Chapter Four
In Main Engineering, an ugly situation was brewing.
“What’s the Captain playing at?!,” Lieutenant Reeves shouted, a small group of officers and crew members hanging off of his every word. “We’re dying down here and all that she can do is shoot garbage into space? Well, I’ve had enough! Who’s with me?!”
“We are!,” came the chant from his followers.
“Lieutenant, what the hell are you playing at? This is no time for mutiny!,” Liz Tennyson said as forcefully as she could while walking up to him. “The Captain knows what she’s doing.”
“It doesn’t look like she does from down here!,” Reeves said, sweat running down his reddened face and there was a manic gleam in his eyes.
As he tried to brush past her, Tennyson put a hand on his chest to slow him down. Reeves pushed her as hard as he could, knocking her to the ground. “Come on! Let’s get to the Bridge!,” Reeves shouted.
Within seconds, Engineering was a melee as crewmen scuffled with each other. Reeves looked on. Grinning wildly, he pushed Tennyson down again as she tried to return to her feet. As she landed hard on the deck, she winced in pain as she noticed the hydrospanner clenched tightly in his hand.
“Now then, I’ve had enough of you and your Captain!,” he shouted, raising the spanner above his head. “Time to… gagk!” He wheezed when a large dark hand gripped his neck and lifted him a few centimeters from the deck. The hydrospanner fell from his hand.
“Is this officer bothering you, Lieutenant?,” asked Crewman Dru’sk.
Liz had never been so glad to see the young Klingon. “You could say that,” was her reply.
With a deft movement, Dru’sk threw Reeves to one side. Then he brought up his phaser rifle and emitted a deafening roar. At once, everyone in the room stopped fighting and looked his way.
“Right. I’m taking this man to the Brig. I’ll be back momentarily. If Lieutenant Tennyson has any more problems, I’ll deal with them personally.” He gestured towards Reeves. “You, up!” With his rifle in hand, he marched the prisoner out of Engineering.
Tennyson clapped her hands. “Okay, people! The fun’s over. Let’s get back to our repairs.” For a moment, everyone stood there as if frozen in the headlights. Finally though, Ensign Wilker returned to his station. Seconds later, everyone else followed his lead. The moment of madness was over.
At least, for now.
* * * *
On the Bridge, Isabel Cardonez was sitting, slouched in her seat. Like everyone else, she was starting to manifest the first signs of radiation sickness. She was tired, irritable, and she felt nauseous.
“How long since we sent the signal?,” she asked wearily.
“Twenty-seven minutes, sir,” said an equally tired Kandro. An attack had hit him in the last few minutes but rather than the blessing that he had thought it would be, it only added to his discomfort. The headache that was usually manageable only exacerbated the other aches and pains that he was developing.
Cardonez nodded. “Get us moving, Lieutenant.”
Kehen gave her no argument. She simply manipulated her controls to push the Testudo, once more, into open space. Although all of them knew that it was psychological, there was a feeling of relief when they saw clear space again. It lasted for only three seconds.
“The Aora is still out there,” Huntington said,” bearing at zero-four-five, mark one-one-nine. Seventy thousand kilometers and closing.”
Cardonez sighed, her head dropping onto her chest. “Take us back, Lieutenant.” She tapped her combadge and asked,” How long, Doctor?”
In Sickbay, Doctor Hollem looked up from injecting another crewman with a vial of hyronolin. Every biobed was occupied and several crewmembers were laid out on the deck. “We have roughly forty minutes, Captain. Some of us will last a little longer. Say the Vulcans, for example, but at the most, only for an hour.”
“Thank you, Doctor.” Slowly, Cardonez stood up. Her head was hung low when she walked towards her Ready Room. Once she was inside, she walked over to the window and gazed outside. Below her, the planet looked like nothing more than the fires of Hell. Closing her eyes, she rested her head on the glass.
A few seconds later, the door to her Ready Room opened. She didn’t move a muscle since she was too tired to even inquire who it was. She heard footfalls heading towards the area of the room where the replicator was located. After a moment, she heard Adam Huntington say,” Two glasses of eliberry juice.” She turned around and found the Tactical Officer was sitting, smiling across from the front of her desk. There was a glass of juice in front of him and another glass in front of her empty chair.
She sat down. “Can I help you, Commander?,” she asked him, wearily.
Huntington took a sip of the pinkish juice. “I’ve been waiting to try that for days,” he said before he placed the glass back down on the table. “It’s a bit too sweet but I can see why you like it.”
“Commander?”
“Oh, yes. It was just a question, really. Well, two questions. First, why is it that you hear you refer to everyone by his or her first name at one time or another, except for me? Then, it’s all very formal. Lieutenant Commander Huntington or Commander Huntington or Mister Huntington.”
“We’re less than an hour from terminal radiation poisoning and you want to discuss why we’re not on first name terms?”
“Well, there’s one of the things that I wanted to discuss. It just seems strange. I thought it might be the fact that I’m older but then Commander Masafumi is older and you use his first name.”
“Well, I suppose, if I’m being honest, you intimidate me a little,” she admitted. She couldn’t believe that they were having this conversation now of all times. “You’ve had quite a long and illustrious career. I suppose I’m always worried that you’re comparing me to other Captains that you might have had.”
“Ah,” he said in a manner that implied that he understood perfectly. “Well, in truth, I do compare you with the other past Captains. I’m only Human after all.”
“You do?,” Cardonez asked nervously.
“Oh, yes, all the time. In fact, I’m comparing you now. Especially since you seem to be doing something that no other captain of mine has ever done. That brings me nearly to my second question.”
“Which is?”
“Why are you giving up?,” he asked, his smile gone now.
Isabel was taken aback and it took several seconds to find an answer. “I suppose because I can’t win. The Aora’s out there and we can’t get away.”
“I find it curious, having read a lot about your conduct during the war and that you considered ‘getting away’ in the first place. Your history suggests a more aggressive posture than that.”
“Yes. I’ll admit that during the war, I would tend to stand and fight but that was different. I had a crew of never more than forty. Now I have over a hundred and sixty-five people depending on me. I can’t just risk them on a foolhardy attack.”
“No offense, Captain, but those one hundred and sixty-five odd people are going to be dead soon unless you go on the offensive.”
“Don’t you think I know that!,” Cardonez barked, bringing her fist down hard onto her desktop. “Almost two hundred people are counting on me and I don’t know what to do next. Sixteen of them are already dead because I didn’t see the Aora as a threat. How many will I kill with my next brilliant command decision?,” she asked before calming down. “For the last few years, all I’ve felt like a fish out of water. I’m a soldier. During the war, I always knew what to do. Starfleet is now asking me to be an explorer and a diplomat. I don’t know how to do those things.”
“I disagree. You know how but you have to gain experience before you’re confident in doing them. That will come with time. I would suggest that, right now, the crew of the Testudo doesn’t need a diplomat or an explorer. They need a soldier.”
Cardonez smiled. Picking up her glass, she drained it in one long gulp. “That feels better,” she said. Whether she meant the drink or Huntington’s faith in her, she wasn’t sure. “We have torpedoes. How inaccurate is the targeting?”
“Very. You get me within point-blank range though and I won’t miss.”
“Thank you, Commander. I’ll be out in a minute.” When Huntington had left, she reached over to a small purple box that laid on her desk. Opening it, she stared at the contents for a few seconds. The silver cross bore a blue half-sphere at its center. Keeping the Pacifica Cross on her desk wasn’t arrogance. It was merely a constant reminder of her duties and responsibilities. She snapped the case shut.
All three Bridge officers snapped to attention when Cardonez strode onto the Bridge. Their spirits lifted slightly when they saw the determination in her eyes. She sat down in her command chair and tapped her combadge. “Cardonez to Tennyson. Liz, I want another load of debris in the Hangar Bay. You’ve got two minutes.”
“Aye, sir,” said Tennyson wearily.
“Captain, that didn’t work last time. Why should…” Kandro closed his mouth when Isabel raised her index finger in the air.
“Lieutenant, when I want an opinion, I’ll ask for it,” she told him. Rather than be offended, the Betazoid found comfort in the steel behind her words. “Answer me this. Would the Aora detect a probe set on passive scan?”
“Not the scan itself but they would detect the impulse engines easily and we would never receive a signal through all of this interference.”
“Don’t worry. The probe won’t be using its engines.” She tapped her combadge again. “Liz, I have an unusual request.”
“Go ahead,” the Chief Engineer said, her curiosity raising her spirits ever so slightly.
“I need some form of cabling that’s several kilometers long and capable of channeling data from a probe to our main computer.”
Kandro grinned. “Simple, yet effective,” he said and Cardonez winked at him.
“Well, we have several bundles of optical data wire. It’s only microns wide but it’s quite strong and it can carry a lot of data. We’ve got about fifty kilometers lying around in Cargo Bay Two.”
“Good. ring a length of it to a computer console in the Main Hangar Bay and the other end to a probe. Set it for passive scanning only before you place the probe in with the rest of the debris. How long?”
“Ten minutes,” Tennyson said, instantly.
“Do it.”
* * * *
Ten minutes later, the Testudo was close to the edge of the interference again with its aft section pointing outwards.
“We’re in position,” reported Kehen.
“Okay, Commander,” Cardonez said,” raise periscope.”
“Aye, aye, Cap’n,” the Tactical Officer said in his best pirate voice. In spite of the situation or perhaps because of it, they all laughed. The Hangar Bay released another load of debris. This time, a probe was nestled in amongst it, trailing a near invisible tether behind it.
Tense seconds passed by before suddenly, the computer intoned,” Warning. Fifteen minutes until fatal dosage.”
“Shut that off,” said Cardonez.
“With pleasure,” Kandro said. A moment later, the Operations Console chirped. “I’m getting sensor data. It’s working.”
Isabel stood up behind him. “Have you located the Aora?”
“Yes, here,” he said, pointing towards a schematic. “She isn’t moving, just scanning the area. They’re probably waiting for us to make a break for it.”
“Cut the tether loose. Zia, how long will it take to get us where we want to be?”
“We’re already on our way. Two minutes, sir.”
Cardonez sat back down in her chair. Activating the intership communication system, she began to speak to the crew. “All hands, this is the Captain speaking. In a few minutes, we’ll be going into battle. I can’t promise that we’ll win but I can promise you that the USS Testudo will not go down without a fight.”
All around the ship, crewmembers stood silently while their Captain spoke. In Sickbay, Doctor Hollem paused in his ministrations. In Engineering, a dozen people stopped what they were doing. In the Brig, Lieutenant Reeves sat with his head in his hands.
“We have a slim chance but even if we fail, we will die in free space with our heads held high, not hiding like frightened children. We have no shields. So it could be a rough ride. All crewmembers are ordered to evacuate to the innermost sections of the ship. Good luck to us all and if I don’t get an opportunity to say it again, it has been an honor to be your Captain. Cardonez out.”
In Main Engineering, Liz Tennyson smiled and said,” We’re going to make it.”
“How can you be sure?,” asked Ensign Wilker.
Tennyson’s grin widened. “Because the last time that she gave a speech like that, we were about to go in against a fleet of Jem’Hadar warships. Trust me. We’re going to make it.”
* * * *
“In position,” said Kehen.
“Stand by, everyone. Take us up.”
The Testudo began to rise, quicker than before. Surprise was their best ally now.
“Ten kilometers,” Kehen said. “Eight, six, four, two…”
“There!,” said Kandro.
The Testudo rose up less than five kilometers from the stern of the Aora. “They’ve spotted us,” said Kandro.
“Too late. Fire!,” ordered Cardonez.
“Torpedoes away!,” shouted Huntington. “Reloading.”
The five quantum torpedoes left the ship as one. Slowly they began to drift apart. By the time that they struck the Aora’s shields, they were several dozen meters apart.
“Their shields are down,” Huntington said,” but they’re returning fire.”
“Evasive maneuvers. Return fire!”
A phaser beam fired from the Aora’s stern away struck the Testudo on her port nacelles, releasing a cloud of hydrogen and warp plasma into space. As the ship maneuvered, another three torpedoes fired from the frigate and struck the science vessel’s port nacelle, vaporizing it.
“Got her!,” shouted Huntington. “She’s heavily damaged. She’s lost power to weapons and her impulse drive. There are hull breaches on every deck.”
Cardonez sighed. “Zia, set a course for Jor’Ka’Hail. We’ll come back for the Aora when we’re in better shape.”
“Captain,” the Tactical Officer reported with a tone of alarm in his voice,” I’m reading a power surge in the Aora’s warp core. It’s on overload.”
“Get us out of here!”
As the Testudo cruised away from the gas giant, the remains of the USS Aora disappeared in a violent explosion.
Epilogue
Captain’s Log, Stardate 54474.0;
We are still in orbit around Jor’Ka’Hail. The Zelket have been very helpful and Lieutenant Tennyson believes that we’ll be fit to leave within the next ten hours. We will proceed to the nearest Starbaser to complete the repairs. Doctor Hollem has confirmed that none of us received any permanent damage from our proximity to the radiation and the wounded are all recovering well, including Commander Masafumi who will be fit to return to duty in a few days.
Isabel Cardonez sat in her Ready Room. Liz Tennyson was with her when the door chimes rang. “Enter,” she called out.
Lieutenant Bill Reeves, looking more sane than the last time that Liz saw him, shuffled inside. “You wanted to see me, sir?”
“Sit down, Lieutenant,” said the Captain. “I won’t beat around the bush. Attempted mutiny is a serious offense.” Reeves’ eyes were downcast but he nodded that he understood. “The penalty is a court-martial and dismissal from Starfleet. There’s also the possibility of time in a penal colony.”
“I understand, sir,” Reeves said, looking up.
“I don’t think that you do. I’ve spoken lengthy with both Lieutenant Tennyson and Doctor Hollem. In this instance, I’m accepting the mitigating circumstances.” As Cardonez spoke, Reeves’ face brightened. “It was a highly pressured situation. In addition, you had just lost a friend. The Doctor confirmed that radiation sickness had a probable impact on your actions as well. In light of this, I’m entering a formal reprimand in your record but that’s all the action that I’m taking.”
“Thank you, sir.”
“Don’t thank me. If it was up to me, you would be off of my ship,” Cardonez said, coldly. “Lieutenant Tennyson spoke on your behalf.”
Reeves turned towards Tennyson “Thank you, Lieutenant.”
“That’s okay,” she said.
“Be under no illusions, Mister Reeves. I’ll be watching you. Dismissed.”
After Reeves had left the Ready Room, Cardonez moved from the chair behind her desk and sat down next to Tennyson. “Are you sure about this, Liz? I can still authorize a transfer for him.”
Tennyson shook her head. “I can’t hide from people like him. I have to learn to deal with them.”
“Okay, Liz, but if you change your mind?”
“I know,” she said before she left.
After a moment, Isabel followed her out onto the Bridge. Engineer, both Starfleet and brown-garbed Zelkets, were working on repairing several consoles. She walked over to Huntington who was standing behind the Tactical console.
“Captain.” He nodded.
“Commander, did you learn anything from the scans of the Aora?”
“Nothing more, I’m afraid. As far as the scans are concerned, the ship was deserted. There wasn’t enough data to indicate whether an AI of some kind was aboard.”
“Another mystery for Sector 29004,” she said with a smile. She turned to walk away but turned back after taking a few steps.. “Do you really compare me to your other captains?”
“All the time,” he said with a sly smile.
Cardonez grinned. “Look after the Bridge for me, Commander. I’m going to go check on my First Officer. Oh, and just one more thing.”
“Yes?,” Huntington asked.
“Thanks for the pep talk, Commander.”
“You’re welcome. And it’s Adam.”
“Thanks, Adam,” she said with a smile before turning back towards the turbolift.
The End.