CHAPTER TWENTY-TWO
September 24, 2400
Three months.
For three months now, the USS Chameleon-A had warped her way in the Delta Quadrant, and was now about midway from home.
Equipped with all the camouflage devices designed by Starfleet, the Klingons, the Romulans and their allies, including a very clever multiphasic Ferengi device, which interacted with the Federation phasing cloak to add even more fluidity and stability to the final result, the Chameleon could in principle have made the entire trip under cloak, except of course for the humongous energy surges which would probably have been detected by an adversary smart enough to think outside the box.
Thanks to that equipment and to Varel’s innate curiosity, they had made a very interesting discovery while they were traveling through Borg space.
“Lieutenant Racicot, why should I get out of my bed and get to the Bridge, short of a red alert?”
“We are witnessing a very curious battle, Captain. I thought you would be interested in watching it for yourself.”
“Who is fighting?”
“The Borg, Captain.”
“Who are they fighting against?”
“The Borg, Captain.”
“Yes, but who are they fighting against?”
“The Borg are fighting among themselves, Captain.”
“What? I am coming!”
“Told you!”
Varel had jumped out of her bed, getting dressed en route to the Bridge, where she arrived prim and proper as usual, just a little out of breath. On the viewscreen, there they were: hundreds of cubes, spheres, diamonds and a few other shapes locked in a gigantic family feud. Or was it?
Varel was looking at a tactical view. She called Annie to it.
“Have you noticed?”
Annie looked at the two points Varel was pointing at on the display.
“It’s less visible on the viewscreen, until you are aware of it. Look there and there!”
***
Three months.
If what her torturers had told her was true, Sabrina had now spent three months in that horrible padded room.
Every day during the day, they had come, fed her with the hypospray, played with their prods on different parts of her exposed body, laughed of her suffering and left.
They had come back at night, cleaned her from the pee, changed her pail and her water, then tortured and raped her. Every night.
The hypospray had to contain some drugs. It was obvious, for she felt completely numb, physically and mentally, after it. But it was the only food she would receive for the day. Already her stomach was getting used to receiving nothing, and the pain of the cramps was almost gone.
At night, when the drug was less potent, and she couldn't sleep anyway after the nightly double rape, she tried to collect her thoughts.
The psych test … Those thirty children coming into the room, telling her they were lost … The little boy starting to cry, all the others crying too … She had looked out, nobody was there … She had started caring for them, had completely forgotten why she was there, telling them stories her nurse had told her, making them a little happier … Then the red alert, that call for immediate evacuation, the children panicking, she taking command of the group and leading them out.
And that damn Commander Chang coming at her, sending the children away, and congratulating her because her psych test was to evaluate her fear of responsibilities …
That had happened, hadn't it?
The years at Starfleet Academy, Roxanne Gifford, Faith, Lavell IX, the Forge, the Benzite guy … That too had happened!
Hadn't it?
The Chameleon, Captain Simmons, her promotion to Lieutenant Junior Grade, her becoming Assistant Chief of Security, the battle, her second promotion, her taking command of the Chameleon-A? The incident at Newman Five?
That had to have happened!
But so quickly?
Had she dreamed her affair with Annie, that gorgeous blonde? No, it was impossible. And yet — no real skin, no feeling whatsoever but her lips, that superhuman skeleton? It wasn’t true for her, for she felt the floor under her naked butts and feet, so cold, always so cold …
It seemed so … incredible. Was all that just figments of her imagination?
What if it was?
How could she have received command of a starship at the age of twenty-five, while just a simple Lieutenant?
No, it was impossible. It had to be a dream.
And yet, even today, it seemed so real …
***
Three months.
For three months Wilkins had left Khitomer in search of Sabrina. A thousand times he had gone through the Wormhole, scanning in every possible way every cubic millimeter of it, sending all kinds of signals, hoping for a clue to what had happened to the Chameleon.
All in vain. And then …
“I liked Picard’s ship better.”
Wilkins woke up and looked at the strange character in front of him, wearing an Admiral uniform.
“Who are you? Security!”
“Don’t bother, mon Amiral. We are not aboard the good ship Lollipop anymore. I wanted to have a private talk with you.”
Wilkins had just awakened enough to sort his ideas. Of course. Now he recognized him from the portraits, and his language was exactly like what both Picard and Janeway had described at length. It could only be …
“Q.”
“Ooooh! And I wanted to play charades with you. But it’s my fault, I guess. I should have introduced myself in a different shape.”
“What do you want, Q?”
“Aaaah, wrong question, mon Amiral. The question is: What do you want? And the answer is obvious. Tell me, Leo, are you in a serious, sexually promiscuous relationship with your little Lieutenant-Captain?”
“What? No! I just …”
“You consider her as the daughter you never had, maybe? But isn’t it a little incestuous then to look at her naked in an aquarium?”
“So you know that too?”
“I know everything about Sabrina Helena Watson, Admiral. It is you who have a few things to learn about her.”
“For now I’d settle for knowing where she is.”
“Irrelevant.”
“How so?”
“You couldn’t get there. Not with this relic anyway.”
“Did you abduct her?”
“Moi? No, mon Amiral, not me. But I know who did it and I know why.”
“Why then?”
“To torture her, of course! Would you like to see?”
And, without waiting for an answer, Q started to show Wilkins everything that had happened to Sabrina, from the chess game to her current predicament in the padded cell.
Wilkins looked at Q. He had tears in his eyes.
“Ah, come on, daddy, your little girl will survive everything. She’s not quite finished though, and what’s left for her to endure may be the worst part.”
“But why? Who?”
“Who is obvious. Why is maybe a little too difficult to understand for your feeble mind. Just know this, Leo: this little girl is the last, the very last hope of mankind. Only to have a chance in the dual role awaiting her, she has to be made ready. And for that she must understand where she came from, and what was …”
He stopped. Wilkins looked at him.
“I was going to give you a little too many clues. She must find out for herself what I just told you, or she will fail. And if she fails, humanity will not be the only species to be denied existence.”
“You told me nothing.”
“I gave you the dots, Leo. Connect them. And when she comes back, make her a captain. That will help her. Ta ta!”
In a flash, Q disappeared and Wilkins found himself back in his quarters, trying to make sense of what he had just been told … or not.