Chapter Seventeen
Stardate 54260.1 (16 April 2377)
USS Finback
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula
The away team from the Scamp materialized on the bridge of the Finback without incident. Once again, Captain Rodenko experienced something akin to deja vous as he looked at the setting which was both familiar, yet profoundly disturbing.
"Commander Slevon, please take Chief Fujita with you to engineering and see if you can continue restoring the ship's systems. Lt. Bin Salaam, you will remain on the bridge with me. I want to access all of the ship's logs as quickly as possible."
As Slevon and Fujita headed to the turbo lift, Rodenko added: "I need not remind you that we may have to depart quickly. At the first indication of tri-quantum waves, you are to beam back to Scamp. You are not to wait for any order from me, understood?"
The Vulcan Chief Engineer inclined his head. "Perfectly, Captain. I shall keep you apprised of our progress."
Rodenko nodded, still caught between restlessness and distraction. "Da, good. Carry on, Commander."
The Russian cutter skipper joined Bin Salaam at the operations station. The Lieutenant's hands hovered over the old-style control configuration as he familiarized himself with the layout. Rodenko pointed to a small alpha-numeric keypad.
"I believe this is what you are seeking, Lieutenant," Rodenko said, concealing his impatience.
Bin Salaam nodded and smiled nervously. "Yes sir - thank you." With that, the young officer entered the command over-ride code they had received from Star Fleet Archives.
"Command over-ride accepted," said the Finback's computer. "Awaiting instructions."
Rodenko placed his hands on the console and leaned forward. "Computer, replay last log entry of Capatin Shartuurn."
"Acknowledged, commencing playback."
A round viewscreen at the Ops station came to life, revealing the severe features of Captain G'lil Shartuurn, C.O. of the Finback and Rodenko's former Skipper. The dour Andorian woman was seated primly in her ready room, her back ram-rod straight and her hands clasped loosely on the desk.
"Captain's log, Stardate 26450 point 6. Captain G'lil Shartuurn, recording.
I have ordered a course change to investigate an unsual energy surge near the Lesser Riven Nebula. I have enformed Echo base of our intentions and we are currently en route at warp factor six with an ETA of two hours, fifty minutes.
Lt. Bruenner reports that the energy readings are approaching 500 teracochranes in intensity, suggesting this is not a natural phenomenon. Though our sensor capabilities are limited compared to a science vessel, we will record the event and submit our report at a later time."
The recording ended, causing Rodenko to frown in consternation.
"She sounds more like a Vulcan that an Andorian," mused Bin Salaam, earning a sharp look from Rodenko.
"She was a fine Captain and ran a tight ship, Lieutenant. I would not have you mock her memory!"
Bin Salaam's eyes widened. "I'm sorry, sir - I meant no disrespect."
Rodenko sighed and clasped the young officer's shoulder. "Of course you didn't, Ali. Forgive my testiness . . . I'm frustrated that we have so few answers."
"Yes sir. Perhaps we would learn more by replaying the bridge recordings?"
Rodenko smiled. "Good thinking, Lieutenant! Begin with time index 26450 point six-oh. Put it on the main viewer on quick-scan mode."
Boris settled into the command chair as Bin Salaam set up the playback from the bridge scanners. Momentarily, they were seeing the bridge of the Scamp from a scanner located near the ceiling, on the aft port side. This afforded them a bird's eye view of the bridge crew and the main view screen. In the quick-scan mode, the crew scurried around with exaggerated speed. Suddenly, the contact indicator light on the helm console began to strobe.
"Stop there, Lieutenant. Back it up a couple of minutes and resume at normal speed," ordered Rodenko.
The view ran in reverse for a few moments, then resumed at normal speed. Captain Shartuurn was seated in the command chair. A Human female sat at the helm and a Deltan male was at Ops. Boris allowed a wistful smile to play across his face as he recognized the raven-haired woman at the helm.
"Lt. Annette Fourier," he said quietly to himself. "Such a crush I had on you those many years ago . . ."
"Helm, drop us out of warp - make our speed one half impulse. Ops, give me an update on that energy surge," ordered Captain Shartuurn.
A fair-skinned Human male with close-cropped russet hair turned from the Ops board. "Energy levels have dropped to 200 teracochranes and are holding steady."
"That's more output than a dozen Ambassador class ships!" exclaimed an Asian woman seated at tactical. Rodenko remembered her as Lt. Commander Sun Li, the Finback's second officer.
"Noted, Commander," replied Captain Shartuurn, calmly.
The contact indicator on the helm began to flash, instantly elevating the tension level among the bridge crew.
"Contact, bearing 117 mark 6, distance . . . 840 million kilometers and closing." reported the Operations officer.
"Identification, please, Mr. Bruenner," replied the Captain, her voice emanating serenity with a hint of rebuke.
Rodenko and Bin Salaam watched with rapt fascination as the Operations officer checked and re-checked his readings. Bruenner said something unintelligible, obviously profoundly disturbed by the sensor readings.
"Ma'am . . ." he began, "I'm not sure . . . it's definitely not in the database, but it's massive! We should be able to get a visual on it . . ."
"On-screen," ordered Shartuurn.
Rodenko felt a primal chill of goose-flesh rippling down his arms as the viewscreen revealed a cube-shaped object rapidly approaching the Finback.
"Now we know . . ." Rodenko muttered. On the screen, the Finback's bridge crew watched with amazement and awe. Fear and horror were still moments away.
"Open a channel to that vessel, Mr. Bruenner," ordered Captain Shartuurn as she stood from her chair and tugged at her burgundy jacket.
"Hailing frequencies are open, Captain."
"I am Captain G'lil Shartuurn, in command of the Federation vessel, Finback. Please identify yourself and state your intentions."
For a moment, there was no response, save the cube increased in size, filling the viewscreen as it closed on the cutter.
The Andorian Captain crossed her arms, clearly perturbed. She was about to repeat her hail when a harsh chorus of voices replied . . .
"We are the Borg. Resistance is futile . . ."
Rodenko and Bin Salaam watched helplessly for several more minutes as the cube caught the border cutter in a tractor beam. Captain Shartuurn ordered phasers to fire at the Borg cube, but the initial effectiveness of their resistance was soon quashed as the Borg adapted and adjusted to the Finback's limited arsenal. All too soon, they witnessed the horrific sight of Borg drones materializing on the bridge. Though the bridge crew fought valiantly, the struggle was over quickly.
As the viewscreen showed the Borg inserting nano-probes into their victims, Rodenko said quietly, "That's enough, Ali. We've seen all we need here."
* * *
Stardate - Unknown
SS Eku
Sector - Unknown
"Sir? Sir! Are you alright?" Delta Simms raced to Akinola's side as the Captain knelt on the deck, trying to regain his equilibrium.
He took a deep breath, then rose carefully to his feet. "I'm fine, Delta. I'm starting to get the hang of these weird side-trips."
"What happened, sir?"
The smell of coffee tickled the Captain's nose. He suddenly realized he was famished. "Let's go to the galley - I'm starving! I'll fill everyone in there."
* * *
A few minutes later, the three Humans, two Orions, and one overweight feline, gathered around the table in the Eku's galley. Akinola was tearing into a sandwich as he related his contact with the ex-Borg.
"So all of this was just a desperate attempt to share what happened to them?" asked Castille. He shook his head. "Sorry, but I just don't get it."
"Think about it, O.C." replied Delta, "These people have been lost from their loved ones for years - some for decades. They realize their time is short . . . what would you do in the same situtation?"
Castille frowned, "Well, I . . ." he hesitated, "I guess I've never really thought about it."
"That's all they've had time to do, since they regained their free will," pointed out Akinola. "They want to be . . . remembered."
Solly had listened quietly throughtout Akinola's account. He rubbed his chin thoughtfully. "Beggin' your pardon, Skipper, but aren't there like thousands of them? How the frak do we 'remember' all those people? Hell, we don't even know who they are!"
Akinola gestured at the dark metal circle that sat in the center of the table - the Borg appliance.
"Scan that thing with your tri-corder, Delta," he ordered.
Simms raised her eyebrows in surprise, but complied. Her surprised expression turned to wonder.
"It's a data-chip!" she exclaimed. "It lists everyone who was captured by the Borg over the past two centuries, at least on these cubes."
Akinola took the dark metal object from Simms and gazed at it. "If nothing else, we're going to provide closure for a lot of people back home."
"Speaking of home," interrupted Castille, "have they left a chunk of metal anywhere telling us how to get back?"
"No," admitted the Captain. "My understanding is, they needed some time to rest. I think their energy levels are getting pretty low. They said they would communicate with me a final time to tell me what needs to be done to get us back home."
Castille snorted. "This is like some twisted version of Dickens' 'A Christmas Carol,' " he groused.
* * *
Stardate 54260.2 (16 April 2377)
USS Bluefin
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula
Inga Strauss sat in the command chair, willing herself not to fidget. She watched the warp-tug, USS Scioto, drift languidly by on the main viewer. Captain Phralnis was anxious to tow the Vulcan and Orion ships back to Echo and get back to his normal routine. The fact that Scioto was still on station was probably due to Captain Rodenko exerting his seniority.
And if I'm any judge, I imagine Captain Rodenko was more than a little blunt in his conversation with Captain Phralnis. The thought made Inga smile a little. She had known that the Scamp's C.O. was a close friend of Captain Akinola's, but she had come to appreciate his loyalty and tenacity at finding their missing comrades.
Her smile faded as she considered how helpless they were in making a rescue. For all of their sensor sweeps, multi-spectrum scans, hypotheses and wild guesses, they had no real idea what to do.
At some point, Admiral Bateson will be forced to call off SAR-OPs and we'll have to give up, she thought, morosely. The idea that they might not recover the Captain, Delta, Doc, Solly, or Lt. Rune seemed surreal to her. She could not imagine such a loss. This wasn't like a combat situation where at least you knew people were dying for a cause . . . for all she knew (and hoped) they were alive and well - just out of reach.
Nervous energy forced her to bound to her feet. She walked forward and stood behind the helm station with her arms crossed, glaring at the viewscreen.
Lt. Bralus glanced up at her. He was going to make a comment, but upon seeing her expression, decided that silence was the wiser option.
* * *