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Star Trek Hunter Episode 25: I Dream of Shiva

If we are really capable of learning political lessons from history, that's a good lesson to learn...

And a very challenging one. No matter how much we try to keep them apart, government and religion are attracted to each other and really desperately want to tango...

Ivonovic's housing arrangements are still too nice for that jackass... In any case, Ivonovic will be richly deserving of whatever untidy fate ultimately awaits him.

I was particularly amused by how viscerally Gibraltar responded to Ivonovic when I introduced him. I had in mind all along that he would end up president of the federation. But he hasn't gotten his comeuppance quite yet...

I really enjoying reading about Sela. I can see some of her human side trying to come out.
Yes. I can imagine a powerful ally, at some point in the future... the more I read about her, the more I want her to switch to the good guy's side.

And I had always intended Sela to become an ally. In part, STH is a story about redemption, a key part of the story arcs for both Ivonovic and Sela... But no good deed goes unpunished...

Thanks!! rbs
 
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Star Trek Hunter
Episode 25: I Dream of Shiva
Scene 16: Jet Blue


25.16
Jet Blue


Rear Admiral Sarekson Carrera, Dr. Tali Shae, Lt. Cmdr. Mlady and Captain Kenneth Dolphin were congregated in the captain’s office on the U.S.S. Hunter. Even at warp 12, which was generally approved for Prowler Class ships in recursive warp mode for non-emergency missions, the journey from Deep Space 9 near the Gamma Quadrant to the Rising Sun colony near the galactic rim and almost to the border of the Klingon Empire – almost on opposite sides of the Federation – took more than a fortnight.

The Hunter was no hotel and the only empty berths were brig units. To make everyone comfortable, Lt. Cmdr. Gaia Gamor had given up her 2nd Officer’s stateroom for Dr. Tali Shae and Mlady to use and had bunked into the captain’s cabin with Dolphin and Carrera. Dolphin’s quarters sported two large, semi-circular divans that were easily large enough for Gamor and Carrera to sleep comfortably on.

Less than a day out from the Rising Sun solar system, Dr. Carrera had requested a full stop.


“Minerva should be here in the next 20 minutes or so,” Carrera said.

“I still find it tremendously confusing that you decided to name this…” Dolphin started, then trailed off.

“Lavardorn,” Carrera said at the same moment Dolphin said, “Lifeform after Minerva.”

“But Minerva isn’t Minerva anymore,” said Dr. Tali Shae. “She’s Shiva now.”

“But what is she doing?” Dolphin asked.

“I don’t think you really want to know,” Tali replied. “I don’t think I really want to know. It all has something to do with encouraging the romulans to allow the U.S.S. Ark to go to that planet…”

“Saketh…” Mlady filled in.

“Saketh,” Tali picked up, “and, I think, dismantle the entire biosphere and transplant it to Al D. 3, Al D. 4 and Al J. 4. Oceans, sea beds, atmosphere and all. There is no record of anyone ever attempting anything like it. President Ivonovic makes it sound like just another day for Federation science… I’m not even sure how you can get three planetary biospheres out of one… it just sounds crazy. It’s no wonder the natives need convincing.”

“But they’re under a death sentence if they don’t,” said Carrera.

“If they’re anything like humans,” said Dolphin, “that’s 300 years in the future – not something they need to worry about just now. Why not put if off?”

“It may well take nearly 300 years to pull it off. And probably more than one Ark, in spite of how huge that thing is,” said Carrera. “I understand three more are under construction – do you know what their names are?

“The U.S.S. Atlas, the U.S.S. Mohammad, and the U.S.S. Delivery,” Dolphin replied with a grin. “Whoever named them had a sense of humor.”

“That would be your buddy, President Ivonovic,” Carrara intoned. “You’ve made some fairly influential friends, Kenny: Ushi Irons - freshly retired from the Federation Council and now the lawyer everyone wants to talk to when it comes time to influence Earth Gov. Everyone’s favorite fighting admiral - Chekov. The Federation President…”

“And the Director of Star Fleet Temporal Command,” Dolphin added.



A blue haze began coalescing in a corner of the room, slowly taking on more and more of a defined form.


“And this must be my friend that I haven’t met yet,” said Carrera as the lavardorn avatar’s form became very precisely defined - long dark blue hair - so dark it almost appeared black, dark blue spots on a light blue neck, a ridged nose, a protruding belly as if she were pregnant…


“I know you!” said Captain Dolphin.


Carrera did a double-take - looking at the blue lavardorn avatar, then back at Captain Dolphin. “What… How…”

“You’re Jet Traxx,” said Dolphin. “You look just like her.”

“Captain Dolphin, it’s pleasant to see you again,” the avatar responded.

“So… Are you still on Trillus Prime?” Dolphin asked.

“Sound asleep at my parents’ house,” said the avatar.

“So… How…” Carrera stuttered.

“Jet is my 7th host. When she sleeps on Trillus Prime, I am awake and with Minerva. When Jet is awake, I have no idea what happens to me. Neither does Minerva. I guess, somehow, I’m with Jet on Trillus Prime.”

“So you’re not Jet?” Dolphin asked.

“I am not really certain,” the avatar replied. “I think of myself as Minerva’s avatar, but I am always aware of what she is thinking and how she feels. I’m almost indistinguishable from Minerva. And from Jet. And from Jet’s symbiont, Traxx. And there is a piece of a bajoran prophet’s consciousness that is somehow part of me as well. In a way, there are five of us.” The avatar turned her attention to Rear Admiral Carrera. “You told me our first meeting would be very interesting. You do not disappoint, Sarekson. Minerva is here now.”


“Captain to the bridge!” came Lt. Commander Napoleon Boles’ voice over the comm system.


“Let’s go meet our new friend,” Kenny Dolphin said, gesturing toward the door leading from his office to the bridge.


25.16 (of 19)​
 
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Star Trek Hunter
Episode 25: I Dream of Shiva
Scene 17: Emory


25.17
Emory


Federation President Emory Ivonovic was seated in the presidential office in the engineering hull of the U.S.S. Ark. This office was not an easy part of the ship to get to. The room projected down from near the middle of the ship, almost exactly over the middle of an ocean. The floor of this office was transparent, as were the walls, affording a largely unobstructed view of the ocean.

Floating in the middle of this office was a holographic representation of the unimaginably large U.S.S. Ark parked next to a space station that was almost as large as the ship’s engineering hull. The engineering hull of the Ark was connected to the space station by what could only be described as a huge, flexible hose. Looking down over the ocean, Ivonovic could see that the waterline had receded significantly. This ocean was slowly being drained from the Ark into the space station in orbit of Vulcan. Eventually, it would be merged with the Regar Sea in an attempt to restart life in Vulcan’s largest ocean.

Ivonovic put on his reading glasses, picked up an old fashioned ink pen and stared at a stack of blank, old fashioned, actual paper. Writing his weekly subspace radio address to his fan base had become so much more difficult now that instead of railing against the man, he had become the man. Being on the inside had, as Ushi Irons had warned, changed Ivonovic. But he could not afford to make the cosmopolitan mistake of speaking to the better angels of human nature.

Emory Ivonovic had not risen to power by appealing to the native optimism and altruism in people, but to their more practical, suspicious, animal nature. Optimism and altruism could ennoble people to take on monumental tasks, but none of those projects would ever come to fruition unless someone was looking after the practical side of things and making sure people were rewarded for getting them done - or punished for impeding them.

Emory had always avoided talking about his older brother, who still farmed the rocky soil of Pilgrim’s Landing on the Colony of New Hope, but Slobodon Ivonovic had always been Emory’s touchstone. What did Slobodon stand to gain from this massive effort to bring a dead sea on Vulcan back to life? Or to rescue a distant romulan planet from a doom that was still 300 years away?

It was easy to write flowery rhetoric about what a wonderful thing humanity was doing or how today’s science would become tomorrow’s technology or how karma might repay humanity for helping a still very mistrustful antagonist. None of that fixed Slobodon’s tractor or made his children better farmers. But it could significantly reduce the chances of his grandchildren dying on some distant battlefield.

Ivonovic put his pen to the paper and started writing – fast, competent, confident, flawless cursive flowed from the antique ballpoint ink pen.



25.17 (of 19)​
 
If you haven't already, read Oscar Schisgall's Take Over Bos'n. (https://www.plotblueprint.com/take-over-bosn-by-oscar-schisgall)

I did read it and it caused Rick, my drummer, to purchase a new sound mixer...

Okay... well... the story brought to mind the song "Barrett's Privateers" by the late, great Stan Rogers, so I brought it to Tilt-a-Squirrel (we're a bluegrass/metal fusion band) and they loved it. But since the song is a cappella, our bass player, Stan, had to sing on it - and Stan's a great harmonist. But he swore that he couldn't sing and play bass at the same time, so we had never set up a microphone for him and Rick's sound board had only 4 xlr inputs. With Stan singing we needed a fifth microphone, so Rick had to get a bigger board (we practice at his house) and Stan had to start bringing a microphone and stand to our gigs. Which caused him to start singing on other songs as it turns out he can sing harmony and play bass at the same time.

I need to start working on my reboot of Edison.

And I need to get back to work on the opening episode for the Star Beagle Adventures. I'm a little stuck because I have no idea how Skip Howard is going to solve the problem I have placed in his way.

I need to start a sketch pad for the series and do what I did for STH - just write one detail every day - describe something like someone's hair, the way a character walks, part of an environment, a critter... Just a paragraph is enough. Sooner or later those little details blossom into scenes.

Thanks!! rbs
 
the story brought to mind the song "Barrett's Privateers" by the late, great Stan Rogers, so I brought it to Tilt-a-Squirrel (we're a bluegrass/metal fusion band) and they loved it.
We consider this our family song:
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The Dun Cow, beside being the name of the pub in the song, is from an old Irish legend about the hero Cú Chulain

-Will
 
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Star Trek Hunter
Episode 25: I Dream of Shiva
Scene 18: The Mouth of the Lavardorn


25.18
The Mouth of the Lavardorn


Minerva was still a juvenile for her race, not yet 400 years old. She was already nearly five times the size of the U.S.S. Hunter - not quite as large as a Galaxy class starship. But she was not a ship. She was a plant that lived in interstellar space. Her distant ancestors had been born in the oceans of their native planet, grown up in their sky and left their own atmosphere to sun themselves.

Smooth and dark on the outside, she looked as though she might be made of the same stuff as the Hunter. But where the Hunter’s form was frozen forever like a dark marble sculpture of a beast about to spring, Minerva rippled and swayed continuously with a supple grace as though she were endlessly swimming through space. She was shaped something like a catfish with a wide mouth that pursed to kiss the Hunter on the port bow, forming a seal against the upper port airlock.


Rear Admiral Sarekson Carrera entered Minerva for the first time by walking on what was functionally her tongue.


He was followed by Kenny Dolphin, Mlady, and Tali Shae, who was pushing a hover gurney. As soon as the gurney left the Hunter, it dropped firmly onto Minerva’s tongue.

“Minerva doesn’t generate artificial gravity the way that you do,” said the blue avatar. “You will need to carry him the rest of the way.”

“I’ll do it,” said Dolphin. He unhooked the armored figure from the gurney and lifted him into a fireman’s carry, then stood up carefully. “Good thing I keep up with my calisthenics. But he’s not as heavy as he looks.”

Mlady and Tali lifted the gurney, which was quite heavy and with some effort moved it a few feet back into the Hunter. As soon as the gurney was over the Hunter’s deck plating, it became weightless again.

“Antigrav plates work on planets as well as against grav plating,” said Dr. Carrera.

“That’s because grav plating mimics the relationship between mass and spacetime,” came the voice of Old Man Crusher, standing at what was effectively the back of Minerva’s mouth. “Minerva doesn’t generate artificial gravity using quantum mechanical solutions. She attracts molecular particles using something more closely related to an electro-magnetic field.” Wesley Crusher turned and walked through an archway at the back of Minerva’s mouth. “Be sure to stay level. Don’t take the path that goes down. Unless you want to get digested, that is,” he said without turning back.

As soon as Dr. Carrera, Tali, Mlady and Kenny entered the lounge, the archway into Minerva’s mouth closed. Dolphin carefully deposited the person he was carrying onto the couch.

“Will you be able to see to his needs? A charging station?” Dolphin asked. Even unconscious and completely relaxed, the borg, Hugh (3rd of 5), seemed menacing.

“Minerva will easily be able to sustain both him and Mlady,” said the avatar. “Both involve intimate mental contact, which Minerva will share with me. I am very much looking forward to it.”


The lounge inside Minerva was spacious and comfortable. It had grown in proportion to Minerva and was now a very large room, easily the interior size of deck 5 on the Hunter, affording plenty of room for running. Which neither Old Man Crusher nor alien Bob (known to Star Fleet as the Traveler) nor the Doctor (formerly the Emergency Medical Hologram for the U.S.S. Voyager) were inclined to do.

“There are no private rooms, no storage, what you see here is all the accommodations that Minerva can afford.” The blue avatar was speaking to Dr. Carrera. “Minerva is not a transport ship, a cargo ship or a fighter. She has no weapons. Her skin is her shield. But she is very intelligent and very fast. She is not a ship. She is a partner.”

“Extremely fast,” Crusher added. “So fast that trying to calculate her speed in relation to warp speed is, well, meaningless.”

“Minerva does not warp space around her the way your space vessels do,” said the avatar. “She selects future selves from waves of probability.”

“That sounds somewhat like the way we travel,” said alien Bob.

“Similar, but more intuitive. Minerva has to actually see her target. As I understand it, you phase in and out of spacetime. Minerva slips through it.”

“Well,” said Wesley, “Technically, you cannot phase out of spacetime. Since the universe is one dimensional, there is no actual spacetime between any two points…”

“Oww!!” howled Captain Dolphin, gripping his head between his hands. “My neo-cortex hurts…” He dropped his hands and looked around the room to find Dr. Carrera, Dr. Tali Shae, Mlady, Old Man Crusher, alien Bob, the holographic Doctor and Minerva’s blue avatar looking at him. Hugh was sprawled unconscious on the divan that ran the circumference of the room.


“There are a few far more intractable topics I would like to discuss in this spacetime,” Dolphin said. “I don’t think the terrorist cells we have been sent to investigate here at Rising Sun are unrelated to the rumors of unrest in the Klingon Empire. With all the fires Star Fleet is putting out all over the Federation and whatever this horrible religion is that our former captain has stirred up in the Romulan Empire… the andorians and the vulcans still putting down their own native insurgencies… The last thing we need is a war with the klingons. And we are very close to the klingon border.”

“Technically, local politics is outside of the purview of Star Fleet Temporal Command,” said Rear Admiral Carrera.

“Local politics?” Dolphin asked, his eyes widening. “An all-out klingon assault doesn’t stay local for long…”

“Local in this case refers to this time period…” said Wesley.

“I am standing inside a living… um… spacetreefish in a room full of super-geniuses,” Dolphin said irritably. “Find a way to keep the klingons from blowing the Alpha Quadrant to Kingdom Come in this decade so there’s something left for the borg to save - whenever you manage to get them here… Please?”

“Chancellor Martok would never allow a full scale assault,” said Dr. Tali Shae.

“Chancellor Martok is now the oldest unmodified klingon on record,” Dolphin retorted. “I’ve heard that he can still walk and seems to be in full command of his faculties, but he is nearly 95 years old and genetically unmodified klingons generally don’t live as long as humans. Martok has done a magnificent job of rebuilding the Imperial fleet. Meanwhile the Federation lost Vulcan to the romulans and now we’re making nice with the Romulan Star Empire… giving them star systems on our side of the Neutral Zone… And our current fleet looks nothing like the old Star Fleet that held the klingons at bay for a hundred years. You can imagine what the average klingon warrior thinks about all that…”

“All right, Kenny,” said Carrera. “I’ll think of something.” He looked around the room. “We’ll think of something…”


25.18 (of 19)​
 
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Star Trek Hunter
Episode 25: I Dream of Shiva
Scene 19: Xagg


25.19
Xagg


In an office in saucer section 4 of the U.S.S. Ark, the elderly Bolian Web Executive Planning Commissioner, Xagg Boles, idly turned a holographic representation of the U.S.S. Hunter over and over in his hands. The holographic model was about the size of one of his hands. He released it and it flew back to hover over a corner of his drafting table before fading out.

The elderly bolian picked up a document reader and thumbed through a few screens in a distracted way, then hit a control that caused a large number of files to be displayed by icons. He touched one icon and Captain Kenneth Dolphin’s face appeared on the reader. Dolphin was speaking directly into the camera, but the sound was turned down, so it was just an odd picture of a human with his mouth moving. Xagg Boles watched idly for a few moments, then he set the reader down and spent nearly a full minute gently patting the top of his drafting table with his blue fingertips. He ran a blue hand over his hairless blue scalp and squeezed the back of his own neck and made a light burping noise.

With more of a sense of purpose, he set the reader on a reading stand next to his drafting table and looked it as he massaged the wrinkles on his face. “Computer, I want to speak to my grandchild.”

A computer voice responded: “You have 17 grandchildren, Executive Planning Commissioner. Which grandchild do you wish to speak to?”

The elderly bolian head of state took a deep breath, straightened himself as much as he could, then said, “My eldest. Get me Lieutenant Commander Napoleon Boles on the U.S.S. Hunter.” Xagg Boles sighed. “It’s been more than 20 years. I should have done this long ago…”


25 - I Dream of Shiva

This is the final scene for Episode 25.

The adventure will continue in
Episode 26 - Rain Over Rising Sun.​
 
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