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Star Trek: Lower Decks - CF064 - "Infinite Insanity in Infinite Discombobulations" (Challenge Entry)

ColdFusion180

Lieutenant Commander
Red Shirt
Originally posted on fanfiction.net - Link.
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Infinite Insanity in Infinite Discombobulations

“Oh joy. Yet another boring ol’ layover at boring ol’ Douglas Station,” Mariner drawled while sauntering down a corridor. “Man, I’ve been to Vulcan repair depots that were more happening that this place. Why can’t the Cerritos ever make a pit stop at a more exciting place like Starbase 11 or Outpost 23?”

“Well, the Cerritos does unofficially consider Douglas Station to be her home port,” Boimler said walking next to her. “Which explains why we seem to make call here about every other week. Though it doesn’t explain your abrupt decision this time to tag along with me.”

“I’m chaperoning,” Mariner smirked tossing an arm around Boimler’s shoulders. “Can’t have you attending some awesomely wild party without somebody watching your back. Especially if that somebody is me!”

“It’s not a wild party,” Boimler said brushing off Mariner’s arm. “It’s a local one-year reunion for the Academy class of ‘79.”

“Eh, same difference,” Mariner shrugged. “Though I gotta say, the timing of it all seems really off. The Academy’s typical graduation day was months ago. So much for your self-promoted rep for exact scheduling and precise organization…”

“I’m not the one who arranged everything,” Boimler defended. “It would be extremely difficult for all the members of an entire Academy class to get together on the exact graduation anniversary date. There was a primary class reunion earlier this year, but I wasn’t able to attend. This is a secondary class gathering for all class members who happen to be posted or stationed nearby.”

“Whatever,” Mariner waved. “It can be the five hundred- and ninety-fourth-day anniversary of your class’s pet mascot for all I care as long as there’s plenty of great food and drinks!”

“Oh no!” Boimler groaned. “Don’t even think about it!”

“How can’t I think about it?” Mariner replied. “Your class’s little shindig is being held in one of Douglas Station’s better bars. Not that that’s saying much…”

“It’s not a bar. It’s a lounge,” Boimler pointed out.

“It’s a bar,” Mariner insisted giving him a look. “A lounge is just a bar with more comfortable furniture and higher quality drinks.”

“Fine, it’s a bar. But that’s not important,” Boimler hissed. “What’s important is that you don’t act out and embarrass me by telling any wild, outrageous stories or end up getting drunk!”

“How about wild, outrageous drinking stories?” Mariner asked. “I know a whole slew of those. Got some pretty juicy ones too. Wohoo!”

“No!” Boimler shouted. “No juice, no stories and no drinking!”

“Aw, c’mon, Boims,” Mariner pleaded. “You can’t expect me to stay dry while hanging out in a bar. That’s like asking a Tellarite not to speak while at a Debating contest and convention.”

“Fine, you can drink,” Boimler gave in. “But not in excess. I say that like I have any control over your conduct whatsoever…”

“Relax, Boims. I’ll be on my best behavior,” Mariner promised with a grin. “No acting out or crazy stunts from Beckett Mariner this time.”

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

The two ensigns soon entered a large lounge filled with people sitting, standing and happily chatting away. “Okay, good. We’re fashionably not quite on time,” Boimler nodded nervously. “Time to reconnect with my peers.”

“Don’t worry, Boims. You got this,” Mariner encouraged. “What do you want me to do?”

“I don’t know,” Boimler stage whispered. “Just go around and mingle with people. In moderation!”

“No pro-blem-o,” Mariner nodded doing so. “So, what’s new with you?”

“I didn’t mean with me,” Boimler groaned. “Go find some poor victim…I mean, citizen to chat, connect and latch onto. Though that may be a bit difficult since technically you are a stranger here…”

“Mariner?” A sable-haired human ensign around Boimler’s age approached the pair. “Is that you?”

“Hey, Qasim,” Mariner waved. “How ya doing, buddy?”

“I’m great,” The man smiled back. “Nice you see you again.”

“Huh?” Boimler blinked in surprise. “Wait, you know each other?”

“Well, duh,” Mariner confirmed. “Qasim here hitched a ride aboard the Cerritos to his first posting about a week before you were assigned to the ship.”

“It was an informative week,” Ensign Qasim said. “I learned more from Mariner about real starship life than I did in four years at the Academy. Especially during our off-hours at the…”

“Whoa, sorry. Gotta cut you off there, Qas,” Mariner held up a hand. “My friend here said I’m not allowed to talk about stuff like that. It’s a wild drinking story after all.”

“Huh?” Boimler did a take. “Wait, what are you…?”

“Oh, I see. Too bad,” Qasim sighed turning to Boimler. “Sorry if I offended you. And you are…?”

“It’s me! Brad Boimler!” Boimler gestured at himself. Qasim stared at him blankly. “We were in the same class at the Academy. We took Quantum Chemistry together. We were lab partners!”

“Oh yes. Now I remember,” Qasim nodded politely before turning back to Mariner. “So, Mariner. What have you been you up to lately?”

“Eh, not much,” Mariner shrugged. “A little exploring, a little blackmail collecting, a little rule breaking…”

“In other words, nothing’s really changed,” Qasim chuckled. “Just like the old days.”

What old days?” Boimler asked curiously. “Please tell me…!”

“Beckett!” A uniformed female Andorian walked up to them with a smile. “I knew that was you!”

“Hey, Verilla,” Mariner greeted. “Told ya toughing things out until you made ensign would be worth the wait.”

“That’s Lieutenant, j.g. to you,” Verilla smiled indicating her collar. “I received a promotion just last month.”

“What? Oh no!” Mariner mocked cried shaking her head. “Verilla, you poor fool. What have you done?”

“Huh?” Boimler blinked once again. “You know her too?”

“Sure,” Mariner grinned. “Verilla did her sophomore field study year when I served aboard the Quito. I was one of her mentors.”

“More like my only mentor,” Verilla grinned fondly. “You taught me everything I really needed to know about Starfleet life. Like what to do with some mako roots, a cytoplasmic separator and a bottle of…”

“Oops! Hold it right there, Verilla,” Mariner warned. “Can’t let you spill the beans about that. It’s another wild drinking story. Well, more like a whole string of them…”

“What?” Boimler gasped.

“Awww, why not?” Verilla pouted. “They’re so interesting.”

“They’re also a verboden topic at this particular gathering,” Mariner explained. “Boimler declared it so.”

“Who’s Boimler?” Verilla asked curiously.

I’m Boimler!” Boimler waved speaking up again. “We were in the same Xenobiology study group together. Don’t you remember me?”

“Not really, no,” Verilla shrugged. “Sorry.”

“What?” Boimler gasped, stunned. “How can that be?”

“Don’t take it personally, Boims,” Mariner said patting Boimler on the back. “Lots of folks don’t make memorable impressions on their peers. It’s okay to be just another forgotten face in a crowd…”

“Aha! Look! It’s Beckett Mariner!” A booming Ariolo ensign strode up to the group. “I’d recognize that distinctive, character-defining voice anywhere!”

“Right back at ya, Loforreo,” Mariner grinned. “Does your right foreleg still itch at the sight of pickled avocados?”

“Are you kidding?” Loforreo chortled. “All my legs go numb just at the thought of them!”

“Why?” Boimler asked. “And how did you manage to meet Mariner while attending the Academy?”

“Oh, we didn’t meet at the Academy,” Mariner explained. “Loforreo and I go way back to when he was just a colt.”

“Our fathers happened to be good friends back in the day,” Loforreo added. “So Mariner and I naturally became the same. In fact, Mariner was the one who inspired me to enter Starfleet in the first place.”

“What?!” Boimler yelped in shock.

“Sheesh, don’t look so surprised, Boims. It’s not that hard to believe,” Mariner rolled her eyes. “As for Lofy’s little avocado phobia, that happened during one crazy jaunt down in Tijuana…aw, forget it. That’s yet another wild drunken story I’m not allowed to tell.”

“Tell it,” Boimler begged. “Tell me, please!”

“Nope, not gonna happen,” Mariner declared making a zipping motion. “I gave my word.”

“And we all know Beckett Mariner’s word is her bond,” A balding, gray-haired man commented joining in. “One that even Klingon painstiks are unable to break.”

“Captain Friant,” The other younger officers instinctively stood at attention. “Sir.”

“Yo, how ya doing, Squeaky?” Mariner smiling giving a casual wave. “Long time, no see.”

“Squeaky?” Boimler twitched staring at Mariner in shock. “Did you just call one of the Federation’s most noted experts in Ancient Philosophies and Interspecies Ethics ‘Squeaky’?”

“Yep, sure did,” Mariner grinned cheekily. “It’s okay. He likes it.”

“Only when it comes from you,” Captain Friant chuckled good-naturedly. “I see you haven’t changed a bit.”

“Eh, why change with what works?” Mariner posed philosophically.

“Since when do you do any work?” Boimler gaped, stunned. “Seriously, when?”

“What brings you here, Professor?” Qasim asked addressing Friant. “I mean, Captain?”

“Professor is fine,” Friant assured. “My ship the Laozi is undergoing maintenance at the moment. When I heard about this local reunion for the class of ’79 I thought I’d stop by and check in on my old students.”

“Really? Wow, thank you, sir,” Verilla and Loforreo nodded. “It’s an honor.”

“Yeah, grab a drink, Squeaky,” Mariner smiled. “Leave your rank at the door and let your hair down for a bit. At least what remains of your hair…”

“A lesson I learned from you the hard way,” Friant noted.

“Excuse me, sir, but exactly how do you know Mariner?” Boimler managed to speak up. “And why do you keep allowing her to call you ‘Squeaky’?”

“Oh, that’s quite an interesting story,” Friant smiled fondly. “You see, it all started during a diplomatic mission to the Jarada…”

“Wait a second there, Squeaky,” Mariner cut in. “You can’t tell Boims here about that. It’s a wild drinking story that he definitely does not want to hear.”

“I do want to hear it,” Boimler insisted. “Tell me! Tell me!”

“But it’s a good story,” Friant pointed out.

“Sorry, Squeaky. No breaking the rules of reunion decorum and etiquette today,” Mariner declared. “I gave my word after all. Maybe next time…”

“But…but…” Boimler stuttered.

“Hey, look. There’s our class salutatorian Ensign H’pozzik,” Verilla pointed. “Think you can get her to dance atop a lounge table and perform the same stunt the two of you did on Sarona VIII, Beckett?”

“Only one way to find out,” Mariner grinned sauntering over to the bar. “Hey, Pozz! What’s up?”

The rest of Mariner’s impromptu entourage eagerly followed after her leaving a completely stunned and shocked Boimler behind. “Okay, this is has to be a dream,” Boimler desperately fumbled for an explanation. “Or a telepathic illusion of some kind. Or I accidentally stumbled into a twisted alternate reality. Yeah, that’s it. Everything makes sense now. There’s no way these kinds of bizarre and highly improbably coincidences could ever happen in the real universe…”

“Hi, Mariner! Beckett, you’re here! Hey, look everyone! It’s Mariner!” More shouts of surprise and delight rose from the growing crowd of class reunion attendees.

“Oh geeze, this really is happening!” Boimler groaned holding a hand to his head. “Maybe I should just leave and return to the Cerritos. With Mariner gone there’s bound to be far less madness and insanity going on aboard the ship than in this place…”
 
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Meanwhile…

“Ah, it’s nice to have time to relax while docked at Douglas Station,” Rutherford commented while working on a starship model in the Cerritos’ bar.

“Wheeeeee! Hahahahaha! Yahooo!” Excited shouts and cries rang throughout the room.

“Though this is the first time I’ve ever heard of a starbase sending people to relax and enjoy themselves aboard a ship,” Tendi noted working alongside him. “How do you think Dr. Migleemo managed to convince Captain Freeman to allow his latest family reunion to be hosted aboard the Cerritos?”

“I overheard Billups mentioning it was because one of Migleemo’s relatives is some kind of high-ranking VIP,” Rutherford explained.

“Yippeeeeee!

CRASH!

“SQUAWK!”

“Really?” Tendi blinked at the crowd of beak and feathered guests partying about them. “Is he the official-looking one doing the nut and jelly mambo or the fancy-dressed one surfing down the bar on an hors d'oeuvre tray?”

“Actually, I think it’s the regal lady draped in fur and ribbons passed out in the punch bowl,” Rutherford said. “Good thing the bowl is empty and pool sized.”

“That’s it! Eat up, everyone!” A bespeckled elder man hooted perched on the refreshment table. “Fresh earthworms, gree-worms and imported racht for everyone!”

“Yay!” All the ornithoid humanoids present whooped.

“If only the punch bowl would remain empty,” Tendi noted as the refreshment table was mobbed. “They’ve had to refill it three times already.”

“Which is weird since most of the guests were already loaded when they got here,” Rutherford remarked.

“Muhahahaha!” A short, fluffed man cackled while repeatedly shooting a civilian-issue phaser into the ceiling. “Happy Rainbow Hour, everybody! Yeah!”

“In more ways than one,” Rutherford gulped as the phaser-armed guest was quickly tackled by a pair of Security officers.

“Excuse me, Doctor. Things are really getting out of hand,” An annoyed-looking Captain Freeman frowned while standing with Migleemo and Migleemo’s mother. “And as for you, Ms. M…”

“Call me Meema, dear,” Migleemo’s mother insisted.

“Ms.…Meema,” Freeman said gritting her teeth. “While I’m all for respecting various cultural and behavioral norms, this unexpected gathering is becoming a bit too much!”

“Ah, don’t put your puffed pastries in a twist, Captain,” Migleemo smiled casually. “This tossed salad of a family reunion may seem a bit mixed and battered at moment, but I assure you every crunchy crouton is well in hand.”

CRASH!

SMASH!

TINKLE!

“Wahooo!” A group of obviously inebriated ornithoids hooted while tossing half-eaten rum balls at makeshift targets of stacked mugs and shot glasses. “I win! I get to take a drink!”

“Aw, no! I lost!” Other equally drunken guests wailed. “That means I have to take a drink too!”

“Aaahhhhhh! Help! No! Get away from me!” Commander Ransom yelped while being chased by an elder, overly-affectionate feathered woman. “Ma’am, please control yourself!”

“Come to mama, sweet cheeks,” The elder woman chirped giddily. “Let me show you how soft all-natural down really feels like!”

“Hmpht. Looks like your Aunt Gheemi is on the hunt again,” Meema commented to Migleemo. “One can’t blame her really. She just got through finalizing her divorce.”

“Really?” Migleemo blinked. “Was it her fourth or fifth?”

“Seventh, actually,” Meema explained. “That old coot is a real man-eater.”

“No kidding,” Freeman groaned.

“Arrrgh, avast me buckos!” A skinny, wild-eyed guest dressed like an eighteenth-century Earth buccaneer cackled while swinging a long soup ladle around like a sword. “Make ready the solar sails and arm yourselves to the beak! All the plunder of the galaxy’s four quadrants will be mine! All mine! Hahahahaha!”

“Oh, I didn’t know Uncle Pompku had been released from the psychiatric facility on Elba II,” Migleemo commented casually.

“He wasn’t,” Meema informed him. “That crazy fool somehow managed to escape.”

“Again?” Migleemo blinked in surprise as Pompku attempted to set Lieutenant Levy on fire. “My, the security measures there certainly have fermented lately. That place has indubitably become a certifiable colander of cracked nuts.”

“What did you expect?” Meema gave Migleemo a look. “You’re the one who recommended Pompku be confined there in the first place.”

“You locked up your own uncle?” Freeman stared at Migleemo in shock.

“Well, it wasn’t the first time,” Migleemo explained. “I’ve had to render several other relatives to the proverbial icebox for their own mental good.”

“Yayayayaya!” Several pairs of feathered guests stormed by while dueling each other with cheese breadsticks. “You selfish oaf! Die! Die! Die!”

“Gheemi! Moksotee! Tuigu! Leeamo! Quit that silly brawling right now!” Meema scolded. “You shouldn’t be feuding with each other like that! You’re cousins after all.”

“Finally,” Freeman sighed in relief. “It’s past time somebody went and laid down the law around here.”

“You all know better than to fight while wasting perfectly good food,” Meema went on. “Use knives, ice picks and cleavers like any other civilized being.”

“Okay!” The flock of cousins agreed doing so. “YAAAHHHHHH!”

“On the other hand,” Freeman groaned.

“Ack, kids these days. They have no sense of responsibility,” Meema tutted. “All except for my special little boy here, right Captain? That must be why you often leave him in command of the Bridge and ship.”

“I what?” Freeman blinked in surprise.

“Now Mother, I told you I worked on the Bridge,” Migleemo coughed awkwardly. “I didn’t say I was in command of the Bridge. Much less the entire ship.”

“Well, why not?” Meema asked. “You’re a fine, handsome tiercel of a man. Not to mention by far the sanest member in the family.”

“You’re what?!” Freeman gasped in shock. “Ugh, why am I not surprised?”

“GET THE *BLEEP* OFF ME, YOU *BLEEPING* LITTLE BRATS!” Doctor T’Ana howled with half a dozen feathered toddlers clinging to her form. A flock of other young, excited kids laughed and chased after her while spraying silly string everywhere. “STOP PULLING MY FUR! NO, NOT THE WHISKERS! YEEEOOOWWW!”

“Aaahhhhhh! Out of the way!” A horde of terrified Starfleet officers bolted from the room in terror. “Oh, my eyes! My eyes!”

“Uh oh,” Migleemo gulped. “Excuse me a moment, Captain. Meema.” He quickly ran off. “Aunt Luuni, please put your clothes back on! That is not a bath fountain!”

“Oh geeze!” Freeman groaned holding her head. “Picard was right! I hate dealing with civilians!”

“Wow,” Rutherford blinked as madness and insanity proceeded to reign throughout the bar. “I’m certainly exploring and learning a lot of new things about relative relations today. Whether I want to or not.”

“I’ll say,” Tendi agreed observing the chaos. “And I thought my family was a bit odd.”

“Really?” Rutherford blinked curiously. “What’s your family like?”

“Uh, you know. Just the usual amount of slightly eccentric types,” Tendi laughed nervously. “It’s not like it’s full of a bunch of highly skilled enforcers and assassins or anything.”

“If you say so,” Rutherford shrugged. “Wait…what?!”

“It’s too bad Boimler and Mariner are missing out on all this,” Tendi quickly changed the subject. “I bet they’re having a great time over on the station.”

--------------------------------------

Meanwhile…

“Why do these things always happen to me?” Boimler moaned dejectedly while sitting at a table nursing a drink. “I work hard, study hard, follow rules, do everything I’m supposed to. Sure, I manage to get in a little trouble now and then, but not through any actions of my own. It’s because I’m always either dragged into it by someone else or from being the victim of a simple misunderstanding. I’m a good person! I take my life and duties seriously. I work and study and strive to be the best Starfleet officer I can be! Is it so bad to sacrifice one’s social and personal life in exchange for building one’s nearly unnoticed career? Is it? IS IT?!”

Boimler sighed and took a calming sip from his drink. “Sorry about that. This whole class reunion has been one big disappointment. Okay, I didn’t expect to be Mister Popular or anything, but I thought there’d be at least one person who would know and recognize me. Is that too much to ask?” He groaned and glanced at his drinking companion. “Thanks for being here with me. Nothing like having a friendly, understanding face to help work out one’s problems. You know what I’m talking about, right?”

“Bloop,” A large lionfish bubbled while swimming inside a nearby display tank.

“Oh geeze, what am I doing?” Boimler groaned as the lionfish nonchalantly swam away. “Enough moping around being sorry for myself. Time to boldly go out and show everyone exactly what they’re missing! I’m a Starfleet officer! I’m Brad Boimler! I’m going to make sure I’m somebody worth remembering!”

“Yahooo! Alright!” Mariner’s excited whoops were heard the length and breadth of the lounge. “It’s Mosh Pit Time, everybody! Break out the body oil and icoberry gelatin! Yeah!”

“Of course, some people elevate being remembered into an art form,” Boimler groaned as the crowd happily cheered on Mariner’s antics. “By becoming a figurative plasma torch that spews nothing but memory-searing graffiti!”

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Later…

“Ugh, well there goes several more sad hours of my life I’ll never get back,” Boimler sighed as he trudged back aboard the Cerritos. “What a waste.”

“Hey, man,” Rutherford greeted standing with Tendi. “How did things go at your class reunion?”

“Don’t ask. Please,” Boimler groaned. “Talk about a complete and utter mess.”

“Oh dear. What happened?” Tendi asked worriedly. “And where’s Mariner? Did she ending getting into a fight with some of your classmates?”

“Are you kidding?” Boimler barked out a laugh. “They voted her Honorary Miss Congeniality!”

“Huh?” Rutherford blinked in confusion. “How is that possible? There’s no such title or position in Starfleet or the Academy.”

“There is now,” Boimler grumbled. “It turns out Mariner had previously met half my Academy class and a good number of the instructors during wild drinking incidents all over the Federation and beyond!”

“What?” Tendi and Rutherford gasped in surprise. “Seriously?”

“Unfortunately, yes,” Boimler groaned rubbing his temples. “Mariner ending up being the literal life of the party. People were carrying her around on their shoulders and spelling out her name in lights made by lines of flaming cocktails. It was crazy!”

“Wow, that’s certainly unexpected,” Tendi commented. “And I thought Doctor Migleemo’s family reunion was wild.”

“His what?” Boimler blinked.

“Oh yeah, Doctor Migleemo managed to host his latest family reunion aboard the Cerritos while you were gone,” Rutherford explained. “It was quite a raid.”

“You mean rave,” Boimler corrected.

“No, I mean raid,” Rutherford stated. “Station Security suddenly burst in during the middle of the Balloon and Custard Popping Contest. Turns out half the guests were fugitives and escapees from various psychiatric facilities.”

“They were what?” Boimler gaped, stunned. “Huh, that explains a lot.”

“Needless to say, the whole family reunion was quickly cancelled after that,” Tendi continued. “Doctor Migleemo and Captain Freeman went over to the Station’s Security Office to make statements, help fill out reports and try to have the least mentally-disturbed guests released on bail.”

“They’ll have to get in line,” Boimler shook his head. “Douglas Station’s entire Security contingent is currently busy trying to deal with Mariner’s latest mess.”

“Huh?” Rutherford blinked again. “What are you talking about? I thought you said Mariner was on her best behavior.”

“She was,” Boimler confirmed. “It was everyone else at the class reunion who ended up acting out and causing a complete, all-out brawl.”

“Huh?” Tendi repeated. “Sorry, you must be mistaken. There’s no way a group of Starfleet officers would ever allow themselves to get drawn into a fight like that.”

“Are you kidding?” Boimler gave her a look. “Lieutenant Verilla was the one who threw the first punch!”

“What?” Rutherford gasped. “Wait, who’s she?”

“My old classmate and one of Mariner’s many, many admirers,” Boimler explained. “The class reunion was actually going okay until a group of local civilians entered the lounge due to a slight booking mix-up. A group which just happened to contain a fair number of Mariner’s many exes!”

“Oh my,” Tendi gasped. “Talk about an unfortunate coincidence.”

“Understatement of the century,” Boimler moaned. “You can just guess what happened once all those people recognized Mariner living it up atop the lounge bar. I’ve never seen a fight break out that fast before.”

“You mean Mariner ended up having to fight her exes?” Rutherford asked.

“No. All of Mariner’s exes ended up getting into a fight with each other,” Boimler corrected. “Over who Mariner considered to be the best.”

“Ouch,” Tendi winced. “That’s not good. Wait, so how did Starfleet officers manage to get caught up in that argument?”

“Because a particularly jilted Bynar tried to bad-mouth Mariner to her face,” Boimler explained. “Which caused Lieutenant Verilla to come to Mariner’s defense. Which quickly drew in the mob of Mariner’s other exes. Which drew in even more Starfleet officers and…”

“I get the picture,” Tendi gulped. “So, what was Mariner doing during all this?”

“Kicking back drinks at the bar while watching everyone else fight. What else?” Boimler groaned. “I managed to sneak out right as Station Security showed up and attempted to pry an enraged Captain Ramsey off a howling Anabaj’s head. Turns out the Oakland is currently undergoing maintenance and resupply at Douglas Station as well.”

“Oh. Okay. Nice to hear Captain Ramsey managed to stop by to see Mariner,” Rutherford commented. “And that Mariner won’t end up being thrown in the Brig over this. From the sounds of it, none of the fighting was actually her fault.”

“Not directly anyway,” Boimler sighed. “Yet somehow Mariner’s very presence managed to set off another wild, out of control incident!”

“At least it proves not all reunions, get-togethers and gatherings are dull,” Tendi remarked. “Whether previously scheduled or not. Life’s never boring when you’re a member of Starfleet’s Lower Decks.”

“Yeah!” Rutherford grinned. “Hmmm, maybe I should consider attending one of my Academy class reunions someday. Now, what year did I graduate again?”

“Oh geeze,” Boimler groaned hold his head. “So ends attending my first Starfleet Academy class reunion. Hopefully, it will also be the last!”

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Disclaimer: I do not own Star Trek: Lower Decks.
 
Once again, you stay true to the manic nature of the show... well done.

Though I have to say, I would have remembered Boimler for his screaming ability alone. :lol:
 
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