• Welcome! The TrekBBS is the number one place to chat about Star Trek with like-minded fans.
    If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

The Star Eagle Adventures: QD2 - State of Entanglement

5


“It wasn’t me.”

“Well, she looked exactly like you.”

Tazla Star glared at Nora Laas and for a moment Michael was reminded of the rather unbecoming feud the two women had been engaged in for the first few months after the Trill had come aboard. He knew he hadn’t helped matter by keeping his new first officer on a short leash in the beginning while at the same time doing little to discourage the Bajoran security officer. He wasn’t proud of how he had handled that entire episode but he was fairly certain that those days were behind them now.

“The commander has about ten witnesses, including me, who can place her firmly on the bridge during that time,” said Michael, first considering Nora and then the other senior officers, as well as Garla, who had all assembled in the observation lounge. “There is no way she could have slipped unnoticed to get down to the science lab.”

“Considering our situation, we have to allow for the possibility that Lieutenant Deen and Nora did encounter Tazla Star.”

Michael had a feeling where Xylion was going with this and he didn’t like the sound of it at all.

“Wait,” said Deen. “You’re saying she was her counterpart? From this universe?”

“That is a valid hypothesis given the evidence.”

Nora shook her head. “I find that hard to believe. We’ve been here for less than four hours. How could she have tracked us down so quickly?”

“Maybe she didn’t,” said Star. “Maybe she was expecting us.”

Michael felt like they were jumping the gun. “Let’s focus on what we know so far,” he said and considered the science officer. “What do we know for certain?”

“We can say with a high degree of confidence that the Prism artifact which Admiral Owens and Jarik brought onboard, transported us on two occasions to two different quantum-universes, most likely with the assistance of a ring-shaped superstructure located in subspace and possibly constructed by a race of subspace-dwelling beings.”

Michael nodded to let him continue.

“We have further apparently witnessed the destruction of an entire quantum-universe by the same superstructure.”

“How is that even possible?” said Star.

“Well, theoretically, the universe—or a universe—could be destroyed by recreating the Big Bang and restarting cosmic inflation,” said Louise Hopkins. “But the amount of energy required for this would be beyond astronomical.”

“Ten to the power of nineteen electron volts,” said Xylion.

“To create that much power one would need…” Deen stopped herself suddenly.

“You would need what?” Star asked.

Deen, Hopkins, and Xylion were just looking at each other as if telepathically communing their impromptu findings.

“A massive particle collider accelerating the most powerful molecule known to exist,” said Garla.

Deen shook her head. “But there’s no particle that powerful.”

“Isn’t there?” the Krellonian said.

“We have already learned that the Ring structure was powered by an immensely powerful element unknown to us,” said Xylion. “We also know that the creation of a universe would have, theoretically required such a particle. It, therefore, stands to reason that the Ring structure is, in fact, a massive particle collider using that same molecule in order to create cosmic inflation from subspace to destabilize universes.”

Michael’s head was beginning to spin. Not because of the science starting to go over his head, but because of the implications being pondered here. He already knew that the particle in question, the Omega molecule, had been theorized to have been the driving force behind the creation of the universe and was therefore powerful enough to destroy one given the right circumstances. It was one of the key reasons why Starfleet had classified any knowledge on the subject to the highest level.

“What if this isn’t about an invasion at all?” said Star, aiming him a concerned look. “Maybe this is about destroying universes.”

“To what end?” Michael said and then looked at Xylion. “Wouldn’t subspace be affected by the destruction of universes as well?”

“Subspace forms the branes or layers which separate quantum universes. If universes were destroyed, the branes would no longer be required. However, since we are discussing highly theoretical concepts, it is difficult to predict this with certainty.”

“Not to mention that there are countless quantum universes,” said Deen.

Michael rubbed his forehead. “All right, there is no doubt we need to find a way to stop the Ring from doing any more damage. At the same time, we need to get my father and Jarik back, as well as the Prism. There’s no telling what this other Star could do with that kind of power.”

“I hate to add to our growing list of problems,” said the first officer. “But our most immediate issue is with Sentinel Culsten. If he was irritated before, he is downright furious after the EMP assault which affected his ships as well. He knows it didn’t come from us but he will have already learned that the EMP signature was Starfleet.”

“Our systems are mostly restored but we won’t be going anywhere while surrounded by Krellonian ships,” said Leva.

Michael considered that for a moment as he slowly regarded his officers until his eyes came to rest first on Culsten and then at Garla sitting next to him. “I think we have to start playing the cards that we have. Perhaps it is time for Sentinel Culsten to meet a familiar face.”
 
6


Lif couldn’t help but wonder if he looked that ugly when he was angry. Of course, the man on the screen wasn’t him, but the physical differences were marginal at best.

Lif didn’t sit in his usual chair at the helm station, the Andorian ensign Srena held that position for now while he stood with Garla near the port side bulkhead of the bridge to remain hidden from the visual pickups which were transmitting an image of the bridge back to the Krellonian ship.

“I don’t even know why I should be surprised by what happened,” said his counterpart on the screen. “I knew the moment you suddenly showed up on sensors that you’d be trouble.”

“This was not an assault against you or your forces. We were the sole target,” the captain said as he stood at the center of the bridge with Tazla Star flanking him.

“So you keep saying. And I believe you. We detected another Starfleet signature nearby which disappeared by the time our sensors were up and working again. Which means you’ve brought your foolish little war all the way out here. As I told you before, I will not get involved in your asinine internal Federation crisis.”

Lif felt a frown coming on. How often had this been a line delivered by Captain Owens or other Starfleet officers, he wondered. It felt strange being on the receiving end of that statement. And did they usually sound as arrogant and self-righteous when proclaiming it?

Owens shook his head. “We have no intention of asking for your assistance. We are not looking for you to get involved.”

“I can’t help but feel that I already am.”

“You don’t have to be. Whoever attacked us took two of our people hostage. I intend to get them back.”

Sentinel Culsten kept his eyes intently focused on the captain. “There’s still something you’re not telling me. And I have a feeling that it is something important. I’m not sure I am comfortable letting you leave here until you’ve given me more to go on.”

The captain glanced over to Lif and Garla for a moment. As far as the Sentinel was concerned, he was looking somewhere off-screen since he could not see them from his end. The captain finally nodded, clearly having anticipated something like that. “Very well,” he said and looked back the other Culsten on the viewer. “You are right. We’ve been keeping something from you. The truth is, we are not from around here at all.” He gestured for Garla to join him, which she did.

“By the Creator, what is the meaning of this?” he said, unable to hide his total astonishment at seeing her.

“My name is Garla. Sentinel Garla,” she said.

“That is impossible. You died. I attended your funeral.”

“That is disconcerting,” said Garla. “But I assure you, I am alive and well.”

Owens gestured for Lif to join them as well.

“What manner of trickery is this?”

“It’s no trickery at all,” said Owens. “This is my helmsman, Lieutenant Lif Culsten. As I said, we are not from around here.”

Sentinel Culsten took a moment to regard his doppelganger and Garla. “You’re from another dimension? Another reality?”

The captain nodded.

“I suppose that explains a few things,” he said without taking his eyes off the two Krellonians.

“We are looking for a way back home, that is our mission. But before we can do that we need to recover our people,” the captain said. “I am not asking you to assist us in that task, I can appreciate how that would complicate the political situation here. But I need you to let us leave here so that we can do what we must.”

“This … this changes things.”

Lif couldn’t tell if this was for the better or worse.

Then he nodded. “Fine. Try and get your people back, although I believe it won’t be an easy task. My only condition is that Garla and my counterpart stay here. As my guests as it were.”

The captain quickly shook his head. “I cannot agree to that.”

“It is the only way I’ll allow you to leave, Captain. I cannot risk for two Krellonians to be discovered on your ship by Starfleet and casting suspicions on the Star Alliance taking sides in their conflict. No matter if they are from this universe or another.”

Lif didn’t like the idea at all and not just because he had a feeling that his double wasn’t being entirely honest about his motivations.

“Captain, I think it is a reasonable request,” Garla said. “I’m happy to be Sentinel Culsten’s guest for the time being.”

“Give us a moment, Sentinel,” Owens said and when Culsten nodded his assent, he indicated to Commander Leva to cut the transmission before focusing back on Garla. “This was not part of the plan. I can’t just hand the two of you over to these people.”

“We don’t have a lot of options here,” she said. “And now that he is aware of our existence, I doubt he’ll ever let us go until he’d had a good look at us.”

“He did seem to speak very highly of her as her mentor earlier,” said Star when Owens regarded her for an opinion. “I don’t love the idea, either, but we’re stuck here in more ways than one if we don’t get the Prism back.”

“And my father to operate it,” Michael said. “Which still leaves us with the issue of how we are getting back to the Ring. I am not yet ready to share that piece of information with our new friend.”

Deen spoke up from her seat at operations which she had swiveled all the way around. “If it is still located where we found it previously, we’re about five-hundred kilometers from the threshold to in-between space, which is roughly in the same direction as the residual Starfleet engine signature we detected. We should be able to head towards the threshold at impulse without suspicion and then allow a shuttle or the runabout to slip into null-space while we pass by it at very close range. If our distance to the threshold remains small enough, our own mass and energy output should conceal the shuttle from sensors.”

“That just might work,” said Star.

The captain seemed to consider this plan. He glanced towards Lif. “How about you, are you ready for this?”

He desperately wanted to say no since, in truth, the last thing he wanted to do was face yet another doppelganger of his, after the last one had very nearly killed him. But with all eyes now resting on him, including Garla who seemed almost eager to go, he knew he had no choice in the matter. “Yes, sir.”

“Very well,” he said and found his science officer. “Commander, prep a runabout and assemble an away team. I want you and Bensu to head back to that Ring and get a head start on understanding how it works and how it can take us back home.”

Xylion offered a short nod and then quickly left the bridge.

Owens considered Garla and Culsten next. “You realize the two of you will be on your own over there? I don’t have to stress to you to be extremely careful about what you do or what you say.”

“You do not,” said Garla. “After what we’ve seen of the Star Alliance in the last universe we’ve been to, it’s hard to imagine that this place could be much worse. We’ll handle it.”

Lif immediately wished that Garla had not used those words. Humans, he had learned, had a superstitious belief that required little more than being overly optimistic about a difficult situation in order to bring about misfortune. Garla, he feared, had just jinxed them all.
 
I’m really intrigued to find out how this universe’s Star knew that Eagle would show up. And she obviously knew about the Prism and where to find it.

Here’s hoping the plan goes well and they can get back Lif when the time comes. (Okay, Garla too. She has turned into a fun antihero.)

BTW, I want a bigger chapter next time, dammit!
,
 
7

Deen’s proposed plan had worked flawlessly.

Once Garla and Culsten had beamed over to the Krellonian lead ship, the small fleet which had surrounded Eagle almost ever since she had arrived in this universe had backed off slightly, and showing no more interest in the reality-misplaced starship, Eagle was free to maneuver away and towards the coordinates of the threshold.

Even before reaching it, Xylion, along with Hopkins, Nora, and Bensu who had recovered sufficiently to join the away team, as well as two Niners for security, had boarded the Nebuchadrezzar which had slipped out from the main shuttle bay and flown in such tight formation with her mothership, that as far as sensors were concerned, the two had been indistinguishable.

Once the two vessels had reached the threshold location, the runabout had peeled off slightly to head right towards it, while Eagle had initiated a brief warp flare to momentarily hide both ships from sensors and what to anyone monitoring from afar would have looked like nothing more than an engine test.

Owens and the rest of the bridge crew watched on with satisfaction as the runabout disappeared as it slipped into the threshold exactly where expected.

Moments later a low-yield subspace burst originating from in-between space signaled to Eagle that the away team had successfully made the transition and Eagle went to warp, following a faint Starfleet warp signature which ostensibly belonged to the ship the alternate Star had used after adducting Jon Owens and Jarik.

It didn’t take them very far.

“I’ve lost it,” Deen said, unable to hide her frustration. “The warp trail has deteriorated beyond the ability of our sensors to detect it.”

“Is there any way to extrapolate the ship’s course?” Star asked.

But Deen was shaking her head. “Whoever piloted that vessel knew how to throw off pursuers. The trail itself was already erratic so as to give no indication of their final destination,” she said and turned her chair around to face her superior officers. “They could have gone anywhere from here.”

Michael noticed Star’s concerned frown that seemed to have been caused by more than just losing track of their prey. “What are you thinking?”

She turned to look at him. “The other me,” she said. “It just feels like she follows the same playbook I used to once upon a time. And if she is as I once was, or rather, what I could have been if I had continued that life…”

She didn’t continue her thought but Michael got the gist. She’d be extremely dangerous. Considering that she had already accomplished boarding them practically unseen and abducting two crewmembers and stealing a powerful artifact, Michael needed a few reminders of her abilities.

“But this also means that you might be able to foresee her next move,” he said. “If you were in her shoes, what would you do? Where would you go?”

She briefly pondered that question. “It’s difficult to say since we know next to nothing about this universe. But considering the methods she used, the EMP attack, and the ease with which she fooled us after boarding the ship, the entire operation felt very much planned. If that is the case, she’d be heading back to her base of operations to deliver her cargo.”

“So you don’t think she’s working for herself?” he asked.

She shook her head. “If she lived my life or anything like it, I don’t think she would. I was always ambitious but mostly I used my talents in the service of other people’s agenda.”

Michael could tell that it pained her to speak of her previous life, one she so desperately wanted to keep in the past. He stood from the command chair and took a few steps towards the front of the bridge and closer to Deen and Eagle’s current pilot, Srena. “All right, let’s say she’s taking our people and the artifact back to her masters. I can’t imagine they’d be going all the way back to Earth. That’s a long trip without a warp sled. What would be a likely destination for her?”

“The largest Federation installation in the sector, at least in our universe, is Starbase 123,” said Deen.

“Not here.”

Michael turned to look towards Leva standing at the horseshoe-shaped tactical console. “According to long-range sensors, there is no sign of a starbase at those coordinates.”

“From what Sentinel Culsten told us, Starfleet is a very different organization in this universe. Possibly involved in some sort of internal conflict and with much more limited resources than what we have at our disposal. It’s possible that 123 was never constructed here, scuttled or otherwise lost,” said Michael.

“It also means we should probably keep our distance from this universe’s Starfleet as much as possible,” said Deen.

“Agreed,” Michael said. “But we still need to find our people and the Prism.”

Star stood from her chair. “I don’t think my counterpart would be headed to a major Starfleet installation in any case. She most likely works in the shadows and prefers to keep a low profile.”

“She could be headed for Arkaria,” said Leva as he worked his console again. “In our universe, it is the closest Federation system from our location and long-range scans confirm it is inhabited here as well.”

Star gave Michael a nod. “I think it makes sense to start our search there.”

“Very well. Ensign, set a course, and engage at warp eight.”

“Aye, sir. Setting course and engaging.”

On the large forward mounted screen, the colorful and star-packed vista of the Amargosa Diaspora shifted as the ship changed heading, and moments later countless dots of stars turned into streaks as Eagle jumped to FTL speeds.

Michael considered Leva again. “What do sensors tell us about a Starfleet presence in Arkaria?”

“I can’t get a detailed high-resolution scan due to the interference from the Diaspora but I definitely detect Starfleet signatures in the system,” the tactical officer said.

“Which means we need to be careful about our approach. Keep an eye on sensors and try to find a way to get us into the system without drawing too much attention to ourselves.”

“It might be too late for that.”

Michael turned back towards Deen at operations. “What is it?”

“I just detected three Starfleet ships on an intercept course, closing in fast. We didn’t detect them sooner due to the interference but they’ve definitely spotted us,” she said as her fingers danced over her console.

“Just what we tried to avoid,” said Star as she returned to her seat.

“We could attempt to outrun them,” said Deen. “We might be able to get to Arkaria before they reach us if we increase speed to warp nine point four.”

Michael shook his head as he followed Star’s example to get back to his chair. “We’d invite too much suspicion that way and would have to deal with ships in front and behind us.”

“You want to try and bluff your way through this?” Star said after he had joined her in his chair next to hers.

Michael tugged down on his uniform jacket. “Worth a shot. Ensign, maintain our course and speed. Let’s carry on as if nothing were the matter. What’s their time to intercept?”

Deen answered. “The three ships are currently at warp eight point five. Four hours until intercept.”

Star leaned over the side of her chair and towards the captain. “If this Starfleet is involved in an internal struggle, it’s possible that those ships are not friendlies.”

Michael nodded grimly. “I had considered that.”

“We may have a problem here,” said Deen, grimacing noticeably.

Michael straightened in his chair to brace for more bad news.

“All three ships just significantly increased speed. Now exceeding warp nine point five.”

“At that speed, they will reach us in just under one hour,” said Leva from tactical.

Tazla shook her head slightly. “That is not a good sign.”

“No, it’s not,” Michael said.

“I’ve been attempting to identify the three ships,” the tactical officer continued. “I’m still working on the two trailing vessels but I have a positive on the lead ship. It’s the Agamemnon, sir.”

That caused Michael to get out of his chair again and face the half-Romulan standing behind him, unable to keep the surprised look off his face. “Are you sure?”

“The transponder code doesn’t exactly match that of her counterpart in our universe, but her warp signature and hull configuration are a close match.”

Michael turned back towards the viewscreen as he momentarily pondered their options before coming to a decision. “Ensign, bring us about, and head towards the Agamemnon. Maintain speed.”

The young Andorian glanced at him briefly, perhaps to double-check that she had heard that right. Then she bopped her white-haired head. “Aye, sir. Changing course.”

“Contact in fifteen minutes,” Deen said and turned to look at him as well. “I hope you know what you’re doing,” she added sotto voce.

Michael returned to his chair once more.

“I suppose I do not have to remind you that Donners may not be her captain in this universe or that, even if she is, she might be a very different person from the ones you know,” Star said.

“It’s a roll of the dice, Commander.”

The next few minutes on the bridge were spent in mostly anxious silence as Eagle and Agamemnon, as well as her escort, were racing towards each other. Michael didn’t need to be told that from a tactical standpoint they were at a clear disadvantage if it came to hostilities. Eagle had suffered some damage during their latest quantum-transition, nowhere near as much as the time before that, and much of it was already repaired, but that didn’t change the fact that his ship wasn’t at one hundred percent.

But he had to believe that Amaya, no matter what universe they were in, wouldn’t force a violent confrontation. It simply wasn’t in her nature. Of course, he couldn’t help and wonder how much of that was simply wishful thinking and colored by meeting the now-vanished Amaya who had married his counterpart before he had been tragically killed.

“All three ships have raised their shields,” Leva said after they were just moments away.

“Now that is definitely a bad sign,” Star said, and Michael could feel her insistent look resting on him. When he didn’t answer, she continued. “We have to assume that if there are different sides in Starfleet here, we’re not on theirs.”

“We’re not on anybody’s side,” Michael said.

“I don’t think they know that,” she said.

He nodded and understood that this needed to be rectified. “Mister Leva, hail the Agamemnon.”

When he didn’t hear an immediate response, he turned around to see the tactical officer shaking his head.

“They are ignoring us.”

“What is their tactical status?” asked Star.

“All three ships are running with shields fully energized. Weapons, too, are powered up,” he said after checking his board.

The Trill first officer moved closer to the captain. “They’re coming in fast and hot and they’re in no mood to talk,” she said, keeping her voice low. “Their intentions seem pretty obvious.”

Michael kept his eyes on the screen, which had since shifted to show the three rapidly approaching ships, flying in a tight echelon formation. Judging purely from a visual perspective it was difficult to tell that these vessels were in any way different to the Starfleet ships he knew. The lead ship was clearly the catamaran-like Agamemnon with two smaller frigates stacked to her right.

It took him a few moments to realize that the hulls of those ships weren’t gleaming quite as meticulously as he would have expected from the famously well-crafted and maintained Starfleet ships, particularly under the stark glare of the combined star-power of the Amargosa Diaspora.

The reason for this became obvious just a moment later when he noticed the many patchwork repairs these ships seemed to have undergone, as well as what looked like temporary fixes to many of their major components.

“Try hailing the Agamemnon again,” Michael said as he positioned himself at the center of the bridge.

“Still no response,” Leva said. “The ships will be in weapon’s range in three minutes.”

Deen swiveled her chair towards him. “They are clearly on a warpath, Michael. I suggest we raise our shields.”

But he shook his head. “The moment we do that, we make it clear that we expect a fight.”

“Michael, this isn’t Amaya, you know that.”

He looked right into her sparkling purple eyes. She was right, of course, and as much as he wanted to believe otherwise, all evidence was pointing to the contrary.

“One minute to weapon’s range,” the tactical officer said.

Michael nodded slowly. “Activate the transphasic shielding and begin deceleration.”

Leva and Srena quickly acknowledged their new orders.

Standing fast in the middle of the bridge, Michael kept his eyes focused on the Agamemnon as she raced towards them with unveiled designs as if perhaps he could somehow, wordlessly impart on her captain the better angels of her nature.

It didn’t work.

“They are opening fire,” Leva said once they had come into range.

Not a moment later the ship trembled under Michael’s boots as the three vessel’s phaser blasts impacted against Eagle’s shields. He had never enjoyed the sensation of being fired upon, but the difference their new reinforced shielding did was noticeable.

“We will not be able to maintain warp speed while the transphasic shields are active,” Leva said.

Michael nodded. “Drop to impulse.”

Srena nodded and had Eagle back to sub-light speed within seconds.

“The Agamemnon and the other two ships have also dropped out of warp and are coming around for another pass,” the tactical officer said.

Michael could see it on the viewscreen, all three ships bearing down on them yet again, this time in a wedge formation with Agamemnon in the lead. And this time they didn’t limit themselves to phasers, throwing in half a dozen photon torpedoes into the mix for good measure.

This assault was more jarring, forcing Michael to briefly fight for balance in order to stay on his feet.

“Shields holding at eighty-nine percent,” Leva said. “However, I don’t recommend we play the bull’s-eye for much longer. We should return fire.”

It was obvious that it went against every instinct of his being to simply sit by idly and be fired upon without offering any resistance. Michael didn’t blame him. “Try hailing them again.”

The response they received was not the one he had been looking for. More phaser strikes and torpedoes smashed into their shields.

“Sir,” Leva said. “They are clearly not interested in talking.”

Michael just raised a hand to let him know to be patient just a little while longer. He understood their new shields wouldn’t last forever but they did give them an opportunity they otherwise may not have had. “Open a channel.”

“Channel open,” he said, doing a decent job to hide his frustration at his captain’s chosen tactic.

“This is Captain Michael Owens of the USS Eagle to the ships currently firing on us. I have no quarrel with you and do not wish to engage you in combat. I just want to talk. If you still believe that there is reason to fight afterward, I promise you, there’ll be plenty of opportunity for that.”

He let that sink in for a few seconds before he turned to look at Leva by his tactical board. He quickly muted the connection and then shook his head. “They can receive us. They just choose not to respond,” he said, just as he had to hold on to his console as the attacking vessels unleashed yet another barrage. “Shields at eighty-five percent.”

Michael indicated towards his console. “Put me back on.”

He followed the order, but Michael was sure he could see him suppress a sigh while doing so. He also didn’t miss the increasingly skeptical look in Tazla Star’s eyes who so far had chosen to remain silent.

Leva nodded to let him know the channel was back open and Michael turned back towards the screen just in time to see the three ships begin yet another run. “Amaya, if you can hear me, please listen to me. Whatever you think is happening here, I guarantee you that things are not as they appear. Just give me a chance to explain. One chance is all I ask for.”

Those ships continued to bear down on them at rapid sub-light speed, ready to unleash more deadly firepower. But this time, instead of firing, all three vessels simply sailed passed Eagle. The viewer quickly readjusted to show the trio of ships come about and then fan out while facing Eagle.

“I cannot imagine a single thing you could say to me that would change my mind about wanting to wipe you off the face of the galaxy,” said Amaya Donners as she appeared on the viewscreen, sitting in the captain’s chair at the center of her bridge.

She looked slightly older than the Amaya of his reality, or even the last version of her he had encountered. Her expression much harder and angrier than he ever remembered seeing on her face before. Her hair was severely short and her eyes lacked the compassion and joy he had always admired in her. And yet, she was undeniably Amaya Donners in every other way.

It took him a few seconds to take in the stark differences.

“What? You were so desperate to talk just a moment ago? Cat got your tongue?”

“Maya, I am not your enemy.”

At that, she laughed out loud, but without any warmth at all. “Since when? Don’t tell me you’ve decided to defect. You know, it wouldn’t even surprise me if you did.” Her face hardened further. “But it’s too late. I’d rather blast you out of the stars for what you’ve done rather than allow you to join my side.”

“What I mean to say is that I am not the Michael Owens you think I am.”

She considered him skeptically. “What kind of game are you playing? I am not falling for it.”

“This ship, me and everyone else on board, none of us belong in this universe. If there is another Michael Owens here, another Eagle, we are not them. We were transported to this universe by mistake.” He continued when she began to frown. “Look at me. Really look at me. Do I look like your Michael Owens?”

And she did. “Uniforms are different and granted your ship doesn’t exactly match the records we have on file. And God knows what’s up with those fortified shields of yours,” she said and shook her head. “But all that could be a trick. Some sort of new technology by the Guardians or an attempt to try and get the Preservers to lower our guard.”

Star had stood from her chair and joined Michael to address the other woman. “Sir, before today, none of us had ever even heard of the Guardians and the Preservers. At least not in the context you are using those terms.”

Michael could see Amaya’s eyes grow wide. “Star?”

She nodded. “Commander Tazla Star,” she said. “First officer of the USS Eagle. This Eagle. I take it that’s not the case in this universe.”

“This is insane,” Amaya said.

“It’s been that kind of week, yes,” Michael said.

Amaya seemed to consider matters for a moment without taking her eyes off him and Star. “All right, I want to hear that story and it better be a good one. You’ll beam over onto Agamemnon in five minutes.”

Star shook her head. “I don’t think I like that idea. A moment ago you wanted to blast us out of the stars, as you so delicately put it.”

“And I still might. Beam over, just the two of you, and convince me I shouldn’t or I’ll start firing again. Coordinates are on the way,” she said and then gestured for a crewmember to cut the transmission.

As soon as she was gone Michael headed for the turbolift.

“Sir, do I really have to spell out what an incredibly terrible idea this might turn out to be?” Star said after him, causing him to stop and turn to face her. “She’ll have us both and her animosity towards you is clear as crystal.”

Leva nodded quickly. “I agree. This is not a wise tactical move, sir.”

“I don’t like this one bit, Michael. I know we keep repeating this, but that woman over there is not the Amaya Donners we know. She doesn’t even seem anything like the one we met in the other universe,” said Deen.

He glanced at his officers, one after the other, before he spoke. “I take all your points. I understand that this isn’t the most cautious approach, hell, it might not even be prudent, but the fact remains that we are in a universe we know nothing about with two of our own kidnapped by unknown forces. If we want any chance of getting them back, not to mention the one device that can take us home, and possibly prevent the destruction of another reality, we have to find allies.”

“And you truly believe this Amaya Donners could be one?” Star said, sounding entirely unconvinced.

“I’m willing to take that chance.”

“I think your judgment is clouded by the fact that she has her face,” Deen said.

It was not unusual for DeMara to speak her mind to him, but usually not quite that openly and not in front of the rest of the crew. He scowled at her for the comment but she seemed unperturbed.

“My mind is made up on the matter. I will beam over to the Agamemnon,” he said and then glanced at Star. “I’m not ordering you to come along but I’d rather you did since she is expecting the both of us.”

She didn’t hesitate and nodded quickly. “Of course.”

He looked towards Leva next. “Commander, you have the bridge. Should anything happen to us while we are gone, you are to continue the mission at whatever cost. Find a way to retrieve our people and the Prism, return home and stop the Ring.”

Leva nodded as well, but unable to entirely hide his displeasure by his captain’s decision. It was, after all, a tall order for any person.

A few minutes later Michael and Star found themselves in the transporter room. Star made an argument to take phasers, even if just the tiny, type-I variety that could be easily hidden within the uniform but Michael vetoed the idea, arguing that they would likely detect them during transport and disable them.

They both stepped up on the platform and he gave the order to energize.

They rematerialized in a transporter room which looked fairly similar to the transporter rooms of the other Agamemnon he had visited recently, although, just like she had appeared much less pristine from the outside, the inside as well looked much more tired, dirty even and in desperate need of a few new bulkheads and consoles.

Maya Donners was waiting for them along with an entire row of armed security officers, all of which were carrying rifles as if they were getting ready to receive dangerously violent criminals.

As she had alluded to earlier, Amaya and her crew wore different types of uniforms consisting of black jumpsuits with colored shoulders and a mock turtleneck underneath, a style the Starfleet in his universe had retired about three years earlier. Judging by the patchy look of their outfits that was apparently also roughly the last time they had replicated new ones.

“Permission to come aboard,” Michael said and stepped off the transporter platform, followed by Star.

Amaya, who didn’t carry a rifle but did have a phaser holstered at her hip, took a moment to look him up and down. “Michael Timothy Owens as I live and breathe,” she took a small step towards him and then, entirely unexpectedly, brought up her balled fist and hit him in the chin with such force, he went down like a sack of maaza stalks.
 
I forgot what the Owens of this universe did to piss off Donners so much, I might need to review the Civil War story again. (Recommended)

Regardless, Michael’s in for it now. And how’s he gonna get the Prism back? He’s short on allies and even if he survives Donner, there’s a ruthless version of Star to still contend with.

Man, it’s been a rough day at the office for Eagle!
Keep it coming!
 
Man, I'm late to the party!
Wow, what a fun sequence! A seedy establishment, explosions, fire fights and a high-speed chase through the city. (One of my favorite parts.) Bano's was nearly killed like, five times! I don't think she knew what she was getting herself into with this mission. You can tell she's in over head, since her skillset has just barely allowed her to survive thus far.

These "men in black" are pretty damn ruthless. Given their disregard for life, I hope Bano keeps The Object out of their hands. But she's gonna need to partner with someone who can hold their own against these merciless bastards, if she hopes to succeed and not die in the process.

You keep writing and we'll keep reading.
 
8


He couldn’t exactly claim to feel euphoric about the upcoming meeting and considering that the last time he had come face-to-face with an alternate version of himself, the other Lif Culsten had tried desperately to kill him, he thought that most people would appreciate his reluctance.

Most people did not, apparently, include Garla who seemed noticeably curious to find out about this universe’s version of the Krellonian Star Empire, including his counterpart and likely her own. In truth, it wasn’t easy to fully understand what was on the veteran Sentinel’s mind these days. Although they had grown somewhat closer lately, primarily since he had been forced to stick close to her as to Commander Star’s orders ever since she had been brought back to Eagle, she had not exactly opened up to him.

It was clear that Garla’s grand plans to save the Star Alliance from itself had failed. From what Lif had pieced together, she had entered into some sort of arrangement with the subspace aliens who seemingly had promised her the tools to reshape Krellonian society in exchange for her assistance in providing essential elements to their particle supercollider.

As it had turned out, however, whatever it was that the aliens had shown Garla to secure her cooperation, had most likely been an alternate reality instead of a possible future for their own.

She hadn’t spoken much about those setbacks since they had returned from the other Piqus, and he had no way of knowing if she had been shown a Star Alliance which had been torn apart entirely by civil strife and unrest or if she had witnessed a society she seemed to have been pursuing all this time, one in which Krellonians and Outlanders lived entirely separated and segregated lives, perhaps one in which their people had never even conquered and subjugated the other races.

Or maybe, the aliens had shown her both possibilities, a dark future which didn’t seem so far-fetched considering the current tensions in the Star Alliance, and another one where things had gone very differently.

He knew Garla wasn’t a gullible individual, couldn’t afford to be in her position, but whatever she had been shown, it had to have been incredibly convincing for her to dedicate so much of her time and resources to assist the aliens and pursue her lofty ambitions to transform the Star Alliance.

The first thing Lif noticed as he began to fade back into a solid state, after having been beamed from Eagle to his counterpart’s flagship, was the massive ursine Buoth standing near the far wall, and although he had seen many of his kind before while he lived in Krellon space, his mind immediately flashed back to his most recent encounter with a member of the bear-like species, in a backyard on Piqus VII, when an enraged Buoth had nearly torn him limb from limb had he not managed to kill the massive creature in the nick of time.

His entire body tensed even before the rematerialization had completed and he felt a sudden cold sweat come over him.

Garla, at his side, also responded to the sight, but the Sentinel was bracing herself for a fight instead, the fact that she had beamed over unarmed not stopping her.

“Welcome aboard the Yellow Rose. Sentinel Culsten bestowed on me the honor to greet you and escort you to his quarters.”

It took Lif a moment, and a calming breath, to register that the Buoth wasn’t posing an immediate threat. In fact, he appeared to be the transporter operator, or possibly a security guard, standing behind a console and doing little more than looking at the two newcomers.

Lif did recognize the man who had spoken. It was another Outlander, a much lither, almost diminutive compared to the ursine, Kridrip. He had met the man before—it was Tenn, Garla’s assistant.

Next to him stood a Krellonian guard, wearing a uniform not entirely dissimilar to what Star Alliance officers wore in his universe, but instead of chrome armor, he wore a lighter jacket, coated it the same kind of reflective material. Instead of a rifle, the female officer wore a holstered sidearm as she stood at attention next to Tenn.

Garla stepped off the platform first and seemingly had taken in the transporter room and its inhabitants in mere moments before she addressed the female officer. “Thank you for having us. I am looking forward to meeting your sentinel.”

The woman looked at her with noticeable confusion etched into her dark features, before she glanced at Tenn next to her.

“Yes, indeed,” he said. “And he is very much eager to meet both of you. Forgive me, but I have not yet introduced myself. I am Chief Justicar Tenn, Second on the Alliance cruiser Yellow Rose,” he said, putting the slightest emphasis on his position as if trying to clear up any misunderstanding.

Surprisingly, Garla, who he was certain prided herself in not missing details, appeared to have overlooked the subtle but visible rank insignia on the two officers’ jacket sleeves. They were not an exact match to those used in the Eye or the Star Alliance Navy, but they were close enough to make it obvious that Tenn held a much higher position than the Krellonian woman at his side.

Garla recovered quickly, although she did seem somewhat uncomfortable in addressing the man she chiefly knew as her assistance. “My apologies, Chief Justicar. Things are a little different where we come from.”

He quickly shook his head. “None are necessary. Please, if you’d like to follow us, I’ll take you to the see the Sentinel now,” he said with a smile.

Garla nodded and the two officers set out with Lif and Garla following closely.

“What’s going on here?” Lif whispered to her as they stepped out of the transporter room.

But Garla just hushed him and they walked into a corridor, right behind their escort.

Lif’s father had served in the Star Navy and as such, he’d had enjoyed opportunities to visit Krellonian cruisers when he had been younger and before he had left his home for the Federation. The Yellow Rose was not exactly a mirror image of those ships but it was close enough that he quickly recognized it as a ship of the line. What was decidedly different here, however, was that at least half the crew they encountered seemed to be made up of Outlanders, something that would have been unheard of in their universe. Lupine T’aq, humanoid Kridrip, and even reptile Zel made up this crew, making it the most diverse Krellonian vessel he had ever set foot upon. And these crewmembers weren’t merely support personnel either, judging by the similar rank insignia on their sleeves, most of them were officers or otherwise held comparable ranks to their fellow Krellonians.

Lif could tell that Garla was taking notice of this as well.

Tenn led them to a turbolift of sorts, one with entirely transparent walls that allowed quite an impressive view of the surrounding space as it traveled along the outer hull of the ship. The short trip to their destination was carried out mostly in silence as both Garla and Lif took in this strange and yet also familiar universe and the people who called it home.

The female guard waited outside Sentinel Culsten’s quarters while the Chief Justicar led them inside where Lif was once more greeted by an uncanny mirror image of himself.

Sentinel Culsten was sitting behind an expansive wooden desk that had a passing similarity to Garla’s large desk in her office. He wore a more elaborate outfit than his officers, a coat like smock with a gold and silver embroidered black shirt underneath which to Lif looked almost regal, featuring elaborated, possibly hand-sewn patterns. It seemed more ceremonial than something a sentinel would wear as a routine outfit and was certainly far more impressive than Garla’s utilitarian and form-fitting jumpsuit.

The other Culsten wore his hair in a shorn mohawk, with a broad patch of silver hair running up the very center of his otherwise bald head and tapering off in a braided ponytail going down his back.

He stood the moment he spotted Garla and Lif. “It is even more stunning seeing you in the flesh,” he said, his eyes noticeably gleaming with excitement as he rounded his desk.

Tenn stepped aside wordlessly to allow the sentinel an unobstructed path to the two visitors.

Sentinel Culsten wasn’t shy of getting close, just short of invading their personal spaces, and studied their faces with obvious curiosity. “The resemblances,” he said. “Uncanny.”

They said nothing as he continued his inspection, trying to get a look at them both from various angles. Then, as if spotting the looks in their eyes for the first time, he took a step back. “As you can imagine, I have quite a few questions.”

“That’s understandable,” said Garla.

“But first, drinks,” he said and quickly headed for a cabinet close to his desk. He promptly retrieved three glasses and filled each one halfway from a tall, brown bottle. He took two glasses and indicated towards a seating arrangement made up of four large, well-cushioned chairs facing each other. “Please sit down,” he said as he handed a glass to each of them.

Lif took his, as did Garla before Culsten retrieved the third one for himself. Together they took the chairs, Lif and Garla on one side and Sentinel Culsten on the other.

Lif’s counterpart kept his sparkling eyes on the duo as he sipped from his beverage and Lif followed suit, immediately recognizing the taste as a popular, although expensive liquor brewed on Yooktku, the homeworld of the fifth, former Krellonian subject race. It had a pleasant burn to it.

“So, you hail from a different universe. A different reality,” he said.

Garla nodded. “That is correct.”

“Amazing,” he said. “Our scientists have long speculated of alternate universes besides our own but your appearance here is the first concrete proof of their existence.” He focused in on Lif and the uniform he was wearing. “I can see that your reality differs a great deal from ours. You are in Starfleet?”

“Yes. I’m serving on the Eagle as a helmsman.”

“A helmsman,” he said and did a poor job to hide his disappointment. Considering his counterpart was already a sentinel at a relatively young age, one of the most prestigious positions in the Star Alliance, it was perhaps understandable that he considered Lif’s rank underwhelming.

“But Starfleet and the Federation, from what I hear, are a very different place where we come from.

“The Borg didn’t wipe out half the quadrant in your reality?”

Lif’s eyes opened wide with surprise, trying hard not to imagine the horrors this reality had seemingly endured. Then he shook his head. “No. We pushed them back.”

“Impressive,” he said and glanced back towards Garla. “And you? You are not with the Federation?”

“No,” she said, and Lif thought that she sounded almost offended by the notion. “I am a Sentinel for the Eye of Krellon.”

His features lit up at hearing this. “Just like your counterpart on this side.”

“Is she here as well?” she asked.

Culsten took a large gulp of his drink. “No,” he said and then stood to return towards the cabinet to replace his glass. “She died,” he added with his back to his guests.

Lif turned his head to see how Garla had taken the news but her facial expressions remained unreadable as she kept her eyes on the other sentinel. “How?”

He uttered a sigh. “A senseless accident. One that should never have occurred,” he said, his voice having lost its earlier excitement.

“An accident?” Garla sounded incredulous.

Sentinel Culsten turned to face her. “Yes. A warp core containment failure on her personal shuttle. Less than a year ago. We lost a great leader that day. You see, Garla—my Garla—she was more than family to me. She was my mentor. Everything I know about the galaxy, I learned from her. She was a person with incredible vision for the Star Alliance and losing her set us back decades. I’ve been fighting a seemingly futile battle with shortsighted politicians and bureaucrats to fulfill her legacy ever since we lost her and I took her place but I’ve made little progress. But now,” he said, his voice taking on the same enthusiasm and excitement it had before. “Now, this could all change thanks to a most unexpected twist of fate.”

“How so?” Lif asked but wasn’t sure he truly wanted to hear the answer to his question.

Culsten took a step forward. “Because fate has delivered you,” he said. “And if you are just half as formidable as my Garla was, together nothing will be able to stand in our way.”

Lif had feared something like that and when he looked back towards Garla, she still refused to make eye contact with him. Instead, she stared back at his counterpart with a determination he had seen mirrored in her face before. It had heralded nothing good.
 
Well, that's one twist. Guess it makes sense, being an alternate reality and all. Well done. I like that you have Edison back.

3


He had to admit that he felt a certain anxiety about transporting over to this unfamiliar Agamemnon and not necessarily because he was worried about his or the away team’s safety. His concerns were much more of a personal nature, considering that he was beaming onto the ship of the woman who in some other reality had been much more to him than just a fellow starship captain. At least that had been the case until she had unexpectedly put their relationship on hold just a few days earlier.

Now he was about to come face to face with a different version of Amaya Donners altogether. He wasn’t sure how many more variations he could stomach. After she had appeared to have gone through a transformation so suddenly, Michael had been inclined to believe that she had been replaced by an alternate version of herself.

Before beaming across to the other ship, Star had made the strong case to take an armed escort with him but Michael had quickly dismissed the idea since it had already become apparent that these people inherently mistrusted their mere presence here, the last thing they needed was to aggravate the situation by showing an unwillingness to trust them. It was the same reason why had also decided against beaming to the Agamemnon armed. Jarik had protested that decision as well but as far as Michael was concerned, if Donners and Edison wanted to harm them while they were guests on the Agamemnon, there was little a few phasers could do to stop them.

Nora Laas, had she been awake, would likely have insisted that she be allowed to accompany him. But since the security chief was among those still unconscious following their harrowing trip, the away team remained limited to just him, Xylion, Bensu, his father and Jarik.

They materialized in Agamemnon’s transporter room were he found Amaya Donners, Arden Texx and Gene Edison waiting for them.

Amaya looked not too dissimilar to his own version except that her naturally curled black hair was straighten and down to her shoulders with a partial bang over the right side of her face. He didn’t know Texx nearly as well but the Bolian first officer looked almost identical to his opposite. The most startling person in the room was Edison, of course. His presence was still quite disconcerting even after people he had thought to be dead had made it their habit to show up alive again as of late.

Edison’s eyes were undeniably the same as the ones belonging to the man who had been his first officer and friend for nearly three years, even if his beard which obscured much of his lower face felt unfamiliar. All three officers, as well as the transporter technician, wore the same uniforms as Michael and Xylion did.

An awkward silence had fallen over the room the moment he and his away team had materialized as the two parties seemed to appraise each other for a moment. Edison was the easiest to read since he made no effort to hide his hostility while Amaya’s expression was near impossible to decipher as her dark eyes regarded him and the others.

Surprisingly, it was Jarik who made the first move as the silence was threatening to drag on. He stepped off the transporter platform and addressed Amaya. “My name is Jarik. With me are Captain Michael Owens, his science officer Commander Xylion, as well as Bensu and Admiral Jonathan Owens.”

Amaya nodded. “I know. I mean I know some of you,” she said and then offered Jarik a smirk. “The two of us went to the Academy together. As far as I know, you’re on Earth working as an administrator within Starfleet Command.”

“Looks as if my career aspirations have remained somewhat consistent,” he said with all the humor of a full-blooded Vulcan.

She looked passed him and considered Michael and the others before her eyes came to rest on Bensu. “I don’t believe I recognize you, however,” she said and then looked to Edison for help.

He shook his head. “This is all just absurd.”

“I’m the bartender,” Bensu said with a smile.

This prompted a quizzical look from Agamemnon’s captain.

“Trust me, if he were just the bartender, I wouldn’t have brought him,” said Michael which quickly invited Amaya to refocus on him with a stare so intense it made him feel slightly uncomfortable in his own skin.

“Not that this isn’t all very fascinating,” said Jon Owens. “But perhaps there is a better-suited place for us to have this conversation.”

Amaya quickly nodded as if only now realizing the awkwardness of this meeting. “Of course. Ard, do you mind escorting our guests as well as Gene to the briefing room?”

“You got it, Cap,” he said and pointed towards the doors.

But before Michael could follow he felt Amaya pin him with another look. “Would you mind staying behind for just a spell?”

Edison didn’t seem to like the sound of that. “Maya?”

“Just … humor me, please,” she said.

Michael exchanged a quick look with Jarik also not quite sure what to make of this request. The other man just shrugged and then followed Texx out of the transporter room along with everyone else and with Edison leaving last and only hesitantly as if uncomfortable with leaving Donners and Owens alone.

Once the doors had closed behind them, Amaya turned towards the transporter tech behind the console. “Ensign, please give us the room.”

The young man nodded and instantly left his post as requested.

“What’s going on?” Michael asked once they were alone.

Amaya turned back around to face him and with three quick steps, she was right inside his personal space. Before he could even try to back away from her, she had grabbed hold of him and pressed her lips hard against his.

Michael’s first instinct had been to fight back after all this was not the woman he knew, but he quickly realized that it didn’t feel like that at all. On the contrary, it felt perfectly right and after just a moment he went along with it, embracing Amaya and kissing her back just as passionately. For a brief moment, all his recent worries and head-spinning revelations simply melted away into nothingness as he lost himself in that kiss. He would have lied to himself if he didn’t admit that this was exactly what he had wanted from her, from his Amaya, for months but which she had refused to give him.

When it was over and she finally took a step back again, Michael felt it had ended too soon.

She looked at him with wide eyes. “It really is you, isn’t it? I can’t believe it.”

“I take it we are on good terms here.”

“We were,” she said and then turned away.

“That sounds familiar. Don’t tell me, I was the one who broke things off. I can’t imagine being that stupid.”

“No, Michael, you didn’t end it. Not on purpose at least,” she said, refusing to look back his way.

He was starting to get a bad feeling about where things were going.

She finally turned to face him again. “You died. Two years ago,” she said and couldn’t quite stop her eyes from getting wet. “A month after our wedding.”
 
9


The blow had come so fast and he had been caught so entirely unawares, Michael Owens had crumbled unceremoniously to the deck.

Star jumped forward immediately but was forced to stop in her tracks when she was greeted with half a dozen phaser rifles pointed at her face. Realizing that fighting wasn’t an option, she turned towards Michael instead. “Are you all right?” she said as she knelt next to him.

In truth, Michael could not remember the last time he had been sucker-punched like that. It was not a common occupational habit as a starship captain, and the pain in his jaw was considerable, as were the stars swirling around his mind. He truly felt like he had stepped into a mirror universe, considering the exact opposite way in which the previous Amaya Donners had greeted him.

Determined not to reveal any more weakness in front of her, he confidently reached out for Star’s proffered hand and allowed her to pull him back onto his feet. “One hell of a right hook you’ve got there,” he said, giving Amaya an admiring look.

She smirked with obvious self-satisfaction. “I don’t know if I buy that fantastically ridiculous story of yours yet but that felt damned good, no matter where you’re from.”

Michael couldn’t help but rub his bruised jar. “Now that we have gotten that out of the way, perhaps we could try and have that conversation. Preferably with less punching.”

“We’ll see how it goes.”

Amaya led him and Star out of the transporter room and into the ship’s corridors with the heavy security escort following behind them. The rest of Agamemnon, Michael quickly realized, looked much like the transporter room had, like a ship that had been in one too many battles and had seen far too little maintenance in between. Compared to what he had seen on his previous visits to the ship, the crew complement felt thin, considering the small number of crewmembers they passed on their way to the turbolift, and almost none of the people he saw wore sciences blue.

Amaya led them to the observation lounge where two of the security officers took position outside and the rest joined them inside, guarding the two doors.

Apparently, Amaya had decided to host him and Star alone and none of her senior officers attended the meeting. Michael knew that in his universe, Amaya had several highly reliable people around her whom she trusted implicitly, he wondered if this was not the case here.

She took the seat at the head of the large conference table and Michael and Star took chairs where she indicated for them to sit, further down the table.

“So, let’s talk. You start. I’m dying to hear how you’re going to convince me that you’re not a complete and utter dirtbag,” she said.

Michael and Star exchanged a quick look before he began to tell her almost everything that had happened over the last few days. He left out a few details, including his strained relationship with her counterpart back in his universe, as well the finer details about Bensu and the Prism. But he laid out exactly how they had come across the Ring, how they believed it had been constructed by subspace aliens, how they had potential plans of invading regular space, how they had landed in another universe, and ultimately how it had been destroyed before ending up here.

Amaya listened to every word carefully and when it was over, she leaned back in her chair, letting out a long breath. “That is quite a story.”

“Tazla Star, a different version of her,” Michael said, glancing briefly at his first officer. “Boarded Eagle shortly after we arrived here and abducted two members of my crew, including my father. We have to get them back before we can attempt to return to our space and hopefully prevent the Ring from destroying another universe. But we’ll need help. We know next to nothing about this place.”

The captain of the Agamemnon considered him briefly before glancing towards Star and then letting her eyes wander back to him. “You know, there is only one reason I’ve even entertained the notion that you might be from another universe,” she said. “The Michael Owens I know would have killed Tazla Star on sight. The fact that the two of you are working together means you’re most definitely not from around here.”

“What happened?” Star asked.

“You, or rather the other you, killed his brother. And Matthew was a good man. A bit bookish and idealistic perhaps but a decent man.”

Michael wasn’t sure how he felt about that. When he glanced at Star at his side, he could tell how awkward she felt about this revelation and Michael gave her a reassuring nod, letting her know that he didn’t believe that she’d be capable of doing something like that. At least, he hoped, not anymore.

“Perhaps you could give us the lay of the land,” Michael said to Amaya, eager to move on. “As I said, our reality is very different from this one. We understand that there are at least two factions within Starfleet. The Guardians and the Preservers, you called them?”

“I don’t know where you’ve come from but if you don’t know about the Schism, I envy you and your universe. We’ve got the Borg to thank for it all. They changed everything.”

Star nodded. “We’ve had our run-ins with the Borg. They were always painful and we paid dearly on each occasion we had to face them but nothing on a scale that would have changed the fabric of our society altogether.”

“Consider yourself lucky then. It all started eleven years ago when the Enterprise somehow encountered the Borg in the Delta Quadrant. When she came back, she and her crew had been assimilated and become a vanguard to an all-out invasion. We fought back, hell most of the Alpha and Beta Quadrants joined together to oppose the Borg. It took us years but eventually, we drove them back. The thing is, after the Borg where gone, there was not much left. Those damned cyborgs wiped out entire worlds and the vast majority of the Alliance fleet.”

“But you rebuilt,” Star said.

“We certainly tried to. But in our weakened state, we were easy prey for opportunists. The Nyberrite Alliance, which had managed to somehow escape the path of destruction the Borg had brought came swooping in. Some saw their overtures as those of good Samaritans, they certainly positioned themselves that way at first, trying to help us rebuild our planets, treating or sick and injured and offering us resources and trade. Others realized their true intentions right away, how they were not much different to the Borg had been, except that they made assimilation a choice nearly impossible to refuse. Soon enough all former major powers had joined their cause, what remained of the Klingon Empire, the Romulans and the Cardassians joined with the Nyberrites to create a new alliance, controlled solely by the Nyberrites themselves.”

Michael was almost afraid to ask the question burning in his mind. “And the Federation?”

“Say about the Nyberrites what you will, but they are damned clever. They took over our formerly great Federation piece-by-piece, not by combat or outright violence, but by convincing former Federation members to join their alliance instead. By the time we even realized what they were up to, it was too late. Most of the few remaining core worlds decided to try and appease the Nyberrites by bending to their wishes and accepting their prohibitively expansive trade agreements designed to undermine and bankrupt us from within,” she said and Michael could sense the anger and frustration in her tone, the subject evoking a number of unpleasant emotions within her. “But a few of us decided that enough was enough and we banded together to try and oppose their insidious ways and fight to restore the Federation to what it had once been. But instead of fighting the Nyberrites, we’ve been fighting each other for almost two years now. The struggle has become an outright civil war between those who are looking to preserve the Federation the way it once was and those who are supposedly guarding what they have left.”

“Preservers and Guardians,” Star said.

Amaya nodded. “If I ever find whoever came up with those preposterous terms, I’ll strangle their neck.”

“So I take it that my counterpart is with the Guardians. What about this universe’s Tazla Star?” Michael said.

“She’s a wild card, I think. Officially she was with the Guardians as well but something happened about a year ago. Matthew Owens and a few others were constructing a secret device for us that promised to end this senseless struggle. You—or rather your counterpart—and a small fleet of Guardians were dispatched to find and I suppose secure the device for Guardians. In the process of that mission Star killed Matthew and Michael swore revenge. It’s the last time I’ve seen her and most thought her dead. Michael was convinced that she was alive and has been on a personal quest to destroy her by any means necessary. From what you’re saying, I guess he was right to believe that she’s still alive.”

Michael needed a moment to take all of this in. Not only had they traveled to another universe, but they had also, seemingly managed to get themselves right into the middle of a highly charged political, not to mention personal, quagmire involving their very counterparts.

“Here is something I don’t understand,” said Amaya as she leaned forward. “Why would Star expose herself like that now just to abduct a couple of people from another universe, one of whom is dead here?”

Michael could tell that Amaya, regardless of what universe she was from, was far from stupid and she understood that more was at play than what he had told her. He was not willing to reveal the existence of the Prism just yet and it was in fact something else that caught his attention. “My father—Jon Owens—he’s dead in this universe?”

She nodded and then apparently noticed Tazla Star’s concerned expression and offered her a little smile. “Don’t worry, as far as I know, your counterpart was not responsible for that one. Not that I wouldn’t put it past her.” When she locked eyes with Michael again, he knew that she would not let her question slip without a satisfactory answer.

“The Star in this universe must have somehow learned about the Ring and its ability to travel into other universes. The two people she took may be instrumental in making that possible,” he said.

Amaya Donners leaned back in her chair again. “And Star is not working alone. I’m not sure if her allegiance is still with the Guardians, with the Nyberrites or some other group, but the idea that they could have access to other universes is damned scary and could change everything.”

“That’s why we must find a way to get our people back,” said Star. “We believe them to be operating somewhere within the sector. Maybe out of Arkaria.”

Amaya nodded. “That makes sense. There has been heightened Guardian activity in that sector lately which considering its remote location is unusual. It’s why I’m out here in the first place, trying to gather intel on their plans.”

Michael turned towards his first officer. “Then Arkaria remains our best option to try and find your counterpart and our people,” he said and then glanced back towards Amaya. “Will you help us?”

She considered that for a moment. “I don’t like Star—my version of her—and I’m fairly certain her masters are even worse. But there is no way I can assist you getting into Arkaria. Not until we get some reinforcements out here and even then it won't be easy, we may have the Guardians outnumbered but they have the more powerful ships and superior technology.”

“How long until your reinforcements arrive?” he asked.

“Hard to say. This isn’t exactly a priority for Command right now. They are trying to win the struggle at home where the fight isn’t going well. They don’t worry too much about what’s going on all the way out here. It could be a day, it could be a few weeks.”

Michael shook his head. “We can’t afford to wait that long.”

“Well,” she said, with a small, mischievous twinkle in her eye. “You might find another way to slip into Arkaria without raising too much suspicion. After all, you and your ship fit right into that party.”

Michael did not like the sound of that at all.
 
First of all, my apologies for being so late with this comment. Life stuff and all.
I’m pretty excited about your return to the “Civil War Universe”. I always thought that this place was worth exploring more. Hopefully this won’t be our last visit!

And oh my, what a motley crew we’re assembling. Prime Michael and Star joining AU Donners to track down AU Star. And now Eagle
may get drawn into the civil war to boot.

Waiting for more.
 
10


Louise Hopkins held on to her console so tightly, her knuckles were turning white as her mind pondered the implications of entering into a fold of subspace which had pretty much disintegrated around them the last time they had been there.

Xylion had argued successfully that the instability of what they referred to as in-between space had been caused by the massive gravimetric sheer created by the movement of the Ring superstructure which in turn had led to the destruction of an entire universe. He had argued that once that task had been completed, the Ring would once more become inert and in-between space along with it.

From a technical perspective, his rationale had made sense to her, but even he had admitted that this was merely a hypothesis and therefore not without potential flaws. And yet it had been enough to convince the Captain to allow him, along with her, Bensu and two Niners to take the Nebuchadrezzar back into in-between space and to the Ring in hopes to find a way to stop its seemingly apocalyptic purpose.

Louise took a deep breath as they approached the threshold and the small ship traversed back into in-between space. She hadn’t even been consciously aware that she had held it in until they emerged on the other side, finding the subspace fold just like it had been when they had first come across it, the massive Ring superstructure once more entirely still as it ominously hung in the salmon-colored void.

“Readings indicate no sign of gravimetric disturbance,” said Xylion as his fingers danced across the console to her right, carefully studying the sensor readouts. “There is no indication of abnormal activity from the Ring structure itself.”

“You’re telling me that that thing was responsible for wiping out an entire universe?”

Louise turned her head slightly. Nora Laas had stepped up between her and Xylion, leaning forward and looking out of the viewports to get a better look at the superstructure.

“There is no way for us to know that for sure,” she said as she followed her friend’s glance. She couldn’t deny the cold shudder running up her spine whenever she looked at that immense device that was multiple times larger than any spaceborne superstructure she had ever encountered or read about. And yet, at the same time, the engineer in her was endlessly fascinated by it, desperate to try and understand how exactly it functioned. “If we’re right, and it is a supercollider, accelerating enormously powerful particles to speeds beyond the warp scale, and colliding them, there would be no end to what this machine could accomplish.”

“Still,” Nora said, unable to tear her eyes away. “A universe-killer? That’s hard to believe.”

“It’s true.”

All three of them turned to look at Bensu who sat in one of the back chairs of the cockpit. The dark-skinned bartender had his eyes closed and seemed to be in some sort of meditative state he had remained in ever since he had boarded the runabout. Louise had heard that he had not weathered the transition into this latest universe they found himself in now very well, and had only very recently awoken from a waking coma of sorts. She wasn’t convinced at all that he had sufficiently recovered to be on this mission in the first place, certainly not by judging his paler than usual complexion.

“I have seen it,” he said in a near whisper that seemed to command the attention of everyone present. “It brought forth energies immeasurable by your instruments to create a state of total entropy and in doing so it wiped away a universe within mere moments.” He opened his eyes and the blank look on his face gave her chills. “Every life, sentient or otherwise, every structure, planet or star. The very fabric of time and space, gone in an instant.”

An uncomfortable silence settled over the small control deck of the runabout.

“If that is true,” Xylion said. “We must find a way to ensure this does not happen again. Not to this universe, ours or any other.”

Louise nodded slowly.

“My question is,” said Nora. “Why would anybody want to destroy an entire universe?”

Louise had wondered the same thing.

“The creatures who seem responsible for constructing this device dwell in subspace,” Xylion said. “We have not yet gathered enough evidence to support a concrete theory, however, it does appear that subspace itself may not have been affected by the particle collider’s activity.”

Louise looked out of the viewport to study the pink and white mass surrounding them in closer detail but found that it looked no different than it had before. “You think they are waging a war on normal space? Trying to wipe it all out?”

“As I said, we do not have sufficient evidence at this stage. We may be able to find more answers on the structure itself,” he said.

It didn’t take them long to get back into transporter range of the Ring, even as they approached it slower and more carefully than they had done in the past, to make absolutely certain that no lingering effects remained.

The entire team of Starfleet officers, accompanied by the two SMT operatives Diamond and Ivory equipped themselves with the same armbands they had used the last time they had beamed onto the structure. Eagle had not been able to deploy a signal buoy like she had done previously to keep up communications through the threshold since it would have been spotted easily by the Krellonian fleet, at least the armbands would make it easier to keep track of the away team once Eagle returned.

At first blush, Louise couldn’t see any changes to the massive, tunnel-like interior of the Ring, still as gloomy and overall imposing as she remembered it. It wasn’t until she referred to her tricorder that she detected anomalies. “I can no longer detect a signal from our drones,” she said, referring to the hundreds of autonomous probes Eagle as well as the ships from the other universe had deployed to map the entirety of the interior.

“This one looks pretty dead to me,” said Diamond, who had approached one of the compact drones that now lay lifeless on the ground and then nudged it with the tip of her boot.

“I suppose they didn’t survive the particle acceleration,” said Nora.

Xylion in the meantime was busy setting up a communications and signal booster he had brought from the runabout. The armbands they wore were theoretically able to keep them in contact with the runabout computer, but as a veteran science officer, Xylion clearly believed in contingencies. “We can assume that the probes deployed by the vessels from the other universe have been neutralized in the same manner as every other matter originating in that reality.”

She knew he was probably right, still remembering how Amaya Donners who had looked so much like her counterpart from their own universe, had practically vanished in front of their eyes. Yet she wished Xylion hadn’t sounded so clinical when talking about the end of trillions of lives and destruction on a scope she could barely get her head around.

“I have successfully reestablished an uplink with the runabout computer,” said the Vulcan as he stood back up after having taken a knee next to the booster to program it accordingly.

“What now?” Nora asked.

Xylion turned to Bensu who seemed to be walking around slowly but with seemingly no specific aim. “Are you picking up anything out of the ordinary?”

It took him a moment to realize that he had been addressed. “I can’t be certain.”

Louise had no idea what he meant by that, considering the puzzled looks by the rest of the away team, they too didn’t know what to make of that response.

Xylion didn’t push it further. “Let us return to the control sphere.”

That seemed like a sensible suggestion and Nora took point, using a tricorder to locate the exact coordinates where they had last encountered the invisible barrier that had taken them into an even deeper subspace domain. She held her phaser tightly in the other hand.

Diamond and Ivory took up the rear and flanks, constantly scanning their environment with their heavily modified phaser carbines at the ready.

Louise watched first Nora and then Xylion disappear as they stepped through the threshold and felt undeniable butterflies of anxiety in her stomach when it was her turn. Like most Starfleet officers and Federation citizens, she had long since gotten used to having her body dismantled on a molecular level and beamed to locations thousands of kilometers away. However, commencing one step in one locality only to find herself somewhere else entirely upon completion of a single stride was not something she thought she’d get used to quickly. Especially not since her new surroundings were so completely alien.

The control sphere too was unchanged and she could still not shake the impression that it resembled an oversized snow globe in which they found themselves trapped in.

For a moment she once more marveled at the void beyond the thin, film-like sphere that surrounded them on all sides. Having been an engineer for her entire adult life, Lou firmly believed in the laws of physics, it was what made starship travel the stars at faster than light speeds—something that had been unthinkable on her homeworld until Zefram Cochrane had shattered the warp threshold and in doing so united an equally shattered planet. And yet, here, in subspace, all rules seemed to be off, in fact, it appeared volumes of books could be filled with everything they still didn’t understand about the enigmatic layer of space-time that existed beyond what could normally be seen and felt.

Xylion and Bensu had made their way back towards the central circle of holographic computer displays which they still hadn’t made much headway in deciphering, probably hoping that after the Ring’s recent, unexpected activity, something may have changed to allow a clue to its operation.

Nora and the two battle-hardened SMTs in the meantime had quickly fallen back into their security stance, weapons carefully sweeping the area as if danger would drop on top of them at any second.

Louise decided to join the science officer and the man she had primarily known as the barkeeper, serving her drinks in the Nest.

“Something is different.”

She stopped to consider Bensu who had spoken suddenly. “Something related to particle acceleration?” she asked. She had her tricorder already in hand but unsurprisingly, like every other time she had tried, it refused to make sense of much of anything around her.

“There is something—somebody else here.”

That immediately got Nora’s attention and she stepped closer to the trio.

“Can you be more specific? Who is it and where are they?” she said, her phaser rifle at the ready.

Bensu closed his eyes. “I am not sure if it is a physical presence but I can sense it. Perhaps if I can just focus on it.”

Not a moment later Louise could see it too. It startled her so much she instinctively jumped back a little when seeing the ghost-like specter appear not two meters in front of her. It was shaped not unlike a man, or a creature but it was blurred to such a degree it was impossible to make out any features. She thought she had seen something like this before.

Nora and the Niners trained their phasers on the specter

“Fascinating,” said Xylion, carefully studying the phenomenon.

Nora shook her head. “Agree to disagree. The last time we came across these things they turned out to be subspace creatures. The very people responsible for this monstrosity.”

The Vulcan considered her briefly. “That event took place in a holographic environment and was initiated by the use of alien technology.”

“I don’t care how it happened, Commander,” she said. “In case you had forgotten, an entire universe died after these guys showed up. We cannot allow for that to repeat itself.”

Louise wanted to agree with Nora but somehow she doubted a few phaser rifles would be enough to prevent that from happening. “What do we do?”

The figure flickered a few times as if it was about to disappear again and Louise could see that Bensu was having trouble maintaining his focus.

“I suggest that whatever it is you’re doing,” Nora said, glancing at Bensu. “You stop.”

He shook his head. “This is not a subspace alien.”

“Who then?” Nora asked while keeping her sharp gaze on the flickering apparition.

But Bensu’s strength and mental focus waned quickly, leaving him exhausted and spent. Louise was at his side before he could collapse and she helped him sit on the floor. He looked up at the others but needed a moment to recollect himself. “I cannot say for certain but I know I don’t have the focus required to connect with it,” he said and glanced towards Xylion. “Not alone.”

The Vulcan nodded, understanding his meaning immediately.

“Commander, this not a very good idea,” said Nora as she too seemed to understand what they were up to.

“At present, this appears our best option to gain answers we desperately require,” he said resolutely as he took a knee next to Bensu to prepare them both for another mind-link.

Nora threw Louise a look as if to try and find somebody who had still a shred of common sense left. “What was that human expression about overzealous interest and the death of feline creatures?”

Louise decided not to humor her, although in the back of her mind she couldn’t help but wonder if the Bajoran wasn’t on the right track.
 
Well, Louise and the team are about ready to take some big risks. But considering the Ring really can destroy entire universes, I don't blame them. Damn, this thing needs to be neutralized somehow. This is shaping up to be the UT's version of "Crisis on Infinite Earths". :0

Makes me glad I decided not to apply for Starfleet!
Here's hoping our heroes can pull this one off!
 
11


He hadn’t been able to deny that Amaya Donners’ revelations about the universe they now found themselves in troubled him a great deal. It had been obvious that this had been a very different place to the one he called home from their very first and rather unwelcoming encounter with Agamemnon. Although her captain had eventually agreed to help them find a way home—at least as long as it didn’t interfere with her own plans, the entire notion that Starfleet and the Federation itself being at war with itself was almost incomprehensible to him.

Then again, Michael also had a difficult time trying to imagine what would have happened if his Starfleet had not been successful in opposing the Borg and if their advances had not been stopped in time to destroy the very fabric that held the Federation together.

Perhaps it wasn’t too far-fetched to believe that a disaster of such a magnitude would have fractured his Federation as well, shattering its long-held ethos of peace and unity and subsequently making it an easy target for foreign powers to exploit the weakened union until it was nothing more than a mere specter of its former self.

He had also not been able to get out of his mind what Amaya had insinuated about his alter ego and the fate of his family in this galaxy. His father dead, most likely in the truest sense—although he would not have put it past him to have faked his death in this universe as well—and his brother only recently murdered by the very same woman who served as his first officer instead of being killed by his own colleague Westren Frobisher a decade earlier as it had happened in his universe.

As for his counterpart, the Michael Owens of this reality was—according to Amaya Donners at least—an unscrupulous warmonger who over the last year had been consumed by a quest to revenge his brother’s murder and burn down anyone or anything that threatened to slow him down in the process.

Michael was convinced that he was not a man he wanted to meet, although he also considered the possibility that Amaya’s opinion of his doppelganger could have been distorted by the fact that they found themselves on different sides of a civil war, and like the sucker punch she had dished out—and he could still feel hours later—had proven, there was no love lost among these two starship captains.

None of these many disturbing revelations had altered Michael’s commitment to locate and liberate his father and Jarik as well as the Prism which as it stood was the only means for them to find a way back home and perhaps stop the Ring for good.

Amaya had stopped short of offering any kind of active assistance in this task but she had pointed them in the right direction, confirming that Arkaria was the most likely location for Star to have taken their people. But there was a good chance that this was merely a way station, meaning that they had to act fast if they wanted any chance of getting their people back.

Michael strode into the large stellar cartography lab on deck nine where he found Star, Deen, and Leva already waiting for him. The lab, essentially a large round room with curved holographic walls high enough to encompass two decks which surrounded a central platform, allowed amazingly detailed views of stars, planets, and stellar phenomena and as the name suggested, was primarily used by the science department to study, observe and chart new stars and the surrounding space. Michael could not remember the last time he had used stellar cartography for anything other than planning tactical operations, an unfortunate indicator of how long it had been since Eagle had truly fulfilled its primary purpose.

DeMara was sitting in the only chair, working the computer console while Star and Leva watched the shifting curved screens all around them which currently displayed a star system from various angles.

“Arkaria,” Michael said as he approached the trio via the short and narrow gangway leading to the platform. After their meeting with Donners, he had instructed his people to learn as much as possible about their destination.

The Trill first officer glanced his way and nodded. She had appeared somewhat shaken by Amaya’s story, particularly learning that her counterpart had been responsible for killing Matthew Owens in this reality and that she had become the Alternate Michael’s nemesis in the process. Her professionalism had ultimately trumped those feelings and she showed no signs of concern now. “In many ways, very similar to our own version but not without a few key differences.”

“That’s right,” said Deen and worked her console focusing in on a large green-tinted planet until it took up almost half of the massive screen in front of her. “Take Arkaria Prime for example.”

Michael noticed the disparity immediately. “No Remmler Array?”

“No,” she said. “However, there are some smaller orbital facilities we can see, most likely functioning as repair and maintenance facilities.” Deen continued to work the controls and the planet began to spin slowly until it revealed several satellite-like installations floating in space above it. Some of which seemed to be serving very familiar-looking starships.

“Have we been able to ID any of those ships?” Michael asked.

“You’re going to love this part,” said Leva who was leaning back against the far railing of the platform. The tone in his voice seemed to imply the contrary.

“We were able to perform a few passive scans which gave us a better idea about what we may find in that system,” said Star while the screen began to shift and focus in on one of the ships in Arkaria’s orbit.

Michael took a small step closer to the railing but quickly realized that he didn’t have needed to bother since the ship was quickly becoming unmistakable, the wide saucer section, the warp nacelles slung underneath her compact engineering hull and the triangular-shaped pod on top of the saucer left no doubt about her class, and once her registry number came into view, Michael let out a surprised breath. “It’s Eagle.”

Deen turned from her station to face her. “I don’t know if we should start believing in cosmic destiny, but if Xylion were here, I’m sure he would tell us about the infinitesimal chances of encountering not just Agamemnon but also our own double twice in two separate universes.”

Michael had to agree that it sounded implausible, but then again, actually traversing the quantum-verse hadn’t sounded much more feasible to him just a few days ago. “If she is here, that means my counterpart will be as well. From everything we know so far, we would be wise to try and avoid him.”

Star was first to agree to that sentiment and he could understand why.

Deen had zoomed out again so that the holographic projection showed the entirety of the system with all its twelve planets orbiting two bright, main-sequence stars. “There are at least eight Starfleet vessels in the system, a few of them patrolling, but most of them near the ninth planet,” she said and focused on that world, a much smaller one with no obvious population centers visible from orbit.

“Which contains a hidden SAI base in our universe. Could there be a similar installation here as well?” Michael said.

Deen swiveled around in the chair. “Impossible to tell from this distance and using passive scans only, I’m afraid. But considering the activity around the planet, I think it’s highly probable there is something on that planet that somebody wants to protect.”

He nodded. “I concur. Which means it’s the most likely location of our people. The question is: How do we get there undetected?”

Leva took a step away from the railing, clearly, he had already considered this problem. “We’ve detected what looks like small craft traffic heading for Arkaria IX. I think we can modify one of our shuttles to make it look like it belongs in this universe, shouldn’t be difficult since most of the differences between our Starfleet and theirs are cosmetic. With some luck, this will allow us to slip into the atmosphere without causing suspicion. The harder part will be trying to find and retrieve our people and the artifact.”

Star took over. “I can lead a team of SMT operatives and infiltrate the base. Assuming it is in the same location as the one in our universe, we’ll already know where to start looking.”

Michael considered her for a moment before casting his gaze back towards the projection of the small planet on the screen. “It’s risky but I think we have little choice.”

She nodded. “I’ll get started on the preparations.”

“Commander, just one adjustment to the plan,” he said, stopping her in her tracks and eliciting a quizzical expression from his first officer.

“There is only one person on this ship who has been to that base before.”

She shook her head, immediately understanding where he was going with this. “Sir, we don’t even know if it is the same base. For all we know it could be something entirely different. Besides, the risks—“

“I understand the risks, Commander. But I believe we both know why you can’t be the one leading this mission.”

Star clearly didn’t see it that way.

“I’m happy to lead the away team instead,” Leva said quickly.

But Michael had made his decision. “Thanks, Commander, but it will need to be me. We know my double in this universe is working for the Guardians faction, which means if I’m discovered I will have the best chance to pass off as belonging there.”

Deen stood from her chair. “Unless you run into him. This doesn’t strike me like a good idea, Michael.”

“The other Eagle is nowhere near that planet so chances are good neither is my doppelganger,” he said and then raised a hand when he felt like all three of his officers about to gang up on him to keep him from going on what was an obviously risky, but in his opinion, necessary mission. “I’ve noted your objections, people. I understand it is not ideal but it is what we’re going to do. And we don’t have the time to sit around and argue over it.” He looked at all three of them and although none appeared happy with it, they all understood that his mind was made up. He focused on Star. “Get those preparations underway, please. I want to head out as soon as possible.”

The Trill hesitated for just a second or so, as if he would perhaps change his mind after all, but then offered a quick nod and left the room along with Leva to do what needed to be done.

“I really hope you know what you’re doing,” Deen said and then followed the others.

All alone in the cavernous room, Michael stepped up to the computer panel and looked over the controls until he found what he was after. Without sitting down, he altered the view to zoom back out from Arkaria IX to once more find the other starship Eagle in orbit around the other planet. “So do I,” he said to himself as he stared at the eerily familiar vessel.
 
Very interesting introspection regarding the Civil War Universe and how the Prime UT universe could have gone the same way. "There but for the grace of God, go we." Of course I would love to hear how events went sideways for the Enterprise D in this AU...why did Q allow Picard and his crew to become assimilated? Or did the Continuum pull Q away before he could save the Enterprise? So many questions that are fun to ponder.

Man, now Michael has to potentially go toe-to-toe with his doppelganger and an alternate Eagle as well.
Well, I seem to remember this AU Michael isn't completely unreasonable, so there's that...I think.

Keep it going!
 
12


Although a great many things in this universe were utterly foreign to him, there were some aspects he recognized from his own reality. Even if it had been many years since he had stepped onto the bridge of a Star Alliance Navy cruiser, Lif immediately noticed that the design was very much comparable to the ones he had seen as a child when his father had occasionally brought him aboard the ships he had sailed on.

Differently to Eagle, with its centrally situated seating arrangement for the captain and his officers and forward-facing control stations located between the command area and the large main viewer, on a Star Alliance ship, the commander sat at the very front of the triangle-shaped control center, facing a curved screen that allowed for a nearly one-hundred eighty degree view of the surrounding space.

All supporting stations, including the helm, tactical, sensors, and engineering were arranged behind the command chair along three banks of computer stations which ran vertically within the control room, each aisle with its own transparent computer display situated at eye-level to allow the bridge officers to see what the captain was looking at or any other relevant data depending on their configuration.

What was still entirely peculiar to Lif was the fact that those computer stations behind the command chair were manned by several different races. Just like he had seen on the rest of the ship, the bridge crew seemed to be made up of an equal number of Krellonians and Outlanders.

After Chief Justicar Tenn had escorted him and Garla onto the command deck, they both paused for a moment to take in this unusual sight. Once he had gotten over the initial surprise, Lif couldn’t help but smile. This cruiser reminded him more of a Federation starship than what he would have expected from a Star Navy vessel, in fact, the Yellow Rose may have been even more diverse.

He briefly glanced over at Garla but his aunt seemed more perplexed than amused, considering that she had spent years trying to figure out how to save the Star Alliance from issues stemming from Outlander and Krellonian tensions.

Tenn led them across the command center and towards the front of the room where his counterpart sat alone in his control chair which swiveled around automatically to face them once he had sensed their approach.

“Good, you are here,” he said with a pleased smile on his features which to Lif felt somewhat disturbing, making him wonder if he ever made people feel that way when he attempted to smile. “I thought you might be interested in observing our mission.”

“What’s your mission?” Garla asked.

“Believe it or not,” he said, still smiling. “But the Eye of Krellon didn’t send me out here to try and find travelers from other universes.” He interlaced his fingers as he considered his two visitors. “Tell me, what do you know about the Nyberrite Alliance?”

It was not a name Lif had heard very often and in truth he was only vaguely familiar with them. He knew that they were a loose confederation of various star systems that operated at the far-end of the Federation.

Garla, the intelligence operative, unsurprisingly was much better informed. “In our universe, they are a minor galactic power operating at the outer fringes of the Alpha Quadrant beyond Federation territory. They have a medium-sized fleet mostly dedicated to exploration and defense. They have a decentralized form of government and a low population that forces them to rely on foreign personnel to man their ships. They have never been considered a significant threat to the Star Alliance.”

“That used to be true here as well once,” he said with a nod, clearly impressed by her knowledge and perhaps the similarities between their universes. “That’s until the Borg devastated most of the Alpha and Beta Quadrants. After that, it was open season for anyone who was spared by the destruction the Borg left in their wake and the will to exploit the weakness of those less fortunate. The Nyberrites quickly filled the vacuum left by the Federation, the Klingons, and the Romulans by entering into key alliances and expanding their influence.”

Lif needed a moment to digest all that.

“So far they have mostly stayed clear of our borders but I have been watching them for a few years now and I am convinced that they have a plan to extend their sphere of influence well beyond what was once Federation territory. There have been minor skirmishes between our forces in the past and our diplomatic status can best be described as heated.”

“You think they are planning on making a move on the Star Alliance?” Garla asked.

Sentinel Culsten nodded from his elevated chair. “Yes. Reliable intelligence has placed one of their listening posts designed to spy on our fleet movements in the system we have just entered. It is unlikely to be heavily defended. I plan to wipe it out and make it clear to the Nyberrites that we will not be as easy a target as the Federation or the Klingons have been.”

“Sentinel, we have detected anomalous readings originating from the third planet,” Chief Justicar Tenn reported after he had returned to oversee the officers working at the computer stations. “The readings are consistent with a high-powered observational array.”

The smile returned to Culsten’s face. “Just as I predicted,” he said and then glanced at his visitors. “You are welcome to stay and watch while we send the Nyberrites a message they won’t soon forget.”

Garla nodded, clearly interested in witnessing this mission in person, and Sentinel Culsten’s chair began to swivel back towards the front.

“Prepare the fleet for battle, Tenn. Raise shields and bring weapons online. We will form the tip of the spear, advise Spirit of Fire and Razor’s Edge to follow us in. Flank ahead,” he ordered as he settled back into his standard posture, his hands working on computer panels located at the tips of his armrests even as he spoke.

Lif could see his diverse crew jumping into action, acknowledging his orders, and confirming their execution as they walked up and down those long aisles to work on various computer stations alongside them. The brighter illumination in the meantime was dimmed and replaced by darker, amber light.

“Fleet reports ready for battle,” Tenn announced after less than a minute had passed.

“What kind of resistance do you expect?” Garla asked.

Culsten just turned his head slightly to answer her. “A few support craft at best. We will be catching them just a few weeks from setting up their operation here. They will not yet be fully entrenched. After we’re done, they will know that we will not tolerate any future efforts to attempt and threaten our borders.”

“Sensors are detecting a wing of defensive vehicles on approach from the third planet,” said a female lupine from her station. “Appear to be automated craft.”

Culsten nodded. “Targeting solution, stand by to fire high capacity missiles.”

“High-caps armed and ready,” said a Krellonian officer from the weapons station.

“Firing solutions for all six vessels confirmed,” the lupine responded not a moment later.

“Fire.”

Glancing over his counterpart’s shoulder, Lif could see the projectiles racing across the screen and towards the incoming vessels. All six missiles made contact, turning each ship into a fireball.

“Six kills confirmed,” Tenn called out although there seemed little need for it.

“Come on, at least try and give me a challenge,” Sentinel Culsten said. “Continue to head for the planet. Start working on a firing solution for the array.”

Once again his officers quickly went to work. But Lif noticed that a younger Krellonian crewmember appeared to have some problems with carrying out the order, frustration clearly evident on his features. “I’m registering increasing electromagnetic interference in the planet’s ionosphere which is interfering with our targeting sensors.”

The lupine officer left her station to assist the younger Krellonian. “Attempt to compensate with the lateral transpectral imager to boosts the targeting resolution,” she said as she pointed out the controls.

The younger officer quickly nodded. “Yes, that has helped,” he said and offered the lupine a thankful nod before being distracted by a loud siren blaring from his station. “The boosted sensors have revealed another vessel in orbit.”

Lif could see it as well. A large, imposing Romulan warbird had suddenly appeared on the viewscreen. The green-tinted vessel was easily the size of the Yellow Rose, probably a bit larger, and was now heading directly for them.

Tenn confirmed a moment later. “Warbird on an intercept course.”

He couldn’t see it, but it sounded as if the Sentinel was smiling. “Well now, that’s more like it.”

“You knew the Romulans were involved here as well?” Garla said with a calm he envied. Fighting a few automated ships was one thing, facing a Romulan warship that was easily powerful enough to give Eagle a run for her money was an altogether different story.

He shook his head slightly. “These aren’t Romulans. At least not the way you might think of them. That ship is part of the Nyberrite Alliance. The Romulans have become their puppets. And to answer your question. Yes, I expected at least one major starship to patrol the area.” He turned his head again to face her, his lips smirking. “Don’t worry, it’s nothing we cannot handle.”

“Warbird will reach weapons range in twenty seconds,” Tenn said.

“Engage attack pattern Sentinel-Four.”

What followed was indeed an impressive tactical feat as the three ships that made up the assault force managed to partially surround the advancing Romulan starship, blasting it from various angles, forcing it to go on the defensive before it could bring its most powerful weapon to bear.

It landed a few shots on the Yellow Rose, causing the deck under Lif’s feet to heave enough to force him to steady himself, but the shields held and the damage remained minor.

The battle reminded Lif a little bit of a dance, a back and forth in which the four ships exchanged phaser and plasma fire as they careened in every direction and jockeying for the best possible position to ensure maximum efficiency of their weapons. He had been in enough space battles to realize that the warbird was at a clear disadvantage, however, outnumbered as it was, and that it would not be able to sustain the fight.

The Sentinel knew it too. “Time to finish this, don’t you think, Tenn?”

The Chief Justicar nodded. “Indeed,” he said and cast a glance towards the weapons officers. “Target their engine core and fire a full salvo of high-caps.”

The Romulan ship was too slow to evade the incoming barrage and most of the missiles remained true to their aim, causing several explosions to ripple across the vessel’s green hull.

“The warbird is breaking off and heading for a course out of the system,” the lupine officer said with a grin wide enough to show off her razor-sharp teeth.

“Let them run and report back to their masters that the Star Alliance does not take kindly to bullies,” Culsten said. “In the meantime, we have a sensor array to dismantle.”

Another alert siren captured most of the crew’s attention. The junior sensor officer quickly saw to it. “Now reading a massive energy build-up coming from the third planet.”

This apparently caught Culsten by surprise as he quickly manipulated his controls to get his screens to show him a view of the ocher-colored planet. “By the Infallible, what are they up to?”

The answer arrived promptly. A massive blue energy beam shot out from the planet and within seconds had ripped right into the side of one of Yellow Rose’s escort cruisers.

Culsten nearly jumped out of his seat. “Full evasive. Now.”

Lif felt the ship lurch to its side so fast, the inertia dampeners weren’t quick enough to compensate and he had to hold on to a nearby bulkhead to keep his balance.

And yet it was still not fast enough to get out of the way of a second blast, this one squarely aimed at the Yellow Rose.

The impact felt as if they had been struck by the planet itself. Lif was ripped off his feet and collided painfully against the bulkhead only to immediately fall the other way and smash into the floor. He felt weightless for a moment, possibly because the artificial gravity net had failed to compensate for the cruiser suddenly rolling onto its side. It lasted just a few seconds before he smashed into the unforgiving floor yet again.

Darkness claimed him.
 
Great description of the Alliance cruiser! Love the details showing the differences between the interior of this ship versus those of Starfleet. Also, loving the "high cap" missiles. If you're going to have projectile weapons, this is the way to go. And while I know you don't love space battle scenes, you handled this one exceptionally well.

But now, stuff has hit the fan. I think Culsten badly under estimated the tactical situation here.
Hope all the characters I like pull through. Just never know what direction this story is headed in next!

Loving it as always.
 
If you are not already a member then please register an account and join in the discussion!

Sign up / Register


Back
Top