The Star Beagle Adventures
Episode 14:
Close to the Edge Part III - I Get Up, I Get Down
Scene 8: In Charge of Who Is There
In charge of who is there, in charge of me…
14.8
In Charge of Who Is There
The dogfish had been moving, glacially, back to main engineering. Once it was within a few feet of the secondary engineering panel, the small robot leapt briskly to the slime-covered panel, disassembled it rapidly and used a cutting beam to destroy the wiring and chips inside the panel. It burrowed its way into the panel, then through the console behind it, destroying everything as it went.
Mushroom tendrils responded immediately, but they could not grow anywhere near as quickly as the small robot was burrowing its way through the panel. Even as the tendrils were reaching the robot, the dogfish clamped itself to a generator deep inside the wall of the engineering section and destroyed itself, completely demolishing the generator and burning the mushroom tendrils that had been reaching for it.
“Well done, Seprek,” said Captain Rhonda Carter. “Bill, bring up the shields to cover the entire ship and also those parts of Rocky that extend above the bridge.”
In response, Master Chief Bill Waller pressed a single control on the rear ops panel. “Navigation shields up, Captain. The configuration can also support combat shields, if needed.”
“Thanks Bill, let’s hope it doesn’t come to that. Good enough that Rocky is now totally dependent on us for shields, which should discourage him from trying to shake us off,” Carter replied. She turned the command chair to face the front of the U.S.S. Escort’s tactical launch bridge. “Seprek, any response from Rocky?”
“All of the other NEER 18’s have been manually deactivated,” said Warrant Officer Seprek Harrison. “7 are located down below with the probes. There are 3 more in the shuttlebay - all of which have also been manually deactivated. We have manually disconnected all lines of communication between this launch and the rest of the ship. So I do not have any direct information.”
“However, I have monitored a 0.0179 percent increase in the amplitude of the vibrations transmitted to this launch from the ship proper, accompanied with frequency shifts, both increasing and decreasing. Considering these readings were previously extremely stable, I’d say Rocky noticed the destruction of the secondary navigation screen generator,” Harrison opined.
“I’m not wild about severing all our direct lines of communication and observation with the main ship,” said Waller. “But it does seem the prudent thing to do.”
“I don’t want to give Rocky any more chances of taking direct control of this launch,” said Carter. “As it is, you really need to monitor every vibration and squeak to make sure that mushroom isn’t reaching its tendrils out to us.”
“Captain, I am reading an energy buildup,” Harrison reported. “I think we’re about to…”
Harrison’s observation was interrupted by a rough transition from station keeping to high warp. The ship jolted hard, throwing Harrison and Carter back into their chairs and lurching Waller out of his rear-facing chair to bang his head with a loud thump and an even louder “OW! Crap!” against the rear monitor. The monitor took no damage.
“Are you all right Bill?” Carter asked. Then: “Bill?” She turned her chair and got up.
The stars blurred on the screen in an unhealthy smear, indicating that the ship and the large, rock-encrusted mushroom that was embedded partly into it, were moving at a tremendous speed, but also that the warp field was, perhaps dangerously, unstable.
Bill Waller feebly tried to wave his captain off. “I’m fine, Captain,” he slurred in a slow, groggy voice that made it clear he was anything but.
The ship lurched occasionally in random directions, but with each bump, the moving star field seemed to clear a little, indicating that the warp field was becoming more stable.
Carter helped the chief of the boat lean back into his chair. She obtained a neck pillow/brace from a large first-aid kit stored in the base of the chair and carefully applied it to Waller’s neck. The pillow slowly self-inflated, supporting the base of Waller’s head against his shoulders. She then obtained a medical scanner and carefully ran it over Waller’s head and neck.
“Let’s keep your neck immobilized for now, Bill. It doesn’t look like a concussion, at least not yet. But your neck took some torque and may be a little sprained.” Carter deactivated the scanner and touched her communicator pin. “Chief Garrity, please report on the condition of the crew up there.”
“Everyone is a little shaken up,” came Chief Medical Technician Kara Garrity’s voice over the communicator. “But no one is hurt. We didn’t have anything to hold on to up here in this corridor. I suspected that whenever that dogfish blew itself up, things might get bumpy, so I had everyone holding onto each other and braced against the walls. We’ve got a few bumps and bruises, but nothing serious.”
“Well done Kara,” Carter said. “It looks like Rocky is learning how to make this ship work. Um… It looks like Bill’s neck got torqued out a little and could be developing a sprain.”
“I’ll be right down…” said Garrity.
“Stay put, Kara,” Carter ordered. “We don’t know if we’re through with the bumpy stuff and I don’t need you getting hurt trying to move between decks. For the next 15 minutes, keep everyone webbed up there against the potential of another rough transition. Just talk me through what I need to do for Bill.”
“Well, you need to relax his neck muscles so they don’t pull themselves out,” Garrity responded over the communicator pin. “Have you got his neck stabilized with the inflatable?”
“Yes,” Carter replied.
“That was a good first move, but you’re going to have to remove the pillow so you can treat his neck directly. There are two large muscles on either side of the spine and another two pretty much directly below the ears. Load a hyposyringe with 2 cc’s of cyclobenzoprime, set for even applications of a half cc, then apply directly to each muscle, starting with the two on either side of the spine, then the two under the ears. For those, place your finger on the jugular, then provide the injection just behind your finger so it goes into the muscle and not directly into the bloodstream. Try to get it just above the mid-point between his shoulders and the base of his skull.”
“Cyclobenzoprime?”
“Correct,” said Garrity. “It was developed specifically for this purpose… Well, for first aid to spinal injuries in general.”
“Got it,” said Carter. “Sorry, Bill. I’m going to have to take that neck pillow back off.” She took a hyposyringe out of the first aid pack, activated it, then said, “Cyclobenzoprime, 2 cc’s divided into 4 equal doses.”
The replicator inside the hyposyringe was silent, but the device emitted a very quiet beep to indicate it was ready. The name of the drug and dosage was displayed on a small, rectangular screen on the side of the device.
14.8