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Tales of the USS Bluefin - 9: "Ghost in the Machine"

Shades of The Haunting here--the original, not the remake! :) Which is a very good thing for the reader--not so good for the characters. :evil:

An excellent job in ratcheting up the tension both with Akinola and Bane as the players are entering their crucibles.
 
Excellent stuff. All very eerie especially since your Nightmare challenge entry a while back hinted at a different end for the EKU and now it pops up with a heck of a lot more mystery surrounding its disappearance.
 
Chapter Seven

Stardate 54258.9 (14 April 2377)
USS Bluefin
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula


Officers’ Wardroom

Inga gazed at Nigel with affection. She had deep feelings for the brash Australian officer, but she knew that there were elements of his past that still remained a mystery to her. Of course, she knew he had several intense but brief romantic relationships with other women in past years, but she had never before pried into the details.

Now, her position as Executive Officer forced her to delve more into Nigel’s past than she really wanted. To learn more about the temperament and judgment of an officer under her charge (in this case, K'lira Rune) trumped personal feelings. She had to know whether Lt. (j.g.) Rune was a responsible officer who had made a terrible mistake, or was she a loose cannon who played by her own rules.

She reached across the table and grasped his hand. “Nigel, tell me what happened that day.”

Bane smiled, but there was a tinge of sadness to it. He nodded, “Alright – you need to know, I understand that. I just hope it won’t . . . you know . . .”

Inga squeezed his hand. “Change things between us?” she finished. She squeezed his hand and smiled at him. “Don’t worry about that, Nigel. I don’t hold your past against you.”

He nodded, accepting her words and he seemed to relax a bit. His brows knit slightly as he gathered his thoughts.

“Like I told you, K’lira and I enjoyed flirting with each other. I enjoyed her company and, well, she liked to hang out with me as well. But I didn’t really realize how strongly she felt about me, until things went really, really wrong on that boarding mission.”

Strauss listened intently, not wanting to break his train of thought.

Nigel took a breath and continued. “We were patrolling when we picked up a vessel emerging from the Badlands. They were running without a transponder, so the Captain ordered us in to investigate. Turns out it was a pirate ship and they had attacked a Merchant Service vessel, stolen what they could from the manifest and taken a dozen of the merchant crew as hostages.”

Bane’s eyes seemed to grow distant as the memories flooded back. “We pursued the blighters for five hours – they gave us quite a run, I’ll give ‘em that. Finally, we got close enough to launch a couple of rat-traps which brought ‘em to a quick stop. The Captain ordered up boarding parties. I was in a group with Commander McBride, Lt. Fralk, Lt. Rune, and a couple of crewman. Senior Chief Brin was in another group with Lt. Caruso and T’Ser – Caruso’s the one who later transferred to the regular fleet and was killed in the war.”

He paused a moment, getting back on track. “Lt. Caruso’s team beamed over to the bridge and immediately got caught in a fire-fight. This bunch of pirates had no intention of giving up quietly. We beamed into engineering and were able to gain control pretty quickly. We had to kill two of the pirates but the others gave up in short order. That’s when I think we let our guard down a bit. Or, I should say, I did.”

Nigel swallowed and Inga noticed a sheen of perspiration on Bane’s forehead. He cleared his throat, whether out of distress or embarrassment, Inga could not tell.

“I was putting restraints on one of the perps, when another pirate suddenly appears. I swear, to this day I don’t know where he came from. He’s got a Merchant Service officer by the throat and a disruptor to the poor sod’s head. The pirate is screaming at us – not making much sense, but his intent was clear – back off, or he kills the hostage.”

“To say I was caught with my knickers down would be an understatement. I’d holstered my phaser and had no cover at all. The bloody pirate suddenly realized he’s got a clear shot at a Border Dog and he begins to smile. Gawd, what an ugly set of teeth in that bloke’s scabby head! I heard McBride and Lt. Rune shout at the pirate at about the same time – warning him to stand down. Scabby keeps brandishing the disruptor, using his hostage as a shield. That’s when K’lira begins to . . .”

He paused, reliving that dreadful moment, a look of anxiety and sadness on his face.

“Nigel . . . it’s alright. Take your time,” encouraged Inga.

“She broke cover and walked out into the clear. McBride was about to have kittens! The Commander warned her off and began to scream at her, to ‘back off’ and ‘stand-down’ and such, but she ignored the XO and aimed a phaser carbine at the pirate. Scabby-face just grins bigger and aims his disruptor right back at me, taunting Lt. Rune, saying that I would die first.”

Bane looked up at Inga, his eyes large and dark. “I honestly thought it was the end for me, Inga. I knew he was going to pull the trigger.”

“What happened?” she asked, softly.

“Lt. Rune fired first,” he said, his voice somewhat distant. “It was a bonzer shot, Inga – caught ‘ol ugly right in the head. He dropped like he’d kissed a Cappelan Power Cat. The hostage staggered a bit, but he seemed alright – just scared to death. Or so we thought.”

Nigel looked down at the table for a moment. “I was shaking like a twig in a gale, couldn’t move for a few seconds. To be honest, the next few minutes were kind of a blur. Our blokes came out of the woodwork. A corpsman went to check on the pirate and the Merchant Service officer just kind of stood there, looking stunned but otherwise okay. K’lira was heading my way when McBride ran over and just unloaded on her! God, Inga, I never saw Commander McBride so angry before nor since!”

“What did Lt. Rune do?” asked Strauss.

Bane snorted, his lips twisting into a rueful smile. “She unloaded a few choice Orion curses on him – I understood a few of them, but I won’t repeat them. The XO relieved her of duty on the spot and sent her back to the ship. At that point, she probably would have received an official reprimand and ship-board punishment, but that’s probably all.”

“But?” prodded Inga.

“But,” sighed Nigel, “The Merchant Service officer suddenly collapses. Corpsman Rice ran over and checked him. Next thing I know, she’s calling for an emergency beam-out directly to sickbay.”

Bane rubbed his face and shook his head slightly. “Poor bloke had a massive heart attack. Dr. Baxter said he was probably dead before he hit the floor. Doc did all he could but, well, our sickbay’s not as advanced as a ship of the line or a starbase. Even then, he probably wouldn’t have made it.”

Inga shook her head in sympathy. “And Lt. Rune was implicated in his death.”

Bane nodded. “Yeah – she was already up shi . . ., in hot water for disobeying the XO and insubordination. But I think if it had ended there, the Skipper would have handled it – though it wouldn’t have been pleasant for her.”

Strauss grimaced, trying to imagine such a meeting with Captain Akinola and deciding she didn’t want to know. “No doubt. But the merchant officer’s death changed all that.”

“Oh yeah. I imagine you know most of the rest from her personnel file – the inquest, the general court martial, etc. She barely avoided a dishonorable discharge and time at the New Zealand penal colony . . . or worse. Instead, they reduced her one grade in rank and banished her from ship duty for four years. All of her commendations and awards were stripped from her record. I doubt she’ll ever advance beyond lieutenant.”

Inga frowned slightly. “But why didn’t she get discharged? I mean, she was implicated in the merchant officer’s death, right?”

“True enough. But her record had been exemplary up to that point. She had some strong advocates on her behalf – T’Ser, the Skipper . . . and me. She did probably save my life, after all.”

“At the expense of a civilian life,” murmured Strauss. She quickly looked at Bane, her eyes widening. “Oh, Nigel, I’m sorry! I didn’t mean it like . . .”

Bane waved a hand. “It’s alright, Inga. And you’re right. She made the wrong call. But . . . well, I can’t help but feel grateful to her, regardless of what she did.”

“But why the rift with Solly?” asked Inga. “I mean, he wasn’t there when it went down – he was on the pirate ship’s bridge, right?”

“Yeah, but he took it pretty hard, Inga. He refused to come forward as a character witness during the proceedings, said it would be . . . ‘inappropriate.’ More than that, I think he was very disappointed in her conduct, probably as much about her mouthing off at Commander McBride than her taking the shot at that slimy bastard of a pirate!”

Inga nodded, conceding the point. “Okay, I can believe that. But still, didn’t he try to help her at all? Encourage her in any way?”

Bane cocked his head at Strauss. “We are talking about Solly Brin here – right? Brin is a top-notch NCO and a down-right scary bastard in a fight, but as to relationships . . .he’s not exactly the warm and fuzzy type.”

Inga absently chewed on her thumbnail in thought. “No, I suppose not. But dammit, this is his daughter, Nigel, or step-daughter, or near-daughter or whatever . . . That should count for something!

He shrugged. “Orions can be odd ducks at times.”

“I suppose you’re right,” said Strauss, still troubled. She forced a smile and squeezed Bane’s hand. “Thanks for opening up to me. It must have been difficult.”

Nigel lifted her hand and kissed it. “Anything for the XO,” he said with a wink.

* * *

Stardate 54258.9 (14 April 2377)
USS Finback
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula

The initial away team from the Scamp materialized on the bridge of the cutter, Finback. Captain Rodenko gazed around the dimly lit bridge. It appeared completely intact and undamaged, save for a lack of power. And the lack of her crew.

Assistant Engineer, Lt. Ali bin Salaam made his way to the engineering station, shaking his head as he gazed at the console.

“Tactile controls . . . switches . . . this looks like something from a museum!” he exclaimed.

Rodenko walked over to the young officer. “The Albacore- class has been through two major refits since this ship disappeared, Lieutenant. The technology may be dated, but it worked just fine when I served on this ship. Surely you don’t think that I belong in a museum as well?”

“No sir!” answered bin Salaam quickly. He continued to scan the console, running his fingers over the familiar, yet different pattern of readouts. He tentatively pressed four toggle switches and the console came to life, at least partially. Other bridge displays whirred to life also, giving the bridge a greater level of illumination, though the main lights were still dark.

“Auxiliary power is still available,” the Arab officer murmured in wonder. “The fusion reactors should be back up in a few minutes and we’ll have lights and environmental back up.”

Rodenko nodded in approval. “Good. Well done, Ali.” He rubbed his arms, the chill on the darkened ship penetrating the heavy field-jacket he wore. “Let’s get this ship warmed up and we’ll begin a deck by deck inspection.”

He turned to the other four members of the away team – an ensign, a CPO and four crewmen. “While we wait, look but for now, do not touch! When power is restored, we will document every control panel, check every read-out, and test every system. After that, we will access the computer logs and scan every millimeter of this ship – inside and out. I intend to find out what happened here!”

The Russian Captain walked around the rail to the lower control pit, which contained the nav/helm console and the command chair. He ran his hand over the leather-covered chair – not markedly different from his own seat on the Scamp. Glancing at his fingers, he noted that no dust had accumulated on the chair. It could have been vacated mere moments ago.

Rodenko absently rubbed his hands together as the rest of the away team wandered the bridge, gawking at the obsolete controls while they waited for power to be restored.

So! he thought, We have the ship . . . but where is the crew?

* * *

Stardate 54258.9 (14 April 2377)
SS Eku
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula


Akinola pulled his phaser from his hip and joined Solly by the galley door. He pressed a finger to his lips and gestured for the others to remain still.

Solly used hand signals, indicating for Akinola to focus on the left side of the corridor while he took the right. Akinola nodded in agreement. Solly then held up four fingers, then used them to count down to zero.

The Captain and the Senior Chief sprang into the dim corridor, phasers leveled. Several meters aft, a pair of green eyes glowed in the gloom.

“Meow?”

Akinola blinked, then noticed Solly tense – preparing to fire. He reached over and pulled the burly Orion’s arm down.

“Stand down, Solly – it’s okay!”

Solly’s yellow eyes glowed suspiciously. “What the frak is that, Skipper?”

A rather plump, gray cat strolled up to the two men and sat on the deck, regarding them curiously. “Meow,” it said, as if explaining the obvious to the red Orion.

“That,” said Akinola, placing his phaser back on his hip, “is Mr. Fluff.”

* * *

Dr. Castille ran his medical scanner over Mr. Fluff as the large, gray feline purred from his perch on the table. Akinola had located some of the cat’s food in a cabinet and the cat was eating with gusto. Castille flipped the scanner shut and crossed his arms.

“I’m not a veterinarian, but best I can tell, this cat is about three years old and in excellent shape, except for being about five pounds over-weight.”

Akinola rubbed his chin, pleased yet disturbed by this new discovery. “Mr. Fluff was my sister’s cat," he said, wistfully, "Mom wouldn’t allow him to sleep with Melody, but he usually ended up with her anyway. He pretty much had the run of the ship. When Melody and I . . . left the ship, we didn’t have time to take him with us.”

He reached over and rubbed the cat’s ears, eliciting even louder purring from the feline. “Mr. Fluff, I wish you could talk to us and tell us where you’ve been all these decades,” he said softly, “and, why you haven’t aged a day.”

Finishing its meal, the gray cat hopped nimbly from the table and began to intertwine itself around Senior Chief Brin’s legs. Solly frowned, obviously uncomfortable with this behavior.

Delta smiled at Solly’s discomfiture. “What’s wrong, Senior? Don’t you like cats?”

“Dunno,” he said, still eyeing the cat warily. “How do they taste?”

* * *

Captain Akinola took Dr. Castille and Lt. Rune to check the bridge while Solly accompanied Lt. Commander Simms to engineering.

To Akinola, the bridge seemed smaller than he remembered. You were a foot shorter, Joseph – the scale has changed, he thought.

Calling the control center of the Eku a bridge was a bit of an overstatement. There were, in fact, only three stations in the cramped compartment. Two fairly comfortable looking swivel chairs were located at the helm and at a general systems panel. An ancient navigational plotter took up space in the aft portion of the area.

“All of the system busses are open,” remarked Rune, shining her light on the operations board. “Must have been some sort of power surge.”

Akinola tapped his combadge. “Akinola to Commander Simms.”

“Simms, go ahead, sir.”

“We’ve got evidence of a power surge up here. After you check the core and the reactor, see if you can get power up and we’ll do a system reset up here.”

“Yes sir. I’m looking at the core now. Containment is fine and the inter-mix chamber is empty, so there’s no risk of back-flush when we start her up. I’ll check the fusion reactor and the fuel pods next, along with the EPS couplings. If there are no surprises, we should be able to restore power within the hour.”

“Thanks, Delta. Keep us posted.”

Dr. Castille was perusing the ship’s controls with a mix of interest and amazement.

“I don’t know the first thing about operating a ship, but this doesn’t look like it could possibly do the job,” he remarked.

“Doctor, at least the first part of that statement was accurate,” said Akinola, annoyed.

The Captain took a seat at the helm, running his fingers over the familiar control surfaces. He smiled, remembering the times his father allowed him some “bootleg” hours piloting the ship when he was as young as eight. By the time he was thirteen, he had logged hundreds of star hours piloting the vessel. It was common practice on boomer ships, though technically a violation of several Federation statutes. Still, it was the accepted way that most boomers learned to run their family-owned ships.

On a whim, he suddenly rose from his seat. “You two stay here and wait on Delta to get the power up.” He began to make his way down the ladder to the main corridor.

“Where are you going?” asked Dr. Castille, warily.

“I’m going to check out my old quarters. I’ll be back in a few minutes.”

* * *

Delta closed her tri-corder, a look of satisfaction on her face. “She’s in remarkable shape!” she said, in admiration of the elderly ship. “The Skipper’s family obviously took good care of her.”

She stood, hands on hips looking around the cramped but immaculate engineering space. Everything had checked out within acceptable tolerances. The only flaw she found was a slight leak in the inner lining of the deuterium tank. The outer containment vessel was sound, however, so the leak posed no hazard, save for causing a few sensor glitches.

Delta suddenly realized that she was alone in the compartment. Puzzled, she called out, “Senior Chief? Where'd you go?”

“Out here in the corridor,” came his reply. “Come here, Commander – I found something you should see.” There was an ominous tone to his voice.

Frowning, Delta stepped through the knee-knocker hatch into the corridor. Solly was shining his light on an object lying on the deck. She knelt beside him.

“What is that?” she asked, puzzled, as she pulled out her tri-corder.

“Don’t bother. I already scanned it,” he said in that same ominous tone. He reached down and picked up the small, metallic object. It was dark gray in color, bordering on black, a circle of some exotic alloy that looked totally out of place on the Eku. He handed it to Simms.

She held it in her palm, the metal inexplicably warm in contrast to the still chilly atmosphere of the freighter.

“So, what did your scanner tell you?” she asked, intrigued.

His yellow eyes glowed with malevolence. “It’s Borg.”

* * *
 
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This is shaping up to be a very nice psychological thriller. Mr. Fluff and the Borg...why does that make me nervous? Tough call for Lt. Rune too--no wonder she's got issues with her near-father--as far as she's concerned, he deserted her when she needed him most. I also have a feeling that Solly is dealing with guilt feelings from that too, not making this any easier. I'm curious to see what sort of ghosts pop out with Rodenko and the Finback too.
 
:borg::borg::borg::borg::borg: A this just got much more interesting. ...Not that it wasn't before...I mean...I'll shut up, now. :)
 
Damn... the Borg? Well, many have guessed they were reconnoitering the Alpha Quadrant long before raiding the Romulan and Federation colonies along the Neutral Zone back in 2364, but wow...

That might explain a lot about where Akinola’s memory gaps and sleepless nights come from. :eek:
 
Mr Fluff was priceless. And his sudden appearance only makes this whole thing even more surreal ... there are no Borg pets, right? So we've got one explanation right there. A handful left to go.

But a heart-attack? Really? Come on! I thought she may have killed a man in cold blood or pulled some Windslow/Star craziness to get kicked off Bluefin. Gee, she's a goddamn hero with some bad luck. I already like her a lot.

Tiny (possible) nitpick. In the beginning you use the phrase "she squeezed his hand" back to back. Not sure if that was intended.

Hey, great segment, continuously great tension .... need to get me more of this.
 
Ok, I just got caught up from the first installment so if my comments are weird (weirder than normal) that's why. First, I have a picture of Gibraltar sitting at his computer with an annoyed look on his face, tapping the DELETE button over and over, muttering, "He promoted her! God damn it! Why'd he go and do that?":guffaw:

I liked the interplay with Bane/Solly and Strauss. Good backgrounding.

re:Solly's cat comment-I've always said I love cats. If you cut the pieces small enough to fit on the hook they make great bait.:evil:(Sorry, I'm a dog person.)

:borg:I knew it was the Borg from your earlier story-but that doesn't explain the lack of passing time. And what the hell did the Finback shoot at?:vulcan:

Great story, very creepy. Can't wait for more.:techman:
 
Chapter Eight

Stardate 54259.0 (15 April 2377)
USS Finback
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula

Good as his word, Lt. bin Salaam had the primary fusion reactor operating in less than an hour. With power restored, the ship began to quickly warm back to a comfortable level. Captain Rodenko authorized additional away teams to beam over from the Scamp to begin their thorough inspection of the Finback.

With teams assigned, Rodenko entered the ready room of Captain G'lil Shartuurn, C.O. of the Finback when they disappeared.

The room was not very different from his own ready room on the Scamp, save for a few details. The wall panels were a light gray and the carpet, medium blue. A standard issue gray desk stood in front of the view port. Its surface was bare, save for an old-style data slate and an earlier version of terminal screen.

Rodenko hesitated before sitting behind the desk, feeling as if he were intruding somehow. With a sigh, he pushed back his feelings and adjusted the terminal display. Removing his field jacket, he settled into the chair.


He glanced around the Spartan room, its austere decorations in keeping with Captain Shartuurn’s stoic demeanor. An Andorian landscape was portrayed in relief on a material that looked much like a slab of ice. A few religious icons from one of the predominant Andorian religious sects held a place of honor on a small shelf. But apart from these, there were no other shelves, no holo-pics of family or friends, no tapestries or other personal items in the room - just Starfleet issue furnishings.

Turning his attention to the terminal once more, he settled into the chair and cleared his throat.

“Computer, replay last log-entry of Captain Shartuurn.”

“Unable to comply without command authorization.”

Boris pursed his lips. They had not been able to obtain the command override code for the Finback, since she had been presumed destroyed nearly three decades ago and her codes were no longer in Scamp's database. But then, he had not expected this to be easy. He took a different tack.

“Computer, open ship’s log entries, authorization Rodenko Beta one five eight one.”

“Invalid code. Please submit valid command code.”

“Damn,” he muttered. Of course his own command code wasn’t recognized – he was only a junior lieutenant the last time the Finback’s database was updated.

He leaned back in the chair a few moments, considering. Finally, he nodded to himself and leaned forward.

“Computer, what is today’s date?”

“Currently, it is stardate 54259.02

Rodenko nodded in satisfaction. The computer had given the correct stardate, meaning it was picking up the Federation subspace transponders at least.

“Computer, what was the date when you went off-line?”

“The computer core went off-line on stardate 26831.77.”

“Now we’re getting somewhere,” he muttered. That was the date the Finback disappeared, 28 years earlier. Another thought struck him, causing his brow to furrow.

“Computer, based on the half-life of the deuterium on board and its rate of decay, how much time has elapsed since the computer core went off-line and its reactivation?”

“Decay of deuterium indicates the elapse of twenty-three hours, twelve minutes, ten point seven seconds.”

Rodenko’s eyes widened. “Computer, the stardates you gave me indicate twenty eight years have elapsed! Explain the discrepancy!”

This time, there was a noticeable pause before the computer responded. “Unable to account for discrepancy.”

Boris uttered a particularly vile Russian oath.

* * *


Stardate 54259.0 (15 April 2377)
SS Eku
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula


Captain Akinola made his way forward along the Eku’s central corridor. He paused a moment by the alcove that contained the escape pods. Shining his light into the darkened space, he saw that two of the three pods were still in place.

A sense of overwhelming sadness suddenly washed over him. He had hoped that, somehow, his family had also escaped and were still alive - somewhere. The two unused pods served as a cold reality check. No one else had escaped.

Forcing himself to push back the threatening cloud of despair, he walked deliberately away from the escape pod alcove. He came to his sister’s quarters first. Shining his light in the room, he noted that the bunk was exactly as it had been when Akinola’s mother had scooped up Melody and hurried with Joseph in tow to the escape pod, where she had deposited them. Melody's small pillow lay on the deck.

Closing his eyes, he tried to recall any small detail of the events of that day, but it was like looking through layers of gauze – distant and indistinct.

Why can’t I remember? He thought, frustration coursing through his mind. He’d hoped that seeing the old ship, his home for many years, would jar loose his recollection of the day his life changed so drastically.

As he turned to leave Melody’s old quarters, a sudden scent tickled his nose. It was faint, but distinct – a familiar, pleasant smell from . . .

His eyes widened in recognition. Lime! It smells just like the lime-scented beard suppressor that Dad used!

He whirled around, sniffing at the air like a blood-hound, trying to get a sense of where the smell originated. It seemed to be stronger forward – toward his quarters.

The Captain quelled the urge to hurry and moved steadily forward. The scent, though still faint, seemed to emanate from just ahead. He aimed his light ahead through the gloom of the inadequate emergency lights, but saw nothing out of the ordinary.

Mere feet away stood the open hatchway to his old quarters. He stopped and stared at the dark room, awash with a sense of deja vous. But of course, he had been here before – many times as a child. These were his own quarters, his personal retreat from the routine and tedium of life in space. His room.

The dark room seemed to beckon to him, bidding him to enter and discover its secrets.

Even with the ink-black darkness, Akinola sensed, knew, somehow that he was not alone. Someone, something was waiting for him in his old room.

He wasn’t afraid or even surprised by this sudden certainty. He was vaguely aware that his feet were inching forward, toward the open hatchway. He didn't resist.

“Brin to Captain Akinola.” The sound of Solly’s voice seemed to wake Akinola from some fugue state. He blinked and drew in his breath suddenly. Apparently, he had not taken a breath for long seconds.

Tapping his combadge he replied. “Go ahead, Senior Chief.”

“Skipper, we’ve found something back near engineering you should see. It may explain what happened to your family.”

“Acknowledged. I’ll be back in just a minute. Akinola, out.” He turned to head aft, toward engineering, but stole another look at his quarters. Somehow, the darkness did not seem as . . . intense. He also noted the smell of lime was gone. All he smelled was the normal, slightly stale smell of the freighter's atmosphere – a mélange of dust, sweat, coolant and coffee.

Get a grip, Akinola, or Castille will send you back to the ship in restraints! With a last look toward the doorway to his quarters, he moved quickly aft, toward engineering.

* * *

Dr. Castille regarded the lovely emerald-skinned Lieutenant with curious interest. Lt. Rune continued her work, scanning the control boards for any anomalies.

“Why don’t you take a holo-pic? It’ll last longer,” she said, never taking her eyes off the tri-corder.

Castille uttered an embarrassed laugh. “Sorry – I didn’t mean to stare. I’m just curious about you. I had no idea that the Senior Chief even had a daughter!”

Rune fixed Castille with bright green eyes that glowed in the dim light. “I’m not exactly on his ‘pride and joy’ list, Doctor. If it’s all the same to you, I’d rather not talk about it.”

Castille shrugged. “Sure, no problem. Just trying to make small-talk.”

K’lira turned her attention back to her tri-corder. “And I’m trying to map all of these circuits before the Captain returns, so if you’ll forgive me, I need to . . .”

She stopped in mid-sentence, frowning. “Slin-jahmat?” she whispered in her native tongue, surprise evident on her face.

The Doctor noted the startled expression on Rune’s face. “What?”

Still staring at her tri-corder she waved a hand in his direction. “Get out your medical scanner – my tri-corder isn’t set up for this . . . whatever it is.”

Frowning, Castille complied and opened his medical scanner. “So what am I supposed to . . . whoa!”

He watched the readings on the bio-metric scale suddenly jump, then just as quickly, to fade away.

“What was that?” asked K’lira, her eyes wide.

“Hell if I know,” replied the Doctor, staring at his medical instrument warily, as if it had somehow betrayed him. “What did your tri-corder show?”

“I got a sudden energy surge that seemed to coalesce in the forward part of the ship – kind of like a transporter beam, but it originated inside the ship . . . like it wasn’t there, then it was, now it’s gone again. And the energy frequency was not like anything I’ve ever seen.”

Castille re-checked his medical scanner. “For just a moment, I picked up bio-electric energy readings, then they just faded away.” He ran a sub-routine on the scanner, his eyebrows shooting up as he read the display.

“This looks like human brain-wave energy – but it doesn’t match the Captain, Delta or me, and we’re the only humans on board!”

* * *

Akinola quickly joined Solly and Delta outside engineering. He noted the somber expressions on their faces.

“What’s wrong?” he asked.

Delta glanced at Solly, her face now registering concern.

“Solly found this on the deck.” She handed the Captain a piece of dark metal.

Akinola noted the unusual warmth of the alloy. “What is it?”

This time, Solly glanced at Commander Simms, hesitating.

The Captain frowned. “Do I have to play twenty questions, or are you going to answer my question?”

“Skipper,” began Brin, his voice unusually soft, “that’s a fragment from a Borg implant.”

Akinola stared at Brin, then down at the small piece of metal in his hand. For a moment, he could not speak, his mind seemed to lock up.

Delta stepped by the Captain, placing a comforting hand on his arm. “Sir, I’m so sorry . . .”

Joseph Akinola closed his eyes. Suddenly, the locked door in his mind opened and a torrent of memories flooded in, overwhelming him.

He gasped deeply and staggered against the bulkhead. Solly grabbed him, preventing him from falling.

“I remember . . . Oh, God! I REMEMBER! . . . The cube . . . green light . . .”

Some defense mechanism in Akinola’s mind suddenly engaged, causing him to lose consciousness. Solly gently lowered him to the deck.

Delta slapped her combadge. “O.C.! Get down here to engineering, fast! – the Captain just passed out!”

* * *
 
Wow. It looks like the captain’s inability to remember is more than simply a psychological defense mechanism. Perhaps those blocks were placed there intentionally.

Really great, really creepy scene with Akinola in his old quarters. :wtf:
 
I'm loving this. A consciousness stuck in the computer, the captain stuck in his very bad memories, and everything looking very odd indeed.

Keep it coming
 
Fantastic stuff. Knew from the Nightmare the Borg were involved but there seems to be an added mystery to it all that is quite creepy. The story title is so apt and a real thrill to read.
 
So the floodgates in Akinola's mind finally opened. That must have hurt.

A great, psychological ride so far. A mystery begging to be solved. Awesome job.
 
Chapter Nine

Stardate 54259.1 (15 April 2377)
USS Finback
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula

"Scamp to Captain Rodenko."

"Rodenko here, go ahead, XO."

"Sir, we finally tracked down the command override codes for the Finback. Starfleet archives came through for us a few minutes ago."

For the first time in hours, a smile appeared on Rodenko's face. "Excellent! Thank you, Commander - you've saved us a lot of time and headaches!"

"You're welcome, sir. I'll transmit the code to Lt. bin Salaam, so he can unlock all of the files for you."

"Very good. Nice work, Commander! Rodenko, out." The Russian cutter commander rubbed his hands together in anticipation and gazed at the computer terminal with a smug grin.

"Now, perhaps we can begin to unlock your mysteries, yes?"

* * *

Stardate 54259.1 (15 April 2377)
SS Eku
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula

From what seemed a long distance, Akinola heard a brief hiss and felt a light pressure on his neck. His eyes suddenly flew open and he found himself looking up into the worried faces of Dr. Castille, Solly Brin and Lt. Commander Simms.

He quickly made to sit up but Castille restrained him.

"Wait just a minute, Captain, and let the stim-shot take effect," ordered the CMO. He ran his medical scanner over Akinola briefly, then snapped it shut, apparently satisfied with what he saw.

"How are you feeling?" Castille asked.

"Like an idiot," groused Akinola. "Can I sit up?"

The Doctor nodded and Akinola worked his way up to a sitting position with Brin steadying him. He frowned at the big Orion.

"For God's sake, Solly, I'm not an invalid - I'm fine!"

Castille looked skeptical. "I think we better cut the field-trip short and get you to sick-bay."

Akinola snorted derisively. "I think not! I feel fine!" And, to prove it, he moved nimbly to his feet - a move that didn't please Castille.

"I just found you lying on the deck, unconscious, Captain. That doesn't fit the definition of 'fine' in my book!" said Castille, firmly.

"It's nothing, Doctor. I just was . . . overwhelmed for a moment. It seems that my memories of . . . that day have returned."

"We showed him this," explained Solly, handing the Doctor the impant remnant.

Castille raised a skeptical eyebrow. "This brought back your memory? What's it supposed to be?"

Akinola took the fragment from the Doctor. "It's Borg. Or at least, a piece of their technology." He took a breath, still processing his new-found memories. "That's what I couldn't remember - it wasn't an Orion raider that attacked us. It was a Borg cube. I saw it from the viewport of the escape pod, just as it hit the Eku with a tractor beam. I must have blacked out then and blocked those memories."

Castille still looked doubtful. "You seem pretty sanguine about your sudden recollection, Captain."

The Captain shook his head. "No, not at all. I have to admit, the memory was . . . is pretty overwhelming - I guess that's why I fainted. But it all makes a certain kind of sense, though. It explains why my family is gone while the ship is intact and the cat was spared - the Borg had no interest in them."

"But Captain," interrupted Delta, cautiously, "the Eku disappeared almost 50 years ago. Our best estimate on the first Borg incursions date them at less than 20 years ago."

Akinola shrugged. "But that's all those are, Commander - estimates. Who's to say the Borg didn't make a few probes into the Alpha quadrant at an earlier date? Besides, we're facing some very odd time anomalies as it is."

"This is all very interesting," said an impatient Castille, "but you're still ignoring the fact that you blacked out! I'd really feel better if I could give you a thorough check-up."

Akinola sighed, trying to keep his temper in check. "I'll make a deal with you, Doc. After we're through here, I'll submit to your checking me out. Then, you can run any test you want. Did your scanner show anything wrong with me?"

Castille glared at the Captain. "No," he admitted, reluctantly, "but that doesn't mean you're 100% okay - this bio-scanner is limited."

"So is my patience, Doctor! Get on back to the bridge, please, and assist Lt. Rune. Commander - you and Solly see about getting power back up. I still want to poke around a bit, then I'll head back to the bridge myself."

* * *

Stardate 54259.1 (15 April 2377)
USS Bluefin
Sector 04341 – Near the Lesser Riven nebula

Lt. Bane sat in the center seat as watch officer, fighting boredom. The novelty of the newly discovered ships had faded as the recovery teams were in place, swarming over the four ships. There was little for him to do but wait.

Ensign Vashtee walked over with a cup of coffee from the recently installed bridge replicator. Bane accepted it gratefully.

"Thanks, Maya," he said to the slender Sri Lankan officer. "Hey - I'll make a deal with you," he gestured to the command chair, "You sit on the throne while I sit at Ops!"

Vashtee threw up her hands in mock horror. "Uh-uh! You know I'm not checked-out for that! Besides," she said, with a smirk as she moved back to ops, "you look like you're having loads of fun!"

"Yeh, right!" he said sulkily. "Do me a favor, then - run a sensor sweep on the epsilon band. I was getting some background fuzz earlier. The grid may be fritzed out of alignment - might as well give Gralt something to bitch about."

She giggled and smiled. "Sure, it's not like there's much else to do. But I didn't notice anything wrong on my last shift."

"Probably not. Just humor me, okay?"

"No problem." She turned to her board as Bane sipped his coffee and gazed at the Eku, which hung in space a few hundred kilometers distant.

"Mr. Bane?" The good humor had departed Vashtee's voice, replaced by puzzlement. "Could you take a look at this?"

Nigel walked over to Ops and peered over Ensign Vashtee's shoulder. He frowned as he peered at the epsilon band.

"Is this what you meant?" she asked.

Bane frowned. "Yeah, but it's much more intense than earlier." He reached forward, adjusting a gain control. His eyes widened as the wave line on the display suddenly began to spike. A feeling of intense dread washed over him.

"Bollocks!" he breathed. He tapped his combadge.

"Bluefin to away team!" his voice was clipped with urgency.

There was a momentary pause before he heard the familiar voice of Captain Akinola.

"Akinola here, go ahead."

"Sir! We need to beam you off of there immediately! We're picking up a massive spike of tri-quantum waves from the vicinity of the Eku!"

Instead of a reply, a sudden squeal of static burst over the open channel, causing both Bane and Vashtee to wince. She quickly lowered the audio gain.

"Captain, do you read me? Please respond!" Bane raised his voice, as if higher decibels could pierce the sudden static.

"Sir!" Maya's face revealed astonishment. "A trans-warp conduit just opened! It's surrounding the Eku!"

Bane whirled, staring at the main viewscreen. Crackling green tendrils of energy erupted seemingly from nowhere and engulfed the small freighter. The small vessel appeared to diminish before their eyes, then, as quickly as it appeared, the energy conduit blinked out.

The Eku was gone. Only the darkness of the Lesser Riven Nebula remained.

"Frak!" muttered, Bane. He tapped his combadge, "Commander Strauss to the bridge. Repeat, Commander Strauss to the bridge."

He turned to Ensign Vashtee. "Sound red alert, Maya, and contact the away teams on those other ships - tell them to get the hell out of there - Now!"

* * *
 
A trans-warp conduit?!? WTF?:cardie: What the hell-is the Eku bait?
I can see it now:

A cube full of Borg are sitting around with nothing to do, and then all of them say, "We are bored Borg. We shall dangle this ship out there in the Alpha Quadrant and see what we catch. It will be fun.":borg:

:lol:
 
"We are the Borg. You will adapt to amuse us. Resistance is futile. Humour is relevant."

Shades of TOS here with the Defiant disappearing, but a few shades deadlier. It might not be the Borg, could be something more deadly. :borg:
 
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