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UT10 Tales of the USS Bluefin - "Ten Hours"

Ah those green, overambitious ensigns who think they know everything. That attitude won't fly long on Bluefin. I do like the fact that you didn't depict him as an arrogant jerk, just a well-meaning, if slightly misguided young man, clearly trying to do his best. Welcome to the Border Service.

I like Miller, she's got moxie. Of course she needs much more than that if she wants to save her ship and/or the three remaining people onboard.
 
Hey hey I'm back as promised (after too long, apologies). Read part 1 of chapter 3. Nice interaction between the characters here, showing their contrasting priorities and methodologies.

Surprised that Akinola - or any captain really - would be so dismissive of regulations.

And... errr... in Vargas' defence, why don't they just use the other Stallion? :vulcan:

So, when's the next bit? We're all waiting!:adore:

EDIT: Pressed on to finish chapter 3. Love the Russian.:beer:
 
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As always, I love the attention to technical detail in your stories. It's lathered on it just the right quantities, giving credibility to the settings and technology.
Great character build up as well in a short amount of time.
Great to see Bluefin back in action!
 
Surprised that Akinola - or any captain really - would be so dismissive of regulations.

And... errr... in Vargas' defence, why don't they just use the other Stallion? :vulcan:

Good question. Akinola understands that regulations cannot anticipate all circumstances. They are going into a rescue mission with no knowledge of the number of people needing rescue. With active ion storms, transporters cannot be used. Thus, they need both Stallions ready to conduct search and rescue operations.
 
Great work by both Solly and the captain in molding an impressionable and promising young officer. He's got the training, he's good the book-smarts, now he's getting the real-life experience that makes all the difference.

Kudos to the three surviving crew of the Forty-Niner for doing whatever they can to stay alive. They'll need every trick they know to keep breathing until Bluefin can make it to them.

More, please! :techman:
 
Author's Note: I should have named this "Ten Years" instead of "Ten Hours" as that's how long it will probably take to finish at my current rate of a chapter every two years. Stand by for a rather startling twist to the story - for good or for bad, things are about to change drastically . . .

Fourth Hour
USS Bluefin


Lt. Bane stepped off the turbo-lift and stalked toward the ops station, eliciting a look of surprise from Ensign Vashtee who was currently on duty at operations.

"Stupid, stupid, stupid . . . ," the Australian lieutenant muttered to himself. His hair was disheveled, indicating he had just vacated his bed and hastily donned his uniform.

"Sir?" asked a puzzled Maya Vashtee.

Commander Strauss rose from the command chair to intercept Bane. "Nigel, what are you up to?"

"Up to being a bloody fool, that's what. Crikey, I should have thought of this hours ago." He glanced down at Vashtee.

"Maya, d'ya mind?" he asked, indicating the ops station.

Vashtee glanced at Strauss who shrugged and nodded. "Uh, sure Lieutenant. It's all yours," replied the Ensign.

Bane settled in, rubbed his hair vigorously, yawned, and began to rapidly input commands into the cutter's sensor controls.

"Lt. Bane, do you mind sharing with us what you're doing?" asked Strauss with a bit more emphasis.

He glance up and grinned. "Sorry. I woke up from a sound sleep and realized we were doing this all wrong."

Inga resisted the urge to shake him. "Please. Be. Specific."

He gestured at the sensor controls. "Our sensor sweeps, or lack thereof, trying to get a solid fix and com-link with the Forty-Niner. Even pouring max power through our system, we can't punch through the ion storm. It's like trying to throw a paper airplane into a hurricane force wind."

Commander Strauss frowned. "No argument there. So what's this epiphany you had? What are we doing wrong?"

"My Dad always said, 'work smarter, not harder. Better still, get someone else to do the work for you.'" He pointed to a display which now showed a familiar piece of hardware. "That is going to do the work for us."

Vashtee and Strauss both peered at the display. "A Clarion-class subspace relay? Nigel, they were all taken off-line last year. They don't function any more."

"Only partially correct.True enough, they no longer function as subspace relays; their fusion reactors were removed, but the relays were left in place as passive navigational buoys. The batteries are still there. I don't need to send a message to Mars, I just need to boost our sensor and comm strength a bit and we should be able to punch through the storm for a couple of hours. Should be enough juice in those batteries to handle that. I just need to hack into one to access their system. Aaand, here's a likely candidate."

He gestured to a string of coordinates on another screen. Sure enough, CL-3667G, one of the aforementioned relays, was situated between their current location and the approximate location of the Forty-Niner.

"How did you know to do that?" asked an obviously impressed Ensign Vashtee.

Bane folded his arms and leaned back in the chair. "Good looks, clean living, and a willingness to bend the rules a bit." .

"Don't let him corrupt you, Ensign," warned Strauss, but it was clear she was pleased. "Nice work, Nigel."

He grinned in a smug manner. "As always. Give me just a few minutes and I can . . ."

Bane suddenly straightened in the chair, the grin gone, his face a study in intense concentration. He quickly shifted the readout from an ancillary screen to the main display as he peered at it with great trepidation. "Bloody hell . . . ," he muttered. There was a tremor in his voice.

Strauss noticed the sudden change with alarm. "Nigel, what? . . ."

"Oh God, no," he whispered, before shouting, "Sarnek! Hard to port, NOW!"

To his credit, the Vulcan helm officer complied without hesitation and the Bluefin heeled over, the inertial compensators strained to the limit. Sarnek's quick reaction almost saved the ship.

Almost.

A rare quantum filament had been hidden by the maelstrom of the ion storm, its deadly hyper-gravity field shrouded by the constant gravimetric flux that comprised the tempest. Though nearly three thousand kilometers in length, the filament had almost no mass, thus it only appeared on the sensors at the last moment.

But despite its lack of mass, the concentrated filament cut through the shields and hull of the cutter like a hot knife through butter. The starboard nacelle was sheared away in a shower of sparking plasma as the quantum filament continued inexorably through the long engineering hull, cleanly slicing away the hangar deck with the smallcraft and attendant crew members.

* * *

In engineering, every alarm sounded at once as the vaulted chamber was ripped open and three of the engineering crew were swept into the vacuum of open space. Lt. Commander Gralt gasped for breath as the sudden loss of atmospheric pressure sucked the air from his lungs. Emergency bulkheads descended, sealing off the forward part of engineering from where the Chief Engineer clung on to a console near the gaping tear in the hull. Within seconds, emergency atmospheric shields activated and the atmospheric pressure stabilized. His heart hammering, Gralt noted that EPS conduits were sparking and the emergency shields were flickering ominously.

"Not going to hold long," he thought, morosely. He moved on unsteady legs toward the transparent aluminum bulkhead where Ensign Athena McDowell stared at him with wide-eyed shock from the other side.

Setting aside his own terror, Gralt quickly assessed the situation. This was way beyond bad. They would likely lose the ship if they did not get a handle on the damage and stop the bleeding.

Tapping his combadge only elicited static instead of the chirp of an open channel. He came within inches of the bulkhead, favoring the ensign and a young Asian crewman (what is that pup's name? Tran? Close enough.) with one of his signature glowers.

"McDowell!" he bellowed, "By the fifth syphilitic deity's spinster aunt! Don't just stand there with your mouth hanging open! Initialize warp core ejection but wait until my command. Got it?"

McDowell nodded, the color beginning to return to her cheeks.

"Good. And try to find out what in the seven hells happened! GO!"

Gralt turned to the crewman. "Tran! Check on structural integrity and get people on emergency bulkheads. Grab whoever you can. The emergency shields won't hold forever. Move your skinny hairless ass and make it happen! NOW!"

Even through the dense bulkhead, Gralt's shouted orders struck home and the two engineers sprang to action. He turned to survey the carnage in the engineering space. His eyes were drawn to the emergency shields that served as the only barrier between him and certain death. There was a very worrisome flicker that, from his many years of experience, indicated imminent failure.

To make matters worse, the emergency environmental suit locker had been situated against the hull that had been ripped away.

He uttered a string of particularly course obscenities, partly over the absolute ruin of his ship, partly because it helped him think. The good news (there was little enough) was that the ship had not yet exploded, there was atmosphere in at least part of the ship, and not everyone was dead. The bad news (of which there was plenty) was epic in scope. He lacked communications and, thus, vital information. He had lost some of his engineering crew and no doubt there were other casualties throughout the ship. They were bleeding atmosphere and were on reserve power, all this in the midst of an ion storm.

A sudden flash from a power conduit forced his thoughts back to his own situation. A moment of absolute clarity came over The Tellarite. He closed his eyes and was able to murmur, "Well, frak," when the atmospheric shielding failed.

Lt. Commander Maonkarv Gav Gralt was cast into the cold void. As he tumbled along with the remaining detritus from engineering, he had a glimpse of the wounded Bluefin and the last thing he felt before the darkness took him was sadness.

* * *

The scene on the bridge was no less chaotic. EPS power circuits had ruptured all over the ship. Strauss, Bane, and Vashtee had narrowly avoided serious injury when two of the operations boards had erupted in sparks and flames. Lt. Sarnek was on the deck, unconscious, a trickle of green blood oozing from a laceration on his forehead. Emergency lighting struggled against smoke and the fog of fire suppressors.

Commander Strauss, coughed and managed to croak, "Status?"

Lt. Bane leaned back against the ops console, a sizeable lump on his forehead. "Quantum filament," he said in a flat voice. "It was just . . . there, and . . . ," his voice trailed off. He appeared dazed.

"Everything is off-line," exclaimed Ensign Vashtee as she futilely tried to gain access to the ship's system. "My board is toast." She moved around the upper level of the circular bridge and froze when she came to the normally unmanned engineering station.

"Ma'am? You should see this."

Strauss pulled herself up and moved to join Vashtee. As she stood, she spotted Lt. Sarnek on the deck.

"Nigel! Check on Sarnek." She tapped her combadge. "Bridge to sickbay, medical emergency."

No response. She glanced back toward Vashtee who shook her head. "Comms are down, too. But that's not the worst of it." She gestured toward the engineering console.

Strauss focused on the readouts and an icy hand gripped her heart. Though much of the intra-ship telemetry was down, there was enough data to show that the damage was catastrophic. Worst of all . . .

"We've lost half of the engineering hull," Inga said, tightly. "The hangar deck, the armory, much of engineering itself. And if I'm reading this right, the emergency atmospheric shields have failed."

"Yes ma'am," agreed Vashtee. "That's how I read it. Also, the main computer core is off-line and with it, inter-ship communications. We're getting this trickle of data through backup secondary and tertiary systems. I don't know how long those will work."

Strauss turned back to Lt. Bane. "Nigel, how is Sarnek?"

"Alive, but out cold. He's got a nasty gash but I think I can staunch the blood flow with the first aid kit. Any word from sickbay?"

"Comms are down. I need to find the Captain but in the meantime, we are under disaster protocol. Securing the ship from the hull breaches and locking down the warp core take priority. Maya, can we launch the disaster buoy?"

"With the amount of damage we've taken, it should have ejected automatically."

"We can't assume that. Keep working with the engineering console. Try to determine the status of the warp core. If it goes critical, none of the rest of this matters. Ensign, you have the bridge until Lt. Bane and I return. Try to keep an eye on Sarnek until we can get medical help."

"Where are we going?" queried Nigel.

"You try to get to engineering. Better get in an E-suit in case . . . well, just do it. Get any able-bodies to work. They know the drill. God knows we've run the drills enough times. I'm going to find the Captain, then see what shape sickbay is in."

"What about communications?"

"There are some of the old-style communicators in the . . ." she paused, remembering the armory was gone. Swallowing hard, she continued, "There are some in sickbay and also in auxiliary control. Get someone to check for those - we need to distribute them to the crew ASAP."

* * *

Captain Akinola was jolted from sleep by being catapulted from his bed. He impacted the chair by the desk and lay on the floor of his quarters, momentarily stunned and disoriented.

"Are we under attack?" he wondered. But as he quickly came fully awake, he realized that was unlikely. He had been in combat enough times to recognize the impact of weapons. This was more like a collision.

He scrambled to his feet and stabbed the comm stud by the computer display. "Captain to bridge, report!"

Nothing. The computer display was blank and there was nothing coming through. He grabbed the combadge on the desk and tapped it. "Akinola to bridge, come in."

Again, nothing. He quickly dressed and strode toward the door of his quarters, nearly colliding with it when it failed to slide open. With a grimace, he opened an access panel next to the door and cranked a small handle until the door opened wide enough for him to squeeze out into the corridor. The light was dim, illuminated only by emergency lighting. The red alert panels strobed silently but offered no explanation to what befell the Bluefin. He spotted the ship's junior operations officer. The young Andorian was approaching with a decided limp.

"Sir, what's happening?" asked Ensign Drii An'Shill. He could see the fear and confusion in her eyes but her voice was calm.

"I don't know yet, Ensign, but I intend to find out. Can you walk?" he asked, gesturing to the leg she favored.

"Yes sir. I was trying to get to my duty station but the turbo lifts aren't working. I was heading toward the ladder."

"You head to sickbay, Ensign," he held up a hand as she began to protest. "No arguments. It's one deck below us. Easier than you trying to climb three decks to the bridge and you can get someone to run two of the emergency communicators to the bridge when you get there. Understood?"

"Yes sir, aye sir."

He placed a hand on her shoulder. "Remember your training, Ensign. We'll get through this."
 
I offer this nitpick only in the interest of saving a great character. Contrary to Hollywood Human Beings can survive in space for a short amount of time. A Tellarite should last longer, being they're much heartier. Gralt might be saved if he can be gotten to in time. Of course, so might the other crew members that got atmosphered out of the ship.

Of course, if the ship can't be fixed in time to get the transporters working... :shrug:

Just sayin'.

I will, of course, keep reading to see what happens.
 
Well, all good things, right?

Not for Bluefin and her crew though. Da-yum, that ship's a goner. Here's hoping against all hope they make it out of this. At least those who are still around.
 
Never boring. And, no matter how long it takes, I'm stickin' around. Thanks for the newest installment of this story. It's always nice to be reintroduced to some of my favorite characters in FanFic-dom. :techman:
 
Thanks for the latest installment! Helluva a plot twist! I did not see that one coming. Trying to catch up on everything right now after all the holiday confusion. BTW, is the United Trek website down or something?
 
Fifth Hour
USS Bluefin

Auxiliary Control

Delta Simms was nearly out of breath when she stumbled into Auxiliary Control. The normally squared-away Second Officer was adorned in workout shorts and a "Ski Rigel VII" T-shirt, her long, red hair partially secured in a pony tail, though tendrils fell across her face. Her journey to the backup control room required several detours up and down ladder alcoves while back-tracking from sealed emergency bulkheads. She was gratified to see Lt. (j.g.) Bralus already seated, his bald, blue head mottled with splotches of purple, indicating the adrenaline surge rushing through the Bolian's system. He turned to look at Simms and shook his head.

"It's bad, Commander. Almost every system has failed."

"I already figured that," she replied, her drawl more pronounced than usual. "How 'bout some specifics?"

Bralus turned back to the controls, gesturing with frustration. "The main computer is off-line and back-ups are slow at best. No comms, no sensors, no navigation, warp drive is down and we've got multiple hull breaches. Life support is on emergency back-up. Did we hit something?"

"More likely something hit us," she replied, turning to study the Master System Display. As the former assistant engineer studied the display, her face paled and she uttered a string of words that would have earned a sharp rebuke from her mother.

"All the emergency bulkheads forward of the flight deck and the main engineering section have engaged," she observed, her voice more calm than she felt. Time to set aside emotions for now. Nightmares could come later, assuming they survived.

"Shield status?" she queried. They were still on the edge of a powerful ion storm. Without shields . . .

"Primary hull shields holding and steady," he replied. "Secondary hull shields are intermittent. Sections forward of engineering are down to 70% but holding. Aft of engineering . . ." He shook his head. "I'm sorry, ma'am, but the EPS conduits were severed at junction 27 and 31. I think we're missing part of the ship."

Delta frowned as she continued to study the MSD. The starboard nacelle was off-line and probably destroyed. Add the loss of warp capability to the list of problems. "Concur," she said, taking in all the red indicators on the MSD, clamoring for attention. Work the problem, she told herself. "Can you extend the shields from the primary hull emitters?"

"Negative. We're on reserve power, as it is. For now, radiation levels in the primary hull are still in the green zone. Secondary hull levels are rising but below dangerous levels at the moment. Still, I recommend anyone going down there wear a hard suit."

"Standard protocol for damage control parties," she replied, automatically. "Assuming we have enough able-bodied crew members left to handle damage control. Priorities are life support, shields, and comms, in that order. Got it?"

The Bolian acknowledged and silently began to study the systems schematics and how to make things function in ways for which they were not designed.

Simms went to a locker near the MSD and opened it. Inside were emergency supplies - first aid, water and food concentrates, e-suits, phasers, and emergency communicators. She took one of the old-style units and flipped open the grid. She was rewarded with the chirp of an open channel. The emergency communicators did not run through the main computer so, although limited in range and capabilities, they still functioned. At least, they were supposed to. Sometimes old-school tech worked best.

"This is Lt. Commander Simms to any Bluefin personnel; report in, please."

There were several seconds of painful silence before a reply came through.

"Delta? It's O.C. What the hell happened? I've got injured crewmen stacked three deep in sickbay. The damned EMH keeps flickering in and out, asking to 'state the nature of the emergency,' and Sanders is the only corpsman who made it to sickbay in one piece. I need normal power restored or we're going to lose a lot more people."

Simms let out a breath in relief. "Hang in there Doc. We're working on it. No idea what happened yet, but we still have air to breathe and backup power. I'm in Auxiliary Control and we're trying to piece things together. Any word from the Captain or any of the bridge crew?"

"No, you're the first person I've heard from outside of the injured crew members. God, it's a mess down here." Delta could hear a commotion and what sounded like someone screaming in pain. "Gotta go," said Castille, and the channel went silent.

Simms flicked the communicator closed and sat next to Bralus at the controls. "Let's get busy," she ordered.

* * *
Ore Carrier SS Forty-Niner

Engineer Tyna Miller started awake. She had dozed off, sitting awkwardly against the bulkhead in engineering. The pain in her broken arm pushed through the exhaustion, the meds having worn off. She looked across and saw that Thurn was slumped in a chair, snoring loudly. The young Tellarite was also worn down, his efforts through EVA to repair their subspace receiver had failed. He still wore the bulky suit, the helmet discard on the deck. Miller wondered how he could sleep like that.

She winced as she stood. The hard deck was hardly conducive to rest. Best to stay awake anyway, just in case someone came to rescue them. Then, she glanced at the countdown timer she had set on the console. Just under six hours for total failure of the containment field.

Who am I kidding? she thought. No one is coming for us in this storm.

She idly wondered which deadly scenarios would be most painful. Warp core implosion? Radiation poisoning? Asphyxiation? All three were very real possibilities. At least death by core implosion would be nearly instantaneous. Radiation poisoning and/or asphyxiation . . . not so much.

It occurred to her that she could end this now. Over-riding the few remaining safety protocols would be child's play. Hell, it was a miracle that the core hadn't gone super-nova already.

Miller walked toward the engineering controls and opened an access panel. She began to reach in, then hesitated. Turning, she saw that Thurn was staring at her with his large, black eyes.

His gaze was not accusatory, just resigned. "I thought about that, too," he murmured. Miller noted the traces of dried blood on his snout and the pool of coagulated vomit on the deck. He had stayed out too long and the radiation had leeched through the suit.

"Thurn, I . . ."

"But it wasn't my place," he continued. "You're the senior officer on board. Your ship, your call."

Miller nodded. She glanced back down at the open panel. It would be so easy . . . so quick.

She closed the access panel. "No," she said, firmly. "We have over five hours. Someone will come."

* * *

Star Stallion 02

He gasped for air. Something was covering his face, but there was air . . . sweet air coming from . . . what the hell did it matter?

But why couldn't he see? There was a dark haze across his vision. He tried to blink but his eyes didn't want to work right.

And why in the seven hells did his chest hurt so bad? It felt like all three of his lungs were on fire. Yet his body was so, so cold. He was shaking . . . couldn't stop.

His last memory was of going EVA without a spacesuit. Had . . . he died? Was this one of the dreaded seven hells of legend?

If so, the afterlife sucked.

"Sir? Commander? Can you hear me?"

His eyes might not be working, but there was nothing wrong with his sense of hearing. Or smell. He inhaled through his ample nostrils. Tellarites, as a species, have a much better sense of smell than sight.

"Vargas?" It came out as a faint wheeze. By the third whore-mongering demi-god, why did his chest hurt so?

"It's okay, Mr. Gralt. You're going to be okay."

From the slight tremor in the young Ensign's voice, Gralt had serious doubts about that.

"How . . . where . . . ?" Gralt gasped.

"I . . . I'm not sure what happened. Captain Akinola ordered me to reinstall the impulse engine in the Stallion I was inspecting. I was inside, running final diagnostics after completing the installation, when all hell broke loose. One minute, I'm in the cockpit, running through lines of code . . . the next, I'm tumbling around the cabin. I managed to stabilize the stallion and saw . . . my God, sir, the ship was nearly cut in half." He paused a moment to compose himself.

"Tried contacting the ship but comms must be down. Was about to maneuver to a docking port when I noticed a secondary explosion from the remains of the engineering section. That's when I saw someone . . . you . . . tumbling away from the ship. I managed to activate the emergency transporter and you materialized and collapsed. Sir, I . . . I thought you were dead. You were cold as ice and unresponsive. Still . . . I had to try . . . used the emergency medical tricorder and the programmable hypospray. It injected Tri-ox and something for radiation exposure. Then, just now, you started breathing and . . . please, sir, don't try to remove the oxygen mask."

Gralt took in everything Vargas said. Part of his mind understood he was suffering from decompression sickness, exposure to vacuum, and extreme cold, not to mention radiation. 'Okay?' That was a frakking joke.

The Chief Engineer's greater concern was the Bluefin. He pawed weakly at Vargas' tunic, his muscles not responding readily.

"The ship," Gralt croaked. "How . . . bad?"

Vargas swallowed. "Bad, sir. Starboard nacelle is gone and we're venting plasma from the remains of the strut. Secondary hull sheared off forward of the landing bay. Engineering is . . . well, you know, sir. You were there. The primary hull appears to be mostly undamaged.

The Tellarite tried to sit up, but a paroxysm of coughing forced him back down. Vargas noted the dark blood coming from his mouth and snout. Ensign Vargas, like all Starfleet and Border Service officers, received training in advanced first aid, but he was no medical doctor. Still, he understood the devastating effects of exposure to pure vacuum. Gases trapped in Gralt's lungs had expanded when he was ejected into space, creating an embolism that ruptured bronchi and damaged lung tissue. If Gralt did not receive real medical attention, and soon, he would likely die.

The young Brazilian secured the Chief Engineer with restraints to the cot, securing him against abrupt maneuvers that might be required. Gralt had lapsed back into unconsciousness. Just as well, because Vargas needed to focus on flying the Stallion.

He moved forward, settling back into the left-hand seat and powered up the sublight engines with thrusters at standby. He activated the Stallion's sensors and frowned. Bluefin still had her shields up. He smacked his forehead, exasperated with himself. Of course the shields were up; they were still surrounded by a powerful ion storm. Good thing the shields were operating, otherwise the surviving crew members would quickly be cooked. The bad news, of course, was that he could not dock with the ship with her shields up.

Vargas was an engineer, not a pilot. But he was a problem solver, so he completed a sensor sweep over the entire cutter, looking for options.

There! As he had expected, there was a gap in the shields aft, where most of the damage occurred. It would be tight; there was only about five meters between the hull and the interior energy wall of the shields. The gap was designed to allow EVA by hard-suited crewmembers or workbees, providing access to the hull while shields were up. A Star Stallion might fit, but just barely. If he contacted the shields, the stallion could be thrown into the Bluefin's hull with catastrophic results. He needed to avoid the shield emitters as there was little to no clearance surrounding them.

He brought up the hull schematics of the Bluefin and studied them for a moment. There was a docking port on the starboard side of the saucer that seemed his best chance. As he recalled, it opened onto the same deck as sickbay, so that made it an even better choice. The downside was the need to maneuver around not one, but two shield emitters, plus the flow of sparking plasma from the fractured nacelle strut. Tricky, but doable for an experienced helm officer like Mr. Bralus or Mr. Sarnek.

Unfortunately, Ensign Vargas was not an experienced helm officer. But he was the only hope that Lt. Commander Gralt had for survival.

He took a deep breath to calm himself. Plotting a circuitous course for the smallcraft, he eased Stallion 02 forward, activating thrusters to match the slow rotation of the wounded cutter. The computer began to issue a strident proximity warning. He silenced it.

"I hope Mr. Gralt doesn't get upset if I scratch the paint," Vargas mused, as the Bluefin filled the viewport against the backdrop of a deadly ionic tempest.
 
See, it takes more than the freezing cold, airless vacuum of space to kill a Tellarite. Really glad Gralt pulled through. Would have missed the fella.

I get it, he ain't exactly save yet and its far too early to celebrate anything, considering the state Bluefin is in, not to mention that ion storm just waiting to finish her off.

But I'm rooting for these guys. How could you not?
 
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