Chapter 5 continued
***
***
The human was terrified. He thrashed around; unable to understand why his movements were inhibited. Something was holding him down, he knew that much, but he had no idea how to disentangle itself.
And oh, how he tried. He pulled as hard as it could at the restraints, first tugging one way, then another. But anyway the human yanked, the slimy tethers would not loosen, would not budge or break.
The human gave passing consideration to untying himself rather than using brute strength, but the problem was hopelessly complex.
He soon grew weary of applying his limited intellect to escaping and began to howl instead----a much more satisfying pastime.
Surrounding the human was a black sea of emptiness, broken by the only other visible object: a large thing just barely visible by a green luminescence. The shape had an odd geometry about it, and was perhaps a polished white boulder, as best the human could tell.
It somersaulted before him in slow motion, a movement the human didn’t overly care for. The constant spinning made him dizzy and he looked away, chattering to sooth his frayed nerves.
Despite his primitive state, the human was painfully aware that he was trapped, and stuck with just two choices: boredom or dizziness.
How long he considered his plight was unknown. He had no conception of real time, after all. But at some point, he began to notice a difference in his perceptions. He experienced a fluidity to his thoughts that was now obvious only because it had thus far been absent.
The process began to accelerate. The primitive began to gain greater awareness. Its mind evolved at breathtaking speed, leapfrogging over generations of evolutionary markers.
Lucidity spread like wildfire, and a network of higher brain functions glittered into place within minutes.
Power swelled within him, the power of human intellect and mental sophistication. It all surged forward like an unstoppable locomotive.
Next in line were memory fragments that fell into the empty places in his head. This caused some measure of confusion because they were jumbled and out of order, with no context in which to frame the experiences. But this began to pass, and the gaps filled in, oozing into the holes and crevices within his psyche and granting him a complete identity.
When the progression finally ran its course, he was exhilarated at feeling whole. The bewilderment and panic was now a bad dream from which he had gradually awoken. It occurred to him that he might have suffered a head wound.
Except….
Some deep part of his mind, a place where humans locked up unsightly thoughts, knew the truth:
His personality had not been returned to him because his brain had overcome a trauma. Rather, his mental faculties were being given back with controlled deliberation.
Because someone or something had taken them out.
Lt. Douglas Pal squirmed, swinging his head in every direction at once.
"Where the hell am I?" His voice had a dull, hollow sound, as if he were speaking within a small cave, kilometers under the surface of a planet.
Quite the opposite. Despite the empty blackness around him, he could tell that he was in a cavernous chamber. Then there was the unpleasant fact that he was snared within a giant trawl, which stretched off in all directions, fading into the void beyond. His arms and legs were swaddled tightly as if he were wrapped in a mushy sleeping bag.
Pal strained against the binds experimentally, making him yaw and jiggle within the net. The wet, sticky ropes stretched slightly, but held. The ties felt disturbingly organic to the touch, a fact he tried to ignore.
Pal hated the image of being caught within a spider’s web, but the analogy was inescapable. Starfleet training or no, he decided that if an abomination began crawling at him, he would probably die of fright.
He needed a diversion, so he began to piece together his last memories before the imprisonment. He recalled the Cardassian gun ships, he remembered launching Genesis…
The vortex. That creepy space tornado, it had chased after them. Pal had tried to evade the thing, but…yes, it had hit them and then----
Well, and then here he was, just that simple. But only him. Adol was nowhere in sight.
Since Pal couldn’t reach his combadge, he set about communicating the old fashioned way. He yelled Adol’s name, but only a few times. He didn’t need unwanted attention just yet.
Movement----a flash of white----made him jump.
Something was spinning in the emptiness ahead of him, illuminated by a ghostly green light. The sickly pallor was just enough to identify the outline clearly.
“You’re kidding me!” He exclaimed.
Hanging before him was the runabout Chin Ho. It turned end over end, completing graceful pinwheels.
What's this all about? He mused with apprehension. What took us out of----?
The tremulous clamor of rending metal aborted the thought. The sound was unmistakable; a metallic structure was being pushed beyond its design threshold.
Pal’s jaw dropped open, even as he tried to reject what his eyes were telling him.
The Chin Ho was imploding. The small ship was being compressed, its hull pulling inward as though a gravitational singularity was located within the ship's cockpit.
Incredulous, he watched the ship turn in on itself, becoming a metallic accordion. It soon resembled a crumpled wad of paper, scaling down to half its former size. The compression went on, until eventually the Chin Ho disappeared completely.
Pal gaped at the vacant space left behind by the runabout, unable to process the random act of destruction he had just witnessed.
Jesus…please tell me Adol wasn’t in there, he prayed silently.
That was when someone asked him a question. It wasn’t an audible voice. Nor was it telepathy, as Pal understood it. It was more like a powerful daydream in which he was acting out both sides of the conversation.
He had been asked “why?”.
"I-----I don't know what you mean..." He stammered.
The daydream became more vibrant. In his mind’s eye, dark contaminant spread through a clear pool of water. He saw old-fashioned machinery grinding to halt as a foreign object jammed the gears…
Interference, Pal mouthed to himself.