“We’re about to enter the Eteron system,” T’Ser announced from her station. “I’m reading the
Heracles. She appears adrift.”
Filled with an unmistakable feeling of foreboding, Joseph Akinola had jumped out of his seat before the Vulcan had stopped speaking. “Red Alert. Give me shields.”
Dale McBride moved to the tactical station, seconds later the red alert klaxons began wailing across the ship, preparing everyone onboard for the worst.
“Do we have a visual?” the captain asked.
The viewer switched on to show a sight of destruction.
“My God, what happened here?” asked Commander McBride once he spotted the devastated form of the once proud
Galaxy-class cruiser. A huge chunk of her saucer section had been ripped away, exposing the innards of the starship to the unyielding vacuum of space. A number of flickering emergency force-fields gave prove that the ship was not yet entirely lost. But the damage was extensive. The hull had practically peeled off from the lower part of the drive section and she was bleeding plasma badly. The
Heracles was surrounded by a field of debris so numerous and with some chunks so large it appeared she was stuck inside an asteroid field.
“Sensors,” said Akinola very quietly, unable to take his eyes off the screen.
“I’m reading no contacts in the immediate surroundings,” reported Nigel Bane who had arrived on the bridge a few minutes ago to lend a hand. “There are about twenty to thirty vessels around Eteron,” he said. “None in any kind of hurry to come over and help, the bloody bastards.”
“Of course not,” grunted Brin. “Let Starfleet bleed, that’s their motto. Wouldn’t surprise me if half of them were in on this play too.”
“Pretty hard to prove, unfortunately,” said McBride.
“Bridge to Baxter,” Akinola said. “As I feared we might have to deal with a large number of casualties. Are you ready to receive them?”
“
We’ve been setting up triages in the cargo bay but depending on the number of injured it might make more sense to beam over to the Heracles,” the former Admiral and now chief medical officer of the Akinola responded.
“How bad is she?”
“Bad,” the captain replied. “Stand by. Bridge out.”
“Mister Okonedo take us in, nice and slow,” said Akinola who was painfully aware that a lot of people on that doomed vessel needed their help but he was not going to double the casualty rate because he had thrown caution to the wind, like some other captain had done.
“Aye, sir, one quarter impulse power.”
“Lieutenant Bane, Mister T’Ser, keep those eyes on your sensors.”
Both officers acknowledged.
Akinola turned to his second-in-command. “Hail her, Commander, let’s find out who did this.”
The first officer nodded sharply and activate the necessary controls. He shook his head with frustration. “Still no replies. It looks like they took extensive damage to their communications array.”
The captain looked back at the screen. “So we can’t talk to them?”
Bluefin trembled slightly as she closed in on the near derelict vessel.
“We’re hitting some major debris,” reported Okonedo from the conn. “Nothing the shields can’t handle.”
The red-skinned Orion stepped away from his station to get a closer look at the screen. Something there had caught his attention.
Akinola noticed. “What is it, Chief?”
He turned to look at his long-time friend and commanding officer. “A lot of debris even for that kind of damage, wouldn’t you say, sir?”
That made the captain glance back at the screen which was now filled entirely with the lose fragments, some of which did not look like they had ever belonged to a Starfleet starship.
T’Ser swiveled her chair around. “Sir, we might be able to reach the other ship by boosting the combadge signals and circumventing the ship-to-ship system.”
“Get on that.”
The Vulcan operations officer went back to her board. “Give me a second to re-modulate the signal of your combadge,” she said as she worked her station. “There,” she added after a couple of seconds. “Try it now, sir.”
Akinola slapped his badge without delay. “Akinola to Schwarzkopf.”
Silence.
“This is Captain Akinola to
Heracles. Can anybody over there hear me.”
And again he was rewarded by silence. He shot a look at his operations chief.
She shrugged her shoulders in the most un-Vulcan fashion after double checking her board, letting him know that he had a clear signal. No reason for them not to hear him. At least not from their end.
“Sir, I’ve been running some scans on the debris,” Lieutenant Bane said. “A large amount of it does not originate from the
Heracles.”
“So they were in a battle and managed to destroy the attackers,” concluded the first officer.
“If it was a battle the attacking vessels must have been right on top of her when they went judging from the proximity of the debris,” said Bane.
“Can you identify the vessel from the debris?” asked Akinola.
“That’ll take a while.”
The captain nodded, prompting him to get to work then he tapped his combadge again. “
Heracles, this is Captain Akinola from the
Bluefin, do you read? We are standing by to provide medical assistance, please respond.”
Akinola turned away in frustration about to give up when an audible crack came over the speakers. He whipped back towards the screen as if somebody might have seen him from the sheer distance. The crack was followed by what sounded like a gasp. And then a clear moan. Akinola thought he recognized the person who uttered it. “Schwarzkopf, can you read me?”
“Akinola … Akinola.”
Concerned glances were shot back and forth between
Bluefin’s bridge crew upon hearing the weak voice of Captain Melvin Schwarzkopf. Each word sounded heavily labored.
“Yes, Captain, it’s me. We’re ready to beam over medical teams, where do you want them?”
“Akinola,” Schwarzkopf repeated, his voice as deflated as before.
“Captain, we are here to provide assistance. Who attacked you? Was it Orion raiders?”
An excruciatingly long pause followed before Melvin Schwarzkopf spoke again. This time he sounded as if he had began to sob. Perhaps he had never stopped.
“They came out of nowhere. Too fast, they were too fast … I didn’t know. And now it’s too late. It’s too late …,” his voice trailed off.
Brin looked at his captain. “I’m no doctor but he sounds like he might be in shock. Probably got hit pretty bad in the head.”
Akinola nodded. “Captain, listen to me. Is there anyone else on the bridge I can talk to. Your first officer, perhaps?”
“No!” he screamed so loudly that everybody on Bluefin’s bridge cringed. Akinola himself wanted to cover his ears but decorum forced him not to.
“They’re all dead. All dead. I killed them, Akinola, I killed them all!”
This shocked Akinola momentarily. He glanced at T’Ser who proceeded to affirmably shake her head. “Multiple life-signs all over the vessel. Many in weakened condition,” she whispered softly to him.
“Captain Schwarzkopf, stay where you are, I have medical teams beaming over now, Akinola out.”
But before he could give another order T’Ser interrupted him in an alarming tone of voice. “Captain, multiple contacts, bearing 253 mark 74, approaching at high velocity, less than 500,000 kilometers.”
“Identify.”
McBride replied from tactical. “I have three … make that four small to medium sized vessels. They are …,” he stopped himself and then looked at Akinola. “They are all civilian, sir. Lightly armed and shielded. Cargo freighters.”
“Where did they come from?” the captain asked. “And how the hell did they get so close without us noticing?”
“They appeared close to the third planet of the system, a gas giant. We did not pick them up before due to the strong background radiation it is emitting,” said T’Ser.
Solly Brin grimaced. “That sounds all a bit too convenient.”
“Agreed,” said Akinola and sat in his chair. “Plot an intercept course, stand by weapons and open a channel.”
“Course plotted and engaging,” acknowledged Okonedo.
“Weapons standing by, channel open,” added the first officer.
“This is the boarder cutter
Bluefin to approaching vessels, power down your engines and identify yourself. I say again power down your engines now.”
There was once again no response. Akinola was getting sick of it. Why didn’t anybody ever want to talk anymore?
“Sir,” Bane started. “I have finished analyzing the debris fragments and a large amount of them appeared to be from non-Starfleet ships, most likely civilian freighters of medium size. I also found evidence of –“
“The vessels are increasing speed, sir,” T’Ser interrupted. “At this rate they’ll be right on top of us within one minute and thirty-three seconds.”
“This feels all kinds of wrong,” Brin mumbled and went back to his station.
Akinola on the other hand sounded as calm and confident as a man who had faced the man with the scythe on more occasions than he cared to remember. “Mister Bane, now would be a good time for the rest of that story.”
“Quaratum,” said Bane urgently and in a much less calmer tone. “Those vessels were packed tight with quaratum, a thruster fuel component that can become extremely unstable.”
“They’re trying to firebomb us,” Dale McBride concluded.
“Mister McBride, load the 22’s, and fire at will. Don’t bother waiting for a target lock, we need to take them out now,” the captain said, his voice still barely raising above a casual conversation level.
The first officer fingers found the right controls immediately and his commands were nearly instantly delegated to the fire control system. But torpedoes could only be loaded that quickly. They had to be removed from storage, placed into the tubes and armed. A process that the
Bluefin’s crew and the computer core had trimmed down to an impressive twenty seconds per load. It was not going to be fast enough to take down all four vessels in time.
Akinola had made the math in his head and was fully cognizant of the few seconds they missed.
“Torpedoes away,” said McBride and two bright dots of light shot out and across the view screen.
The captain’s right hand tapped commands into his computer armrest. “Phasers, maximum yield. Target this vessel and fire.”
“Firing.”
Two bright explosions lit up the main view screen which dimmed just in time to avoid blinding the bridge crew. The electromagnetic pulses unleashed short-circuited the relatively simple propulsion system of two of the incoming ships, causing an emergency shut-down which stopped both almost on the dot.
Lances of hot red phased energy found the third target, piercing the shields and heating the hull just enough for the quaratum to become unstable and rip the ship apart from the inside.
That left one.
“Mister Okonedo, put her in reverse, all she’s got.”
The young African man did what he was told and forward momentum stopped moments later, sending
Bluefin on a mad rush away from the incoming starship mega-bomb.
Brin slowly shook his head with grim foreboding. “It’s not going to be enough.”
Akinola couldn’t help but agree. There was no time for another round of torpedoes, Mark 22’s or otherwise. Phasers were still recycling from the maximum yield output and once they were ready to fire again the makeshift missile on their doorstep would explode so close that it was guaranteed to blow them all the way to kingdom come.
And Akinola still kept his cool demeanor. “Mister Gralt, I need you to channel every last iota of energy into the main tractor beams. Don’t worry about blowing them out, we’re only going to use them once.”
“Easy for you to say you ain’t gonna be the one to fix’em afterwards … sir,” he replied in a deadpan.
“You won’t have to worry about that if this isn’t going to work. Now time is somewhat of the essence so please if –“
“Already done.”
Akinola smiled. “Lieutenant T’Ser, set the tractor beams to repel, get a good aim and activate. All hands, brace for impact!”
Everyone on the bridge clamped down on the console or station closest to them. No matter the results of this last desperate maneuver,
Bluefin was going to take a beating. The only question was, would she still be around afterwards.
* * *