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Star Trek: Espero ' The Return of Hope'

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admiralelm11

Fleet Captain
Fleet Captain
Hello, everyone.
I wrote this story over eight years ago when I was involved with Star Trek: Citadel which was an original fan fiction collaboration. It was broken up and used for a story by the series' main author. We've broken contact since 2016 because of his political leanings. I won't go into that. Suffice it to say, I have dug up this old story and I've rewritten it. I don't know if it's the beginning of something new. I just needed something to get me out of my depression spiral.

Anyways, here it is. Please read and comment.
Thank you.


Star Trek: Espero
‘The Return of Hope’
By Jack D. Elmlinger

The loading of the supplies seemed to take longer than expected as Anax watched them being beamed about the Espero. A team of enlisted crew members hauled them away on anti-gravity carts to their assigned places. The little Defiant-class starship had finished with her repairs after a recent battle and she was preparing to leave Starbase Whiskey-Bravo. The Edoan Lieutenant was a new addition to the crew and he had big shoes to fill as the Chief Tactical Officer.

Behind him, the Cargo Bay doors opened and closed. Turning around, he didn’t see anyone there until he looked down and saw a green-skinned Roylan looking back at him with their eyestalks. With Captain’s gold pips on her crimson collar, she walked up to the console that he was standing behind him, taking a look at the cargo container before turning her attention towards him.

“Will the cargo loading be finished soon?,” she asked him with a kind look on her face.

Looking down at the PADD in the hand of his middle arm, Anax consulted it before he gave her an answer. Along with the regular supplies that were needed to run the ship, they would also be carrying additional supplies for a new installation on Naydeer. It was a Forward Operating Outpost set up to safeguard the lives of miners at dilithium and topaline facilities.

He nodded his orange head at her. “We should be done with this in another hour or so.”

“Good. I’d like to be under way soon.” This was their first meeting since he had reported aboard to Lieutenant Commander Andrew Murray, the First Officer, seven days ago. “I prefer being out in space, instead of docked to a station.”

“I never liked spending time around starbases much either. Give me a working replicator, a phaser, and the open road,” he said, agreeing with her. “Life can’t get any better than that.”

“You could be stranded for six days in an escape pod.”

Espero’s Captain became quiet after she said that. The Edoan was definitely a man after her own hearts. She had joined Starfleet, thirty years ago as an enlisted person because she felt that she had a destiny to explore the Galaxy like Humans did. She had only been promoted to the officer ranks when war had broken out between the Federation and the Dominion. Later on, her ship, the Athabaskan where she served as a junior-grade Lieutenant, had been lost at the Battle of Tyra.

“Ma’am?”

“Never mind. Carry on, Lieutenant,” she said before she turned back towards the door and gave him a final look. “When it’s convenient for you, you should join Mister Murray and I for dinner.”

“Dinner… uh…”

“Stand easy, Once a week, all of the ship’s officers dine together,” she assured him. “Tonight? In the Canteen at 1800 hours?”

“Um, uh, yes, yes, ma’am,” Anax said, surprised by the invitation.

* * * *

“Have you met the new guy yet, Skipper?,” Lieutenant Commander Andrew Murray asked his Captain once he saw her leave the Cargo Bay. He crossed over from an adjacent corridor and walked towards her. He was a tall man with short dark hair.

“I just left the Cargo Bay.”

“Did you invite him to dinner?”

“You’re surprised?”

“Not really. Captain Derajan used to do that,” he said, reminding her of his previous Commanding Officer. Before she had assumed command of the Espero, they had met aboard the USS Hindustan after the Athabaskan’s destruction at the hands of the Jem’Hadar. Despite the tragedy of her loss, they had become good friends over the last six years. In fact, Ikar had been in the middle of her officer qualification courses when they met. He had been a young Ensign that she had easily taken under her wing.

“He wasn’t a bad model.”

“Bridge to the Captain,” the voice of Ensign Meir sounded over her combadge. Like many members of the crew, the J’Naii was a new crew addition who had just graduated from Starfleet Academy. The Espero was her first assignment.

“This is Ikar.”

“Ma’am, Admiral Mernon is asking to speak with you.”

“I’ll take it in my Ready Room.”

Murray raised an eyebrow as she tapped her combadge again to sever the connection with the Bridge. “What do you think he might have in store for us?”

“Knowing Admirals as I do, it’s probably trouble.”

* * * *

The transporter beam dissipated around Ensigns Derrick Lake and Kor lasch Gelek after they materialized aboard the Espero. As small as the ship looked on the outside, the Defiant-class vessel looked like it was bigger on the inside to the Human. This was his first time aboard such a ship and he looked around the small Transporter Bay to see a tall, brown-haired man standing behind the transporter controls.

“Welcome aboard the Espero,” the man wearing Lieutenant Commander’s pips on his red collar said while he stepped away from the controls. “I’m Andrew Murray, the First Officer.”

“Ensign Derrick Lake, reporting aboard for duty, sir,” Lake spit out, jumping to attention. He was visibly nervous in front of the First Officer.

The Tellarite standing beside him frowned deeply and sniffed the air around him. “This ship smells worse than a garbage scowl full of targ droppings,” he growled, snarling at his superior officer.

“This ship smells better than you did after your last bath, Mister Gelek.”

Gelek stepped down from the transporter pad and moved in close to the Lieutenant. “And you look like a partially-digested piece of gagh served with a side order of Denebian shell mouths that puked up an Orion sex worker.”

“Why, thank you,” Murray said, fake-gushing from the compliment. He looked down, straightening his sleeves. “You sure know how to make a guy blush, Ensign. Thankfully, I’m married.”

Gelek growled again. “Permission to come aboard?”

“Granted. Welcome aboard, gentlemen.”

“It’ll be a pleasure once I get my hands on the controls.”

“The controls?,” Lake asked him.

“The helm controls, you noodle knocker!,” Gelek shouted at him. “I’m a frakking pilot!”

“You’ll report to Lieutenant Neff for your cabin assignments and you’ll report for duty at 1800 hours, guys,” Murray told them while he held out two PADDs that he took off of a shelf near the transporter console. “Here’s a copy of the duty roster, a map of the ship, and any other orientation information that you’ll need.”

“Where’s the Medical Bay?,” Lake asked him after Gelek left him alone in the Transporter Bay with the Lieutenant Commander.

“I’ll show you,” he said, leading him out of the room.

* * * *

Captain Ikar walked into her Ready Room and she was surprised by a bouquet of Argelian red roses sitting in a vase on her desk. Inhaling the sweet essence of the decapitated plant life, she looked for a card and she didn’t find one. The gesture in itself was sweet but it was still a mystery. The rose bouquets had started appearing on her desk since their arrival at Starbase Whiskey-Bravo. At first, she thought that they came from an Espero crew member with a crush on her or a member of the Starbase crew. It was impossible. There weren’t too many non-Roylan species in the known Galaxy that wanted to mate with her.

The Espero’s Captain also didn’t think that it could be a member of her own species because of three reasons. The first reason was that she hadn’t been back home since she had left Royla to enlist in Starfleet. The second reason was that there weren’t many Roylans in Starfleet. And the third reason was that she didn’t really know any of them.

Not even the infamous Admiral Tattok or Captain Weynik of the Starsong.

“It’s a mystery wrapped in a conundrum,” she whispered to herself before she sat down behind her desk. The Roylan woman put her personal thoughts aside for the moment and turned her monitor on. Admiral Mernon, a Benzite, appeared on the small screen, one second after the Federation logo appeared and disappeared.

“Captain Ikar, how’re things on the Espero?”

“As well as it can be, sir. We’re proceeding on schedule and we should be departing at 0700 hours tomorrow,” she told him, picking a PADD up from her desktop.

“Good. All that you have to do is deliver your supplies to Naydeer and await instructions about your next assignment. Of course, you’ll remember to keep an eye out for any Tzenkethi ships.” The Tzenkethi, a former formidable foe of Starfleet, was rearing its head up again and looking with thoughts of expansion towards Federation space.

“I understand your concerns, Admiral. Naydeer is close to the Tzenkethi border.” Ikar nodded with understanding. “It wouldn’t be unsurprising to engage them again. We stopped them at Naydeer before. We can stop them again.”

“If that kind of situation comes up, Starfleet will be looking into assigning more ships to this sector. According to Captain sh'Nahl, everything has been quiet out there.”

“There’s more to this than we think, isn’t there, sir?”

Mernon hesitated for a moment, taking a deep breath and exhaling it through his breathing mask. “Nothing that I can think of for now, Captain Ikar.”

“Then there’s nothing more to say, sir.”

Mernon’s frown couldn’t be seen but it was felt. “Good luck and have a safe journey. Mernon out.”

The Benzite Admiral’s image disappeared from the screen and Ikar rubbed her chin in deep thought. “Damn,” she breathed before she smacked the PADD down hard on the face of her desk. The concussion of her anger shook the desktop which sent the vase of roses crashing onto the floor below it.

* * * *

“Doctor, I have a patient for you,” Lieutenant Commander Murray said, addressing the Vulcan standing on the far side of the Medical Bay. His present task has involved the inventory of medical supplies. One of his senior medics was assisting him when the First Officer and Ensign Lake walked in.

Looking up from his PADD, Sovek stepped over to the biobed near them. “You are Lieutenant Lake?”

“Actually, it’s ‘Ensign’ now, Doctor…?”

“I am Sovek.”

The Espero’s Chief Medical Officer had once been a civilian medical practitioner and he had served aboard a Federation medical ship, the Samaritan during the war. After his son had been killed in action against the Jem’Hadar on MN-1274, he accepted a commission in Starfleet. He had come aboard the Espero with Captain Ikar.

“This is the guy that I talked to you yesterday about at lunch,” Andrew said, looking over his shoulder and pointing a thumb at Lake. “This is the guy who – “

“I am well aware of Ensign Lake’s history, Mister Murray. I have taken the time to review his records before his arrival,” Sovek said and the black man frowned at his arrogant tone. Though they had served together for close to three years, there were still moments of animosity between them. The Doctor couldn’t theorize why he displayed this kind of behavior towards him. He suspected that it was an inkling of a past life event that drove the cause of his moments of… emotionalism.

“Then see to his needs, Doctor,” Murray said, leaving the Medical Bay to return to his duties.

Seeing the First Officer leave, the Operations Officer became nervous again. It wasn’t often that he shared his personal problems with anyone. Not even a Counselor. However, with his particular problem, he required the services of a skilled physician. The man with the pointed ears switched his PADD for a medical tricorder that had been sitting on a nearby instrument tray.

“I guess you’re familiar with my medical history?,” Lake asked him.

“As I previously stated, I am,” he said. “According to your records, you abandoned your Starfleet commission in 2372 and you became a member of the Maquis movement. Before they were forcibly disbanded by the Jem’Hadar at the request of their Cardassian allies, you were on a mission to destroy a Cardassian biogenic weapons plant.”

“That sounds about right, Doctor.”

“The circumstances of the situation were reportedly disastrous. You were accidentally exposed to a genetically-modified strain of the Dystrum-B virus,” the Vulcan said, continuing his recitation from memory. He looked up from his tricorder which he had been using while they spoke and raised an eyebrow. “Your last physician, I believe, was treating your condition with injections of hallitene and inaprovaline?”

“That’s correct, Doctor. According to Starfleet Medical, they said that my exposure to the virus will take twenty years to cause me to lose complete autonomic control. I won’t be able to move, speak, or do much of anything except be a brain stuck inside of an empty shell.”

“As your malady has no known cure yet, why have you come to me, Ensign?”

“You’ve heard of the drug known as rosinstalis, right?”

“I have,” Sovek said, returning his tricorder to the instrument tray. He immediately recalled the article in a recent study by Doctor Beverly Crusher of the Enterprise. She had done some research on the Dystrum-B virus and its genetically-modified offshoots. She hypothesized that rosinstalis could remedy most of the effects of every viral strain on most humanoid species and make the victims capable members of galactic society.

“Then you understand what I’m asking you for.”

“If I were Human, I would be flattered by such a request. However, as a Vulcan and as a practicing medical physician within Starfleet, I am obliged to deny you such a treatment. Rosinstalis hasn’t been cleared for release by Starfleet Medical because of some of the possible side effects.”

“I’ve taken rosinstalis before, Doctor, when I was assigned to the Celestris during the war. I was under the Chief Medical Officer’s care, the whole time, and – “

“And you believed that with your transfer to the Espero, I would be sympathetic to your plight that I would give you what you needed to treat your condition?”

“I came to you because I want to continue being useful. I don’t want to spend the rest of my life in a hospital bed!,” Ensign Lake shouted before he remembered himself. Holding up a hand, he spoke in a gentler tone. “Look, Doctor, I’m not some kind of addict. So if you feel that you need to, report me to Starfleet Medical.”

Sovek released a deep breath that he had been holding before he considered the younger man’s words. After taking the Vulcan equivalent of the Hippocratic Oath to ‘do no harm’ before he joined Starfleet, he had been a medical professional for over seventy years. Despite the circumstances, a request for medical intervention couldn’t be ignored.

“I can synthesize the drug,” he agreed. “However, I will only prescribe it when it is absolutely necessary. I shall also be closely monitoring your medical condition. There may be a possibility that I might be able to devise a cure or an antidote.”

“It sounds like you have a plan, Doctor.”

* * * *

“Good morning, Skipper,” Lieutenant Commander Murray greeted his Captain, the next morning when she walked onto the Bridge. He was standing behind Lieutenant Anax who was seated at the tactical console. “Did you sleep well, last night?”

“I started reading ‘The Compass Rose’,” the Roylan said, referring to a piece of twenty-first-century fantasy fiction that had been written by Gail Dayton. Both officers had enjoyed a shared interest in the genre.

“Good book?”

“So far, so good.” Moving to the center of the Bridge, she looked around. “Are we ready to get underway, Mister Murray?”

“As far as I know from the department heads. All personnel are aboard and all systems are online.”

Ikar nodded at him. “Mister Lake,” she said, looking at the young officer who was sitting at one of the portside consoles,” clear all moorings.”

“Aye, ma’am.”

“Port and starboard thrusters are resting at station-keeping, Captain,” Ensign Gelek announced from the helm station, anticipating Ikar’s next command.

“Lake,” Murray said,” request departure clearance from Operations.”

“Aye, sir,” the operations officer acknowledged the order, typing commands into his panel. He shared the same enthusiasm that the other Bridge members had for getting underway and back out into space.

“Ikar to Engineering.”

“Engineering, Nillen here,” responded the Espero’s Haliian Chief Engineer over the intercom. “Everything’s shipshape down here, Skipper.”

“Incredible,” Murray said, walking over to stand beside Ikar’s command chair. “She said that it would take her and the Starbase engineers six months to get the ship up and running again. Then she gets us operational again in only two months.”

“Did you crack the whip, Andrew?” Ikar shared his grin before her eyestalks moved to observe the work of her crew.

“Tarahni’s from the old Scott School of Engineering, Skipper. They love to set their repair estimates by a factor of two. Of course, the engineers from Whiskey-Bravo were a godsend.”

“I have Operations on audio, Captain,” Lake reported from Ops.

“Starbase Operations, this is Espero, request departure clearance,” the Espero’s Captain said, sitting down in her command chair. She liked this chair. It was comfortable.

“Espero, this is Whiskey-Bravo Operations,” a disembodied voice announced over the Bridge speakers. “You are cleared for departure. Please follow course nine-seven-three, mark two-one until you reach the outer markers of the defense zone.”

“Acknowledged. Espero out.” She nodded ahead to the Tellarite sitting at the helm. “Plot course and proceed, Mister Gelek. Maximum impulse.”

“I do know how to fly a starship,” the Tellarite answered her with sarcasm.

“Excuse me, Ensign?,” Murray shot back at him, ready to issue him a verbal warning.

“Yes, ma’am. Course and speed set.”

“Engage.”
 
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* * * *

Hours quickly passed by once the Espero had left Starbase Whiskey-Bravo. The stars splashed past the small window in the Ready Room and Ikar watched them go by at faster-than-light warp speed. This was her only moment in the day that she spent in quiet contemplation. Or, at least, it had been before she read the reports on her desktop monitor.

The door chimes whistled at her and she said,” Enter.”

The door slid open to one side with a whoosh and her First Officer stepped inside. He rested a PADD on the side of his right hip when he stopped to stand before her desk. “You wanted to see me, Skipper?”

“Yes,” she said, looking up at him. “A complaint has been made against you, Andrew. I’d like you to explain your side of it.”

“If I knew what the complaint was about or who the complainant was…”

“It was Doctor Sovek.”

Murray took a deep breath, exhaling it as he tried to avoid the harsh look on her face. This matter was one of the ship’s personnel and it should have been a matter that he should have been allowed to handle on his own. For the Vulcan doctor to bypass the chain of command and make his complaint directly to her… It annoyed him.

“On the first day that we’re out from Starbase Whiskey-Bravo and I receive his transfer request,” she continued, climbing effortlessly to her feet. She picked a PADD of her own from her desk and handed it to him. “This falls into your arena, Commander. Please explain yourself before I’m compelled to grant his request.”

Murray nodded at her. A look of dissatisfaction grew on his face before he explained his reasons for his problems with the senior medic. “I was on MN-1274 during the war and I was rescued by this hospital ship named the Samaritan…”

“This was while you were on TDY from the Hindustan?”

“Yeah. Starfleet wanted some of us to gain some practical experience from the people at Special Operations. So Seylek and I were paired up with a group of SpecOps operators.”

Ikar’s eyes widened with his revelation. She remembered Lieutenant Commander Seylek and how he had been the Hindustan’s Chief Engineer. Of course, she failed to understand the connection between him and Sovek. Mission reports from MN-1274 had been classified by Starfleet Command at the highest levels. She had noticed it when she took a look through the Vulcan’s history.

“Sovek was a civilian physician who joined the Samaritan’s medical team. When the runabouts flew down to rescue us,” – he was beginning to have some difficulty with those memories from that time in his life – ,” he… he let his own son die. He just lied there and died while his father worked on another patient. At the time, he seemed as cold and as emotionless as most Vulcans seem to be. I don’t even think that he even shed a tear over Seylek’s death.”

“Sovek was saving an injured man and Seylek performed his duty,” the Captain said, sitting back down and leaning back in her seat. Folding her hands in her lap, she watched him with her eyestalks.

“Skipper, you didn’t know him back then. He let his son die! He didn’t even care that –”

“You’re wrong, Andrew. A father cares about their child’s death. I’ve seen Starfleet’s reports on the good doctor. Sovek is… a tortured soul. He regrets his son’s death.”

“Are you ordering me to cut him some slack?,” he asked her. He was angry now. “Even though he was responsible for the death of one of my best friends?”

“Cut him some slack. Hatred can run deep. Our friend, yours and mine, was lost. Imagine yourself if it was one of your kids.”

Andrew’s thoughts turned to his wife and kids once they were mentioned. There had been some time for him to see them during their time on Starbase Whiskey-Bravo. Kara Murray was a very loving woman and he loved his children more than anything.

“I… I… I’d be devastated if anything happened to them,” he said slowly.

“Then put yourself in his shoes, Andrew, and consider his friends.”

He nodded. There was a lot of wisdom in her words. It gave him something to think about. “All right. I’ll see if I can talk him out of the transfer.” Changing the subject, he indicated the PADD that he carried in with him. “I brought you the updated duty roster.”

“Andrew,” the Roylan woman said, stopping him in his tracks,” I’m serious. I’m not ready to break in a new doctor.”

“I’ll talk to him.”

“I’ll believe it when I see it.”

“Bridge to Captain Ikar,” Lieutenant Anax’s deep voice said, coming over the speakers before they could start arguing.

“Ikar here.”

“Long-range sensors are detecting a ship directly in our flight path, Captain. It appears to be drifting.”

“I’m on my way.”

* * * *

The obstacle in their path became more apparent as the Espero slowed to impulse speed. On the main viewscreen, it appeared to be a Norway-class light cruiser lying on its port side. Clouds of plasma were leaking from the port warp nacelle and there appeared to be battle scars on the main hull. Oxygen was escaping from breaches in the hull and because of its battle damage, the ship looked like it was mostly intact despite its darkened state.

“Identity?,” Ikar called out, moving along the starboard side of the Bridge. Her eyestalks fell upon Lieutenant Reeta Neff who was conducting a sensor sweep.

“The Starfleet database lists her as the USS Michigan, NCC-72715 which was last reported to be under the command of Captain Dante Rodriguez,” the Bolian Science Officer recited to her. “Her most recent assignment was to categorize and record gaseous anomalies in the Penzat Nebula.”

“Any survivors?,” Gelek asked her.

Neff frowned. “There’s some form of… residue… I’m sorry. I can’t find any lifesigns.”

“Should we calibrate the sensors?,” Lake suggested.

“That would take too long,” Gelek pointed out. “They could all be dead for all we know.”

“This is… curious.”

“Skipper?,” Murray asked from beside her.

Ikar rubbed her chin, lowered her head in thought. After a few moments, she asked,” Do they still have life-support?”

“Oddly enough,” the Bolian confirmed,” it’s probably the only thing that’s still functioning.”

“I know that look. What are you thinking, Skipper?”

Ikar looked up at the dark-skinned man. “We’ll send an away team to the Michigan.”

“Aye, Skipper,” he said, nodding before heading for the Bridge hatch. “Lake, Neff, you’re with me.” He tapped his combadge. “Murray to MedBay. Doctor, we’re going to need you.”

“Acknowledged, Lieutenant Commander,” answered the Vulcan.

“Be safe, Andrew. I insist.”

“Hey, I always play it safe,” the First Officer said with a smile before the hatch door closed behind him, Lake, and Neff.

* * * *

‘What the hell happened to these poor unfortunate souls?,’ Andrew Murray asked himself after he materialized aboard the Norway-class starship. He turned his head to look around the Michigan’s Bridge, seeing fire damage and a few fallen support beams on the deck. He walked over to the center of the room, his familiarity with starship design directing him.

The away team from the Espero was composed of Ensign Lake, Doctor Sovek, Lieutenant Reeta Neff and two Security crewmen.

“It looks like they took more than their share of hits,” Derrick remarked during his survey of the forward operations console. A dead man lay slumped over the side of it.

“Start downloading the database,” Murray told him. He sat down at the empty helm console. “Maybe their logs could tell us what happened here.”

“I’m already on it, sir.”

Suddenly out of nowhere, an unknown light flashed out from the shadows, hitting him in the eyes. Raising a hand to block it, Murray and Lake saw fellow Starfleet officers coming out of the Captain’s Ready Room. As they began to approach the away team, the Security crewmen raised their phaser carbines to cover them.

“Stand easy, Crewman,” Andrew said, recognizing the first person to approach him.

“Andrew? Amigo, is that you?,” Captain Dante Rodriguez asked him.

“Dante… I’m so sorry.”

“Nillen to Murray,” interrupted their reunion.

“Go ahead, Tarahni.”

“We found some of the crew down here in Engineering,” answered the Haliian. “They’re helping us restore power. We should have the main power back up in a couple of hours.”

“Any explanation for the power loss?”

“Well, sir, from what their Chief Engineer has been able to tell me, it looks like someone used a Breen energy dampener on them. They should have been protected from it. I’ll know more once I take a look at their systems.”

“Keep me informed. Murray out.”

“That’s impossible,” the Michigan’s captain said. “We were attacked by Tzenkethi ships, not Breen.”

“There are two possibilities that exist,” Doctor Sovek said, speaking for the first time since boarding the Michigan. “The first possibility is that the Tzenkethi and the Breen are working together. That would be impossible since their empires are too far from one another. The second possibility is that the Tzenkethi salvaged Breen technology from a battle site after the war.” Once his speech was done, his attention returned to a Denobulan crew woman who was suffering from second-degree burns.

“It makes sense,” Neff agreed. “There have been some reports of Orions and Ferengi salvage teams combing through battle sites all over Federation, Allied, and Cardassian space.”

The Bridge lights suddenly came on once power was restored to the ship. That was the moment that Murray saw that the Bridge damage was minimal. Looking at Rodriguez, he delegated to him because of his greater rank. “What are your orders, Captain?”

“It looks like you guys have everything under control. What ship are you from?”

“We’re from the Espero, Captain Ikar commanding.” He stopped for a moment, remembering something. “Thanks for the reminder.” He tapped his combadge. “Murray to Espero.”

“This is Espero. Go ahead, Andrew.”

“Your captain’s a Roylan?”

Murray ignored him. “We found survivors, Skipper. One of them is Captain Rodriguez.”

“Good,” Ikar said. “Assist them with their repairs. I need to have words with Captain Rodriguez if he’s available.”

“I’m at your convenience, Captain,” the Hispanic man answered for the Lieutenant Commander.

“Bring him aboard when you can. Anything else that we can help with, Captain?”

“Nothing yet, but if you could let Starfleet know what happened… I’m afraid our communications are still down.”

“We’ll get in touch with them. Espero out.”

Rodriguez scratched the side of his head after the transmission had ended. “She seems…”

“Blunt?”

“I was going to say ‘direct’ but that works too.”

“She’s a good skipper, sir, and she knows her stuff. I’ve known her for a long time.” Murray took a second glance around the Michigan’s Bridge. “Do you have any orders for your people while you’re with the Skipper?”

“Nope. Just have them keep doing what they’re doing, Commander. I’ll be in Engineering.”

* * * *

Captain’s Personal Log, Supplemental;


We have encountered the USS
Michigan which is intact but damaged. Her crew survived an encounter with the Tzenkethi and they were fortunate. It’s a curious question, the mystery of their survival. Like Klingons, the Tzenkethi aren’t known for leaving survivors. This situation has left me with some pause.


The look on Admiral Mernon’s blue face was almost priceless when he was informed about the attack on the Michigan. Ikar almost wished that she had a holographic image of that look on his face when she mentioned the presence of Breen weaponry on Tzenkethi ships. However, he maintained a rather passive facade when he looked at her from the viewer on her Ready Room wall.

“A Breen energy dampener,” he said over subspace. “I almost can’t believe it. I thought that we insulated the entire fleet from those damned things. Even our older ships were equipped with protective software and shielding against them.”

“The Michigan must be an exception,” the Espero’s Captain said from her seat behind her desk. “My Chief Engineer has theorized that the device could’ve been modified.”

“That’s a matter that I’ll take up with Captain Scott and the Corps of Engineers,” Starbase Whiskey-Bravo’s Commanding Officer said, contemplatively. “With the attack on the Michigan, this incident could definitely signify another Tzenkethi buildup of military forces in that sector.”

“It could be another attempt at Naydeer. Our ships could be easily disabled with this new dampener.”

“More unfortunate circumstances,” Mernon said, looking at the screen on his desktop. “Dundee is escorting a couple of freighters to Nelphia and she isn’t available at the moment. Only the Kingfisher and Monterey are currently at Naydeer, holding the line if there’s an attack.”

“And Naydeer?”

“Their ships are too easily defeated by their weapons systems. They would be sitting ducks to the Tzenkethi.”

“Then Espero will continue to Naydeer.”

Mernon looked over at Captain Rodriguez who was sitting in a chair on the opposite side of Ikar’s desk. He had kept quiet since the start of the meeting. “How’s the damage to your ship, Captain?,” the Benzite asked him.

The Michigan’s Commanding Officer leaned forward in his chair, his hands pressed together in front of him. It was apparent that he was haunted by the attack on his ship and crew. “My Chief Engineer and Lieutenant Nillen report that we can be warp-capable by the morning. However, they aren’t certain about our combat capabilities. We extended our supply of photon torpedoes against the Tzenkethi and the repairs to our phaser banks are on hold until we can replicate parts for them.”

“Replicators are down?”

“Yes, sir. Currently, we’re on emergency rations for the duration.”

Monterey’s engineers could assist you,” Ikar said.

Mernon nodded in agreement with her. “Okay, look, Captain Rodriguez, you’re not necessarily in my chain of command. I know that you report to Commodore Sethen over at Starfleet Sciences but for the critical nature of this situation, I’m ordering you to accompany the Espero to Naydeer. Do you have any questions?”

“None from me, Admiral.”

“I’ll check with Starfleet Command and see if they have any other ships that can be diverted to Naydeer. Just remember that with the end of the war, the pickings for ships and personnel are still slim. The dilithium and topaline mines are vital to the Federation.”

“It won’t be a surprise, sir,” Ikar said with a grin,” if we’re outnumbered.”

“Make the best of the situation if you can, Captain Ikar. Mernon out.”

Rodriguez sat back in his seat and took a minute to think about the situation. He had a stunned look on his face when Ikar looked at him. There was the fact that he didn’t like how the Admiral had deferred more to the Roylan than to him.

“I’m afraid,” he began to say,” that the Michigan didn’t have many opportunities to see much combat during the war, Captain Ikar. We were mostly delegated to escorting convoys and scouting ahead of the Fifth Fleet.”

“It can be easy if you don’t think about it much.” She turned to one side, looking at the replicator. “Can I get you anything?”

“Please call me Dante, and if you have any, I would love a shot of tequila.”

Ikar frowned at him with a raised eyebrow. “Do you suggest that I keep such beverages around? For shame!”

Rodriguez blinked in shock at her. “I’m sorry. I-”

Ikar giggled, smiling at him. “That joke works, every time, on you Humans!” She turned to the replicator and said,” Computer, two tequilas.”

“Those beverages are alcoholic in nature and–,” the ship’s computer began to say.

“Override. Authorization: Ikar-Zeta-India-8220,” the Skipper said and their drinks appeared out of nowhere. Taking one glass for herself, she handed the other to her guest. Her fellow Captain took a sip of the fiery drink and sighed.

“Synthehol just doesn’t have much of a kick as the real thing does,” the Hispanic man said, setting the glass down on the desktop. “So… how do you want to handle this situation? Because, I’ll admit, Ikar… I feel like I’m over my head a little here.”

“You command the Michigan, Dante. I command the Espero. Lead with your feelings. Listen to your heart.”

“You sound like you’ve been doing this thing for a while.”

The Roylan nodded at this observation. “I’ve served in Starfleet for over fifty years. Until I’m killed or I die of natural causes, I’ll continue to serve. It’s my destiny.”

“That must be some destiny.”

“Your destiny,” the alien woman said after she took a sip of her own drink,” is unforeseen and it’s still forming around you. Embrace what you see.”

“You’re starting to sound like you have some inside information.”

“Perhaps I do. Perhaps I don’t.”

* * * *

Working together in tandem, Espero was able to get the Michigan underway by the next day. However, her weapon systems were still offline. It was a fact that bothered Anax while contemplating the situation in his cabin. It kept him from sleeping.

He sat at his desk console in the small room that he shared with Ensign Meir. The genderless alien has a tendency to talk in her sleep. Ignoring his roommate’s slumber, the tall orange-skinned, multi-limbed Tactical Officer made a decision. Standing up from his seat, he left the cabin with a PADD in one of his three hands.

“Computer, what is the location of Captain Ikar?”

“Captain Ikar is located in the Canteen,” answered the ship’s computer to his query. Anax nodded to no one in particular while he walked down the corridor.

* * * *

“Excuse me, Sovek?”

The Vulcan medic looked up from his microscope at the sound of the First Officer’s voice. He frowned, annoyed about another discussion with him since he found it futile to continue to ignore the dislike that Lieutenant Commander Murray had for him.

“Yes, Lieutenant Commander?”

“Do y’all have a moment for me?,” Murray asked him, standing just a few feet inside the Medical Bay door. At this late time of night, the room was mostly empty except for the Chief Medic who was examining blood samples recently taken from Ensign Lake after their discussion, a few days ago.

“I am in the middle of a task. Is it important?” He didn’t even bother with looking at him. Though he was supposed to suppress his emotions like the rest of his species, Sovek had the inclination to turn around and strike the man down.

Murray held up a PADD. It was the PADD that had his transfer request on it. “I was wondering if I could talk you out of leaving?”

“Why would I wish to remain? It is apparent that neither of us will be friends.”

“And that’s a problem on my part, Doctor. You see, I was on MN-1275 and –”

Sovek raised an eyebrow before turning around to face him. “You knew Seylek?”

“He was my best friend aboard the Hindustan.” Murray lowered the PADD and looked back at him. “I know that we can’t bring him back. It was immature of me to blame you for–”

“But I am to blame, Mister Murray. I allowed my son to perish from this existence while I ignored him to save another life. I allowed logic to determine who could and couldn’t be saved. He couldn’t be saved. His injuries –”

“Were too severe,” the First Officer said, finishing his train of thought. “And I was too young back then to understand why you let him go like that. For years, I’ve blamed you for his death.”

“Is that the reason for your hostility?”

“It was. However, a smart lady told me that I should consider putting myself in your shoes.”

“Why would you want to wear my shoes?,” Sovek asked him.

Murray smiled, crossing his arms over his chest. “It’s just an expression.” He paused for a moment and his smile disappeared from his face. “I guess what I’m sorry for is that I would feel just as awful if something happened to my wife and kids. I’d do anything to keep them safe and sound.”

“I can understand the feeling, Mister Murray, if not the emotions associated with them.”

“Then please assure me that you’re not leaving. I’d hate to have to break in a new doctor.”

“I shall reconsider my position, sir.”

“Please… call me Andrew.”

“Yes, s… Andrew.”
 
* * * *

Ikar found herself to be restless while she brooded over the current situation. With the two ships only being a matter of hours away from their destination, even REM sleep seemed to elude her while she searched for a solution. At 0200 hours in the morning, no one could expect to find her sitting on the floor of the Canteen, meditating.

Vacant of any other ship’s personnel, the Royan had divested herself of her uniform jacket and the vest that she wore underneath it. Both of them were folded neatly on a nearby bench. Her legs were crossed together and her eyes were closed while her mind wandered, searching for answers deep at the center of her subconsciousness. Some of the techniques that she used for meditation came from lessons that she had learned on Royla at a Sehkar temple and from lessons that her Chief Medical Officer had taught her.

The doors to the Canteen opened and Lieutenant Anax found his Commanding Officer meditating at the center of the room. Surprised to be finding her in this position, he was at a loss since he wasn’t sure if he should disturb her or to leave her in peace. The Edoan Lieutenant turned around and started to leave when he heard her speak.

“Do you have some answers for me, Mister Anax?”

He turned his head back towards her, looking very sheepish. “I’m sorry, Captain. Am I disturbing you?”

“I’m merely meditating. The Canteen is a quiet retreat at this hour.”

“I can come back if–”

“Come and join me for a cup of tea, would you?,” she asked him, lifting herself up to her feet. She walked over to the replicator and ordered two cups of Orange Spice tea from Earth. It was a black tea blend that she found that she enjoyed since she left Royla back in the late 2340s.

“Yes, ma’am.”

Anax took a seat at a nearby table while she brought the teacups over. She could clearly see that he was a creature bred for service, and she sensed that he still felt some uncertainty about serving under her command. Especially since she was the only Roylan in Starfleet who had climbed their way up from the enlisted ranks to become an officer.

“At ease, Mister Anax. Like some captains, rest assured that I’m not a tyrant.”

“Yes, ma’am.”

“Speak your mind,” she continued, setting a teacup before him. She didn’t show it but his adherence to regulations and protocol was starting to tick her off a little. To her, this was someone who clearly didn’t know how to relax.

“I’m concerned about the upcoming battle with the Tzenkethi. They’re up to something, Captain, and I think that the Michigan might be more of a liability than a valuable addition to the fight.”

“I’ve thought about this myself, and I’ve discussed this with Captain Rodriguez. However, because of his seniority, he’ll lead us into battle.”

“Isn’t he a little inex–” The Edoan caught himself before he finished his sentence. “I’m sorry, ma’am. I didn’t mean to–”

“I asked you to speak your mind. Your apology is unnecessary,” she answered, taking a sip of tea. “Relax. Drink your tea.”

“I apologize, ma’am. I – “

“Apologize to me again and I’ll bust you. First, your rank, then your knees.” A mischievous smile formed on her face before she returned her teacup to its accompanying saucer. “I’m the one who should apologize. We were unable to break bread together.”

“Things happen, ma’am. It’s not necessary to – “

“You should try and relax more,” she repeated her earlier compliment.

“Is that a personal assessment of my abilities, ma’am?”

“It is. Calm yourself. I won’t replace you. In fact, I value you.”

“How can you make such an assessment, Captain? I haven’t been aboard long enough.”

“You came to me with your concerns. Not the First Officer but me. Not many officers would do that. It shows me that you care about your ship and your new crewmates.” She looked at him with an understanding look in her eyestalks. “Your concerns won’t fall onto deaf ears here. They’re open to everyone aboard my ship.” She giggled at her own joke.

“Well, then might I suggest that – “

The sound of Lieutenant Neff’s voice shouting over the shipwide speakers interrupted the Tactical Officer. Her voice was followed by the Red Alert klaxon. “Red Alert! All hands to Battle Stations! Captain Ikar and Lieutenant Commander Murray, please report to the Bridge!”

“Frakking Hemra,” the Skipper said, swearing in her own language before she tapped her combadge. It sounded like she said ‘basay'cah Hemra’. “This is the Captain speaking.”

“Captain, we’ve detected three Tzenkethi cruisers moving ahead of us at Warp Seven,” the Science Officer answered her. “Our course projections put them close to the edge of Naydeer’s star system.”

Ikar’s eyestalks widened at the possibilities and jumped to her feet, collecting her uniform jacket and vest. “Have we heard from the Kingfisher?”

“We were in the middle of an incoming transmission from Captain sh’Nahl when the signal was cut, ma’am,” Ensign Lake answered over the intercom.

“They probably started jamming subspace once they came out of warp,” Anax noted, rising to his three legs. He was already following her out the Canteen door.

“I’m on my way.”

* * * *

“Situation report,” the Michigan’s Captain said when he walked out of his Ready Room. Like his counterpart aboard the Espero, he was putting on his jacket as his First Officer vacated their seat in the command chair.

Espero has reported three Tzenkethi cruisers on the edge of the system, sir,” Lieutenant Commander Aija Nakamura reported from the forward operations console.

“The Hamsters are more than ready to sharpen their teeth.” This remark came from Lieutenant Iseli, the Deltan sitting next to her at the Helm console.

“Stand easy, Iseli,” Rodriguez warned her, sitting down in his chair. “Has there been any communications with Commodore Kuzil or Captain sh’Nahl?”

“Nothing, sir. The Hamsters are flooding subspace with anti-lepton particles.”

“A known Cardassian tactic,” the ship’s First Officer who also served as Chief Science Officer, a Saurian named Borrek suggested. The reptilian humanoid turned around from his station to look at his Commanding Officer.

“Do you suspect anything more than that, Commander?”

“Merely prayer to any known deities and a suggestion that the Dominion War might have taught these guys some valuable lessons.” The Saurian was known for his outspokenness.

“How so?”

“I’m detecting signs of some recent modifications to the lead ship.”

“It could be the ship fitted with the modified dampener,” Iseli suggested before she looked down at her display. “We’re still three thousand kilometers from them, sir.”

“Drop us out of warp and go to impulse power.”

“Message from the Espero,” Nakamura said, adjusting the transceiver in her right ear. “Captain Ikar is requesting instructions.”

Rodriguez nodded, tapping his combadge. “Rodriguez to Engineering.”

A moment passed by and a male voice spoke over the intercom. “Engineering, this is Dhalix.”

“How are the repairs going on the phaser banks, Lieutenant Commander?”

“Well,” answered the Denobulan, “with the few parts that Lieutenant Nillen was able to replicate for us, I’ve been able to get them online but they’re only operating at fifty percent, Captain. I can’t get them working any better than that without access to a shipyard.”

“I’ll take it. Rodriguez out.” He leaned forward in his seat and looked at Nakamura. “Aija, let Captain Ikar know that we’re going after the ship with the dampener. Target selection is left to her discretion.”

* * * *

“They’re going after the ship with the dampener,” Anax reported from Tactical, referring to the Michigan. “His shields haven't been raised yet.”

“What’s Dante thinking? What’s he going to do? Talk’ em to death?,” Murray asked. He turned towards Ikar from his place standing next to Lake. There was already a frown on her face over a dislike for Captain Rodriguez’s actions.

“Slow to impulse,” she ordered Gelek. The Tellarite acknowledged her orders and a starfield appeared on the main viewscreen, a few seconds later. Three hulking Tzenkethi cruisers could be seen in the distance. On the far left corner, the Norway-class starship was already pulling quickly ahead of the Espero.

“He’s going to get himself and everyone else on that ship killed,” Murray warned her.

“We’ll flank him. We’ll take that ship together,” the skipper told him, standing in front of her command chair. Slowly-rising anger was apparent in her mannerisms and the First Officer knew that there would be a series of consequences for the Michigan’s captain once the situation was resolved.

“Shields are at a hundred percent. Pulse and regular phasers are charged. All torpedo tubes are loaded, Captain.”

Ikar nodded at Anax’s report. “Hail the Michigan, Mister Lake.”

The Operations Officer tried for a few moments before he shook his head. “I’m sorry, Captain. It looks like the anti-lepton interference is also disturbing the local communications traffic. I’ll keep trying but – “

“There is no try,” Ikar said as she swiveled her head towards the dark-haired Human. “There is only do. You must not fail.”

“I suppose that I could–”

Michigan is firing phasers!”

“I thought their phasers were disabled,” Murray pointed out. “Have they raised shields yet?”

“Yes, sir,” Anax responded.

“Defensive pattern zeta-four,” Ikar said, clenching her teeth. “As we pass by the flanking ships, fire port and starboard tubes.”

“Tzenkethi ships usually have weak shield points at those angles,” the Edoan said in admiration of her tactics.

“Nice one, Skipper.”

“Like a dragonhawk egg, Tzenkethi ships are easy to crack,” the Roylan said just before the ship started to shake uncontrollably.

“Shields are down to eighty-nine percent!”

“Maintain shields!”



* * * *

Captain Naeralaven sh’Nahl saw the battle that was erupting on the Kingfisher’s viewscreen after she walked out of her Ready Room. The Andorian shen frowned at her First Officer who was rising up from the center seat.

“Is that the Espero?,” she asked him, moving over to the center of the room.

“That would be my estimable conclusion, Captain,” Senek said, stepping over to the First Officer’s position and sitting down in his chair. He turned his console to face him. “Shall we move to assist them?”

“You’re telling a joke, right?”

“No, ma’am. As I do not have much familiarity with humor, I – “

sh’Nahl looked at him with a smile forming on her face. “That was a joke, Number One.” She took a seat in her chair, resting her blue hands at the base of the armrests. “Helm, take us out of orbit. Mister Greene, sound Battle Stations.”

“There’s a call from Naydeer for you, Captain,” the Kingfisher’s Operations Officer reported, turning her head towards her. “It’s Commodore Kuzil.”

“On screen.”

The M-Class specter of Naydeer and the battle occurring in the far battleground disappeared from the screen and the visage of Naydeer Outpost’s Aurelian Commodore appeared before them. His Executive Officer, Commander Karolina Denver stood beside him in the base’s Operations Center.

“Captain sh’Nahl, one of our sensor platforms has detected a battle occurring on the edge of the system,” the winged flag officer stated quickly. “What’s happening up there? Is it the Tzenkethi?”

“Well, apparently, Captain Ikar and her crew encountered some unwanted guests on their way here,” the Andorian woman said before she returned to her feet. “We were just about to leave orbit and –”

“Negative, Captain.”

“Excuse me, sir?”

“The Kingfisher is the only ship at the moment with the tactical superiority to protect Naydeer from any aggressors, Captain. I’m ordering you to remain in orbit.”

“What about Espero?”

“I’m afraid that Captain Ikar is on her own for now.”


* * * *

“One down and one more to go,” Lieutenant Commander Kadir Hamid reported from Tactical. The dark-skinned Tactical Officer had fired the quantum torpedoes that had been the death knell for the cruiser that had been off of the Michigan’s port bow.

“Damage report!,” Rodriguez shouted above the chaos. Smoke covered the Bridge and he jumped up from his seat when an enemy torpedo struck the ship. The Hispanic captain fell forward to the floor between the helm and operations consoles where Nakamura and Iseli were sitting.

“Damage Control reports hull breaches on Decks Six and Seven,” Borrek reported while the Operations Officer helped their Captain back up to his feet. “They’re deploying repair teams while we speak.”

“Evacuate those decks and divert power to weapons and shields,” the Captain ordered, coughing violently. Looking at the main viewer through slits in his eyes, he could see the Espero flying with a tactical methodology of techniques that he hadn’t seen before in his career. The Defiant-class ship moved with a grace that reminded him of a violin concerto.

“Engineering to Bridge!,” the Michigan’s Chief Engineer shouted over the speakers. “Shields are weakening!”

Rodriguez couldn’t respond to the Denobulan’s panic-driven concern over the ship. His attention was directed towards the Espero but another weapon's impact against the ship’s shields returned him to the world around him. He looked around at his Bridge officers and nodded.

“Iseli, come around to three-seven-two, mark nine,” he ordered. “Hamid, target phasers and torpedoes on that lead ship. Prepare to – “

“We’ve just lost phaser control, Captain!,” the Nigerian exclaimed, slamming his hand down against his console. “Shields are down to nine percent.”

“Fire torpedoes! Do it while–”

Rodriguez was interrupted by flashes of white light flying past the ship. These mysterious ‘flashes’ moved quickly enough that the sensors barely had a chance to register them. Those splotches fired blasts of crimson energy at one of the remaining Tzenkethi warships at the same time as another more potent crimson energy beam struck at it. With those multiple hits, the enemy ship’s shields failed instantly and another massive phaser blast penetrated the hull which instantly destroyed the ship.

“Report!”

“Aft sensors are offline,” Borrek reported.

“Best speculation, Number One?”

“It could be Kingfisher, sir.”

* * * *

“What the hell was that?!,” Andrew Murray swore loudly. He stepped forward to stand beside Ikar when the new sensor contacts popped out of nowhere. Unlike the Michigan, the small ship wasn’t as brutally damaged as her counterpart was. In fact, her ablative armor was still mostly intact and her shields were at fifty-one percent, due to Anax’s last report.

“Sensors are picking up something rather large coming up on us from astern,” Neff said, turning and looking at her Captain. “I’m reading a Federation IFF recognition signal. It’s Starfleet!”

“Hail them,” Ikar said, climbing out of her chair. She felt weary but she could have sworn that the unknown contacts resembled Valkyrie-class starfighters that had flown during the war. According to her information, there was only one ship in commission that was equipped with such extraordinary auxiliary vehicles.

“They’re hailing everyone,” Lake added to the Bolian woman’s report. “Even the Tzenkethi.”

The forward viewscreen changed views to show the Bridge of a Typhon-class carrier. At first, the Roylan woman thought for a moment that Starfleet had sent the USS Typhon herself to their rescue. However, the male Efrosian sitting in the Captain’s Seat changed that thought immediately for her.

“This is Captain Yaehn Jah-Narren of the Federation starship Jupiter,” he said before he rose out of his chair. “Naydeer lies inside of a star system protected by the United Federation of Planets and Starfleet. You, your Autarch, and your Ambassadors have been informed of this fact before now. If you attempt to return here, there will be severe consequences for you and your government. You have one minute to withdraw from this system or else your fate will be most dire.”

‘The Jupiter?,’ Ikar asked herself. The last download from Starfleet Command had put the only other ship of the Typhon-class in the Gamma Quadrant as part of an exploration expedition.

“The lead ship is turning, Skipper,” Neff reported, her amber eyes on her sensor readings,” and they’re on a course back to Tzenkethi space.”

“And the Michigan?,” Murray asked her.

“Operational and intact.”

“Her Captain’s an idiot,” Gelek murmured low enough under his breath that no one heard him.

“It looks like we live to fight another day,” the First Officer said with a smile.

“Hmph.”

Ikar walked off of the Bridge to leave her officers confused and hanging their heads. This was the second battle that she had been forced to fight in this star system. Diplomacy has failed here. By Hemra, it hadn’t even been attempted at all. Now she found it difficult to believe that she had allowed herself to give into her baser instincts before finding a diplomatic solution to this matter.

* * * *

Captain’s Log, Supplemental;


The
Jupiter has escorted the Espero and the Michigan to Naydeer. I find myself relieved by Captain Jah-Narren’s quick arrival. Both ships and their crews owe him and his crew their lives.

Meanwhile, our supplies for Outpost Naydeer are being offloaded, and I’m uncertain as to our next mission. I do wish I could return to exploration duties. It seems that the wages of war are getting to me.



“Welcome aboard the USS Jupiter,” An Ensign wearing a Security Gold collar greeted Captain Ikar after she materialized on the transporter pad. The Espero’s skipper was escorted by her trusted right-hand man, Andrew Murray. After seeing to the repairs needed aboard her ship, the First Officer had continued on for seventeen more hours straight without a break. With the engineers aboard the California-class ship Monterey, they had been able to get the Michigan up and running again without the needed luxuries of a shipyard or a return to Starbase Whiskey-Bravo.

“Thank you,” she said, nodding to the Ensign.

“I’ve been ordered to escort you to Captain Jah-Narren.”

“Proceed, Ensign.” The Roylan looked at Murray with a pensive look and the black man just smiled back at her as they followed their guide out of the Transporter Room.

* * * *

Naydeer’s northern arctic region reminded Jah-Narren of his own planet of Efros Delta with its frozen blue oceans, white landmasses, and the cold clouds in the sky. He stood before a window in Jupiter’s Observation Lounge, looking down at the planet while waiting for his guests. After receiving new orders from Starfleet Command by way of Admiral Yamava, his ship had returned to the Alpha Quadrant the previous day and it was with prayer and the luck of the Divinity that he was able to get to Naydeer as quickly as the ship could.

The doors opened with a swooshing sound and an Ensign from Security showed a miniature-sized Roylan woman and an impressively tall man into the Observation Lounge. Jah-Narren turned around from the window and watched them for a moment. He had never met a Roylan before though he had heard one or two of them during the war. One of them was even an important member of the Starfleet Command Council.

“Captain Ikar, reporting as ordered, sir,” she said, standing at attention beside her First Officer.

“There’s no need for formalities with me, Captain Ikar,” the Efrosian said, motioning them to take a seat. His brown eyes met her eyestalks. “Please call me Yaehn.”

“Your ship is big. It reminds me of the Typhon.”

Jah-Narren smiled, nodding. “Oh, you’ll find that while the Jupiter is similar in construction and some of her appearance, she has some technological differences from her sister ship.”

“I wouldn’t mind taking one of those Valkyries for a test flight,” Murray said, taking a seat at the conference table. Both he and his Commanding Officer sat across the table from Jah-Narren.

“Maybe that’s something that my Flight Commander can arrange, Lieutenant Commander Mundi.” Jah-Narren put his attention on Ikar after taking a seat at the table. “I’ve read all of the reports on the Tzenkethi and what happened to the Michigan. Captain sh’Nahl and I are also aware of the facts behind this skirmish. While Commodore Kuzil commands Starfleet forces in this region, we’ve been assigned here for the duration.”

“Starfleet is assigning a competent force here, then?”

“I couldn’t tell you that. As far as I know, there aren’t many ships to spare for this kind of work.”

Ikar sighed with a nod of her head. “Thank you, sir.” She paused for a moment, the fatigue evident on her smooth face. Like Murray, she had helped in the repairs to her ship. Having a small stature and coming from a heavy gravity world, it was easy for her to crawl through Jefferies Tubes and to lift equipment that most humanoids had difficulty with.

“I don’t have any orders for you but Commodore Kuvil has invited you to land the Espero outside of his base.”

“Really? That’s quite an honor.”

“I think the commodore feels safer with a Defiant-class ship on the ground near his operations.”

“Then the Espero will stay for now.”


The End…
 
The Roylan captain is an interesting character. I suppose while compact strength would be an advantage, buoyancy would be a serious problem, as would strength of materials. She might have a comparable weight to a human, but expressed over a much smaller surface area - she might fall through floors that most humans could walk safely on. I'm supposing this is your critter design? I recognize the critter from the STO reboot, but I don't think they addressed the idea of them coming from a heavier planet. Kudos on that - very interesting feature.

I also appreciate the effort you put into making the non-human characters non-human - unusual word choices, unusual reactions, different behaviors and good physical descriptions. Nice tight story. Very much hoping to see more.

Thanks!! rbs
 
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