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Star Trek : Angel - Book Two

Commentary on Chapter 18

Wow, things go from bad to worse as the phenomena that trapped the Leech becomes the stickiest piece of flypaper in the quadrant. :eek:

Fishlock, Bacco, and a whole host of refugees are now mired in these spatial doldrums, which threaten to do the same to Angel and any other Starfleet vessels coming to their rescue.

Interesting twist with the discovery of Chariscarpia’s ‘genetic library.’ I wonder whether the Federation will consider seeding some prospective Class-M world with this material in order to bring her world some semblance of immortality?

As usual, you’re weaving a complex series of plot threads effortlessly here, giving sufficient time and detail to each one. I look forward to more!
 
Chapter 19

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 19


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – ARBORETUM
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1753 FST

Chahal Marnok was a confused and tired little girl. For her, the exodus from the DMZ amid the crush of worried adults had been way beyond her ability to comprehend. One minute they were preparing for the school holidays, the next they were packed in a foul smelling freighter with as many possessions as they were able to carry.

She was slightly happier aboard the Olympic. For one thing it smelt much nicer and there was more room for the energetic to run around in. More importantly she was able to order canaberries from the replicator here, something she had sorely missed since leaving home. The sweet red fruits the size of peaches would always remind her of sitting on the porch of their house, the sun high in the cobalt blue sky, while she swung giddily back and forth on the porch seat.

Reaching idly for the last canaberry in the bowl, her mind was elsewhere until her fingers found the fruit; or rather didn’t. Looking down in confusion she saw that the juicy red skin had dried to papery crispness and was rapidly flaking and falling away as she watched. The inside was a green mush that stank awful, but which also dried to powder just as rapidly.

“Mommy! Mommy look!”

Chahal’s mother turned from the conversation with her neighbour to find out what the sudden clamour was about but saw only an empty bowl with a fine powdery residue in the bottom.

“Mommy the canaberry disappeared!”

With a sigh of frustration that every child in the known universe would have probably recognised, her mother took the bowl and placed it on the table.

“Cha, mommy is talking ok?” She tousled the child’s hair and smiled. “I’ll get some more soon.”

“But Mommy, it…”

Her mother had already returned to her conversation and little Chahal sat quietly, even more confused than she had been a few minutes ago.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – MEDICAL CENTRE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1824 FST

As Dan regained consciousness he kept his eyes closed for a few moments, a habit he’d picked up in his SpecOps days. It was a way of gaining information on his surroundings and preparing himself for whatever might await him when he eventually did open his eyes.

He noted that his throat was exceedingly dry, either from breathing pure oxygen or foul air he guessed but he didn’t know which. There was the sound of many voices around him, most speaking Federation standard and there were also the sounds of children. All in all, it didn’t sound like a tense environment.

When he finally filtered all the facts and felt safe in opening his eyes, he immediately recognised a sickbay but it certainly wasn’t a Starfleet one. The cruise liner he’d seen? Well certainly, the décor was ostentatious enough for it.
He propped himself up in the biobed and almost immediately regretted it as the room swam in and out of focus for a few seconds.

“Whoa, steady there Captain!” He felt hands steady him and gently push him back down. “Try not to move too quickly.”

As his eyes refocused, the blue blob in his vision solidified into a Bolian wearing a crisp white medical tunic emblazoned with a company logo he didn’t recognize although the words below it – ISCS OLYMPIC – indeed suggested he was aboard the liner.

The Bolian, (whose name appeared to be Joll according to his name tag), waved to somebody out of Dan’s view and within moments a woman appeared by his bed. His eyesight, still not operating at full capacity, was further hindered by the fact that the woman was silhouetted by a bright medical light throwing her face into shadow.

“Captain, I’m so glad you’re awake. How are you feeling?”

At the back of his mind, the voice rang a bell.

“A little hoarse maybe, but I think I’m in one piece.” He shaded his eyes to try and see the face of the woman and the medic suddenly realised the discomfort Dan was in. As the light dimmed behind her, the silhouette now took on the form of an angel as the slight woman’s head became surrounded by a halo caused by the light shining on and through the full head of white hair. As Dan recognised the face, so the voice finally fell into place.

“Governor Bacco?”

“I’d like to say welcome aboard Captain, although the circumstances aren’t quite as hospitable as I’d generally prefer.”

Dan sat up slowly this time, swinging his legs over the edge of the biobed and taking a drink proffered by the medic. He took a small sip of the cool, sweet liquid and as he felt it work wonders on his throat he nodded his thanks. The Bolian smiled and quietly withdrew to give Dan and the Governor a little privacy.

“I realise this is a little soon Captain, but would you be up to a meeting with the Olympic’s senior staff? Right now we’re still in a state of confusion over what’s happened and we’re hoping you might be able to shed a little light on the matter.”

Dan stood and tested his legs, feeling more certain now, and nodded to Nan.

“Not a problem I think Ma’am though to be honest I’m not sure I’ll have too more much to add to what you may already know.”

Nan spread her hands in obvious helplessness. “To be honest Captain, that’s not a great deal so anything you tell us could be important right now.”

Dan nodded and followed the Governor out of sickbay to a nearby turbolift, noting the crowded refugees on the observation deck as they passed through. He also saw for the first time, that the right side of her face had a pair of distinctly nasty bruises and there was a cut still healing on her forehead. Nan obviously noted his scrutiny.

“My first, and hopefully last, attempt at flying,” she grinned and as the turbolift whisked them upwards to the command deck she explained all that had occurred in the past two hours.


USS ANGEL – BRIDGE
ZETHANDER – GEOSTATIONARY ORBIT
UFP SPACE
September 15h 2371 – 1837

Kat Gray was in the centre seat when Gava bal Chag at ops advised her that all crew had now been retrieved and the vessel was secured for departure.

She nodded an acknowledgement to the Tellarite before requesting a channel opened to the Mainstay and the Brunel. The now familiar view of Zethander disappeared to be replaced by a split screen containing the faces of Bill Johnson and Ellahar Pathan.

“We’re almost ready to break orbit so I thought I’d check in before we depart.”

Kat looked at the two Captains and with a vague feeling of unease realised she was leaving behind the safety net of advice and friendship. Shaking the thought before it unnerved her further she addressed Ella Pathan first.

“Are you sure we won’t be denying you anything by keeping the Rube on board Ella?”

Pathan shook her head and smiled. “1100 and 1101 are only advisers with our team so strictly speaking I couldn’t stop them tagging along with you even if I wanted to. To be honest it looks like they’ll be a bigger asset to the Angel right now so you’re welcome.”

“Thanks Ella, we’ll look after them.”

She turned her attention to Bill Johnson who smiled encouragingly. “I’ll be online if you need me Kat.”

“I’m counting on it Bill, thank you.” She paused and then added, “If you get any news, let me know?”

With an almost unseen wink, he nodded. “God speed Kat.”

The screen returned to the planetary view and Kat stood quickly.

“Sendok, the bridge is yours. Alert me when we’re an hour out and I’ll want yellow alert going in until we establish exactly what’s happened in there. Oh and advise Starfleet operations that we’re responding immediately.”

“Aye Captain. I have the bridge.”

As the bridge turbolift doors hissed closed behind her, she heard Sendok order the Angel out of orbit for their 4 hour high warp transit to the incident scene.

Out of sight of her crew, she leaned back against the ’lift wall and took a deep breath. This one’s your responsibility now Kat she thought. She knew the butterflies in her stomach had nothing to do with the ‘lift’s rapid descent.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – COMMAND DECK BRIEFING ROOM
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1841 FST

Situated behind the bridge and with a huge curved port looking out over the stern of the Olympic, the briefing room was quiet as Dan finished his brief.

“I’m guessing that the anomaly was responsible for my computer’s…” Dan searched for a phrase other than malfunction but waved his hands helplessly when he was unable to define exactly what had happened.

Dubois spoke from her seat at the front of the room.

“Hopefully that won’t be an immediate problem for us, right Mr Callum?”

A smaller man from the row behind nodded. “Hopefully not Captain,” he replied. “The Olympic has a secondary redundant core tied into the primary at all times. We can switch between the two with no break in operation, though so far there have been no signs of adverse activity.”

“As for the vessel you were following Captain, the bridge reports that they can see it off the port bow some 8000 kilometres distance.”

That caught Dan’s attention. “Any sensor information?”

Dubois shook her head. “Sadly not Captain. We’re having a similar problem to the one you had. Our sensors are reacting at different resolutions depending on where they are focussed around the ship. Sciences believe it likely that the field density is fluctuating.”

“Is it possible to tractor the ship Captain Dubois?”

“I’ll check on it and get back to you Captain.” Dan nodded in appreciation and she turned to dispatch one of the junior staff to the bridge. “So what do you recommend Captain Fishlock?”

It was a question he’d been mulling over for some time and with things as they stood at the moment, there was really only one answer.

“We should wait I believe. Your marker buoy should have attracted somebody’s attention I hope and we know that the Olympic isn’t happy about moving under her own power right now.” Earlier in the brief, the chief engineer had told him that the structural stress on the hull as they’d been dragged out of warp had been off the scales. Until they’d performed a full check, engaging any level of impulse was more of a risk than staying put. “I’d suggest we hold position unless circumstances should change.”

Dubois could see the sense in that and concurred with Dan.

“Very well ladies and gentlemen, let’s finish the structural integrity checks and we’ll reconvene for an update at that point. That’s all, dismissed.”

As the crew quickly left to continue their work, Dubois shook his hand. “Thank you Dan.”

“I’m not sure I contributed a great deal Nereth,” Dan shrugged. “Let’s just hope that marker buoy got the message out, because if not we’re going to need to devise our own way out of this.”

“Bridge to Captain Dubois.”

Turning to the wall mounted comm panel, Dubois answered the hail.

“Go ahead.”

“Captain, engineering advises me that we may be able to attempt a recovery of the vessel Captain Fishlock was trailing.” Dan was suddenly alert. “Dependant on the field fluctuations they believe it should be possible within the next half hour.”

As the liner captain looked to him for confirmation, Dan nodded.

“Very well, we’ll be on the bridge shortly. Dubois out.”

Terminating the connection, Dubois was about to escort Dan and the Governor back to the bridge when he gently stopped her.

“Nereth, I think we need to talk about the circumstances behind my mission.” The look of concern on Dan’s face was enough to give her pause. “If that ship can be recovered, it will have to be met by a security team and there’s a strong possibility that if it goes wrong they may have to be prepared to kill the pilot.”

The statement brought a shocked expression to Dubois’ face, but unseen it drove a knife of despair into Dan’s heart.
 
LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 19 (cont)


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – DECK 8 ACCOMODATION
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1850 FST

Tyrone Blakely was a big man, much of it still solid muscle despite his age, but for all that he was dying. Years before, working for a mining company in the Medra system, he had been involved in an accident that had exposed him to toxic gases deep within the heart of a dilithium rich asteroid.

His crewmate on the excavator had been killed outright and Blakely had barely escaped with his life but the damage to his lungs was done. The doctors had offered him the chance of experimental therapy but warned that it was painful and offered less than a 50% chance of success. When the company refused to finance the therapy Blakely had taken his case to the unions. Despite their backing and the public outcry at his mistreatment Blakely lost his case and eventually his job.

He’d retired in relative poverty to a small colony in what was to become the DMZ, expecting to spend his final years there as his condition deteriorated. It was only when he was offered the chance of repatriation as a refugee that he made up his mind that this was his last chance to see his children and grand-children and so took the proffered position aboard the Olympic.

Which is where he lay on his makeshift bed now, feeling the pain in his chest start again although this time it felt different. Normally he would take his medication, nothing more than a strong analgesic, and within a few minutes the pain would ease and eventually so would his laboured breathing. But this time, the pain was intensifying and for the first time he felt scared.

Not of death as such; he’d resigned himself to that particular demon some time ago. What he was scared of most was that he would never have the chance to make amends with his daughter and her family and that was something he couldn’t bear.

In the semi-darkness, he reached out to fumble for the call panel. As his fingers finally found the contact, a voice seeming distant and weak answered him though he could barely hear their words through the pounding in his head.

“Please…I need…help…”

His last thought as a wave of pain in his chest carried him into darkness was of his daughter.


USS ANGEL – SCIENCE LAB 4
EN ROUTE TO ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15h 2371 – 1859

When the call for senior staff to attend the mission briefing had been made, T’Sell had left the Bynars busily chatting with Chariscarpia discussing theoretical solutions to the neural net problem. Their native language, composed of a machine code similar to binary, allowed them to exchange information at high speed without the vagaries of normal speech. Chariscarpia had found it not dissimilar from communicating with Scorpion when she had been connected and easily fell into the staccato communication pattern.

Chariscarpia had found it fascinating to learn that the Bynars were, by the nature of their connection to a single worldwide computer network, a 'centralized' society, dependent upon one (and only one) nexus that connected them from birth. Shortly after a Bynar was born, a specialist neuro-surgeon would replace the child's parietal lobe with a synaptic processor and they would remain connected with the computer nexus for life.

Over time, they had merged their society and even their own identities into the structure of their vast computer operating system; so much so that disconnecting a Bynar from the master computer or each other could be near fatal.

She wondered to herself how it was possible that a civilization which in many underlying respects resembled that of the Borg could be such a polar opposite.

“We have studied the structure and composition…”

“…of the neural net that has been prepared.”

Chariscarpia was brought back to the present with that remark.

“Do you believe that it will be operationally suitable?” She had gone over the design many times with both T’Sell and Data and felt that they were close to solving the problem and yet it still felt as if they were missing something.

“The base model is structurally sound…”

“…but we believe there may be errors in the synaptic connections.”

“What kind of errors?”

Utilizing their direct connection to Chariscarpia, they described both diagrammatically and verbally the area of connections that they believed required work. It was a conversation that combined the synthetic and the organic in a way that no unenhanced sentient would have been able to follow but as the Bynar spoke, Chariscarpia had a dawning realisation how close they may have come to disaster.

“The connections as they are at the moment…”

“…are completely adequate for a neural net…”

“…which is designed to be self learning.”

“Such as Commander Data’s?” she asked.

“That is correct. However, as a repository…”

“…for a sentience already in existence, the fault in this connection…”

“…would have prevented transfer and storage of the essence that is you.”

Chariscarpia was stunned. “So my memories, my knowledge of self, would have been totally lost?”

“That and perhaps…”

“…much more.”

Residing quietly in the confines of the Hildr’s memory core was beginning to become frustrating for Chariscarpia. She wanted to pace, to breathe, to simply be and her hopes for doing so had nearly ended tragically.

“Can the error be rectified?” Five words forming a question, the answer to which would determine her very existence.

A flurry of computer code between the Bynars slipped past Chariscarpia’s understanding as she pondered her own future as she had never done in the past. Never had she so dearly wanted to continue living as she did now. A whole new life lay before her here in the Federation, or if she wished, beyond. Could it be that the Borg were about to belatedly claim their last Chellantherian victim?

“Chariscarpia?”

The twin chime of the Bynars carried an undercurrent of worry.

“I apologise. My mind was elsewhere when I should be concentrating on the problem at hand. Please, go on.”

“1100 has much more experience with this work than I do…”

“…and I believe that it can be done, but we must work quickly.”

She caught a sense of urgency in the usually unmodulated voice and wished she could face the small Bynar in person.

“It would appear that the calculations based…”

“…on previous information have proved erroneous.”

Chariscarpia felt she knew exactly which calculations they were talking about but had to ask nonetheless.

“I assume you are talking about the onset of degradation?”

The slight pause before the answer was confirmation in itself.

“We believe that you may have…”

“…as little as 24 hours.”


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – MEDICAL CENTRE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1907 FST

Blakely awoke feeling much stronger than he felt he had a right to. Whatever the medics had given him seemed to certainly have eased his breathing and most definitely erased the pain. At least for now.

“Mr Blakely?” A Vulcan woman wearing ship’s insignia on her white lab coat had appeared unnoticed at his bedside. “I am Doctor T’Kan.”

To Blakely’s eyes, T’Kan appeared to be the shortest Vulcan he had ever seen and yet the refined poise with which she carried herself filled the space that she didn’t. He smiled at her, not expecting a similar response of course.

“I don’t what your people gave me Doctor but thanks. It’s really eased things for me.”

T’Kan hesitated momentarily and raised an inquisitive eyebrow.

“Mr Blakely you were only treated with oxygen to aid your respiration. Actually…” – that momentary hesitation again – “I was hoping you could describe your exact problem please?”

Blakely laughed half heartedly at the request. All these techno wizard bits of kit and they hadn’t spotted the obvious?

“Oh, I see, the equipment’s offline right?” Obviously, whatever had happened to the ship must have popped a fuse in the sickbay.

“Not at all Mr Blakely, it is functioning correctly.”

“Not if it couldn’t spot advanced respiratory damage Doctor. I think you need to change your maintenance team.”

The puzzled look on the Vulcan’s face might have amused him at another time, so out of place did it seem. She checked the PADD she was carrying then gave it to Blakely.

“When you were brought in you were unconscious and perhaps slightly hypoxic which is why you were treated immediately with oxygen.” She tapped the PADD and it displayed a complete body scan though Blakely wouldn’t have known if it showed something wrong or not. “However as you can see from the scans, your pulmonary system is in remarkably good condition for a man of your age. Similarly your heart.”

“Doctor trust me, the refugee co-ordination team have my full medical file, and I can guarantee that I haven’t grown new lungs since I came aboard.”

T’Kan retrieved the PADD and stared at it as if the mere act of doing so would change the data, but eventually she turned back to Blakely.

“Mr Blakely, I will need to ask you to remain here until we can confirm these results.”

As T’Kan strode off, Blakely placed his hands behind his head and sighed. Oh sure he felt fine right now, but he knew that probably wouldn’t last long if previous episodes were anything to go by. Still, he couldn’t wait to see the look on T’Kan’s face when she found out she’d got it wrong.
 
Commentary on Chapter 19

The temporal anomaly is certainly making things interesting, but I suspect it’s going to start causing more chaos than mystery in the near future. Blakely’s temporally ‘repaired’ lungs and the hyper-degradation of the child’s fruit are likely only the first examples of what may be in store for the rest of the refugees and ship’s crew if the vessels can’t be rescued quickly.

And now Chariscarpia discovers that not only is their first positronic network non-viable, now she has considerably less time than originally projected.

You’re building momentum (not to mention angst) here as people and ships converge upon this enigmatic new phenomena… and I can’t wait to see where you take us from here.
 
Sorry for the delay in updating. Real life has taken me away from the work I love best, but the good news is I've managed to catch up a litlle so for all you ST:A fans.....

The next chapters!

PS Work has started on Book Three and as a tease it will cover a subject that screen Trek barely touched on yet had the most pronounced affect on Trek history! :techman:
 
Chapter 20

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 20


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – BRIDGE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1931 FST

Dan watched quietly as the Olympic’s engineers adjusted the settings on their docking and mooring tractors, attempting to tie the normally disparate beams into a single unified one that could be used to recover the Leech. The task had taken longer than expected simply because they’d never been designed to work in that manner. Eventually, though, the chief engineer stepped back and rubbed his hands together as if he was wiping them on a rag.

“Well, I think that’s as good as it’s gonna get Captain. Long as we take it nice and slow we should be able to maintain a coherent beam.”

Dubois smiled slightly. “I think I hear one of your ever present “buts” about to surface Mr Callum.”

“Kind of Captain, but you gotta understand I’m out of my depth on this one.” The engineering officer looked slightly chagrined to admit that something was intrinsically beyond his ability to circumvent, but he ploughed on nevertheless.
Activating a viewscreen on the bulkhead, he brought up a schematic of the Olympic and the area of space surrounding it.

“Ok, now we know from what Captain Fishlock has told us plus the limited information we’re getting from the sensors that at the heart of this field is a temporal anomaly of some sort.”

Dubois nodded. “But the field it’s creating is somewhat more exotic correct?”

Callum folded his arms and sighed. “Ma’am, this goes way beyond exotic. It’s created something that has never been recorded before as far as I can tell. Whatever’s happening out there, it shouldn’t prevent movement or dull sensors or any of the other twenty or so effects it’s having, but it is.”

Tapping the screen he expanded the view slightly and set in motion an animated review.

“This is the worrying part though Ma’am. Sensors have reported anomalies around the hull which they can’t effectively define. The best way to describe them is like…” Callum waved his hands for a moment before settling on the term “…bubbles of non-time or other-time.”

Seeing that his description was causing more confusion than clarity, he turned back to the animation.

“Imagine the field we’re in is like a big mug of synth-ale…”
At Dubois’ and Dan’s bemused expressions he smiled. “Bear with me here, it get’s weirder. The Olympic is like a peanut ok?”

“A big peanut but go on.” Dan honestly couldn’t see where this was heading.

“Yea a big peanut,” Callum grinned. “So we know that the synth-ale, our exotic particle field, is fairly active already. Now what happens when you drop a peanut in a mug of synth-ale?”

Dan looked to Dubois and she shrugged her shoulders for him to take a shot at it.

“The ale fizzes?”

Callum’s smile broadened. “Exactly Sir, but there’s another effect besides that. The bubbles of gas created by the peanut’s entry into the ale cling to the surface of the nut.”

The animation progressed to show the Olympic entering the temporal anomaly’s field with small pockets, or bubbles, of non-time fizzing around it.

“This is where things get slightly more serious though. We were travelling at superluminal speeds which is the equivalent of taking that peanut and firing it into the ale from a catapult. Watch.”

This time the effect was much more pronounced with the Olympic diving much deeper into the field before slowing and the field itself becoming highly agitated.

“Higher entry speed, more bubbles.” Callum left the animation playing as he continued. “The big problem is, we have no idea what these bubbles are likely to do. In some respects they’re acting liking synth-ale bubbles by drifting around for a while then dispersing, or popping, but we know that some are gravitating towards the ship.”

“So what are the sensors telling us?”

Callum returned to their initial conundrum. “Very little Ma’am. As I said, nothing like this has been catalogued before so other than a concentration of chroniton particles which seem to form the shell of the bubble, whatever’s inside is unknown and it’s making the sensors have a fit.”

“What are the odds of these bubbles penetrating the hull Mr Callum?”

“Again Ma’am I’m sorry but until I can recalibrate the sensors to scan internally for something they don’t understand in the first place, I can’t say.”

Dubois massaged her temples feeling the start of a stress headache beginning to dull her thoughts. “Make it a priority Mr Callum. If we don’t know what it is, I don’t want it aboard my ship. Mr Bradbury, confirm we have contact with the Majestic and the Hercules now?”

The young officer at comms nodded smartly. “Barely Ma’am but we have them.”

“Thank you, hail them please and schedule a Captain’s conference for ten minutes time.”

As the crew dispersed to their pressing duties, Dubois turned to Dan with an apologetic look. “Dan, I’m sorry but until we get a handle on this I need to ask you to postpone recovery of the Leech.”

Dan considered the request seriously. Under normal circumstances the BROKEN SWORD protocol would relegate the safety of the Olympic and its passengers to a secondary concern. But it was obvious that the Leech was going nowhere and he rationalised that if these bubbles were likely to do harm to the Olympic and its fragile cargo of beings, then recovering the Leech became a moot point anyway. It tore at his soul to even have had to consider the option of risking the Olympic over the Leech.

“I understand Nereth. If you need me I’ll be with Governor Bacco.”

“Thank you Dan,” she said placing a hand on his arm. “We’ll recover your friend if we can I promise.”

If he’s not already beyond rescue thought Dan sadly.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – SECONDARY COMPUTER CORE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1934 FST

Deep in the secondary computer core of the Olympic, an event that lasted the smallest fraction of a second went completely unnoticed by those aboard the ship.

One of Callum’s bubbles erupted into being surrounding a pair of isolinear chips that controlled the heating across all decks. It dispersed rapidly and the only effect was to throw that one small section of the core backwards three hours in time. It only took seconds before the secondary core had conferred with the primary core and realised that part of its timing was incorrect and automatically reset it.

An error dump was transmitted to the primary core and operations continued as normal.

For now.


USS ANGEL – OFFICER’S QUARTERS
EN ROUTE TO ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15h 2371 – 1940

T’Sell had been preparing to meditate when the call had come from the science lab. 1100 and 1101 had requested to speak to her urgently and within minutes of the call had arrived at her quarters.

It took perhaps fifteen minutes for the diminutive Bynars to explain the ramifications of what they’d discovered, but by the time they had finished T’Sell was on her feet and pacing the lounge in a most un-Vulcan like manner.

“I cannot believe I missed it!”

“Commander, it is only the fact…”

“…that we have previous theoretical experience…”

“…that enabled us to diagnose the error.”

In other words she thought don’t beat yourself up.

“I need to confer with the Captain but are you willing to begin work straight away?” T’Sell studied the ingenuous faces of the Bynars knowing she was in no position to order them to do so.

There was the briefest of high pitched squeals as they conferred before nodding solemnly.

“We are prepared Commander.”

It was perhaps the only time that she’d heard a complete sentence delivered by just one of the Bynars, but it was the answer she’d hoped for.

“Thank you, to both of you.” Quickly checking the chrono beside her bed, she said, “I will meet you in the science lab in fifteen minutes once I have briefed the Captain.”

In a manner more reminiscent of small clockwork soldiers than highly intelligent beings they nodded once and left in perfect step to head for the science lab.

As T’Sell quickly changed out of her meditation robes and back into uniform, she had time to consider just how much of the previous few weeks had been dependant on time. The diverting of the asteroids over Zethander and the rush to evacuate Coral City had all been against the clock. Even now, the fight to save Chariscarpia in time was being fought against the backdrop of their headlong rush towards the Argolis Sector.

She recalled a saying her Vulcan father Senik had often quoted to her throughout her childhood. “Time is a commodity more precious than latinum: once spent, it can never be recovered.” Her Betazoid mother Breeann on the other hand had phrased it more succinctly: “Don’t waste time, use it.”

Time had once again upped the ante and as they drew closer to the Argolis Sector she could only hope that events would not conspire against them. Chariscarpia’s life now depended on it.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – DECK 9 TERRACE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 1942 FST

When Dan eventually found Nan Bacco, she was sitting with a small family on the terrace that overlooked the arboretum plaza. They were sharing a small meal and chatting amiably as he approached and he considered leaving them to their quiet meal until Nan spotted him.

“Captain, come and join us, please.” She drew out a chair and invited him to sit with them. As he took his place at the table, Nan introduced the family as Michael and Sheri Tamar and their daughter Rihanna. “Rihanna is seven years old and very proud of it.”

Dan couldn’t help but smile as the young girl drew herself up to her full height and declared quite solemnly “I’m going to fly a starship when I grow up.”

Sheri smiled proudly at her daughter. “It’s all she’s been able to talk about since we came aboard.”

Dan looked at Rihanna seriously and said “Well I’m sure one day you’ll make a fine starship captain.”

She turned to him with a look of surprise and said “No I really want to fly it, not be Captain!” Rihanna appeared slightly taken aback when the adults began to laugh but managed to retain her poise.

“So Captain,” said Nan deliberately stressing the word, “any news?”

He managed to convey the need for privacy with a slight rise of his eyebrows. “That’s actually why I came to find you Ma’am, that’s if Rihanna doesn’t mind me borrowing her special guest for a short while?”

Nan looked at the little girl as if she might be the most important person aboard the ship. “Would that be alright?”

Rihanna’s smile could have powered a warp core. “Promise you can come back later?”

“I’ll try, but you have to promise to be good ok?”

“Oh I will! Really!”

Waving goodbye, Dan led the Governor back down the terrace and smiled innocently at her. “She’s a little young to vote isn’t she?”

“And you’re still too young to be a dyed in the wool cynic!”

Dan was captivated by the Governor’s easy charm even under the circumstances they found themselves in, but knew that the news he had to deliver would put even that to the test.

Over the next twenty minutes as they walked slowly towards the bridge, Dan passed on all that Callum had explained. Occasionally Nan would ask a question of him or pause to speak to one of the refugees. It was only as they approached the turbolift that she stopped and placed a hand to her head.

Concerned, Dan placed a hand on her arm. “Governor, you ok?”

As Nan dropped her hand and gave him a wan smile, Dan thought that for the first time since they’d met she truly appeared her age.

“King sized headache Captain. Comes with the job.”

“Bit like my cynicism then Governor.”

Guiding her into the waiting turbolift, he ordered it to stop at sickbay first. Whatever news the bridge might have could wait at least that long.
 
Chapter 20 (cont)

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 20 (cont)


USS ANGEL – MEDCENTRE ONE
EN ROUTE TO ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2002 FST

“So I suppose you’ve heard that we’re off adventuring again?”

Gabby smiled drowsily up at Anthony Winston. “The all hands announcement was a bit of a giveaway doctor.”

With a mock scowl, Anthony crossed his arms and shook his head. “You do realise that I refer the cheeky patients to the EMH don’t you?”

Anthony couldn’t deny that the Emergency Medical Hologram had been a boon in the recent crisis at Zethander but he’d entered a notation in the CMO’s log that perhaps even a small amount of “good old bedside manner” should be considered for the next upgrade. It was fairly obvious from Gabby’s expression that she agreed.

“I’m not sure which sadist at Starfleet programmed him but I’ll promise to refrain from sarcasm if you don’t activate him again.”

Anthony took a seat by Gabby’s bed and scanned the readouts on the medical arch that covered much of her body, nodding in satisfaction.

“You have my word. Besides, the good news is that the work we did this afternoon is perhaps the last major surgical work you should require.”

As Gabby’s eyes went wide in pleased surprise, Anthony felt a smile of satisfaction tug at his lips.

“Really?”

“Don’t get me wrong Gabby,” he counselled, “there’s still some way to go yet but depending on what we see tomorrow, I may be able to release the stasis on your spine.”

“And then?”

“Well obviously there’ll be a period of physiotherapy just to get you mobile again but a week, possibly two, and you’ll be running laps of the promenade deck.”

The look of pleasure on Gabby’s face was reward enough for Anthony at that moment.

“How is the counselling going?”

The sigh that escaped Gabby’s lips contained a thousand unspoken words and Anthony saw the first touch of sadness in Gabby’s eyes.

“Oh we talk, Commander Hamble nods a lot, but nothing’s coming back to me yet.”

Anthony stood and placing the chair against the wall, returned to place a hand on Gabby’s shoulder.

“The counselling isn’t all about getting those lost memories back Gabby. There’s good coming out of it that you won’t recognise for a while but trust me when I say that Geri Hamble is one of the best.”

Gabby’s smile returned as she valiantly struggled to stay awake.

“I’m being spoiled aren’t I?”

Chuckling, Anthony tapped in the final commands on the medical arch before answering.

“Well as our sole in-patient at the moment, we wouldn’t dare offer less.”

Gabby sank into a quiet sleep, the ghost of a smile still on her face but as Anthony dimmed the lights he wondered just how much longer the wards might remain this quiet.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – BRIDGE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2012 FST

When Dan and Governor Bacco arrived on the command deck of the Olympic it was just in time for Callum to announce that internal sensors had been reconfigured to scan for any possible intrusion of the chroniton bubbles.

“Do it Mr Callum and I want a permanent monitor display of it.” As he returned to his station, she turned to the comms officer. “Mr Bradbury, please transmit Mr Callum’s sensor configuration data to the Majestic and the Hercules.”

“Aye Captain.”

Dubois made a brisk tour of the bridge stations before returning to speak with Nan, her face a carefully composed mask that barely concealed the concern she was feeling.

“Governor, Captain. How are the refugees holding up?”

“Surprisingly well considering the circumstances,” replied Nan. “I’ve got representatives from the refugee co-ordination team posted at strategic locations throughout the accommodation so that at least they won’t have far to look for help if they need it.”

Dan pointed to Callum as he ran the internal sensor scan. “Any word on these bubbles of Mr Callum’s?”

Dubois brought up a schematic on the command console in front of her. “We naturally had the navigational deflectors up when we were dragged from warp and as far as he can tell, it seems that they’re currently keeping the bubbles away from the surface of the hull,” she said tapping at the screen. Sure enough it seemed that those bubbles forming and approaching the screen were dispersing on contact.

“What’s really concerning me is the fact that we’ve had bubbles forming inside the screens. If they can do that, they could form inside the ship just as easily but until we’ve swept the interior we won’t know for sure.”

As if prompted by her words, Callum turned from the engineering station and waved them over with a concerned expression.

“Obviously not good news Mr Callum?”

Shaking his head, he pointed to three areas on the ship schematic. “’Fraid not Captain. There are no signs of current activity but there are chroniton traces here, here and here. I’d guess that they’re bubbles that have dispersed.”

Dan saw that they were evenly spread across the ship; one in the accommodation complex, one in the arboretum area and one at the centre of the secondary computer core.
Callum pointed at the latter. “I’ve got a level 1 diagnostic running now but there have been no relevant issues flagged up.”

A rapid, staccato beep issued from the console running the newly initiated interior scan and Callum turned quickly to study his console.

“It’s another one, arboretum again…hang on…” Rapidly inputting commands, he brought up a security camera monitoring that section of the vessel and zoomed in on the co-ordinates given by the computer. What they saw was both breathtaking in its clarity and horrifying in its implications.

One of the potted palms by the fountains swayed gently as a section of its segmented trunk turned first green then black before crumbling altogether. It teetered for a moment before tumbling backwards into the pool behind it. Shocked refugees dashed away from the broken palm fearing that something more was about to happen though for the time being nothing did.

Dubois sprang into action. “I want a maintenance team down there to recover both halves of that palm. We need to examine exactly what happened there. Captain Fishlock, could you supervise the inspection please?”

Dan nodded and quickly left to head for the arboretum while Dubois now faced Nan.

“Governor, could you ask one of your team members to check the occupants of…where was that accommodation Mr Callum?”

“Deck 8, berth 42 Captain.”

Nan nodded, her receding headache now forgotten. “Got it. I’ll see if I can ask some innocuous questions.” She looked at the harried captain carefully. “I’m assuming you don’t want this public knowledge yet.”

“Not without hard facts Governor, no. I appreciate it.”

Dubois was fairly certain though that she knew exactly what had happened in the arboretum. For now they’d been lucky, but she knew that luck had the fickleness of a pending avalanche.


USS ANGEL – BRIEFING ROOM
EN ROUTE TO ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2023 FST

Kat looked around at the gathered heads of departments, Anthony Winston being the final one to take his seat.

“Ladies, gentlemen,” she began without preamble. “We’re very much going into this one blind. You’ve all seen the information dispatch we had from operations at the earlier meeting?” At the round of nods that circled the table she continued. “Well that’s still all we have. My recommendations are as follows. We’ll drop out of warp slightly later than planned but clear of the incident area. Dependant on what long range scans can give us, I want a Valkyrie out as well as the sensor pod equipped runabouts. Commander O’Hara, make sure the runabouts have a full complement of marker buoys, I want the hazard area marked clearly.”

“Aye Captain.” Eyrie tapped instructions into her PADD which were immediately dispatched to the flight deck.

“Commander T’Sell, I’d like a full science and C3 team in place by the time we drop out of warp. Although we’ve only had reports of one marker buoy, there are three vessels from the same convoy out of contact.”

Kat indicated DeSalle next.

“Commander, we have no idea what’s caused this and I’m hoping it’s both benign and ultimately harmless, but I’m not going to bet on it. I want the ship at red alert before we hit real space and ready for anything untoward."

He nodded tersely, his dark eyes alert and active.

“Doctor, again we have no idea what the casualty count might be here but with the three ships in total, I can tell you they’re carrying in excess of 15,000 souls. To that end I’ve requested that Starfleet Operations divert the two liners from Trans Quadrant Shipping back from Starbase 310 to accept casualties if necessary. It might at least give you a little breathing space.”

She noted that the familiar faces seated around the conference table were stunned at the possible number of lives in peril. She also knew that like herself, they were all aware that if this was indeed a worst case scenario, they would be hopelessly swamped. If the operation at Zethander had tested them, this may prove an operation with a less fruitful ending.
 
Chapter 21

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 21


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – ENGINEERING ANNEXE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2035 FST


With an accompanying team from the Olympic’s engineering section, Dan had recovered the tree to a small maintenance office on deck 15 where he was now performing a scan of the shattered trunk. Above the break, the tree was still perfectly healthy but at the fracture itself the bark and the wood had become brittle, turning to powder at the slightest touch.

He examined the readings from the tricorder and although they confirmed what he suspected he was still shocked by the results. In a matter of seconds the trunk that had been enveloped in the ‘time bubble’ had aged in excess of a hundred years compared to the surrounding material.

Requesting that the engineers remove the affected portion of trunk and place it in stasis, Dan excused himself to make his return to the bridge. A whole new deadly element had been added to their current predicament and if it were to worsen, he had no idea how they could protect the occupants of any of the ships.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – DECK 8 BERTH 42
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2038 FST


Nan rang the door chime of berth 42 and the door was answered by a young woman cradling an infant. Beyond the woman, she could see that the luxury berth had been effectively partitioned to allow four smaller spaces to be created. It was cramped but not uncomfortably so.

“Governor Bacco? How can I help you?”

Good question thought Nan. The last thing she wanted was to cause a panic amongst the refugees when they already had so much to deal with. Gently for now.

“It’s just a courtesy call really,” she lied. “I know the refugee team have been doing the rounds but there are a lot of people to see and I thought I’d pitch in with them.” She indicated the berth beyond the woman’s shoulder. “Is everything alright in the berth?”

The young woman’s eyes went wide as she realised she’d kept the Governor standing on the doorstep.

“Oh I’m sorry Governor, please, come in.”

Nan stepped through into the narrow passage created by partitioning screens and the young woman, who introduced herself as Alyth Merrick, guided her to the portion of the berth that was hers.

Despite the fact that it was a quarter of its original size, the berth still offered space enough to allow the young couple and their child a decent living area. Hastily fitted lighting fixtures allowed each quarter of the berth to be lit independently, and the dividing corridor led directly to the en-suite facilities which were naturally shared by all the occupants of the berth.

“It’s much more comfortable than we expected Governor,” said Alyth as she held the narrow door open. “When we were told how many people would be aboard each ship we feared the worst.”

Nan smiled and couldn’t resist a peek at the baby.

“How’s the little one taking it?”

Alyth smiled as Nan cooed and the child’s tiny fingers grasped at Nan’s.

“Oh she’s fine. She’s at the age where life is sleep, eat and make noise. It’ll be quite the adventure to tell her about as she grows up.”

“Does anybody know what happened yet Governor?”

It was Alyth’s partner, Erion, who asked the question.

“Not exactly,” replied Nan deciding that at least a partial truth was allowed. “They’re working on it now though so we should have some answers quite soon.” She indicated the adjoining rooms. “Nobody was injured were they?”

Not during the incident,” answered Erion, “but a gentleman from the end room was taken to sickbay a couple of hours ago.”

Nan was instantly alert. “Do you know what happened?”

He shook his head. “The first we knew was when the medtechs arrived and hustled him out.”

The mental maths showed Nan that the man had been removed at approximately the time of the ‘time bubble’ appearance and she didn’t believe in coincidences like that.

“Well I’d best move on,” she said, trying not to appear too keen to leave. “If there’s anything you need though, just contact an immigration team member. We’ll do our best.”

The young couple stood to see Nan out but she waved them back down. “Please, its fine. Look after yourselves and the little one, and I promise as soon as we know more we’ll let you know.”

Alyth smiled as Nan herself stood to leave. “Thank you for coming down Governor, it means a lot.”

Nan made her way back down the passage towards the berth door wondering just what she would discover when she checked in at sickbay and again the thought passed through her mind that she had promised to look after these people. She was now seriously wondering if it was a promise she had any chance of keeping.


USS ANGEL – MEDCENTRE ONE
EN ROUTE TO ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2047 FST


Under normal circumstances Anthony would have handed over control of the med-centres to Helena Russell four hours ago and this particular night he would have now been entertaining the senior crew of the Brunel in the Phoenix lounge. Instead he was co-ordinating the alert med-team leaders as to the likely influx of casualties.

Mass casualty treatment always became a lottery at the triage stage with the lucky ones receiving treatment while others had to be left aside. Anthony knew that his team leaders in the triage section were fully capable of making those decisions but knew equally that in the aftermath it could be choices that caused much soul searching.

If they’d just had one more operating theatre, or perhaps if another med team had been available or even if they’d just had the luxury of a little more time. He’d been there and knew how it felt, but it was a career they were dedicated to and one they excelled at.

He’d just sent Dorian off with a PADD full of last minute notes when he noticed Homer nervously peering around the door.

“Lieutenant Richmond?”

“Er…look if you’re busy I can…”

Anthony waved him in. “Nonsense, you can help me stack these crates while we chat if that’s alright?”

Homer nodded and began lifting the ready packs of medical supplies on to the anti-grav gurney, but said nothing. It seemed to Anthony that the young pilot was trying to reach a decision about what to say.

“I’d normally try and show a little more patience Lieutenant, but I’m afraid we’re a bit pushed for time this evening.”

Homer blushed slightly and apologised. “Doc, I gotta be honest, this is gonna sound like one of those corny old war movie lines but I wanted to leave a message for Gabby.”

Homer handed the small isolinear chip to Anthony and shuffled his feet in embarrassment.

“I assume you mean one of those “just in case I don’t come back” messages?”

Looking thoroughly miserable he leaned back on the gurney and nodded.

“Doc I know it sounds stupid. It’s just that after Gabby’s accident, it kinda made me realise that even the most innocent looking mission can go wrong and we never get to say some of the things we should have done.”

For a moment Anthony said nothing then sat down beside Homer.

“The circumstances aren’t important, but I can assure you that not only do I understand exactly what you mean but I don’t find it stupid.” He looked at the chip, then at Homer. “I’ll make you a deal. I’ll hang on to this for now but when this is over, I want you to sit down and tell Gabby exactly what you said on this chip.”

Homer mulled over the contents of the chip knowing he’d basically poured his heart and soul out on it, but realised the Doc was right. Once or twice as he’d sat talking to her, he’d wanted to say just how much she’d become to him in the short time they’d known each other; how she wasn’t just a shore leave fling that he’d forget about by the next planetfall. That, and so much more.

“Thanks Doc, I appreciate it.”

“Fly safely Lieutenant, there’s a young lady expecting to see you in the morning.”

Anthony’s grin was infectious and Homer left the med centre feeling that a great weight had lifted off his shoulders. Anthony, despite his optimism in front of Homer, was hoping he wouldn’t have to deliver the chip to Gabby, because Homer was right; in their job, jeopardy was a constant companion. Especially now.


USS LEECH
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2053 FST


The Leech, despite its dire injuries, had survived remarkably well. That’s to say it had remained relatively intact at least. Atmosphere had been lost behind the command module, and power was now reduced to emergency levels but the structure had at least remained whole.

With the advent of the randomly appearing time bubbles however, that wasn’t to last. Unbeknown to the crews of the trapped vessels, these time bubbles had been an intrinsic part of the phenomena since its formation but until recently they had been both short lived and microscopic. As the temporal anomaly had gained power however, they had started to become larger and last longer. While it was true that the disturbance caused by the three huge ships being dragged from warp had attracted and possibly caused the formation of more bubbles, they had still remained somewhat dispersed. In fact, with space being the vast empty place that it is, the majority were forming and dissipating without interacting with anything larger than cosmic dust.

The Leech – having been stationary for some while – was unlucky enough to become the epicentre for a forming bubble. It expanded quite quickly to reach a diameter of almost eight metres but it was the location of its expansion that caused events to unfold the way they did.

The centre of the bubble was located just outside the ship’s skin but as it grew, it crept inside the already weakened frame of the Leech, biting into and rapidly ageing the central spar of the cargo support unit. With the damage already done by the Section 31 shuttle, it became the proverbial straw that broke the camel’s back as the spar crumbled to fine powder under the strain.

Outwardly however, nothing seemed amiss. There was no movement in the vessel to disturb the equilibrium of the two halves and to all intents and purposes, the ship still appeared intact.

Inside the Leech though, more damage was being wrought as the bubble ended its expansion by neatly bisecting the artefact that had remained inert under the blanket of the nearby neural damper.

Other than the ancient race that had devised the prison for the hive-mother and her parasites, nobody would ever know what dimensions the artefact plumbed to imprison the creatures. Suffice to say that however it operated, the effect of the bubble was magnified by the distorting forces inside the artefact. It ballooned rapidly, reaching deep into the previously unbreachable prison but rather than simply ageing all that it touched, it literally tore them asunder.

The hive-mother felt the dissolution of each and every parasite the bubble touched, a brief scream of fear and the barbed mental thrust of agony piercing her psychic shields until she became overwhelmed by the ferocity of the mental onslaught and toppled over the very edge of sanity itself. Her relief only came when the bubble eventually tore her atom from atom.

The neural damper that the Section 31 operatives had managed to beam aboard became the final victim of the bubble as the half enveloped by it crumbled rapidly leaving the remaining part to spark briefly and then die.

With its death, however, came a surprising revelation that until now had lain hidden by the dampening field.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – MEDICAL CENTRE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2107 FST


Nan spoke quietly to the Vulcan doctor who had recovered and treated Blakely after his call for help. T’Kan explained that after running a full spectrum of tests she had found a perfectly healthy man.

“In truth, he is perhaps healthier than a man of his age has a right to be. At his suggestion, we checked the medical records he had brought aboard and they confirmed that a mining accident had severely and permanently damaged his lungs.”

“And yet now, that damage has disappeared?” Nan was astounded. It would appear that if this was due to the effects of a time bubble, then it had been a benign outcome rather than the ones they’d previously become aware of.

“So it would seem,” T’Kan responded. “Right now I am at a loss to explain it.”

“Doctor T’Kan, I’m not sure how many of your colleagues were involved in the examination of Mr Blakely but I would ask that for the time being his condition be kept on a need to know basis.”

T’Kan’s eyebrow rose at the request. “Is there something that I should be aware of Governor?”

Nan mentally debated how much she should tell the doctor and decided that a minimal truth was necessary.

“The Captain believes that this may well be a side effect of the field that dragged us out of warp, but at the moment it is still being investigated.”

T’Kan nodded as she followed the statement to its conclusion. “And she does not wish to alarm or concern anybody without conclusive evidence?” The decision seemed to appeal to T’Kan’s sense of logic. “A wise action I believe. I will continue the examination of Mr Blakely and forward my results to the bridge; in the meantime I will indeed treat the matter with confidentiality.”

“Thank you doctor that would be greatly appreciated.”

T’Kan inclined her head before returning to her work once more, and Nan hurriedly returned to the bridge. Without further study it seemed the effects of the time bubbles were as unpredictable as their formation and that could only be bad news for the ship as a whole.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – BRIDGE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2109 FST


“So there’s no doubt then?”

“The professional in me says that without further empirical proof, blah blah blah.” Dan shrugged. “The realist says he isn’t going to argue with the proof he’s already got.”

It seemed to Dan that Dubois’ expression became even more pained than it had been for the past few hours.

“Look, Nereth, I don’t want to raise your hopes but its possible I may have at least a partial solution to this but I’ll need to get back to my shuttle and power it up to confirm it. Is that possible?”

Dubois chuckled somewhat humourlessly. “Dan I’d give you the keys to the Olympic if it helped prevent any more injuries.” He noted she avoided saying “deaths” but the implication was clear. She turned to call over her shoulder to the chief engineer. “Mr Callum, what’s the current status of Captain Fishlock’s shuttle please?”

“She’s in standby mode Captain attached to the command tower airlock, but remember she’s not airtight. If you need…” His voice trailed off.

“Mr Callum?”

Dan followed Dubois to the engineering console where Callum was obviously running a sensor scan.

“What is it Duncan and please don’t make it bad news,” Dubois said softly.

“Actually Captain, it may just be good news.” He pointed to the screen in front of him and overlaid on the image of the Leech was a small set of readings that Dan couldn’t quite make out. “We’ve kept the ship that Captain Fishlock was following under regular scans as requested but this is the first time we’ve received any positive life sign readings.”

“What? Where?” Dan could barely keep himself from pushing past the engineer and Captain.

Callum tapped at several pads and brought the schematic up to full screen size.

“We’ve been running a sweep every 15 minutes and this just came up. They’re feint but they’re there, look. This is definite brainwave activity and low level vital signs.” Callum shook his head in confusion. “The only thing I can think is that this field has been messing up the scans and we’ve finally hit a clear patch. Whoever or whatever is over there seems to be in pretty poor shape though.” He looked apologetically at Dan.

“Is there any chance that the transporters can push through this field if there’s been an opening?”

Callum once again operated the console but sat back shaking his head. “She’s steady at 8000 kilometres off the port bow but according to the computations she’d need to be at less than 2000 kilometres to obtain a definite fix. As the field fluctuates it affects the targeting array so we could just as easily kill him as save him.”

Damn! Dan stared at the screen willing an answer to appear.

“How about if I were to board the Berwick and we combine your tractors with my thrusters to get over there? I can make a scan of the database while I’m aboard the shuttle.”

Callum nodded seeing how the plan might proceed. “That way you can use the shuttle transporter and we can reel you back in again. You’ll be at the extreme range of the tractors though Captain; if the field shifts we might lose you.”

Dan turned to Dubois who shrugged to indicate that the choice was his. Right now he felt that he’d come too far to lose the one chance of recovering Gabe that he might have.

“I believe it’s worth the risk.” He turned to the chief engineer. “I’ll head out to the shuttle now. How long would you estimate the journey out to the Leech Mr Callum?”

Callum held out his hands in surrender. “I don’t even want to give you a ball park figure Sir, there are way too many variables; tractor strength, field strength, the effect of the shuttle’s thrusters. Any one of them could change and the estimate goes out the nearest airlock.”

With a grim smile Dan placed a hand on Callum’s shoulder. “Best speed then Mr Callum.”


USS ANGEL – SCIENCE LAB 4
EN ROUTE TO ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2122 FST


T’Sell stood at the back of the science lab watching as the Bynars worked quietly in synchronization. The neural net was arrayed on the lab bench in front of them as they conferred in short bursts of speech, their hands weaving a tapestry of polymers, fibre optics and nanoprocessors.

Again she found herself waging an internal war between her Vulcan and Betazoid persona in the realization that time was slipping quickly away. She breathed deeply and began the Vulcan Wh'ltri that her father had taught her in her childhood, but again it refused to calm the inner turmoil she felt. Her foremost fear was that if they were to arrive at the Olympic incident site before the work was complete then more precious hours could be lost, hours that they simply did not have. While she fervently believed in the Vulcan mantra of the needs of the many outweighing the needs of the few, this time she hoped against hope that the many could wait just a little while longer.

Her thoughts were interrupted as the Bynars suddenly fell silent and turned around like perfectly harmonized marionettes.

“Our work is almost complete but we would wish…”

“…to perform at least one complete simulation…”

“…before attempting the transfer.”

T’Sell could see the sense in that if time allowed, which of course prompted her next question. “How long do you estimate the simulation to take?”

“At the moment we estimate approximately two hours…”

“…though that does not take into account the possibility of remedial work.”

She nodded realising that the estimate would mean that the Angel would already have arrived at the incident site, possibly incurring further delay. It would appear that the scales of time were finely balanced right now and it would take very little to upset that equilibrium.

“Thank you, to both of you. Please continue, I will advise Captain Gray of the progress.”

She almost gave them a grateful smile but reined it in just in time, substituting it with a nod of gratitude before leaving for the bridge.
 
Commentary on Chapter 20

Things are getting progressively worse for the stranded refugee ships caught in the chrono-whatchamacallit phenomenon as the bubbles begin to penetrate the ships themselves. Dan’s stuck aboard without access to his usual battery of formidable Starfleet resources, which isn’t helping the situation… the same situation Angel is flying into blind.

And now the race against time to complete and transfer Chariscarpia’s consciousness into her new android body accelerates. Here’s hoping everything goes according to plan…
 
Commentary on Chapter 21

Nan & Dan’s investigation into the temporal anomalies continues and begins to shed even greater light on their dangerous circumstances. Heaven forbid these things begin popping up inside the ships with greater frequency. Without a way to stop them, the panicked refugees would be at the mercy of this potentially horrific phenomenon.

The segment with Homer and Anthony was touching in the simplicity of the emotions on display here. Homer's realization regarding the fragility of life has come only after he finds himself having feelings for his fellow pilot, a woman who tragically no longer remembers anything about him.

And just when you thought things couldn’t get any worse, the destruction of the prison dimension has unleashed… well, something doubtlessly awful. And now Dan’s going to pop over and try and beam whatever it is aboard his shuttle.

Yeah. :wtf: That’s going to turn out just peachy.

Continued drama and excellent character interactions here. The sound of the other shoe dropping is going to sound like a
 
Chapter 22

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 22



SHUTTLE BERWICK
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2138 FST

Dan had suited up for the transfer to the Berwick because although the seal had been repaired, the engineering team had admitted that the work had been somewhat improvised. The seal around the port was now fine, but a closer inspection had shown that the frame was infinitesimally buckled. Dan knew they had done their best but right now was happy to take whatever precautions he thought necessary.

He’d laid his helmet on the co-pilots seat, and prepared the second suit he’d brought for Gabe. He had forlornly eyed the set of stasis cuffs lying beside the suit hoping against hope that they wouldn’t be needed. The minimal life signs indicated that Gabe wasn’t likely to be in a resistant state but remembering the stories of enhanced strength that were attributed to those under mind control, he wasn’t about to make any assumptions. To that end, the phaser he carried was set to the highest stun level.

With the Berwick now powered up and the computer, (at least for the time being), behaving, he opened a channel to the Olympic.

Olympic, this is the Berwick standing by for your signal.”

Having gently manoeuvred the shuttle round to the port bow of the liner, he was waiting now for the combined docking and mooring tractors to gently take the shuttle in their grasp. Combining with the Berwick’s own thrusters, and under control of the Olympic’s computer, the journey to and from the Leech should be safer and faster.

“Berwick, this is Olympic tractor control, engaging beams now.”

Dan felt the slight shift in the shuttle as the tractors engaged one by one.

“Beams engaged Captain, half ahead thrusters.”

“Thrusters half ahead, engaged.”

The tractor beams swung him clear of the bow and would now provide directional control all the way out to the Leech. He would only increase power if the tractors became weakened by distance or by fluctuations in the field.

Olympic, Berwick shows green across the board.”

“Acknowledged Berwick, Olympic reports in the green also.”

Dan tapped into the LCARS system and brought up the Starfleet database on known contacts with temporal anomalies. He knew that in there was a report he half remembered concerning a science vessel’s experiences with a fluctuating chroniton field though he couldn’t recall mention of the ‘time bubble’ phenomena that was now threatening the vessels.

Olympic, I’m now searching the database for information and will contact you shortly. Thanks for the ride guys, Berwick standing by.”

With an occasional bump as the tractors jostled for grip in the ever shifting field, Dan typed in the small amount of data he recalled and began a search through the onboard computer’s database. His concern was that the search would give an incomplete result without access to the larger core of a starship. If that were the case then they would need to improvise, and quickly.

His fears were fortunately unfounded as, with a small chirp, the computer announced that it had found a match to his query. He smiled as he realized that his memory had supplied the right information and quickly hailed the Olympic.

Olympic, I have that data for you if you’re ready to copy?”

“Go ahead Berwick.”

He transmitted the small data package which detailed how Captain Helgarth of the USS Song had run afoul of a temporal anomaly in2363. Although the effects recorded in her log didn’t match perfectly with those now affecting the trapped ships, it did contain the data on how she had managed to sweep the vessel clean of chroniton particles. As these were an integral part of the time bubbles outer shells, they should at least be able to quickly disperse the bubbles if not prevent them forming entirely.

Olympic, you should have that data now. In a nutshell, you’ll need to initiate the shield grid and reconfigure it to emit a deflector pulse using the auxiliary deflector array. Once you’ve worked out the chroniton field density and frequency equation it’s a case of reconfiguring the deflector dish to emit an anti-chroniton pulse internally, which should purge the bubbles inside the ship.”

“And here was me expecting something difficult,” replied Callum somewhat wryly. “We’ll get on it right away Captain and let you know the results. How’s the journey so far?”

“Let’s just say I’ve had worse shuttle rides.” He checked the view through the forward port. “I’m not picking anything up on sensors but it looks like there are some kind of eddies forming out here. I’m not sure if the anomaly is picking up debris but there’s a definite visual element to it.”

“We’ll check that too Captain. Any problems let us know and it might be an idea to run the solution you sent us through the Berwick as well.”

Dan smiled, the thought already having occurred to him. “I’ll do that Olympic, Berwick standing by.”

In truth although Dan had considered the possibility of a bubble forming within the shuttle he wasn’t deeply concerned. With the tractors and thrusters now working in synchronization, his relative speed had increased to around 2000 metres per second. It seemed likely that any bubble that did begin to form would have passed out of the shuttle long before it had the chance to cause any harm and the deflectors would handle the outside of the ship.

Whatever the case though, it seemed prudent to at least prepare the system. So far his mission had been far too full of the unexpected to risk doing otherwise and so he set the computer to work on calculating the field equation hoping that this time it wouldn’t have a nervous breakdown.


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – ARBORETUM
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2155 FST

Petrie had at last grudgingly admitted to himself that he was outmatched by Bacco in both position and attitude. The admission had not been easy and his professional pride and ego were wounded leaving him an even more unpleasant person to be around.

What made it worse, in his opinion, was having to work underneath the woman who had formerly been his assistant. Oh, she hadn’t gloated, at least not to his face but every time he met a member of the team he felt a look of pity was being bestowed upon him.

One thing was for sure, as soon as they made their first port of call he was going to address the matter directly with the Federation Immigration Council and get off this godforsaken ship. He might have to suffer his work right now, but he saw no reason to prolong the misery.

The most recent task he’d been delegated by Derring was to organise the refugees and request that they assemble in the main arboretum area at 22.00. He hadn’t bothered to listen why, simply nodded and set about reluctantly following orders. As he now strolled along the terrace that ringed the arboretum on this deck and the next two up, he was barely paying attention to his surroundings. Without warning, a small child clutching an overly large stuffed toy burst out of a berth on his right.

Staggering sideways, he caught the handrail that ran the length of the terrace. The force of the impact had not threatened to topple him over but his already sour mood was only made worse.

“What are you doing child?” he bellowed. “You should be with your parents in the arboretum!”

“Governor Bacco said if I was quick I could fetch Muffit.”
The child was close to tears and held the stuffed toy up as if it was all the reason in the world for her actions but Petrie was not impressed in the slightest. The fact that it had been that Bacco woman who seemed to have precipitated this was the final straw. He grabbed the young girl by the arm, eliciting a wail, and unceremoniously dragged her behind him.

“We’ll see what your parents have to say about this young lady.”

In the piazza below, Nan heard the wail and eventually spotted its source as Petrie appeared dragging the distraught Rihanna Tamar behind him. The look on his face prepared Nan for another outburst from the man. As far as she was concerned however, it would be his last as part of the team.

Rihanna tried to pull away from Petrie towards Nan, but he refused to let go of her tiny hand. Not, at least until he’d had an explanation. He opened his mouth, about to unleash a tirade aimed at Nan but was interrupted by the sound of sizzling at his feet. Looking down in puzzlement he noticed a patch of deck begin to change colour in a perfect circle around his feet. Nan noticed it at exactly the same moment and leapt forward to grasp Rihanna’s free hand as the decking gave way beneath him.

Far from releasing his grip on the child, he tightened it in a panicked attempt to prevent falling and Rihanna was dragged closer to the invisible boundary of the bubble that had formed. The deck plate had been the first victim of the rapid aging and dissolution of its fabric, but now Petrie had become its next.

Nan stared in horror as the hand gripping the edge of the circular hole began to wrinkle and thin. The effect spread to his face and his whole frame seemed to shrink with the exception of the arm that still clutched the young girl in a death grip. Her frantic struggling and Nan’s added leverage had so far kept it clear of the effects of the bubble, but the withered point at which it attached to his body simply could not take the strain.

As his face rapidly aged into a grotesque skull, the arm detached altogether causing Nan and Rihanna to fall backwards away from the bubble and the remains of Petrie. In a final hiss that sounded like a death rattle, Petrie’s rapidly dissolving remains finally fell through the hole with not enough of them left to hit the deck below.

The silence that had come over the crowd was pierced by Rihanna’s scream as she realised that the hand that still gripped her wrist was Petrie’s, locked tight like a bizarre Halloween prosthetic. Nan quickly covered the child’s eyes and hugged her close as she indicated to one of the men to remove the thing. When at last it was finally prised free, Rihanna screamed again and Nan could see the discoloured skin where Petrie’s grip had bruised her.

Medics had quickly pushed through the crowd to reach Nan’s position and she gently laid the girl on the gurney, but Rihanna wouldn’t let her go.

“Don’t leave me! Please, don’t leave me!” Her sobs were heart breaking and Nan quickly made sure that Rihanna’s mother was there.

“I won’t leave you little one,” she said, knowing that she must. The medic applied a hypo-sedative to the child’s neck and Rihanna’s grip relaxed, her eyes fluttering closed. As Nan bent to pick up the cuddly toy that had been dropped in the struggle, her attention was drawn to the sight of the perfect circle in the deck.

She had despised Petrie for his attitude and she certainly hadn’t liked him as a staff member, but she would not wish a death like that on anybody. A cold shiver ran up her spine as she realised just how close she too had come to being pulled into its maw.

As a chime rang out from the public address system to signal the start of the anti-chroniton sweep she prayed that Petrie’s death would be the last.
 
Chapter 22 (cont)

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 22 (Cont)



USS ANGEL – BRIDGE

ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2223 FST

The star streaks passing by the huge starship shrank to become distinct points of light as the mighty vessel dropped out of warp.

Tara Courtney, the young Lieutenant (J.G.) at the conn, looked over her shoulder at Kat in the centre seat. While it was technically the beta shift under Sendok, he had relinquished command once more to Kat.

“Out of warp captain, full stop and station keeping thrusters active.”

“Thank you Mr Courtney. Tactical, anything?”

Janowski tapped his console for a few moments then shook his head.

“No apparent threats Captain. We have the marker buoy at 50,000 kilometres but no debris, no sign of weapons discharge or explosions. The area appears clean.”

“Captain,” called T’Sell from Science 1. “Sensors are detecting an unspecified anomaly bearing 005 mark 03 range…” As she paused, Kat turned to look over her right shoulder where T’Sell worked at the console and saw that her face was a mask of concentration.

“Range uncertain Captain.”

“In what way uncertain Commander?”

Tapping more commands into the console, T’Sell eventually stood up straight.

“There is a dense field of interference between ourselves and the anomaly which is currently fluctuating and apparently in motion. Sensors indicate chroniton particles in dense packets as well as shifting graviton fields and various trace radiation elements. The net effect is that sensors cannot effectively penetrate deep inside the field.”

She tapped a command that brought up a schematic of local space on the main screen.

“What we can so far detect however is the edge of the field, or at least the perimeter of its effect. Also there are definite sensor returns on two large vessels with a possible third further away.”

Kat studied the schematic for a moment before standing and turning to face Sendok.

“Commander, take us in to within 10,000 kilometres of the field. Continue sensor sweeps but keep us clear. T’Sell, prepare a preliminary analysis of sensor records and dispatch them to Starfleet Command with a recommendation that the corridor be closed to traffic until further notice. Tactical set up a repeating hail to the three ships we’re looking for and as and when we receive a reply, contact me immediately. Ops get Commander O’Hara to begin deploying the warning buoy grid.”

Mentally reviewing her actions, she felt she’d got everything and finished with “Mr Sendok you have the bridge.”

Sendok nodded, replying with the customary “I have the bridge Captain,” before stepping down into the command well.

Quietly Kat whispered “Did I miss anything?”

With an almost smile, he raised an eyebrow and replied quietly “Not a thing Captain.”

“Thanks Sendok. I’ll be in my ready room if required.”

As she left the bridge, Kat felt for the very first time that the mythical aura that was Command had finally found her but knew that she wasn’t about to start counting her chickens just yet. Hubris wasn’t her style.


USS ANGEL – FLIGHT DECK
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2227 FST

“Alright, let’s keep it fast and simple.” Eyrie was stood atop a supply crate as she spoke to the five runabout pilots. “Allocations are as follows; Jeffries you’re in Koch, Than in Fleming, Richmond you have Blackwell, Hiroshi in Galen and Parker in Nightingale. You’ll each have a systems operator to handle the warning buoy dispatch.”

Bringing up a display screen that showed local space, the anomaly was presented as a sphere with it’s epicentre at the best guess location according to the latest sensor information.

“Now we don’t know the precise boundaries of this thing which is why each runabout is fitted with the sensor pod. It’s your task to map, monitor and mark it. First run will be the buoy drop followed by a second run to check for any fluctuation in the field’s diameter.”

Tapping the console, three rings appeared overlaying the sphere; one equatorial, the other two meridians set at 90 degrees to each other.

Koch and Fleming will mark the polar tracks, Blackwell the equatorial and Galen and Nightingale will fill in where we find extrusions or any other navigation hazard that extends beyond those boundaries. Any questions ladies and gentlemen?”

Eyrie was gratified to see that there were none. “Light the fires then, let’s get this beastie marked up.”

Each pilot headed for their individual craft and Eyrie turned to the two chiefs who had been listening in to the brief from the sidelines.

“Spider, Dingbat, the Captain wants you to warm up the Rube. It seems our Bynar friends are currently tied up with another task and for some reason you’re suddenly our experts.” The last was spoken with a mischievous grin. Eyrie had a great deal of respect for the two non-comms both in their engineering role and as pilots and was more than grateful that the Angel had secured their services.

“Any idea exactly what we’re facing out there?” Spider had read the brief of course but it had been full of generics until more comprehensive readings could be taken.

Eyrie sighed and shrugged as she stepped down from the crate. “To be honest no,” she replied. “Everything we know so far has been extrapolated from hunches about guesses Spider.” Hooking a thumb over her shoulder to encompass the anomaly outside she said “We know that the Olympic was dragged out of warp according to the marker buoy, but we’re only guessing that it was the anomaly that caused it. We know there are definitely two, and probably three, ships in there but we don’t know why they’re not moving even though they seem to have power. See what I mean?”

“SNAFU,” grunted Dingbat. “Situation Normal, All F…”

“…Fouled Up,” finished Spider quickly before Dingbat managed to embarrass himself with the expletive.

Hiding her amusement, Eyrie pointed at the Rube. “I’m guessing that the Captain will want to send the Rube in after we’ve completed the warning buoy mission rather than a crewed ship. Last thing we need is for more people to get stuck in that thing.”

She turned to head back up to the Flight Deck Ops Office and stopped, masking her grin before she turned back to face them.

“By the way,” she said pointing at the Rube, “If we’re going to be keeping that thing for a while can you see about tidying it up. It’s really starting to offend my sensibilities as a pilot.”

Without waiting for a reply and barely controlling a laugh that was ready to burst out, she left the two chiefs on the hangar deck looking slightly bemused.


SHUTTLE BERWICK
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2241 FST

Dan was a mere 500 metres short of the Leech when Olympic’s tractors began to show signs of weakening but they held for the final segment of the journey. Shutting down the aft thrusters, he began braking with the fore as the tractor beams switched gently from push to pull. He was gratified when the Berwick halted approximately 100 metres away and slightly above the Leech.

Berwick to Olympic, nice work Mr Callum. I’m here in one piece.”

The reply he received was scratchy and broken showing that the field was affecting communications as well as the tractors.

“Ber…your trans…arely readable. Unders…have reach…”

Boosting the power to the subspace channel, he replied hoping that he wouldn’t sound quite as broken as Callum.

“Affirmative Olympic. I am now transporting to the Leech. Maintain tractor lock and I will contact you on my return, confirm?”

His only reply was a short burst of garbled static and the comm fell silent. Not the most auspicious of starts thought Dan. Still there was little he could do about it now and so retrieving the spare EVA suit and cuffs he addressed the computer.

“Computer confirm estimate for completion of anti-chroniton pulse calculations.”

“Estimating completion in 8.35 minutes.”

Dan had been unable to start the calculations earlier due to the shuttle’s movement through space. It naturally had to calculate the equation with information garnered from a fixed point.

“On completion of calculations, initiate anti-chroniton sweep every five seconds.”

“Acknowledged.”

Stepping back to the emergency transporter, he programmed the targeting array himself and set in a ten second delay before stepping on to the small platform. The transporter sparkle began just as Dan wondered precisely what he would find aboard the Leech.


RUNABOUT USS BLACKWELL
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2241 FST

“Buoy five dispatched Lieutenant. The field’s circumference appears to be remaining constant.”

Homer watched as Anya Vischenko updated the grid and then programmed the sensor sweep. For each buoy they dropped, a sweep was run to monitor the field, search for vessels and send out an automatic hail. Unlike the previous sweeps, this time they got a return.

“I am registering Sheldon class cargo vessel, no response to hail. It matches profile of SS Hercules Lieutenant.”

“Nice one Anya, pipe it back to Angel and we’ll set up the next buoy.”

The work was tedious and needed to be completed as quickly as possible, but Homer wasn’t about to rush on and miss what they were searching for. The buoys were the primary task at the moment, Starfleet having responded and closed the shipping lane that almost bisected the anomaly to any other traffic. Unfortunately, there would be vessels that may miss the all points warning broadcast and still stray into the anomaly’s field simply because they weren’t transiting down the main corridor.

At the same time that the buoy grid was being put into place, Angel was collating the information and formulating a plan to rescue the vessels so every scrap of information they could collect was crucial to the rescue effort.

“Lieutenant, I believe that the field is moving.”

“Moving?”

Anya nodded and pointed at the screen. “There is element of rotation and possibly contraction as well. See here?”

Checking the screen, Homer could see that it wasn’t a vast difference but Anya was right; the field had indeed shrunk fractionally.

“Is the movement affecting the vessels?”

She worked silently at the console for a moment before shaking her head. “Is difficult to tell Lieutenant, the field distorts readings the deeper in we try to probe.”

Homer shrugged realising that until the complete grid was in place they could do little more other than report the information back to C3 aboard the Angel.

“Ok Anya report that as well and we’ll move on to the next drop point.”

Homer was silently worried that the newly discovered rotation and contraction of the field was going to make their rescue work that much more hazardous. He silently reminded himself that a great starship captain had once said “Risk is our business” and it had become almost as much a motto for Starfleet as its authorised one. Given the circumstances, Homer was pretty certain it would make an excellent crew shirt motif for the Angel too. In fact, that seemmed like a good idea to run past Monty in stores.

If I ever get the time he thought dryly, and continued to the next drop point.
 
Chapter 23

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 23


SS LEECH
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2245 FST

As the transporter beam released him, Dan’s vision cleared to reveal the dimly lit command deck of the Leech. Surprisingly, apart from the low power output, there appeared to be little in the way of damage to this section of the ship. Dan thought it grimly ironic that an aged and battered cargo vessel could have its back broken in a collision and retain atmosphere, while a first line Starfleet shuttle gets a tiny knock and starts leaking atmosphere like a sieve.

Sweeping the command deck with his tricorder, Dan immediately spotted the life sign readings hidden behind a support stanchion and quietly drew his phaser. He checked to confirm that it was still set to high stun and quietly moved forward. He eventually stopped some three metres away from the hidden form and called out.

“This is Captain Dan Fishlock. If you can hear me, come forward and keep your hands in sight.”

He crouched to make himself a smaller target should the life form make a sudden attack, but there was no movement whatsoever and no change in the readings. He desperately wanted to believe that this was Gabe and he was still alive but was fully prepared for the life form to be anything other than his friend.

Tightening his grip on the phaser, he edged quietly forward, at the last moment throwing himself flat on the floor and bringing the phaser to bear on…Gabe!

The face was deathly pale and gaunt enough to indicate death, and yet the tricorder said the opposite was true. There was brain activity, pulse, and breathing but all were at such depressed levels that Dan believed his friend would not survive much longer. He placed the phaser down within easy reach and opened the shuttle’s medkit to take out the medical tricorder and began an immediate scan.

Within moments it beeped displaying several flashing warning tags and recommended immediate responses. The general diagnosis was trauma induced coma with the main site of injury being the cervical vertebrae which appeared to have struck the corner of the stanchion. Carefully, Dan removed the detachable sensor from the tricorder and played it around the back of Gabe’s neck. The image that appeared on the screen left Dan momentarily shocked.

Although partially obscured by swelling of the tissue, it clearly showed some form of parasite attached to Gabe’s spinal column but no indication of life in it. As he rotated the scan it became abundantly clear why.

Whatever had caused Gabe’s fall, when he struck the back of his neck against the support the parasite had absorbed most of the blow at the expense of its own life. Its carapace had shattered and what appeared to be the head was completely detached. Several of the carapace shards had passed close to Gabe’s spinal column but none had penetrated.

Quickly storing the information, he paged back to the previous screen and began preparing hypos as detailed by the tricorder. In all there were four designed to re-oxygenate the blood supply, raise cardio-vascular activity, stimulate the body’s innate healing process and finally a low level stimulant that may or may not release him from the coma.

In the first three cases, results were almost instantaneous with Gabe’s pulse strengthening and his breathing becoming less erratic as Dan watched. But there was no response to the stimulant according to the tricorder.

Right then and there, Dan didn’t care. His friend who he had subconsciously already begun to mourn was alive! Getting him back to the expert care of the medics on the Olympic was now his priority. He quickly tapped his commbadge.
“Computer standby for transport.”

When there was no reply Dan tried again, but once more there was only silence. Striding quickly to the command deck port, he gazed out at the shuttle but could see no immediate reason for the lack of response. The running lights were lit, the nacelles and bussards glowed healthily and he could see a warm glow emanating from the cockpit.

“Computer respond.”

When his final attempt to communicate was unsuccessful, Dan knew he would now need to act quickly and get Gabe into the EVA suit because it seemed that the only way they were going to get back to the shuttle was the hard way.


USS ANGEL – SCIENCE LAB 4
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2253 FST

1100 and 1101 had run every analysis and simulation available to ascertain that the work they had completed was satisfactory. When the last test was completed they fell silent and shared a small look of approval. The adjustments that they had made had not been extensive, but there was no doubt that they could prove to be crucial.

The neural net responded as stable and – more importantly – safe to receive Chariscarpia’s essence. They were all too aware that “safe” was a subjective term of course. The net, with its alterations and additions, was now of a type that had never been in existence before and only performing the transfer would confirm the truth of whether it could save Chariscarpia’s life. The alternative was that she would remain in Hildr’s core which of course was no alternative at all.

Chariscarpia had followed their work from her location in the hangar, marvelling at the fluid and precise way these two small beings interacted.

She knew that even should the operation eventually prove fruitless, it would not be for the lack of effort of everybody who had taken part.

After first being introduced to this assembly of races known as the Federation, she had studied their ethical mandates set forth in the charters and creeds laid down by the ruling bodies. No community as large as the Federation could ever be perfect, certainly not in her own sojourning experience, but the Federation was nothing if not persistent in working towards that goal. Every being she had interacted with had shown her nothing but kindness and honesty whilst asking nothing in return but the same.

If the procedure was successful, she knew that to be allowed to stay among these people and become a part of that great society would be an honour.

“Chariscarpia, we believe…”

“…we are ready to attempt the transfer.”

“Then we should contact Commander T’Sell.” She paused momentarily. “I wish to offer my thanks to you both for your work yet it seems like so little to offer considering the reward I receive in return.”

The Bynars seemed slightly embarrassed by the thanks bestowed upon them.

“It is what we do Chariscarpia…”

“…but we are grateful to have done so in such a good cause.”

1100 opened a channel to the bridge and when he was connected to T’Sell’s station said quite simply “Commander, it is time.”


IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – CAPTAIN’S ROOM
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2255 FST

“I assume this isn’t a social call Duncan?”

Dubois smiled tiredly at her chief engineer realising that he had been on duty longer than she had. The Captain’s Room that he’d entered was actually a misnomer as it wasn’t a room at all, merely an annexe to the bridge without a door.

Unlike Starfleet vessels, a cruiser captain could expect to spend as much time circulating and mingling with their passengers as they did on the bridge so a ready room had often been deemed unnecessary.

“Not exactly but I did bring an extra strong Java if that helps?”

Placing the mug before Dubois, her smile broadened. “I can only imagine this bribe means there’s bad news as well as good?”

In a strange quirk of fate, the relationship between Dubois and Callum was a mirror image of Dan and Kat’s. They had worked together for much of their careers in posts around the quadrant; Dubois had risen rapidly up the chain of commissioned rank while Callum had stayed true to his dream of becoming a chief engineer. Their relationship was professional but comfortable allowing for quiet moments like this. Callum took the proffered seat opposite Dubois and rubbed at his gritty eyes.

“Don’t you ever get tired of being right?”

“Captain’s prerogative. Now what do I need to worry about next?”

Passing her the pre-prepared PADD, he replied “It’s all in there but in a nutshell, things are happening.” He ticked the points off on his fingers. “One, the anti-chroniton sweeps that we’ve instigated have worked, at least so far. No more incidents since that nasty in the arboretum.”

Taking a swig of the java, Dubois blew out a sigh of relief.

“As good news goes, that comes close to ‘we’re moving and we’ll be free in five minutes’. I’m guessing that’s not on the list though?”

“Good guess but not quite right.”

That made Dubois sit up quickly. “Meaning?”

“Meaning two, we are moving but not out of this mess. The field’s in motion, both rotating and contracting and we’re moving with it. Nothing major yet but the trend is towards acceleration.”

“Merde!” Profanity was a bonus of her close relationship with Callum and this one was heartfelt. “Is this affecting the Majestic and the Hercules as well?”

Callum nodded. “The shift has broken our tractor lock on Captain Fishlock’s shuttle as well. Comms are out to him but for now I’m hoping he’s not facing any problems.”

“Anything else before I fire you?”

“You can’t fire me, I resign, and yes there is something else but it’s only a possible.”

Dubois sat forward, the eagerness in Callum’s reply causing a small spark of hope.

“Astrometrics believe they detected a Cherenkov event astern. It was distorted and feint and may have another explanation, but a ship exiting warp seems favourite at the moment.”

Dubois was almost afraid to entertain the hope of rescue, but they certainly had to act on it.

“Tell me what you’ve already done so I don’t order it twice.” She knew very well that Callum had probably covered all bases or she really would fire him but had to ask anyway.

“Sensors and comms both boosted to the event co-ordinates, continuous tight beam automatic hail along with a data packet detailing conditions here and a kind request for rescue. That enough?”

“More than enough Duncan, thank you.” She stood and buttoned her tunic. “Keep this close hold until we have confirmation, I don’t want to start raising hopes prematurely.”

Callum nodded and likewise stood. “Anything else?”

“Keep me updated on the ship movement. Any acceleration towards the anomaly and I need to know yesterday. Same for the data packets please Duncan, constant updates. If there really is a ship out there, I want them to have all the information they can get.”

“On it Captain.” He paused before leaving the alcove. “Listen, from one friend to another, you’ve done real well here Nereth. Just keep doing what you’re doing. The people down there have trust in you and Governor Bacco, so you just need to believe in yourself as much as they do.”

With a wink he departed and Dubois felt the affect of the friendly words reach her tired soul.
 
Chapter 23 (cont)

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 23 (cont)


DEEP SPACE

Indeed the anomaly is in motion. The closest analogy is possibly water draining from a bath tub. Energy and matter forced into our continuity by the anomaly is now looking for equilibrium and the only way it can do so is to attempt to drain back to its origins.

The field is now contracting and rotating in very much the same manner as our water analogy with the anomaly acting as the plughole. Also in accordance with our analogy, the process is likely to accelerate.


USS ANGEL – SCIENCE LAB 4
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2311 FST

T’Sell had returned to the science lab to find that Ensign Dixon was already there. Despite being officially off duty, she had been the one person other than herself and the Bynars closest to the operation.

On the biobed to the side of the lab lay Chariscarpia’s new body, ready to accept its new occupier. T’Sell quashed a small feeling of oddness at the thought and was reminded of Dixon’s comment about Frankenstein. At least it’s much better looking than Frankenstein’s creation she thought.

Like the constantly evolving design of Data's own body it included the ability to grow hair and a pseudo-cardiovascular system which produced a pulse and breathing. Rather than pumping blood of course, it distributed biochemical lubricants and regulated micro hydraulic power and temperatures throughout the body. And it looked so human.

“Commander, Chariscarpia is ready…”

“…as are we.”

T’Sell lifted her eyes unconsciously to the ceiling.

“Chariscarpia?”

“I am here Commander.” The voice was calm and almost serene.

“I need to know that you really want to proceed with this. Despite all our work, there all still inherent risks.”

There was a momentary pause where T’Sell believed that Chariscarpia might really be having second thoughts.

“Commander, 1100, 1101, Ensign; I have lived a long and fulfilling life. I have seen and experienced things beyond my wildest imaginings and travelled further than my people could have believed possible. The events that have led to this moment were precipitated by evil, but resolved by compassion and friendship.”

T’Sell looked once more towards the body on the biobed feeling slightly inadequate in the flow of speech that washed over her.

“While my dissolution is not something I relish, should it happen now then I know that not only has my existence not been in vain but that I have found a place to rest that would have met with my people’s approval.”

T’Sell saw Vonny turn away, a hand over her eyes. The Commander felt that she could offer little in the way of a reply that approached the eloquence of Chariscarpia’s speech. Instead she raised her hand in the split finger Vulcan salute.

“Live long and prosper Chariscarpia.”

She nodded to the two diminutive Bynars who approached the console before them and said simply “The operation will now commence.”


USS ANGEL – BRIDGE
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2318 FST

Sendok pursed his lips and stared at the main screen. Their crablike movement to stay astern of the vessel that had now been positively identified as the Olympic was not visible to the naked eye, but as he watched Ensign Mahoney and Lieutenant Courtney perform their co-ordinated tasks, he knew that the movement was accelerating.

“Commander, I have an incoming hail!” Janowski worked furiously at his board to refine the signal. “Audio only and very weak but they’re identifying themselves as the ISCS Olympic!”

Sendok spun in his seat in a most un-Vulcan way.

“On speakers and hail the Captain.”

The voice that emerged overhead was scratchy and distant but the bridge crew clung on to every word.

“Mayday, Mayday, Mayday. This is Chief Engineer Duncan Callum of the ISCS Olympic broadcasting blind. We are currently trapped in a spatial anomaly with no definitive way to plot our exact position but last readings before becoming trapped are included in the attached data packet.”

Kat appeared on the bridge at a run and heard the voice from the Olympic continue.

“So far we have had light casualties and life support is being maintained. There are four other known vessels and one unknown also within this region, again identified in the data packet.”

Kat and Sendok both looked to Janowski who nodded to confirm he had received the data.

“This broadcast is set to automatically repeat at thirty second intervals.”

“I have the bridge Mr Sendok.”

“You have the bridge Captain.”

Sendok retreated to stand behind the command seat monitoring the operations of the bridge.

“Tactical, pipe the packet to sciences and here please, respond to the hail and advise them that we are currently studying options for recovery.”

“Aye Captain.”

With a small beep, the data packet decrypted and displayed on the screen set into Kat’s armrest. She began to scroll through it, noting the properties of the field, the time-bubbles, the recently noted eddies and various readings taken within the last thirty seconds before the packet was dispatched.

Further down were listed the vessels known to be in the anomaly’s field. The ISCS Olympic of course under Captain Nereth Dubois, the ISCS Majestic commanded by Captain Marcus Cartwright, the SS Hercules under Captain Challe Taron and the Starfleet Shuttle Berwick under Captain Dan Fishlock. She also saw the name of the unknown…and her mind froze.

Again and again, her eyes scanned the line and refused to process it yet there it was; the Starfleet Shuttle Berwick under Captain Dan Fishlock. It has to be a different Dan Fishlock her mind incorrectly rationalised.

“Captain, the Olympic is responding.”

When Kat didn’t reply Janowski looked to Sendok who discretely placed a hand on her shoulder. “Captain?”

Kat merely looked at him then pointed to the screen, her eyes filled with hope. It was only as Sendok read through the list that comprehension dawned. He too initially considered that this could be a different Dan Fishlock but realised that the name itself was unusual enough to preclude that.

“Captain, take the hail from the Olympic and I’ll confirm the ID on the shuttle,” he said quietly.

As he stepped away to a free auxiliary console, Kat roused herself from the shock of seeing Dan’s name and tried to return to the Starfleet professional demeanour expected of her.

Olympic, this is Captain Kat Gray of the USS Angel; it’s good to hear from you.”

A firm yet feminine voice responded through the static.

“Trust me Captain, not half as good as it is to hear from you!” The smile in the voice was evident and contagious. “Do you have our location?”

“We do. We’re currently off your stern, range now 10,000 kilometres.” Kat’s heart leapt as Sendok turned from the auxiliary station with a nod. “Olympic, we’re currently studying the situation and working on a solution to extract the vessels; do you have any critical injuries aboard?”

Dubois confirmed that at the moment all the injuries being treated were minor, and then went on to update Kat on the current situation in the anomaly.

“Our Astrometrics department advises me that there has been an exponential increase in the anomaly’s draw towards its centre Captain, although from within this field many of our readings are still distorted by the effects.”

Kat studied the display and determined that the Hercules was currently the vessel deepest into the anomaly and therefore likely in most danger, the Olympic further out and the Majestic slightly closer to the exterior again. She relayed this to the Olympic and stated that as of this time, that would be the preferred order of extraction unless they had other priorities.

“That sounds fine Captain. I’ve asked all vessels in the group to apply full forward thrusters at this time. The rotation doesn’t seem to be an issue as long as you can track us but I’d prefer that none of the ships sink deeper.”

Kat heard a voice in the background before Dubois continued.

“My chief engineer just pointed out that we have a Starfleet shuttle in here as well, last known position was 8000 kilometres off our port bow attending a second smaller vessel. Do you have any contact with it?”

“Stand by please Captain.” Kat turned to Janowski at tactical but he silently shook his head. “Not at this time Captain but we’ll check on that as well. If you can give me a short while, I’ll confer with my heads of departments now that we have the data packet and see about getting you off the fairground ride.”

“Thank you Captain Gray, we’re looking forward to it, Olympic standing by.”

As the channel closed Kat was immediately out of her seat, a new energy in her voice as she relayed instructions to the bridge crew.

“Mr Sendok, all department heads to the briefing room immediately please, including yourself.” He nodded as he turned back to the auxiliary console to issue the call. “Conn take us in to 5000 kilometres of the field’s perimeter and hold station aft of the Hercules. Tactical scan for that shuttle. Ops where’s the nearest runabout in relation to the last known position of the shuttle?”

Gav bal Chag scrolled through the available runabouts and tagged the Blackwell. “Lieutenant Richmond in the Blackwell Captain. They’re just finishing the buoy drop.”

Kat nodded and studied the schematic. “Get the Galen to complete Blackwell’s drop and asked Lieutenant Richmond to start a deep scan of the location. Any updates to me immediately in the briefing room.”

With a slight inclination of his head, Sendok confirmed that the department heads had been advised of the meeting.

“Mr Sendok with me, Mr Janowski you have the bridge.”

As Janowski moved across to the centre seat, Sendok was quietly pleased to note that this time Kat hadn’t sought his council. It would appear the trainer wheels are finally off he thought, though he made sure that the smile didn’t make it as far as his face.
 
Commentary on Chapter 22

Dan threads the proverbial needle to reach the Leech (hey, that rhymes!) as things get progressively worse aboard the Olympic. I was no big fan of Petrie myself, but damn :eek: … what a way to go… shuffling off his mortal coil like something out of Indian Jones and The Last Crusade.

Angel arrives on scene to give us our first outsiders perspective on the anomaly, and quickly sets about mapping its boundaries. It’s terrific to see Kat easing into the captain’s position, and the crew responding in their usual seamless professionalism despite the unfamiliar nature of the phenomena.
 
Commentary on Chapter 23

I had given up hope that Gabe had survived his ordeal at the hands (er… pincers?) of the parasite inhabiting him. He might still not make it through, but for now at the very least there remains some hope.

The moment of truth has arrived for Chariscarpia and the team that’s endeavoring to save her. A great deal of hard work has gone into her prospective android body. Here’s hoping it comes to a flawless fruition. Her speech describing her outlook on the possibility of the project failing was touching and heart-felt.

The anomaly now appears to contracting, making the situation even more dicey right on the cusp of potential rescue by the Angel and follow-on vessels.

You’ve done a wonderful job in maintaining the suspense and danger of the situation, with each step towards successful rescue followed by two steps back as the scenario becomes ever more precarious. Nicely done!
 
Chapter 24

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 24


RUNABOUT USS BLACKWELL
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2320 FST

Galen, confirm you have enough buoys to finish this run?”

Homer was pleased to hear the calm and professional tone in Misaki’s voice when she responded affirmatively.

“Ok you have the run Galen, Blackwell remaining on station for the sensor scan.”

“Acknowledged, Galen out.”

Homer brought the Blackwell to a halt abeam the position that the shuttle Berwick had last been reported and placed it into station keeping mode. Allowing for the rotation of the field and its possible movement of the shuttle, the runabout would now remain in constant proximity to the location until Homer commanded otherwise.

“Alright Anya, let’s see if we can spot this sucker.”

For the next several minutes they followed the pre-programmed sensor scan of the last known position for the shuttle but received no returns. Looking through the forward viewport, the eddies within the anomaly field were definitely beginning to become more distinct to Homer’s eyes. Whoever was stuck in there he hoped they could hold out just a little longer.

“Nothing Lieutenant. Some debris, but no shuttle.”

Homer studied the readouts, confused and partial as they were, then looked back out at the field ahead of the runabout.

“Looks to me as if the rotation of this thing is stronger than the pull right now, whaddya think?”

Anya nodded and pointed out to port.

“Given last reported position and rate of rotation, the shuttle should not have moved too far I think.”

“Alright, programme the box and we’ll run some numbers.”

“Aye Lieutenant.”

As Anya reprogrammed the sensor scan and defined the new location, Homer hailed the Angel.

Angel, this is Blackwell.”

Go ahead Blackwell.”

“We’ve scanned the last know location of the shuttle and so far drawn a blank. Do you have an update on the field parameters?”

There was a pause followed by a chirp as a data package from Angel arrived.

“Latest information we have Blackwell and there’s an eye’s only message from Captain Gray.”

An eye’s only message? Something hit the fan?

“That’s received Angel, Blackwell out.”

Anya forwarded the message to a discrete console for Homer to read then continued the position plotting utilising the updated information from Angel.

Homer entered his personal decrypt code and the text message scrolled up on his screen. As he read it, his eyes went wide.

Lieutenant Richmond

Information just in from the Olympic. The shuttle you are trying to locate was known to be in pursuit of a dangerous individual. It is not known whether the Starfleet officer has apprehended this person but if you are in a position to rescue the occupants be advised that ultimate force has been sanctioned.

Off the record, if you recover the occupant of the Starfleet shuttle, I personally will support you and your ensign’s tab in the Phoenix Lounge for a month.

Gray

Homer was confused as to who exactly could warrant such an offer from the Captain, but he smiled. That’s just the kinda reward a fighter pilot likes.

“Lieutenant, I have another location for scan. Transferred to helm.”

As an eye’s only message, he wasn’t in a position to tell Anya any part of it. Of course if they were able to rescue whoever was in there, she would need to be armed and ready. Until that time, he simply nodded and took the controls once more.

“Ok fingers crossed and we’ll try again.”


USS ANGEL – BRIEFING ROOM
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2330 FST

T’Sell was the last to take her seat at the table, slightly out of breath after her run from the science lab. Kat allowed her to settle and raised an enquiring eyebrow.

“The transfer has begun Captain. 1100 and 1101 could only tell me that it will be complete when it is complete.”

“Keep me advised T’Sell.” She nodded and Kat turned her attention back to the matter at hand.

“Ladies and Gentlemen, we now have as much information as we’re likely to have for the foreseeable future and I’d like some options. Ensign Asheen, if you’d like to continue please?”

The young ensign from the Alpha shift had volunteered to fill in while T’Sell was supervising the transfer of Chariscarpia and was the logical person to conduct the brief. For 15 minutes she explained about the field, its idiosyncrasies, the vessels trapped within it and any other relevant information. When she concluded, Kat thanked her before dismissing her back to her bridge station.

“So there’s the problem, all we have to do is solve it. Starfleet advises me there are two other vessels en route to this location but for the next six hours we’re on our own.” She looked around the table at the intent faces. “Any takers?”

Kat wasn’t surprised when the first person to speak was her Chief Engineer, Andi Machilveen.

“How much do we know about the exact composition o’ yon field Captain?”

T’Sell studied the relevant readouts on her PADD and shook her head.

“The problem is Commander not what we know about the individual elements within the field, but more about what their interaction is causing. Many of these elements - be it radiation, exotic particles or gravimetric fields – would never normally occur concurrently. Add to that the fact that the central anomaly is temporal in nature and we face more questions than we can answer.”

Machilveen sat silently for a short while before standing and proceeding to the briefing screen. After tapping in several quick commands she stepped back to show the display of surrounding space including the locations of the Angel and the Hercules.

“In that case, my hypothesis is based on elements that seem tae be in abundance. In this case the chronitons. We know that yon Olympic and the other ships have held these time-bubble beasties at bay with an anti-chroniton sweep.”

Tapping the screen, a cylinder of clear space appeared between the Angel and the Hercules.

“If we duplicate the effect and project outwards rather than inwards, it’s my bet we can punch a corridor into that mess.”

T’Sell tapped quickly at her PADD.

“It is feasible, but ultimately flawed.” Machilveen’s grin didn’t diminish however. “Commander, the corridor produced would be too narrow for Angel to navigate. Even if we could, the corridor would be projected in front of us therefore closing behind us.”

“That’s assuming Commander that we actually move anywhere.”

As she tapped the screen controls once more, a miniature image of the Rube passed down the corridor connected back to Angel by its string of power relays.

“We kick in the secondary core to exclusively provide power to the Rube and combined with the Hercules’ own power, we should be able tae break her free.”

T’Sell, who had been following the brief and simultaneously tapping at her PADD sat back, eyebrows raised.

“An elegant solution Commander and theoretically possible, though it will require some intricate manoeuvring on the part of Angel.”

“Ah well, I never said t’would be easy Commander.”

Kat frowned slightly seeing a possible fly in the rescue ointment.

“T’Sell, I assume our Bynar friends are essential to the task in the science lab?”

“Yes Captain I’m afraid so.”

Standing to indicate the end of the brief, Kat looked to O’Hara. “Eyrie, you’d better advise the Chiefs that they’re our knights in shining armour today.” At O’Hara’s nod she turned back to Machilveen. “How long to prep the secondary core Andi?”

“Gimme thirty minutes Captain and ye’ll have it.”

Kat nodded. “T’Sell set this in motion and confirm the theory doesn’t put us at risk or there’ll be nobody to rescue anybody. Sendok, I need our best helmsman on this one. Anthony, prep the wards though hopefully if we pull this off you won’t be getting any customers.”

The senior staff stood and hurried off to their duties with just Sendok lingering momentarily to nod at Kat.

The thought of 15,000 souls depending on one ship however was enough to prevent Kat from smiling.


SS LEECH
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2335 FST

Dan had been quietly appalled at exactly how emaciated Gabe had become. He had no idea whether it had been caused directly or indirectly by the parasite’s attachment but it had obviously weakened his friend to the point of collapse.

Carefully, Dan had placed him into the suit with a sedative that would keep him under for at least an hour. By that time they’d be back aboard the Berwick and Dan would be in a position to cope with Gabe if he proved to be a problem though he prayed that wouldn’t be the case.

He finally flicked off the Leech’s grav plates to make his transfer of Gabe somewhat easier though even when they were active his body had seemed to weigh less than a child’s.

With the Leech no longer requiring atmosphere to support life, Dan didn’t waste time in cycling the airlock and instead quickly purged the air from the command deck before opening the connecting door to the cargo hold. He was aware that two decks down was the main airlock but as he gazed at the wreck of the cargo bay he knew he wouldn’t be requiring it.

Some ten metres aft of his position, he could see the crumpled fore section of the black shuttle. Grotesquely, the face of one of its crew could be seen pressed against the forward screen, its neck at an angle that told Dan immediately that he had nothing to fear. He quickly ran a tricorder scan to confirm that nothing had changed since his sensor scan from the Berwick and was grateful to find that no life forms were detected. He would at least be able to proceed without that worry.

Once he’d transferred Gabe though, he would need to return and check this vessel if he had the time. Determining who was responsible for attempting to steal the artefact and ultimately ramming this vessel was important, though right now not as important as Gabe’s life.

He moved slightly further aft and as he stepped out on to the balcony overlooking the main cargo floor, he noticed the perfectly spherical bite taken out of the ship’s spine and flank. It was a shocking reminder of his vulnerability to the effects of the time bubbles here, a threat he’d mentally put aside while tending to Gabe.

Towing Gabe behind him, he pushed gently upwards towards the opening carved out by the time-bubble and grabbed a stanchion while still some three metres away. The edges of the opening were perfectly smooth, and Dan had no doubt that they were razor sharp as well. As he checked around for a suitable launch point to keep him clear of those edges, he saw what remained of both the neural damper and the artefact semi-hidden in the shadows.

He immediately recognised the artefact, or at least its remains, for what it was though he had no idea what the still sparking piece of equipment close by had been. He realised he would have to pass close to both of them to be able to reach a position where he could use the EVA suits small thrusters to manoeuvre up and out through the hole.

Carefully edging past the sparking equipment, he came abreast of the artefact now open to the void and for the briefest of moments looked inside. A wave of vertigo swept over him as he realised that inside, the artefact didn’t end where physical laws said it should. Instead it seemed to extend out to infinity with violent flashes of light doing little to make the space any lighter. At the same time he felt an overwhelming sense of confinement, an almost suffocating claustrophobia.

And anger.

Anger that anybody had the right…the right…

To confine me! So long in this place yet so close to freedom!

Dan staggered back, the image of inside the artefact still swirling in his mind and the voice of the hive-mother accompanying it. She might have been dead but the last dregs of her anger and frustration were still trapped inside that limbo space and Dan felt himself losing his grip on reality.

They take my children! But they shall pay! THEY…SHALL…PAY!

The last came as a ghostly psychic scream that sent Dan reeling against the railing surrounding the drop to the cargo bay floor some ten metres below. Clasping his hands against his helmet in a futile attempt to shut out the noise he tried to pull away from the artefact but as if caught in nightmare, he found himself unable to move.

THEY…SHALL…PAY!

Suddenly, as if a cord had been severed, he found himself flying forward and away from the artefact. It was just as he blacked out, that horrendous scream still ringing in his mind, that a space suit encased arm wrapped around his neck.
 
Chapter 24 (cont)

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: Star Trek is trademarked and copyrighted by CBS Studios.
NO infringement is intended. All other material is copyright to Unusualsuspex 2009.


Chapter 24 (cont)



IMPERIAL LINES STARLINER I.S.C.S.OLYMPIC – BRIDGE
UFP SPACE
September 15th 2371 – 2341 FST

“Reckon it’s feasible?” Dubois obviously had her doubts, as did Nan, having seen the size of the shuttlecraft in the schematics sent over by the Angel, but Callum seemed positively enthused by the idea.

“Absolutely! Never-been-tried-before-feasible but it stands a good chance if they can hold steady aft of the Hercules. Gonna take some nifty piloting though.”

Nan Bacco stroked her aching arm absently, the wrench of saving young Rihanna having caused her shoulder to dislocate. Despite the treatment in sickbay and the analgesics administered once the shoulder was back in place, she felt every single one of her 79 years and then some.

“Governor?”

Nan realised belatedly that Dubois had asked her a question and had to apologise for her distracted state.

“I’m sorry Nereth. That event in the arboretum has shaken me more than I realised.”

Dubois guided the suddenly frail seeming woman back into the Captain’s Room and sat her down. Nodding to Callum to continue preparing the Olympic for her own turn at rescue, she drew the privacy curtain.

“I’d offer you a brandy but with the medication you’ve got pumping around right now, that might not be such a good idea.”

Dubois grinned as Nan relaxed into the forma-seat letting the soft material mould to her body. This was something she was definitely going to have to get for her office back on Cestus III.

“If I wasn’t so old, I’d take you up on the offer anyway.” Sighing, Nan closed her eyes. “I’m sorry Nereth, you spoke to me on the bridge and I missed it.”

“I was wondering whether now would be a good time to inform the refugees about Angel’s arrival that’s all. I don’t want to raise their hopes unduly, but God knows they deserve something after the past day.”

The passengers and crew had all now been informed of the events transpiring around them with respect to the anomaly’s field and the time-bubbles, but with matters transpiring so quickly there had been no time to consider telling them about Angel and her plans for their rescue.

Nan nodded. “You’re right, they should be told.”

Dubois stood and made to exit the small alcove but Nan stopped her.

“I’ll do it Nereth. You’ve got quite enough going on up here.”
Nan also wanted to say that it was her own responsibility, but she knew that wasn’t entirely true. She just felt it was so. “If you could request everybody gather in the arboretum again, I’ll break the news.”

Dubois hesitated slightly, seeing how close Nan was to the edge of exhaustion, but then nodded.

“You must get some sleep afterwards Governor, and that’s Captain’s orders. That’s one thing I insist on.”

Dubois’ sympathetic smile took the commanding tone out of her voice and besides, Nan knew it was true. Right now she was running on caffeine fumes and little else so with a smile of her own, she conceded.

“You’re worse than my political advisor, and even if I hate to admit it, she’s usually right as well.”

Fifteen minutes later, Nan was being helped up on to the stage that was still in place from several hours before. She was mentally running through what she wanted to say to the refugees when she noticed the sound of applause. Quiet at first but rapidly growing in volume, it swelled to a crescendo as she reached centre stage.

Stunned by the roar of approval, she felt a tug on her pants and looked down to see the pale face of Rihanna Tamar beaming up at her and in her arms a beautiful bouquet of Cestus roses. As she knelt to accept them and give the small girl a hug, the crowd went wild and in those few minutes Nan’s spirits rose once more.

This was the reason she did her job. Not for the applause or the congratulations obviously. For the people who needed her, or who at least needed somebody. By the end of her news about the Angel’s arrival, the crowd was ecstatic, and yet it was one little girl’s quietly spoken word of thanks that would last in her memory.


RUNABOUT USS BLACKWELL
ARGOLIS SECTOR
UFP SPACE
September 16th 2371 – 0003 FST

“I have it Lieutenant! Is there!”

Homer jumped slightly at Anya’s delighted shout and she suddenly blushed.

“Sorry Lieutenant. I was just starting to think that we should perhaps not find it.”

Homer chuckled. “Well I guess if anything deserves to be excited about this is it. Put it up on screen please.”

As he studied it, he compared the results to the initial plots they’d been given and saw that the shuttle had drifted further clockwise in the field than the larger ships. He could also see that it had settled further into the anomaly as well.

Had it not been for the enhanced sensor pod fitted on the roll bar of the runabout, it was possible they may not have detected the small ships at all.

“Ok that’s the shuttle, so I’m assuming this one here must be the ship he was pursuing.” He squinted at the vague image. “Some weird returns there Anya, is that one ship or two?”

Anya refined the scan for the greatest clarity yet it still appeared wrong.

“Is standard class four civilian shuttle with cargo handling unit, but here,” she tapped the image, “looks like second craft.”

“Are they docked?” It certainly didn’t look that way from the angle of the second ship, but Homer didn’t want to start making assumptions.

“If they are then he’s very bad pilot Lieutenant. I would say there has been impact.”

Homer found himself smiling at Anya’s intensity as she concentrated on the task at hand. Her native Russian accent had become thicker as the mission progressed.

“Scan for life forms please Anya; see if you can get any sort of transporter lock.”

Leaving the young ensign to her work he turned to the controls and opened an all channel hail to the shuttle.

Crossing his fingers he waited but heard nothing. Repeating the hail several times produced the same effect. Nothing.

“I am detecting two life forms Lieutenant, but the transporter cannot maintain a lock on them through field. We need to be closer.”

Which of course was something they couldn’t be. Even now, he’d progressed closer than Captain Gray had suggested just in order to clarify the sensor scan. There was the faintest tug of the field as it wavered at its periphery and he knew that any closer would place them deeper into the field’s effect.

At last, he made his decision. “Blackwell to Captain Gray.”

“Go ahead Lieutenant.”

“Captain we have the shuttle and two life forms on sensors. It’s alongside a second vessel but right now they’re out of reach of transporters.”

“And that’s despite the fact that you’re closer in than you should be?”

There was a subtle hint of a smile in the Captain’s voice and Homer shrugged.

“Yes Captain, but I think I have an idea if you approve.”

“If it involves penetrating the field the answer is no unless you have a compelling reason?”

Homer smiled when he heard that. The Captain could have just told him no and to wait for Angel’s assistance, but she’d given him the opening he needed.

“I believe from what the sensors are telling us that the smaller craft is being affected more markedly by the currents in the field Captain. She’s being rotated and pulled in faster than the larger ships. My concern is that the shuttle could become out of reach much faster than the other ships.”

“And I assume you have a theoretical solution Lieutenant?”

Again the sense of a smile, but he’d noticed the stress on the word theoretical.

As he explained the idea to the Captain, he looked at Anya and was gratified to see her nod enthusiastically. By the time he’d finished, there was silence from the Angel.

Moments passed and he was on the verge of hailing them in the belief that he’d lost the link, but then the Captain replied.

“We’ll run the solution through the computers here first but I’m diverting the Galen to your location at this time. Stand by for final confirmation but advise us if the situation changes. Angel out.”

Homer glanced at Anya once more and couldn’t believe that she actually looked excited about his plan. He was the one who’d suggested it and he was far from excited.
 
Commentary on Chapter 24

The encounter between Fishlock and the alien artifact was chillingly creepy! I’m not sure what kind of ugliness resides inside there, but something that could overwhelm as formidable a mind as Dan’s with such ease can clearly not be a good thing to have loosed upon the galaxy.

How quickly the Bynars have become an indispensable asset to the Angel. That they cannot be spared from Chariscarpia’s cyber-resurrection to assist with the rescue of the civilian ships says a great deal about their talents.

Kudos to Bacco for keeping the civilians focused and calm under the most dire of circumstances. This woman ought to run for President! :p

Homer’s got something cagey up his sleeve. I hope for Dan and Gabe’s sake he’s as clever as he seems.
 
Re: Chapter 24

I just read the first part of the story and I really like how you are able to shift around to the three different places the story is taking place...feels like a movie!

Rob
 
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