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Star Trek: Into the Void - Season One

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Star Trek: Into the Void

Episode 09 - ‘Difficult Mission’

By Jack D. Elmlinger


Prologue

When Commander Yashiro Masafumi entered the Conference Lounge, the heads of everyone turned towards him. “Good day, everyone. Thank you for coming,” he said as he sat down at the head of the table.

He looked in turn at the five people seated around the ovoid conference table. On his immediate left side was Lieutenant Commander Adam Huntington, the ship’s Tactical Officer and Chief of Security. Aside from Masafumi, he was the only other person in the room who knew what was happening.

Next to Huntington was the Betazoid Operations Officer, Lieutenant Valian Kandro. Beside him sat Doctor Hollem Azahn, the ship’s Bajoran Chief Medical Officer. On the First Officer’s immediate right side was Lieutenant Junior Grade Louise Ramblin. She had been part of the Testudo’s Engineering Department but now she was the relief Operations Officer. Sitting next to her was Lieutenant Junior Grade Paul Carson. He was a well-built black Security Officer who was in his mid-fifties with short iron-gray hair. He had appeared to be incredibly intimidating the first time that the Commander had met him. Shortly after spending time with him, he had learned that Carson was a big softy at heart.

He was a rarity.

A man who had enlisted in Starfleet as an Ordinary Crewman and worked his way up to Chief Petty Officer before he had been given a field promotion to Ensign during the early days of the war. That commission had been made permanent shortly afterwards and he had recent;y been promoted again. He had been aboard Testudo for just a few weeks as Huntington’s new deputy.

The five officers were looking at him, expectantly. There was evident confusion on all of their faces, except for Huntington, of course. “Well, I suppose you’re all wondering why I’ve called you here today,” the Commander began with a weak smile. It was intended to break the ice but he knew as soon as he had said it that it would come off as patronizing. Captain Cardonez would have done it so much better, he mused, and for the millionth time in the last four months, he reflected that the crew of the Testudo had much more innate respect for the laidback Captain than for their uptight First Officer.

Well, if this doesn’t work, they may have to get used to me being in command, he ruminated, surprising himself with the clinical assessment.

He would have guessed that Lieutenant Kandro would have made a smartass response but in fact, it was Lieutenant Ramblin. In truth, he wasn’t too surprised. She had been the second on his list.

“Yes, I think we are. Especially since some of us were off-duty at the time,” she said with a more than sarcastic tone.

“Sorry.”

“I assume that this has something to do with the Captain?,” asked the Betazoid.

“You’re correct. How did you know?”

“Come on, Commander. One minute, we’re in orbit of Lekree. Next, we’re hightailing it away. Then you and Commander Huntington spend an hour in the Captain’s Ready Room and she’s nowhere to be seen. Where is she?”

Masafumi looked over at Huntington. He got the message. “The Captain is on Lekree,” the cultured Englishman said.

“How?,” asked Doctor Hollem. “I didn’t think that we had any away teams scheduled.”

“We didn’t. Not officially anyway. What I’m about to tell you is classified information. It does not leave this room. Understood?”

They nodded.

“Very well. The Captain and Lieutenant Dayle are undertaking a covert mission to examine Lekreeian society.”

“Why is that classified?,” asked Ramblin. “And why did she take the ship’s counselor along with her?”

Masafumi and Huntington looked nervously at one another as if they were hoping that the other would be the one to speak. Finally Masafumi did. “We were under special orders from Starfleet Command to investigate Lekree for cultural contamination. I’ve just spoken with Admiral Gavin who has cleared me to tell you this.”

“He approved the plan?,” asked Huntington.

“Yes.”

“What plan?,” asked Carson.

“First things first, Lieutenant,” Huntington said. “Commander?”

“Very well. Since we arrived in Sector 29004, we have had long-range probes examining each star system, especially those that are inhabited. Several reports that we’ve received from Lekree were quite worrying. When the Wellington visited the planet twenty-six years ago, they reported a thriving culture that, although comparable to the early twentieth century in terms of technology, was too far advanced in its philosophy. Its inhabitants had known peace for generations and they had never suffered a global conflict. It was the belief of Captain Stanislav that they would develop warp drive within a hundred years and become potential Federation members.”

“Just a hunch,” said Ramblin,” but I’m guessing our probes detected a change.”

“Indeed,” said Masafumi. “The few fragments that we detected from the planet’s communications indicated something wildly different than what Stanislav reported. For a start, there were indications of several small-scale conflicts between different nations. The planet’s differing states were all part of a Global Union. However, some of those nations seem to have broken away. It’s them who are in conflict with the rest of the planet.”

“Do we know what they’re fighting about?,” asked Hollem.

Huntington leaned forward in his seat. “It appears to revolve around this man,” he said, activating the viewscreen mounted on the wall and a tall, gaunt Lekreesian appeared. He looked old. His skin was chalk-white and mottled with liver spots. He had no hair and he looked like nothing less than a walking skeleton. Like all Lekreesians, he looked Human with the exception of the typical Lekressian nose which was bulbous and ridged with an additional nostril pointing upwards between the eyes.

“This is Coryphaeus Frinn. For the last twenty-five years, he had been the leader of the Global Union. He was an unimportant mayor but after a particular incident, that we’ll come back to shortly. He rose up to high office on the back of a paranoid and xenophobic new attitude amongst the Lekreesians. Those few nations that have broken away from the Global Union are more open and democratic.”

“So you’re implying that the Lekreesian changed a few decades ago, and I assume that the Captain is investigating for cultural contamination that the Federation could be responsible?,” asked Kandro.

“Correct,” said Masafumi. “Twenty-six years ago, the population of Lekree were shocked by the publication of a single image. Commander?”

Huntington tapped in another command and the face of Frinn was replaced by a grainy black-and-white image. “Ladies and gentlemen, the catalyst for Leeressian paranoia is proof of extraterrestrials.” The image was of a young dark-skinned Vulcan. His pointed ears were made more prominent by his close-cropped hair. He was clad in an old-style Starfleet uniform and he was walking near a copse of trees. Although he was standing straight at the camera, there was no sign of recognition on his face.

“Oops,” said Ramblin.

“‘Oops’ is putting it mildly, Lieutenant,” the Security Chief said. “Not only did this image provide proof of alien lien but it also suggested that they might be hostile. After all, they were skulking around the countryside, rather than walking up to the Powers-That-Be and say hello.”

“Who was he?,” asked the relief Operations officer.

“A member of the Wellington’s crew, an Ensign Rylek,” Huntington said. “It was hardly his fault. What was Stanislav doing, sending away teams down to the surface is anyone’s guess.”

“We sent four covert missions to the surface. Only the Captain, Commander Huntington, Lieutenant Dayle and myself were involved. On the fourth trip down there, the Captain and Mister Dayle were captured. As near as we can tell from monitoring their communications, there was an accident and someone spotted the Captain’s ears. Needless to say, the planet is in an uproar now.”

“So we go in and rescue her… them… Right?”

“It isn’t that simple, Lieutenant Kandro. Any action that we take is only going to exacerbate the damage done to the planet’s culture.”

“So we sit here and let them be killed or dissected or whatever the Lekreessians have planned?,” the Betazoid asked, his anger rising as he half-stood from his seat.

“Sit down, Valian!,” Masafumi said forcefully. He was slightly surprised when he did. “Under normal conditions, we would call for a Horizon team to try and clear up this mess.”

“Horizon team?” The Bajoran doctor looked confused.

“It’s not something that gets used very often. They are specially-trained individuals who try to solve crises like these. They’re named after the USS Horizon that was responsible for causing profound damage on the population of Sigma Iotia II. So much damage that Captain James T. Kirk was forced to take…” Masafumi paused for a moment, weighing up the best way to say it. “Unconventional means in order to try and repair the harm done.”

“Unconventional is one way of putting it,” Huntington said, smiling.

“The point is that thirty or so years ago, Starfleet set up these special teams to act in similar situations. If the Captain hadn’t been captured, we would have likely reported our findings and left them to it… but…”

“But the nearest Horizon team is over forty lightyears away. They’re on their way but they won’t be here for a week,” added Huntington,” and we’ve seen a planet-wide communication from Frinn, stating that the aliens will be executed in two days.”

“Can’t we just beam them aboard?,” Hollem asked, stating the obvious.

“That would do more harm than good,” Masafumi said. “Presently, Frinn has the populace whipped up into a frenzy and if those two ‘aliens’ were to suddenly vanish, it will only add to the planet’s paranoia.”

“What are we going to do then, sir?,” asked Carson.

“In the absence of a Horizon team, Commander Huntington has put one together. Congratulations.”

“Me? I mean us?,” said Ramblin.

“I don’t have time to check through the whole ship for candidates. I need officers that I already know. The four of you sprang to mind,” Huntington told them. “You have the option to refuse and no one will think any less of you if you do.”

The four officers remained seated. They looked nervously at each other and the Security Chief knew that if one of them said no, they would likely all follow. Fortunately, the herd instinct was at work in his favor because no one had the nerve to say no. All of them remained silent.

“Excellent. I assume that you’re all in, then?”

“In on what exactly?,” asked Kandro.

“Our mission is twofold. First, we have to rescue Captain Cardonez and Lieutenant Dayle in such a way that we don’t damage Lekreesian society any further. Second, we have to convince them that they have been wrong these last twenty-six years and that, in fact, aliens do not exist. Thereby, robbing Frinn of his hold over the planet and hopefully restoring it to something like its former self.”

“What?!,” Hollem balked at them. “You’re talking about deposing a planet’s government! That can’t be right! The Prime Directive – “

“Does not apply in this instance,” Masafumi cut in the middle of the Bajoran’s tantrum. “The only reason that Frinn is in power is because the Federation made an error, a quarter of a century ago.”

“Shouldn’t we do more harm than good?,” asked Kandro.

“Perhaps but every indication is that Lekree will boil over into global war soon,” said Huntington. “The paranoia has them looking over their shoulders and distrusting each other.”

“So what are we going to do?,” asked Ramblin.

Huntington hit another command and another picture appeared on the screen. It was of a younger, portly Lekreesian, his hair was wild and red. “This is Master Dau Reeve. He is the Head of Security for the Global Union. He’s also a staunch supporter of Frinn and incredibly paranoid. We’re going to convince Reeve that Frinn fabricated the whole alien conspiracy, twenty-six years ago. We’re going to retrieve the Captain and Lieutenant Dayle, giving Reeve the distinct impression that they never existed in the first place.”

“Hasn’t he seen them?,” asked Hollem.

“No,” Huntington said, bringing up another picture. This time, it was of an imposing fortress. Its brown walls reached several stories into the sky. What windows that were visible were little more than tiny slits, glowing dimly. Large metal doors stood at the base of the structure. “This is Glakow Prison where our officers are being held. Our people are being held in maximum security on the top floor. Frinn is so paranoid that he has only let his bodyguards and his personal medical staff have access to them. Although he has promised to show them to Reeve before they die. They have been paraded on camera but very few people have seen them in person.”

“That paranoia will work to our advantage,” said Masafumi. “From what we can tell, Reeve is actually a patriot who believes that he’s doing what’s best for his people. If we can persuade him, it should lead to Frinn’s downfall.”

“Glakow Prison is protected by a primitive electromagnetic field that is designed to prevent electronic surveillance. We can scan through it easily but it had the unfortunate side-effect of preventing us from getting a firm transporter lock. So we’ll have to smuggle pattern enhancers in so Testudo can beam us out.”

“When do we go?,” asked Carson.

“I’ll brief you fully in five hours. I recommend that you get some rest. The next twenty-four hours are likely to be quite tiring. Are there any questions?”

Ramblin was smiling. “Why do I get the feeling that if we’re caught or killed, Starfleet will just disavow any knowledge of our existence?”

“Not at all,” Adam said with a wry grin on his face. “It just means that the real Horizon team will have its work cut out for them when it gets here.”
 
Chapter One

Six hours had passed by and Commander Adam Huntington’s motley Horizon Team was in Sickbay.

“Does it have to hurt so much?,” Louise Ramblin asked after Hollem finished affixing a fake nose over her real one. The Doctor already had one in place, hiding his ridges.

“I’m sorry but the adhesive has to be strong enough to hold the prosthetic in place,” he replied before he wandered off to begin work on Paul Carson’s nose.

She was still sitting on the edge of a biobed, nervously touching her new nose when Valian Kandro, also sporting a new nose, hopped up next to her. “Wow,” he said, staring intently at her,” do I look that ugly now as well?”

Ramblin looked down her nose at him. “Trust me. You look uglier.”

Meanwhile, Hollem was holding Carson’s prosthetic in place while the adhesive bonded with his skin. “How are the ears?,” he asked.

Carson lifted a hand up and felt along the top of his left ear. The edge was now ragged and scarred. “It doesn’t hurt but it feels weird. Are you sure that you can put it back the way it was before?”

“Positive,” said the Bajoran. “I’m afraid I’m going to have to simulate scarring and stitching around your fake nose.” He picked up a dermal regenerator and a laser scalpel. He activated the scalpel and leaned in. As the warmth of the scalpel approached his skin, the Security officer lifted a hand up and grabbed the doctor’s wrist.

“All things being equal, Doctor, I’d like another shot of that pain suppression before you do that!”

“I’m sorry,” Hollem said, putting the dermal regenerator down and grabbing a hypospray. He gave Carson a hot to his left cheek and then waited for a moment. “How’s that?”

“Numb,” Carson managed to squeak.

Hollem leaned in close again and he began to burn irregular dots on the real and fake skin around the nose. After a few seconds, he put the scalpel down and used the dermal regenerator to partially heal the wounds.

“Okay, that should prevent itching. I doubt that any Lekreesian doctor will be able to identify it as recent work. They should be fooled.”

Kandro was still sitting next to Ramblin, smiling and swinging his legs back and forth. “At least, I got the better outfit,” he said, gesturing to his tight purple trousers and matching baggy smock-like tunic.

Ramblin sneered at him. “There must be someone else that you can bother right now?”

Secretly, she envied him for the outfit that he was wearing. Lekreesian women’s fashion was a tad too outrageous for her. The dress was composed of myriad strips of a green leather-like fabric that was linked by thin fibers. She wore boots made out of the same material. The dress was far too short and figure-hugging for her but that explained why the Betazoid was in no trouble to leave her alone. He was enjoying the view far too much.

“Nah. No one else is as fun to bother as you are.”

The doors to Sickbay opened and Commander Huntington walked in. He already had a nose in place and he was wearing clothing similar to Kandro’s, except his was a very dark blue. In one hand, he held a ragged-looking bag and in the other, a cluster of metallic tubes.

“I see that everyone’s ready to go,” he said with a wink.

“As we’ll ever be,” Hollem said. His outfit was a similar color to the Betazoid but his trousers were looser and his tunic was adorned with metallic symbols that apparently marked him as a Lekreesian physician.

“Here you go, Paul,” Huntington said, handing the bag to Carson. Unlike everyone else, Lieutenant Carson’s outfit was poorly made and composed of a ragged brown material that was similar to the bag as if they had both been cut from the same cloth.

Carson looked inside. “Cool. It looks faded as well. Made out of local materials, I take it?”

“Oh, yes,” said the Security Chief. “The replicator had some trouble with Lekreesian galot hair but it managed it eventually. Short of using an electron microscope, they would be hard pressed to see it as anything other than twenty-six year old clothing.”

Carson nodded and reached inside the bag, removing the only other item, a dirty glass bottle half-filled with a murky red fluid.

“This is galot wine, right?”

“Yes. Doctor, Hollem, have you analyzed the sample that I took on our first visit?”

“Yes,” he said with a raised eyebrow. “I still can’t believe that you acquired an alcoholic beverage on a covert away mission.”

Huntington smiled. “I’m just preparing for the next time that Admiral Gavin comes around. So what do you make of it?”

“Vile stuff. Very alcoholic with several elements that could prove to be quite harmful to Humans after a few drinks.” He picked up another hypospray. “This should mitigate against those effects though and it should also prevent you from getting inebriated,” he added, giving Carson another shot. “Take this before you walk into town.” He gave him a small white pill. “It will taint your breath for forty-eight hours with the smell of galot wine.”

Carson winced. “Why do I get the scummiest assignments?”

“Natural talent?,” Adam asked with a laugh.

He moved across Sickbay to Kandro and Ramblin. “Here,” he said, handing the three metal tubes to her.

She hefted them up in her hands. “The modified pattern enhancers?” He nodded. “Liz made them with all of the modifications that I asked for?”

“She wasn’t able to use as much delirium as you requested in its construction but the effect should be the same.”

“Cool,” she said, smiling weakly. “We might pull this off yet.”

“Trust me. I know the kind of things that Horizon teams have to attempt. This will be easy by comparison.” He looked around. “Is everyone clear on the plan?” Everyone nodded and murmured their agreement.

Huntington tapped his combadge. “Huntington to Bridge.”

“Kehen here.”

“Lieutenant, you may begin your flyby. We’re on our way to the Transporter Room now.”

“Understood. Kehen out.”

“Okay, ladies and gentlemen, it’s time to move out. Let’s go. The rest of our gear is waiting in the Transporter Room.” With that said, he led his troops out of Sickbay.

* * * *

When consciousness returned, Isabel Cardonez tried hard to fight it. Sleep was warm, safe, and she knew on a subconscious level that the waking world wasn’t the happiest of places at the moment. Unfortunately, Lieutenant Dayle’s gentle shaking of her forced her awake. She opened his eyes to see him kneeling by her bunk and considered that, a few short weeks ago, the thought of waking up next to the handsome Lareyan would have felt good. Thanks to the situation that they were currently in, she was disappointed to see him and not a rescue party.

“You’re awake at last,” he said. “Thank goodness.”

“Ow!,” she said, leaning up on her elbows. Her ribs ached. So did her face. The beating had been amateurish but hard.

“I don’t think they broke any of your ribs,” he said with some concern etched on his face.

Cardonez sat up. “I think it looks worse than it feels. I don’t know, considering that there is a dictatorship of sorts on this planet. I would have expected far nastier interrogation techniques. I’m almost disappointed.”

“How can you joke? They beat you half to death.”

“I could have stopped it earlier if I told them what they wanted. Sometimes having a stubborn Romulan streak is a pain in the ass.” She smiled, the bruises on her cheek causing her to wince slightly.

“Captain, I… I have to tell you that I didn’t hold out for very long,” Dayle said, guilt mixing in with the concern on his face now. She had guessed that he hadn’t resisted. His perfect complexion was testament to that.

“It’s okay, Counselor. This kind of thing isn’t exactly in your job description. What did they ask you and what did you tell them?”

“They asked for my name and where I was from. They also wanted to know if I was related to the entity that they observed twenty-six years ago. I pretty much told them the truth. I don’t understand why they beat you up when I told them everything.”

“Fascists are funny creatures. They often won’t believe anything unless they’ve beat it out of you. I pretty much told them the same things. I tried to explain that our intentions were peaceful but I don’t think that they believed me.”

“Did they give you any idea what they’re going to do to us?”

“Oh, yes,” Cardonez said. “Apparently, in two days’ time, we’re going to be executed live before an auditorium full of Lekreesians.”

“Oh. Well, if they kept us locked up, then they would have gotten a nasty surprise in three months anyway.”

“How so?”

“That’s when I finish my masculine cycle and my gender changes to female.”

“That soon?!,” she asked with surprise. She had been giving more thought to actually asking him out on a date during the last few days. “I thought that you were years away.”

“No. It’s been almost five years since my last change so I’m due.”

“And at what point does your gender ‘fix’ itself as either male or female?”

“Well, it mostly occurs around the age of forty among Lareyans. My family has a history of being late developers though. So I;m probably looking at about forty-two.”

“You’re thirty-two now. So you’ll be ‘female’ for five years. Then ‘male’ for another five. Will it ‘fix’ before you change again or not?”

Dayle shrugged. “Who knows? It doesn’t make a lot of difference to me.”

“I suppose I’m looking at this with a very Human attitude but won’t it be weird? I mean, you’ve been a guy for the last five years. How do you adjust to suddenly being a woman?”

“You just do? Bear in mind that, even though, the change in three months will be my fourth, it’s just what I am.”

“But your whole personality must change…”

“That’s a good thing! I don’t know how you mono-gender creatures stay sane. I’d get bored if I were just a male or a female for my entire life.” Suddenly Dayle’s eyes narrowed. “You know for a counselor, I can be quite blind to the truth sometimes.”

“What do you mean?,” asked Cardonez. Her stomach tightened and she knew that he knew how she felt about him.

“I mean, you’re asking me all of these questions to take my mind off of our situation. Well, it won’t work. What else did they say to you?”

Cardonez relaxed a little. “Not a lot. They mentioned dissecting our corpses several times and a few of the guards promised to give me a fun time before execution.”

“Fun time?,” he asked. “I don’t understand.”

Cardonez’s gaze darkened. “Yes, you do, Lieutenant,” she said gravely.

“Oh, I see,” he replied softly.

“Don’t worry. Those bozos are in for a surprise. I’m a lot stronger than I look.” It was false bravado and she knew it. She would put up a fight but they outnumbered her and they had weapons. There was no need to tell Dayle that though.

She stood up and her ribs were now sending darts of agony through her body. Walking over the window, it was dirty and so covered in gunk that she couldn’t see a thing through it. The cell that they were in was small and square-shaped. The two cots were the only furniture in the room apart from a bucket in the corner. The door looked old and rusty but it looked very solid as well.

“Are we going to try and escape?,” Dayle asked.

“You bet your ass we are. I just need to figure out how. With any luck, Masafumi will send a rescue party after us but given the lack of time that we have, we might not be able to wait for them.” She smiled at him again. “Don’t worry. I’ve been in scrapes like this before. One day, I’ll tell you how I escaped from a gang of Ferengi pirates when I was Security Chief aboard the Galaxy.”

* * * *

Aboard the Testudo, the makeshift Horizon team had arrived in their assigned Transporter Room. Chief Leong, the regular transporter technician, was nowhere to be seen. However, there was a replacement.

“Wow, I see we’re traveling in style now,” Kandro said with a low whistle upon seeing Commander Yashiro Masafumi standing behind the transporter console.

He bowed. “It seemed sensible to keep this within as small of a group as possible.”

“How long until we’re in range?,” Huntington asked.

Masafumi examined the console in front of him. “Kehen is taking it slowly. I don’t think that the Lekressians have the technology to spot us but it’s better to be safe than sorry. We’ll be there in a few minutes.”

“Good. Commander, could I have a word?”

“Of course.”

“Uh… outside?”

Masafumi nodded and Testudo’s First and Second Officers stepped outside. As the doors closed shut behind them, the four officers remained, casting uneasy glances at each other.

“Now what do you suppose that was all about?,” asked Hollem.

“It’s none of our concern,” said Carson. “Come on. Let’s check our gear before we beam down.” He dropped down to his knees beside the three holdalls arrayed on the deck.

* * * *

Outside in the corridor, Huntington and Masafumi faced each other. After waiting a moment for a young Ensign to walk past them, the First Officer asked,” What did you want, Lieutenant Commander?”

“I wanted to thank you for going to bat for this plan with the Admiral. I know you think that it’s a bad idea.”

“I may think that it’s a bad idea, but unfortunately, it is the only idea we have that won’t completely destroy the Lekreesians and their culture. I am not about to allow the Captain to die. I made that point perfectly clear to Admiral Gavin.”

“Did we take much persuading?”

“He took considerable persuading. Starfleet Command’s position was that only a fully-trained Horizon team with weeks of reconnaissance work would stand any chance of pulling this off.”

Huntington looked confused. “I don’t understand. How did you get the Admiral to agree?”

Masafumi’s face remained impassive. “I informed him, in no uncertain terms, that he either allowed you to undertake your mission or I would locate the power source for Glakow Prison’s electromagnetic field and use the ship’s phasers to knock them out. Then I would beam the Captain and Lieutenant Dayle back to the ship.”

“And he believed you?”

“Of course,” said the First Officer, a slight smile playing on his lips. “After all, I wasn’t lying.”
 
Liking Masafumi more all the time. interesting critter design on the Lekreesians and their culture. Very familiar - fascists are rather predictable.
 
Chapter Two

The Away Team materialized in a small clearing within a dense forest. Adam Huntington immediately opened his tricorder and scanned in a circle around them.

“I hope there are no small children with cameras,” said Valian Kandro.

Huntington smiled. “No, but I am detecting several woodland creatures. Hopefully, none of them are photojournalists.” He closed his tricorder, slipping it back into his bag. “All of you know your assignments. Lieutenant Carson, you head off first. The town of Perik is three kilometers to the north. You know what to do when you get there.”

Carson nodded.

“Doctor Hollem and Lieutenant Kandro, you’ll make it to the road and acquire a ground vehicle. Remember to give Paul plenty of time before you make your move.”

“Sure,” said Kandro.

“That leaves us to rescue the Captain and Counselor Dayle,” he added, smiling at Ramblin.

“I guess so,” she replied. “I still don’t see how we’re going to get into the prison though?”

“Trust me,” said Huntington,” I have a fair amount of experience with this kind of thing. All of you know where to be when Testudo makes its next run into orbit. Remember that if all goes pear-shaped, you have subcutaneous transponders in the soles of your feet so that Testudo can keep track of you. If all else fails, you each have a map reference for an emergency beam-out point. None of you knows the others’ coordinates so that information can’t be acquired if you’re captured.”

He looked at each of their faces. So young… He couldn’t remember ever being that young and inexperienced. It felt like he had been doing this kind of work for his entire life. He knew that he had chosen well. They would pull it off or they would, at least, give it a damned good try.

“I know that none of you have ever really done anything like this before, apart from Lieutenant Carson, but I know that you’ll do your best. Doctor Hollem, you’re play-acting but remember that you’re acting the part of an actual doctor. Just be yourself. Mister Kandro, trust your senses. They’ll guide you well. The best con artists that I’ve ever met were empathic and it never hurts to know when you’re going too over the top with a mark.”

“‘Mark’?,” Kandro asked him.

“I’ll explain later,” the Security Chief said. “As for you, Lieutenant,” he continued, looking at Ramblin. “Leave getting into the prison to me. All that you have to worry about once we’re inside is getting through the security systems. For a talented engineer like yourself, four hundred year old technology shouldn’t pose too much of a barrier for you.”

* * * *

Coryphaeus Frinn sat alone in his palatial office, staring at a strange device that had been found on one of the two aliens. It was two pieces of some strange material hinged together. When it was opened, it emitted strange beeping noises and lights flashed on its interior surface. His scientists couldn’t make heads or tails of it but they thought it might be a communication device of some kind. He agreed. The alien spies must have a way to communicate with their mothership. The other items were safely locked away in Glakow Prison with his planet’s new guests.

He was jolted out of his thoughts by the buzzing voice box on his desk. He flipped a switch on it. “Yes?”

“Coryphaeus, Terrant is here to see you,” came the voice of his secretary.

Frinn closed the alien device and placed it in an opening on the top of his desk before he flipped another switch. A panel came out, covering it up. “Send her up,” he said.

A moment later, the door opened and a squat, strong-looking woman entered. Her hair was cut brutally short and matched her vindictive appearance. She was dressed in tight blue trousers and a blue smock, pinned to her left shoulder was the symbol of the Lekreesian Global Union: a red arrow superimposed on a black circle and edged with silver.

“Coryphaeus,” she said, bowing slightly.

“Terrant, what news do you bring?”

She gave him a cruel smile. “My colleagues and I have interrogated the prisoners. They admit to being from another world but they claim that they’re only here as explorers.” She snorted. “The female is strong but the male is a weakling. He told us all that we needed to know but we interrogated the female anyway.”

“Have the doctors made a full assessment of them?”

“Yes. However, because we’re keeping them in such seclusion, only your personal doctor has seen them. He confirms their alien origin. The female had ears like the previous intruder. Also, she only has one heart and her blood is green.”

“Green?,” Frinn said with distaste. “What of the male?”

“His blood is like ours but he only has one heart. We found lenses over his eyes. When we removed them, they are like the eyes of a Runwar Beast. Doctor Yevit believes that he will know more after a full autopsy.”

“Excellent. We will need to know their weaknesses if we are to prevent their invasion. Is there anything else?”

Terrant shifted uneasily on her feet. “Only that Dau Reeve has been asking to see the prisoners again. His demands are getting more aggressive.”

Frinn smiled, his face appearing like nothing more than a grinning skull. “Leave Reeve to me. He is loyal but he has ideas above his station. Go now and guard the aliens well. This will prove to the doubters once and for all that the ways of our ancestors are outdated. Lekree must be protected.” He spat venomously.

Terrant bowed her head once more and left.”

Frinn flicked the switch on his voice box again. “Get me Security Headquarters at Perik. I need to speak with Dau Reeve.”

* * * *

It had taken Paul Carson just over an hour to reach the outskirts of Perik. It was a medium-sized town that seemed to be overburdened with industry. As he walked through the streets, the air was heavy with pollutants and he was glad that he didn’t have a tricorder to find out what he was breathing. Lekreesians bustled past him in the streets that looked like anyone that you’d see on any other industrialized world. The Lekreesian equivalents of ground vehicles, cars and trucks, drove past at dangerously high speeds and shops were everywhere.

He noticed two other things. First of all, the image of Ensign Rylek seemed to have achieved an almost cult-like status. He saw it on posters, on books, and it was even printed on clothing. The second thing that he noticed was that people swerved to avoid him as he passed by.

He didn’t really blame them. He hated how he smelled as well. The jog to Perik had made him somewhat sweaty. In addition, he had taken his pill and his breath now reeked of the foul-smelling Galot wine. He had also poured half of what he had over his clothing to increase the stench. As a final clincher that he had been living rough, he had discovered some animal droppings that he had smeared over his boots and trousers. He had decided that after all of this was over, he would, at least, be taking a day-long shower.

He finally reached his destination - Security Headquarters. Now all he had to do was get inside and attract the attention of Reeve who was now walking out of the building and towards a parked car.

Damn!, Carson thought.

Thinking on his feet, he began to jog towards Reeve. “Hey!,” he called out, slurring his words. “Hey, buy a drink of Galot wine for a veteran.” The Universal Translator that he wore was of Ferengi design and inserted well into his ear.

As he approached, Reeve looked up with annoyance evident on his florid countenance. “Get out of here, you drunken swine, before I arrest you!” He had reached his car and he had a hand on the door handle.

Carson came to a halt, a meter or two away from him, pleased to see the look of disgust on Reeve’s face when he smelled his foul odor and looked up and down before him. “Listen to me,” he slurred, pointing a grubby finger at him. “I’m a veteran. I save the planet once so you should treat me with more respect.”

Reeve reacted, pushing him away. For his part, Carson used the push and fell backwards onto the pavement behind him. As he, he swung the bag off of his shoulder and he was pleased to hear a satisfying smash when it hit the pavement next to him.

“Oh, no,” he sobbed. Carson had done a fair bit of amateur dramatics in his time and he was a master of turning the waterworks on. He sat up and rummaged through the bag. “You broke my bottle!,” he cried. “That was my last bottle.” He kept his gaze down on the bag, reluctant to spoil the illusion of a man heartbroken by the loss of alcohol by looking up at the Chief Security Officer. For a moment, he was sure that he was going to ignore him but he was wrong.

Reeve glared down at the smelly creature sitting on the ground, crying. “You deserved that!,” he shouted. “Now get out of here or it won’t just be your bottle that gets broken!” With his threat made, he was about to turn back to his car when he noticed that the other man was pulling something out of his bag. It looked like an item of clothing of some kind. It was maroon in color with some insignia on it. It looked very old and faded but there was something very familiar about it.

Then it suddenly hit him where he had seen it before.

Carson finally looked up. “Okay, okay, I’m going.”

Reeve was looking down at the clothing item in his hands. His eyes were opened wide with shock. He smiled inwardly. The old-style Federation tunic in his hands appeared to be doing its job perfectly.

* * * *

Adam Huntington and Louise Ramblin had spent forty-five minutes on a hill, overlooking a winding road that led to Glakow Prison. They were sitting in a small clump of trees, hidden from anyone who might be looking up from the road below.

“How much longer do we wait?,” she asked.

“Not long,” he answered, pointing his binoculars back along the road. There was nothing coming. “We have to get the right vehicle if we’re going to pull this off.”

“I still don’t see how we’re getting inside. We have no identity papers.”

“Trust me. They won’t even see us enter.”

“Do you always keep your plans secret from the people that you’re working with?”

“Usually. Old habit. The last thing that you want is a colleague who can give the whole game away under torture.”

“I wish you would stop mentioning the word torture. It’s stunting my morale.”

Huntington put his binoculars down and glanced at her, a guilty smile on his lips. “Sorry.”

“That’s okay. So do you really think that we can fool them?”

“It’s been done before as I said. Lots of times in dire situations than this.”

Ramblin wasn;t convinced. “How do we know that it will really help them? Suppose we convince them that aliens don’t exist? What happens in a hundred years or so when they develop spaceflight and go out there to discover real aliens? Won’t it piss them off to leave that they were fooled?”

Huntington sighed. “Honestly, I don’t know. I do know that the Lekreesians seem to have been nice people before we screwed them up. If we can restore them to something like how they were, I’m all for it. Maybe they will be somewhat annoyed in the years to come but the alternative is that either they destroy themselves or they eventually spread out into space as xenophobic and paranoid aggressors. Anyway, history will have to be the judge of what we do here. First and foremost, our job is to rescue our people.” He turned back towards the road and trained his binoculars in the distance. “And our jobs just got easier. There’s a truck coming. Only a driver as far as I can tell.” He put the binoculars down and smiled. “Showtime, Lieutenant.”

Ramblin sighed. “I’m going.”

She stood up and carefully walked down the hill to the road. It wasn’t easy since her boots weren’t made for hill climbing. Making it to the road, she readied herself, pulling up the hem of her dress slightly to show off a bit more leg.

I can’t believe I’m doing this, she mused as she shook her head to fluff out her shoulder-length blonde hair. As the truck turned around the corner and approached her, she suddenly got worried. Would a guy really stop his truck to help a damsel in distress just because she was in a leather mini-dress? She considered most of her ex-boyfriends and decided that a guy probably would. Sticking her chest out with newfound confidence, she waved her arms in order to attract the driver’s attention.

As it slowed to a halt, she considered that it wasn’t like any truck that she had seen before. The cab at the front was fairly generic as was the tarp-covered section at the rear. Between these two was a curved section, a few meters long, that appeared to house the engine. The truck had four wheels in the usual space but she saw another wheel was located underneath the truck. She assumed that it ran directly off of the engine driving the vehicle and the four other wheels were for maneuvering only.

The truck had come to a stop now and the driver climbed out of the cab. “Afternoon,” he said, walking towards Ramblin. He was dressed much like Kandro and Huntington but his clothes had seen better days and they were a dirty brown color. As he approached her, he made no effort to hide his gaze as he admired the scantily-clad young woman before him with a lascivious smile on his lips.

Ramblin ignored her desire to punch him and allowed herself to go all ditzy. “Oh, thank goodness that you stopped!,” she gushed. “I’ve been out here for hours since my car broke down.”

“Well, you’re lucky that I happened along. I’m on my way to Glakow Prison and I can give you a ride there. Climb aboard,” he said and he began to turn back towards his cab.

“Wait!,” she said, stopping him from turning around after she saw Huntington sneak up on him. “I… uh, I was hoping you could take me to the nearest town so I could call my brother to come and get me.”

The driver shook his head. “I’m sorry but I have a schedule to keep. They’ll let you contact your brother at the Pris–” He was cut off when a stun blast slammed into his back and he fell face forward onto the road.

“Ouch!”

“He’ll be fine,” Huntington said with an old-style Type-II phaser in his hand.

“How did you sneak up so quietly?”

Huntington smiled. “It’s amazing the things that one learns by teaching at the Academy,” he said cryptically. “Now then, if the doctor is correct, he’ll be out for, at least, ten minutes. I’m going to steal his cargo. You go and collect our gear. Please change out of that ridiculous outfit.”

“Just when I was starting to like it too,” Ramblin snorted before heading off.

After a second, Huntington jogged around to the back of the truck. With his phaser in hand, he looked underneath the tarp, just in case there was anyone there. There wasn’t and so he pulled the tarp all the way back and pulled the tailgate down. The rear of the truck was half-filled with metallic-looking boxes. He pulled one of them down and he was surprised at the weight. So surprised by it that it fell to the floor, smashing open and revealing that it contained small tins of some kind. He assumed that they were rations or something of that type. For the purposes of his plan, it didn’t really matter. He grabbed another box, careful of its weight this time, and carried it over to the tree line before dropping it to the ground, scattering tins everywhere. Satisfied that this would convince the driver that his cargo had been carried off by hijackers, he returned to the truck and used his phaser to disintegrate the rest of the cargo in a red flash.

“Okay, so you’ve convinced him that his cargo was stolen. How does this help us again?,” Louise asked him, emerging from the trees, dressed identically like Huntington now and carrying a dark holdall.

He smiled slyly. “It’s simple. Now he’ll drive us into the prison when he wakes up.”

Ramblin rolled her eyes, certain that even once this was all over, she still wouldn’t have a clue of what had happened.
 
Fun that there are some universal humanoid constants... drunken veterans, leggy damsels in distress, and, of course, greedy dictators...

Thanks!! rbs
 
Chapter Three

The Desk Sergeant manning the front desk in the Perik HQ was surprised to see Dau Reeve re-enter the building, minutes after he left. He was more surprised to see him dragging a homeless man with him.

“Chief Reeve, can I help you?,” he asked.

“Yes,” Reeve said with a dark look on his face. “Place this man in a cell and let no one see him here unless I order it. Then get Doctor Levin to examine him.” He handed Carson over to the bewildered guard.

“Sir, weren’t you on your way to see the President?”

“Yes, I was, but our esteemed leader will have to wait for the moment,” he said before he stormed off.

Reeve proceeded through to his office, the homeless man’s bag in his hand. When he reached it, he hurried past his secretary’s desk and locked the door behind him before he sat down and removed the clothing within. It was obviously a hoax, of course. At least, he thought it was. The clothing felt like Galot hair. He had grown up on a farm and he recognized the texture. That only proved that it was made on Lekree, not who had made it. He thought about the homeless man’s face with scarring all around his nose as if it had been reattached.

He shook his head, trying to clear it of the thoughts that were starting to form from there. No, it was too absurd to contemplate. He put the jacket back in the bag and placed it on the floor behind his desk. Out of sight but not out of mind.

* * * *

“Are you sure you wouldn’t like me to try?,” Hollem Azahn asked from the passenger seat of their stolen car.

“No, I wouldn’t. You won’t have any better luck than me,” Valian Kandro replied sharply. They had stopped the car, forty-five minutes ago and drugged its driver, tying him to a tree. Now the driver was awake and looking on, bemused, as the two Starfleet officers tried in vain to start the engine.

“This is ridiculous,” Hollem said. “These people are four hundred years behind us and you can’t even figure out how to drive one of their vehicles?!”

“I’m sorry if ancient driving skills weren’t covered at Starfleet Academy. I only enjoyed four years of the student life. Not eight like some others.”

Hollem eyed the Betazoid coldly. “It never ceases to amaze me that it take four years to learn to press all of those buttons that allow the ship to run itself.”

“I’ll have you know that it takes a lot of skill to be the Operations Manager for a starship.”

“Oh, really?,” Hollem asked him. “And there was me figuring that you spent most of your time at the Academy, chasing girls.”

Kandro stared at the Bajoran for a moment. His face was a hard mask and for a second, he thought that he had gone too far. Then the Betazoid smiled. “Actually, I didn’t start chasing girls until my fourth year.” Then he laughed.

Hollem laughed as well and the two men finally gave into the ridiculous nature of their predicament.

“Maybe you should try? There’s nothing else that I can think of.”

“To be honest, I’ve watched everything that you’ve tried and I can’t think of anything else.”

“Well, we have to do something,” said Kandro. “Carson is probably being prodded and probed by now.”

For a long moment, the two of them looked at each other. After a while, something dawned on both of them at the same time and their gaze simultaneously turned to the hapless motorist tied to the tree. He had been almost amused at the interplay between the two carjackers. Even if he didn’t understand what they were talking about. Now he remembered the precarious predicament that he was in and began to worry at the strange looks on his captior’s faces.

“Whmff?,” he asked through his gag.

* * * *

The soldiers guarding the gates of Glakow Prison were used to the daily food delivery and although the driver was driving quite fast, they attributed it to the fact that he seemed to be running a little late. So they opened the gates to let him through. Once inside the main gates, the truck swerved to a halt and the driver almost fell out of his cab.

“Help! Help!,” he cried out, running towards a high-ranking Guard Captain that he recognized.

“Ferid, what’s wrong?,” the Guard Captain asked.

“I was hijacked, just a kilometer away. They stole everything!”

“What do you mean everything? When did this happen?”

The driver was breathing heavily and the words tumbled out at high speed. “Not long ago. Half an hour, maybe. This woman flagged me down and said that she needed a lift. The next thing I knew, I was waking up on the ground and there was no sign of anyone. I checked the truck and my cargo was gone. Nothing left but a few boxes that they dropped when they cleaned me out.”

The Guard Captain thought for a moment before barking his orders. “Sergeant, I want three cars worth of troopers ready to move in two minutes, fully armed!” He turned back towards the driver. “Get yourself into the canteen. They can’t have gone far. Don’t worry. We’ll catch them.”

The Guard Captain spun around on his heels and marched off towards a waiting car that was already filling up with armed men. The driver watched him go before trudging off towards a nearby building that was just off of the courtyard.

* * * *

Meanwhile, underneath the truck, Louise Ramblin hung in agony, suspended from the underside by several high tensile ropes on one side of the drive wheel. “Can we let go yet?,” she whispered painfully.

On the other side of the drive wheel, Adam Huntington hung intently, reading the information displayed on his tricorder. “Not just yet,” he replied, nonchalantly while he watched the lifesigns gather around them in several locations and then begin to move off.

“My back is killing me!,” she seethed.

“Maybe you should make some more noise so it’ll be the guards killing you. So hush!,” he replied in a cold whisper.

Five minutes went by until he was satisfied that there was no one close enough to the truck to witness their arrival. Slipping his tricorder back into his rucksack, Huntington slowly lowered himself to the ground.

“Lieutenant,” he whispered,” stay put for the moment. I’m going to scout around.”

“Typical,” she mumbled under her breath. She had decided that she was never, ever, going on an away mission again. Dressed like a tart, and then suspended from a moving vehicle wasn’t her idea of fun.

Huntington rolled out from under the truck and quickly leaped up to his feet. He proceeded to walk away from the truck towards a nearby door, glancing half-heartedly around him as he went. The courtyard was large and several vehicles were standing idle. There were a few people milling around, dressed much like Huntington and Ramblin but no one was taking any notice of him. The main gate was now closed and there appeared to be three other exits leading off from the courtyard. One of them was a loading bay. The others were single doors. From the scans that Testudo had made, he knew that the single door nearest to where he stood was the best way into the prison without passing by lots of armed guards.

Strolling back towards the truck and pretending to drop something, he bent down quickly to pick it up. “Now, Lieutenant,” he said. “As quick as you can.”

Ramblin proceeded to extricate herself with all of the grace of a swan. That is, a swan that was trapped in a fishing net. As she struggled to untangle herself, Huntington resisted the urge to start whistling, nervously, keeping his eyes on the other occupants of the courtyard. She finally fell to the ground and rolled out before rising unsteadily to her feet.

“Sorry,” she said as he cast his eyes skywards in disbelief. “Look, I’m new at this kind of thing.”

“I know, Lieutenant. Now let’s get through that door,” Huntington said, gesturing towards the entrance to the prison’s interior.

They walked over to the door. Always prepared for the obvious, Adam tried the handle but it was locked. There was a well-used keyhole midway between the handle and the top of the door and he gestured towards Ramblin.

Sighing, the Lieutenant pulled two tools out of her pocket and inserted them into the lock. As she worked, he nervously eyed the rest of the courtyard. “Try to look less like a thief and more like an honest prison guard who’s just having trouble with the lock,” he said out of the corner of his mouth.

Ramblin gave him a hard stare “You want me to treat this how I would treat this if I was supposed to be here?”

“Yes,” Huntington said,” act normally.”

Rambin smiled. “You’ve got it, Commander.” Suddenly, she kicked the door. “Open, you piece of garbage!,” she snarled while she was still wiggling her tools in the lock.

“Lieutenant, what are you doing?,” asked a panic stricken Huntington.

“You told me to act normally,” she said, her face contorted while she tried to force the tools to do their work. “I’m acting normally.”

“When I said act normally, I meant normally for a normal person, not for…” Huntington was cut off by the sound of the lock clicking.

Ramblin smiled and slipped her tools back into her pocket. “See,” she said before opening the door and jumping with surprise when she discovered a large Lekreesian standing in the doorway. “Oh!”

“I’m sorry,” came the booming voice of the giant. “Did you have trouble with the lock?”

“Yes,” answered Huntington.

He nodded. “Typical. Some days, I can’t get it to open the first time. We’ve asked for a new one, seven times and no one’s fixed it so we put up with it. New here?”

“Yes,” added Ramblin.

“Though you should really get your badges before someone turns you in,” he said, gesturing to the silver circle pinned to his left shoulder.

“Thanks. We were told that we’d get them in a day or two.”

The giant nodded before he turned sideways and gestured for them to pass by him. After they did, he walked through the doorway into the courtyard and called out,” See you around,” over his shoulder.

“See,” Ramblin said when they were alone,” I fit in perfectly around here.”

Huntington said nothing. He merely cocked an eyebrow.

* * * *

“We’re going to die here, aren’t we?,” Dayle asked, sitting on a bunk with his knees drawn up to his chin.

Captain Cardonez stopped examining the window for the tenth time and sat down on the end of his bunk. Reaching a hand out, she gently touched one of his. “I think that we might,” she said. No one had entered the cell since she had awoken. They have had no food or water since then. Obviously, the Lekreesians had no intention that their captives should be healthy for their execution. “I’ve been over every square inch of this cell and there doesn’t seem to be anything that I can use to help us.”

“Maybe Commander Masafumi will come and rescue us?,” he asked her, a pleading look in his eyes.

The Lareyan wasn’t strong and she usually hated that in a man but there was something that was so vulnerable and lovable about him. She wanted nothing more than to protect him. Even so, she couldn’t shield him from the truth.

“Look, if they were going to rescue us, I think they would have done it by now. Masafumi has probably made a judgment call that rescuing us would damage the Lekreesian culture even more. It’s probably that the decision was made even higher up than him. The truth is, I can’t blame them.”

“Oh,” was all that he could say.

“Look, if anything else, I’m going to try and overpower them when they come for us. We might not get very far. I’ve rather be shot in the back, trying to escape than helpless and tied to a chair or however they do it. Are you with me?”

“You bet,” Dayne said but his voice lacked conviction.

They sat in silence for several seconds before he spoke again. “Captain, can I ask you something?”

“Sure.”

“I get the impression that you don’t like me very much. I was wondering why?”

“What makes you think that?,” she asked nervously.

“Well, you seem to get uncomfortable when I’m in the room. In fact, sometimes I think that you deliberately avoid me aboard ship.”

Cardonez bit her lip. Should I lie or should I tell him the truth?, she wondered. “Ah, what the hell…,” she muttered.

“Captain?”

“Look, the thing is… it’s not that I don’t like you.” She couldn’t look him in the eyes and she knew that she was blushing. “In fact, it’s quite the opposite.” She looked up now.

“Oh.” Dayle had a confused look in his eyes that suddenly changed when he realized what she was saying. “Oh! I really am a bad psychologist. I never see anything coming anymore.” At least, he was smiling. Maybe that was a good sign. “Why didn’t you say anything?”

“Well, because we’re both in positions where people confide in us. I didn’t think that the crew would take to a counselor wo was on more than first name terms with the Captain and vice versa.”

“I suppose that makes sense. I guess we’ll never know if it could work now, hmm?”

“I guess not. Wait, are you saying that you’re interested in me too?”

He smiled. “Well, you’re very attractive so I probably wouldn’t have said no to a date or two.”

“Typical,” Cardonez said. “Every time that I meet a nice guy, he’s either about to turn into a woman or we’re going to be executed. Story of my life.”

* * * *

“Maybe you should slow down a bit!” Hollem Azahn had to shout to make himself heard as the convertible sped along a deserted road at high speed.

“No can do,” Valian Kandro replied. “We should have picked up Carson, ages ago. We can’t afford to waste any more time.”

“I just think that driving at one hundred kilometers per hour when you’ve only had ten minutes of tuition from a frightened native might be dangerous!”

Kandro shook his head. “Trust me. We’ll get there in one piece,” he said as the car continued to weave from left to right.
 
Chapter Four

Paul Carson was lying flat on a bunk, trying hard to appear semi-conscious. He was beginning to wonder where Kandro and Hollem were and what to do if they didn’t show up soon. A physician had been in and gave him a rudimentary exam that mainly involved examining his scars and checking his heartbeats. Fortunately, the Bajoran Chief Medical Officer’s work appeared to be holding up under scrutiny and the device that he had inserted underneath the skin that simulated a second heartbeat was working fine.

As Carson contemplated his next move, Reeve was standing outside the cell with the physician.

“Well, what can you tell me?”

“Not a great deal without getting him to a hospital and having some radiography photos taken. It definitely appears as if his nose had been reattached at some point, although I can’t tell how long ago that this was done or even why. He had some more scarring on the tips of his ears…”

“His ears?,” Reeve asked, curiously.

“Yes. Again, I don’t know what caused it…”

“Could it have been the removal of something stitched onto the ears?,” Reeve asked.

“Well, perhaps. I don’t see why anyone would do that though.”

Reev thought for a moment. “Arrange for a transfer to a hospital and give me a full rundown. I think that there’s a lot more to this man than meets the eye.”

The doctor smiled warmly. “You don’t think that he’s another alien altered to look like us, do you?”

“No, but then don’t you find it strange that, in a quarter of a century, the aliens have never invaded?”

“They’re here now,” said the doctor.

“Yes, they are. Just in time for Frinn to rally his cause when it seems to be fading.”

“I don’t quite follow you.”

“Never mind,” said Reeve. “I hope that I’m just being paranoid. I’ll be in my office.”

* * * *

As Kandro and Hollem walked into the front office for the Perik Security Headquarters, the man behind the front desk looked up. “Can I help you?,” he asked in a very unhelpful manner.

“Hi,” Kandro said, flashing a smile that he usually reserved for attractive girls,” my name is Kandro and my companion here is Doctor Hollem. We’ve just arrived from the city of Pentath.”

“That’s a long way away. What’s your business here?”

“We work at the Pentath Asylum. Several days ago, one of our patients managed to escape and we have reason to believe that he might head this way.”

“Why?”

“Why, indeed,” Kandro said, fumbling for an answer before he gestured towards his companion. “Doctor Hollem, perhaps you could explain?”

“Well, uh… it’s a little known condition called Valian’s Syndrome. The patient believes himself to be a famous person with wealth and beauty that’s irresistible to the opposite sex.”

“No one like that has come in here.”

“Really?,” asked Hollem before shaking his head sorrowfully. “Mister Kandro, perhaps you could show him the image of poor deluded Carson?”

Kandro removed a small black-and-white image of Carson from his pocket and placed it on the desk. “Are you sure that you haven’t seen him?”

“Why, yes. He’s in our cells in the back.”

“Oh, wonderful,” said Kandro. “If you’ll release him into our hands, we’ll be on our way.”

“I can’t do that. I need to let Security Minister Reeve know that you’re here. He can authorize your patient’s release.” As he spoke, his hand moved towards a voice box on the desktop.

“That won’t be necessary,” the Betazoid said, a small pistol was now in his hand.

“What?!,” was all that the desk sergeant had time to utter before he pulled the trigger and a small puff of air propelled a tiny dart into the man’s cheek. Within seconds, he was unconscious.

“I still prefer a phaser but it’s a nice drug all the same.”

“Thank you,” said Hollem. “Shall we go find the Lieutenant?”

Kandro pulled a tricorder out of his pocket. “I’m picking up his subcutaneous transponder. He’s not far.” Slipping the tricorder back into his pocket, he went around the desk and firsked the unconscious sergeant. “Valian’s Syndrome, indeed?,” he said with a grin.

“I’m sorry. It was the best that I could do on short notice.”

“Thanks. That almost makes it worse.” The Betazoid continued to search the sergeant. “Ah ha!,” he said as he grabbed a handful of keys. “This way.” He wandered over to the door that led to the interior of the Headquarters building. With his own pistol now in his hand, Hollem followed him.

* * * *

At Glakov Prison, Ramblin was busily picking her third lock of the day. “I can’t believe this has been this easy so far. The security here is a joke.”

“Not really,” Huntington said with his back to her while he watched the corridor behind them. “People are the same all over. Show them the obvious and they believe that it’s true. A man wakes up next to his truck and finds that his cargo is missing. Ergo, his first thought is that he’s been robbed, not that there are two aliens hanging underneath his vehicle. It’s the same thing here. A guard sees two strangers who are dressed like prison guards and he believes that they must be new guards. You would be amazed with the places that I’ve got into, just by wearing a pair of glasses and carrying a clipboard.”

Ramblin looked up at him. “Who do you think you are? James Blonde?”

“You mean Bond, and no. I could never live up to his fictional escapades. What’s taking so long?”

“This lock was double-pinned but I’ve got it now,” she replied before the door swung open and they walked through the doorway into a large antechamber. In the distance was an elevator. “We’re taking the elevator, right?”

Huntington nodded and they walked across the open chamber, nodding as they passed guards who were going back and forth. Once they were inside the elevator, the Security Chief checked the control panel. “Thirteenth floor, it is,” he said, pushing the button marked thirteen in the Lekreesian numeric.

“High Security Wing. Access code, please?,” came a cracked voice from a speaker inserted near the panel.

Huntington reacted quickly. “I’m sorry. I meant to push Twelve.”

“I wish you idiots would stop doing there,” came the voice again before the line went dead.

Huntington pushed the button for the Twelfth Floor and the elevator began to slowly move. “Quickly check to see if you can override that and get us up to the Thirteenth Floor.”

Ramblin nudged him aside and grabbed a flat tool from her pocket. Levering the panel off, she examined the mess of wiring inside. “Wires. How quaint,” she said while she started to prod her through the wires with her tool, looking for the one that she wanted.

“Third floor,” called out Huntington.

“I’m working on it!” Ramblin traced the wire that she wanted back from the panel to a junction box. “Ah, a triple feed junction box with anti-sabotage detection. Give me your phaser.”

He handed the weapon over. “Eighth floor.”

She set the phaser to a stun setting and fired at the junction box which proceeded to short circuit.

“I like it that you know what you’re doing?”

“Yeah,” she answered him while she handed his phaser back to him. She grasped the blue wire and yanked it out of the junction box. “The junction box prevents you from pushing the Thirteenth button without a signal going through to that floor. It’s designed to trip an alarm if you bypass it but I short-circuited the detector. We should be all right.”

“Should be?,” Huntington quizzed her.

Ramblin shrugged. “If you wanted perfect, you should have brought Liz. I’m unconventional.”

“That’s exactly why I chose you and not Lieutenant Tennyson. Twelfth floor.”

Ramblin pushed the panel back into place. The doors opened, revealing a dank corridor that led off into the distance. There was a gate blocking the corridor off, a few meters away from the door and there was a small station on the life side of the gate. A lone guardsman who looked bored was sitting behind it. He looked up when the lift doors opened.

“I’m sorry. Wrong floor,” the Security Chief said, punching the button for the thirteenth floor. There was no voice this time as the lift began to rise. He took out his phaser and set it to wide-beam stun. “There’s no time for anything fancy. We have no idea how many guards that there might be so keep your weapon handy.”

She took out a small dart gun that was identical to the ones that Hollem and Kandro had. “How come you get the phaser anyway?”

“Simple. It’s keyed to my palm print. Anyone else who tries to use it and it’ll self-destruct. Same thing with my tricorder. Here we go!,” he snapped as the lift stopped and the doors slid open.

There were three guards standing outside the door. They turned when the lift doors opened but all that they could remember seeing was a flash of crimson light before they lost consciousness.

“Disable the lift,” Adam said and Louise pulled the panel off and ripped a handful of wires out.

“What now?”

Huntington had moved over to the guard station and found the control panel that activated the gate. As it opened, he checked his tricorder. “There are only two Lekreesian lifesigns on this floor. Both of them are located in a room that also contains the Captain’s and Dayle’s equipment. Let’s move.”

As she passed through the gate, he hit the button again and dashed through before the gate closed. Once through it, he turned his phaser on the gate control panel and fried it.

* * * *

Lieutenant Carson sat up when he heard a commotion outside his cell. As the door opened, he saw Doctor Hollem and Lieutenant Kandro were standing over several bodies.

“Coming?,” the Betazoid asked him.

“Oh, yeah,” he said before he followed them out.

* * * *

The room with the only other Lekreesian on the thirteenth floor appeared to be a laboratory of some kind. Eager not to waste time, Huntington stepped inside and stunned them both before they had a chance to spot him.

He found a partially-dismantled communicator and gathered up the parts. He quickly located the second combadge and took it too. He finally found a tricorder and several blood samples that related to the two aliens. He took them as well.

“Is everything okay?”

“No. There’s only one tricorder here. There’s no sign of the other.”

“Should we go looking for it?”

“No. We have to keep to the plan. Let’s get to the Captain.”

* * * *

Reeve stood in the doorway of the open cell. “How are the men who were shot?”

“Recovering, sir. Whatever was used on them wasn’t harmful,” the doctor replied, standing next to him. “The desk sergeant that they shot first, said that they claimed to be from Pentath Asylum. I’ve contacted Pentath and they’ve never heard about them or about an escaped patient.”

“Someone’s cleaning up loose ends. I intend to get to the bottom of this. Sergeant!,” he called out down the corridor.

A young sergeant ran up to him and saluted. “Yes, Minister.”

“Prepare a car. Coryphaeus Frinn is on his way here. When he arrived, we’ll both go to Glakow.” As the young man hurried off with his instructions, Reeve glanced at the doctor. “I might not have been paranoid enough.”

* * * *

Captain Cardonez and Counselor Dayle hadn’t spoken much since she had confessed her attraction to him. It was like both of them had become shy about revealing anything else. When she heard a key in the lock, she braced herself. She was tired and hungry but she was prepared to channel what little strength that she had left into a frontal assault on whoever came through that door. She wasn’t prepared for that person to be Lieutenant Commander Huntington though.

“I’m sorry for not calling beforehand, but we thought that we’d take a chance on you being home,” he said with a grin as he entered the cell. Lieutenant Ramblin came in, right behind him.

“Hi, Captain. Counselor.”

“Commander, I’ve never been so glad to see anyone in my entire life!,” Cardonez said. “I can’t get out of this cell soon enough.”

“In that case, I apologize,” Huntington said before shutting the door and locking them in before he proceeded to melt the lock with his phaser. Then he melted the eyehole in the door as well.

“Commander?”

“Trust me, Captain. It’ll be worth it.”
 
Epilogue

As their car pulled up into the courtyard, Frinn and Reeve exited the vehicle and walked up to the guardsman who was in charge. “We heard on the radio that there has been trouble,” the Security Minister said.

“Yes,” the guardsman said before he led them through the main doors and towards the antechamber that housed the lift. “The lift stopped working, a short while ago, and we lost contact with the thirteenth floor. We sent men upstairs and discovered that several of our guards were unconscious. Further investigations indicated that the cell holding the aliens has been locked from the inside and the lock itself has been melted.”

“They’re still in there, correct?,” asked Frinn.

“Oh, yes,” said the guardsman. “There’s no way that they could have gotten past us. As I explained, the door was clearly locked from the inside so someone had to be in there.”

“Obviously, their alien friends have come to rescue them and they’ve been trapped. See, Reeve? Your fears have proven to be groundless. Soon, we should have more prisoners.”

“We’ll see,” Reeve said as they entered the lift. The panel had been jury-rigged to enable them to use it. Soon they were rising towards the thirteenth floor. “How soon before your men are through the door?”

“Not for long now.”

* * * *

Inside the cell, all four Starfleet officers were standing inside an imaginary circle that had three pattern enhancers forging a boundary around them.

“Shouldn’t we turn them on?,” asked Dayle.

“Not just yet,” said Ramblin.

“The outer casing and most of the components are composed of a substance called delirium. It’s usually a pretty tough and inert plastic alloy. When you put any kind of current through it, it begins to break down at a cellular level. Once we activate these babies, they’ll only work for about twenty seconds. After that, they’ll dissolve into a pile of ash.”

“And the Testudo won’t be here for another ten seconds,” Huntington said, checking his tricorder. “My plan wasn’t supposed to go this close to the wire. Sorry.”

“That’s okay,” the Captain said. “I’m just glad that you came at all.”

* * * *

Minister Reeve and President Frinn were outside the cell door now. Crouched down by the lock was a guardsman using a welding torch to burn through the lock. “Just a few seconds more, sir,” he reported.

“Then we’ll see what’s in there,” Reeve said.

“What’s the problem, Mister?,” Frinn asked him.

Reeve swung a small rucksack from his back and took out the faded Starfleet tunic. He tossed it towards him. “This is. It was found in the possession of a man whose face bore scars conducive with surgery that had been carried out, many years ago.”

“I still don’t follow,” Frinn said, examining the tunic.

“That man was abducted from my headquarters less than an hour ago by unknown individuals who I believe were working for you. I believe that there were never any aliens and that you concocted the entire scheme in order to drum up support for your own political gains.”

“That’s ridiculous!,” he shot back at him as the guards around them looked on in confusion.

“Is it?,” Reeve smiled. “Or did you fake an alien, twenty-six years ago and you’re performing an encore now?”

Frinn’s skeletal face was becoming flushed. “When the occupants of that cell are killed, dissected, and I have the proof that they’re not from our world, I will have you stripped of your position and charged with treason.”

* * *

“Okay,” Adam Huntington said when his tricorder beeped,” that’s the signal, Lieutenant.”

Ramblin quickly went around and activated each enhancer. Tense seconds passed by as the tips glowed blue and she began to worry that they would begin to disintegrate before they would be transported out.

Then, suddenly, the four of them began to dematerialize.

* * * *

“Done!,” the guardsman said and moved aside so that two of his comrades, armed with submachine guns, could move it and kick down the door. They moved inside, sweeping their weapons left and right. The room was completely empty.

“I don’t understand?!,” Frinn said, moving into the cell. “Where are they?”

Reeve stepped through the door behind him. “Perhaps they were never really here,” he said, a pistol now in his hand. “Guards, place the President under arrest.”

“No… no… wait!,” Frinn shouted, frantically. “The alien devices! We still have them.”

The guardsman looked uncomfortably at his feet. “They’re also missing.”

Reeve placed a hand on his shoulder. “Don’t worry, Guardsman. We’ve all been deceived here. He and his accomplices will pay.” He trained his gun on Frinn. “Move.”

“Wait!,” he shouted. “I have one of the alien devices in my office. This is obviously an attempt by the aliens to rescue their people but they can’t have known about the device that I had. That’s the proof. We just have to get it.”

“Very well,” Reeve said, his tone turning dark. . “We will drive to your offices and see this device. Be forewarned though; if it isn’t there, I will likely execute you where you stand. You have led us far enough from our traditions as it is.”

* * * *

As they rematerialized on the transporter platform, Captain Cardonez noticed that Commander Masafumi was smiling from his location behind the transporter console. Off to one side, she saw Doctor Hollem, Lieutenant Kandro and Carson. The security officer looked like he needed a bath more than she or Dayle did. They were all smiling.

“Come on, Captain. I need to get you and Lieutenant Dayle to Sickbay.”

“Wait a moment,” Huntington said. “I could only find one tricorder. The Lekreesians must have the other one. With that one still in their hands, the mission will have still failed.”

Masafumi was still smiling. “This tricorder?,” he asked, holding a battered tricorder up in his right hand.

“How?,” asked Louise.

“Whoever was examining it foolishly activated its communications function. It was easy to spot once we were in orbit. Since there was no one detected near it, I beamed it aboard.”

Adam laughed. “Well, only time will tell if we did enough. Let’s get to Sickbay.”

The bedraggled officers left the Transporter Room and began their journey to Sickbay, oblivious of the startled looks that they were receiving from the officers and crew members that they walked past.

Isabel walked next to Dayle. Leaning in close, she whispered in his ear. “Lieutenant, if you’re interested, would you mind having dinner in my cabin tomorrow night?”

The Lareyan smiled. “I’d love to, Captain,” he whispered in response and she was happy to notice that her stomach flipped for the first time in days and it wasn’t from hunger.
 
“Very well,” Reeve said, his tone turning dark. . “We will drive to your offices and see this device. Be forewarned though; if it isn’t there, I will likely execute you where you stand. You have led us far enough from our traditions as it is.”

Sweet justice for being right at the wrong time and being the wrong person to be right... Definitely a James Blonde flick you've got going here..

Thanks!! rbs
 
And here's the next story...


Star Trek: Into the Void
Episode 10 - ‘Into the Middle of Things’
By Jack D. Elmlinger


Prologue

Captain’s Log, Stardate 54772.7;

We are currently orbiting the Zelket homeworld of Jor’Ka’Hail as a prelude to an invitation to join the United Federation of Planets. At the invitation of our hosts, I have allowed the crew the opportunity to take shore leave on this beautiful world. Unfortunately for my two most senior officers and myself, this will be a working holiday.



Captain Isabel Cardonez sighed contently, deciding that if all meetings were like this, diplomacy would be much more appealing. She was sitting in a large pool of crystal clear blue water, her arms spread back behind her, holding onto the smooth white edge. The pool was located on a patio outside of the Grand Lan’Yiet’s palace that sat on a cliff top overlooking a large city of golden spires and pale domes. A few meters away on the other side of the pool, Arlam-Nevu, leader of the Zelket, floated serenely with a smile on his lips.

She looked up into the near-perfect sky which was a bright blue that was only marred with a few tufts of pure white clouds. “So it never rains?,” she asked him.

“Rarely,” he replied, his voice soothing and intelligent belying his imposing visage. Like all of the Zelket, his skin was a dark bronze in color. His head was hairless but white ridges of bone ran over his skull and also swept out from under his deep red eyes. “That is why the Shel’dry Pool is such an important ritual for my people. In the centuries before we discovered replicator technology, water was highly prized. One could bestow no greater honor than meeting with guests in the Shel’dry Pool.

“It is certainly a pleasurable custom to retain,” Commander Yashiro Masafumi said, sitting by Cardonez’s left side.

Cardonez was quite amazed by his nonchalance. Her normally stoic First Officer had taken to this informal meeting like a duck to water. He wore nothing but regulation Starfleet swimming trunks that were maroon in color like her own one-piece swimwear. She had her hair tied back in a ponytail and Arlam-Nevu had been fascinated by her pointed ears which were the only physical hint of her mixed Romulan-Human heritage. In contrast to Commander Masafumi’s relaxed mood, her Second Officer, Lieutenant Commander Adam Huntington seemed to be more reserved than usual and he sat low in the water to her right as if he was hiding his body from the sun.

“We appreciate the gesture that you’re showing us. I think that it bodes well for increased relations between your people and the Federation.”

Arlam-Nevu smiled, his sharp teeth glinting in the bright sunlight. “As I have told you many times, Captain. We are an open and curious race. However, our spiritual beliefs mean that we must wait for others to discover us.”

Cardonez nodded, knowing what he meant. The Zelket didn’t utilize warp drives, believing that it harmed what they called the ‘Spirit Web’ where their ancestors resided. Because of that belief, the entire Zelket solar system was shrouded in a subspace-dampening field that prevented anyone from using warp engines or even subspace communications within their territory.

“It still surprises me that you welcome visitors when the only way that we can reach you is only by using warp drive and, in your beliefs, damaging the Spirit Web,” she said, having learned, months ago, that the Zelket valued an honest approach.

“We accept the right of others to walk their own path,” was his reply. “In the hopes that one day, their path might intersect with our own and that we might walk together.”

“If we walked together, surely that would mean that we would be imprisoned within our own star systems?,” asked Huntington.

“Indeed,” said Masafumi. “Your beliefs seem to be somewhat at odds with each other. You wish to meet new species and yet, you hope for a day when no one will be able to travel between the stars.”

Arlam-Nevu shrugged. “We of the Zelket have been fortunate. Our dealings with other species have been peaceful and enlightening. Can you say that it always is? Do you think that the Bajoran people were enlightened by warp drive?”

“That’s one example out of hundreds,” Cardonez said. “What happened to the Bajoran people was terrible but I could give you numerous examples of where a planet has been enriched beyond measure by contact with other species. Before Earth encountered the Vulcans, we were a divided race that almost destroyed itself.”

“There is also the benefit of racial survival,” added her First Officer. “How many lifeforms have been winked out of existence because of disease or environmental collapse? If Earth was destroyed tomorrow, Humanity would survive purely because of our ability to transplant ourselves to other worlds.”

Arlam-Nevu held out his hands with his palms outstretched. “You make fine arguments in your favor, but the Zelket do not frown on traveling to other worlds, only on the method of accomplishing that travel. Why, we have several ships on route to other planets now.”

“You do?,” asked Huntington. “At sub-warp speeds, they’ll take years to reach anywhere.”

“Years that can be spent in contemplation and study.” Arlam-Nevu smiled. “Does one always have to take the quickest path? Can’t one just enjoy the journey?”

“You have us there,” Isabel said with a smile. “I must tell you the story of the Tortoise and the Hare someday. Back to the business at hand, though. As I have said before. The Federation would be most interested in having the Zelket as a member world.”

“I’m afraid that I do not see what is to be gained from formalizing relations between our people. No Zelket would want to join Starfleet and we do not need military assistance. We are quite capable of defending ourselves.”

“Surely an exchange of technologies and ideas…,” Masafumi began to say.

“... could be realized without us joining the Federation,” finished Arlam-Nevu.

“Is it something you could take to your people to decide?,” asked Cardonez.

He shook his head. “I was elected because they trust me to speak for them. We have no desire to join your Federation. We would have no objection, however, to a less formal exchange. Federation citizens would be welcome here and we would be happy to serve as a port for Federation ships needing to resupply but we value our neutrality too much to side with anyone.”

“That’s a shame but it’s not unexpected. The Federation would be happy to have any sort of agreement with a race as advanced and peaceful as the Zelket.”

“Thank you, Captain. Perhaps now we can relax and enjoy the serenity of the Sheldry Pool?,” Arlam-Nevu asked with a smile.

Cardonez closed her eyes and let herself slip underneath the water. Just before her head disappeared from view, she said,” Now that sounds like a great idea!”
 
Chapter One

Testudo moved with deliberate slowness which was little more than drifting in high orbit above the yellow planet below. As the New Orleans-class frigate passed over the only substantial body of water on the planet below, Lieutenant Valian Kandro sighed.

He was sitting in the Captain’s chair, ostensibly in command, although there was little to be in command of. Testudo’s Bridge was quiet and almost deserted. Apart from the Betazoid, the only other officers on duty were the ship’s helmswoman, Lieutenant Zia Kehen, and Ensign Pamela Tilmoore standing at the Tactical station. He desperately wanted to be down on the planet’s surface with the rest of the crew but his duty shift wasn’t due to end for another two hours and he was bored rigid.

When the turbolift doors opened with a swish, he was grateful for the distraction.

Lieutenant Liz Tennyson, the ship’s Chief Engineer, swept onto the Bridge with her hands clenched tight into fists and a scowl on her face. Without a word, she came over and bounded down into the First Officer’s seat.

“And I thought that I was pissed off today,” Kandro said with a smile. He was trying to lighten the mood because he sensed that Liz was even angrier than she appeared to be. “What’s up, Liz?”

Liz took a deep breath and composed herself. “It’s just him!,” she spat out venomously.

“Bill Reeves, I take it?” Kandro’s Betazoid senses were telling him that was correct, even before she nodded. He had learned, long ago, to fake a reaction to a person’s response and not just their emotions. “What’s he done this time?”

“It’s what he won’t do. He won’t take shore leave.”

“Well, apart from being insane, what’s the problem?”

Tennyson put her head in her hands. “It’s not that, necessarily. It’s the fact that he won’t follow my damn orders. He says that he’s got repair work to complete on the warp manifolds and now is the best time to do it. He wasn’t even being obstructive. He was being enthusiastic. So why am I so pissed off?”

“Uh, would you like us to leave?,” Tilmoore asked from above them.

“Yeah. I mean, if you want, we can end our duty shifts early and crack on with the sightseeing.” Kehen smiled.

Liz smiled. “Sorry, guys. I shouldn’t be airing personal problems in public.”

Kandro looked around. “It’s hardly public and let’s be honest now. Reeves has managed to annoy most of the crew at one time or another. We’re all friends here. Just don’t go airing any problems over the shipwide intercom.”

“Thanks, guys. I think I’ll just stay up here for a while if no one minds?”

“It’s fine by me,” said Kandro.

“And us,” said the Yulani. “It’s nice to have another girl on hand to defend us from Lieutenant Testosterone here!”

“Oh, great. Now I’m outnumbered three to one,” Kandro said, grinning.

Tilmoore leaned forward and rested her chin on the Tactical console. “Funny. Alone with three girls. I would have thought that was a fantasy of yours.”

“I tried it once. I didn’t particularly like it,” he said. “Kidding,” he added a moment later when Tennyson’s mouth dropped open. “What with ‘Pick on Valian Day’ anyway? Things can’t get any worse.”

And then a moment later, they did.


****


Cardonez had just climbed out of the pool. She had forsaken a proffered towel because the sun was so hot that she knew that she would be dry in minutes anyway. The pool was empty now. Arlam-Nevu was consulting with an aide to one side and Masafumi and Huntington were drying themselves off with large fluffy towels. As they finished, she saw that the Commander slung his towel over his shoulder while Huntington had wrapped his towel around his waist like a sarong. Inwardly, she smiled, never realizing that her Chief of Security was so bashful.

“I think that went quite well,” Yashiro said when he joined her.

“Me too,” she replied. “I didn’t think that the Zelket would have any interest in joining the Federation but, at least, we’ve made a friend.”

Masafumi turned to look at the magnificent vista. “They are a wonderful race. Warm, spiritual, and friendly. I could get used to their laid-back lifestyle too.”

“Doesn’t anyone else find it odd that such a peaceful race thinks that it’s well-prepared to fight off any attack without assistance?,” asked Huntington.

Isabel laughed and asked,” Always thinking tactically, Commander?”

He smiled. “That’s what I’m paid for, Captain.”

“We get paid?,” Cardonez asked with mock surprise.

“I hate to interrupt this witty repartee but can anyone else see that?,” Masafumi asked, still looking out over the city.

“What?”

“That… The air is flickering,” he replied, pointing off into the sky.

Cardonez and Huntington followed his gaze and noticed what he meant. About twenty meters from the clifftop, the air seemed to shimmer. For a moment, they simply stared at it. It was Huntington who first realized the implication.

“Everyone get inside!,” he called out before grabbing his comrades by the arm and pulling them in his direction towards the palace.

As she was led along, Cardonez asked,” Commander, what the hell is wrong?”

“I believe that is,” said Masafumi, looking over his shoulder.

The three of them stopped and turned around. Where the air had been shimmering, there was a ship decloaking. Each of them instantly recognized it. It was roughly thirty-five meters long and sunlight reflected brightly off of its highly polished silver body. Twin warp nacelles hung beneath its flattened and curved body. There were no windows or markings of any kind marring its smooth surface. So there was no way to know if it was the same ship that had brutally murdered Linda Grady on Cassius Five but it clearly belonged to the same power. As they stood and watched, four black holes appeared in front of the ship.

“Get going! He’s going to fire!,” shouted Masafumi and the three Starfleet officers began running for the door.

“What is going on?,” asked Arlam-Nevu. “What ship is that?” He was quite flustered but he still moved quickly towards the door as well. On the other hand, his aide panicked and dived into the pool.

The ship suddenly fired four bolts of amber-colored energy. Two of the bolts struck either side of the pool, gouging huge craters into the stone patio. The center two bolts plunged into the pool itself, superheating the water and boiling the hapless aide alive.

Cardonez made it to the door and she hauled it open. “Go, go!,” she cried out, bundling Huntington and Masafumi through the portal. Clouds of steam and dust obscured her view of the ship but she knew that it would fire again soon. Arlam-Nevu lumbered towards the exit and the moment that he was through the door, she got inside and slammed the door shut. They were standing at the end of a long corridor where her fellow Starfleet officers and the Grand Lan’Yiet were standing expectantly in a group.

“Run!,” she shouted and the four of them began to dash down the corridor. Letting Masafumi and Huntington lead the way, Cardonez slowed her pace down to stand behind Arlam-Nevu.

Suddenly the corridor behind her exploded and she was flung to the ground while dust and debris fell over her.

“Captain, are you all right?,” her First Officer asked her as he and Adam ran back to her.

Cardonez stood up, shaking the dust out of her hair.. Looking back down the corridor, all that she could see was rubble, dust and flames. “My back hurts but I don’t think it’s anything serious. That blast knocked the wind out of me. That’s all.”

Masafumi leaned around to check her back. The Captain’s swimsuit was badly ripped and her back was a mass of tiny scratches with green blood seeping from several of them. “You need medical attention but I don’t think it’s too serious, Captain. May I suggest that we find our uniforms and attempt to communicate with the ship?”

“Good idea, Yashiro,” she replied. Her back stung but it hadn’t incapacitated her. “Grand Lan’Yiet, which way is it to the chamber where we left our clothes?”

Arlam-Nevu was standing, open-mouthed in shock, while the building around them shook from another strike. “Captain, who is attacking us?,” he asked, seemingly oblivious of her question.

Cardonez sighed. “I don’t know. We encountered a similar ship, a while back that attacked us for no reason. That ship was automated in some way…”

“Like the Federation ship that you found on your first visit to our space?”

He catches on quickly, she thought. “We have no proof but we think that the two incidents are connected.”

“But why are they attacking my world?”

“I don’t know, sir.” Another shockwave shook the palace and more dust rained down on them from the ceiling. “Perhaps we could discuss it on the move. We need to get our clothes and communicate with our ship.”

For a moment, the Zelket leader was silent. “This way,” he said solemnly and led them down the corridor.


****


At the same time that a ship was decloaking above the Grand Lan’Yiet’s palace, another three ships were decloaking off of the Testudo’s bow.

“What the hell?!,” shouted Kandro. “Shields up! Red Alert!”

“On it,” Tilmoore replied.

“Liz, take Ops,” Kandro ordered.

Tennyson nodded and she moved towards the empty Ops station.

“Zia, bring the impulse engines online and prepare for evasive maneuvers.”

“Aye, sir.”

“Lieutenant, I’m registering another five vessels of similar configuration inside the planet’s atmosphere,” reported the Ensign at Tacticalm” and I’m also getting signs of weapons fire.”

“Are any of those ships manned?”

Tennyson checked her readouts. “Negative. They’re all automated. No, wait… I’m reading sporadic lifesigns from the centermost ship.” She turned in her seat and looked at Kandro. “They appear to be Human?”
 
Really nice culture building and critter design with the Zelket. And quite the surprise attack - evidently being cool and laid back does not mean that no one wants to cook you off...

Thanks!! rbs
 
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