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Star Trek Destiny - Episode 1 - Prologue

The Baryon Sweep was used on TNG: Starship Mine to clear the Enterprise of Baryon radiation but it also destroyed organic material.

As for how it happened, just wait and see!
 
The howl of klaxons and the flashing of red lights engulfed the bridge as Bane Mather surveyed the officers busying themselves around him. Letina Iyal was notably silent in her seat at his right hand side but he did not doubt that his first officer would rise to the occasion should the need arise.

“Ms Wildman,” requested the captain from his chair. “Where on the ship is the power loss most severe?”

“The port sides of the star-drive section, sir,” replied the efficient Operations Manager.

Bane instinctively responded, “Helm! Hard to starboard! Full impulse!”

Tessa Shanthi entered commands into her console and altered the speed and trajectory of the Saturn-class starship. The bridge crew observed the main viewer as the ship swerved harshly to the right and Yolande-IV disappeared from the screen.

“Captain, the power loss is subsiding,” noted Wildman, as she studied her console.

“Ra-Barra’veth,” called Bane Mather, examining the controls in the arm of his char. “I want you to use the multi-spectral sensors and find the source of the dampening field is.”

“Aye, sir,” replied the Efrosian science officer as he set to work on his console.

Bane Mather stroked his strong chin, pondering his next move. He was expecting someone or something to make their presence known but was also more than prepared to flush them out.

“I have modulated the multi-spectral sensors to penetrate the dampening field,” the science officer informed Bane. “There appear to be two small unmanned spacecraft, merely twice the size of sensor probes which are jointly producing a dampening field.”

“Transmit the co-ordinates to Tactical,” commanded Bane Mather, ready to flush out his hidden opponent. “Mr Darzon, lock phasers on those co-ordinates and fire at will.”

The view screen showed two thick beams of scorching orange light lashing through space and two separate explosions.

“Direct hits,” reported the Tarlac tactical officer. “The objects have been destroyed and the dampening field has been eliminated.”

Naomi Wildman’s console seemed to come to life as readouts, suppressed by the dampening field, flickered before her. She immediately set about scanning for an alien vessel but her captain appeared to be one step ahead of the sensor readings.

Bane rose from his chair and demanded, “Now Mr Darzon, hailing frequencies open!”

Darzon tapped his controls and nodded to his commanding officer.

“This is Captain Bane Mather of the Federation starship Destiny,” declared the self-assured Bajoran officer confidently. “Unidentified vessel, any further attempts to immobilize this ship will be treated as an act of aggression and will warrant a hostile response.”

There was a heavy silence on the bridge as Naomi Wildman ran her fingers across the Ops console, determined to locate the unseen opponent. She scrutinized her sensor readings for neutrino emissions, indicating the possibility of a cloaked ship, with little success. The resourceful young officer picked up on a faint ionic distortion and homed in on the irregularity. Upon further inspection she concluded that the sensors were in fact detecting an ion trail. She adjusted her scans to examine the ion trail and finally found exactly what she was looking for.

“Captain,” called Wildman eagerly, “I am detecting a starship emerging from low orbit of the second moon of Yolande-IV.”

“Helm, intercept course!” ordered Bane, standing over Wildman’s shoulders.

“The ship appears to be similar in size to the Destiny,” noted Wildman, studying her readouts. “The warp signature is not familiar but is powerful and I am picking up on charged pulse phaser cannons.”

Darzon interrupted from the tactical station, “Sir, we are receiving a response from the alien vessel.”

“On screen,” said Bane Mather staring at the mammoth viewer.

The view screen flickered and the imposing image of a striking red-skinned humanoid with fierce eyes resembling molten rock. There was no one hair on the head of the alien staring back at the bridge but his dark uniform sported feathers and animal skins.

“I am Brigadier Ghorzar of the Zytron Regency,” glared the intimidating figure.

Bane folded his arms and responded, “Brigadier, you have violated Federation space and we suspect that you have -”

“Surrender Admiral Bruce Maddox!” interrupted the alien, Ghorzar.

Letina Iyal rose from her seat, reverting to her dedicated role as first officer of the Destiny. She stood by the captain’s side in a deliberate gesture of support.

“Bruce Maddox died on Yolande-IV along with everyone else on Outpost Arcadia,” pronounced Bane, meeting the alien commander with a determined stare of his own. “Of course you are already aware of that…you wiped out all life on that outpost!”

“The Zytron Regency is concerned only with punishing Bruce Maddox. However, anyone found to be harbouring him will be eliminated unless he is surrendered.”

“Is that what happened on Yolande-IV? You couldn’t find Maddox so you threatened them with extermination?”

“My soldiers raided your facility on the planet’s surface but were repelled and so we conducted a Baryon Sweep of the outpost on the understanding that it would cease if Bruce Maddox was surrendered.”

Finally, thought Letina Iyal, the pieces of this morbid, macabre jigsaw started fitting together. The Baryon Sweep, eliminating Type-F Baryon particles and all organic life was used as a grotesque, terrifying weapon against the inhabitants of Outpost Arcadia.

“We agreed to supply Admiral Maddox with materials for his research on the understanding that he served as an informant…yet he proved to be unreliable, his transmissions were often erroneous or falsified. He had to be punished!”

“You cannot punish two hundred men, women and children for the actions of a lone individual!” yelled Bane Mather, incensed at the callousness of the brigadier.

Ghorzar’s eyes and nostrils flared as he spat, “We will do as we must to fulfil our mission. Now surrender Bruce Maddox or your vessel will fall victim to the same fate!”

“Bruce Maddox died on Yolande-IV, damn it!” affirmed Captain Bane.

“So we thought…but why is the pathetic old man transmitting messages to my warship as we speak? Why is he attempting to bribe us with more false promises? Why is begging for safe transport to Zytron Prime?”

Bane glanced to Naomi Wildman who entered commands into her console.

“It is true, sir,” asserted the Operations Manager. “There is an unauthorized transmission from…”

“Let me guess,” interjected Bane. “Cybernetics?”

The young officer nodded, “Yes, sir.”

The ominous brigadier interrupted with a snarl, “I will give you thirty minutes to surrender Maddox…or I will destroy your vessel.”

Ghorzar disappeared from the main view screen, replaced with the sight of his warship. Menacing pulse phaser cannons protruded from the dome shaped hull of the vessel and appeared to be trained directly on the USS Destiny.

“Captain,” called Ra-Barra’veth from the science station. “I have judged that the Zytron warship matches the Destiny in terms of firepower and manoeuvrability. The result of a battle between the two starships is far from clear.”

Bane Mather acknowledged the science officer and mulled over the situation briefly.

“Commander Iyal,” he called over his shoulder as he strode towards the turbo lift, “you have the bridge. I’m going to have a word with Admiral Maddox.”

The doors slipped shut behind Bane, leaving Letina Iyal perplexed but willing to place her confidence entirely behind her new captain.


* * *


Standing in the turbo lift as the carriage descended, Bane grew angry at the deception and the atrocity he was finally beginning to understand.

“Bane to Owai,” called the captain, touching his comm-badge but failing to note any response.

“Bane to Nagata!”

Still no response.

“Bane to Lenor!”

A pause.

“Captain, this is Dr Lenor,” came the breathless reply of the Cardassian woman. “I need security at the Cybernetics Lab immediately!”

The carriage came to a halt and the doors hissed open. Bane spotted two burly security officers marching down the corridor before him, armed with Type-III phaser rifles. He followed his men, picking up to an agile jog. When he and the guards arrived at the entrance to the Cybernetics Lab, Dr Lenor was doubled over, appearing dishevelled, a small gash evident above her brow.

“Captain!” she called fretfully. “It is Daystrom-3!”

Bane Mather helped the Cardassian doctor to her feet, supporting her with one hand and reassuring her with the other. The two security officers entered the Cybernetics Lab, with their rifles ready. Bane and Lenor followed.

Marcus Owai lay incapacitated across the floor, Lieutenant Ray Nagata was stood rigidly in a corner of the room. The android, Daystrom-3, held Owai’s phaser at the engineer with one hand whilst he tapped the touchpad on the wall-mounted computer terminal with the other.

“What have you done?” demanded Bane Mather, glaring at the android.

The metallic face glared at him, “Stay back! All of you! When I shot Lieutenant Owai the phaser was set to stun, however I can assure you all that it is now set to kill!”

“Daystrom-3,” pleaded Dr Lenor, “don’t you realize what you are doing?”

“He isn’t Daystrom-3, doctor!” spat Bane Mather, looking at the android with utter contempt. “Allow me to introduce Professor Bruce Maddox.”

Lenor was shocked, as was Nagata as he stood nervously in the corner.

“I wouldn’t waste your time trying to contact your Zytron friends…they’ve already killed you once and they won’t buy your bribery and broken promises a second time,” remarked the Bajoran brusquely.

The android focused increasingly on Bane Mather, aware of the two security guards training their rifles on him and his hostage in the corner yet engrossed in the words of the Bajoran captain.

“When Dr Lenor investigated your quarters she found biographies and papers by all the great cyberneticists,” explained Bane Mather, his eyes locked on the artificial life form. “Everyone from Richard Daystrom to Noonien Soong…to Ira Graves.”

The Cardassian doctor gasped, realization dawning on her.

“You transferred your consciousness into an artificial life form!” exclaimed Dr Lenor.

“It was an extreme length to go to, Maddox,” asserted the Bajoran captain. “More than just the perfect disguise but a way to save yourself from a Baryon Sweep which was slowly destroying every last particle of organic matter on that outpost.”

“You have found me out,” conceded Maddox, the robotic head dipping in shame.

“I also know about your arrangement with the Zytron Regency,” prompted Bane.

“After the Ira Graves Incident, thirty years ago, the Daystrom Institute has demonstrated a stubborn reluctance to support certain avenues of research,” explicated the humiliated Maddox. “I used contacts within the Zytron Regency to find the materials I needed…in exchange for information.”

“In exchange for Federation secrets!” insisted the captain. “You are a traitor, Maddox, and even now you are trying to weasel your way onto that Zytron warship!”

The shocked and disturbed Lenor interjected, “After they tried to hunt you down and after what they have done to all those people, you are still trying to curry favour with those…murderers?”

“It is an act of total desperation, doctor,” grimaced Bane as he stepped forward, nearer to the armed android. “Ghorzar will not be fooled again. He is too vengeful and he is threatening to fire upon the Destiny unless I release you into his custody.”

Maddox lowered his arm and handed the phaser to Bane Mather.

As Lenor watched she was certain that if Maddox existed as a human being rather than imprisoned as an automaton, he would be visibly distraught, perhaps shedding tears of guilt and despair.

The Chief Medical Officer kneeled at the side of the fallen Lieutenant Owai and scanned him with a medical tricorder as the two security guards moved to take the android into custody.

“I would understand if you surrendered me to Ghorzar, captain,” stated the ashamed Bruce Maddox.

“I have no intention of doing so,” replied Bane Mather, with a relieved sigh. “However, I do want you to send another message to the Zytron warship explaining the situation.”

“Do you think that Brigadier Ghorzar will be so understanding?” asked Maddox.

Bane smirked, “I don’t think so…that’s why I need my Chief Engineer back.”

Ray Nagata wiped perspiration from his forehead as he looked at his captain.

“Mr Nagata,” asked the captain with a glint in his eye. “How would you like to blow up an android?”
 
Nice! More of the mystery is revealed, and Maddox downloading his consciousness into an android body dovetails nicely with the Baryon sweep conducted by the Zytron Regency. And if Bane is planning what I think he’s planning… the good Brigadier is going to find himself in some hot water very quickly. :D
 
Maddox downloading his consciousness was a nice plot twist and the Zytron Regency sounds like some very ugly customers. From the dress of the Brigadier I'm wondering if they might be a society that got warp technology a little too soon--the 25th century equivalent of barbarians.
 
DavidFalkayn said:From the dress of the Brigadier I'm wondering if they might be a society that got warp technology a little too soon--the 25th century equivalent of barbarians.
You mean... like the Klingons?! :lol:
 
Commander Letina Iyal and Lieutenant J.G. Tessa Shanthi sat at the forward computer stations aboard the Federation runabout Superior. The Caspian-class auxiliary vessel emerged from the shuttle bay of the USS Destiny and soared through space at impulse speeds on a course for Yolande-IV.

“We are entering orbit of the planet,” noted Shanthi as she ran her fingers across the state-of-the-art control panel on the runabout. “The modulating subspace shield appears to have concealed our presence from the Zytron sensors.”

Letina Iyal felt her stomach churn as she watched the vessel’s descent into the atmosphere of Yolande-IV. The cockpit trembled against the turbulence as the Trill officer became entranced by the coarse storm clouds and cascading swirls of toxic gases she was being plunged into.

In Captain Vran’s last moments alive, he must have experienced something similar. The thought paralysed Letina Iyal with fear. She barely registered the comments of her crewmate on this daring mission.

“We will be in transporter range of the outpost in approximately twenty seconds,” reported the helmswoman as she handled her console expertly.

Time seemed to freeze as the steadfast runabout battled through the tempestuous atmosphere and the storms.

“We are in transporter range of Outpost Arcadia. I am scanning for the androids.”

The words passed right through Iyal, she felt her nails penetrating her uniform and digging into her thighs as she envisaged the last moments of Vran’s life in such similar circumstances and was overcome with the fear that she may meet her end in the same way.

“I have located a unit and I am initiating transport.”

Letina Iyal postulated that the only comfort she could draw from Vran’s death on a barren rock, drowned in toxic gases was that her officers were able to recover the tattered, charred and warped body. The shreds of Captain Vran peeled off the surface of a nameless planet were loaded into a torpedo casing as he would have wished. Letina imagined how her remains would be treated if she died now, in this cruel jungle of poisonous mist and blasts of thermionic radiation.

“Commander…”

Why did Vran tempt fate?

“Commander…”

Why was she tempting fate now?

“Commander…”

She remembered.

“Commander Iyal…”

She remembered the words Ra-Barra’veth spoke to her which had corrected her on the day of Vran’s funeral.

You haven’t let anyone down for as long as you have served on this ship - don’t start now.

“Do we have the android?” asked Letina Iyal, snapping out her trance and tapping the console in front of her.

“Aye, sir,” confirmed the perplexed Tessa Shanthi. “Are you alright, commander?”

Letina Iyal smiled and nodded, “Better than ever, lieutenant. Now get us out of here!”

The sleek, grey runabout carried out a swift one hundred and eighty degree turn, roaring through the storm clouds and gliding between blasts of radiation, clearing the atmosphere of Yolande-IV and returning to the Destiny.


* * *


Brigadier Ghorzar marched through the wide metallic corridors of his warship, flanked by two brawny soldiers. Their heavy boots clanged against the floor as they made their way to the Transporter Chamber. The three military officers stepped through the great blast-doors and into the chamber where another soldier, with a rifle strapped over his back, was operating a wall-mounted control panel.

Ghorzar and his guards removed their phaser pistols from their holsters and pointed the weapons towards the transporter pad, anticipating the arrival of their prisoner.

“The Federation ship is signalling that they are ready to transport the android on our signal,” stated the soldier at the controls.

“Very well,” acknowledged the brigadier. “Energize!”

A high-pitched screeching sound echoed throughout the Transporter Chamber as the figure of a sturdy, silver android started to form within the confines of a beam of extraordinary light. The shrieking subsided and the beam disappeared revealing Ghorzar’s prisoner.

“Admiral Maddox,” grinned Brigadier Ghorzar, “I look forward to your interrogation.”

The android simply stood before the soldiers, firmly placed on the transporter pad and unresponsive to the comments of the brigadier. The soldiers closed in around their prisoner, circling the still automaton, their weapons raised.

“You may not choose to speak now but I can assure you,” began the snarling brigadier, “even androids can be made to talk!”

Brigadier Ghorzar looked the motionless android up and down when suddenly the realization that he had been tricked dawned on him.

By then it was too late.

The frozen android was blasted into a million pieces with a monstrous explosion. Ghorzar and the soldiers in the Transporter Chamber were vaporized instantly in a blinding white hot light. Flames and intense heat broke down the walls of the chamber and flooded the near-by corridors with raging fireballs. Flames engulfed a whole section of the Zytron warship and heat charred the interior of the vessel.

Daystrom-2 was no more.


* * *


Letina Iyal and Tessa Shanthi emerged from the turbo lift carriage and strode onto the bridge to take their stations.

“Well done ladies,” remarked Bane Mather, examining the view screen from his chair in the middle of the bridge.

Darzon called form the tactical station, “Sir, the detonation was successful. I am detecting a hull breach on the Zytron vessel.”

“Understood,” noted Bane, stroking his proud chin and observing the broken, wounded starship on the screen. “Target those phaser cannons, Mr Darzon. I want their weapons disabled.”

Two balls of orange light raced along the Destiny’s phaser strips and met to feed a powerful beam of energy. Repeated phaser blasts charred the opposing warship, obliterating the protruding phaser cannons and scarring the hull.

“I think we have made our point,” grinned Captain Bane as he rose from his chair and stood before the view screen. “Open a channel to the warship.”

The chirping from the tactical console indicated that a channel had been opened.

“This is Captain Bane of the Destiny,” declared the victorious Bajoran. “You should be aware that I have my forward phasers locked onto your ship and a full spread of quantum torpedoes loaded and ready to fly.”

Letina Iyal watched her commanding officer’s performance, having decided that she could learn as much from serving with Bane Mather than she could if Captain Vran still occupied the captain’s chair.

“Unless you stand down and commit to retreat from the Yolande system - never to return - I will unleash the full firepower of this starship.”

The long pause was followed with the news Bane Mather had anticipated.

“Attention USS Destiny, we are prepared to stand down.”

Bane Mather beamed a glowing smile as the satisfying air of triumph and success ascended throughout the bridge. The Bajoran captain shook hands with Commander Iyal, who shared a contented grin with him and exchanged an approving nod with Ra-Barra’veth at the science station.

Captain Bane Mather had won the battle, won the day and finally won over his first officer.


* * *


The cell reserved for Bruce Maddox was reinforced with a modulating force field in order to contain the resourceful android. Bane Mather doubted he would attempt to flee but nonetheless, every precaution was taken to contain the prisoner in the event that the physical power or the calculating positronic mind of the automaton was employed to devise an escape.

“What do you think will happen to me?” asked Maddox, the cold, emotionless tone and face disguising his inner torment.

“I suspect you will be detained and put on trial like any other prisoner,” replied Bane Mather from outside of the force field.

The android paced from one side of the cell to the other, hands clasped behind his back, demonstrating the human traits of the artificial life form.

“I do not want to be remembered like this,” muttered Maddox. “I don’t want to be remembered for my desperation or my treachery…I was always driven by the need to discover, to explore, to push boundaries.”

Bane Mather sympathised for a moment but could not bring himself to agree. Bruce Maddox was a desperate traitor, motivated by self-interest and the pursuit of personal glory. He may once have been an admirable man, a dedicated scientist and a loyal Starfleet officer. What he had become was twisted and self-absorbed. He had never demonstrated malice or wickedness. Bane believed that in his mind Maddox could justify his actions to himself. However, this void of morality did not wash with Bane Mather.

“If it is any consolation…” said Bane, his voice hushed. “I do not believe you meant any harm to others. Indeed, you seemed too engrossed in your own interests to spare a thought for anyone at all apart from yourself.”

Bruce Maddox stopped and stared at Captain Bane.

The truth cut like a knife.

“We will arrive at Starbase 600 in about an hour,” estimated Bane, taking one last look at the human being confined to a mechanical shell. “Admiral Kelvin will decide what to do with you when we get there.”

Bane Mather stepped away from the force field and exited the brig, leaving Bruce Maddox alone inside one of the machines he gave his life to understanding.


* * *


Commander Letina Iyal pondered how exactly she should approach her captain about apologising for her fiery attitude towards him throughout their first mission together. She had come to realize that it was her responsibility to break down the barriers built by guilt and grief.

The turbo lift offered her a moment of quiet solitude in which to think when it suddenly came to a halt and in walked Captain Bane Mather himself.

“Sir,” nodded Iyal in acknowledgement as Captain Bane entered the carriage.

The turbo lift resumed the ascent as the two senior officers stood in silence.

Bane did not enjoy the taut stillness.

Iyal would not speak for fear of saying the wrong thing.

Bane cracked first, “Halt turbo lift!”

“Captain?” posed Letina Iyal anxiously.

“I think it is time we cleared the air and I certainly think it is time you told me about Vran’s death.”

Letina Iyal was visibly uncomfortable yet she understood that this was a matter which she must address.

“Vran held Risa in deep affection ever since his early postings there as a Starfleet meteorologist,” explained Iyal with a sigh, remembering the horga’hn from the ready room. “He was well-versed in the dynamics of the weather modification network and so when an equivalent system on Nuribuku-V malfunctioned, he volunteered to take a shuttlecraft to conduct repairs.”

A tear was forming in Letina Iyal’s eye as she continued with her account of the tragedy.

“Equally, our Chief Tactical Officer was proficient in piloting shuttles in harsh conditions and so he volunteered to join the away team,” added Iyal, living the ordeal in her mind all over again.

“That was how the shuttle crashed?” asked Bane, softly and almost rhetorically.

Iyal nodded, “The turbulence was severe…he died because I failed to uphold Starfleet protocol and object to him leading the away team.”

Bane Mather wanted to comfort the tormented Trill officer but could not decide how.

“When I was on the runabout at Yolande-IV I experienced what Captain Vran must have experienced himself in his last moments alive,” said Iyal, recounting the restless storms and the volatile bursts of radiation.

“It was a dangerous situation but you knew the risks…as did Captain Vran,” explained Bane Mather, his voice soft yet clear and warm.

“I realize that now.”

Letina Iyal sighed as Bane signalled the turbo lift to continue the ascent.

“Letina you have more than paid your penance,” asserted the captain.

The turbo lift stopped and the doors slid open. Bane made to depart when he stopped in his tracks and turned around to face his first officer.

“You know,” he began, a smile forming on his face, “you haven’t lived until you have tasted some of Cassandra’s homemade steak pie. Care to join us?”

Letina Iyal was taken aback by the proposal yet Bane’s warm, inviting smile set her at ease.

“I would love to,” replied Letina, stepping out of the turbo lift and carriage.

Bane patted Letina on the back and guided her through the corridor joking, “You have the pleasure of dining at the captain’s table tonight.”

“The pleasure is all mine.”

Captain Bane Mather and Commander Letina Iyal made their way side-by-side through the corridors of the USS Destiny, developing the first stages of friendship and forging a formidable partnership.



That's the first episode of Star Trek: Destiny...THE END!

Hope you enjoyed it, I certainly have. Work is underway on te next episodes which are going to revolve much more around the promised political climate of the 25th century but until then I'd appreciate your thoughts and feedback.
 
Very well done. I liked this story quite a bit. You managed to create a very distinct pilot here with - as pointed out before - a group of fascinating characters.

I especially enjoyed the mystery of what had happened to the outpost as well as the the first officers issues of getting over the death of her former captain.

The inclusion of Maddox as an android was an well done twist.

Congratulations on a great story!
 
Thanks a lot for the interest. I'm glad the characters were so well received because I have said throughout that it is the characters which drive my stories.
 
I thought that what happened to Maddox was a nice bit of poetic justice. You've got a good background and set up here for future stories and I hope you continue. You've got a good feel for character interaction and you did a good job in dealing with interpersonal conflicts on the ship while at the same time keeping the story focused on the central plot.

All in all, a very well done first effort! I hope to see more of the Destiny.
 
I'm a bit late to the party, sorry. I agree with all of the above. This is a really good, solid story. I wish I had done as well on my first post. :D
 
Just finished...excellent start to what seems to be one interesting Star Trek story. Looking forward to the next episode and following the crew of Destiny all season long.

Admiral Young
 
Very nicely done. Your first foray here on the BBS has been a memorable one. I’ve enjoyed your crew, their characterizations, the plot, the pacing, and the story overall.

The eventual reconciliation between Iyal and Bane was a nice note to end on. Hopefully, she can let Vran's spirit rest now.

It will be a pleasure to join Captain Bane and his crew on their continuing adventures. I’m also hoping to learn more about the stellar-political situation the Federation finds itself in on the cusp of the 25th century. :thumbsup:
 
Thanks for all the positive feedback. Work is underway on the next installment which will be very heavy of Alpha Quadrant politics on the even of the 25th century.
 
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