USS Enterprise
Kevratas orbit
Stardate 57063.2
The welcome face on the screen did little to buoy Picard’s spirit. He had already provided the head of Starfleet Intelligence with all the data he had on the Kevratas virus and the protocols he had put in place to protect his crew. Admiral Marta Batanides, his former classmate from the Academy and good friend, stared back at him from across the Neutral Zone and her expression was anything but reassuring.
‘I wish you hadn’t decided on this course of action, Captain,’ Batanides said. ‘We were trying to keep this from getting out. Praetor Tal’Aura has enough on her plate right now without a runaway virus to contend with, especially when she has no experts in the field to call upon.’
‘I would have thought the Romulans would have plenty of virologists,’ Picard replied.
‘They do, but none are loyal to Tal’Aura and are actually working for their surviving patrons on other projects. According to our mole inside the Empire, the Tal Shiar have this new ship from which they conduct their business and it sounds like you’ve found it. You were lucky not to have been destroyed.’
‘Commander Sela escaped onto that ship, didn’t she?’ Picard scowled at the thought of her continuing to run loose.
‘Most likely, but she is now working directly for Director Rehaek and the Tal Shiar, while Tal’Aura thinks Sela works for her. The problem that you and I both have, is that both their missions are identical, to find out who is making this virus and turning them. Our goal is to find the scientist and stop him. We cannot afford to have this man targeting anybody.’
‘My acting chief medical officer, Doctor Tropp, tells me that the work is somewhat similar to the work of Crell Moset.’
Batanides nodded. ‘My people tell me the same, but Moset dropped off the radar after that incident at Loran II a couple of years ago. I have people looking for him.’
‘Do you have any other suspects?’
‘None that have the level of expertise or capability needed to create a virus on this scale. I’ve spoken with Admiral Janeway about this and we both agree that our best hope for beating this thing is keeping the Enterprise on point. I assume that you have your people working on a cure for the virus?’
Picard nodded. ‘I do, I also have my security teams down on the surface looking for Doctor Crusher, Commander Worf and the survivors of the Pasteur.’
‘Aren’t you spreading yourself a bit thin?’
‘The Kevrata are thankful for what Doctor Crusher has done and what we are doing now and they’re helping in the search.’
Batanides looked at something off-screen for a brief moment and then turned back to Picard. ‘I wish you luck, Jean-Luc, the last thing we need is this getting across the Neutral Zone.’
‘I’ll be in touch, Admiral, Picard out.’
The screen blanked and Picard stood, he had a meeting to attend to. While he would normally have given his senior officers all the information that he could, he wasn’t sure whether he should continue to do so. Although his ship was no longer seen as a pariah among the rest of the fleet, he was still being given officers who had issues which most other commanding officers wouldn’t tolerate. He didn’t have a choice in the matter and his command staff was typical of that. By the time he reached the conference lounge at the rear of the bridge, his mind was made up.
The others stood as he entered and he waved them back to their seats. Against medical advice, La Forge and Kadohata were present, though Tropp was also there, monitoring them with an open but muted medical tricorder. On the other side of the table, Madden was in Riker’s former chair and Counsellor T’Lana sat beside him with Lieutenant Battaglia seated on her other side. Ensign McGowan remained at the helm. Picard sat down and looked at each of them in turn.
‘We’re to remain here until certain situations are resolved. Firstly, I want a cure for this virus, and secondly, I want our people found. Doctor?’
‘We’ve been extremely lucky, Captain. Doctor Crusher and her people had the foresight to back up everything they did. It appears that one of the medical technicians, Denise Sakuro, actually found a working vaccine for jaceta, the Kevrata’s name for the plague. I think I can improve on it and make a cure, but we have already started to synthesise the vaccine.’
‘Excellent,’ Picard replied, knowing that half the job was already done. ‘I would like to know if you can tell me who designed the virus.’
‘I’ll do my best,’ Tropp replied.
Picard turned to Battaglia. ‘Lieutenant?’
‘I have every available security officer, and some non-essential personnel, on the surface sweeping the area by the lake. The cave system is extensive and we have only just began to map it. I’m confident we’ll find them before too long.’
‘Still no answer to our hails?’
‘No sir, it’s possible that the sarium krellide power cells in their combadges are depleted. Or that the kelbonite deposits is preventing the signal from getting through.’
‘Alright, keep trying and let me know what you find as soon as you have something.’
‘Aye sir.’
‘Is there anything else?’ Picard asked.
‘Captain, I wondered if I might bring something to your attention,’ T’Lana spoke up.
‘Go ahead, Counsellor.’
‘I have noticed that you seem hesitant to provide further information to us, since you clearly know something that you are not revealing.’
Picard’s eyes twinkled. ‘Of course I know something I’m not telling you, Counsellor. I am a Starfleet captain and have classified information which you are not cleared to know. As regards this particular mission, I do not wish to give you further information that I deem irrelevant to the assignment at hand.’
‘Captain,’ La Forge interjected. ‘I think I speak for most of us here when I say that I trust you in what you give us. Personally, I want to help the Kevrata, rescue our people and go explore the galaxy.’
Everyone nodded, even Madden.
‘Dismissed,’ Picard said and pushed his chair back.