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The Star Eagle Adventures: QD2 - State of Entanglement

13


He had to admit that the uniform invoked a certain sense of nostalgia in him.

After they had reviewed many of the files Amaya had made available to them about this universe, particularly those relating to the Guardians, it had been clear that the other faction of Starfleet favored wearing an even older style of uniform than Donners and the Preservers.

It was the same two-colored outfit which he had worn for the majority of his Starfleet career, in slightly varying iterations, and it tended to remind him of a very different time when the galaxy hadn’t looked quite as dark and ominous as it had later turned out to be. But then again, as was often the case with nostalgia, he wasn’t sure how reliable those feelings truly were, after all that era that felt so innocent now had also been the same one in which Starfleet had first encountered the Borg and thousands had lost their lives to them. And while they had managed to defeat them in his reality, in this twisted alternate one, things had played out very differently.

Lieutenant Alendra and an engineering team had altered the shuttlecraft Osiris that would take him, along with Leva and three Niners to Arkaria, but the changes had been so superficial, he had hardly even been able to spot the differences after walking into the shuttlebay. They had decided to keep Eagle’s registry and other identifying marks on the livery, hoping that anyone spotting the shuttle would assume it came from the Eaglenative to this universe.

Leva was already at the piloting controls when Michael walked up the rear ramp and he could see the three Niners, Sensy, Violet, and One-Shot also already on board. “Took us a while but I suppose we finally did get you into uniforms after all. Even if they are somewhat outdated,” he said with a smirk at seeing all three operatives wearing the same style outfit he did, although theirs were mustard-yellow across their chests instead of his command-red. He recalled that one stipulation of the Special Mission Team members after coming aboard had been that they could be exempt from Starfleet’s uniform dress code and instead wear their mixture of civilian garb and tactical outfits they were used to. Michael had hesitantly agreed since he didn’t wish to meddle with whatever combination of factors made the Niners so effective even if he was not pleased about the idea of having a different set of rules for different members of his crew.

“We wear whatever is required for the mission,” Sensy, the tall, broad-shouldered team leader said.

Violet, the Boslic woman who had her bright hair tied up neatly in a bun, didn’t seem quite as happy and was pulling at the tight collar of her uniform. Considering that she seemed to prefer outfits with far deeper necklines, she was probably not very comfortable. “Honestly, no clue how you Fleeters ever thought this was a good idea.”

“The pajamas are the least of our trouble,” said One-Shot, the dark-skinned human sniper and weapons expert as he looked over the only armament he carried. Or at least the only one visible. “These type-II phasers are a joke. Sensy, give me a few hours and I can see if I can’t turn these toys into real weapons.”

Michael shook his head. “We don’t have a few hours. I’m sure you’ll do fine. And I’ll have you know that we did all right with these kinds of weapons and uniforms for a good decade or so,” he said as he glanced at the sniper and then the Boslic woman.

“Can we at least take some standard-issue rifles?” the man nearly begged.

“This is an infiltration, not an assault. Somebody sees us coming in heavily armed and we blow our cover,” said Sensy, beating Michael to it. “The captain is right; we make do with what we have. Wouldn’t be the first time.”

His two operatives nodded begrudgingly and Michael continued to the front of the shuttle where Leva was going through the preflight checklist.

He considered the half-Romulan for a brief moment while he was busy working the computer console. He knew the man was a capable security officer and had in fact served most of his career in that capacity. However, since Michael had followed the example set by his former commanding officer on the Columbia, on which he had served as first officer, where Captain Eduardo Mendez had preferred the more old-fashioned approach of splitting security and tactical duties across two roles, it was rare that Leva left his bridge post for an away mission.

Michael had no second thoughts about bringing him along instead of another security officer, knowing full well that Leva routinely trained and worked out with Nora Laas and her team and that he was probably itching at the chance to get some time away from the ship.

His heritage could have been a concern since Romulan Starfleet officers weren’t exactly common in their universe, which likely meant they were even less typical in a reality in which the Federation had apparently been decimated.

However, since Leva was the progeny of two races, his forehead was almost entirely smooth rather than raised as was the case with many Romulans, this, along with his elegantly tapered ears allowed him to easily pass as a Vulcan.

And yet the tactical officer still seemed somewhat uncomfortable as he observed him tugging at his old-style uniform tunic. “Something the matter, Commander?” he said. “Don’t tell me you are having issues with this outfit as well.”

Leva looked up, appearing slightly embarrassed by having drawn attention to himself in this way. “No, sir. The uniform is fine. I just wished they’d picked a different color.”

Michael couldn’t help but smirk. Differently to him, and the Niners, Leva wore a blue uniform denoting a science or medical officer, it seemed that Star, who he believed had chosen their outfits and equipment, must have felt that it be less conspicuous for their cover to be more varied. It also made sense to have a fake medical officer in their midst, considering that his father was still very ill.

“This hue just doesn’t do me any favors.”

“I think it fits you well,” he said with a little grin, noticing that it seemed to have made the large-framed Romulan even more uncomfortable.

Leva was clearly keen to move on. “I’ve plotted an indirect course towards Arkaria IX,” he said quickly and then brought up their programmed flight plan that came up on the holographic HUD projected on the large forward viewport.

It showed a somewhat serpentine route towards the star system that would get them there in just a bit under five hours. It was slower than a straight-line approach, but Leva seemed to believe it was less likely to get them noticed. Michael was happy to defer to his tactical judgment on that matter.

According to his mapped course, they’d drop out of warp at the outer edge of the system, near the Oort Cloud, and at the opposite side of where the ninth planet was currently orbiting its two stars. From there, Leva had planned what looked like a planet-hopping course, using the various stellar bodies within the system to mask their approach to their target, however, he had made sure they kept their distance to Arkaria Prime, likely to avoid a run-in with the one person in this universe who could have immediately ferreted out their deception.

It was going to be a long trip but it was a very sound plan. “Good work, Commander. We better get moving, we have a lot of ground to cover.”

Leva nodded and began the final pre-flight check while Michael got in touch with the bridge and Star one last time before obtaining take-off clearance.

Not long after, the back hatch of the shuttle sealed up tight and Leva smoothly initiated the anti-gravs to allow Osiris to push off the deck. Since the large bay door was already fully opened, he nudged the small vessel forward and it slid effortlessly through the forcefield separating the ship’s atmosphere with the vacuum of outer space.

Leva kept the shuttle on a straight course for less than a minute at low impulse speed to gain some separation from Eagle, before altering the heading in accordance with his flight plan and then promptly engaged the warp engine for the pre-programmed approach vector.

Michael spent most of the journey studying the data Amaya had provided them on this universe, trying to understand this place as best as he possibly could.

The war with the Borg which had driven the Federation and most of the Alpha and Beta Quadrants close to the breaking point, the faltering reconstruction efforts after they had finally been defeated, the emergence of the Nyberrite Alliance, and the schism within the Federation. It was all difficult to stomach and yet the more he read about how the galaxy had gotten to this place, the more it seemed to make sense. In this reality, the Federation had once enjoyed the same prosperity, optimism, and moral certitude that he recognized from his home, but it had been chipped away steadily over the years and after continuous defeats and losses. He recognized the trend, after all, it wasn’t too dissimilar to how things had felt during the Dominion War when it had become harder and harder to believe that victory was possible. Perhaps, if things had panned out differently, his own galaxy would have started to resemble this broken place much more than it did.

They completed their approach on Arkaria without incident, dropping back into normal space just where Leva had planned, but forcing him to use all his piloting skills to navigate the dense asteroid field which made up the outer boundary of the system. Michael kept an eye on sensors while Leva successfully steered them out of the Oort Cloud for a high impulse jump towards one of the uninhabited and frozen outer planets in the system in order to slingshot around it and in the direction of their next waypoint.

Michael heard the sensor alert before Leva could report it. “We’ve got an incoming vessel, heading two-three-one point four-six,” the tactical officer said as his fingers marched across his console.

He checked his instruments to confirm. Sure enough, somebody was heading their way. Judging by its course, it wasn’t making a beeline for them, so the chances were good that they had not yet been detected.

Leva quickly crushed those hopes. “We’re being scanned.”

“Can you identify the vessel?”

Moments later the tactical officer brought up the sensor details on the computer screen positioned in the console between them. Michael could feel a cold shudder shoot up his spine when he instantly recognized the familiar shape of the ship displayed in wireframe. For all their preparation, it now appeared, his worst fears were coming true after all.

“Definitely Nebula-class,” Leva said as he kept studying the sensor data. “She’s changed course to intercept. Wait … I’m getting a transponder signal. Registry reads as NCC-72015.”

Michael shot his pilot an astonished look. The good news was that this wasn’t Eagle. It took him a moment to remember which ship owned that particular number.

Leva spelled it out for him. “It’s the Sutherland. Shall I plot an evasive course?”

He shook his head. “No, there is no way we’d outrun her in a shuttle. And with a civil war raging in the Federation, we’d only draw more attention to us.”

Leva nodded slowly. “She’s hailing us.”

Michael uttered a heavy sigh. “So much for the stealthy approach,” he said and tugged at the bottom of his old-style uniform tunic. He knew very well who commanded the Sutherland in his universe and hardly any encounter with her captain had ever gone particularly well. He very much hoped their relationship was of a different nature in this reality, or better yet, she was commanded by a far-less—in his opinion at least—notorious commander. “Put it through.”

Once again, his prayers were not answered when the face of an attractive, blond-haired woman appeared on the computer screen. She wore her curly locks high with bangs covering her forehead and she was dressed in the same command-red uniform he currently wore. “Michael Owens,” she said and it sounded almost like a curse. “Not exactly somebody I expected to run in all the way out here at the ass-end of the galaxy.”

It seemed obvious that whatever animosity existed between him and Shelby extended to this reality as well. He hoped that they were fighting on the same side in this civil war since they were clearly outgunned. “Captain,” he said in a clipped tone. “What can I do for you?”

She considered him suspiciously. “What is that new thing you’re trying? Tact? Don’t think it suits you much.”

Michael wasn’t sure if he should feel offended. He’d always considered himself a rather diplomatic person, even when dealing with individuals he didn’t always agree with, a category that Shelby—at least the one he knew—definitely fell into. Clearly, the Michael Owens of this universe did not share this trait with him. “We’re allies, aren’t we? Let’s just keep this civil and then get out of each other’s way,” he said, adding a little bit more fire to his tone, hoping that it would make him sound more like a person he’d never met but whom Shelby was apparently expecting.

It worked and she visibly relaxed slightly, leaning back in her command chair. “I think you know exactly what’s going on here. And I for one am sick of playing these types of games.”

Michael racked his brain but for the life of him, he couldn’t tell what she was alluding to. He decided to play it somewhat honestly. “I have no idea what you’re talking about, Captain.”

Shelby smirked. “Like hell, you don’t. Last I heard your sole mission in life was to hunt down the woman responsible for killing your brother. God knows how you manage to get away with this kind of crap, putting your selfish quest for vengeance above the good of the Federation. Tell me, you got something on Admiral Leone, or are people still afraid your father will come back to life someday?”

Michael was momentarily stunned by this outburst. Hearing somebody talk so bluntly about such matters felt disconcerting, and his father coming back to life hit closer to home than Shelby could have ever imagined.

Shelby wasn’t done. “Imagine my surprise at seeing you being part of whatever the hell this little expedition to the middle of nowhere is all about. But considering your family history, I suppose I shouldn’t be. All this cloak-and-dagger stuff runs in your blood. Now, I want to know why half a fleet has been assembled in a remote system of no strategic value whatsoever when we could ensure we protect the borders of the core worlds and keep those damned Preservers in line?”

It turned out that Elizabeth Shelby knew how to push his buttons no matter the universe. He had never been able to stand people talking about his family, particularly when implying that he took after his father, no matter that she was obviously talking about a very different family. But then again, it felt so much like his own. “You know what your problem is, Elizabeth? You just can’t keep your nose out of things that do not concern you. You’re a Starfleet officer for Christ’s sake. Try behaving like one for a change. You get an order to travel to the ends of the galaxy, you should ask how fast, not why. I don’t have any answers to give you and even if I did, I don’t think you deserve them.”

The woman glared at him with murder in her eyes, reminding him for a moment of the look that this universe’s Amaya had given him the first time they had met. For a brief moment, he thought he may have pushed things too far especially considering his rather exposed position.

But then Shelby allowed herself a smirk. “You know, Captain, you remind me of a dog I once had. An unimpressive little creature that barked all day long to make up for its diminutive size. I think you know just as little as I do and it makes you mad. Good luck on your moronic quest for revenge. Remember to dig two graves. Shelby out.”

Michael let out a deep breath after the woman had disappeared from the screen. He turned to cast a glance at Leva who was staring right back at him.

Michael shrugged. “I suppose I got carried away a bit.”

Leva did not comment further and instead reviewed the sensors. “The Sutherland is no longer heading our way. Judging by her course she appears to be patrolling the system.”

He nodded. “Let’s try to avoid running into her again. Next time could get ugly,” he said. “Uglier,” he added quietly.

Leva resumed the shuttle’s heading towards the nearest planet and once they were sure that the Sutherland was no longer monitoring their progress, they continued to head for the ninth planet, managing to avoid any further run-ins with other ships.

Traveling across a planetary system tended to be a quick affair thanks to faster-than-light engines and high-powered impulse drives, but their encounter with Sutherland notwithstanding, Michael opted to keep their clandestine approach that, if nothing else, was time-consuming but would also make doubly sure that Shelby would likely have had a difficult time finding the shuttle again. It took a few more uneventful hours until they emerged from the dark side of Arkaria IX’s largest moon to finally lay eyes on their destination.

The small, unremarkable planet looked very much like he remembered it from his universe. Passive scans had already revealed that there were currently no starships in orbit or in close proximity. They had also located a well-hidden underground structure exactly where it had existed in their reality and one which would have been near impossible to discover unless somebody knew where to look.

Leva entered the planet’s thin atmosphere from the opposite hemisphere to where the base was located, it would add some more time to their approach but it would also increase their chances of remaining undiscovered.

After yet another hour of high supersonic, low altitude flight across the mostly barren and unpopulated surface of the Arkaria IX, they eventually entered transporter range and Leva landed the shuttle in the crevice of a canyon before joining him and the others.

“To reiterate, our mission has three elements,” said Michael to the Niners and Leva who were checking over their admittedly limited gear. “Locate Admiral Owens, Jarik, and the Prism artifact, retrieve all three, and return to Eagle without raising any alarms. We may not be able to remain completely undetected but hopefully, we will pass an eye test,” he said as he considered the four others, all of which looked mostly inconspicuous in their regulation uniforms. Sensy, the burly Niners team leader had even trimmed his usually thick red beard to appear more like what was expected of a Starfleet officer.

“Do we have a priority target?” One-Shot, the team’s weapon’s expert asked while he once more went over his handheld, type-II phaser, no doubt silently bemoaning the limited range of armaments available to him on this mission.

Michael hated the question but understood its necessity. He didn’t want to make anyone more important than anyone else during a rescue mission, but he also understood that to fulfill their wider mission, which very well may have included the fate of an entire universe, some elements were simply more crucial than others. “We need the Prism. And my father is the only person we know who can operate it,” he said and left it at that. The silent nods he received in response made it clear that the message had been well understood.

“When retrieving packages and personnel, it tends to be easier to start with personnel which in turn may be able to give us indications as to where to find the packages. I suggest we start by locating Admiral Owens,” Sensy said.

This made sense to Michael and he nodded. He tried not to let the fact that he desperately wanted to get his father back influence his decision. “Let’s make it so. Considering his poor health when he was taken, a sickbay or infirmary might be the best place to start.”

“That just leaves us with how to infiltrate the facility undetected. Approaching it via shuttle is bound to get us noticed and we won’t be able to just beam inside,” said Violet.

This put a small smirk on Leva’s usually serious features. “Actually, beaming in just might work.”

Michael and the others shot the tactical officer quizzical looks.

“I ran a passive scan of the base and I was able to recognize their shield configuration. They are utilizing a triple rotating shield sequence at a frequency of two five seven point four. That’s the same frequency most Starfleet shields operated on maybe a decade ago in our universe.”

“What does that mean?” One-Shot asked.

That smirk widened slightly. “There is a known vulnerability to that frequency we can exploit. Not only can we beam into the base through the shield by reconfiguring our transporter beam to the same rotation, we can make it appear like nothing more than a minor shield fluctuation when we do. Something that is not bound to get noticed.”

“I knew there was a reason I brought you along,” Michael said, now mirroring the half-Romulan’s smile.

Leva quickly went to work in reconfiguring the transporter and after having located a lightly frequented part of the underground structure with passive scanners, they beamed into what turned out to be some sort of storage facility.
 
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“So far so good,” said Michael after all five of them had rematerialized and no audible alarms had been triggered.

Leva quickly reached for his tricorder clipped to his waist. He was the only member of the away team equipped with a tricorder, one which Star had cleverly disguised as a medical scanner to go with his cover. “We might be in luck,” he said after reading the small screen of the device. “It looks like we arrived during the night shift. I’m reading very light foot traffic in the facility.”

“Anything that looks like a medical bay?” Michael asked.

He nodded. “There is a small facility less than two hundred meters to the east of our position which has a layout consistent with an infirmary.”

“That’s our first target,” Michael said and indicated for the Niners to take point, a task which Sensydelegated to Violet, the Boslic woman on his team.

She carefully opened the door of the storage room by just a few centimeters to check their surroundings. After a moment she nodded to the rest of the team and opened the panels normally, allowing them to slip into the corridor outside.

Michael was once more struck how similar this structure appeared to what he had found in their universe. The corridor was wide, with slightly outward-curved walls and high ceilings, clearly of non-Federation design, most likely even predating Starfleet. The corridor was empty as they set out with Violet taking the lead.

He admired how confident she and the rest of the Niners looked as they moved down the corridor. The last time he had been on a mission with the operatives it had been into a subspace domain and while just traversing that environment had been a huge physical effort, everything about their demeanor was different now. Instead of slinking through the hallways ready to pounce an enemy at any moment, Sensy and his team looked relaxed and untroubled, as if they belonged here and were intimately familiar with their surroundings. It was exactly how infiltrators were to act, of course, and yet for Michael, it wasn’t nearly as easy to fall into such a composed stance. He did his best to imitate them.

Whatever he did was good enough to fool the couple of Starfleet officers they encountered on the way to their first target. Fortunately, there seemed to be enough people stationed on the base that not everybody apparently knew everyone else by sight, and the people they encountered passed with just brief and disinterested nods.

It didn’t take them long to get to what Leva had identified as a possible sickbay but instead of turning at the right junction to head for it, Violet simply continued straight on, passing by the corridor that led to the entrance. This allowed Michael to catch a quick glimpse of a set of doors guarded by two armed security officers.

Violet stopped once they were out of view of the guards and after checking their surroundings, the team quickly huddled up.

“I think the human term is jackpot,” said the Boslic.

Leva agreed. “There’s definitely something in there they want to keep from getting out. Possibly a prisoner.”

Sensy took stock of the corridor they were in for a moment. “From what I’ve seen so far, the design of these hallways is fairly symmetrical. I believe we should be able to double back by continuing down this corridor and approach from the opposite side.”

Michael nodded. “Do you have a plan to get us inside?”

The team leader considered that for a brief second. “Boot and substitute,” he said and looked at his people.

“Like Merian IV?” One-Shot said with a smirk.

“Exactly like Merian IV.”

“That should work if we’re quick,” Violet said.

Michael shot Sensy a quizzical look which he promptly responded to. “We knock them out and take their place. We won’t have much time to do what we need to do inside but it’s the quickest way to get passed them.”

“Let’s do it.”

“Two teams,” he said to his two operatives. “Follow our lead,” he added to Michael and Leva.

Sensy and Violet quickly continued down the corridor and then made a turn at another junction ahead while One-Shot stayed behind. He waited about a minute, presumably to allow the others to get in position on the other end, and then asked Michael and the tactical officer to follow him back towards the guarded entrance.

“We’re just going to have a quiet conversation as we walk by the guards,” said the Niner as they turned into the corridor with the entrance.

“That’s it?” Michael asked.

“That’s it,” he said and then continued, talking but saying nothing of consequence and allowing him and Leva to respond with simple answers.

Michael could see that Sensy and Violet were already coming down the corridor from the opposite end, similarly engaged in quiet conversation. He wasn’t entirely sure how they had managed it but at their present pace, they would all meet pretty much exactly in front of the two guards.

The guards were briefly distracted by their approach but then, as they were all coming together, and space was becoming more limited even in the wide corridor, One-Shot collided gently against Violet in what looked very much like an accidental run-in.

What happened next took place so quickly, it seemed very much like a blur. Before One-Shot had even completed his faux apology to Violet for getting in her way, he had jumped the guard on the left while Sensy was on top of his colleague on the right. The startled guards didn’t even know what hit them and within moments both their bodies had gone limp.

Violet had already located another empty side room into which the two unconscious guards were deposited quickly. No ten seconds after they had first approached, One-Shot and Violet now stood by those doors, looking not one bit out of place and Sensy slipped in between them and inside the room with Michael and Leva following quickly.

There was another guard inside which Sensy greeted quickly as if they were best friends. The man had no chance to even have time to show his bewilderment of meeting this perfect stranger, since the Niner had already struck him so hard in his throat he reached for his neck to gasp for air.

Sensy grabbed the incapacitated guard and dragged him away from the door.

Michael’s concern about the guard surviving the brutal assault was immediately interrupted by a woman stepping out from behind a partition. “What’s going on here?” she asked

Michael glanced towards Sensy with concern that she may have seen him dragging away the unconscious guard but apparently, he had been quick enough, if anything, the woman may have caught a glimpse of the poor man’s boots before he had pulled him around a corner and out of her line of sight and even then only if she had looked at the floor which thankfully she had not.

Michael quickly realized that Leva had not only steered them right—since they seemed to have walked right into a sickbay filled with biobeds—but that they had indeed struck gold as one of those beds was occupied by his father, apparently unconscious.

The young woman who was now walking towards them was short, compact with brown hair cut into a bob. She wore a blue medical uniform and according to her rank insignia, she was an ensign. “Where did Schmitt go?”

“Schmitt had to step out for a minute,” Michael said quickly and then headed towards the woman to keep her from coming their way and try to go find the downed guard.

“Without telling me first?” she said, sounding suspicious but slowed down as Michael and Leva closed in.

He decided to refocus the conversation. “You have a patient here we need to talk to.”

She shook her head. “I’ve already told the Director that he is no condition to talk. Not yet. I’m still not entirely sure what is wrong with him,” she said as she glanced over to where Jon Owens was lying on the biobed. “I’ve never seen readings like that before.”

Michael had the impression that this woman wasn’t a doctor. Or if she was, she seemed very young to be one. Perhaps this spoke to the desperate straits these Guardians found themselves in and their lack of resources and personnel. He ignored the ensign and walked up to the bed with his father.

“I don’t think you are authorized to be here,” she said and followed him. “Who are you, I don’t think I’ve seen you around here.”

Realizing that she could become a problem, he turned back around. “Captain Owens,” he said, stressing his rank as he skewered her with a dark look. “Ensign?”

“Issara Taiee,” she said but refused to be intimidated by Michael’s hard stare. “And the Director has made it very clear that I am in charge of all medical matters on this base. And quite frankly I do not appreciate you just waltzing in here in the middle of the night like you own the place.”

Michael’s visage softened as he tried a different approach. “You are right, of course, I apologize, Doctor.”

“Nurse, actually,” she said, defiantly crossing her arms in front of her chest.

“Yes. You see, the Director thought it would make sense to get you some help with treating this patient. This is Doctor T’Lev,” Michael said and indicated towards the half-Romulan who he hoped looked sufficiently like a Vulcan to Taiee. He specializes in these kinds of cases.”

Leva raised an eyebrow in such Vulcan fashion, it would have fooled Michael had he not known better. He guessed that part of his reaction was stemming from genuine surprise. He took on his new role quickly enough and adopted a very stiff looking posture which would have made Xylion proud.

“I am not aware of any doctors on this base,” she said, her suspicions once again raised.

“I serve with Captain Owens on his vessel,” Leva said, keeping his voice perfectly neutral.

Taiee was still not satisfied. “I like to think that I know our medical community quite well and I’ve never come across your name before,” she said.

Michael felt that this was dragging on for too long and he gently motioned with his head towards Taiee’sneck while giving Leva an insistent look which he responded to with a blank one of his own.

She apparently noticed the glances being exchanged and caught Michael moving his head. “Something wrong with your neck?”

Michael grabbed it quickly. “Just sore from working long hours. You know how that goes,” he said, actually being quite truthful for once.

“Tell me about it,” she said, nodding in agreement. “I’ve been told there used to be a time when Starfleet could afford having actually well-staffed sickbays. Before my days, I suppose.”

As she turned back towards her patient, the famous Vulcan neck pinch did finally find Taiee’s nape and she quickly and silently fell unconscious. It had not, however, come from Leva but instead from Sensy who had snuck behind the unguarded nurse, having come out of seemingly nowhere, and then caught her as she sagged to the ground before picking up her limp body.

“That’s a useful move,” said Leva as he watched him depositing her on top of an empty biobed. “You’ll need to teach me that at some point.”

“It’s all in the fingers,” he said as finished with the nurse.

Leva noticed Michael displeased glower and shrugged. “Just because I’m pretending to be a Vulcan doesn’t mean I know all their tricks.”

Michael decided that to be a fair enough point and quickly approached his father’s bed. He looked pale and weak, worse even than what he had looked back on Eagle. According to his bio readings, he was alive but his vital signs weren’t encouraging. “We need to get him out of here now.”

“That might not be that easy,” said Leva. “We can’t beam back to the shuttle from this location and carrying an unconscious man through the base will not go unnoticed.”

Before Michael could consider their next move, he heard the doors to the sickbay hiss open behind him. He turned around, forcing himself not to reach for the phaser on his hip to maintain his cover.

“Michael?”

It was Jarik

“What are you doing here?” he said as he slowly stepped away from the door. A moment later Violet followed him inside and when the half-Vulcan looked back he seemed to realize for the first time that this particular guard did not belong there either. He looked back at Michael and nodded with a grin. “I should have known. This is a rescue mission, isn’t it?”

“Very astute,” he said sharply. Jarik had been a close friend of his back at the Academy but it had become very clear to him over the last few days that the Academy had been a long time ago. He had come here to save his father, bring back the Prism, and find Jarik. In that order. And in truth, he doubted if he would have lost too much sleep if the latter had not worked out. “Mind telling me what the hell happened?”

“Tazla Star happened,” he said and approached slowly. “The one from this universe. I have to admit I did not know her all that well in ours but her counterpart here is a positively vicious individual. I didn’t feel like arguing with her after she shoved a phaser into my face hard enough to leave an impression. She wanted the Prism.”

“And you showed her where to find it?” he said sharply.

“I didn’t have much of a choice in the matter.”

“How did she even know about it?”

“I have no idea. We didn’t exactly share a deep conversation after she took us and then brought us here.”

“Where is she now?”
He shook his head. “I haven’t seen her since we arrived.”

“How about the Prism? Do you know where it is?”

“I think so. I saw them place it into a separate room.”

“Take us to it,” Michael said and then indicated towards Leva and Violet. “Bring my father.”

Jarik took another step forward. “I don’t think that’s a good idea.”

He could tell that Leva and Sensy seemed to agree with him on that point but Michael was adamant. He wouldn’t lose him yet again. “We’re taking him with us, get the Prism, and then get out of here.”

There were no further objections and Leva and the Boslic operative managed to pick up Jon Owens and carry him carefully between them.

Jarik hesitated for a moment, looking at the scene with a large frown plastered on his dark face before he ultimately relented and lead them out of sickbay.

“We don’t have much time,” he said once they were outside. “It won’t be long until my guards will find out that I managed to slip away. According to them, there is no place I can go but then again they were not expecting a rescue mission.”

“What exactly does Star want with you and the device? What does she know about it?” Michael asked as he followed him down the corridor.

“As I said, she didn’t share her plans with me,” he said and made a left. “The room where I believe they placed the Prism is just ahead.”

Jarik was right and it didn’t take them long at all to reach a set of larger doors. Michael thought it was a particular stroke of luck that they had not run into any more base personnel who could have witnessed them lugging his unconscious father along with them.

“No guards?” Sensy observed.

But Jarik had already walked into the room. “I’m sure the Prism is in here.”

And in fact, Michael could feel the distinct energy it possessed already, doubtlessly all of them could. It was a sensation that was difficult to forget, resonating deep inside his bones, like the power of the sun contained inside a device smaller than the size of his palm. It was as if it called out to him.

The room was dark, too dark, Michael realized, for Jarik or anybody to find anything inside of it. “Jarik?” he said once he had lost sight of the man.

The powerful sensation emanating from the Prism remained but something else began to grow within Michael, something that made him reach for his phaser.

“Something is very wrong,” said One-Shot.

“Let’s get out of here,” Michael said without further hesitation.

The lights came up so suddenly and were so bright, they blinded him instantly. Once his eyes had finally adjusted, he realized what he had already started to intuit moments earlier.

They were surrounded by a dozen armed men and women all of which had their phaser rifles pointed at him and his team.

“Captain Michael Owens, I presume,” the voice said and it took him a moment to find who had said them. It hadn’t been one of the armed officers. Another man slowly stepped into the circle, Jarik at his side. He was of average height, bulky but not overly so, his head entirely bald and lacking any kind of hair, his features sickly inviting as he radiated with congeniality that felt blatantly misplaced. The Deltan’s smile was wide enough to show off his pearly white teeth. “Although not quite the same Michael Owens I know and cherish. Welcome to my humble home, Captain. Welcome to my universe.”
 
Oh, crap! Don't you know you're walking into a trap by now, Owens? In different universes, trust no one. Except for Roylans and Caitians.
 
Is that the same Taiee I’m thinking of?

Man, Michael stepped right into that one, didn’t he? None of this is going well. I think the problem is that despite Michael’s war experience, he’s no match for these people when it comes to underhanded, backstabbing cloak and dagger maneuvers. Folks in this universe would sell out their own mothers if it served their needs. He’s going to have to step up his game to survive and complete his mission.

Can’t wait to see how he turns this around!
 
14


Although it had felt as if he had been hours, Lif had only lost consciousness for a few seconds. The lights around him were flickering wildly and he could smell the acrid fumes of burned plastics, flesh, and blood. Thick smoke was making it difficult to see more than a few meters.

“What hit us?” he could hear his voice ask. He couldn’t see his counterpart through the smoke but he could hear him coughing. “What was that?”

Tenn responded from somewhere at the back of the bridge. “From what I can tell, some sort of high powered, planet-based plasma weapon. The Razor’s Edge has taken heavy damage. Our damage report is still being compiled.”

“That’s impossible. They shouldn’t be having any planet-based weapons,” Culsten responded.

Lif felt a strong hand reaching out for him and pulling him back onto his feet. “Are you all right?” Garla asked.

He nodded at her when he finally recognized her face, slightly bruised but otherwise unharmed.

He felt a stinging pain in his shoulder. “May have dislocated something but I think I’ll live.”

Garla nodded and then quickly darted away. At first, he wasn’t sure where she was going until the smoke was beginning to dissipate thanks to atmospheric filters and he managed to see the destruction that had been caused on the bridge. Many of the computer banks had blown out and their screens had shattered. Very few of the officers who had manned them were still at their stations.

He spotted the lupine officer who lay still on her back, a large metallic fragment lodged deep into her skull. The younger officer was kneeling next to her, his face wet from tears and his own blood as he tried desperately to revive her.

Garla found a still working control station. “We’ve lost main propulsion and shields and we are drifting,” she said after looking over the ship status, apparently finding the controls not at all so different from what she was used to. “I’m also detecting another energy build-up on the planet.”

Lif turned back towards the front of the bridge where he could see Sentinel Culsten crawl back in his chair. He watched on his screens as another energy blast was being flung through space and into their direction. Considering how much damage the first strike had done, he doubted very much that they could survive a second hit.

Spirit of Flame has been hit,” Tenn said from the back. “She has taken heavy damage.”

Lif forced himself not to feel relief that it hadn’t been them. No doubt the other ship had suffered casualties as well.

“We have to get out of here now,” Tenn said. “We are a sitting target.”

“Main propulsion is offline,” said Garla as her fingers raced over the consoles of the computer stations. “But I might be able to transfer some power from the primary weapons platform to give us a sub-light pulse that should get us out of the system.”

“No,” Culsten said, his chair now turned to face the back of the bridge. “We have to finish off that array.” He urgently began to enter commands into his console. “New assault patterns: Sentinel-Nine-Five. Get us into weapon’s range of that planet and give me a targeting solution on that weapon.”

Tenn hesitated for a moment longer but then bowed to his commander’s orders and returned to his station even if most of his officers were already injured or incapacitated.

Lif could see through the forward windows that the other two ships slowly turned toward the planet. Too slowly, he thought, more like limping animals rather than predators out for the hunt. One of the ships, he wasn’t sure of her name, was quite noticeably venting large amounts of drive plasma from her starboard engine nacelle.

“Sensors are having difficulties to pinpoint the weapon’s exact location,” Tenn said, his voice strained.

“Then we just have to turn that entire blasted planet into glass,” Culsten shot back, his eyes staring at the object of his ire with furious intensity.

“The weapon is firing again,” said Garla who apparently had her eyes on sensors now as well.

Culsten nodded as she stood from his chair. “Evasive. And pinpoint the origin of that beam,” he said as he turned around to look towards the control stations behind him. “Let’s zero in on that weapon and take it out of commission for—“

But even as he spoke, Lif could see the energy beam blasting up from the planet and towards them, and whatever evasive actions were being taken, it was clear it wasn’t going to be enough.

He had just enough time to brace himself for what he knew was going to be inevitable.

The impact shook the Yellow Rose with enough force to rip everyone to the deck, once again filling the command center from thick, acrid smoke from the chain reaction of computer stations that exploded in a spectacular shower of sparks.

Lif had seen Garla go down when the console she had been working on had erupted and he rushed to where she had landed the moment the deck had stopped moving beneath him.

There was blood trickling from the corner of her mouth and he feared the worse. She was barely conscious and yet managed to look up at him as he hovered above her. “Transfer energy to the engines. Get us out of here now,” she said, struggling to keep her tone firm.

He nodded quickly and stood, his crisis management training, which was mandatory for Starfleet bridge officers, quickly asserted itself. One of its tenets was to get a starship out of danger first before seeing to those who had been injured, even if they required critical care.

As he desperately searched for a computer console still operational, he spotted Tenn emerge through the smoke, a nasty wound on his forehead blooming with bronze-colored blood.

“We have no defense against that plasma weapon. We must withdraw if we are still able,” the justicar said.

Lif could just about make out the shape of the sentinel at the front of the bridge, shaking his head. “They shouldn’t even have that weapon,” he insisted angrily.

“That doesn’t change the fact that they do and that it is killing us,” the Kridrip said, clearly not afraid to stand up to the sentinel.

Lif had finally found a working station and tried hard to remember how to make it work. It had been a long time since he had operated a Krellonian starship and even then, those had been mere shuttles. This was far more complicated.

“I’m instructing the fleet to withdraw,” said Tenn, apparently having grown tired of waiting for orders from his commander. “Can you get our engines to work?” he asked Lif when he realized what he was up to.

He nodded as his fingers flew over the controls, entering new commands while shutting down error messages brought on by his input errors and failing starship systems at an equally rapid pace. He felt he was getting a handle on things. “I’ve managed to transfer energy from weapons to engines to initiate the impulse burst pulse,” he said. “I think.”

He looked back to the front of the bridge, mindful that he hadn’t been given any order yet by the captain of the ship.

But his counterpart seemed to be just staring out of the forward viewport.

“By the Infallible Creator, this shouldn’t have happened,” he mumbled angrily.

“Do it, activate the engines. The other ships are already on escape vectors,” Tenn said as he gave Lif a sharp nod.

He pressed down hard on the panels. “Engaging,” Lif said and then immediately had to hold on tight to the console as the ship lurched forward and away from the planet and its deadly plasma weapon. It wasn’t the smoothest ride he had ever experienced on a starship, but given the circumstances, Lif was thankful the ship responded to his commands at all.

Once he was certain that they’d be able to escape the system without taking another hit, his eyes returned towards his counterpart, seemingly steaming in his chair and refusing to make eye contact with anyone left alive on the bridge.

Once again, Lif’s hopes that perhaps he could have been a better or maybe a wiser man in another universe felt frustratingly unfulfilled.
 
15


“We don’t have to be enemies, Captain,” the Deltan said, wearing what could only be described as one of the most amiable smiles Michael had ever seen, one that nearly made him forget that he was surrounded by a dozen or so men who had their rifles pointed at him and his team. Instead of a uniform, he wore an elegant and smartly tailored two-piece suit that matched the dark blue of his intense eyes.

“That is an interesting thing for you to say,” he responded, keeping his phaser raised even in the face of the overwhelming opposition they were up against. “Considering that you had my ship boarded and abducted two of my people,” he said and then looked around, trying to find the doppelganger Tazla Star who according to reports had been the front person in the raid on Eagle. But the Trill woman was not among those surrounding them now.

“Michael, listen to him. He is right. Altee is after the same things we are and together we’ll be able to help each other,” Jarik said while he remained next to the Deltan.

Michael shot the man he had once called a friend a poisonous glare. “You set us up. After all the things you’ve done, I don’t even know why I should be surprised. What exactly is he offering you?”
Jarik shook his head. “I just listened to what he had to say and it made a great amount of sense. You should too. We need allies if we want to try and get back to our universe.”

“We may have been able to get back just fine,” said Leva, “if they hadn’t taken the artifact and Admiral Owens.”

“From what I’ve been told, you had a very close run-in with the Krellonians. And let me tell you, the Star Alliance in this universe is far more powerful and dangerous than what you are used to,” Altee said.

“Your little stunt didn’t exactly help matters,” Michael said and then exchanged a brief glance with Sensabaugh who, along with his two operatives, still had his weapon up as well. His body was visibly tense and ready for action but the look in his eye seemed to make clear that he was not overly optimistic that a forced confrontation now could be turned into an advantage.

Michael didn’t have the tactical chops of the Niners team leader or even those of So’Dan Leva, but then he didn’t need to be a military genius to figure out that being surrounded by a dozen or so armed men, deep inside a hostile base, meant that the deck was decisively stacked against them. It didn’t help that his father by his side, who was coughing intermittently, was still weak from his affliction, was in fact barely able to stand on his own and would not only be useless in a fight but also likely be its first casualty.

Altee seemed to know exactly what Michael was thinking and took a few small steps forward, immediately causing Sensy to track him with his rifle. But the Deltan made no aggressive movements whatsoever, even raised his hands slightly to demonstrate his peaceful intentions.

Of course, his security detachment made no such overtures. “Listen, I think it is clear that we are at a bit of an impasse here. Sure, we could start shooting at each other, and you might even be able to take out a few of us, but ultimately, I’m afraid to say, you wouldn’t get far,” he said and indicated towards his ailing father. “The admiral will be among the first to go down and in his condition, that might even be fatal. So then why not put down your weapons and talk. I’ll make sure that your father gets the medical care he needs. After all, that’s what we were doing for him before you decided to liberate him from the infirmary. Let us find a way to work together to get you back home.”

“Michael,” his father whispered beside him. “You cannot trust him.”

He didn’t need to be told this. Although Altee was doing an immensely great job at the attempt, he was certain that the man had another agenda. None of this changed the fact that he didn’t really have another option. “All right, so what do you propose?” he said, but kept his phaser up for now.

Altee nodded. “We both know the Ring structure is dangerous. Far too dangerous to be left alone and unguarded, particularly with the Krellonians in the area who are likely already curious about it after your sudden arrival. And there are other powers in this universe who would go to any lengths to secure it for themselves.”

“You want to take control of it instead, is that it?”
“Captain, whatever you may think of me and this universe, I’m still a Starfleet officer. I like to believe that that counts for something. I want what you want. I want this universe to be safe and free of the strife and war that has ravaged it for so long. I believe you can help me do that and I, in turn, can help you get back home.”

The words all sounded right, as did the tone in his voice but Michael couldn’t ignore the nagging notion that the situation was still all kinds of wrong.

“Here’s what I’m offering,” Altee continued. “You and your officer may consider yourselves our guests for the time being, not prisoners. You’ll be allowed to move freely as is Jarik here until we have discussed how we can best help each other.”

“What about the rest of my team?”

“I understand your operatives are quite resourceful. So at least for now, I will have to insist that we keep them detained. But only until we have concluded our discussions and then you are all free to go. Your father, of course, will continue to receive medical care.”

“Think it through, Michael. It’s a much better deal than to start shooting at each other,” Jarik said.

He could see his father slowly shaking his head beside him but it was his concern for his well-being that ultimately made him choose his course of action. He nodded and lowered his weapon, and a moment later so did the rest of the away team.

“Thank you, Captain. I’ll make sure you don’t regret the trust you’ve shown me today. I suspect the two of us have much to talk about,” he said but before he could continue, an assistant—who had apparently been waiting out the stand-off between Michael and Altee’s men—quickly approached the Deltan and began to whisper something in his ear.

Whatever the news, it was clearly not positive, since Michael could see Altee’s visage slipping slightly for the first time, his carefully maintained smile and affable demeanor briefly replaced by a frown wrinkling his perfectly smooth forehead.

He exchanged a glance with the messenger and for just a heartbeat his eyes looked cold as stone. To his credit, he caught himself again quickly and the glower disappeared once more as he offered the young man a nod instead.

Then he glanced back towards Michael. “I apologize, Captain, but some urgent business has come up that will require my attention. But I am a man of my word. While we’ll have to confiscate your weapons and equipment for the time being—for safety reasons—I’d like you to consider yourself my honored guest. My men will show you to temporary quarters and I’m looking forward to speaking to you just as soon as circumstances allow,” he said and then indicated to his men who quickly moved in on the surrounded away team, not just taking weapons and tricorders, but also removing their combadges.

Michael offered no resistance and made sure the rest of his team fell in line as well. For now, he had made his choice, for better or worse.

His father, at his side, was trying to speak up but his words were lost in a coughing fit and Michael had to steady him to keep him upright once it looked as if he was about to lose his balance.

Altee looked concerned. “Removing Jon from the infirmary wasn’t a very good idea, I’m afraid. He is gravely ill and needs medical treatment. My men will escort him back there. And I’m afraid I will have to ask that your security detail is remanded to our holding cells, at least until you are ready to depart.”

Michael watched on quietly as Altee’s men followed his orders, escorting first his ailing father out of the room and then Sensy and his men. He exchanged a brief look with the Niners team leader as he was being led out of the room, making it clear that he was already thinking about potential next steps. In truth, he hoped the combat veteran had a few more plays in his bag of tricks since for the moment at least, he had nothing.

“Now, I really do have to excuse myself. I feel terrible about being such a poor host but I’m afraid I have little choice in the matter,” Altee said and then quickly found Jarik. “Why don’t you escort our guests to quarters while I tend to other matters?”

The half-Vulcan nodded briefly and then stepped forward while Altee urgently left the room with a small entourage. He did leave behind four armed security officers with Jarik and for a brief moment, Michael considered his odds to try and overpower them. But even with Leva’s help, he didn’t like their chances, not to mention that he no longer had any illusions which side Jarik would support if it came to a fight.

His former Academy friend offered him a small smile and then indicated towards the doors. “Shall we?”

Michael glowered at the man before he turned on his heel and headed for the exit, Leva right by his side and Jarik and the guards close behind.

Once outside Jarik led them down the corridor.

“I had not thought it possible that you could stoop any lower,” Michael said, turning his head slightly to make sure Jarik could hear him but avoided to make outright eye contact. “Are you so desperate to make alliances that you will sell us out to anyone we cross paths with?”

“Altee isn’t the enemy here, Michael.”

“Oh no? I suppose the assault he ordered on Eagle was a mission of mercy.”

“I admit that perhaps Star’s strategy was somewhat overzealous. This version of her is a rather intense individual. But I’m convinced that if there had been any other way, if we had not been surrounded by a fleet of Krellonian vessels, things would have gone very differently,” he continued while he walked behind him.

“And what exactly are you getting out of all this?” Michael wanted to know.

“My only interest is to secure the Ring and stop the subspace aliens from launching an invasion. Altee will be able to help us do that.”

He led Michael and Leva into a decently-sized double cabin that had been set up to serve as personal quarters, complete with chairs, tables, a couple of beds, and even some decorative although uninspired paintings and plants. At first blush, Michael could spot no replicator or any other form of technology inside. No matter how friendly those quarters looked, he recognized a jail cell when he saw one.

Jarik seemed to be able to read his mind. “Director Altee does not want you to feel like a prisoner. He has given you the same liberty and freedom of movement he has shown me, meaning you may move around freely throughout the facility. Within reason of course.”

Michael turned to regard his former Academy roommate again, studying him carefully as if he could determine the man’s true agenda just by the expression on his face. Although only half-Vulcan, Jarik’s mien was as carefully schooled as that of his full-blooded kinsmen. “Are you telling me that you are really trusting this man? So much so that you would give him your loyalty? You hardly even know him or his plans.”

“My loyalties aren’t in question.”

“Like hell they aren’t,” said Leva sharply which garnered him a brief glare from Jarik.

“You will see that all this is for the best,” he said. “I’ll return shortly with Altee and I’m certain you will understand once he explains what he has planned and why our cooperation is essential.”

With that Jarik left the room along with the guards. Michael was certain that the security detail remained just outside those doors.

“No offense, sir, but I cannot believe that man was ever your friend.”

Michael shook his head. “Neither can I,” he said as he began to take a closer look around the room, trying to find anything of use but quickly realizing that his first impression had been correct.

Leva was equally unsuccessful. “What are your orders?”

Michael uttered a heavy sigh as he considered his next move. “Something very odd is happening here. Something we haven’t figured out yet and I doubt Altee or any of his people are going to tell us exactly what that is.”

Leva nodded. “How do you suggest we find out?”

“For now, let’s take Altee up on his offer. Why don’t you test the limits of his supposed hospitality? Take a look around. See what you can find out. Don’t take any provocative actions just yet, there is no point in forcing another confrontation until we are ready.”

“Reconnaissance?”
Michael nodded.

“What will you do?”

Michael allowed himself a rare smirk. “Our Tazla Star has at least one thing in common with her counterpart of this universe. She is extremely resourceful, not to mention insistent,” he said and he tapped the side of his neck.

Leva seemed to understand, offered him a nod, and then left the room.

Michael remained behind and sought out the compact refresher of the cabin. If there were listening devices in these quarters—and there was no reason to assume there weren’t—the fresher may have been the one area that was not being surveilled.

He activated the sink unit and splashed his face with cold water before regarding himself in the mirror for a moment. The eyes that looked back at him seemed much more tired than he had expected and he realized that couldn’t remember the last time he had slept.

It was of little consequence, of course, he already knew that rest was not one of the things awaiting him in the near future.

He began to carefully probe the side of his neck with his fingers until he felt the tiny, subdermal transponder device Star had insisted he had implanted before he left the ship. Thankfully, Altee’s people had not carried out an intensive body scan and therefore had missed the device which was hard to detect, even with sensors.

The device was powerful for its size and meant to be able to allow discreet communications over long distances by using the shuttle’s comms array as a booster but Michael was not sure if it was going to be strong enough to contact Eagle within a shielded activity.

His concerns were unfounded and apparently Altee’s people had not yet disabled the shuttle nearby.

“Captain, are you all right?”

Star’s voice reverberated across his skin and came across weak and distorted as if she was speaking to him from across a long tunnel. It was good enough considering their situation.

“The mission didn’t work as planned. It appears Jarik has made some sort of deal with the man behind his abduction. We were able to locate my father and the Prism but Jarik sold us out before we could return.”

“Damn that man. I wish I had insisted we put him in the brig after that last episode,” Star said.

Michael saw himself nodding in the mirror. He’d had that exact same thought as well. “Too late for that now.”

“If we perform a warp jump we can reach your coordinates within less than twenty minutes, send down an assault team and bring you and the others back.”

It was a valid backup plan and one they had discussed before he had set out on this mission but it was not without its flaws. “There are ships loyal to the man in charge here throughout this system. Even if you could get here avoiding them, there is no chance you wouldn’t be detected and be surrounded within minutes. Let’s keep that option as a last resort. So far Altee seems to be more interested in discussing his plans with me and he has been surprisingly civil about it. As if he wants me to trust him. Jarik clearly does.”
There was a momentary pause on the line. “Sir, did you say Altee?”

“Yes, Director Altee, I believe. He is the man in charge here. It appears he also instructed your double to assault Eagle.”

“Sir, whatever you do, you cannot trust that man.”

“I assume you are familiar with him. Or maybe his version in our universe?”

“Unfortunately, yes. He’s the man who recruited me into Starfleet Intelligence and quite possibly the most ruthless and manipulative person I’ve ever met. If he is anything at all like the man I know, he will stop at nothing to achieve his agenda. He will be extremely dangerous.”

He could hear her concern in the tone of her voice, even over the weak comm. channel. Tazla Star had shared quite a bit about her former life with him over the years and he did recall her mentioning a rather scrupulous senior official under whom she had served and who had been more interested in resolving his personal grudges than serving the best interests of Starfleet and the Federation.

“Yeah, I didn’t get a good vibe from that man. Now, I know why.”

“Sir, I urge you to reconsider an immediate rescue mission.”

Michael shook his head even if she couldn’t see it. “Not yet. I’ll make contact again in exactly one hour from now. If you haven’t heard from me in an hour and a half, you can come in guns blazing. Until then, I’m going to see if I can try and find out what is really going on here. Owens out.”

He disconnected the line and Michael glanced back at the man in the mirror. He found it difficult to recognize those eyes as his own. With each passing day, he thought they began to resemble more and more those belonging to his father. He wasn’t sure what could possibly scare him more.
 
Running behind on my comments!
Nothing better on a Saturday morning than reading a new Eagle installment while I sip my coffee.

Altee is already shaping up to be a deadly villain. Not to mention a splendidly complex one! At least Michael and Star have an escape plan prepared. I'm happy to see this kind of foresight. In some stories, the main characters blunder into deadly encounters with no exit plan. But not this team, which makes sense given Star's resume and the presence of the Niners---all of whom are experienced tacticians.

What is certain is that Michael can't allow anyone from this AU to gain access to the ring structure or the Prism. And that includes the traitorous Jarik. (We've all been telling you he should have been escorted to the airlock a long time ago.)

Now where do they go from here? I hope to find out soon.
 
16


The Yellow Rose’s medical bay was packed with casualties from their recent and ill-fated encounter with the Nyberrite Alliance and Lif was forced to push himself passed dozens of wounded crewmembers who had not yet been allocated a bed or simply hadn’t been seen yet by the clearly overtaxed medical staff in order to find the person he had come down here looking for.

Garla was lucky enough to have been assigned a bed even if she apparently didn’t seem to appreciate the gesture, judging by the way she was arguing with a frustrated Krellonian nurse.

“In the long list of injures I have sustained over the years, this ranks as a flesh wound at best, so there is little need to keep me here any longer. I will be much more valuable in assisting with repairs than taking up space better put to use to treat those with actual injuries.”

Lif couldn’t help but smirk at hearing Garla’s vocal objections to her being remanded to the medical bay, her attitude immediately evoking those commonly found by people in authority roles he had come across over the years, be that starship captains or senior intelligence officials such as his aunt.

But the veteran nurse was not intimidated by her background, keeping his back to the unwilling patient as he reviewed a data padd presumably containing her medical chart. “Doctor’s orders, I’m afraid. You are to remain in the medical bay until you have been cleared by your attending physician.”

Garla just shook her head and then spotted Lif approach. “Perhaps you have better luck talking sense into these people,” she said but then quickly moved on to the next subject on her mind. “What’s our status?”

“We’re out of immediate danger,” he said but unable to keep himself from sadly shaking his head. “But we’ve taken serious damage and heavy casualties. Half the crew of Razor’s Edge has either been killed or injured and Spirit of Flame hasn’t fared much better.”

“That explains the crowded conditions,” she said, looking past her bed and the many wounded crewmembers still waiting for treatment. To the medical staff’s credit, most of those who had been seriously injured had already been seen to. “And more reason to let me get out of here quickly.”

“From what I’ve gathered there are no immediate plans for another assault on the planet. At present we are heading back towards Star Alliance territory to carry out repairs,” Lif said in hopes to convince Garla to look after herself first.

As expected, the plan didn’t quite work. “They’ll need all the help they can get after the beating they took.”

Lif noticed Tenn, the Kridrip Chief Justicar, emerge from the throng of patients around them. “Ah, there you are. The Sentinel has asked me to make sure that you are on your way to recovery and all your needs are being taken care of.”

“My current need is to get out of this place,” she said. “Unfortunately, your overbearing medical staff seems to have other ideas,” she added, shooting the nurse a dark look he barely even acknowledged.

“I’m certain they are simply ensuring your well-being,” Tenn said and then considered the nurse who quickly handed over the medical chart.

“Which is admirable but unnecessary considering my minor injuries,” she shot back. “As you can plainly see—“ Garla had to stop herself due to a sudden coughing fit.

Tenn raised a thin eyebrow as he glanced over the chart. “According to this, you suffered a collapsed tertiary lung and internal bleeding. These are hardly minor injuries.”

Garla tried to wave it off and Lif was convinced that she had likely suffered much worse in her long career as a sentinel where she clearly had made it a habit of leading from the front. And yet even with her hand raised, she seemed to be unable to stop from coughing.

The nurse finally showed pity on her and handed her a glass of water which Garla took eagerly.

“I’m afraid I will need to insist that you stay here and fully recover,” Tenn said as he watched her empty the glass. “It would be unthinkable that you should aggravate your injury because you were released prematurely.”

Garla was ready to protest again, most likely not appreciating being told what to do by a man who was nothing more than her assistant in her universe, not to mention an Outlander.

Lif spoke up before she had the chance. “I fully agree. In the meantime, I would be more than happy to assist with any repairs or any other needs you may have.”

Tenn nodded. “That would be greatly appreciated.”

Lif offered him a smile. “It’s settled then,” he said and shot Garla another look. It was clear she wasn’t nearly as happy with this arrangement but it was equally obvious that she was not going to win this argument.

A couple of minutes later Lif and Tenn had left the begrudged sentinel behind in the medical bay and headed down the corridor together.

“Where can I be most useful with repairs?” Lif asked the chief justicar walking at his side.

“We’ve taken serious damage to our main engines and the navigational array. I understand that your specialty is in piloting, so it seems to me that would be a good place for you to put your skills to use.”

Lif quickly nodded. “Glad to,” he said, and then after a moment. “I’m still astonished that we were so terribly blindsided by the Nyberrites. My counterpart—Sentinel Culsten—he appeared convinced that our intelligence was solid.”

When the other man didn’t respond to this, Lif cast a sidelong glance his way. “What do you think went wrong?”

Tenn seemed to consider that for a moment and then, apparently having made up his mind, beckoned Lif to follow him into an empty room just off the corridor they had been on. Tenn only spoke up again once the doors had closed behind them. “There is a good reason why he was so convinced of the validity of the intelligence.”

He offered the Kridrip a puzzled look.

“He is a sentinel.”

Lif suddenly understood. “It was his intelligence.”

Tenn nodded.

“And it was bad,” Lif said, now recalling his counterparts astonishment when the Nyberrites had opened fire with their devastating weapon, very nearly destroying his small fleet.

“And not for the first time.”

That caught Lif’s attention and he glanced back at the justicar. “What?”

He quickly shook his head, heading back towards the doors. “It’s not my place to speak of this.”

“Wait, are you saying that my counterpart is not a good sentinel?”

Tenn stopped and uttered a sigh. “He has great ambitions, that is a certainty. But he has run into difficulties with the Eye leadership on numerous occasions over the quality of the intelligence he has produced since he took over for Sentinel Garla. Some even suspect that he was somehow involved in the circumstances of her death.”

This caused Lif’s eyes to open wide with surprise. “You think he killed her,” he said. “I thought she was his mentor. That he looked up to her.”

“She was and they certainly were close when she was alive. But I know for a fact that Garla didn’t agree with his more aggressive aspirations and that they argued often about his vision to greatly expand Star Alliance influence beyond our current borders.”

“Enough to plot her death?”

Tenn took a few steps closer towards Lif, lowering his voice as he spoke again. “I am not saying that Sentinel Culsten was responsible for Garla’s death. In fact, the Eye of Krellon conducted a thorough investigation afterward and found no indication of foul play.”

Lif stared right back into Tenn’s eyes. “But what do you believe?”

He didn’t respond. Then he turned back towards the door. “I believe that we have wasted enough time discussing this subject and that there is much work for us to do to address urgently needed repairs.”

He watched as the justicar headed back out onto the corridor, waiting to see if perhaps he would turn back and elaborate further on the suspicions around his counterpart in this universe. Tenn never did but his refusal to address the question seemed answer enough.

Lif wasn’t sure what was worse, a version of him that had been outright hostile towards him and everything he stood for, or one that was cunning enough to scheme and plot his way to power, willing to do anything to achieve his goals.

A cold shudder ran up his spine before he eventually followed Tenn out of the room and towards whatever repairs awaited his attention.
 
Great. So now we find out AU Lif is an incompetent dumb ass. This doesn't help our Lif and Garla's chances for survival.
And while we're on the subject, poor our Lif. This dude keeps getting confronted with unpleasant versions of himself. It's almost as if he went bad in every universe in which he didn't join Starfleet. What is this doing to him psychologically? Or, as Dr. Seuss said at the end of Cat in the Hat, "Well, what would you do if it happened to you?"

I think we'd all be a mess. It will be fascinating to see how Lif overcomes this, or if he overcomes it at all.
You keep writing and we'll keep reading.
 
17


He couldn’t help but worry that he may have lost a step or two over the years. Once upon a time, he had prided himself on being one of the best security officers in the fleet, and certainly, his career had supported such bold claims after he had worked himself all the way up to the chief of security of Deep Space Two, one of Starfleet’s most prominent frontier outposts.

He’d always thought that he had done a decent job to ensure that his finely honed senses that had made him such a good security specialist were not getting dulled after he had decided to become Eagle’s chief tactical officer five years ago and had exchanged a role that had required him to be highly physically active at all times to one where he spent the majority of his time on the bridge or studying starship combat strategies.

He still started most days running laps around the ship’s saucer section along with his former protégé Nora Laas, and he took part in her rigorous training exercises on the holodeck. And not just the somewhat watered-down versions she ran for the senior staff and non-security personnel but the grueling and often back-breaking affairs designed to keep her and her team in perfect physical shape.

And yet, So’Dan Leva found it difficult not to blame himself for the way their latest mission had turned out. A mission where in Nora’s absence, he had filled the role of ensuring the away team’s safety, which instead of leading to the retrieval of the men they had sought out to liberate, they had found themselves prisoners as well.

One could have argued that with the presence of Sensabaugh and his special mission team operators, security had been primarily their responsibility but So’Dan had never been comfortable with shifting blame to others.

The truth was that he should have anticipated Jarik’s betrayal and taken steps to counter it instead of being led into what in hindsight had been an obvious trap.

There was no point in denying it, So’Dan thought. Spending years standing behind the tactical board on the bridge had likely made him a maven tactician and space combat specialist but at the cost of his once stellar instincts on which he had been able to rely on as a security officer.

He was determined to find a way to redeem himself and the best opportunity so far had been Altee’s willingness to allow him and the captain free movement within his underground facility.

His intuition wasn’t yet so far gone that he didn’t consider the offer as anything other than a ploy to get Captain Owens to trust Altee who clearly had his own agenda, and he was certain that although he could see no visible guards trailing him as he walked the corridors, his movements were more than likely being closely monitored. Regardless, it was still his best opportunity to try to find a way to free Sensabaugh and his people and escape with both Admiral Owens as well as the Prism. Jarik was on his wish list as well, not because his retrieval had been part of the original mission but rather so that the man could stand trial for his growing catalog of crimes committed against Eagle and her crew.

He quickly realized that this was going to be a tall order when it became apparent that most sections of the base had been sealed off or were heavily guarded, giving him access to just a handful of low-security areas like the small, mostly abandoned mess hall and the even less frequented rec room.

He was surprised, however, when he spotted Owens rounding a corridor and heading his way, escorted by a couple of security officers, considering that he had only just seen him in their quarters. “Captain?”

Owens gave him a short nod in acknowledgment but didn’t even slow down as he headed towards him.

So’Dan considered the two armed security officers with him. Last they had spoken, the captain had indicated that he was planning on making contact with Eagle using the hidden transmitter he wore under his skin. The fact that he was now under guard could mean that Altee and his people had discovered his clandestine communication attempt. “Is there a problem, sir?” he asked as Owens walked past him.

The captain stopped and turned to face him. “There is a big problem and if somebody doesn’t provide me with some answers soon, things will get much worse, trust me. Do you have answers for me?”

So’Dan was taken aback by the angry, almost aggressive tone in the captain’s voice, not something he was used to. “What answers are you looking for?”

Owens uttered a sharp laugh but there seemed no humor at its core. “The same answers I’ve been looking for over the last year. I’ve been led to believe that my mission is the worst hidden secret in the fleet. What rock did you crawl out from, Commander?”

It was only then that it hit So’Dan that this wasn’t his Captain Owens.

“I know that the man with the answers is hiding himself away on this particular rock. Where is he? Where is Director Altee?” Owens continued when Leva didn’t respond.

“Sir, if you’ll follow us, we’ll take you to the Director,” said one of the security officers who had been escorting him.

But Owens seemed suddenly more interested in So’Dan and he took a couple of steps closer to him just shy of invading his personal space. “There is something very peculiar about you, Commander. Something that doesn’t quite fit and I wonder why that is.”

Leva did his best Xylion imitation and raised an eyebrow in Vulcan fashion even as he squared his shoulders and clasped his hands behind his back.

“But I don’t have time for this,” he said and then quickly turned away again and continued to stride down the hall with his escort following him closely.

“There is something peculiar about you as well, I’d say,” So’Dan mumbled under his breath before he resolved to follow the angry Michael Owens doppelganger at a safe distance.

It turned out to be a good decision since Owens managed to run into Altee not long after and just outside the restricted area into which Leva would not have been able to follow them.

“Altee,” Owens barked as soon as he spotted the bald Deltan.

The man immediately responded with what appeared to be a large, good-natured smile on his face, very similar to the one he had sported when his armed men had threatened to cut down So’Dan and the away team a short time ago. “Ah, Captain Owens. What a pleasure. I’ve only just been informed that you’d arrived here. If I had been aware of your plans to visit us, I would have made more accommodating preparations,” he said and then discharged the security guards who had escorted Owens.

Owens shrugged off the comment with a grunt. “I can just imagine what those would have looked like,” he said as he approached the Deltan. “Considering you’ve made it near impossible to find this place.”

“And yet, here you are.”

“It might surprise you to know this, but I still have a few friends in the fleet, including within this task force you’ve assembled here in the middle of seemingly nowhere and for God knows what reason.”

“Perhaps we should talk more in my office,” Altee said and pointed towards the doors leading into a guarded area of the facility.

But Owens made no moves to follow him. “I know she’s here, Altee. And I want her head.”

“This obsession of yours is not healthy, Captain. Tazla Star is dead.”

Owens shot Altee a look so cold, it made So’Dan shudder which was not something he was prone to. For the briefest of moments, even the Deltan lost his carefully maintained composure, his seemingly inviting façade faltering for less than a second to reveal something akin to contempt. It was gone before Leva could have been sure of what he had seen from where he was spying on the two men.

“I just want it to be perfectly clear that if I ever find out that you’ve been hiding her from me all this time, I’ll make it my sole mission in life to destroy you, Altee. Just after I’ve destroyed her. I don’t care if it will be the last thing that I do.”

“There is no need to be so melodramatic, my dear Captain. If you are convinced that Star is still alive, I’m more than happy to assist you in locating her. How about this, you help me with my mission here and I will dedicate all my resources in assisting you with yours?” Altee said, sounding once more as magnanimous as always.

But Owens was not interested in a deal. “I don’t care what you’re up to out here and I certainly don’t want any part of it. All I want is her. In fact, I’m going to stay right here until I’ve found her. If you have a problem with that, take it up with Admiral Leone,” he said with a growing smirk. “She’s given me wide latitude in identifying traitors to the cause and Tazla Star is pretty high on that list. Besides, turns out she can’t stand you either. Guess that Deltan charm of yours only gets you so far,” he added as he momentarily seemed to relish his position of power over a man who technically outranked him before he turned sharply and walked away. “We’ll be delighted to host you as our guest, Captain,” Altee called after him even if Owens did nothing to acknowledge him.

Once Altee was alone again, he couldn’t quite keep a growing frown off his features, one that told So’Dan that this newest development was clearly a complication to whatever plans he had designed. Then he quickly turned back and disappeared into the restricted area just behind him.

So’Dan on the other hand immediately understood that this latest complication for Altee meant something much more important to him. It was their best opportunity to make a move.
 
I really enjoyed Leva’s introspection as he wrestled with guilt and frustration over his self described failure. He obviously takes his duties seriously. I hope he gets another chance to make amends with himself.

And now Michael’s angry doppelgänger has shown up. Man, this is going to be good!

Waiting for more .
 
18


“Light-duty? Who does he think he is? More importantly, who does he think I am?” Garla fumed at him, just minutes after Lif had returned to the quarters they shared on the Yellow Rose after a few long hours assisting with repairs to the ship’s main navigational guidance system which partly due to his efforts was back to near one-hundred percent, speeding up their return to the nearest repair base.

It was clear that Garla, who had eventually managed to get herself released from the medical bay, was not happy with the caveat his counterpart had insisted upon in exchange for her newly won freedom.

“I suppose he thinks that he is a sentinel in this universe and that you are not,” he said, sounding a bit more flippant than he had planned which immediately garnered him a rather displeased glare from his aunt.

“I don’t think I care for your tone, Mister.”

Lif offered an apologetic gesture. “Look, he’s worried about you and wants to ensure that you are fully healed up.”

She shook her head. “I am not some precious doll likely to crack if you drop it a few too many times. I am a sentinel and that doesn’t change just because we are in a different universe. It also means that I’m used to taking action and I certainly don’t need to be coddled. If my alter ego in this universe was anything like me, Sentinel Culsten should be well aware that this approach is not going to make me consider staying here more favorably.”

Lif sat down in one of the large chairs of their shared lounge, his earlier conversation with Tenn quickly returning to the forefront of his thoughts. He had been so distracted with working on the navigational systems over the last few hours, he had not given his words a great deal more thought since. “You are seriously considering his offer to stay in this universe?”

She took a step towards him. “How could I not? Consider what you’ve seen here. The Star Alliance in this universe is not just strong, it is healthier than ours has ever been. The more I think of it, and the more I see here, the more I believe you were right all along.”

“Right about what?”

“About doubting my designs of a stand-alone society. I was so convinced that we were too far gone as a people that unity between Krellonians and Outlanders was simply impossible. That there were too much pain and hurt and history between us that we could ever hope to come together. And perhaps, for our universe, that is still true. But here things are very different. Here Krellonians and Outlanders work hand-in-hand like equals. And the Star Alliance is a much stronger place for it.”

“So then let’s take these lessons back to our universe. Let’s find a way to fix our Star Alliance,” Lif said.

But Garla shook her head. “I’ve had plenty of time while I was sidelined in the medical bay over the last few hours to read up about the history of this Star Alliance. It is very different from ours. The conquests of the Outlanders never happened here. The alliance came together in a much more mutually beneficial way.”

“Like the Federation,” Lif said.

Clearly, Garla didn’t care for that analogy but it appeared difficult to deny the similarities and she nodded begrudgingly. “What matters is that there is hope here. More than that, opportunity. I can make a real difference in this universe.”

“But it isn’t yours, Garla. You died here.”

She turned away with obvious frustration. “So what? Who is to say who belongs where?” she said and faced him again. “We have been given the ability to step from one reality into another, why not take advantage of this?”

“I don’t know. It just feels wrong to me.”

Garla sat down in a chair next to him. “Why? Because your beloved Federation is falling apart in this reality? Nothing is ever perfect and you have to accept sacrifice if you ever hope to make a change. And you know what? I would exchange a broken and crumbling Federation in favor of a healthy and thriving Star Alliance any day of the week. And as a Krellonian, so should you. You can finally come back home, Lif.”

He looked her right in the eye. “You think Sentinel Culsten would like having a doppelganger around? I doubt his offer extended to me. And I’m not even sure if he’s entirely honest about wanting you here in the first place.”

To that, she offered him a puzzled look. “What do you mean?”

“I mean that there is a good chance that my alternate is unstable. You have seen the way he acted on the bridge during the assault. He practically froze up when things turned sideways.”

“It happens to the best of people.”

“Would it have happened to you?”

Garla didn’t voice her opinion. “He had disastrously bad intelligence that led to his people getting killed. That’s a hard lesson for anyone.”

“He is a sentinel. Intelligence is his business. And from what I hear, it was his intelligence that got his people killed,” he said and shook his head. “He is in over his head, Garla. Blinded by ambition and willing to stop at nothing to get what he wants. I’ve seen that type before.”

She stood from the chair. “We’ve been in this universe a few hours and you are telling me you have already figured him out?”

“He is me. A version of me at least. A much darker version.”

“I refuse to believe that. And I made a career out of reading people,” she said sternly.

“Well, your senses are wrong here, Sentinel. This man might very well be responsible for your alter ego’s death.”

“What?”

He nodded. “There is no evidence of this, of course, but rumors abound. They disagreed quite a bit over the direction the Star Alliance should take and I think Sentinel Culsten decided it would be easier to get what he wants with her out of the way.”

“That’s insane.”

“Any more insane than versions of the both of us being part of a brutally fascist empire?” he said, referring to the Lif Culsten and Garla they had encountered in the previous reality they had visited.

“I get it,” she said. “You don’t want to stay here. You cannot stomach the idea that your Federation has degenerated into civil war and is being carved up by more powerful empires. But that doesn’t mean I can’t stay and make a difference. If you so desperately want to return to our universe to see the Star Alliance share that same fate, be my guest, but I refuse to be a witness to its downfall,” she said, turned, and walked out of the cabin.
 
So Garla doesn’t want to go home. I can see her point but Lif’s point has more weight...namely that she probably wouldn’t survive long in this universe. I’m sure his counterpart did assassinate her and would happily do so again.

can’t wait to see where she ends up when this is all over.
 
19

“He is in here, sir,” So’Dan Leva said as he indicated towards the doors of the mess hall they were approaching.

Michael stopped and glanced at his tactical officer who responded with a brief nod. “I cannot say that I ‘m looking forward to doing this,” he said as he uttered a small sigh before tugging down at his red and black uniform tunic as if it would give him the courage he needed for what he was about to do. He had forgotten how snug these uniforms had been compared to the much more comfortable outfits he had gotten used to wearing over the last few years. The tightness of his clothes was the last of his concerns now, he finally decided, and then stepped up to the doors which obediently parted before him.

He stepped into the mess hall, Leva just a couple of steps behind him, and his eyes immediately found who he was looking for.

The man was the spitting image of himself, that same prominent chin, the same eyes that greeted him in the mirror each morning, he even wore his brown hair in the same short crop that he tended to favor.

Something he didn’t quite recognize in the other Michael Owens perhaps was his apparently ferocious appetite. He sat alone at a large table in the mostly empty mess hall, busying himself with a full plate of what looked like a large chicken or similar fowl, tearing into his meal by hand and helping it go down with a tall pint of beer or lager. He didn’t seem to care much about general eating etiquette as he ripped into a large drumstick while grabbing his drink with his free hand.

Michael had observed a few Klingon meals in his time and his counterpart would have likely fit into that crowd rather nicely.

It didn’t take long at all for the other man to notice the new arrival and it caused him to forget his dinner immediately. He froze the moment he spotted the overly familiar face as he stared back wide-eyed.

He unceremoniously dropped the drumstick he had been holding and put down the glass of beer so quickly, some of the golden liquid sloshed over the rim and onto the table.

He stood up from his chair slowly, his eyes glued to the other Michael Owens.

Ever since Eagle had first arrived in an alternate universe—one which had since been wiped out of existence—Michael had dreaded the idea of coming face-to-face with a counterpart of his. He had, of course, read the reports of other Starfleet officers, displaced in time, in alternate realities or some other strange galactic twists, meeting different versions of themselves and had felt for the members of his own crew like Dee, Xylion, and particularly his young helmsman who had been forced into situations where they had to meet their counterparts which had turned out to be disturbing encounters.

As much as he had wanted to avoid such a scenario for himself, he had seen no other choice at present, not after Leva had informed him of his presence on the station and his all too obvious disdain for the same man who kept him and his people prisoner. They needed an ally and at the moment, Michael Owens was the best candidate for the job.

And yet he immediately regretted his decision now that he had actually laid eyes on his virtual twin, quickly realizing that no matter what he had read or what others had said about the experience, it had not been enough to prepare him for it. In fact, he found it difficult to describe the surrealism of the situation, of meeting himself. It was not natural, that was for certain, and not something that should ever be allowed to happen.

“What the goddamned hell is going on?” the other Michael said after a few seconds had passed, his eyes burning himself into his doppelganger, his facial features mirroring an odd mix of confusion, disbelieve, and anger. “Who are you?”

Michael took a couple of careful steps towards the other him. “That will take a moment to explain, I’m afraid,” he said. “But essentially, I am you. But also not. I am from a different reality.”

The other captain slowly left the table and cautiously approached his mirror image. “This is one of Altee’s absurd games, it has to be.”

He shook his head. “I assure you this is no game. As for the absurdity of the situation? I suppose I’d have to agree.”

“How is this possible? Explain and do it quickly,” he said, sounding much more aggressive than Michael thought he ever did. His counterpart clearly didn’t share his sense of patience.

“There has been an incident originating in the Amargosa Diaspora, not far from here. It created an anomaly of sorts which caused a bridge between multiple quantum realities,” he said.

“Quantum realities? Like alternate universes?” the other Michael said, not entirely able to hide his confusion.

Michael had never considered himself a great scientist although he shared the innate curiosity and drive to explore the mysteries of the galaxy as many of those who had decided to dedicate their lives to Starfleet did. He inherently understood and was fascinated by the idea of quantum realities, even if as of late he had been exposed to the idea far more closely and personally than he would have ever liked to. Somehow, he didn’t get the sense that his counterpart shared those values.

Michael nodded. “Yes. We were forced into this reality against our will and are trying to find a way back to our home universe.”

“Get to the part where you just strolled into the exact same place I was having dinner in while wearing my face.”

Michael exchanged a brief look with Leva before considering his counterpart again. “Altee abducted some of our people and brought them here. We attempted to try and free them but we were captured as well.”

“Altee. I should have known he was involved in this. That man is constantly planning and plotting like the weasel he is.”

There had been only two other people in the mess hall when Michael and Leva had entered, both security officers, and the two men had watched the unusual encounter in silence until that point. Now they had decided to act and quickly approached the two identical men, each of them with one hand resting on their phasers. “Sir, I need you and your Vulcan officer to return to your quarters,” said the more senior officer, clearly realizing that his boss would not approve of this meeting.

Michael’s double shot the man a venomous glare. “What’s your name?”

“Alec Peters, sir,” the ensign said.

“Alright, Alec. Here’s what I need you to do. Take your friend and get to the other side of that door and stay there until I say otherwise and don’t even think about running back to your puffed up Deltan master or I swear by my brother’s grave that I will make it my primary mission in life to make yours as miserable as possible, and I won’t stop until both of you get assigned to the frozen wastelands of Delta Vega chasing down ice beasts for the remainder of your miserable and very likely short careers.”

The ensign swallowed sharply, very briefly glanced at his equally mortified colleague, and then, without saying another word, both men quickly left the mess hall. Judging by the looks on their faces, Michael was fairly certain they would not alert Altee of this meeting, at least not immediately.

He wasn’t entirely sure if he was impressed or concerned about the degree of malice in his counterpart’s words and tone. He could not argue, however, with his effectiveness.

Once the only other witnesses to their discussion had been removed, the other Michael once again refocused his entire attention on his double. He indicated towards the table he had been sitting at and both Michael and Leva took the offer and sat down.

The other captain followed shortly, for a brief moment considering Leva as he took his chair. “I knew there was something very off about you, Vulcan.”

“Probably because he isn’t a Vulcan,” Michael said.

“Romulan,” Leva said. “On my mother’s side.”

The man nodded. “Not the strangest thing I’ve heard today,” he said and then glanced back at the other him, studying his face intently as he sat opposite him. “This is remarkable. You truly are me, aren’t you?”

“Yes, but not entirely. We may look the same, we may even share many other commonalities, but our universes are very different. For example, there is no civil war in ours.”

“I suppose you won the lottery when they gave out universes.”

Michael wasn’t so sure about that one. Yes, the Federation was still intact in their reality but he wasn’t willing to consider their fate lucky, certainly, the millions of people who had died in the recent Dominion War hadn’t been. “We’ve had our share of challenges,” he said, deciding to leave it at that since there was little point in comparing tragedies.

“I want to know how Altee is involved in all this.”

“We don’t know the full extent of his involvement yet. But he clearly was aware of the anomaly that brought us here. At least to some degree. It was almost as if he was waiting for us to arrive,” Michael said, wondering not for the first time, how this version of Tazla Star had been able to act so soon after their arrival. “He had our ship boarded and took two of our people. He brought them here. We followed him but we were betrayed by one of the people we sought to rescue after he made a deal with Altee.”

The other captain nodded. “He is a slimy bastard, that one.”

“We need your help to free our people and get off this station. The fate of multiple universes may depend on it.”

But Michael didn’t seem all that moved by the potential risks to entire realities, yet another way in which that version of Michael Owens seemed to differ greatly to him. Considering what he had learned about the man, it didn’t come as a huge surprise. It was, however, disappointing.

The other Owens leaned back in his chair. “That sounds like serious life-and-death business you’re dealing with,” he said even if his tone didn’t entirely match the weight of those words. “But I have my own problems and I cannot afford to be sidetracked. Not while I am so close to achieving my goals.”

Michael considered Leva at his side and the blank expression on his vulcanoid face seemed to mirror his own. He glanced back at his counterpart, remembering what he had learned about him from Amaya Donners. “I think I know a little bit about what you’re looking for.”

He uttered a short, sarcastic laugh. “I supposed I haven’t cared to keep it a secret. Half of Starfleet—Guardians and Preservers both—know what—whom I’m looking for. I shouldn’t be surprised the news has reached other universes by now.”

Michael looked him right in the eye, it was eerie, like looking into a mirror and seeing himself and yet not himself at the same time. “The woman you are looking for, she boarded my ship and took my people. She brought them here.”

Everything about the alternate Owens’ demeanor changed then, his pupils noticeably widened, his nostril flared slightly, his brow wrinkled and he leaned forward in his chair. “Star.”

Michael considered him carefully. “I think that perhaps we can help each other, Captain.”
 
Michael Prime is taking a huge gamble in soliciting his counterpart’s help. I’m starting to see that it isn’t just different experiences that separate these men, but different personalities as well.

With problems beginning to multiply, I can only say that our heroes need to depart this universe is quickly as possible!

Hope more is coming soon!
 
20

In her nearly five-year tour of duty as Eagle’s chief of security, Nora Laas had gotten used to her objections being considered and then ultimately cast aside by those above her in the chain of command, and so, she was left with few options other than to look on with a frown on her face as Commander Xylion and Bensu were getting ready for yet another mind-link to attempt and make contact with whatever they had caught a glimpse of earlier, appearing out of the ether like a shady specter.

She had conferred with her security team, the human Niners operative Diamond, and her Vulcan colleague Ivory, making sure to position them in the control room for maximum coverage to deal with whatever may ultimately emerge.

Of course, considering, what they were up against, Nora was beginning to doubt that a few phaser rifles would make much of a difference in the face of universe-destroying forces.

She watched on silently as Xylion and Bensu took up sitting positions near the center of the room, Xylion reaching out to make contact with the other man as they both closed their eyes to focus on their mental connection.

Nora had never truly understood psionics and how exactly it was supposed to work. She knew that certain species, including Vulcans, had the innate ability to create telepathic connections with others and that Bensu—although she still wasn’t entirely clear to what species he belonged—seemed to possess similar abilities. Since it was impossible to see or physically fight a psionic field, she usually regarded it with a high amount of skepticism. Considering their current circumstances, where they now found themselves, and what had transpired over the last few days, she felt fairly justified in her beliefs.

It didn’t take long for their joint efforts to bear fruit.

“Look, over there,” said Hopkins after she had spotted the slight shimmer in the air again where the initial specter had first appeared. But something was different this time. For one, its shape seemed different, much smaller than what they had witnessed before. It barely would have reached her knees.

“I can sense it,” Bensu said. “It is close, attempting to breakthrough.”

Laas exchanged a concerned look with the chief engineer. “Breaking through from where?”

But Louise just shrugged her shoulders. She didn’t have a clue.

“It is a powerful intelligence,” Xylion said, eyes still closed as he continued to support Bensu’s efforts.

She stepped closer to the Vulcan. “Can you determine what it is?”

But Xylion didn’t respond, either because he couldn’t hear her or maybe because he was so focused on the task at hand that he had no perception of the outside world.

She shook her head. “I don’t like this.”

She felt a hand on her shoulder. “Let’s just give it a chance,” Louise said.

Whatever it was the two telepaths were trying to accomplish, however, didn’t seem to work the way they had hoped. The small blurry shape refused to solidify, almost like a transporter beam which was perpetually stuck in the rematerialization cycle.

Bensu’s smooth dark brow began to furrow. “I cannot maintain the connection.”

“We have attempted this previously,” Xylion said calmly. “You must center your mind on a single thought.”

“I am trying but it isn’t working.”

Xylion seemed to attempt to compensate for Bensu’s lack of focus with his own as he was visibly beginning to extort more and more effort into his psychic link. Laas knew things were going wrong when she spotted the first trickle of bright green blood dripping down his nose.

“We have to stop this,” she said.

When Xylion’s body began to tremble, Louise removed her hand from her shoulder. She took a knee next to the Vulcan. “Commander.”

But he continued to ignore all external stimuli.

“Commander,” she repeated more forcefully. “You have to stop.”

When this also didn’t work, she grabbed him by his shoulders and began to shake him slightly. “Xylion, stop.”

His eyes shot open and he gasped loudly as if coming up for air after being submerged underwater for hours on end. He glanced at Hopkins with wide-open eyes.

“Xylion, are you all right?”

It took him a moment to respond, maybe because he didn’t immediately recognize her. Then he offered a minuscule nod and removed his physical connection to Bensu.

“I am unharmed.”

But Louise looked doubtful. “You are bleeding.”

Xylion reached for his nose, his fingers coming away with droplets of his blood. “A superficial injury, Lieutenant, I assure you.”

She kept his eyes on him a moment longer and Laas had an inkling on why that may have been. After all, she was well aware that Louise had once carried a torch for the science officer, in fact, she had learned of this in the most unusual manner in a holodeck of all places. That had been years ago and clearly Louise had moved on from what appeared to have been a foolish infatuation with a man who had made it his primary mission in life not to show his feelings. Considering the look she held in her eyes now, however, perhaps she had not entirely moved on after all.

Regardless, the moment soon passed and Bensu also reopened his eyes and Louise seemingly realized that she had neglected to check on his well-being. “How about you? Are you okay?”

He nodded slowly. “I think so,” he said and then glanced back towards the Vulcan. “I felt my mind touch it, Xylion. It was so close. I thought I had it, I thought I could push it through but it slipped past me. We need to try again.”

Laas couldn’t believe what she was hearing and quickly stepped up closer, shaking her head. “Not going to happen,” she said forcefully. “Whatever you were trying to do, it didn’t look right. Xylion here looked close to popping a few blood vessels in his brain.”

“The mental strain was significant,” Xylion agreed. “However, I could sense it as well.”

“Was it the subspace aliens?” Louise asked.

“I don’t think it was,” Bensu said.

“Agreed. I could sense a powerful intelligence attempting to make contact with us. But something prevents it from doing so,” Xylion said.

“Well, we tried,” Nora said, slinging her rifle over her shoulder and crossing her arms in front of her chest. As far as she was concerned, this was over.

“If we could somehow amplify the psionic energy from our side, perhaps that will be enough to establish contact,” Bensu said, sounding much more eager now than he had before. “We were so close.”

“We might be able to fashion some form of rudimentary psionic enhancer with equipment on the runabout,” Louise said.

“We don’t necessarily need a technical solution,” Bensu said, looking first at the chief engineer and then at the science officer.

Xylion understood straight away. “We require another telepathic conduit.”

Xylion, Bensu, and ultimately even Louise turned their heads to find the only other person on the away team who fit that description. It took Laas a moment longer to realize who they had singled out. Oddly, she had never really thought of the woman as a telepath or even a Vulcan for that matter, although her elegantly taped ears and angled eyebrows didn’t exactly hide her ancestry. Perhaps it was the fact that she had barely ever heard the dark-skinned operative utter more than two words that had caused her no to think of her sooner.

It was Diamond, her fellow Niner who spoke up first. “This is not the kind of thing we do,” she said quickly. “You need muscle or tactical firepower that’s where we come in. But we don’t go messing around inside other people’s heads. That’s psych ops stuff.”

“She has a point there,” Nora said.

Xylion pushed himself off the floor and considered his fellow Vulcan who simply stared back at him. “I will not order you to participate in the mind-link, however, I would be remiss if I were not to stress the importance of what we are trying to accomplish here in order to locate a way in which we can return to our universe and stop the particle accelerator to cause any further damage.”

“So, you know, no pressure or anything,” Louise mumbled under her breath.

Ivory raised one of her finely arched eyebrows. “I am not an accomplished telepath.”
“You are Vulcan. You have intrinsic psionic abilities not shared by anyone else on this away team other than Bensu and myself. Even if you have not trained those abilities, our chances of success increase significantly with your assistance.”

True to what she knew of the operative, she said nothing, simply staring back at the older Vulcan and for a brief moment Laas wondered if they were carrying out an entire conversation in their minds instead. She disregarded the thought, fairly certain that Vulcan telepathy didn’t work that way.

Ivory turned to her fellow Niner and wordlessly handed over her rifle.

Diamond considered her skeptically. “Are you sure about this?”

“Yes,” she said simply and then walked over to Xylion and Bensu.

Xylion offered her a very small nod and then indicated for her to kneel on the floor, creating a tight triangle with him to her right and Bensu to her left.

Although she clearly had little experience in these matters, most likely having dedicated most of her life to training her body and mind for combat instead, she had obviously paid close attention to what they had done previously and she reached out to touch Bensu’s face to make contact with him while allowing Xylion to touch hers.

“Clear your mind of any thoughts other than the task ahead. You will shortly be exposed to several significant mental stimuli that you may find difficult to decipher and understand. Avoid the temptation to let these thoughts distract you. Instead, keep your focus on supporting and strengthening Bensu’s mind,” Xylion said and then watched her bop her head slightly before she closed her eyes.

“This just gets better by the minute,” Laas said quietly who had hoped that they were done with this foolhardy approach only to now having to witness yet another person being dragged into this. She shot a glance toward Diamond and spotted something on her face she had not seen there before: Concern.

Ivory was clearly not entirely prepared for what she experienced next and her usually carefully maintained visage quickly distorted to display surprise and then discomfort, perhaps even pain. Her mouth opened as if to utter a moan but it never came.

“Look to my mind first,” Xylion instructed. “Let it wash over you to steady your own.”

That did the trick as Ivory began to relax thanks to Xylion’s calming influence.

Not long after that, the shape that had emerged earlier returned.

Their joint efforts seemed more successful now. Although neither of them spoke, each of their faces became masks of stern concentration and the strain Xylion had exhibited earlier was not nearly as worrisome this time around.

“Look, it’s starting to emerge,” Louise whispered and pointed at the object

Laas took a few steps closer to it, raising her phaser rifle while doing so. She didn’t know if it would be of any use against what was beginning to take form, but if nothing else, the heft of the weapon felt reassuring to her.

The shape was perhaps twenty or twenty-five centimeters tall and forty centimeters long, far too small for an average-sized humanoid. In fact, it was so small, Laas went down to one knee to study it in closer detail as more and more of it became visible.

It was an animal of sorts, four-legged, black-furred with a small head and a long tail. It wore something shiny around its neck. “By the Prophets, what is that thing?”

Louise stepped up next to her. “That,” she said, sounding incredulous, “is a cat.”

Laas looked up at her. “You’re kidding?”

She shook her head.

When she looked back at the domesticated animal, it hissed at her and then leapt forward so quickly, it caught Laas unprepared as she fumbled for her weapon while it jumped right past her.

When she turned back to find it again, she realized that the cat had not been alone after all. Unbeknownst to anyone else present, somebody else had appeared.

A man, appearing roughly middle-aged with dark hair and wearing what looked like a very old-fashioned two-piece suit complete with a shirt and necktie. An outfit Laas recognized mostly from historical records from Earth. The man appeared to be human.

The cat made a beeline to the strange man who quickly picked it up and took the animal into his arms.

Startled by his sudden appearance, Laas pointed her rifle at him, joining Diamond who had been a beat faster at leveling her own weapon. “Who the pah are you?”

The man took a moment to take her in, stroking the black cat in his arms. “The name is Seven. Gary Seven. We have much to talk about.”
 
21

“All right, so what do you need from me?” Captain Michael Owens asked his counterpart and his half-Romulan tactical officer after he had agreed to assist them.

“We need to get off this station along with the rest of my team and the people we came here to bring back,” Michael said. “There is also an artifact Altee took from us we need to retrieve.”

The other man shook his head. “There is only so much I can do. I may have a strong mandate from Command but Altee has assembled half a fleet in this system which answers to him. If we attempt to get your people back by force, he’ll have reinforcements here within a moment’s notice.”

Leva turned to his commanding officer. “Sir, I believe our priority has to be to get off the station first.”

But Michael did not like what he was hearing. “I’m not willing to leave anybody behind, Commander.”

Leva quickly shook his head. “I don’t suggest we do, sir. Presumably, Captain Owens here has a ship in orbit. It should have more powerful sensors than the shuttle and I might be able to locate our people from there.”

“And how do you propose we beam out of here undetected?” The native Owens asked.

Leva offered a small smirk. “Same way as we beamed in.”

Michael nodded. “That could work.”

The other Owens looked confused but the other two quickly filled him in on the method they had employed to beam through the base’s shields without raising an alarm. After that, it was just a matter of explaining the process to the transporter operator onboard Captain Owens’ ship.

A few minutes later the two Owens’ and Leva materialized in Eagle’s transporter room.

Captain Owens immediately stepped down the platform to approach the operator. “Report? Any sign that our departure was detected.”

The young human officer behind the controls shook her head. “None that I can see, sir. There are no alerts or unusual activity on the base.”

He turned back towards his two guests. “That was quite a neat trick. I’ll have to remember that for the future.”

Michael in the meantime was taking a moment to absorb his new surroundings. Although transporter rooms on Starfleet ships and installations were fairly interchangeable, this one felt more familiar than most, being nearly identical to the ones found on his own ship. He didn’t recognize the young woman behind the transporter console, however, indicating to him that some things were bound to be different here.

“So, what’s next?” Captain Owens asked.

Leva stepped down from the platform as well and approached the console. “I should be able to scan for our people from here,” he said and moved behind the station, glancing at the woman operating it. “May I?”

She checked with her captain first, and when he gave her a nod, she stepped aside to let Leva take over. The two Owens’ joined him there.

“I’ve located the Niners by scanning for their subdermal transponders,” he said after working on the station for just a few moments.

Michael nodded, making a mental note to thank Star for suggesting to tag the entire away team in this manner. “Beam them up.”

Sensy, Violet, and One-Shot materialized on the platform shortly after. Their confusion of being whisked away suddenly lasted mere seconds and as soon as the team leader recognized Michael and Leva, he quickly bounded down the two steps of the transporter platform. “Sir?”

Michael indicated towards his double. “We were able to get some assistance from the locals. We are on his ship.”

Sensy nodded, seemingly not particularly disturbed by the presence of two Captain Owens’.

Michael was thankful for the man taking the news in stride since he didn’t have time to explain further. Instead, he turned back to Leva. “Get my father next.”

“Wait, your father?” Captain Owens said, sounding surprised

Michael nodded. “He is one of the people Altee took from my ship and we came here to recover.”

“Jonathan Owens?” the other man said.

Michael nodded again.

“My god,” he said, looking pensive for a moment. “My father died.”

“So did mine.”

Captain Owens shot his counterpart an odd look.

Michael quickly shook his head. “Long story. Suffice it to say for now that last time I saw him he was alive. Barely. We need to get him back and provide him with medical assistance as soon as possible.”

“I would very much like to see him again,” Captain Owens said. “Even if he isn’t really my father.”

Leva spoke up. “That might not be as easy,” he said while working the console.

Michael cast him a concerned look. “What is it?”

He shook his head even while his fingers kept dancing over the controls. “The admiral doesn’t have a transponder and I’m having a difficult time locating his signature. I think I may have located Jarik though. His Vulcan bio signs are more distinct.”

“I want my father, Commander,” he said, not just because Jon Owens was much more important to him, it was also quite clear that Jarik, his erstwhile Academy roommate and close friend, had betrayed them when he had allied himself with Altee. On a practical note, Jon Owens was far more vital for the mission to succeed since he was the only person who could use the Exhibitor.

Captain Owens tensed visibly. “Jarik is on that station?”

Michael wasn’t entirely sure why. “Yes, he was taken from my ship along with my father.”

His facial features hardened. “Jarik is a traitor.”

Michael nodded. “Yes, he appears to work with Altee now,” he said, not immediately realizing that it hadn’t been a question.

“He worked with Star and was complicit in killing my brother.”

Michael exchanged a worried look with Leva before he considered his agitated double again. “You speak of Jarik from your universe. This man traveled with us from our reality. Although it does appear that his duplicitous nature is disturbingly consistent.”

“Beam him up,” Captain Owens said sharply.

“According to sensors, he is not alone. Transporting him now would raise alarms,” said Leva.

“I don’t care. Bring him in.”

Michael put a hand on his counterpart’s arm, making sure to speak softly when he addressed him. “Captain, this is not the same man you know. He is from a different universe like the rest of us. And we cannot risk getting him until we’ve found my father and the artifact Altee took.”

The look that greeted him in the other man’s eyes seemed empty and Michael couldn’t be entirely sure that he had gotten through to him.

The sudden wailing of the red alert klaxons refocused everybody’s attention and Michael immediately feared that their efforts had been detected.

But Leva shook his head, apparently sensing his concern. “I don’t think it’s us,” he said quickly as he checked the board.

Captain Owens tapped his combadge. “Owens to bridge. Report.”

“Sir, sensors have just picked up an incoming Guardian fleet. They’ll reach the system in less than five minutes.”

Michael couldn’t believe it. Amaya was making her move now. It was terrible timing.

“The rest of our ships in the system are beginning to rally to fend off the attack,” the officer on the bridge, who sounded eerily similar to Josè Carlos, Eagle’s deputy chief of security in Michael’s reality, continued to report. “We are being ordered to join their efforts.”

“We have to find my father and the artifact first,” Michael said. “We might be able to use this distraction to do it.”

Captain Owens pushed Leva aside and manned the transporter station himself.

“What are you doing?” Michael said

“I’m beaming Jarik aboard.”

“Wait, don’t.”

But it was too late; the man was already beginning to materialize on the transporter platform while Michael looked on with dismay.

Owens walked around the console and moved towards the transporter platform as if to welcome his newest guest.

Jarik looked significantly more disorientated than the Niners had when they had been beamed aboard abruptly moments earlier. “What’s happening?” he said, looking around with a befuddled expression on his face which betrayed the human part of his ancestry. “What is this?”

“You’re on Eagle,” Captain Owens said as he stepped up to the platform. “Welcome aboard, you son of a bitch,” he said and then without slowing down, cocked his fist and downed the unprepared man with one blow to his chin.

Michael couldn’t deny a small sense of satisfaction at seeing the man who had betrayed him more than once go down in a heap. The gratification was fleeting and he quickly whipped back around towards Leva who had once more taken the transporter console.

The tactical officer already knew the question and had an answer ready. “They know he’s gone,” he said before he made eye contact with Michael. “And they know we have him. They are on full alert and have altered their shield harmonics.” He shook his head sadly. “I can no longer get a lock on anything on that base.”
 
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