• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

The Cloaked Figure

Jenee

Dancing Goddess
Premium Member
Back by popular demand.

... well, maybe just because I referenced it in another forum and the original thread got pruned.

Anyway, here's the first chapter...



The cloaked figure made her way up the dirty street. The dust and grime that hung heavy in the air wasn’t the only cause for the filth. The establishments that lined the street provided for the basest of desires for every species in the Alpha Quadrant and any one who made the trip through the wormhole.

The cloaked figure, however, wasn’t in the area to quench any of those desires. She was hiding.

It wouldn’t be long before those looking for her would be swarming the streets of this God-Forsaken colony. But, she would be gone then. She had survived these last couple months by staying one step ahead of them.

When she debarked the dingy, old freighter earlier this evening, she knew what she had to do to put an end to this nonsense. The problem was, she’d rather cut off her right arm, than beg for help from the man she’s hated since childhood.

She scanned the crowd looking for a target. And there wasn’t a shortage of those. Most patrons of these establishments weren’t the most astute nor alert group of ‘intelligent’ beings she had ever been in the company of.

However, there were maybe one or two people in each establishment alert enough to be watching out for members of their crew. Those were the ones she worried about. Obtaining her prize would be easy enough from nearly every one of the hundreds of characters roaming the streets and in and out of the shops looking for their next fix. It was the guy sitting casually just inside every bar on the street looking for all the world like he was enjoying a quiet drink while waiting for his ship’s load to clear, find another job and take off. But, he wasn’t as distant as he appeared. He knew exactly where each crew person was and he knew who the possible pickpockets were on the street (including our cloaked figure), and where they were in proximity to his fellow crewmembers.

She needed to find some one local, but not so local that they didn’t have enough latinum pay for her communiqué and subsequent transportation out of here.

Fortune was smiling on her that evening as she discreetly scanned left and right from under her hood. A drunken brawl suddenly erupted from a bar and into the street directly in her hurried path. Not one observer could have accused her of that distraction, nor of taking advantage when a big, burly guy stumbled backward into her and they both landed in the street with a coccyx-crushing thud. For a brief second she considered sitting there in her misery when she realized her quarry was safely in her palm and she needed to get out of the vicinity quickly, because her hood had fallen ever so slightly in the scuffle. She couldn’t afford to be seen on any security surveillance systems - not yet, anyway.

Her sudden eruption of Klingon cursing caused the brute to jump faster than she would have given him credit for. The crowd must not have noticed her facial features, because they all moved just as quickly. She got to her feet and walked as fast as she could to the next intersection and took a left.

An implant behind her left eye allowed her to scan behind her to see if she had been followed or if any one was otherwise tracking her movements. She didn’t detect anything or anyone. If she were lucky, she just might make it off this rock alive.

At the end of the street she took a right, then another left after that, trying to put as much distance between herself and the drunk Cardassian whose pocket she’d picked.

The third street over she found a public subspace communications system. She dropped the credit slip into the slot and punched in the code she’d known for more than 30 years. She already knew what she was going to say, had in fact thought it out and memorized it during the journey on the freighter. And yet, when the familiar, though aged, face appeared on the screen, her stomach lurched. She braced herself and began to speak.

“I need your help.

She wasn’t sure if he would recognize the sound of her voice, but she did know he couldn’t refuse those four words regardless of who spoke them.

“Who are you and how did you get this code?”

His tone told her that he hadn’t changed in fifteen years. He was still the same arrogant bastard he’d always been. She pulled back her hood just enough to allow the light from the console to reveal her face.

The look of shock on the man’s face told her all she needed to know. She allowed the hood to fall back over her face. He opened his mouth to speak, but she cut him off.

“I know who your contacts are and I know just how much power you have. I also know, that you know from our entire relationship leading up to our last conversation that I wouldn’t have contacted you if I had any another options. If you were ever a friend to my father, you will meet me in four days at Project 6-7-2.”

Without waiting for a reply, she terminated the communication. She, then, took a step backward, pulled out a phaser and blew up the unit.
 
Great start...leaves me wanting more....so..MORE!!! Was is project 6-7-2? Is this something from Star Trek I should remember?

Robert Scorpio
 
No. Just something I made up. In fact, it's not even a 'real' project, but a clue - something only this person (someone she'd obviously spent quite a bit of her youth with) would be able to figure out.
 
The last time Gerald Harper laid eyes on Serena Duncan, she’d just graduated from the Academy, at the top of her class, naturally. His best friend Patrick, had always spoiled the girl and Gerald found himself more often than not, annoyed with her behavior and antics when others showered her with praise. His attempts to instill order and discipline had not only gone ignored, but eventually festered into outright hostility.

Serena’s spoiled character began to show itself at her first posting. She was a belligerent junior officer and her warnings and reprimands soon began to add up. Rumors of an upcoming dishonorable discharge were taken as given.

Then she’d been killed during a peace conference in the Badlands.

And, yet, she obviously hadn’t been.

Gerald Harper began to mentally review as much as he could remember.

Shortly after the end of the Dominion War, honest and fair negotiations began with a nearly destroyed Cardassia. However, within two decades the Cardassians were up to their old shenanigans, trying to drive out or kill the Federation settlers and regain their old territory.

The Federation, wanting to avoid another war, was just about to, again, sign over Federation colonies to the control of Cardassia.

A group of rebels reclaimed the name Maquis and attacked the conferences. One of which, supposedly claimed the life of Serena. Then, as suddenly as it started, Cardassia backed out of their claims on the territories with no explanations. Leaving the Federation with more territory than it started with.

He thought then as he thought now, that the entire situation had Section 31 written all over it; which would explain Serena’s sudden reincarnation quite nicely. Once the thought was in his head, he realized that of course she would have gone that way. It was always in her nature to buck the rules. She always had to have things her way, regardless of who she hurt. This was so like her. Get herself in over her head and then come crying for help. – well, that’s not true. She’d never in her life asked for help. She could be as stubborn as a Klingon when it came to that.

Suddenly, he was very angry. This was just like her. She just disappeared for 20 years, letting her father believe she was dead, rather than tell him she’d gone into that rogue organization. Why hadn’t Patrick listened to him all those years ago and tried to instill in her a bit of respect for other people! She was a selfish, spoiled brat and he should just leave her to her own comeuppance.

But, he knew he couldn’t do that. And so did she. That’s why she’d contacted him. She knew he would do whatever he could to help her. Not because of who she was, but because of who he is. The part of his life he’d always taken pride in, now became a bitter pill.

So, what has happened? Why was she, obviously, running for her life and why was she so uncharacteristically asking for help? Had something finally happened to bring a bit of humility to Serena Duncan?

He turned his attention back to the monitor and started trying to figure out Serena’s code. What the hell is ‘project 6-7-2?’
 
:lol: Now I know how the writers of Lost feel. There's nothing 'mysterious' about it. It's just a place where she wants to meet without saying exactly - just in case - someone else is listening. It's a code. For somewhere they both know, someplace he would be able to figure out, but probably not anyone else.




15 years earlier…


The young ensign relaxed her grip on the phaser rifle and shifted her feet. The desire to take a seat on the nearby pile of boulders was almost overwhelming. She suppressed an urge to sigh.

A slight breeze flowed through her hair and rippled across the river. The sun was shining but not searing. Aside from the weather, she couldn’t imagine why these people were fighting over this planet.

Not for the first time in six months, she wondered what had possessed her to join Starfleet.

Serena furtively lifted her left heal and discreetly rotated her ankle. Then, did the same for her right. She looked around to see if anyone had noticed. Well, anyone besides the creepy old man sitting on the newel block of the stone bridge straddling the deep, narrow river. She was pretty certain the reason he hadn’t caught any fish today, was because he’d been paying more attention to her than his line. He’d tried to be discreet, but every time she looked away from his direction, she could feel his eyes on her. She’d tried to tell herself she was being fanciful, she knew deep down that it wasn’t so.

There was a small village on the far side of the river. She’d been (semi) intently watching the comings and goings of travelers entering and leaving the town via the bridge. Serena was posted just northwest of the bridge, just southeast of the clearing.

Inside the clearing she was helping to secure, was a delegation of peacekeepers hammering out yet another treaty hoping to satisfy the inhabitants of these dreaded Badlands. Things weren’t looking good for the human – or rather, Maquis settlers. The Federation had been expecting trouble.

At this point, Serena was almost hoping for trouble; any thing to alleviate this mind-numbing boredom.

For the tenth time in ten minutes, she cursed her stubborn nature and juvenile behavior, both of which had led to her insane decision to join Starfleet. Here she was, in the prime of her life, guarding an idealistic group of ‘do-gooders’ in a fruitless ambition of diplomacy, when she should be out enjoying her young life while she had a chance.

The sound of footsteps behind her brought her musings to a halt. She waited until the footsteps were about to reach her, then she turned to face her commanding officer. Why was she intentionally so difficult sometimes?

“The conference is packing it in for the day. Have your team pull in and escort the delegates to the beam out site.” And then he returned to the clearing.

She mentally laughed as she tapped her combadge and relayed the instructions given her by the Chief of Security. Her team. This team belonged to her no more than the man in the moon – as her grandmother would say. All the junior officers were rotated into leadership positions, testing their worth in command positions.

As she started toward the clearing, something instinctive made her turn around and look. The old man was gone.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top