Part Seven: The Rabbit Hole
1
Eagle was making good progress back towards Federation space, once again linked up with the warp sled which allowed the ship to travel at extreme warp speeds, which her own engine core would not be able to produce on its own.
The away team was back onboard after their harrowing escape from Piqus, along with all the shuttles and the runabout
Eagle had left behind. Most of the equipment they had brought along, however, had been lost when the away team had been forced to evacuate the planet in a hurry. The vast majority of it had been destroyed when Louise Hopkins had rigged the facility to self-destruct, thereby also ensuring that very little Federation technology would find its way into Krellonian hands.
Michael had given the entire away team a couple of days off from their duties in order to recover from their latest mission. Predictably, however, Tazla Star had not taken him up on the offer and after just a quick sonic shower—the only thing she had admitted she couldn’t go without for one more day—and a change of uniform, she was back at his side as they both made their way through
Eagle’s corridors and towards the bridge.
“What kind of diplomatic fallout do you expect from your actions on Piqus?” he asked her after he had read her report which she had managed to produce in just a couple of hours after having returned to the ship.
“Minimal,” she said quickly. “Chella, Piqus’ local administrator, had nothing but praise for us and the way we have dealt with their medical crisis. Councilor Yorlo, even though he did not achieve his overarching mission of gaining valuable intelligence he could use against Garla, was clearly relieved that the quarantine could be lifted and that there was no further risk of the disease spreading to other worlds within the Star Alliance. I like to believe that, overall, we made a very positive impression on the Krellonians.”
“Except perhaps on Sentinel Garla.”
“Let’s just say she won’t have us over for dinner any time soon.”
Michael frowned. “According to your report, she was dead set on capturing our people and Lieutenant Culsten in particular.”
But Star shook her head. “From everything I’ve learned and seen, she may have significant latitude operating within their borders, but very little beyond. In fact, the threat that it may become known that she has worked with a foreign power was enough to make her abandon her plans to take us prisoner.”
They both entered the turbolift and Michael asked for the bridge. Now that they had some privacy, he was more comfortable to broach the
mugato in the room. “I need to know everything you can tell me about the Omega Molecule.”
“There isn’t much,” she said. “It’s clear that they were synthesizing it at one, possibly more locations within the Piqus system. Some sort of accident at one of their facilities and the resulting exposure to boronite caused the Piqus Plague.”
“Still, surprisingly lucky considering that the last known Omega-related accident caused an entire sector of space to become impassable. What else?”
“According to Lif, Garla produced the molecules for a foreign power and had it transported to a location somewhere within the Amargosa Diaspora,” she continued.
“To what end?”
She shook her head. “Unclear. The only thing we know for sure is that this deal has enabled Garla to bring about her own ambitious and highly questionable sociological experiments. There is also no indication what Garla’s partners are planning to do with Omega.”
Michael found it difficult to keep that frown off his face. “I don’t even know if I want to know more. As far as I’m concerned, this entire thing is now my father’s problem. They decided to keep this from me, let them figure out how to solve it.”
Tazla looked puzzled. “Your father?”
“A long story, Commander.”
The doors to the lift swished opened and they both stepped out onto the bridge.
So’Dan Leva, who was presently in command, quickly turned to the approaching senior officers. “Sir, I was just about to call you. We’ve received an urgent message from the
Agamemnon.”
“I’m sure we have.”
Leva didn’t let his captain’s obvious annoyance distract him. “She is on an intercept course at high warp. At present speed we will rendezvous in less than one hour,” he said and then left the command area of the bridge to return to his usual post at the tactical station.
Michael and Star sat down in their respective chairs.
When he hadn’t given any further orders, Star leaned into him slightly. “Are we going to respond?” she asked quietly.
“Honestly, I’d rather not.” But before she could inquiry any further, he tugged on his uniform jacket. “Mister Leva, put them through please.”
“Aye, sir.”
The large, forward viewscreen shifted to show exactly the three people he had expected to find. Maya, Jarik and his father who had apparently now given up all pretenses to continue with the charade of his death, and eliciting a few surprised gasps on
Eagle’s bridge.
His father was the first one to speak.
“We need to talk.”
“Funny, I seem to remember that we spoke just a few hours ago. And I didn’t much care for what you had to say then. What makes you think things will be different now?”
“Stop being so childish, son. Grave matters are afoot which require all our immediate and total attention.”
He nodded. “So I understand. But as far as I am concerned, my role in these grave matters of yours has concluded. We’ve dealt with the crisis on Piqus, my people escaped barely alive, and now, I fully expect to return to the mission I had been promised before all this started,” he said and then began to enter commands into the armrest console of his chair to establish a secure uplink to the other ship. “I am more than happy to send you all the data and reports that have been filed on our mission which will mean you will know precisely as much as I do,” he said and then briefly glanced towards the screen again. “Although I still doubt that very much. Do with the information I’m sending you as you wish.”
Owens Senior unsurprisingly was not pleased with this.
“Don’t make me having to give you an order, son.”
Michael stood. “Dead men can’t give orders.”
The bridge fell silent while Michael and his father stared at each other across the void of space, for a moment at least it seemed the world around them was all but forgotten. He had lost count of how many times they had been in situations just like this one, father and son, locking horns, neither one of them willing to give an inch.
He was fully aware that this was hardly the time or place for another family argument but he also couldn’t deny how angry he was with him. Of all the things he had ever pulled, pretending that he had died, and then using that same ruse to put him and his crew into harm’s way without so much as a whisper of what they were really up against, it had to rank near the top.
Nobody else, on either ship, seemed willing to try and mediate this conflict and for an awkwardly long time, Michael could hear nothing but the gentle operating sounds of his bridge and the mild humming of the warp-sled powered engines while his eyes remained focused on his father like ice-cold daggers.
It felt like an eternity even if it probably lasted for much less than a minute and until he decided that he needed to be the bigger man. “We’ll rendezvous with
Agamemnon in…” he turned back to glance at his armrest again. “Forty-six minutes. I will provide you with a full briefing in person after which I fully expect this ship to return to its previous assignment.
Eagle out.”
And with that, his father and his coconspirators disappeared from the view screen.
Star stood from her chair and joined him by his side. “I have a feeling I shouldn’t even ask.”
He shot her a dark look which he quickly tempered, remembering to channel his anger towards the people who deserved it most. “I need you to tell me everything you learned on Piqus no matter how inconsequential you think it was. I want to resolve this entire mess as quickly as possible before we get as far away from this place as this warp-sled can take us.”
She nodded. “I can do that.”
“Mister Leva, you have the bridge,” he said and then strode towards his ready room with Star following closely.
* * *