Star Trek: ALL - Seven Deadly Sins (6 page)

BOOK: Star Trek: ALL - Seven Deadly Sins
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Silence hung in the air between them for a moment. Her plan, which Toqel knew would require much consideration and refinement,
was bold—one Sarith would have appreciated. Her daughter would not only have approved of such a daring scheme, but she also would have wanted to play an active role.

Perhaps I can make you as proud of me as I always was of you.

“Well,” she said, forcing her thoughts back to the business at hand. She tried without much success to ignore the possibilities she now faced with regard to changing the course of Romulan history. “It seems we have much work to do.”

Much work, indeed.

5

Captain Thomas Blair stepped from the turbolift and onto the bridge of the
U.S.S. Defiant,
pausing to allow the circulated air to cool his sweat-dampened skin. Wiping his face with the towel draped around his shoulders, he glared at the main viewscreen, upon which was displayed the now-familiar Alamedus asteroid field. The region had been the target of the
Defiant
’s survey assignment for the past two weeks, but the asteroids currently visible on the viewer, varying in size from meters to kilometers in diameter, were not his concern. Instead, it was the metallic, cylindrical object at the center of the screen that demanded his attention.

“What’s the story?” Blair asked, nodding toward the viewer. Letting the towel fall back around his neck, he made his way around the upper deck toward the science station.

Rising from the command chair at the center of the bridge and turning to face him, Commander Kamau Mbugua eyed Blair and his exercise attire, which consisted of perspiration-dampened gray sweatpants and a matching shirt emblazoned with the
Defiant
insignia. “Apologies for disturbing you, sir, but I thought you needed to see this.” The first officer was a large, imposing man of African descent, broad-shouldered and muscled beneath his gold uniform tunic and presenting the very epitome of physical fitness if ever Blair had seen
such a specimen. Just looking at the younger, robust Mbugua caused Blair to recall the days when he too could take pride at being in top form.

That was twenty years and thirty pounds ago. Happy fiftieth birthday to you.

Indicating his state of dress with a dismissive wave, Blair reached to pat his midsection. “I already promised Doctor Hamilton that I’d make up the abdominal drills later.” With a wry grin, he added, “Not that it won’t stop her from denying me my slice of birthday cake and consigning me to dietary salads for the next month.” Putting aside the pleasantries, he nodded toward the viewscreen. “What’ve we got?”

Nodding toward Lieutenant Commander Erin Sutherland, who stood waiting at the science station and holding a data slate at her side, Mbugua said, “You’re on.”

Sutherland pointed toward the viewscreen. “It’s a communications buoy, sir. Older model, in common use until about ten years ago or so, mostly by civilian colony and freight-hauling ships. They turn up on secondary and black markets from time to time, as the internal components are useful in all sorts of other equipment. The crews on Orion ships in particular tend to like them.” Pausing, the science officer reached up to brush away a lock of red hair that had fallen across her eyes. “We detected it about five minutes ago, sir, when it began broadcasting a transponder signal on a wide band.”

“How long has it been here?” Blair asked.

Her eyes shifting to glance at Mbugua in an expression the captain realized was one of nervousness, Sutherland replied, “About five minutes, sir.”

Blair frowned. “Come again?”

“There are no other ships or artificial constructs anywhere in the system, sir,” Mbugua said, folding his arms across his chest. “No background radiation or electromagnetic fields interfering with sensors, either. The place is a graveyard, Skipper.”

The captain nodded, already knowing this based on Sutherland’s initial report on the Alamedus star system as well as the scant data collected by unmanned sensor probes more than a decade ago and culled from the
Defiant
’s library computer banks. A notable lack of properties that might impede the effectiveness of sensor equipment was one of
the prime reasons Alamedus asteroids were receiving further scrutiny. If all went according to plan, several of the larger bodies would be selected and ultimately relocated to predetermined coordinates along the border separating Federation and Klingon space. Once moved into position by teams of
Ptolemy
-class towing vessels equipped with heavy-duty tractor beam systems, the asteroids would become the foundations for new observation outposts, similar to those currently in use along the Federation-Romulan Neutral Zone.

“Is the thing carrying some kind of shielding to hide it from sensors?” Blair asked, turning his attention back to the main viewer and the image of the communications buoy. “Or was it just powered down until now?” Even as he asked the questions, he knew what his science officer would say.

Sutherland replied, “No odd shielding that I could find, and even if it had been drifting inert for however long, our sensors should still have picked it up.” She nodded toward the viewscreen. “That thing wasn’t here five minutes ago, sir.”

“Then where the hell did it come from?” Mbugua asked from where he stood at the bridge railing, looking up at Blair and Sutherland.

Her attention attracted by an indicator light flashing on her console, Sutherland turned and once more peered into the workstation’s hooded sensor viewer. “Okay, this is starting to get annoying.” When she looked away from the console, a frown clouded her features. “Sensors have just detected
another
buoy, seventeen million kilometers from our present position, toward the system’s outer boundary.”

Not liking the implication of what he was hearing, Blair said, “And you’re sure it wasn’t there before, just like this other one?”

“Absolutely, sir,” the science officer replied. “Sensor logs show no record of it.”

From behind Blair at the communications station, Ensign Ravi-shankar Sabapathy said, “Captain, the second buoy is now transmitting its own signal.”

Blair gestured to Sutherland. “Feed those coordinates to the helm,” he said as he stepped down into the command well and moved to the center seat. “T’Lehr, take us there, safest speed.”

“Aye, sir,” replied Lieutenant T’Lehr, and the Vulcan began inputting the appropriate instructions to the helm console.

Settling into his chair, Blair said, “Sutherland, let’s have a full-spectrum sensor sweep of the system. Give me everything you’ve got.”

From where he still stood at the railing near Sutherland’s station, Mbugua said, “What are you thinking, sir?”

“That somebody’s screwing with us,” Blair replied as he again used his towel to wipe his face. It was a gut call, nothing more, but an instinctual feeling he had learned long ago not to dismiss out of hand.

Mbugua frowned. “We’re a long way from Romulan space, if that’s what you’re thinking.” He nodded toward the viewscreen. “The Klingons are just down the block, but cloaking technology doesn’t strike me as their cup of tea.”

“Don’t believe everything you’ve heard or read,” Blair countered. “There are plenty of Klingons in the Empire who’d happily use a cloaking device if they thought it could get them close enough to cut your throat with one of those ceremonial daggers they love so much. That said, a Klingon ship commander wouldn’t play games like this.” Pausing, he shook his head, regarding the image of asteroids sliding past the
Defiant
as the starship made its way through the field. “No, this is something else.” Would a Romulan ship venture so far into enemy territory, even with the ability to shield itself from sensors? Blair held no illusions about such a scenario, provided the vessel’s commander had good reason for such an act.

So, the question—assuming it
is
the Romulans—is: What’s the point of all this?

“Captain!” Sutherland called from her station, and Blair looked up to see the science officer alternating her gaze between her hooded viewer and other screens and readouts at her console. “I think … wait … that’s not right.” When she frowned, Blair was sure he heard the science officer mutter a particularly colorful Andorian oath before she turned to face him. “Sir, I thought sensors registered some kind of spatial distortion, just for a second, but it’s gone now.”

Rising from his seat, Blair moved to the edge of the command well, placing his hands atop the red railing. “What kind of distortion?”

Sutherland shook her head. “I’m not sure, sir. I’ve never seen anything like it, natural or artificial. According to sensor logs, it reads almost like background ionization, but there’s nothing here that could
be the cause of something like that.” Drawing what Blair took to be a calming breath, she added, “It has to be artificial, sir.”

“Another ship,” Blair said, at almost the exact instant as Mbugua offered an identical declaration. The two men exchanged a knowing glance before the first officer turned from the railing.

“Red Alert,” he called out, his voice booming across the bridge. “All hands to battle stations.”

Moving back to his chair at the center of the command well, Blair said, “Shields and weapons, T’Lehr. We’re going hunting.”

Even as he gave the orders, Thomas Blair gripped the arms of his chair and felt a knot form in his gut, his anxiety increasing as he considered the nature of the quarry they might be seeking.

Happy birthday to me.

The bridge of the
I.K.S. Kretoq
was dark and all but silent. The battle cruiser’s primary power generators had been taken off-line, with reserve power being channeled only to systems absolutely required to operate the vessel. Those consoles that were active were muted, their controls casting a pale red glow only just visible in the room’s subdued lighting. From where she sat in the command chair, Toqel sensed the anxiety all around her as she and everyone else on the bridge watched the image of the Starfleet vessel on the main viewscreen. Drifting among the asteroids of the Alamedus system—labeled the Dar’shinta system on Romulan star charts—it rotated in space as it altered its trajectory and began drawing closer to the
Kretoq.

“Maintain position,” Toqel ordered. The chair’s high, unpadded backrest was uncomfortable, designed for Klingon physiology as well as a mindset that viewed concepts like ergonomics as crutches for the weak. Despite the ache at the small of her back, Toqel forced aside the compulsion to rise from the seat, not wishing to appear frail in the eyes of those few Klingon warriors present on the bridge.

“Range ten thousand
mat’drih
and closing, Proconsul,” reported Rezek, the young centurion standing alongside his Klingon counterpart at the tactical station. “They know we are here.”

“They
suspect
something is here,” Toqel corrected without turning her attention from the viewscreen, tapping the nail of her right
forefinger on the arm of her chair. Casting a glance toward Rezek, she asked, “What’s the status of the cloak?”

Pausing to study one of the tactical station’s status displays and to confirm with the Klingon officer assigned to him, the centurion replied, “Operating at full capacity, Proconsul.”

Toqel nodded in approval. The integration of cloaking mechanisms into the onboard systems of six Klingon vessels had gone surprisingly well, even when accounting for the often radical differences in Romulan and Klingon technology. Her cadre of engineers had negotiated those obstacles in fine fashion, leaving Toqel to test the newly equipped vessels in the only manner that was of any tactical importance. Entering foreign territory and attempting to thwart the sensors of an enemy ship would quell any lingering doubts held by the Senate. Once all such uncertainty was laid to rest, Toqel knew the senators would give her the latitude she needed to further strengthen the Romulan fleet, eventually forging it into a weapon against which no enemy of the Empire would be able to defend.

First things first, however.

“Proconsul,” Rezek said after another moment, “the Starfleet ship is engaging its full array of sensors.” When he spoke this time, Toqel thought she detected a hint of anxiety in his voice. “They appear to be conducting an expansive scan of the immediate area.”

Seated at the helm before Toqel, Centurion Nilona turned in his seat. “Should we cut all remaining power, Proconsul?”

Toqel’s immediate response was to arch her right eyebrow as she regarded him. “That would hardly be conducive to our experiment.” Though the new cloaking field was able to conceal the ship’s motion—
an ability lacking in earlier versions—it could not completely mask plasma emissions generated by the impulse engines. Still, the output from the
Kretoq
’s maneuvering thrusters was easily shrouded. Provided no undue spike in power generation took place while the enemy vessel’s scanners probed for her ship, Toqel had been assured by her engineers that the cloak should withstand even the most intense sensor sweep.

The Starfleet vessel was growing larger on the viewscreen, its maneuvering thrusters propelling the enemy vessel ever closer.

“They detect us!” Nilona said.

Toqel did not agree. Engaging the
Kretoq
’s impulse engines to give them some distance after depositing the last communications buoy—itself a means of baiting the Starfleet ship and seeing how its commander would react to the mysterious appearance of the objects—likely had triggered an alarm to the enemy vessel’s sensors. It was a calculated risk, but in addition to being a further test of the cloak’s abilities, Toqel also wanted maneuvering room if it became necessary to retreat, or even to turn and fight.

Forcing her voice to remain calm and measured, she ordered, “Stand by to route power to weapons and shields at my command.” Glancing toward Rezek, she called out, “Range.”

The centurion replied, “Sixty-three hundred
mat’drih,
and closing.” After a moment, he added, “Proconsul, their current course heading indicates they will pass close enough that collision is a danger.”

Very close,
Toqel conceded, but still distant enough to suggest the Starfleet vessel’s sensors had not actually locked onto the
Kretoq.
“Helm,” she said, “lay in a course out of the asteroid field along our current orientation. Adjust your course to utilize the largest asteroids along our flight path for cover. Engage when ready.”

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