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Star Trek : Angel - Vignette No 6

unusualsuspex

Captain
Captain
As previewed in the Angel Book 2 Thread!

KAZZAN OF PRIDEHOME

THE BOND


HARIZAN PLAINS
PRIDEHOME
UFP SPACE
December 23rd 2371 1700 FST

The tall grass of the Harizan Plains moved like ripples across a golden pond as the gentle breeze played amongst the blades. Shadows passed like ground locked clouds and silence reigned.

His mind drifted back in time to his own rite of passage, a time that felt so long ago it could have been somebody else’s life. He huffed, the sweet smell of the plains carrying the distant scent of a gathering storm.

How apt he thought as his eyes rose to the skies above and the invisible stars, strange in their constellations even now; constellations that were not those of the skies of his home world. He had left them behind years ago, yet while he missed them still, the freedom he had attained for his family and himself was payment enough.

A movement out in the grasslands stilled his musings. A small patch of darkness disturbed the grasses, moving slowly and intermittently. The wildlife in the area, such as it was, remained undisturbed and Kazzan was quietly impressed. To have reached this point in the rite was an achievement in itself but Kazzan was the final obstacle the initiates would face and for this one, it would prove one obstacle too many.

Kazzan slipped from his hide on all fours remaining deep within the cover of the tall grasses. Now utilising his keen sense of smell and innate awareness of his immediate surroundings he approached the initiate’s last location and paused to sniff silently. He immediately recognised the scent as that of Harran, his own cub and felt just the smallest amount of disappointment that he would be ending his initiation, but there would always be next season.

Sliding silently through the dry stalks, his eyes fixed on the direction of the scent, he caught the merest hint of golden fur almost lost amongst the similarly coloured autumn grassland and pounced, landing a mere stride from his eldest.

Harran spun to face him, a look of deep cunning on his face.
“You have done well initiate,” growled Kazzan, “but your trial is at an end. Surrender now.” It was the ritual challenge and though it never ended in combat to the death as in the old days, the initiate was still not expected to surrender.

“To surrender is to throw my honour to the wind,” came the expected reply. “Besides Elder, it is you who should surrender.” That was not a part of the ritual and Kazzan cocked his head curiously. It was only then that he sensed the scents of others around him. Three, no, four of them.
Harran curled his lip back and bared his fangs. “I believe you are surrounded Elder.”

Without pause, Kazzan leapt vertically and spinning in the air spotted all four of the other initiates in the grass. As he landed by the nearest, he swept out with his paw keeping his claws sheathed and slapped the marker against the throat of Kallon before rolling aside to catch the next one. His son, however, had moved quickly around and behind and leapt to place his own marker against his father’s throat. The combat, fast and bloodless, was done and in almost perfect silence.

The initiates materialized from the surrounding grass to stand before Kazzan, now on their hind legs, with only Kallon bearing the red marker of defeat.

“It is over,” intoned Kazzan, “and those who do not bear the mark are, from this day forward, warriors.”

Before Kazzan could complete the statement of attainment, Harran stepped forward.

“Elder, I vouch for Kallon.”

It was, of course, the right of any initiate to make the case in support of another who had failed, though Kazzan could see no defence for Kallon who had moved too slowly to escape his strike.

“Then speak initiate.”

“Just like I, Kallon was merely bait Elder. In the same way that I drew you to this spot by showing myself, so Kallon allowed the strike that brought you within striking distance of my marker. This was all pre-planned elder. Kallon sacrificed himself for the group.” Harran bowed his head and retreated.

Kazzan could not remember the last time that initiates had worked either so closely or so well together and was impressed, though he refused to allow that to show on his face. Instead he drew back his huge paw and striking out with a speed that was frightening, plucked the marker from Kallon’s throat.

“Your support of your group is honoured Kallon. It is over,” repeated Kazzan, “and those who do not bear the mark are, from this day forward, warriors.” With pride evident in his voice, he barked loudly. “Return, for your reward awaits you!”

The group of initiates howled in victory and sped off towards the colony shouting and laughing. Kazzan stood silently and watched them before turning to the south and testing the air once more.

Indeed, a storm was coming.


EDRITH COLONY
PRIDEHOME
UFP SPACE
January 4th 2374 1000 FST

Kazzan watched as the Federation shuttle touched down in the plaza of Edrith raising small plumes of snow. The group of Council Elders gathered behind him remained silent but he knew that, like him, their hopes of honour and loyalty lay within that shuttle encompassed in the words of a single man.

A keening wind direct from the snow covered slopes of the Attizan Mountains rippled Kazzan’s fur but he ignored it, his sensitive hearing now attuned to the shuttle sitting in the square. The heat collected from its atmospheric entry leached away into the cold air making the hull tick and pop, a staccato accompaniment to the wind’s low moan.

Kazzan’s ears twitched at the click and hiss of the forward hatch disengaging and his eyes flicked to the figure that appeared there. Unlike the Starfleet officers who were also awaiting the arrival of this visitor, the man himself had ignored the need for cold weather issue and stepped forth in the red, black and gold of a Starfleet admiral’s uniform.

A man of above average human height, his bearing almost aristocratic to Kazzan’s eyes, descended the steps and made his way towards the gathered Council members. The admiral’s long white hair blew in wild array around his head but it didn’t hide the one thing that Kazzan remembered from all their subspace communications; his eyes. They were eyes that had always been full of intelligence, humour – a concept that Kazzan had come to appreciate – and a hidden back catalogue of stories that intrigued him no end.

As he finally stopped some three metres away, he held his hands out palm up in the traditional Tzenkethi greeting of peace to show empty hands and sheathed claws. Kazzan responded likewise.

“You honour us with your presence in person Admiral. I hope this bodes well.”

“Perhaps we should step inside so that you may discover the answer to your question Elder.”

Kazzan began to curl the corner of his lip in an imitation of the human smile then stopped. The members of Starfleet who worked at the colony in aid of Kazzan and his people had quickly learned the ways of their guests and smiling, (at least in the teeth baring way of most species) had quickly been replaced by a tight lipped smile in deference to the displaced Tzenkethi.

He swung his large paw to indicate the entrance to the Edrith colony and stepped aside as the Admiral advanced before him led by a pair of junior Council officials. From the corner of his eye, he caught sight of Zahaan, his mate, and with an imperceptible nod of his head acknowledged her presence before following the entourage into the side of the mountain.


EDRITH COLONY
PRIDEHOME
UFP SPACE
4th January 2374 1100 FST

The formal ceremonies of welcome and greeting were deeply ingrained in the Tzenkethi of the colony. While they wished to escape the totalitarian and often brutal regime of the Tzenkethi home worlds, they did not wish to turn their back on who they were at heart.

Admiral Akaar admired that among these fierce and proud warrior people and as the traditional singing of spirits echoed into silence he had stood to face the gathered crowd.

“I have been welcomed into your hearts, and I stand before you today with a mixture of pride and sorrow in my own. Pride at bearing witness to the true face of Tzenkethi…”

A loud cheer from the assembled masses rose at that and Akaar waited for it to die down before continuing.

“…and sorrow that the troubles now endangering the quadrant should bring me here.”

He then turned to the leader of the Tzenkethi colonists as the crowd grew silent.

“Governor Kazzan, since your people first arrived here, your presence has been kept a closely guarded secret. Not from shame at your presence but in defence of your freedom. The time for secrecy, it seems, may be over. You made a request to the Federation Government.”

Kazzan looked deeply into the Admiral’s eyes to divine some insight into what was about to transpire but could see nothing.

“We wish to fight beside you,” he said.

The tall Tzenkethi, his tail twitching dangerously, stared intensely at Admiral Leonard James Akaar, defying him to deny the warrior the chance to defend his home.

Akaar stood his ground and without flinching said "And should I tell you that is not possible?"

"Then we shall fight anyway. This is our home now Admiral and we will protect all that we have sacrificed to build here."

Gods but I wish I had a hundred thousand more of you thought Akaar. Carefully avoiding bearing his teeth in the Tzenkethi sign of challenge, he smiled at the warrior.

"Then defend it you will Kazzan. There are conditions, and you should know that I have had to lay my own honour on the line to provide you this chance. Fight well."

The huge crowd erupted in howls of triumph and Akaar was almost deafened by the uproar. What he could not tell Kazzan, or any of this proud warrior race gathered here, was that the vote had been close in allowing them a starship with which to join the beleaguered ranks of Starfleet. Some in the Federation’s halls of power were still afraid that the refugees from Tzenketh and its neighbouring systems might still turn renegade in aid of the Dominion despite the protestations of those who knew much better, Akaar amongst them.

But perhaps the more pressing concern was ship availability. Vessels that had been in mothballs for years and destined for the breakers were suddenly being reactivated for frontline use and despite the hard work being put into their preparation, many were simply not up to the rigours of the challenge. Akaar had recently heard of a reactivated Miranda class ship simply coming apart as it entered warp leaving the Sol system.

They’d left the raised stage half an hour previously and since then, Akaar had been giving the final briefing to Kazzan and the Council.

“When can we expect to receive the ship Admiral?” Kazzan had led the discussion with only minor interjections from other Councillors.

“Barring any major problems in reactivation, she’ll be here within a week. She’s a Soyuz class vessel that was retired from service in 2282 but she was used as a training vessel for the next 40 years.”

Kazzan huffed. “Should I feel offended that I am being offered an antique?”

Shaking his head, Akaar leaned his elbows on the table. “We’re issuing these kinds of vessels to frontline Starfleet units all the time right now. It allows more modern vessels to be withdrawn for rapid maintenance, so no you should not be offended.”

Sitting back in the large chair, the Tzenkethi leader nodded.

“Then we shall be ready Admiral. Many of my warriors have been readapting their training for some time thanks to the holodeck equipment that Starfleet have allowed us to use in the hope that this day would come.”

Akaar stood followed by Kazzan and the Council members. “I have to leave Elder, but I thank you for this offer of allegiance. The threat of the Dominion affects the whole of the Alpha and Beta Quadrants and it’s just a shame that some of the adjoining Governments cannot put aside old animosities in a show of joint defence.”

Kazzan gave Akaar a sly look. “There are those in power throughout the galaxy who will never see beyond their own preconceived ideas of other races Admiral. It may take a tragic event such as war to change that.”

“Then it is good to know that some leaders are ahead of the game. God speed Kazzan, and may your honour protect you and your crew.”

As Akaar lifted in the shuttle to head back to the USS Banner waiting in orbit, he wondered whether he would ever get the chance to meet the proud warrior again. He at least hoped that Kazzan would appreciate the new name that had just been painted on the Soyuz class hull.


USS ANGEL – BRIDGE
UFP SPACE
May 14th 2374 – 1141 FST

“Hold her steady Lieutenant.” Dan Fishlock only hoped that Pharana could manage to do so in the maelstrom that surrounded the ship right now. He had no doubt about the Denobulan’s ability to pilot, proven on so many occasions, but the ship was being buffeted by shockwaves from explosions all around them while desperately attempting to maintain a tractor lock on the Akira class they were extracting from the combat zone.

“A pair of Dominion fighters have broken through the screen Captain, heading this way.” DeSalle stared intently at his tactical screen then called out “Raptor flights engaging.”

Dan turned in his seat, thankful for the safety restraint as the ship rocked again.

“Commander?”

Kat Gray nodded imperceptibly. “Almost there Sir, another thirty seconds.”

Come on Raptors, stop ‘em.


USS HILDR - RAPTOR 1
UFP SPACE
May 14th 2374 – 1142 FST

“Raptor 2 break starboard.” As Homer bent the Gunr over on to its right wing, Mo broke left and heaved the Valkyrie round into a tight turn slightly below the Dominion fighters while Homer ended up slightly above.

“Target 2 is priority Homer. Take it.”

“Weapons away.”

She watched as the pair of micro-torpedoes zeroed in on the tail of the corkscrewing bug then fired her own, immediately switching to the second target to repeat the process. It was a trick they had learned through endless engagements with the agile adversaries.

Whether it was a design fault or poor Dominion strategy, the rear shields on the bugs were often at their weakest when attacking a large ship as the fore shields were strengthened. They’d found that when the first torpedoes hit the shields, power re-routed to shore up the weakened spot leaving the opposite rear quarter briefly exposed for a fraction of a second. It was timing that shot that had become their trademark.

As Mo’s first micro-torps struck home fractionally behind Homer’s there was a flare of light from which the first bug emerged spinning and gyrating out of control, its starboard nacelle arcing out and venting a trail of sparks and debris. Pulling her Valkyrie into the engagement vertical, she half rolled over the top and watched as the second bug was struck amidships by the fatally wounded first. In seconds it was all over, and checking her screens Mo called Homer back to close patrol for the Angel.

Raptor flight this is Eyrie, Angel reports clear. Evac operations now underway.”

“Acknowledged Eyrie, confirm we have time for re-arm? I’m just about down to throwing seat cushions.”

Mo heard Eyrie chuckle at that. “Raptor flight, that’s approved but it’ll be a hot turn round and be advised we have intense flight deck activity.”

A hot turn round meant they’d be taking on stores without a complete shutdown, not the safest procedure but war defined its own safety limits.

“Acknowledged Eyrie, Raptor flight out.”

“I’m guessing the ball game ain’t over yet then.” Homer’s predilection for baseball was what had gained him his nickname in the first place though since the start of the war, games had been scarce, reduced to morale boosters. The lack of games certainly hadn’t boosted Homer’s morale.

Checking her sensors and seeing the battle seeming to intensify behind them, Mo agreed. “Yep, still looks intense back there my man. Let’s make this brief.”

As the fighters recovered to their discrete bays on either side of the main hangar bay, Mo stifled an exhausted yawn.

Not just yet girl, she thought, not just yet.
 
Re: Star Trek : Angel - Vignette No 6 (cont)

USS PRIDE - BRIDGE
UFP SPACE
May 14th 2374 – 1149 FST

“Standby conn.” The whispered order came out as a harsh grunt with the foul air, smelling of burnt plastics and ozone, having already seared the back of Kazzan’s throat.

Around the bridge, his crew were coiled tight knowing that their impression of a dead ship was about to be exposed, though the Dominion were about to learn it the hard way.

“Tactical, on my mark, a full spread of torpedoes into that centre vessel, then targeting at your discretion.”

He tapped a claw against his arm rest panel as he studied the approaching vessels. The fact that they were withdrawing from the battle and escorting what would normally be classed as a low value target had piqued his senses. The Pride had also withdrawn to shore up its battered shields and found itself in the perfect ambush position if they could convince the approaching Dominion vessels of their helplessness.

He’d ordered engineering to vent plasma; helpful in their masquerade by not only making them appear damaged but by confusing sensor scans as to their exact status. Running lights were out, sections exposed to vacuum had their forcefields dropped to expel atmosphere, and the Pride hung lifelessly in space.

Kazzan stood and placed himself between the conn and ops.

“All stations standby…” His muscles tensed as he raised his huge paw, claws unsheathed in preparation for battle. “Mark!”

As the recently replenished shields sprang back into place, a surge of power threw the Pride forward at the small Dominion convoy. Kazzan held his place by muscle power alone as the old ship’s inertial dampers struggled to catch up with the sudden manoeuvre.

Caught completely unawares by the attack, the freighter in the centre of the convoy was obliterated by the first torpedo salvo, its destruction making the shields on the accompanying destroyer flare and weakens for crucial seconds. They were seconds that Azzat at tactical did not waste.

Releasing a second spread of torpedoes targeted at the destroyer’s exposed bridge, he immediately followed it with a raking phaser volley that opened the belly of the ship to vacuum. As the Pride passed around and behind the destroyer, Kazzan was gratified to see that two of the four Jem’Hadar fighters had also perished in the destruction of the freighter. The other two were even now manoeuvring to bring their weapons to bear on his ship.

“Sannek, evasive pattern Tak!” As the Pride heeled around and below the shattered remains of the freighter, Kazzan turned to Kateth at ops. “What’s the state of the destroyer?”

Kateth gave a feral grin and said, “Under power but adrift. Bridge is dead and she’s venting badly.”

“Sannek, get us clear of the destroyer. They won’t self destruct that vessel if there’s still a Founder alive but let’s not take the chance.”

“Aye Captain.”

The two fighters were now approaching at high speed and Sannek was rolling the huge ship through some intricate evasive manoeuvres attempting to spoil any firing solution the pair was trying to create while simultaneously putting space between themselves and the destroyer.

“Azzat, target the left hand fighter, port side. Sensors are showing its shields are weak above the nacelle!”

Swift thinking Kateth! Even in the midst of battle, Kazzan felt a pride in his crew’s ability to mesh as if they had been doing this for years. Now make the Dominion bastards pay!

A concentrated volley from the Pride’s lateral phaser array surgically removed the port nacelle from the oncoming fighter, its suddenly asymmetrical power flow putting it into a flat spin. The second fighter broke to starboard to avoid being hit by his wingman and the carefully planned attack fell into disarray with the shots going well wide of the Pride.

“Sannek, heading 122 mark 0, full power to aft shields, Azzat take him down!”

Kazzan felt the full pounding force of his lust for revenge sweeping through his veins and clenched his fists tightly to control it. Blood from the unsheathed talons digging into his flesh dripped to the floor at his feet.

He was dimly aware of the phasers whine and a cheer from his crew but only when Azzat gripped his shoulder tightly did he realise that it was over. As if some internal switch had been thrown, he felt the strength leave his body and Azzat caught him as he slumped.


USS PRIDE - SICKBAY
UFP SPACE
May 14th 2374 – 1237 FST


“You know if you insist on making me provide you with these injections, you’re just as likely to die from an overdose as your heart condition.”

Natreth, the ship’s healer, was also one of Kazzan’s oldest friends and the comment had only partly been in jest.

“Natreth my friend, did you know that the humans have a saying, ‘Physician heal thyself’?” Kazzan watched carefully as his friend packed away the instruments of his trade.

“I had heard of it yes, why?”

“Don’t make me make you intimately acquainted with it!”

Kazzan’s glower was so obviously transparent that Natreth chuckled.

“And who would administer your drugs then oh brave Captain?”

Kazzan gave up trying to intimidate the one person who he couldn’t possibly succeed with and laid his head back on the biobed. Natreth, meanwhile, sat at the foot of the bed and looked closely at his friend. The heart condition was serious enough to worry him but obviously not his Captain. Had they been a true Starfleet crew, he could have ordered his Captain relieved of duty to receive treatment – life saving treatment in this case. But that’s not how the Pride worked.

Since the death of his cub Harran, the last member of his close family, Kazzan had become driven by revenge. Not to the extent that it was endangering the ship, the crew or their mission yet, but the toll it was taking on Kazzan himself was fearsome.

Natreth held his council, knowing full well that Kazzan would not retreat from the frontline while he was still alive.

“I know what you’re thinking Natreth.”

“And I know how little my opinion means Kazzan.”

The exhausted Captain managed to lift himself to a seated position. “Natreth, your opinion has always mattered to me, always. Even now I know that your concern is genuine, but until my condition becomes threatening to more than just myself, I cannot…” Kazzan coughed and lay back once more.

Natreth ran a bio sensor across Kazzan’s chest and frowned at the readings but said nothing other than “Rest for now my friend. We will discuss your pig headedness later.”

Kazzan never heard his friends words having already lapsed into a fitful sleep.


USS ANGEL – MEDCENTRE ONE
UFP SPACE
May 14th 2374 –1518 FST


Anthony Winston looked around the morgue at a scene that had become increasingly common. There were 43 bodies in the morgue stasis units, each one dead before his teams had a chance to work on them. In critical care stasis were another 27 whose injuries were so severe they would need to be taken to Starbase 129 despite the facilities he had at his disposal.

And yet once again, the Angel had saved lives. The crew of the USS Baxter had been dragged from the heart of the battle, their ship saved and more importantly, the lives of those aboard as well.

Except for those here he thought. He turned as he heard the doors behind him open to reveal Dan Fishlock.

“If you’re busy, I’ll come back later Doc.”

Anthony shook his head sadly. “No, not at all Dan. Just mentally balancing the books as it were.”

Dan watched his CMO carefully. He’d come to accept the quiet and self effacing man as a close friend in the three years they’d served together, and never more so than at times like this.

“I get the feeling that we’re still in credit Doc.” He placed a hand on Anthony’s arm. “Commander Jarvis wanted to send you and your teams her thanks.”

Turning to head back to his office in MedCentre One, Anthony gave a rueful smile. “All part of the service, but I’ll speak to her shortly.” He looked at Dan. “So what’s the real reason for our illustrious Captain visiting Hades?”

Around them, the work of cleaning up the operating areas and triage continued quietly and efficiently. Dan knew from bitter experience that an hour ago, Anthony’s description of the place as Hades would have been closer to the truth.

“It’s the leg Doc. That neural feedback circuit seems to have slipped out of sync again. I almost started dancing across the bridge.”

Anthony felt a sudden laugh bubble up inside him at the image. “Well, we can’t have that kind of behaviour now can we? It’ll set a bad example to the rest of the crew.”

Unable to banish the mental image from his mind, he continued chuckling even as he hooked Dan’s artificial leg into the diagnostic interface. “How’s it been holding up otherwise?”

Dan shook his head in resignation. “Well other than my senior staff laughing at my expense, it’s been fine.”

Anthony selected several protocols, adjusted their parameters and reset the diagnostic. With a beep from the unit, Dan felt the muscle tics he’d been experiencing fade.

“Much better thanks Doc.” Dan rolled his pants leg back down over the prosthetic limb then flexed his leg to work out the kinks that had formed in his thigh muscles. “I’ll be making an all hands broadcast shortly, but the Dominion were pushed back.”

Anthony looked closely at Dan and the unasked question of “at what cost” was obvious.


USS ANGEL
STARBASE 129
UFP SPACE
May 16th 2374 – 0938 FST


The Angel had recovered the Baxter and her crew to Starbase 129 and with a lull in the fighting was taking the unexpected chance for shore leave. Despite their proximity to the Cardassian border, the amount of Starfleet traffic at the Starbase was an adequate deterrent to Dominion forces, at least for the moment.

Anthony had just finished clearing a backlog of paperwork when his commbadge trilled. Tapping it, he spoke to the air.

“Winston.”

“Doctor, I have a comm from Admiral Akaar if you’re available?”

Much as he was tempted to say he was busy, he decided that asking an Admiral to call back later wasn’t the wisest career move he could make.

“By all means Lieutenant Gittings, pipe it through to my office please.”

His comm screen flashed once and the text “ENCRYPTION PROTOCOLS IN PLACE” appeared. Encryption? He wondered.

The screen cleared to reveal the distinguished features of the Capellan Admiral although dark rings around his eyes marred his otherwise aristocratic appearance.

“Admiral, a slightly unexpected pleasure. How can I help?”

“Commander I’m calling to ask a personal medical favour. I understand you’re on a brief layover at Starbase 129?”

“For the moment Sir, yes that’s correct.”

Akaar seemed slightly ill at ease as he continued.

“Commander, what I have to ask of you comes under the heading of classified is that understood? You are to discuss this with nobody."

Curiouser and curiouser thought Anthony, but nodded despite himself.

By the time the Admiral had finished briefing him however, he was more than aware why the information was classified and indeed why it was that he had been singled out for the duty.


USS PRIDE
STARBASE 129
UFP SPACE
May 16th 2374 – 1024 FST


Kazzan stared with ill humour between his own healer, Natreth, and the unexpected human who sat before him.

“Commander Winston,” he said, “I believe you may have come here on a…wild goose chase?” Anthony couldn’t help but notice that despite the fact that Kazzan’s claws were sheathed, his tail twitched dangerously and so he chose his words carefully.

“The phrase is correct Captain, but I believe its accuracy slightly less so.”

Kazzan stared daggers at his friend before returning his attention to Anthony.

“Might I ask doctor, how you would be so intimately aware of my medical condition?”

Anthony smiled a tight lipped smile. “Because Captain, it was I that treated you and your kin when you arrived at Starbase 621 three years ago. Remember that?” He sat back and folded his arms as Kazzan’s face changed abruptly.

His eyes wide, he performed a perfect double take between Anthony and Natreth that under other circumstances might have been almost comical.

“That…that was you?”

Anthony nodded, for now saying nothing more. He found it surprisingly difficult to read Kazzan’s face at that point as a mixture of emotions seemed to pass across it and none of them appeared to be happiness.

Finally, he bowed his head and in a low voice said, “Then I owe you my life healer.”

Leaning forward intently, Anthony said “Technically, and perhaps by the customs of the Tzenkethi you do Kazzan. But in my opinion, you owe it to your crew and the memory of your family even more.”

“I cannot allow the time for surgery doctor.” Suddenly it was ‘doctor’ again, not ‘healer’. Anthony felt slightly more on solid ground with that.

“You lie the loudest when you lie to yourself Captain. I believe that is one of your people’s proverbs?”

Anthony prepared to feel claws rip at his throat as Kazzan suddenly stood, knocking the seemingly flimsy chair backwards.

“What is that supposed to mean doctor? And I suggest you choose your words carefully.”

Anthony composed himself and looked Kazzan in the eye.

“You have so convinced yourself that your need to avenge your family takes priority over your own life that you haven’t thought beyond that have you? How many Dominion lives will it take to satisfy your need for vengeance Kazzan?”

Kazzan growled at Anthony’s challenging tone. “There will never be enough of their deaths to…”

“Exactly!” Interrupting Kazzan was a risk, but Anthony thought he saw light at the end of the tunnel. “In fact you’ll keep killing until you die won’t you? And what then?”

The big Tzenkethi’s mouth opened and closed, but words weren’t forthcoming.

“Let me enlighten you Captain. Your revenge will still be incomplete by your standards, your crew and your people will no longer have the leader they so desperately need, and you will have let them all down!”

For a moment there was silence and then Kazzan pointed at Anthony.

“Leave my ship and know that it is only because I owe you my life that I do not kill you where you stand!” Spinning on his heel he left the room.

Anthony closed his eyes and backtracked across the conversation trying to find the flaw in his logic. He nearly jumped out of his skin when he felt a huge paw rest on his shoulder.

“Thank you Doctor Winston,” said Natreth as he headed for the door that Kazzan had just left by.

“I’m sorry I didn’t help healer.” Anthony stood and prepared to return to Angel.

“Quite the opposite Doctor. I believe our mutual friend will indeed change his mind after your words.” Natreth curled his lip slightly.

“It didn’t seem that way to me.” Confused as Anthony was, he wanted to believe that his opinion had been heard.

“Look at yourself doctor. Do you see anything different to when you arrived?” Anthony shook his head. “Exactly. If you had lied or been insulting and wrong, trust me when I say that your appearance would be considerably different. Kazzan knows that you are right and I suspect that before we leave Starbase, he will have submitted to surgery.”

Now it was Anthony’s turn to flounder. “Oh…right…”

Natreth nodded at the door. “I’d suggest that leaving the Pride would still be a good idea though.”


USS ANGEL
DEPARTING STARBASE 129
UFP SPACE
May 19th 2374 – 1641 FST

Having handed over to the Beta shift under Doctor Russell, Anthony had just switched the office lights out when his personal terminal beeped. He hesitated at the door wondering whether to allow the communication to wait for the morning but eventually relented and returned to sit at his desk.

Opening the message he discovered it was text only with no originator, but there was no doubt who it was from.

“Doctor Winston

With hindsight I offer my apologies following our recent meeting though I understand that our mutual friend already made apologies on my behalf. He has a habit of doing that.
You will be pleased to know that my physician, arcane as some of his practices may be, has assured me that I will make a full recovery following my surgery. You have my thanks and my bond doctor, one that can never be broken.

My honour is yours

K”

A second message appended to the first stated that a package was awaiting collection in the quartermaster’s office at his convenience.

He flicked off the terminal and once again turning out his office lights, he bid Helena Russell goodnight before heading directly to the QM’s office. After a few moments of searching through what appeared to be an Aladdin’s cave of items the grizzled non-comm handed him an ornately carved wooden box.

“There ya go Sir. Arrived just before we departed Starbase 129.”

“Thank you Chief.” Anthony opened the box to find a drawstring bag inside made of a material not unlike silk. He gently opened it and withdrew a beautifully fashioned golden knife which, like the box, was intricately engraved.

“Now that’s a beauty,” whistled the Chief in admiration.

Anthony totally agreed. He remembered seeing such knives before during his service in the Tzenkethi border conflicts. It seemed every warrior that had been captured or brought to him for medical attention carried one though he’d never given them significant thought before.

“You know what it is then Chief.” The Chief was obviously a woman who’d seen her fair share of service and she nodded.

“It’s a Tzenkethi Bond knife. They’re kinda family heirlooms passed down through successive generations, but I’ve never seen one that beautiful before.” She rested an arm on the counter top and smiled. “Wanna tell where ya got it from Sir?”

Placing the knife carefully back in the bag and pulling the draw string tight, he returned the smile. “Well I could Chief,” he replied, “but then of course I’d probably have to kill you.”

As Anthony headed out of the office chuckling, the QM shook her head. “I am so glad I never took a commission,” she grunted to herself.

FOR THE FULL STORY OF ANTHONY WINSTON’S FIRST ENCOUNTER WITH KAZZAN SEE
“STAR TREK : ANGEL – THAT OTHERS MAY LIVE”
AT A REPUTABLE WEB SITE NEAR YOU NOW!
 
This is a great look into the Dominion War and a sneak peek at what our heroes from the Angel will be suffering three years ahead of your present storyline. How did Fishlock end up with an artificial leg? That’s only the first of many questions this tale generates.

I loved the inclusion of the Tzenkethi in this story, harkening all the way back to the beginning of your first Angel adventure. Their predator mentality and martial prowess is undoubtedly a boon for the Federation, and Akaar’s courage in fighting for the Tzenkethi’s right to help defend their adopted homeworld speaks volumes about the man.

I’m already growing attached to the various Tzenkethi characters, which is saying something given that I’m generally not the most sympathetic person to that particular species. These guys make very worthy allies to the Federation, and hey, when you’re fighting Jem’Hadar and Cardassians, having some really big, really angry cats on your side can’t hurt! :lol:

Wonderful stuff so far, and I’m eagerly anticipating more. Kudos!

P.S.- Winston takes the prize for the ballsey-est CMO in the Fleet! I'm shocked he came away from that confrontation with his throat intact.
 
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