Star Trek: Intrepid - The Double Edge Chapter 2
Chapter 2 Continued
“I could align Tango Fleet between the enemy and Betazed, and then launch the weapons at them within stealth material.” Jellico countered, thinking aloud.
Aubrey shook his head. “Even if that worked, these are poor copies. If they’re detonated in the vacuum of space, the Genesis wave won’t travel far. Also, the Dominion fleet would be spread too thin for significant damage to occur.”
“You’re saying that we need the nebula for kindling wood, or we can’t start our forest fire.” The admiral summarized.
“In so many words, sir.”
Edward Jellico could stamp his name to many things, but indecisiveness wasn’t one of them. He had honed his assertiveness to the point that he could draw decisions with the speed of an old gunslinger. His tendency to act swiftly had landed him in trouble more than once in his younger days. Although now more seasoned, that aspect of him had changed little over the years.
So it was a profound statement that he allowed silence to occupy the room while he chewed one of his thumbnails.
“Any use of Genesis technology is still illegal.” He finally remarked.
“There is one upside to this,” Aubrey put in.
“How’s that?”
“Well, since you’re the one that will authorize this mission, I can be absolved of all blame. I’m fortunate to have a flag officer to hide behind.”
Jellico’s mouth hung open. The air almost seemed charged with a pending thunderstorm.
Aubrey retained a deadpan expression, but amusement twinkled somewhere behind his eyes.
Then, to the surprise of both men, the admiral threw his head back and laughed. The laughter was coarse and uneven, as though rusty from disuse.
***
Six hour later…
Lt. Commander Adol held his breath for the second time in 30 minutes, watching the passive sensor display with fierce scrutiny. Three Jem’Hadar fighters seemed to drift lazily at the extreme edge of sensor range-----but he knew they were really whipping by at one quarter the speed of light; a serious velocity by anyone’s reckoning.
The Andorian speculated that if the enemy ships reduced speed, or made a sudden course change, he would know they had found him. If they maintained their current speed and scanning pattern, then he was probably still invisible.
Unless that was their plan-----to lull him into a false sense of security.
A minute dragged by. Then two.
His hand hovered over the arming switch of the runabout’s weapon. He knew better than to engage it prematurely. The energy signature was powerful and distinct. It would be like sending up a flare. Besides, once you armed the thing, there was no going back.
The fighters sped into the distance without slowing.
Adol wiped his lower lip of perspiration and cycled down the arming prestart sequence for the Genesis weapon.
“We’re clear,” He said to the man in the pilot’s seat. “Resume heading.”
Intrepid’s Operations Officer, Lt. Douglas Pal brought the runabout’s impulse engine online and gradually pushed the
Chin Ho forward again. Once the ship was at the correct speed, he shut down the impulse drive and put all systems back into low power mode. The runabout resumed its journey on inertia.
Pal was a wiry man in his late twenties whose angular face was crowned by a head of auburn hair. A neatly trimmed goatee of the same color made a short comma off his chin.
“Well, that was stimulating.” Adol commented.
“Jesus Christ,” Pal exclaimed through a shaky exhalation. “I didn’t think we’d run into patrol ships this far from the nebula.” He scratched at his goatee nervously. “This isn’t looking good, Adol.”
Intrepid’s Security Chief was busy running a diagnostic check on the arming protocols for Genesis. “You knew the odds when you volunteered. So did I. Let’s keep focused, Lieutenant.”
Adol and Douglas Pal were friends who had been acquainted since Starfleet Academy. Ironically, they hadn’t been able to stand each other at first. As roommates, they were the unfunny version of the old “Odd Couple” play. Pal was messy and absent minded. Adol wanted their living space organized and regulated with the precision of a machine.
On at least one memorable occasion, they had come to blows over who’s turn it was to have the room for female visitors. After the scuffle, demands had been made on both sides for the other party to vacate the premises, post haste.
But both of them had been too young and defiant to concede defeat by moving.
Over time, an uneasy alliance formed when, to their chagrin, they had gotten to know one another. They discovered a shared vein of ideas about everything from philosophy to politics and even the fairer sex. Their friendship had taken them both unawares. By the time they graduated four years later, they were as inseparable as blood brothers.
That strong connection between them----forged from countless hours of studying, laughing and brawling----was still intact years later when they found themselves posted to the same ship.
Pal had more uplifting commentary. “We might have underestimated the Dominion----again. If they’re patrolling this far from Kokala, they’ve probably already shot down the second runabout.”
“Doubtful,” Adol said. He continued the diagnostic without breaking stride. “Those fighters would have been conducting a far more aggressive patrol if they knew about a Starfleet presence here. Our second runabout is safe, for the moment.”
The runabout
Montreal had departed first. If all went according to plan, they would get close enough to wipe out the Kokala Nebula.
Adol and Pal were insurance, in case the first attempt failed. The
Chin Ho was following an elliptical trajectory that would bring them to Kokala’s opposite side. Because their journey wasn’t direct, they could afford no delays. If the Dominion detected a presence, they would break formation and leave the nebula’s dead zone. Destroying the dust cloud at that point would be of small benefit.
Even worse, Tango Fleet would lose the element of surprise.
“Can’t believe the old man went for this.” Pal mumbled a few minutes later.
If he were human, Adol would have rolled his eyes. He never understood why some people felt the need to blabber when they were nervous. Andorians used stressful waiting periods to focus their concentration, not ruin it.
But Pal was his friend, so he paused long enough to indulge the man. “Why can’t you believe it?” He asked reluctantly.