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Star Trek: Fortitude - Season Two

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admiralelm11

Fleet Captain
Fleet Captain
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two - Episode One: “The End, Part Two”
By Jack D. Elmlinger




PROLOGUE



Last time on Star Trek: Fortitude…

While returning to Starbase 499 in the Santrag system for repairs and a maintenance overhaul, the Federation Starship USS Fortitude, NCC-76420, answered a distress signal from the Pekeni people, a race that they had previously encountered on relatively good terms. The Pekeni were under the constant fear of attack from the End, a vicious space-faring race grown by an unknown power for one reason only: galactic conquest.

Upon beaming down to the Pekeni capital city with an away team, Captain Ewan Llewellyn was greeted with the horrific annihilation of the entire species at the hands of the ruthless End fleet. Out of nowhere, an End battle cruiser appeared in orbit and attacked the
Fortitude. When End soldiers began appearing aboard the Starfleet vessel, the firefights were desperate and yet short-lived. After the dust settled, Captain Llewellyn and his crew were left with twenty-four End corpses and an empty End battle cruiser to do with as they pleased. While all of this was going on, Captain Llewellyn felt himself be consumed by a level of rage that he had never experienced before and it was all directed towards the End for being such cold-hearted murderers.

When Commander Valerie Archer discovered that the End fleet was heading directly for Starbase 499, Captain Llewellyn left her in command of
Fortitude and gave her specific orders to join the fight in the Santrag system and save the Federation from a nasty invasion force. Meanwhile, he and Ensign Jason Armstrong used the captured End battle cruiser to plot a course deep into End space so they could try and find some way of diffusing the conflict before any more innocent lives could be lost…


… and now the conclusion.




ACT ONE



It was the last attack group. Six End fighters were moving fast.

Debris from the epic battle that had raged for almost two hours was smashed aside as the graceful lines of the USS Fortitude pursued after them. Their shields had given up trying to function some time ago, and now every impact, every shot, left a dirty gaping wound in the silver skin of the Intrepid-class starship. Some of the wounds had even bled, and not just energy sparks or decompressed atmosphere, but crew members as well. It was all part of the clean-up that they were dreading. Transporting the corpses of colleagues and friends back aboard to be identified and honored properly.

On the Bridge, an embittered Commander Valerie Archer ignored the smears across her usually beautiful face and the misplaced hair brushing before her eyes. She looked like she was at home in the mess surrounding her.

Lieutenant Arden Vuro was sitting at the helm, bleeding after one of his LCARS interfaces had exploded in his face. He stayed at his post, knowing full well that Sickbay was overrun with the injured and that Doctor Lynn Boswell would be busy with more serious, life-threatening problems right now.

He banked Fortitude part the burning hulk of an End dreadnought. That had been a sweet victory, but they had paid a rather steep price. No, there would be no time for those kinds of thoughts. Grieving would have to come later, the Bolian resolved, focusing on his flying skills.

“Ensign Morgan,” Valerie growled with her hands balled up into fists,” target the closest fighter in that wing and fire.”

“Ventral phasers are down, Commander,” came the reply from Jim Morgan, his position at tactical steadfast as his dark brown skin sweated profusely. “I need a clear shot from the dorsal array. If you wouldn’t mind, Arden?”

“With pleasure, Jim,” nodded the lieutenant, obliging by dipping the nose of the battle-damaged Fortitude. A moment later, they watched the flickering viewscreen together when orange phased energy beams lashed out and obliterated three of the six escaping End vessels.

Turning with an expression of satisfaction, Vuro nodded towards Jim at tactical with a smile. “Good shooting, Ensign.”

“Thanks. What about the remaining three, Commander?”

There was an uneasy silence.

Archer wanted to destroy them right there. She wanted to wipe out the End attack fleet that had begun to slaughter those aboard Starbase 499 and mount an invasion of the United Federation of Planets so mercilessly and so coldly. Yet, throughout this entire war, her mind had been divided, split in two by the nagging pain that she was experiencing at the loss of her commanding officer. Captain Ewan Llewellyn was indeed a brave man and the thing that she respected most about him was his compassion, his pacifism, and his mercy. The End certainly didn’t have any, but she was Human, and she was Llewellyn’s First Officer. That stood for something.

“They’re running,” she finally ordered,” so let them go.”

“Understood, ma’am,” Morgan replied, wiping the sweat from his brow. “I’m pleased to report that it seems to be over. There are no more End vessels in the vicinity.”

That information would have been cheerful if it weren’t for the shock of the image dominating the viewscreen. Twisted chunks of macabre hull plating mingling with the floating dead. Many of them were the decaying faces of the enemy but a good number of them were Human, dressed in red, yellow, and blue shouldered Starfleet uniforms as their fates had been sealed by those that now drifted alongside them between the stars.

Through the graveyard beyond, Valerie could make out the USS Steamrunner, disabled thirty minutes ago and barely holding life-support together. Then, of course, there was Starbase 499, the gargantuan structure that was still holding its position above Santrag II. It had seen better days, but it was relatively intact.

That part of the mission had been a success.

“499 to Fortitude. Commander Archer, can you hear me?”

“Yes, Rear Admiral Blackmore,” she said aloud. “This is Fortitude.”

“Congratulations, and thank you. Letting those final three escape was a nice touch. I have to admit that from what we’ve learned about them, I had no idea that the End were even capable of escape. We must have shown them!”

“Sir, the Steamrunner is in a bad way. Are your tractor-beams functional? Or do you want us to tow her home?”

“Our beams are offline and the relays are shot to pieces.”

“Understood. We’ll get to it.”



* * * *



Lieutenant Commander Sollik wished he could take back every complaint that he had ever made about being the Chief Engineer aboard Fortitude. From the modifications that he had to oversee after the ship was pushed out of Spacedock early, to the retrofitting of the Steamrunner at Captain Llewellyn’s request… nothing compared to this. Almost every system aboard was damaged in some way. Warp drive had been offline for hours now. Everything else was on the verge of catastrophic failure and it was he and his team holding it all together, despite several members of his team being among the casualties of war.

Of course, the Bridge was calling the shots. Ensign Jim Morgan burst into Engineering and surveyed the chaos for a brief moment before he saw the Suliban lieutenant commander and headed right towards him.

“Not now, Ensign,” Sollik immediately hissed with venom,” I’m busy.”

“Commander Archer ordered me to help you get the tractor-beam back online. We’ve got to rescue the Steamrunner.

“The tractor-beam? Oh, yeah, because that’s more important than structural integrity or, oh, maybe life-support?”

“Listen, I know you don’t like me very much and that you’ve got your hands full, but the Steamrunner is losing structural integrity and half the decks don’t have life-support either. So with all due respect, sir, quit the attitude and help me get the tractor-beam back online like the Commander ordered!”

Sollik was taken aback by Jim’s outburst. The young tactical officer was right about everything too. He didn’t like him, and Steamrunner was facing a critical failure. It was the logical choice to save them before saving their own ship. Despite that, he was the senior officer and he was about to spit back a retort when he noticed a tear running down Jim Morgan’s cheek. Stopping himself, the Suliban cocked his head and frowned, contorting his green forehead.

“What is it?,” he asked, oblivious to the circumstances.

“We’ve all got it bad,” Jim whispered,” and yet all I can think about is Jason, out there somewhere in an alien vessel with the captain. He could be dead and I wouldn’t even know. I’ll never know what happens to him, will I?”

Sollik grimaced. He, and indeed, his people, had a major problem with homosexuality and therefore, the homosexual relationship between this officer and Ensign Jason Armstrong. His personal history with Jim definitely didn't support his attitude towards same-sex mating. Half of the only gay couple that he had ever known had caused him serious injury in the past. Yet here, he was faced with the emotional breakdown of a fellow officer, and like it or not, the ship needed a tactical officer right now.

“Will crying about it bring him back?,” he asked, perhaps too forcefully but he was trying nonetheless. “Look, Ensign Armstrong did what he thought was right and what he thought would save lives. Right now, we need to save the lives of those in distress. So you can either stand here and continue crying or you can help me get the tractor-beam back online. Jason is a hero and you can be too.”

Jim knew that had taken some effort. Being in a same-sex relationship, he knew which races had issues with his choice of partner. Nodding as he wiped the tear away, he picked up a nearby toolbox and gave Sollik a weak smile.

“Thanks.”

“Tell anybody that I ever said that and you’ll be scrubbing deuterium filters,” Sollik growled at him, fetching his own tools. “Come on, let’s go.”



ACT TWO



Captain’s Log, Stardate 41221.5;


Ensign Armstrong and I have been traveling aboard the captured End battle cruiser for several days now. We are definitely deep within the heart of their territory with our sensors showing that we are closing in on their central command base. We have also seen a massive buildup of ships and soldiers, all disturbingly pointed towards Starbase 499.

Clearly, the battle there didn’t go well for them. Well done, Valerie. My mission carries much more weight now than I had originally expected.



Tentatively, Ewan Llewellyn sipped at his temporary coffee substitute. The replicators aboard the End ship were severely limited to some kind of hideous battle rations. So from memory, he and Jason had attempted to program some facsimile of coffee into the databanks with limited success. Still, it was better than the disgusting green ooze that passed for some kind of drink among the enemy. Deciding that one sip every five minutes was more than enough, the captain lowered his cup and tapped at the sensor console in front of him.

“It looks like we’re nearly there.”

“I’ve been trawling through their records,” Armstrong replied. “They don’t actually have a homeworld but what we’ll be looking at is the fragmented remains of an ancient Class-M planet. Here, take a look.”

He tossed the PADD that he had been reading over to Ewan, who caught it and raised his eyebrows when he saw the displayed image. It looked like an apple core. The flesh of the fruit had been eaten away, leaving the inedible behind. Sticking out from the center of the dead world and reaching out into space were several vast mechanical arms. It was a starbase of sorts, clinging to the last desperate existence of the world’s still-warm heart.

“Wow… I’ve never seen anything like that before.”

“From what I can tell, all of the End ships, regardless of size, receive permanent data uplinks to that structure via a sophisticated subspace network. If we can find some way of shutting it down, all End vessels will automatically switch off.”

“No safeguards?”

“They don’t feel that they need any. Their enemies usually get wiped out so ruthlessly that nobody’s ever managed to get this deep into their space before.”

“This almost sounds too easy,” Ewan sighed.

“It does and it isn’t,” the younger man told him. “The subspace network is regulated by a computer deep within the structure. Now the structure also serves as the End’s primary soldier growth facility, meaning that there could be thousands of those bastards between us and the off-switch. I’m sorry, sir, but we’re going to have some fighting to do.”

“You know,” the captain admitted,” that’s become less of a problem with me these days.”




* * * *



The sensor grid surrounding the system was rendered pathetic.

The End battle cruiser carrying Llewellyn and Armstrong was the perfect camouflage. It drew no attention from the computers regulating the various obligatory shows of force. It was a token gesture and nothing more

As the Fortitude operations officer had predicted, the End were arrogant in their own ability to crush any opposition. It was an uneventful flight to the Central Core, but spectacular to undertake. Two polar ice caps were connected by a tapering sliver of rock. The middle of it had been fused and mutilated to fit a mechanical structure and starport. The planet must have been roughly the size of Earth, the captain estimated. The picture that he had seen earlier failed to do it any justice.

“Oh my God,” he whispered.

“I’m setting a course for the nearest docking port,” Jason reported, taking on the initiative without any orders. “Let’s hope there’s no welcoming committee waiting for us.”

“What about sensors?”

Ensign Armstrong hammered at the alien controls with consternation. Their systems were going offline, locking them and him out. Ewan noticed his reaction and repeated his question.

“Everything’s going offline,” he answered. “That massive structure is taking over the ship's functions. We’re just the interstellar equivalent of a fish on a line.”

“I hope we’re a good enough catch.”

“Speak for yourself, sir. I wouldn’t mind being thrown back.”

When a gigantic mechanical arm reached out from the Central Core and seized the thick orange hull plating of the battlecruiser, Ewan and Jason felt the lurch and immediately grabbed their phasers and tricorders.

Like it or not, they were here.

It was now their mission, their self-imposed mission, to find out what drove the End.

Whether they would end up negotiating peace with them or destroying them remained to be seen. Despite the captain’s newfound realization that violence was often required, he was praying inwardly to whatever deity would listen and hoping that words would solve this dilemma instead of weapons.

“Are you ready?,” Ewan asked his subordinate.

“Ready to stop the slaughter of innocent civilizations? Always, Captain.”

“Then let’s head out.”
 
ACT THREE



The interior inside the Central Core was just as sinister as the exterior.

“No welcoming committee,” Armstrong observed.

“Yes,” Ewan added with pessimism.

Dark corridors branched off in multiple directions, leading them into shadows that seemed to stare back at the two Starfleet officers with a seething menace. Maybe it was their own fears playing tricks on them while their trepidation was making the hairs on the back of their necks stand at attention, but whatever it was, they moved fast.

Jason held up his tricorder, scanning for the route that they needed to follow. A few steps behind him, Ewan swept every corner with his phaser stretched outward.

“Down there are the soldier growth facilities,” the ensign indicated at one point. “We want to avoid them at all costs, sir. I have no idea if they’re conscious or not. They’re probably out in that fleet that we monitored, but we don’t have any chance of facing off against hundreds of End all by ourselves.”

“Agreed,” Llewellyn nodded. “How far is it until we reach our destination?”

“It’s just a little further, Captain.”

Five minutes passed by them. Corridor after corridor after corridor… they all looked the same. As they walked by, Ewan started to notice things. Some of the bulkheads were dirty, cracked, and eroded. The floor was littered with dust and debris. Rust was forming on the metallic components surrounding them and as they walked around a corner, wires were hanging down from a gaping hole in the ceiling, having gone unfixed.

“It doesn’t look like anybody’s been here in a while,” he noted with a frown. “We passed by the soldier growth facility, didn’t we?”

“Yes, Captain,” Jason replied quickly, his eyes still locked on the tricorder.

“And they go directly to their ships in the docking bays?”

“I believe so.”

Events started to coalesce in Llewellyn’s head. Pieces of the puzzle, the diabolical puzzle that came together to create a picture of the End, was sliding into place. The Welshman wanted to avoid jumping to conclusions but the evidence was all around him, the evidence of disrepair and abandonment.

Just as he was about to activate his own tricorder and run his own scans, the captain was interrupted by his operations officer who had stopped walking and turned to face him. “This is it,” was his report.

A large door blocked their path. Some frantic hacking by Jason ensued, tapping into the locking mechanism and ordering it to relinquish control for just a few seconds. Finally, it worked and the Central Core was revealed.

It was just as Ewan expected it to be.

His suspicions were confirmed.

The chamber was a vast circle like the sunken Roman gladiatorial arenas, only without the crowds baying for blood. Imposing computer consoles and regulatory systems replaced them, humming and chirping their own song.

At least, some of them were.

Other components were shattered, broken, and dead. The place was a complete mess. Cables snaked across the floor, leading from relays to terminals and keypads that were throbbing with the last remaining energy from the warm heart of the dead planet around them.

As he took in the sight, Llewellyn let his gaze rest upon the finishing touch to the whole picture. There was a body. A decaying, long-dead body was slumped over a console.

“Ensign,” he said slowly,” I want this place quantum-dated.”

“Aye, sir,” Jason said, running his tricorder scans. “Got it. Along with the rest of the structure, this room is over six hundred years old. And our friend over there? He’s been dead for just as long. We’re the first people to set foot in here for generations.”



* * * *



Back in the Santrag system, repairs were well underway.

“Commander,” Jim Morgan called out from tactical, drawing the attention of Valerie Archer immediately,” incoming transmission from 499.”

“Put it up.”

“Commander Archer, this is Rear Admiral Blackmore with bad news,” growled the comms system. Energy from the main viewscreen was being diverted at this stage, robbing the Bridge crew of the USS Fortitude of seeing his bearded visage. “Our sensor array just came back online and we’ve got more End ships on an intercept course. We estimate that they’ll be on our doorstep in less than two hours!”

“Sir, we need more time!,” exclaimed the first officer.

“I don’t have any to give you.”

“How many ships are we talking about?”

“More than last time,” came his grave reply. “A lot more.”



* * * *



Captain Llewellyn closed his tricorder with a sign. “Agreed,” he acknowledged.

Between them, both Starfleet officers had managed to complete their puzzle. The alien corpse slumped over the controls of the Central Core was a vague DNA match to the recorded readings gathered from the End pilot that Fortitude had recovered during the opening stages of this sorry tale. Whatever species that he came from, it was long gone and probably decimated along with the world that had once surrounded them. They have been growing clones, growing an army of vicious soldiers to fight a war, six hundred years in the past.

A war that was now obviously long since finished.

“That means,” Armstrong was saying,” that this guy stayed behind to set the soldier growth facility on automatic. He stayed behind to ensure that his race survived in the shape of those bastards, and to ensure that they won their conflict.”

“The End are nothing more than the echo of a long-dead race,” Ewan concluded, running a tired hand through his dark hair. “They’re grown, sent straight to their ships, and upon the only orders that they were ever given: to conquer and prevail. No wonder they’re so strong. They’ve had hundreds of years to perfect their goal!”

Armstrong returned to his tricorder, waving it around the chamber. “Captain,” he said,” I have our solution.”

“What?”

“This Central Core… it regulates all of the ships in the End fleet. There’s a low-level subspace network connecting every vessel’s computer to this room. To that terminal, right here. The closest thing that I can think of is the way that the Borg connect their drones to the hive mind. If we can tap into the network, we could send them an order to power down… or self-destruct.”

Llewellyn felt like he had been punched in the stomach. “What about our escape route?,” he asked him. “What about the battle cruiser that we used to get here? We’d be stranded!”

“I isolated her systems after we were dragged in. I didn’t like being at the mercy of this starport so I took a precaution.”

Clever Kid. There was no question of that.

It was an incredible power that no man or woman should ever have in their grasp. With the push of a button, he would slaughter an entire race of insane clones. Was that the way to look at it? He could end the suffering of millions of people and remove a dangerous threat to the Federation. Even more importantly, he would save the Santrag system. He would save everyone that he cared about.

Save Rear Admiral Blackmore.

Save his ship.

His crew.

Save Valerie…

“All it would take,” Jason continued,” is a phaser blast at that core.”

The blonde operations officer was pointing at the humming shaft in the center of the chamber. All of the computers were linked to it through all of the cables and relays. Was that all? Was that really it?

“I… I can’t…,” the captain stammered, wrestling with his conscience. “Clones or not, they’re sentient beings!”

“They’re murderers, sir!,” Ensign Armstrong protested with a vast amount of vigor. “They’re automatons grown by a computer that should have stopped working long ago! That’s why nobody has come down here, sir! That’s why we encountered no resistance, getting here! They’re arrogant, violent, psychotic, and they shouldn’t be here!”

Llewellyn felt his hand shake. It still had a hold of his phaser. Slowly, devoid of an actual thought process, his arm began to rise. He considered that the End were devoid of any kind of thought process and devoid of any reprieve.

They had declared war on the Federation by attacking Starbase 499, dragging him and Fortitude out here before they were ready. Ready for exploration, ready for combat… ready for this? Was he ready for this?

He started to sweat. All it would take was a single push of the trigger.

“We’ll never get this chance again, Captain,” Jason pointed out from beside him, his tone sympathetic to the moral ambiguity of the action while firmly urging him on. “It will never be this simple again. Take out the core and their fleet dies. Their ships stop, break apart, and the End meets their end! We’ll have won this war with only a single shot!”

The phaser wavered in his grip.

He swallowed hard. This was it. Now or never. Do or die.

“No.”

Feeling his arm relax, the captain stumbled backwards. For everything that he had learned during his time in this corner of space, for the entire realization that being a pacifist was not enough and that violence was sometimes required of him, he simply couldn’t do it.

“Fine,” Jason said coldly. “Then you can court-martial me later.” The operations officer raised his phaser.

“Wait, stop!”

It was too late.



EPILOGUE



Valerie Archer was having a difficult time, comprehending it.

She sat in the Ready Room of Fortitude, hoping that her position in this seat wouldn’t become permanent and that Ewan would return from his mission. It had apparently been a success.

They had been minutes away from the most catastrophic space battle ever imagined. Hundreds of End ships blasted through warp towards the Santrag system and to Santrag II with their weapons armed. They would have systematically slaughtered the population of the planet, annihilated the starbase, and wiped out every last ship, shuttlecraft, escape pod, and every last person… but they stopped.

They had stopped, dropping out of warp within a considerable distance from their target.

They had stopped and they had blown up.

Each battle cruiser, each carrier, and each fighter had all suffered from an immediate warp core breach. Their antimatter containment units went offline in the blink of an eye. The resulting shockwave had smashed into Starbase 499 and the waiting Fortitude, causing a few crewmembers to get knocked on their butts. Not a single End vessel remained.

Whatever the captain had done, it had worked.

But at what cost?”

Perhaps, his own life or perhaps even worse. Perhaps he was stranded.

“Bridge to Commander Archer. We have one End battle cruiser on an intercept course,” Lieutenant Vuro reported, his voice filling the Ready Room. “Sensors show that it’s the same battlecruiser that the captain took into their territory. There are two lifeforms aboard. They’re Human, ma’am.”

Valerie could have cried.

They had made it… and yet the question still remained.

At what cost?



The End.
 
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two - Episode Two: “Assistance”
By Jack D. Elmlinger




PROLOGUE



Veth Ka’Gerran was a troubled man.

He had occupied the office of the Prime Minister for almost three years now and yet he was still astonished at the capacity for unexpected developments to assault his position. As the political leader of his people, he was a figurehead. Respected by some, reviled by others, and voted into office by a majority.

Well, that was a joke.

Only fifty-six percent of those eligible to cast a vote in the election had actually done so. Of those people, just over half of them had given their thumbprint to the scanner beside Veth Ka’Gerran’s party. For almost three years, he had ruled Santrag II without a popular mandate.

The natural beauty of the morning did little to ease his headache. Santrag II was a simply gorgeous world that none could argue against. The cityscape was designed in such a careful way so it could blend in with the rolling hillsides and snow-capped mountains that surrounded it. Thick forests waved in the cool breeze as a stunning orange sun rose into view, bathing everything in a glistening haze. A dozen species of exotic birdlife provided the soundtrack to the breaking day.

There was a reason for the capital being one of the most cosmopolitan destinations in the sector and probably the anchoring point for the Federation Starbase in orbit.

Ka’Gerran sighed heavily as his short fingers massaged his temple. Hoping for a few moments of peace was futile.

“Prime Minister! Prime Minister!” It was his Chief Aide, an all-too-eager young man.

“What is it?,” Veth growled at him.

“We have an incoming transmission from Starbase 499. They say that the End have been officially defeated! We have prevailed!”

“You mean that they have prevailed. Seriously, calling to gloat…”

“They are also requesting assistance in repairing their battle damage and Rear Admiral Blackmore was wondering if you could join him in orbit. He understands that the domestic situation done here is delicate…”

Yes, Veth Ka’Gerran was a troubled man.



ACT ONE



Captain’s Log, Stardate 41033.2;


As the repairs to Starbase 49 and the fleet proceed apace, I find myself reflecting on recent events with increasing anxiety. My return to the Santrag system was worthy of the noblest hero and yet I feel anything but heroic in my cowardice. Nobody here has discovered the truth yet. That I bottled it, that I couldn’t bring myself to fire my phaser to destroy the End… and then, of course, there’s the question of Ensign Jason Armstrong? Do I punish him or pin a medal on him?




Ewan Llewellyn finished his log and his toast. Donning his red-shouldered Starfleet uniform made him feel, for the first time in his entire life, slightly wrong. There was guilt attached to it now or perhaps even shame as he found deciding difficult. He was still trying to process the incredible events of the trip to the End’s Central Core, debating with his own morality about whether he should be shocked that he contemplated mass murder or shocked that he failed to undertake it.

“Bridge to Captain Llewellyn,” chirped the communications system.

“Go ahead,” he responded after tapping his combadge.

“You have an incoming message from Rear Admiral Blackmore.”

“Send it to my quarters.”

Making his way over to his desk, he felt his tired body slump down in the comfortable chair and locked eyes with the desktop display monitor. The seal of the United Federation of Planets was quickly replaced with the familiar face of the senior officer. He beamed back at him. It was the first time that they had spoken since his return from End space.

“Ewan! You look like hell, boy!”

“You can talk, Boxer,” the captain smiled weakly. “What can I do for you?”

“I’ve got the Prime Minister of Santrag II on his way up here. I want to make a good impression on him. I’m going to try and squeeze him for some resources while we make our repairs. If he could meet the man who delivered us from the End… You know, the usual grip-and-grin, then he could gain some political weight on his world. They have some trouble down there and… I was thinking about mutual benefits all around.”

“With all due respect…,” Ewan began to say, rubbing his face slowly.

“I know it’s not your thing, my friend,” Blackmore interjected, waving him off. “Listen, I promise no more than an hour with him. 499 is in bad shape, not to mention your ship. Valerie used it like a shovel to whack those End… We need the Santragans’ help.”

“You’re not leaving me much choice in the matter, sir.”

“No, I’m not, am I? Half an hour then?”

“Bugger…”



* * * *



Elsewhere aboard the starship Fortitude, another member of the senior staff was waking up and questioning the uniform that he was about to dress himself in. sitting on the corner of his bed, staring at the yellow shoulders and Starfleet combadge, Jason Armstrong let his smooth young face fall into the cupped palms of his hands. He knew the truth of it all, knowing what he had done, and also knowing the risks and ramifications. In the moment, in the heat of the moment, he had made a decision that he believed to be right. Now back in the security of his quarters, he doubted that decision.

Behind him, Ensign Jim Morgan stirred to consciousness. Slowly as he opened his dark eyes and fixed them upon his boyfriend, he sat upright. It took a second for him to wrap his arm around Jason’s shoulder, slowly kissing the back of his neck.

“Hey,” the tactical officer whispered,” how long have you been up like this?”

“Honestly, not long,” Jason replied, lying badly.

“Want some coffee? Something to eat before our shift starts?”

“No. Sorry, no thanks. I’m not hungry.”

“Not even for my famous replicated pancakes?”

The joke failed to elicit a response.

It hardly required the expertise of a Betazoid to notice the growing signs of depression within the blonde Kentuckian operations officer. The previous evening upon the away team’s return from End space, both of them had been so wrapped up in seeing each other again to notice that anything was wrong.

Jason was relieved to discover that Jim had survived the battle and Jim was relieved to discover that Jason had survived the belly of the beast. It was taking this pause in their emotional outpouring to allow them both an assessment of the impacts.

“What happened out there?,” Jim asked gently. “Seriously, Jay, tell me.”

“Nothing… I…”

“Don’t brush me off. If you don’t talk to me, then I can’t help you!”

Jason grew angry, physically feeling his blood pressure rise within him. The problem was that he was angry with himself, not Jim, and yet it was his partner who would bear the brunt of his outburst. He couldn’t stop himself.

“Just drop it! Drop it! Damnit, we’re safe! Isn’t that enough?!”

Getting to his feet and snatching up the uniform that he had been staring at and using it as an excuse to get away from the inquiry that he was facing in the bedroom, Armstrong stormed into the bathroom to get changed. Stunning at the eruption of rage from the man that he loved, Jim remained sitting in bed. If his dark skin allowed for visible blushing, he would have turned a bright crimson.

That had never happened before.

That was when something caught his eye.

Turning to the large sloping window behind him, Jim watched as a graceful vessel soared through the stars. It sported a tapered nose, sweeping back to three refined wings that combined around a powerful warp drive reactor, all of them covered in polished blue polyduranium alloy. It was an elegant vessel and recognizable in an instant.

The Santragans were paying a visit to Starbase 499.”

Jim got up. He was going to need his uniform too.



ACT TWO



“Captain Llewellyn, this is Prime Minister Veth Ka’Gerran.”

Rear Admiral Blackmore was giving the introductions. They stood collected at the main docking ring aboard Starbase 499. For some reason, it made more of a statement for the leader of the Santragan people to travel aboard his personal starship rather than beam aboard.

Perhaps that was just one of the reasons for the troubles on the planet’s surface, the Rear Admiral grunted to himself, shaking the hand of the politician and smiling genuinely from behind his grey beard. They had worked closely together since the election, reinforcing the relationship between Santrag II and the Federation in their own small ways. It was the first time that Ewan Llewellyn had met the Prime Minister. Their handshake was much more forceful, the smiles absent of any feeling or personal messages and the short nods were hardly appreciated.

“Captain,” Veth acknowledged,” I must thank you for stopping the End from overrunning our system. We are far from a warlike people and we wouldn’t have lasted a day against such a destructive force. We owe you a great debt.”

“Prime Minister,” Ewan replied in his best diplomatic tone,” your praise isn’t required but appreciated nevertheless. What’s done is done. We’re here to discuss the here and now, and that debt that you mentioned… Well, we might have a small request.”

“Yes, Edward has already asked.”

Blackmore beamed. He and the Prime Minister had been on first-name terms for quite some time. Leading the gathering to his office, which included Ka’Gerran’s Chief Aide, they all took seats and shared a steaming cup of coffee.

For Ewan, it was his first cup of the day, his first of what usually became many. He was surprised to see the Santragans drinking it. Their plates consisted of mostly bland foods with the nutritional value regarded higher than flavor. It matched their appearance, to be honest.

Santragans were humanoids, bipedal, and of a similar range of skin tones as Humans were. Only a collection of short, stubby horns protruding from their foreheads, usually symmetrical and into the double figures, set them apart from their Human friends. That, and their feral, irregular ideas about hairstyling.

“How can we be of assistance?”

“Basically, we’re in bad shape,” Blackmore admitted, facing Ka’Gerran with deep sincerity. “Usually, our damaged starships could find respite here but 499 is suffering from some crippling setbacks of its own. For example, Station Master Martinez regrets not being able to meet you but she’s down in our main power core, fighting a plasma fire. We haven’t even begun to lick out wounds yet, and there are the starships themselves.”

“You have four, yes?,” confirmed Veth.

“That’s correct, Prime Minister,” Ewan said, taking over. “My ship, Fortitude, took the most of the fire from the End and requires the most work. However, there are various other problems to deal with aboard all vessels. Steamrunner needs a completely new port warp nacelle and gravitational plating system. Winchester, our Miranda-class vessel, has a breach piercing her saucer section and Katherine Johnson…”

“... the Oberth-class science vessel?,” interrupted the Chief Aide, displaying his youthful ignorance through his eagerness to contribute to the conversation. “What was she doing actively involved in a combat situation?”

“In case you were watching,” Blackmore growled at him,” there was somewhere close to one hundred enemy ships versus a starbase. We scrambled everything that we had and Johnson has two phaser arrays and a torpedo launcher. She did her duty like everybody else and lost a lot of good people in the process.”

“My apologies,” the Aide retreated, bowing his head.

“It is a daunting list,” Ka’Gerran nodded with a somber expression. “My condolences to you, gentlemen. You appear to have sacrificed a great deal in the name of peace. You have my assurance that the Santragan people will band together to repay our debt and fix any problems within our capability.”

On that note, the meeting concluded rapidly. As the two visitors finished their coffee and returned to the docking ring, Blackmore placed his mug slowly on the table and leaned over to Ewan, giving one final parting smile before the door slid shut. The facade dropped from his face faster than a Vulcan could recite the works of Surak. It was a sight that took the Welsh captain by surprise. He thought the meeting had gone well.

“Silver-tongued bastard…”

“I don’t follow, Boxer,” Llewellyn admitted.

“‘The Santragan people will band together’?,” laughed the Rear Admiral, echoing the Prime Minister’s words. “That man has about as much influence over his people than I do over the internal affairs of the Klingon Empire!”

“Tell me more…”



* * * *



The trip had been ridiculously short but that was his way.

Veth Ka’Gerran returned to the Prime Minister’s Residence on Santrag II immediately after the conclusion of his meeting with Blackmore and Llewellyn. Flying there and back had taken almost three times as long as the entire conversation had been, and predictably upon his return home, he was assaulted by his critics.

“... and we have confirmed reports that the Prime Minister’s vessel has returned to his private hangar, a few moments ago. I believe this speaks for itself, but as a political commentator, allow me to--”

He switched off the news channel with disgust. Nobody understood his life or his position. Not one single person on the entire planet. There was his Chief Aide, of course, but he had been hired for his diplomatic phrasing of situations and gentle manner, nothing more, nothing substantial or helpful.

Ka’Gerran exhaled, grasping the bridge of his nose with his fingers and wishing that his headache would leave him in peace.

The Santragans were growing tired with their political system and Veth Ka’Gerran was the embodiment of that system. Therefore, the Santragans were tired of him.

It had been a long time coming. A general apathy in political life had come about rather lazily as the definition of apathy suggested. Santrag II was a world of bounty, of great sociological security, and high quality of life. The Prime Minister existed to preside over the wonderful existence of his people and made sure that it remained wonderful. That task, Veth noted with sadness, had been performed without flaw. It was just his time, just bad luck, that he was the man feeling the brunt of the aftertaste.

Since everything ran so smoothly, there were those people who wondered why the Prime Minister even existed. Quickly, the voice shouted his support had been drowned out by the voices calling for the abolishment of the governmental structure. It was an expensive structure to run. Taxes had only been raised because everybody could afford them, but with the arrival of the Federation and Starbase 499…

Yes, that had been it. What was it that Rear Admiral Blackmore used to say? It was the straw that broke the camel’s back.

The people of Santrag II saw that there was an existence available to them without money. It had happened on Earth. As society reached a pinnacle of achievement, money ceased to become an issue for the Humans and it had eventually disappeared. The Santragans wanted the same, and yet Ka’Gerran simply could not do it. What people failed to realize was that the economics of their world was finely augmented by the government, and so doing away with the government would lead to their collapse. No, they wanted things like the new guys and they wanted it now.

Ka’Gerran liked Blackmore and counted him as a friend. However, the Prime Minister realized that the Rear Admiral might have just as well started a revolution on Santrag II.
 
ACT THREE



Captain’s Log, supplemental;


I have been told some troubling stories about the political unrest on Santrag II by Rear Admiral Blackmore. While I always hope for peace and security on any Federation starbase’s anchor world, the proximity that it has to those that I care about means that I’ll be watching this situation with a steady gaze.

Meanwhile, I must turn my attention to another matter, one that requires an immediate resolution before our mission can continue.




The door chimes rang.

“Come in,” Llewellyn called out, placing his coffee cup back on the desk.

Ensign Jason Armstrong stepped into the Ready Room of Fortitude with a heavy heart and trepidation in his stride. This was a meeting that he had not been looking forward to. It was a meeting where he would have to face his captain about an emotional subject that both men wished to avoid. They exchanged a knowing look before Ewan gestured toward the comfortable sofa underneath the panoramic window that currently showed a convoy of Santragan vessels moving towards Starbase 499, laden with repair equipment.

“You asked for me, sir,” Jason said, playing dumb.

“Yes, Ensign,” Ewan nodded as he sat down. “I think you know why.”

“I can guess…”

They both let their minds fill with images from the dark and sinister Central Core of the End’s primary starport. Neither of them wanted to remember it but inwardly, Jason respected his commanding officer for handling the gulf between them so directly. Many people, including his parents, had never spoken to him about such matters. Emotions were something to think about briefly and move on. The captain was proving his masculinity by calling for this meeting but admitting his inability to act and facing the consequences. Ewan respected Jason too, for only having the resolve to act but to also attend this meeting with honesty.

“I’m not going to punish you for your actions,” the older officer began. “What I want to understand is why you fired that phaser. It was, well… I was shocked. I took you with me to the End Central Core because I wanted to count on a level-headed young man, Jason. I thought that you were the right choice. You’ve always weighed the consequences of your actions with care.”

“Permission to speak freely?,” asked the operations officer.

“Always.”

“I fired that phaser with a level head because I knew that one of us had to. We were at war with a vicious alien race and we had an opportunity to stop them. Was it a desperate act? No question about that. Was it a violent act? Absolutely… but was it our only choice? I believe it was and I also believe that you would have never been able to do it.”

“In one single move, you annihilated an entire race.”

“In one single move, I annihilated the empty shells of a long-dead race. You saw the devastation at Pekeni, knowing that they’d do the same to 499, Santrag II, this ship, and all aboard if they were given half the chance.”

“I need to know something,” Llewellyn said softly,” and I want an honest answer.”

“Sure,” the ensign agreed, straightening his back almost in preparation.

“Did you do it because Jim Morgan was on the front line?”

There was a pause.

Jason was torn. His immediate reactions were to snap at his commanding officer, to yell at him, wave his arms about, deny it, and defend his relationship with Fortitude’s tactical officer and question the validity of such a thought. To get angry, just as he had gotten angry at Jim this morning.

But he stopped himself, just in the nick of time.

He remembered this morning, remembered snapping at his boyfriend, remembering the crushing weight of his conscience: the destruction of a race. Yes, he knew the answer to the question. It was true.

“The honest answer,” he slowly admitted,” would be yes. The danger towards Jim represented by the End hurried my decision, but, Captain, in retrospect, I did the right thing. If you were thinking of asking me whether I would do it again… Yes, sir, I would.”

“Can you live with that? I mean, really live with that?”

“Do I have much of a choice?”

“I guess not.”



* * * *



Jim Morgan wasn’t an idiot. He knew something was wrong.

Working in Main Engineering with Lieutenant Arden Vuro, his mind was elsewhere as he and the Fortitude’s helmsman watched Lieutenant Commander Sollik run around, chasing after the busy Santragan repair crews and making sure that they kept their hands away from his lovingly-maintained systems. It would have been amusing to him, were he not preoccupied with this morning’s outburst from the man that he loved. Vuro knew that something was wrong too. He decided to choose the right moment to ask him and it had yet to present itself so they worked in silence.

Two Santragans passed by them. Jim managed to break free of his thoughts long enough to hear them discussing their Prime Minister. It was not a favorable discussion. The Universal Translator managed with all of the words and some of them were more than a little rude. With wide eyes, he watched them pass by.

“What was that all about?,” Vuro asked, having heard the same thing. The words were even worse for him. The Bolian language contained phrases that no Human would ever dream of uttering.

“No idea, but somebody’s not happy,” replied Jim.

This was Vuro’s chance. “You can say that again, and the Santragans seemed upset too.”

“Am I that obvious?”

“No offense, but when your partner returns from a life-or-death situation and you’re a bit glum, the next morning, I don’t need to be the ship’s counselor to put the pieces together. Hand me the hyperspanner, would you?”

Jim obliged, his dark hand meeting the blue skin of Vuro halfway over the LCARS display. As they continued to work, their eyes were locked on their tasks but their conversation continued with complete honesty.

Jim liked Arden. Like most of his people, the Bolian was open-minded, fair, and kind. Unlike their Suliban chief engineer who had become uncomfortable while trying to console him earlier, Arden knew the right things to say and it was very appreciated.

“He’s never blown up like that before. Never,” concluded the tactical officer after a few minutes. “I’ve seen him angry, of course, but it was never directed at me.”

“He did just participate in the destruction of a race,” Vuro pointed out to him. “Although I use the term ‘race’ incredibly lightly about the End. all of us wanted to be there. All of us wanted to deliver that final blow ourselves, but despite all of that, despite all that we’ve been through, it remains a large undertaking. Give it time.”

“I suppose you’re right. I wish I knew what happened! At least, then, I would have somewhere to start. Then I could help him.”

“You help, trust me. You have and you will, you always will. I’ve seen you two together in the Mess Hall. As Commander Archer would say, you’re the ‘real deal’.”

“That we are,” Jim smiled weakly. “Thanks, Lieutenant.”

At that moment, a voice spoke over his combadge. It was a familiar voice, a welcome voice, a voice that made both officers smile. “Armstrong to Morgan.”

“Go on,” nodded Arden, turning away from the young ensign. “Answer it.”

“Morgan here,” Jim finally replied, tapping his combadge.

“I’m getting reports of a naked flame in the vicinity of our quarters. It seems to be close to some very fine food and wine. It’s in danger of breaching some shipboard safety protocols. I require tactical assistance to extinguish it.”

It was a call that they had made to each other on several occasions. It was a playful call that basically meant ‘get home, I’ve made dinner’.

Jim’s smile broadened. “I’m on my way,” he answered. “Morgan out.”

Tapping Vuro on the shoulder, he set down his tools. “If you’ll excuse me, Lieutenant, I’ve got some other repairs to make.”



EPILOGUE



The sun was setting.

If it wasn’t an apt metaphor, Veth Ka’Gerran did not know what was.

Upon returning to the surface of Santrag II and ordering the immediate assistance rendered to the damaged Starbase 499 and her small fleet of starships, the protests against his trip had increased dramatically. There was dissent in his cabinet now too. If one listened very carefully, one could hear the sound of blades being sharpened in the corridors of power. Only the Prime Minister’s Residence allowed him a small degree of solitude and here, slumped in a comfortable chair, he watched the day conclude and drank his final drink.

What was that expression that Rear Admiral Blackmore had used once? Yes, that was it… drowning one’s sorrows.

The Chief Aide approached him, about to finish his work and head home for a lucky rare hour of sleep before, once more, the nightmare of their jobs resumed.

“I have reports that the repairs to the Federation Starfleet in orbit will be completed within several days,” he reported. “They’ll be back to full capacity and free to resume their exploration in no time, Prime Minister. That’s good news.”

“Lucky them,” Veth sighed. “It’s funny, isn’t it?”

“Prime Minister?”

“As the Humans and their Federation close the darkest chapter of their stay with us, so we open the beginning of ours.”

Veth Ka’Gerran turned to stare at his Chief Aide. His eyes were round, filled with a miserable hopelessness and a futility of a struggle long since lost. Soon, very soon, the government of Santrag II would fall and his position of power would be destroyed by the same people that he was desperate to help, to save from themselves, and to protect.

His tone was grave and he dismissed the Chief Aide with a warning.

“A storm is gathering.”



The End.
 
Happy Valentine's Day!



Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two - Episode Three: “Winchester”
By Jack D. Elmlinger




PROLOGUE



Three stars. Perhaps the most beautiful sight that he had ever seen.

Standing on the Bridge of the aging Miranda-class USS Winchester, NCC-2799, Rear Admiral Edward Blackmore stroked his equally-aging beard with satisfaction. For months, he had remained aboard Starbase 499 and presided over system status reports, formal banquets for newcomers, and issued orders to the four starships under his direct regional command. Now was a rare opportunity for him. The old space dog was stretching his space legs and loving every moment of it.

The trinary star system, roughly five lightyears from the Santrag system and where the Rear Admiral would call home, had yet to be officially charted by the Federation. When the omission was discovered in the Starbase Database (jokingly nicknamed “Base, Squared'' by the junior officers), he had jumped at the chance. The Winchester had been fully repaired earlier for several hours and the finishing touches were being polished and screwed into place aboard Fortitude, Katherine Johnson, and Steamrunner, meaning there was a spare starship and a spare few days. Here, soaking in the spectacular vista of the swirling light between the triad of celestial giants, he welcomed the break. Besides, Miranda-class starships had comfortable command chairs. It had been too long since he had done this.

A Lieutenant manning the science station had been scanning and collecting a myriad of technical details for quite some time when his console lit up like a Christmas tree.

It was enough to draw Blackmore’s attention. “What is it, son?”

“I’m not sure, sir,” he replied. “I’m getting ridiculously high energy readings from beyond the trinary cluster. It’s like nothing that I’ve ever seen before!”

“Any ships? Planets?”

“Negative,” admitted the Lieutenant, flummoxed,” Just energy readings. Big ones!”

“Do we return to Starbase 499, sir?,” asked the Helmswoman, a young inexperienced crewwoman of a nervous disposition.

“Are you kidding?,” Blackmore grinned with relish. “Let’s go exploring!”



ACT ONE



Captain’s Log, Stardate 49339.3;


It has taken a great deal of time and effort but my crew and I have finally completed our repairs to
Fortitude. These Intrepid-class starships are certainly robust and built to withstand a hefty beating. Our largest undertaking was relatively minor compared to the extensive attention required for Starbase 499 and the rest of the fleet, contrary to our initial analysis.

Despite this, I find myself as the ranking officer in the Santrag system, after Rear Admiral Blackmore left with the
Winchester, two days ago. I’m eager for him to return. Exploring is my job, after all, and I wish I were out there with him.



Captain Llewellyn was aware of the interest.

After all, she was hardly trying to hide her feelings. This morning, once again, he had gotten the distinct expression that Station Master Erica Martinez was finding insignificant excuses to meet with him. Was the status report really important enough to warrant a personal delivery? Oh, she had wanted to see Fortitude too. All of this time and she had never once left Starbase 499. So it was nice to walk around and while I’m here, Ewan. She liked calling him Ewan. Yes, the interest was hardly noticed.

Sipping at his umpteenth mug of coffee as he browsed through the report, Llewellyn smiled to himself, shaking his head. The words were simply not being processed in his mind. Thinking about matters like who had a crush on whom was a nice change of pace.

No more wars, no more evil aliens, just getting ready to explore. So, Erica liked him, did she?

The Welshman was flattered to say the least. She was definitely a very attractive woman. There was no question about that but a connection? Perhaps the crush was purely physical. There was a complication when it came to that aspect of analyzing relationships. Anyways, a complication in the shape of a certain First Officer…

Ewan blinked hard, refocusing on the report. That was something that he had been pondering for quite some time, and try as he might, he either failed to find an answer or failed to find the resolve to act upon such an answer, whenever it would present itself. He wouldn’t find an answer today so he went back to the report, finishing his coffee as he did so.

The door chimes rang. Speak of the Devil.

“Valerie,” he greeted her as she stepped into the Ready Room. “I trust everything is ticking over nicely?”

“Good news, Ewan,” Commander Archer beamed triumphantly, her brown hair falling playfully in a new hairstyle that she had been experimenting with. “499 reports that Katherine Johnson and Steamrunner are fully repaired. The last of the Santragan crews are returning to the surface as we speak. The finishing touches to 499 itself can be handled in-house.”

“Excellent. I think I’ve had my fill of self-pity. We’ve licked at our war wounds for long enough. It’s time that we got going again.”

“We’re just waiting on the Winchester then…”

He had to hand it to her. Valerie was the perfect First Officer for one simple reason. She could read people like they were open books in a matter of seconds. With a flick of her eyes and a few exchanged sentences, she could run a scan that was more detailed than the most sophisticated tricorder and determine the nature of somebody’s mental state and the focus of their desires.

Despite his preoccupation with romantic overtones today, Ewan was clearly longing to join Rear Admiral Blackmore in exploring the trinary star system. As it was, he would be sitting on his hands for a few more days and it was driving him nuts.

“You’re getting freakishly good at that,” he told her.

“When you make it too easy,” she said with a wink.

“I won’t hold it against Boxer,” the captain admitted, using Blackmore’s nickname as he relaxed in his chair. “He hasn’t been out in space for years. If I were in his shoes, I would be chomping at the bit, just as much as he was, the other day. Plus, remember that he used to command a Miranda-class starship? I won’t stand in the way of nostalgia.”

“If I am ever offered a desk job, you have my permission to shoot me if I accept it,” Valerie observed with mock-sincerity. “My career is an explorer and my place is in space.

“If it all falls through,” Ewan teased her,” you could write bad poetry instead.”

The commander was about to protest at his sneaky little jibe when the communications system chirped for attention. Ensign Jason Armstrong’s boyish Kentuckian accent called out to the Ready Room, hailing the captain from the Bridge, just outside the door.

“Go ahead, Ensign.”

“Captain, I’m getting a distress signal on a Starfleet carrier wave.”



* * * *



The captain and the first officer were on the Bridge within seconds. “Play it,” Llewellyn snapped.

Armstrong began relaying the repeating transmission to the entire Bridge. Lieutenant Arden Vuro and Ensign Jim Morgan joined him with expressions that were laded with concern. Archer stood beside him and it was no question, the voice belonged to Rear Admiral Blackmore.

“... I say again, this is the Federation starship Winchester, calling for any available assistance! We have become trapped in a subspace undercurrent and we’re being pulled against our will into a --”

Silence reigned and all eyes turned to the operations console. “That’s all that I could get,” he said. “We’ve lost the signal.”

“What’s the position of the Winchester?,” Ewan demanded to know.

“The distress signal originated from the vicinity of the trinary star system. I’d estimate that it’s no more than a lightyear in any direction but the signal is weak. I’m sorry, Captain, but I can’t get any better than that.”

“He said that they were being pulled into something,” a concerned Archer observed, folding her arms while she speculated. “Pulled into what, exactly?”

“That’s what I intend to find out,” Llewellyn said. “Bridge to Engineering. Sollik, I’m going to need maximum warp. I hope those repairs of yours are going to hold. Divert all power to the warp engines.”

“Aye, Captain,” replied the voice of the Suliban chief engineer.

Fortitude to Starbase 499,” was his next call.

The viewscreen flared to life, displaying a worried Erica Martinez overlooking the Bridge of the ship from the Station Master’s Office. Obviously, she would have been able to intercept the distress signal simultaneously, triangulating the source, just as her colleagues aboard Fortitude had after recognizing Edward Blackmore’s voice instantly.

“Don’t worry about checking in,” the Latina woman barked at him. “Get out there, Ewan! We’ll be waiting when you bring them back safe.”

“As soon as the other ships are ready, and if we’re not back within twenty-four hours, send them in as well.”

“Will do. Good luck, Ewan!”

With the groan of mechanical gears, the glowing warp nacelles of the USS Fortitude folded upwards, locking securely into place and boosting the starship to speeds far beyond the speed of light. It was an image that Erica watched with a heart heavy with hope for the safe return of the USS Winchester, and Rear Admiral Blackmore, her friend, and commanding officer.



ACT TWO



“Well, that’s all that we can manage,” the Rear Admiral realized with disdain.

Nostalgia was all well and good but the simple fact of the matter remained. Miranda-class starships were old. Retrofits could be made. The most sophisticated systems could be installed but above it all, stood the same design flaws, the same power regulation systems, the same weak spots and now they were failing him. His knowledge of the class meant that he had done all that he could do to divert power to the faltering engines, but it was nowhere near enough.

The only thing left to divert was life-support but Edward Blackmore didn’t give up that easily.

There was always a way out.

Just what this situation would provide as a way out, he was at a loss to see at this time. All he could see was the image dominating the main viewscreen, the image of Winchester’s impending doom.

Stunning to behold but deadly to observe, it was the classic siren call scenario.

It was a particle fountain.

They were small but deadly spatial anomalies. Blackmore had heard the horror stories about one discovered in the Hupar system. Starfleet had attempted to map the phenomenon, only to lose a small fleet of nearly a dozen ships to it. As the swirling cornucopia of energy drew the Winchester in even closer, all that he could think about was the list that would occupy a database somewhere.

The list would identify the USS Winchester, NCC-2799, as the thirteenth casualty of such an unknown and natural destructive power. Thirteen, yes… it would have to be number thirteen, wouldn’t it? It was certainly unlucky for some, but the number had always been unlucky for the Rear Admiral

Damned subspace… Of all of the places that subspace could have destabilized and it does it right here, sucking innocent things into the gates of Hell itself. Maybe there was a connection. Maybe he had just made the biggest scientific breakthrough about particle fountains. It was just an unfortunate footnote that he paid for the information with his life.

The young Lieutenant at the science station was in a complete state of panic. Sweat poured from his face as the lights on the Bridge began to fade. All that remained of them were the pulsing flashes of crimson red from the strips in the floor. Through the shadows and the chaos, Blackmore sat the Lieutenant’s face and felt the responsibility and regret that a commanding officer always did in such situations.

“Take it easy, son,” he tried to soothe him. “We’ll get out of here yet. That distress signal is bound to have been heard by somebody.”

“Yeah?,” panted the Lieutenant, fighting the fear. “What if… what if they’re hostile? What if they come to … to finish us off? To kill us before the fountain does?”

“What’s your name, Lieutenant?”

“Moore. James Moore, sir.”

“You’re one of the science boys from 499, aren’t you?”

“Uh-huh. Sir, with all due respect, you didn’t answer my question. What if whoever gets that signal is hostile?”

Blackmore wiped his brow with the back of his hand, letting his fingers run down to his beard and indulge in a good scratch. There was no sense in coddling this young man. He had to be told the truth. Captain Llewellyn would have told him the truth. He was an honest person with his crew and he was respected for it. The Rear Admiral knew that it was the only decent thing to do.

As harsh as it sounded, he gave the honest answer. “Then we’ll die quicker.”

It was at that time that the sensors gave their last reading.

Somebody was answering the distress signal.



* * * *



“Secure from warp!”

With a flurry of lights, the USS Fortitude dropped to sunlight speed. With his blue hands dancing across the helm display, Lieutenant Arden Vuro logically kept a safe distance from the drifting hull of the Miranda-class starship that they were here to rescue.

It was a precaution on the order of Commander Valerie Archer. What was it that Oscar Wilde would have said? She put it as, ‘To lose one starship may be regarded as a misfortune, but to lose two starships would seem like carelessness’.

It was a blunt reminder to think things through and to look before leaping. Ewan appreciated her wisdom. His drive to save the Rear Admiral and the Winchester had the potential to cloud his judgment.

Damned emotions… Where were the Vulcans when you needed them?

“Status?,” he called out.

“She’s in bad shape, Captain,” Ensign Jason Armstrong reported from Ops. “Her main power has been completely drained in attempting to escape from the subspace undercurrent. Life-support is failing and structural integrity is getting weak!”

“Crew complement?,” Archer asked, knowing full well that Blackmore only cobbled together enough people to fly the Winchester in his eagerness to undertake his foray into unknown space. It would work to their advantage.

“I’ve got thirty-five biosigns, all stable,” Jim Morgan chimed in from Tactical, working with the sensors from a different angle and providing, as always, the perfect balance to Jason’s analysis. “They’re mainly collected in groups. Engineering, the Bridge, and a few of them in Sickbay. It should be easy to transport them.”

“Hail them.”

“No response, Captain,” Jason said, shaking his head. “Our transmission is being scattered by subspace interference.”

“Bridge to Transporter Room One,” Llewellyn ordered without wasting a second. “Lock onto the crew of the Winchester and start beaming them aboard!”

No response.

“Transporter Room One --”

“Bridge, this is Sollik in Main Engineering,” came the eventual reply. “The subspace distortions surrounding the particle fountain make using the transporters impossible so I’ve diverted their power to our shields as a precaution. I knew that you would try transporting right away. I apologize for acting without your approval.”

“Explain!,” the captain shouted, frustrated by his helplessness.

“Captain, I’ve been analyzing the subspace undercurrent pulling them in while you’ve been scanning the ship itself. If we tried to use a transporter beam, it would scatter the compressed molecules of whoever we tried to beam aboard. I don’t know about you but I don’t exactly want to bring our people back… inside-out.”

“Tractor beams?”

“They would scatter just as the transporter beam would, Captain.”

“Get to work on a Plan B, Sollik,” Archer snapped at him,” and when you’re done, we’ll be having words about the proper protocol during emergency situations.”

“I understand, Commander.”

“This would be a whole lot easier without that undercurrent,” Ewan growled.

“This wouldn’t be a crisis without that undercurrent,” Valerie pointed out to him.

“What options do we have?”

“Orthodox options?,” confirmed the First Officer, folding her arms. “We’re out of them, Captain. It’s time to time outside the box.”



* * * *



Blackmore slammed his fist into the LCARS display with rage. “Son of a bitch!”

Just as Fortitude had attempted, Winchester had tried and failed to send a ship-to-ship transmission out of the gigantic deathtrap that dominated this sector of space. They were so close and yet, so far away. Someone might as well scurry down to the nearest airlock, throw a tin can into the stars and pull back until the string grew taunt.

Shaking his furrowed brow, the Rear Admiral cleared the sarcasm from his mind. Now was not the time to get sarcastic. Now was the time to think clearly.

“Any idea, no matter how stupid or ridiculous it is,” he told his Bridge crew,” I want to hear it! No hesitation and no questions!”

Beneath their feet, the deck plating shuddered. A horrible groaning protest came from the bulkheads around them as the Winchester fought to the end as the stress and strain placed upon her by the approaching particle fountain began to take their toll. Even the emergency lighting began to falter, fading in and out of existence as Lieutenant Moore became the trendsetter for a panicked expression.

Even Blackmore let himself go. “This is it…”
 
ACT THREE



Well, it was certainly an unorthodox idea.

By Jim Morgan’s estimates, the Winchester would lose structural integrity and suffer from a catastrophic containment breach in less than thirty minutes. Watching with dismay, the Bridge crew had already watched the foreboding sight of sections of the hull plating being torn from the Miranda-class starship, spinning towards their inevitable fate of complete vaporization within the vortex of the particle fountain. It was startling but the sinister nature of the subspace undercurrent meant that it would be a slow process. Those people aboard would suffer, and that was what Captain Llewellyn was here to stop.

“You’re sure that this will work, Sollik?”

They stood in Main Engineering. Yellow-shouldered members of the crew darted around in organized alarm, each one of them scrambling to beat the clock. Llewellyn and Archer watched their Suliban chief engineer put the finishing touches on a very ugly device that he called a Grappler.

“Captain, starship history is something of a fascination with me,” Sollik explained while he worked, frustrated with the distraction but yet loyal to the rank. “You name a class of starship and I’ll tell you all about her systems. Think back to your history lessons at the Academy, sir. Does Jonathan Archer and the Enterprise, NX-01 ring any bells?”

Valerie smiled. She could feel Ewan’s eyes on her. “Archer?”

“Before you ask, Captain,” preempted the First Officer,” yes.”

“We can trace family trees later. You were saying, Sollik?”

“Those old NX-class ships didn’t have tractor beams to start with. Before they were invented by Starfleet, starships were equipped with something called a Grappler. In essence, it’s basically a large magnetic claw attached to a tether.”

“You’re going to fire this thing at Winchester?”

“With your permission,” nodded Sollik’s mottled green head. “By my calculations, an overburn of the impulse engines should give us enough thrust to pull the Winchester away from the subspace undercurrent.”

“She’s already losing structural integrity,” Valerie pointed out to him. “Won’t yanking her out of there be a risk? What if she breaks apart?”

“Commander, we’ve already lost the Winchester. All I’m talking about is getting her out long enough for us to beam the crew aboard. I mean, we could try locking a tractor beam on her when she’s clear but to be honest, at that rate of decay, my apologies, but not even the engineers at Utopia Planitia could rebuild and repair her after today.”

Llewellyn weighed the options. Valerie was right and there was a risk. Tugging on an already loose thread might unravel the entire situation, quite literally. All they needed were ten seconds. In ten seconds, both transporter rooms and the cargo bay transporters could be simultaneously activated to rescue the thirty souls in mortal danger.

Winchester might be the favorite of the Rear Admiral, but he knew that he would understand. She was a collection of metals and fibers, with energy for blood, not like the people aboard. They were men and women. Some of them with children and all of them with parents somewhere. People came first. That was a rule that was universally recognized by all species.

“Get down to the shuttlebay,” he finally ordered,” and get that thing installed. We’ve got less than half an hour so I want it to be ready in fifteen minutes.”

“Aye, Captain.”

“22nd-century technology. Well, Valerie, you did say to think outside of the box.”



* * * *



Aboard the Winchester, cold and dark, the mood was grim.

Palm beacons had been distributed, using the last few seconds of available light before the Miranda-class starship surrounding her panic-stricken crew gave up on her inhabitants and finally laid herself to rest.

The white light flashed across the bodies of crewmembers, people checking on their friends and colleagues every few minutes with a grunt or a whispered question. Life-support had officially gone offline.

Well, nobody had known. They had lost count. What they did know was that the air was getting ridiculously thin and awfully stale. It was freezing, yet many of them sweated in their seats or at their stations, waiting for the inevitable shroud of death to fall upon them.

Rear Admiral Blackmore felt his stomach turn over for the seventh time that minute. It was really happening, wasn’t it? Hope had only lasted for so long. Seeing Fortitude arrive before the sensors went down had seen him through the rest of the power failures but now… surely they could have done something by now? What if there was nothing to be done? What if the subspace undercurrent was that crippling?

“Lieutenant,” he called out, his throat parched.

James Moore lifted his head from the colorless LCARS display, weakly responding to the light in his eyes.

“Stay with me, Lieutenant,” Edward urged him. “Stay with me.”

“For what, sir?”

“Rescue.”

As if on the command of the Rear Admiral himself, something struck the hull. A reverberating clang was heard and it was accompanied by a slight tremor in the deck plating which everybody had felt but nobody could identify.

“What was that?,” Moore gasped, slightly more awake now.

“I’ve got no idea, son. Just hang in there.”

Then Lieutenant James Moore began to disappear, surrounded by a blue beam of sparkling energy.

The rest of the Bridge crew followed.

Feeling the same energy envelop his body, Rear Admiral Blackmore managed a weak smile. Good old Ewan, always at the last minute.



* * * *



“We have them, sir!”

Heavy applause broke out across the Bridge. Llewellyn nodded his satisfaction as it died away, returning his attention to the viewscreen as it played out the final moments of the ill-fated USS Winchester.

Sollik’s Grappler had worked just as planned, but also the side-effects of the device were just as predicted. Just as the final survivor was beamed aboard Fortitude, the section of hull seized by the makeshift device tore away. Twisted metal and debris floated away, sucked into the raging torrent of destructive power at the heart of the particle fountain, followed by the rest of the Miranda-class starship. One of the warp nacelles broke away, exploding inward on itself as the shockwave obliterated the ventral side of the saucer section. The roll bar and its sensor pod collapsed and soon the entire wreck was spinning out of control.

“Arden, get us the hell out of here before that thing breaches!,” Ewan barked.

“Aye, Captain, with pleasure!”

They made it out just in time.

The matter/antimatter explosion that followed was perhaps the largest explosion that anybody had ever witnessed. Llewellyn, Arch, and the rest of the Senior Staff threw their hands across their faces, shielding their eyes from the furious flash.

The USS Winchester, NCC-2799, was gone.

“Bridge to Sickbay,” Commander Archer demanded in short order. “Doctor Boswell, medical teams to the transporter rooms.”

“I’m on my way, Commander,” replied the young Lynn Boswell.

“All’s well that ends well, Captain,” the First Officer allowed herself to smile.

“It could have been worse, Valerie,” Ewan admitted. “Yet we have lost a starship today.”

“Indeed.”



EPILOGUE



“Poker, Ewan?”

Rear Admiral Blackmore was sitting up in his biobed as Doctor Boswell finished her tricorder scan and allowed Captain Llewellyn to approach. They would be arriving back at Santrag II soon to dock with Starbase 499 and deliver the sad news about the Winchester to the rest of their colleagues in the system. Four ships were now down to three. There was a major hole in their defenses now, a hole that needed to be mended at some stage. However, today, the thirty officers rescued from the particle fountain, including Edward Blackmore, were just happy to be alive.

“Haven’t you learned anything from the last time that I beat you?”

“Men,” Lynn chuckled to herself as she left. “All the same…”

“I presume that we lost her, Ewan,” Blackmore asked with a serious expression across his face as he referred to the Winchester and not the doctor.

“We did all that we could, Boxer.”

“Ah, I know you did. Sollik was in here, a moment ago. I heard about his Grappler. Heh, I thought I was old, but I’ve never heard of one! I don’t know. Do you think there’s a lesson to be learned from all of this?”

“Yes,” the Welshman nodded, taking a seat beside the biobed. “Next time, if there’s something to be explored, leave it to us. Okay?”



The End.
 
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two, Episode Four: “The Team”
By Jack D. Elmlinger




PROLOGUE



“Nobody has seen this in over eight hundred years.”

It was incredible.

They stood together, firmly in the center of the chamber with their palm beacons dancing over the huge stone walls. Shadows merged with the rocks. There was some serious undergrowth covering most of them but enough gaps were remaining to show off the intricate carvings and masonry beyond them.

The temple’s capacity alone must have been close to five thousand humanoids. That is, if they had been humanoids. The civilization that built this collection of four temples on this particular jungle moon hadn’t been around to maintain them, leading one to presume their extinction. They knew that there were no other biosigns on the moon’s surface, save for a few native bird species and some kind of alligator.

It was a shame.

Whoever had managed to construct such marvels would have been a fascinating culture to meet and learn from.

“I love the echo in this place. There are some great acoustics.”

“You think that it was some kind of concert hall?”

“Perhaps. Well, actually, see up there? Those are the same religious icons that we saw in the other temple. Maybe this was a prayer hall instead?”

“One more question to ponder. Damn, it’s impressive.”

The distant background noise was dominated by distant drips of residue but other than that, it was completely silent. The atmosphere was damp but not overpowering. This was a place of complete solitude. Enjoying the change in scenery and the chance to do some real exploring, they almost lost track of time.

“We should get the archaeological survey teams down here.”

“I guess you’re right,” the team leader sighed, tapping his combadge. “Llewellyn to Fortitude, three to beam up.”




ACT ONE



Captain’s Log, Stardate 49584.3;


We have made a major archaeological find while exploring an uncharted system that we have dubbed ‘Vir’, the Latin word for ‘hero’. One single red giant sustains almost fifty small planetoids and moons. It’s on one of those moons, Vir IX, that we have discovered the remains of a long-dead civilization. It’s a remarkable place and an incredible change of pace for my crew. Nobody needs to be rescued here. Nobody is waiting in the shadows to attack us. We could find ourselves taking our time with this exploration.




“These scans are certainly impressive, Ewan.”

“They don’t do the place any justice, Boxer.”

Leaning back in his chair in his Ready Room aboard Fortitude and, for the first time in a long time, Ewan Llewellyn felt completely at peace with himself and his mission. He smiled at the desk monitor as the head and shoulders of Rear Admiral Edward Blackmore smiled back at him, sitting in his office aboard the distant Starbase 499. They had been chatting casually about the Vir system and the archaeological discovery on Vir IX for several minutes. Their conversation was beginning to wind down but despite this, due to their friendship transcending their respective ranks, they continued to exchange dialogue.

“Well, I’d love to be out with you,” Blackmore admitted to him. “You know that.”

“The problem is we’re running out of starships,” Ewan reminded him, referencing the recent loss of the USS Winchester at the hands of the Rear Admiral.

“Yeah, yeah, fair game, my friend. You’re never going to let that drop, are you?”

“Not really. Anyways, how are things going back home?”

“Same as always,” sighed the older man on the monitor. “I had breakfast with Prime Minister Ka’Gerren this morning at the Prime Minister’s Residence down on the planet. I consider Veth a friend, but boy, can he moan.”

“Are his political reforms still disappointing the Santragans?”

“I don’t think they’re ever got a chance of success. The Santragans hate their political system so nobody within the political system will be able to escape unscathed, let alone fix the crippling divisions in their society Ka’Gerran’s hands are tied by his job.”

“Hmm, yet let his job, and he’ll lose the power to even try.”

“Catch Twenty-Two, Ewan. Just be thankful that our jobs are somewhat simpler.”

“At the moment, I’m thankful for the change of pace. These ruins will take us some time to catalog, stunning that they are. I think this mission is exactly what the doctor ordered for the Fortitude.”

“I look forward to the next collection of scans,” Blackmore concluded.

Llewellyn gave a little mock salute towards the monitor, flashing his trademark-winning smile, a sight that the Rear Admiral had almost forgotten. It was a reminder of the happier times, of poker games, and shared laughs. Vowing to bring those times back, no matter what political storms were brewing on Santrag II or whatever the great unexplored realms of the Beta Quadrant held, the subspace link was terminated.

“See you later, Boxer.”



* * * *



On the surface of Vir IX, standing in awe of the ruined third temple and letting the warm sunlight dance across his smooth face, Ensign Jason Armstrong took in the sweet musky air deeply through his nostrils. It was a joy to breathe a non-recycled atmosphere for once and the beauty of his surroundings only accentuated the experience. Running a hand through his blonde locks, he reopened his eyes and absorbed the echoes of the lost civilization before turning and absorbing something that he found all the more beautiful. A few meters behind him, running a mapping scan on his tricorder, was his beloved boyfriend, Ensign Jim Morgan.

“Would you put that thing away and just experience this?,” he chastised him playfully, joining the tactical officer and embracing his shoulder.

“The captain wanted this scan, and the captain’s going to get this scan.”

Jason grinned. Jim was ever the eager officer. Perhaps it was his aversion to his own assigned task that had taken roots in recent events, the Kentuckian wondered. It had taken many sleepless nights to mentally grapple with the burden that he carried ever since he had destroyed the End fleet. With no order to do it and nobody to share the responsibility with, it had been a difficult time.

Jim had helped him greatly. Many hours had been spent with Jason staring into his deep, dark eyes and being cradled in his arms. He was the most sympathetic and most supportive person that anybody could wish for. While he hoped that he would never truly understand the feelings of guilt behind eradicating an entire species, he felt like, in some small, yet important way, he did.

“You know,” Jim laughed,” this kind of behavior could qualify as harassment.”

“Even though I know exactly how you like to be harassed?”

They kissed like it was the first time all over again. It was like that when you were in love. It never got old, and it never became commonplace. As they parted, both of them took a moment to recover with unavoidable joy spread across their faces.

“I think I’m getting some interference with my scans,” the tactical officer finally decided with a flirtatious raise of his thick black eyebrows. “My mapping survey might take a little longer to complete.”

“That’s the spirit, partner,” Jason winked with relish.



* * * *



On the other side of the cavern, covering what remained of the third temple’s ceiling and entrenched in his own tasks, Lieutenant Arden Vuro noticed the activities of the young couple with amusement. Unlike his colleague in Engineering, the Bolian pilot was completely at ease with the concept of a same-sex relationship and he actually found it a comfort when he observed the banter between the two ensigns.

It was sweet, he thought, and a rare moment of luck for both of them to be Bridge officers, not to mention senior officers on the same starship. His thick blue skin twisted into a smile and he turned towards the person that he had been assigned with for the exploration of the temple.

“Bless them, huh?”

“Oh, must I?,” sighed Doctor Lynn Boswell, her attention turning towards the couple only briefing before her eyes locked upon Vuro. “They’re great guys and all, but we singletons aboard Fortitude see them as reminders of our own sorry status.”

“That’s quite a pessimistic view, Doctor,” the lieutenant chuckled. “I think we should do something to correct that.”

Lynn’s eyes widened and her cheeks morphed from faultless to flushed. “Are you asking me out on a date, Lieutenant?”

“Oh… oh, no… No!,” Arden blustered apologetically. “I mean, not that I wouldn’t, uh… no, all I meant was… Ah, I…”

“Stand down,” Lynn assured him, her turn to chuckle,” I’m just teasing you.”

As if to seal the lid on the conversation altogether, her tricorder made enough noise to take focus away from their current topic. The doctor stared at it, her slender fingers tapping to double-check the readings appearing on her display.

Her face was now shielded by her long brown hair as Vuro stepped over to join her, his eyes peering over her blue-covered shoulder. Sensing his presence, she narrated her observations. “I’m getting some unusually biometric readings from a small antechamber directly below us.”

“What kind of biometric readings?”

“Unknown. The tricorder can’t lock on them. Want to go take a look?”

“Now, hold on,” he said, holding his hands up in mock surrender. “We know what happens when people go exploring suspicious readings. Rear Admiral Blackmore is minus one starship if you haven’t forgotten.”

“Well, thank goodness, I’m not taking a starship with me,” Lynn teased him, walking away from the lieutenant with her nose buried in her tricorder. “If I’m not back in ten minutes, you can send in Search and Rescue. Look after my fish.”

Glancing back at Jason and Jim, Vuro came to a moment of sudden sarcastic clarity.

No wonder they were in a same-sex relationship.

“Women…”



ACT TWO



Valerie Archer was starting to humanize the USS Fortitude.

It was commonplace and not a worry for the first officer. Had she been unaware of the incredibly Human attribute of forming relationships with inanimate objects, she might have been apprehensive about her inner monologue. Yet, sitting here on the Bridge in her cozy command chair, she embraced her attachment to the Intrepid-class starship with relish. It provided her with a warm bed, a secure workplace, and a home for almost a year now. It had protected her from interstellar combat, belligerent asteroids, particle fountains, and the cold, harsh vacuum of space while saving her life on numerous occasions.

And she was grateful.

Slowly, she felt her hand press against the armrest of her chair and a smile crept across her face.

Standing behind her at the mission operations console, Sollik worked on upgrading the sensor matrix for the afternoon’s complex process of continuing the survey of Vir IX and the wider Vir system. The Suliban was happy to remain aboard Fortitude while the away teams beamed back and forth from the surface, collecting pictures and scientific readings to store in the database. His demeanor hardly allowed for him, the frivolity of a jaunt down to the surface to indulge his senses and give himself a break from bulkheads and gravity plating.

Then the alarm sounded. It was a proximity sensor that warned him of something unexpected and unscheduled. Ignoring his sensor calibrations for the moment and calling up the relevant data, his green scales creased into a frown.

“Commander,” he hissed,” I have the Shuttlecraft Domtar coming up from the surface at maximum impulse.”

“That’s funny. I didn’t expect anybody to be finished up just yet.” Archer stood, relinquishing her own comfort for the coming inquiry. “Have they logged their return?”

“No communications between Fortitude and Domtar have been logged,” snarled a highly suspicious Sollik, a moment later. He took note of another sensor reading and his snarl intensified. “Commander, it’s moving away from us on heading two-four-two, mark three-three-zero.”

“What?! Hail them!”

“No response. I’m not getting any biosigns either.”

On the main viewscreen, the Type-9 Federation shuttlecraft thrust hard away from the misty green orb of Vir IX, showing its aft plating to the Bridge crew and pushing itself as hard as it could to make a run for the deep starfield beyond the system.

No biosigns?

What the heck was going on over there? The shuttlecraft was trying to escape… on its own? Only a hail from the surface broke the slew of questions running through Valerie’s mind.

“Doctor Boswell to Fortitude. Commander Archer, please respond!”

“Go ahead, Lynn,” allowed the commander.

“You’ve got the beam us all up immediately! I’m guessing that you’ve already detected the shuttlecraft getting away? Well, you’re not going to believe what happened!”

With a somber tone, Archer turned towards Sollik. “Get the captain.”



* * * *



“From the top, Doctor,” ordered Captain Llewellyn.

All of the senior officers were seated around the Briefing Room table, with the captain sitting at the head as usual, leading the discussion while being framed by the panoramic window. Archer, Vuro, and Sollik were all focused intently on Lynn Boswell’s worry-riddled expression as she began to relate her tale about what exactly happened in the antechamber of the third temple. Jason and Jim were giving the best of their attention, although a small degree of their collective minds was frustrated that their romantic interlude had been interrupted by yet another incident, crisis, or event in the line of duty.

“I found some unusual biometric energy readings coming from an unexplored section of the third temple, Captain,” Lynn began to say in earnest. “I would like to note that at this point, Lieutenant Vuro, my partner on this assignment, warned me against the dangers of proceeding with such haste. This isn’t his fault. It was entirely my idea to explore the readings without hailing Fortitude or bringing in another team.”

“Lynn, I know that you’re new to this away team business, but we’re still fundamentally explorers,” Ewan soothed her, reassuringly, knowing full well that he would have done the same thing in her position. “You were exploring. Don’t apologize.”

“Understood. Thanks, Captain. Anyways, I found the source of the biometric readings to be some kind of ceremonial artifact. It was spherical, about a meter high, resting on an engraved plinth and dominating the antechamber. It was clearly of great importance to whatever culture had resided on Vir IX and a major archaeological find, but the presence of biometrics on my tricorder display piqued my medical curiosity.”

“That’s when I stepped forward,” Arden continued, taking over the story. “I rested on a small idol carved into the wall and before we knew what was going on, the sphere shattered. It released some kind of… well, I don’t know what it was, Captain. All I know is that it floated about her heads for a while. I felt uncomfortable.”

“Was it alive?,” Jason asked him, sitting forward with his attention now fully focused.

“My tricorder busted,” Lynn sighed in response. “Our phasers, tricorders, palm beacons… everything technological that we were carrying was ruined by the… thing. It stuck around long enough to ruin our equipment and then darted through the wall.”

“That’s when we gave chase,” noted the Bolian helmsman.

“That’s also when we saw you,” Jim Morgan pointed out,” and realized that something was wrong. Unfortunately, Jason and I were too far behind them to catch up.”

“It reached the shuttlecraft and well… you know the rest, Captain,” Boswell finished off with a defeatist shrug that suggested she had absolutely no idea what happened to her, despite her position of knowledgeable authority in the Briefing Room so far.

“We’re currently giving chase,” Sollik reported. “Our estimated intercept is just in less than ten minutes. Whatever had control of the shuttlecraft hasn’t raised shields or charged any weapons so I am willing to submit that this is a non-hostile entity that we’re dealing with. I suggest that you beam me over as soon as we’re within transporter range and let me try to disable the internal systems. I can see if we can’t trap this… thing… and establish a dialogue.”

“I’ll join him, sir,” Valerie offered.

“Me too, Captain,” Jim said immediately. “Backup, in case, things get ugly.”

For once, Llewellyn had little to say in the way of substantial orders to issue. It happened frequently when starship crews began to combine their shared talents over time. Here he was, presented with a unique and distinctly alien problem to deal with and the solutions were instantly placed before him for an evaluation and a rubber stamp. At least, he reasoned, it lightened the workload.

“You heard our chief engineer, ladies and gentlemen,” he finished off. “Just under ten minutes.”



ACT THREE




The gap closed, right on schedule. Fortitude loomed over the tiny auxiliary shuttlecraft, the arrowhead-shaped saucer section casting a shadow across the dorsal white hull as both vessels streaked through space at maximum impulse.

Instantaneously, three humanoid forms materialized within Domtar’s confined cabin space, all completely prepared for the unexpected and armed accordingly. As Sollik advanced on the main control console, setting about his task of finding out what was going on, Archer and Morgan exchanged a nervous glance before running their own scans with their tricorders. The atmosphere was stable as they established before beaming in. Fortitude’s sensors had told them that much, as well as confirming the lack of any biosigns. Still, something was controlling this shuttlecraft, something above and beyond their current level of comprehension.

“Any thread,” the commander told her away team,” however small, just find a thread.”

“I think I have one,” Sollik replied, a moment later.

“Then give it a tug,” Ensign Morgan suggested, sitting down beside the chief engineer and looking at the main LCARS access panel. What he saw made his eyebrows raise and his jaw drop slightly. “Whoa, then again, maybe not…”

Two words, that was all.

Welcome aboard.

“That’s rather spooky,” Archer observed grimly.

“I can’t tell where the commands are coming from. Something had bypassed the ODN relays throughout the shuttlecraft and it’s feeding directly from the antimatter residue in the warp containment field.”

“Our guest, perhaps?,” Jim suggested.

The screen before them changed in a heartbeat. I am responsible for the modifications. This is your vessel?

“It can hear us?”

“I guess so,” Valerie realized aloud, standing tall and clearing her throat. “Yes, we call this vessel the Shuttlecraft Domtar. My name is Commander Valerie Archer of the Federation Starship Fortitude. We come in peace. Who are you?”

All eyes snapped back to the screen. A second passed and then an answer came. I am an Ancient Guardian. You violated my temple.

“We have no idea that the temples were still inhabited. We apologize for any violation. We are merely explorers and we were curious about your civilization.”

Apology denied. This vessel will be seized. You will be detained.

Okay, that was getting terrifying. Sollik’s gleaming yellow stare blazed at that last communique from the entity within the shuttlecraft. As a Suliban, his natural response to threats was to become as equally threatening. Yet his Starfleet training kicked in and he turned his head towards his superior officer. His expression remained and Archer took careful note of its determination and anger. A glance at Jim reinforced the feeling hanging in the atmosphere around them. They were all thinking the same thing, experiencing the same dread and the same reaction of defiance.

“We can’t allow that,” she finally stated. “We ask you to surrender the shuttlecraft and return to your planet immediately.”

No surrender. No return. You broke the rules. You pay.

Jim flinched at that last line. This situation was starting to turn out like one of Jason’s B-movie holo-programs. Working and thinking quicker, he tapped a small secondary display on the co-pilot’s access panel and wrote his own lines of dialogue, adopting the entity’s method of communication. It was hardly a foolproof plan but it made sense at the time, at least, to the young tactical officer.

We can’t discuss a plan openly. It’ll hear us. I suggest leaving.

Valerie and Sollik read it. The chief engineer shook his head in refusal before he was even finished, making up his mind to deny all advice from Jim. Senior staff or not, his own personal relationship with the man was shaky at best, prickly at the moment, and rocky at the worst of times. The commander felt her thin red lips twist into an expression of agreement, nodding along with the suggestion.

Then Sollik typed out his own message. I can send a feedback surge through the antimatter containment field.

Jim leaped to his own panel. You’re going to kill it? Will it work?

Hopefully, it should just wound it, but yes, I believe so.

“Listen to me,” Valerie called out to the Ancient Guardian as soon as the somewhat ridiculous written exchange had subsided,” we can forcibly remove you from the shuttlecraft systems if you leave us no choice. We will defend ourselves.”

An unsettling, uneasy pause hung in the air like the inescapable stench of live gagh before the entity responded on the central console. I have control. You can do nothing.

“I’m sorry, Guardian, but you’re a little bit behind the times.”

Sollik had finished his work. The feedback surge was ready, primed to cause irreparable damage to the Ancient Guardian entwined with the systems of the shuttlecraft. His scaled finger hesitated over the activation control, the glow of the LCARS display giving him face a sinister shadow.

Archer held up her hand, holding him off for a moment, waiting to see if Domtar would respond.

Eventually, it did. No surrender. No return. You broke the rules. You pay.

Enough was enough. Watching this latest development unfold without his own participation, Jim Morgan decided to take action. Deep inside, he would, just like his partner had done recently with much larger stakes, wrestle with his conscience later. Right now, there was a danger and he could stop it. Brushing the Suliban’s hand aside, he pressed the feedback surge control without remorse.

Sparks flew. The team lost their footing, struggling to remain upright. The display with the Ancient Guardian’s words upon it faded.

It was dead.




EPILOGUE




The debriefing in the Ready Room was hardly conducted in a jovial mood.

“It was unavoidable, simple as that,” Archer said, resigning herself quietly to the facts. Clasping her hands behind her back, she stood firmly before the captain’s desk, resolute in her position. “I have to condone Lieutenant Commander Sollik’s recommendation and Ensign Morgan’s actions. There’s no question of that. They have my full support on this one.”

Ewan knew that she was right. Still, he wanted to have his say so he could put his point across. “We unleashed some kind of religious spirit? And for what? Because we got curious, and we poked our noses in. Whatever it was, that entity ceased to exist. We wanted our shuttlecraft back, but so forcibly to evict its alien tenant? Is that how things work out here now? We peer into corners of civilizations that take our fancy, the consequences be damned? No care or attention is given to their customs or their rules? I don’t know about you, Valerie, but that doesn't sit too well with me. We need to do better.”

Valerie agreed. “You know what they say about curiosity, Ewan.”

“Absolutely, but deciding what party qualifies for status as the cat is not our job. We don’t decide who lives and who dies. To have that kind of power… is wrong. It would make us monsters.”

The first officer simply paused, letting those final words sink in. It was an indirect attack and it probably was not meant to be one by the Welshman seated before her. Nevertheless, she felt that it was necessary to defend herself, to defend those who were there, and who had to make the choice.

“I was part of the team, Ewan,” she finally responded.



The End.
 
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two, Episode Five: “Downtime”
By Jack D. Elmlinger




PROLOGUE



A change of pace. That’s what everyone needed.

Sitting behind his desk with his feet upon it, and leaning back with a sigh, Ewan Llewellyn realized that he hadn’t done this in months. The prerequisite coffee in his hand, the low background hum of the ship around him, the stars of the unknown Beta Quadrant soaring past the window… it was almost peaceful. The captain thought back over the latest missions that Fortitude had undertaken. It was either repairs or rescue attempts or crazy encounters with ancient spirits. There had been absolutely no time to simply relax or to get on with the day-to-day running of a starship.

A change of pace. That would be nice.

Ewan had been given no fun, no release, and neither had his crew. Although some of them had come close to enjoying themselves during the latest archaeological survey. That was before it turned into another potentially dangerous threat. His mind went back to the Santrag system, to Starbase 499, and the card games that he had played with Rear Admiral Blackmore. Even the slow-burning romantic attention that he had been getting from Station Master Martinez would be a welcome distraction. The budding feelings that he had been cultivating for Commander Archer, his first officer, had been buried underneath the latest goings-on. He hadn’t flashed his trademark winning smile in… Well, he couldn’t even remember the last time that he had. Things were changing. The mission was getting exceedingly dark and exceedingly sinister.

A change of pace. Could it be done?

Checking his desktop display screen, which was dominated by a large star chart mapping the course of Fortitude, he noted the absence of anything remotely interesting for a good number of sectors. That settled it. Snap decision. There and then, the captain decided upon a course of action to alleviate his tired crew… and his tired self.

A change of pace. It would be ordered.




ACT ONE



Captain’s Log, Stardate 49628.2;


After what seems like an eternity of troubles, the crew is being given extended downtime for the next few days. I have ordered that Holodeck One be used around-the-clock to provide a tranquil escape, something similar to the tropical beaches back home on Earth. Holodeck Two will be open for personal bookings and the Mess Hall is being overhauled with more comfortable furniture. I know that this isn’t exactly Starfleet regulation and I know that many captains would argue that such actions would lower productivity, but I care about this crew and this crew looks to me for care.




“How did you sleep, Ensign?”

With a knowing smile came the answer. “A little restless, but I… got off eventually…”

“Ah, young love…”

They were seated in the Mess Hall, enjoying the fabulously lavish suite replicated and installed on the new orders of Captain Ewan Llewellyn. Holding a frosted glass with the latest Risian fruit concoction in it, Valerie Archer smiled and nodded along with the assessment of her junior officer, Jason Armstrong. They weren’t the only ones indulging themselves in the fresh decor and innovative approach to seating.

While neither officer had ever seen the Mess Hall quite so busy before, it wasn’t crowded and it wasn’t intrusive to their conversation. It was a relaxing atmosphere, and exactly the one that Llewellyn had hoped for at the beginning of his generosity

“I could get used to this exploring business from now on, Commander,” Jason laughed, the strawberry cheesecake in his grasp shaking with anticipation. “Good food, comfy chairs… What’s next? Casual dress?”

“Don’t push your luck there,” the first officer warned him teasingly,” and call me Valerie. We’re off-duty, remember?”

“Fair play. Boy, the only thing that would make this perfect was if we were a little closer to Earth. Not that I’m homesick or anything, don’t get me wrong… I adore it out here, despite all of the ups and downs. But, you know, nothing can beat those blue skies of home. I doubt that we’ll be seeing those any time soon.”

“Speak for yourself, Jason,” Valerie revealed after she sipped her drink. “I was born in space and I’m a Starfleet kid. By the time that I was ten years old, I had seen, oh, twenty different sectors and lived aboard three different starships.”

“So, no desire for Earth?,” the operations officer asked, surprised.

“Well, I’m still Human… and it is rather beautiful but…” Pausing, she considered echoing the words that she had delivered to Llewellyn to describe her anchor in life and knew that nothing else came quite as close to effectively nailing her down. “My place is space.”

“What about the Academy?

“It was fun while it lasted, but it was a means to an end for me.”

Jason took an overly extravagant bite of his cheesecake, letting the sweet texture coat his tongue in tastebud-pleasing joy before swallowing it. It filled his head with memories like those of a happy childhood and an even happier education. With the conversation having been steered towards Starfleet Academy, he let his mind become subject to the images and sensations of his training… and his formative years in the relationship that he enjoyed with Ensign Jim Morgan. Yeah, he had loved it.

“Quite the opposite for me,” he finally responded. “I didn’t want it to end.”

“The Academy?,” she clarified. “Isn’t that where you met Jim? Where is he, anyways?”

“He’ll be down soon. He’s just finishing up on a report on the Bridge. That’s why I’m stuffing myself with this,” he apologized, raising the cheesecake’s plate slightly,” so I’m not caught out. Yeah, he and I met at the Six-Oh-Two. Do you know it?”

“It’s a bit off of the beaten track for me. That’s outside the grounds.”

“It makes things all the more adventurous for me. You would get all sorts of folks in there. The night that I saw him, there was an altercation between a Coridian and a barmaid. It seems that he got a little too frisky. Before I knew it, there was a bar fight. I had no idea what to do since they’re so rare! I kinda panicked, but after a second or two, I saw somebody take a swing at Jim, and well… the rest is history.”

“His knight in shining armor,” Valerie smiled, her drink finished now.

“I wish. With armor, I might not have been so badly bruised,” Jason said sheepishly, his cheeks flushing. “I got beat up, trying to rescue him, and in the end, he recovered and dragged me from the place before Security was called. We barely made it back to the Academy grounds before curfew.”

“Okay then, it’s more like… partners in crime?”

“Yeah,” grinned the young ensign, a hand running through his blonde hair,” something along those lines…”

The large double doors behind them opened with a swish. Almost twisting his neck out of alignment with his excited anticipation, Armstrong locked eyes on the gorgeous dark visage of his boyfriend and immediately dropped the cheesecake. Wiping the corners of his mouth with a napkin, he leaped to his feet like a puppy heading for his master. A playful wink was directed at Commander Archer which concluded their conversation.

“If you’ll excuse me, Valerie,” he smiled. “Holodeck One awaits!”

“Go, go,” she chuckled to herself, waving them away.

She watched them leave the Mess Hall. So impressed that she was with the way that both officers handled their relationship, her mind analyzed them for a considerable time afterwards. They were good people. Young, yes, and they could probably learn a thigh or two about restraint and the difference between knowledge and wisdom, but… mature in a way.

Starfleet officers led high-flying lives, filled with wonder and diversity. Both men had seen their fair share of darkness in their time aboard Fortitude. Yet, here they were, stronger than ever, and living their lives in harmony.

She sighed. How often had she wished for such a relationship? How she often knew of the perfect man.

How she often dreamed of telling him the truth about her feelings.

“One day,” she vowed quietly to herself. “One day.”




ACT TWO



Lieutenant Commander Sollik was not a happy man.

Since his first day at Starfleet Academy, the Suliban vowed to make the most of his career. To be the best that they were, the most efficient, and the most dedicated. He graduated at the top of his class with distinction and honors, beating a Vulcan who he could have sworn showed a hint of frustration at being defeated in the finals on Warp Field Theory. He detested laziness, punished the late and carefree in Main Engineering, and above all, he had severe problems with erratic command styles.

Today, therefore, he was not a happy man.

The new orders allowing for increased downtime had infuriated him. His gleaming yellow eyes had narrowed and his teeth had ground together as he studied this morning’s LCARS display over breakfast.

Oh sure, all crews needed rest and relaxation, every now and then. He wasn’t completely averse to some well-earned shore leave.

No, his problem was with the completely unscheduled nature of the orders. It was as if Captain Llewellyn had woken up, closed his eyes, and thrown a dart at a calendar, and hey presto! We’re all standing down and heading to the Holodeck! See you later, sir!

Sollik had meant to use the extended journey through the uneventful sectors passing by Fortitude to complete some very necessary upgrades to the plasma network. It would double response time, securing a vital few seconds the next time that energy needed to be transferred… but, of course, trying out the new chairs in the Mess Hall is more important…

Main Engineering was quiet. Only the gentle throbbing of the warp core, the peaceful swirling mass of blue light bathing his green skin, kept him company.

That was until the doors opened to reveal a certain Bolian pilot. “There you are!”

“What is it now, Arden?,” Sollik scowled, almost punching his workstation.

“There’s a great watersports program running on Holodeck Two that’s open to all,” Arden Vuro said, his friendly face beaming as he collapsed his athletic body over the workstation, forcing his friend, the chief engineer, to look up. “Come on! Get out of this place for a while and enjoy the captain’s generosity!”

“Can’t,” came the Suliban’s short reply,” working.”

“Doctor Boswell said you’d say that. She was heading over there too. She said to use a Human expression to convince you. ‘All work and no play makes Sollik a dull man’.”

“Then I’m dull. Go on and enjoy the captain’s generosity.”

Vuro frowned. Try as he might, he simply couldn’t engage him. “Have it your way.”

Turning his back, he tried his one final gambit. The pilot was one of those optimistic people who just didn’t quit at the first sign of resistance. Sure, Sollik had every right to be a grumpy stick-in-the-mud and if he didn’t like something, nobody had the power to demand that he think otherwise. However, he was the closest thing that the chief engineer had to a real, true friend. That meant a degree of that power was up for grabs.

Sollik watched the Bolian start to leave and he exhaled. “My apologies,” he heard himself say.

It got Arden’s attention. “What’s wrong?”

“Look, it’s nothing personal. I just feel more comfortable when I’m working. Perhaps when my shift is over, and if the program is still running, I’ll join you for a drink.”

“Okay, sure. That’s all you had to say.”

“Thank you. Go on and have fun.”

“Oh, I intend to!”




* * * *



Personal Log, Erica Martinez, Stardate 46928.4;


With the latest report from the starship
Fortitude having just landed on my desk, I do wish I could be out there with them. I’ve always been someone who craves an anchor, and I guess, a position of steadfast permanence. It’s not the exploration that has me yearning for that vessel.

Captain Llewellyn… Ewan, I mean, has called for an extended period of downtime for his crew. I get the impression that he’s wrestling with the burden of being a starship captain, and other things that he didn’t expect to find. Part of me, the part of me with feelings for him, just wants to be supportive… but I suppose out there, he’s got Valerie Archer for that…




“I win again,” observed Rear Admiral Edward Blackmore with a grin.

“Huh? Oh, yeah… you do. Damn…”

“I’m getting the impression that your head isn’t in this game, Erica.”

Letting her beautiful features fall into her cupped hand, slouching over the completed hand of poker on the table in front of her, Station Master Martinez gave a slight nod. The Latina woman was certainly not her usual character this evening, and it didn’t take years of serving together for Blackmore to notice. Scratching his grey beard with a growl, the bear-like father figure to all of the officers and crew members stationed in the Santrag system scooped in his victorious chips and started to reshuffle the deck of cards.

“Care to share?”

“It’s just… something… nothing, really. I’m sorry, Boxer. I’m here, honestly.”

“Is it Ewan?”

That question caught her off guard. She hadn’t confided her feelings in anyone, let alone the Rear Admiral. He would probably be the first person if she did, but still… Was she that obvious? How did he know? She didn’t even need to ask him. Her expressions of amazement did all of the work for her.

Fortitude is scheduled to return in a few weeks,” Edward continued,” and you’re wondering if you can let him pass through without telling him. You’re wondering if you could survive another one of their absences… or if they would survive whatever terrors that they dig up next, out there, and you will have missed your chance. Am I even close to right here, or are you going to let me prattle on?”

“Okay, okay!,” Erica interrupted him, holding up her hands in mock surrender at the amazing powers of deduction that were on display. “You win, you win! My God, you are good at this. Do you know that? You should open up a counseling office in the mall!”

“Jokes aside,” growled the older man,” are you all right?”

“Seriously, I’m fine. These things happen, Boxer. We can’t choose who we fail for. Can we? Otherwise, life would be so much simpler.”

That it would.

That it would, indeed.

Blackmore knew all too well, himself, what she was talking about. His past relationship record wasn’t exactly a spotless how-to guide. Still, right now, his Station Master needed a friend, a distraction, and that was that. No deep psychoanalytical conversations, no crying on sympathetic shoulders, just a friend… that was what Edward Blackmore was best at.

“Too true, Erica,” he said simply, dealing the cards.

What a complex adventure that their lives were.



ACT THREE



Completely unaware of the conversation about him, lightyears away, Captain Llewellyn strode through Fortitude’s corridors in ignorant bliss. He was heading to his quarters for a quiet meal and an early night that he felt like he deserved. Tapping a PADD between his hands, he was looking forward to discarding it with careless abandon. One of the benefits of being the captain, he smiled to himself, was that when you wanted to relax, you could make it happen. Upon walking around a corner, though, he realized that he had picked the wrong route. His mood almost broken, he felt his expression fall as his gaze settled upon the doors to Holodeck Two.

Doctor Lynn Boswell was wearing a somewhat revealing swimming suit and with her normally tidy hair cascading over her shoulders. Hearing his inner monologue curse loudly at him, he tried turning away before he was spotted…

… but it was too late.

She had seen him and called out to him. It wasn’t that he disliked the young chief medical officer but he had just wanted to be left alone this evening. There was no choice.

“Doctor,” he smiled grudgingly after he turned to face her,” I know that I said you should let your hair down, but don’t you think this is a little over the top?”

“It’s still within regulation, even if you wanted to punish me, sir,” the doctor smiled back. “I’ve seen almost everybody come and go from the holodecks, all day. Yet, I haven’t seen you down here. Don’t tell me you’re the only person who isn’t following your orders?”

“Captain’s prerogative,” Ewan reminded her, letting his forced smile become more natural as the conversation progressed. “Some people choose to relax in different ways is all. What’s going on in there anyways?”

“The most incredible watersports program that you’ll ever see. Most of the senior staff are in there too. In fact, even Sollik dropped in, a few minutes ago. You should come on in, say hello, and socialize a bit.”

“Thanks, but I have plans.”

“Oh? With whom, if I may ask?”

Yet again, he heard another curse inside his head. Lynn had just told him that all of the senior officers were on the blasted holodeck, and that meant that his usual excuse about meeting with either a Bridge officer or even his first officer was a complete write-off. He fumbled for an excuse, a second too long, realizing that he might as well have just admitted to her that he was planning on doing absolutely nothing.

“I see,” she grinned at him. “Well, as Ship’s Doctor, I have authority in this matter.”

“Excuse me…?,” Ewan stammered, not sure what exactly the matter was.

“Boswell to Lieutenant Vuro and Ensign Armstrong,” Lynn continued, tapping her combadge and ignoring her captain completely. “Please report to the corridor outside Holodeck Two on the double.”

It only took them a moment. They were near the doors.

Turning, Llewellyn saw the doors to Holodeck Two open. Jason and Arden emerged, both of them wearing swimming shorts and childish grins. Just beyond them, the bemused Welshman could see a large tropical environment dominated by an azure swimming pool. Collected around it were a handful of crew personnel from the lower decks, several from engineering, and the rest of the senior staff, just as Boswell had told him. Jim Morgan, Valerie Archer… Even Sollik was there, although he was the only one still wearing his uniform. Before he could even react, he was swept up in the doctor’s maniacal plan.

“Gentlemen,” she addressed the scantily-clad men,” I am using my authority as Chief Medical Officer of the USS Fortitude to temporarily relieve Captain Ewan Llewellyn of command. My new orders, under those circumstances, are as follows…”

When she was finished, he was astonished.

Could she even do this?

He suddenly realized that she could. A pair of blue-skinned arms belonging to Lieutenant Vuro seized his legs. Falling back, he was caught around the shoulders by Jason Armstrong who quickly nodded to his Bolian counterpart to life. Aghast, Llewellyn had no alternative but to allow himself to be carried by his two officers onto the holodeck. As he passed by Lynn, the doctor simply smiled and plucked the PADD from his grasp.

“I’ll take that,” she said, laughing.

Soon he was teetering over the edge of the swimming pool. The artificial water looked dangerously real, the artificial sun being warm enough as it was. The black in his uniform magnified the heat and he felt sweat form on his brow.

Damn it, this was tantamount to mutiny!

If this had been at any other time, under any other situation, he would have been furious. However, as it stood, he had a moment of self-realization that he had ordered this and now he was paying the price.

“Careful, Jason,” Jim warned his partner, fighting to keep himself from getting hysterical,” you wouldn’t want to drop the captain, would you?”

“I don’t know,” Jason called out from behind Ewan’s head. “Would I want to, Doctor Boswell?”

“I’d say… yes!,” Lynn replied with a smirk. “On three… two… one!”

As Ewan Llewellyn flew helplessly from the clutches of his two Bridge officers, laughter echoed around the holographic environment, filling his ears, and he caught a glimpse of Valerie Archer. Somehow, everything seemed to be just fine. She was smiling, chuckling, and adding to the laughter. Because of that, he didn’t mind the abrupt shock to his system as he struck the pool’s crystal clear waters.

Applause broke out as he surfaced.

Spitting out an accidental mouthful of water high into the air, Ewan cleared his eyes and looked up at his happy crew. It must have been hilarious because even Sollik’s stern visage had twisted into a smile. The sight of his captain drenched against his will was apparently even funny in Suliban minds.

Jason and Jim held each other up, their young sides fit to burst as their sense of humor was perfectly catered by the stunt. Arden mouthed a wordless apology down into the pool as his mouth curled into a smile. The architect of this little moment of chaos, Doctor Lynn Boswell, waved Ewan’s PADD playfully at him with a friendly wink.

He couldn’t help himself. Feeling his shoulders start to shake up and down, that trademark grin of his appeared across his face. He had brought this onto himself, hadn’t he? That grin turned into a laugh and the applause grew.

Then Valerie called out to him.

Swimming over to the edge of the pool, Ewan found his first officer reaching down to give him a hand up.

“Sorry, Commander,” he warned her, briefly.

Taking her hand as she had expected, he kicked off and pulled her into the pool. The rest of the crew followed suit.

Well, Ewan thought to himself, what was losing one early night when compared to the bond that could grow between his crew? It was an effective tool, the sight of their captain leading the party, having fun… and being Human. After all that they had been through together, it was the least that he could do for the morale aboard the USS Fortitude.



EPILOGUE



A change of pace. It was fun.

Having long discarded his ruined uniform, Ewan’s new outfit consisted of a brightly-colored shirt that he had replicated, a long time ago for shore leave on Risa, along with some equally tasteful swimming shorts that matched. Hardly the dress code befitting a Welshman, he told himself while looking in the mirror but he had only gambled on wearing it only once. Now, walking back to his quarters as the party on Holodeck Two had ended, he stifled a yawn and reminded himself to be a better gambler.

“Ewan, hold up…”

Valerie Archer was jogging to catch up with him. He slowed down slightly, letting her draw alongside him, and together, they continued on their way home.

“We should do this more often,” she said with some sincerity.

“Nothing to explore, no bad guys to fight… it was the least that I could do,” he told her, nodding along. “All of them have performed above and beyond the call of duty. Downtime is a reward and they’ve certainly earned it.”

“It’s nice to know that you won’t be pressing charges about the pool incident.

“Bollocks to that! Court martials all around!”

They shared in the laugh. It sounded more in-tune without the crescendo of the others, more connected… more intimate. In silence, both of them had analyzed the same thoughts, felt the same feelings before Ewan reached his quarters, and stopped walking. With his head turning, he found Valerie had stopped but deliberately looking away from him as if she wanted to move on.

“I… uh… don’t suppose…,” he began to say.

“Oh, um, uh… No, I had better… ah, get back to my… my quarters,” was her instant reply, cutting her captain off before he could ask what was so obviously going to be asked, out of her fear at being unable to refuse. Valerie wasn’t a stranger to flirting. She was no prude when it came to relationships but this was different. This wasn’t standing at the bar in San Francisco with some Starfleet officer about to ship out in the morning. This was her commanding officer… and this had real feelings.

“Of course, of course,” Ewan heard himself reply, his brain detached from his mouth.

“Work starts again tomorrow.”

“Indeed. Well, then… tomorrow. Goodnight, Valerie.”

“Goodnight, Ewan.”



The End.
 
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two, Episode Six: “Return”
By Jack D. Elmlinger




PROLOGUE



“Estimated time of arrival?”

“We’ll be back in orbit of Santrag II within six hours,” Captain Ewan Llewellyn relayed over the subspace transmission. Standing at the monitor which displayed his face, Rear Admiral Edward Blackmore nodded and let his friend continue with his report. “Then you and I can talk shop while we restock our supplies. I’m eager to know how the situation with the Santragan government is going. How is Prime Minister Ka’Gerran holding up?”

“Same as always, my friend,” growled Blackmore. “Not much has changed, but I would like to talk about possible support. By way of thanks for saving our butts over the repairs.”

“That sounds good to me. See you in six hours, Boxer. Llewellyn out.”

Leaving his office behind him, the Rear Admiral made his way through the corridors of Starbase 499, heading for the Station Master’s Office. He wanted to make sure that Erica Martinez knew about Fortitude’s return and to help her prepare. She had been wrestling with herself over the question about whether or not she should disclose her feelings to the dashing young Welshman. He was a sympathetic commanding officer and he wanted everything to be given a fair chance.

Adjusting the belt of his dress uniform as he stepped into the hustle and bustle of 499’s central control hub, his plan was immediately dashed by a PADD and a fretful expression.

“What’s this, Erica?”

“We’ve got a vessel incoming,” Martinez reported. “They’ve requested permission to dock with us and they wanted me to relay a message to you. They’ve got a passenger aboard who requests an audience with you.”

“Oh? Who is it?”

“Take a look at the vessel designation, sir.”

Blackmore’s aging eyes bore into the PADD for a brief moment. What he read took him by surprise. Again, he scanned the data, double-checking his senses as his stomach performed an uncomfortable tap dance in response to the upsetting bombshell.

“Agent Hawkins,” he growled. “Damned Section Thirty-One!”



ACT ONE



Captain’s Log, Stardate 49676.8;


Our return to the Santrag system has been marred substantially by a very unwelcome guest. Agent Hawkins, the nefarious Section Thirty-One agent, has resurfaced. The last time that he was here, he planted a bomb aboard one of my shuttlecraft and attempted murder to flush out the Romulan spy posing as my chief medical officer. His methods are unorthodox, his manner deranged, and I have absolutely no confidence in the man whatsoever. Whatever he’s here for, it can’t be good news, and once again, I fear for the safety of my ship and my crew.




Ewan rarely stormed anywhere, and despite recent events taking the edge away from his pacifist tendencies, peace was still at his core and his driving force. The rampant simmering of resentment and loathing gnawed away at that peaceful core, this morning, as he stormed towards Rear Admiral Blackmore’s officer aboard Starbase 499. He visualized the face that would meet him: the thin, narrow face filled with pointed features and topped with slick, equally thin black hair. The pale white skin and deep, sunken eyes didn’t help the instant visual dislike. Only the shared history between Llewellyn and Agent Hawkins added to that dislike.

Without even ringing the door chimes, he entered the office.

“Ah, Captain,” Hawkins sneered at him, instantly, standing beside Blackmore’s desk while holding a cup of tea. “Such a pleasure to see you again.”

“What the hell are you doing here, Hawkins?”

“Please, Ewan… I can call you Ewan, can’t I?”

“Absolutely not!”

“Wonderful. Anyways, Ewan,” the Section Thirty-One agent continued, savoring his deliberate annoyance with a diabolical relish. “I am here on a very important mission from Starfleet Intelligence and I would appreciate a certain level of assistance on the part of Starbase 499 and the crew of the USS Fortitude.”

“I’ve heard that line before,” Llewellyn retorted with his fists balled up at his sides. “Last time you were here, you almost killed my chief engineer!”

“You’re also forgetting that I had almost gotten your Doctor T’Verra killed… and look how that turned out. I unearthed a Romulan spy in your crew, Ewan. I think that you should be a little more grateful, not to mention, a little happier to see me.”

Deciding to ignore the repulsive Hawkins entirely, the captain turned to the rear admiral who remained seated silently behind his desk. With a wide-eyed expression, almost searching for support in his tirade against the man who brought danger and deceit with him in spades, Ewan lifted his arms emphatically and felt his head shake from side to side.

“Boxer, please tell me that this is some kind of joke.”

“Unfortunately, it isn’t, Ewan.” Blackmore’s tone was grim. “These orders are solid.”

“Excellent, well, now that we’ve got that out of the way,” Hawkins sighed, moving away from the desk and heading for a seat. “Gentlemen, my mission is of utmost importance, not only to the security of the Federation but also to the political stability of this entire star system. Now, I gather that your senior staff is fully aware of Section Thirty-One, despite regulations to the contrary. Am I correct, Ewan?”

Llewellyn bit his tongue again at another mention of his first name. It was being used as a weapon to chip away at his resolve but he wouldn’t let the bastard win. Calming himself, he slowly explained the situation.

“We’re far removed from the Federation mainland,” he told Hawkins. “As you know, all Starfleet admirals, no matter their rank, have classified knowledge of Section Thirty-One. Rear Admiral Blackmore and I decided quite early in Fortitude’s posting out there to share all information. I was sent a file describing your organization and I quietly passed that file on to only my six senior department heads.”

“Loose lips sink ships,” Hawkin chastised him, his sneer gone. “Still, despite my problems with your openness, it will make this job go slightly easier.”

“And just what job would that be?”




* * * *



An hour had passed by. It was a strange hour that Captain Llewellyn wanted to see the back of rather promptly. After hearing Agent Hawkins through, and demanding to see substantial evidence to support some of his rather outlandish claims, he was now fully satisfied that there was an immediate threat to the Santrag system. Leaving Blackmore and Hawkins to sort out the details, he had returned to his ship with his head clouded by a million thoughts, bogging down his ability to process things.

Main Engineering was his destination. Upon his arrival, he searched through the yellow-shouldered members of the crew to find the only one bearing a head encrusted with scales. Calling out before he even reached Lieutenant Commander Sollik, he grabbed the Suliban’s attention, causing him to snap to attention.

“Captain! I wasn’t expecting you!”

“At ease, Sollik,” Llewellyn said, waving him off. “Listen, there’s going to be a briefing for all of the senior staff soon, but I wanted you to get a head-start on some things.”

“Oh? What things, sir?”

“I want you to enhance our tactical array. Specifically, I want you to divert power from both holodecks. Just take them offline. Include energy from the cargo bays and non-vital areas of the ships. Turn lights off, and maybe a few sections of the gravity plating. Just anything that will give us some extra juice. Send all of that power towards tactical systems. Shields are to be reinforced, phaser targeting refined, and torpedo loading times halved.”

Sollik didn’t like what he was hearing. Here was a normally peaceable man and for such a peaceable man to deliver such orders made him very uneasy.

“Are we expecting a battle, Captain?”

“Just get to work, and I’ll see you at the briefing. Oh, and get Ensign Morgan to help out.”

That request provoked an immediate hiss of displeasure from the chief engineer. His gleaming eyes burned as his muscles tightened beneath his uniform. Before Ewan could turn and leave Engineering, he couldn’t stop himself from complaining about Ensign Jim Morgan, the one person aboard Fortitude that he had a real problem with.

“Must I use him?”

Llewellyn was in no mood to play mother to the dysfunctional family. “This is no time for your personal prejudice, Sollik!,” he blurted back at him. “The array, now!”

Damn Agent Hawkins.

He always brought out the worst in people.




ACT TWO



The briefing went down like a lead balloon.

Jaws dropped, nostrils flared, and eyes widened as Ewan told his six most trusted officers about the return of Agent Hawkins. Usually, the one to keep a cool and level head in a crisis, Valerie Archer even felt her toes curl up underneath the table, bearing into the soles of her boots like the crest of a relentless tsunami. It was then that the captain paused, standing up and turning to the window behind him. As his gaze cast across the beautiful world of Santrag II below them, he moved on to report on Hawkins’ quest.

“He’s back because another one of our old friends has also decided to return.”

A few of them had their guesses before he turned to tell them.

“The Romulan spy Naketha, the woman who we knew as Doctor T’Verra of Vulcan when our mission began, is somewhere in the Santrag system. She’s using an advanced cloaking device to conceal her warbird from our sensors and her own agenda is something that we can’t allow to continue.”

The gasps grew louder and the jaws dropped even lower. Jason Armstrong and Jim Morgan shared a horrified look, worried for each other’s safety. Lynn Boswell, the person who had spent the most time with the Romulan deep-cover operative, shook her head. Arden Vuro’s blue skin flushed a deep shade, almost turquoise, and Sollik suddenly realized why the captain had been insistent on those tactical upgrades.

“Are we planning on engaging her?,” Archer asked him after she had seen Sollik and Jim working together at the tactical station on the Bridge earlier.

“I don’t know yet. Hawkins claims that he simply wants to flush her out. Are all of you aware of the current political instability on Santrag II? Of the troubles facing Prime Minister Veth Ka’Gerran and his government?” A smattering of nods allowed him to continue when he returned to his seat. “Well, there had been a recent increase in rebel violence towards the capital, directed mainly as the Prime Minister’s Residence.”

“Armed uprisings?”

It was Jim Morgan, genuinely surprised at the idea. As a tactical officer, he had a vested interest in the various weapons of various worlds. He knew the one overriding factor when it came to Santragan sidearms was that they were notoriously difficult to come by, even in black markets and underground emporiums.

“They were using Romulan disruptors,” Llewellyn told him, gravely. “Naketha is on a secret mission to support the overthrow of Ka’Gerran’s government.”

“Oh, my God…,” Valerie gasped.

The rest of the Briefing Room joined her in that sentiment.

Ewan knew how they felt. He had experienced the same onslaught of shock earlier in Blackmore’s office, and so he let the room hang for a moment.

“Our new orders, direct from Starfleet Command,” he continued,” are to support Agent Hawkins in his assignment to expose Naketha’s supply runs and deny her the ability to restock the rebels on the surface of Santrag II. I’m supposed to tell you all to accept his orders and acquiesce to his requests, but I’m not going to. Instead, I want you to report to me everything that he asked for. I don’t want him so much as running a sensor sweep without my knowledge.”

“Absolutely, sir,” Vuro nodded.

“You’ve got it, Captain,” Jason and Jim chimed in.

“Understood,” Sollik hissed willingly.

Standing up once again, Llewellyn leaned over the table and looked around at the collected faces, barely managing the smile that he forced himself to show in an attempt to reassure them. Settling on Valerie, he sighed and gave them parting words of encouragement.

“I won’t let this divide us like it almost did before. Stay strong, my friends.”

The smile returned.

“Let’s get to work.”



* * * *



They were completely oblivious to her presence… the fools.

She could almost see them through the Briefing Room window. The viewscreen was dominated by the USS Fortitude, NCC-76240. It filled her with a tempest of memories and emotions: the hatred that she had for the Federation starship, the prison that she had to endure, the Sickbay where she had pretended for so long to be Vulcan. Oh, how she loathed Vulcans. So devoid of passion, or ambition, and it almost sickened her to think that as a Romulan, she was a distant relative of those logic-loving idiots.

Naketha crossed her uniformed legs while she observed the viewscreen for one final time, letting the computers take in all of the new information that they could about the Intrepid-class starship. Any advantage that they could find would be useful and she could present it to the Senate and her commanding admirals with pride and security later as an added bonus.

She dominated the Bridge of her D’Deridex-class warbird, the Chuketh. She had never expected to get another command so quickly after her failure aboard the Fortitude on Stardate 49125.2. She had barely escaped with her life from that nightmare. Her Vulcan cover had been blown, and her only hope was in pleading with the pacifist Captain Ewan Llewellyn. He was so easy to manipulate, but then she wished that she had never escaped at all. Her failure had not gone unpunished.

It was almost three months of agonizing torture, horrific beatings, and crushing loneliness before salvation had come her way. An old friend of hers had become a Senator, probably through some backstabbing assassination. He had insisted upon her release for a special new assignment that he had cooked up overnight. After gaining a seat on the Romulan Star Empire’s ruling body, he had become privy to an intelligence report detailing the political unrest on Santrag II.

His mind was a cunning one and the opportunity had been too delicious to pass up. Suddenly Naketha was free. Her experience with Captain Llewellyn and Starbase 499, not to mention her familiarity with Santrag II, made her the ideal candidate for the mission. She was given a house, a military commission, a small crew, and her own command, the Chuketh.

Now, here she sat, filled with contempt.

Desperately fighting the urge to order all weapons trained on the unsuspecting starship, she simply turned to a Centurion and asked for a report. The cloaking device was holding steadily. The cargo containers were ready and the planet was inside of transporter range.

“Beam the shipment to the coordinates,” she ordered him.

“Transport complete,” the Centurion informed her, a moment later. “Our contact is signaling. They have the shipment.”

“How marvelous,” she grinned, arching her fingers. “Politics is such a fine art.”
 
ACT THREE



“I’ve just spoken with Prime Minister Ka’Gerran. He obviously welcomed the news like he would be welcome to a kick to the face, but he assures me that his security force is being deployed to track down the illegal weapons.”

Captain Llewellyn nodded slowly, accepting the development despite the unfortunate fact that it was probably a futile exercise anyways. The Santragans might get lucky and stumble across a faction of the rebels who were armed with Romulan disruptors. Then again, the limited and remote existence of any tangible data was the deciding factor. On the desk screen in front of him, Rear Admiral Blackmore peered into the Fortitude’s Ready Room and shook his head in desperation, his beard looking greyer than usual.

“I don’t know, Ewan,” he growled over the communications network. “This is one messed-up situation.”

“You can say that again, Boxer,” the captain agreed with him, finding the coffee on his desk without looking away from the monitor and letting the steaming hot liquid run down his throat and reinvigorate his tired senses. “Of all the ghosts that could have returned to haunt us, I was hoping that it wasn’t Agent Hawkins and Naketha.”

The door chimes to the Ready Room rang.

“Anything you need me to remain online for?,” Blackmore asked him.

“Nope,” he said, standing. “Just another haunting.”

Signing off from his transmission and leaving his desk behind, Llewellyn beckoned for his visitor to enter. He knew who it would be, and sure enough, in stepped the figure of hatred that he had come to revile.

Barely making any eye contact whatsoever, he walked away from Agent Hawkins, stepping towards the panoramic starfield that greeted him beyond the large windows of his Ready Room and concentrating on his coffee. Sure enough, the nefarious Section Thirty-One agent didn’t let the silence reign for long.

“Your people are annoying me, Ewan.”

“Whatever could you have done to antagonize them?,” Ewan asked him in a mocking tone, fully intending to insult him. “Oh, that’s right. You’re completely beyond redemption and lacking in any kind of moral center. Well, hey, that’s life, I suppose.”

“Order them to cooperate!,” Hawkins yelled at him. “I had to ask Ensign Armstrong for permission to run a simple scan. Ensign Armstrong! An Ensign! Damn this attitude, Ewan. This is exactly the kind of attitude that the enemy will relish! I could be finding this cloaked Warbird right now if I wasn’t in here, fighting with you Starfleet brats!”

That was enough of this nonsense for the captain.

“Now you’re just being rude, Hawkins,” Ewan hissed at him, turning on the spy. “We ‘Starfleet brats’ do our best to maintain a peaceful balance in the Santrag system. As removed as we are from the Federation mainland and as isolated out here to function on our own initiative, we would be rather annoying egotists refrained from shooting up the place… which is exactly what you would be doing if you were given half the chance! You’re on my ship and that means you play by my rules!”

A riposte was about to be launched when the communications system interrupted the verbal sparring and gave both men something to focus on.

“Bridge to Captain Llewellyn,” called out Lieutenant Vuro. “Sir, you might want to get out here. I think we’ve found the Warbird.”



* * * *



On the Bridge of the Chuketh, Naketha let her superior Romulan gloating take a short break as an alarm sounded to her right. Glaring at the Centurion on duty for a report, she quickly got one, long before she had to place a hand on her disruptor to reinforce the chain of command.

“We’ve been detected,” stammered the young officer.

Naketha leaned back in her command chair, a slender finger tracing over the ridges that formed an imposing v-shape over her forehead. Slowly and calmly, she called up the current telemetry onto the viewscreen and there was Fortitude. It was moving to intercept, slowly moving with caution. With a slight smile, she watched the unfolding drama, wondering if Captain Llewellyn had changed at all since their last encounter.

Well, she was about to find out, wasn’t she?

“Hold position and maintain cloak,” she ordered. “Let’s see what they do.”




* * * *



“Report!”

Ewan ran out onto the Bridge of his ship with a tail in the form of Agent Hawkins who was irritatingly keeping pace and standing center stage along with the captain as events began to unfold. The turbolift doors opened, unleashing Valerie Archer. She had also been summoned by Arden, who suddenly ceased to be the ranking officer in charge and he took his place at the helm. With a nod, the Bolian handed the technobabble over to Jason Armstrong at Ops.

“It seems that the fancy new Romulan cloak ain’t all that fancy,” he reeled off with his usual Kentucky drawl. “Not a single trace of the Warbird but I am detecting residual polaron particles, bearing at three-two-eight, mark four. Polaron particles are the only known byproduct of Romulan transporter systems, according to Starfleet records. I think we’ve caught them red-handed, Captain.”

“Are we heading in?,” Archer asked as she joined Llewellyn and Hawkins in the middle of the Bridge, placing herself between the two rivals.

“Aye, Commander,” Vuro confirmed,” slow and steady. I’ve got nothing yet.”

“Charge weapons!,” Hawkins cried out, turning to Jim Morgan at tactical and gesturing in the overblown manner that one might expect from the insane. “Red alert! Charge weapons and raise shields! Prepare to fire on my orders!”

“Hawkins..,” Ewan interrupted him.

“Shut up, Ewan!,” came his dismissive reply. “I’m in charge here!”

“No, Hawkins.”

That was it.

The final insult.

The word that made the spy stop dead in his tracks and turn, shaking with frustration, towards the captain. This was it, the moment that had been building up, ever since he returned to the Santrag system and since he came aboard.

The Bridge froze. Nobody wanted to get involved, even though all of them continued to watch the altercation with a morbid fascination. Even Valerie backed away.

Hawkins, even the one to simply take a few cheap shots at Llewellyn. Ever the one to appear superior, to belittle those that he disliked and wanted to overpower with his fancy mandates and signed orders. He could see it coming. There was nothing that he could do. Nothing but take another cheap shot.

“Pathetic. You’re utterly pathetic.”

Ewan couldn’t contain himself any longer. Seizing the Section Thirty-One agent by the collar, he yanked Hawkins in close, his dark hair falling from its place across his enraged demeanor as he tightened his grip.

“You listen to me, you stuck-up piece of shit! Try giving another order and I’ll have you shoved out of an airlock! You can float back to your ship and leave this system or you can stand here in silence and watch us handle the situation! It’s your fucking choice!”

Nobody could believe it. Especially his knowledge of swear words. It was as if the real Ewan Llewellyn had been replaced by a Klingon warrior.

Everyone on the Bridge supported him. Agent Hawkins really did bring out the worst in people and here, on display for all to see, was the darkest incarnation of the captain ever to see the light of day. Letting go, he regained his posture and took a deep breath, replacing the stray hair with a sweep of his hand and turning back to the viewscreen which displayed empty space.

In shock, Hawkins did as he was told. Not a word left his lips.

“We’ve reached the polaron particles,” Armstrong reported a moment later, almost nervous to speak as the awkward silence was broken. “Sensors are still negative, sir.”

“All stop.”

“What’s the plan, Captain?,” Archer asked him, placing a reassuring hand on his shoulder in an attempt to calm him down. It was hardly needed. His restraint was so professional that he was as level-headed as he would ever be and inwardly, the release of his pent-up anger had been satisfying. It was a horrible thing for a pacifist to admit, but then again, that had been changing recently, hadn’t it?

“She can see us from here so what do we do?,” she continued.

“I’m hoping that being here is enough,” he began, letting his measured Welsh tones trail off slightly. “Perhaps we should be sure. Open a channel on all subspace bands.”

Jason complied and gave his captain a nod.

“Naketha, this is Captain Llewellyn,” he said, mustering forth all of the authority that he could manage and expanding his chest accordingly. “We know about your supply runs to Santrag II and we know you’ve been equipping the anti-government rebels with Romulan disruptors to tip the balance of power in favor of anarchy.”

There was no reply. He didn’t expect one.

“Your cloak is impressive, but your transporter beam isn’t.”

Again, there was no reply but he let the silence hang anyways.

“I must admit that it’s a bold plan,” he finally continued. “Were you hoping that a change of leadership would make the Santragans move against the Federation presence? Well, let me tell you that I think you picked the wrong planet to try and destabilize. Whatever political problems that they’re having down there are not the product of the Federation and they will not involve the Federation. You can’t do anything further without making any overtures of war. So why don’t you just return home to Romulus?”

There was more silence but it satisfied Ewan this time. He jerked his hand across his throat towards Ops, letting Ensign Armstrong know that he could kill the transmission.

“Continue scanning for polaron particles,” he ordered. “Other than that and without firing blindly into space, I can’t see any further action on our part. Agreed, Valerie?”

“Agreed, Captain,” she nodded with a slight smile.

“Right, then. Arden, take us back to 499 at one-quarter impulse. Hawkins, you’re coming with me to Transporter Room One and I hope that I never have to lay eyes on your sorry face ever again. We’re done here.”



EPILOGUE



It was a bold speech. He got respect for it.

The Chuketh was streaking back behind the borders at high warp and Naketha still managed to wallow in her own success. Unlike before, she hadn’t failed miserably. She hadn’t lost the Romulan Star Empire any ground in the Santrag system or within Starfleet or aboard Fortitude.

Captain Llewellyn had made a noble and rather convincing display in the final moments there and came close to engaging her Warbird in armed combat. Yes, he could have fired blindly into space but she didn’t believe him to be that kind of a commander and her beliefs had been reinforced by his words. He was ever the peacemaker, the diplomat, and yet not out of ignorance.

Last time, she had been the one desperately trying to convince him to stand down and allow her to escape to Romulan space. Nobody wanted war. Not with the continued friction between the Federation and the Klingon Empire, and certainly not with the looming shadow of the Dominion elsewhere in the Galaxy. This time, the tables had turned and she had been considering an attack.

Captain Llewellyn had reminded her… of herself during their last conversation.

Besides, she had completed her mission.

The cache of Romulan disruptors had been delivered for the third and final time. On the surface of Santrag II, right at this very instant, the rebels would be training with them or even… well, who knows?

Naketha had succeeded.

The revolution was coming.



The End.
 
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two-Episode Seven: “Revolution, Part One”
By Jack D. Elmlinger


PROLOGUE


“They’re at the gates!”

He could see them from his window.

With a somber realization of defeat, Prime Minister Veth Ka’Gerran knew that this day had been coming for quite some time. Crestfallen, he watched as blasts of disruptor fire, like bolts of lightning in a storm, flew from the throngs of angry Santragan rebels. They were pushing against the ornate barricade of fencing that surrounded the Prime Minister’s Residence in the capital city. In a display of power and menace, the multiple horns that adorned the Santragan skull had been painted angry reds and blacks. Banners were being waved. Some of them catching a stray disruptor beam and catching fire, instantly becoming deadly projectiles of flame in the wrong hands.

It was an impressive display of uprising, Ka’Gerran had to admit.

Then there were the disruptors themselves… the Romulan-made ones.

This was it.

This was the end of his government and the end of his reign. Only a pessimist could see it as the conclusion of an era, he sighed to himself. Those people below him, fighting for what they believed in, saw it as the dawn of a new age. Of course, they were sadly mistaken, acting on impulse rather than pragmatic thoughts. As if it was happening on every single planet in the entire Galaxy that had raced a revolution.

“I said, Prime Minister, they’re at the gates!”

Ka’Gerran turned his sallow eyes onto his Chief Aide, ever loyal and ever panicking. “I heard you,” the older man reassured him. “You’re forgetting the energy shields that protect the building. We have time.”

“Time for what?”

“To summon our allies at this, our darkest hour,” Veth revealed, moving to a transmitter station embedded in the marble wall. Pressing a small button, he centered himself before the monitor and spoke clearly and with purpose. “This is Prime Minister Veth Ka’Gerran of Santrag II, calling the Federation Starbase 499. Rear Admiral Edward Blackmore, please respond…”



ACT ONE



Jim Morgan was feeling like a cornered animal.

“The captain won’t like it,” Arden Vuro was telling him from his place at the helm, a smile spread out across his blue face despite the warning. “Regulations allow for facial hair, only if it’s neatly presented. Besides, the captain’s a tidy man.”

The Bridge was in a relaxed mood, the atmosphere benefitting from the lack of an urgent situation after the recent high-tension exchange that the crew had witnessed between Captain Llewellyn and the deranged Agent Hawkins of Section Thirty-One.

Standing at Tactical as he completed his early morning systems check, Ensign Morgan laughed and shook his head while his Bolian colleague returned to his own work. Over at Ops on the other side of the Bridge, Jason Armstrong steered clear of that conversation. Although Jim was his boyfriend, he wasn’t going to leap to his defense on this one.

“How is one supposed to grow a neatly-presentable beard without going through the early days of stubble?,” the tactical officer responded, scratching the dirty-looking bristles of his unshaven face for emphasis. “Besides, I think it adds character. Come on, Jason, back me up on this, won’t you?”

“Sorry, Jim,” Jason shrugged. “It tickles too much.”

“I see. Betrayed from all corners!,” Jim declared, his delivery being deliberately overblown which drew chuckles from the occupants of the other Bridge stations.

The turbolift doors beside him slid open and Vuro’s claim was about to be proven.

“Morning, all,” Ewan Llewellyn said in his usual manner.

“Good morning, Captain,” everybody replied.

Making his way past the tactical station and towards his Ready Room, Ewan caught the new feature on Jim Morgan’s face out of the corner of his eye. He paused, his hand finding the edge of the tactical console as his head turned slowly and dramatically to lock into place, squarely facing the young ensign. Jim gave him a sheepish grin and he ignored it as he analyzed the stubble with narrow eyes. To the clean-shaven Welshman, it looked far too rough and far too unruly. It was not his place to give orders to his crew on personal hygiene or grooming habits but…

“Is your razor broken, Ensign?”

“No, sir.”

“Then what’s with the fuzzy face, Jim?”

“I’m trying a new look, sir.”

“I see. Can’t you try it on your own time?”

The banter was interrupted by an incoming transmission alert. The sound came from Armstrong’s console but it was sufficiently loud enough to draw Llewellyn’s attention from the other side of the Bridge.

Thanking whatever higher being had arranged that little distraction, Jim returned to his duties as the captain walked away.

“What’s up, Jason?,” Ewan asked him.

“Incoming call from Rear Admiral Blackmore,” he relayed to him. “It’s marked private, high priority.”

“Transfer it to my Ready Room. Damn, I don’t like the sound of this.”



* * * *



Captain’s Log, Stardate 49747.7;

It’s begun.

The revolutionary forces on Santrag II have stormed the capitol and they are attempting to break into the Prime Minister’s Residence. Using the disruptors that the Romulans supplied them with, thirty people have already been killed in the violence. Prime Minister Ka’Gerran has made a formal request of Rear Admiral Blackmore that, as a Federation member world, they receive immediate Starfleet assistance to keep the current government in power.

However, this is a tricky issue…



The four of them remained standing; two men and two women.

Rear Admiral Blackmore was using a large topographical survey map of the capital city, that was being displayed on a large screen that dominated one wall of his office aboard Starbase 499, to Llewellyn, Valerie Archer, and Erica Martinez where exactly the revolution was focused and where their forces were striking. The Prime Minister’s Residence, a large property at the direct center of the city and the oldest building on the map, was entirely surrounded by swarming red dots. It was almost as if thousands of army ants had wormed their way into the LCARS display, but in reality, each red dot represented a very real and a very dangerous revolutionary soldier.

“Well, he wasn’t lying to me,” Blackmore observed. “This is really it.”

Ewan stepped forward, away from the ladies while he raised his first coffee of the day to his lips and soaked in the map’s details. He was hardly a tactical genius and the very sight of such violence made his stomach do backflips, but today, this would be his job.

“What exactly did his request entail, Boxer?”

“He wants a full security team to beam down directly to the Residence. He also wants shuttles to perform flybys of the crowd as a show of force. If that’s not successful, he wants the shuttles to start dropping stun grenades on them.”

“Yeah, sure,” the captain growled sarcastically,” and then we’ll get Steamrunner to attack the rebel strongholds and perform political genocide. He can’t be serious!”

“The tragic part is,” sighed the Rear Admiral,” that he believes we’ll do it.”

“How long can their energy defense shield last?,” asked Valerie Archer, her own mind being a little more suited to tactical thinking. She was already analyzing the possible variables of a rescue operation or a ground-based response. “Are we talking days?”

“Hours, Commander.”

Erica Martinez had been watching the Fortitude’s first officer ever since they had politely shaken hands, a few moments ago. This was her competition for Llewellyn’s affections; the woman who was at his side for almost twenty-four hours per day while they were off exploring the Beta Quadrant. Despite being a grownup in complete control of her senses, she felt her Latina passion burn pure loathing within her. Making her own move in the meeting, she attempted an approach that she thought that Ewan would approve.

At least, she hoped that he approved of it.

“Hours? Minutes? Does it matter?,” she asked, turning heads towards her. “Santrag II might be a protectorate of the Federation and sure, I feel for the Prime Minister as much as anybody else does, but doesn’t the Prime Directive stop us from interfering with the internal political affairs of any world, Federation member or not?”

An uneasy silence followed after her. Erica wondered if she had put her foot right into it.

Then a nod came from Ewan and she stopped holding her breath.

“It’s a good point,” the Welshman agreed. “Even scare tactics with the shuttles might be perceived as becoming involved. Being realistic, I don’t think that Veth Ka’Gerran’s government is going to survive this revolution. Whoever is in power after him might hold a grudge and then we would be in some serious trouble.

“That’s got to be the biggest contradiction in our respective charters,” Valerie objected with frustration. “The Federation says to help them. Starfleet says don’t. What a load of nonsense! Who wrote those damned things, anyway?”

“Steady, Commander,” Blackmore cautioned with a wave of his hand.

“Apologies, Rear Admiral, but sometimes I think we’ve got to be practical about situations and do what’s right.”

“What do you suggest, Valerie?”


ACT TWO


It actually turned out to be the only viable course of action. Whether it was sensible or not remained to be seen, but regardless of it, it went ahead for now. It was the only legal loophole anyone could both see and support, the only way of helping out the Santragan government without having to falsify any records or to lie in personal logs.

To that end, four sparkling blue transporter beams appeared in the Prime Minister’s Residence at the heart of Santrag II’s capital city. Told to meet the valiant rescuers of Veth Ka’Gerran, the Chief Aide watched as four semi-familiar faces materialized, solidified, and stepped forward. Rear Admiral Blackmore led Commander Archer, Lieutenant Commander Sollik, and Ensign Morgan over to him. A brief understanding smile and a quick handshake were exchanged before the away team was led into the presence of the Santragan Prime Minister. The dull echoes of weapons fire and cries of anarchy provided the soundtrack to the foreboding proceedings. It only served to accentuate the dismay and horror spread across the face of Veth Ka’Gerran.

“Edward!,” he exclaimed upon seeing them.

“Hello, Veth.”

“I take it from your presence that you’ve agreed to help?”

It was only at that moment that he took note of the small group of uniformed Starfleet officers standing before him. Besides Blackmore, there were only three of them. One of them even wore the maroon color of command, not the gold of tactical. The attractive woman with sharp features and neatly-presented hair was certainly no soldier! Despite the phaser on her hip, Ka’Gerran dismissed her immediately and his initial elation died as he gave half-hearted glances to the Suliban and the Human behind her.

“Is this the measure of your response?,” he asked of the Rear Admiral.

“Listen,” the older Starfleet officer reasoned with him,” we can’t fight a war for you, my friend. It is simply prohibited by our rules and regulations, and as much as I would like to, even I can’t bend them for this occasion.”

“Then you’re going to let this government be overrun?”

“Absolutely not,” came his surprising reply. “I won’t deny that what they’re doing is illegal and unjust. We’ve found a loophole, a way of getting Starfleet personnel into this building and keeping you safe, at least, until a diplomatic solution can be found. This is Lieutenant Commander Sollik, chief engineer of the starship Fortitude…”

Nods were exchanged as the introductions were made.

“... and Ensign Jim Morgan, their tactical officer. They’re here to implement the repairs and upgrades to your defensive energy shield like you asked for.”

“But I didn’t ask you…!,” Ka’Gerran protested, while confused.

“No, listen to me,” Blackmore reassured him, emphasizing his words. “They’re here to implement the repairs… and upgrades… that you asked for!”

It took a moment.

“Ah,” the Prime Minister finally realized,” I see.”

“It’s the best that we can do. Commander Archer and I will remain with you to search for a resolution to your revolution and we’ll buy all of the time that we can. Aside from firing photon torpedoes into the crowd out there, it’s the best that we can do.”

“Thank you, Edward.”

“Don’t mention it, Veth. Now, let’s talk shop!”



* * * *



Ewan felt like he was cramming for an exam, something that he hadn’t done in years.

His Ready Room was a mess of PADDs with a sea of information washing over the furniture and lapping at his ankles. The sheer volume of data that he was digging through was almost the complete and utter legal history of the United Federation of Planet. Beyond that was the Starfleet Charter and the equally impressive Starfleet General Orders. Documents marks with a blue F were from 2161 and beyond, dealing with the powers of the political protection stemming from Federation membership, whereas those documents marked with a red S were even older, detailing the building blocks of Starfleet as the pioneers of the warp engine desperately tried to escape the choking oversight of the Vulcans. Some documents even went back as far as the days of the United Earth Space Probe Agency, a confusing anagram to the uneducated. There had to be something in here that he could use!

Seated beside him on the comfortable couch beneath the window, Lieutenant Arden Vuro let his hands dance across screens and controls as he absorbed information at a slightly higher rate of pages-per-minute. What Bolians stereotypically lacked in courage and cunning, he compensated for in spades. He was the most valuable asset to Llewellyn right now and together they were determined to track down an answer.

“This is impossible…,” Ewan sighed, frustrated rather than defeated.

“It’s a shame that the computer wasn’t able to run the search for us,” Arden agreed with him. “One day we’ll have to get Sollik to program in some refined parameters to allow for loopholes to be flagged… and avoid all of this mess.”

“The mess isn’t my Ready Room, Arden,” Ewan pointed out to him. “The mess is down on Santrag II. I don’t know… Do you think we’re doing the right thing? Sneaking around, helping out Ka’Gerran on the shy because we’ve got a good working relationship? Yes, we’re not breaking any rules, but I… I don’t know. I feel slightly… like we’re betraying the principles of the Prime Directive.”

The helmsman nodded and he could see exactly where the captain was coming from. He agreed with his assessment. Arden was a deeply moral person, a person who stood up for equality, fairness, and compassion. Was trying to fight a revolution really the moral high ground?

It seemed that the revolution underway down on the planet had popular support. So was it really illegal or unjust? Well, of course, it was illegal. Someone couldn’t overthrow a government without breaking the government’s rules.

Unjust, though?

Arden frowned, realizing that all this time that he hadn’t asked what the rebels wanted and what their goals were. There was a general dissatisfaction with the Ka’Gerran government, but why? For what reasons and for what endgame did this entire process strive towards?

“I believe it is right to help a friend who asks for help, Captain,” he finally answered, choosing his words carefully. “I also believe that it is wrong to organize a violent action simply because you disagree with those in power. However, I know little about the actual political climate of Santrag II. Without that knowledge, we can’t make an informed decision. Therefore, we must simply do what we believe in.”

“Which is helping out a friend who asks for help.”

“Indeed, Captain. Did you know that there was once a revolution on Bolaris IX?”

Feeling ashamed at his poor grasp on the history of his crew’s homeworlds, Ewan shook his head and let Vuro continue.

“Before we joined the Federation in 2368, a little over five years ago, we were engaged in a sporadic conflict with the Moropa. There was an uneasy truce that was broken by one of our more … colorful leaders. A popular revolt overturned his seat of power and re-established the truce with the Moropa, a day before they planned on invading our homeworld. I don’t mind telling you, Captain, that I was a soldier in that revolution. I helped storm the gates and change the hands of power.”

“Do you believe what you did was right?,” Ewan asked him, carefully.

“Yes, I do, sir. I saved lives. I ended a possible war and I saved lives. For that, I’m proud of myself and my actions. Here, today, we’re trying to save lives and to stop a violent protest from causing a civil war.”

“Are you calling us revolutionaries, Arden?”

The question went unanswered as the lighting in the Ready Room suddenly switched to a sinister crimson glow that bathed both officers in an eerie hue. The familiar klaxon drowned out their conversation as the captain leaped to his feet.

Something wasn’t right.

Red Alert.
 
ACT THREE



“Captain!,” Ensign Armstrong exclaimed. The young operations officer had ordered the Red Alert as soon as his sensors confirmed the incoming danger. As Llewellyn took his position on the Bridge, Vuro relieved the crewman at the helm and he also saw what was approaching Fortitude. With wide eyes, he turned to face the captain.

“Report, Jason!,” Ewan barked over the klaxon.

“Sensors are detecting eight Santragan ships on an intercept course with their shields raised and their weapons charged!”

“You’ve got to be kidding me,” breathed the Welshman.

It was the development from Hell. The viewscreen flickered to life, showing the graceful lines of the Santragan starships breaking orbit and forming into a threatening diamond-like formation. Their tapered noses were like darts heading for a bull’s eye, their tri-winged structure like the talons of an eagle. Not even the shining blue bodywork could dispel the instant threat.

“The rebels must have taken the shipyards,” Vuro warned them,” but why are they coming after us? Their quarrel is with Ka’Gerran, not the Federation! Why waste their ships on fighting us?”

“That’s what I intend to find out, Lieutenant,” Llewellyn vowed, gritting his teeth. “Hail the lead ship, now!”



* * * *



On the surface, things were no better inside the Prime Minister’s Residence. Putting aside their differences as best as they could under the endless bombardment of Romulan disruptor fire, Sollik and Jim deftly manipulated the circuits of the protective force field to maintain it. If it collapsed or even faltered for a moment, the thousand-strong mob outside the Residence, fuelled by their pent-up frustration with the Ka’Gerran government, would overrun the building in seconds. Both officers periodically checked their phasers as they worked, knowing full well that the shield wouldn’t last forever.

One floor above them, standing over a gigantic paper map of the city and several old blueprints of the Prime Minister’s Residence that dated back countless centuries, Rear Admiral Blackmore and Commander Archer were working out a strategy. They wanted to get Ka’Gerran somewhere secure where he could make calls and establish contact with his people outside the city. While their leader was contained within the energy shield, their job would be to make the right diplomatic overtures to the rebel leaders and to establish a dialogue, and work for peace.

It was a huge undertaking and understandably, Veth was growing anxious. His crushed realization of defeat that had burdened him for months had transformed into a glimmer of hope, but one that shook with every disruptor volley and every cry for his head.

“... so here would work?,” Blackmore asked, pointing to the map.

“The old guardhouse, yes,” Valerie nodded. “It’s still within the shield but isolated and close to the perimeter. It also lies towards the rear where the least concentrated section of the rebel attack is playing out.”

“What do you think, Veth? Is it worth a run for your money?”

“I believe so,” the Prime Minister agreed,” to use your interesting turn of phrase.”

Suddenly the old marble floor beneath their feet trembled with an almighty force, causing the troubled leader to be knocked off-balance. As he slumped forward over the maps, dust fell from the high ceiling of the chamber, dancing through the flickering light like stardust. Archer felt her hair become undone, falling across her face, and Rear Admiral Blackmore simply looked astounded.

“What the hell was that?!,” he barked, coughing through the dust.

Another roar drowned his voice out and yet more damage was being done to their surroundings.

“Sollik to Commander Archer,” chirped Valerie’s combadge.

“Please tell me that the shield is still up,” she snapped back a response upon tapping her combadge.

“Negative, Commander. They’ve gotten hold of some kind of catapult device and they’re launching projectiles that look like… Goodness, they’re using hover cars! The fusion reactors are breaching upon impact like warheads! Commander, the shield is failing and this place is going down!”

Panic spread across their faces.

Then they heard the gates fall and the army outside advance.

“Blackmore to Fortitude,” the Rear Admiral yelled, tapping his own combadge in desperation. “Blackmore to 499. Is there anybody there?”

No response.

No rescue.




* * * *



Llewellyn had his hands full, as did Starbase 499.

“Listen here,” he pleaded with the commander in charge of the lead Santragan vessel, trying to avert a dogfight,” we’re scrambling the USS Steamrunner and the USS Katherine Johnson right now so unless you want a larger problem on your hands than simply my ship, I suggest that you back down!”

The Santragan rebel wasn’t listening. He had been awarded the glory of charging into orbit with eight of his people’s best starships and of carrying out his assignment for the good of the revolution. He wasn’t going to be dissuaded by some Human with a superiority complex and a funny accent. His horns were adorned with the same tribal paint as his brothers fighting down on the planet’s surface.

He scowled at Ewan across the viewscreen. “We detected your transporter beam,” he spat out with genuine menace. “Going through that gap at the apex of the energy shield… did you think that we wouldn’t notice your subterfuge? We know that you’re sending down troops and supplies to Ka’Gerran’s Residence! You’re helping them to defeat us and because of that, you have become an enemy of the revolutionary army!”

“We’re nobody’s enemy!”

“You’re lying!”

“No, please, believe me. We only beamed down four personnel. Only four! They’re meeting to discuss the political future of your world! Starfleet and the Federation understand the delicate climate and we want to help find a peaceful solution. We’re not sending down weapons, supplies, or soldiers for that matter! Stand down!”

“You should be supporting us, Federation,” the rebel commander pointed out to him. “Our world is riddled with taxation and crippled by the continued use of money. It keeps the rich in power and the poor under their thumb. You and your society inspired us to act! Why not turn your ships over to our fleet? Remove your people from the Prime Minister’s Residence and open fire?”

“You’re jamming our communications and transporter capabilities,” Llewellyn explained, growing exasperated with this conversation. “Even if we wanted to, we couldn’t!”

“So… you admit that you’re trying to continue to beam supplies down to the planetary surface?”

“What? No! You’re twisting my words!”

“Am I? Shame… your ships would have been useful.”

The connection between the two ships was dead. The main viewer turned back to the image of the eight dangerously-close vessels heading directly for Fortitude. Entirely at a loss with trying to bargain or reason with the rebel leader, the captain turned solemnly to his command chair and slumped down into it, rubbing his forehead. He had five seconds of peace before Lieutenant Vuro informed him of the first incoming attack.

The battle was on.

EPILOGUE

“Stay behind us, Prime Minister.”

Edward Blackmore was getting too old for action. Yet, it was his duty and he was never too old for his duty. Standing shoulder-to-shoulder with Valerie Archer, he raised his phaser towards the main entrance to Veth Ka’Gerran’s office and listened to the approaching storm obliterate the corridors of power beyond. There was yelling, shoving, crying, and screaming which was broken up by the steady beat of disruptor fire. It was daunting enough to drive somebody insane and crouched behind his two Starfleet protectors, the Prime Minister felt like he just might be at this very moment.

“Do you think Sollik and Jim will be captured?,” Archer asked the Rear Admiral.

He sighed. “Thanks to those jamming signals, we may never know.”

“I hope they make it. I hope we do too.”

“Chin up, Commander,” Blackmore said, attempting to calm her. “We’ve still got some decent cards in our deck.”

The door in front of them started to groan. It was being smashed on the other side by a horde of the most fervent of anarchists. Repeatedly, over and over, the noise echoed around the crumbling walls until they could finally resist no more.

They burst in, some of them falling over each other in their desperate scramble for the Prime Minister, their goal, and their victory. Weapons were raised but not fired. Archer and Blackmore kept their own phasers raised and steady since they were the last best hope for Ka’Gerran’s survival.

Over all of the roaring voices and all of the cries for revolution, Commander Archer managed to deliver one final line. She hoped they wouldn’t be her famous last words.

“I think now might be the right time to play those cards, sir.”



To Be Continued...
 
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two, Episode Eight: “Revolution, Part Two”
By Jack D. Elmlinger


PROLOGUE


Last time on Star Trek: Fortitude…


The growing political tension on Santrag II has come to a head. Equipped with illegal Romulan disruptors smuggled to them by the duplicitous spy Naketha, anti-government rebels stage a dramatic assault on the Prime Minister’s Residence in the capital city. Fearing for his own life and the security of his government, Prime Minister Veth Ka’Gerran signals Starfleet 499 in orbit, hoping for Federation assistance to stop the revolution from taking place.

Caught between the moral desire to help their friend and the Prime Directive’s noninterference policy with the internal affairs of alien worlds, Captain Ewan Llewellyn of the USS
Fortitude and Rear Admiral Blackmore of Starbase 499 conclude that their only course of action available is one of quiet, small-scale support. Sending down an away team composed of Blackmore, Commander Valerie Archer, Lieutenant Commander Sollik, and Ensign Jim Morgan to the surface, Llewellyn remained aboard his ship, hoping to find a peaceful solution within the many pages of Starfleet and Federation law. Before long, Santragan starship under the control of the rebels attacked, believing that the transporter beam to the Prime Minister’s Residence contained soldiers and weapons. Unable to convince the incoming fleet of their true intentions, Llewellyn prepares for battle.

Meanwhile, on the surface, the energy shield protecting the Prime Minister’s Residence fails after a particularly brutal assault on the part of the rebels. Storming the building, they quickly overpower what little security remains and make their way to find Blackmore and Archer guarding Ka’Gerran with their lives.


And now the conclusion…


ACT ONE

“Stand aside, Starfleet,” a voice bellowed from the throng of approaching men and women. Their teeth were bared and their horns were sharpened. “We are here for the so-called leader of our people!”

Blackmore felt the grip on his phaser loosen slightly as his aging hand wavered. Beside him, protecting the cowering Veth Ka’Gerran with her body just as the Rear Admiral was, Valerie Archer raised her own phaser an extra inch. She was emphasizing the weapon, showing that she wasn’t afraid to use it and he believed that she wasn’t. On the other hand, he was facing a sight that he had never seen before. There must have been, at least, a hundred of them now, packed into the chamber and gunning for one man. It was only now, faced with such a reality that the older officer considered the logic of their plan, wondering if the Santragans would really fire on them.

“Prime Minister Ka’Gerran is under the protection of Starfleet and the United Federation of Planets,” the Fortitude’s first officer snapped back, clearing the stray hairs from her face as she locked eyes with anybody who would return her stare. “Our phasers are set to wide-beam dispersal. If anybody advances any further, we can both fire and disable you all…” Slowly, she leaned over to Blackmore and whispered under her breath,” … right?”

“What jurisdiction does Federation law have here?,” a brave rebel called out to them.

“You haven’t broken any yet,” Archer countered to the crowd,” but you’ve broken plenty of your own laws! We’re here at the behest of your leader!”

“He’s not our leader!,” another voice cried, a woman this time.

Jeers of support went up in an echo of power.

“We know that you beamed down to support him!,” shouted another voice once the latest excitement had died down. “Who are you to threaten us?!”

Blackmore cleared his throat, his initial reaction quelled now. It had surprised him, his willingness to drop his phaser and run, but the words of these revolutionary anarchists were hitting home with alarming frequency. The Federation did have some degree of jurisdiction here. Veth Ka’Gerran was the leader of these people and they weren’t threatening them, just presenting them with the facts.

Commander Archer had done well enough to halt their advance towards them but now the dialogue had gradually opened up. His role as a diplomat and a high-ranking representative of the Federation kicked into gear. Ignoring the multitude of itchy trigger fingers before him, fighting the small voice in his mind that feared the restraint keeping them in place might burst like a dam at any moment, he carefully began to take a few steps forward. His phaser remained solidly raised, his secure grip returning to him.

“‘Threaten you’?,” he echoed, frowning at them. “We have done no such thing! It is you who have threatened us, bursting in here with your mob mentality, looking for blood! And you call yourselves a civilized society?! Look at you! No, we’re not threatening you! We’re simply standing up for the unjustly oppressed, and protecting an innocent man! Stand down now, and you’ll be given a forum for your grievances. That’s a promise! Be reasonable and objective about this… or we will have no choice. We will both open fire and you will be arrested.”

“It’s a lie!,” yelled another voice.

“Go on then!,” cried the brave one from before. “Shoot us or stand aside!”

Blackmore looked at Archer and raised a single grey eyebrow. “Oh,” he sighed,” all right then.”

Both phasers burst into life, their wide beams covering the entire chamber. The heavy stun setting proved to be effective, blinding many of their opponents before the energy discharge shut down their central nervous systems. The effects leaped from body to body, hitting them all in a matter of nanoseconds. As the orange waves were deactivated, the last member of the anarchic masses slumped to the floor with many of them piled on top of one another.

Veth Ka’Gerran opened his eyes. He felt just as stunned as the rebels were.

“Diplomacy,” Blackmore growled,” never fails.”


* * * *


In orbit, matters were not proceeding with as much success as expected.

Working together, the joint power of the Fortitude, Steamrunner, and the Katherine Johnson proved to be a formidable fighting force against the eight-strong fleet of Santragan vessels under the control of the uncooperative rebel commander who, right now, was regretting having traded barbed insults with Captain Ewan Llewellyn. Three of his ships had been disabled. One of them flew foolishly a little too close to Starbase 499 and got a blast from one of her phaser auto-turret cannons for her troubles.

The Oberth-class Katherine Johnson, using her small size and quick speed to great advantage, had taken the least damage in the raging battle. The slower Steamrunner packed more punch and had broken through the shields of multiple Santragan ships before her shields were lowered to even half-strength. It was turning out to be a relatively one-sided engagement.

Aboard Fortitude, the deck plating lurched.

“Shields are holding at thirty-five percent, Captain,” Jason Armstrong reported after dashing over to the tactical station when the shooting began. He had learned a thing or two from his boyfriend to make him worthy of combat. “We’ve got two of them, closing fast astern!”

“Lock phasers and return fire!,” Llewellyn barked from the command chair.

“Direct hits,” Jason confirmed with a grin. “They’re veering off.”

“The others can deal with them,” Ewan nodded with satisfaction. “It’s times like these that I’m glad that the Santragans aren’t a warlike people. Arden, take after that lead ship, defensive pattern Hrelle-Sierra-11. See about her engines and weapons.”

A flurry of discharges crisscrossed the stars as Fortitude delivered blow after crippling blow to the graceful blue vessel in front of them. Some shots were returned but the Santragan weapons were weaker than Starfleet phaser banks, though they still packed a strong-enough punch to make Vuro a cautious pilot. The Bolian made the Intrepid-class starship dance to his tune and keep a perfect balance between weapons range and defensive flight. Moments later, the lead rebel vessel was disabled.

“Well, I’ll be damned,” Armstrong relayed to the captain. “Sir, they want to talk.”

“There’s no surprise there,” Llewellyn observed dryly. “Go on and put him through.”

“I’ll be taking this to the Federation Court!,” the Santragan screamed at him as soon as his infuriated visual appearance graced the main viewscreen. “You have violated your own noninterference policies and you will be punished, according to our membership with the Federation!”

“As I was trying to tell you,” Ewan sighed, shaking his head,” until you rudely opened fire on our ships… which, by the way, places the blame for all of them squarely on you, we are not interfering in your revolution and we’re not taking sides in the ongoing conflict down on the planet! Now, will you, please, turn off your jamming signals so we may retrieve our personnel from the surface?”

The rebel paused, weighing his option. “That’s all?,” he asked slowly, eyeing Ewan curiously. “No supply runs?”

“Oh, for the love of… no, no supply runs.”

“Very well, but we will be monitoring your transport.”

As the viewer darkened, returning to the starfield beyond, Ewan turned towards the tactical console and gave Ensign Armstrong the nod to begin scanning for the away team. The young Kentuckian’s hands slowed when his sensor data came back with a disturbing result. Llewellyn watched his face fall as if he was watching a slow-motion holographic program and realized that the news couldn’t be good.

“What is it, Jason?,” he asked quietly, moving to stand beside him at tactical.

“I… I can only read three… three combadges, Captain,” he revealed, determined not to let himself burst into the tears welling up inside him, biting his lip. “I’ve lost all reading … on Jim!”


ACT TWO


Captain’s Log, supplemental;


Thanks to the attack upon Starfleet personnel, I have no moral qualms about sending down a security detail to the surface of Santrag II. Working with Ka’Gerran’s forces, we have managed to secure the Prime Minister’s Residence and fend off the last of the current revolutionary forces… for now. However, this mission has changed into something more sinister. Unable to get a reading on Ensign James Morgan, I am ordering the undertaking of a search and rescue mission.



Sickbay. He still found it uncomfortable.

There was little time left for his personal apprehension. As Captain Llewellyn and Ensign Armstrong entered, their attention was immediately drawn to the central biobed. The occupant lifted his head slightly to take note of the new arrivals. Despite his strong sense of duty and pride in Starfleet regulations, Lieutenant Commander Sollik couldn’t have stood at attention for the captain even if he tried.

Right beside him with a medical tricorder, Lynn Boswell placed a reassuring hand on his exposed green chest, knowing his compulsion to get up. He was in a sorry state. His leg was wounded, shot by a Romulan disruptor, and his shoulder would require extensive surgery.

“Captain,” he started to say with great difficulty as Ewan approached the biobed.

“Easy, Sollik,” he replied. “What happened down there?”

“We were separated from the others. Ensign Morgan and I… A small band of rebels managed to locate us and started shooting. We were pinned down for a good few minutes, but then Ensign Morgan was hit…”

Jason’s expression did little to hide his sheer terror.

“... and as I continued to return fire,” Sollik continued his tale,” I noted a small room behind us. It was nothing fancy, but perhaps somewhere to retreat and lock the rebels out for a while, even indefinitely if needs be… but then my leg was shot… so I made for the room alone, firing blind…”

That story was just not good enough for Jason Armstrong.

“You left him!,” he yelled, lurching forward and seizing Sollik’s shoulders, every ounce of his love for Jim now being directed into making his Suliban coward pay. “You intolerant bastard! You left him and ran!”

Lynn tried to push the operations officer off of him but it took Ewan to physically pick Jason up and throw him from the biobed and the wounded chief engineer to stop the altercation before it became nasty. His handsome features were screwed into a scowl. The captain lifted a finger in silence and pointed it, vibrating with anger at the young ensign, warning him off of Sollik.

“You’re relieved, Ensign!,” he shouted. “Get out!”

Defeated and yet still overflowing with pure, unbridled rage, Jason slouched his way out of Sickbay without knowing whether or not his partner was alive or dead.

Turning back to Sollik, Llewellyn urged him to carry on.

“I made it to the room,” he struggled to say,” and I sealed the room. I heard the disruptors stop firing, and a voice… a voice said something about a hostage. Then they broke through… and shot my shoulder… before I was beamed aboard.”

“So, you think that Jim’s still alive?,” Ewan asked him carefully. “You think that he could be a hostage?”

“If what I heard… was correct… then yes…”

That was enough for today. With her compassion for her patient overriding her desire to let the captain continue with his questions, Lynn Boswell moved alongside and entered several commands into the biobed. Two large arms, meeting over Sollik’s torso, arched over the wounds and began therapeutic scans as the doctor waved Llewellyn away.

Backing down with the understanding need to let Sollik recover from his wound, he closed his eyes. It was partly out of his revulsion for hospitals and medical procedures but it was also partly to conceal his inner monologue, cursing himself. Why did he agree to send people down there? Such a critical situation and he sent in Starfleet personnel. Damn Ka’Gerran, and damn those revolutionaries! This wasn’t supposed to happen!

He wasn’t supposed to lose people!


* * * *


Darkness reigned.

The musty hood placed over his desperate features was oppressive and unwelcome. With his hands tied, he found it difficult to keep balance, useless as they were, just like his senses. Other hands, free hands, jostled him to the left, to the right, always forward, guiding him towards an uncertain fate. If he had been a fearful man, he might have cried or whispered for his mother. No, he wouldn’t do that. He was a Starfleet officer and a tactical expert. He didn’t cry, nor father in the face of adversity. He stood proud, ready to defend himself.

Jim Morgan was thrown into a highly uncomfortable chair by three tall, burly, and decidedly unattractive Santragans. One of them yanked the hood from his head and blinking like it was the first time, the young ensign struggled to regain his focus.

When he did, he wished he still had the hood on his head.

He was in some kind of basement, dank and morbid in smell and color. Liquids dripped from several cracks in the ceiling, a bright single light dominating all four corners of the room that, judging from their appearance, would rather remain in the shadows. There was a distant hum as if a nearby generator was powering this room and this room alone. Accompanying the droning sound was a concert of creatures squeaking intermittently.

Were they some kind of rats or something worse?

Jim didn’t know.

What he did know was that he had been captured by the Santragan revolutionary forces and it wasn’t for a pleasant social occasion with tea and cake.

“Look into this,” the lead Santragan snarled, pointing at what appeared to be some kind of holographic imager on a tripod,” and read this.”

A piece of paper was thrown towards him. He barely caught it with his bound hands and turned over to see words in Federation Standard. How thoughtful of them. Giving it a quick scan, he returned his dark eyes to the Santragan and cocked his head sideways, perhaps a little too comical, given the circumstances.

“Like Hell, I will,” he retorted in defiance.

“Read it… or be shot. Either way, you will have served a purpose.”

Hideous as he was, the man had a point. The choices were clear. One, be part of a ransom message or two, exist as a martyr and a bloody reminder that the revolutionaries meant business. Clearing his throat, Jim made the only choice that anybody in his position could ever make and started to read.
 
ACT THREE


“My name is Jim Morgan, Ensign, Starfleet, serial number: six-four-seven-dash-eight-alpha. I am reading this statement of my own free will. Veth Ka’Gerran, the supposed leader of the Santragan people, you are to hand yourself over to the revolutionary forces that strive for freedom and equality in society.

“In exchange, I will be returned to your Federation supporters in orbit, unharmed, and no charges of interference will be brought to the Federation Court upon our seizure of power. We have no disagreement with the Federation, nor do we object to the starbase in orbit. Without it, we would have been overrun by the End and subject to possible Klingon subjugation.

"Our new system of government will continue the prosperous relationship with the Federation unhindered… but Veth Ka’Gerran, your continued taxation undermines the quality of life for those who are less fortunate than you, and your continued support of the financial system shows that you have no compassion for justice and equality, preferring to keep your stranglehold over the people intact.

“This cannot be our system of government.


“This cannot be our way of life.

“The exchange shall take place at our transponder signal. A single transporter beam will deliver you to the stronghold of the revolutionary forces while simultaneously delivering me to the starship Fortitude, as previously stated, entirely unharmed. Failure to respond to the transponder signal will result in the live broadcast of… of my execution.”

Sobbing came from the operations console.

Perhaps, in retrospect, Llewellyn shouldn’t have ordered the ransom demand to be played on the main viewscreen of the Bridge, especially not with Jason Armstrong on duty. With an apologetic shrug, he turned to Valerie Archer who understood her role in such situations. Quietly, she took Jason into the Briefing Room beside the Bridge, consoling him and coming as close as the Intrepid-class starship would ever come to having a counselor aboard. In the meantime, the captain returned his attention to the ransom.

Blast it! Could they get away with this? There must be some way of tracing his signal and finding out where Jim was being held. They had routed it through the entire planet’s communications grid, meaning that it could have come from anywhere.

“499 to Fortitude,” blurted the communications system. “This is Rear Admiral Blackmore. Ewan, did you see that?”

“Yes, we saw it,” Ewan replied, calling out to him. “Our efforts to trace the signal came up negative. It looks like the bastards have us over a barrel. The only way to get Ensign Morgan back unharmed is to deliver Ka’Gerran at their signal.”

“Yeah, and that signal could be any time soon. We don’t have a time frame to work with here and something tells me that Ka’Gerran isn’t going to make a snap decision on this. He could be going straight to prison or worse.”

“I think that we should beam down to the Prime Minister’s Residence and do this in person, though. It’s safe enough, thanks to our people.”

“Agreed,” Blackmore nodded, unseen to the Bridge. “See you down there?”

“See you down there.”


* * * *


Veth Ka’Gerran clasped his hands behind his back as they spoke. The troubled Prime Minister had his back to them, his concentration absorbing their words and processing the tragic development in his world’s sorry state of affairs. Though his eyes were absorbing something different. They looked from a burning tree to a smashed window and from a broken wall to an overturned hovercar. The streets outside his office window had seen the brunt of the revolutionary attack. While the rolling green hills and snow-capped mountains beyond the city remained as peaceful, as beautiful, and as comforting as well, civilization had taken a hard beating. For him, it was a sobering lesson in politics… and life.

After much of the report had been finally delivered, he turned to face Captain Llewellyn and Rear Admiral Blackmore. He was surprised to see them as ashen-faced as he was feeling himself. Perhaps they thought that his decision would be long and drawn-out, ponderous, and overly critical. Perhaps they thought that he would refuse them, condemning their officer… Ensign Morgan, was it? The fellow that had been in here earlier during the battle with the unkempt stubble and the dark skin… Perhaps they thought that he would condemn him to death. Watching them as they finished, the Santragan took a deep breath.

“So the choice is yours,” Blackmore concluded.

“Gentlemen,” the Prime Minister began, at length,” you refused my initial request for assistance. You sent down four people when I asked for forty. You sent no ships and no shuttlecraft. You could have been very well beaming down into a slaughter, a warzone in which you would have been most certainly overcome.”

He could see both Humans shift uncomfortably.

“Had you intervened as I had requested, this incident would have become a galactic focus and a larger issue that would have most certainly seen the end of my government, thanks to Federation Law,” he continued, ignoring the metamorphosis of their expressions from grief to acceptance. “What you did was save my life and nothing more. You remained impartial and dealt with only what your morality dictated for you to deal with. You chose the prudent and logical course of action and for that, I am forever in your debt. So, yes, I shall exchange myself for Ensign Morgan.”

“Are you sure about this?,” Blackmore asked him, confirming the offer as if he expected it to be rescinded at any moment. Mentally kicking himself, he realized after he had spoken of his trust in Ka’Gerran and his friendship. He was hardly dealing with a Ferengi here, but rather with an honest and upstanding statesman.

“Quite sure, Edward. Never fear.”

“Prime Minister," Llewellyn chipped in, taking a step forward,” the revolutionaries that we’ve encountered seem to be a violent and reactionary people. Your life could be in danger. They might even decide to execute you.”

“As I’ve observed, Captain, even Humans become violent and reactionary when they’re faced with a … shall we say, passionate situation? No, these are my people. They are ultimately my responsibility and their actions are my responsibility too. I won’t let them murder him. All I ever wanted to do was lead them and help them. It’s not my fault that the system itself is flawed, but it is within my power to change it. If these recent events have shown me one thing, it’s that anybody can change the future.”

Blackmore was shocked to feel himself getting slightly emotional. As everyone around him did, he regarded himself as a tough old star dog, one who had seen everything, been everywhere, and was wise in the ways of the universe. Not so, he discovered, as he suppressed a tear with the skill and dexterity of a Vulcan. Here stood his friend, a man with whom he had built a working relationship with. And now he was prepared to risk the unknown, to place himself at the mercy of those who had opposed him, and all to save a life.

A life that wasn’t even from his world.

“Veth,” he said after a long pause, making sure that the tear didn’t resurface,” you are perhaps the noblest man that I have ever known. Bless you.”

“Edward,” the Santragan replied,” it has been a pleasure. We should prepare.”


EPILOGUE


The exchange went exactly as it had been planned.

Jim Morgan was now aboard Fortitude and back in the loving arms of Jason Armstrong.

It had proven that the Prime Minister had been right on one point. His people weren’t savages or bloodthirsty criminals. They were merely a species driven to a point of change and they had taken it upon themselves to drive that change.

Sitting in his Ready Room, pondering over the vast ramifications of the past few days, Ewan had to agree that Ka’Gerran’s assessment of Humanity held merit. There had been times in Earth’s history where a revolution was a necessary course of action. There had also been times when it had been required but absent. Why didn’t people rise up against Adolf Hitler or Lenin or Stalin? What about Khan Noonian Singh, Colonel Green, or the brutal post-apocalyptic factions of the mid-twenty-first century?

Ewan knew that Veth Ka’Gerran was nowhere near any of those tyrannical monsters. He was simply unfortunate, the innocent leader in office when the floodgates finally opened and unleashed the pent-up antagonism of his people. The captain turned, casting his eyes out towards the striking image of the Class-M planet peacefully spinning through the stars and wondering just how the Santragan people would sleep tonight. He wondered if Ka’Gerran would get any sleep, wherever he would be sleeping.

Would there be an execution?

He doubted it.

The mob mentality had died away with the fires of the siege, leaving behind those with an eye on the future with a sense of responsibility. Those who led the revolution for political reasons, not for the sheer anarchy that most of the rebel army would go along with any excuse for a riot.

This would all make for one impressive log entry, he realized. It was getting extremely late, and coffee could only sustain him for so long. Reaching over to his desk monitor, he punched in a few commands and placed his cup down onto the desktop.

“Captain’s Log,” he began to recite,” supplemental…”



The End.
 
Star Trek: Fortitude
Season Two-Episode Nine: “Natural Disturbance”
By Jack D. Elmlinger



PROLOGUE


Two years had passed by. Two years since she had been stolen.

No, that wasn’t fair. After all, they didn’t have any idea that her shuttle had been caught in their energy-collection efforts. It had only been after they reached the planet that they called home that they bothered to check their intake manifolds, such as they were. Within the giant chasm, her shuttle had rested and inside of it, she had rested. She had been knocked unconscious, completely unaware as the shock of the experience had shut down her central nervous system. But there she was in her shuttle, nevertheless.

It had been an incredible twist of fate.

They had been searching for a doctor, a doctor beyond their basic understanding of biology. For all of the technological advances of the Eastleans, for all of the majesty and wonder of their space fleet, the gaps in their grasp of biology and medicine were about as large as their star cruisers themselves. Upon awakening aboard her shuttle, crowded by a gaggle of curious faces, she practically had to heal herself using the medical tricorder and emergency hyposprays that she kept close by. While technology wasn’t exactly her forte… Well, that was an understatement. While her powerful technophobia still reigned supreme in her character, even she had to applaud the Universal Translator built into her combadge.

With it, she had learned quickly that the Eastleans were suffering from a crippling illness. A horrible plague had swept into their system by a passing storm. A total accident, some curious young astronaut, servicing one of their space stations, had collected a sample from the storm, and well, the rest was so much Eastlean history.

But they had found her. Accident or not, they had a doctor.

Two years ago…


ACT ONE


Captain’s Log, Stardate 50418.5;


We are approaching the Eastlea system which has been unexplored by Starfleet and is teeming with life. A gigantic spaceport on one of the core worlds, Eastlea III, appears to be a major galactic trading hub for this entire sector. Sensors indicate over twenty-five distinct alien species using the Eastlea III facilities, which means that we’ve got our work cut out for us as representatives of the Federation. Before we can even begin our study of this species and their culture, I have the honor of making First Contact with the Eastlean authorities.



“Those ships are… my goodness…”

Lieutenant Arden Vuro could barely complete his sentence, instead of letting his voice drift away into the background hum of the USS Fortitude’s Bridge. Seated behind him, both Captain Llewellyn and Commander Archer shared his amazement. They thought that Starfleet built nice starships but this was something else.

The viewscreen was dominated by two large vessels. They were resting peacefully in orbit of Eastlea III, the swirling blue atmosphere reflecting from their glistening silver hulls. Sensors recorded their size at over one thousand standard meters in length and almost six hundred meters wide. Beside them, the Intrepid-class visitor must have looked like a playful puppy, nipping at the heels of two elephants. Countless viewports swept along with their blunted forwards sections, bulging midway to provide support for the graceful pair of wings that each of them proudly displayed. The engines were distinguished by their cavernous, hollow intake manifolds which were stunning to behold.

“They have to be the biggest ships that we’ve ever encountered,” Ewan breathed, hardly a starship buff but he was still held in awe. “Don’t go crazy on those scans, Jason. We haven’t introduced ourselves yet. We don’t want to be rude.”

“Aye, Captain,” Ensign Armstrong nodded from Ops.

“This is the easy way to make First Contact,” Valerie piped up, shooting a sideways glance at Ewan. “Tons of new races with all of them in one place. You’re going to have to delegate, sir, if you want us to ever get going again.”

“You didn’t have plans, did you, Commander?,” Ewan teased her. “You know, this is why we’re out here. We could meet more new people, make more friends here than we could ever hope to by just flying out into the unknown. Think of Eastlea III as one giant reception. Make yourselves comfortable and mingle.”

“I have the Eastlean Commissioner hailing from the surface,” Armstrong reported, interrupting the conversation between the captain and the first officer. Standing from his seat, Llewellyn straightened his collar and smoothed down the front of his uniform before he turned back towards the operations console and gave a short, sharp nod. Jason complied, opening the channel right away. “Putting him through…”

A warm smile greeted the Bridge.

The Eastleans were a humanoid race with pink skin that was more brightly toned than the Humans serving aboard Fortitude and slight ridges surrounding their eyes. There was a total lack of anything even close to a nose and it was unsettling to Ewan, at first. Getting past his initial reaction, the Welshman stood tall and returned the smile.

“Greetings!,” exclaimed the Commissioner. “I am Adarak, leader of the Eastlean people and commander of the Eastlean Space Force. May I welcome you to our starport and wish you a very happy stay!”

“Your hospitality is most welcomed, Commissioner Adarak,” Llewellyn replied.

“Please, just Adarak, Captain…?”

“Llewellyn, Ewan Llewellyn. My vessel is the starship Fortitude and we represent the United Federation of Planets.”

Commissioner Adarak stopped smiling. His pink complexion faded, his eyes instantly transforming from open and welcoming to something resembling disappointment. His mouth opened slowly as if to speak, before closing again. Obviously, the mention of the Federation had bothered him but as to why, Ewan had no idea.

“Is something the matter?”

“No… no, not at all, Captain… but we should meet immediately.”

“Would you care to beam aboard?”

“Again, no. You should come here. I stand ready to receive you.”

The connection was terminated at the source. As the viewscreen returned to the appearance of the impressive star cruisers of the Eastlean Space Force, Valerie joined Ewan at the center of the Bridge, fixing him with a puzzled expression.

“What was that about?”

“I intend to find out, Commander. You have the Bridge.”


* * * *


Adarak’s office was a regal affair. Materializing in the corridor outside, Captain Llewellyn had chosen to take Ensign Jim Morgan with him, in case of any possible dangers that the odd invitation would reveal. Together, they walked slowly forward, finding that the only door available to them was slightly ajar. Pushing it aside, they found the Commissioner inside alone, the flickering orange flames that lined his office creating an almost eerie old horror feel to their surroundings. It reminded Jim of one of his boyfriend’s old B-movie holodeck programs: the sinister villain’s lair. Only Adarak’s expression diffused the mood, moving forward to greet the two Starfleet officers.

“Forgive the theatrics, Captain,” he said, seeming brighter already. “I was just caught slightly off-guard by your arrival. As for my surroundings… well, they’re the downside of keeping our culture intact. My ancestors obviously favored the dramatic.”

“Please, Adarak,” Llewellyn continued,” why the urgency when you heard that we were representing the Federation?”

“Do follow me,” the Commissioner motioned, shuffling away.

Ewan and Jim did as they were asked, moving through the old office and into a much modern chamber. It was lined with large monitor screens, vast displays that could have displayed an entire shuttlecraft full scale if so ordered. Upwards of thirty Eastleans manned the various consoles. Headsets were clamped down over their pink faces and it quickly became apparent that this was starport traffic control. The Eastleans, putting their leader so close to their organizational trading structure, were clearly driven by their hospitality and their role as a galactic hub for friendly races.

“As you can see, Captain, I am a busy man,” Adarak revealed. “We have little time for special cases as much as I would love to cater to your every whim. Our race was once ravaged by a deadly plague, a disease that threatened to eradicate us from existence, and since overcoming it, we’ve vowed to do as much as possible for the Galaxy. What’s ours is yours, so to speak.”

“Fascinating,” Jim interjected,” but that still doesn’t answer the captain’s question, sir.”

“I’m getting to that. We’ve only recently built all of this, gentlemen. Over the past standard Earth year, as we’ve increasingly become stronger as more and more of our people defeated the plague…”

“Hold on,” Ewan broke in, frowning. “A standard Earth year?”

“Yes, Captain. You are not the First Human to set foot on Eastlea III.”

“What? Then who is?”

Footsteps approached from behind the small group, echoing above the background chatter of the starport traffic control computers. Turning around, both Llewellyn and Morgan fixed their gazes on the source. She must have been somewhere between forty and fifty years of age. She was of medium height and sporting curled blonde hair of a medium length. Her attire was of the most interest. It was an old Starfleet uniform with black shoulders giving way to the blue of her department color. Her combadge featured rounded edges rather than the modern squared angles and the three pips on her collar indicated her rank was Commander.

“I am, Captain,” she answered with a smile, her hand outstretched towards him. “Doctor Katherine Pulaski. Pleased to meet you.”


ACT TWO


“Her genetic profile is confirmed,” Lynn Boswell nodded.

The away team adjourned to Sickbay aboard Fortitude, leaving Commissioner Adarak behind on the planet’s surface at the insistence of Katherine Pulaski. The leader had seemed reluctant to let her leave but he caved in the face of her reassurance that she would return soon. Ewan found this all rather strange, the frown never once lifting from his expression. Now, here aboard his ship, the woman’s identity was established as genuine.

“You’re still not entirely convinced,” Pulaski noted.

“Doctor,” Llewellyn began, explaining his position,” official records indicate that you disappeared without a trace while aboard a shuttlecraft transferring from Starbase 27 on Stardate 47439. I find it hard to believe that you made it all the way out here into the unexplored depths of the Beta Quadrant all on your own.”

At that explanation, Pulaski turned back to Doctor Boswell. “Would you care to run those scans again?”

“Why don’t you just tell us what happened to you?,” the captain asked, fuming while he found the newcomer’s attitude to be abrasive.

“As you’re no doubt noticed,” Pulaski said, complying with his request,” the Eastleans have an impressive space fleet. Those starships of theirs use something called a Galactic Scoop to power their engines. Gigantic open filters that absorb background radiation and stellar dust, turning it into a fuel supply for their advanced warp drives. It’s a concept that I hardly understand. I can tell you that warp theory is beyond me.”

“Like a basking shark,” Ewan mused.

“Excuse me?”

“Basking sharks swim the oceans with their mouths constantly open,” he explained to both doctors as he remembered an uncle who had been obsessed with marine biology, telling him about all of these strange fish when he was a boy. “They filter out the plankton and minerals that they feed on as they go, never eating anything larger.”

“That sounds about right,” Pulaski agreed with him. “Tell me, Captain, has a basking shark ever accidentally swallowed a person? I only ask because that’s what happened to me. The passing Eastlean ship didn’t detect my shuttle. I was pulled into their engines and when I awoke, I was out here, back at their homeworld.”

“And you decided to stay?”

“They were suffering from a crippling disease. I couldn’t leave them.”

The pieces were beginning to fit together. While he hardly trusted the story on its face value, it was difficult to imagine anybody making up such an incredible tale. He had seen the Eastlean Space Force assembled, seen the technology being discussed, and realized that it wasn’t completely outside the realms of possibility. With such starships, the Eastleans could cover much more ground than Starfleet ever could.

Folding his arms, Llewellyn sighed, tilting his head towards Pulaski. “So you decided to remain, waiting for the day that Kansas would return to Dorothy.”

“Federation medical advances are far beyond anything they’ve ever seen here,” she replied, letting the colorful analogy pass without any comment. “Even the emergency medkit aboard my shuttle was capable of diagnosing symptoms that they never noticed. It wasn’t long before I realized that I could help them.”

“No wonder Adarak was wary of us. You’re the local heroine and he thinks that we’re here to take you home.”

“It’s not just that, Captain,” Pulaski warned him. “My work is almost complete. In one week, I will have finished everything, eradicating every single microbe of the virus from their entire species forever. I always said that I would be leaving one day to find a way home so you’re couldn’t be any better from my perspective. It could, however, be from theirs. I don’t think they’re going to let me leave.”

“Oh, joy…”


* * * *


“... and you believe her, don’t you?”

As usual, Llewellyn turned to his First Officer for advice. They were seated together in his Ready Room, the bond between them growing stronger with each of these soul-searching conversations, one often able to finish the other’s sentences by this stage. Valerie Archer was completely relaxed in the presence of her commanding officer. It was a rare thing so early on in a working relationship but today was not the time to psychoanalyze such things.

“At first, I didn’t,” Ewan answered honestly. “We’ve been out here long enough to know that if it sounds too good to be true, then it probably is. A missing Starfleet officer turning up on an alien world, just about to cure a deadly plague and ready to return with us? I don’t think that I’m the only person aboard who would react negatively. But then you look at her, Valerie, and you see those two years etched into her eyes. You see the work that she’s put in, the struggle that she’s had… All the while, disgraced from her home and removed from her people. Yes, I think she’s telling the truth.”

“Well, we have no reason to distrust the Eastleans, either,” Valerie noted with a degree of truth. “Adarak seems like a decent guy. His people are warm and open about their past.”

“I can empathize there, too. Coming out of what could have been the end of their entire existence… well, you’ve heard the stories of born-again religious experiences. Why couldn’t it happen to an entire race?”

Archer got to her feet, returning her empty coffee cup to the replicator and watching as it disappeared into the recycling buffer. It was much like the same way that the infamous Katherine Pulaski had disappeared, two years ago from Federation space, she pondered. She had gone without a trace, scooped up from the stars… indeed, by a Galactic Scoop, a giant component of a vast Eastlean Space Force cruiser. That was all above board, all of it a little fantastic, yet still plausible by modern standards. If Ewan believed it, she believed as that was the nature of their trust. The only part of this entire tale that she was now apprehensive about was the final warning from Doctor Pulaski.

“Adarak isn’t going to let her leave,” she mused. “Does she want to leave?”

“Yes,” the Welshman nodded, joining her at the replicator and disposing of his own coffee cup. “She’s been telling them for two years that, one day, she would either take her shuttle and point it towards Earth or, failing that, hitchhike across the sector and try to find an outpost or a starbase on her way. Now that we’ve arrived…”

“... and given her the perfect chance to get out.”

“Exactly,” Ewan realized. “In one week, she’ll be finished.”

“Do you think it might come to blows?”

With his pacifism securely in place, he turned to her and gave her the weakest smile that he could muster, desperately trying to show her that he wasn’t bothered by what really bothered him.

“I hope not.”
 
ACT THREE


Captain’s Log, Stardate 50421.3;


It has been six days since we arrived in the Eastlea system. In that time, we have successfully relayed a message to Starfleet Command through Starbase 499 and managed to reactivate Doctor Pulaski’s Starfleet rank and position. Working with our own chief medical officer, she had completed her important work on Eastlea III ahead of schedule and we’re preparing to head for home. I only hope that my fears about Commissioner Adarak are invalid or this situation could turn nasty.



Pulaski smiled at Lynn Boswell. The young woman had surprised her over the past six days, working solidly with a determination, unlike anything that she had ever seen before. It was as if she was trying to prove something to somebody, somewhere. They had been working with such fervor and such dedication to removing the last traces of the horrific Eastlean disease that they hardly had time to engage in friendly conversation. With a few minutes to spare while the last of their work was replicated and transported down from Fortitude, Pulaski handed Boswell a cup of tea and sat down beside her inside her Eastlea III laboratory.

“You’re a little young to be a chief medical officer.”

“It’s a long story,” Lynn replied, her mind instantly filled with images of Romulan spies, injured helmsmen, and rapid promotions. “Let’s just say that I wasn’t given much choice in the matter.”

“Oh?”

“Being assigned to Starbase 499, Fortitude is a long way from the Federation. We have to survive on our own out here. It’s no simple matter of calling home and asking for a new doctor. It can often be stressful but it pulls us all together much more strongly than any other crew that I’ve heard of.”

“It sounds like the perfect balance of challenge and safety,” Pulaski observed.

“Sometimes,” Lynn agreed with her but she still shook her head,” but then again, sometimes not. There have been trying times. Some quite recently, in fact, but still, I wouldn’t have it any other way. That’s for sure.”

“I have no idea where I’ll end up,” Pulaski mused with some trepidation. I’m hoping to find a posting of limited stress. After the two years that I’ve had, I could do with a break. A small job… perhaps a starbase physician in a remote sector…”

“What about Starbase 499?,” Lynn suggested immediately with her youthful eagerness shining through her professional resolve. She had enjoyed working alongside such an experienced mind, learning from one of the all-time greats of Starfleet medical care and the author of so many noted papers. “We might get it pretty rough on Fortitude but it rarely hits the space station. Besides, I think you’d get along nicely with Rear Admiral Blackmore. He can be quite…”

“I’m sorry,” Pulaski interrupted her. “Edward Blackmore?”

“Yes, do you know him?”

“I doubt he’ll remember me,” the older woman smiled with her cheeks flushing. “We were Academy friends. He was a few years ahead of me and…”

“Llewellyn to Pulaski and Boswell,” chirped their combadges, breaking into the reminiscing on Pulaski’s part and the fascination on Boswell’s. “We’ve finished replicating the final batch of supplies. They’re in transport now. Have you made arrangements to leave?”

“This is Pulaski,” the rediscovered physician replied to the communique. “My shuttle is ready to launch at your request, Captain. Boswell here will beam up presently.”

“The transporter would be quicker for both of you, Doctor,” Ewan reminded them once again, eager to get moving.

“I’m sure it would be,” Pulaski countered, reminding him of her technophobia. “My shuttle will do fine, thank you. I have a few goodbyes to make. They’ll only take a few minutes if you don’t mind…”

“The sooner, the better, Doctor. Llewellyn out.”

Damn, he was worried, wasn’t he?

Lynn Boswell beamed up with her equipment, almost immediately. Saying a silent farewell to the laboratory that had been her home for the last two years, Pulaski gave it a small smile before heading for the Commissioner’s office and the starport traffic control center. Hopefully, Adarak wouldn’t make the goodbye too painful. She had grown quite fond of the charming gentleman and considered him to be a good friend.

Charming, right now, he was not.

She found him inside that awful chamber of his, the one that history demanded remain preserved in a state of sinister foreboding. With the torches alight and the stone walls almost suffocating, Pulasking felt like she was going to the principal’s office to apologize for something she did.

In a way, she was.

As much as her Humanity told her that she didn’t belong with the Eastleans, it was going to be hard to leave them. They wanted her to stay and a small part of her conscience was guilty.

No, she had done her duty and cured their race. Enough was enough.

Adarak turned to face her, his usually jovial expression distorted by regret. “It’s time?”

“Yes, my friend,” Pulaski said with a warm smile. “These last two years have been a wonderful experience for me. Thank you for everything. I wish you and your people all the best in the future.”

“It’s a future that you should share…,” the Commissioner wavered, reaching beneath his desk and producing a small weapon which he pointed at Pulaski. “It’s a future that you will share, Doctor! I cannot allow you to leave!”

Oh, no… this wasn’t how she wanted it to be.

The weapon shook in Adarak’s hand. He was fighting himself to do this.

Cautiously, she stepped forward.

“Now look,” she began to say, her voice sounding as calm as she could manage,” you and I know that you’re not going to pull that trigger. It goes against everything that you stand for! You and your people are peace-loving explorers and hosts, not kidnappers! For all of your exploration, you keep coming back here… to home. That’s because home means more to all of us than we sometimes can comprehend. Coupled with laughter, it’s often the best medicine… and after two years, I’m ready to find my home again.”

Adarak felt tears in his eyes. “But…,” he stammered, his pink face practically glowing. “But… I…”

It was obvious what the end of the sentence would be.

“I know,” Pulaski said, cutting him off, her compassionate eyes meeting his. “I’ve known for quite some time, and I’m sorry that it’s come down to this. I didn’t want this.”

“You’re really leaving, aren’t you?”

“Yes… I am.”

“Will you ever come back to us?”

She didn’t want to lie to this man. He was still holding a weapon at her chest, but she knew that the answer would be one that would crush him. A brief struggle occurred within her. To lie, for what she could justify as therapeutic purposes. Or to tell the truth, as she always promised herself that she would? There was only one option.

Turning slowly, watching the weapon fall away towards the desk in Adarak's Loosening grip, she ignored his hopeful stare and walked away.

If she had been an emotional woman, she would have cried too.

Moments later, Adarak still waited for an answer to his question as he watched Pulaski’s shuttlecraft lift away from Eastlea III’s primary landing bay. He would survive, just as his people would survive… thanks to her.

Two years…


EPILOGUE


“Computer, locate Katherine Pulaski?”

“Katherine Pulaski is in the Mess Hall.”

Upon entering the recreational area decked out with the lavish upgrades that he had ordered, months ago, Captain Llewellyn quietly located his target. She was seated in a contemplative posture with an untouched drink in her hand while she watched the stars of the Beta Quadrant whip past the windows at Warp Seven. Ewan had to remind himself that this was the first time that she had been aboard a starship in almost two years. The uniform that they had replicated for her, updating her fashion in line with new Starfleet regulations, had taken some time to get used to. She had discarded a PADD beside her and upon approaching, he saw that it was a brief history of the last two years. Yes, she had some catching up to do.

“Doctor,” he said quietly.

“Captain, please…,” Pulaski responded, gesturing to another chair.

“No, thank you. I’m not stopping. I just wanted to make sure that you were settled in.”

“Oh, yes. It’s most comfortable, thank you.”

Ewan took a moment to size up her reactions. This wasn’t merely being out of touch with modern history. This was something else. Taking the offered seat for a brief moment, he caught her attention, brushing his dark hair away from his face as he shot her a look that asked, in silence, if she was all right.

“I’m sorry, Captain,” she replied after a moment. “Saying goodbye was difficult.”

“Don’t worry, Doctor. You’re also saying hello to a new job, a new crew, and a new seat of friends. Oh, and before I forget, call me Ewan, won’t you?”

“My… such a young, headstrong captain that you are,” she observed with a wry smile that made Ewan chuckle. “You’re very different from the other commanding officers that I’ve met throughout my career. I can tell you that.”

Llewellyn had to agree with her, as would his entire crew.

“You have no idea, Doctor.”



The End.
 
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