Akinola had been invited to meet Captain Michael Owens immediately after he had learned that T’Ser and one of
Eagle’s crewmembers had been abducted by a criminal faction on Tiaita.
He had been determined to give the Starfleet captain a piece of his mind in regards to the way he had handled this situation and more importantly the way he had apparently decided to keep him and
Bluefin at an arm’s length while the crisis was unfolding on the surface.
The situation had been entirely unacceptable and he was going to make sure to let Owens and his crew know. They would not be able to waltz around as if they owned this part of space. Not while the life of one of his crewmembers hung in the balance.
When Joseph Akinola materialized on the transporter platform of the
Nebula-class starship he found a very young lieutenant–she couldn’t have been more than twenty-five, he ventured–waiting for him, wearing an impossibly inviting smile on her stunningly attractive face.
“Welcome aboard,
Eagle, sir.”
And just like that all that anger and bitterness he had felt associated with his trip melted away. He couldn’t quite explain it but the smile on her face simply made things seem a whole lot less desperate than they had seemed previously. For just a few moments Akinola felt an incredible rare sensation. Speechlessness.
The lieutenant appeared perfectly patient, almost as if she had expected this kind of behavior. “I’m Lieutenant DeMara Deen, it is a pleasure to meet you, sir. I only wish it could have been under better circumstances.”
Akinola’s captivation didn’t last long. He had met too many Deltans and more than his share of Orion women in his time to be easily enthralled by a siren. But he had to admit that she was like no other woman he had ever met. This weren’t mere pheromones doing their work. This was something else entirely. Owens had to be an ace on diplomatic missions with a woman like that around, he thought. With a bit of an effort Deen could probably have tamed an entire Klingon army.
“Permission to come aboard, Lieutenant,” he said, trying to keep this as professional as possible.
She nodded without hesitation. “Of course, sir.”
He stepped off the platform.
Deen had apparently noticed that the veteran captain was not particularly interested in wasting time. “If you would like to follow me, sir, Captain Owens is expecting you in his ready room.”
“Lead the way, Lieutenant.”
They left the transporter room and soon after entered a turbo-lift and Deen asked for the bridge.
“Lieutenant, if you don’t mind my asking,” Akinola said, “I do not believe I’m familiar with your species.” She looked human enough but there was no doubt that she wasn’t. Her purple eyes were too radiant and her golden hair too shiny to be human. She almost glowed.
“Tenerian, sir,” she said with that smile again. “I’m the only one serving in Starfleet. The first out of many someday. At least I’d like to think so.”
Akinola had heard of Tenerians in the same way people had heard of elves or dragons. He allowed himself a small smile himself. “If you are any indication on the rest of your people, I’d say Starfleet would be enriched immensely by more of your kind.”
“That is kind of you to say, sir.”
The Nigerian captain forced himself to put on a more stern visage again. He had come here to talk tough and not to complement the crew, he reminded himself.
Moments later they both entered the captain’s ready room. Akinola felt momentarily disappointed when she excused herself. But then quickly realized that not having such a calming influence in the room would make it much easier to maintain his disposition.
Michael Owens had stood from his chair, walked around his desk and extended a hand in greeting. “Captain Akinola, it’s good to finally meet you,” he said.
Akinola took the hand and shook it firmly but briefly. He measured up Owens and found nothing extraordinary about the man himself. His smile seemed honest enough but his blue eyes appeared guarded, like somebody who knew that he was facing a man of equal stature and intelligence.
“Captain Owens,” said Akinola in a clipped tone which he was surprised to find, didn’t throw Owens off in the slightest.
“Please take a seat,” he said. “Would you mind for something to drink? I’ve taken the liberty to remove a bottle of scotch whiskey from the ship’s stores,” he said and pointed at the bottle of liquor on his desk. Two empty glasses next to it.
Akinola sat and looked the bottle over.
Glenfiddich. Fifty Year Old, Single Malt Whisky. Pretty damn good stuff and not replicated. He knew it was a cheap trick to offer a disgruntled guest a good drink up front in hopes to mellow his mood. He didn’t know if Owens had learned of his staunch abhorrence to replicators or if it was a coincidence he was being offered a genuinely alcoholic beverage, something Starfleet was not exactly known for.
In the end he couldn’t quite resist the temptation. It had been too long that he had sampled a good scotch. “I’ll have drop, thank you.”
Owens nodded, opened the bottle and poured each of them a single. “We have a common acquaintance by the way,” he said, put the bottle down and sat in his chair.
“Is that so?”
“Yes,” Owens said. “I believe your quite close to the Donners.”
“Cicero and Sheila?”
Owens nodded.
Akinola couldn’t help but smile. Cicero Donners and his wife were very close friends of his. The two of them had served in the Border Service for many years before they had made the foolish decision–in his view at least–to settle down on Earth and live a quite life. Like him, Cicero had been a mustang officer, had climbed that ladder from enlisted crewman all the way up to captain. They had served together, fought together and bled together. It was a powerful bond almost impossible to break. He had a lot of good memories of Cicero and Sheila.
“I went to the Academy with their daughter Amaya.”
He remember Amaya as well. In fact she had been the reason Cicero had married Sheila at a very young age. It had been one of those foolish things that people still did but which later on had turned into a blessing. Amaya had been so unexpected that Cicero had turned to the least likely person to become her godfather. Least likely because in those days Joseph Akinola had been as young and foolish as his friend had been. Well, maybe not quite as foolish, he thought with a smile.
“Maya,” he said quietly as if to bring back the memories. They still wrote each other from time to time but it had been less frequent in recent years and since the war had begun. In his mind she would always remain that that little girl, impossibly out of place on a border cutter which for many years had doubled as her playground. “I haven’t seen her in quite some time. She has always been such a bright kid.”
Owens smiled good-naturedly. “She’s hardly a kid anymore. She made captain about two years ago and got her own ship. The
Agamemnon.”
“Captain, really? Of a Starfleet ship?”
Owens nodded.
Akinola took a sip from his glass, savoring the taste. “Impressive,” he said and then smiled viciously. “Cicero must have bounced off the walls when he found out she didn’t take a border cutter.”
Owens chuckled. “I would think there was some discussion on that subject.”
“Well, I’ll have to make sure to get in touch with old friends again. It has been far too long,” he said and put down his glass. His eyes wandered for a moment. Owens’ ready room wasn’t quite like that of most other captains he had seen. There were no starship models here. Instead he found a number of old, leather-bound books, a large watercolor painting of an American country house and most prominent of all, a Botticelli sitting by itself on an easel. Akinola assumed it was a copy but even though it felt somewhat pretentious for Owens to have it in his ready room.
The captain of the
Eagle had done a pretty damn good job at distracting him from the reason he had come in the first place, bringing up common friends and offering him a good drink which he only now realized Owens himself hadn’t even touched. Akinola was not willing to stall any longer.
Michael Owens registered the mood change immediately and took preemptive measures. “Captain, I realize you haven’t come here to discuss old friends. First of all let me apologize to you for the way we have treated you recently. We should have met sooner and we should have involved you immediately once we learned of the crisis developing on the surface. But to be honest everything happened so quickly there was little time to even think of cooperation. My people were ambushed so suddenly that, had we not taken immediate action I fear the consequences would have been far worse than they already are.”
The man was a born diplomat, Akinola acknowledged. But he was not. And he was not going to be put at ease by pretty words. “Arguably we’ve both made mistakes. What I want to know is what are we going to do to get our people back? I have rescue teams standing by as we speak and I don’t want to waste any more time.”
“I appreciate your concerns, Captain, trust me I’m right there with you. But we have to be extremely mindful of our next steps. No matter the actions we have already taken, we are not here to put soldiers onto the ground.”
“Then what do you suggest we do?”
Owens leaned back in his chair and for the first time his carefully maintained expression seemed to slip slightly. Perhaps because he didn’t have an answer himself. Or maybe because he didn’t like the one he had. “Admiral Scharzkopf is having an emergency meeting with the planetary government as we speak and then will return to
Eagle to brief us. I’m sure we will come to some sort of decision quickly.”
“I don’t like it. And I’m not willing to put the life of one of my crewmembers into the hands of Admiral Schwarzkopf or his local allies. Let me be perfectly clear. I trust Schwarzkopf just about as much as I’d trust a Romulan Tal’Shiar agent.”
Michael Owens’ eyes hardened. “I understand that you have a previous history with the admiral but surely you can appreciate the need for everyone to keep a cool head in this situation and not to proceed with any rushed actions until we know exactly with who and what we are dealing with here.”
Akinola uttered a short, humorless laugh. “Rushed actions are what Schwarzkopf does best and I’m willing to bet latinum it’s what got us into this whole mess into the first place.”
“Still,” Owens countered, “this mission is important to Starfleet and the Federation. And as such we need to respect that there might be greater implications here than–and forgive me for saying this– two Starfleet crewmembers. Don’t get me wrong I will not give up on them but I will not commit us on a course that will doom this mission.”
“Captain, with all due respect, you just fired your phasers onto that planet. If this mission is not doomed already we’re pretty damned close to it.”
Owens leaned forward slightly. “I need to believe that it still has a chance. Now, I need you to be patient just a little while longer,” said Owens and didn’t miss the skepticism burning in the Nigerian man’s eyes. “At least until after the meeting with the Admiral.”
“Captain, I have not been invited to any such meeting.”
That left Michael Owens momentarily at a loss for words.
Akinola on the other hand was hardly surprised. Maybe Owens wasn’t as much of a yes-man as he had feared but it was clear to him that Schwarzkopf was still calling the shots. And as such he had not deemed it necessary to involve him in any dealings. Not even now that one of his crewmembers had been kidnapped.
“An oversight, I’m sure,” Owens said. “We’ll be holding the meeting at 1600 hours in the observation lounge right here on
Eagle. I think it would only be appropriate if you joined us.”
“I don’t much see the point, Captain but I’ll be there. And I will put off any decisions until then.”
Owens nodded. “That’s all I ask.”
And then something on Owens’ computer screen captured his attention. Akinola didn’t know what he was looking at but it was quickly becoming obvious from the growing frown on Owens’ face that he didn’t like it. He didn’t like it at all.
Eagle’s captain had become so involved in what he had been reading that he had appeared to have all but forgotten his guest sitting across from him.
“Bad news?” asked Akinola, concerned that Owens was reading a report regarding the missing crewmembers and keeping it to himself.
Owens looked at his counterpart as if seeing him there for the first time. “I beg your pardon?”
Akinola gestured towards the screen, the content hidden from his view.
“Oh,” Owens said, realizing that he had kept the
Bluefin’s captain. “I’m sorry it’s nothing concerning our kidnapped people but it will require my immediate attention, I’m afraid.”
Akinola got the hint and stood. “I understand.”
Owens stood as well. “It was a pleasure meeting you and I hope that together we will be able to resolve this situation as quickly as possible.”
“From your lips, Captain.”
They both shook hands again.
“I will see you at the meeting.”
Akinola nodded and then was quickly whisked away by Lieutenant Deen. It had been impossible not to notice Owens’ much more concerned demeanor. Whatever he had just learned had clearly disturbed him significantly and Akinola couldn’t help but wonder what could have fazed the man to such a degree. Especially after he had appeared so focused throughout their conversation.
Except for that last incident Akinola had come away from his initial meeting with
Eagle’s captain with a decent impression. Owens was a smart man, there was no doubt about that. He had not given Akinola any chance or reason to further perpetuate the notion that he was an incompetent as he had feared after he had allowed T’Ser to be kidnapped on his watch. But his clear deference to Schwarzkopf had him worried. Owens had appeared more concerned about Schwarzkopf’s failing mission than retrieving the kidnapped crewmembers. And that was something Akinola could not allow to happen.
On the way back to the transporter room, Lieutenant Deen made some casual conversation by displaying a seemingly honest curiosity for the Border Service. It was such a pleasant experience that Akinola had joked that she should consider joining
Bluefin’s crew to get a feel for the service.
She had laughed softly at the suggestion and said that she’d love to give it some thought but something made him believe that she was merely humoring him and that she had heard countless similar offers in her short Starfleet career.
Akinola would have left
Eagle with a rather agreeable disposition considering the circumstances had it not been for the last person he encountered before reaching the transporter room.
Deen had led the captain out of the turbo-lift and on their short walk to the transporter room he noticed a red-haired Trill coming along from the opposite direction. Akinola had never met her face to face but knew immediately who she was. She nodded to him respectfully as she passed by but he never afforded her more than a cold stare.
He wondered what possible dealings Captain Owens could have had with Tazla Star and the thought consumed him more than any other even after he had returned to the familiar surroundings of his own ship.
* * *