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The Star Eagle Adventures: EVS-2 - Crossing Over

I just loved the interplay between Xylion and Aurelia. I can't think of two more different Starfleet officers.

I also loved the twist where irrationality trumps logic to save the day. Score one for Sintina! :lol:

Great story (and thanks for the shout-out to T'Ser, stirring up trouble I see). I've really enjoyed your cross-over tales. This one has been every bit as fun and entertaining as the others! :techman:
 
The two hours it took the rescue teams to finally reach them had easily been the longest two hours of Aurelia’s life. Xylion had remained true to his word and barely said a single word and the young lieutenant had found herself with little to do but anxiously stare at the rock wall.

Not half an hour after being rescued, still wearing their dirty and dusty uniforms, they both stood in Hood’s ready room in front of a sitting Captain DeSoto who was looking over a padd which contained a preliminary report of what had happened on the planet below.

Aurelia was anxious. Yes, she was pretty proud of having been able to talk down the hologram from killing them and possibly even safe an entire continent but she was also well aware that she had done so disobeying a direct order from a superior officer. And Starfleet frowned on such behavior, especially from lowly officers with nothing more than one and a half pips on their collars.

Xylion, as a strict pragmatist, was going to make sure that his report would not leave out the fact that she had not obeyed his orders. Add to that that she was already on report on the Hood for having allowed her fiery temper to get the better of her, this apparent triumph could have easily turned into an impressive failure.

“Very interesting,” DeSoto said, as he finished reading the short report and then looked up. “So these Forerunners created this machine in order to control the seismically active tectonic plates?”

“That is the assumption we are currently operating under, sir. A Starfleet science team is likely to return here to study this machinery in more detail. It might help the Federation make significant inroads in the field of seismology.”

“Of that I have little doubt,” DeSota said. “But right now I’m more interested to find out how you managed to repair the device.”

“It was not … a straightforward task,” the Vulcan said and shot a glance towards the young woman at her side. “The computer controlling the machine did not respond as would have been expected. Thankfully Lieutenant Aurelia recognized the computer’s modus operandi in time and was able to communicate with it appropriately.”

DeSoto leaned slightly forward. “You did?” he said with surprise etched on his face as he looked at her.

She shrugged her shoulders. “I suppose I did, sir.”

“Maybe there is something to the rumor mill after all and you truly are after your own captaincy. Should I start watching my chair, Lieutenant?”

Her cheeks flushed red just before a wide smile came over her lips. “I don’t think that’ll be necessary, sir. Yet.”

The captain leaned back in his chair again. “Well, in any case, well done. Both of you. The Stellarians are in your debt. Commander, I’m sure you are eager to return to your vessel. Lieutenant, I expect a full report from you … once you had a chance to freshen up. Dismissed.”

The two officers nodded curtly and then left the ready room.

Aurelia turned towards Xylion once they had stepped onto the bridge outside. “You didn’t mention that I disobeyed your order.”

“Considering the results I felt it was not necessary to point out your failure to adhere to protocol. However, if you are truly interested in pursing the command track, you might wish to familiarize yourself with Starfleet regulations.”

She smirked. “Thanks, Commander. But I’m not so sure about command. I mean, could you imagine me sitting in one of those?” she said and gestured towards the now empty captain’s chair at the middle of the bridge.

“It would not be the most illogical proposition I have had to contemplate today.”

Aurelia laughed. “It was a pleasure meeting you, Commander. I think we made a good team.”

The Vulcan raised his right hand in a traditional Vulcan salute. “Live long and prosper, Lieutenant Sintina Aurelia.”

She tried to emulate the gesture but her fingers didn’t quite bend the right way and she gave up. “You too, Commander.”

With that Xylion turned and stepped into the turbo-lift.

“Transporter room.”

The lift set in motion immediately.

“What a firebrand, don’t you agree?”

“She is quite an irrational young woman,” Xylion said.

“In other words,” Bensu said. “She’s got heart.”

For a moment neither one of them spoke as the turbo-lift continued on to its destination quietly.

“So, what’s next? Still contemplating resigning your commission?”

“That will not be necessary,” he said. “I have come to a decision concerning my future.”

“And?”

“I will remain in Starfleet and seek out another assignment on a starship in the near future.”

Bensu shot the man a surprised look. “Really? You do realize that that means that you will encounter a number of other people like her. You now, the irrational kind.”

“That is what I would have to expect. And I have come to realize that not every situation can necessarily be solved purely with logic. It is an interesting concept which I shall study further.”

“For a Vulcan that sounds like the onset of rebellion.”

Moments later Xylion stepped up onto a transporter platform and then looked towards the ensign operating the console. “One person to beam onto the Soval.”

Bensu looked on peevishly. “You know, one of these days I would really like to be counted as a person as well.”



_ _ _ _ _ _ _

Stay tuned for ‘From Lexington With Love’ featuring characters from DavidFalkayn’s Star Trek: Lexington.​
 
Aurelia is bad at first impressions, but once you get to know her, she's not so bad.

Great story, you wrote for her well.
 
From Lexington With Love
Featuring characters from DavidFalkayn’s Star Trek: Lexington


Sometime in the 22nd Century


“Batteries one through four, fire at will. Stand by photon torpedoes. Aliz, hold your heading and on my mark bring us about hard.”

The gray-haired man in the mustard-colored uniform shirt gave his orders calmly, keeping his voice even while he spoke and putting on display the confidence of a man who had seen everything and done it all. In the infinity of space that was an unlikely proposition but as far as starship commanders were concerned, it could have been argued that this statement was truer for this specific officer than it was for anybody else currently sitting in the center chair of any other vessel.

The confidence the veteran exuded was in desperate demand for neither he nor the young crew surrounding him had ever faced an opponent quite like this before.

It was solely to his credit, his poise, his command presence and his firm leadership that their fears and anxieties in the face of this opposing enemy remained in check and allowed them to stay focused on the task that needed to be done.

“Phaser batteries, firing,” Lieutenant Terrence Lawford replied in a crisp English accent once his fingers had found the bright red buttons on his panel, unleashing cobalt-colored lances of phased energy.

“Torpedo tubes one and two standing by,” the burly Russian first officer confirmed in his low rumbling voice which was so perfectly suited to his burly figure.

The man in the captain’s chair wasted no time. “Fire.”

The bridge crew watched as each of the torpedoes struck their target just seconds after the successful phaser hits.

No matter how massive and seemingly insurmountable their opponent appeared, there was a moment of unspoken excitement in the air after their proud ship, one of the finest in the fleet, had unleashed its powerful arsenal. Surely a statement had been made. You cannot come into our backyard and start attacking our planets without repercussions. And if you were foolish enough to try, the price you would pay was a high one indeed. Surely that message had now been clearly and unmistakably received.

Alas not.

“I can detect no damage on the other vessel,” the graceful, blue-skinned science officer reported after looking through her sensor hood. Her antennae peaking out from underneath her white hair were twirling in a sign of obvious concern. “No damage at all,” she repeated a bit unnecessarily and perhaps only because she couldn’t quite believe it herself.

Some of the officers uttered a gasp or shot her an astonished look. Not their captain however. He remained stone-faced with his eyes dead-locked on the massive device – they hadn’t been able to establish yet if it was in fact some sort of ship – on the screen which continued to bear down on them.

“Ms. Bathory, now. Bring us about. Full impulse,” he said with the same even voice as if he had never expected any other outcome.

The young woman at the helm was already prepared and quickly manipulated her controls to move the ship out of their opponent’s path. And yet it wasn’t quite quickly enough.

“It’s returning fire!” the Andorian cried out.

The captain stabbed a button on his armrest with one fluid motion. “All hands, brace for impact.”

On the screen the massive jaw of the conical shaped ‘thing’ bearing down on the Starfleet vessel erupted in a blinding light and unleashed a torrent of angry pulsating energy, which was catapulted towards the starship.

It was fortunate that the ship had already been coming about as it may not had weathered a direct, frontal hit as well. That was not to say that the crew of the intrepid vessel didn’t feel the impact. Quite on the contrary.

Nobody on the bridge managed to stay in their chairs or on their feet as their ship nearly flipped over under the immense pressures of the impact.

Consoles, one by one, blew out in a chain reaction of fires and sparks.

The bridge was plunged into darkness for a couple of seconds during which nothing but the steadily flashing red alert klaxons illuminated the command center.

The lights returned and the view screen once again shone brightly to reveal the terrifying sight of their enemy who had refused to be intimidated and had dished out far worse than it had taken.

The man in command pulled himself onto his feet and then helped the petite young woman at the helm back into her chair. But not before the two of them allowed themselves just one second to exchange a surprisingly private look nobody else noticed.

“Status,” he said once he was settled in the command chair again.

The first officer responded promptly, the sturdy Russian requiring no time at all to steady himself again. “That hit nearly took out our shields. Right now they’re holding at fifty-six percent. I do not recommend we get punched like that again.”

“So noted,” the captain said. “Commander Zha’Thara, what is our friend doing?”

The Andorian was still picking herself off the floor and then quickly spied through the hood at her science station, which cast a dark blue shadow onto her similarly hued face. “It seems to have lost interest in us for now. It’s heading for the third planetoid in the system.”

“If it does to it what it did to the previous two it will be nothing but rubble once it is done with it,” said the Russian in a grim sounding voice which wasn’t really any different to his regular tone.

“Unlike the others this one does contains a civilization of sentient humanoid life,” the science officer said after studying her readouts.

The ship’s commander swiveled his chair towards the engineering station. “Lieutenant, I need to know what that thing is and more importantly how to stop it.”

The lieutenant turned away from her own station in order to look her commanding officer in the eye. “What we know for certain at this point,” said the woman with the sandy-blond, shoulder length hair, “is that it is definitely artificial but not a starship in the traditional sense. It does not appear to have a crew and is likely controlled either remotely or by a powerful AI. It is about 2,700 meters in length and over 500 meters wide. The outer hull consists out of solid neutronium through which we cannot scan and our weapons cannot penetrate. It emits an antiproton beam which can cut through a solid planetoid within hours and against which our shields cannot protect against for long.”

“Weaknesses?”

“Well,” she said. “It’s slow. So far we have not seen it move faster than half impulse. It also requires massive amounts of energy to use its antiproton beam after which it enters into what appears to be a cool-down period. It was unable to move for almost ten minutes immediately after it destroyed the first two planets.”

“Doesn’t help us much though. Nothing we throw at it had the slightest effect,” Lawford said from his station next to Bathory.

Ty che, blyad! Who the hell are you and what are you doing here?”

Every single person turned to see what could have caused the first officer’s sudden and angry exclamation.

He was looking at a woman standing close to the turbo-lift on the upper deck of the bridge. The fact that nobody had noticed the doors opening however seemed to imply that she had not emerged from them. Differently to the ship's crew, she was clad in a black and gray uniform, wearing a golden undershirt and had a chevron-shaped medallion tucked to her chest. She had small ridges on the bridge of her nose and seemed to hail from a race unfamiliar by the surprised bridge officers.

Unfamiliar to everyone but one. The woman at the engineering station jumped to her feet. “Laas?”

The captain also left his chair. He looked the newcomer over and then turned towards the engineer. “Louise, you know this person?”

“Yes,” she said.

That caused the first officer to shoot her an impatient look even while he made sure to keep one eye trained on this unexpected visitor. “You better explain yourself, Lieutenant. And do it quickly.”

Louise Hopkins was at a momentary loss for words. “I’m not sure how …”

“Not good enough,” the Russian said and activated a comm panel. “Bridge to Security, –“

“Computer, pause program,” Hopkins said causing the first officer to stop in mid-sentence as he as well as every other photonic creation on the bridge instantly froze in place.

“No need for security,” the newcomer said with a smirk. “I’m already here.”

“Laas, what are you doing here?” Louise said as she took a couple of steps towards her Bajoran friend she had known since they had been roommates at the Academy.

“I could ask you the same thing?”

Louise frowned. “I’m not the one who barged into somebody’s holodeck program unannounced.”

But Nora Laas didn’t seem to pay her much attention as she began to walk around the bridge, looking over the ancient controls and into the faces of the inanimate people who populated them. “So this is where you’ve been spending all your time lately. This is pretty interesting. What is this supposed to be?”

The engineer relaxed slightly. “This is Lady Lex.”

Laas turned to give her a quizzical look. “Lady Who?”

“Lex,” she said and walked over to the golden-plated dedication plaque next to the turbo-lift doors. “USS Lexington.”

The Bajoran shook her head. “I’ve seen the Lexington and it didn’t look anything like this.”

The engineer shot her an incredulous look. “That’s because this is the original Lexington. 1709. Constitution-class.”

“Why are you wearing that?” she said as she stepped closer to study her friend’s low-cut, red mini-dress outfit complete with boots and dark stockings.

The engineer’s cheeks blushed slightly while her friend looked her over with a barely concealed smile of amusement on her lips. “This is the standard uniform of that era,” she said and pointed to other female officers on the bridge. “Everyone wore them.”

“That’s a uniform?”

Louise defiantly crossed her arms in front of her chest but before she could comment on the dress code of the previous century any further, her friend moved on towards the man standing next to the captain’s chair, still looking at the spot where she had appeared moments earlier. Differently to his first officer, the captain had not shown surprise or alarm even if it was obvious that every muscle in his body had tensed significantly.

“And this would be?”

“You’re kidding, right?”

“History isn't my strong suit.”

“You don’t say,” she said and stepped down into the command well with Nora and the frozen captain. “That’s none other than Commodore Robert Wesley. One of the greatest starship captains in Starfleet history.”

“Wesley,” Laas repeated and looked him over. “Not as good looking as Jim Kirk.”

Louise uttered a heavy and clearly annoyed sigh. She understood perfectly well that this was payback for time when the situation had been reversed and she had intruded on Laas' holodeck exercise program some time ago. In truth Nora probably didn't care much about Kirk or any of the great captains of yesteryear. Hopkins on the other hand had a real fascination for early Starfleet explorers and the rugged starship commands of the previous centuries. Archer, Wesley, Kirk and Kieran Forester were her heroes. The latter she had been lucky enough to meet in person once after he had been time displaced into the 24th century.

In any case, the Bajoran seemed to have a grand old time interrupting her spare time activity and poking fun at it.

“Laas, you haven’t answered my question yet. What are you doing here?”

She turned to face her. “Well, somebody forgot that we had dinner plans today. After realizing the futility of waiting, I decided to come and look for you instead.”

Louise blushed a little bit more. “Oh my gosh, what time is it?”

“Little bit past 1900 hours.”

“I’m so sorry, I guess I got a little bit carried away in here and totally forgot about dinner,” she said with genuine regret obvious in the tone of her voice.

“If this had been the first time you’d done this I wouldn’t have resorted to something as extreme as barging into your little holodeck fantasy but you’ve been blowing me off for over a month now.”

The young engineer shook her head. “That’s not true.”

“Really?” she said and crossed her own arms. “Last Tuesday. Remember that? You were half an hour late. And the day before we never even made lunch. First I thought it was me,” she looked around. “I’m relieved to see that it wasn’t. It’s just that you prefer playing around in here than spending time with your friend.”

“First of all,” she shot back, her embarrassment slowly turning into indignant anger, “I’m not playing around. Not really. This is more like a challenge not unlike those combat simulations you like to put yourself through.”

Nora didn’t seem convinced and Lou knew why. She loved her to bits but she also knew that she had never been one for fantasies. Perhaps it was her rough upbringing during which she had been too busy bashing in Cardassian skulls instead of playing with dolls or whatever else girls were supposed to do during their childhood years. Or maybe it was simply her no-nonsense nature, which didn’t allow her to indulge in what she surely saw as silly fantasies. Sure, she’d visit the holodeck from time to time to hone in her fighting skills but those weren’t elaborate scenarios like the one Hopkins had created.

“A challenge?” she said, clearly intend on calling the bluff. “I’m always up for a challenge.”

Hopkins turned her back on Laas and stepped back onto the higher level. “I don’t know. I don’t think this is quite up your ally.”

Laas followed her. “Why not? Because you think all I’m capable of is bashing heads together? Is that how you see me?”

“Of course not,” Louise said quickly and faced her again even though that had been exactly one of the thoughts going through her mind. But there was another very good reason why she didn’t want Laas to have any part of this and it had nothing to do with her.

“Then why can’t I play along?” she said and then immediately raised her hands in apology. “Sorry, I mean take part in the challenge,” she added with an amused gleam in her eye.

Lou frowned. “For one you don’t know anything about this time period.”

“What better way to learn about history?”

And then Hopkins smirked, knowing exactly how she could get that silly notion out of her friend’s head. “And you would have to wear one of these.”


* * *​
 
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Loved Sintina's story and her interaction w/the Vulcan officer.
Not sure why Lexington is a holonovel, but it's interesting so far!
 
Louise Hopkins sat impatiently in a chair of her holographic quarters in the equally holographic Lexington, waiting.

In the end she knew her friend had been right about her spending too much time in the holodeck lately. And the worst part of it was that she hadn’t even realized how it had affected her life outside those doors. It hadn’t interfered with her duties as chief engineer, that would have been entirely unacceptable, but the temptation of spending almost every minute of her free time as the imaginary chief engineer of the USS Lexington had obviously caused some problems in her social life.

And now she felt guilty about neglecting her friends, especially Nora Laas who as it turned out was not the kind of person who took well to being neglected. She had taken it so badly in fact that the one person who was least likely to ever take part in a holodeck adventure had practically demanded to be part of hers.

And Louise had felt too ashamed about her selfishness to say no.

“Come on, Laas. We’re going to be late.”

“I don’t know about this,” came the Bajoran’s voice from beyond the closed doors leading into the other room.

Hopkins’ lips curled upwards. “It’s not too late to change your mind, you know,” she said, secretly still hoping that she would.

But then those doors opened and Lieutenant Nora Laas, former Bajoran resistance fighter and Starfleet Marine and current chief of security of the USS Eagle, emerged wearing a little red mini-dress nearly identical to the one Hopkins was wearing.

She was trying to push the hemline of the dress down but of course the material would not budge any further than her upper thighs. “I swear to the Prophets, this thing is the most ridiculous excuse for a uniform I’ve ever seen.”

In fact the last time Laas had seen a uniform this silly had been the day she had decided to join Starfleet many years ago. Of course back then she had also made the decision that if she was ever required to wear anything like this, she’d jump onto the first ship heading back to Cardassian occupied Bajor.

Louise on the other hand had no idea why she was trying so desperately (and unsuccessfully) to cover up more of her nylon-clad legs. Nora Laas had the perfect body for the outfit and she felt a momentary tinge of jealously of her athletic figure and muscular legs. “I think you look good in it.”

She finally let go of her dress and looked up. “Not a word about this to anyone.”

“Here is a thought,” she said. “Nothing that happens here will leave the holodeck, deal?”

Nora nodded.

“And you are sure you still want to play?”

“Let’s do this.”

The two women stepped out of the cabin and into the corridor. It wasn’t difficult to notice that her friend felt a bit self-conscious about being seen wearing that uniform even if it was just by holographic characters. Once she realized that about a quarter of the crew wore the same kind of clothes and that nobody on the surprisingly busy corridors gave her a second look she began to be more comfortable even if she was clearly not quite her assured self again.

“So what are we doing?” she asked as she walked alongside Hopkins.

“First things first,” said the engineer. “While I waited for you to get ready I made the necessary changes to the program for you. You are now Lieutenant Nora, chief of security of the USS Lexington.”

The Bajoran nodded. “Not too much of a stretch. I think I can handle that.”

“Now the computer knows who you are and what you can do. It is designed to create challenges based on the profile of the participating players so be on your guard.”

“Expect the unexpected. Nothing new there either. What else?”

They stepped into a turbo-lift and Nora was momentarily startled that it only started moving after Hopkins had taken hold of a handle mounted on the wall.

Louise smirked. “Well, we are over one-hundred years in the past so a lot of things will be very different but I’m sure you’ll catch up. This entire program is based on the historic Lexington and her crew with some creative modifications.”

“What kind of modifications?”

Hopkins seemed a bit hesitant to answer that question straight away. “Well, for starters I’m the chief engineer and you’re the security officer. Also the program is designed to create random events and to keep things interesting they are only very loosely based on actual events. Right this moment Lexington is trying to stop a – as of yet – unidentified device which is threatening to devour an inhabited planet whole.”

“That sounds serious.”

She nodded. “We’re on our way to a senior officers briefing to figure out what our next step should be. I have a pretty good idea of what we need to do, so just follow my lead.”

“No problem.”

The lift stopped, the doors opened and Nora began to head for the exit.

“One more thing,” said Hopkins.

Laas turned to look at her.

“There are some other things you should probably know about this simulation so that they won’t come as a surprise to you.”

But the Bajoran held up her hand to stop her. “Don’t worry about it. Not knowing what’s going to happen is part of the excitement, isn’t it? Let’s just try and have fun,” she said and stepped out of the lift.

Hopkins couldn’t help but utter a heavy sigh.


* * *​
 
I liked the contrast between the logical Xylion and the impulsive, illogical, and reckless Sintina. Here impulsiveness and illogic saved the day--but as Sintina has found out much later to her sorrow, there are times in which a more...cautious...approach is warranted. It's also fun seeing your take on the Lex and her crew--even though they are just players in a holodeck fantasy here...they're still family.
 
I also like the choice of using a holodeck to visit the Lexington. This seems like a real fun set up.
 
:lol: So Aurelia's own brand of logic bested the situation. It was Kirk like how she seemed to bamboozle the computer at the start. And poor Xylion seeming to have a concussion and imagining Bensu. Nice treat.
 
She smirked. “Thanks, Commander. But I’m not so sure about command. I mean, could you imagine me sitting in one of those?” she said and gestured towards the now empty captain’s chair at the middle of the bridge.

“It would not be the most illogical proposition I have had to contemplate today.”
Hee hee/ Oh how fate smiles and laughs at what people say. Brilliant.
 
Oh liking the idea of visiting some of the Lexington crew through a holodeck novel. I wondered how you were going to fit in to these crossovers. This should be interesting - I think Nora doesn't quite appreciate the challenges Louise has in store for them. So is this the Doomsday Machine?
 
Louise Hopkins was very much aware of her friend’s strengths and her weaknesses. She was more than anything else, a fighter. A warrior, even. She was skilled like none other she knew in hand-to-hand combat as well as in using a mindboggling number of weapons, energy or bladed or blunted made little difference to her. She was also quite a decent leader. Not so much because of her charisma (which wasn’t particularly well developed, in her humble opinion) but because of her ability to inspire her people through her own bravery and confidence.

All that made her an ideal security officer.

Space combat on the other hand was not her strong suit. She had attended all the tactical classes that were required for a cadet wishing to join the security division while at the Academy but she had never excelled at those and nobody on Eagle would have ever suggested that she fill in as a tactical officer on the bridge.

As such the problem Lexington was currently facing, battling a massively powerful machine which if unchecked would continue on a path of unfathomable destruction and the deaths of billons of lives, was not one that suited her particular skill set.

Louise felt a little bit sorry for her after she herself had practically taken over the senior staff meeting and gone on and on about their enemy, its suspected offensive and defensive capabilities and her own theories of how to destroy it.

All the other officers in attendance, the Commodore, first officer Kuznetsov, science chief Talana Zha'Thara and even CMO Vincent participated in the conversation dominated by Hopkins. Nora Laas however remained quietly in her seat, apparently pretending to study the content of one of those clunky padds while the others talked. Whenever Lou shot her a quick furtive glance she appeared to be otherwise engaged.

Hopkins didn’t let this stop her. After all this was her simulation and her time to shine. “Essential this ‘planet-killer’ is fairly similar to what the Enterprise discovered a few years ago. Scans confirm that it is composed of the same neutronium material that will make it impossible for us to damage it externally. From what I can tell, the only means to destroy this thing is from the inside. The Enterprise managed to do this by maneuvering a damaged starship inside and detonating its warp core remotely.”

“We don’t have another starship,” Kuznetsov said.

“What if we used a shuttle craft?” asked the Andorian science officer.

Hopkins shook her head. “They tried that without success. A shuttle’s power plant would not be able to create the energy required.”

The Russian shook his head. “And we can’t wait for Starfleet to send another ship. By the time it gets here this system would be dust and billions of people dead,” he said and looked at Wesley.

The commodore nodded and made eye contact with the chief engineer who had remained on her feet. “Something tells me you have another idea, Louise.”

Hopkins couldn’t quite help for her lips to curl up into a small smile as she noticed Wesley’s eyes upon her. They were filled with brimming confidence like those of a man who knew that when things got tough and if nobody knew the answer, he could always count on her to come through. It wasn’t the kind of look she was accustomed to outside the holodeck. But she enjoyed it immensely.

She nodded with equal confidence and then depressed a few buttons on a computer console, switching on the three-way monitor at the center of the table.

It displayed the massive doomsday machine and then the comparably tiny Lexington approaching its huge opening, which burned in angry red and yellow colors.

“As we don’t have another warp core available we have no choice but to use our own. But in order to be successful we have to maneuver the ship at least fifty meters inside the device. We fit the core with timed detonators, eject it and then escape at full impulse,” she said as the senior staff watched the demonstration on the monitors with rapt attention. Even Nora had looked up from her padd to see this part.

The simulation ended with the planet-killer destroyed and Lexington watching from a safe distance.

When nobody spoke up, Hopkins once again took the initiative. “If my analysis is correct, and I’m sure Talana can confirm, the energy output of this device falls off drastically just after it has … consumed, I suppose is the right word, a planetoid. From what we’ve seen it requires about forty-five minutes to fully recharge and be able to either attack another planet or engage us with its antiproton beam,” she said and hit another button which caused a timer to appear on the screens. “That gives us a window of thirty-one minutes to carry out this plan. I estimate that we require about twenty-five minutes to pull this off which will give us a nice little safety cushion.” Hopkins simply had to stop at this point for no other reason than to catch her breath. She was not used to giving long speeches.

Considering the limited time-frame available it was perhaps a little bit discouraging to find that nobody in the room seemed to be in any kind of hurry, especially not Wesley who kept watching the simulation which continued to run in an infinite loop. His stone-faced façade slipped every time he saw his ship slip just inside the massive doomsday device.

Apparently Aliz Bathory, their young helmswoman, was experiencing a similar dilemma. “Couldn’t we just eject the core in this things flight path without actually having to enter it?”

Louise quickly shook her head. “I’ve thought of that, too. But our chances of success decrease by twenty percent for every one hundred meters. Unless we are practically sitting inside, I cannot guarantee that this will work. And we only have one shot at this.”

Time was ticking away when the commodore finally managed to tear himself away from the monitor and turned to the engineer again. “So you want me to put my ship into the middle of a machine that can slice apart a planet like a hot knife through butter?”

“Essentially, yes,” she said with the kind of blunt conviction she rarely felt in real life.

It seemed to work on Wesley who began to nod slowly.

“What if there was another way of stopping this device?”

All heads turned towards their new security chief who of course, as far as the holographic crew of the Lexington was concerned, was no stranger at all.

“There is no other way,” Hopkins said quickly, shooting a quick glance at the timer. Her comfortable cushion was slowly evaporating. Of course that would make things more interesting but also make failure more likely. She tried to hide her frustration at her friend’s interruption of her master plan.

“Maybe there is,” she said and then stood up and walked up next to the engineer to be able to manipulate the computer console.

Louise watched her with a frown she couldn’t quite keep off her face.

On the monitors the image zoomed in closer onto the planet-killer until it filled out the entire screen. “Take a look at this,” she said and gestured towards the monitors, which had now focused on a singular point on the massive hull of the device. There appeared to be a noticeable deviation on the outer hull’s surface and for a moment they looked like unevenly shaped, brightly lit panels of some kind.

“Are those … windows?” Bathory said.

Laas nodded. “I think there might be to some sort of command center. The hull is still too strong for our weapons to have much of an effect but I bet that we could beam through the weaker parts of the hull and possibly find a way to shut it down from the inside.”

Hopkins couldn’t take her eyes off the screen. There was no doubt that her friend was right. Those were clearly viewports and the scan results not only confirmed that a transporter beam could penetrate that part of the hull, they also seemed to be certain that they would find a breathable atmosphere. And still she shook her head. “That’s impossible.”

But Wesley seemed to like the idea. “If it really is a command center than you should be able to find a way to shut this thing down from in there. Lieutenant?”

“That shouldn’t be there,” she mumbled to herself.

“Louise,” Wesley said, his voice never indicating any signs of impatience.

The engineer quickly faced him. “Sir?”

“I think I’d be much more comfortable with the idea of beaming over a landing party than risking the entire ship by putting it inside that thing.”

It was Nora who responded. “We’ll go over there and find a way to shut it down, sir.”

Wesley nodded. “Good. Time is working against us. We have half an hour before this thing is ready to consume the next planet,” he said and stood. “Aliz, get us into transporter range. Commander, assemble a landing party. You have your orders people. Let’s make this work.”

With that the commodore and the rest of the senior officers quickly left the conference room leaving only Hopkins and Nora behind.

“I can see why you’re enjoying this,” said the Bajoran once they were alone. “It’s kind of stimulating, isn’t it?”

But Hopkins had sat down in the chair, for the first time since they had started this briefing, and was still looking over that monitor. “I don’t get it. A command center? That makes no sense. There shouldn’t be any command center on that thing.”

Nora put a hand on her shoulder. “You said it yourself, the simulation adjusts to its players. It probably figured out that I wouldn’t be much use in your solution and came up with something else. Pretty clever if you ask me.”

The engineer nodded, slowly accepting the explanation in lieu of having a better one. But her disappointment was obvious. She had been so excited to having found a solution to this problem and so confident in the notion that Wesley and the crew would trust in her advice and ability that it was deflating to have the one person who ordinarily had no interest in these kind of fantasies find a better solution.

It wasn’t difficult to notice her mood change. “Don’t worry Lou, I’m sure there’ll still be plenty of challenges left once we get over there. But we shouldn’t linger too long. You heard the Commodore, we don’t have a lot of time.”

The fact that Nora was getting into this was not making Hopkins feel any better about her stealing away her moment of triumph. And yet she forced herself to forget and adapt. She stood from the chair, smoothed out her uniform and headed for the exit. “Let me show you to the transporter room.”


* * *​
 
Sounds like a Kirk/Kobyashi Maru solution in the works. Can Laas program a holodeck on her own?
 
This is fun. Knowing it's a program doesn't diminish it.

If you like the Doomsday Machine, you should search for "Star Trek: New Voyages." I think they made a fan film about it. I watched it awhile back.
 
“The same genius who thought it be a good idea for women to wear a mini-dress must have been the guy who figured that bright red is the color security officers should be wearing. Why not just paint a bulls eye on my back?”

But Louise Hopkins was paying little attention to her friend’s complaints as they were walking towards the transporter room, still trying to figure out how to stop this planet-killer without, what she had thought to be, her ingenious plan of detonating the warp core inside of it.

Now that Wesley had gone with Nora’s suggestion there was not enough time left to try hers if they would fail. Only now did she realize that she had been so preoccupied with planning her own triumph that she had never allowed for the possibility that somebody could have a better idea. And of course it wasn’t really a better idea. It was merely the computer having adapted to the new player and giving them an alternative means to overcome their opponent.

She was still so much in thought that she didn’t even notice the officers already waiting for them when they stepped into the transporter room.

“Quaint,” said Laas as she took in the old-fashioned platform and simple computer console.

Besides the transporter operator there were three other men who apparently were going to accompany them.

Commander Alexei Kuznetsov, the Russian first officer which she had since learned was nicknamed the Bear and for perfectly good reason. He reminded her of a number of Marines she had known in her time. Tough, to-the-point, and little to no sense of humor. She could appreciate a man like that.

The other man, who like herself wore red and which was contrasted quite beautifully with his coal-colored skin tone was of African descent. He could also have been mistaken for a Marine, thanks to his excellent, muscular physique.

Laas was just about to bemoan how few non-humans seemed to inhabit twenty-second century Starfleet vessels when she spotted the third man of the team. She knew this person quite well and was surprised of finding him here.

He was a tall Vulcan wearing a powder blue uniform shirt and an insignia, which seemed to hint that he was a science officer.

She gave him a big smirk. “Commander, I didn’t think you’d be here as well. This doesn’t seem like your kind of thing.”

The Bear and the Zulu security officer looked at her with startled expressions but Xylion merely raised an eyebrow. “Considering the circumstances, it may be more appropriate if you were to refer to me as ‘Lieutenant’,” he said in his typical, calm Vulcan voice.

She nodded quickly. “Of course, Lieutenant,” she said and shot the other two men a quick glance. “My mistake,” she added but couldn’t quite suppress the silly smirk on her lips. It didn’t totally escape her that Xylion was a great deal better at play-acting as she was.

“Laas, can I have a quick word?” Hopkins said as she acknowledged the three men, giving the Vulcan a slightly longer look, before turning towards Nora.

But the Bear was not going to have it. “There is no time for chitchat,” he said in an impatient tone. “In case you forgot, the planet-killer will be in range of the next planet within thirty minutes. Take your positions.” The first officer’s tone left little room to argue. This was a man used to giving order and used to people following them without question.

A language Nora apparently understood quite well and she was the first one on the platform.

The other followed with Hopkins the last person to take her position.

“You better brace yourselves,” the transporter officer, a gruff Tellarite, said. “We can be certain if the transporter can even teleport through the hull of that Gods-forsaken monstrosity. In any case, better hold on to your butts, it’ll be a rough ride.”

“Understood,” said Kuznetsov. “Energize.”

Hopkins’ ensuing anxiety had little to do with the uncertainty of a successful beam-in.
 
This is a really fun simulation. I like how the computer altered the machine in order to include all the players. This is great.
 
Oh. So a risky gambit is now in play as the computer shifts and changes to adjust for the players. That could make things very complicated. And Xylion is in on the program too?
 
I like how you...er...skirted the skirt issue. This sort of reminds me of a D&D session with the holodeck computer acting as the DM; changing the game to fit the skills of all the players.
 
The inside of the planet killer was very much like the outside. With an absence of straight lines and odd angles, the place reminded Louise more of the interior of the House of Horrors at the Ottawa summer fair than the interior of an unstoppable device of mass destruction.

The walls and ceilings were mostly asymmetrical bluish surfaces shimmering like wet stone or polished marble. The floors, thankfully were perfectly smooth and designed for regular humanoids who depended on even surfaces.

The chamber the away team had materialized in was a spacious room with a series of large window panes installed in the ceiling some ten meters above them through which they could spot the distinctive form of the Lexington.

There were computer panels installed in the room and thick awkward angled conduits which connected the workstations and then disappeared deeper into the device, a latticework of power lines and data tubes arranged in no quickly apparent order.

Numerous open corridors branched out form this place and presumably deeper into the planet-killer.

Louise was fairly certain that all this was nothing more than a clever computer construct, something invented by the holodeck on the spot to make the program itself more challenging, and not based on the actual planet-killer the Enterprise and the ill-fated Constellation had come across. To make things more interesting and allow for surprises, she had purposefully asked for this program to play loose with actual historic facts and realities. She was beginning to regret this now.

“Well, this wasn’t too bad,” said Laas. “Hardly felt a thing.”

Xylion reached for his tricorder, which was strapped around his shoulders, opened the flap and began to scan his surroundings. “Fascinating,” he said as he studied his readouts. “I’m detecting a significant amount of energy consumption and computing power in this chamber. It would be logical to assume that this is indeed the central control room for this device and that therefore we may be able to affect its movements and functions from this location.”

“We’re in the right place,” said the Bear. “You could have just said that we’re in the right place.”

The Vulcan shot the first officer a glance, implying that that would have hardly been his style.

“Any life signs?” asked Nora out of a force of habit. As a real-life security officer she had taken part in countless away mission and her foremost concern had always been to identify any threats. It seemed prudent to do the same thing here.

“I read no other bio-signs outside of those of the landing party.”

Hopkins put down a toolkit she had brought along and removed her own tricorder. “So I suppose we better get to work. We don’t have much –“

The sound of approaching footsteps cut her short. And from the quickly increasing noise it was fair to assume that whoever was approaching was bringing along company. A lot of company.

“I though you said there was nobody else here,” said the Bajoran who quickly had the old-fashioned phaser in hand. She may not have known much about this era but she knew weapons and didn’t need instructions on how to use the pistol shaped device.

Xylion glanced back down. “I can confirm no life sign readings. However, I do detect –“

“Robots!”

Kuznetsov was spot on. At least a dozen man-sized robotic machines walked into the room and then stopped just by the entrance they had used.

Their design was obviously based on bipedal humanoids, complete with feet, legs, torso, arms, hands and a conically-shaped head. They were painted in dull-gray colors and had no noticeable features except for a ring of blue light located roughly were a humanoid’s eyes would have been and spanning around the entirety of their heads.

One of the robots stood slightly ahead of all the others and it slowly raised its arm into the direction of the away team.

“You think it might want to shake hands?” Hopkins said.

The robot hand dropped down to reveal gleaming tubes attached to its upper wrist.

Laas shook her head. “I don’t think it’s trying to say hello,” she said. “Take cover!”

The away team scrambled to get behind the computer consoles just in time for those tubes to reveal themselves as disruptor-blasting gun ports.

“Would have been too easy,” mumbled Hopkins.

Laas, already returning fire, watched with satisfaction as her phaser beam was dead on target, blasting into the firing robot’s torso and unceremoniously dropping it to the ground like a marionette which strings had been suddenly cut.

The other security officer, Nealo Mtolo, and Kuznetsov quickly joined and in short order half of the drones were cut down.

It was only then that the remaining robots decided to return fire, now using both blaster equipped arms and slowly approached the away team while shooting. With their arms stretched out before them and hands dangling down, they looked not unlike a horde of undead zombies. Albeit robotic ones with deadly disruptor blasts coming out of their arms.

Thankfully they didn’t posses much in the means of shielding and were relatively easily disposed of. The threat would have been neutralized quite quickly if it hadn’t been for the fact that for every robot they managed to take down, two more seemed to appear from the hallway.

“We don’t have time for this,” Hopkins shouted. “We need to get this thing shut down and we can’t do that if we battle it out with these androids.”

Laas agreed. “What we need to do is draw them away so that you and Xylion can get to work,” she said and then looked towards the first officer. It felt odd to her to have to get approval from a hologram but he was supposed to be her superior officer and some habits were hard to break.

Kuznetsov quickly nodded. “Agreed. We'll split up and try to draw them away from this chamber. I'll go fist while you provide cover fire. Ensign, you go next and Nora you try to get the rest of those blasted machines to follow you."

The plan was solid and worked pretty much as advertised. When Kuznetsov rushed into the hallway he took a whole bunch of robots with him and the same was true for Mtolo who headed into an opposite direction.

Laas moved closer to her friend before it was her turn. “This is kind of fun,” she said while continuing to return fire towards the now thinned out crowd of robots. “Are you going to be alright?”

She nodded. “I should be fine. With any luck most of the remaining androids will follow you.”

“Hold your fire when I go.”

Louise shot her a quizzical expression. “You’ll need cover fire.”

She shook her head. “I’m counting on those things being rather simple. If they don’t register anyone else firing at them they might think nobody’s left and all follow me.”

“Safety protocols might be in place but I’m sure getting hit by one of those blasts is still going to be a world of pain.”

“Well, then I’ll have to make sure not to get shot, right?” she said with a clearly amused twinkle in her eyes. “You said it yourself, this is supposed to be a challenge.”

Hopkins really had nothing to say to that and then watched with bated breath as the Bajoran leaped from behind the console and towards one of the many hallways.

The robots took aim but Laas seemed to be too fast for them as she weaved back and forth and from one console to the next. As a final bit of athletic prowess she performed a couple of rolls on the floor to avoid the hailstorm of disruptor fire.

Hopkins had to smirk watching her. The mini-dress had clearly not been designed for those kind of moves.

But Laas managed to get where she needed to go without as much as a grazing shot. She opened fire again and Hopkins realized that she had been right. The remaining robots focused in on her and took off in pursuit as she rushed further down the dark corridor.

All but two androids.

Hopkins looked at Xylion and mouthed the word ‘three’.

He nodded understandingly.

She counted down. Three, two, one.

They both stood from beneath their cover and fired.

The two androids went down instantly.

With a satisfied smirk Hopkins reattached the phaser to her belt and looked at the Vulcan. "Looks like it's just the two of us now."


* * *​
 
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