Then I hope you enjoy this next bit.
Chapter Four
On one level, Adam Huntington knew that he was dreaming and yet, on another level, he knew that somehow this was quite real. He saw blue sparks and a white creature was shying away from him. Then he felt himself being lifted up and carried a stretcher. He saw a bubble-headed monster by his side who was affixing something to his arm.
Darkness…
In another dream, he sat naked in a chair. Two creatures with large heads and ears stood on both sides of him, clad in orange suits and they looked like they were identical twins. He saw their mouths move but he couldn’t hear a word. One struck him across the face but he didn’t feel anything. The other one leaned in and again spoke silently. Huntington didn’t understand and he tried to speak but he couldn’t. The creature looked angry. Reaching down, it showed him something that looked like a tennis racket. Then he used it like a weapon, bringing it up between Huntington’s legs. He tensed in anticipation but there was no pain.
Darkness…
He was sitting outside. It was a cold day but the sun was shining. Beside him was Natalia. She was dressed in a floral red dress. Her hair was still blonde and she looked so young. She was smiling at him and pointing off into the distance. He turned his head around and looked at where she was pointing. The children were running through long pink grass, chasing a football. He knew that this was Primus Four. His daughter Elizabeth was in the lead, gleefully kicking the ball away from her brother Yuri, much to his frustration. She was two years older and two years faster than him. Trailing behind them but happy to do was little Peter, two years old and toddling unsteadily on tiny legs.
Darkness…
He was back in the chair. One of the large headed creatures, a Ferengi, he realized, was using a hypospray to inject something into his neck. The Ferengi’s twin stood off to one side. Suddenly, a third person appeared. A man, a Human. He stared deeply into Huntington’s eyes, his mouth moving animatedly and asking questions that he couldn’t hear.
Darkness…
He was kneeling in a dark street with a woman held in his arms. She was dead, staring upwards with lifeless eyes speckled with blood from the deep cut across her throat. Huntington was crying. His eyes stung with loss, frustration, and anger. The woman was young, no more than twenty years old. She had bright red hair framed in a heavily-made up fact that couldn’t disguise what had once been porcelain skin.
Suddenly the woman’s face morphed into that of Liz Tennyson. Too late again.
Darkness…
A graveyard and a cold, bright day. He saw Natalia, dressed in black, holding a single red rose in her hand while she stood by an open grave. His children stood close by. Elizabeth was comforting Yuri while he cried on her shoulder. Peter was standing straight, trying hard not to cry. Huntington began to run towards them, trying to figure out that he wasn't dead. However, before he could reach them, he saw a huge white monster move up behind them, its claws were ready to cleave their heads from their bodies.
“Nooo!,” he screamed, jerking himself up in bed.
“Welcome back to the land of the living,” a familiar voice said from his side.
Huntington was awake now. The dreams were gone but he was drenched in sweat. He glanced around and he saw that he was sitting up in a white-colored bed, naked from the waist up. There was a bandage wrapped around his right forearm. Isabel Cardonez was sitting on the edge of the bed, dressed in a white dress.
Huntington smiled at her. “My name is Adam Huntington,” he said,” and I’m here to rescue you.”
“Some rescue.”
They both laughed. Huntington grabbed his side in pain when he did.
“Easy, Adam,” said Cardonez. “You busted a couple of ribs and they haven’t quite healed yet.”
He coughed suddenly and Cardonez realized how dry his throat must be. Reaching over to a bedside table, she picked up a plastic tumbler. “Here, drink this.”
He gratefully took it from her and drank deeply. “How long have I been out?,” he asked her between gulps.
“They brought you in four days ago and they’ve taken you out a few times since then. Interrogation, I think.”
Huntington nodded and passed her back the empty glass. “Yes, I remember some of it. What the hell was it that took a chunk out of me?”
“Something called a Mugato. Offenhouse imported it from some backwater planet as a guard dog. He even had it surgically altered so that it could live in a vacuum for short periods of time.”
“Effective guard dog,” he said, glancing under the sheet and frowning slightly.
“It’s okay. I didn’t peek,” Cardonez said, smiling. “There are some clothes in the dresser for you.”
“My boots?”
“Gone. Offenhouse delighted in telling me about all of the little toys that he discovered in the heels of your boots. And the ones that he found in the lining of your clothes too.”
Huntington ran his fingers through his hair. “So they got everything. Typical,” he said. Suddenly he frowned and glanced at Cardonez. “Who the hell is Offenhouse?”
Cardonez smiled. “Well, I assumed that you came here looking for me and I was looking for him. It’s the real person behind a man named Patek.”
“The Ferengi businessman. Yeah, Tyrell put me onto him.”
“Well, he’s not a Ferengi. Would you believe that he’s a megalomaniac Human from the Twentieth Century with a plot to buy the Ferengi Alliance?”
Huntington sighed. “It seems like I have a lot of catching up to do.”
Cardonez fetched another two glasses of water and then she began to fill in the blanks. After she had explained everything, including the fact that she had barely been allowed out of the room since he had been captured. Huntington decided that a shower might be in order. Wrapping a sheet around his waist, he grabbed clothes from the dresser, blue trousers, a sweater, and matching plimsolls before he headed into the shower.
The hot water felt good against his aching body and the only thing that he missed was a razor. The stubble would have to stay on his face for now. His sides ached and the bite mark beneath the waterproof bandage itched. Why they hadn’t used a dermal regenerator on it, he didn’t know. Then again, he still found it curious that he and Cardonez were still alive.
After a long shower, he got dressed and he stepped outside, just in time to see one of the Ferengi twins clasping binders onto Cardonez’s wrists. His brother stood off to one side with two other Ferengi. All of them were armed and they all wore those ludicrous orange jumpsuits.
“Are we going on a day out?,” he asked.
“Shut up and put your hands out,” said the brother that was closer to Cardonez.
Huntington smiled while he did what he was told and let the Ferengi place the binders on him. “So, are you a tennis fan? Or is it your brother?,” he asked him.
For an instant, the Ferengi was taken aback by his question and Huntington knew that they hadn’t expected him to remember that. A sly grin crept across his face. “Oh, that was me,” he said proudly.
“Nice backhand,” he said as pleasantly as if he was really talking about tennis. The Ferengi laughed. “Just bear in mind that the game isn’t over,” Huntington added, injecting as much menace as he could into his words for a man with his hands bound.
“Just try something, please?,” asked the other brother, fingering the butt of his gun.
“Nah,” said Huntington. “Not just yet.”
This caused the Ferengi to laugh even harder before they ushered both Starfleet officers out of the doorn and down to Offenhouse’s lair. It was no different to the last time that Cardonez was there. The only change was in Offenhouse who was wearing a darker suit. His hair was slicked back somehow in a perverse mirror image of Huntington.
“Please sit down,” he said affably.
Cardonez and Huntington were prodded towards one of the sofas and sat down, side-by-side. “So this is the part where you explain your plan no doubt?,” he asked. The twin with the tennis fixation stood to his right side.
Offenhouse regarded him with a look of distaste. “You know, I’ve never cared much for Brits,” he said. “Too pompous by half. Take Picard, for example.”
“Picard’s ancestry is actually Ferengi,” said Cardonez.
“Well, he sounds English,” said Offenhouse, his usual prop of a glass of scotch in his hand,” and so do you.”
“Well, actually, I was born on the Moon, but I understand that you’re a little behind the times.”
“Try a lot behind the times. He’s an anachronism. Mankind gave up lusting after profit, centuries ago,” Cardonez said.
“Perhaps, but it will soon be time to reawaken Mankind’s lust. Or did you really think that I would stop at the Ferengi Alliance?,” he asked them.
“I would tell you that you’re mad but I usually get beaten up if I say that,” said Huntington. “So I’ll keep my mouth shut.”
“Wise move,” said Offenhouse. “You killed a lot of my best men. It was difficult to keep you alive.”
Huntington cast a glance sideways before sneering. “If they were your best men, then I don’t see you taking over a corner shop. Let alone an Empire.”
The Ferengi standing near him cuffed him across the back of the head. “Shut up!”
Offenhouse merely laughed. “As I’ve explained to Captain Cardonez here countless times, I don’t intend to overthrow the current Ferengi government. I intend to buy it out.”
“And I’ve told you that you can’t have the latinum for that,” Isabel said. She knew that Huntington was up to something. He was far too chipper for a man that was facing death or worse. She was ready to move when he did. If she was going to die, it would be on her feet, struggling to survive.
“Ah, but in a few hours, I’ll have more than enough. You see, I’m going to make my own.”
Cardonez and Huntington laughed together. “Latinum can’t be replicated,” said Isabel.
“Actually, it can but it takes an awful expenditure of time and energy that makes the process worthless. I’ve invested heavily in an alternative.”
“You know those beans aren’t really magic,” said Huntington. “You should have kept the cow.”
Offenhouse ignored him. Instead, he placed his glass down, out of the reach of his prisoners and picked up his remote. He didn’t point it at the blank viewscreen. He pointed it at the ceiling. With a loud groan, a section of the ceiling split apart and, seconds later, a metal cradle was lowered to an inch above the floor. Sitting in the cradle was a simple, metallic torpedo-shaped object. Attached to it was a blocky device with a display and a control panel.
“A bomb?,” asked Cardonez. “You’re going to make money with a bomb?”
“Oh, this isn’t a bomb. In fact, this is more of a myth, a legend. A discarded piece of history, just like me.” Offenhouse smiled.
“The suspense is killing me,” said Adam.
Offenhouse walked up to the device and paused. After a second, he punched a command into the keypad and the display lit up. Now it showed numbers and an obvious countdown sequence that was set to start at sixty minutes. He turned towards the Starfleet officers. “You’ve never heard of the Genesis Device?,” he asked with a flourish.
That question got their attention. Before they had seen Offenhouse as a grubby little industrialist with a nebulous money-making scheme. Now he was potentially a very dangerous foe.
“Genesis doesn’t exist,” Cardonez said,” and even if it did, no power would use it. Not even the Romulans.”
“Oh, it does exist,” Offenhouse said, patting the device gently. “I know that all of the Genesis research was banned after the Khitomer Accords were established, but it’s amazing what you can do if the mood takes you and you have the cash. Carol Marcus’ unfinished autobiography, for example, or the computer core of a Klingon Bird-of-Prey that was fished out of San Francisco Bay. throw in a few embittered scientists stymied in their research by Khitomer and voila!”
Finally the true nature of Offenhouse’s plan became clear. “Relatrix,” Huntington said. “You’re going to use Genesis on Relatrix.”
“Give that man a cigar,” Offenhouse said. He pointed the control at the floor and another section split apart, leaving a hole more than wide enough for the cradle to descend into “I’ll shortly be activating the timer and sixty minutes later, Relatrix will be reborn as a planet awash with rivers of latinum.”
Cardonez stood. “You can’t do it,” she said. “The people. There are thousands of people on this planet.” The Ferengi twin that was closest to her pushed her back down into her seat.
“Forty-seven thousand, six hundred, and thirty-one, the last time that we checked,” Offenhouse said. “It’s regrettable but this is no other way.”
“You know that people will figure it out,” said Huntington. “The planet that you own just happens to miraculously transform into a pot of gold. I don’t think so.”
“Anyways, Genesis doesn’t work. It uses protomatter and it’s unstable. Your latinum will be useless to you,” said Cardonez, annoyed that she had descended to the level of trying to reason with a madman.
“You’re both correct and wrong at the same time. Yes, protomatter is a problem but times change. One of the scientists that I’ve employed has discovered a way to stabilize the protomatter and my latinum will last for a lifetime. This does leave the problem that Mister Huntington so accurately painted thought and so, in the heart of the new Relatrix, will be an unstable core awash with uncontrolled protomatter. I have three converted D’Kora-class ships nearby that are just waiting to swoop in and load up their cargo bays with enough latinum to fulfill all of my needs. Within a few hours, the protomatter in the planet’s core will destroy the planet.”
“Leaving no trace of what really happened. Just the residue of a failed Genesis experiment.”
“But why Relatrix?,” asked Cardonez. “Why kill all of these people when you could use an uninhabited world?”
“Because every Hitler needs a Reichstag Fire,” said Huntington.
“Yes, very perspective,” said Offenhouse. “You see, I won’t just rise to Nagus-hood on wealth alone. I’ll also ride in on a wave of paranoia and fear. The Ferengi Alliance has been attacked after all and by whom? Why, the very people that it was closest to, the Federation.” He smiled again with the cold smile of an alligator.
“And you’ll prove this how?,” asked Huntington.
“Oh, it’s much easier than I originally hoped. You see, originally, I was planning to plant evidence indicating that a Federation ship was nearby… and then you two bumbled into my hands.”
“Uh-oh,” said Isabel.
“Quite. Already the remains of your novel little runabout has been collected. They will be scattered near the edge of this star system, along with the remains of your bodies. Two renegade Starfleet officers, each of them acting without any official sanction, and killed while escaping after their cowardly attack on a Ferengi world.”
Huntington knew that he was running out of time. He needed a distraction and soon. Because whether this man’s plan succeeded or not, he and Cardonez would be just as dead. As it was though, none of the Ferengi were relaxing their guard at all.
“Insanity doesn’t do you any justice,” said Cardonez. “Someone will find out the truth.”
“Who?,” asked Offenhouse. “The only man who knows what kind of mission that you’re on is, by your own accounts under interrogation, a spy. The Machiavelian head of a secret organization. He’ll be a very convincing witness.” He yawned. “Face it. We used every drug on you so we know everything that you know. No one else knows where you are. John Wayne isn’t about to ride over the hill, guns a-blazing to rescue you.”
The viewscreen activated out of the blue and the face of a crumpled old Ferengi appeared. “Offenhouse, we’re in trouble,” he told the older Human.
Offenhouse frowned. “Fetta, what do you mean, trouble?”
“A Federation starship is entering orbit.”
Cardonez and Huntington exchanged looks.
“It’s of no relevance,” he said. “Destroy it. It will merely add to the illusion.”
“Yes, sir,” said the Ferengi named Feta and the screen went dark.
When it went dark, Huntington made his move. The guard was as distracted as they were ever likely to get. The small laser cutter dropped out of his sleeve and into his right palm. It was no wider than a strand of hair. The tiny black device had been secreted within the hair on the back of his head and it had been completely missed when they stripped him of his other toys. The laser cutter was limited since its housing only had just enough energy for a single short-range blast of energy. It was quite enough to snap the linking plate between each of his wrists.
He moved like lightning, swinging to his right. He punched hard with his left first, right into the tenderest part of the Ferengi standing next to him. As the man squealed, Huntington grabbed his disruptor. “New balls, please,” he quipped and rammed the weapon up hard into the Ferengi’s face.
Simultaneously, Captain Cardonez rolled sideways off of the soda, clumsily knocking the second brother to the ground.
“Get them!,” shouted Offenhouse and the two other guards suddenly ran towards the melee going on near the sofas.
Huntington was ready for them. He had the disruptor in a two-handed grip now while the Ferengi twin fell to the floor. The two oncoming guards hesitated for a fraction of a second. The Starfleet Commander didn’t and two shots lanced outward, downing both of the guards. He spun around fast on his heels to help Cardonez but he found out that she was doing quite all right on her own. Her momentum had enabled her to get astride the Ferengi and now she hit him hard across the face. Both of her fists were clenched together into one powerful swing. He was unconscious but she followed it up with a second blow.
“Stop!,” called out a sudden voice.
Isabel froze before she could strike the Ferengi again. Huntington half-turned around but he knew that he would never bring his gun to bear in time.
Offenhouse was standing by the Genesis device and he was holding Huntington’s phaser in his hand. “Well-played, Commander, but I have the upper hand once again,” he said. “Now drop the gun.”
Huntington sighed. “You know, this used to be a lot more fun when I was younger,” he said. “Why don’t you drop your gun? Or rather, drop my gun.”
“You’re in no position to threaten me, Commander. If you so much as lift your weapon, I’ll fire. That goes for you too, Cardonez.”
Cardonez stopped reaching for the unconscious Ferengi’s gun. “Give it up, Offenhouse. There’s a ship in orbit.”
“A ship that’s outnumbered three-to-one,” Offenhouse said through gritted teeth. “Commander, I told you to drop your gun.”
“I know,” said the Commander,” but I really can’t do that.”
“Adam?,” asked Isabel.
“Don’t be a fool,” said Offenhouse.
Huntington smiled wanly. “It wouldn’t be the first time,” he joked and then he started to bring his gun to bear.
Offenhouse smiled and pulled the trigger.
The flash was bright and for a moment, Cardonez was blinded but she still dived for the gun. As her vision returned, she rolled awkwardly on the floor and came up, ready to shoot.
Huntungton stood in the same spot, still smiling. Offenhouse lay in a crumpled heap by the side of his pride and joy.
“What the…,” she muttered.
The Security Chief walked over to Offenhouse’s body, kneeled down and picked up his weapon. “Fingerprint scanner in the trigger housing sends an electrical charge through the pistol grip if the fingerprint isn’t authorized,” he said, absently. “No one uses my gun but me.”
He walked over to Cardonez, helping her up before he used his phaser to snap her bonds as well.
“Now what?,” she asked him.
“Now we get their guns before any of them wake up,” he said and the two of them quickly gathered up the other guard’s weapons, Cardonez took one for herself and they disposed of the other three.
“A Federation ship? It must be Tyrell’s people. How did they find us?”
“Who knows?,” said Huntington with a shrug. We had better find a way to contact…” He didn’t get to finish his sentence as the sound of the cradle moving again cut through the air.
They turned around just in time to see Ralph Offenhouse, clinging to the cradle while it descended. Huntington managed to get his head in his sights but before he could fire, disruptor beams fired into the sofa closest to them, destroying it. The two Starfleet officers swung to their left, targeting the lone Ferengin who was standing in the nearby doorway. They both fired at once, dropping him where he stood.
Dashing over to the hole in the ground, they looked down and saw a small pinprick of light in the darkness. Cardonez was about to shoot when Huntington stopped her. “Don’t fire. I have no idea who unstable a Genesis Device is but we can’t take the chance of it detonating.”
“So what do we do?”
“You go find a communicator and contact that starship. I’m going after Offenhouse.”
“You give orders far too easily,” she said. “Just remember who the Captain is here.”
“You’re on a leave of absence. That means I have operational control.” He smiled.
“Okay, good luck,” she said before running off towards a nearby staircase.
Huntington jabbed his phaser into the waistband of his trousers before tearing his jumper off. Ripping it in half, he wrapped one half around each hand before he reached for the single cable and began his climb downward.