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The Star Eagle Adventures: EVS-2 - Crossing Over

Thanks Mistral.

I admit the structure for this story is less straight-forward than on the other stories and in hindsight I probably should have posted everything in one go instead of in pieces. I usually think that it is easier on readers to post small chunks, just maybe not this time.

A quick recap: We find a woman in a dingy little room seeing bats and apparently having lost her grip on time.

The day previous we meet a crime boss named Denka playing a game of Tongo with an attractive blonde, a mysterious man, an alluring Vulcan woman and a Nausicaan among others.

Two days earlier we meet a blonde Tazla Star working undercover in Denka's organization trying to work herself into his graces. She faces off with a mysterious man, Pava, a shape-shifter called Galven who's going as a Vulcan and her Nausicaan associate. Pava tries to convince her to help them bring down Denka but she decides to go at it alone and try to bring down the entire syndicate.

As to what the Mark is, we'll soon find out.
 
One Day Ago

“Some would call me a monster,” Denka told the Tongo players whose ranks had thinned out significantly since the game had begun. “But don’t let the self-righteous and ignorant masses fool you. We are simply providing a much needed service, filling a required demand. A demand that has always existed and always will. It is the nature of business, the galaxy even, to fill demand. And if we didn’t, you know what we would have?”

“Chaos,” said the blonde and alluring Tazla Star sitting next to Denka.

He looked at her, surprised at first but his facial expression quickly turned into a smile. “That is exactly right. Chaos,” he said and looked at the others. “Without us, without the middle man who stands between the supply and the demand the galaxy would be thrown into chaos.”

“And how do you figure that?” said Pava Lar’ragos absentmindedly as he was looking over his cards.

“Well, isn’t it obvious?” said Star. “We bring a semblance of structure and order to what would otherwise be a messy and dirty affair. Imagine entire squadrons of hunting parties roaming the galaxy in search for slaves or even their next dinner. Imagine the bloodshed if those we provide with easy shipments were unable to attain them any longer and were forced to take more aggressive actions. Indeed, imagine the Tholians, many of which consider human organs to be a luxurious philter, declaring full out war in order to plunder and conquest. Thanks to us they don’t have to. You could say, we ensure peace in the galaxy maybe even more so than Starfleet does.”

Denka’s smile grew even larger. “I couldn’t have put it better myself, my dear” he said. “Come over here.”

Star obliged without hesitation and leaned in closer to Denka. He reached around her neck and pulled her even closer still in order to give her a long, passionate kiss in front of the few remaining players. “You are as smart as you are beautiful, my dear. One day you just may be able to make something out of yourself.”

“I am merely here to please you,” she purred.

Denka nodded. “Pleasing me will get you go far in this organization, I’ll see to that,” he said and looked at the others. He quickly focused in on the other siren sitting at the table. The Vulcan woman was watching them carefully but hadn’t said more than a few words. “And there is always room for more.”

The Vulcan looked at her cards and then back at Denka. “Evade.”


* * *


Two Days Ago

Denka rolled off the blonde woman, his body covered in sweat. He was exhausted. “You are quite something, aren’t you?”

“You are pleased, then?” she said.

“Pleased?” he said as if he had not heard her correctly. He was lying on his back now, still breathing hard. “My dear, I can safely say that no woman I’ve ever met has taken my breath away as much as you have. And I’m not ashamed to say that I’ve met many, many women before you. I’ve been with wildest Orions and the most sensual Deltans and yet you have nothing on them. You might be a young thing but trust me, under the sheets one might think you’ve been doing this for thousands of years.”

Tazla Star smirked at the comment. It wasn’t quite right but close enough.

She felt a painful sting in her stomach and she had to struggle to ignore it and not to let the physical discomfort show on her face. She knew exactly what it was. Her previous hosts were offended, perhaps even disgusted that she had drawn on their extensive experiences for such a lewd and objectionable task.

She told herself, and she hoped the symbiont would understand, that she was doing all this for the right reasons. She was taking no pleasure from this, she found Denka Decqour with his long slick hair and his vile breath repulsive. But more than that, she thought he was a cruel, heartless monster who would be able to justify killing his own mother if he had to.

But she had to pretend otherwise. And she had to do it with all her being, unless her true thoughts be discovered by him or the many telepaths he employed for exactly this reason.

And so she ignored the symbiont’s objections, her own consciousness, her own shame and all those other feelings which were standing in her way of doing her job.

She put on her sweetest smile and snuggled up against him. “Shall we go again?”

Denka looked at the woman at his side as if she had lost her mind. However her innocent features quickly allowed him to relax again. “You got to give me some time here.”

She bit her lip but also nodded obediently even while her hand reached out for his broad chest, roaming over his naked body as if she couldn’t wait to continue what they had started.

Denka didn’t protest.

She ultimately found the octagon shaped mark on his upper torso just a few inches above his heart. Her fingers traced the symbol etched into his skin.

When she looked up at him she found that his eyes were already watching her.

“You want to get the Mark, don’t you?”

She nodded.

“I don’t know,” he said. “People much more important than me would have to approve. Besides, this isn’t just another tattoo,” he said and carefully touched the symbol, no bigger than the size of a coin. “Once you are marked you become a member of the Syndicate. And that, my dear, will be a lifetime commitment, the drug will see to that.”

“I’m no stranger to drugs.”

Denka sat up. “Y isn’t just any drug. Once you get your first injection it will take hold of you for the rests of your life. There are no antidotes, there is no rehabilitation program you can take to free yourself again. Once it’s in your system it will stay there forever. And your body will crave it. You will not be able to sleep without, you will not be able to function unless you take regular injections. And the Syndicate will be your only supplier.”

Star had heard about this of course. Y or yridium tricantizine was not widely known as a drug outside Syndicate circles but she had learned that every high-level operative was marked and therefore owned by that compound. Unless you could show that you had the unique octagon mark left behind by the Y injectors you weren’t really part of the Syndicate.

“If you think I’m ready than I’m willing to give my life over to the Syndicate,” she said. “I could serve as your right-hand and protect you from enemies both outside and inside. I’d be at your beck and call night and day.”

At that Denka smirked. “Now that sounds like a fantastic idea,” he said as he reached out for her body once more.
 
One has to admire Star’s dedication to her craft. No one who wasn’t fully committed to the mission would last more than a few minutes in the den of villainy that is the Orion Syndicate. However, it’s clear she still doesn’t understand what this assignment will demand from her, and the price it will likely exact on her soul for the rest of her lives if she decides to take the drug.

And then there’s the added complication of the Starfleet Intel team.

Oh, yeah… this has ugliness written all over it. :scream:
 
I like to think that Star's heart is in the right place here. But you are of course absolutely right.

There is a great human saying about the road to hell. I don't think they know about that one on Trill. Shame.
 
You've shed more light on Star that helps me understand her a bit more (though not completely). While she's far from a sympathetic character, her decisions made "in the line of duty" help explain the recklessness that would become her trademark.

Nice! :techman:
 
You've shed more light on Star that helps me understand her a bit more (though not completely). While she's far from a sympathetic character, her decisions made "in the line of duty" help explain the recklessness that would become her trademark.

Nice! :techman:

Once again he takes my words. He tasks me but I will have him!
What he said. ^ :cool:
 
I like to think that Tazla has a rather complicated personality and it would be boring if it could be explained in just one little short story. Hopefully though, this story helps to explain why she eventually becomes the person that she is.

Thanks for reading.
 
One Day Ago

After a marathon gaming session of Tongo only four players remained. Denka, Star, Pava and Glaven. All others had been eliminated.

“It is a shame that you haven’t shown a greater interest in the business opportunities I can offer,” Denka said. “Your sharp intellect could be put to great use, not to mention your other assets,” he added as he shot the Vulcan woman a not-so-subtle look.

“I am interested in business opportunities,” she replied and then looked straight at the woman sitting next to Denka. “However I have no desire to become a drugged up, sexual plaything.”

Tazla Star simply smiled at the Vulcan. “It is sad that as logical as you may be, you do not appear to understand the need for sacrifice. For the game, for business, for love, for achieving greatness. Without sacrifice, by playing it safe all your life, you will never accomplish anything. Differently to you, I’m in this to win.”

Denka leaned slightly into her. “What are you willing to sacrifice for me?”

“For you, my love,” she said and gently brushed his cheek. “Everything.”

He smiled and looked over the other players to make sure that they had taken notice. “Now that is loyalty. You cannot put too high a price on that.”

But Pava shook his head. “Some prices are not worth paying,” he said and folded his cards on the table shortly after Galven had, ending both their involvement in the Tongo game.

“Looks like it’s just me and you left, my dear. What’s your next move?”

Tazla Star hesitated for just a moment. She looked at the Vulcan she knew as the shape-shifting Galven and then at Pava. Their true thoughts were hidden underneath perfectly maintained masks. And yet she knew exactly what they were.

And she knew exactly what she needed to do.

“Acquire.”


* * *​


Now

She was lying on her back with her head hanging upside down over the edge. Her eyes were glazed over and she wasn’t moving. Hadn’t it been for the steady rise and fall of her chest one could have easily assumed that she was dead.

That was the state Pava Lar’ragos, Galven and her Nausicaan partner, Kren, had found her in.

Galven, now in the form of a human woman, pulled out a small tricorder and scanned Star’s motionless form. “She is alive. But barely. I cannot tell the cause for her current state.”

Pava stepped up to the bed and pulled her loose shirt open slightly, just enough to reveal an octagon shaped mark above her left breast. Then he spotted the injector lying next to her and picked it up. It was depleted.

“It’s the Y. It quite purposefully won’t show up on standard scans. But she’s pumped full of the stuff. Considering that this is her first shot, she’s probably going through hell right now,” he said and shot her a pitiful look. “I don’t think she’s going to wake from this for hours and once she does, she’ll probably wish she hadn’t.”

“Stupid, stubborn, little girl,” said Galven and then turned to her partner. “Kren, help me out, we’ll carry her back to the ship. If we stay to the back allies we should be able to get there undetected.”

But Pava shook his head. “No.”

“You don’t suggest we just leave her here like this?”

He stood up and faced the shape-shifting intelligence operative. “That is exactly what I suggest. We won’t be able to help her anyway. There is no known cure for yridium tricantizine poisoning, especially not considering the dosage she’s taken. She’s made her choice. Now she’ll have to live with it.”

The Nausicaan had moved to one of the grimy windows. “Whatever we do, we better do it quick. There are half a dozen Syndicate goons coming up the street.”

“No doubt coming to check in on their newest recruit,” said Pava.

“What do we do now?” asked Galven.

Pava had already moved to the door. “We continue as planned. We take down Denka and shut down his slaving operation in this sector.”

“So she went through all of this for nothing?” said the woman without a hint of sympathy in her tone.

“I think we may have helped her along unwittingly.”

Galven glanced at Pava. “How so?”

“Once Danka is gone, somebody will have to fill his shoes,” he said with a shrug. “Now that she has the Mark, she is trusted within the Syndicate, so it may as well be her.”

“You don’t think she really has a shot at taking them all down, do you?”

Pava had already moved towards the door, fully cognizant that they couldn’t afford to be around when those Syndicate members turned up. “Take down the entire organization?” he said and shook his head. “No. But she may just do some serious damage. Who knows, she may save a lot more lives before all this is over. Too bad that in the process she has destroyed hers.”


______________________________

Stay tuned for 'The Enemy of My Enemy (is My Lover)'
featuring characters from Darkush’s Dark Territory, Brother Benny’s Star Trek: Pytheas and TheLoneRedshirt’s Tales of the Border Service.
 
That’s Pava for you, cold and clinically analytical when it comes to matters of life and death. In the end, Star got what she wanted, though at a price that she continues to pay for the rest of her days.

It’s a big, tough, mean old world boys and girls… don’t play if you can’t take a bloody nose, or an incurable addiction to Syndicate-Y. :evil:

Excellent story, CeJay, you’ve captured Lar’ragos with uncanny accuracy.
 
A sad finish to the tale. In the end, what did it get her? A life-long addiction and some fearful, drug-induced memories.
 
Yeah, not exactly a happy ending for Taz here. The only good news perhaps is that we know that no matter how deep she has fallen (and still will), eventually she'll try to redeem herself.

This was my first time taking a stab and Pava and I'm glad that it seems to have worked.

Thanks for reading.
 
No, not a happy ending, but well-considered and tightly written, nonetheless. I'm afraid Star's life will not be encumbered with many happy endings.

Great job writing Pava! You certainly captured the essence of my favorite Gibraltar character. He can be a cold bastard, can't he? - even when he's right.

I'm repeating myself, but I'm really enjoying your cross-over short stories. :)
 
Thanks for reading and commenting, guys. That's much appreciated.

The fifth story is due to start this weekend.
 
Wow - cold and heartless are words often used to describe Star and/or Pava. I don't think them accurate terms but certainly the two of them can use very expedient judgements - means to an end mentality to achieve what they want to achieve. In ways, one has to admire Star for being so willing to go to go such lengths in order to serve justice - but what horrible lengths she goes to.

Look forward to the next story and whoever it includes.
 
That was certainly gritty, and extremely well written. Star just had to do it her own way, didn't she? Tragic and frustrating and compelling ... great stuff, CeJay. Oh, and everyone else is right -- you did totally nail Pava.
 
Mirandafave: cold and heartless are good terms to describe both these characters but you are absolutely right that they are probably not entirely appropriate except perhaps to merely the casual observer. I'm happy to see somebody actually admiring Star and what she does. I know that's not easy.

Kes7: very excited to see you having had a chance to read this. It's good to see a writer I have great respect for sharing her thoughts.

David: glad to see you back in the neighborhood. I'm very much looking forward to read more of your work.

Thank you all for the kind words. A new story will arrive very soon.
 
The Enemy of My Enemy (is My Lover)
Featuring characters from Darkush’s Dark Territory, Brother Benny’s Star Trek: Pytheas
and TheLoneRedshirt’s Tales of the Border Service


September 2374


So’dan Leva couldn’t help but feel that this had all been one big mistake.

“This is one big mistake,” Xeris said as if he could read the half-Romulan’s mind exactly. “This trip will accomplish nothing except hand the empire three political prisoners and a Starfleet vessel as a trophy. Not that this bucket is worth putting on display anywhere. What is thing, anyway? An Oberth-class?”

Ousanas Dar had only just entered the small cabin all three men shared for their four-day journey. The vessel had not been designed to carry much of a crew, not to mention passengers and they had to make due with what was available. The crew had gone out of their way to prepare the largest cabin on the ship for their guests. It would have been decent accommodation for one passenger. It was impossibly too small to accommodate three.

The stately Romulan carried his age well. Few who had only a passing familiarity with him would have guessed that he was pushing 100. It wasn’t just his Romulan physiology, the former Romulan military man and defector believed in keeping both his mind and body in peak condition.

“Not quite,” he said and held on to an inconveniently placed support strut in the middle of the cabin. “But she was an Oberth once. Back in my heyday they were one of the most reliable ships in Starfleet. Very difficult to track, too.”

Xeris rolled his eyes. “Are you going to tell us war stories next?”

“No,” said Dar sharply. “But I suggest you don’t let Captain Nor Huren hear about your estimation of her ship. I’m sure she’d let you know in no uncertain terms what exactly she thinks of you.”

The Romulan engineer was sitting on top of his bunk right next to the forward facing window, starring into space with a palpable sense of dread. “She most likely would,” he said and turned to look at his older kinsman. “I meant no offense. I’m certain that the captain and this ship perform more than adequately in their duties. But ferrying passengers to Romulus doesn’t exactly fall into that category now, does it?”

“That’s exactly why this vessel was chosen. One of the conditions for allowing this meeting was that we travel to Romulus in an unarmed vessel,” Dar said.

“That’s very convenient. Let’s face it we might as well go there as their prisoners because we’re practically begging them to throw us into a brig the moment we arrive.”

“I have full confidence my contact on Romulus. They are genuine about holding talks to form an alliance against the Dominion. Besides if they wanted to take us prisoner it would hardly matter which kind of ship we traveled on. It still be us against the entire Romulan Navy.”

So’Dan Leva who sat by the small table at the center of cabin didn’t look particularly convinced either. Like Xeris he wore a Starfleet uniform with a golden undershirt. But unlike his colleague he was a tactical officer. And unlike both Xeris and Dar he was a half-Romulan, his father had been a human, giving him much less pronounced forehead ridges. “Then perhaps we should have agreed to a neutral location. It is a tactical mistake to allow for this meeting to take place on their terms on Romulus.”

Dar shot Leva an impatient look. “That was another condition, you know that. Besides you have both volunteered for this mission, nobody forced you to go.”

Xeris stood from his cot. “I’m a Starfleet officer,” the engineer said in an almost accusatory tone. “I will go wherever I’m sent but I don’t have to like it,” he added, walked past Dar and left the cabin.

The older Romulan looked after him for a moment. “I suppose I didn’t expect euphoria over this trip but the chance that we could sway the senate to join the war effort are worth the risks we are taking.”

“They’ll have us tried as traitors,” Leva said, avoiding any kind of eye contact with other man.

“My contact has guaranteed our safety.”

“You keep saying that but didn’t it ever occur to you that maybe your contact has betrayed you?” he said, stood and turned towards the window to keep his back towards Dar. “And even if they are trustworthy, that doesn’t mean that the Tal Shiar is not making plans to dispose of us the moment we set foot on Romulus. In case you have forgotten, that’s what our people do best,” he said and then turned to face Dar. “Damn it, Ousanas, they asked to meet with the only two Romulans serving in Starfleet, one of which is a half-breed, an abomination in their eyes and then you. A known defector and traitor in their eyes. Their intentions couldn’t be more obvious.”

“They didn’t ask for anything.”

“What do you mean?”

“I suggested this. I knew that they had declined meeting with any Federation diplomats. I’ve lobbied for weeks and ultimately they accepted my compromise to meet with the only Romulans serving the Federation.”

The tactical officer considered that for a moment but then shook his head. “It doesn’t change anything. They saw a chance to get us easily and they took it. We are presenting ourselves like a gift on a silver platter, already wrapped up like a present in this toothless starship.”

“You volunteered for this – “

Leva cut him off with a sarcastic laugh. “When the President of the United Federation of Planets asks you personally to got to Romulus and beg the empire to join the fight against the Dominion there is very little volunteering going on,” he said and studied the look on Dar’s face very closely as he spoke. “You knew that we would never go along with this, didn’t you? It is obvious that Commander Xeris isn’t too thrilled about this assignment but you would have known that I would never sign up to go to Romulus voluntarily. I don’t know how but you managed to convince the president to make those personal appeals, knowing full well that we could never turn him down.”

“Yes,” Dar admitted. “You are right. I knew you wouldn’t go. I knew that you are so scared of facing your own people that you would have found a way to get yourself out of this. But I know the truth. I know that there is a part of you deep down and hidden away that wants to be with your people again. It’s that little voice in the back of your head, that passion that breaks the surface every now and then even while you try to keep it down. You have to accept that no matter what you tell yourself, no matter how hard you try to deny it, you are Romulan.”
“So you’re doing this for me, is that it? All this to put me in touch with my lost roots?”

Dar shook his head. “I’m doing this because without the Romulans, the Federation, the entire Alpha Quadrant will fall.”

“No, you are doing this because after decades of turning your back on your own people you finally have a chance to go back and be accepted for what you truly are. Let’s not forget, between the two of us, you are the true Romulan here. You are the outcast and now they offer you this chance to go back and you’re too blinded by your long suppressed desires to see that you are selling us out to the enemy.”

“Or maybe you are the blinded one,” Dar shot back. “You have become so comfortable with the anger and hate you have wrapped yourself in that you are unwilling to look past your personal demons to take a chance to save the Federation. Perhaps you’re right, maybe this is all an elaborate plan by the Tal Shiar to get their hands on three wanted political enemies but ask yourself one question: What if they are genuine? Can we really afford to ignore this chance? Aren’t the lives of two Starfleet officers and one old Romulan long passed his usefulness worth the price for an opportunity to end a war which has claimed thousands and will undoubtedly claim thousands more?”

The two men, the mentor and the often-reluctant student glared at each other as they had done countless times before. The truth was their relationship had always come down to these moments. It had always been one full of tensions and disagreements and yet, against the odds, it had always endured.

“Nor Huren to Dar, we’re entering the Romulus star system. I think you might want to come to the bridge.”

Dar hesitated only shortly before he tapped the Border Service combadge he had clipped to his civilian outfit. “I’m on my way,” he said without ever taking his eyes off Leva.

“If you do not wish to join us and stay on the ship instead of –“

“Don’t play coy, it doesn’t become you,” Leva interrupted as he headed for the doors. “We both know that I don’t have a choice in the matter.”


* * *


All eyes on the small bridge of the Pamlico were focused on the main view screen which now prominently displayed an emerald-shaded planet.

“We’re now approaching Romulus,” the young petty officer at the helm announced. He turned to look at the woman sitting in her chair behind him. “There is something I didn’t think I’d ever say.”

Despite her rank pips, identifying her as a lieutenant commander, the bronze skinned Rigellian in the center seat was the unquestioned master and commander of her vessel. She frowned at the helmsman. “Eyes front and center, Andy. I need you to be one-hundred-fifty percent alert for this one.”

“You got it, Skipper,” he said and turned back to his console.

Captain Kalendi Nor Huren noticed Leva’s skeptical look. “Don’t worry, he’s really good at this.”

“It doesn’t really matter how good or how alert we are,” said Xeris who sat at the engineering station on the bridge. “If they don’t want us to get out of here alive, we won’t.”

“The good news is, it’s really quiet out there. Besides a number of bases I’m not picking up any major military starship activity.”

“That’s because they’re all cloaked,” said Dar, keeping his eyes fixed on the planet on the view screen. “My guess is there are about twenty warbirds surrounding us as we speak. All watching our every move.”

Andrew Pelham swallowed and tried hard not to think of the warships lying in wait. He hoped they were not in his flight path as he steered the Pamlico closer to the Romulan home world.

“Hell of a first assignment,” Nor Huren said as the planet grew steadily larger.

Xeris and Leva exchanged surprised looks. First assignment? the engineer mouthed wordlessly.

“Entering standard orbit,” the helmsman said. “We’re receiving a message from the surface. Beam down coordinates. Also, instructions to hold position until we receive departure clearance.”

The tall Rigellian captain stood form her chair. “Well done, Andy,” she said and then looked at her three Romulan guests. “I got you here in one piece. I suppose making sure we get out of here again will be up to you, gentlemen.”

Dar nodded. “Your assistance has been greatly appreciated, Captain. Our talks with the Romulan delegation are expected to commence immediately. With any luck we should wrap things up within a few days.”

“We’ll wait for as long as it takes,” she said. “Just don’t ask me to join the party because I don’t think I packed my dress whites,” she added, shooting a quick glance at the shiny white uniforms Leva and Xeris were wearing.”

Dar gave her a little smile. “I don’t think that will be necessary,” he said and then turned to the two Starfleet officers. “We shouldn’t keep our hosts waiting.”

Xeris stood. “Let’s get this over with then.”
 
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