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Something of a gift!

Something MORE of a gift!

While you're waiting for the concluding chapters, thought you might like these!

Enjoy!

ASTERATLAS.jpg


AtlasDeVille.jpg


AtlasmARRIOTT.jpg
 
Oooooooo, 60s actor shots too!! Niiiiiiice!

Although, I pictured DeVille a good deal younger than that, and Dr. Marriott a fair bit older.
 
To be honest, these started out as fun pieces but I figured they weren't a bad match for the characters.

Thanks for the comments Maxillius :)
 
These look awesome and I too like the 60s throwback look.

And Marriott is a hottie.
 
Chapter Ten

TEN

It took almost thirty seconds for the battery back-up lighting on the bridge to kick in. Eventually, as the lights flickered into life, Schmitt began to wish they hadn’t. Bathed in a Faustian red blush, the bridge appeared to be all angles and shadows. Amidst the darkness she saw protruding legs and arms poking obscenely from beneath a collapsed support beam.

Dragging herself back to the command seat, she hit the intercom button and received nothing but silence in response.

“Engineering! Come in Engineering!” She turned in confusion and saw Baker, the Head of Communications, shaking his head in obvious frustration.

“All external and internal comms are out Sir.”

“Mr Price, are we still moving?”

The young Ensign at the helm bent over his console in concentration but after a few seconds slapped his hand against it angrily.

“If we are Sir, the sensors aren’t allowing me to judge it but it would only be movement by momentum. Impulse and warp both indicate offline.”

Schmitt closed her eyes and counted to ten before spinning around to the security crewman climbing shakily to his feet by the turbolift door. Thankfully, he appeared shaken but otherwise capable.

“Crewman Kennedy! It’s silent running. You’re my first runner so I need you to get down to sickbay and advise the Commander as to our status. Mr Lense, get working on separating those pods.”

Lense nodded and began to enter commands into his console as Schmitt turned back to the crewman. “As soon as you arrive in sickbay, request a team to the bridge and make sure that they dispatch runners out to contingency posts, got it?”

“Yes Sir!” With a purpose to fulfil, the crewman was all business and immediately ran to the front of the bridge to access the Jefferies tube that ran down and around towards sickbay.

The silent running protocol was something of an anachronism, a hangover from the days of submarines although its purpose was still to prevent noise. Rather than the physical thumps and bangs that may have been the death warrant for a submarine desperate to hide however, the silent running protocol aboard a space vessel was implemented to reduce electronic noise to zero. Active sensors, internal comms and use of any electronic equipment were immediately curtailed and messages were dispatched by a relay of runners between departments.

Schmitt knew that if power was genuinely offline, then using turbolifts was potentially disastrous, another action catered for in the protocol. During a combat scenario, use of the turbolifts meant electronic output; during this crisis, lack of power could mean a falling car or, worse perhaps, doors opening on to an empty lift shaft.

As she watched the crewman disappear down the Jefferies tube, she knew that all she could do now was to try and bring the bridge back to life whilst tending to the wounded. Her mind though, could not help but linger on the dangerous cargo that even now was still attached to Atlas.

* * *

DeVille had also discovered that the internal comms were down and even attempts at using his communicator were unsuccessful. He looked around the sickbay which had faired much better than other sections of the ship even though he was unaware of it. Quick action by the Medtechs led by Marriott had not only cleaned the bay up but begun the preparation for receiving casualties.

“What the hell was that Tom?”

Marriott appeared concerned but collected for which DeVille was truly thankful right at that moment.

“I have no idea, but in this region of space it could be one of a dozen things and all of them unexpected. I’m hoping Andrea is activating silent running which means we sit tight until we get a runner.”

While DeVille explained the protocol as he helped ready sickbay, Marriott nodded in response. Eventually however there was nothing more to do and Marriott guided him by the elbow into a quiet alcove.

“Tom, you never explained how you knew about the cut to the Captain’s hand or the logic of bringing us down here in the first place.”

For a brief moment, DeVille’s concern for the ship made him struggle to remember the exact reason too until it all flooded back. He quietly explained about the vision of Aster’s hand tapping out Morse code during his apparent blackout on the bridge.

“The cut on Alison’s hand I couldn’t have known about which just confirms to me that whatever this ‘communication’ might have been it was genuine and, to my mind, came from the Captain.”

Marriott considered his logic and found it compelling if still inexplicable.

“So did you figure out the Morse code?”

“Hmmm?” He shook his head as if he’d been deep in thought about something else before replying. “Oh, right. Partially. I came out of it before I could get the full message but the part I got was S E P and A I N E R.”

“Meaning?” Marriott saw no obvious message in those jumbled letters even if there really was one.

DeVille perched on a low shelf and shook his head. “If I had to discern anything from it, I’d say it should have been SEPARATE CONTAINERS, but in all honesty it may have been anything. If it was that though Jenny, it means somehow she’s aware of what’s happening!”

“Alright,” she replied gently hoping that her tone didn’t sound patronising, “I probably don’t have to remind you but Alison is still in a coma Tom. No matter how persuasive your argument might be about the cut on her hand I can still see no logical way she could have…” Marriott’s voice trailed off as a light sprang into DeVille’s eyes. “What? What is it?”

“That’s the second time you’ve mentioned logic Jenny!”

Any further explanation he might have given was cut short as two things happened at once. Firstly, the main lights sprang back to life along with a deep, resonant thrum of power being fed back into the ship’s vital organs. At the same moment, the main doors to sickbay slid open allowing the entrance of Crewman Kennedy from the bridge.

Marriott allowed DeVille to converse with him as she rounded up her team of four runners and prepared them to set out on their relay. By the time she’d finished, she turned to see that the crewman had departed again and DeVille was pacing excitedly.

“Commander?” Marriott decided that her questions could wait until ship’s duty had been taken care of. “Any message to relay?”

“Standard damage control protocol, walking wounded to attend sickbay and other requests for medical aid to be relayed by runners.” He stopped the four before they could hurry off on their duties. “I’m told that the power fix may be temporary so we’re still not using turbolifts unless necessary for patient transfer, clear?”

They all nodded and set off for their allocated destinations as Marriott once again confronted DeVille.

“So, what’s this about ‘logic’ again?”

He smiled and started to explain, hoping against hope that he wasn’t about to waste time on a wild goose chase.

* * *​

“So is it electronic or mechanical failure?”

Schmitt tapped at the semi-responsive console but got little back that was comprehensible.

“Until I get down there and look I can’t really tell Sir. It might be we’ve severed a connection and the command simply isn’t getting through. Worse case scenario is that the torque from that last upsurge has damaged the container couplings on the main plate…”

“Which means we’ll have to blow the bolts manually,” she finished for him. “Ok, get down there and give me a report as soon as possible.”

Lense didn’t wait to acknowledge but instead headed straight for the Jefferies tube. Just as he disappeared, Kennedy’s head popped up.

“Make it good news Kennedy,” she grinned though she hoped it didn’t seem as forced as it felt.

“Sickbay’s up and running Sir, Commander DeVille is fine but requests you maintain the conn for now. He’s commanded a container separation and maximum speed out of the area as soon as possible.” Schmitt nodded as Kennedy continued the brief with reference to casualties.

Once he’d finished, Schmitt nodded to the crew who had sustained cuts and burns from rupturing consoles and conduits and asked Kennedy to escort them down to Sickbay. Fortunately, the only other injury was an obvious broken leg that would require a med team to attend. He was about to follow the wounded back down the tube when he stopped short.

“One other thing Commander Schmitt, Mr DeVille requested that Lieutenant Skell attend sickbay as well.”

She was gratified that Skell responded immediately, albeit with an inquisitively raised eyebrow. “Permission to attend sickbay Commander?”

“By all means Mr Skell, Allen take Science.” As Skell descended the ladder, she returned her attention once more to the security crewman. “Good work Kennedy. Advise the Commander that we’re working on the containers and power already and hopefully internal comms will be back soon. Carry on.”

Tossing off a rarely seen salute, he smiled and descended back down the tube as Schmitt stepped over debris to return to the Loadmaster’s station. The console still fizzed and spluttered nonsense at her and she sent a silent prayer to whichever deity would take pity on them to allow Lense to separate those containers damn fast.
 
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Well, Schmitt certainly knows what she's doing on the bridge, calling for the silent running (cool!) and all that.

Now let's see if DeVille is right about the message.
 
As Chief of Engineering, I suspect Schmitt has a better grasp of the physics behind these things than most :)

The end approacheth and Atlas's time is running out!!!!!
 
In the brief break before the next chapter, can I just wish all TrekBBS subscribers and particularly those readers who've put up with my dodgy writing schedule a peaceful and prosperous New Year. :beer:

Thank you for your encouragement and good wishes! :techman:
 
Chapter Eleven

ELEVEN

Standing at the observation port in the spine of the connecting neck, Lense could clearly see that container two had already broken loose. The assembly between cargo containers was nowhere near as strong as that between container and ship. It seemed clear that the violent lurch had been enough to separate the magnetic rings and manual bolts.

As he stared at the slowly turning container, he was sure that he also spotted surface damage at the rear of it, though what might have caused it he didn’t know. Not that he was overly concerned either. It was free of the ship which just left container one to contend with.

“Turner, Roberts, start lifting the manual separation hatches. If I can’t access separation through the computer, that’s our next priority.”

The two engineers quickly descended the ladder one deck into the mating assembly room. On Ptolemy class vessels, this was better known as the plate room. The plate itself resembled a half cylinder which mated perfectly with the fore, topside of the lead container. Strong electro-magnetic couplers backed up by large manual latches secured the container to the ship and subsequent containers would then be attached to the rear of that one to form a train of sorts.

In the event of an emergency where the container needed to be separated manually, these mechanical latches could be activated with small explosive bolts, but each one of the twelve needed to be primed by hand and detonated simultaneously.

Knowing the contents of container one and its destructive potential, Lense was naturally reticent to use the explosive bolts unless it was a last resort.

Sitting down at the lower Loadmaster’s console, he tapped gently at the keys and prayed that the manual separation would be unnecessary.

* * *

Aster was concerned but, in her current comatose state, had no way to either express it or affect it. The creature had disappeared from her mind and despite her calling to it at regular intervals, had not reappeared.

She still inhabited the dream-like world but to her unease the pastel shades had begun to take on a muddy, darker hue.

Hello? Please, I need to talk to you!

Again there was no response and, with despair nibbling at her consciousness, she wondered how much of her message - if any - DeVille had received and understood. Because Aster had required the creature to act as a ‘bridge’ in order to reach out to DeVille’s mind, she had tried the Morse code illustration knowing that if he got the context then he could decode the message.

It had been just as she was finishing her plea for him to separate the containers and leave the area that the creature had broken its contact and silently left. Was it beginning to lose control of its own volition? If that was the case, then she had no idea how much time they had left; only that it was very little.

* * *

DeVille had been pacing Marriott’s office continuously since Kennedy had departed. All he’d said to Marriott in that time was that his next action would require sanctioning by both the participant and Marriott and that he would abide by the wishes and decisions of both parties.

Until the sickbay doors parted, he had maintained his silence, but as the wounded began to arrive in sickbay he scanned their faces. Each one cradled an arm or staunched blood from cuts and burns and were immediately taken into cubicles lining the fore and starboard bulkheads.

Though the faces of the injured were uniformly showing signs of pain and distress, the last person to enter displayed no emotion whatsoever. DeVille could only hope that it wasn’t a harbinger of his failure to acquire the Vulcan’s consent.

It seemed that Marriott immediately intuited DeVille’s intent when she saw Skell approaching her office, yet she too remained silent as he entered.

“You wished for my presence Commander.” Skell was calm and seemingly unperturbed by the events of the past few hours as he stood coolly with his hands folded behind his back.

“I did Lieutenant, thank you for attending so promptly.”

Until he had Skell before him, DeVille had wondered just how he would broach the subject knowing how sensitive an issue it was. Under the circumstances, he realised, there simply wasn’t the time to be anything other than direct.

“Lieutenant, I want you to understand that the request I am about to make of you is one that you are entirely at liberty to refuse without condition. All I can say is that I have run out of both time and options in the matter at hand.”

Skell inclined his head slightly before nodding once.

DeVille took one deep, cleansing breath and began to explain his unusual mental communion with Aster. He espoused his belief that Aster was still actively conscious despite inhabiting a coma stricken shell and further, that he believed she was aware of what was happening here in the Delta Triangle.

“The bottom line, Skell, is that I need to contact her. For that…”

“You wish to propose a mind meld.”

DeVille merely nodded and looked briefly to Marriott whose poker face gave away nothing.

A silence that seemed to stretch beyond its temporal reality ended when Skell looked directly at DeVille.

“Commander, the mind-meld is perhaps one of the most intimate and personal acts that a Vulcan may accede to. Under normal conditions, it is a practice that would only be undertaken with the express mutual consent of both parties.” He turned his back and began pacing the small office slowly as he continued. “In this case, you want me to act as a bridge between two non-Vulcans, one of whom may or may not be mentally diminished.”

It was a simple statement of fact delivered in an uninflected tone of voice. DeVille was entirely uncertain as to whether he had offended the science officer or not although it was a chance he was willing to take if it meant saving the ship and the lives of all those aboard her.

“Mr Skell, I…”

The Vulcan raised a hand, his index finger extended, effectively silencing DeVille before he could proceed.

“Furthermore, the mind-meld is a cultural symbol of Vulcan and its people. It is an activity that I never would have believed that my commanding officer would request or require of me no matter how dire the circumstances.” He let out a deep sigh and DeVille felt that his options had just diminished by one. He would need to get back to the bridge immediately and…

“I’m sure, however, that you were at least peripherally aware of all this before you made your request Commander. The fact that you made that request anyway is an indication of how deeply serious the circumstances are that prompted it.” Skell turned to face DeVille and Marriott once more, his demeanour inexplicably altered in some small way. “You should be aware, Commander, that having served in Starfleet for twelve years I have yet to meet a Captain and First Officer who have engendered such respect in their crew as Captain Aster and yourself have. Whilst acting within your orders and mission parameters from Starfleet, you have both treated the crew with respect and compassion at all times.”

DeVille looked with mild surprise at the tall, dark haired Vulcan and barely recognised himself in the description he’d just heard. It was the person he had always striven to be of course, but far too often he felt he had fallen short in some way.

For his part, Skell took a step back into the centre of the small office and inclined his head.

“There is a Vulcan tenet,” continued the Vulcan, “which states that the needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few. If ever that precept were true, this is such a time.”

Turning his attention to Marriott, he became all business once again and, perhaps, even more Vulcan-like.

“I am aware, as I’m sure you are Doctor, of the inherent risks involved in this undertaking. However, I assure you that the risks of not performing this mind-meld are equally dire.” He lowered his voice but it was no less intense. “The Commander has said that he would not proceed without both our consents, and I appreciate his concern. I would, however, feel much more sanguine in this endeavour if you were also to support it Doctor.”

To that point, Marriott had been unsure which way she might respond to whatever DeVille’s plan would turn out to be. Initially, when she had heard him explain it to Skell, her immediate concern had naturally tended toward the safety of the Vulcan. Were he to attempt to meld with a mind that was unprepared to accept the contact, the risk to his own mind was perilous. If that mind were not even present…

“Doctor?” Skell had not raised his voice in any way but it was evident that he wished to deal with this matter as soon as possible. With the briefest of glances at DeVille, she smiled.

“It would seem that the decision is made but if it helps, I wouldn’t have vetoed the idea out of hand.” Skell was about to turn away but she stopped him with a single word. “But…”

DeVille held his breath, unsure even at this late moment as to whether Marriott would find a reason to backtrack and prevent the mind-meld.

“…if I see even the slightest problem rearing its ugly head, I will intervene make no mistake.”

Skell seemed to consider this for a moment before finally nodding his acceptance of Marriott’s coda.

“Very well Doctor that will be acceptable. Perhaps, however, we should briefly discuss what exactly it is you should be looking for during the meld?”

Marriott’s slight blush made DeVille smile and with the mind-meld now a go, his thoughts returned to the ship and its current predicament. He hadn’t yet received an update from the bridge and with a few minutes to spare before the meld could begin he excused himself to check in with Schmitt upstairs.

“Skell, I just want to say thank you, on behalf of the entire crew.”

Before turning and accompanying Marriott to the sideward, he hiked one eyebrow and said, “Thanks are not necessary Commander; it was the…logical decision.”
 
Chapter Twelve

TWELVE

It took DeVille a matter of minutes to navigate the Jefferies tube from the sickbay on deck four to the bridge, but in that brief time he had analysed and rejected several scenarios in his mind as he desperately sought a resolution to their situation. The ideas fell short because of one simple factor; lack of solid information. Without any tangible evidence to support him, he believed without doubt that at least a good part of that information lay with Captain Aster. He only prayed that the mind-meld with Skell would uncover enough to help them.

Reaching the last of the rungs leading to the bridge, he emerged into a haze of plastic and ozone scented smoke which the scrubbers were still struggling to clear. Despite recent events, an atmosphere of qualified calm was prevalent. Even the engineers replacing ruptured GNDN conduits and still sparking control interfaces did so with professional quiet.

“Commander, good to have you back Sir.”

Stepping around the helm and navigation consoles, he took Schmitt’s proffered handshake.

“It seems you’ve got it all under control Andrea. Thank you.”

“Depends how you define control Sir. So far everything we’ve done has been reactive rather than proactive.” She dropped her voice so that only DeVille would hear her. “We’re running out of time Sir.”

Strangely, DeVille had exactly the same feeling and he was far from sanguine about sitting still.

“Time to start changing the rules then Andrea. What’s the progress on separating the cargo containers?”

Schmitt quickly explained that container two, the rearmost of the train, had broken free after the spatial upsurge that had temporarily disabled them. It seemed however that it had also misaligned the mechanical latches that connected container one to the ship.

“Damn it.” DeVille ran a hand through his thick, black hair and sighed heavily. “If there’s one thing I hate about this situation it’s having a container full of anti-matter sat right behind us.”

“Michael’s down there now trying to resolve it but what options are left if we can’t achieve a manual separation?”

As an engineer who’d transferred to the command track, DeVille knew the ship and its physical capabilities as well as Schmitt and the only two options he could see were either saucer separation or abandoning ship, neither of which he would consider until absolutely necessary.

“It’s our job to give him time to work on it Andrea.”

Before he could continue, a medtech runner appeared through the Jefferies tube hatch.

“Commander, a message from Dr Marriott.” DeVille nodded for the young crewman to continue. “She reports that Mr Skell is ready to proceed Sir.”

He smiled grimly as he replied “Advise the Doctor to continue and let me know as soon as there’s any progress. Oh and crewman?”

The young man paused as he began his descent. “Sir?”

“Tell the Doctor and Mr Skell from me to be careful.”

With a slightly confused expression the crewman nodded. “Aye Sir.”

DeVille put the forthcoming mind-meld from his thoughts and headed for the Loadmaster’s station at the rear of the bridge hoping that Lense might have made at least some progress.

* * *

Aster had settled uneasily into a dark state of mind. The creature had not answered her calls, which had become increasingly desperate as time had passed. She had no idea whether the creature was beyond the point of volition or whether it had somehow been incapacitated; neither situation boded well for the Atlas and her crew.

The darkness that had coloured her mood had been mirrored by the darkening of her metaphysical surroundings where the pastel colours, once bright and even uplifting, had begun to blur into a homogenous swirl that resembled a painter’s palette left out in the rain.

It was the slightest change in this background miasma that alerted her to something new. For a moment it shimmered, reminding Aster of the transporter effect, then slowly brightened. Along with the change in visual stimulus, there came an all encompassing calmness. It was only at that point that Aster realised she had been experiencing a buffeting sensation, as of a wind blowing around and through her, and it subsided with the arrival of this new… presence?

Hello?

Captain Aster?

The voice was immediately recognisable to Aster as the Vulcan bridge officer Skell, and in that moment of recognition the pall around her lifted leaving a bright sunlit winter panorama.

Aster smiled to herself as she acknowledged the scene that had been plucked from her own memories of childhood in Switzerland. Appearing over a rise ahead of her came the tall dark figure of Skell wearing his standard Starfleet uniform, traversing the crisp, undisturbed snowfield as if he had been doing it all his life. The likelihood of Skell finding snow anywhere on Vulcan made Aster’s smile grow wider.

Are you well Captain?

The voice was within her mind although the image of Skell mouthed the words.

As well as can be expected under the circumstances Mr Skell. I’m assuming that contacting me in this manner wasn’t a unilateral decision.

Correct Captain. Commander DeVille believes he received, or at least partially received, a telepathic message that originated with you. He came to a halt before her, his breath curling in wreaths around his head in the crisp mountain air. Unfortunately, while he was certain that the link had indeed been established, he was unable to divine how such a contact was possible.

I suggest then Mr Skell that you make yourself comfortable. She indicated the rustic table and chairs that had appeared nearby. I have a great deal of information and very little time in which to make Commander DeVille aware of it.

* * *

Lense initiated the computer controlled release protocol one last time and saw exactly the same result as his past few attempts. All the mechanical latches activated with the exception of five. One flickered between amber and green whilst the other four remained stubbornly red. He knew that they couldn’t simply blow the five perverse latches while the rest were open. The possible torque of the container disconnecting unevenly could shear the connecting neck away from the primary hull. Worse, it could spin the container of anti-matter into contact with the primary hull at which stage all bets would be off.

He turned and called down the open Jefferies tube that led to the plate room. “Ok Turner, Roberts. How’s the situation down there?”

“All the latches are primed Sir,” replied Roberts. “It just needs one person to activate the sequence.”

“Got it.” He slapped at the intercom panel on the wall before remembering that the internal comms were offline. Damnit! Jumping quickly to his feet, he slid down the ladder inside the Jefferies tube, landing at the opposite end of the plate room from the two engineers.

“Gents, that’s it. Auto-sequencing isn’t playing ball so it’s gonna be the hard option. Mr Turner, double time up to the bridge personally please.” Lense didn’t want the information delayed or diluted by having to pass it through two or three relay runners. “Advise them that we’re ready to do a manual separation on their word. Get to it.”

Turner set off at a run for the bridge knowing he had quite a climb ahead of him as Lense turned back to address Roberts.

“Mr Roberts, take the hatch above the plate control room. If it decompresses in here I want that hatch shut without delay.” Roberts seemed on the verge of objecting, but Lense raised a hand forestalling him. “My responsibility Les, seriously. Let’s do this right first time and we won’t have to worry, ok?”

Looking far from convinced, Roberts replied with an “Aye Sir”, before retreating back up the Jefferies tube.

Brave speech Michael he thought to himself. Now let’s try not to screw the pooch.

* * *

Is the creature still in contact with you Captain?

Skell had received the full story from Aster in the briefest time; the benefits of a telepathic link. He had viewed it with equal parts wonder, shock and concern. His natural gift for Science was enough to fill him with the thrill of discovery; a species that had long been suspected but never officially catalogued. The shock came with the discovery of the power that this creature could wield in its attempt to procreate and preserve its species. The concern, naturally, arose from the fact that Atlas was in the immediate vicinity of it all.

No, replied Aster, I’ve not heard from it in some time, though it’s been difficult to gauge how long. Whether it’s because the creature has now lost control of its voluntary actions or perhaps it’s regrouping for the final effort of rebirthing… I honestly don’t know Skell.

Skell rose from the imaginary chair and took a step away.

Very well Captain, I will relay this to Commander DeVille. Your orders?

Aster didn’t hesitate. I’m sure my orders would simply reinforce all the actions that Commander DeVille is already undertaking.

Skell inclined his head slightly in acknowledgement.

Then I shall leave, for now Captain. Pausing momentarily, Skell drew himself to attention. I have implanted a mental trigger that will alert me if you wish to contact me. Just return to this table and ring the bell that will be here.

Sure enough, when she turned to look at the table, she saw a small golden bell arranged on a red napkin. She smiled as Skell receded towards the nearby rise and disappeared over the crest. For the time being, Aster was alone again but the knowledge that she hadn’t been forgotten was enough to raise her spirits.

It’s up to you now Tom.
 
The mind meld was a pretty ingenious idea. Lucky for Astar that they had a Vulcan on board. I'm assuming they weren't as common in Starfleet back in those days.

Now I wonder what happened to our good-meaning entity. Its silence cannot be a good omen.
 
Chapter Thirteen

THIRTEEN

“Engineering to bridge.”

DeVille jumped in surprise at the sound of the ship’s intercom, but quickly toggled the lit switch.

“Bridge here, go ahead.”

He saw Schmitt shrug but smile nonetheless.

“Good news Commander, you have ship’s comms back, at least internally. External comms are still being affected by local spatial anomalies.”
DeVille could tell there was a ‘but’ looming on the horizon and waited patiently. He wasn’t to be disappointed.

“I’ll need to confirm this with Commander Schmitt Sir, but warp drive is offline. Whatever is happening out there is affecting the subatomic structure of the dilithium crystals.”

DeVille was well aware that any crystal with subatomic flaws couldn’t be correctly aligned by the crystal articulation frame meaning that it would lose its focus randomly. The only outcome to that would be a large cloud of expanding duranium and organic fragments.

He nodded to Schmitt and made a shooing motion towards the Jefferies tube. With a brief grimace, she disappeared heading down towards engineering.

“Commander Schmitt is on her way right now Mr Wa’het. How do we stand with impulse power?”

DeVille could here the Rannet engineering officer call across the obviously busy engineering room. After one or two shouted exclamations, he returned to the comm.

“Three quarters impulse is the best I can offer Sir, and right now I’d request half impulse if I thought we could get away with it. I’m guessing that’s not the case?”

Even though it was an audio only connection, DeVille shook his head. “Doesn’t seem that way Mr Wa’het but I’ll do my best. Bridge out.”

Palming the switch that disconnected the comm circuit, he turned towards the command well.

“Helm standby on my command to initiate half impulse on the previous heading we were taking.” Receiving an acknowledgement from Ensign Garvey who had now taken the helm position, Deville took the centre seat and flicked open a connection to the plate room.

“Plate room, Lense.”

“Michael, this is the bridge. How are we going with the separation? I still have no indicators or screens up here.”

After a short pause where an amount of shuffling could be heard, Lense replied, slightly out of breath.

“Computer separation just isn’t happening Sir so it’s down to a manual separation.”

DeVille cursed under his breath wondering how everything had become so complicated inside the space of just twelve hours.

“Container two is already separated Sir but it’s not drifting far. From what I can see visually from the observation port, it appears to be crumpled at the stern.”

“Crumpled Michael?”

“Best way I can describe it Sir. I’m fairly certain it’s not damage sustained in the separation.”

That was odd. Generally, the containers existed in three states; pristine, the way the loadmasters liked to keep them, hulled very occasionally, or destroyed. Crumpled was a description that never would be applied.

In which case, decided DeVille, it’s way past time to be getting the hell out of Dodge.

“Ok Michael, now we have intraship back online, I have one last check to make then we’re blowing the locks and running. Standby.”

Putting the plate room on standby, he opened a line to sickbay and prayed that Marriott had news for him. The crew on the bridge were all diligently studying their consoles but DeVille was all too aware of the tension now permeating the atmosphere.

“If you’re calling with reference to Mr Skell, I can tell you that you should be able to speak to him any second now.” Marriott at least sounded like her normal acerbic self as she continued, “He took off like a bat out of hell about two minutes ago heading your way.”

No sooner had Marriott spoken than Skell appeared from the Jefferies tube, pale but apparently sound.

“Thanks Jenny, he’s just arrived. Bridge out.”

Skell seemed hardly out of breath despite his sprint from sickbay and he quietly briefed DeVille on the full, amazing particulars of their situation as told to him by Aster. His report was almost complete when the main screen fizzled, burped one or two blasts of static and then came to life.

As one, the bridge crew turned to the forward screen and breathlessly watched the scene unfolding outside the ship. Bright streamers of what DeVille could only guess was some exotic energy discharge wrapped around Atlas, constantly wavering and changing colour. In the near distance he could just make out Delta One and Two to port and starboard similarly festooned in amorphous glows, there one second and gone the next.

DeVille slumped into the centre seat awe struck by the beauty of the image and simultaneously horrified to think that very shortly this stunning display would scour this particular area of space clean.

Gathering his wits he reached out and hit the all decks intraship button.

“All hands this is the captain…”

* * *

“…this is the Captain.” Lense turned expectantly toward the intercom. “Events are moving rapidly and as of right now we have more questions than answers. However, one thing is certain. We need to leave this area as soon as possible.”

Nodding to himself, Lense returned his attention to the separation protocol that he’d just finished entering into the computer. In the room above, Roberts stood by the decompression override panel. If the lower plate room lost atmosphere, it would be his job to ensure Lense had enough time to evacuate.

“Shortly we will be separating the last cargo container. After that, I require all personnel to standby for ship evacuation. This is precautionary but could save us critical time…”



“…in the event that evacuation becomes necessary. All personnel on Level One duties are to remain at their posts until ordered otherwise.”

Schmitt looked over her crew in engineering and knew that the majority of them were Level One personnel.

“Assigned evac teams should report to their posts immediately”, continued DeVille. “Level Two and Three personnel should begin orderly movement to emergency evac posts…”



“…and stand by for further orders.”

Marriott detected the slight catch in DeVille’s voice as he finished his broadcast.

“I know there has hardly ever been such a thing as a routine voyage but this one has tested all of us. I think I’m safe in saying that the captain would be incredibly proud of her crew right now.”

Marriot glanced briefly at the still form of Alison Aster and wondered whether she would ever be in a position to recommend commendations.

“Thank you to all of you. Let’s get home…”



“…All staff to report when in position, bridge out.”

As DeVille closed the connection, he sat back in the centre seat and hoped that he had sounded more confident than he felt. He had the utmost faith in his crew to give their all, but when pitted against an unknown alien that had already confirmed it was losing rational control and a section of space that was neither stable nor friendly…

You’ll be fine Daddy.

The breath went from DeVille’s lungs for a moment at the sound of his daughter’s voice. He looked around the flight deck but saw that nobody else seemed to have noticed anything untoward, each crew member deeply engrossed in the forthcoming operation.

Only then did it strike him that these were the exact words that Elizabeth had said to him before departing on his first long haul mission.

He’d made a big show of saying he didn’t think he’d manage to get anything right without Elizabeth being there to organise him. She’d placed her hands on his shoulders and looked at him with mock despair and said, “Really Daddy you should be able to manage by yourself now.”

Then she’d smiled; that heartbreaking smile that always made him wish he didn’t have to leave her.

You’ll be fine Daddy.

He tightened his shoulders and tapped the intercom button on the arm of the centre seat.

“Mr Lense? Standby for separation on my mark…”
 
The daughter's voice in his head is a nice yet depressing touch.

Now let's see if those last fateful words are a good omen for Atlas and her crew.
 
Chapter Fourteen

FOURTEEN

Lense had finally primed all of the charges and routed the subcommand to a handheld sequencer device. After hearing DeVille’s all hands transmission, he picked up the small pad and called up through the accessway to Turner.

“This is it Les. All set?”

“I’m here Sir but don’t hang around down there when it all goes off.”

The lights flickered once but Lense ignored it. There had been so many power fluctuations over the past hour that it had become almost commonplace. As the lights flickered once more, however, the small video display on his console sprang to life. It was commonly used during connection or disconnection of the cargo containers in dock and showed a full length display from the connecting plate down to the end of where container two should have been.

Sure enough, the container was there, angled nose down at around forty five degrees but what he saw made his blood run cold. The aft end of container two was collapsing in upon itself with atmosphere escaping through the rents in its surface. Bolts of what he assumed were energy discharges were leaping from the container out into the surrounding space but, more worryingly, also arcing to the aft end of container one where the connecting collars should have been mated. All around the containers were brightly woven ribbons of light, swirling and interconnecting like some vast maypole dance.

The intercom crackled and he thought he could just hear, through the static that issued forth, the sound of Commander DeVille’s voice. Reaching out quickly he tapped at the intercom but received nothing in response but continuing static. He was about to try again when another discharge of energy arced from the fore end of container one directly into the plate room.

* * *

Aster realised suddenly that she had been…what? Sleeping? Daydreaming? She wasn’t sure. She clearly recalled sitting down at the table where Skell had left his symbolic bell. It had been warm despite the snow covered slopes that surrounded her and strangely she had found comfort in it.

The next thing she was aware of was how dark it had grown. The slopes were still there but they had taken on a menacing appearance. The silhouettes of snow covered fir trees loomed towards her out of the murk. It was as if there had been a total eclipse leaving her mindscape in twilight.

The wind too had increased and as she drew her mind back to the here and now she saw it begin to bend the laden trees and flick random flakes of snow past her.

YOU MUST…LEAVE!

It was undoubtedly the thoughts of the creature, but even without the visual cues to guide her, she would have sensed the stress, almost the agony, in its tones.

We are trying to leave but you need to give us more time, please…

THERE IS NO MORE TIME! I…CANNOT CONTROL…

The creature’s thoughts faded into incoherency and Aster snapped out a command to draw it back.

Listen! Listen to me!

I AM…TRYING…

I know but we need just a few moments and we will be leaving. Can you do this?

The wind suddenly howled, not from any cardinal point but seemingly from everywhere. The table holding the bell blew over despite Aster’s attempts to save it and she found herself sprawling in the snow.

GO! QUICKLY! I AM…LOSING THE…FIGHT!

Thank you she whispered, knowing how unlikely it was that the tormented creature had heard her. The darkness became complete but the wind subsided allowing her to hear the creaks of the recovering firs. It was then, in the stygian darkness, that she realised she had no idea where the bell had fallen.

* * *

DeVille waited for an answer from the plate room but heard nothing. He toggled the line to engineering and after a moment’s pause was answered by the voice of Schmitt.

“Andrea, I can’t reach the plate room. Have we lost any internal comms?”

There was a brief pause and DeVille imagined Schmitt studying panels of readouts in an attempt to track down the problem.

“Comms seem fine to all points shipwide Sir with the exception of the plate room.” Her voice took on a note of concern as she continued. “I’m reading a power loss there as well, unspecified cause.”

“Thanks Andrea, I’ll organise a runner, bridge out.”

His sense of foreboding mounting, DeVille toggled the intercom to the nearest runner location and received a response from a young yeoman by the name of Lister.

“Mr. Lister, I need you to get down to the plate room and find out what’s going on there. We’ve lost communications with them.”

With a brief “Aye Sir”, she left and DeVille turned to the helm position.

“Mr Garvey, are we ready?”

Garvey turned in his seat, his look one of dedicated determination.

“Aye Sir. Course laid in and half impulse on standby.”

DeVille nodded in acknowledgement and prayed that the situation in the plate room was nothing but a minor glitch.

“On my mark then Mr Garvey.”

* * *

Turner heard the crackle of a sudden energy discharge followed by a bang and suddenly atmosphere was rushing past him towards what could only be a hull breach. Raising his hands to his mouth he bellowed into the incessant roar of escaping air.

“Lieutenant! Can you hear me?”

Turner was suddenly aware that even if Lense could hear him above the noise of decompression, Turner might not be able to hear his reply. Assuming he can reply Turner thought. There was no time to debate the matter, Turner knew he had to get down to the plate room and find out for himself what had happened.

Placing the connecting door on a five minute delay to prevent it from locking him in, he quickly scrambled down the first ladder into the control room and then negotiated the second ladder into the plate room. What he found there sickened him.

Lense was desperately gripping the chair he’d been sitting in with blackened and bleeding hands. A cauterised gash ran from his right shoulder to midway down his sternum and his eyes were screwed tightly shut below hair that had been partly burnt away.

“Lieutenant!!”

He watched in undisguised horror as his superior officer and long time friend partially opened his mouth, a sound that belonged to the grave escaping his lips.

Turner knew he had little time in which to act and released his grip on the ladder. As he was carried by the force of the venting atmosphere towards Lense, he grabbed an overhead rung arresting his forward motion.

Desperately searching the immediate area he saw a cargo securing strap locker in the corner by the control station. Rifling through it and beginning to feel light headed, Turner found a strap long enough to encircle himself and Lense and secured the semi-conscious Lieutenant to his back. The gurgles of pain that Lense emitted were heartbreaking but Turner tuned them out of his mind as he concentrated on saving them both.

He could clearly see that the control panel was a smoking wreck and knew that to summon any assistance he would need to travel up two decks to his previous watch position. Until such time he was on his own.

Moving one step at a time and maintaining a grip on the available handholds as well as Lense was almost impossible against the headwind of escaping air. Turner was completely unaware how long his rescue mission had taken so far and how much longer he would have before the decompression hatch would close. It was enough of an impetus to drive him to new efforts.

* * *

Marriott had just completed her rounds with the final stop being beside the bed of the captain. There was absolutely nothing to indicate that a spark of life remained in her body with the exception of the slow rise and fall of her chest. Vital signs were all low but steady, but brain activity verged on vegetative.

Between her rounds she had continued to study diverse texts from all four corners of Federation space as well as some from beyond. The Vulcan texts had proven to be not only the most illuminating but offered perhaps the most hope. Sadly, to reap the hope they offered would require the skills of a qualified Vulcan healer.

She shook her head and was about to return to her office when the intercom whistled for attention. Being nearest, Marriott took the call.

“Sickbay, Marriott speaking…”

“Doctor I need a med team…” The rest of the transmission was lost in what sounded like a full blown hurricane. With a suddenness that momentarily stunned her, the sound ceased and all she could hear was the laboured breathing of somebody on the intercom.

“Where are you? What’s happened?” Marriott beckoned to a medtech and quickly whispered to gather a trauma team when the voice responded.

“Doctor, it’s…Turner in the plate room…access corridor. We’ve had an energy discharge…and an explosive decompression. Lieutenant Lense is…badly injured.”

Marriott pointed to the trauma team and whispered “Plate room stat. Burns and concussive injuries.” Watching them leave sickbay she turned once more to the intercom. “Turner hang in there, we’ve got a team on the way to you. Is the bridge aware of the incident?”

“I…I don’t know…Doctor, he’s hurt badly…I don’t know what to do…”

She could hear the beginnings of panic creeping into Turner’s voice and realised she had to nip it in the bud before he too became a secondary victim of whatever had taken place.

“Turner, listen to me.” His voice subsided into silence and she could only hope that her tone was balanced correctly to get through to him. “You need to report what’s happened to the bridge while we get down to you ok?” There was no reply leaving Marriott to begin to suspect the worst. “Turner, did you get that?”

Finally, there was a faint sob-like intake of breath and Turner replied. “Yes Doctor…I can do that, but…please hurry.”

Grabbing her already packed med-kit she ran for the door and headed for God knows what catastrophic injury that awaited her in the plate room.
 
Chapter Fifteen

FIFTEEN

The two incoming alerts to the bridge actually overlapped. Lense took the first call while Aarbesh also took a call at engineering. As it turned out, both calls contained exactly the same information. An explosive decompression in the plate room due to an unknown energy discharge with one officer down and another possibly injured.

Turning to the tall, reed thin Gelmin engineer, he received an update.

“We have a team heading down to seal the breach Commander. Currently the decompression hatch above the plate room has been sealed.”

DeVille stood quickly making his way to the engineering station.

“Was container one detached?”

His heart sank when Aarbesh shook his head. “Indications up until the point that we lost readings indicated that it was still attached Sir.”

DeVille knew that moving the ship with unknown occurrences happening so close to a volatile cargo was unwise. Conversely - or perhaps perversely under the circumstances – if they didn’t move the ship they could well be subject to another energy strike. Turning to face the command well, he was about to order Garvey to engage impulse when the intercom at Aarbesh’s station whistled again.

“Bridge, this is Ensign Turner at the plate room access corridor. I need to speak to the Cap…erm Commander.”

The Gelmin stood and proffered his seat with a wave of his long seemingly fragile arm. DeVille slid into the engineering position quickly.

“Commander DeVille here Turner, report please.”

He listened with mounting horror as Turner ran him through the sequence of events that had led to the evacuation.

“If I get into an environmental suit Sir, I can get back in there and activate the separation sequence.”

“Has the med team arrived Turner?”

There was what seemed to be an interminable silence before Turner responded in a very quiet voice.

“Yes Sir. I’m afraid Lieutenant Lense didn’t make it.”

The shock of Lense’s loss took the air from his lungs. It had been Lense who had eventually befriended him and become his sounding board over the loss of his daughter. A friendship born out of need, it had almost become DeVille’s saviour.

“Commander I can do this.” Turner’s impassioned plea brought him back to the present. DeVille realised he didn’t have the time or the luxury of mourning Lense’s passing yet, and that he needed to concentrate on the other two hundred and some souls aboard Atlas.

Reaching a decision, DeVille nodded. “Get to it Turner. Suit up, blow the latches then get the hell out of there understood?”

“Aye Sir, on it now.”

Keying the circuit closed, DeVille swore that there would be no more loss of life. This had gone on long enough and if he ended up facing a court martial because some previously unknown creature had died because…

He stopped, took a deep breath and retraced his thoughts, feeling ashamed that in the heat of the moment he’d allowed that rationale to even form in his mind. As a Starfleet officer, he knew that his trade demanded both compromise and possibly even sacrifice if the circumstances dictated it. Right now though, he felt a long way from sacrifice and considered it the last fall back position.

He intended to both save the ship and allow the creature its natural right to procreation. If it eventually came to a choice between the two, however, he knew that he had to be ready to make not just a decision, but the right decision.

* * *

Turner was now suited up and beside him stood an engineering crewman similarly garbed. The decompression hatch in the plate room access corridor behind them was now shut and the corridor itself depressurised. Back behind that door was another engineer posted as a backup.

This time, Turner would finish the job that Lense had started.

He leaned forward and pressed his helmet against that of the crewman saying, “Don’t forget, as soon as that container separates, start hauling on the umbilical. I’m happy to take knocks on the way out; I just don’t want to put a hole in the suit.”

It was unlikely that would happen as the suit was made from layers of ultrafine mesh that, under normal circumstances, could withstand the harshest of treatment. Turner didn’t want to test the manufacturer’s claims however and was satisfied when the crewman gave him the thumbs up.

Clasping an engineer’s torch in his left hand, he palmed open the upper plate room hatch and climbed carefully down the first ladder. He could see, where Lense had brushed against the bulkhead, trails of soot mixed with blood. It was a sight he would never forget and it took all his control to rein in his emotions.

Job first, mourn later he admonished himself. Get with the programme Turner.

In the control room above the plate room itself, papers that had survived the initial outrush of atmosphere lay in the corners forlornly. The consoles and stations around the room were blank and lifeless but it didn’t matter. The most important piece of equipment was down in the plate room proper; the separation sequencer.

While there was no atmosphere in the two rooms, there was still artificial gravity and Turner clung to the final ladder as he sank into the darkness that filled the plate room. He thought he could faintly see flickering lights, a mere shadow of those currently cocooning the ship, but he realised after a tense moment that it was merely a reflection entering through the gash that had been torn in the bulkhead.

When his light waved across the station where Lense had been working, he saw an almost surgical scar that ran from upper right to lower left, beyond which awaited the hard vacuum of space. There, lying on the work surface, was the interface.

Picking it up gently, he saw that the screen was blank and worked his gauntleted fingers along the length of cable that connected it to the wall until he reached the connection jack. The scar from the energy discharge ended a mere ten centimetres above the socket.

Looks like the surge sliced through the connection board he mused, reducing the surreal situation down to a simple engineering exercise. He slid the connector from its socket and moved to the terminal furthest from the damage. Flipping open the connection port cover, he carefully reconnected the sequencer and checked that the connection was sound.

Unconsciously holding his breath and mentally calling for intervention from any deity who might be concerned, he activated the hand held unit. For several seconds the interface remained stubbornly blank. Turner reached for the jack to make sure it was seated properly but snatched his hand back as the tiny screen spluttered to life. Numerals scrolled across the display as it self checked and reset before displaying the single, most beautiful word Turner could ever remember seeing;

READY>

* * *

Aster had tried to gauge the angle that the bell might have fallen at but so far had found no sign of it. Working further away from the table, she had dug small, shallow indentations into the loosely packed snow, gradually working deeper in an attempt to locate it but so far without luck.

She knew that it couldn’t have fallen any further away from the table and so returned to her first dig to begin working her way backwards. The wind that had so cruelly tossed her lifeline aside had abated somewhat, but the gloom of darkening clouds remained reminding her that the creature was barely in control of itself or its actions.

She reached the depression in the snow where she had first begun her search and was amazed to see the soft burnished surface of the bell. It hadn’t been there before and she began to question how she could have missed it until she remembered that it was nothing but a symbol. It had no shape, form or mass in reality; it was a mental trigger that existed solely in her mind.

Nevertheless, she leaned forward and gently picked up the small bell and rang it sharply three times.

* * *

Although Skell had remained on the bridge, he had handed his science duties over to the Beta shift science officer. While he observed what was transpiring both inside and outside the ship, he took no current part in its operations. Commander DeVille had requested that he supervise but remain ready for any sign that the Captain might try to contact him.

Although Vulcan’s were generally accepted as being touch telepaths, the connection often lingered for hours, sometimes days, after a meld had been completed. It was the reason that Skell had left the symbolic bell image for Aster to anchor her end of the connection to and it was within his mind that he now heard its clear sharp rings.

He closed his eyes and gently released the bridge surrounding him, picturing instead a snow covered slope lined with row upon row of deep green fir trees. Instead of the image remaining in its pristine state, however, he noted that it immediately sank into a menacing darkness while the area surrounding him was lit as if he carried a lamp with finite power and reach. The image warned him that, though his own mental capacity was strong and vibrant, the Captain’s had begun to inexorably slide.

Cresting the rise that he had climbed before, he saw the Captain resting with her back against the overturned table, her hair awry and a small but noticeable cut on her right temple.

“Captain! What happened?”

He hurried forward and lifted her gently to her feet as she explained that the creature was on the verge of losing control of its own actions as it began the rebirthing. Although nobody knew what that would actually entail, it was patently obvious from the limited amount that they did know that being in the area when it happened would be fatal.

“I will inform Commander DeVille but you must rest now Captain. The strain of maintaining this connection is affecting you in the real world. You must try and conserve your energy now.”

“Don’t worry Skell,” she nodded weakly, “you’ll get no argument from me.”

Loathe as he was to leave the captain like this, he knew he had to report the shortening of their deadline to Commander DeVille.

“I will return once I have delivered the message Captain.” A second lamp now accompanied the first, and he passed it to Aster. “Keep this by you Captain, draw warmth and sustenance from it and I will return.”

Although he knew that the lamp actually represented a mental shoring up of her defences, to the Captain it was merely the comfort of keeping the dark at bay. Either way, it would help to sustain her.

Standing, he felt awkward; he wanted to say something encouraging yet had no idea under the circumstances exactly what. Instead he simply settled for a polite and reverent Vulcan nod before turning away to return to the real world.
 
dude!

the covers: *bows*

the poster: *bows*

did you draw it yourself?

the story: *bows*

i miss your Angel stories...can't wait to continue them
 
Haha thanks ambessalion, very much appreciated. :bolian:

Angel will continue my friend and yes I made all the images but the model of the Ptolemy class ship was made by Dave Metlesits over at DeviantArt. Fantastic modeller and artist.

I'll be checking out STMPA as I recover as well. :alienblush:

Once again, thank you :bolian:
 
This is quickly building up to the climax, it feels. I still really like the imagery here, specifically the virtual construct Astar is experiencing while she is unconscious.
 
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