It is finally happening! A brand-new chapter is ready for your enjoyment!
When we left off, Captain Rinckes and the former Q Tony had travelled back to the Station A-12 Debacle of 2380 in a desperate attempt to alter the devastating war that would follow. However, when Tony and Rinckes are faced with a downright impossible dilemma, they have wildly different viewpoints on how to handle their years-long mission's conclusion.
Without further ado, here is the first segment:
Fallen Heroes - Book 2 of 2 - Chapter 8a (of 10)
Lieutenant Tony Blue fires at the man he once trusted with his life. His hesitance decreases with each bolt of phaser energy exiting his rifle; his combat instincts are taking over. Captain Stephan Rinckes seeks cover behind the elongated room’s standing interface console and fires blindly from his hiding place. Avoiding these lethal phaser bursts, Tony drops to the floor and tries to ascertain if the interface console fails to conceal his captain entirely. He hopes against his better judgment that a shot to the leg might snap the captain out of his violent state. Another salvo of phaser blasts flies over Tony’s scalp, just as he determines he cannot hit the captain from here.
It pains him to have to apply his tactical abilities and training in this confrontation with his captain, no matter their personal history or the reasons for this death match. Admittedly, Tony’s intention of destroying Station A-12 with everyone on it is unsettling to the core, and he questions whether he has the nerve to go through with such an extreme course of action. The argument is rendered moot by Rinckes’ stance on the subject. The captain may realize sacrificing Station A-12 is vital, but his desire to save Melanie Simons has annihilated his rationality. If only Tony can be granted the opportunity to access the interface console and overload the shield generator coils on the other side of the transparent partition. The resulting power surges would rip this station apart and safeguard a future where billions will be spared a brutal death.
Rinckes emerges and shoots at Tony, who presses himself against the partition to minimize his chances of getting hit and returns fire. The captain seeks cover and bellows, “Throw me your weapon! This doesn’t have to end in bloodshed!”
Tony knows Rinckes well enough to discern between sincere and insincere remarks. Also, the captain’s icy stare as he shot at Tony betrays his dangerous frame of mind. For a moment, Tony entertains the idea of firing at the interface console, because it would ruin Rinckes’ cover. It would also complicate overloading the coils, so it’s worth careful consideration.
That is, until Rinckes decides for him. By his doing, the interface console reddens as if blushing and explodes in a fountain of debris. Tony dodges the rubble and flees the carnage, making sure to stay close to the floor, heading for the exit at the far end despite knowing it’s locked.
“Give up, Tony!” Rinckes shouts. “You can’t be the hero today.”
Crawling forward, Tony glances over his shoulder and sees Rinckes breaking through the particle fog whirling to the carpet, his rifle’s flashlight shining at full force. With the interface console blown to smithereens, Tony will first have to reroute its functions to this room’s wall panels. Then he’ll have to figure out what Rinckes did to effect the power surges and duplicate it. It will cost time, but it can be done. It must be done.
The captain fires another series of phaser blasts, and Tony rolls onto his back and sits up halfway to return fire as precisely as he can. Aching burn marks on his neck and shoulders inflicted by the time machine’s molten wiring upset his aim, and his shots disappear into the mist without causing the sickening thud of hitting flesh and bone. He got the message across, though, and Rinckes retreats to seek cover, allowing Tony to resume crawling for the exit.
Fifteen meters ahead, locked doors seal off his escape route, so Tony aims his weapon. If a rifle can blow up a solid interface console, it’ll cut through a set of double sliding doors too. He raises the rifle’s intensity settings, changing its indicator from yellow to red.
Maybe Rinckes is right. Shouldn’t he just storm those doors and head straight for Emily to find comfort in her embrace, guide her to the shuttle bay, and fly away from the station, away from the Altonoids, and away from whatever cruelties fate has in store for them? She’d have to fall in love with him again, but he has always felt that no obstacle, whether tangible or abstract, could restrain their affection. All he has to do is pulverize the doors and run for his life and hers.
Instead, he swivels ninety degrees to the right, toward the transparent partition and the coils behind it, and makes his choice. The station has to go. He and Emily will die so others may live.
He blasts a ragged hole in the partition and leaps into the coil room. Turquoise light and electric air surround him as he navigates through the nine man-high coils and takes position in the back, temporarily hidden from his opponent. Aiming his rifle at the nearest coil, he ponders the consequences of firing into its mesmerizing patterns. Could it overload the system and destroy Station A-12? He should pull the trigger to find out, but hesitation paralyzes him. He knows what he must do, but his injured body is weak, his mind tired—tired of deflecting endless waves of sorrow and constant reminders of his inadequacy. Still, to be obliterated in a flash of exploding equipment is not the end he had pictured for himself, for a being who once had the whole universe as his playground.
Something moves at the edge of his vision. It’s Rinckes, looking like a madman with his messy hair, bruised jaw, bloodied right arm, and phaser-burnt shoulder. “Don’t!” he shouts. “You don’t know what’ll happen.” He has his rifle trained on Tony but cannot bring himself to shoot, no doubt harboring the same reservations when it comes to discharging energy weapons in an environment this volatile.
“I was promised immortality,” Tony says, raising his voice above the coils’ buzzing. “I could’ve seen civilizations fall and rise, let the Federation be overwritten by libraries of history books, remain a higher entity, the mortal who transcended to godhood. Yet here we are.”
Rinckes inches toward him. “Yes, here you are, having chosen mortality”—his eyes are cold and distant—“only for you to die a coward’s death.”
Tony stares into the coil’s bright, turquoise shapes. “Our lives for billions. The math is simple. How can we shirk our duty? We vowed to protect the Federation with our lives.”
Rinckes is almost within striking distance. “So you’ve found a cross to die on? To bring your savior complex to its logical conclusion? Listen to yourself!”
Tony cannot scrounge together a reply.
“You think you’re the hero?” Rinckes scoffs. “Let me tell you about heroes. My parents were heroes. Did you know that?”
“I… I didn’t.”
“I’m not surprised. Everyone forgot, everyone but me. They burned alive for their colony, for their people. Their deaths were heroic… and ultimately meaningless. Raiders plundered the colony months later, took everything of value and killed every inhabitant.”
“I’m sorry you lost your parents, but today’s stakes are higher than a colony.” The minute he says it, Tony realizes how awful this must sound, regardless of how true it is. He discovers he has lowered his aim somewhat, so he raises his weapon and returns to convincing himself to pull the trigger.
“The universe forgot them so quickly. It doesn’t care about heroes. Doesn’t need them.”
Tony glances at his captain, who keeps spouting these words of wisdom despite resembling a stalking predator.
“Our loved ones don’t want heroes, never asked us to be,” Rinckes says. “They just want us by their side.” For the first time since their conflict began, the captain lowers his rifle, a welcome gesture of goodwill. “Real heroism is being there for those who need us. Do you understand what I’m trying to tell you?”
This resonates with Tony, aligns with the conclusion he drew when Q scolded him on the alien planet, and he briefly looks away to formulate a response.
Without warning, Rinckes leaps at him, rifle stock thrust forward. Even in reflex, Tony can’t fire at the coil, so he moves out of the way as best he can. Despite this, the rifle stock connects with his shoulder blades, expels the air from his lungs, and causes him to lose his footing. Grunting in pain, he attempts to carry his wounded shell to the other side of the room, berating himself for letting his reluctance to kill distract him from one undeniable fact: The captain considers him a danger to Melanie’s existence.
He doesn’t get far; a painful blow to his calves sends him sprawling. He scrapes his palms on the cold metal floor but hangs on to his phaser rifle and tries to roll onto his back to take aim. Rinckes is ferocious, however, and stomps at his spine, keeping the lieutenant pinned in place, then follows up with strike after strike of his rifle butt, threatening to bludgeon Tony to death.
Tony’s entire body is agony, but he’s not down for the count yet. Done with weighing the possible ramifications, he presses his phaser rifle flat on the floor, points it at the nearest coil, inhales in between the beating he’s receiving, and pulls the trigger with all his might.
“No!” Rinckes shouts, staggering backward.
In a split second, the orange phaser burst travels to the crackling energy patterns surrounding the coil, its trajectory bent toward the coil’s center by invisible forces. A loud clap resounds as the coil absorbs the burst and brightens from turquoise to dazzling white.
Hurt as it might, Tony gets up on one knee and fires into the coil again, and again, ignoring the blinding flashes and deafening noise each hit summons. How much more punishment can these coils withstand? He squints into the glare as it branches into small lightning bolts and distributes its energy to nearby coils, where it dissipates. As soon as Tony realizes this means weapons can be fired in this chamber, he rolls to the left—just in time to evade Rinckes’ first shot.
Tony limps off and the captain shouts after him, “If you want to blow this station up, you’ll have to do it the old-fashioned way!”
Struggling to stay upright, the lieutenant scurries on, planning to make a right at the last coil, follow the partition, and return to the control room. As soon as he reaches the coil, the shriek of a phaser rifle in action sounds behind him, and he fears his escape was too slow. Milliseconds later, the phaser blast strikes the coil, and three forks of lightning erupt with such violence that it throws Tony off balance and slams him against the partition. Scrambling for his rifle, he spins around to face his captain, who fires five shots in a row from across the room.
Tony can’t help but brace himself as he fires back. The anticipated phaser impacts don’t happen, though, nor do any of Tony’s phaser blasts strike Rinckes. The coils beside him and the captain influence the blasts’ trajectories and pull them in before they can reach the other side. As a result, hazardous branches of electricity discharge from the coils, further dissuading the two from firing. This could be compensated by firing from closer range, but neither of them are inclined to step forward and risk being hit by phaser fire or a miniature lightning bolt.
“You’re wasting time,” Rinckes says. “Why not hurry to Emily?” Arcing electricity surrounding them discolors the whites of his eyes, lending him an otherworldly appearance. “Isn’t this a dream come true? You’ll be with her again! Why this constant desire to be the hero? Sacrificing yourself for the greater good I’d understand, but how could you sacrifice her so willingly?”
“Argue all you want,” Tony says, “but let’s call it what it is: You’re trying to justify running off with Melanie Simons, damning the Alpha and Beta Quadrant to a horrible future. Billions will be systematically slaughtered by Altonoids and brainwashed S’Prenn and you’re okay with it?”
“I’m not sure you—”
“One thing we agree on, Captain. You’re not a hero.” He fires at Rinckes and strikes the coil next to the captain, creating the diversion Tony needs to move out of sight.
Having confused Rinckes for however long it will last, he circles a group of coils, hoping to get a bead on his opponent, who is on the move too, judging from the footsteps barely audible over the humming coils. A closer proximity to his captain should negate the coils’ appetite for phaser—
A violent eruption of lightning lashes out at him, singes his left ear, and knocks him to the floor. Ignoring the pain and the smell of burnt flesh, he stands up immediately and tries to reacquire his target for a frantic moment, before running into a random direction to evade the second outburst.
In the chaos, his ever-diligent inner tactician presents him with a useful addition to his strategy: He’s near the blasthole in the partition, so if he were to sneak through it into the control room and take position by the gap, he’d have a significant advantage over Rinckes, who’d have to either go through the gap too or create a new blasthole himself, giving away his position before entering. Despite the ringing in his ear, Tony ascertains the captain’s whereabouts by listening to his footfalls and heavy breathing. Ideally, he should lead Rinckes to the back of the room while progressing to the entrance himself. Nice plan, almost sufficient distraction from his racing heart and the thudding pain in his sore body.
“You can’t hide forever,” Rinckes says.
Taunts like these help Tony determine the captain’s location. He maneuvers himself to where in his line of sight the captain is barely visible between a set of coils. Before Rinckes can become aware he is being watched, Tony fires. As expected, the coils attract the blast; it misses its mark but hits the last coil, which causes Rinckes to lift a hand to shield himself from its lightning branches.
Quickly, Tony puts the next line of coils between himself and the captain.
“Whatever you’re planning, you won’t succeed,” he hears Rinckes say. “Cowardice always leads to failure.”
These attempts at discouragement remind Tony of Captain Sharpe’s posturing over the comm, back in 2387. It didn’t work then and it doesn’t now, so he repeats his trick of firing at specific coils until he reaches the ragged hole in the partition and slinks up to it.
Just as he puts a hand on the frayed transparent aluminum and prepares to crawl through, Rinckes speaks up from somewhere in the chamber. “Emily would’ve been ashamed of you. At least she died with dignity.”
It stops Tony dead in his tracks.
“I saw it, saw how she died, surrounded by Altonoid soldiers. Ted had already been killed. They’d sliced his EV suit and left him to suffocate. Emily was next. She undid the medical appliances he had fastened to her suit and stood up to face her executioner.”
Tony is frozen in place, his body temperature flaring, the partition cold to the touch.
“She looked him straight in the eye, gritted her teeth. ‘Do what you must,’ she told him. Impressed by her valor, he sheathed his knife, grabbed a handphaser to grant her a swift death, and vaporized her.” Rinckes’ voice is closing in. “Now that is how a Starfleet officer handles imminent defeat.”
It takes everything to keep from replying and revealing his position. The captain couldn’t possibly know all this, yet he speaks with such confidence and in such detail there is no question he’s telling the truth.
“She doesn’t deserve to be collateral damage of your obsession with making a difference. She deserves to live, Tony. She deserves someone who places her well-being above his personal goals. Vaporize the station, vaporize her. You’d be no better than the Altonoid bastard who shot her.”
Brimming with anger, Tony abruptly turns around and sees Rinckes stepping out from between two coils and opening fire. Tony stumbles backward through the partition as the nearest coil bends the blasts away from his torso and into his phaser rifle, reducing it to shattered fragments of hot metal. He trips into the control room, lets what remains of his only means of defense clatter to the floor, and wobbles toward the same exit that tempted him to go find Emily. As soon as he arrives at the double sliding doors, he rips open its LCARS panel and begins regrouping wires and isolinear chips to override the lock.
Bits of phaser rifle crunch under Rinckes’ shoes, alerting Tony of the captain’s presence and motivating him to speed up his attempts to open the doors.
“End of the line, Tony.”
He needs five seconds at most to complete the override, and there’s no point in surrendering to a man possessed. Once he has removed the chip in the bottom left corner, the next—
Rinckes fires.
Multiple phaser blasts strike Tony in his right leg from thigh to ankle, and he collapses onto the carpet. It’s as if his leg is on fire, every nerve ending sending up indescribable anguish. Screaming, he twists onto his side and reaches for his blackened leg, its broken skin and cauterized veins rough under his fingertips. Near the blasthole in the partition stands Captain Rinckes, breathing heavily, his bloodshot eyes peering through strands of tousled hair.
Clasping his maimed leg, Tony pushes himself up with his free arm and steers himself toward the bulkhead. Rinckes keeps staring at him from six meters away, unmoving and unmoved. “You’re wrong,” Tony spits out as he props himself up against the bulkhead. “If Emily died bravely, like you said, she’d give her life… to save billions. She’d understand.”
“I can’t let you live.”
Years of accumulated fatigue take hold of Tony. “I didn’t know Melanie Simons well.” Head listing, he sizes up the man whose actions will determine the course of history. “But if she’s worth damning billions to an early grave, if she’s as valuable as you claim…”
A subtle trembling of Rinckes’ facial muscles. “She is.”
“…she’d give her life too.”
Rinckes lets his gaze drifts past the lieutenant, to the exit, then levels his rifle at him. “I’ll make sure she never has to make that sacrifice.”
Tony locks eyes with his captain and sees deep into the broken man’s soul. Duty, morality, allegiance, the greater good—nothing will ever come between him and the one person in the universe who can heal his festering grief. Tony has to accept his fate and make peace with the end of his failed life. Without breaking off his stare, he pulls himself together enough to decide on his final words and speaks them to his executioner. “Do what you must.”
This simple phrase stings his captain, chips away at the cracks in his mask. Rinckes’ eyes water, yet he pulls the trigger.
The phaser blast strikes Tony in the gut with the force of a shuttle crash. Lying supine and with the back of his head still in contact with the bulkhead, he wants to howl in pain and terror but lacks the strength to do so. Feeling both hot and dry, as if his insides have been cooked, everything below the waist is alternating between numbness and sheer agony as the nauseating scent of charred flesh intensifies.
From the borders of Tony’s narrowing tunnel vision, Rinckes enters view, wiping at tears with the heel of his palm. “I-I’m so sorry… I... I didn’t…” He alternates between walking off and returning to his victim, goes around in circles, slaps the partition in helpless rage.
Each breath requires an unholy amount of effort. Speaking is out of the question. Not that Tony knows what to say; the impact trauma alone has stupefied him, dulled his senses to a merciful degree. His legs refuse to obey him, having become useless collections of meat and bone. So, without any choice, he watches the captain pace back and forth, one fist clutching his hair, the other his rifle.
Rinckes’ shoulders quake with repressed sobs. “I have to get going.” He gives the fading lieutenant a final look with eyes begging for forgiveness. “You were a good man. A good man… Better than I ever was.” He staggers away, his contrite stare lingering on the Achilles’ last crewmember until he bumps into the opened LCARS panel and resumes the lock override. “You got pretty far,” he says in a feeble attempt to compliment the dying.
It matters little to Tony, who is struggling to retain clarity of thought, as even the suggestion of trying to get up is too much to parse. He is vaguely aware of the doors opening for the captain and footsteps disappearing in the hallway. These are his final moments as a living being, one who was destined for infinity but will cease to exist like any mortal, like any of his friends. He’d expected to think of his loved ones, the people he cherishes, and he strains to focus on them and choose his dying thoughts.
But he’s a tactician at heart. Bit by bit, from the fog in his mind, his extremely limited options coalesce into a plan, his last shot at fulfilling his mission.
Though his flesh and muscles feel like lead, he slides his arm toward the tricorder secured to his belt. Slowly, he removes the slim handheld device from its holster and lifts it. Char stains prove it has sustained damage, but it still powers up. Its screen flickers and its image tears, but it responds to commands. A small recess in the tricorder’s back houses an emergency transport unit, ready for use. With shaking fingers, he detaches the small, round unit from the tricorder and pins it on his chest.
A fleeting hint of panic reminds him the Altonoids have set up a transporter scrambler in this area. He surmises, or rather hopes, that such a scrambler designed to prevent people from beaming in would be ineffectual against a functioning transport unit attached to someone inside its field.
He exerts every ounce of willpower to manually configure the transport unit via its paired tricorder, stopping briefly to thank Jon Terrell for his invention. The passage of time becomes increasingly subjective as his grip on life weakens, but soon enough the tricorder displays the one message he longed to see:
READY TO INPUT DESTINATION