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Star Trek: In Perpetuity

Withers

Captain
It was cold. The frost embraced the mud under foot making it crunch. The air was crisp and it was sunny. The perfect metaphor, he thought to himself, for the Federation. A sterile environment, bathed in sunlight, where any possibility of a mess was frozen solid by the very atmosphere that bound it all together. He shifted his position on the park bench and leaned back to consider this with a certain bitterness escaping him in the form of an incredulous smirk.


Lieutenant Commander Ezekiel Burk had been at Landing 47 all morning long. It was a popular park for cadets to await test results and for officers to consider their futures as Starfleet Headquarters was only a short walk away. On this Tuesday morning, as he watched others pace back and forth in the thin January air, he judged the state of affairs as a detached outsider looking in.


Watching the callow young ensigns and junior officers, gathered in clusters no doubt reassuring one another of their collective worth and ability, he reminisced of his first years in Starfleet. He had known, then, that his would be a name for the history books. He had known, then, that the galaxy which awaited him was filled with opportunities to define and prove his greatness. He had grown up listening to tales of the legendary Starfleet Captains that championed what it truly meant, not only to be a Starfleet Officer, but ultimately to be a human being. He would add his name to theirs as he knew, in the deep untapped recesses of his person, that he was truly their equal. He would do whatever was necessary to prove it not only to the galaxy but to himself.


The days after graduation turned to weeks, the weeks to months and the months to years. The accomplishments, the promotions, and the praise from his peers all led to this moment at Landing 47 where the feeling that none of it was enough was almost overwhelming. It would have been for anyone so ambitious were it not for the overriding thought that better wasn't coming.


His heroes had lived in a time when the frontier was new, when there was a frontier at all. Space, for his purposes, had been explored. The enemies of the Federation had all been pacified or worse assimilated. This, he thought, was the ultimate injustice. He had been born into a Federation that existed in a universe where the biggest problems seemed to stem from conflicts that could be solved by an assistant counselor- none of it was worthy of his attention as none of it could distinguish him in the eyes of history.


He scoffed and chuckled scornfully aloud, moved at how self-important he could be at times. He didn't retract any of his thoughts as self aggrandizing but nevertheless there was something he found caustically funny about his own egotism. A fresh group of Cadets jogged through the park, all marching in unison, all dressed exactly the same way. He sat forward, clasping his hands together to consider this, when his communicator went off unexpectedly.


“Accosta to Commander Burk” He slapped his combadge harder than he needed to in order to active it, already sour at an assignment he hadn't yet been given. Whatever it was he doubted very much he would enjoy it.


“Go head Lieutenant.” His voice was metallic as it stopped almost immediately in front of his mouth, not for lack of volume, but because of the sheer weight with which each word was uttered.


“The Admiral has asked to see you in her office right away Commander.”


“On my way. Burk out.” He stood up and stretched. He took one last look around Landing 47 imagining this would be the last time he would see it for a while. This Admiral was no doubt about to congratulate him on his recent research findings aboard USS Palisade. She would then, he thought, assign him to some dry, safe, station on the border to continue tinkering with spacial mechanics in order to extend long range sensors even further than he already had. This is what his life in Starfleet would equate to- a good officer who contributed... just like the thousands upon thousands of other good officers who contributed. As the cadets came back, marching along as they went in a loop, he couldn't help but think to himself that they were suckers, fools for thinking they could make any difference. The smartest of them would be lucky to be as distinguished as he was. The rest history had already forgotten. He shook his head and started the short walk to Starfleet Headquarters.






“Lieutenant, take us out of warp, raise shields and arm the forward phasers.”


“Aye Commander.”


Lieutenant Commander Addison Goss sat in the Captains chair of the USS Sarajevo with a conspicuous smile on her face. She relished any chance to use the phrase 'arm forward phasers.' She was a tall and lithe woman. The zeal with which she gave orders, added to her physical appearance, made for a very robust and formidable presence.


“Target within visual range Commander.”

She stood up from her chair and moved closer to the view screen as though she were personally stalking this target. The unwavering nature of her gestures kept the tone on the bridge of the Sarajevo very intense and focused. Hers was a command that demanded professionalism and precision. Any deviation would surely, it was thought, be met with a rebuke sterner than pleasant to imagine.


“On screen.” While her voice was cold it wasn't emotionless. It was plain for anyone to see that she was enjoying this moment, that she was alive in it and that it spoke to her definition.


The view screen illuminated and a comet appeared. The bridge remained quiet save for the hum of the engines and the sound of the Commander's footsteps on the deck plates as she approached the helm.


“Helm- bring us along side and adjust to match its course and heading. Mr. Ostapko- target the ventral side of C-956 and fire forward phasers at 45% yield.”


“Aye sir.” The ship moved along side the comet and the forward phasers impacted its ventral side, dramatically changing its trajectory and visibly reducing it in size.

“Report.”


“C-956 has been reduced in size by 34%. Its trajectory now has it missing the Benzite Asteroid Mining Colony by..., “The Ensign giving the report smiled as he turned from his station to the Commander, to finish “Nearly half a million kilometers. Well done Ma'am.”


She turned from the helm to look at the Ensign in what seemed to be discontent. But then, half a moment later, her austere presence broke and she smiled brightly in return. The crew on the bridge began a collective sigh of relief as she walked back to the Captain's chair to sit. She crossed her legs, pulling the tunic of her uniform taught as she issued a nod of approval to the bridge crew.
“I want a full report on the Captain's desk by 0900. Where the hell did it come from,” she asked rhetorically to the overnight crew on the bridge.


“A few days later and we would have been too far away to get here in time,” came a remark from the Lieutenant, Ostapko, at tactical.


As the mood settled on the Bridge the Commander gave the order to resume their previous course and speed. As she sat in the Captains chair, reading over various departmental reports, she realized her heart was still racing. Her forehead was still damp with anticipation for an event that had concluded with success. This was the first time she'd had the chance to use her particular skill set in nearly a year. Addison Goss was a predator. She had always been athletic and competitive which led her to pursue command since the first day she enlisted with Starfleet. But it wasn't just leading others she thought she was good at. It was leading others to victory where she knew she was distinguished. Her time aboard USS Sarajevo had tempered her want to fight which she had, until this moment, viewed as personal growth.


Noting how her heart raced, how she could feel every aspect of the world around her, and how she became absolutely certain of her abilities in that moment she started to think of her tempered wants less as the product of an evolving persona and more the traits of a domesticated wild animal. The idea didn't sit well with her.


“That comet,” she thought to herself sitting in the Captains chair, “is that your only battlefield?” This quiet discontent was enough to fuel a return to the austere, stern woman she'd been not an hour previous. How dare an enemy worthy of her deprive her by virtue of not existing?


“Commander, we have an in coming communication from Starfleet Headquarters,” came a message from the communication station, interrupting her thoughts.


“Let the Captain know and then put it through immediately,” she said fecklessly.


“A Commander Ezekiel Burk is requesting you... personally, Commander.”


This surprised her. It was certainly out of the ordinarily for a Commander from Starfleet Headquarters to hail a ship and ask to speak to the third officer in the middle of the night. She didn't know this person and based on the source of the transmission this wasn't a personal call. The oddity of it was reflected in the faces of the bridge crew as she looked quickly around at her peers.


“... Put it through in the conference room. You have the bridge Mr. Ostapko.” She stood up, again pulling her uniform taught, and exited the bridge, headed for the conference room. Addison Goss wasn't the sort to be intimidated. Still, the out-of-the-ordinary nature of this particular call made her uneasy. She saluted two junior officers as she passed them in the corridor just outside her destination. She took a deep breath and entered. Taking the seat that would ordinarily be used by the Captain she activated the monitor using her personal command code.


“I'm Lieutenant Commander Addison Goss- how can I help you Commander..,” she said, staring at the face of a rattled looking Ezekiel Burk for the first time.






“What we have to remember is that first and foremost we are scientists and doctors. While it is easy to get swept up in the political and societal aspects and ramifications of any given situation it is absolutely imperative that we remain detached, honor our oath, and continue the search for truth objectively.”


Ninety sets of eyes were locked unwaveringly on him as he spoke. It was unnerving but he had steeled himself through the entire hour lecture and so he ad libed in a moment of self reassurance at the end. “Remember that the next time you make a joke about the situation on Risa.”


The class broke into light laughter and he smiled gently in return. “Class dismissed,” he said . The cadets began clapping and he politely nodded his head in appreciation.


Lieutenant Commander Dr. Olivier Lane had been hosting cadets from Starfleet Academy who were certified for field training at Deep Space Twelve for the past four months. As part of an agreement with Starfleet Command, he would lecture at Deep Space Twelve in return for use of the unique warp core laboratory on board. The Starfleet Corps of Engineers, the Commander of Deep Space Twelve and skeptics of his work had vocally objected to his team being given exclusive access to the lab for six months on the grounds that his research wasn't likely to produce anything tangible. Studying the long term effects of warp speed on bio-mater in a controlled environment had never been done before, however, and he thought of his work as equally necessary as any other endeavor for which the lab might be used.


The classroom emptied and as the last students were filing out the Commander of Deep Space Twelve chuckled lightly and folded his arms upon entering the room.

“You're a natural, Doctor Lane. You've got a bright future teaching at Starfleet Medical.”


Dr. Lane sighed, busying himself with gathering papers off the podium from which he spoke, anticipating whatever it was the Commander had to say would be caustic if not just irritating.


“'Teaching,' just not anything else, right Commander Stone?”


Commander Stone chuckled again, smugly, unfolded his arms and looked out a window onto the nearby Kazon Nebula.


“Do you know why Starfleet put the Warp Core laboratory on DS12 rather than in San Francisco, Doctor Lane?”

“So scientists could use it without fear of blowing up the Earth and crippling the Federation...sir?”


The Commander laughed at this. While he didn't particularly like Doctor Lane and didn't put much stock into his research he had always appreciated the curt dry wit that he employed without much reflection or self editing. He finished his laugh with a sigh, put his arms behind his back and gazed out at the Nebula again.


“No, Lane, they put it here to scare the Engineers. They put it here because there is nothing beyond this point and if the Engineers send a vessel out beyond DS12 there'll be no return for that ship or its crew if their engines fail. It was put here as an incentive, a motive for them to work harder- there is no room for failure out here.”


“I see... well, it's been delightful chatting, but as you know I have a mountain of pape-”


Doctor Lane was cut short when Commander Stone turned from his gazing, descending the steps of the classroom toward the podium to announce,


“Pathfinder III has been green-lit.”


Doctor Lane stopped sorting PADDs and put his hands at either side of the podium leaning forward in a gesture of exasperation.


“...and the final two months of my time with the lab have been cut short so the Corps can move in and begin tests on various forums of newly found dilithium in the hopes of shortening the trip to the galaxy rim.”


“That's what I always thought made a great teacher- the ability to know all the correct answers,” Commander Stone's demeanor was one of gloating. It was clear by his attitude that even if it had been for something less significant any excuse to boot Doctor Lane out of the lab would be met with approval.


“You know Mark,” Doctor Lane said dropping the formalities or any notion of respect, “speed isn't the only way to explore the galaxy... and nobody likes a smart ass.” He took the stack of papers from the podium and prepared to exit the classroom, marching in an obviously perturbed way past the Commander.


“Oh, Doctor Lane- one more thing. The USS Sarajevo is making an unscheduled stop here and should arrive within the hour. I'm told that a Lieutenant Commander Addison Goss needs you to meet her at the airlock just as soon as they arrive.”


“Why?”


“Captain Benson couldn't say. The Sarajevo is supposed to be headed in the opposite direction. He seemed annoyed with whatever is going on- it's impressive Lane, you're a nuisance to people who haven't even met you.” The Commander smiled and walked off chuckling smugly to himself.


Doctor Lane sat down in contemplation. What would a Lieutenant Commander from an Imperious Class ship want with him? That thought evaporated quickly though. Whatever it was she wanted would be made apparent very soon. How he was ever going to conduct and complete his research without any real backing was the real question. He was going to have to tell his team that they would all be being reassigned shortly. It was a saddening thought and he was remorseful he hadn't spent more time with them in a casual atmosphere when he had the chance. On the bright side, he thought jadedly to himself, he wouldn't have to grade any more ridiculous papers.






“The Federation Council has voted. There isn't anything you can do about this Liz.”


“Like hell there isn't.”


Admiral Elizabeth Macnamera slammed her palm down hard to deactivate the monitor on her desk, ending a heated conversation she'd been having with an old friend.


She relaxed in the great leather chair with her arms on either rest. The lines of wisdom around her eyes and mouth were accentuated by her short gray hair and she seemed to fit perfectly with the dusty, library like office in which she sat.


What was happening was wrong. Every fiber in her being told her it was wrong. The Federation Council was wrong. Her old friend, retired Admiral Douglas Fitzwallace was wrong too. Still, she didn't know what if anything she could do about it. She wasn't the kind of woman to be idle, however, and she resolved at least to try.


“Tea, Earl Gray, hot,” she said to the replicator. She took the tea and saucer in her hand, sipping as she contemplated. 'We're allowing ourselves to become what so many generations have fought vigorously against..' she thought to herself. 'The Federation will be the architect of its own demise...' These thoughts rambled around in her brain. The air remained still and lightly scented by her flowery aroma. The sunlight poured in through the opened old fashioned drapes she had cast over the windows. The quiet hush of her office went on unhindered for over an hour until her melodic yet serious voice broke through it like a hammer shattering glass.


“Computer: Display a list of Starfleet personnel who meet the following psychological and educational profile...”


She sat down the empty tea cup, her decision made.





(Be kind; this was my first attempt at a fan/science fiction writing. Thanks for reading either way and I hope you enjoyed it.)




-Withers-​
 
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You obviously put a lot of thought into this. There is a depth or layering of ideas taking place that bodes well for future installments. Your grammar is correct(thank you!) and your sentence construction, although at times a little heavy handed with the descriptions, is fairly fluid. As you broke away from the heavy exposition of the beginning it became even easier to read. I found that when I reached the end I was disappointed-not because you did anything wrong but because I wanted to keep reading. Keep going, please. And don't forget the Federation also involves alien species. :)
 
“Commander Goss, the Sarajevo is about to be redirected to Deep Space Twelve. Upon arriving you are to contact a Doctor Olivier Lane. The two of you will requisition a shuttle craft and proceed to the coordinates I'm sending you along with official orders from Starfleet Command. You are to speak of your orders to no one under penalty of court martial and potential ejection from Starfleet. Understood?”

Addison Goss relaxed her posture. A bemused incredulity found its way onto her face. Who, exactly, did this commander think he was?

“Commander Burk- this is all highly irregular, I can't just---”

“Captain Benson is about to be informed of your reassignment. Beyond that a mission debriefing will follow... shortly. You have your orders Commander. Burk out.”

The communication ended as abruptly as it had started. She now had a set of coordinates on a Padd and orders from an Admiral Macnamera instructing her to do just as Commander Burk had. Before Addison had much time to process just how odd the situation truly was a voice called out to her.

“Commander Goss- see me in my quarters immediately.”
“Aye Captain, on my way.”

She stared at her reflection in the deactivated monitor on the wall. If she had been uneasy before she was outright nervous now. She allowed herself the time to comb one hand through her thick red locks of hair, stood, adjusted her uniform and headed for the Captains quarters. As she approached the turbo lift the oncoming Beta Shift ensign assigned to tactical stopped her before she could enter.

“Commander Goss! I have the results from stellar cartography you requested from-”

Addison cut the ensign off with a gesture of her hand. Now was no time for stellar cartography reports and though there was no way the Ensign could know, Addison Goss was very much in a hurry to get where she was going.

“Give your report to Lieutenant Ostapko. Dismissed.” She then boarded the turbolift and allowed the doors to close without another word. Outside the Captains quarters she stood a moment with thoughts racing through her head. Had she done something wrong? What was all of this about? Would the Captain be giving her information or demanding it of her? In all her time in Starfleet she had never felt so uncertain and it caused her typically assured composure to fidget.

She activated the door chime with an unsure finger.

“Enter!” came the voice from the other side of the door. She walked in the room and remained very much at attention as she noted the Captain, in his evening attire, was obviously agitated about being woken up in the middle of the night... but perhaps more. He stood up from his seated position, waving one hand through his slick hair in a gesture of exasperation before he spoke.

“Commander, in four life times, I have never been a fan of being woken up in the middle of the night,” the blunt, matter-of-fact statement was issued with a deliberate yet bombastic voice that seemed to Addison to echo off the bulkheads. It was a well known fact that unless a true state of emergency arouse Captain Benson was not to be disturbed once he retired for the night.

“Sir, I---”

She was abruptly cut off as he continued. “There's one thing I like less than sudden rousing from much needed slumber and that is secrets aboard my ship.”The trailing half of what he said elevated in tone and volume to the effect of somewhat startling the Commander. She didn't know exactly how to respond as she was in every was possible at a loss for words.

“I have just received an Alpha One, coded transmission from Starfleet Command. The Sarajevo is to be redirected to Deep Space Twelve. As though postponing our mission wasn't enough they're reassigning my third officer- You are to be offloaded at Deep Space Twelve where I am told you instructions form persons unknown as to what to do next.” His face was flat but the annoyance in his voice was clear. Here was a man very much put out by the goings on that night aboard the Sarajevo.

Addison Goss remained at attention still not knowing what to say. She was under orders from someone who outranked her Captain and had already been threatened with a court martial if she revealed them to anyone.

“Well Commander?!”
“Sir, I... apologize for the delay of the Sarajevo's mission.”

She resolved herself. She thought back to that moment on the bridge when she had redirected the comet and how her heart had raced, her forehead had dampened, and how alive she felt. She was feeling something of that now and, rather than remain loyal to her Captain, she decided instead to follow her heart into the unknown. Something about his posture shifted as if to say he knew she wasn't going to talk. This, however, did not relax the atmosphere in the room nor did it ease the overwhelming sense of irritation he emanated.

“Very well Commander. Your command codes have been deactivated and, as this vessel is strictly off limits to non-crew members, you are restricted to your quarters which I expect cleared out by the time we reach Deep Space Twelve.” His voice was a quiet, dark monotone as he spoke. She remained at attention and faced him as he finished.

“It was an honor to serve with you, Captain Benson.” She raised her hand in a salute. The gesture was not reciprocated.

“Dis-missed.”

She left the Captain's quarters and was immediately greeted by two security officers who escorted her to her own. Whatever had just happened she hoped whatever was about to would be worth it.




“To the finest group of fellows any doctor could ever ask for,” Olivier Lane raised his glass of Saurian Brandy in the fifth toast to his displaced team of doctors in under half an hour. The mood in the Officers Lounge of Deep Space Twelve was one of celebration in spite of the fact that their work was over.

“And to the Corps of Engineers! May they find the “tangible results” we just couldn't!” bellowed Doctor Chase, one of Lanes foremost assistants. Rather than drink politely from a glass, however, he took the bottle and drank from that instead, laughing in good humor immediately there after.

“Here, Here” came the reply from the room. As they drank the conversation wasn't one of uncertainty but was kept unintentionally light so as to offset what had just happened. Doctor Lane had called a meeting of his research team in the wardroom ten minutes after Commander Stone had informed him they would be being reassigned. At first he thought of trying to reassure them but since he couldn't even reassure himself he decided on a more direct approach- liquor. The bartender at the stations only civilian run establishment owed him a favor and so he called it in- six bottles of his finest brandy. He figured if they were going to be kicked off the station they could at least leave with a final pleasant memory.

As the party continued on Doctor Cameron, another of Lanes assistants, came and flopped next to him on the couch where he was gazing out the window at the Kazon nebula.

“Olivier...”

“Oh, Doctor Cameron, don't get sentimental now. We'll be back... just as soon as they figure out how to go warp ten without turning everyone into lizards.”

The two of them chuckled at that and drank a private toast to one another. She looked longingly at him as though she had more to say but didn't for reasons unbeknown. Though neither of them knew for certain where they would be headed next or what they would be doing they knew it was unlikely they would see one another again for some time. This added a sense of urgency and thus increased the speed at which they drank.
“You know Cameron... one day they'll tell the story of---”

Whatever he was about to say was cut short when his combadge unexpectedly went off.

“Ops to Doctor Lane”

He was in no mood to be told to keep the noise down and he couldn't imagine anything he wanted less than to hear Commander Stone's voice ever again. With a motion of irritated obligation he gingerly pressed his palm against his combadge, rolling his eyes at Dr Cameron as he did.

“Laaaaaaaane here. Go ahead,” he said in a sing song voice.

“A Commander Addison Goss is insisting you report to airlock three at once.”

He considered this for a moment. It had completely slipped his mind that the USS Sarajevo was making an unscheduled stop at the station specifically so this Commander could speak with him. He was to meet her at the airlock upon the ships arrival. Whatever it was she wanted, regardless of the circumstances of her arrival, he didn't care at that particular moment. He wanted to sit, drink, and be with his team for as long as he could. At this point he felt no obligation to Starfleet outside of the fact that he was a doctor. Somehow he couldn't imagine she was sick... and he wasn't that kind of Doctor anyway.

“Tell the...Commander,” he stressed the word 'commander' so as to make it apparent the rank meant nothing to him, “that I am...,” he poured another glass of Saurian Brandy and refilled Doctor Cameron's as he continued on to the Ensign in ops, “indisposed. Lane out.”

He then took off his combadge and raised his glass to the room.

“To Commander Stone! For tolerating our nuisance lo these past four months!” Laughter rang out from the fifteen or so people in the room and a somewhat drunken smile settled on Doctor Lanes face. The party continued on for another half an hour uninterrupted. Through the conversations he had with his team Olivier Lane wished harder and harder that he'd spent more time with them in an atmosphere like this one rather than in the laboratory. He had always known that six months in exchange for teaching was a deal that Starfleet was likely to revoke. So even though he thought of his work as important he thought the real tragedy here was missed opportunities to create lifelong friendships with Doctors whom he very much respected.

As the party started to break up into smaller, quieter conversations, the mood was suddenly broken when a Commander with deep maroon hair burst into the room. Doctor Foreman, the person nearest the entrance, turned to her and said in a very intoxicated voice “Red alert!” A light wave of laughter filled the room.

“Where is Doctor Olivier Lane?” Her voice did not waver. She stared down Doctor Foreman who, in spite of being drunk, was slightly intimidated by this new stranger. In response to her question he remained silent and pointed just as Oliver Lane half stood up.

“I'm Doctor Olivier La---,” he started to smile and nearly giggled as he deduced that she must in fact be the Commander Goss whom he'd stood up at the airlock. She was a good deal taller than he was but, thanks in no small part to the copious amount of alcohol he'd consumed, he wasn't intimidated by her stature as most were upon first viewing her. He walked through the crowd as the party recommenced and offered her his hand.

“I'm Doctor Lane. You must be Addison Goss. You'll forgive me Commander, we were celebra---”

“Doctor, I don't have time for this and neither do you.” She handed him a PADD with orders from Starfleet Command. She looked around the room at the assembled guests all of whom were in as bad or worse shape than Doctor Lane. She sighed knowing how much more difficult this would make things. They were already late and she had no way of knowing what consequence that might have.

“Commander Goss,” he said, still not taking the matter as seriously as she needed him to,” These orders are from an Admiral I've never heard of, delivered to me by a Commander from a ship that's supposed to be headed in the opposite direction, I can't just...” He paused. He had obviously lost his train of thought as his mouth was moving faster than his brain. Frustrated even further Addison Goss grabbed the doctors arm none too lightly and spoke directly at him.

“Doctor, you can follow me out of this room or I will have a security team take you out of it.” Her eyes focused intently on his. She was typically a no-nonsense sort of person but given recent events she was especially serious. This was conveyed effectively enough for the good Doctor to follow her instructions.

“...alright, alright, just let me...,” he turned as if he were about to bid adieu to his fellows but she didn't release his arm.

“Now Doctor!”

With that the two of them left the party in the Ward Room. She moved at a hasty pace and he had trouble keeping up with her. He rubbed his arm as he trotted along, confused by the orders, rendered somewhat unable to process information thanks to the Brandy.

He tripped over a separation in the deck plates and fell flat on his face. She helped him up and her frustration turned to something more akin to pity. Lifting him up with one arm over her shoulder she turned to him and said, “Doctor, we need to requisition a Type XI shuttle craft. If you can handle that, I'll take care of the rest.”

Pausing in the corridor he tried to press his combadge. He had, of course, taken it off and left it at the party. Deducing an obvious solution he reached across Addison's chest and pressed hers, making contact a little too personal for her liking. He smiled drunkenly at her to which she responded by rolling her eyes and sighing.

“Lane to Shuttle bay one...”




Admiral Elizabeth Macnamera had been pouring over Starfleet personnel files for over a week. She needed three officers who matched her criterion without deviation. Though there were plenty with the educational background required for the mission she planned to send them on only a handful would be apt in regard to the other aspects of the assignment. For days she circled names and then crossed them out only to be added again. Finally, after reviewing nearly every officer who met the qualifications, educationally, she narrowed the list down to ten that she believed could handle the responsibility she was about to impose on them. Of the ten two were older than she was, three were on deep space assignments and would be irretrievable for months, and two were officers already assigned to Starfleet Intelligence- a deal breaker as far as what she wanted was concerned. That left her with three names; Ezekiel Burk, Addison Goss, and Olivier Lane.

She sighed deeply, satisfied that her task was complete, but daunted by the fact that finding officers for the mission was the easy part. She relaxed into her chair and dusted her fingers through her hair the way she had when she was young. She rubbed her tired eyes and sat forward again. Two of the officers she had chosen were already on assignment and she knew work had to be done to free them for what she was certain would be their most important work. Ezekiel Burk had yet to be re-stationed after he completed his work aboard USS Palisade and that would make things a little easier.

After another day spent maneuvering people around the galaxy she was ready to put her plan into motion. She was uneasy about what she was doing but if there was one thing Elizabeth Macnamera knew for certain it was the difference between right and wrong. As a Starfleet Admiral she felt it her solemn duty to right wrong where she could and now, in her head, was that time. She woke early that Tuesday morning and set about putting the pieces of her plan in motion.

“Ensign Accosta,” she said holding a cup of steaming tea as she walked through the waiting area outside her office, “Tell Commander Burk that I'll see him now.” The Ensign, standing at attention as the Admiral approached and then passed on her way into her office, did as she was told. Inside her office, Admiral Macnamera sat poised at her desk, ready to meet one of the three she had selected. She looked at the various medals, awards, and diploma that adorned her wall, evidence of a long and distinguished career. She smiled and said aloud to herself “I wonder if they'll let me hang those up in prison?”
 
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Ezekiel Burk finished his walk from Landing 47 to the building that housed the Admirals office faster than he thought he would. Somehow the growing number of junior officers and cadets made him uneasy. He found something about their naivete repugnant and so jaunted from it more quickly that was really necessary. Finding the building wasn't hard of course. You could see it from shuttles in space if you knew where to look. When he first joined Starfleet he was sure it would only be a matter of time before his name was known to every occupant of the building. Of course, now, he had his doubts. His bitterness at the fact became more apparent as he ascended the stairs and stepped closer and closer to what he was sure would be an unworthy assignment.

He was taken aback at the nature of the Admirals waiting room. The building itself, which housed any number of Admirals offices, looked every bit as Starfleet as a starship did. Clean, efficient, though someone void of personality- a complaint often issued by more 'colorful' species than human. All of that clashed abruptly with the Admirals waiting room and the exterior to her office. Dark oak lined the walls and the dust in the air was so apparent it seemed to Burk as though one could swim through it. How, exactly, this disparate area could exist was beyond him. Old fashion everything was everywhere. From the book shelves that housed actual books to the carpet and the light fixtures to the desk behind which the Bajoran ensign sat, everything seemed to come from a time immemorial. It was odd but also pleasant.

“The Admiral is waiting,” Ensign Accosta said as she took Ezekiel Burk's coat and waved toward the mighty twin oak doors that stood several feet as the entrance to Admiral Macnamera's office. Ezekiel nodded to the Ensign and pushed the doors open. As he entered the swung shut behind him. He remained standing at attention in front of the Admiral who was seated behind her own heavily polished wooden desk.
“Commander Ezkiel Burk,” she said in a way that seemed as though she were giving him his name. She tilted her head back slightly at this and turned in her chair. She stood up, sipped from her cup of tea, and then walked around the desk to greet him in closer quarters. The Commander said nothing and remained at attention.

“At ease Mister Burk.” She said this as she moved around him in a semi circle only to then walk to a window facing away from him. His posture relaxed somewhat as she continued to speak.

“I understand congratulations are in order for your work aboard the Palisade.” At this she turned her head over her shoulder to gauge his reaction. He didn't offer anything save a very subtle body language that suggested he neither thought congratulations were in order nor did he want to discuss why. At this the Admiral smiled, and turned to face out the window again. “Most officers are pleased to know an Admiral has taken notice of their work. But then... I probably wouldn't have picked you if you were that sort of officer.”

This piqued the Commander's attention. He finally turned to look at the back of her head. Picked?

“Ma'am?”

She turned to face him and then walked back to her desk as she spoke. She half sighed and half chuckled before saying, “Starfleet should really update protocol in this regard- Ma'am will do in a crunch. I prefer just Admiral.” She returned to her desk and sat behind it. She then motioned for the Commander to have a seat. The light atmosphere of their meeting took a very swift turn for the more serious as she continued.

“Commander, I've called you here to break the rules.” She sat forward and in her chair and swallowed hard as she said this. This would be the riskiest thing she had ever done in her career. If she continued on there would be no going back. She leaned back in her chair with this thought in her head, satisfied she'd had the conviction to see it through this far. She picked up a remote and aimed it at the wall monitor behind her head. Sitting with her profile to the Commander she clicked a button and the screen activated displaying a star chart with four locations clearly marked on it.

“Over the last six months the Romulans have asked the Federation for three uninhabited star systems in the Beta Quadrant. In exchange they promised us scientific data, mining rights on certain planets nearer the former Neutral Zone, and other such minor compensation. Our Think Tanks worked tirelessly trying to find a reason why the systems might be important to the Romulans. Nothing was ever found. No ancient civilizations, no deposits of anything that could be combined into anything useful, no strategic value- nothing. So, one by one, we gave them what they asked for.”

Commander Burk eased in his chair listening intently to her speak. She'd had him at the admission that she called him there to break the rules- that the Romulans were somehow involved only sweetened the deal. His future seemed brighter with each passing sentence she uttered. The Admiral paused, took a sip of her tea, and then continued.

“As part of the agreement we promised not to interfere in any way, either officially through inquiry or unofficially through espionage, in what the Romulans were doing. Well, SFI pretty much immediately broke that part of the agreement- thanks in no small part to your work on long range sensor arrays.”

Burk nodded his head and smiled from the corner of his mouth at this.
“While we're not entirely sure what the Romulans did we know that they did something to the star in the systems we gave them that rendered them uninhabitable. The very nature of space seems to have been altered by whatever it is they're doing. The Romulans are keeping a close guard on these experiments of theirs as their top of the line Warbirds have been stationed all around these three sectors which are separated by dozens of light years.”

“Omega particles...,” Burk offered.

“No. We thought so at first too but the readings we've gotten aren't anything like that. Last week the Romulans asked the Federation Council for a fourth system. The problem is that the system they've asked for is inhabited. Added to that it isn't exactly a Federation system- it's in the former Cardassian Union and has protectorate status with the Federation- the DinKura system.”

She clicked the remote in her hand which brought up specifically where the DinKura system was. It was on the border of what used to be the Cardassian Union and the Federation. It was now on the fringe. It was a Cardassian world that, like many Cardassian worlds, was unaffiliated with any regional superpower save for its status as a Federation protectorate.

“This time, however, the Romulans made the Federation Council an offered they couldn't refuse. The DinKura system in exchange for releasing the Federation from the terms of the Treaty of Algeron. They've given us one month to evacuate DinKura of all Cardassian civilians.”

“Admiral... the Cardassians aren't going to want to leave their homes...”

“And we can't tell them that if they don't they'll be subjected to whatever tests the Romulans have been conducting without tipping our hand that we've been spying on them. The Federation Council voted and it was agreed- an honest attempt to evacuate DinKura will quietly be made but that the Cardassians who remain are on their own.”

The Admiral sighed deeply at this, seemingly disgusted by even saying it out loud.

“We've sold millions of Cardassian lives to the Romulans in exchange for permission to use technology older than I am-”

“And you want me to stop this from happening,” Burk asked without thinking, almost sarcastically.

“No, Commander. There's no stopping it. It's done. We've sold those lives and I want to know why. I want to know what the Romulans are doing. Starfleet Command has decided that beyond scanning the systems we give to the Romulans we will honor the agreement not to investigate. Starfleet Intelligence was given a very specific instructions in regard to the deal we made.”

“And you called me here to break the rules.”

The Admiral deactivated the monitor and turned to completely face Burk. Her face, still retaining the warmth of an old lady, seemed harder perhaps even somewhat annoyed with his petulance. She studied him a moment and then remembered how hard it had been to pick him from the lot- his petulance was part of the reason she had chosen him. Of course, his lack of respect was somewhat unnerving to an Admiral who had spent 50 years in Starfleet and had become accustom to certain awe in her presence, still she needed him and she knew she could count on him to get the job done.

“Commander, I've spent the last week digging your name out of a mountainous pile of names. I spent the last two days assembling your team and most of last night getting the shuttle you're going to use.”

She stood up from her desk and handed him a PADD.

“You'll find the coordinates of all four sites and the deployment of the Romulans fleet around them according to SFI's most recent long range sensor sweeps. Find out what the Romulans are doing- but understand this; I will disavow any---”

“I understand Admiral.” He stood and saluted.

Again she was some what put off by his attitude. It was not only inappropriate for an officer to act this way toward an Admiral of her standing it was rude for a man of his age to cut off a woman of hers. She folded her arms, narrowed her eyes, reminded herself again why she chose this person, and then continued speaking with her head ever so slightly titled.

“Take SC-31 at Hanger One and rendezvous with the rest of your team. I've...”freed” them up.”

“The rest of my team? Ma'am, I assure you I--"

She took this opportunity to reiterate the fact that she was the one wearing the Admirals pips.

“Commander, while confident in my selection for this mission, I would never send any man to do what you're about to alone. Your expertise, while impressive, does not cover all potential eventualities and so I have selected two other officers to accompany you. Report to Hanger One immediately. You are dismissed.”

He saluted again, took the PADD in his hand and marched out of the Admirals office. Once he was gone she sat down in her chair and quietly removed the pips from her collar and looked out the window, rubbing her chin in contemplation.

Outside her office Ezekiel Burk looked over the PADD with more scrutiny. His heart was racing. This was what he had been waiting for... though what he was doing was illegal, he somehow didn't care. He could prove his worth to the Federation and be remembered. His mind raced with possibilities as he studied the orders on the PADD. As he gathered his coat from Ensign Accosta he turned and looked on her the way a hungry man might look at a fork.

“Ensign, I need a secure channel opened to the USS Sarajevo. I need to speak directly to Commander Addison Goss immediately.”

“Of course sir, there's a conference room just across the hall. I'll have the channel open by the time you're there.”

“Thank you Ensign.” He proceeded to the conference room. Something had returned to him, he noted as he walked. It was purpose. Whatever was about to happen something echoed deep in the wells of his person that this was his purpose.




(Thanks for reading guys! I hope you're enjoying the story so far. Your comments are always welcome.)
 
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Oh, no...now all those Cardassian lives are in danger, too! :cardie: :(

It seems like typical Federation politics, though...appeasement without regard to who pays the price. You'd think they would've learned from the way they sold out the DMZ borderworlds, but nooooo...

I really hope these guys can find out what the Romulans are doing before all those Cardassians end up dead or experimented on!
 
Very intriguing plotline you have here. Sounds like the good Admiral is going rogue-and for good reason. I look forward to more.
 
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