Here, at last, is Act V, which serves as the end of "Eternal Midnight." I'm so glad I finally finished this, because I needed to get to spot where I could move onto "The Better Part of Valor" which is the sixth episode of the series.
Believe it or not, I wrote the last scene first. This was so I knew where I was going with the episode.
Anyway, enough of my jabbering... enjoy!
-----------------------------------
Captain's Log
Supplemental
The arrival of the Excalibur and the Sutherland within the sector has made it easier to ward off traffic until the volatile nature of the field has time to dissipate to prove less of a major hazard to ships passing between Starbase 310 and Deep Space Four. Unfortunately, this will cause a major delay to many shipping and passenger liners that operate this close to the Cardassian border.
The search for Ensign O'Day continues, but Farragut has been ordered to return to Starbase 310 and hand over the mission to escort the freighters to the Excalibur and her crew. Sutherland will continue the search while we return to meet up with Captain Maxwell and the Phoenix to join his task force to patrol the border.
For the time being, Starfleet has yet to make a final determination on what happened to the Shoeless Joe, based partly on the fact that my own officers seem to be unable to put a declarative end to the matter, themselves. I expect that this issue will remain open within the Inspector General's office for some time to come.
Speaking of the Inspector General's office, upon our return, Commander Elannis was called down to the conference room to speak with Commander Hargreaves.
"Please state your name, rank, title, and present assignment for the log."
"My name is Ariel Ivanda Etsuko Katayama Elannis. My rank is Lieutenant Commander. My title is chief of operations. My present assignment is the starship USS
Farragut."
Tricia Hargreaves smiled at Ariel. "Thank you for appearing, Commander."
"Oh, it's your pleasure, I'm sure," replied Ariel mockingly.
"I assume, for the record, that you don't want to be here?"
"You assume correctly. For the record, I think this investigation is a complete waste of everyone's time."
Good, thought Tricia. I want her emotional. Let's show Starfleet exactly how unbalanced Leone's closest supporter is. "You were carried on the crew roster as the ship's chief of operations as of Stardate 4322-"
"I was carried as the ship's chief of operations and the acting executive officer," corrected Ariel quickly. "I also supported Captain Leone's actions completely. Are we done, now?"
"No, Commander, I'm afraid we're not," Hargreaves said with a satisfied smile. Her fingers tapped against the surface of the padd, but nothing changed on the padd's display. She merely tapped in a refresh command over and over to give the appearance of recalling information. "On Stardate 43224.3, Captain Leone gave the order to alter the ship's heading to rendezvous with the Kasui fortress. According to the reports gathered from the logs and reports, you were in conference with the captain prior to her order."
"So?"
"Were you included in the discussion regarding that change?"
"Yes, I was."
"Could you tell me about it?"
"Sure."
They sat in silence for a moment, before Hargreaves sighed. "What did you and the captain discuss in her ready room, prior to her issuing the order to alter course?"
"The captain was intent on withdrawing the ship from Tristnor space at the best possible speed."
Hargreaves' jaw dropped. "Excuse me?"
"The captain," she repeated, as though she were speaking to a person of lesser intelligence, "was intent on withdrawing the ship from Tristnor space at the best possible speed."
"Thank you," came the very dry reply. "What I meant to ask was, why was this information not included in the official report?"
"Because the conversation was conducted in private, and Captain Leone stands by her orders. She is a woman of conviction and great passion." Ariel leaned forward and a smirk appeared on her lips. "As you well know."
Tricia cleared her throat. "What did you and the captain discuss prior to the change in her orders?"
"A lot of things."
"Be specific."
"I don't think that's relevant to your investigation."
"I determine what's relevant and what's not. Answer the question."
Ariel rolled her eyes as Tricia postured. She folded her arms and looked up at the bulkhead as though she were trying to recall the salient details of the conversation. "We discussed the situation and how the Prime Directive applied. She was certain that the Prime Directive did apply in this situation, and I played devil's advocate. We often do that when we're trying to dissect the circumstances."
"I'm sure that you do. In this case, it seems that your advocacy of an evil agenda worked on the captain."
"I dare say that it did."
"Pardon me?"
"You heard me. I was the one who convinced the captain to change her mind. If there's any blame to be laid, I think I should be the one to-"
"Hold it right there, Commander. The captain ultimately made the decision to alter course and join the conflict with clear disregard toward Federation law."
"Then I'm an accessory. I supported her orders and I never questioned them once."
"That's nice, but-"
"Furthermore, I led the assault on the facility and was the principle liaison officer coordinating the joint efforts between-"
"Commander, that much is a matter of record, and I have to caution you that by admitting your guilt, you may open yourself up to charges-"
Ariel scoffed, "Where you're concerned, Trish, I'm fucking counting on charges being brought."
"Lieutenant Commander Hargreaves, please. I don't recall giving you permission to refer to me by my first-"
"Oh, shove it up your ass, Trish. We go way back, you and I. All the way back to the
Victory, remember? I was there, and I know what happened when Krys found out about your little problem."
Hargreaves shut off the log and fumed. "I would have fixed it, until she went and blabbed to Captain Wainwright-"
"As her duty entailed..."
"God damn you!" thundered Hargreaves, feeling her emotional control vanish. "Both of you! You both think you're so smug, sitting here on your very own ship, handed to you-"
"To me?"
"To
her!"
"That's what this is about, isn't it?" asked Ariel, leaning back with her voice level. "You're here for revenge."
Trish slammed her fist onto the table. "I'm here for justice! That slimy bitch weaseled her way up the ranks and managed to use her mommy's influence to gain a starship command she had not business in accepting in the first place!"
Ariel got to her feet so quickly, the chair jumped out from under her and skidded on its wheels until the momentum carried it too far and it toppled to the ground. By the time it did, Ariel had already moved to Trish's side of the conference table, menacingly. "Because we go way back," she said, softly but furiously, "I'm going to give you a few seconds to take some of that back."
Seeing her move as quickly as she did caused a tsunami of fear to well up inside of Hargreaves. "A-Are you threatening me?"
"Not at all," said Ariel with a Cheshire grin on her face. "I'm stating fact. And your time is nearly up, Trish. What's it going to be?"
---- SCENE CHANGE ----
Greg sat alone within the ship's lounge with his drink untouched on the table before him. His eyes stared out at the warp-streaked stars as
Farragut made the return trip to Starbase 310 and sighed heavily. Every now and again, he would steal a glance at the chair to his left where Tommy would always sit facing the door to see who would enter and leave.
"Is this seat taken?" said an unfamiliar voice.
He looked up in surprise at the woman, whose blond hair and brown eyes stared down at him over the warm smile on her lips. The seat she touched was the one that Tommy usually sat in, and he was reluctant to offer it to her so quickly.
"It's just a chair, Lieutenant," she told him. "Unless you'd prefer I sat somewhere else?"
He shrugged, unable to trust his voice to speak.
The woman settled into the seat and relaxed in it. "Thank you. It's been a while since I've been able to take a break. With all the shuttles back, it's been quite the madhouse in here." He said nothing to her, but she looked at the full glass. "Something wrong with your drink?"
"Not thirsty," he mumbled.
"Why'd you order it, then? Come to think of it, why did you even come here? People come here to drink and eat, not sit at a table with a cloud over their heads," she told him plainly.
"Should I leave?"
"Up to you. But I think you could use the company, no matter how much you're going to tell me otherwise."
Greg sighed again. "It's a free country. Do what you want."
"Because you're not doing what you want, right?"
"Who are you?"
"Oh," she said, hiding her smile behind a hand briefly. The woman held it out to him. "Caryn Johnson. I'm running this lounge, now. Nice to meet you."
He shook it gingerly, before releasing it. "Lieutenant Greg Aspinall."
"I know who you are. So, I take it whatever's eating at you is behind us, now?"
"I don't want to talk about it."
"Try again."
Greg shot her a baleful glare. "I said I don't want to talk about it."
"Do you mind if I talk, then? I don't have much in the way of friends on this ship besides..." she trailed off, lost in thought for a moment. "Well, actually, I'm so new, I barely know the people working for me."
"Yeah, sure. Go ahead."
Caryn grinned. "You always this cheerful around new people? It's no wonder everyone took off after you entered. It's hard to get used to the chill in the air, y'know? Maybe I should have you come down when there're people causing trouble so I can get them to leave. I could pay you in synthehol. Looks like you don't drink that much, anyway. Works out for the both of us."
As she spoke, the incredulous expression on his face took on more and more definition. Who
was she? Finally, he couldn't help but break his dour look with a small smile as he chuckled. "Yeah, I'm sure that'll work out great. Who needs security, right?"
She slapped his upper arm playfully. "Exactly! We could have you come down and spread your sour mood around and people will be running for the doors."
Greg snorted at the thought and the mental image that accompanied it. "Am I that bad?"
"Haven't you noticed my waitstaff cowering in the corner? I had to be the one to come over here and talk to you."
"Sorry."
"So, what's the problem?"
Damn, but she was a tenacious person. Greg shook his head. "I was... disappointed by the orders to end our part of the search and return home."
"Starfleet's not given up hope, yet.
Sutherland is remaining behind, right?"
"Yes..."
"You wanted to be the one who found him, didn't you?"
He nodded silently.
Caryn squeezed his shoulder. "I'm sorry, Greg. He was your friend."
"The best."
"I'm sure they'll find him, and he'll be back on board as soon as he can."
"That's the thing..." he said. He felt the emotion welling up inside, threatening to clench his stomach tightly. "We're not entirely sure he made it off to begin with. So, we could be searching for nothing. Er...
they could be searching for nothing, I guess."
"Better to try, at least. I know he would want us to."
"I think he would want us to stay on site until we found him."
"I know this is probably a terrible thing to say to a fellow when he's down, but isn't there a limit on time?"
He gave her another slow nod. "If his suit wasn't damaged, which isn't likely, then he has about a day or so before the scrubbers are too saturated with carbon dioxide. Knowing him, he probably turned his suit's life support to minimum to stretch it out, so three days at the most. But if his suit was damaged, then he's on backup or he's..." His eyes watered as he considered the final possibility.
She reached over to embrace him. "I'm sure he's not. I'm sure he's just floating out there, waiting for someone to beam him out."
Greg enjoyed the smell of her against him, and promptly chastised himself for doing so. In the back of his mind, he knew that if Tommy were in his place, he wouldn't hesitate to turn the situation to his favor. The right side of his mouth lifted up with a smirk.
"Something funny?" she asked as she pulled back.
"Just remembering... uh, something he said to me."
"Care to share?"
"Uh, it's personal. Sorry."
She seemed to know, if he believed her smile at all. "I see. Well, keep remembering all the good times, Greg." She rose from her seat and let her hand linger on his left shoulder, before running across his neck and to the right one. "If you need anything... anything at all, come see me."
Before she could move away, he called, "Caryn?"
She turned to look at him. "Yeah?"
"Thanks."
"Anytime, Greg. It's what I'm here for."
---- SCENE CHANGE ----
Rear Admiral Joseph F. Aybar, the Inspector General of Starfleet, stared at Lieutenant Commander Hargreaves over the subspace communications link. His dark hair and eyes always seemed to look right through her whenever they spoke. In his baritone voice, he told her to "Report."
"Sir, I have found sufficient evidence to bring charges against Captain Leone and Commander Elannis," she told him without hesitation. "With your permission, I would like to relieve them of duty and take them into custody for transfer back to Earth for court-martial."
"Permission denied."
She made no secret of her confusion and displeasure. "Excuse me, sir?"
Admiral Aybar leaned forward in his seat and raised his voice, as though she could not hear him. "I said, permission is denied. You will not take either officer into custody, nor will you attempt to relieve them of duty."
Trish sputtered, "B-But
why, sir? The evidence points to gross violations of the Prime Directive, and furthermore, I think that Starfleet has a serious case to permanently transfer them both to a penal colony for the rest of their lives."
"The evidence also contains information that has been recently classified by Starfleet Command. In fact, all mission data collected by your investigation has been sealed at the request of the heads of Starfleet Intelligence and Starfleet Tactical," replied the admiral, in a resigned tone.
Although she smiled, her tone dripped with barely-concealed anger, "I must protest strongly, sir. This is a grave miscarriage of justice."
"Be that as it may," he said with a shrug, "I have been informed that information contained within your report touches on too many sensitive topics and cannot be admitted in a court of law under present conditions. Perhaps, with time, those orders might change, but for now..." He allowed his voice to trail off, indicating the unsaid portion of his statement with a wave of his hand.
She could not believe how nonchalant he was acting about the case. Just a week ago, he told her not to leave any stone unturned, and now everything was hands' off? Incredible. "Sir, you realize that this is simply Captain Leone's family manipulating the system on her behalf, don't you?"
Aybar frowned at her. "That changes nothing."
Her frustration threatened to boil over; it took all of her composure to keep herself from exploding before her commanding officer. She took in a deep breath to calm down. "I understand, sir. What are my orders?"
"You will return to Starbase 310 and undertake another investigation," Aybar said, happy to be returning the conversation to something less uncomfortable. "I will transmit the case to you as soon as you arrive."
Defeated, she stood before the admiral and nodded. "Aye, sir." Once the viewscreen powered off, Hargreaves reached for the nearest chair and threw it against the bulkhead with all her might. She watched as it bounced off and fell to the deck in one piece, though the back of it appeared to have been bent by the impact.
It wasn't enough to satisfy her rage. She decided to make use of the ship's holodecks for a while. On her way there, she wondered if it was against Starfleet protocol to create an image of the person you hated most, for the sole purpose of beating the shit out of it.
As far as she was concerned, Krystine Leone may have won this battle, but the war was far from over.
---- SCENE CHANGE -----
The field of stars beneath his feet reminded him of the story his father used to tell him about walking in the Land of Eternal Midnight. As the story went, a guard that lived on a moon in orbit of a world that had a single occupant; a princess for whom he was to watch over and protect from any harm that space might bring. One day, after years of maintaining his vigilant watch over her, he decides to abandon his post to meet her. In order to make the journey from the moon to the planet, he walks within the Land of Eternal Midnight and has many adventures among the stars.
Of course, he felt like the guard, but no adventure other than the obvious one of survival met him as he floated with his limbs outstretched. Vertigo claimed him long ago, as he lost his sense of up and down or left and right. For a moment, he almost reveled in the feeling of being within the hold of nothing, but that moment fleeted away from him just as soon as it had come.
He looked down at the panel on his arm to check the status of the suit's life support system. The numbers on the display reinforced the notion of keeping his breathing as steady as possible to prevent the hoards of panic waiting to bust down his training-instilled control. He knew that his short-range radio call was not likely to reach anyone. He knew that there was a real possibility of dying of asphyxiation before any other demise he could think of. At least, the other kinds would require a ship to drop in, and he hoped that they would have the presence of mind to save him rather than shoot at him.
No matter how hard he tried, sleep did not seem to come to him. The tight fist of freefall clenched at his stomach prevented the natural desire to blissfully carry him off so that he could at least let the time pass by faster than simply waiting in the void for a rescue that may or may not come. He wished he could sleep. His eyelids felt heavy, so he closed them, trying to imagine floating on his back in a pool of warm water and it began to work.
That's right, he thought. That's where I am. I'm in the pool at the Academy, just floating on my back when the days got really rough and I couldn't deal with it anymore. Well, this is one of the rougher days of your life and you could surely use that pool right now, couldn't you?
As Tommy O'Day floated in the Land of Eternal Midnight, he spoke aloud to himself with a slow nod:
"Yes, I sure could."
---------------------------
Yes, you will find out what happens to Tommy, I promise. Please keep the hate emails to a minimum.
Next up, the teaser for "The Better Part of Valor."
-- ZC