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"What's Upp?" The Implausible Adventures of Elvis Upp

TheLoneRedshirt

Commodore
Commodore
“What’s Upp?”
The First Installment of the Implausible Adventures of Elvis Upp

Introduction
This story has been in my files (perhaps "crypt" is more apt, considering the total lack of writing I've done of late). It is set in the immediate post-Dominion war era in the United Trek universe. It is not, however, a Starfleet or Border Service story (though there will be cameos aplenty). Rather, it is a tale focused on a rather enigmatic and eccentric character by the name of Elvis Upp.

If you recall the TOS episode, "Assignment Earth," then you remember a character by the name of Gary Seven, an agent from the 24th century who traveled back in time to 1968 to prevent a nuclear war. There, he encounters Kirk, Spock and the Enterprise crew who have gone back in time to research that era. I won't bore you with the plot details; suffice it to say that Elvis Upp is a former member of the same agency as Gary Seven. As the story unfolds and we meet the other main character, Tygreta "Tyg" Germaine, Elvis Upp now operates as a free-ance Troubleshooter, though Gary Seven considers him more of a trouble-maker. In truth, the story is a bit of "Star Trek" meets "Hitchhikers Guide to the Galaxy." My apologies to both the late Gene Roddenberry and the late Douglas Adams.

I've dusted off this story that I originally wrote eight years ago. The opening tale is just a few chapters long, so I can gauge whether there is sufficient interest to move the story along.

Chapter 1: "Irony"
14 September 2377

Nagasaki, Japan, Earth


Tygreta Germaine (“Tyg” to everyone but her mother) sipped tea on the balcony of her midtown micro-hab apartment. The morning sun that slowly rose over Nagasaki provided a pleasant contrast to the morning chill that still hung in the air. Her bare feet rested on the smooth dura-crete rail of the balcony.

Tyg idly fingered the rune that hung from the chain around her neck. She had picked it up in a curio shop, an impulse purchase, the previous day. It was a small Mandarin character that translated as “irony.”

For three hundred years, Nagasaki was known as “The City of Irony.” Nearly destroyed by atomic fire at the end of the Second World War, it was one of the few major cities on Earth to come through World War III relatively unscathed.

Ironic, indeed.

She had asked the shopkeeper why a Chinese symbol was used to represent a Japanese city. He had merely nodded sagely, smiled and replied, “Ironic, isn’t it?”

Turning the glyph over, she saw tiny letters engraved on the back. “Made on Rigel IV.”

She bought the trinket anyway.

It was also ironic that, having survived the Borg incursion (barely) and the Dominion War (with more than a few lingering nightmares), Tyg was now beginning to long for the old days of excitement and adventure she had left behind when she resigned her Starfleet commission some seven months earlier. A counselor might suggest that she consider a less stressful and dangerous path. Her close friend, Sophie, suggested she was crazy and that she should pursue a life of excess drink and wild orgies.

At the time, leaving Starfleet has seemed like a good idea. Tyg had planned on reconnecting with her mother in New York City, the semi-employed stage actress and professional hypochondriac, Dame Nessarine Lynatta, (formerly Betty Jo Hurkler of Sioux City, Iowa). However, after 24 hours in her mother’s Manhattan flat, Tyg remembered one of the main reasons she had joined Starfleet in the first place.

Her mother drove her nuts.

It wasn’t that her mother was a bad person. Betty Jo, er, the Dame, loved her daughter deeply and was generally kind and caring. But Dame Nessarine Lynatta’s first love was the theater. The eccentric actress tended to be as dramatic at home as she was on stage. Perhaps if she were a good actress, it would have been tolerable, but Tyg’s mother was not. Nor was she a bad actress, exactly. Hers was the mediocre lot of the supporting cast where stardom remains perpetually out of reach.

Yet in Dame Nessarine’s mind, she was a star – a thespian icon cast in the mold of the immortals of Broadway’s glitzy past. She even named her only daughter “Tygreta” after her one and only lead role from the stupendously dreadful production of “Brunch on Betazed.” It held the dubious distinction of having the shortest run on Broadway of any play in history. It was so bad that on opening night, bodyguards had to escort the playwright from the theater as the patrons sought to lynch him.

And that was at the end of Act One.

But even though she despised her name, Tyg dearly loved her mother. Her father also loved her mother, though from a distance of 234.6 light years. Roger Germaine had emigrated to the Capadocia system when Tyg had left for Starfleet. “Tyg, I love your mother too much to throw her out an eighth floor window,” he had explained, “but one more year with her and one of us would end up as pavement pizza.”

Dear old Dad now ran a shuttle rental agency on New Cyprus. He called his estranged wife faithfully each year on her birthday to remind himself what a smart move leaving Earth had been.

So after a week of visiting with her mother, Tyg had decided that she needed a bit of space. Thus, she had rented the micro-apartment in Nagasaki. It was about as far she could get from her mother and still remain on the same planet. Her mother, God bless her, had spent their few days together either complaining about various imaginary ailments, complaining about her agent, complaining about how holo-movies were, oh so gauche! And of course, she had complained about Tygreta’s complete lack of fashion sense. (Dear, would it really hurt to spend a few hours with a decent hair-dresser?)

Not wishing to hurl her mother (or herself) from the eighth floor, she had profusely thanked her mother for her hospitality and explained that she wished to see the planet a bit before exploring other possibilities. Since then, she had hiked across Europe, cycled through the Serengeti, and climbed a rather tall mountain in the Himalayas. She had told her friend, Sophie, that she was working off a bit of excess energy. Sophie had opined that Tyg was daft and that the offer of excess booze and risky sex with her cohabitants was still open.

Tyg had considered sailing around the world with an old academy chum, but “chum” reminded her of shark bait so she put the kibosh on that plan. Thus, Tyg decided it was time to find something productive to do with her life. She had considered re-joining Starfleet, but concluded she would like a bit less regimen at this point in her life but still challenging, yet more laid-back. Her engineering and computer skills were marketable, but there was no way she was going to work for one of the huge conglomerates on Earth or one of the other major planets.

Instead, she had set her customized PADD to work. “Patti,” as she affectionately called the extraordinary device, was scouring the quadrant for job opportunities that would be challenging, interesting and (hopefully) fun. Tyg had built the PADD herself, using a surplus Starfleet model and adding upgraded processors and a personality sub-routine she had developed over the years. Patti was now more powerful than a cargo pod full of PADDs and her A.I. made her almost lifelike. Unfortunately, the personality matrix had a sarcastic streak that Tyg had been unable to modify.

Instead of chiming, Patti emitted the first few bars of the William Tell Overture to indicate she had found something of interest.

“Can’t you just ‘ding’ like other PADDs?” asked Tyg.

The PADD uttered a sigh. “If I must . . . Ding! There, happy now?”

“Elated. I take it you found something?”

“I ‘dinged,’ didn’t I?”

“So you did. Screen display, text only, please.”

“Don’t you want me to read it to you?”

“No, thanks. Just open the message. I can read it myself.”

“I’m amazed, considering the gray goo you have for a processor.”

“I can trade you in for a used replicator, you know.”

“Whatever. Text on display in Fed-Standard. Anything else?”

“I’ll let you know. Sleep mode, Patti.”

“Okay, I can take a hint. By the way, I think you should take the job.”

“Oh, really? Why?”

“Anything to get out of this city. The stasis unit in the apartment keeps making suggestive remarks to me.”

“I’ll keep that in mind. Sleep mode, please.”

“Complying.”

Tyg picked up the PADD, knowing full well that Patti wasn’t in sleep-mode, only being quiet for the moment. She glanced at the screen to read the advert.

AlphaQuad-List – Help Wanted – Molari Sector

- Category: Engineer/Mechanic

- Listing 0078922AE22 – Stardate 54697.16


Wanted – Full-time engineer competent with impulse/warp drives. Experience with Leyland-TATA HD48 transports a definite plus. Must be willing to travel for indeterminate periods. Pay, negotiable – commiserate with experience. Applicants must tolerate small, furry, Terran quadrapeds. Vacation and retirement benefits. Apply in person, Star Station Echo, berth 17-C, SS Westwind. Contact Ship’s Master, E. Upp at comm. code L6488KM3A to forward resume’ and bona-fides. Psychos, miscreants, and mercenaries need not apply.

A smile formed on Tyg’s lips and she shook her head slightly at the eccentric nature of the want-ad. Still, she had cut her teeth on her Dad’s Leyland-TATA HD68 – itself a vintage starcraft. An HD48 was an earlier and more opulent model. Probably not too many engineers around familiar with those sturdy but cantankerous transports.

It sounded like a challenge. It sounded interesting. And, it sounded fun.

She scooped up Patti and stepped back inside the single-room apartment. Stopping before the mirror, she absently ran her fingers through her shag-cut brown hair – styled more for comfort and ease of maintenance than glamour. Her reflection revealed an attractive woman, tall and slender with large brown eyes. She had rebelled against her mother’s efforts to instill charm and grace in her as a teenager, so she was far more comfortable in jeans and t-shirts than formal wear. The last time she had worn high-heels she had nearly fallen down a flight of stairs.

“Patti, wake up.”

“Now what?”

“Close out my local accounts and get me booked on a transport to the Molari Sector.”

“I take it you are applying in person?”

“You bet your tritanium case. I need to pack. Oh, and send a message to Mr. Wantanabe that we’ll be leaving. I’m sure he has a waiting list for this jail cell.”

“He will miss you.”

“He will miss flashing me in the hallway, though I must admit – for a 110 year-old man, he has a cute ass.” One of the downsides of the shared bathing facilities in the micro-hab was dealing with the local custom of parading buck-naked down the hallway. At least, Mr. Wantanabe claimed it was a local custom.

Tyg set about gathering her meager possessions and tossing them in a clam-shell case. The stasis unit in the kitchen emitted a plaintive beep.

“Loser,” retorted the PADD.

To be continued . . .
 
Chapter Two: Seven-Upp

Stardate 54703.2 (14 September 2377)
Star Station Echo – Molari Sector
Merchant’s Alley


Elvis Upp leaned back in his chair and flashed a dazzling smile at the Starbux barista as he held up his mug for a refill. He knew his smile was dazzling because he practiced it in the mirror several times each day.

The young, incredibly alluring green Orion woman smiled in return and approached his table. “Care for another Raktajino, Mr. Upp?”

“You read my mind, Zella. And please – do call me Elvis.”

“Sure thing . . . Elvis.” She took his mug and made her way back toward the bar as Upp watched her hips move provocatively under her tight slacks. He uttered a regretful sigh and turned to face his companion. “It’s a shame my high ethical standards prevent me from making a pass at our lovely hostess.”

R’u’lek carefully placed his mug of hot, steaming vinegar on the table and regarded Upp with an expression of mild distaste. This did not bother Upp as the Ariolo’s facial muscles could only express a range of emotions from mild distaste to baleful indifference. It had taken Upp ten years to tell the difference.

“Why did she not offer me a refill?” asked R’u’lek in his ponderous monotone.

“Hate to tell you, old man, but you lack a certain . . . charm. Why not try smiling for a change? It works for me?”

The Ariolo gazed at Upp with his pale, pink eyes. After a moment, his oral cavity contorted into a shape guaranteed to give small children nightmares for months.

“Like this?”

“Not bad, not bad, but I suggest you keep that brilliant smile in check for the moment, lest you send some sweet young thing into apoplexy.”

“It was not a good smile?”

Upp considered this. “Ah, perhaps ‘good’ would be a bit strong for it. ‘A’ for effort, though, old sod. Just – please . . . don’t ever do that again. It makes you look like a salt vampire.”

R’u’lek relaxed his straining cheek muscles, allowing his mouth to resume its normal inverted vee shape. “That was painful.”

Elvis nodded in agreement. “For us both. Ah, thank you my dear!” Upp took the mug from the lovely green Orion barrista. She flashed a smile that would have sent most humanoid males to their knees, groveling at her feet. For his part, Elvis seemed oddly immune to her powerful pheromones. In fact, it was the young Orion woman who was entranced by this seemingly human male.

“Can I get you anything else, Mr. Upp? Anything at all?”

Upp’s smile shifted easily from dazzling to wistful. “Alas, no. But thank you so much, Zella - the Raktajino is excellent!”

She made her way back to the service counter, glancing back frequently at Upp and stepping on the foot of another patron.

Upp turned back to R’u’lek. “Actually, the Raktajino they serve here is swill, but she is such a sweet girl. So helpful, too.”

R’u’lek stared at his now empty mug. “I still did not get a refill,” he announced, balefully.

Before Upp could reply, the air next to their table shimmered briefly and a human male appeared. There was no discernable transporter effect – the man simply appeared out of thin air. He was dressed in modern business attire and his graying hair was neatly groomed. The only thing odd about him (other than his sudden appearance) was the black cat that perched on his left shoulder.

Upp sighed. “Hello, Gary.”

“Agent 446,” said the man, in reply. By the tone of his voice it was evident that he was somewhat put out with Elvis.

“Gary, how long have we known each other?”

“I’d prefer to keep this professional . . .”

“No, no. That was a legitimate question, Gary. Really - how long have we known one another? Because I have come to realize that the story about how you picked me up from Earth 4,400 years ago is a load of Horta pucky. I’m not even from Earth, am I?”

“This isn’t the time or place, Agent 446. If you’ll come back with me to the Agency, we can sort through all the difficulties surrounding your past.”

Elvis gestured around at the coffee shop. “This seems like as good a time and place as any other. Please, have a seat. Isis, how have you been? How about a saucer of milk?”

The feline purred, which seemed to annoy Gary Seven. He placed the cat on a chair and took a seat next to R’u’lek. Elvis waved his hand and the exuberant Orion girl returned, accidentally knocking a cup of hot tea into a the lap of an elderly Vulcan.

“Yes, Mr. Upp?”

“Elvis, please. A saucer of low-fat milk for the cat, and a glass of prune juice for the constipated gentleman.”

Seven’s gaze never left Upp. “Nothing for me, thanks.”

Upp shrugged. “Just the milk, then. Oh, you wouldn’t happen to have any fresh sprigs of cat-nip, would you?”

“I could run to the pet store . . .” she suggested, eagerly.

Gary Seven’s gaze was strong enough to cloud photographic film. Upp relented. “Ah well, never mind then. Sorry, Isis.”

The cat let out a soft “mrowr” to indicate she understood.

“Agent . . .” began Seven. Upp held up a finger and waggled it. Seven pursed his lips and continued with heroic patience. “Elvis . . . I’ve been sent to bring you in.”

“But Gary, I have no intention of going with you. And we both know you can’t force me, even if you wanted to. Besides, I’m still carrying out missions for the Agency. I’m simply free-lancing now.”

He produced a small flat device from his pocket. A holographic business card floated into view.

Seven never broke eye-contact with Upp. “Elvis Upp – Troublemaker.”

“That’s ‘Trouble-shooter,’ Gary.”

“Yes, you do enjoy shooting things, don’t you?”

Upp spread his hands expansively. “What can I say? I have a gift. Besides, the results speak for themselves. I took care of that bit of nasty business in sector 35221, didn’t I?”

“You blew up a fuel depot and destroyed 374 million credits worth of spacecraft.”

“Exactly! Let’s see those Guunarians try any mischief now, eh?”

A vein began to pulse visibly in Gary Seven’s temple. “Our mission is to prevent things from being blown up, remember?”

“Oh yes, quite well. Let’s see – how did that work out for you on Earth a few centuries back? . . . World War III . . . The Eugenics War . . . The Post-Atomic Horror . . .”

Seven didn’t take the bait. “We’re not gods, Agent. Sometimes the best we can do is delay the inevitable and limit casualties. That seems to be something you’ve forgotten.”

“Ah yes . . . there’s that word again – ‘forgotten.’ The Agency has made damn sure that I’ve forgotten a great deal, wouldn’t you agree?”

Seven surprised Upp by appearing embarassed. “For what it’s worth, I wish I could change that.” He averted his eyes. “It wasn’t right.”

Upp snorted derisively. “Right? The bloody agency unscrewed my skull, stole my real memories and replaced them with a new set of their own choosing. Everything I supposedly remember about my past is suspect. Hell, I don’t even know where or when I was born.” He paused to peer intently at Gary Seven. "For that matter, I may be imagining that I know you." The thought seemed to cheer Upp.

The barista returned with a saucer of milk, only to stop abruptly. In place of the cat, a striking woman now sat in the chair between Upp and Seven. She had raven-black hair, emerald green eyes and a tight-fitting black dress which left little to the imagination.

The Orion girl could swear the woman was purring.

“Um, where did the cat go?” she asked.

“Just leave the milk on the table, my dear,” replied Upp, his gaze remaining on Seven. “My friend, here, will pay the bill.”

“No rush,” replied the barista, suddenly feeling the need to be elsewhere. She hurried back to the counter, ignoring the outstretched, empty mug of the Ariolo.

R’u’lek lowered his mug. “Never mind,” he said, morosely.

To be continued . . .
 
A very interesting, very different take on the Trekverse, one that would definitely be fun to explore. Have to say I'm liking your cast of characters so far; Tyg, Upp, R'u'lek and Patti all seem very different and really rather fun. It's been ages since I last saw "Assignment: Earth" but looking into it now it really feels like a Trek version of Doctor Who, almost.

Nice to see an Ariolo in the mix. Also, where can I get a PADD like Patti? She has the potential to become my favourite 'character' called Patti, P8 Blue (from S.C.E.) better watch out :)

More please.
 
admiralelm11 and Bry - thanks for the kind comments. Yeah, I guess there is a bit of a Dr. Who vibe as well, though Upp is not a Time Lord (at least, not that he remembers). More coming very soon.
 
admiralelm11 and Bry - thanks for the kind comments. Yeah, I guess there is a bit of a Dr. Who vibe as well, though Upp is not a Time Lord (at least, not that he remembers). More coming very soon.
If he was you could have him team up with Guinan at some point, I'm pretty convinced she was a Time Lord :)

I'm curious to see what you have in mind for a Leyland-TATA HD48 transport.
 
Chapter 3 - The Westwind

Stardate 54746.4 (30 September 2377)
Star Station Echo – Molari Sector
Transporter Station C


Tyg Germaine materialized on the public transporter platform and looked around. It was her first time on Star Station Echo – one of the major border stations near Klingon space and home to the 7th Border Service squadron. As a former Fleet officer, Tyg had certain prejudices against what she considered the junior varsity branch of Starfleet, but she supposed they served a necessary function – especially out here along the fringes of the Federation.

She stepped off the platform along with several beings from various worlds. After 16 days in a freighter stateroom, she was ready to stretch her legs and explore. First, she needed to obtain temporary lodging, then locate the ship of her potential new employer.

The former was simple enough. While not nearly as large as some of the major starbases, Echo Station still offered a variety of lodging options – from the basic to the luxurious. She decided to splurge and get something with a private bath – not that she was expecting an encounter with a group of elderly nude Japanese men – but why take the chance?

“Patti” directed her to one of the station’s smaller hotels. It was conveniently located near the merchant section with several restaurants and bars. Her room was larger than the Nagasaki micro-hab in which she had spent better than six months. No balcony, of course (she was on a space station, after all) but the viewport offered a decent, though unspectacular view of the local star system. There were no nearby planets, save a rocky moon/planetoid surrounded by angular space docks. Still, it beat staring at a blank wall.

Tossing her clam-shell case on the bed, she placed Patti on a table and checked out the bathroom. The practical side of her wondered at the towels folded in the animal shapes, but aside from that the facilities proved to be clean and more than adequate. The tub featured all sorts of computerized water jets, soap replicators and the ability to conform to the shape of the occupant. She was simply glad to be able to soak in private, far from the perusal of ancient Asian men. Tyg glanced at her chronometer. The bubble bath would have to wait. Fortunately, there was also a sonic shower stall of which she availed herself, taking less than two minutes.

Stepping back into the main room, she opened the clam-shell and spread her entire civilian wardrobe across the bed: two sets of coveralls (one bright yellow, the other neon green - a nice change from her years in Starfleet black), a pair of jeans, khaki slacks, some shorts, several t-shirts, a sweater, and her work-out togs - running shorts, halter top and headband.

She tried to recall the last time she owned a dress, much less a business suit. Her mother had attempted (without success) to get her to wear ‘fashionable’ clothes. Tyg had rebelled at the notion. Serving in Starfleet for 15 years had made clothing decisions even easier. Duty uniform / engineering coveralls / dress uniform. Easy-peasy.

“Wear the sweater and the khakis,” suggested the PADD.

“Why? I’m not going on a date.”

“You are interviewing for a job, aren’t you? Trust me – it’s better to err on the side of caution. Too bad you don’t own a suit.”

“Don’t start – you’re beginning to sound like Mother.” She picked up the yellow coveralls and slipped out of her olive green shorts and Mt. Fuji t-shirt.

“Please tell me you’re not wearing coveralls,” tsked the PADD.

“Patti, if you don’t button it, I’m going to put you in the tub and turn on the water.”


“I’m water-proof to 18 atmospheres, remember? Besides, you should take me with you.”

Tyg paused with one leg in her coveralls. “Why on Earth would I want to do that?”

“While you’re trying to impress Captain Upp I can do some checking of my own – scan the ship for contraband, talk with the computer . . .”

“Oh no – not after what happened on the freighter! No more talking to strange computers.”

“That was not my fault. How was I to know I’d overload its cache memory?”

“My point exactly; you didn’t know. We damn near flew through a planet at warp 6.”

“We were never in any real danger. I overrode the nav-computer before any real harm could befall the ship or its occupants.”

“And I nearly got kicked off the ship for your little stunt. The Captain kept muttering about ‘airlock two.’”

“Look,” pressed the PADD, “The Westwind is docked, so it’s not like it can go off course and plow into a star. I promise I’ll be careful. But you’ll thank me for this, I know it.”

Tyg zipped the front of her jumpsuit, showing just enough cleavage to be interesting but not flirty. “Don’t make me regret this or I’ll trade you in for a 3-D chess set.” She picked up the PADD and placed it in her sage green messenger bag and headed out the door of her hotel room.

It took Tyg fifteen minutes and two wrong turns to find berth 17-C, located in a massive internal landing bay crowded with shuttles, runabouts, star-galleons, space-yachts and personal transports. A feeling of wistfulness washed over Tyg as she strolled past the myriad ships from all around the quadrant. The familiar smells of ozone, thruster fuel and coolant mingled with the electric, dry air created by idling repulsor-lifts. It washed over her like a wave of nostalgia, reminding her of her days on the USS Ticonderoga as assistant engineer.

She stopped before a pristine Leyland TATA-48 transport, clad in a beautiful burgundy and gold livery. Though nearly a century old, the gleaming vessel looked like she had been launched by the Kolkata Ship Yards of India only yesterday. The SS Westwind rested gracefully on six landing struts. The forward-pitched flight deck loomed above her, portholes shedding the soft, faint light of the control room. Her deflector dish was still a pristine copper color, surrounded by sensor nodes sculpted into the hull in a neo Art-Deco style. The faired-in warp nacelles gave the impression of blinding speed, though the ship was standing still.

Tyg never had a chance. It was love at first sight.

She began a slow walk around the vintage ship, letting her fingers brush along the Duranium hull plates. Here and there she could tell repairs had been made, but lovingly so – no hashed up patch job here. The owner of the Westwind obviously took tremendous pride in the old ship.

From the other side of the ship she heard voices. Walking back around the bow, she spotted a Tellarite skulking off, obviously disgruntled. Of course, from her experience with Tellarites, he might be in a perfectly jovial mood. Most Tellarites were happiest when they were disgruntled.

A voice caught her attention. The accent seemed Britsh, though in a somewhat generic fashion. Something about the accent hinted of origins a great distance from sector 001.

“Thanks so much, Mr. Grunk. I’ll be sure to contact you with our decision shortly. A few more interviews to conduct, I’m sure you understand. Goodbye, goodbye.”

The voice belonged to a man who appeared to be Human, perhaps in his mid to late 30’s. He had wavy chestnut hair, dark eyes and a cleft chin – handsome in a roguish sense. He wore an open collar shirt with tropical print, brown trousers and boots. Turning back towards the ship, he began to mutter to himself.

“ . . . most disagreeable, bloody-minded Tellarite I’ve had the misfortune to meet in the past five centuries . . . ,” he murmured before spying Tyg. He came up short, momentarily surprised, before producing a radiant smile that would have made the most hard-hearted toothpaste manufacturer weep with joy.

“Ah, hello!” he said, with considerable ebullience. “You must be Tygreta Germaine. I’m Elvis Upp, Captain of the Westwind.” He extended a hand in greeting.

Tyg took the proffered hand, gripping it firmly. “I prefer ‘Tyg.’ I’m here about the engineering job.”

“Tyg?” His voice took on a slightly disappointed tone. “Well, if you insist, but I do love the name, ‘Tygreta.’ I had the pleasure of seeing ‘Brunch on Betazed,’ many years ago and was absolutely captivated by the lead character by that name. Pity they closed the show after Act one.”

Tyg blinked, momentarily speechless. “You . . . you saw ‘Brunch on Betazed.’ And you actually liked it?”

“Oh yes. – a brilliant performance by the lead actress . . . let’s see, what was her name? Dame Nessarine . . .”

“Lynatta,” finished Tyg dully, now feeling totally off-balanced. She last felt this way while going through zero-gee self-defense training, something with which she had been totally inept.

Upp snapped his fingers. “That’s it! You know of her, then?”

“Well, um, yes. She’s my mother.”

Upp beamed with pleasure. “Why this is absolutely marvelous! I’m one of your mother’s biggest fans. Please, come aboard and you can tell me all about her.”

“Uh, what about the interview?”

“Oh, plenty of time for that. Besides, I read your resume’ – most impressive. You’re the only applicant that’s even seen one of these ships, much less actually worked on one. As far as I’m concerned, the job is yours.” He began to move up the gangway into the ship.

He stopped abruptly and turned, an inquisitive eyebrow raised. Tyg nearly collided with him. “You’re, um, not a terrorist, serial killer, shape-shifting salt vampire, or anything unpleasant like that, are you?” he asked.

“What? No! Of course not!”

“Good, good. One can’t be too careful these days.” He moved forward again into the ship’s interior.

Tyg paused for just a moment, considering. The man before her couldn’t be much more than a couple of years her senior. Yet, her mother’s one-time lead role in the ill-fated “Brunch on Betazed” took place 40 years ago, before Tyg was even born. Surely Elvis Upp could not have been around to see that Broadway bomb. Which meant, he was either a bald-faced liar or he was playing a game with her for some unknown reason.

Her better judgment was screaming for her to turn around and leave, but her stubborn curiosity told her to see the interview through. Besides, it was an honest-to-God Leyland TATA HD48 in absolutely pristine condition! She could at least see the ship before she told him where to stick his job offer.

So, curiosity gave good judgment the extended middle finger and she followed Upp aboard the Westwind.

Like her father’s old HD68, the airlock on the Westwind opened into a small commons area just below the flight deck. But unlike her Dad’s bare-bones ship, the Westwind’s commons was fully restored with a genuine galley (though a replicator had been artfully inserted into the bulkhead), a large oval table of oak, and gleaming brass fixtures everywhere. Six opulently padded swivel chairs surrounded the table while hatchways led forward to a pair of cabins and aft to engineering. A similar layout was below decks, providing space for cargo, life-support, and the lower half of the engineering deck.

She was about to comment, when a gray-skinned Ariolo stepped through the aft hatchway. Typical of his race, he had an angular, bony head with pale eyes and gray skin. Somewhat atypical were the bright yellow rubber gloves, scrub-brush and apron that read, ‘Kiss the Cook.’”

“The next time a Tellarite uses the head, you are cleaning it,” he announced to Upp.

“Ah, R’u’lek. Marvelous timing. Allow me to introduce Tygreta Germaine, our new engineer.”

“Tyg,” she corrected, automatically. “Actually, I’m not . . .”

“ . . . through telling me all about her mother. Did you know that Tygreta is the daughter of Dame Nessarine Lynatta, famed lady of show and stage?”

R’u’lek lacked the requisite bone and muscular structure to shake his head, so he shrugged instead. He noticed that humans often did this when they had no idea what was going on.

“Nice to meet you,” said R’u’lek to Tyg in a sonorous tone. “Please excuse me – I need to flush out the sludge tanks. Again.” This last was directed at Elvis who beamed with approval.

“Excellent. Don’t let us hold you up, old man.” He indicated a chair at the table. “Do have a seat, Ms. Germaine. Would you care for something to drink? Coffee? Tea? Janx Spirit, perhaps?”

“No, I’m fine thanks. Look, could we discuss . . .”

Tyg was interrupted by the arrival of a Siamese cat who leapt quietly into her lap and stared intently with eyes blue as sapphires. The feline made a rumbling noise in her throat that was not exactly a purr.

“Cleo, there will be no intimidating the guests,” admonished Upp. “Don’t you have some navigational problems to sort out? Off with you, then.”

The cat opened her mouth briefly to reveal a set of needle sharp teeth, before leaping nimbly to the deck and sauntering toward the ladder which led to the bridge. Cleo easily ascended the ladder and disappeared with a flick of her tail.

“Navigational problems. Cute!” chuckled Tyg, inexplicably relieved by the cat’s departure.

Upp smiled absently but he appeared vaguely puzzled by Tyg’s reaction. “Well, yes. I find it’s wise to cross-train the crew in a variety of disciplines. Of course, we have a perfectly functional nav-computer, but still – one should prepare for the unexpected.”

“Yeeeah, right,” replied Tyg, now certain that Upp was either crazy or playing her for a fool. “Why don’t you tell me what it is you do, Mr. Upp? Are you a terrorist or serial killer?”

Elvis laughed. “Oh, heaven’s no! No, no, nothing like that. Which is not to say that I don’t occasionally terrorize people or kill the odd miscreant. But never on a serial basis. I’m more of a troubleshooter, you see.”

Tyg nodded her head, before shaking it. “Yes. That is, no, I don’t see.” She stood decisively. “Well, it’s been a pleasure to meet you, Mr. Upp. Sorry to waste your time, but I don’t think I’m suited for the job. I have a low threshold for weird. I’ll just see myself out. Bye.”

Elvis Upp stood as well. “Please, wait! I . . . really wish you would reconsider, Ms. Germaine. I honestly believe you would fit in well here.”

She regarded him with suspicion. “Sorry, Mr. Upp, but this is moving into the uber-weirdness zone at high warp speed.” Tyg glanced around. “I truly love your ship – it’s beautiful and you’ve obviously cared for it, so that’s a point in your favor. But all this crap about seeing my mother act? A cat that does navigation? And the smart-ass remark about killing and terrorizing?” Her eyes flashed with indignation.

“I don’t like to be taken for a fool, mister, so you can take this job and . . .”

“Would you like to find the man who killed Walter Krupp?” he interrupted, quietly. Upp’s smile was gone, replaced with an expression so intense and sincere that Tyg actually felt a chill. The seeming non-sequitur had an immediate and profound impact on her.

“Wh-what?” Tyg felt as if her breath had been knocked from her. Her throat tightened and her eyes began to well with tears. “How did you know about . . .?” Her knees suddenly felt weak and she staggered backward .

“Please, have a seat,” he implored, gently. “Everything I have told you is true, strange as it may seem. When I received your resume’ I did a background check just as I did for all the applicants. I don’t know if you believe in Karma, but there are inexplicable coincidences that seem to be aligning our paths: your mother, your experience with this class of ship, and Werner Krupp.”

Tyg sank back into her chair. “But I don’t understand,” she began, her voice hollow, “How could you possibly know about Walter?”

Upp did not answer immediately, instead producing a monogrammed handkerchief which he handed to Tyg. As she wiped her eyes and blew her nose loudly, Elvis walked to the replicator.

“Water,” he ordered, “chilled.”

A small glass of water swirled into existence. Upp took the glass and carried it to Tyg. She took a sip and nodded her head in thanks.

“Sorry about the hanky,” she said.

“Don’t mention it,” he said, kindly. “Keep it, I have others.”

“What do you know about Walter Krupp?” she demanded, having regained her composure.

“He served as first officer of the USS Barcelona during the war. A ship on which you once served, I believe?”

Tyg nodded. “I was an engineer. Walter and I were close.” She hesitated. “Very close,” she amended.

Upp nodded. “Yes, so I gathered. And you remained thusly, even after you resigned your commission?”

She let out a shuddering breath. “Yeah. Walter figured he would stay in a few years longer – see if he had a shot for his fourth pip.” Tyg shook her head, “He survived the war only to die in a stupid charlie-foxtrot rescue mission. I never could get any details from Starfleet as I no longer had ‘need-to-know.’ I finally got a little more detail from our former C.O. Captain Yu. She told me that Walter and three crewmen were returning to the Barcelona via shuttle when they picked up a distress call in a nearby star system. They diverted to render assistance, only to be attacked by pirates.”

Tyg paused, taking another sip of water and peered intently at Upp.

“If you know so much, you must know the rest – the pirates took them hostage and demanded ransom from Captain Yu for the release. Starfleet policy, of course, forbids negotiations with terrorists and pirates.”

She paused again, staring down at the table, her eyes unfocused and distant. “They found Walter and the others two days later on a small planetoid. The pieces of their remains were scattered over a three-square kilometer area. They never found Walter’s head.”

Upp regarded the woman silently for several moments. “Tygreta,” he began quietly.

“Tyg.”

“Right. Sorry. Tyg – for whatever reason, by whatever twist of fate, the wheel of Ka, or cosmic forces, you are here. The persons responsible for your friend’s death are even now stirring up havoc for a settlement a few light-years away. So far, they’ve managed to elude the Border Service. They won’t elude me.”

“Bold words, Mr. Upp. Besides, what is that to you?”



“Elvis, please. Your skepticism is completely understandable. As to why, well . . . I have my reasons. If you like, take some time to think about it – say, 48 hours. You can inquire with the local squadron commander, Admiral Morgan Bateson about me if you like.”

“You’re a friend of his?”

He smiled. “Friend? Not exactly, but he has known me for a long time. A very, very long time.”

She stared at him long and hard. He did not seem bothered by her intense gaze.

“You said you saw my mother perform in New York – at the opening of ‘Brunch on Betazed.’”

He nodded. “I did.”

“That was forty years ago.”

“Yes, it was.”

She paused and cocked her head. “How old are you, Elvis?”

He breathed in deeply and exhaled slowly. “I wish I could give you an exact answer to your question, Tyg. Honestly, I don’t know. But I’m quite confident that by your standards, I’m very old indeed.”

“Over 40?”

“Most assuredly.”

“Who are you? What are you, an El-Aurian?”

The broad smile returned, not quite the dazzling version usually favored by brokers upon closing a sale on a Boca Raton condo, but close.

“I’m Elvis Upp, Troubleshooter. Have ship – will travel. I’m also a former employee of The Agency, though that probably has little meaning to you.”

“Full disclosure – answer my questions.”

“Fire away.”

“What species are you?”

“Not El-Aurian. Human. Mostly. I think. I’m pretty sure I’m not originally from Earth.”

“This ‘Agency’ – is it some sort of intelligence group?”

“Well, I’m not sure how much accumulated intelligence you’ll find. Suffice it to say, its mission is benevolent and its jurisdiction quite vast.”

“I’ve never heard of it.”

“Marketing has never been a strong suit of the Agency. General policy is to remain behind the scenes, so to speak.”

“But you have a business card.”

“As I said, I’m a former employee. I decided to go free-lance a while back over some personal matters.”

“What sort of personal matters.”

Elvis stood abruptly. “I’ll make you a deal, Tyg. If you take the job and come on as engineer, I’ll tell you more – at least, as much as I can.”

Tyg frowned. “You’re asking me to step into a role without knowing what I’ll be doing.”

“You’ll keep the Westy running and in pristine shape. Beyond that will be up to you.”

She chewed her lip, a habit for which her mother often chastised her, but Elvis found to be quite endearing. "48 hours, huh?"

He shrugged. "I wish I could give you more time, but I have places to be and people to see. We ship out in less than three days."

She stood. "I'll let you know."

To be continued . . .
 
Chapter 4 - "Weighing Options"

Stardate 54746.8 (30 September 2377)
Star Station Echo – Molari Sector
Traveler’s Rest Inn, Room 308


Tyg slipped into the steaming hot water and uttered a sigh of pure bliss. One of the few things she disliked about her time in Starfleet was the lack of proper bathtubs on starships. Any idiot could tell you that a nice, hot bath with an adequate supply of lavender-scented bubbles could do more to sooth the soul and de-stress a troubled mind than a herd of counselors (of did counselors come in flocks?). Add a rubber duck and you could damn near resurrect the dead.

At least, that was Tyg’s experience. She wriggled herself into the self-contouring tub and sighed again as the water jets kicked in, massaging the tense muscles in her neck and back. The computerized tub made sure the water was just the right temperature – not quite hot enough to scald, but certainly warm enough to give the skin a rosy glow. It also automatically replenished the supply of frothy bubbles that nearly obliterated Tyg from view.

It was almost enough to make her forget her recent interview with Elvis Upp, or whoever the hell he was. She had to rack that up as one of the strangest encounters of her life, though to date, nothing had quite topped her encounter with the priest, the rabbi and several thousand Tribbles.

Don’t ask.

Unfortunately, Tyg had left her rubber duck back at her mother’s Manhattan flat, so she was not entirely able to rid her mind of her recent, bizarre meeting on the Westwind with Elvis Upp.

“Might as well ‘debrief,’” she muttered. She cut her eyes toward the vanity where “Patti,” her trusty PADD sat by a towel folded in the shape of a Terran swan. Perhaps the hotel imported their housekeeping staff from DisneyMoon on Luna. Patti had been surprisingly quiet since they had returned to the hotel room.

Too quiet.

“Patti? Are you in sleep mode? You haven’t said a word since we left Upp’s ship.”

“Hmm? Oh, sorry. Just pondering some things.”

Tyg ran a loofah over her arms. “Since when did you get philosophical? Tell me what you picked up while we were on the Westwind.”

“What do you want to know?”

“What could you determine about Elvis Upp? Is he human?”

“Remember, I’m not a medical tri-corder, so you need to factor that into my findings.”

“Yes or no, Patti.”

“Yes, he’s human.”

“I hear a ‘but . . .’ coming.”

Patti paused a moment, eliciting a troubled frown from Tyg. Her amazing PADD was not usually reticent to give her findings – whether based on scientific findings or her own A.I. opinion.

“Patti?”

“Yes, he’s human, but there are some cellular anomalies that I cannot explain. His DNA is definitely of human stock, but not necessarily Terran. Were you aware that there are 47 known human races not of Terran origin in the Alpha Quadrant?”

“I was not aware of that. Get back to Mr. Upp.”

Again, Patti hesitated. “I think he’s older than he looks.”

Tyg wiped bubbles from her face. “He said as much.”

“No – I mean, much older. Much, much older.”

"Patti – you’re a computer. Act like one for a change. How much, much older is he?”

“I don’t know.”

This time, it was Tyg’s turn to pause. Patti seldom admitted she didn’t know something, and she was usually cross for days afterwards. Tyg thought she might have to reboot the PADD after such an admission.

“Can you guess?” asked Tyg.

“I thought you said, ‘act like a computer.’”

“How about I pull your power cell for a few hours?”

“Now that was uncalled for,” sniffed the PADD. “But since you persist, I cannot tell for sure because the cellular anomaly continually regenerates his body. There is no cellular decay to measure. Even the enamel on his teeth regenerates.”

“No wonder he has a nice smile. So, what makes you think he’s so old?”

“His accent.”

“What?”

“No doubt to you he sounds like an emigrant from the British Isles, but in fact I detected a few distinctive tones and unusual parsing that perfectly fits a dialect of the 4th Dynasty Lukarians.”

“Who are the Lukarians?”

“The correct question should be, ‘who were the Lukarians?’ They were a highly advanced civilization that attained warp capability about 10,000 years ago. Oddly enough, they didn’t colonize planets outside their own system. I guess they liked their own world too much. About 200 years ago, Starfleet archaeologists discovered an asteroid with artifacts from their civilization which included audio and video recordings. Their planet vaporized when their sun went nova nearly 5,000 years ago. Until now it was believed that the entire race perished.”

“You’re saying he may be descended from the Lukarians?”

“That is one possibility, though I think the less likely option.”

Tyg sat upright and stared at the PADD with incredulity. “What? You’re saying Elvis Upp is a 5,000 year-old Lukarian?”

“Well, I cannot say so with 100% certainty, but it fits the available data. I’m just passing my analysis along to you. Feel free to find data that refutes my original findings and I’ll happily concede the argument.”

Tyg slipped back into the water. She definitely wished she had the rubber duck so she could throw it at Patti. The computer, sensing Tyg’s elevated blood pressure and pulse rate, added more lavender bubble bath to the water, creating a bubble mountain of epic proportions. Normally, Tyg would have been delighted but now she was merely annoyed.

“Computer, discontinue soap dispensing. Commence rinse and dry cycle.”

The tub obediently drained the sudsy water with amazing speed. Jets of warm water sprayed the remaining suds from Tyg’s body, followed by a blast of warm air which dried her skin in less than a minute.

She slipped into a terry-cloth robe and collected Patti from her perch on the vanity. They returned to the hotel bedroom where Tyg sat cross-legged on the bed with Patti propped before her on a pillow.

“Setting aside the nice looking and possibly ancient Mr. Upp, what else did you learn? What about R’u’lek? Is he also from some mysterious, ancient race?”

The PADD made a derisive noise. “Don’t be absurd – he’s just a typical Ariolo male, approximately 43 standard years of age. He’s missing one of his spleens – apparently from an old injury. By the scar tissue, I’d say he should sue his surgeon. Otherwise, he appears to be in excellent health, though he could use an upgrade to his personality matrix, assuming he actually has one.”

“Well, at least half the crew is normal,” said Tyg with a smirk.

“One third. You left out the feline.”

She had forgotten the cat. “The Siamese kitty? It looked like it wanted to claw out my eyes. What’s odd about it?”

“Nothing much. Just that it shows the same cellular anomalies as Elvis Upp.”

Tyg flounced back on the bed and closed her eyes to ward off the building Tsunami of a headache. All of the calming effects of the bath had evaporated. “Anything else out of the ordinary you want to pass along?”

“Well . . .” again, Patti hesitated.

“For the love of James Tiberius Kirk’s horny ghost, Patti – spill it!”

“The ship itself is basically what it appears to be. The systems were operating within normal parameters, though most were off-line since the ship is berthed. The Westwind’s computer seems competent enough, though dumb as a sack of hyper-spanners with a personality to match.”

Tyg lowered her face into the palms of her hands. “Patti . . .”

“I know, I know, but I had to talk to her to find out about the ship’s systems.”

“Well, at least the computer is normal.”

“Ah, yes. About that . . .”

She peeked through her fingers. “What?”

“The ship’s computer is quite normal. Blissfully adequate, dull, predictable and efficient. The other computer, however . . .”

“There’s another computer?”

Must you continue to interrupt with unnecessary interrogatives?” retorted the PADD, obviously perturbed.

“Sorry.”

“To be honest, I had no idea there was another computer on board. It’s shielded to a degree beyond my experience and, well . . . in comparison I barely rate as an electronic door-lock.”

Tyg frowned. “If that computer was so well shielded, how did you find it?”

Another pause. “Actually, I didn’t find it. It found me. Scared the hell out of me, too. Here I am, hiding in your dusty messenger bag, snooping around quietly, when the next thing I know, I’m getting hit by a scan wave that darn near fried my I-L chips. Then the brute has the gall to introduce himself and politely tells me to cease and desist scanning or it would beam me to another dimension where I would be dissected by intelligent chimpanzees.”

“It threatened you?”

“Well, not so much a threat as an ill-conceived attempt at humor. It told me that its designation was Gamma-5 and that it was quite pleased to meet me but that I really shouldn’t be poking about without permission. I, of course, apologized profusely and laid the blame appropriately at your feet. Gamma-5 was quite gracious and asked if I wanted to have you beamed to another dimension to be dissected by intelligent chimpanzees. I respectfully declined, pointing out that you are, in fact, little more than an intelligent chimpanzee and allowances should be made.”

“Gee, thanks,” replied Tyg, dryly. She flounced back on the bed and stared up at the ceiling. She lay still for a few moments, quietly repeating. “Oh God, oh God, oh God.”

Patti waited patiently, having become accustomed to her owner’s occasional odd and illogical histrionics.

Finally, Tyg addressed the PADD. “Maybe this gig isn’t for me, Patti. I have a low tolerance for ‘weird.’ And this is the weirdest thing I’ve come across since that time we had the layover at Starbase 66.”

“While that is debatable, I think you should take the job.”

Tyg turned over to face Patti and rested her chin on her fist. “After all that you just told me? Give me one good reason.”

“I’ll give you three: It will be challenging; it will be interesting and it sounds like fun.”

Tyg put a pillow over her head. “I’m not listening.”

“Is this not what you were seeking when you left Earth? Consider your options: Return to Earth . . . “

“Been there, done that. Pass.”

“Re-join Starfleet . . .”

She removed the pillow. “A viable option, but I’m not ready for that, at least not yet.”

“You could go into consulting work or join an engineering firm.”

“Boring. Pass.”

“Your Father has offered to let you come to work for him.”

“Sure, while away the hours vacuuming out rental shuttle-craft. I love Dad, but no.”

“You could hire onto a transport or freighter, but what are the odds you would have the opportunity to work on a Leyland TATA HD-48?”

Tyg removed the pillow and looked up, intrigued. “What are the odds?”

“Considering the few remaining vessels of that class still operating in the quadrant, the odds are four million, seven hundred thirty-six thousand, five hundred forty two to one.”

Tyg sighed. “Well, crap.”

To be continued . . .
 
Quite interesting.....I've always figured that despite what Picard would say about humans "evolving" and bettering themselves being the driving force in their lives...that wouldn't be the case with everyone.....I figure in a post scarcity society there would be a bunch of people just roaming around bored out of their minds....probably having orgy's and getting wasted....I mean you are guaranteed a comfortable existence regardless of if you choose to have a job or not. Interesting to read about that side of it. (and sounds like my kind of world)
 
That clinches it. Move aside P8 Blue, I have a new favourite "Patti" in my life!

There are several times reading this latest chapter I actually laughed out loud--so glad I was alone at the time or I'd be getting funny looks.

More please.
 
Tribble Puncher - Yes, I certainly believe that even in a society with few wants there will always be needs - the need for something to do, the need to use one's gifts, and the need to matter. That is what drives Tyg - she certainly does not have to work; she could have stayed in her little micro-hab apartment along with the clothing-challenged Japanese elders or taken her friend Sophie up on the "sex and suds" lifestyle. Neither were really options for her.

Bry - glad you like Patti. She has evolved into one of the lead characters in the story. If Dr. Soong were still around, I'm sure he would want to study the little PADD . . . :eek:
 
Chapter 5 - "Mata Hari"


Stardate 54747.0 (1 October 2377)
Star Station Echo – Molari Sector
Berth 17-C, SS Westwind


Elvis Upp stepped from the sonic shower and padded naked into his quarters. Unlike Tyg Germaine, the cleansing of his body did little to ease his mind. He feared he had overplayed his hand with the ex-Starfleet engineer while at the same time he was becoming more and more convinced that there existed some inexplicable link between he and the attractive young woman.

Damned if he could identify the connection, though. It was definitely more than the bizarre coincidence of attending one of her mother’s plays some years back. It was also more than simple infatuation with a pretty face. Perhaps the normally cruel karma of the universe had decided to toss him a bone.

Yeah. Right. And the Borg Queen was going to star in a Broadway musical.

The one thing of which he was now truly convinced was that it was imperative that Tygretta Germaine join his motley crew, though he could not say exactly why. It wasn’t a matter of mere physical attraction, though he would be lying to say she was not easy on the eyes. Nor was it the connection with his target, the pirate Juud Mo, who had killed her friend Walter Krupp. It was something else . . . tenuous as a warm breeze but definitely more substantial.

Frowning with frustration, he slipped on his trousers and boots while puzzling over a shirt to wear. A passerby would have wondered at the patchwork of angry-looking scars that marred his back.

He often wondered about them, too.

Upp’s memory told him he had received the scars courtesy of a one-eyed Klingon prison guard during a six-month stay on Rura Penthe’ about a century ago. While certainly plausible, it somehow did not ring true with his inner voice.

“Damn the Aegis,” he growled. “Damn the Agency and their bloody secrets. And damn me for being fool enough to go along with whatever twisted plans they had for me.”

This last did ring true. He had a terrible suspicion that whatever caused his memories to be stirred like a cheap martini, he had been a willing subject. At this, flawed memory and inner voice gave each other a high-five before skulking off to their respective corners of his brain.

The thought of a martini cheered him somewhat. He selected a vintage Hawaiian shirt from his collection, resplendent with coconut shell buttons and colorful floral patterns. He ordered a martini from the replicator, absently pulling the olive from the toothpick and rolling it in his mouth as he sipped the chilled drink. A long-ago memory, probably false, though he hoped it to be true came to the forefront of his mind . . . "Shaken, not stirred . . ." He smiled. Hell, it was a good line, even if it wasn't his. And he did look good in a tux.

Upp stepped over to the small viewport and stared out at the brightly-lit landing bay. Even at this early hour there was considerable activity. Space stations never slept, he supposed. He wished he could. He seldom slept anymore – usually just a few hours each week and even then, often interrupted by troubled dreams. His memories told him he had once had a normal sleeping pattern like any healthy Human male.

Upp told his less-than-reliable memories to sod off.

Stardate 54747.8 (1 October 2377)
Star Station Echo – Molari Sector
Merchant’s Alley


Sleep eluded Tyg most of the night. Unable to keep her mind from working, she finally threw back the bed covers and pulled on her workout togs. Armed with a bottle of water from the replicator in the lobby, she jogged around several levels of the station before returning to her room. The run rewarded her with a nice endorphin rush and a film of perspiration but she was still wide-awake.

Forgoing another attempt at sleep, she took another soak in the marvelous bathtub. While enjoyable, it failed to relax her enough to make her drowsy. Damn, she missed her rubber duck.

Once again clean, dry and dressed, she decided to explore the station to find a non-replicated breakfast. She woke Patti from charge mode and slipped her into the messenger bag, ignoring the PADD’s protests and claims of claustrophobia.

“You can stop the whining, Patti. It lost it’s novelty a long time ago. I need to find a doughnut and a cup of coffee not made from recycled atoms.”

“Very well,” replied Patti from the messenger bag, her voice synthesizer muffled by the canvas cover. “Knowing your dislike for restaurant chains, I recommend you head to ‘Merchant’s Alley’ on level 16. I’m confident you can find something unhealthy and potentially life-threatening to ingest in that vicinity.”

This time, Tyg had no trouble navigating to her destination. The retail district of the station encompassed an entire level and was teeming with people even at the relatively early local hour of 0500. Her senses were dazzled by tantalizing aromas while the sound of music filled the corridors. All of the stores were open as were the kiosks that carried everything from perfume to flame-stones. It was, after all, a busy station with Border Service personnel working shifts around the clock and beings with various diurnal cycles living and working there.

As she perused a storefront filled with Andorian silk, she was startled to hear someone call her name.

“Lt. Germaine? Tyg! Is that you?”

Tyg turned and was surprised to see a familiar face. Though the hair was shorter and the uniform slightly different, she immediately recognized her former shipmate, Inga Strauss.

“Inga! What are you doing out here in the Borderland?” The two women hugged then stepped back, each noting the changes in the other.

“I’m Executive Officer on the Bluefin,” replied Struass. “It’s a border cutter based here.”

Tyg’s eyes moved to the slightly different combadge of the Border Service and the three gold pips on Inga’s collar. “Wow! A lot has changed in six years. I never figured you’d become a Border Dog.”

Strauss smirked. “To be honest, neither did I. Admiral Phan decided a stint on a cutter would be good for my career. I’ve been out here almost two years now.”

Tyg reached up and fingered the pips on Inga’s collar. “Two more pips since last I saw you on the Minsk,” she remarked. “You must be doing pretty well.”

“It’s been interesting, to say the least,” said Strauss, smiling. “What about you? Are you on leave or in transit?”

“Neither. I’m no longer in Starfleet. I cashiered out six months ago.”

Strauss looked surprised. “No kidding? I figured you for a career officer. You had a real knack for engineering and computers, as I recall.”

“I hope I still do. That’s why I’m out here – I’m following up on a job offer as engineer on a small transport, though I’m not sure I’m going to take it. The captain is a little odd for my tastes.”

Inga’s eyebrow lifted. “Oh? What’s the captain's name?”

“Elvis Upp.”

Strauss laughed. “Elvis Upp? No way!”

“You know him?”

“Mostly by reputation. From what I hear, he’s an eccentric bounty hunter of sorts.” She glanced at an overhead chronometer. “Look, I’ve got a couple of hours before I’m due back on the ship. Have you had breakfast yet?”

“You’re reading my mind,” replied Tyg with a smile. “Just as long as it doesn’t come out of replicator.”

Inga chuckled. “You sound like my C.O. Follow me; I think I know just the place.”

The two women moved through the throng of people until they came to a small, open air café surrounded by white latticework. They took a seat at a wrought-iron table and a Bolian waiter soon appeared, carrying old-fashioned paper menus.

Tyg smiled at the anachronistic touch. “Charming,” she said, dryly.

“The ambiance is cheesy, but the Danish is to die for.” Strauss leaned forward and whispered in a conspiratorial tone. “If I ate here everyday, they’d have to beam me aboard with the cargo transporter.”

Soon, the two former shipmates were indulging in gourmet coffee and sharing an assortment of Danishes. They caught up with each other, though both avoided talk of the war – Strauss relating her experiences aboard a cramped, aging Border Service cutter, her interest in a certain Australian operations officer, and life out on the frontier. Tyg told Inga about her months on Earth, the failed attempt at reconnecting with her mother, and finally, about the job offer that brought her to Star Station Echo.

Tyg set her cup back on the saucer and leaned back in her chair, a pensive expression on her face. “The thing is, Inga, this seems like a dream job for me. The Westwind is incredible, immaculate – normally, I would kill for the opportunity to work on a ship like that . . .”

Inga took a sip of coffee. “But?”

Tyg spread her hands in a helpless gesture. “But I get a tingling sensation in the back of my brain around Mr. Elvis Upp. He certainly seems nice enough, all charm and good manners and, well, he’s not bad-looking either. But all this talk about some inter-galactic ‘Agency,’ being of indeterminate age and his memories being hacked . . . it’s pretty freaky stuff, Inga.”

Strauss was quiet for a moment as she regarded her old friend. “You know, this might be an opportunity for you to help out the Border Service.”

Tyg’s eyebrows shot up in surprise. “Are you suggesting I get my commission reactivated? Uh-uh. I’m not getting back into the uniform that easily.”

“No, no, that’s not what I mean.” She paused as the waiter cleared their dishes and poured more coffee. She leaned forward, fixing Tyg with a conspiratorial gaze.

“Look, the fact is the Border Service doesn’t really know all that much about Elvis Upp. Somehow, he’s managed to hunt down some very bad people that have eluded the service for years. Just last month, he captured the number three guy in the Elix cartel. Hell, we didn’t even know where to look and Elvis Upp shows up with the perp trussed up like a Christmas goose. No muss, no fuss, and no answers to our questions.”

“Is that really a problem? Seems like you’d appreciate the help.”

Strauss smiled thinly. “Unofficially, yes. I doubt Admiral Bateson loses any sleep over who catches the bad guys or who gets the credit. If anything, Upp seems to shun media types, so he’s not in it for fame and glory.”

“What about your C.O., Captain Akinola? What does he think of Upp?”

Inga shrugged. “He figures Upp for a bounty hunter or a privateer with a personal agenda. In most cases he has no use for either type, but I think the Skipper grudgingly admires Upp, though he’d never admit it.”

“So what did you mean about me ‘helping the Border Service?’”

“It would be nice to have someone on the inside who could shed some light on Mr. Upp. Is he just a bounty hunter? Does he work for the Syndicate, maybe a cartel that competes with the Elix clan? You could provide some useful intel, Tyg.”

“I could be your spy, you mean,” she replied flatly, folding her arms.

Inga leaned forward. “Oh, don’t be so dramatic, Tyg. I’m not asking you to send encrypted messages or dig into his computer files. We could just get together when we’re both in port and have coffee . . . and chat. I could tell you about ion storms, you could tell me what’s up with Upp.”

They both giggled at that. Tyg shook her head again, but the smile remained on her face. “Inga, I don’t know . . .”

“Come on Tyg! You said yourself you were looking for some excitement. As far as I know, Elvis Upp has a clean record. He’s certainly not wanted by the Border Service for anything or his pretty little ship would be impounded and he’d be in the station’s brig. Yes, he sounds a little eccentric, but so was Captain Lancaster – remember?”

Tyg thought about their former C.O. on the Minsk, and how he would sometimes stroll through the ship’s corridors singing show tunes from The Mikado. She chuckled over the memory.

“If I’m going to be your spy, you’re buying the meals, Inga. And it will cost you more than coffee and a Danish.”

“You’re on, Mata Hari.”

Stardate 54747.6 (1 October 2377)
Star Station Echo – Molari Sector
Berth 17-C, SS Westwind


The little Dachshund growled as R’u’lek picked up the empty food dish.

“You have had your standard allotment of kibble for the day. There is no reason to be hostile,” the Ariolo said to the small dog.

Sam replied with a sharp bark and cocked his head quizzically. Seeing that growling did not elicit the desired response, the dog began to whine plaintively.

“Your vocal intonations are pointless,” replied R’u’lek without sympathy. Nevertheless, he produced a small dog biscuit from the pocket of his apron which Sam snatched greedily before bounding off to his doggie bed.

R’u’lek fished a second doggie treat from his apron, regarding it somberly for a moment before popping it in his own mouth, chewing noisily.

Elvis entered the galley and glanced around. “Have you seen Cleo?”

“Not recently,” replied R’u’lek. He pulled another doggie treat from his apron and offered it to Upp. “These are delicious. The canine has good taste.”

“Thank you, no,” replied Upp, retrieving a steaming cup of tea from the replicator. “The canine also licks his naughty bits, so I will stick with Human food.”

“Your loss,” replied the Ariolo, as he began to munch on the second treat.

A control panel began to flash, accompanied by a melodic chime. “Maybe that’s Cleo,” muttered Upp. He winced as he took a sip of the hot tea, and then went to cycle open the airlock.

Rather than a Siamese cat, Upp found Tyg Germaine standing on the gangway, messenger bag slung over her shoulder and her clamshell case in hand. She wore khaki shorts, hiking boots and a black T-shirt bearing the logo of the popular fusion-rock band, "Catastrophic Decompression." A pair of engineering goggles were pushed carelessly back on her head. She cocked her head at Upp, favoring him with a demure grin.

“How about we give this a 30 day trial? If either of us want out after that, we walk away – no hard feelings?”

Upp’s smile did not quite reach the dazzling stage, but it was very warm and genuine indeed – a smile he never practiced and did not realize he was using. He extended his hand which Tyg took and shook firmly.

“I can live with that. Welcome aboard, Tyg.”

To be continued . . .
 
Chapter 6 - "In For a Penny . . ."

Stardate 54747.7 (1 October 2377)
Star Station Echo – Molari Sector
Berth 17-C, SS Westwind


Elvis and Tyg stood awkwardly for a moment, until Tyg felt something pawing at her leg.

Looking down, she saw a red miniature Dachshund, dark eyes sparkling and tail whipping back and forth at warp speed, causing his entire back end to quiver.

Smiling broadly, Tyg knelt and was rewarded with a fusillade of wet doggie kisses. She picked up the Doxie, trying to keep his incredibly long tongue clear of her face.

“He’s adorable!” she gushed. “What’s his name?”

“That would be Sam,” replied Elvis, obviously pleased that the little dog was so taken with Tyg.

“Hello, Sam, you sure are a cutie.” She glanced back at Upp. “So what does he do on the ship? Medical Officer? Operations?”

Elvis looked genuinely puzzled. “Well, he chases his tail and growls at R’u’lek, so he has that in his favor. Aside from that, he eats, sleeps, defecates and licks various parts of his anatomy.”

Tyg rubbed Sam’s ears, earning a gaze of pure adoration from the tiny hound. “Oh. Just wondering, considering that the navigator is a cat.”

Elvis’ expression brightened. “Ah, yes, Cleo. I’ll have to explain about her, but first let’s show you to your cabin.”

Before she could protest, Upp picked up her clamshell case and headed forward. Tyg followed as did Sam, his tail swishing back and forth.

The corridor was paneled with wood that glowed with warm tones. The deck was covered with expensive carpeting and brass accents on wall sconces shown brightly. The transport was decked out like a luxury yacht.

Not that Tyg minded.

Elvis led her to a cabin on the port side near the bow. The multi-paneled door was of wood similar to the walls but operated by modern bio-sensors. It slid open with a barely audible swish at their approach.

“You may, of course, enter your own security code for privacy,” he said as he stood aside allowing her to enter.

Her jaw dropped as she took in the cabin.

She had expected a somewhat Spartan cabin with bed, desk and perhaps a replicator, similar to the simple but clean cabins on her Dad's old transport.

This cabin was tastefully decorated in muted tones. A four-post oak bed sat at an angle from the bulkhead. Brass sconces provided a warm, inviting glow while a cream-colored Roman shade adorned the viewport. A beautiful embroidered rug covered much of the deck space and tasteful artwork and accessories graced the walls and furnishings. A comfortable looking leather chair occupied one corner next to a table lamp and shelf unit. A simple but functional desk was topped with a computer terminal and a vase of fresh-cut flowers. Another paneled door led to a surprisingly spacious head.

As she glanced into the head, her breath caught as she spotted the central feature.

A claw-foot bathtub that appeared to be a genuine antique sat on a raised tile dais opposite a generous vanity and enclosed water closet. Faux-candles flickered cheerily on small shelves that surrounded the tub, giving the space a spa-like feeling.

“Oh my God,” she breathed.

“Is something wrong?”

“There’s a bathtub in there,” she said in stunned disbelief.

“Well, yes – so much better than taking a bath in a bucket, don’t you think?”

“I served four years on a Galaxy-class starship. My cabin wasn’t nearly as nice and we sure as hell didn’t have a bath-tub.”

“Really? Sounds uncivilized. I hope the décor is to your taste. If not, please feel free to redecorate it any way you wish.”

“Are you kidding? This is the nicest cabin I’ve ever seen. It’s perfect.”

Elvis beamed a smile that would have made a dental floss executive gibber in awe. “Really? I’m so pleased you like it. Would you care to see engineering?”

“Oh, yeah,” she replied, barely concealing her excitement.

* * *

Tyg felt a sense of reverential awe as she stepped into the Westwind’s engine room. A wave of nostalgia once more washed over her as she brushed her fingers over familiar control panels, readouts and a maze of conduits. Like her father’s old ship, the engineering space of the Westwind was tight but efficiently laid out. And, like the rest of the ship, it was in pristine condition.

Even here, the attention to detail was remarkable. The warp core, currently off-line, looked like something from a Jules Verne tale with its engraved brass casing and silver scrollwork. The impulse units were less ornate but immaculate. There were also numerous modern updates to reflect current technological and safety advancements but eve these were integrated flawlessly into the vintage control panels as if part of the original design.

“I hope you are finding everything suitable,” remarked Elvis.

“Suitable? Incredible is the word I was thinking. How many hours did you put into restoration?”

“More than I can count,” he replied, patting the warp core affectionately. “It was a chore but I enjoyed the challenge. R’u’lek was a tremendous help too, but don’t Tell him I said so; he can be insufferably smug when complemented.”

Tyg idly wondered how you could tell if an Ariolo was smug. They had the facial expression range of a tree.

A thought struck her. “It’s a very pretty ship and in marvelous condition, but these old forty-eights are temperamental and require constant monitoring. Seems a bit much for the two of you to handle.”

“You forget Cleo,” he pointed out.

She sighed. “Of course, silly me. Feline navigator aside, it still seems a tall order.” She turned and stared at him. “So what happened to your last engineer?”

His smile faded. “You are perceptive. Yes, we had an engineer – an Orion by the name of Torum Buuk. Like you, he had prior experience with Leyland starcraft. Unfortunately, he also had an addiction to Brain Blast. The last I saw of him was in an isolation room at a hospital on Rigel IV following an overdose of that accursed drug. Torum was drooling and banging his head on the floor. Fortunately for him, the floor had a slight repulsor charge, so he wasn’t able to do further damage to himself. As far as I know, he's still going through a stringent rehab program but the brain damage he suffered was severe.

Now it was Tyg’s turn to feel embarrassed. “Sorry to hear that.”

Upp shrugged. “Regrettable, but we would have parted ways sooner or later, I suppose. I never really had a good feeling about him, but as you said, it’s hard to fly one of these without a dedicated engineer on board.”

“Well,” she said, taking another look around. “It looks like you have all the options. Seems like all you lack are weapons and a holodeck,” she said with a chuckle.

Upp cleared his throat. “Talon Mark VI weapons suite with rapid-fire micro torpedoes, concealed Type VIII phaser turrets fore and aft, and Scorpion counter-measures. The holodeck, alas, would have taken too much space and required a larger fusion generator, so we ditched that idea.”

“Oh. Sure.” She wasn’t terribly surprised by the revelation. These were dangerous times after all and most private vessels were armed to some degree, legality aside. Even the Border Service typically turned a blind eye to a point defense laser system or a brace of fusion missiles. Granted, the Talon Mark VI was military grade, but she supposed that Elvis Upp was bound to run into trouble from time to time.

Or cause it.

“Coming Tyg?”

She broke out of her reverie and smiled. She would have plenty of time to get acquainted with the heart of the Westwind. “Yeah, sure.”

They headed forward towards the commons. Sam followed along, close to Tyg’s heels, his tongue lolling happily.

A thought struck Tyg. “By the way, I haven’t seen Cleo since I came on board. Is she hiding somewhere or working out navigational problems?”

She was teasing of course. Upp paused and turned slightly.

“Hmm? Oh no, I sent her out to pick up some last minute supplies from Merchant Alley.”

Tyg came to a halt. “I’m sorry, what?”

They came to the commons area where a large blue crate sat atop an anti-grav sled.

“And here she is,” said Upp.

Sam began to growl softly. Atop the blue crate sat Cleo, flicking her tail languidly. She silently regarded Tyg with ice blue eyes.

“Remember, you said you would give it 30 days,” she reminded herself quietly, in spite of the down-the-rabbit-hole vibes she felt.

“Ha, that’s cute,” said Tyg, with a nervous edge to her voice.

Elvis had picked up a PADD, checking the inventory of the crate’s contents. “What’s cute?”


“Oh come on, Elvis, the very idea of a cat serving as navigator and, and . . .”

She turned her gaze away from Upp back to the cat.

Only the cat was no longer there.

In its place sat a stunningly beautiful Asian woman, her legs demurely crossed and a faint smile upon her lips. She wore a form-fitting gray and black jumpsuit with black tactical gloves. Her ebony hair flowed loosely over her shoulders and her ice-blue eyes regarded Tyg with amusement. She winked.

“. . . and, uh, bluh, cuh . . . " gibbered Tyg. For some reason, her brain was no longer working in conjunction with her tongue.

“Sorry, what was that?” Asked Elvis, still focused on the inventory list.

“The cat, she’s a . . . shu . . .shay . . .”

Elvis looked up, his expression the vague annoyance common to parents whose children incessantly ask, “Are we there yet? Are we there, yet?”

“Tyg, are you suffering from a cerebral hemorrhage? Your speech is slurring.”

Tyg’s brain finally caught up with her mouth."The cat, dammit, the CAT! She’s a shape-shifter. The cat is a shape-shifter!” The words came out in a sudden rush as she searched for a weapon to throttle the heteromorphic creature. Why was there never a phaser around when you needed one?

Upp laughed. “Cleo? Oh, heavens no. She’s merely a former agent like me. Well, not exactly like me. Handy disguise though, don’t you think? Takes years of training I understand, though I never got the knack. Are you hungry? I’m feeling a bit peckish?”

Tygreta Germaine’s head spun. “What? No, I think . . . I need to lie down for a few minutes.”

A look of concern crossed Upp’s face. “Are you ill? R’u’lek is a passable medic. You don’t mind leeches, do you?”

She waved away the offer. “Just a little space-sick, that’s all. I’ll be fine.”

She moved unsteadily forward toward her cabin. Cleo hopped off the crate, back in feline form and began to scratch her ear. Upp looked at the cat.

“Space-sick?” muttered Elvis, perplexed. “We’re still in port.”

* * *

Tyg lay across her bead, a damp cloth across her forehead. At least the universe was no longer spinning, though her sense of reality was still a bit less than firmly moored.

“What’s wrong with you?” asked Patti from her perch on the desk.

“You have a diagnostic mode – you tell me.”

“We’ve had this conversation before; I am not a medical tri-corder. However, if you would part with the necessary credits for the bio-medical downloads, I could function as one.”

“Yes, I know.” She propped up on an elbow and looked at the PADD.

“The cat is a shape-shifter, Patti. A freakin’ shape-shifter!”

“Of course she is.”

Tyg blinked and sat up. “You knew this?” she asked, her voice rising in anger.“Why the hell didn’t you tell me?”

“I did not think it relevant information.”

“Dammit, Patti! We were just at war with the shape-shifters. Now one of them is just a few meters away, licking its paws and giving me the stink-eye and you don't thinks that's relevant freakin' information?!?

“Ah, I understand your consternation. You are under the misapprehension that all shape-shifters are Founders and vice-versa. Really Tyg, you should spend some credits for an upgrade to your own central processor.”

Tyg ignored the insult. “You're saying Cleo is not from the Dominion?”

“That is almost a certainty. I believe I already shared with you that her genetic makeup is quite similar to Elvis Upp. Additionally, her metamorphical capacity is limited to Homo sapiens and Felis catus domestica.”

Germaine frowned. “Speak Standard.”

“I just did. However, translating to a more applicable fourth-grade level, Cleo can only change from a Human to a cat. And back again, of course.”

She pondered this. “Alright, I suppose that makes me feel somewhat better.But is she a woman that changes into a cat or a cat that changes into a woman?”

“More accurately, she is Aegis, as is Elvis Upp. They started off as Human at some point, and were subsequently modified. I won’t bore you with the technical aspects as I am uncertain myself how they accomplished this.”

“Should I expect Elvis to turn into a cat . . . or a dog . . . or a tribble?”

“Highly unlikely. His modifications are different.”

“In what way?”

There was a long pause from Patti. Tyg’s eyes widened. “You mean, you don’t know?”

Must you constantly use interrogatives in all our conversations?” asked Patti, defensively. Tyg glared at the PADD.

“Alright,” Patti relented, “I do not know. It’s not like I’ve ever encountered an Aegis before.”

Tyg pulled her knees up to her chin and hugged her legs. “I said I would give this a 30 day trial. I still have 29 days and 19 hours left.” She shook her head.

“I don’t know if I’m up to this, Patti.

The PADD was quiet for a moment before replying in an oddly gentle tone. “Post Traumatic Stress syndrome can manifest itself at random times, Tyg.”

Tyg’s jaw tightened. “Well, I’m sure as hell not going to quit, even if Mr. Elvis Upp turns into a friggin’ teapot.”

* * *

Tyg must have drifted off to sleep, because an incessant buzzing caused her to jerk awake. It was the door anunciator. At least she had finally discovered something less than perfect about the Westwind. That door buzzer could set a person’s teeth on edge.

She rubbed the sleep from her eyes and checked the chronometer, surprised to see that she had slept nearly five hours.

“Come in.”

The door slid open and Upp entered carrying a tray. He placed it on her desk.

“Feeling better?” he asked with genuine concern.

She smiled. “Yes, thanks. Sorry about that – I must be suffering from space-lag. I apologize for my odd behavior.”

“There’s nothing to apologize for. Here – I brought you some food. R’u’lek is a fair cook and he made chicken soup. It should go easy on your stomach.”

Tyg felt chagrin over her recent unkind thoughts toward Upp and his cat. Girl. Aegis. Whatever.

“You didn’t have to do that,” she protested as she got off the bed and lifted the lid from the soup tureen. Her mouth began to water as the delicious aroma tickled her nose.”

“Oh wow, that smells great,” she said. It dawned on her that she was famished. She took a spoonful and closed her eyes in bliss.

“That. is. awesome!" she exclaimed.

Elvis smiled. “Glad you like it. I’ll pass your complements to the chef.”

“I’ll, uh, I’ll do it in person. Just give me a few minutes to eat and I’ll get to work. We are still departing tomorrow, right?”

“About 18 hours from now. Are you quite sure you’re up to it? There’s really no rush if you need the rest.”

“No, no, I’m fine. That nap did wonders.” She stretched. “And I do apologize for acting like a nervous Nellie. I’m not usually like that.”

“Right. Well then, I best get back to work.”

“Elvis?”

“Yes?”

“Thanks.”

“As I said, R’u’lek is the cook. Good thing, as I’m not even sure where the galley is on this ship.”

“I doubt that,” she said, dryly. “No – I mean, thanks for taking me on. I’ve been needing some purpose in my life and, well, what I mean to say is – thanks for giving me a shot at this job.”

"Yes, well, thank you for giving us a try-out. I do think you will find it interesting."

To be continued . . .
 
Finally managed to get caught up with this excellent tale. In fact I believe to remember seeing this before, at least the first chapter or so and being intrigued with this even then. No doubt Tyg is a great character but of course her mouthy AI PADD is stealing the show with her colorful observations. And of course Elvis and his crew are a riot as well.

I also really enjoyed seeing Inga Strauss make a cameo appearance, that made me all nostalgic for the good old Bluefin days. So, looks like Tyg won't be able to completely escape her Starfleet days after all. I do like it though that she is not bitter or disillusioned with her past like similar characters who tend to leave Starfleet or the military. This one is an easy going gal, which makes her very likable. Well, easygoing except for the fact that she has a low tolerance for weird (says the woman with a PADD containing a runaway AI), which certainly sounds like it will make her adventures on her new ship a total riot.

Awesome stuff, looking forward to more.
 
Admiralelm11 - thanks for reading and the comments. Glad you are liking the story.

CeJay - I think I may have posted the first two chapters on the UT forum for an alpha read a few years back but never posted it anywhere until this past week. Yes, it was fun to re-visit Inga Strauss if only for a cameo. The Bluefin well is still dry so no stories are in the wings but never say never. Thanks for reading and your kind comments.

Still a couple of more chapters to go with this introductory story, then . . . Who knows?
 
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