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Terran Empire- The Next Generation

Chapter: Arsenal of Freedom

"Captain's Log, Stardate 41798.2. Given our recent losses to the Romulans, I have taken it upon myself to equip the Enterprise with the most advanced weapons known to exist

To that end I have ordered a course for the Lorenze Cluster and the planet Minos. Known as the best weapons manufacturers in the quadrant, the natives have resisted all attempts at Terran occupation, but have provided weapons to all sides in every major interstellar conflict for the past three hundred years.

However, we seem to have a mystery on our hands. Long-range probes have indicated that all intelligent life on the planet has disappeared."

<><><>

Marlena had had enough. She cried out and struck the man who’d claim her like some sort of prize. “No,” she shrieked. “I am not some play thing to be abused any long,” she said.

Jean-Luc Picard reached across in the dark shadows of his quarters and grabbed her by the hair. “Everything that belonged to James Kirk now belongs to me, including you.” He pulled her closer. “I don’t need your permission or your consent. Only your obedience.”

Marlena slapped him across the face. The edge of her rubidium ring tore open the flesh on his right cheek. Picard snarled and backhanded her across the face. “Perhaps you have outlived your usefulness,” he said. “For a month now I’ve hidden you away from prying eyes and enjoyed myself thoroughly.” He pulled the phaser out of his holster and adjusting it’s settings. “You had a long life,” he said.

Marlena remained silent. ”Silent to the end. When I killed James he cried like a child, begging for mercy that I never showed.” He chucked as her mouth fell open in shock. “That’s right. I killed him myself. Knifed him through the back and tore out his heart.” He touched the firing stud.

“Bridge to Picard. We are approaching Minos, sir. You should really see this.”

<><><>

“Well well well, Picard said, as he departed the lift and drank in the site on the forward viwere. “An old friend.”

“Sensor’s confirmed,” O’Brien said. “USS Drake.”

Picard’s gut clenched. He’d hoped not to have to deal with Riker any time in the next fifty or sixty years. “Have we made contact?”

“Negative,” Data said, vacating the command chair. “Sensors show no signs of life aboard the Drake.”

“What about on the surface?” Picard asked.

“Sensors are being disrupted within the planet’s atmosphere,” Data said.

“Assemble a landing party,” Picard said. “Find out what happened down there and see if there are any useable weapons left.”

Data headed for the left, instructing O’Brien to follow as well as Hanson.

Picard found himself relaxing for the first time in weeks. With Data and Hanson both off the ship, there was no one directly critiquing him and driving him mad. Except Beverly, but she knew her place. He watched the world come closer into view along with the abandoned Defiant-Class escort ship. Smaller than the Enterprise’s saucer section the tiny ship possessed enough power to vaporize the surface of a planet.

Picard was tempted to beam aboard and take the ship for his own, but he knew Riker’s reputation. He wouldn’t have left his ship in orbit without an impressive anti-piracy protocol in place. Ah, well, Picard thought, maybe after I’ve killed him.

“Sir!” snapped Worf from tactical. “The Drake is firing!”

Picard spun on his heel to face the screen the exact moment a stream of pulse-phased energy lashed out from the forward cannons of the small battle ship. The Enterprsie rolled and creaked under the assault.

“Shields at sixty percent,” said Worf. “The Drake was running a high-yield dampening field. It has since been shut down. The full crew is accounted for.”

“Helm, warp eight, take us out,” Picard said. With the away team on the surface, he’d have to sacrifice them for the safety of the ship.

“Sir,” Worf said. “The Drake is hailing us.”

“On screen,” Picard snapped, his fury boiling over. He’d been expertly led into this mess.

Sure enough the smug image of Riker appeared on the screen. “Hello, Jean-Luc, it’s a pleasure.”

“Why have you attacked my ship?” Picard demanded.

“Looting weapons factories to use against the Romulans without informing Command,” Riker said. “Admiral Jellico was quite upset. Sent me out here to take care of you.”

Jellico. Picard’s rival since the academy

The pompous full had rode Picard’s coattails since their freshman year. During their sophomore studies aboard the Wyoming, Jellico had framed Picard for the destruction of the ships bio-weapons lab after Jellico had set off a proton explosion. Picard had been reprimanded by Captain Raimer and had been and nearly executed. If not for the last minute efforts of Boothby, he would have been.

“You can tell that piece of worm-ridden filth to go hang,” Picard said. ”He’ll get no pleasure from me.”

“Pity,” Riker said. “Thought you’d put up more of a challenge.” He nodded to someone off screen and the link was terminated.


<><><>

“Data to Enterprise.”

The landing party had huddled around a small structure in the forest of Minos and awaited contact with the ship. From the destruction that spread in every direction from their position, it was obvious that a high yield orbital bombardment had taken place.

“Do you really think Riker would’ve done this?” Hanson asked. “I only know him by reputation, but what purpose would this serve? Minos has always been loyal to the Empire.”

“Riker is an arrogant fool,” Data said. He swept his tricorder in a wide arc. “It’s most likely he obtained what weapons he could and destroyed any chance of Captain Picard doing the same.”

“Do you think Riker’s on the Drake?” Hanson said.

“Yes, he was running a static dampening field that blocked our scanners. I ‘neglected’ to inform the captain.”

Hanson stood up at attention. “You’re taking a big risk, Commander. Letting your captain die isn’t the most loyal thing you can do.”

“No, but with Picard’s reputation it’s the least he can expect. Our good captain was trying to the exact thing we’re accusing Riker of. Obtaining the Minos weapons for himself for use against the Romulans.”

“In the name of the Empire,” Hanson said. “If Riker weren’t acting on his own, I doubt he would have exterminated all life on this world.”

“Perhaps, but Picard was acting on his own with the help of those Klingons. I will be keeping a very watchful eye on him.”

“As should any good first officer,” Hanson said with a smirk. “And as the chief enforcer of imperial policy, I will be keeping my eyes on you. Especially your cavorting with Romulan spies.”

Data smiled. “Yes, Miss Sela did a number on all of us, myself included. I look forward to witnessing her execution.”

“You won’t have long to wait,” Hanson said. “She’s been in the booth for eighty-nine hours, her Vulcanoid heritage is really rearing it’s ugly pointed head. But best estimates show she’ll break within the next ten to fifteen hours. And that point, she’s all yours.”

“I look forward to it.” He was stopped by the sound of footfalls approaching. La Forge and O’Brien had returned from their recon patrol.

“Nothing,” La Forge said. “We managed to get up on a pretty high incline; there’s nothing left. They really did a number on this place.”

“No sign of any remaining technology,” O’Brien said. “It’s all useless junk.”

“And we have lost contact with the ship,” Data added. “Set up a camp, shell out the provisions. I’ll see if I can construct a more powerful communications array that will breach whatever dampening is in effect.”

<><><>

“Shields at eighteen percent,” Worf said. “The Drake is closing on us.”

Picard grabbed the arms of his command chair and held on as the ship was struck three more times and what little remained of the aft deflector shields melted away. “Come to course eight four,” he said. “Straight into the planet’s atmosphere.”

Barclay struggled against both the weapons fire and the gravitational effects of Minos as the ran at full impulse for whatever cover could be found in the dense atmosphere of the planet.

“Hitting the ionosphere,” Barclay said.

“Shields are gone,” Worf said. “Aft weapons are off-line.”

“Hold your course,” Picard said. “All power to structural integrity.”

<><><>

“Shields are fried! We’re just coming in too damned fast!”

Riker silenced the wailing of the helmsmen but gutting him and taking over the conn himself. The bridge of the Drake was coming apart around them as they pursued Picard through planet’s atmosphere.

They’d nearly burned out the ship’s warp coils once they got word Enterprise was making their way out here. Admiral Jellico had been adamant that Picard not be allowed the weapons of Minos at all costs. Riker had regretted not being able to take the weapons for himself. There just hadn’t been time. He’d ordered a full bombardment of the surface then littered the planet with subspace scramblers that stopped all incoming and outgoing transmissions.

Then they’d set up the dampening field and played opossum until Enterprise came in. As powerful as the Drake was, Enterprise had given as good as she got. Both ships had lost their shields and had fractures along the outer hull. The Drake had fared worse, her smaller space frame coming apart at the stembolts. The computer kept warning that integrity would collapse within seconds if they didn’t’ return to orbit.

“But we’re so close,” Riker said. He barely caught the sensor return as the Enterprise shut down her impulse drive and fired her forward thrusters, essentially coming to a full stop.

Riker slapped the helm and fired the retro-thrusters.

It didn’t do a bit of good. Drake skidded directly into the path of a full spread of torpedoes and phasers. The aft section of the ship was vaporized in an instant, her engineering compartment breached.

“Computer! Escape plan, Riker Omega Three!”

<><><>

“Well done, Worf,” Picard said, grabbing the back of Barclay’s chair for support. The Drake came apart and erupted in a fireball.

“Sir,” Worf said, “a shuttle has launched from the bay. Two Terran life-signs.”

“Tractor beam,” Picard demanded.

Worf spent several moments working the board, then pounded the controls with his fist in frustration. “No good, sir. They masked themselves and went to warp.”

“Riker always knows when to run,” Picard said. “Helm, return to standard orbit. Once we’re stabilized, take a shuttle down and get our away team back home.”

<><><>




Deanna Troi touched the dermal regenerator to the gash on Riker’s forehead. The beams knitted the skin back together and repaired the damage. “There,” she said. “You’ve got enough scars as it is.”

Riker slapped the device out of her hand and grabbed her by the wrist. ”Don’t. Ever. Mock. Me. You may be my Imzadi, but you are still my subordinate.”

“Yes,” Troi said coldly. “Of course.”

Riker shoved her away. The cramped confines of the escape shuttle was grating on his nerves. They’d been on the move for five days since they escaped the destruction of the Drake at Minos. “That bastard’s going to have to pay for this,” Riker said.

“And you’re the one who’s going to do it,” Deanna said, running a finger down his spine. She kissed him firmly and passionately.”

When he pulled away, his eyes twinkled. “You are a catch, Imzadi. When we get home, I’ll make sure your well taken care of.”

Riker smiled. He’d meet up with Jean-Luc Picard again, and the next time, Picard would be the one to lose everything. “I think I should start with the doctor,” Riker said, picking up a data padd. “Hit him close and him fast.”

<><><>

Picard rushed headlong onto Deck 6 outside the booth and was greeted by Commanders Hanson and Data. “Report,” he snapped.

“She broke,” Hanson said.

Picard followed her into the chamber and smiled and the crumpled form on the deck. “Ninety-three hours,” Data said with a smile. ”No one’s ever lasted this long.”

“She was apparently conditioned by her superiors to resist our methods,” Hanson said. “But Lieutenant Worf had a few devices with him.”

“Good old fashioned mind sifters,” Data said. “Nostalgic, crude and effective.”

“We basically ripped what we needed out of her head,” Hanson said, inputting commands into a data terminal. “We got everything. Her contacts in Starfleet, her handlers, everything. We’re still putting the information together, we had to pull it out in chunks, but the correlation programs are ongoing, translating them back to Standard.” She tapped another series of controls. An image appeared. Three Starfleet admirals stood in a semi-circle, laughing and sharing drinks. “These are her contacts,” Hanson said.

Picard felt rage swell within him. The admirals on screen were the highest placed members of Starfleet. Admiral Aaron, Admiral Savar of Vulcan and Gregory Quinn.

“Data,” Picard said, menacingly and barely above a whisper. “Set a course for Earth.”
 
Chapter: Conspiracy

Captain's Personal Log, Supplemental. While it is quite unusual for a starship to return to Earth we seem to be left with no other choice. I have apprised the remaining bridge crew of our situation and I will settle this issue personally.

Earth loomed ahead of them.

“We’ve just cleared the Luna defense marker,” said Data as Picard took his seat. “Starfleet Operations has provided us with a docking slip at McKinley Station.”

“Any word from Headquarters?”

“No, we’ve been sending hails since we passed Mars, nothing yet.”

“Keep hailing,” Picard said.

“Ship coming into range,” Worf said. “Ambassador-Class ISS Horatio.”

Despite the circumstances, Picard found himself smiling. “Always good to have friends nearby.” He and Walker Keel, the current CO of the Horatio went way back to his days as a lieutenant. “Hail them.”

Worf’s hands reached for the controls the instant the Horatio exploded. The warp core breached, scattering debris and the antimatter shockwave in every direction.

“Shields!” Picard cried. “Back off!”

Enterprise dove to starboard and was still showered in debris as she escaped the expanding ball of death.

“Damage reports coming in,” O’Brien said. “Shields held, some minor buckling on the port nacelle.”

“Incoming message from Starfleet Command,” Worf said.

“Put it on screen,” Picard said, at last finding his voice. Walker Keel had been like a brother to him. Starships just don’t explode like that.

The image on the viewer shifted from his friends death to the smiling face of Admiral Karl Aaron, surrounded on both sides by Savar and Quinn. “Hello, Captain,” Aaron said. “Damned shame about the Horatio. Keel was a good man. Those old Ambassador-Class ships should have been retired decades ago.”

Picard bristled. “Admiral, we’ve come on an urgent mission from the Neutral Zone. I have to speak with you immediately.”

“Of course,” Savar said. “We will have dinner prepared. Beam down at thirteen forty five. We’ll have an appropriate welcome laid out for you.”
The image shifted. “Data,” Picard said. “See to our plans. Chief O’Brien, report to transporter room three and assist the commander. We have very little time. Picard to Hanson. We’re ready.”

<><><>

Beverly Crusher was waiting for Picard in the transporter room, passing back and forth. Both O’Brien and Data were busying themselves with an intricate series of modifications to the main transporter array.

Beverly found herself fighting back tears. Walker Keel had been a good man. He was the one who had introduced her to Jack all those years ago. The fact that he had been killed in an obvious message towards Jean-Luc rattled her to her core. Was this the life she would lead as the captain’s woman? Constantly in fear of losing not only he only life but the lives of everyone she cared about.

After Wesley was killed, she found a dispassionate center inside herself and bottled up her rage and sorrow, shoving it away and moving forward. She had never spoken to Jack about what he had done to Wes and Jack had never mentioned it again. Then Jean-Luc had come into her life, let Jack die, and she was supposed to just get used to it. Even when Jean-Luc had been keeping that whore of Kirk’s in his quarters for all those weeks, Beverly had shoved it aside because Jean-Luc came home to her each night.

Not to say she wasn’t relieved when he’d finally killed her a few weeks back. It saved her the trouble. Her breath caught in her throat as the doors hissed open. Jean-Luc entered followed by Worf. That was a matter she was steal trying to come to terms with. The unmitigated gall of Jean-Luc to make Worf an officer defied all logic and Imperial procedure.

“Doctor,” Picard said formally. “Are you ready?”

Crusher indicated the small medical scanner in the palm of her hand. “All set. It won’t be difficult to get the readings, but they’re going to have to be analyzed back here on the ship. There’s no way they could gotten this far without a sophisticated gene re-sequencing that fools internal security sensors not to mention transporters.”

“How long will it take to confirm our suspicions?” Picard asked.

“Maybe ten minutes,” Crusher said. “It depends on a lot of factors.”

“Very well,” the captain said, turning his attention to Data and O’Brien. “Status?”

“She’s good to go,” O’Brien said, thumping the control panel. “I’ve disengaged the secondary emitter array and routed it through the Heisenberg compensator. Soon as you give the word, we’ll be able to snatch anyone out of Headquarters whether the shields are up or not.”

“Good work,” Picard said. “All right, then. Data, Beverly, you’re with me.” As he ascended the pad he turned to face Worf and Hanson. “Keep the ship on combat alert and general quarters. I don’t’ want what happened to the Horatio to happen to us. No one is to beam to or from without my express authority.”

Hanson nodded and saluted him. ”Good luck, Captain.”

“Energize.”

<><><>

“Damned shame about the Horatio,” Admiral Quinn said, reaching across the table for his drink. “Walker was a damned fine officer.”

“Have we confirmed it was an accident?” Picard asked, sipping his wine. “Seems there should have been some sort of warning.”

Admiral Aaron nodded. “Our sensor satellites registered an immediate loss of containment in the ships warp core. The same thing happened to the Renegade and the Horatio last week. Captain’s Scott and Rixx were trying to navigate an inversion nebula when they hit a subspace eddy that ripped the warp cores apart.”

“I wasn’t aware of that,” Picard said. “With so many malfunctions and accidents I’d have thought the flagship would have been advised.”

Aaron smiled. “Your ship’s brand new, Jean-Luc and you’re a good loyal soldier of the Empire. We didn’t want to worry you.”

“Of course,” Picard said.

“So,” Quinn said, “What brings you all the way back to Earth, Captain?”

Picard leaned forward, clasping his hands together. “It’s been an unusually couple of weeks aboard the Enterprise. First, hours after Admiral Quinn came aboard at Relva and delivered my new political officer with expertise in all things Romulan, we picked up a freighter that had been attacked by warbirds. Then we discovered a Romulan spy among my command crew.”

“Indeed,” said Admiral Savar. “That is most disturbing. Why havne’t you reported this?”

“The investigation has not yet been completed,” Picard said. “The officer in question is still being interrogated.”

“captain,” Beverly said from the side of the table. “I need to return to the ship.” She stood up and put her hand to her stomach. “I’m not feeling well.”

“Yes, of course,” Picard said mildly. “Go.” As Crusher left the lounge Picard and Data turned their attention back to the admirals. “Anyway, the officer was my chief of security. We still haven’t fully discovered the amount of information she passed along to her handlers.”

“Handlers?” Quinn asked.

“Yes,” Picard said. “Those people in positions of power that enabled her to get posted aboard the flagship.”

“Enterprise to Captain Picard.” It was Beverly’s voice.

“Picard,” he said into his combadge.

“I’m feeling much better, Captain, all signs point to what we assumed.”

The admirals remained quiet for several moments.

Data and Picard exchanged looks. “I thought as much,” Picard said. “How long have you been here, Romulan pigs?”

“You can’t prove anything, Captain,” Aaron said. “You dear old friend Walker Keel got wind of your little theory and was trying to warn you. We’ll silence anyone who stands in our way.”

The admirals stood as one. “Quinn to Operations, put up the shields around Headquarters.”

Savar smiled. “We’ve been preparing for this for a long time, Captain. Romulus has struggled against your people for centuries. The endgame is near, we will not be stopped by someone like you.”

Picard returned with a smile of his own. “Interesting,” he said. He tapped his combadge. “Picard to Enterprise. Energize.”

<><><>

Picard had always marveled at the Imperial Palace situated on the island of Honolulu. Constructed in the early twenty-first century by one of the Empire’s more petty tyrants, the palace had stood for centuries and the center of power of the Terran Empire.

Six hours ago after determining the true identities of the ‘admirals’, Picard had been summoned to the palace for a personal meeting with His Majesty.

As Picard was led down the stone hallway, he took in the history around him. Coming to attention at the dais he dropped to one knee and nodded to the emperor. “Majesty,” he said, “it is a great honor to be summoned.”

Emperor Jassa Noonien Singh, distant grandson of the great Khan stood before him, ensconced behind a protective forcefield. “It is a rare honor that a mere starship captain to be summoned before me.”

“Yes, Majesty.”

“Rise, Picard,” Singh said. As Picard did so, the emperor touched a panel on his throne and the forcefield dissipated. He descend the small steps and stood before Picard. “You have done the Empire a great service this day. With the involvement of the Romulans at our highest military levels discovered, I have ordered a through search and purge of Starfleet Command.”

Picard winced. Such acts were being carried out by the most ruthless man in Starfleet. Picard had never met Luther Sloane, but he knew the man by reputation. Trust right hand of the Emperor, it was Sloane’s job to maintain the stability and loyalty between Imperial rule and Starfleet. Twenty-seven people had already been executed since Picard had sent word of the Romulan infiltration.

How many of the dead had actually been working for the enemy, he did not know, but the Emperor had a clear method of eliminating anyone he saw as disloyal under the guise of security.

“Yes, sir,” Picard said.

“We will be returning to Romulus,” Singh said. “For too long we have sat in the shadows of their Empire, and nipped at their borders. No more. We will no longer invade to conquer, only to destroy. We will eradicate the Romulans from the galaxy. And you Picard, will lead our forces. Make your preparations and depart for the Neutral Zone at once.”
 
I was almost waiting for those weird bug things, if you know what I mean. So it's war? Then man the cannon and tie off the silk! Yohoho and a bottle o' rum! That's the way these Alt Universe Fleeters operate-like a pirate fleet. Maybe a common enemy will give them reason to act unified?
 
Chapter: The Neutral Zone:


Imperial Decree by Emperor Jassa Noonien Singh, Stardate 41775.

“Koval, Lovok and Vreenak.

Aaron, Savar and Quinn.

Six names of the most powerful individuals in two empires. Three of which had been snuffed out in a coordinated military assault by the Romulans in order to take control of Starfleet and prepare to invade the Terran worlds.

Thanks to the valiant efforts of Imperial Captain Jean-Luc Picard, these spies have been uncovered and terminated. Starfleet and the Empire ows Captain Picard a great debt. I make this decree for all to hear. Today marks the end of our stalemate with the Romulan Empire. I am ordering all ships to battle. Our forces will destroy Romulus, take the rich diltihium mines of Remus and kill everything that moves in that affront to civilization.”

“TO WAR!”

<><><>


Will Riker watched the holorecording of a rare appearance by Emperor Singh in anger and shock. “He’s a god damned hero.”

He and Troi were seated in their quarters at Utopia Station orbiting Mars. They’d returned early this morning from the disaster at Minos. “We have to get his operation under way,” Riker said, “before that damned fool is the one to plant the Terran flag on Romulus.”

Troi sidled up to him and stroked his beard. “Don’t worry; I’m sure the professor will give you all the tools needed to have your way.”

“Speaking of which,” Riker said, moving towards the desk. He checked the current time. “Come on, he should be waiting for us.”

They made their way through he dark corridors to the station’s main operations center where most of the new starship design work was done. They found the person they were looking for, clad in his traditional white lab coat and golden eyeglasses. He looked absurd, but he was the most brilliant mind in Starfleet engineering.

“Professor Sisko,” Riker.

The dark-skinned man jumped at the voice. He spun around. “Riker,” he said in a high pitched voice. “Troi.” He looked at the homemade clock on the wall. “You’re three minutes late for our meeting.” He giggled to himself. “Must remember to keep things on track, time is linear, must be on time from now on. Omni directional flow of the space time continuum must be respected.”

Riker rolled his eyes. Brilliant or not, the man was insane. “Professor, your message indicated that the Titan was ready for launch.”

“Yes, yes, quite right,” Sisko said. “Titan-Class.” He made a show of flexing his muscles. “Mighty gods of mythology. Very powerful. Like this ship.” He shuffled over to the main screen and activated a series of panels. The forward viewer came to life with the image of a great vessel berthed in her docking bay.

Riker whistled softly. “Impressive,” he said.

“Most,” Sisko said. “Most powerful. Puts the old Defiant classes to shame. I should’ve been more careful designing those. Limited weapon ports, takes you by surprise when attacked from behind. Not Titan though. Phaser cannons every where, multi-directional torpedo turrets. Powerful ship, yes, she’ll do fine for you.”

“Has she been assigned crew?”

“Oh yes,” Sisko said. “Admiral Jellico. Pushy man. Selected the crew himself.” Sisko pulled an apple from his lab coat and bit into it. As he chewed, he ran a hand along the image of Titan. “You’re going to need a chief engineer who’s familiar with the ins and outs of this design.”

“You think you’re qualified for starship duty?” Troi asked with a smirk. “They’d eat you alive.”

Sisko smiled, bits of apple falling out of his mouth onto the deck. “You need me,” he said, “and you need my wife’s help.”

“Doctor Sisko’s already under my general command,”Riker said. “Admiral Jellico made sure of that.” He pointed his beefy finger at Sisko. “She’s tailoring what I need for a special project. One that you will keep silent about.”

Sisko put up his hands in a gesture of understanding. “Of course, of course, Jennifer just talks in her sleep. Very bold to move against Picard like this. He’s a good man.”

“Yes, well,” Riker said. “I’ll pass on the offer, thanks. I’ll find someone just as qualified who has starship duty experience.”

“Probably safer to stay here,” Sisko said, turning to look out into space. “No one wants this job, so they don’t try and kill me for it. Oh, your cloaking device arrived. Was a pain to install, let me tell you, but I got it working last night. It won’t hold up at high warp, but should be just fine at sub light and below warp six.”

“Good to know,” Riker said. He turned to Troi. “Get aboard the Titan and see to the departure. I’ll join you shortly.”

Troi nodded and left.

Riker turned back to Sisko. “Professor, what’s the shield rate of weapons dissipation for Titan?”

“Ten point eight terajoules with dissipation rate of point nine four.”

Riker did the math in his head. “That’s a concentrated phaser and quantum torpedo barrage for seven minutes without appreciable reduction in shield strength.”

Sisko smiled broadly, his white teeth shining in the light. “My pride and joy.”

“I won’t make you chief engineer,” Riker said, “But I’d like to have you aboard as my personal engineering advisor.”

Sisko bowed. “A pleasure,” he said.

Riker shook his head. “Just make sure when you report on board you bring that wife of yours. We depart at oh five hundred tomorrow.”

“We’ll be there,” Sisko said.

<><><>


“Your out of your damned mind!” snapped Jennifer Sisko. “You want ME to serve aboard RIKER’S ship? The man’s a monster.”

“He needs us, Jen. We can help!”

“You’re a fool,” Jennifer said. ”Sometimes I don’t know why I married you.”

Sisko leapt over the chair and got within inches of her face. “Because my family is powerful, my father revolutionized modern Imperial food supplies. Because of the name Sisko, troops live longer and healthier lives!”

Jennifer said nothing. “Fine. I have to pack my things. I thought this would be the last time I had to work for Riker.” She shook her head. “But building pathogens specifically tailored to one person’s DNA is very dangerous!”

Sisko laughed, not quite a laugh, but more of a yelp escaping from his mouth. “I’ve learned to do what I’m told and not ask questions. Maybe you should follow my example.”

<><><>

“All repairs are complete, Captain, the fleet is ready for departure.”

Jean-Luc Picard entered his bridge and took his seat. They were setting off for war and conquest, the primary mission of the Empire. And he would lead the campaign, the fleet and the soldiers under his command. Three hundred Imperial ships were setting out from Earth, to meet up with two hundred more at Regulus, then the push across the Neutral Zone would occur and they’d decimate the Romulan homeworlds. Once the destruction of their capital worlds were apparent for all to see, the outlying Romulan colonies would collapse and Picard would be showered in the glory.

“Excellent work to everyone. Helm, break orbit, link up with the fleet and plot a course for Romulus all possible speed.”

<><><>

Beverly Crusher felt the warp engines come online and she reclined back in her chair within her office in Sickbay. She was a doctor not a soldier. But she’d do her duty. She knew once Romulus fell, Jean-Luc would have accomplished something no Terran solider ever had and he would be rewarded handsomely. And she would be at his side to reap the benefits.

“Doctor Crusher?”

“Yes, Alyssa?” she asked as her chief nurse entered the office carrying a small box.

“This package arrived for you before we left orbit,” she said.

Crusher took the box and opened it. A small vial of perfume wrapped in a bow sat in the small container. A note was attached that read “To my beloved Beverly, Love Jean-Luc.” Beverly removed the stopper and dabbed the fragrant perfume on her neck. She smiled up at Ogawa and replaced the stopper. “I knew he had a streak of passion in him.”

Her hands began to tremble, the capillaries on her skin burst open. Before her mouth could form a shriek, Crusher crumpled over her desk, dead before she hit the surface.
 
<><><>

Will Riker sat in the darkened confines of his quarters and smiled broadly. He watched out the viewports as Titan followed the Imperial fleet under her cloaking shields. Word had just been intercepted from the Enterprise informing Starfleet Command of the death of their Chief Medical Officer.

“She did a good job,” Troi said. “Letting her think it was Picard was brilliant.”

Riker turned around and took her hand. “It’ll rattle him, but he’s too much of a stoic to let it affect his command abilities. He’ going to just fight that much harder.”

“Will he know it was you?”

“He has no proof,” Riker said, “only suspicions. I’ll have to make another move once he finds a new woman.”

“I just came from the bridge,” Troi said. “I don’t know where Jellico found some of those people up there, but I don’t want to run into half of them in a darkened corridor in the middle of the night.”

Riker laughed out loud. “I know what you mean. It’s Jellico’s way of keeping me on a short leash.”

“So what’s our next move?” Troi asked.

Riker gestured towards the viewport and the fleet they were pacing. “We let him do his job, let him wipe out the Romulans. Do our dirty work for us, then we kill him. I’ll challenge him or something, I haven’t quite decided.”


<><><>

The Imperial fleet met no resistance between Earth and Regulus where the remainder of the forces met up with their support ships and resumed a course for the heart of the Romulan Empire.

The news of the death of Beverly Crusher had shaken the entire crew. Especially since Picard was the prime suspect. The captain had filed a complete report and denied any involvement. It turned out the package Beverly had received was transported by a shuttlecraft that had been assigned Utopia Station orbiting marks. Picard had tracked that particular shuttle down via the traffic logs and found that it had crashed in the Mohave desert on Earth minutes after beaming the compound aboard.

That had been another mystery. Science teams had analyzed the compound that had killed her and found several genetic markers that indicated it had been specifically tailored to kill only Beverly.

Picard had a list of suspects a light-year long. He’d made his share of enemies during his career, but one name stuck out among the rest.

Riker.

The captain of the Drake had disappeared after the Battle of Minos and had not been heard from since. It only made since that he was out there plotting against Picard.

As soon as this Romulus business is done, Picard decided, I’ll be taking a much more interested role in Mr. Riker’s career.

But there was no time for revenge now. They were nine hours away from the Romulan border and no doubt in for a fight all the way to the homeworlds. With his medical officer dead, he called in a favor from his old friend Patrick Taggert. So now he stood in transporter room two awaiting his new medical officer.

“Signal from the Repulse, Captain,” said Lieutenant Collins. “Ready for transport.”

“At last,” Picard said, turning to face the pad. “Energize.”

The transporter beam showered into existence and deposited a petite woman in medical blue, her light brown air cut short around the ears and her eyes wore a fatigued expression. At the sight of Picard she snapped to attention and saluted.

“Doctor Katherine Pulaski, reporting duty, sir.”

Picard nodded. “Welcome aboard, “ he said. He indicated Lieutenant Collins. “Mister Collins will see to your things and issue you quarters. Senior staff briefing in twenty minutes. Don’t be late.” Without another word he left.

Katherine Pulaski watched the captain leave the transporter room and shook her head. She looked to Collins. “Is he always that abrupt?”

“Sorry ma’am,” Collins said. “The captain’s having a hard time of it. Our last chief medical officer was killed.”

“Yes I know that,” Pulaski snapped. “That’s why I’m here.”

“Yes, ma’am, but Beverly Crusher and the captain. They were…they were together.”

“Ah,” Pulaski said. It all made sense now. His cold demeanor, his quick dismissal. “This is going to be a fun assignment,” she said dryly.

<><><>

“The fleet is operating at peak efficiency, given our high warp status, we will cross the Romulan border is less than one hour. After that our forces will divide, eliminate any outlying resistance and proceed to Romulus in a three-pronged offensive. Any questions?”

Picard waiting patiently for any of his officers to field their questions. “Good. Because once this meeting ends, we’re either going to stand victorious over the ashes of a dead world, or will be dead ourselves.”

No one spoke.

“Dismissed.”

As everyone filed out of the conference room, Picard remained behind, turning his chair to watch the stars stream away.

“Captain?”

He spun his chair around to face Doctor Pulaski. This damned woman was going to be a thorn in his side, he just knew it. She was one of the best medical officers in the Empire, but she was going to serve as a constant reminder of everything he had lost. “Yes, Doctor, what can I do for you?”

“I just want you to know sir, that I will do my very best to serve this ship. And you have my complete loyalty.”

Picard’s rage overcame him. He leapt out of his chair, sending it crashing into the bulkhead. “Your job is to see to the medical welfare of this crew,”he shouted. “You serve at my leisure. Go to sickbay, do your job, and stay out of my way!”

Pulaski blinked in shock at the outburst. She nodded, saluted and left the lounge.

Picard felt a headache coming on. Sometimes he felt like the world was closing in around him.

“No one ever said command was such a burden,” he said to the room. “I may end up having to kill her.”

<><><>



In space where there are unlimited directions and countless billions of kilometers in distance, space combat is an exact science. To pinpoint a vessel with weapons millions of kilometers away takes a sophisticated targeting array and the skill of a very experienced tactical officer.

The Terran Empire trained the very best in weapons operations.

The Terran fleet crossed the Romulan side of the Neutral Zone at oh eight twenty nine on Stardate 41986 and systematically destroyed every relay station, outpost and Starbase in their path.

What troubled the leaders of the Terran force was the lack of Romulan battle ships in their path. Even if they had been in the area hidden behind their cloaking shields, it seemed almost impossible that the Romulans had not responded to the attack.

When the sectors adjoining the Neutral Zone had been pacified, Picard ordered several ships to being the deployment of the minefield that would seal off the far sectors of the Romulan Empire, isolating them from support of the homeworlds.

Once they’d resumed course, it was an eerie silent trip until the reached the outskirts of the core system.

“Eleven hundred forty three ships scattered about the system,” Miles O’Brien said, bring the forward scanners to bear on their targets. “No telling how many of them are cloaked.”

Picard stood in the center of the bridge, the crimson glow of the battle lighting reflecting in his eyes. This is how it had been sixty years ago. John Harriman former captain of the Enterprise-B had led the assault against Romulus from the Federation beachhead at Tomed. It had been a disaster on both sides. Neither fleet had backed down, and both were pummeled into dust. The stalemate had lasted decades, but now was the time to end the Romulan threat once and for all.

“Open a channel to the fleet,” Picard said.

Worf nodded, indicating the channel was open.

“Terran fleet, this Captain Picard. We stand on the precipice of a great victory. For two centuries the Romulans have posed a serious threat to the stability of our worlds. That threat ends today. The Romulans have fallen back with everything they have in a vein attempt to preserve their petty homeworlds. We are not here to conquer this day, we are here to destroy. We’ve stalemated against them too many times. Today we will be the victor. The Emperor has commanded us to use what ever means at our disposal. To that end I am authorizing deployment of the Omega Device. Set your course for home and be prepared for maximum warp. Glory to the Empire!”

<><><>


A century ago a Terran physicist discovered the key element that had set off the explosion that ignited the big bang, giving birth to the universe. A single molecule dubbed Omega had been constructed at distant Terran outpost deep in the Lantaru Sector. Theorized to be able to be harnessed as a power source, Omega proved to be useful for only one thing: the destruction of subspace. The Empire had classified all data and executed everyone with knowledge except a handful of loyal scientists.

Working for decades the Omega Device had at last been perfected as was ready for deployment.

<><><>
The Romulan fleet, in classic Romulan fashion, did not attack the Terran fleet the moment they appeared in their home system. The Romulan mindset was always to draw the enemy in, let him attack with whatever he had and to resist him with the full strength of the Romulan military.

Therefore they were not ready to respond when a three meter long device was released from an airlock aboard the Terran flagship.

On the bridge of the cloaked ISS Titan, Will Riker watched in puzzlement as the device emerged from Enterprise. “What the hell is that?” he demanded.

At the science station, Jennifer Sisko shook her head. “No idea, sensors can’t penetrate the outer casing.”

“Captain.”

Riker turned to the voice. At tactical, Lieutenant Chakotay’s beefy hands were pounding the control board. “The fleet, it’s coming about and going to warp!”

Riker spun around and watched as the Starfleet taskforce leapt into high warp. “What the hell are they doing? Helm, go after them…”

As Titan’s warp engines came online and flashed in an antimatter annihilation, Chakotay shouted, “Sir the device has detonated!”

A blinding blue-white flash erupted across light-years, the very fabric of space coming apart at the celestial seams.

“Massive subspace instabilities are forming!” shouted Doctor Sisko.

“Warp drive’s failing,” said the conn officer, “we’re coming out of warp.”

“What about the fleet?” Riker asked as the impulse generators kicked in.

“They’re at the edge of the shockwave and pulling away at high warp,” Sisko said. “The shockwave was so fast and permeated subspace. There was only about a ten second window to escape the shockwave.”

“What the hell was it?” Troi demanded.

“No idea, the readings don’t make any sense,” Sisko said. “But Romulus and Remus are gone, incinerated in the shockwave along with their fleet. We barely escaped destruction ourselves. Structural integrity field’s down to twelve percent.”

“Full stop,” Riker snapped. “Get started on repairs. How soon until we can get underway?”

Sisko looked back at him, her face full of terror. “We can’t, sir. The blast destroyed subspace in a radius farther out than sensors can reach. Warp drive’s out of the question.”

Riker’s blood burned, his head throbbed. “You’re telling me we’re stuck out here in a dead zone with only impulse engines?!”

Sisko looked at the deck; said nothing.

Riker spun on his heels back to the forward screen. Subspace was gone in every direction. No warp drive, no subspace communications. For all intents and purposes Titan might as well be in another galaxy.

“Seta course for Terran space,” he ordered. “Full impulse.”

<><><>

Cheers erupted on the bridge of the Enterprise and Picard let them celebrate. The utter destruction of the Romulan homeworlds, not to mention the calculated destruction of subspace in a two hundred-light year radius throughout Romulan space had been the greatest scientific achievement in Imperial history.

But was a costly one too. Nearly a dozen ships had been destroyed, their crews not acting quickly enough to escape the initial explosion. But the remainder of the fleet escaped and at the high side of warp nine had a few moments ago escaped the blast wave and altered their course for home.

Picard breathed a sigh of relief. Since his meeting with the emperor he’d not been sure he’d be able to orchestrate this attack, but his old friend Jenice Manheim, wife of the brilliant Terran physicist Paul Manheim had provided Picard with the Omega device specifications which Data and La Forge had replicated for use against the Romulans. He knew the Emperor would be furious at the scientists for releasing the data, and they’d no doubt be put to death, but Picard knew their deaths would be a small price to pay for the total annihilation of the Romulan Empire.

“Captain,” Data said. He was standing at the aft portion of the deck at one of the secondary science stations. “You should see this.”

Picard pulled himself out of the command chair and ascended to the aft deck and watched the readouts on the sensor screen Data was operation. “Report.”

“The moment the Omega device detonated and the fleet jumped to warp, a cloaked ship also tried to escape the blast.”

“Not surprising,” Picard said. “The Romulans do doubt had dozens of cloaked ships in the area.”

“It WAS a Romulan cloaking device,” Data said, entering a series of commands into the console, “but not a Romulan ship.” He brought up a visual record of the blast and paused it. The silhouetted shape of a Starfleet vessel appeared. “The class is unfamiliar,” Data said, “But it was a Terran ship, with a crew of nearly five hundred.” He enhanced the image and zoomed onto the secondary hull. The lettering on the hull, partially obscured by the failing cloak did reveal enough characters.

“ISS Titan,” Picard said.

“There is no record of a ship of that name in the Imperial database,” Data said.

“Curious,” Picard said. “A Terran ship, hiding under cloak. Did they escape the blast?”

“They escaped destruction but not the effects of the Omega wave. They are no doubt stranded in the dead zone.”

Picard watched the data readings fizzle out as the Omega wave destroyed the ability of the subspace scanners on the effected area. “Damned strange. Why would they be hiding like that?” He turned around and addressed the forward section of the bridge. “Helm, set a return course to Earth. We have much to discuss with Command.”
 
What an unusual twist of events you have here. I didn't see the Omega molecule coming. And what are you going to do with Riker?
 
I'm so loving this. Interesting to see how you are incorporating all of the franchises into this one story! I assume that Khan was not found by the Enterprise in "Space Seed" if the Emperor is a descendant? Or was it?
 
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