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Star Trek: Lower Decks - CF033 - "Subspace Side Trip"

ColdFusion180

Lieutenant Commander
Red Shirt
Originally posted on fanfiction.net - Link.

Note: This story takes place after the main events in the episode "Terminal Provocations".
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Subspace Side Trip

“I can’t believe you signed the captain’s yacht out in my name again,” Boimler pouted sitting in one of the pilot’s seats. “And that you dragged me along with you to go who-knows-where while the Cerritos warped off right after we left the ship. Why do you keep doing this to me?”

“Hey, relax Boims. We ain’t going AWOL or anything,” Mariner smirked seated next to him. “We’re just taking this baby out for a little spin and we’ll rendezvous back with the Cerritos before you know it.”

“Yeah, just in time for our court-martial,” Boimler moaned. “I never thought my Starfleet career would end this way. Being drummed out of the fleet due to your unhealthy obsession with joyrides!”

“This isn’t a joyride,” Mariner corrected. “We got important stuff to do. We’re heading to Theta Zibal III to conduct vital business transactions.”

“Oh no,” Boimler groaned. “Please tell me you didn’t con me into joining you in picking up another load of contraband.”

“Of course not,” Mariner said. “We’re going to Theta Zibal III to sell a load of contraband. You didn’t think I acquired all those dangerous, random weapons just for myself, did ya?”

“What?!” Boimler yelped. “Are you crazy? That’s crossing a line! You can’t sell a bunch of weapons to unknown parties on a neutral, independent planet! That’s a violation of the Prime Directive! No way! Forget it!”

“Relax, Boims. The Prime Directive doesn’t apply,” Mariner waved. “I’m just gonna unload a dozen or so crates of various bladed weapons to a bunch of wealthy, material possession-obsessed collectors. It’s not like I’m running a load of Klingon disruptors to a mob of trigger-happy revolutionaries. At least not this time…”

“Well, I guess that’s not too bad…wait, what?!” Boimler yelped doing a double-take. “What do you mean this time?!”

“Well, ya see…” Mariner began.

RUMBLE!

“Uh, what was that?” Mariner asked as the yacht suddenly shook violently.

“Not sure. Some kind of gravimetric distortion,” Boimler glanced at the sensor readings. “It’s destabilizing our engines. We’re dropping out of warp…ahhh!”

“Whoa!” Mariner blinked as the yacht abruptly transitioned from warp to normal space to an all-encompassing white light. “Great. Warp and impulse engines are offline. Switching to thrusters.”

“Better bring us to a full stop until we find out what happened,” Boimler said checking the yacht for damage. “Running a trans-spectral analysis now. Looks like we entered some kind of subspace quasi-phase pocket.”

“Aw, man. Not again!” Mariner cursed. “I hate it when stuff like this happens.”

“You’ve run into subspace pockets before?” Boimler stared at her in surprise. “Oh wait, of course you have!”

“Well, yeah. Who hasn’t?” Mariner gave him a look. “Starfleet auxiliary craft are always running into unexpected spatial phenomena. You’d think the odds would be infinitesimal given the crafts’ small size compared to the infinite vastness of space, but turns out incidents like this tend to happen to not-so-random Starfleet officers every other week!”

“Huh, imagine that,” Boimler blinked. “On the bright side, it looks like I finally beat the odds. Guess the universe has a quirky sense of humor.”

“More like the universe’s self-appointed script writers have no imagination,” Mariner rolled her eyes. “Talk about going to the gravity well one too many times…”

THUD!

“Aaahhhhhh!” The two ensigns yelled as a slim, humanoid body suddenly slammed into the yacht’s fore viewport.

“Holy *bleep*!” Mariner yelped. “Yuck, get it off! Ugh, why doesn’t this thing have viewport wipers?”

“Wait, I’m reading a human lifesign,” Boimler stared at his console in amazement. “Whoever’s out there is still alive!”

“What?!” Mariner gasped. “How the heck…know what, never mind! Locking on. Preparing to transport.”

“Wait, shouldn’t we set up some kind of containment field first?” Boimler asked. “We could accidently beam aboard some strange, residual subspace particles…”

“No time, man. Energizing,” Mariner engaged the transporter controls. The humanoid figure materialized prone in the yacht’s small transporter alcove. “Okay, let’s see who you hit.”

“Who I hit?” Boimler sputtered getting up and grabbing a medkit from a supply locker. He quickly approached the prone figure and knelt by their side. “Hello, are you okay?”

“Uh, I think so,” A pair of alert, feminine brown eyes blinked up at him. The clearly female figure sported a practical yet stylish crown of dark hair, wore a sleek utilitarian civilian jumpsuit and appeared to be about the same age as Boimler. “Are you Starfleet?”

“Yep, that’s us,” Mariner grinned sauntering over to her. “Ensigns Beckett Mariner and Brad Boimler at your service.”

“Oh, thank goodness!” The figure sighed in relief. “I was afraid I was going to be stuck in that strange white void forever.”

“Eh, still might,” Mariner shrugged. “That is if we live that long.”

“Huh? What do you mean?” The figure sat up and stared out the fore viewport. “Oh no!”

“Easy,” Boimler cautioned while carefully helping her into a chair at a secondary control station. “Your system has obviously had quite a shock. Try to stay calm.”

“Physician, heal thyself,” Mariner quipped.

Boimler gave her a dirty look while running a medical tricorder over their guest. “I’m not getting any anomalous readings. From what I can tell you seem to be in perfect health, Ms…”

“Odelina,” The figure smiled at him. “Or Odette if you wish. And you seem to be in perfect health too.”

“Uh, thank you,” Boimler blinked.

“Nice to meet ya, Oddy,” Mariner leaned against a console. “So, what’s a nice girl like you doing in a subspace quasi-phase pocket like this?”

“Well, my ship was just warping through space like any other day,” Odette began. “I was doing some reading when I suddenly felt a sharp jolt. I began making my way to the bridge when the bulkhead next to me suddenly disappeared. Next thing I knew I found myself suspended in that featureless limbo out there.”

“How long ago was that?” Mariner asked.

“I don’t know,” Odette shrugged. “A few hours at least. I have a pretty good sense of my internal clock.”

“You were stuck in an airless, zero-gravity subspace environment for a few hours?!” Boimler gasped. “And you survived without even slightly elevated CO2 levels? How the heck is that possible?”

“Eh, it’s subspace, Boims,” Mariner shrugged. “Just one of the many deus ex machinis of our strange, fascinating universe.”

“Well whatever the reason, I’m certainly not going to complain,” Odette said. “Especially if it kept me from crossing over the great, final frontier known as death.”

“Smart girl,” Mariner nodded in approval. “Though even death isn’t nearly as permanent as one might think. At least to some people…”

“I think you’re lucky you were ejected into subspace at near the exact opposite velocity vector as your ship,” Boimler said running a final scan on Odette. “The force from the atmospheric decompression made your net relative momentum and velocity practically zero. If they had been any higher you would have been nothing but a messy smear on our viewport when you smacked into our hull.”

“A fate I’m quite happy to have avoided,” Odette smiled at him. “Thanks to you.”

“It was nothing,” Boimler shrugged modestly. “It’s our sworn Starfleet duty to explore the unknown, aid others in distress…”

“Yeah, yeah. Enough with the boring sciencey stuff already,” Mariner waved heading back to the pilot’s seat. “Let’s get outta here before another ship bumbles into the pocket and ends up turning us into a messy smear on its hull.”

“Right,” Boimler gulped checking Odette once more. “Are you sure you’re feeling alright?”

“Don’t worry. I’m fine,” Odette assured him. “You go work on getting us out of this place. And please try to locate my ship too while you’re at it. It’s very important.”

“Eh, whatever,” Mariner rolled her eyes.

“That might be difficult,” Boimler warned returning to his seat and quickly running a few sensor scans. “All the extraneous EM interference is rendering our sensors nearly blind. Proximity detection limited to less than sixty meters. Wait, I’m reading fairly high levels of plasmons, polaritons and plasmarons. They seem to be concentrated in various subspace eddies…”

“Quit it with the particle counting, Boims. I know how to get us outta this mess,” Mariner cut him off. “I’ve done it before.”

“Of course you have,” Boimler drawled.

“This subspace quasi-phase pocket is like an inflated, misshapen balloon,” Mariner worked her console. “All we gotta do is blow a hole in it with a torpedo and ride the resulting shockwave out.”

“Are you insane?! What am I saying?” Boimler stared at her in horror. “Detonating a torpedo inside subspace could rupture the very fabric between it and normal space!”

“Uh, yeah. That’s exactly what we want it to do,” Mariner retorted. “Duh.”

“It would be an uncontrolled reaction,” Boimler went on. “We could end up forming an unstable subspace rift. Besides, the captain’s yacht doesn’t even have weapons.”

“No, but it does have a deflector array,” Mariner pointed out. “Which I’ve finished reconfiguring to emit a resonance burst. It should simulate a photon torpedo blast just fine, only with more intense shockwaves…”

“WHAT?!” Boimler yelped. “Oh no! Don’t even think about it…!”

“Too late,” Mariner grinned activating the main deflector. “Hold on to your hats, boy and girls! Here we go!”

A bright blue beam shot out from the yacht’s deflector array before coalescing at a point a hundred yards in front of the ship. The beam stayed active for a few seconds before shutting off.

“Aaaaaand nothing happened. Nothing happened,” Mariner blinked. “Okay, I was not expecting that.”

“That’ll be a first,” Boimler muttered.

“Hmmm, this particular subspace quasi-phase pocket must be different than the others I’ve found myself stuck in before,” Mariner concluded turning to face her companions. “Whelp, there goes my brilliant plan. Anyone else have any bright ideas?”

“Don’t look at me,” Odette held up her hands. “I’m not a scientist.”

“Well technically I am, but are you sure you don’t have any stray subspace knowledge rolling around in your head?” Mariner asked. “We’re not too picky.”

“Wait a minute,” Boimler leaned forward and studied a set of sensor readings. “Look at these plasmon counts. They keep fluctuating within the concentration of subspace eddies while the polariton counts stay consistent.”

“Yeah, so?” Mariner asked.

“So, it means that some of the matter must be exchanging between normal space and subspace on a subatomic level,” Boimler explained. “If they get out, we can get out. All we have to do is match the exact resonant frequency of the plasmon’s corresponding EM variances and amplify the resulting quantum plasma oscillations until they propel us back into normal space.”

“And how the heck are we supposed to do that?” Mariner drawled sarcastically. “Reverse the polarity of the plasmons? Like that overused, nonsensical cliché would ever work!”

“No, we emit a localized antipolariton field,” Boimler went on. “It will interact with the polaritons in the eddies and the resulting subatomic level repulsion combined with the right shield modulations should amplify the quantum plasma oscillations until they’re strong enough to get us out.”

“Wow,” Odette stared at Boimler in awe. “That’s brilliant!”

“Eh, I wouldn’t exactly call it that,” Mariner brushed her off. “But when did you start acting all Spock-Data-Dax-like, Boims? Have you been taking Science night classes on the side or something?”

“Uh, actually I read about it in one of the Enterprise-B’s mission logs,” Boimler admitted working his console. “Along with a few footnotes from the Al-Batani, the Stargazer, the da Vinci…”

“Well, here’s hoping your nerdy habit of pouring over boring ol’ mission logs pays off,” Mariner said as she reconfigured the yacht’s deflector array once again. “Okay, modifications complete. Positioning us in the center of the nearest subspace eddy.”

“Great,” Boimler performed a final check of his calculations. “Emitting antipolariton field…now!”

The region around them began to distort as the yacht proceeded to shake and rumble ominously. “Hull stress starting to rise,” Boimler reported watching the readings. “Approaching recommended limits.”

“Oh dear,” Odette braced herself in her seat.

“The workers at Utopia Planitia better not have slacked off when they build this baby,” Mariner warned as the yacht continued to shake and groan violently. “You sure this antipolariton plan is gonna work, Boims?”

“Pretty sure,” Boimler gulped diverting all reserve power to the structural integrity field. “Of course, it’s only a theory…”

“WHAT?!” Mariner yelped as sparks began to fill the cockpit. “Ahhh, we got power conduits overloading!”

“Don’t worry, Ensign Boimler!” Odette shouted above the din. “I believe in you!”

“Thanks!” Boimler gasped as the hull stresses passed the redline. “I think…”

“A lotta help moral support and happy thoughts are gonna be when we break up like an odd Tellarite couple!” Mariner griped as subspace continued to distort around them. “Arrrggghhh, I’m about to spend the rest of my life trapped in a featureless white void with Boimler! Talk about a living…!”
 
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VWWWUUUUUUSSSHHH!

“Ugh,” A slightly green Boimler moaned as the shakes and groans abruptly stopped. “Oh, I knew I shouldn’t have had so much pozole for lunch. Oooo…”

“Did it work?” Odette asked hopefully. “Are we back?”

“I think so,” Mariner checked her bearings while glancing at the familiar starfield out the fore viewport. “We’re just outside the point from where we originally dropped out of warp.” She smiled and gave Boimler a friendly punch on the arm. “Way to go, Boims! I never doubted ya for a second!”

“Huh?” Boimler winced rubbing his arm. “But you said…”

“Eh, that was just the adrenaline and lack of alcohol talking,” Mariner waved. “You really saved our butts this time. Nice job, man!”

“Thanks,” Boimler smiled.

“That was incredible!” Odette walked over and gave Boimler a friendly squeeze on the shoulder. “You are absolutely amazing! So intelligent and caring.”

“I am?” Boimler blinked in surprise. “Gee, I guess I am.”

“But what about my ship?” Odette asked. “Can you free it from that strange subspace pocket the same way you freed us?”

“Unfortunately, no,” Boimler said as the computer finished compiling a damage report. “Our shields are offline, structural integrity is barely holding on and we completely burned out the deflector array. There’s no way we can create an antipolariton field now. We’ll have to send out a distress signal and wait for the Cerritos.”

“Speak of the devil,” Mariner quipped as the Cerritos suddenly popped out of warp a few dozen kilometers off their port bow. “Talk about timing.”

Mariner!” Captain Freeman’s furious image appeared on a screen. “I knew you were the one responsible for filing that unauthorized flight plan. What have you done to my yacht this time?

“Hey, Cap,” Mariner casually waved back. “Fancy seeing you here.”

“Excuse me. Sorry for interrupting, Captain,” Boimler spoke up. “Be advised. There is an unknown subspace quasi-phase pocket nearby. We ran into it without warning earlier and just barely managed to get out with our lives.”

Do you seriously expect me to believe that?” Freeman gave him a look. “Everyone uses the old ‘ran into an unexpected subspace anomaly’ story. It’s been overused!

“In more ways than one,” Mariner quipped.

“It’s true, Captain,” Odette said getting Freeman’s attention. “My ship ran into the same subspace pocket and is still trapped inside. I would be too if it weren’t for the brilliant, courageous actions of Ensign Boimler.”

“Don’t forget me,” Mariner added. “I helped too ya know.”

What?” Freeman stared at Odette in surprise. “Who are you?

“Call me Odette,” Odette said. “Please, my ship is still trapped in the subspace pocket. You must help!”

Right,” Freeman quickly accepted the situation. “Give us a few minutes to study the anomaly and come up with a solution.

“There’s no time for that,” Odette cut in. “Ensign Boimler already came up with a solution which worked for us. We just need you to implement it in a different manner.”

Really?” Freeman raised an eyebrow. “Is that true, Ensign?

“Uh, yes sir,” Boimler confirmed. “The subspace pocket is filled with plasmon- and polariton-rich eddies. We created an antipolariton field to amplify the resulting quantum plasma oscillations to propel us back into normal space. I’m sending our sensor logs and ship’s systems data to you now.”

Got it,” Commander Ransom was heard over the channel. “Looks like a solid plan, Captain. We can shoot an antipolariton beam into the pocket and see what pops out.

I agree,” Lieutenant Commander Billups concurred.

Alright,” Freeman nodded. “Hit it!

A bright green beam shot out from the Cerritos’ main deflector dish before seemingly terminating at a point in empty space. “Nothing yet,” Billups reported. “It may take a while for the plasma oscillations to build up.

“Wait! My ship is certainly currently running with shields down,” Odette realized. “Will that affect its return to normal space?”

“No, but considering what we went through it might be in a few million pieces when it pops out,” Mariner said.

“What?!” Odette yelped.

“It’s okay. I’m sure your ship will be just fine,” Boimler attempted to assure her. “We came out okay. Your ship will probably just suffer a few crushed bulkheads, a handful of power grid overloads, a couple dozen hull breaches…”

A large, sleek cargo vessel suddenly popped into view in front of them. “Or it could emerge from the subspace quasi-phase pocket without a scratch,” Boimler blinked. “Aside from the collapsed bulkhead which blew you out into subspace…”

“Whoa!” Mariner gawked at the practical, majestic lines of the elegant cargo ship half the size of the Cerritos. It had clearly been built for speed. “You were travelling on a Windjammer-class merchant vessel?”

“Why sound so surprised?” Odette gave her a look. “I did say I had a ship.”

“Yeah, but I was expecting something a lot less refined,” Mariner blinked. “Like a second-hand Barolian freighter or a single-pilot cargo hauler…”

Starfleet! Thank goodness it’s you!” The screen split to show a weathered, middle-aged Rigelian male next to Freeman’s image. “I presume we have you to thank for getting us out of wherever we just were, but we still need your help! Our captain was lost and may still be alive in the void…

“Calm down, LeMarois,” Odette got his attention. “I’m right here.”

Captain! You’re alive!” The Rigelian gasped in relief.

Captain?!” Boimler, Mariner and Freeman stared at Odette in shock.

“Of course. I told you it was my ship,” Odette smiled. “I’m also the owner, operator and entrepreneur with commerce licenses in good standing. And this is Naej LeMarois, First Mate of the independent freetrader Interstella, my pride and joy.”

Aw, thanks Captain,” LeMarois puffed up proudly.

“I was referring to the Interstella,” Odette said teasingly. “Speaking of which, damage report.”

No damage, Captain, except for the hull breach where we were believed to have lost you,” LeMarois reported. “Repairs to it are complete. All eighteen crewmembers healthy and accounted for.

“Thank goodness,” Odette sighed in relief. “I was so worried about you all.”

Not as much as we were about you,” LeMarois said. “Glad to have you back, Captain.

“No other damage at all?” Boimler blinked, surprised. “Huh, that’s unexpected.”

Not really,” Billups was heard over the channel. “I’ve performed a preliminary analysis on the subspace data you sent us. Turns out the yacht’s shields created a harmonic amplification effect from the plasma oscillations. That’s what caused all the shaking and stress on the hull.

“So, wait,” Mariner frowned. “You’re saying that if we had just kept the shields down we wouldn’t have nearly torn ourselves to pieces?”

Pretty much,” Billups confirmed.

“Figures,” Mariner shot Boimler a look. “Nice going, Boims. Your theoretical, by-the-dusty-old-ships’-logs plan nearly killed us!”

“Oops,” Boimler gulped. “Uh, sorry?”

“Don’t listen to her. You have nothing to be sorry about,” Odette said giving Boimler’s shoulder another squeeze. “You saved our lives, my crew’s lives and both of our ships. You are a true hero!”

“Well, I wouldn’t go that far,” Mariner quipped.

“It was nothing,” Boimler blushed modestly. “All part of the service.”

“Really? Then perhaps you’d allow me to shower you with a reciprocal appreciation service,” Odette smiled. “Aboard my ship. In private…”

“WHAT?!” Mariner yelped narrowing her eyes at Odette.

“Huh?” Boimler blinked, stunned.

Speaking of service,” Freeman broke in sounding slightly amused. “The Cerritos will be staying to deploy warning buoys and chart this unexplored subspace quasi-phase pocket. I’d be happy to have an engineering team look over your ship if you’re willing to remain in a safe area outside the pocket’s proximity.

“Thank you, Captain, but unfortunately we are already running several hours behind schedule and have a prior appointment to keep,” Odette declined. “We’re due to offer a priceless selection of rare bladed weapons from all four quadrants for sale on Theta Zibal III.”

“WHAT?!” Mariner cried.

“Really?” Boimler blinked. “Wow, what a coincidence.”

What was that, Ensign?” Freeman asked.

“Uh, nothing,” Boimler gulped nervously.

In that case, return to the Cerritos once you see your guest there returned to her ship,” Freeman ordered. “I expect a full report on everything that occurred during your little jaunt within an hour.

“Yes, sir,” Boimler nodded.

“I don’t suppose you would be interested in acquiring a piece or two from our collection, Captain?” Odette gave Freeman a charming smile. “There’s a 3rd century Romulan cutlass or epic Nausicaan tegolar sword with your name on it.”

Sorry, those kinds of items are prohibited aboard Starfleet vessels,” Freeman declined. “I’ll just have to do without. Good trading and good journey.

“Thank you,” Odette said as Freeman’s image disappeared from the screen. She turned her attention back to Boimler. “Well, I’m afraid I must depart. I don’t suppose your captain would be willing to grant you some impromptu leave time?”

“I doubt it,” Boimler sighed shaking his head.

“Like heck she would,” Mariner twitched glaring at Odette. “Over my dead body!”

“Pity. Then please accept this gift to remember me by,” Odette smiled and gave Boimler a light peck on the cheek. “Until we meet again my bright, caring Starfleet officer in spandex.”

“Uh, right,” Boimler smiled back. “Until then, Ms. Odette. I mean, Captain. I mean…”

“It’s just Odette or Odelina, dear,” Odette smiled signaling LeMarois over the still open comm channel. “Odelina Kay Mudd.”

“MUDD?!” Mariner gasped as the Interstella’s transporter whisked Odette away. The Windjammer-class merchant vessel quickly closed the channel before warping away as well. “It couldn’t be…”

“Wow, what a woman,” Boimler leaned back in his seat with a big, happy smile on his face. “Odette is intelligent, capable, grateful, cool in a crisis and a starship captain to boot. She’s awesome!”

“She’s a menace! A menace, I tell ya!” Mariner growled. “First she steals my trade idea then she steals my customers! Now she’s trying to steal my friend too! Well, I wouldn’t let her!”

“She even owns her own ship,” Boimler whistled, impressed. “And operates as an independent space entrepreneur. How cool is that?”

“What am I supposed to do with all this contraband now?” Mariner threw up her hands. “Store it aboard the Cerritos until there’s a ship-wide need for bladed weapons?”

“I should’ve given her my personal subspace communication frequency. Or at least asked her for hers,” Boimler sighed in disappointment. “I even forgot to thank her for helping us get out of trouble with Captain Freeman. I have to admit, this has been the best unauthorized side trip we ever had.”

“Depends whether we’re able to return all the contraband to my hidey-spaces before we dock with the Cerritos,” Mariner warned. “Otherwise, we’ll end up spending the rest of our soon-to-be-terminated Starfleet careers in jail. Which is exactly where that little two-bit, hustling, rogue free-spirt should be!”

“The contraband, right,” Boimler groaned snapping out of his daze. “I’ll help you hide it from Shaxs and Ransom this time, but only to avoid being considered guilty by association.” He shot one last look where the Interstella had warp off into space. “Think we’ll ever run into Odette again?”

“I’d say the chances of that are as likely as a Starfleet shuttlecraft running into an unexploded, unexpected spatial anomaly,” Mariner growled with a determined twitch in her eye. “Which is one set of odds I definitely hope to lose!”

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Disclaimer: I do not own Star Trek: Lower Decks.
 
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