Author's Note: This story takes place during the first Cardassian War when Joseph Akinola was senior enlisted man aboard the Border Service cutter, USS Bluefin.
Submitted as an entry for the February 2011 Ad Astra Challenge: "Overcoming Personal Prejudice."
Tales of the USS Bluefin: “The Blood Pit”
Stardate 31674.7 (4 September 2354)
Planet Tykura II
Firebase Hades (aka “The Blood Pit")
Master Chief Petty Officer Joseph Akinola squatted on his haunches and peered out into the fog. The sun was making an anemic attempt at introducing daylight, but the constant rains and oppressive humidity of the Tykuran jungle absorbed the light much as it absorbed most everything else. His keen eyes scanned the jungle canopy for any sign of movement. The Cardassians were out there somewhere – probably as cold, wet and miserable as he. The thought gave him scant comfort.
For over six weeks, Akinola and a half-dozen Border Dogs had shared this gods-forsaken hill with twenty raggedy-assed Federation Marines. The Marines had been here longer and were in worse shape – physically and mentally. Starfleet Command, in its infinite wisdom, had decided that Tykura II was a “strategic asset” to be “defended at all costs” against the Cardassians. The Nigerian NCO could not fathom why either side would want this nasty, disease-ridden ball of dirt. Trace minerals and the constant moisture wreaked havoc on their equipment. Scanners were all but useless and communications were sketchy at best. Transporters did not work and energy weapons degraded quickly. Worse still was the stuff you couldn’t see that got under your skin, causing painful festering sores. Not to mention the stuff that got into your digestive tract.
He stood up carefully and more than a little painfully, satisfied that for the moment, a Cardie attack was not imminent. He would send Solly and a couple of jar-heads out to check the perimeter and trip wires later.
The irony of the situation struck Akinola once more as he carefully slogged his way back to the command post through the sticky, stinking ankle-deep mud. Six and half weeks ago, the cutter Bluefin had been tasked with sending in food, medical supplies and fresh gear to the Marine detachment on Tykura II. Captain Reninger had dispatched two Star Stallions on the mission as the cutter was still needed for convoy escort duty. It had seemed like a straight-forward mission: come in under the protection of Marine drone-ships, drop off supplies, and evacuate the wounded. If all had gone according to plan, the entire mission would have taken less than a week.
But in war, things seldom go according to plan. No one at Fleet Command knew that the Marines’ drone-ships were grounded with corrupted guidance systems. And no one had bothered to tell the Marines that the Border Service was inbound.
Thus, when the two Stallions hit the atmosphere of Tykura II, they were met not with Marine drone-ship escorts, but with Cardassian anti-starcraft missiles. Stallion Oh-One had taken a direct hit, exploding in a massive fireball and killing seven Border Dogs. Stallion Oh-Two had escaped instant destruction by the skillful flying of Lt. Helena Ortiz, but the crippled smallcraft had been forced into what could charitably be called a controlled crash. The Stallion’s inertial restraints had spared their lives but most of the supplies were ruined and Petty Office Cho had suffered severe burns to his hands and face when a control panel overloaded and exploded.
The comedy of errors had nearly turned fatal for the survivors as they stumbled across a group of Marines in the dark. Fortunately, no one was hit in the brief fire-fight.
Now, the surviving Border Dogs were joined up with the remnant of Baker Company, 3rd Platoon, 1st Federation Marine Expeditionary Forces. The Company Commander, 2nd Lt. Klessaan, was dead, leaving Gunnery Sergeant Grigory Stephanz in charge of Baker Company.
And, in Akinola’s opinion, Gunny Stephanz was as big a problem as the jungle or the Cardies.
The Nigerian NCO absently flicked a swollen bloodfly from his arm as he maneuvered amongst splintered wood, sawgrass and carnivorous vines until he came to the entrance of the make-shift command post. The shelter was comprised of empty storage containers, sheets of tritanium salvaged from the Star Stallion, and held together with lengths of the tough, native vines. A berm of mud and logs surrounded the CP, providing marginal protection from the wind. No one was under the illusion that they were protected from a Cardassian assault. The one bright spot was that the Cardies’ equipment was about as frakked up as their own.
He pushed aside the plastic sheets that served as a door and stepped down into the CP. It was considerably warmer in the enclosure but also considerably darker. The air was stale with sweat, decaying rations and the pungeant odor of infection. A single emergency lamp glowed anemically, revealing a hodge-podge of communications equipment, weapons, and rations boxes. The last were dwindling quickly.
“Joe,” greeted Lt. Helena Ortiz. The Latina Border Service officer looked weak and haggard. The sclera of her eyes were tinged with yellow and running sores covered her face and arms. Like all of them, her uniform was in shambles – the durable fabric no match for the toxic jungle environment. She sat cross-legged on a sleeping mat, scant protection from the pervasive mud, but better than nothing, and turned her attention back to a recalcitrant component of the Marine company’s subspace transceiver.
“Morning, Lieutenant. Beautiful day, isn’t it?” Akinola took a tin cup and drew a few swallows of water from their still. Thankfully, they still had a source of fresh water, thanks to the ingenuity of Lance Corporal Richley and Corpsman Kurtz. The modified moisture traps provided filtered drinking water for the twenty-odd Marines and Border Dogs – at least enough for survival if not hygienic purposes.
Ortiz grunted. Normally good humored, the Lieutenant had become spare of words lately. Understandable considering her weakened state, but her physical decline worried Akinola.
Still, Ortiz was in better shape than Petty Officer Randy Cho who lay quietly on another sleep pad under a makeshift table. Cho’s arms were bandaged as were his eyes. Unfortunately for Cho, medical supplies and equipment were virtually nonexistent. Corpsman Kurtz had salvaged his medical tricorder and his personal med-kit from the debris of the Stallion but the bulk of the supplies were destroyed. The Asian Petty Officer remained stoic for the most part, though he sometimes moaned in his sleep.
“Any luck with the transceiver?” asked Akinola.
Ortiz shrugged. “Maybe. I just can’t tell. The power cell is pushing out a viable subspace pulse but I’m not receiving jack-crap. If anyone can hear us, we may not know until they show up.”
Akinola knew that “they” could be a Starfleet rescue party or a Cardassian patrol. It was a risk they had to take.
The flap to the CP opened again and Gunnery Sergeant Grigory Stephanz entered. His face was ruddy, though remarkably clean. Akinola knew he shaved with his razor-sharp K-bar knife, sans water. Whether he did this to maintain esprit ‘d corps or to prove he was a bad-ass, Akinola did not know or care. Personally, Akinola found that a beard provided at least a modicum of protection from the horde of insects that plagued the jungle.
Stephanz removed his helmet and nodded at Lt. Ortiz. Following long-held naval tradition, he did not salute indoors. He turned his attention to Akinola, fixing him with pale, gray eyes.
“Master Chief.” His voice was flat and cold. Whatever warmth of personality he may have once had was long-gone, swallowed by the damned jungle and the constant company of fear, hunger and isolation.
The flaps opened again, allowing Petty Officer Solly Brin and Lance Corporal Anna Richley to enter.
Instantly, Stephanz’ eyes narrowed at the sight of the Red Orion. His lips pressed together in a tight line and Akinola noticed his hand moving absently to the K-bar knife strapped to his thigh. His fingers tapped a nervous staccato just above the knife's grip.
And here was the other problem – more pressing at the moment than the Cardies, jungle rot, or even their need to find more food. Stephanz had an in-grained hatred toward Orions – red, green, male, female, slave or free. It didn’t matter to the Gunny. When it came to Orions, he was an equal-opportunity bigot.
Akinola wondered how the man had passed through all the psych-screenings to become a Marine, much less a gunnery sergeant. Not that it mattered now.
For his part, Solly Brin tried to ignore Stephanz’ hostile demeanor, though Akinola could tell that his friend was alert and ready to defend himself. The Orion caught Akinola’s look and gave a minute shrug as if to say, “What’s a guy to do?”
Ortiz coughed and spat out a wad of phlegm into the mud. Beads of sweat stood out on her brow. She looked feverish. Akinola made a mental note to have Kurtz check on her.
“Sit-rep,” she said, hoarsely, asking for the morning’s situation report.
“Perimeter is manned and secure,” replied Gunny Stephanz, keeping his cold gaze on Brin. “We’re down to fourteen working phaser carbines and three ARCs. Photon mortar batteries are in place but I can’t guarantee how many rounds are good. I’ve got some men working on Punji stakes – that will slow down any Spoonhead assault.”
Ortiz frowned, unfamiliar with the term. She was, after all, a pilot and helmsman, not a line officer. “Punji stakes?”
“Sticks sharpened and smeared with excrement,” explained Akinola. “Hidden under a layer of foliage. Nasty but effective.”
The Lieutenant frowned in distaste but did not protest. Six weeks in the blood pit had stripped away much of the veneer of civility from warfare.
“Okay,” she said. “Master Chief, what about patrols?”
“We’re down to fifteen combat-ready personnel from the Marines and our bunch. The rest are physically unable. I want to change up the patrols – put Richley in charge of one squad and Brin in charge of . . .”
“Hell, no,” growled the Gunny.
Akinola eyed him coldly. “I wasn’t through talking, Gunnery Sergeant,” adding emphasis to the difference in their rank.
“You can talk all you want, Master Chief. But it will be a cold day in hell when I send my Marines out with any yellow-eyed, murdering Orion devil.”
Lt. Ortiz was instantly off the sleep pad and in the Gunny’s face. “You’re out of line, Gunny! You don’t have the luxury of indulging your bigotry. I don’t give a damn about your screwed-up view of the universe, our asses are surrounded by Cardies and gods knows what else. You will follow orders or I’ll have you brought up on charges!”
Stephanz did not flinch. A rictus grin formed, stretching the tight skin of his face into a death’s head.
“Aye, aye Mr. Ortiz. Like you said, there are all kinds of bad things out beyond the blood pit. Anything can happen, right slis’pul?”
The last, he addressed to Solly. Brin bristled at the vulgar, Orion insult. “Yeah, that’s right you ignorant vuut. Anything can happen.” His hand slid to the handle of the Andorian blade sheathed on his side.
“Enough,” growled Akinola. “Both of you, stand dow . . .”
Before Akinola could complete his sentence, two things happened. The subspace transceiver, silent for so many weeks, suddenly came to life. At almost the same moment, they heard a distant, muffled “krumph” as an anti-personnel mine detonated.
“The trip wires!” exclaimed Stephanz. He grabbed his ARC and helmet and was out of the CP with Brin, Lance Corporal Richley and Akinola right behind.
Rain was now falling in heavy sheets, making visibility difficult. Akinola slipped and fell, sliding downhill and flailing around for a handhold. He grabbed an exposed root, just as a photon mortar round detonated a few dozen meters away. The heat washed over him, momentarily drying the moisture from his exposed skin. Instinctively, he turned his face away from the dazzling light just as the shock wave hit, sending him up in the air before landing awkwardly in a puddle of stagnant, green water. His head struck a splintered tree stump and his vision exploded with stars as a purplish black haze threatened to steal his consciousness.
Stunned and disoriented, Master Chief Akinola attempted to regain his equilibrium as all hell broke loose.
Submitted as an entry for the February 2011 Ad Astra Challenge: "Overcoming Personal Prejudice."
Tales of the USS Bluefin: “The Blood Pit”
Stardate 31674.7 (4 September 2354)
Planet Tykura II
Firebase Hades (aka “The Blood Pit")
Master Chief Petty Officer Joseph Akinola squatted on his haunches and peered out into the fog. The sun was making an anemic attempt at introducing daylight, but the constant rains and oppressive humidity of the Tykuran jungle absorbed the light much as it absorbed most everything else. His keen eyes scanned the jungle canopy for any sign of movement. The Cardassians were out there somewhere – probably as cold, wet and miserable as he. The thought gave him scant comfort.
For over six weeks, Akinola and a half-dozen Border Dogs had shared this gods-forsaken hill with twenty raggedy-assed Federation Marines. The Marines had been here longer and were in worse shape – physically and mentally. Starfleet Command, in its infinite wisdom, had decided that Tykura II was a “strategic asset” to be “defended at all costs” against the Cardassians. The Nigerian NCO could not fathom why either side would want this nasty, disease-ridden ball of dirt. Trace minerals and the constant moisture wreaked havoc on their equipment. Scanners were all but useless and communications were sketchy at best. Transporters did not work and energy weapons degraded quickly. Worse still was the stuff you couldn’t see that got under your skin, causing painful festering sores. Not to mention the stuff that got into your digestive tract.
He stood up carefully and more than a little painfully, satisfied that for the moment, a Cardie attack was not imminent. He would send Solly and a couple of jar-heads out to check the perimeter and trip wires later.
The irony of the situation struck Akinola once more as he carefully slogged his way back to the command post through the sticky, stinking ankle-deep mud. Six and half weeks ago, the cutter Bluefin had been tasked with sending in food, medical supplies and fresh gear to the Marine detachment on Tykura II. Captain Reninger had dispatched two Star Stallions on the mission as the cutter was still needed for convoy escort duty. It had seemed like a straight-forward mission: come in under the protection of Marine drone-ships, drop off supplies, and evacuate the wounded. If all had gone according to plan, the entire mission would have taken less than a week.
But in war, things seldom go according to plan. No one at Fleet Command knew that the Marines’ drone-ships were grounded with corrupted guidance systems. And no one had bothered to tell the Marines that the Border Service was inbound.
Thus, when the two Stallions hit the atmosphere of Tykura II, they were met not with Marine drone-ship escorts, but with Cardassian anti-starcraft missiles. Stallion Oh-One had taken a direct hit, exploding in a massive fireball and killing seven Border Dogs. Stallion Oh-Two had escaped instant destruction by the skillful flying of Lt. Helena Ortiz, but the crippled smallcraft had been forced into what could charitably be called a controlled crash. The Stallion’s inertial restraints had spared their lives but most of the supplies were ruined and Petty Office Cho had suffered severe burns to his hands and face when a control panel overloaded and exploded.
The comedy of errors had nearly turned fatal for the survivors as they stumbled across a group of Marines in the dark. Fortunately, no one was hit in the brief fire-fight.
Now, the surviving Border Dogs were joined up with the remnant of Baker Company, 3rd Platoon, 1st Federation Marine Expeditionary Forces. The Company Commander, 2nd Lt. Klessaan, was dead, leaving Gunnery Sergeant Grigory Stephanz in charge of Baker Company.
And, in Akinola’s opinion, Gunny Stephanz was as big a problem as the jungle or the Cardies.
The Nigerian NCO absently flicked a swollen bloodfly from his arm as he maneuvered amongst splintered wood, sawgrass and carnivorous vines until he came to the entrance of the make-shift command post. The shelter was comprised of empty storage containers, sheets of tritanium salvaged from the Star Stallion, and held together with lengths of the tough, native vines. A berm of mud and logs surrounded the CP, providing marginal protection from the wind. No one was under the illusion that they were protected from a Cardassian assault. The one bright spot was that the Cardies’ equipment was about as frakked up as their own.
He pushed aside the plastic sheets that served as a door and stepped down into the CP. It was considerably warmer in the enclosure but also considerably darker. The air was stale with sweat, decaying rations and the pungeant odor of infection. A single emergency lamp glowed anemically, revealing a hodge-podge of communications equipment, weapons, and rations boxes. The last were dwindling quickly.
“Joe,” greeted Lt. Helena Ortiz. The Latina Border Service officer looked weak and haggard. The sclera of her eyes were tinged with yellow and running sores covered her face and arms. Like all of them, her uniform was in shambles – the durable fabric no match for the toxic jungle environment. She sat cross-legged on a sleeping mat, scant protection from the pervasive mud, but better than nothing, and turned her attention back to a recalcitrant component of the Marine company’s subspace transceiver.
“Morning, Lieutenant. Beautiful day, isn’t it?” Akinola took a tin cup and drew a few swallows of water from their still. Thankfully, they still had a source of fresh water, thanks to the ingenuity of Lance Corporal Richley and Corpsman Kurtz. The modified moisture traps provided filtered drinking water for the twenty-odd Marines and Border Dogs – at least enough for survival if not hygienic purposes.
Ortiz grunted. Normally good humored, the Lieutenant had become spare of words lately. Understandable considering her weakened state, but her physical decline worried Akinola.
Still, Ortiz was in better shape than Petty Officer Randy Cho who lay quietly on another sleep pad under a makeshift table. Cho’s arms were bandaged as were his eyes. Unfortunately for Cho, medical supplies and equipment were virtually nonexistent. Corpsman Kurtz had salvaged his medical tricorder and his personal med-kit from the debris of the Stallion but the bulk of the supplies were destroyed. The Asian Petty Officer remained stoic for the most part, though he sometimes moaned in his sleep.
“Any luck with the transceiver?” asked Akinola.
Ortiz shrugged. “Maybe. I just can’t tell. The power cell is pushing out a viable subspace pulse but I’m not receiving jack-crap. If anyone can hear us, we may not know until they show up.”
Akinola knew that “they” could be a Starfleet rescue party or a Cardassian patrol. It was a risk they had to take.
The flap to the CP opened again and Gunnery Sergeant Grigory Stephanz entered. His face was ruddy, though remarkably clean. Akinola knew he shaved with his razor-sharp K-bar knife, sans water. Whether he did this to maintain esprit ‘d corps or to prove he was a bad-ass, Akinola did not know or care. Personally, Akinola found that a beard provided at least a modicum of protection from the horde of insects that plagued the jungle.
Stephanz removed his helmet and nodded at Lt. Ortiz. Following long-held naval tradition, he did not salute indoors. He turned his attention to Akinola, fixing him with pale, gray eyes.
“Master Chief.” His voice was flat and cold. Whatever warmth of personality he may have once had was long-gone, swallowed by the damned jungle and the constant company of fear, hunger and isolation.
The flaps opened again, allowing Petty Officer Solly Brin and Lance Corporal Anna Richley to enter.
Instantly, Stephanz’ eyes narrowed at the sight of the Red Orion. His lips pressed together in a tight line and Akinola noticed his hand moving absently to the K-bar knife strapped to his thigh. His fingers tapped a nervous staccato just above the knife's grip.
And here was the other problem – more pressing at the moment than the Cardies, jungle rot, or even their need to find more food. Stephanz had an in-grained hatred toward Orions – red, green, male, female, slave or free. It didn’t matter to the Gunny. When it came to Orions, he was an equal-opportunity bigot.
Akinola wondered how the man had passed through all the psych-screenings to become a Marine, much less a gunnery sergeant. Not that it mattered now.
For his part, Solly Brin tried to ignore Stephanz’ hostile demeanor, though Akinola could tell that his friend was alert and ready to defend himself. The Orion caught Akinola’s look and gave a minute shrug as if to say, “What’s a guy to do?”
Ortiz coughed and spat out a wad of phlegm into the mud. Beads of sweat stood out on her brow. She looked feverish. Akinola made a mental note to have Kurtz check on her.
“Sit-rep,” she said, hoarsely, asking for the morning’s situation report.
“Perimeter is manned and secure,” replied Gunny Stephanz, keeping his cold gaze on Brin. “We’re down to fourteen working phaser carbines and three ARCs. Photon mortar batteries are in place but I can’t guarantee how many rounds are good. I’ve got some men working on Punji stakes – that will slow down any Spoonhead assault.”
Ortiz frowned, unfamiliar with the term. She was, after all, a pilot and helmsman, not a line officer. “Punji stakes?”
“Sticks sharpened and smeared with excrement,” explained Akinola. “Hidden under a layer of foliage. Nasty but effective.”
The Lieutenant frowned in distaste but did not protest. Six weeks in the blood pit had stripped away much of the veneer of civility from warfare.
“Okay,” she said. “Master Chief, what about patrols?”
“We’re down to fifteen combat-ready personnel from the Marines and our bunch. The rest are physically unable. I want to change up the patrols – put Richley in charge of one squad and Brin in charge of . . .”
“Hell, no,” growled the Gunny.
Akinola eyed him coldly. “I wasn’t through talking, Gunnery Sergeant,” adding emphasis to the difference in their rank.
“You can talk all you want, Master Chief. But it will be a cold day in hell when I send my Marines out with any yellow-eyed, murdering Orion devil.”
Lt. Ortiz was instantly off the sleep pad and in the Gunny’s face. “You’re out of line, Gunny! You don’t have the luxury of indulging your bigotry. I don’t give a damn about your screwed-up view of the universe, our asses are surrounded by Cardies and gods knows what else. You will follow orders or I’ll have you brought up on charges!”
Stephanz did not flinch. A rictus grin formed, stretching the tight skin of his face into a death’s head.
“Aye, aye Mr. Ortiz. Like you said, there are all kinds of bad things out beyond the blood pit. Anything can happen, right slis’pul?”
The last, he addressed to Solly. Brin bristled at the vulgar, Orion insult. “Yeah, that’s right you ignorant vuut. Anything can happen.” His hand slid to the handle of the Andorian blade sheathed on his side.
“Enough,” growled Akinola. “Both of you, stand dow . . .”
Before Akinola could complete his sentence, two things happened. The subspace transceiver, silent for so many weeks, suddenly came to life. At almost the same moment, they heard a distant, muffled “krumph” as an anti-personnel mine detonated.
“The trip wires!” exclaimed Stephanz. He grabbed his ARC and helmet and was out of the CP with Brin, Lance Corporal Richley and Akinola right behind.
Rain was now falling in heavy sheets, making visibility difficult. Akinola slipped and fell, sliding downhill and flailing around for a handhold. He grabbed an exposed root, just as a photon mortar round detonated a few dozen meters away. The heat washed over him, momentarily drying the moisture from his exposed skin. Instinctively, he turned his face away from the dazzling light just as the shock wave hit, sending him up in the air before landing awkwardly in a puddle of stagnant, green water. His head struck a splintered tree stump and his vision exploded with stars as a purplish black haze threatened to steal his consciousness.
Stunned and disoriented, Master Chief Akinola attempted to regain his equilibrium as all hell broke loose.