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The Star Eagle Adventures IV: All The Sinners, Saints

Enter the Prias - is he a wild-card or will he simply accelerate the plans of Simas Sindron-Tia?

You've added interesting levels of depth to this story. I'm looking forward to seeing things really go wrong! :devil:
 
A very vivid scene-you must sit there, typing and chuckling to yourself all of the time, thinking, "Wait till they read this!"
 
You have really developed this society very well! Everybody seems to have their own agenda here (the way it should be). It'll be interesting to see who gets there way and who doesn't.
 
The warmly-lit and pleasantly carpeted, wide corridors of the USS Eagle, made the Starfleet ship look like an interstellar cruise liner compared to the cramped interiors of the utilitarian Bluefin.

T’Ser mused that nobody would be able to get much work done in this kind of environment.

And yet the ship had some very useful amenities, one was the ubiquitous computer which promptly directed her to her destination once she had gotten lost on one of the massive decks. Even if it was a bit disconcerting that it watched over her so closely, alerting her every time she threatened to make a wrong turn.

It was an efficient system though and she soon stood in front of the door she had sought.

She took a small breath, bracing herself for what would have to come next– truth be told she wasn’t entirely comfortable with this encounter–and then activated the annunciator.

There was no response.

T’Ser had done her research before boarding Eagle. She had accessed the ship’s duty roster before hand–entirely legitimate for a fellow Starfleet officer–and found that the crewmember in question was off-duty and given the time unlikely to be asleep. Of course crew rosters were not always a hundred percent reliable. Some crewmembers switched duty shifts or put in extra hours in their free time, a practice T’Ser was sure was as usual on Starfleet ships as it was in the Border Service. But considering the person she had come to visit, she found it unlikely that this was the case.

A small sigh escaped her lips and she was about to turn away.

“Enter.”

She froze. T’Ser slightly tugged on her uniform and stepped into the personal quarters.

The light levels inside were dimmed but a few candles were providing sufficient illumination for her to make out a Vulcan man kneeling on the floor in front of a small lamp near the center of the living room. He wore a long black robe decorated with golden Vulcan script.

The man showed no surprise upon seeing her enter his quarters, his facial features remained perfectly neutral.

T’Ser forced herself to mirror the expression but she had hardly any training in Vulcan mannerisms. Her parents had turned from Vulcan logic a long time ago and as such she had been born on Earth, a long way from most of her kinsmen.

“Lieutenant T’Ser, Starfleet Border Service, currently operations manager on the USS Bluefin,” she said, knowing full well that the Vulcan would appreciate factual information up front. “I apologize for the intrusion but I wished to speak to you.”

“I have heard of you, Lieutenant.”

This slightly surprised T’Ser. What interest could the science officer of a Starfleet ship have had in her? Xylion on the other hand was not an unknown. Not so much for his exploits on Eagle but from his research at the Vulcan Science Academy. He had written a number of fascinating, if as expected rather dry, research papers and as far as she knew had been awarded a number of times for his findings.

“You are a member of a growing faction of our people which have decided to ignore the teachings of Surak. You are v’tosh ka’tur. Vulcan without logic.”

She had never particularly liked that term. Yes, she and her parents did not follow the teachings of Surak, they were convinced that suppressing emotions was the wrong way to live your life but that didn’t mean she had no logic. Xylion’s voice had remained even while he spoke and yet she couldn’t shake the feeling that there was accusation in his tone. That wouldn’t have been the first time that she had felt a certain degree of animosity from a fellow Vulcan.

She decided not to dwell on it. “Sir, I’ve come to request permission to join your next away mission to Tiaita.”

To that, Xylion raised an eyebrow. “That is an unorthodox request, Lieutenant. To what purpose do you wish to visit Tiaita?”

T’Ser considered sharing the truth for a moment. That she had good reason to believe that they were being duped by the government to help them fight their own war. But she had no proof besides a few cryptic remarks from Nigel Bane most likely influenced by the well-known Starfleet renegade Tazla Star. Proof was what she hoped to find on Tiaita. “I have a scientific interest in the people of that world,” she said, only half lying.

“The Border Service does not conduct scientific studies. If you are interested in such you should consider a transfer to Starfleet Science.”

She knew he had seen through her lie.

“Regardless, your request is not compatible with protocol. You are not a member of this crew and therefore you are not eligible to join an away mission unless it has been authorized by the commanding officers of both vessels.”

“I have authorization from my commanding officer,” she said a little bit too quickly. “You are the acting first officer of this ship, surely if you were to approve than protocol would be satisfied.”

She thought she had him.

But Xylion shook his head fractionally. “You have no skills to add to the away team,” he said. “Your presence would be superfluous.”

And then T’Ser realized for the first time that for all of Xylion’s claims to be without emotions he did genuinely dislike her. It was of course very well hidden and she doubted that a non-Vulcan would have noticed the subtle hints but they were there nevertheless. Xylion did not agree with her lifestyle and as such he didn’t want her to be part of his away team. In that regard Xylion was not too different to most other Vulcan’s she had met over the years. To them, T’Ser and her kind were a danger to Vulcan and possibly even the galaxy. By turning away from logic, they argued, they risked of reverting to the old and violent ways of their kind which had almost annihilated the Vulcan race. T’Ser found this argument to be silly. Just because she didn’t want her life to be dictated by logic and rationality didn’t mean she was going to become a Romulan. As far as she was concerned she was as unlikely to turn into a homicidal maniac as the many non-Vulcans who served in Starfleet.

“I don’t think you are correct, Commander,” she said but holding no more hope for him changing his mind now. “I am a capable officer and I think I’m damned good at what I do. I’m convinced I’d be an asset to your away team but you are too narrow minded in your ways to admit to that.” She had not planned on sounding so defiant, it had simply slipped out. This would not have happened to a Surak Vulcan.

Xylion of course did not rise to the bait. “You are entitled to your opinion, Lieutenant. Unless there is something else you may now leave my quarters.”

T’Ser’s carefully maintained expression cracked for a frown and when Xylion diverted his glance she spun on her heels and headed towards the door. She stopped before reaching it. “You know I knew a Vulcan once who wasn’t all too different to the way I am. She was a great friend of mine, actually.”

Xylion didn’t speak and T’Ser turned around and continued. “I believe you knew her as well. Her name was K’tera.”

Xylion’s eyes found hers quickly.

“Maybe you didn’t know this but she lived on Earth for a number of years, that’s where I met her. She was a wonderful and kind person, a real delight to be around and I grieved greatly once I heard of her tragic death.”

“Lieutenant, if you are trying to exploit your friendship with my late betrothed in order to change my mind about –“

Angrily T’Ser took a step towards the still seated Vulcan. “Commander, I might be as you say without logic but I would not stoop that low and quite frankly I don’t appreciate the insinuation. I’m simply trying to make a point, sir.”

“What point is that, Lieutenant?”

“K’tera spoke very highly of you. That is the reason I came to speak to you in the first place. If she was so fond of you I assumed that it was mutual. You dislike me for what I represent and yet K’tera shared a similar philosophy and you were willing to marry her.”

“K’tera was not v’tosh ka’tur.

“Maybe not. But like us she had rejected most of Surak’s teachings, had she not? She displayed some of her emotions openly. In a way she was more like me than she was like you.”

“You knew K’tera well?”

T’Ser nodded. “She was a friend. We spent some time together on Earth and I treasure those memories.”

“Regrettably I never had the opportunity to learn more about K’tera. If she had not expired I am certain that we would have married and that I would have learned much about her which was hidden from me before.”

She took another, smaller step towards the Vulcan. “I can tell you about her if you wish.”

“And is your condition for sharing your knowledge that I allow you to join the away team?”

T’Ser smiled and sat down cross-legged on the floor opposite Xylion. “No. My condition is that you reconsider the preconceptions you seem to have of me. I think I deserve the same respect you once extended to K’tera.”

“Your condition is acceptable.”

And then T’Ser began to talk about her old friend. Shared everything she had ever learned about her with Xylion. She even mentioned his name a few times, giving further credence to the fact that K’tera for all her confusion and conflicting feelings had thought about him many times. And pleasantly so.

T’Ser never once exaggerated or added to the truth, something she was sure Xylion would have noticed. She had not come here to talk about K’tera, it hadn’t even been a backup plan. But she was glad that she had a chance to do so, as she soon found that speaking about her friend was as gratifying to her as listening appeared to be for Xylion. He never spoke but his facial expressions had noticeably relaxed.

When T’Ser was done, when she had shared every single anecdote and memory she’d had of the late Vulcan woman they remained in silence for a few more minutes. Then she stood and walked towards the exit.

“Lieutenant.”

She stopped short and looked at him.

“I appreciate you sharing your experiences with me.”

“It was my pleasure.”

“I will see you tomorrow at 0800 hours,” he said and smoothly stood for the first time and began to extinguish the candles in the room.

“What’s at 0800?”

“That is the time the away team will depart for Tiaita. Transporter room two. I trust you will be punctual,” he said after the last candle had been put out, drowning the room in near darkness and then retreated to his bed chamber.

T’Ser’s beaming smile found no witness. “Good night, sir,” she said and left his quarters.

* * *​
 
I'm glad to see you taking on the issue of v'tosh ka'tur and their outcast status in Vulcan society here. One of the great ironies is that with T'Ser her and orthodox Vulcans both see each other as far more alien than true aliens. But...understandings do happen...and it looks like we're seeing one develop here.
 
Very nice scene! I was wondering if T'Ser and Xylion would cross paths. Nice to see they've reached some middle ground. To echo DavidFalkayn, I'm glad you addressed the chasm between the traditional Vulcans and the v'tosh ka'tur.

As to the away mission, I have a feeling it's not going to be a mere walk in the park.
 
Was the point of this conversation really just to have a standard Vulcan and an emotional Vulcan confront each other? Because otherwise it defies common sense.

If what Xylion said was true - that it was up to the two vessels' commanding officers to decide whether T'Ser joined Eagle's away teams - then T'Ser's first stop should have been wherever Captain Owen was when she beamed off of Bluefin so she could make her request to him. That way, if he said "Yes", then Xylion's opinion of v'tosh ka'tur wouldn't matter. T'Ser's part of the away team, and that's that. Of course, if Owen said "I'll approve it if Xylion does," that's different, but you didn't depict that, so it looks like T'Ser used up considerable time and her own peace of mind getting a bigot's approval when it wasn't necessary.
 
From a story-telling perspective, yes, I was interested in exploring the issues between traditional and emotional Vulcans.

As for why she went to see him, Xylion is the only person on Eagle she knows of. She was friends with K'tera and she must have given T'Ser the impression that Xylion was the kind of person who would hear her out and not judge her based on being an emotional Vulcan.

Turned out it didn't work out quite that easily. But in the end she got what she needed and possibly made a positive impression on Xylion in the process.

I wouldn't go as far as calling Xylion a bigot however. Like many Vulcans he is very much concerned that emotional Vulcans may revert back to their violent and/or dangerously irrational ways (i.e. Sybok).
 
In my estimation Xylion appeared guarded and a little conflicted. The V'Tosh Ka'tur are a threatning element to Vulcan's that keep a tighter leash on those strong emotions they otherwise don't have experience processing. Still, Xylion felt deep regard and affection for such a Vulcan and it's quite obvious in this scene that he's not quite gotten over K'Tera. Which makes me think on Lou and the torch she currently carries for the resident Science Officer and acting XO. Will T'Ser play a part or provide any insight to that particular sub-sub-plot in the story?
 
In my estimation Xylion appeared guarded and a little conflicted. The V'Tosh Ka'tur are a threatning element to Vulcan's that keep a tighter leash on those strong emotions they otherwise don't have experience processing. Still, Xylion felt deep regard and affection for such a Vulcan and it's quite obvious in this scene that he's not quite gotten over K'Tera. Which makes me think on Lou and the torch she currently carries for the resident Science Officer and acting XO. Will T'Ser play a part or provide any insight to that particular sub-sub-plot in the story?

That is a very good question.

However due to the large number of (guest) characters in this story some of Eagle's regular crew are taking a back seat. One of the reason's Cry Havoc became almost unmanageably long was because I cramped too many character sub-plots into it. I wanted to avoid that this time. Having said that, the intricate plot of the current story is already running up the word count more than I had planned.

I do hope to explore relationship sub-plots like the one between Hopkins and Xylion in future installments.
 
She felt a tinge of trepidation before she entered the captain’s ready room. Truth be told, it was an altogether new feeling for the young Tenerian who was undeniably the captain’s closest confidant and friend for many years. But ever since their mission to Ligos IV months earlier she had spent much less time with him alone.

It was easily explained. After all the war kept them all busier than usual. Personnel shortages had forced many, including herself, to pull double shifts and the little spare time she had was usually best served by partaking in combat and readiness drills.

The other reason was a lot more complicated however. DeMara Deen was scared that she may have been in love with Michael Owens.

She had only admitted those feelings to one other person. And Eugene Edison had been perfectly willing to discuss them and maybe help her make sense of those confusing emotions. Michael Owens was her friend and mentor. Had been since she had been a child. He had been the first official alien visitor to her home world and he had been the man who had begun to train her as a Starfleet Officer. He had continued to be there at the Academy where he had been her academic advisor and after she had graduated she had served under him first on the Columbia and now on Eagle. It was difficult to imagine a life without Michael Owens. And perhaps Edison would have told her that being so close to another person for as long as she had been it was only natural to develop feelings beyond friendship. She would never know what Edison’s advice would have been as he was killed before he could give it.

She did her best to ignore these feelings for now. She had been ordered to report to the captain and she had already put if off longer than she should have done. Besides, he needed her. As a clear-headed advisor, as his conscience and as his moral anchor. Especially know after all he had been through.

Come in,” his voice invited her.

She entered the ready room with such a serious expression on her face, she didn’t even realize how awkward it looked to the captain.

“Dee, are you alright?”

She walked up to the middle of the room and squirmed uncomfortably.

The captain frowned. “What’s going on?”

“I’m here to express my regret for the manner I spoke to you earlier.”

He smirked at her official tone. It had always been understood that behind closed doors they were friends first and Deen had always enjoyed the privilege of speaking her mind, no matter how blunt. Sometimes even in front of the crew.

“Is that so, Lieutenant. And may I ask what you are apologizing for?”

She shot a quick look at the Botticelli painting which still adorned the ready room.

Owens followed her glance and then looked back at her. She avoided direct eye contact. Deen was a remarkable woman of that there was no doubt. Beautiful–spellbinding even, thanks to the enigmatic aura of her people–incredibly smart and surprisingly wise for her young years. And yet, apparently, apologizing was not one of her strength. Owens took a small bit of pervasive comfort in realizing this. Even DeMara Deen was not perfect.

“My tone and behavior during the mission briefing was not appropriate as I failed to show you the proper respect that you are entitled to as my commanding officer,” she said in what sounded like a carefully planned speech.

“Yes,” he said, “now that I think of it, you are right. You didn’t.”

She frowned. “Could you try not to make this more difficult for me than it already is?”

He leaned back in his chair with an easy smile. “Please continue, Lieutenant.”

She took a deep breath. “I assure you, sir, that this will not happen again and I sincerely hope that you will accept my apology,” she said and locked eyes with him, remaining ramrod straight.

He let her stand there for a moment. Then after a few uncomfortable seconds had passed he said: “Apology accepted. Take a seat.”

She did, obviously relieved.

“So what brought this on?”

“A certain Vulcan officer approached me after the meeting and in his stern voice –and his stern voice is pretty intimidating by the way – he told me in no uncertain terms that I had been out of line and that I needed to apologize to you. In fact I was ordered to. His exact words I believe were: “your relationship with the captain does not entitle you to forgo Starfleet protocols or show a lack of respect for your commanding officer.’”

“Well said.”

“I am genuinely sorry if I sounded disrespectful in front of the crew.”

“Well, seeing you squirm like that almost made it worth it.”

Deen crossed her arms in front of her chest in a defiant posture. “Everybody’s happy then,” she said and after relaxing she found the painting again. She felt her eyes always being drawn to it. It was a beautiful sight of course but to her it’s presence here was also an exotic clash between the modern sterility of a Starfleet starship and the imaginative and artistic vision of a bygone era. “I thought you wanted to put it up in the Nest,” she said, keeping her voice free of any hint of accusation this time. “Give the whole crew a chance to appreciate it.”

Owens nodded thoughtfully. “That was the idea. I had two crewmembers here earlier who were going to take it down.”

“What happened?”

“They nearly dropped it. So instead of risking to leave it in the care of butterfingered ensigns to carry it halfway across the ship I told them not to bother and leave it where it was. I’m glad you weren’t here to see it, I almost lost my temper.”

Deen knew that Owens hardly ever lost his temper. This admission alone meant that he had truly been concerned. “You could always beam it there.”

“You know, this painting has never been beamed as far as I’m aware. My father was very strict about that. He may have trusted the transporter to pick him apart molecule by molecule but never his prized painting. Ever since he inherited it, it has always transported manually. And now that I’m in charge of it, I can’t really get myself to do it either,” he said as his eyes remained locked on the artifact.

She had never quite heard him talk like that. There was concern in his voice, of course. But there was something else there as well and she couldn’t quite place it. “I guess it is quite a burden. But you are a starship captain. The responsibility of an entire crew rests on your shoulders and you’ve never let that fact stun you into indecision before.”

“But being a starship captain is what I do. What I’m trained for. I’m not a museum curator. And while a life, any life, maybe more significant than a piece of art, no matter how old or how significant, I wouldn’t want to be the one responsible for losing it. It is just so … fragile.”

“Lieutenant Commander Xylion to Captain Owens.”

He looked towards the ceiling as he heard the Vulcan’s voice. “This is Owens, go ahead, Commander.”

“Sir, I wanted to make you aware that the
De Gaulle has just cleared the ship. The shuttle is carrying Major Wasco and thirty-two of his marines. They will secure the landing area in the city of Al Tre Nek and set up pattern enhancers to allow our landing parties to beam down.”

“Very good, Commander. When do you expect to beam down?”

“The first team is scheduled to leave
Eagle at 0800 hours.”

“Understood. Will the interference allow you to remain in contact with the ship once you are on the surface?”

“The background radiation from the twin pulsars interferes with our sensors and transporters. Additionally much of the local area is laced with kelbonite and fistrium deposits which may also interfere with communications. However the subspace transmitter on the De Gaulle will prove sufficient to maintain a communications link with Eagle,” Xylion continued.

“Very well. Report back once you are on the surface. Owens out.”

“If I were a superstitious person I’d say the planet itself does not want us to be here,” said Deen and gave the captain a meaningful look. “And doesn’t it strike you as odd that we need to use marines for a purely humanitarian mission?”

“They are merely a safety precaution. Every aid mission needs to be protected especially if it is in unfamiliar territory. And the Tiaitan government has made us aware of a few minor security concerns. This isn’t a Federation world. There’s bound to be some crime and delinquency.”

“I guess what worries me is that we have signed a treaty with a world we know so little about.”

“It isn’t an ideal situation,” he said. “But you’d be hard pressed to find any of those these days. We’ve lost so many people in this war already and right now it looks as if it could get a lot worse. We owe it to them to make sure that their deaths were not in vain.”

“And you think that Schwarzkopf’s plan might be able to do that.”

“I honestly don’t know. But if there is even the smallest chance that this might lead us on a course to victory do we not owe it to those who have already died and those who surely still will that we try our best to make it work? It might seem like grasping at straws but maybe it’s all we have left.”

And then Deen saw for the first time what had really been on Owens’ mind. It was the sacrifices of Eugene Edison and Jana Tren and all the others. It had been the fear that they could all have died for nothing in the end if they didn’t win this war. He wanted to believe more than anything else that they could win. Even if he needed to trust a plan he wasn’t entirely convinced of himself.

Deen prayed that believing was going to be enough.


* * *


T’Ser arrived at Eagle’s transporter room ten minutes before eight and was not surprised to find that Xylion on the rest of the away team had already assembled.

Introductions were done quickly and efficiently. T’Ser found most of Eagle’s officers either cautious or reserved. She hadn’t expected a warm welcome, fully aware that she was the unknown outsider and that besides Xylion nobody had met her before.

Doctor Ashley Wenera offered a small smile but said little. She seemed entirely preoccupied with last minute reports about the city they were to visit, the medical facilities she wanted to tour and the coordination of the thirty-five men strong medical and support team which would follow the away team moments later.

Nora Laas was the Eagle’s chief of security and like many individuals she had met over the course of her career, she found the Bajoran as uninviting as was to be expected from the person in charge of security. T’Ser was sure she saw something else in the woman’s intense eyes. If she had been a counselor or an empath she may have been able to identify what it was. Without those special skills there was no way to know for sure.

Lieutenant Lif Culsten was a Krellonian, a race she knew very little about. His fine silver hair and the lack of any ears on his smooth head took a moment to get used to. Otherwise the young man seemed very quiet and the Vulcan was sure he was studying her suspiciously.

Rounding up the team were two marines, both of which were strongly build human males. They barely even acknowledged T’Ser and didn’t interact with the Starfleet officers. They wore full combat gear and heavy assault rifles which could not be confused with the Starfleet phaser carbines which looked like toy guns in comparison.

She had learned that the two marines were but a small part of the detachment which had already made planet fall by shuttle earlier to secure the beam-in sites. She questioned the need for that much security until she remembered Bane’s unsatisfactory warning which had set her on this course in the first place.

Wenera had raised some concerns over the military presence as well but Xylion reiterated that it was a necessary precaution. Neither Major Wasco who was already on the planet, awaiting their arrival, nor the first marshal in charge of the local security forces expected any trouble.

But even T’Ser understood that not expecting trouble was commonly the first step to getting into some.

As she stepped onto the transporter platform, flanked by regular fleeters and marines, she realized for the first time that all three main branches of Starfleet would be represented on this mission. It would fall to T’Ser alone to represent the Border Service.

* * *
 
A very well done scene between DeMara and Owens--the blurring of lines between friend and CO/subordinate is one of the biggest sources of conflict in the Trekverse--in a way, I see it as both an inherent strength and weakness of how Starfleet is set up organizationally and ethically. In any event, it gives plenty of grist for writers to work with.

Why do I get the impression though, that when T'Ser entered that transporter room, she had something of a deer in the headlights look--along the lines of "What the hell did I get myself into?" Still, I could see this as yet another important part of her growth process that will eventually lead her to the first officer's billet on the Gibraltar
 
I very much enjoyed the scene between DeMara and Captain Owens - a great character piece. The bit about the painting never having been through a transporter was a very nice detail - not something we would normally consider, but it made perfect sense.

I have to remind myself that this is a younger T'Ser, not quite as confident as she will become in a few years. I thought you set the mood just right - there was bound to be some tension between the three services - the Fleeters wary and perhaps distrustful of T'Ser, the Marines completely aloof and ready to bust heads. Nicely done!
 
I agree with TLR-the "no transporter" thing was a clever and believable touch. The whole piece i just read was very well developed-something too many of us fail at while rushing to get our stuff written. I think that's what I like best about your stories-those little things the rest of us often miss or fail to think of.
 
The whole piece i just read was very well developed-something too many of us fail at while rushing to get our stuff written. I think that's what I like best about your stories-those little things the rest of us often miss or fail to think of.

I concur, wholeheartedly.
 
Al Tre Nek was nothing like the capital city, halfway around the globe.

There was absolutely nothing glorious about this place. It was a city close to collapse.

And yet at least seven hundred-thousand people lived here. Most were Ait and lived in or close to poverty.

Decorations and monuments to Tiaita’s monolithic religion had crumbled a long time ago. What remained of what probably had once been a city filled with culture, were crippled buildings and torn up streets. Recent battle scars were evident everywhere. Collapsed houses, burned out vehicles and large blackened craters were common sights.

Work crews did what they could but they were too small in number and ill-equipped to tackle the vast amount of damage they faced.

Vehicle traffic was sparse. Most people walked, their clothes had seen better times and signs of any kind of prosperity were far and few in-between. The second most preferred mode of transportation was on horseback or what passed as horses on Tiatia.

“Tre Nek,” First Marshal Trelt-Ait had tried to explain to the away team while they had toured the city, “has once been a great center for commerce, culture and science. In fact two of our most important research facilities are located right here in the city. Most of their operations have since moved underground. Al Tre Nek has been the target of unbridled and cowardly attacks of an atheist terrorist organization which is determined to destroy our way of life. They target civilians, schools and hospitals, they make no distinction between military targets and civilian ones. The population must fear surprise attacks daily. In a place like Al Tre Nek it has brought economic or cultural affairs to a near standstill. It saddens me to admit it, but here it almost appears as if these terrorists have won.”

The general went on to assure Commander Xylion that while Starfleet was visiting and providing supplies, the terrorists would be kept at bay thanks to an unprecedented security arrangement.



Lif Culsten kept his eyes open while he toured the city along with the other members of the away team. He wasn’t overly concerned with security. The local military was almost omnipresent and Wasco’s thirty-something marines who had arrived here on the De Gaulle, kept a watchful eye on the Starfleet medical and support personnel.

He was surprised at the state of the city. Wenera had made a decent point to demand to be brought here after their visit to the capital city which by all he had seen so far might as well have been on a different planet.

It would have been evident even to the most ignorant observer that their help was desperately needed here. Wenera and her people had switched into full assistance mode the moment they had arrived. Frustrated by the long winded tour Trelt-Ait had provided, she had cut it short by assessing the people’s most pressing needs and delegating her staff accordingly. It would have been clear to anyone that Wenera was now in her element. She had started her career as a member of Starfleet Medical’s interstellar relief agency whose sole task had been to identify planets in great need and dispatch personnel and supplies. Often regardless of the planet’s political affiliation, be it a friendly Federation member or a distrusting Gorn colony world.

As such Culsten’s main concern was not security which was being aptly handled by Nora and Wasco, nor was he too worried about the relief process as Wenera and her people appeared to know exactly what to do.

Culsten had made the stranger from Bluefin his top priority. Galven’s warning was still fresh in his mind. Somebody on this mission was a potential traitor, working against them. And now this rather unusual Vulcan woman had appeared out of seemingly nowhere. She had not made her motives for joining the away team clear and Xylion had done equally little to explain his decision to allow her to take part. That she was nothing like Xylion, or most other Vulcans for that matter appeared to be quite clear when he had noticed her emotional reactions to the impoverished state of the people they had encountered.

It was very feasible that this woman had something to do with what Galven had warned him about. In fact it was not out of the question that she worked for Starfleet Intelligence, trying to bring down Schwarzkopf even if it meant sabotaging a desperately needed relief mission and war time alliance.

The young Krellonian needed to inform Xylion of his suspicions. He found the acting first officer by himself but close enough to observe a small group of marines who were talking casually with the local soldiers. Major Wasco was speaking to First Marshal Trelt-Ait, apparently exchanging military tactics.

“Commander Xylion,” said Culsten as he stepped up to the Vulcan.

Xylion didn’t look his way. Instead he simply raised a hand. “Not right now, Lieutenant,” he said and continued to study the exchange between marines and government soldiers.

One of the soldiers had shown an interest in the heavy assault rifle carried by the marines and the Andorian private apparently had no qualms about handing over the weapon to his comrade-in-arms once he had activated the safety.

“Lieutenant Nora,” Xylion said, finding the Bajoran woman close by.

She came over to join Xylion and Culsten. “Sir?”

“Please remind Major Wasco that his duties here are to provide security for the Starfleet away teams and not to exchange combat practices with the local military.”

Nora followed Xylion’s glance. “I don’t see anything wrong with that. It’s the job of every soldier and marine to make sure they know their allies.”

“Lieutenant, we are not here to assist the Tiaitan people in any military manner. Our assistance is strictly limited to humanitarian efforts.”

“With all due respect, Commander,” Nora said. “If worse comes to worse we might have to fight alongside these people to defend ourselves. If that should be the case we need to know who is fighting at our side and how they’ll be fighting.”

“You objections are duly noted, Lieutenant. Now please carry out my order.”

Nora Laas was about to make another point but when she noticed the determined look in the Vulcan’s eyes she knew it would be to no avail. Like a good soldier she trotted away and did as she had been told.

Culsten who had observed the interchange quietly took the opportunity to speak up. “Commander, I’m concerned about Lieutenant T’Ser.”

Xylion continued to watch the group of soldiers and marines as Nora took Wasco aside and passed along the order. Wasco made eye contact with Xylion and gave him a sharp nod even if his body language made it obvious that he agreed with Nora.

“Please elaborate, Lieutenant.”

“Well,” he said, all of a sudden not so sure anymore how to make his point without giving away his source. “I mean, what do we know about her? Don’t you find it a bit suspicious that a Border Dog shows a sudden interest in this mission? Do you find that logical?”

Within moments the government soldiers and the marines had separated and Xylion turned to give Culsten his full attention. “Lieutenant T’Ser is a v’tosh ka’tur. It would not be alarming if she was to partake in an action which is not logical.”

Even Culsten found that explanation surprisingly weak. “Right. But there must be a reason why she wants to be down here. All I’m suggesting is that we keep a closer eye on her.”

“The lieutenant has given me no reason to distrust her. If you are concerned about her presence here I suggest you monitor her activities,” he said and turned away again, clearly indicating that he had better things to do with his time than to engage in the young man’s paranoid tendencies.

“I’ll do that.”

“Very well, Lieutenant,” said Xylion and walked away.


* * *
 
Nothing like a bit of intragroup tensions with Lif making a rookie, yet natural, mistake. I'm also enjoying the opposing of Xylion and T'Ser--the same species, but coming from two such totally different world views that they might as well be aliens.
 
The suspicion toward T'Ser is understandable, but unfortunately it seems to be distracting Lif from the real troubles. He's coming across as a bit eager to impress the XO.

Xylion is showing his maturity, both in his dealings with T'Ser and his focus on the mission. Like Mistral, I have to say I like him - "logic" and all! ;)
 
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