Affair on Astate: A New Assignment
Mars Colony, Sol System SFI Divisional HQ
“What the hell is the matter with you Akina”, Captain Peter Harris shouted as he paced around Captain Zane Akina who stood silently at attention in the captain’s office. “Do you know how much trouble you’re in – I’m in? I have half the brass on this rock clamoring for someone’s ass over this! I’m more than happy to send them yours. And look at this!” The captain read from a padd as he paced back and forth. “Excessive use of force, damage to public property, damage to Starfleet property, one wrecked transport, one dead, two wounded, and let’s not forget this one, operations outside of applicable jurisdiction. What do you have to say for yourself and what the hell were you doing there in the first place? We have rules and policies Akina – ones you are supposed to follow!”
“Well when I see three men assaulting a female in the middle of the night, I shoot the bastards, that’s my policy”, Akina answered.
“Captain, mowing down civilians in the wee hours of the morning is not acceptable especially when they are outside of SFI jurisdiction.”
“Let me get this straight sir, you’d have me stand by while those criminals had their way with that woman?”
“YES”, came the heated reply. “Akina, you’re a field agent, a damn good one, one of the best, but you don’t just don't see the big picture. You’re undercover remember! Now your ugly mug is splashed across every media source on Mars and beyond. You’ve just exposed yourself. Everything we’ve been working on for the last six months just evaporated, its gone – finished. And so are you . You can’t work here, at least not for the foreseeable future until this mess blows over. You’re a celebrity now, a damned hero to the masses.”
Akina grimaced. “I stand behind my decision sir. I’m not going to stand by while innocent civilians are violently assaulted by punks who had it coming to them. If I had it to do over again, I’d do the same thing.”
“Oh you would? What about the credits that went into this operation, what about all the intelligence work that’s now useless? What about that Akina?”
“A small price to pay in exchange for someone’s life sir.”
“We don’t pay you to make those types of decisions!”
“So if it had been your wife or daughter I should have done nothing?”
“Don’t change the subject!”
“You listen to me Captain”, Akina replied gruffly. “I did my duty to uphold the law and protect Federation citizens. If I rained on your parade or disrupted SFI’s timelines so be it. Right now there’s a women recovering from a terrible event who is still alive to tell about it, you have one dead perp, and two others in custody off the streets and away from the public. So there was some minor damage in the firefight, but I'd call that acceptable collateral damage. In any other outfit, they would call that good work, why the hell am I getting the first degree?”
“You just don’t get it Akina. As intelligence officers were supposed to be invisible, unseen, subtle – you’re a god damned supernova! You’re on the news ten sectors away and beyond. Hardly what I would call invisible.”
“Are we done here”, Akina asked annoyed at the Captain’s incessant barking.
Harris grumbled something unintelligible and threw a padd at Akina. “Read that. Your orders. You’re being shipped out of here. Report to the spaceport at 09:30 hours tomorrow to catch a transport.”
“Where am I being sent?”
“As far away from here as I could manage”, Harris replied with a smile. “Astate, it’s a small planet on the border with our friends the Romulans. I don’t care what you do there. If you start a war with the Romulans at least I won’t get the blame for it.”
“But…”
“You’re rated in Romulan culture and language so shutup. Its done. Be on that transport.”
“Great”, Akina muttered.
“One more thing. Here”, the captain said shoving a small black box into Zane’s hand. “Now get the hell out of my office!”
Zane shot a sour look at the crusty captain and existed the office his butt having been sufficiently chewed for the day. Opening the box he looked inside to reveal a commendation ribbon for his recent actions. Turning he poked he head back into Harris’s office.
“Thank you captain. You really do care", he said sarcastically.
“GET OUT”, Harris erupted. Zane left the office and as the doors slid closed he swore he heard something heavy hit the wall from within Harris’s office.
Akina shoved the ribbon into his pocket. He didn’t care much for accolades or awards. He did his duty whatever the circumstances. He glanced at the padd. Astate. He knew something of it though would need to do his homework on the area if he were to be prepared for his assignment which still wasn’t exactly clear. The padd contained only scant information, transfer orders, and little else. Harris appeared to have been in a hurry to transfer him otherwise the orders would have had more detail and specificity.
Turning down the hall, Akina headed to his desk to collected his few belongings. He had a transport to catch in less than 24 hours and little time to take care of any outstanding issues before that time.
Captain Zane Akina Intelligence Operative Starfleet Intelligence (SFI)
Affair on Astate: A New Assignment - Part II
USS Britain – Medical Frigate
“Bring us out of warp Ensign Hall”, Captain Tom Greer ordered from his seat on the bridge. “Aye sir”, came the reply as the medical frigate Britain slowed to impulse. The planet Astate appeared on the viewscreen as the Britain moved in to drop off supplies and a passenger.
“Put us in standard orbit. Contact Astate command and coordinate transport of our medical supply shipment.” Greer turned and looked at his guest who was seated at the rear of the bridge taking in the view. “End of the line Captain Akina. We should be in transporter range in a few minutes.”
Captain Zane Akina stood and moved toward Greer. “Thanks for the lift captain, a few days trip aboard the Britain was preferable to the back of a crowded transport that would have taken a week or more. I appreciate the ride.”
“Don’t mention it. I’m glad you caught us when you did. By the way, how did you know we were headed to Astate? This wasn’t a scheduled stop.”
Akina smiled softly. “I’m in intelligence captain, I can’t give away all my secrets.”
Greer laughed. “Of course. Well enjoy your new post. I hear Astate is quite beautiful.”
“I’ll do my best. I should be off. Thank you again for your hospitality captain.”
“Don’t mention it Captain.” Greer tapped his communicator. “Greer to transporter room, standby to beam Captain Akina to the planet surface. Out.”
Akina nodded taking one last look at Astate on the viewscreen. It amazed him how large the planet was compared to the Earth. “Watch your back out there Captain”, he said heading toward the turbolift. “You do the same. Good luck.”
Akina nodded as he entered the lift headed for the transporter room.
The rippling tingle of the transporter beam slowly dissipated as Zane Akina shimmered into existence on a transporter pad inside the Starfleet complex near Caenis. Shaking off the effects of the trasporter, Akina stepped from the pad with his few belongings in a case slung over his arm. The only one in the room was the transporter operator who stopped after a few moments when the captain failed to leave.
“Is there something I can help you with sir?”
Akina looked somewhat perplexed. “Well, I’m not sure. Isn’t there supposed to be someone here to meet me?”
“Uh, I didn’t receive anything. Let’s see, Captain Zane Akina – orders are confirmed. No sir, nothing here but your transport authorization.”
“Great”, Akina muttered. “Any chance you know where I can find the SFI offices?”
“SFI? I’m not sure they have any offices here. I think you guys have a facility somewhere on Astate, that’s really all I know. Don’t you have your orders sir?”
“Yes and no. I was transferred here, but I’m not quite sure what I’m supposed to be doing – yet.”
“Oh well, perhaps the computer can help. You might also talk to one of the base commanders.”
Akina nodded. “Thanks.”
The transporter chief nodded and went about his duties as Akina exited the room. No firm orders, no one to greet him, no idea where to report – it was just the sort of excuse he could milk for a few days time which would allow him ample time to relax, enjoy the scenery, and check out some of the local attractions to get familiar with what was his new home for the time being.
Turning the corner, Akina headed leisurely down a corridor looking for a computer terminal to find the nearest mess hall or restaurant. He’d grab some food, a drink or two, and then try and find out where he could crash and get a few hours of sleep. He continued down the hallway passing a few attractive female officers which caught his attention. Smiling to himself he thought this new position might not be too bad after all if the locals were friendly and the food was half decent. It was still a far cry from the sophisticated cities on Mars or Earth, but this place seemed to have character and charm all its own. He was looking forward to a quiet posting for a change. Spying on the Romulans had its appeal after all and they were worthy adversaries despite being loosely allied with the Federation when it came to the ongoing war with the Dominion. Things were beginning to look up.
Captain Zane Akina Starfleet Intelligence
Affair on Astate: Reassignment, Romance, & Romulans? - Part I
Astate Colony
“So Captain, what do you do for a living here on Astate”, the attractive woman sitting across the table from him asked playfully. Captain Zane Akina smiled softly as he took a swallow of his beer. The last two days off had done wonders for his personal morale. Now he was in a great bar, having a conversation with a wonderful Lt. Commander named Mirialia, and enjoying several local beers which were quite excellent. Being away from the cloak and dagger of his previous assignment on Mars, and the subversion, misdirection, and moral peril of SFI in general was a refreshing breath of air of which he hadn’t experienced in quite sometime.
“I’m a fighter pilot”, Zane replied taking another gulp of his beer.
“A pilot”, Mirialia repeated. “Seriously? Have you been in many battles?”
“A few”, Zane lied. It was against SFI policy for an agent to divulge his or her position or function. Loose talk like that, even if casually, could make for a quick end to an agent’s career if not their life. While he was rated to pilot a Valkyrie class fighter, he had limited combat training, and had never been in actual combat outside of simulations.
“That’s interesting. What brings you here to Astate?”
“Orders. You go where they tell you. I don’t ask too many questions, it just irritates top brass. I’m sure you can relate Commander.”
“Perhaps. Do you think I could see your fighter sometime? I’ve never actually seen one. Perhaps I could sit in it”, she asked.
Zane chuckled. That was one request he would have some difficulty making a reality. “Let’s play it by ear huh? Perhaps I can arrange something.”
“I’d love to go for a ride in one, sail the skies, just like a bird. Must be an amazing feeling. Probably beats flying a desk day in and day out.”
“It’s pretty incredible”, Zane answered. He leaned forward and took Mirialia hands in his own. “You have nice hands”, he said rubbing them gently. “Too nice to touch a bunch of gritty war machines.”
Mirialia smiled. “You’d be surprised what I’m willing to touch”, she said with a mischievous inflection.
“Would I”, Zane asked questioningly. “Perhaps I’m curious to find out.”
Mirialia pulled her hands away. “I bet you are Mr. Hotshot. Why don’t you take me home, we can talk a bit more about your career and perhaps I’ll tell you a few more things about me in the process.”
Zane looked into Mirialia eyes which captivated him. This assignment was a godsend – SFI could keep Mars this place was a veritable garden of Eden compared to the daily grind on the Martian colonies.
“Shall we”, he asked standing. She nodded her lithe figure rising from her chair. Extending his arm she took it with hers as they walked slowly out of the bar.
The couple turned down a corridor headed for her apartment complex which was somewhere on the other side of the Starfleet facilities. Zane still wasn’t sure exactly what she did for Starfleet, but he was sure he’d get a few answers later on after a long, exquisitely thorough interrogation of the exceptional, if not slightly coy, lieutenant commander.
The two talked about random subjects as they walked each enjoying the other’s company when the lights flickered and failed bathing them both in darkness. A few emergency lights snapped on providing some illumination despite the pervasive darkness.
“That’s odd”, Mirialia said. “I’ve never seen the lights go out like this. I wonder what’s wrong.”
Zane looked down the hallway straining to see in the darkness. The hairs on the back of his neck suddenly stood on end. As an SFI agent he had a sixth sense for danger and alarms were sounding in his head – only he couldn’t quite place the cause. Something just didn’t feel right.
“Let’s get back to your place”, he said abruptly taking Mirialia’s hand and briskly moving down the long hallway. “I don’t like the…”
His sentence was cut off when the emergency lights flickered and went out. A split second later an explosion detonated in their vicinity enveloping both of them in a cloud of light, debris, and chaos. Zane heard Mirialia scream, but in the blast he had lost track of her as expanding gasses and the rush of air flung him like a rag doll into a bulkhead. Darkness surrounded him blotting out everything in its approach until there was nothing, but the nothingness itself.
Zane’s eyes slowly opened. His vision waivered as his senses slowly returned. His ears rang incessantly making it difficult to hear the sounds around him. His chest burned as each breath was choked by clouds of acrid smoke which stung his eyes, face, and throat. Pulling himself upwards, debris, wiring, and bits of metal rolled off his body as the reality of what had happened sank in. He rubbed his left eye his sight blurred in a red miasma. He discovered a large gash above his eye dripping copious amounts of warm blood. Wiping what he could of the sticky mess away with his sleeves, Zane looking out before him amazed at what he saw.
A huge gaping hole sat before him where the corridor connecting one of the Starfleet wings with another once stood. Beyond the burning, jagged hole a firefight had erupted between Starfleet and some other hostile force. He couldn’t see the attackers through the haze of fire and smoke, but he could hear the unmistakable whine of their weapon fire and see its telltale color as he knew them both well. Romulans.
Reaching for his sidearm under his jacket, Zane was about to race out into the courtyard to investigate when he remembered why he was here. Mirialia! Where was she? Stepping through the burning debris, Zane found his date covered in debris, a plasteel panel partially covering her legs. Racing to her side he quickly pulled the heavy panel away tossing it backwards as he sought to determine if she had been injured.
“Mirialia, Mirialia! Answer me”, he pleaded as he rolled her over onto her side. Zane’s eyes snapped wide open as the extent of her injuries became apparent. The front of her uniform was soaked in dark red and several ominous cuts and lacerations dotted the woman’s body.
“Mirialia”, he cried out amidst the confusion and chaos around him. She’s slowly came to her eyes opening and meeting his. “Cap…tain”, was all she said.
“Don’t talk”, Zane answered pulling off his jacket and tearing its sleeves into strips. After a few moments he fashioned several crude tourniquets from the material and proceeded to dress and bandage her wounds as best as possible given virtually no true medical supplies.
“What the hell was going on”, he mused as he quickly worked his hands covered in his own blood as well as Mirialia’s. He tightened the last tourniquet and propped her against the wall.
“Listen to me Mirialia”, he said sternly. “Commander, I said listen up”, he shouted to get her attention which was wavering. She nodded indicating she understood. Zane could tell she was in a great deal of pain. She obviously had some internal damage having caught the brunt of the explosion. “Commander, I’m going to go find some help. Until I return you have to remain awake and alert, do you hear me! That’s a direct order Commander from a superior officer!”
“Aye sir”, she weakly replied. Zane realized she didn’t have long unless he could get her to a medical facility. He frantically clawed his remains of his jacket for his communicator. As he suspected it was dead along with the entire communications system he gathered. He’d give the Romulans credit – they were efficient and cunning bastards.
“Mirialia, I’m going to get help. Wait here until I return and stay awake. If you don’t our date is off and I won’t let you ride in my fighter, understand?”
Mirialia weakly smiled at the Captain’s attempt at humor despite the circumstances.
Zane stood pulling out his sidearm from his shoulder holster beneath his arm as he checked its settings. He set the controls to kill. The weapon was Romulan. Efficient and accurate, he preferred the Romulan disruptor pistol for several reasons, but right now what he cherished it for most was its incomparable lethality. Turning toward the gaping hole exposing the firefight outside, Zane leapt through the opening racing thorough the smoke and flames and into the lion’s den. He’d make a few of these bastards pay for what they had done to Mirialia.
Emerging from the smoke and debris, Zane was greeted by a scene that was unfathomable, even for him. Romulan soldiers were pouring across the compound. Green and red weapons fire crisscrossed the area as Starfleet and Romulan forces returned fire for fire in a chaotic battle that Zane realized could be an opening gambit of a Romulan ploy to attack and or invade a weakened Federation. He had little time to evaluate the possible implications of an attack and their political costs. He had to find a medic or at the very least a med kit if Mirialia was to have any chance at survival. Time was not on his side.
Crouching down against a nearby wall, Zane came upon a wounded cadet who was nursing his shoulder having taken an unfortunate hit from a disruptor. Luckily for him, the beam had cauterized the wound on impact reducing the bleeding. Despite its grotesqueness, Zane realized the cadet would be alight. “What the hell happened”, he asked the cadet pulling him out of the line of fire and back behind an outcropping of one of the nearby buildings.
“Don’t know sir. The compound here was hit by several explosions. Power, communications went out, and then the Romulans appeared out of thin air. I got hit a few minutes ago, that’s all I know sir”, the cadet replied between labored breaths.
“Sit tight. Stay out of the way, I’m sure this whole mess will be over shortly.”
A disruptor beam exploded above Zane’s head showing him and the cadet in fragments of dusty debris. Zane swore and returned fire his expert marksmanship dropping of the Romulan assailants. Searching the area, this entire corner was fenced in leaving no where to go except through the raging firefight. Zane had to get to some medical equipment or else Mirialia was finished.
“Captain”, the cadet muttered, “You’re not planning on going out there are you?”
“Son, sometimes duty takes courage, sacrifice, and if you can’t muster those you just tell yourself you are a damned fool and do what it takes anyway. I’ve got someone I have to help as a result of this fiasco so if you’ll excuse me I have a few Romulans I’d like to give a piece of my mind.”
Disruptor blazing, Zane Akina ran into the battle leaving the wounded cadet behind. He had a singular purpose – to find some help for Mirialia. His anger grew in intensity like the fires around him fueled by a strong sense of duty. He was determined to locate some medical help for Mirialia and if he had to take on a Romulan army to accomplish that goal – so be it.
Affair on Astate: Reassignment, Romance, & Romulans? - Part II
Pressing his body flat against a concrete wall, Zane Akina clutched his arm which had been grazed by weapons fire as he had crossed the maelstrom of weapons fire and chaos that surrounded this section of the Starfleet facilities. He could feel the warm stickiness of his wound through his fingers as he caught his breath still trying to piece together what was going on here. His frustration was absolute as he had no back doors to exploit, no escape routes to use, nor contingency plans on which to fall back upon. On Mars, a mere whisper would have produced armed men, weapons, supplies, emergency transports, perhaps even aerial or orbital weapons support. Here on Astate he had nothing having only just arrived a few days ago.
Cursing his misfortune an errant disruptor beam suddenly tore into the concrete above his head showering him in dust and debris as the wall crumbled under the beam’s fury. Dropping to the ground, Zane grumbled again as he desperately searched for more cover. This facility was built to keep people out as well as keep people in – he couldn’t locate an entrance and time was running out.
With a burst of speed, Zane jumped to his feet like a sprinter leaving his mark and bolted across a grassy field as beams flew past him in all directions. Spotting a possible entrance he altered course and dove into a line of hedges just as several green beams sliced into the walls above him raining down sparks and debris.
Coughing, Zane pulled himself from the bushes as he spotted a doorway guarded by three cadets and one or two marines. He quickly made his way there only to be held up by his own people before they realized he was not a Romulan.
“Captain, what the hell were you thinking”, a gruff marine shouted at him pulling him back into the relative safety of the doorway. “You could have been killed running across there like that!”
“Couldn’t be helped”, Zane answered brushing the twigs and leaves from his hair and shoulders. “There’s wounded on the other side of the courtyard. Some are in critical condition. Where the hell is the garrison? Why aren’t there more troops down here?”
“I don’t know”, the marine shouted firing off a few shots of cover fire with his phaser rifle. “Communications are out and everyone appears to be scattered. We can’t coordinate efforts with the blackout and power failures. I suspect half our forces are trapped inside as a result of the power outages. With a loss this serious most of the more critical areas are sealed off by bulkheads for security. They aren’t easy to open without power and computer access.”
“There’s always something”, Zane muttered to himself.
“How bad do you think it is?”
“Take that you green-blooded SOBs”, the marine yelled laying down a pattern of merciless crossfire along with the other cadets guarding the open doorway.
“Bad enough! Look around you! Sorry sir, looks like the Rommies hit with dozens of platoons, hell it may even be company or battalion strength at this point, I can’t tell, they just keep coming!”
Zane nodded as he looked out into the firefight. Romulans never acted this impulsively about anything. They were calculators, devious, subversive, and clever. Force was not unknown to them, but they applied it only when needed, not on a whim and certainly not like cavalier Klingons seeking honor and glory. There was a reason for this assault – it was either a diversion to keep Starfleet’s attention from something elsewhere or they wanted something inside the facility, something they were willing to kill for to obtain. Ulterior motives were hallmarks of Romulan strategies and something didn’t add up.
A disruptor blast exploded against the wall near Zane snapping him from his momentary contemplations.
“Sergeant, where’s medical from here? There are several persons who are in desperate need of medical attention and if they don’t get it in a few minutes it’ll be too late.”
“You can’t get to it from here. It’s sealed off.”
“What about a med kit? Are there any emergency kits around here?”
The marine stopped and looked at the captain. “You planning to run back through that mess again?”
“If I have to”, Zane answered.
“There’s a weapon’s cache down the hallway to the left. There should be some medical supplies in there.”
The marine fired several shots before turning back to the captain. “Sir if you…” The marine stopped realizing the heroic captain was gone. The sergeant smiled silently wishing the insane captain luck as he went back to his duty of defending the doorway.
Affair on Astate: Reassignment, Romance, & Romulans? - Part III
Zane ran down the near black corridors inside of the large Starfleet complex searching for the hallway the marine had been talking about. Power was still out and only a few dim emergency lights spaced along the hallway provided enough light to navigate their depths. Hanging the first left he came across, Zane found a small room with lockers, supplies, and weapons. Digging around in the room he managed to locate a med-kit which he quickly checked. It wasn’t exactly what he wanted, but had enough supplies for emergency triage. Spotting a tricorder, Zane quickly opened it and was able to pull up a map of the facility. A few moments of configuration had the tricorder acting like a personal radar unit which would scan the hallways for movement and heat signatures several meters ahead giving him advance notification of any life forms. Grabbing the med kit, Zane searched the room for weapons, but came up with only a type I phaser which he shoved into his pocket. Practically useless in a firefight, no wonder it had been left behind. The other weapons were gone having been distributed to able bodied cadets and marines sometime earlier. He checked the powercell of his disruptor pistol. It was nearly empty. He’d been a tad overzealous with his firing which might very well cost him.
Shoving the weapon back into his shoulder holster, Zane sped out of the room tricorder in hand having charted a faster path back to Mirialia from inside the building. He wouldn’t have to cross the battlefield again and hoped none of the hallways had been blocked.
His footfalls echoed loudly in the empty corridor as he ran. The tricorder suddenly chirped indicating an obstruction ahead. Zane slowed and found himself face to face with one of the blast proof security bulkheads the sergeant had mentioned. Checking the tricorder he quickly realized this was the only path back to Mirialia. If he tried to go around this door it would take more time and there was no guarantee that other routes wouldn’t also be blocked by these accursed blast doors.
Dropping the medkit to the floor he quickly ran to the door’s controls. With power out the computer was offline, but each door had a manual release mechanism. After a few moments Zane located the manual override pulling off the secured plate and tossing it aside. A heavy hydraulic lever was inside which he grabbed and pulled but was unable to budge. Gripping the lever with both hands, Zane put his weight into it as the lever resisted. Neglected and probably untested for years, such backup systems were installed, but never seriously meant to be used. Maintenance was always lacking on such systems.
With time against him, Zane struggled with the lever which refused to move frozen in place by neglect and the passage of time. Frustrated and brimming with anger, Zane kicked the lever again and again before gripping it and pulling with every ounce of strength he could manage. The tendons and muscles of his shoulders and arms bulged and quivered in silent protest.
Suddenly the lever broke free from its housing. Gasping, Zane cursed the metallic handle and slowly pumped it backwards and forwards to manually separate the thick metal door one pump at a time. After several minutes he had managed to separate the door by a few inches. Two or three more minutes passed as the huge doors sat about a foot and a half apart. It would have to do – he was out of time. Mirialia’s life depended on him getting back to her.
Zane grabbed the medkit and exhaled shoving himself between the narrow gap that separated the two massive doors. “Definitely going on a diet”, he grunted as he wiggled his sore, wounded body through the opening. Emerging on the other side his tricorder erupted in his hand as dozens of blips filled its tiny screen. It was impossible to tell if the movements detected up ahead were friend or foe, but he had no choice but to press onward.
Holstering the tricorder in favor of his disruptor pistol, he tightened his grip on both his weapon and on the medkit before setting off slowly down the hallway. It wasn’t long before his worst fears were realized. Romulans had breached the interior and had established a small cell of resistance at an opening not too dissimilar from the one caused by the earlier explosion that had wounded him and Mirialia. Leaning around a corner, Zane could see a long hallway. At its end was the doorway which would lead him straight back to Mirialia. Somehow he had to get to it, but with Romulans everywhere how was he going to make it with any real chance of survival?
Zane leaned against the wall closing his eyes gripping his weapon. He was an SFI agent, not a solider. He never liked playing marines preferring more cerebral challenges like games of skill, misdirection, and cunning. Tactics, guile, and stealth were his strengths, not brute force. His thoughts drifted to Mirialia, whose wounded body was burned into his memory. He had to get to her! She didn’t deserve to die here in this place, not like this.
He suddenly had an idea. It was crazy, absolutely insane, but given the circumstances it was the best he could devise with time against him. Steadying his mind he had to think as his body pumped chemicals into his blood stream making it difficult for him to concentrate. His Romulan was rusty, he hadn’t used it for awhile, especially since the Dominion had reared its ugly head for a second time. He was sure with a few weeks practice it would all come back, but now with adrenaline running through him all he could come up with were a few choice phrases that didn’t make much sense, but might confuse the Romulan’s long enough for him to get past them before they knew what was happening.
He sucked it one final breath. It was now or never. He rounded the corner and made his way toward the door. He didn’t care how many Romulans were before him. It mattered little now as they could hear his approach and there was no going back.
“Vaed'rae (Attention)”, he yelled as he ran toward the half dozen Romulans firing out into the courtyard from their vantage points. “Havams! Havams! Kholairlh-a deleth mnevher! (Humans, humans, elements protect us!)”
Zane didn’t blink he just kept running with the door in sight.
The Romulans wavered as a body running at top speed came out of nowhere shouting to them in their native tongue though it seemed to make little sense. The soldiers stopped firing and turned some fearing a Starfleet assault was coming from the panic filled shouts of comrade. Zane ran by them as fast as his legs could carry him. Momentary confusion set in as the Romulans were reluctant to fire their eyes seeing a human running past them while their ears heard the words of a Romulan.
“Beest”, one of the guards shouted. (Halt!)
Zane continued to run. He was almost there. A few more moments and he’d be out of harms way.
“Hna'h, Hna'h! (FIRE FIRE!), shouted one of the soldiers as the ruse evaporated. Zane continued to sprint his heart pounding as disruptor beams tore into the walls around him. Several beams sliced into the door before him spraying the area in smoke and debris. At that instant his foot caught something on the floor sending him flying forward. Zane came to a stop only a few meters from the now burning exit dazed, hurt, and reeling from having tripped.
Reality suddenly hit home as he felt the unmistakable edge of a rifle press into the soft underside of the back of his skull. “Fvadt (damn)”, he muttered aloud his mind still partially engaged in speaking Romulan.
“Au`rh yy'a havam (you’re dead human)”, came the response he had feared all along. He had failed to reach Mirialia. Just as his life was soon to be forfeit her’s too would suffer the same fate as soon as the Romulan pulled the trigger.
Zane didn’t struggle, he waited for the inevitable unable to stop himself from wondering if there was another way he could have approached the situation. Was there another way? Some other strategy that evaded him? His calculating mind didn’t allow for much else in that split second.
He heard the whine of the weapon, but felt no pain. Was death truly this quick and painless?
The body of a dead Romulan fell next to him his cold, lifeless eyes staring into his own as they lay together on the floor.
“GET UP AND RUN YOU CRAZY SUNNUVA BITCH”, came a loud, gruff voice from the other end of the hallway. Zane sat up and could make out the sergeant and a few armed cadets in the distance laying down a heavy field of covering fire. They were keeping the Romulans pinned down. For some reason they had followed him here and couldn’t have arrived at a better time.
Zane scrambled to his feet clutching the med kit as weapons fire exploded everywhere in the narrow hallway. Racing to the exit, Zane looked back at the cadets and the sergeant. He was too far away to communicate anything meaningful through the chaos with words. Standing briefly at the doorway, Zane saluted the sergeant as his only means of thanks before racing off down the hallway. Mirialia was only a few hundred meters away and he prayed he wasn’t too late…
Affair on Astate: Reassignment, Romance, & Romulans? - Part IV
StarFleet Facilities
A twisted, hellish funhouse was the only thing Zane Akina could use to describe the current situation he found himself in only there was nothing fun about it. Startled at every turn by unknown forces sometimes friendly, sometimes not and blocked by debris on an ever changing path Akina swore if he survived this disaster of an attack which had caught Starfleet with its pants down that heads were going to roll at least in the intelligence divisions. Someone somewhere should have seen this coming –intelligence’s primary job was to provide forewarning of just these types of events and stop them in the shadows or at least give the military planners time to prepare defenses. It wasn’t a perfect science as operatives and analysts often had to piece together bits of data into a big picture view that wasn’t always clear. An all out assault on Starfleet facilities would have had warning signs – troop buildups, increased subspace traffic, shifting of key personnel to new or unusual posts, hardware movement – soft intelligence like this spoke volumes about an adversaries intentions or future actions.
Dismissing his frustrations there was little time to worry about such matters. Here in the present he had to find a way to survive this madness. Running down a dark corridor, Zane heard a loud whine that grew louder. It sounded like aircraft, but without visual confirmation he couldn’t be sure. Had Starfleet finally managed to scramble some air defenses to provide cover? A moment later the building shuttered around him with a fury that launched him forward as his body rolled across the floor. He could hear explosions muffled by feet of concrete, steel, and other building materials. Something had just struck the building somewhere above – perhaps a fighter or support ship. That could only mean the situation was deteriorating.
Wiping the blood running down his face and from the corner of his mouth, Zane stood again and continued to run down the hall. He stopped suddenly at a junction point to check his tricorder for directions and quickly realized there were several dead Romulans nearby. He quickly pulled his weapon and much to his relief the troops were indeed dead. Frisking the bodies he came away with two extra power cells for his disruptor pistol, another small medkit, a few Romulan grenades, and a disruptor rifle. Stashing the items on his person, he continued down the hall turning the corner until he finally returned to the hallway that he had left sometime ago when the attacks had begun.
“Mirialia”, he shouted spotting her body still in the same position he had left her in against the wall. He rushed to her side scrambling to see if she was still alive. “Mirialia, speak to me”, he shouted gripping her by the shoulders. The Lt. Commander was unresponsive as he shook her trying to get some sign of life from the woman. “Damn it, don’t do this to me”, he shouted pushing his ear close to her mouth and nose. Zane could hear shallow breathing; it was faint, but noticeable. Opening the med kit, Zane scanned her with the tricorder finally getting a look at the extent of her injuries.
He spat his own blood seeping into the corner of his mouth as he ran the scanner over the length of her body. It’s results were not promising. She had several deep lacerations on her arms and torso, the signs of a mild concussion, and had suffered blunt force trauma to her abdomen which had caused either severe bruising or possible internal bleeding he couldn’t be sure.
He prepped a stimulant to give her, but stopped. She was unconscious and a stimulant could send her further into shock or possibly kill her in her present condition. He couldn’t use it, at least, not right now. He injected her instead with a coagulant to help stop the bleeding as he did his best to partially heal some of the more dangerous wounds with a dermal regenerator. After several minutes he checked again – her vitals were still unstable, but he had stopped most of the bleeding and stabilized her injuries. She still needed medical attention and soon, but his patch job would buy her some additional time for him to figure how to escape this mess and find safety if there even was such a thing.
Small fires still burned as Zane looked out of the massive hole torn into the building from the earlier explosion. The courtyard area he had crossed sometime earlier was awash in fierce fighting. Green and red beams crisscrossed the grassy field leaving little room for cover or shelter. Anyone not eating the dirt or tucked behind heavy cover had little chance for survival under such murderous fire. It still seemed impossible to him that a Starfleet facility had been so totally compromised by an enemy force.
As he looked on pockets of resistance appeared to be turning their fire skyward. Aircraft were visible, but they were Romulan. Zane quickly came to the realization that the Romulans were firing on their own support craft. Why would they do such a thing? More time passed as air units fired on ground units Romulan against Romulan. Green beams were interspersed with purple ones from the opposing forces.
Zane tried to make sense of the situation, but his knowledge of local politics and affairs was poor. Was there some internal power struggle? A civil war? He didn’t have any answers and not knowing was tearing him apart. He had to make rash decisions without any information which wasn’t beyond him, but he hated acting blind.
His thoughts evaporated in an instant as his eyes snapped open at what he saw before him. A troop carrier, having strayed too close to the battlefield, was quickly caught in a barrage of fire from a well disguised position at the edge of the campus grounds. Disruptors slicing through its hull, the carrier was quickly set ablaze as it struggled to leave the area. It was too late. Its engines loosing power the large carrier abruptly jerked 90 degrees and nose dived toward the ground straight for Zane and Mirialia.
He could do nothing but watch, there wasn’t time to react. Throwing his body over her, Zane tightly closed his eyes as the cockpit of the carrier slammed into the ground with the force of a small bomb. Metal exploded as the mass of the craft dug into the grass and dirt tearing a path through the courtyard like a giant plow. Dirt erupted in all directions showering the entire area with damp earth as the large craft carved a path straight for the building. Zane braced for the worse as the whine of the engines grew louder and the sounds of an approaching train wreck drowned out all other noises.
Zane cracked an eye when the explosion and impact he had expected never came. He turned his head – outside the carrier had come to a stop a few feet away from the edge of the building and the hole that had exposed the hallway Zane was now staring through. Smoke poured from the craft’s aft section and its cockpit was gone having absorbed the brunt of the impact. Much of the forward section of the craft was burying several feet into the dirt or crushed beyond recognition.
Zane let out a sigh of relief that was filled with a new apprehension that he might not make it through this attack. The stakes were higher than he first expected now and both sides were playing for keeps - this was a war plain and simple. A commando raid or surgical strike would have been over minutes ago the scale and breadth of troops, firepower, and damage had convinced him the Romulans were here to seize the facility or die trying.
One this he knew for sure was that he had to get out of here along with Mirialia. They couldn’t stay here. He was afraid to move her, but he didn’t have much choice. His own wounds were catching up with him and he couldn’t keep this level of intensity up for too much longer without some rest. Reaching onto the medkit, he pulled a hypo out and stuck it into his neck. He winced as a stimulant was injected into his bloodstream. He hoped it would last long enough for him to find some shelter away from this madness. Moments later he felt some strength return as he packed up the medical kit and secured it to his belt. Standing he picked up Mirialia and pulled her onto his shoulder her limp body heavy and difficult to carry.
Determined to find some safety, Zane set off carrying a woman he barely knew down the wrecked hallway. He knew there were cadets around here somewhere – even unseasoned rookies would be preferable to going it alone against the swarms of Romulans who appeared to be overrunning the facility.
As he pressed on Zane was painfully aware of one fact that was now haunting him like a nightmare he couldn’t wake up from. He was a Starfleet intelligence officer. If he was taken captive, the Romulans, would most surely attempt to extract the knowledge that existed in his head and would do so using a variety of painful and effective methods. Torture was not something he was looking forward to especially not at the hands of Romulan intelligence officers like the Tal’Shiar. He’d rather go out in a blaze of glory than end up a quivery mass of flesh in some dark interrogation chamber.
Despite carrying Mirialia’s body over his shoulders, Zane pulled his pistol. He wasn’t going to allow them to be captured. Whatever fate had in store for them, being taken prisoner was not an option. He’d make sure that possibility didn’t occur - one way or another.
Affair on Astate: Reassignment, Romance, & Romulans? - Part V
Blackness.
Zane was utterly lost inside the lower levels of Starfleet Tower 1. Without power each hallway was a shadowy venture into the dangerous unknown. Voices called out suddenly from the darkness piercing the unnatural silence. An occasional weapon discharge brought with it fear of further Romulan incursions. Frantic officers and enlisted personnel ran about the darkened halls like frightened animals fleeing the approach of a vicious predator.
Starfleet’s teeth had been pulled, its bite tame, its power shattered. Fear, panic, and despair floated through the confusing, haunting hallways. Communications had failed, personnel and leadership were separated or in some cases trapped behind security doors, and only small pockets of resistance had formed to fend off the Romulan threat. Casualties seemed to be everywhere having been caught in explosions, hit in exchanges of fire, or injured in random collateral damage.
Zane’s expression was solemn as he trudged through the hell that had been wrought on Astate. He turned a blind eye to the carnage, suffering, fear, and despair that was slowly gripping those lost in the black maze of twisting corridors and endless hallways. Running purely on adrenaline, an earlier shot of stimulants, and willpower he moved forward carrying the body of Lt. Commander Marialia on his shoulders whose own medical condition was rapidly deteriorating. His years with SFI had blunted his sense of compassion something that had always concerned him. The longer he worked in SFI the more of his humanity seemed to slip away, but in the end it was all he had ever known, and leaving the family was fraught with peril and hazards all its own. One never truly left the intelligence community. There were always strings attached, debts to be paid and collected to friend and foes alike.
Step after painful step, Zane pressed forward. He didn’t know where he was headed. All he knew is that it was away from the front line fighting. Perhaps he might find a doctor or medic who could help Mirialia along the way; at least they would be out of the line of fire.
He shielded his eyes with his hand when suddenly a burst of intense white light cut through the blackness with the power and brightness of a supernova. Not waiting for the light to disappear, the first he had seen in what seemed like hours, Zane ran toward it like a moth to a flame uncertain what lie beyond its blinding center.
Stepping through the glowing doorway, Zane struggled to see his eyes having difficulty adjusting to the lighting. This room had power.
“CAPTAIN”, a voice called out. Blurred images of people surrounded him. It took him a few moments to collect himself from the intensity of the light to the voices demanding his attention.
“Captain, are you alright sir”, a cadet asked. Several cadets swarmed the senior officer and helped take Mirialia off his shoulders. A few cadets trained in first aid went to work applying their craft to the injured woman. Zane was about to protest, but was interrupted by a flood of young officers.
“What’s going on”, Zane said with authority his annoyance and fatigue showing through his tough exterior.
“We were hoping you could tell us sir! You’re the first officer we’ve seen since the power went out.”
“Power? How is that possible?”, Zane asked.
“Backup generators. They’re required equipment for most military hangars.”
Zane looked around finding himself standing in the center of a huge hangar surrounded by several squadrons of fighters. Most of the cadets were pilots, but others made up ground crew, support staff, and other flight related posts. There didn’t appear to be a one of them over the age of 25.
He turned back toward Mirialia, who was getting the royal treatment. Two of the cadets sensing the captain’s concern looked up. “She’s in tough shape sir, but I think she’ll make it.”
Zane nodded. He had medical field and survival training, but he was no doctor. These kids seemed better at playing doctor than him and probably were. Despite his extreme fatigue, aching muscles, loss of blood, and several serious gashes of his face and arms, Zane took command of the situation. Duty and training took over as he suddenly sensed a chance to level the playing field.
“How many pilots are there here?”
“Thirty two sir”, someone shouted.
“I’m going to give it to you straight men”, he said gruffly. This was no time for speeches. These boys were going to have to grow up and quickly though it pained him to be the one to tell them.
“Romulans have attacked the academy en masse. We may be looking at brigade or possibly battalion strength forces out there with reinforcements on the way. They have launched an all out assault on the academy grounds.”
Most of the cadets stood silent in the vast hangar transfixed by the senior officer’s words.
“Power has been knocked out throughout the facility. Communications have failed, security protocols appear to be preventing marines and security forces from mounting an effective counterattack. You men may very well be the last, best defense we have left against the Romulans.” Zane paused for only a moment to let his words sink in. “I know combat wasn’t what you expected when you woke up this morning, but it’s here. You’ve sworn an oath to the fleet and to the Federation. It’s time to defend what you’ve all sworn to protect. This isn’t going to be easy, but duty in the face of danger rarely is. I’m not your commanding officer, I’m just a captain caught up this situation just like you, but you have to make a decision right now. Fight or run. I’m not here to judge, only to tell you what you’re up against.”
None of the cadets moved. It appeared they had all made their decision. Many of them were visibly angry as they learned what was going on outside.
Zane pointed toward the hangar door. Let’s get those doors open – you men are combat pilots. It’s time you got out there and showed the Romulan’s what happens to those who plan sneak attacks.”
“We can’t open the doors sir. We’ve tried. The computer is locked out and all of the security mechanisms are frozen in place”, one of the cadets stated.
Zane looked at the doors. Without the proper security codes the massive steel doors weren’t going anywhere. A manual override could take hours and he doubted there was enough manpower in the hangar to push the massive doors open without mechanical assistance. On Mars he could have had a trusted team of computer specialists here in a moments notice to ‘bypass’ to codes or break them if necessary all of which could be done in minutes not hours. This wasn’t Mars and his knowledge of intelligence infrastructure was poor to none on Astate.
“I’ll take care of that.” Zane pushed his way passed the cadets and made his way to the lead fighter sitting on the line in formation. Pulling himself up onto the wing he turned and shouted out to the crowd of cadets. “All of you find some cover now! Get to the other end of the hangar on the double!” “GO”, he shouted. As the cadets moved off, some reluctantly, Zane dropped into the seat of the fighter. He wasn’t familiar with this model, but it appeared to be a short range superiority fighter which was perfect for the task at hand. A few buttons activated the ubiquitous computer systems that were found in most combat aircraft. After a few moments, Zane had the weapons systems warming up.
He stood from the cockpit and looked back to ensure everyone had indeed backed off. Falling back inside, he closed the canopy of the fighter and locked the craft’s weapons squarely on the center of the two double doors.
“Computer, lock phasers on target.”
[ Target Locked ]
“Fire phasers.”
Twin crimson phaser beams cut across the hangar bay slamming into the hangar doors. The white metal warped under the assault turning a pale red as metal was superheated. The center of the doors liquefied and began running down forming a pool of molten metal on the deck plates below. Despite the barrage, the thick, shielded doors weren’t budging having been engineered to take a protect the internal facility from external attacks.
Zane had no choice. In his mind these fighters had to be allowed to fight. His information was lacking, but all signs pointed to a Starfleet defeat unless more resistance could be brought against the enemy and soon. “Computer, lock micro torpedoes on hangar bay doors. Set yield to 25 percent…FIRE!”
Two torpedoes streaked out from the fighter slamming into the doors. A reddish explosion enveloped the deck rocking his fighter before subsiding. As the dust cleared the doors, visibly mangled, still resisted the punishment they were absorbing.
“Computer, Increase yield to 65 percent of maximum. Load a three torp spread. FIRE!”
Three more torpedoes left their tube streaking out toward the door in a flash of light. The explosions shook the hangar like an earthquake as air rushed about knocking over equipment and people. A few moments later, two cadets following the Captain’s bold lead, jumped into their fighters and within moments were aiding Zane in dismantling the hangar doors with their phasers as giant chunks of metal fell forward exposing an opening wide enough for the fighters to launch through.
Zane opened the canopy and jumped from the fighter. The cadets returned some shocked by the Captain’s seemingly reckless actions.
“What now”, one of them asked.
“Now you get your fighters out there and take the fight to the enemy”, Zane responded looking back at the giant hole that now existed in the two massive doors. “You’re pilots, some of you are squadron leaders – it’s time to put your training to use. Your fellow students and officers are being massacred out there – I suspect they could use the morale boost of seeing a few Starfleet fighters and I know they could use the air support to pin down some of the Romulan thrust.”
“Its up to us”, one of the squadron leaders shouted taking command of the situation.
Zane limped off as the cadets took the initiative. They were young and inexperienced, but being young meant they were also fearless, cocky, and willing to prove themselves. After a few moments, Zane located Mirialia who was conscious.
“Commander, can you hear me”, Zane said kneeling down toward her.
“Yes”, she replied her voice weak having lost all of its previous musical qualities.
“You’re going to be ok. I’m going to get you some help.”
She nodded the pain again evident on her face.
“Can you walk? We’ve got to get out of here.”
She nodded as Zane helped her to her feet. She could stand, but barely move. Bracing her as best he could, Zane marched across the flight deck which was now awash with personnel as the fighters prepared to take off. Engines whirred to life filling the bay with an overpowering whine as exhaust and air rushed backwards created by the crafts’ powerful engines.
Zane left the flight deck, confident it was in good hands, as he struggled once more into the dark depths of the Starfleet facility with Mirialia at his side.
Twenty minutes later Zane, staggering through the relative darkness, found his way to a concentration of people. Wading through the civilians, Zane approached a security checkpoint.
“Halt”, the guard shouted. “No unauthorized personnel..”
“Akina, Captain, Starfleet Intelligence. Clearance Level Two – I’m authorized”, he said in a cold tone, his eyes narrowing letting the guard know he was in no mood for funny business. The guard seemed unwilling to permit him passage despite Zane’s credentials.
“Sergeant, your commitment to duty is admirable, but can I assume that beyond that door is the command center?”
“Perhaps”, the guard stated. “I’ve been instructed to permit no one inside during the current crisis and..”
Zane pulled his disruptor and aimed it squarely at the guard’s chest. “Sergeant, you will permit myself and the Lt. Commander passage now. I have vital information from the front lines and you are obstructing delivery of that information. I’m giving you a direct order as a Starfleet captain in Intelligence to step aside NOW!”
The guard failed to move, but at last relented. “Fine”, was all he said unimpressed by Akina’s theatrics.
Akina, Mirialia hanging from his side, moved passed the guard and into the command center whose interior was bustling with personnel scrambling to defend against the Romulans.
“Who the hell are you”, a pretentious commander shouted seeing Zane and Mirialia, covered in each other’s blood, caked with dirt and grime, and wearing tattered uniforms.
“Captain Zane Akina, Starfleet Intelligence. This is commander Mirialia. Is there a doctor here, she needs immediate medical care.”
The commander grimaced at the sight of the officers. “Yes, this way.”
Zane followed the man to a makeshift medical ward that had been setup in what appeared to be barracks of some type. Helping Mirialia onto a bed, Zane collapsed into a nearby chair his strength gone. He was utterly exhausted.
“Captain, you’ve lost a lot of blood”, one of the attending medics said as they moved into to examine the new arrivals.
“Hadn’t noticed”, Zane responded suddenly feeling light headed.
“The commander, how is she”, he asked as the medic wiped a painful alcohol swab across the various gashes and cuts on his face and neck. “She’s hurt, internal bleeding, a few broken bones, superficial wounds. She should pull through. You got her to us just in time.”
Akina fell backwards in the chair. He didn’t care about anything else now. He’s saved her life and somehow survived himself. As the doctors poured over him, he closed his eyes. He could feel painkillers being injected. A few minutes later his consciousness faded. He didn’t need to fight anymore for the moment. His eyes grew heavier until at last he could no longer struggle against their weight. This wasn’t how he had planned spending his first week at a new job. It was certainly a change, but this wasn’t the sort of change he was looking for. His part in the fight was over now – it was up to others to turn the tide. He had faith, but after what he had seen today, that faith was being tested. Only time would tell the outcome.
Affair on Astate: Reassignment, Romance, & Romulans? - Part VI
His eyes slowly opened. The room slowly came into focus as his eyes adjusted to the light. He was somewhere unfamiliar. His mind, not fully operational as it shook off the last vestiges of sleep, had no idea where it was. A wave of adrenaline shot through him and he bolted upright in his cot.
His quick actions were met with a burst of pain from his left shoulder. He clutched it as his memory slowly returned. The room he was in was filled with wounded. Doctors, nurses, and medics were tending to patients some in serious condition and others like him, with lesser, non-life threatening injuries. Zane realized his arm was bandaged. It appeared the doctors hadn’t had time to use a dermal regenerator on him, opting to stop the bleeding first and then go back later and treat the wound - that is if there was a later.
He stood grabbing the nearby wall for support. His legs ached from the abuse he had put them through. Every muscle in his body was sore, tired, and overworked. The last few hours had been hell. Zane suddenly wondered how long he had been asleep and how the battle was progressing. His survival instincts again took hold, but first he had to check on something.
“Nurse”, he called out flagging down a tired officer who looked as though she had been working for hours on end. Her eyes seemed devoid of all emotion and exhaustion was evident on her face.
“Captain, you shouldn’t be up”, she said. “Please, sit down and get some rest. You had a busy day.”
“Haven’t we all”, he muttered back. The nurse nodded with a faint trace of a smile. “I came in here with a woman, a Lt. Commander.”
“She’s doing fine Captain. Now please, I have other patients to attend to.”
“May I see her?”
“I believe she is asleep sir. Please, just relax and get some rest sir. I’ll be by to check on you later.”
The nurse moved off leaving Zane alone in the corner he found himself in. Despite the doctor’s orders, Zane wasn’t usually one to follow the rules. He was shirtless, his clothing having been cut away so that the doctors could get to his wounds no doubt. His weapons were missing which was of some concern to him, but right now he needed to find out what was going on.
Slowly he tested his legs. Both felt as heavy as lead and painfully reminded him they were exhausted each time he instructed them to move. Despite his discomfort, Zane headed out of the room and back toward the command area he remembered passing through. It wasn’t long before he located the room which was jammed with officers who seemed to have some grasp of the current situation.
“What’s the situation”, Zane asked moving up to a makeshift holographic table many of the officers were crowded around.
“Who are you”, a commander snidely asked. “You’re not authorized to be here. Get back to the medical area.”
“Captain Zane Akina, SFI. I’m not sure I appreciate your tone Commander.”
The commander seemed put off by Zane’s rank and appearance, but retreated slightly in his harshness toward the captain. “My apologies sir”, the commander replied with little remorse. “Your rank was not immediately evident.”
“What’s the situation”, Zane repeated his question.
Zane thought he heard someone behind him mumble something about intelligence officers wasting the military’s time in a critical situation, but he dismissed it. He hadn’t joined intelligence to be loved or worshiped. It was true that many people had a low opinion of intelligence officers due to the department’s methods, tactics, and behind the scenes way of operating. SFI was not a transparent organization, nor should it be. He always figured that frightened people, but being on the inside looking out he was never quite sure what it was that put people off. He was doing his job to protect the Federation just like anyone else – the methods were different, but the duty was the same.
“We are here”, the commander said pointing to the holographic map. “The Romulans have pockets of troops here, here and here”, he said pointing to various locations. We’ve managed to set up a partial perimeter here and have forces defending several key locations inside tower one. Our location is secure at the time and wounded are being brought here for treatment as our forward units encounter them.
“How many men do we have currently”, Zane asked staring at the map.
“Numbers are difficult with communications down. I’d estimate roughly 75 to 100 men sir.”
“A hundred men, that’s it”, Zane exclaimed.
“We’re doing the best we can under difficult circumstances captain”, the commander shot back with an annoyed tone.
“Your best isn’t good enough commander”, Akina replied leaning against the table. “I just came from out there, nearly got myself killed in the process as my arm here will attest. We have brave men and women dying out there by the dozens. We don’t need search parties out looking for wounded or trying to contact other units – we need to consolidate our forces here into a position of strength and push back at the enemy now!”
“Push back with what”, a lieutenant chimed into the discussion. “Half our forces are exhausted as it is. Our weapon supplies are dwindling, medical supplies are running low, and without power the replicators are useless. We can’t evacuate with transporters due to all the damned jamming going on out there let alone get a clear transmission to anyone. What do you want us to resist with? Sticks? Rocks? Their disruptors pack a bigger punch than rubble and debris!”
Zane’s eyes narrowed. “Mister, you’re out of line!”
“So are you! Just because you are a captain doesn’t give you the right to barge in here and start giving orders! We haven’t even confirmed your identity, let alone your credentials. What does an intelligence officer know about military tactics and ground operations? Why don’t you just go duck back into the shadows where your kind belong!”
“THAT’S ENOUGH LIEUTENANT”, the commander shouted at his subordinate. The entire command center sat silent as the drama between officers played out before them.
Zane stood up despite his extreme discomfort. “Gentlemen, I’m not inclined to fight both you and the Romulans. Before I arrived, I passed two squadrons of fighters. With a little motivation those boys are most certainly out there fighting against the enemy. Right now, we should have a slight edge in air support and if we can mobilize our forces here we might be able to push the Romulans back and hold them until reinforcements arrive.”
“And what if reinforcements don’t arrive captain”, the lieutenant snapped. “We would have sent a hundred officers to their death.”
“Lieutenant, no one who wears that uniform is safe from the unknown and unexpected. You put on that uniform and swore and oath to protect Starfleet and the Federation even at the cost of your own life. I’m sorry that this Romulan attack has made you uncomfortable, but from time to time Starfleet has to get its hands dirty. If you’re not willing to do your duty then I suggest you resign your commission now and relieve yourself from duty and go cower in the back. Starfleet doesn’t need cowards right now nor any heroes, just men of conscious with the will to do what is right. Now you’re either in this thing to win or your not. Which is it Lieutenant?”
“Captain, may I have a word with you in private”, the commander said attempting to pull Akina aside.
“No”, Zane replied stepping toward the lieutenant ignoring the commander. “Lieutenant, I just sent thirty cadets out to fight some of them younger than you. Most of them were willing to go once they knew what the stakes were. I suspect they are out there now fighting and even perhaps dying for all of us. Would you dishonor them by retreating the face of the enemy?”
“I don’t have any combat experience”, the lieutenant shouted back. “I’m just an adjutant.”
“Can you fire a phaser?”
“Well..yes.”
“Then you’re a soldier. Just aim it at the enemy and fire. There’s nothing that hard about it. Now I need some out there to spread the word. Get our people assembled back here. Once we can regroup we can assess our situation and come up with a plan of action.” Zane stepped over to a nearby security guard and took his weapon shoving it into the hands of the lieutenant.
The lieutenant looked at the weapon and then back up at Zane.
“It’s called duty lieutenant. Better get used to it because it doesn’t get any easier to swallow the older you get. In fact it gets that much harder.”
Glancing at the commander, the lieutenant marched off weapon in hand to carry out his orders.
“Captain, who do you think you are? Napoleon? This isn’t your own private little war here!”
“The hell its not”, Zane shouted back. “I was having a romantic stroll down a corridor when an explosive shattered the hallway injuring myself and nearly killing my date for the evening. The Romulans have obviously declared war on us by attacking a Starfleet facility and it’s about time we started taking the fight to them. They started this mess and I intend to finish it. Do I make myself clear!”
“Perfectly”, the commander said.
“We’re starting the fight from right here. I’m not going to sit back and be taken prisoner by the Romulans. Do you people have any idea what they do to prisoners? Especially when they want information?”
Everyone in the room fell silent.
“That’s what I thought. Well if you don’t want to end up having your head squeezed for information from mind probes, drugs, or the old fashioned methods, I suggest you get your butts in gear and start trying to win this thing.”
Zane rubbed his head. He could use a cup of coffee right now, but he knew none would be forthcoming.
“Where’s the commanding officer?”
“Who?”
“Where’s the official in charge around here?”
“Admiral Enor?”
“Yes.”
“We don’t know sir. No one has had contact with him since the power failed.”
“Great”, Zane muttered. The base’s commander was MIA and the place was crawling with Romulans whom he still had no idea what they wanted or hoped to achieve by assaulting a Starfleet facility other than creating an incident with the Federation which could spiral into full scale war.
“Sir! Sir”, the lieutenant shouted running back into the command post.
Zane looked up at the excited lieutenant.
“The Romulans are withdrawing. They’re retreating. They just transmitted a message also indicating they are withdrawing.”
Zane shot a glance at the communications officer. “Confirmed, it’s on all channels. The jamming is letting up. They’re withdrawing.”
A collective cheer ran through the command post, but faded quickly.
“Anything else”, Zane asked.
“They’re withdrawing. Bringing in carriers to withdraw their troops. Something about any Romulan that continues to fight is fair game for Starfleet forces – they are considered rogue and should be shot on site. That’s it, message keeps repeating on all frequencies.”
Zane nodded. “There’s a turn of luck”, he said quietly.
“Lieutenant, get our people and form search and rescue teams. Until power is restored, we need to sweep the hallways for survivors and wounded. Remain armed as there still could be Romulans who may not heed the withdrawal orders. If any team encounters any resistance, you are authorized to use force to defend yourselves or others.”
The lieutenant nodded as he rushed back out, but stopped at the doorway. Turning, he looked at Akina and saluted. “Thank you sir”, was all he said before rushing out.
Zane turned toward the commander. “Think you can handle things from here commander”, Zane asked.
“I think I can manage”, the commander said with a hint of coldness in his voice. Zane could sense the man still held a grudge against him for assuming command, but under regulations Zane had every right and duty to do so.
“Carry on then”, Zane said.
Stepping off, tired and hungry, Zane decided to check up on Mirialia. He just hoped they were able to restore power soon. He needed a shower and something warm to drink. With the crisis averted for now, it would be nice to get back to a semi-normal schedule again.
He hoped this new assignment on Astate wouldn’t always be this exciting. He’d had enough excitement to last him quite sometime.
Affair on Astate: A Little Local Trouble - Part I
The power was finally back on, communications had been restored, and most computer systems were again operational. The skirmish with the Romulans was at long last, over. Romulan forces had completely withdrawn and all resistance had surrendered or had been dealt with by Starfleet forces. A strange calm enveloped the Starfleet facilities, a welcome feeling after the hours of touturious fighting and chaos.
Looking out through a cracked glass window several floors above ground level, Zane surveyed the Starfleet grounds from one of the high towers. A thin haze of smoke still hung in the air from a few minor fires. Debris lay strewn everywhere on the campus grounds. Evidence of damage and the tell tale signs of weapons fire crisscrossed nearly every building. He could see the downed Romulan transport that had crashed nearly crushing him and Lt. Commander Mirialia some hours earlier. It’s wreckage was embedded deep into the ground and would takes days to remove and dispose of. He doubted there was any computer equipment of any intelligence value aboard, but the wreck would need a through examining. It was possible this entire affair could shed some additional light on Romulan tactics, organization, morale, and possibly net Starfleet with a few useful nuggets of information extricated from dropped or damaged equipment.
He took a sip of his coffee. The warm liquid was comforting given the last 48 hours. The replicators were back up in some areas granting him access to a soothing stimulant that didn’t come from a doctor’s medkit. Truth was, there was enough intelligence work to keep an army of agents busy yet despite the circumstances he wasn’t even sure what intelligence staff existed on Astate. He still had no official orders and given the circumstances he was inclined to make his own rather that sit and wait.
Sipping his coffee his mind chewed over a few bits of info he had managed to obtain over the last few hours. He learned from a security officer that the Romulans had been after a political refugee who had crash landed a Romulan warship on Astate. The attack on the Starfleet campus was a failed attempt to recover this Romulan officer who appeared to have requested asylum. He certainly needed more information on this development. In time he would get the answers, but it would be weeks before he could develop reliable information networks, meet key Starfleet staff, and last, but not least figure out what he was supposed to be doing other than rescuing damsels in distress and dodging Romulan disruptor beams.
Turning his attention to the matter at hand the computer had indicated an office of some sort existed on this floor for intelligence personnel. He moved through the hallway eventually finding the office whose door was conveniently locked. Fortunately, the hallway was empty. Personnel were busy in rescue operations, clean up, and other duties as Starfleet sought to clean this recent mess up and move on. He had already done his bit for king and country and the time was perfect for him to do a little snooping while everyone’s attention was focused elsewhere. He needed some answers and was not inclined to sit things out waiting for someone to put him to work.
Pulling a small square object from his jacket, Zane placed its magnetic surface against the door and pressed a few buttons on the novelty which any good intelligence officer kept on hand. The computerized locks on the door quickly released their grip and the doors to the intelligence office sprung open a few inches allowing him to force his way inside.
Zane activated the lights and let out a mumbled, “hmmmm”. The office was a mess. First impressions made the office seem like it had been burglarized or that the Romulans had gained access trying to steal secrets, but Zane knew better. The ransacked office was probably the result of inexperienced staff panicking at the Romulan attack and doing what they could to either remove important intelligence information or destroy it so that it couldn’t be taken.
He stepped through the mess of debris that littered the small office. Padds, office supplies, boxes littered the tiny lobby and hallway. A few offices had overturned chairs and furniture. Zane noticed weapons fire and could smell the residual stench of incinerated plastic. They had panicked. He wondered how much useful intelligence data was destroyed by such a boneheaded response.
A few padds that worked contained nothing but outdated intelligence estimates, a few vague intel references regarding Romulan movements, nothing of any real value or interest. He tossed them aside checking the rest of the offices for anything useful. Coming up empty, he wondered how much serious intelligence work actually went on here. There were a few offices, but no computer systems, no locked files, nothing that would indicate a serious intelligence department other than a meager team that performed rudimentary analysis and data gathering. This had the feel of a small outpost with no real field agents of any reasonable caliber.
Zane sighed. Astate wasn’t exactly a strategic port, nor a vital link in Starfleet’s vast security and defense plans. It was in his mind though an excellent, untapped resource which appeared to be underfunded, under staffed, and woefully archaic. Sure Astate wasn’t an intelligence bonanza for thwarting the Dominion or contributing to a swift end to the current war, but it was the closest planet the Federation had to the Romulans to his knowledge. Additionally, the Romulans were camped on the far side of the planet which made intelligence gathering opportunities ideal if not crucial in his mind.
The Romulans had always been unsteady and difficult to trust. They were currently allies, but the relationship was always strained even in the best of times. The chain of listening posts and Starbases along the Neutral Zone was testament to the distrust that still existed between the Federation and the Star Empire. The Romulans had always bore watching and Zane wondered why a golden opportunity seemed to be unrealized in what appeared to be prime real estate.
As he looked around the offices one thing continued to bother him. He wondered if Admiral Enor even received local intelligence estimates from local staff or if that data came from analysts back on Earth or elsewhere who took educated guesses with little understanding of realities on the ground. Zane also wondered if this entire attack might have been prevented or at least stopped cold by accurate intelligence prior to military operations. It was obvious Starfleet had been caught with its pants down. He couldn’t help but wonder if the recent attack might have been prevented with adequate intelligence estimates.
He didn’t have that answer yet, but perhaps he would know in time. One padd in the office seemed to stand out from the others. It had some damage, but wasn’t fully destroyed. He had found it under a pile of charred padd remains having missed total destruction. He wondered if there was any data he could extract from its memory circuits. It appeared important – at least important enough to destroy. In any event, it would give him something to do until things settled down. He shoved the padd into his jacket and headed for the exit.
Zane made his way out of the office and carefully relocked the doors. He had seen enough for one day. Until he had some definite orders he intended to play things by ear and do thing his way until told otherwise.
“What are you doing here”, a voice called out suddenly from behind. Zane cringed silently cursing himself for being careless. He hadn’t anticipated anyone being on this floor.
Zane turned around as a Lt. Commander approached.
“You look like a pilot, what the hell are you doing? This area is restricted. How did you get up here?”
Zane was out of uniform having found a shirt and jacket. He had no access to replicators to replace his bloody, torn, and sweat soaked clothing. Most replicators were dedicated to serving up food and medical supplies at the moment. By all accounts he looked like a fighter pilot, having grabbed a flight jacket from nearby the hangar and a t-shirt that was available in the pilot’s locker room.
“I just wanted to check out the damage from above”, Zane replied seeing if he could dodge the questioning by playing dumb. “That was some firefight. Did you see any action?”
“No”, the commander said directly. “Don’t change the subject. What were you doing hanging around those offices back there?”
“Offices”, Zane replied. “I came up here to get a birds’ eye view of things and needed to use the head. Is that a crime?”
“It is if you’re on a restricted floor.” The commander gave Zane a careful visual inspection. Zane still had a nasty pink scar over his right eye where the doctors had healed the wound he obtained in the fighting, but lacked the time to perform any cosmetic procedures. Zane looked like he had seen some action.
“This floor is restricted. Go on, get out now, before I call security. And don’t come up here again pilot unless you want your wings clipped. If you want to see the damage from above, I suggest you do it from the air. We are just recovering from a major incident and don’t need people wandering around in restricted areas.”
“Yes sir, I apologize”, Zane said apologetically. “All the doors were open and unlocked with the power problems. I didn’t realize there was an issue. Sorry.” He saluted the commander and moved off back toward the stairs. The officer watched him leave down the staircase.
Zane smiled as he slowly took the stairs downward. He pulled the burned padd from his jacket and examined it before tucking it safely back into the folds of his jacket and out of sight. Yawning, he decided to go check up on Mirialia’s condition and perhaps find something to eat. A long nap might also be in order assuming he could find a quiet, out of the way place, to crash and catch some sleep for a few hours. It was anyone’s guess if the temporary quarters he had been issued were still in one piece or had been commandeered for medical or other emergency needs.
He wanted to talk to some of the senior officers here on Astate, but that was probably impossible given the gravity of the situation – at least for now. In a few days perhaps he could schedule an appointment as soon as things settled down. Until then, he planned on getting as much rest as possible. He’d been through hell as of late, and could use some extra sleep.
Affair on Astate: A Little Local Trouble - Part II
“Computer, status”, Zane asked from the small desk in his quarters. Scattered across the work surface were various tools, wires, scanners, bits of plastic and fragmented circuit boards. For the past few hours he had busied himself in an attempt to extract any information from the damaged padd he had discovered while searching the small Astate intelligence offices. The padd, charred and half melted from phaser fire, hadn’t been completely destroyed. It was interesting as it had been valuable enough to destroy, yet someone had been sloppy, rushed, or both allowing it to survive buried under several other pads which weren’t as fortunate.
Zane busied himself with his little project having little else to do. Starfleet was picking up the pieces after the Romulan attacks. Things on the colony were slowly returning to normal. He still lacked any operational orders from command. Until orders came through he was content to amuse himself namely by learning all he could about recent events, local politics, and key personnel both Starfleet and Romulan. The padd before him might contain some tiny tidbit of information that could aid his understanding. He was curious, though doubtful, that the padd held any useful data. Its internal circuits were badly damaged and the computer had had a difficult time extracting data.
[ Processing final data block. Standby. ], the computer responded to his inquiry.
Zane had extracted what he could from the damaged memory cores and now had the computer running several classified algorithms against the corrupted data bits to see what, if anything, could be reconstructed and salvaged. He was about to get a drink from the replicator when the computer indicated it had completed its assigned tasks.
Zane moved to his computer terminal and instructed the computer to output the repaired data.
[“Three data blocks recovered. Remaining data is degraded beyond repair.”]
“Display, data block one”, Zane instructed eagerly waiting to see the data.
Garbled video appeared on the screen. Filmed from a hidden camera it showed a dark room which had little to identify it. Static and artifacts littered the image making it difficult to make out any details. A man appeared wearing what looked like a Starfleet uniform. The image suddenly terminated.
“Display data block two.”
Zane watched as the computer indicated it was audio only.
“Yes I have it”, a man’s voice could be heard saying in the midst of heavy static. “Of course, it’s all here.”
“Not until next month…..I can’t…..too soon……..good enough for you now……take it or leave it……..fine!.......just make sure it’s there…on time for once!”
Zane listened intently as the audio terminated. “Play data block three.”
More video appeared. The Starfleet officer appeared again. His face was impossible to ID given the poor quality of the video. Someone else was there in the darkness beyond the camera’s view. They slowly moved forward, but stopped still hidden in the shadows. The officer and individual talked though the audio was missing. The officer held out something - a padd. The mystery person took it. The camera bounced a few times and the video ended.
[“End of recovered data”], the computer reported.
“Go back”, Zane instructed, “back to time index 116.2, play video.”
The video repeated from the requested spot and played. The padd was passed as the video began to bounce. “Freeze image”, Zane shouted as a blurred streak filled the camera a mere fraction of a second before the video terminated. “Computer, magnify and enhance upper right corner of image.”
The image was cropped on his screen, magnified, and the computer attempted to reconstruct and refine the image. Slowly, pixel by pixel, the image was enhanced. Zane sat in his chair glued to the screen as more and more of the image was brought into focus. A minute went by, then two, then five. Several blocks of the images suddenly snapped up in the screen as the computer finished its enhancements leaving Zane shocked. He couldn’t believe what he was seeing.
“Romulans”, he muttered as the image finally cleared showing the unmistakable image of a Romulan officer, possibly in intelligence, more likely in the Tal-Shiar.
The door chime suddenly rang startling Zane. Quickly he saved the data and deactivated his computer. He quickly pushed the remnants of the disassembled padd into a nearby drawer before standing and heading toward the door.
The chime rang again. He touched the controls to open the door where he was face to face with a Marine Colonel he had never seen before.
“Captain Zane Akina, correct?”
“Yes.”
“I’m Colonel Leon Ventris.”
“What can I do for you Colonel”, Zane asked.
“I understand you are from Starfleet Intelligence.”
Zane’s expression betrayed nothing. “I’m afraid you are mistaken Colonel, I’m a squadron commander, 214th fighter squadron. I was just transferred here to Astate.”
“I see”, the colonel replied. “My mistake captain. I understand you were in Tower One this morning which is restricted. What business does a fighter pilot have in restricted areas?”
“Oh that”, Zane answered. “As I explained to the officer earlier, I just wanted to view the academy grounds from a better vantage point, you know to see the damage. I ended up seeing my fair share of action and just wanted the bird’s eye view. That’s all. The grounds took quite the beating. It will probably take weeks to clean up and repair all the damages.”
The colonel didn’t immediately respond. “Did you see much fighting?”
“I saw enough”, Zane answered giving no further details.
“Well, I just wanted to stop by and check on you. Is there anything you need? You appear to require some additional medical attention.”
Zane smiled and touched the pink scar running across his forehead and cheek. He had yet to return to medical to have the doctors remove the blemish from his earlier wounds. “Oh this”, he replied his finger tracing the pink line on his face. “I’ll have it seen too eventually. Right now the docs have their hands full treating serious injuries. My battle damage can wait awhile longer.”
The colonel nodded. “Very well Captain. It was a pleasure meeting you. We will have to get together sometime for dinner, get to know one another. Your fighters will no doubt be responsible for providing cover and support for my infantry and front line units. Perhaps we can go over strategy and tactics later on? Recent events have given us both something new to consider, wouldn’t you agree?”
“Yes”, Zane responded. “Recent events have proved to be quite interesting, quite interesting indeed.”
The colonel nodded giving Zane a peculiar look. “A bit of advice captain. I’d watch your back around here if I were you. This latest incident is proof of how unpredictable and dangerous this colony can be. Especially for men like you and I. I would hate to see something happen to that lovely lady you have been looking after, the Lt. Commander, I believe?”
Zane’s posture stiffened. The conversation, already odd, just crossed the line into dangerous, if not murky waters, and both men realized the other knew it. This colonel was here to feel him out. Zane recognized the ploy. It was obvious the Colonel knew who he was, but perhaps wasn’t sure why he was here or what his motives were. What was painfully clear was that Zane had struck a nerve with someone, but to whom he couldn’t yet say.
“Is that a threat Colonel”, Zane asked with a hint of a smile in this escalating game of misdirection the two men were currently engaged in.
“Not at all, just some friendly advice from someone who had some experience here on Astate.”
“I see”, Zane answered. “Well, I’ll take your advice under advisement. I’ve always been pretty good at watching my own back. Besides, most targets which end up in my sights end up disappearing in a large ball of flame. I doubt I have too much to be concerned about.”
“You pilots”, the colonel laughed. “Arrogant and cocky to the last. Just keep your weapons locked on the enemy and you should do well here Captain. It was a pleasure meeting you.”
“Likewise”, Zane answered.
“Well I have other duties to attend to. Good evening Captain.”
“Good evening Colonel.”
Colonel Ventris nodded and moved off down the hall. Zane left the doorway as his doors hissed closed. He returned to his computer and reactivated the screen. The image of the unidentified Romulan lit the display. Zane glanced up at the closed doors.
He had just been put on notice. Someone knew who he was and had just delivered a message for Zane to essentially behave and follow orders. The notice, a veiled threat against him and Mirialia, were not enough to dissuade him to stop investigating what he had uncovered.
Zane wasn’t yet sure what he had. From the video and audio, it looked like a Starfleet informant paying off a Romulan with stolen information, classified data, or other secrets. Perhaps the officer was being blackmailed, or perhaps he was working willingly – in any event Zane had to determine who these people were and uncover their motives and actions. Perhaps his presence was enough to make someone nervous or perhaps he had come too close to something someone wanted to keep hidden.
Zane wasn’t sure the Colonel’s visit had anything to do with the data he had just recovered, but then again, perhaps it had. He couldn’t be sure yet. The one thing he did know was there was something wrong on Astate, something that lurked in the shadows. He had stumbled upon chance data out of his own curiosity which now seemed to infer a clandestine Starfleet-Romulan connection. His duty as an intelligence officer demanded he investigate this.
He deactivated his terminal and requested the computer lock all of his personal files with intelligence grade encryption. Leaning on the edge of his desk he pondered recent events as well as the data he had uncovered. He might be facing a mole, simple espionage, a spy, or perhaps deep penetration of Starfleet officers by Romulan operatives. The implications were high, yet despite the danger, Zane couldn’t inform the top brass, at least not yet. While the video and audio were damning, all they indicated were possible motives and transactions – as of yet he had no hard facts, names, or motives to explain the data. Explaining to an Admiral how he had even obtained the data in the first place would be nearly impossible without winding up in the brig or worse.
He would have to keep this information for a time and quietly conduct an investigation. Perhaps armed with a few more facts he could provide Astate’s brass with something more concrete, but until then he would have to play detective for a time. The best place to obtain information was the criminal underworld which he would have to locate, feel out, and contact. Informants were a rich source of valuable information. Petty thugs could provide a wealth of information if properly motivated.
Stepping to the wall near the door, Zane grabbed his shoulder holster and pulled his Romulan disruptor pistol ejecting its power cell. It currently read full power. Reholstering his weapon, Zane would have to be on guard. Astate wasn’t quite the paradise he had at first believed it to be. It appeared to harbor the same dangerous shadows as the Mars colonies with its own unique underworld characters.
Smiling, Zane grabbed his jacket and his weapon. He’d pay a visit to Mirialia, who was still recovering in the hospital. He was sure she would enjoy the company. Afterwards, some sleuthing about this colony was in order. Unlike typical private detectives, few of them were ranking intelligence officers. Zane could go nearly anywhere without too many questions and his clearance was the tool he would use first. A thorough check of Colonel Ventris’s records was in order. Zane was confident the Colonel’s file would prove to be interesting.
Affair on Astate: A Little Local Trouble - Part III
Akina smiled as his ran a hand through his hair standing before the mirror. Pulling on the edges of his uniform he admired his handiwork. A little makeup, a replicated uniform of a flag officer, some hair dye, a few medals, and easily forged credentials had transformed him from Captain Zane Akina to Commodore Theodore Reynolds. One of his many aliases, the fake persona came in handy when dealing with internal investigations. He had been granted use and creation of the fake, but seemingly legitimate credentials, as part of a past internal SFI investigation involving a suspected spy. Akina had ensured the credentials were not erased after the investigation had ended thus providing him a valuable tool in his intelligence toolbox for future use.
Unfortunately, he had to resort to a more hands on approach to get what he wanted. The computers on Astate were secured by a new security system which prevented easy access. With some time and patience he may have been able to bypass the security measures, but there was some risk of being detected and he couldn’t ensure his usual tricks would work. The in-person approach was his second option which would provide him with a direct method of bypassing security without raising suspicion. Few would question a fleet commodore with valid credentials. There was some risk that the high rank would draw attention to himself, but the risk was negligible especially with the recent Romulan incursions. Zane suspected there would be several high ranking officers about to survey damages, ascertain casualties and losses, gloss things over as a diplomatic incident, etc. What was one more flag officer asking questions and throwing his or her weight around?
Grinning at his especially keen touch of grey hair coloring, Zane turned and left his quarters headed for the one place he could get his hands on some information – Starfleet Security.
- Security Offices, Astate**
The officer at the security desk looked pale as Akina stood impatiently his arms folded.
“I’m sorry Commodore, there doesn’t seem to be any record of your visit or arrival. When did you arrive?”
“Son, I’m not obliged to discuss my itinerary with you. With all the ruckus around here, I decided to show up and find out just what and the hell was happening on this rock. To blazes with schedules. There I was trying to figure out how to win a war and then suddenly I get a memo that our installation here on Astate was under assault by Romulan troops. Now I don’t know about you son, but the last thing we need is more enemies. I rustled up a transport and high tailed it here to ascertain what all the hootin’ and hollerin was about. When I got here, I find barracks on fire, casualties, disorganized chaos, and no one can give me a straight answer on anything.”
“Well, I see sir, but I can’t just let…”
“Son, did you not hear a word I just said? We’re in the middle of a crisis here. Now someone has got some explainin’ to do or else heads are going to start rollin’, do ya understand me? Starfleet Command wants to know what in tarnation happened out here! And so do I. Since I can’t get a straight answer and your Admiral Enor is up to his neck in horse s#!t and won’t make time to discuss the matter the only place left is your computer system and its video tapes, records, and intrusion systems. One of these systems had to have recorded something!”
“Sir, Commodore, this is an unusual request. I mean, no offense to your rank sir, but…” “What’s your name son?”
“Matthews sir. Robert Matthews.”
“Lieutenant Matthews. I’m sure we can come to an understanding here. I’m a busy man with top brass breathing down my trousers for answers. Someone let a weasel into the hen house and there’s a rope waitin for whomever left the gate open for the Romulans to waltz right on in. We may have an internal issue here. Hell there may even be spies that have penetrated local security, Romulan bastards, who have compromised internal safeguards which made this recent incident so damned easy to perpetrate. Ya got two choices here Lieutenant. You can either give me access to the rooms back yonder, or else I can have you sent home right now as a private. Now which sounds like a better deal?”
“Sir, there’s no need to be rash. Just, just a moment.” The nervous lieutenant made a brief call.
“Sir, the access terminals are down the hall, through the secured door, and on the left. The lieutenant will see you to a secured room. I apologize for the inconvenience.”
Zane smiled, but only for a moment. “Now that’s getting’ somewhere. I knew you and I could come to an understanding.”
“Commodore Reynolds”, a lieutenant commander said from down the hallway. “If you will follow me sir, I will show you to a secure room.”
Zane nodded and followed the commander down the hall and through several security checkpoints before being led into a small room with several computer stations.
“You guys really got the tar kicked out of ya”, the commodore commented.
“I prefer to say we were bruised sir. That’s far from being beaten.”
“I see. Well thank you commander. I think I have what I need for now. I’ll conduct my investigation from here.”
“Do you require anything else sir, perhaps some additional staff which may assist you in your investigations?”
“Negative commander. Right now, I have to independently research the situation. I’ll let you know if I need any additional assistance.”
“Very well sir. I will have Lieutenant Matthews on call if you require anything.”
Zane nodded as the Commander closed the doors leaving him alone with the computers he needed access to. Reaching into his jacket, Zane produced a small device which he quickly waved about the room. Electronic signatures were minimal. The room appeared to be clean from microphones, cameras, or surveillance equipment. Satisfied he could work alone, Zane quick took a seat at the large desk on which sat four computers. Each had a specific purpose and each tied directly into the colony’s main computer minus the annoying security safeguards.
“Computer, recognize Theodore Reynolds, Commodore, Starfleet Security.”
“Voiceprint verified”, the computer responded.
“Security clearance, Bravo, 211357 Alpha Tango Seven Five – Authenticate and confirm.”
“Code accepted. Access Granted. Good Morning Commodore.”
Zane allowed himself a slight grin. “Personnel records, display all information on Colonel Leon Ventris. Current assignment, Astate Colony.”
The record appeared which Zane carefully began reading.
- One Hour Later **
“Computer, cross reference and tie into Starfleet databases on Earth, is this everything on the Colonel?”
“Affirmative. There are no additional records on file for the specified individual.”
Zane rubbed his forehead. He didn’t know what to make of this. The colonel had a distinguished record. He had a steady promotion record, a few commendations, a few medals – nothing extra ordinary and nothing that stood out. His record was decidedly average and clean – too clean. Everyone made mistakes, himself included. His own record was dotted with a few clashes with management that didn’t exactly make him a team player. Zane preferred it that way. He worked best solo playing by his own rules without anyone constantly looking over his shoulder. He delivered results much to the irritation of Starfleet brass over his methods. They seldom agreed with him, yet couldn’t deny the fact that Zane could deliver the bacon when it was needed most.
Zane produced a small device and set it next to the computer terminal. Within moments he had downloaded everything on Colonel Ventris for analysis later on. Zane was suspicious of the computer records. His instincts as an intelligence officer were sounding alarms and he usually trusted his instincts. There was an old saying, “when something sounds too good to be true, it probably is.” The colonel’s record was too perfect, too average, and too well rounded. The prettiest of diamonds had their flaws yet this man had none. This left Zane with two possibilities. Ventris was either an ass-kissing suckup, in which he did anything and everything for someone of position and power which is why his record remained so clean possibly as a means to obtain better and better promotions, or this Ventris was a fraud and his entire record was a carefully crafted forgery designed to fool the vast majority of Starfleet officers. Zane’s brief encounter eliminated Ventris as a suck up. His personality didn’t fit a boot licker. That left option two: a spy, informant, perhaps a Romulan operative masquerading as a Starfleet Marine Colonel.
Zane still lacked the hard proof he had been hoping to find. All he had now were more questions. There was still nothing substantial, nothing hard he could use to unlock the veil of mystery which surrounded the information he had uncovered. He still couldn’t take his theory to Admiral Enor or anyone else – not yet. All he had were hunches and years of intelligence experience which told him something was wrong, perhaps badly wrong.
Determined to utilize his computer access to the fullest, Zane pulled up everything he could find on the recent Romulan attacks, personnel files on Romulan officers and politicians on Astate, Admiral Enor’s records, everything he could get his hands on while in the intelligence candy store.
Two Hours Later
His portable storage unit almost at capacity, Zane scanned through pages of seemingly unimportant documents, reports, and accounts of the recent Romulan incident. Files were accumulating almost on a minute by minute basis as new information came in and was filed and submitted. Medical records, personnel lists – all of it seemed routine until something popped out from the search routine he was running against massive amounts of routine data.
Zane sat up from his chair his boredom and sleepiness slowly evaporating. “Hello”, he said reading over a communication thread that was classified and encrypted with high grade Starfleet codes. Over the past two hours he had gained insight into recent events, its characters and players, and the catalyst for the Romulan attack.
The communication intercept was interesting as it indicated that Starfleet had in its possession the body of the prime instigator of recent events and that this Romulan had been dead for sometime. More tantalizing still was the fact that Starfleet had handed over this individual to the Romulan government sometime ago denying him asylum. It had the hallmarks of a well crafted Romulan plot.
Zane copied the message and leaned back in his chair. Could this curious wrinkle be related to his Colonel Ventris? He wondered. It was possible. There wasn’t any data suggesting a link, but both loose ends had that fishy smell only a seasoned intelligence officer could appreciate. All was not as it seemed.
“Computer, access personal files, folder 1154, and execute program Vanish5.”
“Program execution complete. Computer history, searches, and inquiries made in the last five hours by Commodore Theodore Reynolds have been erased. All records of recent transactions have been purged from all internal systems.”
Zane nodded and deactivated the computer terminals. His housekeeping complete, he was confident that anyone curious as to his actions would be met by nothingness should they attempt in investigate. One of the advantages of being in Intelligence was the vast number of toys the department afforded to its elite few.
Armed with a wealth of fascinating information, Zane had no idea where any of it pointed. He had a Colonel which was more than he claimed, top brass had a Romulan officer that was in two places at once, and he had the data he had recovered from the damaged Padd which didn’t fit any of the puzzles before him. The one thing he was sure of was that Astate was far more interesting than he had ever imagined.
Standing, Zane took his various devices and tucked them away in his tunic. Tugging on his uniform, he headed toward the door and back through the checkpoints.
After a brief farewell chat with the lieutenant at the front desk, Zane left the security offices and headed out for some fresh air. He couldn’t go home just yet. He was a paranoid bastard which is what had kept him alive in this line of work. In the event someone had decided to follow him, Zane would play Commodore for a bit longer before heading home to eliminate the chance of a tail. The last thing he needed right now was to end up having to explain himself and his actions which were based on suspicious instead of hard facts. He had learned quickly that top officers hated to hear about conspiracies, espionage, and infiltrations pretending that such things never occurred. In fact such activities were common, though never publically disclosed, and it was up to SFI to uncover the truth and quietly hunt those seeking to do harm. That line was often grey crossing the line of legality, and in Zane’s case he crossed it frequently, however such steps were often necessary to root out those who secretly plotted against Starfleet and its interests.
Affair on Astate: Future's Past
Rigel IV
Like an obsidian blade shooting upwards from the ground defying the gods, the massive headquarters of the NeoDyne Corporation stood dwarfing all other structures on the planet surface. The colossal skyscraper rose into the sky nearly two kilometers high, splitting the clouds asunder, its jet black exterior powerful, but foreboding. The structure was as much a product of engineering prowess and technological innovation as it was of arrogance, greed, and elitism that knew few boundaries.
Lightning flashed across the sky as a heavy rain poured down on the city below. The gentle thunder in the distance foretold the approach of the gathering storm whose ferocity had yet to peak. As the twilight hours ticked slowly forward one light at the top of the NeoDyne tower remained on as the city below slept peacefully despite the coming fury of storm outside.
A chime rang.
“Enter”, a calm voice answered.
Doors opened as a businessman appeared at the doorway of the NeoDyne Preisdent’s expansive office. The office, with its expensive furniture, black marble flooring, and an anachronistic wood burning fireplace was a testament to the leadership that had made NeoDyne wealthy, influential, and immensely powerful. With its various holdings in biomedical research, defense technology, and energy, NeoDyne had become a substantial player among the quadrant’s major powers.
His shoes echoing off the cold, dark tile, the businessman approached carrying with him several data pads. Stopping at the president’s desk, the businessman said nothing as the Chairman sat quietly his back to him gazing out the windows that surrounded the huge office space. The patter of rain beat against the glass as the wind invisibly wore at a structure it could not conquer. For a time the chairman said nothing, before slowly turning in his leather chair to face his subordinate.
Chairman Allister Marakai sat quietly his hands clasped together on the desk his intense light blue eyes missed nothing. His shoulder length silver hair reflected the intensity of the lightning outside. The result of a genetic birth defect, the chairman lacked normal hair color giving him an ethereal quality which was as intriguing as it was intimidating.
“Chairman, here are this week’s business reports”, the businessman said once gaining his superior’s attention.
“Proceed”, came the one word reply.
“Weapons section 5 has again failed to produce results. The recent test firing of the new “Excalibur” system failed again I am sorry to report.”
“Demote the lead scientist and fire the project manager. I want results. There is a war on. If NeoDyne cannot produce viable weapons – we cannot increase our profits. Do what it takes to get that project off the drawing board and into soldier’s hands Herrick.”
“Yes sir, I’ll see that changes are made at once. On the lighter side, our medical division has made good progress on a new substance it discovered on a planet near the galactic core. The indications are positive it can be refined for treating several types of disease.”
“See that they get increased funding. A new drug would generate profit inflows for years to come. Is there anything else Herrick? The hour is late and I find myself fatigued.”
“One more item of curiosity sir. I thought you might want to see this.”
Marakai took one of the padds from his assistant and carefully read its contents while Herrick continued.
“As you know the Astate colony on the Federation / Romulan border has little intrinsic strategic value to either the Federation or the Romulan Star Empire. Both maintain a presence there, but neither side has vast military installations or capabilities. The planet however, does afford for easy contact and communication between the powers given its unique situation which we use to our advantage as required.
“Get to the point Herrick, insignificant planets within the Neutral Zone do not concern me.”
“I believe this one will sir. We have a small presence there which gathers information and provides several small services to NeoDyne and its interests. Unfortunately, recent events may have compromised some of our activities due to the improper actions of a select few. I’m having those individuals dealt with, however there is a minor problem. One that shouldn’t cause us any trouble, but one I thought you would be interested in.”
“Go on”, Marakai stated.
“As you have read, Starfleet was attacked by the Romulans recently. While the event is being spun as the result of a rogue Romulan officer acting without orders, it has focused the attention of Starfleet Intelligence, in particular someone you are acquainted with. It appears he is currently acting alone and without orders, but I thought you should know that Zane Akina is researching the matter.
Marakai’s eyes widened for a split second as lighting cracked outside of his office window. When the light had subsided the Chairmain’s eyes had narrowed to thin slits his displeasure evident on his face.
“Akina....Zane Akina. He is there, there on Astate?”
“Affirmative. Our agents on Astate have confirmed his arrival and as usual he is sticking his nose into places it doesn’t belong.”
Marakai stood from his chair his blue eyes seemingly glowing in the relative darkness of the office. “Why didn’t you tell me this before Herrick! Zane Akina is no mere curiosity. Do you forget what happened ten years ago! He nearly ruined NeoDyne after uncovering evidence of our weapon sales to the Breen and nearly destroyed myself and my reputation in the process. I’ve spent the last decade repairing this company’s perceived image with the public and quadrant powers as well as my own and I’m not about to let him destroy either again!”
“But sir, he has nothing. How could he? Our agents were thorough despite the Romulan incident. It is true he was seen snooping around the intelligence office, but if he found anything it will be useless otherwise he would have reported it by now.”
“NO”, Marakai said firmly. “You don’t know him like I do. The man is calculating and borders on brilliance when it comes to unorthodox investigative work. He’s unpredictable, bold, rash, and unquestionably loyal to the Fleet and his own ideals of justice and honor. If he is there it means he has something. He’ll hold his cards to the last moment until it is too late. No, we have to find out what he knows now before he can report his findings. If he can link NeoDyne to anything he will do so, especially after our last encounter. I will not underestimate him again.”
“But sir, he is just one man…”
“He’s a man obsessively motivated to bring light to the darkness whatever the cost. After our last meeting he wouldn’t hesitate to drive a knife through the heart of NeoDyne or myself even if it cost him his career. Such men and such passions are more dangerous than an entire army of solders and weaponry. No, we must uncover what he has learned and stop him. I should have finished what I started ten years ago!”
“Of course. I’ll inform…”
“No Herrick. I’m taking charge of this situation. Bring me a list of all of our interests and personnel on or about Astate. I need to know what our exposure is there. I will personally end Zane Akina’s constant meddling – one way or another! However we must proceed with the utmost care and caution. SFI is not to be trifled with or taken lightly. This much I have learned.”
A flash of lightning and the powerful roar of thunder swept the office as the storm outside raged building in intensity and fury.
“As you wish sir”, Herrick said with practiced professionalism. He nodded and quietly left the office leaving Chairman Marakai to himself.
Marakai glared at the padd in his hand. The smiling face of that wretched intelligence officer was again staring back at him after more than a decade. The scowl on Marakai’s face deepened as he meticulously scanned the recent picture of his past nemesis. “And they made you a god damned captain for what you did to me and my company”, he shouted at the image which seemed to mock him even now.
“No, you won’t get a second chance Zane. It is high time you learned that being a Starfleet Intelligence operative is a hazardous line of work especially when you go looking for things you have no business searching FOR!”
Marakai turned and hurled the padd into his nearby fireplace. The image of Captain Akina sputtered on the screen as flames consumed the electronic device. The image finally went dark as the intense heat melted the padd which exploded with a small pop.
“I’ll destroy you Captain Zane Akina. Not all at once to be sure, but I will destroy you. I swear it.”
Chairman Alistair Merikai
President, NeoDyne Defense Corporation
Affair on Astate: A Little Local Trouble - Part IV
Captain Zane Akina stepped through construction and repair teams entering the personnel offices for the colony. The large circular room surrounded by offices had at its center a circular desk and an attractive female officer. Zane approached and leaned against the desk seemingly drawing the ire of the female officer.
“May I help you, captain?”
“Yes, yes you can”, Zane responded. “I’m looking for Commander Griffen. I need to speak with him on a few matters.”
“I’m sorry Captain, Commander Griffen is extremely busy today. I can reschedule you for next Thursday at the earliest.”
Zane smiled. “Are you sure there isn’t room in that calendar for a few minutes. I’ll be brief.”
“Sorry Captain. He has a full schedule today.”
“Is that so? Would a few free drinks when you are off duty free up just a few minutes of his time?”
“Captain, unless you have some official business elsewhere in personnel, please leave, before I file a complaint.”
“Excuse me Lieutenant. No harm intended. It is quite urgent that I speak with the Commander. It’s official business.”
“As I stated Captain, he is unavailable.”
Zane was loosing his patience with the uncooperative lieutenant. He pulled out his badge and held it before her. “Captain Zane Akina, Starfleet Intelligence”, he said coldly before shoving his credentials back into his jacket pocket. “I’m conducting an official investigation and I must speak with the commander at once. I’m sure he can spare a few moments, that is unless you would like me to write you up for obstruction of an official SFI investigation.”
The lieutenant glared at the Captain. “Just wait here”, she snapped before standing and moving off to one of the rear offices.
Several moments passed. Zane noticed several men emerge from the back of the room. He met their cold stares as they passed him. Something was wrong with the way they looked at him. They seemed annoyed almost as if they had been interrupted. Their annoyance seemed to be directed at Zane.
He watched the men leave as the frosty secretary returned. “Alright Captain. He can see you for a few moments, however he doesn’t have all day to sit and chat.”
“Neither do I”, Zane answered curtly before heading toward the back of the circular room and the personnel officer’s office. Two glass doors parted as Zane entered a large, well furnished office, whose opulence surprised him for a mere commander. A large desk sat in front of several large windows that overlooked Astate. The walls were covered with highly polished wood panels which surprised Akina. Such decoration was something he would have expected to see in an Admiral’s or Ambassador’s office, not that of a mere commander’s.
“Ah, Captain Akina. This is an unexpected surprise. I’m Commander Felix Griffen. What can I do for Starfleet Intelligence?”
“Commander. I’m Captain Zane Akina. I passed several men in the lobby, they seemed troubled. Something wrong?”
“Some slight personnel issues Captain. A small dispute between civilian contractors assisting with repairs and Starfleet interests, but I’m sure you didn’t come here to inquire about such matters.”
“Correct. I need some personnel information.”
- Ten Minutes Later
“I’m sorry Captain, I can’t help you”, Commander Griffen stated from behind his desk.
“Commander, is there any chance I can speak with Admiral Enor? Perhaps he can clear this up?”
“I doubt it sir, at least not for sometime. The Admiral is a busy man cleaning up after recent events. Personnel matters aren’t on his short list of priorities even for Intelligence Captains.”
“Griffen, I’m not asking for any favors here. I need to know what happened to the two Starfleet intelligence officers that were stationed here on Astate. I can’t find them. Their quarters are deserted and I’ve done some checking around, no one has seen these men in days.”
“I’m not responsible for these men Captain. They could be anywhere. Intelligence isn’t the most forthcoming branch. How should I know where they are or what they are doing? I maintain files on who comes and who goes. If you’re concerned, I suggest you speak with security.”
“I’ve done that”, Zane answered. “They don’t know anything either.”
“Well, if security doesn’t know, I’m not sure how else I can help you.”
“What were these men’s assignments? How long have they been here? I would like to see their records.”
“I’m sorry captain, but our computers were damaged in the fighting with the Romulans. It will be a few days before I can retrieve any personnel records. You do understand?”
“Of course”, Zane replied not buying a single word the Commander was saying. Zane smelled it a mile away, the commander was being evasive and uncooperative for some unknown reason. What were his motives? Why was he being purposely deceptive?
“Is there anything you might be able to add? An investigation of the SFI offices indicated tampering and unauthorized access during the Romulan attack. Anything which might shed some light on matters would be most helpful.”
“Captain, I spent most of my time during the crisis below in this building’s emergency bunker. I have no knowledge of what may have transpired during that time. The Starfleet campus is a large facility. As for your officers, I’m sure they came in, were assigned to duty, and went about their jobs and lives. We get hundreds of transfer requests, new arrivals, and departures daily Captain. You can’t expect me to remember two men?”
“They were the only Intelligence officers on this rock. I would expect you to know something more about them?”
“Well I don’t. I’m sorry. Are we through here? I have a pressing schedule and I’ve told you everything I know on the subject.”
“When those computers come up – I want those files”, Zane stated coldly.
“I’ll see what I can do”, Griffen stiffly answered.
“Commander.”
“Captain.”
Zane left the office passing by the rude lieutenant. She gave him a disapproving look as he passed by. Leaving the personnel offices, Zane was sure that Griffen was lying. He hadn’t mentioned to Griffen that he already had the two missing SFI agent’s personnel files and that security had found the two officers dead under unusual circumstances. The preliminary report was that they were killed in fighting with the Romulans, but the staff doctor at the morgue wasn’t convinced their wounds were consistent with combat. Zane was also suspicious as it wasn’t like SFI personnel to expose themselves needlessly, risking capture with stupid heroics. Of course, he was usually the exception to that rule, but that was him, not other SFI officers.
Who was Griffen covering for? It was obvious he was stalling, but why?
More determined that ever to get to the bottom of the mounting mysteries, puzzles, and riddles that seemed to have infected Astate with the swiftness and voracity of a flu virus, Zane headed off for home to sift through more of the data he had collected from the central computer.
Affair on Astate: A Little Local Trouble - Part V
Returning to his quarters Zane wanted a shower and some food. He was anxious to review the recovered recordings he had extracted from the damaged padd again to see if he could glean any additional information in addition to reviewing more of the data he had taken from the central computer core. Right now his inquires were coming up dry and without a major break Zane worried the puzzles he was attempting to solve would go cold and remain unsolved curiosities that would be forgotten by the passage of time. Something strange was occurring on this planet and with no orders to occupy him, Zane intended to get to the bottom of the things which just seemed to get more mysterious and dangerous by the hour.
Reaching his quarters Zane stepped through the doors to a ransacked living space. Bookshelves had been overturned, furniture had been slashed, his table was shattered, and padds lie scattered everywhere. Zane quickly reached for his weapon in his jacket, but not before something struck him in the back of his head. His vision exploded into a million stars as he knees buckled beneath him. His stomach turned as the world faded into darkness.
Sometime Later
“Wake up”, a gruff voice said above him. “Come on, pretty boy, snap out of it.”
Zane felt the harsh slap of a hand against his cheek as his eyes slowly opened revealing an empty, dark room illuminated by a single bright light source somewhere above him. His head pounded and he moved to rub it only to realize his hands were bound behind him. He was seated in a lone chair which appeared to be the only piece of furniture in the room that he could see.
“So you’re finally awake”, a voice said from the shadows. Two men stepped into the light each wearing fake smiles.
“Who are you”, Zane asked. “What do you want?”
“We’ll be asking the questions Captain”, one of the men said as the two stepped around Akina. “Cooperate and this can be over quickly – resist and well, this could take some time.”
“Unless you’ve kidnapped me to ask me about the weather, you can forget about any cooperation. You won’t get a damned thing from me.”
“I told you he wouldn’t consciously divulge any information”, the second man said.
“Well, we’ll just have to convince him otherwise”, the first man answered delivering a harsh blow to the side of Zane’s face. “I want to know what you found in the Starfleet Intelligence office.”
“What intelligence office”, Zane responded.
Another powerful blow struck him in the face.
“Don’t play dumb with us. We know who you are Captain and who you work for. Now what were you doing there?”
“If you know who I am then you must also know I have no idea what you are talking about! I’m a wing commander of the 215th fighter squadron based on Astate. What the hell would I know about intelligence matters?”
A blow to the chest sucked the air from Zane’s lungs causing him to double forward.
“Save it Akina. You’re SFI. We know it, so cut the crap and tell us what we want to know. You were in the intelligence office looking for something. What was it and who sent you?”
“Who are you guys working for”, Zane said from behind clenched teeth. “Whatever they are paying you, I’ll double it.”
Another hit to his head split his lower lip. A thin ribbon of blood trickled down his chin and neck as his cheek began to turn a shade of blue and purple.
“You can’t buy us and besides you could never afford us. Now just tell us what you were doing there and this needless violence can end.”
Zane laughed despite his injuries. “I wouldn’t tell you bastards the time assuming I knew what it was. You can beat me into a pulp and I still won’t tell you a single word. So go on! Just get it over with already! I’m not talking so let’s skip the interrogation and get right to the torture. I’m an impatient bastard and I hate waiting.”
“He’s going to be a tough nut to crack as I indicated. Should I prepare the hypo?”
“No, no drugs just yet. I want to have a little fun with him first. He’ll tell us everything soon enough.”
Later
Zane leaned forward heaving as droplets of sweat mixed with his own blood dripped from his face. His entire upper body pulsed with pain as the two men took pleasure in delivering vicious punishment to his body. Zane remained silent throughout the ordeal betraying nothing. He always knew this day might come. SFI had trained him to resist physical torture, but he was disappointed to say the training was nothing compared with the genuine article.
Zane felt the crack of hard steel against his jaw as one of the men delivered another punishing blow to his face. He fell forward in the chair as the pain radiated throughout him each time becoming more and more difficult to dismiss. Coughing, Zane went limp his resolve slipping as the punishment continued.
“That’s enough. He isn’t talking. It’s time for the drugs. He will be much more cooperative then.”
“Fine. He wasn’t quite as much fun as I had hoped anyway.”
The first man moved to a nearby table and produced a hypo spray filled with an unknown compound. Zane could probably guess its contents, but preferred not to think about it. Right now he had to stay focused and calm.
“In a few minutes he’ll be singing like a bird. Once he tells us what the boss wants to know what do we do with him then?”
“We can’t kill him. Boss’s orders. We’re just supposed to break him. After that, the boss doesn’t care what we do so long as he doesn’t die. I’m up for breaking every bone in his body, slowly, one at a time. It’ll take those Starfleet doctors months to put him back together again.”
“You can have your fun, once our employer has what he has paid us to obtain”, the first man said to the second moving over to Zane with the hypo. “Now captain, this is probably going to sting.”
Zane leapt from the chair as the man moved to inject him. Throughout the torture, Zane had managed to loosen his bonds a little at a time until he felt confident he could slip his wrists from the binding ropes. Throwing a punch of his own, Zane landed one in the man’s abdomen struggling to keep the tip of the hypo away from his body. The two struggled as the second man rushed in to assist his comrade. Sensing the incoming attack, Zane twisted violently putting the first man in line of the second man’s rush. The second man collided with the first as they toppled over into a heap the hypo injecting the first man as he was pressed against the floor.
Zane didn’t wait to see the outcome. Racing toward the door to the dark room he touched its control surface to open the doors. Nothing. He pressed the buttons frantically trying to part the doors to make his escape. Locked from the inside it appeared he wasn’t leaving the room through the doors. He had to find another way out.
“Hold it”, an angry voice shouted. Zane turned to see the first man unconscious on the floor while the second man held him at gunpoint with a Klingon style disruptor. “You’re stronger than you look Starfleet. You had me fooled, but that isn’t going to save you.”
“Get down on your knees NOW!”
“You can’t kill me remember”, Zane replied his voice weak in his own ears. “Your employer won’t allow it.”
“Forget about the boss. I’m going to tear your apart until you beg me for mercy. Whatever is left of you will tell me what I want to know right before I crush your head into the ground under the sole of my boot. Now get on your knees! DO IT!”
A green beam leapt from the disruptor and exploded above Zane’s head showing him in sparks and debris.
“Forget it. Go on, shoot me and get it over with”, Zane mocked his attacker. “I’ll not bow to you or any other man. So kill me and end this or let me go. It’s up to you, but you’ll never break me. You’ve failed.”
“SILENCE”, the man screamed. He kicked over the hypo to Zane which slid across the floor. “Go on, take the drug and you might just survive this. TAKE IT!”
“Or what, you’ll shoot me? Are we back to that again? Just do it and get it over with!”
“PICK UP THAT HYPO NOW!” Several disruptor beams exploded around Zane as he calmly called the man’s bluff. The threat of death was his only card, but Zane refused to fold. Whoever had staged this kidnapping wanted Zane alive which meant that if this thug killed him, he too would probably end up in the hot seat. Calling the man's bluff was all he had - if he submitted to his demands, it was doubtful he would survive this encounter. As harsh as it sounded, Zane preferred the quickness of a disruptor beam over many more slow hours of torture which he might not be able to resist.
The first man sat up from the floor obviously having difficulty shaking off the effects of the drug. He seemed to be the leader of the two man team. He muttered something to the other man which Zane was just barely able to make out, “Kill…him..”
Shocked, Zane braced for the inevitable. Suddenly the doors behind him slid open. Several green beams cut through the air from over his shoulder. Seconds later his torturer holding him at gun point doubled over in a blood chilling scream as his atoms were savagely ripped apart in a swirl of green particles. His disruptor clattered to the floor as the man disappeared into nothingness.
Zane felt a strong hand grab his shirt and drag him backwards. “Come with me now”, a voice said in his ear as more disruptor fire covered their escape. Zane was pulled through the darkness until he felt the cold tingle of a transporter beam grip his body. Moments later his eyes were assaulted by the bright lights of another building. He could see dark shapes of several bodies nearby as his eyes struggled to adjust to the light. As the transporter released him his legs failed him as he fell to his knees. He could hear several voices, but they were distant and unrecognizable. He couldn’t make out what they were saying. His head spun as pain, mixed with dizziness, overcame his senses. Unable to cope with his injuries and the adrenaline running through him, Zane fell forward to the floor unconscious as the bodies approached their intentions and motives unknown.
Affair on Astate: A Lotta Local Trouble - Part VI
Zane’s eyes slowly opened. His vision was blurred as he tried to focus on his surroundings. Like a bad dream, reality seemed to be a mix of colors and shapes he couldn’t identify. Several fuzzy memories danced in his head which he couldn’t make sense of. As the cobwebs cleared, a few more scattered memories fell into place. He tried to move, but felt someone push him back. He looked upwards his vision finally focusing on the body which hovered above him. The body retreated and took a seat at his bedside.
“You’ve have interesting friends Mr. Akina”, a male voice stated.. Zane's vision cleared and he could see a single well dressed businessman sitting comfortably nearby. Zane wasn’t sure where he was or how he had gotten here, but from the soreness and pain he was in no position to put up any resistance.
“Where am I”, Zane managed to whisper with a hoarse voice.
“Safe”, the man answered with a cool voice his answer intentionally evasive.
Zane struggled to speak, but was interrupted by the unidentified man.
“Allow me to anticipate your next question Captain. My name is Ailec Reltah. And you would be correct to assume it was my men and I who rescued you from that terrible place we found you in.”
“Why”, Zane whispered his voice unsteady and weak.
“Hmm, that is a question which I can only partially answer. I am by trade a mercenary for hire. My organization performs odd jobs for those willing to pay for certain services. I have been hired to rescue you in addition to keeping an eye on you from now on. It appears you have a great many enemies here on Astate, Captain Akina. My employer has enlisted our assistance to help you deal with your problem.”
Zane’s head throbbed. He attempted to sit up, but was quickly pushed backwards by Reltah.
“Captain, you’ve had a busy day. I realize that in your position trust is not something that is generally forthcoming, however I assure you there is nothing to fear. You have received medical attention and you are my guest until you have had a chance to rest and recuperate. Anything you need or desire shall be seen to.”
“Who paid you”, Zane asked managing to summon some additional strength to continue the conversation.
“I’m not at liberty to say. He didn’t leave a name and I did not inquire per our arrangement.”
“I’ve heard about you”, Zane mumbled as he flexed his muscles which responded in painful protest.
“Well known merc outfit in this area who tends to play all sides, Romulan, Klingon, Federation.”
“You wound me Captain.”
“I’m just stating fact”, Zane answered. “You and those like you serve a function in this universe. It isn’t my cup of tea and I’d be lying if I said I approve of your business, however It isn’t my place to pass judgment and right now I’m in no position to complain. And besides, I wouldn’t be a very good guest if I insulted my host, would I?”
“You have wit Captain. I like that. Most Intelligence officers lack personality, a flaw I find quite irritating. You however appear to be different. I must say I’m surprised.”
“I assume you deal in information?”
“One of many business ventures.”
“What do you know about the dead SFI officers here on Astate? I’m going to assume they had some informal contact with your organization or at least should have.”
“Indeed we have had some minor dealings with SFI here on Astate, but I have no information to give you. This business with the Romulans has been difficult on many levels.”
“Tell me Reltah, your name, Romulan?”
“Witty and astute. I salute you again sir. To answer your question, partially, my father was Romulan, my mother was human.”
“I see. May I ask one additional question before you start charging me or my mysterious benefactor?”
“Of course.”
“What do you know about SFI operations here on Astate and have you had any dealings or know of any information on a Starfleet Colonel named Ventris?”
“Well Captain, that’s actually two questions, but I will indulge you as you’ve been interesting company. SFI maintains a small listening post on the planet. The location is well known by most interested parties. Its function is to intercept and record Romulan transmissions for analysis. Your counterparts on the other side of the pond have similar posts. With that exception, the SFI presence here is quite small. As for your Colonel, his name has come up once or twice in other dealings, but I have had no direct dealings with him. From what little I do know, I can tell you he appears to keep interesting company for a Starfleet Colonel. Not at all what you would expect from someone of his stature. That is all I know of him.”
"Commander Felix Griffen, do you deal with him?"
"No, but there are rumors about him. I am not privy to all of them, but I may be able to put you in contact with someone who is. I know a man, a Starfleet insider, which might better answer your questions for a price. Your Commander Griffen is a powerful man on Astate. It is he who controlls personnel assignments - who comes and who goes from this planet. Such a man might be how to say - influenced if properly motivated to make certain staff assignments or changes."
"What kind of changes", Zane asked.
"I am just speculating Captain. I cannot say. I've found there are limits to the depth of which one can successfully probe without bringing undue danger, risk, or harm to himself or others. I deal mainly in passive information, I don't aggressivly seek it which attracts unwanted attention. I can say this, you sidestepped the system. Your arrival on Astate was unexpected. Since you have no formal orders or assignment - Commander Griffen never received your paperwork in advance. I can say with some reliability that your arrival yesterday morning at his office came as quite a shock to him."
Reltah stood from his chair.
“Well, the hour grows late Captain. You require rest and I must see to other matters. We will have to chat again soon, you are most stimulating company.”
“Reltah, tell me, how extensive are my injuries?”
“Do not worry yourself. Your medical needs will be seen to by qualified personnel. As an SFI agent I assumed you would want to keep this matter out of the official spotlight. Starfleet doctors ask so many questions. Was I mistaken?”
Zane shook his head. “No. Thank you for your discretion and assistance. You saved my life for which I am grateful. “
Reltah nodded out of respect. Both men were wary of the other, but each respected the other on a professional level. It was possible, given time, the two could benefit from the other on certain matters of mutual interest. Only time would tell. Captain Akina seemed to be the type of officer who would use whatever resources at his disposal to accomplish a goal even non-sanctioned resources and methods. Their relationship could bear fruit given time.
“Your injuries were substantial, but not life threatening. My physicians ensure me that you will make a full recovery. Right now you need rest. Since you have no standing orders I doubt you will be missed.”
“How do you know that”, Zane asked.
“It’s my business to know such things”, Reltah replied. “I keep a close eye on variables that could impact business operations. Intelligence officers are fascinating to watch no matter what interests they are pursuing.”
"So you do have contact with personnel at some level?"
Reltah shook his finger. “Sorry Captain, I’m not at liberty to reveal all my secrets. Let's just leave it at that for now.”
Zane chuckled which he regretted his ribs painfully protesting. Reltah was obviously well connected with lines of information from both Starfleet and Romulan personnel. It was possible this mercenary could be useful to him in the future. For some low grade intelligence files of little intrinsic value or non classified information it was possible he could swap them for counter-information on certain subjects or perhaps for Reltah’s specific brand of services.
“Get some rest Captain. You look terrible.”
“Thanks”, Zane said dryly. “One more thing – my attackers, who were they?”
Reltah stopped at the doorway to Akina’s room. “Hired help. I’ve run across those two before. It’s just as well that they’re both dead. Despicable beings, even among my standards. They were without honor – money was all that they loved and they did anything to increase their holdings.”
“You didn’t answer my question. Please, I must know.”
Reltah paused for a moment, but his back continued to face Akina in the doorway. “Specialists in extracting information. The pair were experts at obtaining information by any means be it torture in your case, drugs, mind probes and the like. If you are asking who hired them, I cannot say. What I can tell you is that those men were expensive. Whoever hired them is wealthy with considerable influence and connections. Someone wants something that you know or perhaps something they believe you know. Of one thing you can be sure Captain, someone out there with vast resources and wealth has you in their sights.”
“Wouldn’t be the first time, probably won’t be the last”, Zane replied.
“And interesting response. We will have to talk again soon. Good Evening Captain”, Reltah said quietly before taking his leave.
Zane let out a sigh as he digested the information Reltah had been so gracious to provide. Such information usually carried a substantial price tag from someone like Reltah. The man had been quite forthcoming and Zane had no reason to believe the man would mislead him – he had nothing to gain by doing so.
More questions than ever filled his mind. Who had sent those men after him? What did they want? What had happened to the dead SFI officers? How did the mysterious Colonel Ventris fit into the puzzle and was he even connected? Who were the players in the audio and video fragments he had recovered from the damaged padd and what was their role? Was Commander Griffen accepting bribes? If he was, who was paying him and for what purpose? What possible value would the knowledge of personnel on Astate be to anyone? Astate was not a strategic port or military installation. Why would anyone want to know who came and went - unless...unless Griffen was being paid to accept or deny everyone who arrived or left thus making him perfect for bringing in and retaining specific personnel - but for what?
Zane's head ached. Conspiracies seemed to be multiplying like rabbits. Everywhere he turned more more questions emerged. This game had now turned dangerous which was usually just when things began to get interesting. Despite his close shave with death, he wasn't about to stop investigating. He was more convinced than ever something sinister was occuring Astate. It was subtle, carefully controlled, and well managed to avoid detection. It was doubtful any top brass was aware of any anomalies and Zane suspected even if alerted they might not believe they existed.
Exhausted, Zane closed his eyes his entire body numb from painkillers combined with the fading after effects of shock from his injuries. He had little choice but to accept the mercenary’s hospitality for now. He had to rest and recover - there was far more to learn on Astate and as recent events had proved, he would need to be in perfect form to venture deeper into Astate's underworld to find the answers he was seeking.
Captain Zane Akina
Starfleet Intelligence
Ailec Reltah Mercenary-for-Hire
Affair on Astate: A Lotta Local Trouble Part VII
Zane touched his toes and stretched exhaling as he tested his muscles. Today marked the third week of his stay enjoying the hospitality of his mercenary benefactor, Ailec Reltah. With the mercenary’s assistance, Zane had made a full recovery from his previous injuries. The long days of rest, diet, and exercise had prepared him for continuing his investigation into the strange happenings on Astate.
Inhaling and exhaling, Zane took one last look at his small, but well furnished room which had been his home for many days. Today, he would thank Reltah for his gracious hospitality and return to Starfleet to continue his work. Turning off the lights, Zane made his way out into the hallway and through the maze of corridors toward a lift he had seen Reltah enter on several occasions. Today, it seemed unguarded. Entering the lift, Reltah pressed the top most button and seconds later was whisked upwards.
The lift stopped as the doors opened. Zane stepped into a lavish lobby decorated with imported woods, fine light fixtures, and impressive statues. Marble tile polished to a mirror finish covered the floor as he quietly moved about the large room.
“May I help you”, a cheerful voice said behind him causing Zane to flinch at the unexpected voice.
Zane turned to see a petite, well dressed woman smiling back at him. “I was looking for Mr. Reltah. Is he free?”
“Right through those doors Captain. He is expecting you.”
Zane was a little confused by her statement, but nodded thanking the woman and proceeded through the doors into what he guessed was Reltah’s office. It too was impressive as black marble covered the floors. A row of large windows lined the back of the large room in which a single desk sat centered and at it, Reltah himself.
“Come in Captain. I’ve been expecting you.”
“You have”, Zane asked approaching Reltah’s desk.
“Of course, why else would you have boarded my personal lift if not to have another one of our stimulating conversations?”
Zane nodded.
“Have a seat Captain? What do you think of the view? It’s one of the best on Astate in my opinion.”
Zane looked through the glass windows. In the distance he could see the colony and beyond the twin Starfleet towers and distant mountain range. “Impressive. One could probably charge for such a vantage point.”
“I do. Two floors below. The colony tour is quite popular with visiting tourists, but enough about the view, I believe you are here to inform me of your intentions to depart?”
“Well informed as always. Your hospitality and generosity have been unmatched. I owe you my thanks for all of your assistance.”
Reltah nodded at the human’s gestures.
“I must now continue my work. Something dark lurks in the shadows of this colony. I must learn more about recent events. Call it a gut feeling, but there's something out there that is dangerous, but quiet. Leaving it unchecked would be foolish.”
“You may be more right than you know. I too have sensed the tiny tremors of something foul, but from what or where I cannot say. Will you return to the Starfleet facilities?”
“Yes. I must start from there to build my case. The answers I need lie there for now.”
“While I would not presume to doubt your instincts or training Captain, might I offer you a proposal instead? Call it a business opportunity.”
Zane raised an eyebrow. “Such as?”
“Consider this Captain, you’ve been out of sight for three weeks time. The authorities have searched that wretched hole we found and rescued you from and discovered the disintegrated remains of three bodies or rather two bodies and a carefully altered sequence of your DNA. You’ve been officially listed as MIA while the investigation continues. For all intents and purposes, you don’t exist captain.”
“What? What did you do Reltah? You planted DNA at the scene to fool the authorities into thinking I was dead? What for”, Zane asked not bothering to hide his emotion.
“Your benefactor suggested that such an arrangement would benefit you and your ongoing investigation. I merely did what I was paid to do.”
“How? If I’m listed as MIA, that means I’m off the radar, no clearance codes, no access permissions, nothing. I might as well be an average citizen.”
“Come now Captain. An intelligence officer of your background and intelligence won’t be hampered by such an inconvenience. When one persona is no longer useful just create another – as an intelligence officer I’m sure you have several aliases. From your record you appear to work best off the radar as you put it.”
Zane said nothing for several moments unhappy about the situation. “You said you had a business proposition?”
“I do. Returning to Starfleet would only tip your hand Captain. Right now you are perfectly positioned to carry out investigations outside of official constraints and rules. You no longer exist which makes you a ghost – a ghost that can go anywhere and do anything – unseen and unheard. I am willing to provide you with living quarters, supplies, weapons, and other equipment to aid you.”
Zane smiled. “And the catch?”
“No catch, just an exchange. I want whatever information you uncover. Names, places, data files, records, etc.”
“So you can sell them to the highest bidder?”
“Captain, consider this. You have more enemies at the moment than friends. You need my help. My organization can get you the supplies and equipment you will need without any red tape – no questions asked. All I ask in return is a fair trade to help me offset the costs of assisting you. Unlike the planets you are used to, Astate’s underworld is complex and dangerous. You need me and my local knowledge. Starfleet’s influence here is limited. No cavalry will rush to your rescue if you find yourself in trouble. You will have no backup, no agents waiting in the wind to move in when needed. You are alone Captain and Astate is a dangerous place in the darkness of its shadows.”
“Why do this? What’s your angle Reltah?”
“Angle? Captain, I’m a simple businessman. You will no doubt produce results that my clients and I may find useful to promote and protect our business interests among other things. It’s just that simple.”
“Simple or not I won’t sell out Starfleet or my own convictions. I'm sorry Reltah, that's too high a price.”
“I’m not asking you to sell anything Captain. I’ll leave what information you wish to share at your discretion so long as I am content the information you are passing along is relevant, timely, and useful. If you uncover something you feel could compromise your obligations to king and country you may withhold that information. I have no desire to see you jailed or court-martialed. Betraying your loyalties or convictions under duress does not benefit either of us. I’ll end up with useless information since you won’t be forthcoming and you would be forced to choose between loyalty and the mission. Neither of those outcomes are beneficial to either of us. Do those terms satisfy you?”
Zane, already wary of Reltah, was suspicious of his motives and true intentions. The man knew more than he was saying, Zane could see it in his eyes. The whole thing felt orchestrated like a well thought out setup. However, Zane had little choice. Reltah’s words did resonate with some truth. With Starfleet believing he was dead and possibly his enemies as well, he now had additional latitude to investigate without having to follow normal protocol and regulations. Such ability to move freely and quietly was invaluable. Being MIA might be advantageous to acheiving his goals.
“I will require an extensive array of equipment, computers, and supplies”, Zane answered. “Since I won’t have my usual Starfleet access, most of that equipment will be difficult to obtain and expensive to purchase or acquire. Are you sure you’re prepared for such contingencies? I don’t want to be hampered by refusals, rejections, and lack of funding – I can get that and more at the fleet home office.”
“Captain, profitable or not, your wit and tenacity are worth the price alone. Do you accept my offer stipulations included of course?”
Zane nodded. “I don’t seem to have much choice in the matter, but yes, with some additional conditions. I get to choose when and where I submit information. I don’t want to worry about having to report in every 48 hours. Second, no threats. Bring in any muscle and this deal is off.”
“I wouldn’t think of ruining our relationship Captain. You are far too interesting as company to chase away by such brutish methods.”
Reltah stood leaning over his desk. “Then we have a deal sir?”
Zane stood grasping the mercenary’s hand accepting and committing to the mutual agreement. The pact was one made out of convenience as well as necessity. Zane didn’t like it, but he had made such deals with underworld figures before. It was the best method for obtaining results even if the risks ran high. As in casinos, one had to bet big to win big – the trouble was determining who was playing who and in stakes like these, betting the wrong way could cost more than money – it could be fatal.
Reltah smiled returning to his seat. “I look forward to our partnership Captain. My men outside will see that you are transported to a suitable facility and will provide you with the means to contact me. Any supplies or equipment you require upon arrival will be seen to as quickly as possible. No doubt some items of your curious profession may take longer to acquire than others, but I have many resources.”
“Indeed, as I am aware of firsthand.”
“Good luck Captain.”
Zane nodded and turned to leave. He had some misgivings about their arrangement, but he needed answers and Reltah was willing to help him find them. Part angel, part devil – Zane didn’t trust Reltah, and was still unsure where he stood, but for now the relationship worked – how long that would last remained to be seen.
Affair on Astate: A Lotta Local Trouble Part VIII
Colony Outskirts, Astate
A gentle electric hum pulsed through tiny, dilapidated shack on the outskirts of Caenis. Shadows danced across the walls in the dim light as a single electric lantern buzzed quietly in a dusty corner. Pushing a fresh power cell into his Romulan disruptor pistol, Zane checked its charge before sliding the weapon into his shoulder holster. Taking a seat on a squeaky bed, Zane closed a case of supplies and pushed the large metal storage box under the bed frame.
True to his word, Ailec Reltah had delivered putting Zane up in a small, poorly furnished, three room shack on the edge of the colony. The place was quiet, isolated, and out of the way; perfect for someone who needed anonymity. With few colonists on the outskirts, Zane could operate without raising suspicion.
The small cabin had a tiny bedroom, a dining and kitchen area, and a larger living area with a large table, a few rusty chairs, and a small sofa. The structure was poorly maintained as he could hear the wind whistling through several cracks. With only one window at the front door, the cabin provided moderate security and privacy.
Grabbing a padd, Zane activated its screen and made a final inspection of his recent handiwork. A small 2D wireframe map appeared on the padd’s screen showing the cabin and the surrounding area. A red line, roughly square, surrounded the cabin on all sides indicating the invisible security fence he had installed earlier in the day to warn of any possible intruders. He wasn’t taking chances after recent events. Someone out there with vast wealth and resources was trying to capture him or perhaps kill him. They had failed once, but given time, they would no doubt try again.
Tweaking a few minor settings to the security fence, Zane activated its alarm system and set the padd down on a nearby table. He was impressed with how quickly Reltah had been able to deliver the supplies he had requested. Weapons, security and detection gear, food, a generator, a personal replicator, and clothing had all arrived within 48 hours. There were a few intelligence issue supplies he was still waiting on, but such instruments would take Reltah time to acquire.
Yawning, Zane pulled off his boots. It had taken him almost two days to settle into the small cabin, secure it, and create a plan for going after and uncovering the truth. With Starfleet believing he was missing or dead, Zane could be more aggressive in his search to learn the truth. He had spent the better part of a day reviewing what had happened trying to determine the best point from which to begin what had become a personal mission.
Commander Felix Griffen, Personnel Director
Zane’s initial encounter with the commander had been unusual. The commander’s secretary had been overly evasive to a superior officer. In addition, Zane had noticed several men who seemed out of place after he had twisted the secretary’s arm to get a meeting with Commander Griffen. Then there was the commander himself. The man’s office rivaled a fleet admiral’s in opulence and décor. Griffen had been blunt, evasive, and non-cooperative. Reltah had hinted that Griffen was being bribed or perhaps paid-off, but from who or why he did not know. It was possible someone was using Griffen to funnel personnel to or from Astate via the personnel office, but for what purpose still remained a mystery.
Colonel Leon Ventris, Commander 145th Marine Battalion
Another odd character. Zane’s meeting with the Colonel was unplanned with the Colonel visiting him at his personal quarters. The Colonel appeared overly concerned with Zane’s unscheduled, and unannounced visit to the SFI offices. Zane was equally curious as to why a Marine Colonel would have such an interest and would personally investigate what was a security matter. Their conversation though brief had unsettled Zane. The Colonel appeared to be involved in something, but where he fit into the overall puzzle was unclear. Zane had no proof the Colonel was involved in anything illicit, but years of experience and his gut instincts told him there was more to the Colonel than met the eye.
Then there were the two dead SFI officers. Both had died in the fighting with the Romulans. Zane suspected a cover up. What bothered him was lack of interest by SFI. There were several possibilities. Zane suspected Griffen was somehow involved and had manipulated records and assignments to prevent fleet command from learning of the officer’s deaths. Still, he wondered if the two men had stumbled into something and if they had been killed for what they knew. The other possibility was that they were dirty themselves, aiding whatever scheme was being perpetrated on Astate, and they had been killed to erase a connection to someone or something.
Finally, there were the two hired operatives that had kidnapped Zane and attempted to learn what he knew. Both had met untimely fates, however Zane had to determine who had hired them and why. It was unusual for anyone except for the major powers, the Klingons, Romulans, an occasional Cardassian to go after a Starfleet Intelligence Officer. The risks of creating a diplomatic incident were too high. Dirty tricks, traps, bribes, and other nefarious methods were typically used to learn, extract, or obtain information. Violence was not unheard of, but it was used sparingly in all of the intelligence branches of the major powers. Intelligence operatives and agents were unseen and unheard in a silent game few people knew existed. Information was traded for favors, sex, money, influence, and power. Information was power, but there were rules of engagement and defined lines.
Someone out there had crossed the line violating the roughly accepted tenants of interstellar espionage. Zane had dismissed all of the quadrant's main power players. That left old rivals, enemies, small time criminals whom SFI had crossed, busted, or betrayed, or powerful non-governmental entities such as the Orion Syndicate or corporations. Such entities might cross the line to settle a score or vendetta.
Zane sighed with little to go on and more questions that hard facts. Tomorrow he would start searching for answers. Perhaps with a little luck he would lift the veil of mystery that surrounded recent events and shed some light on Astate's criminal darkside.
Affair on Astate: A Lotta Local Trouble Part IX
Captain Zane Akina sat quietly in a rundown bar in Caenis’s industrial district. The bar was frequented by locals, workers from local industry, freighter captains and crews, and other less savory types. The air in the local dive was heavy with faint traces of tobacco smoke, oil, sweat, and grime. While not overtly busy, the badly maintained bar was filled with several patrons drinking the poison of their choosing while talking with others or watching one of the overhead displays showing various sporting events.
Akina sipped on a disappointing local beer while running over the last few days. His search for answers had come up dry. Days of work had yielded nothing. Chatting up locals, pumping several informants for information, and making general inquiries with local law enforcement had yielded nothing. Even Ailec Reltah’s network of people had been unable to provide any additional leads. The loose ends of the possible conspiracy he was chasing appeared to be beyond his grasp. He wasn’t sure there was enough information on Astate to follow anywhere meaningful. Even with a crack team of Intelligence agents specializing in undercover ops and intel gathering, Zane was becoming pessimistic about his chances of cracking the mysteries surrounding him.
Guzzling the rest of his beer, Zane had come to the harsh realization that despite a full hand of peculiar events, an attempt on his life, and some shady characters back at the Starfleet facilities, he was no closer to the truth now than he was several days ago. Reltah had remained quiet thus far, but Zane knew it was only a matter of time before the mercenary began demanding some progress and information in exchange for the price of outfitting him with lodging, supplies, and equipment.
Sullen, Zane had arranged a discrete meeting with a local construction and shipping merchant after receiving a tip that the man may have some information. Not optimistic about the encounter, Zane wondered what his next move should be with all avenues of information quickly fading like a light morning fog.
“You Flannigan”, a gravely voice suddenly asked from behind.
Zane turned toward the person behind him. “Aye, who’s asking”?
“Name’s Vernon, Vernon Brecht. Got a message you were looking fer me.”
“Roy Flannigan”, Zane said with a firm handshake. “Have a seat Vernon, let me buy you a drink.”
The man took a seat on the barstool next to Zane and ordered an expensive alcoholic beverage taking advantage of Zane’s offer.
“So what is it you be wanting Flannigan? Is this business?”
“In a way”, Zane replied. “I represent the Anasovan Mineral and Mining Group, perhaps you have heard of us?”
“No”, came the sharp reply.
“We’re currently conducting a survey of Astate for any possible mining and mineralogical deposits which might prove to be commercially viable. Astate has quite a bit of rugged, uncharted land mass which could contain deposits of precious metals, dilithium, petroleum, and other valuable natural resources. I’m here performing advanced research for my company however I’ve heard that there has been some trouble here on Astate. I was told you might have some information on such subjects being that you transport heavy equipment here on Astate and are responsible for several construction projects.”
“I don’t think I can help you Flannigan”, Brecht answered. “Bad for business.”
Zane smiled and produced several large bars of gold pressed latinum from his jacket. “Mr. Brecht, we’re both businessmen. I have to ascertain any risks to future operations here on the colony. It would be most helpful to learn of any risks that might exist which might hamper business operations. I’m sure you can understand as an astute businessman yourself?”
Brecht looked at the latinum for a time before slowly accepting the bribe. “Ok, Flannigan. This stays between the two of us.” Brecht looked about the bar nervously which caught Zane’s attention. Being a student of human behavior, Zane sensed the uneasiness in Brecht’s mannerisms, speech, and actions. There was something the man feared and was hesitant to discuss.
“It’s the Graithong area and the southern ice shelf that you should be wary of if yer intending on starting operations there.”
“How so?”
“Well, several of my competitors have run into some trouble in those parts recently. It’s just best to steer clear. That’s about all there is to it.”
“Mr. Brecht, excuse me for insisting, but if I am to report back to our board of trustees I’m going to need a little more than that.”
Zane could see Brecht fidgeting. The man was clearly uncomfortable.
“Ok, ok. It’s like this Flannigan.” Brecht lowered his voice. “There’s been some odd things occurring in those parts lately. I don’t ask too many questions ya see, but there’s stories and rumors.”
“Go on.”
“Well, there was some construction out that way. Some on one of the Graithong islands, some more on the ice shelf to the south. I don’t know what was being built, but it was secretive, you know all quiet. No invoices, no paperwork – it was almost like a government operation but not even the Romulans or Starfleet acts in such odd ways. I know, I helped construct some of the more secure buildings at the Starfleet complex here in Caenis.”
“What was odd about the construction?”
“The lack of paperwork was one, but just the way the entire thing was handled. No names, no permits – it was all under the table. I doubt Starfleet even knows of what was going on. I had no part in any of it, but some of my competitors took the contracts. Things have been a little lean and they needed the work and business. I never thought anything of it until people and equipment started disappearing.”
Zane’s eyebrow raised slightly as he ordered another beer. “Disappearing?” “Keep yer voice down. Yes. Men, materials, heavy equipment – poof, gone. No trace, no questions, no investigations. They flat disappeared and anyone who they knew disappeared with them.”
“Were the local authorities contacted? Were there any investigations?”
“Hell no. No one around here wants anything to do with the law. Bad for business – too many questions, inspections, people poking their noses into your business. Not all of us do work exclusively for Starfleet if you get my meaning. We take business where we can get it. But beyond that, anyone talking about this usually ends up missing too. Look, I’ve already said too much as it is.”
“Mr. Brecht, please”, Zane said producing more latinum. “This is important information I need to obtain for my company. If there’s anything else you can tell me, I’d be most appreciative.”
Brecht seemed to vacillate on accepting more of Zane’s money, but eventually gave in and accepted the additional compensation. Zane figured the man needed the money and for now that fact was working to his advantage.
“Look Flannigan, I don’t have any specifics. I’ve seen friends and rivals alike been burned by whatever or whoever is down there in the ice or on one of those jungle islands. All I know is that people and equipment vanish. Now the Klingons have some hunting lodges in those parts and I haven’t heard them complaining, but us businessmen steer clear. There’s a rumor there’s some sort of creature down on the islands. Eats anything, man or beast. Heard a few Klingons were searching for it – you know how they are, man vs beast, the thrill of the hunt, that sort of thing. Whatever or whoever is down there – it’s not safe. People disappear on those islands Flannigan. Anyone shootin their mouth off about it ends up the same so nobody talks about it. It’s a subject everyone knows about, but isn’t discussed.
“Which islands, can you give me any additional specifics?”
“Are you crazy man? Have you not heard a word I’ve been saying?”
Zane nodded. “Mr. Brecht, my corporation has formidable security and takes careful steps to ensure the safety of our workforce as well as the security and safety of our operations and equipment. As such, it is imperative that I learn the location of any ‘hot spots’ so we can avoid those areas should we find suitable locations to begin operations in the Graithong area.”
Brecht, produced a small padd in which he pulled up a map of the planet. Zooming in on the Graithong area, he pointed out several of the areas where people and machinery had gone missing.
“That’s all I know Flannigan. We’re done here, I’ve said all I’m going to say.”
“Very well Mr. Brecht. You’ve been quite helpful. Perhaps our two companies can do business with one another in the future if your services are required.”
“Ok, whatever”, Brecht answered. “You just keep what you heard to yourself. As far as I’m concerned we never talked and I’ll deny we ever met.”
“You have my word as a gentleman and a businessman”, Zane replied.
“Fine. Just keep quiet. If I were you I’d take your business interests elsewhere on this rock. The islands are no place for profit, just misery.”
Zane nodded as Brecht left the bar visibly nervous and uncertain.
Without waiting, Zane also left the bar to return home and perform his own research on the fascinating information he had just uncovered.
Zane sat at his computer terminal in the small, run down cabin provided by Ailec Reltah. His recent conversation with a local businessman had been spectacular providing him with a fresh lead. It was just the sort of turn of fortune he was searching for to jump start his investigation which had run practically dry.
Pouring over maps of Astate, Zane focused on the Graithong area and its chain of islands. After some research one interesting fact stood out like a spotlight in a dark, night sky. A small Starfleet intelligence installation was located on one of the islands. From the records he had copied posing as an Admiral in Starfleet Security some days ago, Zane learned of the small listening outpost. Tiny and unmanned, the listening post recorded Romulan transmissions and presumably forwarded those communications back to the SFI office on Astate for decryption, translation, and transmission to fleet intelligence back on Earth. With the death of all of the SFI agents on Astate in the recent Romulan battle, Zane wondered if the facility was still operational. If so, where was it sending its information and who might be utilizing it?
Such questions garnered an inspection of the facility. It was doubtful the outpost was heavily guarded or protected. Such listening posts generally were small, were remotely operated, and could operate for months or years without maintenance. Sensing the possibility for a break in his case, Zane headed back into Caenis. He needed to visit Reltah and secure some transportation.
Affair on Astate: A Lotta Local Trouble Part X
Caenis, Astate
“Captain Akina, please come in”, the mercenary businessman Ailec Reltah said graciously as Zane entered the man’s office.
“Please have a seat. What brings you back so soon?”
Zane took a seat before Ailec Reltah’s desk. “I need some transportation.”
“May I ask your destination Captain?”
“Not far, I need to follow up on a lead in the Graithong area.”
“Graithong? How unusual your investigations would take you there. What lead has you making the journey into the jungle?”
Zane was reluctant to disclose the information he had learned, but he had to placate Reltah with something to secure more of the man’s resources and assistance.
“I’ve learned there’s some odd events that have occurred in the Graithong area recently. Missing persons, missing equipment – there’s rumors something was being built out there, however no one knows what. I’ve also heard rumors of a mysterious creature which eats men alive.”
“Odd, I’ve not heard these rumors, though I must admit there’s very little in the Graithong area which garners much scrutiny other than the occasional Klingon hunting wild game in the dense jungles. Hardly worthy of time or attention.”
“My source was quite convinced there was something odd occurring in the area. While the rumor of some beast that kills sounds like a cover, I want to investigate the area nonetheless. There’s also an SFI listening post which I would like to inspect.”
Reltah rubbed his chin as he looked at the captain as if contemplating the request. “Graithong is a dangerous place Captain. The jungles are dense, there are many animals that may prove dangerous, and several volcanoes and volcanic activity make adventuring hazardous.”
“Just another day in intelligence field work”, Zane quipped. “The transportation?”
“Alright captain. I’m sure I can secure a small shuttle or transport for you that can cover the distance. Would you prefer any assistance? I can have two or three of my men accompany you to provide additional security if you would prefer?”
“I work faster alone”, Zane quickly replied, “but I appreciate the offer.”
“Very well Captain. I will arrange transportation. You may pick it up tomorrow morning. Is that satisfactory?”
“Quite.”
“Very well then. I have an important meeting to attend in a few moments. I enjoyed our chat today. Do be careful in the Graithong area. I look forward to our next encounter Captain.”
Zane nodded as he left the mercenary’s office.
“That was easy”, he thought to himself as he left Reltah’s office building. Zane had several hours of packing and supply gathering to prepare for the jungle trip. He couldn’t be sure how long the trip would last depending on what he uncovered. Accustomed to the urban jungle, the real thing was sure to have some interesting surprises and dangers all its own.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part I
Jungle Island – Graithong Island Chain, Astate
Having acquired a small, shuttle from the well connected and powerful mercenary, Ailec Reltah, Captain Zane Akina now had the transportation needed to reach the Graithong Island chain to continue his investigations into the bizarre and near fatal occurrences that had plagued him since arriving on Astate. Having been pulled into a web of lies, danger, and Astate’s criminal and corrupt underworld, Zane was now classified by Starfleet as MIA due to recent events that had nearly claimed his own life. Free to pursue the person or persons who had sought him out for information, Zane was well financed and supplied by the mercenary Reltah whose intentions were still unclear. With the ability to operate ‘outside’ of normal channels for the time being, Zane’s intentions were to shed light on the dark mysteries he had encountered and expose those who might pose a danger not just to himself, but to Starfleet and/or interstellar peace and stability. He had no shortages of loose ends, shady characters, and unanswered questions to investigate.
Zooming just over the treetops of the heavily forested islands of the Graithong region, Akina had chosen a few islands to investigate based upon the information he had obtained and his own research. It was clear that businessmen were avoiding the area due to stories and rumors of death and disappearance to anyone who ventured near the island chains. Such claims demanded investigation, but first he had a duty to perform. The SFI listening post, the only SFI property on Astate, needed a checkup.
The listening post was a small, automated structure requiring little maintenance. Its purpose was to intercept Romulan communications, record them, and forward them on to SFI personnel for decoding and translation. Since the Romulan attack on the Starfleet facilities and the death of the two SFI agents stationed on Astate, Zane had been unable to find what had happened to the intelligence information the station was supposed to be providing. No one seemed to miss the lack of incoming communication intercepts which puzzled Zane. Perhaps the war had SFI’s attention focused elsewhere, perhaps the station had yielded little data of any intelligence value, but it was still odd that no one at fleet was concerned over the loss of reports.
Spotting a tiny clearing in the trees, Akina quickly scanned the area. The ground was stable and the area provided good cover. The clearing was also close to the SFI listening post. Engaging the shuttle’s thrusters, Zane slowly maneuvered the craft down through the trees and carefully landed. After a few minutes of post flight operations, scanning the area for any dangers, and collecting his gear, Zane popped the hatch and exited the shuttle to setup camp and investigate the clearing.
Akina closed the hatch on the old, rusty shuttle that had been provided by Ailec Reltah. Avoiding a Starfleet patrol and flying close to the ocean’s surface to avoid being detected Zane had set the craft down on a small jungle island where Starfleet Intelligence had a remote listening outpost. Finding a landing site had been difficult. The island was covered in dense forests except for a small clearing near a section of beach. The gap in the trees created a good place to setup camp in addition to camouflaging the transport from prying eyes.
Zane pulled a device from his backpack and attached it to the transport’s small, rusty hull. The electronic unit, used for covert SFI operations, ensured the transport and the clearing would remain invisible to sensors from orbit just in case anyone was looking. Zane was sure Ailec Reltah had undergone significant expense to locate and acquire this specific device at his request. A precaution at least and a necessity at best, Zane was taking few chances after listening to the stories of people and equipment that had disappeared in the area. Remaining quiet, discrete, and invisible was exactly what Zane Akina intended to do.
Pulling the backpack stuffed with equipment and supplies onto his back, Zane gazed off into the dense jungle beyond the small clearing. A thin fog clung to the ground while the air was warm and thick with humidity like a bathroom after a hot shower. Insects buzzed about while the loud sounds of birds and animals echoed through the trees.
Zane grabbed the tricorder at his side and pulled up the map showing the location of the intelligence outpost. Ensuring the area was secure he set off into the jungle to locate the SFI listening outpost. Perhaps the computers there could provide him with some new leads about the strange rumors of the Graithong area. He had a hunch that the rumors surrounding the islands were somehow connected to his personal mission, but only time would tell.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part II
Starfleet Intelligence - Listening Outpost - Graithong Island Chain - Astate Colony
Wiping the sweat that was pouring off his face and neck, Zane gazed into his tricorder. He had covered nearly two kilometers through dense jungle, underbrush, and stubborn plant life. The trek was slow-going and difficult. Fifty pounds of supplies and gear strapped to his back wasnʼt making his journey faster or easier.
Pressing forward through vines, dense trees, and thorny brambles Zane came to a small clearing hidden by dozens of tall trees. The area was surrounded by a tall security fence of Starfleet design and topped with sharp razor wire. At the center of the fenced off clearing was a small Starfleet building. Tall grass and plants had overgrown the clearing obscuring much of the building from view. A few metallic antennas were visible protruding from the top of the building no doubt a part of the listening equipment designed to intercept and record Romulan communication transmissions.
Scanning the area, Zane located the entrance to fence. It was locked by a weatherproofed security keypad. Zane considered cutting through the fence to gain access, but decided against forcibly breaking in. There was a possibility someone might still be using the facility even with the death of the local SFI agents who supposedly were the caretakers of this facility and its information. If he damaged or tampered with the equipment it was possible he might trip an alarm which might alert someone to his presence.
Examining the keypad revealed a standard issue Starfleet design. Zane was able to scan the device and determine the make and model. Using his invaluable toolkit of classified Starfleet intelligence information which was contained in a separate tricorder, Zane located the master code to the unit. SFI had backdoors into most computerized systems in use by Starfleet. Such information was both highly valuable and highly guarded. Zane, however, was no ordinary agent, and used his position and clearance to obtain any tools that might come in handy or in extreme cases, save his or another life. The intelligence game was a dangerous one with pitfalls and peril at every turn. To survive, one had to take advantage of any and all information that might prove useful.
Inputting the code caused the unit to unlock as the gate slowly swung open with a rusty groan. Stepping inside the fence, Zane closed the gate and carefully proceeded toward the small building several yards away. He pulled his disruptor pistol as he made his way through the tall grass, carefully and quietly to avoid detection. Reaching the building he quickly pressed himself up against its damp exterior and moved along it searching for its entrance.
A corner suggested the presence of a door. Zane carefully peered around the corner. A sudden blurred body rushed him followed by an ear piercing scream. His finger clamped down on the trigger of his disruptor as a single green beam shot off into the dark jungle before him at the rushing attacker. Zane quickly realized his attacker was no person, but an animal. Having spooked a large tropical parrot, the bird now sat on the buildingʼs roof staring oddly at Zane.
Slowing his heart rate, Zane stared up at the colorful blue bird which chattered above him as if laughing at the humanʼs reaction. Zane hurled a few verbal insults at the bird before focusing on the locked door before him. The building had a more complex locking system than the fence which was probably tied back into the Starfleet intelligence & security network in Caenis. Using his own credentials to open the door was risky. Currently, Captain Zane Akina was listed as MIA. If his codes were used it could trigger a security response as it was customary for all personnel listed as MIA to have their security clearances frozen.
While Captain Akina was listed as MIA, his alias, Commodore Theodore Reynolds was not. Entering the codes to the fictitious Starfleet Commodore whose fake identity and clearance codes came in handy for navigating situations such as these, Zane was easily able to unlock the door. Tapping the controls, the door slid open as dirt and dust fell from the entrance revealing the interior space of the building. Zane wasted little time and entered quickly.
The computer, detecting movement, activated the lights and computer systems as it waited for further commands.
The small two-room structure housed only a few pieces of specialized equipment. In the back room, Zane examined the antennas that ran through the ceiling and connected to the computers in the next room. A small generator sat nearby the antenna wiring which powered the facility. Zane checked the unit. Itʼs fuel cells were running low suggesting no one had been by recently to replace them. The generator was a standard model and could power a small facility such as this for several months without maintenance or refueling. Zane wondered how long it had been since someone had last visited the outpost. The lack of fuel was an indicator, however the computer would probably contain the logs of any recent visits.
Pulling the heavy backpack off his shoulders, Zane sat down at the small computer terminal in the next room and activated its single console. With some additional security codes and a few SFI tricks for bypassing security, Zane was curious to review the information in the computer system which might shed light on his investigation.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part III
Starfleet Intelligence - Listening Outpost - Graithong Island Chain - Astate Colony
Captain Zane Akina, having successfully accessed the SFI listening post on Astate, sat quietly at the small computer system which controlled the tiny installation. Streams of data poured across the large main screen and four smaller displays. The outpost, though small in size, was collecting large quantities of data – subspace transmissions, Starfleet, Romulan, public, private both legal and illegal had been recorded and stored. Despite the volume of communication intercepts the post was also recording data from an installed sensor array which sat in geosynchronous orbit high above Astate. The satellite appeared to be of Starfleet design however Zane had been unable to access its systems given the limited equipment of the outpost. He surmised the satellite monitored Romulan ship movements, classes, transmissions in addition to possibly transmitting that data to one of any number of Starfleet subspace relay stations scattered throughout the quadrant.
As he poured over the data several small details began to emerge which seemed out of place for standard intelligence operations. Astate was not a major military or high value intelligence target and this outpost was simply here to provide limited electronic eyes on the Romulans on the chance event something of intelligence value could be recorded. As such, Zane questioned the need for anything beyond communication intercepts. The Romulans would never stage military assets on or near Astate of any significant quantity. The risk of detection was far too great. Marshalling forces would also violate treat obligations governing the Neutral Zone with the Federation.
That fact led him back to his initial question – why? Why were sensor readings being taken?
Several hours passed as he sifted through hundreds of seemingly meaningless intercepts and sensor scans. Everything seemed routine – too routine. Another anomaly Zane encountered was that the computers were nearly at capacity having failed to upload or transmit its collected data to SFI for processing and analysis. Running back the date of the last transmission uncovered another telling clue. The last upload of data occurred just before the two Starfleet Intelligence Operatives were killed in the Romulan attack of the Starfleet facilities on Astate.
Diving deeper a clearer picture began to emerge. The lack of maintenance of the facility had caught his eye, the sensor sweeps were unusual for a low priority monitoring station, the computer’s memory banks were nearly full having not been issued the command to transmit. That command was set to manual instead of automatic transmission which was standard procedure for an outpost such as this one.
Zane quickly suspected that the two intelligence officers that had been assigned to Astate were involved in something far more than simple intelligence gathering. He couldn’t prove they had been dirty or compromised, but they didn’t appear to be following normal SFI procedures. Perhaps they were being blackmailed or coerced, but he suspected there was more going on than anyone realized. Their suspicious deaths now seemed like a cover up, but for what? Who had done the killing and why?
“INQUIRY COMPLETE – SENSOR AND COMMUNICATION INTERCEPT SUMMARY NOW AVAILABLE”, the computer responded verbally to a command Zane issued minutes before.
“Computer, analyze recorded intercepts and compare against previous intercepts from the past year. Inquiry, are there any unusual communication spikes, dips, or other phenomenon which stand out from previous transmission patterns? Average the analysis, for anything statistically significant.”
“Affirmative. There are four such instances based on current parameters.”
Zane poured over the data. “Computer, disregard all transmission that have been intercepted over the last two months. The recent conflict with the Romulans will probably have caused abnormal spikes in normal transmission patterns. Recompute given previous parameters.” “Request complete. There are no statistically significant abnormalities in recorded transmissions during the time period specified utilizing the current analysis parameters.”
Zane leaned backwards in the chair rubbing his chin. The data didn’t support what his gut was telling him. Something wasn’t right. He just had to find that something in a sea of seemingly useless and unimportant information.
“Ok computer, round two. Analyze sensor data using the same parameters.”
“No statistically significant abnormalities in recorded sensor data.”
Zane frowned at the response. “How long does the sensor record go back?”
“Data files exist for the last six months.”
“No computer, how long has this facility been recording sensor data?”
“Four years, seven months, eighteen days, nine hours…”
“Ok ok computer. I got it. Let’s look at this from another angle. It appears the sensor package was installed by SFI some years ago. Tell me about the sensor’s primary function.”
“A Mark Six Model 04 Sensor package, Starfleet Intelligence designation 345-SSP-4. Current directive: Monitor all activity within range and record.”
“Not what I needed computer.”
“Please provide additional information.”
Zane sighed. He hated that computers were so logical. If they just had a little more personality perhaps he would enjoy research of this nature somewhat more.
“Just for the sake of argument computer, the orbital sensor satellite, does it scan the Romulan side of the planet?”
“Negative, current orbital position prevents direct scanning of Romulan territory.”
Zane’s interest suddenly peaked. “Really? If the satellite cannot scan Romulan territory then what is the satellite’s purpose?”
“To monitor all activity within range and record.”
“You already said that”, Zane said with a hint of anger. “If you aren’t watching the Romulan’s then who are you watching? Computer, the satellite in orbit, has its trajectory been altered since installation?”
“Affirmative. Satellite trajectory and position altered 1.2 years from today’s date.”
“By who?”
“Starfleet Intelligence Commander Christopher R. Scott.”
Zane smiled. “Dead, but yet not – the ghost persists.” The name corresponded to one of the two dead intelligence officers who had suspiciously been killed during the recent Romulan attacks.
“Ok, computer. Let’s see how tangled this web really is. Hypothetical analysis; given the current and previous locations of the current orbital sensor satellite from its installation four years ago to now, extrapolate the advantages of moving the satellite to its current orbital position and suggest all possible reasons for doing so.”
“Standby.”
Zane, now standing to get the blood in his legs moving after sitting still for several hours, patiently waited for the computer to chew on his latest inquiry.
“Analysis complete. Movement of orbital satellite would provide the following monitoring advantages: Improved tracking capability of Federation controlled spaceports and landing areas. Improved monitoring of major Federation and Starfleet cities and facilities. Improved monitoring of all incoming and departing vessels from Federation controlled land masses. Current orbital location provides excellent scanning of planet’s eastern hemisphere.”
“I see. Continue hypothetical analysis – Would current orbital position allow for quality scanning of Romulan land masses and traffic paterns?”
“Negative.”
“Now we’re getting somewhere”, Zane said as if the computer cared. He now had a moved satellite whose position had been altered for some unknown purpose, but the intent appeared to be to spy on Starfleet activities and Federation assets instead of the Romulans.
“Computer, access log files. Has anyone initiated or requested scans of specific locations on Astate?”
“Affirmative.”
“Well by all means computer, let’s have the log summaries in audio.”
“Stardate 240708.14 – Commander Christoper R. Scott, Requestor, - command issued to scan Graithong island chain. Results uploaded to SFI computer network in Caenis.
Next Entry, Stardate 240712.21 – Commander Christopher R. Scott, Requestor – command issued for high resolution scan of Graithong Island Chain. Results uploaded to SFI computer network in Caenis.
Next Entry, Stardate 240712.29 – Requestor Data Missing – inquiry logged for previous six months of all inbound and outbound traffic from Astate colony. Detail: vessel identifications, durations of visits, activity recorded at all major spaceports and landing facilities both Starfleet and civilian. Inquiry detail also included visits of all recent starships, capital ships, or other military vessels recorded in orbit of both Federation and Romulan design.
Next Entry…”
“Whoa, computer, that’s enough’, Zane said with an excited tone. It seemed like he had just found his needle in a haystack.
“Let’s go back to the first entry. The scans requested by Commander Scott; any specific areas targeted in those scans?”
“Affirmative. Displaying coordinates.”
Zane took a look at the computer’s results. Shocked by what he saw, he pulled out his tricorder and verified his own position. Holding the tricorder up to the computer’s own screen Zane compared the data. Both screens showed the exact same coordinates. Commander Scott had been requesting detailed scans of this outpost. The very ground Zane now stood on had been probed time and time again. After a few minutes of further research it appeared this island was almost constantly scanned even now, but why?
Why scan an area over and over again?
Zane thought for a moment. Continuous scanning of a specific area was significant. Had Commander Scott been looking for something specific? That reasoning didn’t make sense. High resolution scans would have told him exactly what was here – so why keep looking? What value were sensor scans of this island? Why continue to scan again and again?
Perhaps Scott wasn’t searching for something at all – what if he had been monitoring something. The repeated scans might indicate he was watching this area for changes. If that was the case then there had to be something on this island worth watching. It made sense. Someone had been looking at departures and arrivals, ship movements, normal activities – such information would be crucial to someone who wanted to carry out activities in a clandestine manner. Knowing where patrols were, the routes of inbound and outbound transports, even the position of orbiting starships would be needed to avoid detection.
The evidence was still circumstantial, however Zane’s instinct screamed to him loudly from within his head. Someone had been watching this island which meant there was something here worth watching. Zane thought back to the conversation he had had with the construction owner at the bar. The nervous man had indicated that other construction workers, rivals, competitors were engaged in shady business deals and that some of them had gone missing. Had this island been the place of their disappearance? Had some clandestine construction occurred here?
“Computer, using the orbital satellite, scan my current location and widen scan to include entire island. Set sensors for maximum resolution. Upon completion report any anomalous findings.”
“Acknowledged. Scan will require 27.3 minutes to complete at maximum resolution.”
“Fine. Execute instructions.”
“Affirmative. Scanning requested coordinates.”
Zane ran a hand through his hair while the computer scanned the island. He suspected the results would be interesting. Grabbing an energy bar from his backpack, he again took a seat at the computer. There were now more twists that had emerged that demanded investigation and follow up. Determined not to waste a second, Zane continued his research of the data while he waited for the computer to complete its scans.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part VI
His tricorder in his hand beeped furiously as he pushed his way through the dense jungle bushes of the deserted island. Captain Zane Akina stopped looking at his readings. This was the spot. His recent analysis of a Starfleet Intelligence outpost had provided him with valuable information. Someone had been scanning this area again and again, but the results were all negative. Someone with high grade intelligence authority had ordered an orbiting satellite, in orbit to monitor Romulan activities on the far side of the planet, into a different orbit in order to keep a closer watch on Starfleet movements at key facilities and spaceports with a particular focus on this island and this very spot.
Wiping his forehead, sweat dripped from his face in the high humidity of the tropical jungle. The area he found himself in was surrounded by dense jungle, brush, trees, vines, and the valley was enclosed on three sides by tall rocky walls. At the bottom of the valley was a small river that was spring fed which ran nearby providing a source of fresh water.
Scanning the area with his tricorder, Akina realized the rocky canyon walls were composed of mineral deposits and other heavy metals which seemed to bend, reflect, or distort normal sensor beams. He was having difficulty getting readings of the surrounding area, though he could accurately gauge his position on the island.
All of the data he had uncovered pointed to something here – here at this spot yet there was nothing but vegetation. Setting his pack down, Akina attempted additional scans to no avail – the interference from the local rocks was blocking all attempts to survey the area in any detail. This fact alone made him even more convinced there was something here. This was the perfect place in which to hide something. Dense vegetation, natural shielding from sensors, and a small island of little use or value to anyone could be the perfect place to hide something, but what?
Four Hours Later
Exhausted from searching the area by foot and by hand, Akina collected water in his canteen from the nearby stream. The sun was beginning to set over the horizon. He had decided to pitch camp here for the night and renew his search again in the morning. Heading back to his equipment he unpacked his tent and prepared to stake its ends into the ground. After positioning the tent, he located his mallet and attempted to drive the stake into the humid wet ground when the mallet suddenly bounced back forcefully in his hand. Had he struck a rock? Digging around in the soft, earthy, forest floor, Akina felt no obstruction. Again he tried to drive the stake into the ground. It hit something – hard.
Unpacking his lightweight camping shovel, Akina quickly begin digging after removing several feet of top soil and earth his shovel struck something hard and oddly – metallic.
30 Minutes Later
Zane had excavated the area and found solid tritanium plating spreading out in all directions. There appeared to be a structure submerged beneath the surface. More excavation had revealed a single hatch he had been unable to open which appeared to lead down into the structure. Decay, time, and rust appeared to have taken its toll on the hatch which appeared to have been closed for sometime.
A rusty hatch wasn’t going to stop him – not now. Pulling his disruptor pistol from his shoulder harness, Akina increased its power output to maximum and took aim at the stubborn hatch. Squeezing the trigger a green beam tore through the air and impacted the hatch’s exterior coating. Tritanium, expensive and strong, was resistant to weapons fire and was used extensively in Starship hull constructions and military installations. What it was doing here remained a mystery as his weapon slowly burned a hole into the metal which glowed red as the beam’s energy slowly ate through the outer coating.
Within a minute the outer coating of metal had vaporized leaving the softer interior metal exposed. Akina quickly cut his way through the hatch revealing a dark shaft and ladder than led downwards into a dark and foreboding unknown.
The sun was slowly sinking leaving only traces of pink and purple in the sky as the light gave way to darkness. With adrenaline running through him and a strong desire to explore this underground facility, Akina’s earlier sleepiness had vanished. Grabbing a flashlight (torch) and keeping a tight grip on his weapon, Zane Akina mounted the metal rungs that lead downward into a dark and potentially hazardous unknown.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part V
Disruptor in one hand, flashlight in the other, Captain Zane Akina slowly descended the ladder which took him deeper into the bowels of an unknown facility he had uncovered by sheer accident. As he slowly advanced down the ladder the air became stale, with an odd sickly smell he couldn’t quite identify. The scent was somehow enticing and revolting all at the same time. It was clear that whatever this place was – it hadn’t been used in sometime.
After what seemed like an eternity, Akina’s boots touched solid ground. Cautiously he stepped away from the ladder and activated his arm mounted light. Surveying the room revealed an unusual scene. He appeared to be in some type of lounge or lobby. Everywhere he shined his light in the pitch black darkness revealed a scene of some forgotten chaotic event. Chairs and benches lie overturned, glass panels were smashed laying in fragments scattered across the floor.
Venturing further inside, Akina could see dark brown smears of a substance on the walls and floors. He didn’t need a tricorder to tell him what it was. The substance was blood – dried blood from some terrible accident or incident that seemed to have occurred sometime ago. Whatever had happened here had been quietly shutdown, closed up, and forgotten. Some group or someone had made some dreadful mistake here. This facility had been quietly and carefully hidden and forgotten.
Shining his light around the room revealed more of the same. Chaos had reigned here at some point in time its after effects still present in the here and now. As he moved his light about the tattered room his beam stopped in a sign which struck Akina like a phaser blast to the chest. A company poster its logo, torn, but legible sent an instant shockwave through the captain as powerful as a phaser set to full stun.
Zane stood motionless as he stared incredulously at the sign. It’s wording simply said, “Welcome To NeoDyne Corporation”.
A wave of intense anger and volatile emotion swelled up from within the captain bordering on rage. Ten years ago while on an undercover mission posing as an employee of NeoDyne, Akina had uncovered damning evidence which conclusively proved the company was selling advanced weaponry and technology to the Breen despite Federation restrictions on such exports. The mission had earned him a series of commendations and promotions, yet the company’s president, a one Alistair Merikai, had evaded the law with his vast network of connections, wealth, and power. The company was sanctioned by the Federation, but had survived. Ten years later it seemed their lust for power and profit had again bent the rules of ethics and legality. The facility was surely a cover for some covert operation. Akina intended to uncover its secrets. Perhaps this time he could finish what he had started ten years ago and see Alistair Merikai in front of a firing squad for crimes against humanity. Letting out a guttural yell, Zane pointed his disruptor at the poster and fired its green beam lancing out through the dark room and striking the poster in a shower of orange and green sparks.
The poster quickly caught fire as the NeoDyne logo slowly disappeared in the flames that consumed it.
Spotting a nearby door which seemed half open, Zane headed toward the opening and squeezed through the tight space as he continued his journey into the depths of the facility which he now knew could only hold some terrible nightmare which had been sealed away to be forgotten and erased from the pages of history forever.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part VI
Captain Zane Akina had searched the dark, underground facility for over two hours. Room after room revealed chaos, destruction, the evidence of bloody confrontations with some unknown entity. He had encountered the decomposed remains of many humanoid bodies in various states of decay. The sickly sweet smell he had encountered earlier suddenly became apparent to him – it was the tell-tale scent of death.
Examining the bodies revealed them to be NeoDyne scientists and maintenance personnel. A few stained ID badges and some other clues led Akina to believe this had been some type of covert research facility. He had already passed through several surgical rooms filled with arcane equipment and surgical implements which seemed grotesque and malicious like something from an assimilation room aboard a Borg Cube. Some form of unethical medical research had been conducted here, but he had only scant clues and no evidence of what this facility was for or what type of illegal research had been conducted in this tomb of the dead. All he did know was that something here had gone terribly, terribly wrong.
Entering a large room, Zane shined his light into the vast darkness which seemed to swallow his pathetic light beam into its dark maw of black nothingness. More bodies lined the floors. Some hung from the rafters and catwalks like frightful puppets or marionettes. From the uniforms of the deceased workers they appeared to be maintenance and engineering staff in this area. After a through search of the area, Zane located several electrical panels which were covered in dried blood. A nearby body seemed determined to accomplish some task at one of the master panels, but the lifeless corpse communicated nothing but a painful and gruesome death. Something had stabbed the man repeatedly which appeared to have caused his eventual demise.
Recognizing the significance of the massive power junctions, Zane wondered if the facility was as lifeless as it seemed. Half a dozen electrical breakers sat side by side and Zane slowly pushed each of the master switches upwards to their “on” positions. Moments later a loud humming could be heard around him. Equipment began to beep and light up in the utter blackness. Generators began to spin, he could hear air begin to move through the ventilation ducts and the entire facility slowly came to life as power was once again restored to its dormant systems. Several bright overhead lights snapped on temporarily blinding Akina whose eyes had become well adjusted to the almost total blackness. After several painful moments, his eyes finally focused revealing the true horrors surrounding him.
Lifeless corpses and bodies lay strewn everywhere. Dried, brown blood covered the floor like paint as some force or entity had murdered everyone alive in the room sometime in the not to distant past. Bodies lay on the floor, some cut asunder by ferocious force, others simply suffered fatal stab wounds, while still others had been torn to pieces their limbs torn off and slung about the large engineering room.
Akina, a man who had seen his fair share of battlefield combat and death, was overwhelmed by the sight of so much carnage. He sank to one knee and silently prayed for the souls before him whose lives had been cut short by some unknown, brutal force. Standing, his growing anger intensified into rage. Alistair Merikai and his powerful corporation known as NeoDyne would pay for this atrocity – he would personally finish what he started years before and see the crafty executive hung for his crimes. Too many people had paid the ultimate price for his greed and lust for power, influence, and wealth. These victims demanded the sword of justice and Akina had to ensure they would receive it.
The cycle had to end – Akina swore to the bodies before him he would seek and exact lawful justice. Vengeance would be a better end to the terrible corporate executive, but Akina was a Starfleet Officer and a man of deep convictions. While he bent the rules or ignored them to achieve his goals it was always in the pursuit of truth and justice – revenge was for the uncivilized and for petty criminals. He would not stoop to their level despite his sheer hatred of the NeoDyne President.
He had almost toppled Merikai and his corporate empire once before. Perhaps now, with this evidence, he could finally end the man’s influence and power and erase the evils his company both sold, researched, and produced forever ridding the galaxy of a dangerous, powerful, and influential force.
Stepping through the carnage strewn around him, Akina continued deeper into the facility. With the lights now active he could see various signs and markers which indicated his location. Heading toward the labs he wondered what terrors he would find there. Gripping his disruptor tightly he knew that any electronic evidence or notes would be there. He had to go inside. Wasting little time to contemplate the situation, Akina moved past the now functional sliding double doors into the NeoDyne Labs unsure what lie ahead.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part VII
Captain Zane Akina slowly walked through the dimly lit walkway of the underground facility's main laboratories. Damaged lights buzzed and flickered in the distance and shattered fragments of broken glass crunched under the weight of his footsteps as he made his way down the narrow hallway.
An automated female recording eerily called out a foreboding warning every few minutes over the loudspeakers as red emergency lighting swung about the area like a red beacon from a lighthouse swinging its beam in the wide, steady circle.
“WARNING – L1 CONTAMINATION DETECTED – ALL PERSONNEL OBSERVE CONTAMINATION PROCEDURES IMMEDIATELY–LEVEL ONE LOCKDOWN AND QUARANTINE NOW IN EFFECT!”
The power in this area of the facility was erratic with lights flickering on and off and damaged equipment thumping noisily as it attempted to function. The area had the smell of a hospital, but somehow twisted or warped. There were strong chemical odors and odd scents Zane couldn’t identify. This entire wing of the underground facility was somehow different from the other areas. There were no corpses like before. Zane wondered if this area was the epicenter of the carnage and destruction he had seen spread throughout the rest of the facility.
With nervous trepidation, Zane gripped his weapon tightly venturing further into the labs passing surgical tables smeared with substances he couldn’t identify. He noticed a stained, bloody lab coat on the floor of the narrow hallway, but no body or victim. It was as if this entire area had been wiped clean of all traces of life; abandoned and forgotten and left only to the whispers of a violent, but unknown history. Bending over, Zane took the ID badge from the jacket of the lab coat. The ID belonged to what appeared to be one of the labs top research scientists, a Dr. Artimis Ballentine. There was no trace of the doctor or what fate he had met. His coat and badge were all that remained to testify to his existence.
Zane noticed a sign that read, “EXPERIMENT LAB”. A nearby door appeared to have heavy security access. The door was sealed shut yet Zane could see traces of something, perhaps blood, running past the door indicating it had been opened at one time. Perhaps his reactivation of the facility's power had reengaged the safety systems designed to contain whatever arcane experiments had been conducted here. If that was the case then he most likely had already been exposed to any potential danger. The risk of entering was still high, but no higher than the risks he was already taking. If he had been exposed to a virus or germ - there was little he could do now but to continue his investigation.
Determined to gain entry, Zane leveled his weapon at the door. His disruptor would probably take some time to cut through the solid steel of the heavy door, but he wanted the truth. All of it. The secrets behind this door could ruin NeoDyne forever. He had to know what lie beyond.
Before pulling the trigger, Zane noticed a keypad and security access pad beside the door. He reached for Dr. Ballentine’s ID badge. It was a long shot, but perhaps cutting the door apart wasn’t needed. Carefully he inserted the doctor’s badge and swiped it through the magnetic reader.
To his surprise the lock went from red to green. A loud hiss filled the air as the large door suddenly opened revealing a large room that to Zane’s eyes was beyond belief – far beyond the most intense nightmare he had ever experienced both in his dreams or on the bloody, battlefield of war.
He slowly entered the large experiment chamber with a sense of awe that both disturbed and sickened him at the same time. What the hell had they been doing here? What sort of godforsaken place was this?
If hell existed this place and its contents were its counterpart in the world of the living.
Glass canisters, each filled with fluid, contained the dead fetuses of unborn humanoid children who had seemingly been grown using artificial and technological means. Humanoid in appearance dozens and dozens of experiment canisters lined the walls their contents sickening to look at and even more terrible to contemplate to a person with any moral or ethical standing. Zane noticed some canisters contained different species, he thought he recognized a Klingon, perhaps a Krivaldi, and several other species of which he had never seen. Babies, brains, and organs of unknown function lined the walls in this house of horrors like some sort of sick, biological library.
Some of the canisters had been smashed open their contents missing while others bubbled and flickered the result of decaying systems having been reactivated by the return of electrical power. Akina grit his teeth in anger. NeoDyne had gone too far. There was already enough evidence here to destroy the company forever, but instead of turning around and leaving something compelled him to stay and learn the final truth of this place. It cried out to be explored and Akina had to learn what NeoDyne had been doing and what had gone so terribly wrong.
At the center of the room was a large, round column. Built into the column were dozens of doors. Set at an inward angle, the doors sealed individual pods which surrounded the column. There were thirty some pods arranged in a circle around the metallic column which rose to the ceiling. Some of the pods were dark, their systems having failed or perhaps had been shutdown intentionally. Zane carefully moved about the column slowly. Some of the pods had been damaged by something their heavy glass doors shattered as if something had escaped. There were several pods still active. Venturing closer, Zane gazed into one of the sealed pods wiping away the thick condensation that clung to the outside of the glass.
“Children”, Zane blurted as his eyes made contact with what appeared to be a young humanoid male who appeared to be either asleep or in some form of suspended animation. Zane quickly moved around the dais looking into the active pods which were identical – children and teenagers were sealed in tubes for some unknown, but sinister purpose.
Holding back the urge to be sick, Zane steadied himself taking several deep breaths. His growing anger helped stabilize the raw emotions which were pouring through him. Starfleet, the Federation, all the civilized races of the quadrant had to know of this place and the atrocities that had been committed here.
A flickering computer terminal suddenly caught Zane’s attention. Moving toward the computer, Zane found the system to be active and undamaged. Dr. Ballentine appeared to still be logged in to the terminal and pages of research notes and data filled Zane’s eyes as he quickly produced a special issue SFI tricorder for downloading large computerized databases.
Activating the tricorder – the unit would download as much information as it could until either its massive memory capacity had been reached or there was no data left to be extracted. A small AI built into the unit effectively broke encrypted files or simply stored the data for later decryption on larger computer systems. The device was extremely efficient at draining a computer of valuable intelligence information quickly and efficiently for later analysis.
Zane read some of the notes as the tricorder went about its work. Most of the information he couldn’t comprehend. It was all medical information – blood counts, chemical analyses, and genetic mappings. There were notes on experiments that had been terminated or had been successful, but nothing that spoke to what the scientists were attempting to accomplish.
The tricorder at last beeped indicating it had reached its maximum memory capacity. The data it now held could be used to destroy NeoDyne. Safely tucking the device away in his backpack, Zane continued to scan the doctor’s personal log files. There were a few mentions of success after many failures and setbacks. Ballentine kept referring to needing a sample from the ‘other’ to complete the work. It appeared the doctor was trying to reconstruct something through these illegal experiments, but there were no specifics. Log after log referred to the "initial sample". Another log again referred to "the other key" for success to be acheived. Zane continued to get cryptic clues from the doctor's writings. The doctor spoke of requring the combination of both keys to acheive complete success. It appeared that the doctor already had one of the so called "keys", but the other elluded him and NeoDyne. The doctor appeared to be trying to make do with the "one key", which Zane had no idea what the doctor was referring to. Perhaps it was something medical like a protein or molecule. Medical matters were beyond his expertise, but the mention of these "keys" intrigued him.
The doctor went on to report some successes with the first key and a breakthrough with one experiement using new techniques. The doctor referred to the experiement as producing the best results thus far, but that additional testing and observation would be required. There were more demands for NeoDyne to find and deliver the second key and some highly technical notes that described some process in detail, but which Zane could not comprehend.
Leaning against the computer terminal , Zane continued to pour over the records absorbing as much knowledge as he could trying his best to learn the dark secrets of this facility and the sinister motives of the scientists who had once worked here.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part VIII
Zane continued to stand at the computer terminal and read through the Doctor Ballentine's gruesome experiment notes detailing the horrors he had put this 'subjects' through to achieve some unknown goal. The doctor spoke cryptically of keys, but to what Zane could not deduce. The doctor was careful not to divulge too much in his notes - perhaps out of fear of being replaced, perhaps to keep NeoDyne at bay while he conducted his experiments keeping data close to his vest to protect himself.
Zane continued reading until a voice startled him sending a rush through his spine causing him to roll into a defensive crouch his weapon at the ready – his finger quivering over its trigger ready to fire.
“Are you here to help us”, the voice said. Zane looked on as a child roughly 10 or 11 years of age by his estimation called out to him with an innocent voice that seemed filled with hardship and pain.
Zane hesitated for a moment. Was this one of the experiments that had survived? Zane shook his head. He couldn’t think like the researchers. This was a person – a living, breathing individual. No matter what others had done to him, Zane couldn’t treat him with the coldness of the scientists. His heart wouldn’t let him.
Lowering his disruptor pistol, Zane nodded, holstering the weapon. “Yes, I’m here to help. My name is Zane. Zane Akina. What’s your name?”
“Name”, the young boy asked in confusion. “Name – I don’t understand? What’s name?”
“What do they…what do I call you?”
“My designation”, the boy replied. “My designation is X109.” The boy ran toward Akina and grabbed him in a tight embrace. Hugging the small child who began to cry at his shoulder, Akina was unable to withhold his own emotions despite years of SFI training and experience designed to harden him to the ill effects of emotion. A few tears ran down his cheeks as he held the boy as his emotional control waivered. How could anyone do such things to someone so innocent and young? "It's ok, its alright", Zane said pulling the young boy back. Reaching into his backpack, Zane produced an energy bar. The boy looked starved and disheveled having probably survived on little for what seemed like a long time.
"Try this", Zane said holding out the bar. "You eat it. It's good."
The boy hesistated at first so Zane took a bite himself. "See? It's good. Try some."
The boy took the bar and carefully examined it. After a few quick sniffs he quickly devoured it. After a moment the young boy was smiling at him. "That was good! Do you have any more?"
Zane gave the boy another bar which he quickly devoured. Zane’s training snapped back into action. He had to interrogate the child as gently as possible – perhaps the boy could shed light on what had happened.
“X109 – what are you doing here? Where is everyone?”
With a full mouth, the boy responded. “The bad men are all gone. They can’t hurt us anymore.”
“Bad men? You mean the scientists?”
“Sci-on-tisck”, the boy tried to repeat. “The white coats, the bad men, are gone. All gone. Brother took care of them all and now there is light again. It was so lonely here, but you’re here now. You are not like the white coats, you bring yummy food and bring back the lights. You are here to help us right?”
“Yes”, Zane replied. He doubted this child would ever lead a normal life, but at least he could rescue him from this hellish pit. The Federation would have the resources to determine what had been done to the boy and how best to help him.
“You said others, are there more of you?”
“Yes, there are my brothers and sisters.”
“X109”, another voice shouted from the entrance of the giant experiment room. “Who are you talking to?”
A teenage boy stepped forward being somewhere of 16 or 17 years of age. Surrounding him were a dozen other children both male and female of varying ages although they all were younger than the teen which seemed to be their leader.
“He’s a bad man”, the teen shouted quickly moving forward.
“No, he returned the light. He brought food and is here to help. Tell them”, the small boy pleaded tugging on Zane’s clothing.
Zane stood as grim reality sank in. The men and women of this facility hadn’t been killed by some alien beast, or vicious, unknown life form. They had been killed by the very experiments they had been working on. These innocent children had been their killers. Somehow they had managed to overpower grown, mature adults, bypass advanced security measures, and survive in this facility without power for an undetermined amount of time. The killers were the experiments and Zane now found himself surrounded by over a dozen of them. At least now some of NeoDyne’s ambitions and goals were now clear to him. He wasn't sure just how they killed, but these children had to be the source of the carnage.
“He’s just like the others! Are you here to put us back into those things”, the teen shouted pointing at the pods at the center of the room.
“No”, Zane said firmly, but in a non-threatening tone. “I discovered this place from the outside. Many bad people have hurt you. I’m here to help – to take you away from all of this. My designation is Zane. And yours is?”
“I’m X002”, the teen said proudly. “This outside you speak of? Where does it exist? We’ve been everywhere. There is no outside, no light. Where did you come from?”
“You are in a sealed underground building. I found a way inside.”
“LIAR”, the boy shouted. “There are no entrances or exits. I’ve looked. We all have. You’re one of the bad men!”
Zane had to regain control of the situation and fast. He could feel the stares of the children upon him. If he didn’t act quickly it was very unlikely he would survive to escape this facility.
Zane slowly pulled his disruptor pistol. “X002. This is called a disruptor. It is a tool that emits a powerful light that can cut apart objects by disrupting their molecular structure. This tool allowed me to open a door to this place from the outside. It is how I came to be here. Without this tool it would be as you have said impossible to come or go. Watch. I will demonstrate.”
Zane hoped a demonstration of his weapon would win the children’s trust.
Pointing the weapon at a nearby surgical cart, Zane pulled the trigger. A green beam leapt from the tip of his pistol across the room slicing through the cart splitting it into two pieces.
Expressions of shock and bewilderment were now upon the faces of the children.
“This tool can cut through walls and make holes in solid objects. I did not lie when I said this is what I used to enter. I can also use it to help us all escape this place - that is if you let me.”
"He gave me food", X109 said happily running toward the teen holding up what little remained of the energy bar. The teen took the bar and after some inspection also injested the final few bites.
The teen X002 moved to the cart and stooped inspecting the still glowing fragments. He slowly stood with an expression Zane recognized as one of disbelief. His mind was attempting to interpret something he had never seen and the boy was struggling with the new facts Zane was presenting.
“So…that light can get us out of here – that tool”, the teen said slowly.
“It already has”, Zane said quietly. “If you will follow me, I will lead you to the exit. From there we can leave this place. I have friends that will help us, help all of you. There’s no reason to stay here any longer. I have others with food and drink who will help you. They do not wear white coats and they do not hurt innocent children like the people of this place once did."
“Listen to him X002”, shouted the younger “X109”. “He can help! He isn’t like the others!”
“Show me this exit”, the teen instructed with a menacing tone. “If this is a trick I will terminate you just like I did with all the others.”
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part IX
Captain Zane Akina stood quietly as the teen uttered words that made even him cringe. “If this is a trick I will terminate you just like all the others.”
“No tricks. Follow me. I promise to show you the exit", Zane said strongly.
The first child he had met, “X109”, grabbed Zane’s hand. “You’re a good man. I know it.”
Smiling softly, Zane led the children back through the facility toward the access shaft he had entered. It was possible he was making a mistake by freeing them, but he had little choice. He could sense the teenager's extreme distrust and malevolence behind him. The slightest sense of betrayal could be fatal. He had no idea what these children were capable of, but he could only guess having seen the bodies which he was again passing; a grim reminder of the children’s wrath should it be invoked.
The journey toward the exit was faster and easier with the electrical power restored. Zane estimated they were close. A few more corridors and turns would lead back to the escape shaft where he could contact Starfleet personnel on Astate and request emergency assistance. Someone else had to witness this - they had to see this place for themselves to beilieve it. The sheer magnitude of injustice, cruelty, and violation of eveything moral and just had to be exposed to the world. NeoDyne's sinister and vile plans had to be stopped for they were a threat to galatic peace and stability as much if not more so that the Dominion or Jem'Haddar.
Rounding the final corner there was just one room remaining to traverse. A pair of double doors at its far end led to the maintenance shaft he had entered from and freedom from this hellish laboratory.
Zane walked slowly his hand still holding the young boy’s whose only name was a scientific designation, “X109” as they made their way toward the exit.
“WARNING – ALL PERSONNEL PROCEED TO ASSIGNED EVACUATION POINTS – EMERGENCY CONTAINMENT PROTOCOL ONE HAS BEEN IMPLEMENTED. WARNING – ALL PERSONNEL PROCEED TO EVACUATION POINTS. THIS FACILITY WILL SELF DESTRUCT IN FIVE MINUTES! THIS IS NOT A DRILL. THIS IS NOT A DRILL.”
“What’s going on”, one of the children shouted as alarms and warnings flashed across the walls. Red light replaced the standard white leaving the group bathed in reddish darkness as alarm klaxons and warning alerts sounded from speakers and video displays showed the count down timer for some built-in safeguard that had been activated to obliterate the facility and erase its existence.
Zane was no fool. Such a system would have already been automatically activated if indeed the facility’s computer had been programmed to react to any serious contamination breech. Someone else was here – someone who didn’t want Akina or the living evidence around him from escaping the facility. Someone had intentionally activated the destruct sequence to keep this place and its dark secrets silent - forever.
“WE HAVE TO MOVE NOW”, Zane called out tugging on the young man’s hand. “We have to get out of here quickly!”
“LIES – I KNEW IT”, shouted the teenager from behind. “He’s no different from the others. He’s just like them! He wants to hurt us!”
Zane turned to see the group of children had stopped. Their loyalty to the teenager seemed iron clad.
“NO”, Zane shouted. “The exit is not far. It’s just through those doors. I don’t know what’s going on, but we have to get out of here now!”
“NO”, shouted the teen. It was obvious to Zane the young teen did not comprehend what was happening around him. His world had been this facility – it was all he knew. The boy probably knew nothing of the outside world, of humanity, of other races. He had been educated to speak and perhaps given some limited education, but the scientists here were no saints - the boy had been given only what he needed to know in order to function and nothing more.
The alarms and warnings had served to breed distrust in the boy who most likely already had a strong distrust for adults due to the things the scientists had no doubt subjected the children to – painful terrible experiments that Zane couldn’t possibly fathom.
“All of you, get back. I won’t let him hurt any more of you. He’s one of them. We’ll take his light tool for ourselves and use it to gain our freedom. We don’t need him any longer!”
Zane swallowed pulling his disruptor. His training and instinct forced him to pull the weapon, yet his heart was screaming to him in tones louder than words like a throbbing headache of emotion that he couldn’t fire – he couldn’t kill children. His mind was suddenly flooded by the training, voices, and indoctrination of Starfleet instructors and officers who had drilled into his very being the necessity of protecting oneself from an enemy, any enemy. Intelligence information came at a high price, one instructor he had had once said. Lives were expendable if the information was important enough. Kill or be killed the words of another instructor floated threw his mind. How could he kill children? How could he live with himself?
Zane shuddered as he hesitated his mind blurred by emotion and training, instinct, and impulse. He had killed before, yet he was fighting adults in battle or on the silent battlefield of intelligence in dark allies and behind closed doors. He had in his possession evidence that would rock the quadrant both on a tricorder and in living form. The genetic wars that had produced such monsters as Kahn Noonian Singh on Earth centuries ago seemed to reinforce the idea that history did indead repeat itself - just in new, dissimilar ways.
Zane hesitated his weapon hand quivering. The very children he was trying to save from death had in a single instant become his enemy.
He looked on, weapon drawn, as the computer screens around him counted down the time to destruction. He faced the ultimate endgame scenario – his own personal Kobayashi Maru – the traditional test given to Starfleet cadets seeking command in which there was no way to win. This was his no win scenario - kill or be killed - die at their hands or the facilitiy's ticking time bombs or live with the guilt of disintigrating over a dozen children for the rest of his days only to save his own life.
He could kill these children with his weapon and escape and have to live with that action forever, be destroyed by the facility’s self-destruct system, or take his chances fighting the children which given the evidence suggested it was a fight he couldn’t win.
“SEE, he now points his light tool at us”, the teen shouted. "He will use his weapons against us just like the whitecoats did before!"
“NO, X002”, shouted X109 the small boy still clinging to Zane’s leg. “He’s not like them. He isn’t!” Tears were streaming down the young child’s face as Zane held the teen in check with his pistol. Time ticked by second by painful second as Zane struggled for a solution against an impossible situation.
“HE’S ONE OF THEM”, the teen shouted enraged. Zane felt a pang of fear grip him as the teenager’s blue pupils suddenly dilated and turned a bright crimson red. A solution finally presented itself however crude. Perhaps if he eliminated the teen he could save the other children. Perhaps he could save the teen also, but if not, the needs of the many would indeed justify the loss of the one.
His mind made up, Zane pulled the trigger of his weapon its tip aimed at the belligerent teenager. Faster than lightning the teen reacted, Zane suddenly felt the teen’s hand on his throat as he was hoisted into the air off his feet. His disruptot shot bounced harmlessly against a rear wall seemingly too slow to hit the teenager who had reacted with uncanny speed.
The teen laughed with a sinister tone as Zane struggled to breathe a crushing grip blocking air from reaching his lungs. The child’s speed and strength were like nothing he had ever seen or even heard about. No species could react like that or exhibit such strength at such a young age. It was impossible!
The teen, confident in his superiority, threw Zane across the room like a pitcher tossing a baseball. Zane flew threw the air like a rag doll hitting the floor yards away skidding to a stop against the metallic wall his disruptor spinning out of his grasp and disappearing into the depths of the room. The youth had thrown over 245 pounds more than seventy feet like it was nothing. Zane was amazed and terrified at the same time. It was clear now what had happened - the staff he stood no chance against such strength and speed.
Coughing, still recovering from both the throw, and the crushing grip of the teen, Zane scrambled for his weapon which lie several feet away. He was only a few feet from his weapon and the teen, now running at him, was over sixty feet away.
His hand almost upon his weapon’s hilt, again the teen grabbed him. Zane couldn’t believe it. The teen moved with speed that was physically impossible covering ground at speeds no species could ever obtain.
“WARNING – ONE MINUTE TO SELF DESTRUCT – ALL PERSONNEL EVACUATE IMMEDIATELY – THIS FACILITY WILL SELF DESTRUCT IN FIFTY NINE SECONDS!”
Zane tried to reason with the teenager. “We’re all going to be killed if we don’t get out of here”, he yelled. “Can’t you hear the alerts!”
“Adult tricks”, the teen said with a confident snarl. “I’m going to tear you apart slowly for tricking us! Just like I did the rest of your kind with your lies and deceptions!”
“Listen kid, we’re all going to end up dead! This place is going to explode a mile high in just a few seconds!”
“Don’t hand me that! I’m invincible! That’s what they told me! I’m faster, smarter, and stronger than any other creature alive! I am the ultimate biological weapon! Nothing before or since has surpassed my abilities! Once I escape from this dungeon with your powerful light tool there will be no stopping me! I’ll have my revenge on all the lying adults of the world you came from. My brothers and sisters will never again have to fear the likes of you adults and those with the white coats!”
Zane now understood with crystal clarity want NeoDyne had been researching. How they had achieved it was too much for his mind to understand, but it was quite clear to him now the meaning and intent of this facility and its research. They had been building the ultimate biological life form – either for military use or for some other sinister purpose he couldn’t say, but governments the galaxy over would pay trillions of credits for the technology to produce armies of super humans and Neodyne would become the most powerful corporate entity in existence perhaps as powerful as the Federation or other empires combined with armies of these superhuman individuals at their command.
In a bit of random humor that suddenly popped into Zane’s swirling head – he wondered if the teen might actually pose a challenge even to a ‘Q’.
Zane felt himself lifted off the floor again and thrown into the air. His body hit a wall seveal feet from the floor and crushed a nearby video display which exploded in a shower of sparks. Breathless and hurt, Zane struggled to get to his feet. If he was going to meet his end he would do so standing. His arm had been cut by the impact and Zane could feel a warm stream of his own blood running down the length of his arm.
“WARNING – THIRTY SECONDS UNTIL SELF DESTRUCT”
Laughing the teen again approached to finish Zane just as he had killed his other victims. Zane never anticipated meeting his end like this, but then again, no one knew their ultimate fate. At least whatever happened would be quick.
“STOP”, a voice shouted out as a small body attached himself to Zane. The younger child, X109, clung to Zane as he cried profusely. “HE ISN’T LIKE THEM BROTHER! STOP IT, YOU’RE HURTING HIM!”
“Get out of the way X109”, the teen shouted back. This doesn’t concern you. I will protect you from the adults. I am your protector. Me and me alone!”
“No! No! Zane isn’t like them. He helped me! He brought back the light! He brought us food. He wants to help us!”
“LIES”, the teen screamed. “He’s tricking you X109! Just like they all tricked us before! Injecting us with their shots and causing us so much pain! NO! He must die like the others!”
“NO BROTHER HE WONT HURT US! AND I WON’T LET YOU HURT HIM!”
Zane felt the young boy push something into his hands. HIS DISRUPTOR! The boy had retrieved it for him!
Anguished washed over him at what he had to do. The young boy had the teen distracted. If he was going to act – that time was now.
“I’M SORRY”, Zane yelled out at the teen.
A green beam cut through the air slamming into the teenager’s right leg. The teen screamed in pain the disruptor beam ripping the atoms of his leg apart with its usual deadly efficiency. Falling to the floor, Zane quickly scooped up the small child and ran toward the exit as the computer screens counted down the final fifteen seconds.
Racing through the doors, Zane spotted the ladder and the sunlight shining from the opening he had made earlier. Grabbing the first rung of the ladder he raced upwards toward the light and fresh air of freedom and safety.
The young boy, X109, giggled as Zane frantically climbed unaware of the danger that was only seconds away. Nearly to the top, something tugged at Zane’s leg instantly stopping his progress.
Looking down, Zane locked eyes with the crimson pupils of the teenage boy who had somehow pulled himself to the ladder and climbed it with one leg, in extreme pain, and twice as fast as Zane had been able to do so himself.
“I WON’T LET YOU HAVE HIM”, the teen cried pulling on Zane’s boot as he struggled to pull himself and the young boy out of the hatch and back into the dense jungle. "YOU WON'T TAKE MY BROTHER!" Zane stared into the depths of the boys crimson red eyes which burned hot with unnatural brightness. The image would forever be etched into Zane's memory as he locked eyes with the teenager's for what seemed like an eternity.
A hand with ten times the strength of his own yanked the young boy from Zane’s grasp as the two children fell backwards down the shaft into the reddish darkness. There was nothing but silence afterwards as Zane screamed downward into the maintenance tunnel.
“NO! X109”, Zane yelled downwards. He quickly went to climb down to rescue the child when he heard the automated computer warning from below.
“SELF DESTRUCT INITIATED – FINAL DETONATION SEQUENCE NOW IN PROGRESS”
There wasn’t time. He was out of time and so were the children. All that remained was to escape this infernal place as quickly as possible and report to Starfleet Command. It was all he could do now - fate a sealed the children's destiny and if he didn't hurry it would seal his just as easily and swiftly.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part X
Pulling himself from the escape hatch, Zane grabbed the critical tricorder from his backpack quickly shedding the extra bulk and weight. He knew if he could reach his base camp half a mile away he might have enough time to escape the island or at least be far enough away to avoid the initial blast that was now inevitable.
A facility as large as the one beneath his feet despite the warning would take several minutes to fully detonate. A fusion explosion was typically used to destroy large secret facilities and took time to fully activate. Multiple fusion power cores were often overloaded by removing the control rods simultaneously. The end result was several runaway nuclear power plants which when properly constructed and with other technologies could create atomic destruction on massive scales with horrific releases of energy and radioactivity.
Zane estimated he had only a few precious minutes to make it back to his shuttle. He dashed off back to camp – he’d never been a sprinter, but now he had little choice. He had to get as far away from the facility as he could and quickly. The entire area was likely to be devastated and highly radioactive for years if not centuries to come – if the NeoDyne security forces had done their homework.
Dashing through the underbrush and trees, limbs tore at his face, scratching and cutting his his flesh like knives as he ran. Tripping on a plant he felt forward into the dirt rolling down a steep embankment as rocks and dirt did further damage to his already battered body.
Picking himself up he continued to run, his heart pounding in his chest, until at last he could see his campsite and the small shuttle that Ailec Reltah, Astate’s resident Mercenary had kindly loaned him. Continuing to run the ground suddenly shook violently beneath his feet. Again he was thrown to the ground as hell erupted around him.
A light more intense than the sun itself swept over Zane blotting out his surroundings. Zane was bathed in a sea of pure, absolute white as he rested on the ground which jerked and shook beneath him like an untamed bull or bronco. Closing his eyes tightly, the brightness of the light still penetrated his closed eyes seconds before a deafening roar could be heard in the distance. There was a sudden second of calmness. The birds and animals had all ceased chirping and talking, silence reigned for that one instant in time, before hell itself erupted into the world of the living destroying all life it touched in the distance.
A massive shockwave rattled the ground around the battered captain. Gale force winds snapped trees like toothpicks, rocks were thrown about, trees were uprooted, and the air became thick with dust and dirt. Then, as quickly as it had overtaken him, it was over. The hellish nightmare retreated back through its gate as quickly as it had sprung forth and a deadly quiet fell upon Zane’s ringing ears.
Pulling himself up with what little energy he had remaining, Zane turned and looked off into the distance wiping the blood from the many cuts on his neck and face. A huge, grey and black atomic mushroom cloud rose miles above the tiny forest island. With the facility underground much of the surface had been spared the inferno of the nuclear detonation. NeoDyne had done its work well. The facility was gone and with it all traces of the horrors it had created deep below. The nuclear fallout and high radiation levels would ensure that no living thing would be able to venture anywhere near the explosion site for years to come. No one would see the horrors – they had just been erased from the pages of time and history forever.
Zane held up the tricorder which was still tightly clutched in his hand. The device, spattered with droplets of his own blood, was now the only record of the facility, the children, and NeoDyne's evil activities. He had to get this to Starfleet – the galaxy had to know what had happened here. Staring up at the giant cloud that towered above the island like a giant umbrella, Zane sank to his knees. He hadn’t been able to save any of them. The smiling face of the child known only as X109 filled his vision. That child and the others like him were now only memories erased by the NeoDyne corporation - killed at their hands to silence them and their secrets.
Unable to control himself, Captain Zane Akina, the fearless intelligence officer who sometimes doubted the existence of his own heart began to cry. Shuddering from an overload of emotion and regret, Akina finally let loose a torrent of harsh emotions; pain, sorrow, guilt, and anguish. The faces of those children filled his mind and his heart as tears rolled down the captain's face.
As his emotions poured forth beyond Zane’s control deeper within himself a raging fire, he could not yet sense grew ten fold in intensity. Other emotions held it for now in check, but the primal human instinct for revenge had taken root. Someone had to pay for the atrocities committed – someone had to answer for the children who had been made to suffer and who were ultimately destroyed to erase their existence. That person was the chairman and president of the NeoDyne Corporation – Alistair Merikai.
Zane had to stop that man and his ambitions - even at the cost of his career or his own life. The blood of too many lives were on Merikai's stained hands - the slippery executive would come to know the same pain and fear he had put others through. The lives of those at the facility cried out for justice - Zane was now their only hope at redemption and peace. He had to stop Merikai at all costs - and stop him he would using every advantage and every fiber of his existence to do so. Akina swore to the dead children he would avenge their deaths - he owed them that much having been unable to save any of them from annihilation at the hands of a corrupt and unholy corporation with terrifying ambitions to unleash hell upon the world of the living.
Affair on Astate: Island Intrigue - Part XI
The minutes passed – Zane emotionally spent and badly wounded painfully picked himself up off the forest floor and returned to the his nearby shuttle. Tapping the control padd to unlock the shuttle, Zane leaned against the hull as the door slid open. There was one final duty to perform as he willed himself onward through pain, emotion, and brutal exhaustion. He had to get his information to Starfleet back at headquarters in Caenis and he had to it quickly and quietly as he could be sure both Starfleet and the Romulans were now tracking the nuclear explosion that had just occurred wondering just what the hell was going on. He didn’t want to be here when the cavalry arrived to investigate no matter which side showed up first.
As he stepped into the shuttle someone behind him cleared their throat causing Zane to instantly freeze.
“Captain Akina. What ever are you doing in such a dangerous place”, a familiar voice asked from behind.
Turning from the entrance of the shuttle, Captain Zane Akina came face to face with an old acquaintance, Marine Colonel Leon Ventris of Astate’s 145th Marine Battalion. As Zane looked on he could see a dozen marine sharpshooters and infantry in the trees and forest surrounding him – any one of them could easily end his life should he make any sudden moves. Once again, Zane found himself on the razor’s edge between life and death.
“Colonel Ventris, what an unpleasant surprise”, Zane stated making no attempt to move outside the shuttle. “One could ask you the same question.”
“I have an affinity for pure air and blue skies away from all of the hustle of Caenis and my duties”, the Colonel said with a wry, arrogant smirk.
Zane, not amused by the Colonel’s obvious dodge to his question, continued their verbal sparring. “I see. It is quite lovely here – with the exception of that atomic cloud over there and the radioactive fallout that will soon blanket the area exposing everything in its wake to high if not lethal doses of poisonous radioactivity. But, nevermind the beautiful scenery or its pitfalls – since you and I both seem to be on vacation here on this lovely island I have a question for you as well. Do you always go camping with a full platoon of expert sharpshooters or are they just as enthusiastic about the outdoors as you are?”
“My dear Captain. Let us cut to the chase.”
“Indeed. I’ve had a busy day and I really don’t want to stay here with that cloud approaching.”
“I think that can be easily arranged Captain. I don’t think you have to worry about that fact. Leaving this place is in fact what I need to speak to you about.”
“Forgive me Colonel for being rude, but just get to the damn point”, Zane said bluntly. Ordinarily he would have enjoyed the verbal games, but he was exhausted, angry, and trying to find a way out of yet another impossible situation for what seemed like the fourth or fifth time today.
“The tricorder in your hand. Hand it over now.”
“And If I refuse”, Zane said with defiance.
“Captain, please, let’s be reasonable here – I”
Zane interrupted. “Colonel, it’s obvious I’m not leaving this shuttle alive. Your presence here and the presence of the marines only furthers my suspicions that you and all of these men around you are on the payroll of NeoDyne. You were the one who activated the facility’s auto destruct and you are the man responsible for killing dozens of innocent children whose only crime was being born into this world at the hands of monstrous, morally bankrupt, and corrupted individuals like yourself who seek only power, wealth, influence or all three! Since we’re getting right to the heart of things Colonel – just confirm my suspicions before you execute me and take what you will! Give me the satisfaction of knowing it was you who killed those children!
Zane’s anger was mounting like a building storm. “Neodyne lost control of the facility – they knew what was down there, but they didn’t know what to do with them once they escaped and went wild. No one could figure out quite what to do about the situation after so many had died. AM I CORRECT? Neodyne just quietly shut the facility down under your watchful eye forgetting its existence and hoping their little problem would just go away or at least stay quiet until enough time had passed for the threat to have passed so the research could either be collected or restarted! AM I RIGHT?”
Ventris’s smug cockiness vanished and was replaced by harsh contempt. “Very good Captain. You are truly as keen and clever as your record says you are. My compliments for piecing together the puzzle.”
“And the personnel director back at Caenis”, Zane added, “He carefully and quietly placed key personnel for you here on Astate and coordinated transfers and personnel assignments?”
“Yes.”
“And the dead intelligence officers? Did they get to close – or were they just liabilities also on the payroll of NeoDyne?”
“They became liabilities unfortunately and had to be eliminated. They both knew too much after the facility had been shutdown. NeoDyne had too much invested here for anything to leak out.”
“Collateral damage”, Zane mumbled.
“Afraid so – which is unfortunately what you will soon be as well.” Ventris looked down at a scanning device and then back at Zane. “You are correct in noting that in approximately ten minutes radioactivity will begin to blanket this island given the current weather conditions. As much as I would love the opportunity to chat – my time and yours has run out captain. The tricorder in your hand - please hand it over and I will assure you that your end will be swift and painless. It is the least I can offer a fellow officer.”
“You’re no officer”, Zane shouted back. “You’re a traitor and a disgrace to everything that uniform stands for! ALL OF YOU ARE! If you want this tricorder so badly Colonel, then you can pry it from my cold fingers.”
“That can easily be arranged captain”, Ventris said with a hiss.
“WAIT”, Zane yelled holding his hand up. There was one question remaining. Since it was clear he was to die shortly he wanted the final puzzle piece to complete the picture.
“Before you kill me, permit me one last question Colonel.”
“Very well Captain. Ask.”
“Yourself, the NeoDyne facility, the personnel director, the contractors – everything couldn’t have been arranged so carefully or neatly without raising suspicions. Even back channels have eyes and so do the walls – this was too carefully crafted, too calculated, too well thought out to be so perfectly executed even by a corporation as influential as NeoDyne.
Who was the architect? There has to be someone in a position of influence at the highest levels pulling the strings of the marionette puppets below him or her – there has to be a coordinator, someone of influence or access to influence to pull something of this sophistication off!
I want a name! Grant me my final wish before you terminate my existence. I want to know who it was!”
Ventris hesitated for a moment staring the Captain down for several seconds.
“Very well Akina. Since you’re date with reaper is only a few moments away I will tell you. I’ve personally never met the man. He’s an influential ambassador, up and coming, from what I know – perhaps to become one of the Federation’s leading diplomats in time with NeoDyne’s quiet assistance. He pulls the strings having access to all the right connection and ears. His name is Ambassador Ian Lamont.”
“Now you know Captain. Satisfied? Or does it leave that mind of yours thirsting for more information? In any event you’ve had your last request granted. Any final remarks before I watch you disintegrate into the great beyond?”
Zane stiffened realizing his death was at hand. There would be no escape this time. He was out of aces – his tricks exhausted. The final hand had been cast and it was his time to fold. How calloused and fickle fate was he thought to himself. How could someone like Ventris live while someone like himself died at his bloody hands?
Perhaps in few moments he would know the answer to that question.
“I just want it to be known that I died a loyal Starfleet officer, true to myself, true to justice, and true to the fleet and the people of the Federation. If I am to die, at least I do so with the knowledge I died defending my principals in this life against the slime of humanity like you, your men, and the President of NeoDyne, Alistair Merikai who signs your blood stained paychecks.”
“How touching”, Colonel Ventris remarked. “Goodbye Captain Akina. Give my regards to the children when you see them.”
Zane closed his eyes awaiting the finality that awaited him. When it struck he suddenly felt cold as he could feel the molecules and atoms of his body being torn apart. A slight dizziness enveloped him yet there was no pain, no burning, no anguish. How funny it was that a phaser could destroy his life so quickly yet cause no negative feelings. He’d seen others disintegrated and their expressions were far from pleasant. How odd that as his life ended he felt virtually nothing at all.
His vision was a swirl of lights and particles as he tried to make sense of the afterlife. Then suddenly his vision cleared, the haze lifted and he found himself staring into the eyes to a transporter technician, a Starfleet captain, a medical officer, and several heavily armed Starfleet guards all standing before him in a transporter room. This couldn’t be heaven or hell – could it?
Unable to process any additional information, Zane’s eyes rolled backwards into his head as his knees buckled beneath him. He collapsed on an empty transporter padd as his mind and body simply shutdown after a day of extreme mental, physical, and emotional strain.
The medical officer rushed up to Akina’s unconscious body as the Captain looked on with a measured expression which betrayed nothing.
“Commander Durandal, status, the Captain quickly asked with a firm tone.
“He has some broken ribs, dust inhalation, I’m reading elevated radioactivity levels from his clothing, though the levels are not overly harmful. He had several contusions and lacerations and has lost a fair amount of blood. He’ll make it, but I need to get him to sickbay immediately.”
“Very well”, the captain said. “Site to site transport – two to sickbay on the double!”
Doctor Durandal stood next to his patient as the transporter chief set the computers to beam the pair to sickbay.
“Doctor, patch him up fast. I must talk with him as soon as possible. Time is not on my side. As soon as he is able to stand I want him in my quarters under heavy armed guard. Notify me as soon as you deem him fit to engage in conversation.”
“Captain, he’s going to need to recover and rest I cannot ..”
“Doctor, obey your orders this once. I want to speak with him. You have eight hours. Do what you can in that time.”
“Aye sir”, came the muted reply from the ship’s chief medical officer.
“Energize”, the captain commanded as the medical officer and Captain Zane Akina vanished into a swirl of blue particles.
The captain dismissed the guards and then headed himself to the exit. In orbit above Astate, the U.S.S. Corsair, and her determined commanding officer were running out of time. He had already violated his orders to be here at this planet and the engineer’s thin excuses for emergency repairs at Astate were only going to buy him little time if any. His engineer was there to fix the ship, but recently the Captain had been asking him to tear it apart if only to buy him time - time he didn't have to answer questions that demanded quick answers. Questions that could very well determine how the balance of power would unfold for decades to come on a galatic scale.
As he headed back to the bridge of his starship, Captain Taverain Corsica Ramius, hoped he could buy at least another day in orbit given the now tense situation on the ground. Perhaps the massive atomic detonation, which was practically unheard of with nuclear weapons having been banned for centuries, could be an asset to him. The event had caused quite a stir between the Romulans and Starfleet and could be used to his advantage. He could offer the local commanders his ship’s sensors and a Starship in orbit, especially a Nova class, like the Corsair heavily armed due to the war with the Dominion, would help deter any aggressive posturing by the Romulans. Perhaps he had more time than he originally anticipated.
In any event, recent events on Astate and in particular, the actions of Captain Akina, held great interest with Captain Ramius. The next few hours would prove to be interesting that much he knew for certain.
Tapping his badge he called to the bridge. “Number One, place the ship on yellow alert and raise our shields. Bring weapons to standby readiness – I want to be on full tactical alert given the situation on the ground until we know more about what the hell just happened down there. And get me an open channel to Starfleet on Astate - I need to speak with them immediatly about the situation.
Captain Zane Akina
Starfleet Intelligence
Captain Taverain Ramius U.S.S. Corsair
Commander Keith Durandal Chief Medical Officer
Affair on Astate: An Unusual Partnership
Captain Taverain Ramius sat quietly in his ready room as he skillfully erased the transporter logs from the ship’s main computer. No trace of beaming Captain Zane Akina aboard the Corsair from Astate could exist. He had left orders with Doctor Durandal that Zane not be entered as a medical case into the computer and that he only be treated for his injuries without questions or standard procedures. Akina was to be treated as nothing more than a phantom – at least for now.
Ramius was anxious – although he had great respect for Captain Akina and his accomplishments, Ramius’s own history with the NeoDyne Corporation superseded the Captain’s recent investigation and discoveries. Ramius had to know how much the man had learned. If he knew too much things could be come extremely complicated forcing him to take measures he would never consider otherwise. Hopefully he could reach an understanding with the Captain. They both had an old score to settle with the corporation which might aid them in forging a working relationship. Ramius would have to evaluate Akina and see if such trust was possible. If it wasn’t – he’d have to find a way to make the Captain disappear which left him with few alternatives.
He glanced at the blood spattered tricorder on his desk. The ship’s main computer was still busy at work decrypting the high grade code used to protect most of the NeoDyne information Akina had managed to extract from the NeoDyne computer systems. It would be sometime before any of the data would be available for analysis or review. He had to hand it to the Captain – the man was an excellent intelligence operative.
“Sickbay to Captain”, Durandel’s voice cut in suddenly. “The patient is conscious and I’ve had him sent to your quarters as instructed under heavy armed guard.”
“Thank you doctor – I appreciate your expediency.”
“Captain, I’ll go along with this for now, but I want an explanation as to what’s going on. That man, who I wasn’t allowed to identify, still needs rest and medical attention. I will not withhold administering my duties and obligations to treat the wounded forever. Whatever business you have with him, I suggest you conduct quickly sir. I don’t want a confrontation with my commanding officer, but you have put me in a difficult spot sir.”
“Your objections are noted for the record doctor. I have my reasons, but I will assure you that the patient will receive proper care as soon as I have spoken with him to my satisfaction.”
“Very well captain. I would expect you will notify me if there are any problems with the man?”
“You have my word doctor.”
“That’s all I need. Durandel out.”
Ramius grabbed the tricorder from his desk and exited his ready room onto the bridge. “Number One, I’ll be in my quarters. I don’t want to be disturbed for the next three hours under any circumstances. You have the conn.”
Stepping into the turbolift Ramius headed toward his quarters for a conversation he wasn’t looking forward to.
Moments Later – Captain’s Personal Quarters
Ramius dismissed the guards outside his door and entered his quarters. As the doors closed he issued a firm order to the computer. “Computer, seal the room and place level one forcefields at the doors. Disable all audio, recording, and sensor systems – authorization Ramius Delta 11257 Sigma.”
Captain Zane Akina, bruised and battered, sat on the Captain’s sofa with an odd expression on his face. The two captains exchanged silent glances for a time before Ramius had a seat across from Akina at his office desk.
“No questions, no answers, doctor’s who say nothing, armed escorts, and now sealed and secured rooms – if I didn’t know better Captain Ramius, I’d say this was an informal interrogation”, Zane stated calmly. “I have some experience in such things”, he remarked with a touch of sarcasm.
“You know me”, Ramius asked with an inquisitive tone.
“Does that surprise you Captain”, Zane asked. “Your step-father I believe happens to be a Commodore in Intelligence back on Earth and you yourself are well known as being one of the greatest living combat pilots of all time. What was it they call you – ‘the hero of Anataraine? You destroyed an entire squadron of enemy fighters single handedly and saved your disabled starship from certain destruction – but of course all that information is classified – except to those in the intelligence community who take interest in such matters.”
“Like yourself I assume”, Ramius replied flatly.
“Why yes. You’re quite the fascinating individual. Your personal record isn’t the best in the fleet – impersonating officers, stealing equipment, disobeying direct orders, breaking the chain of command, misuse of Federation property for personal gain, violating the territorial sovereignty of another species – of course that’s all off the record – quietly hushed up by your well connected step father, the good Commodore. Your combat record though is the stuff of legend – I assume it’s why they gave you command of this starship? With the war on – I guess Starfleet needs every seasoned military veteran they can lay a hand on these days.”
“I sense some malevolence there Captain Akina.”
“No ill will, just personal objections. You’re undisciplined – you don’t follow the rules. You make your own which can endanger yourself as well as others.”
“Is that so”, Ramius answered. “Is that advice from an expert on the subject? You seem to have taken a few liberties yourself Captain Akina. I believe you’ve impersonated a few officers on Astate, hell you’re officially listed as Missing in Action and yet failed to report back in so you could conduct your investigation in private. You’ve associated yourself with mercenaries – not the best crowd of friends out there, and you were around when a 250 kiloton fusion explosion suddenly detonated on a peaceful tropical island in the middle of nowhere. I won’t even get into the fact that you trespassed on Starfleet property, improperly accessed Starfleet systems, or made use of forbidden technology much like this tricorder here for non-official, personal business. Either you and I have something in common, or your last statement seems somewhat hypocritical Captain.”
Akina didn’t reply, but tipped his head slightly in acknowledgement of Ramius’s better than expected knowledge of his actions and movements.
“Well since you know so much about me Mr. Akina, let me return the favor”, Ramius said calmly. “Captain Zane Akina, Starfleet Intelligence Operative – Service Number 3764189. Your accomplishments are many, but your crowning achievement is infiltrating and exposing illegal arms deals between NeoDyne Corp and the Breen roughly ten years ago. The evidence and media coverage nearly bankrupted and ruined the company. I myself was quite unhappy it managed to survive after your impressive work.”
“And why is that Captain Ramius? What vested interest could you possibly have in a single corporation such as NeoDyne. I exposed a threat and a wrong doing, it was my job. What does that have to do with you?”
“Everything”, Ramius replied cryptically.
“Let us get to the heart of this conversation. While I enjoy our dialog, I have need of information.”
“Agreed. What is it you seek Ramius?”
“We’re analyzing the tricorder you had in your possession. Most of the data is heavily encrypted and will take some time to decode. But beyond that – I want to know what happened down there on that island. I know NeoDyne was involved, but I need facts and I believe you can provide them.
“Captain Ramius, your actions thus far don’t exactly inspire a climate of mutual trust. Especially when the stakes are this high. While your record is impressive and your step father is an influential Commodore in Intelligence, I’m not obligated to tell you anything. Trust is something that has to be earned in my book. So far, you’ve given me little if nothing in return. My investigation is classified. You have little if no jurisdiction in my affairs.”
“I have top intelligence clearance”, Ramius firmly stated. “Dear old dad provides me with that much.”
“Nevertheless, I am indebted to you for saving my life from those marines back on the island. That is a debt I cannot easily repay – but the price you are asking in exchange is too high. I can’t be sure you aren’t working for NeoDyne – it seems everyone else around here is. My objective is to get my information to Starfleet command and expose the corporation for the atrocities it has committed on Astate. Until that goal is met – I cannot give you what you seek.”
“Captain Akina”, Ramius said coldly. “You won’t be contacting Starfleet about what you have seen or uncovered. And the information you obtained from the facility below stays with me and me alone. I won’t have this knowledge getting out into the public – it can never be exposed. I’m sure you can understand? I have a fair idea what you may have seen down there and from the fire in your eyes I can tell your soul wants revenge for what occurred.”
Ramius paused for a moment. “Don’t look so surprised Akina. I’ve seen that look dozens of times in the eyes of fighter pilots who wanted nothing more than to fight an impossible fight, to sacrifice themselves, to avenge a fellow pilot against all odds! You have the look of a pilot with just that expression. One who is driven to avenge an injustice. And not just any injustice, something that transcends all decency and honor. But the foe you seek is far too influential and well equipped. Besides you’ve already hurt them once – do you really expect they would let you do so again so easily?
“What are you getting at Ramius”, Akina snapped his injuries and fatigue still very much with him.
“You need allies and so do I. We both want to same thing – we both want NeoDyne destroyed. Neither of us alone posses the power to take on an entire company, but together with other allies, unified in purpose, we can inflict damage – perhaps fatal damage this time – that is if you’re willing to help.”
Ramius stood from his desk and walked about his quarters slowly considering his next words. “I’m not here to coerce you or force you into anything. If we are to build a relationship – that first step must start with trust.”
“Captain Ramius, with all due respect, why should I trust you? All you’ve given me is a good speech – words which neither help nor hurt me. I’m afraid I need something more tangible. Why don’t we start with your reason for wanting NeoDyne ruined and then perhaps we can work our way up from there. An equitable request, don’t you agree?”
“My reasons”, Ramius whispered to himself. He stared at Akina for a long moment as he paced the room as if contemplating a difficult decision.
“If we are to work together I suppose you are entitled to both my reasons and the truth. However, Captain, I will give you a choice.
“Computer, release forcefields and locks on doors.”
“I’ll permit you to leave this ship, now if you choose to do so. You’ll be beamed to the outskirts of Astate where you can go about your career and forget we ever met – I however shall keep your information on NeoDyne and my connections probably outweigh yours – so you will in essence have nothing to report to Starfleet other than a fantastic story that few officers will believe or accept.”
“And my second option”, Akina asked.
“I will give you my reasons for wanting NeoDyne obliterated myself and complete your understanding of NeoDyne’s ambitions and activities for the last twenty years. However, in doing so, you must agree to a partnership with myself and a few others who seek the ultimate goal of toppling NeoDyne and its leadership. This partnership is non-negotiable. If you accept I will give you the answers you seek, and a chance to quench the fire inside you to take revenge on the company, but in return we have to establish a mutual bond of trust and respect. Your obedience is what I will require and demand for I, and I alone, hold the key to NeoDyne’s destruction or success.
That is all I can say. The door is there and unsealed. You may leave now or stay – the choice is yours.”
Akina’s eyes narrowed as he evaluated the Captains unusual proposition. Such an alliance was odd to say the least, but could he trust Ramius? The man had a sterling record of loyalty and duty to the fleet that was beyond question despite his reckless and cavalier methods which differed little from Akina’s own unorthodox ways for accomplishing difficult tasks no one else dared to conquer or approach.
Akina stood from the couch and moved toward the Captain. He looked the man in the eyes, carefully, like a scientist probing for data. He saw nothing in Ramius’s eyes but a genuine fire of his own which betrayed no ill intent or deception.
“Very well Captain. I accept your offer. However, before I agree to such terms I must have some type of assurances. I sense no ill will, but I’ve worked in intelligence too long to take many things on faith alone.
“A reasonable request. Computer, reseal the doors.” Ramius moved to the corner of his desk where he stopped running a finger along its thick obsidian colored surface. “Tell me Captain Zane, have you ever seen the impossible made possible?”
“I’m not sure what you mean Captain”, Zane replied. “I’ve seen quite a lot in my career.”
“How about a nightmare then? Something unnatural – something that should have never existed, but despite the odds, was released into the world. Have you seen something mankind was never meant to find – something that began innocently enough, but in the wrong hands could alter the balance of power in this galaxy, destroy the peace, and perhaps mankind itself?”
Akina saw the faces of the children, destroyed in the NeoDyne facility flash before his eyes. “Yes, I may have seen something similar to what you are describing, but that nightmare is gone – forever. Neodyne saw to that.”
“Did they”, Ramius replied. Turning to face the Akina, Ramius took a deep breath and lowered his head. His hands turned to fists and when his head finally rose, Akina nearly fell backwards at the shock of what he saw.
“NO”, he said regaining his footing. Zane looked on at Ramius whose eyes were now the same brilliant crimson as the teenager’s below who he had fought in the facility only a few hours prior.
“What the hell”, Zane shouted. “What is this – you’re one of them?”
Ramius raised his arm and in a flash sunk it through the dense corner of his obsidian desk made of plasteel and other materials that a normal human would have been unable to dent, let alone scratch. Without any expression of pain, he withdrew his bloody, arm embedded with fragments of glass and wood which he carefully extracted and tossed to the floor. Curling his arms and fist before him, Zane looked on with wide eyes as the wounds quickly stopped bleeding and began to heal as if by magic. No dermal regenerators, no equipment, Ramius’s arm was repairing itself before his very eyes.
A few minutes past as Ramius, replicated a towel to clean his wounds, and returned to his chair. The color of his eyes slowly faded back to the blue-grey pupils Zane had first noticed.
Akina sat in silence unsure what to say or how to react. The captain was just like the children – had he been one of the experiments himself? Had he escaped NeoDyne sometime in the past?
“Captain, I must say you have my undivided attention”, Zane finally spoke.
“Captain Akina, you and I need to come to an understanding. An agreement – a contract that transcends friendship –be it professional or otherwise, but we have to trust each other. I want nothing else than to see NeoDyne destroyed. I’m sure after what you witnessed on the planet you want the same. Thus we have a common enemy and a common threat that if not stopped could cause complications on a grand scale.”
“I’m listening Captain”, Zane answered still shocked by Ramius’s demonstration.
“I have a good idea what NeoDyne was attempting down there – It was I who funded your mission via a certain mutual acquaintance, Mr. Ailec Reltah.”
“You were the one”, Zane said astonished.
“Indeed. Since you nearly destroyed NeoDyne ten years ago, I’ve followed you with great interest. It’s what led me here. I’m sorry if I manipulated events and even yourself, but I had to know what NeoDyne was up to and you were the perfect candidate. I believe you succeeded brilliantly, but as you no doubt have experienced first hand, NeoDyne is a corrupt and morally twisted organization. Their president seeks to develop weaponry and medical technology for profit and personal gain. Alistair Merikai will stop at nothing to obtain those goals. That is why he has been searching for both myself and my brother for nearly twenty years. My brother was not as fortunate, he was captured by them some years ago, but escaped, but not before they obtained samples of his blood – samples which they were mostly likely using to create beings of great strength and power. Does any of this sound familiar Akina?”
“You, you are just like the others I saw. One nearly tried to kill me. I tried to save the others – but, I was unsuccessful. They were all children damn it – NeoDyne was playing God with human children! Children with incredible strength and speed. One even referred to himself as the ultimate life form.”
Ramius leaned back in his chair examining the man closely. “Indeed, that supports my suspicions. I will give you my story as this entire affair began with me and my brother, but other than my step-father the Commodore and my twin brother you will be the only one else alive, with the exception of Merikai himself who knows my family’s dark secrets. Be warned – what I am about to tell you will never again leave this room. If it does your life is forfeit and I will use every means at my disposal to hunt you down and silence you. Now, do you accept my terms or are we done speaking?”
“I think I’m beginning to like you captain”, Zane answered. “I’ll choose the risk if you don’t mind. I have many questions that demand answers and you seem to know a great deal. Perhaps we can be of some use to one another.”
“Indeed.”
The two men, bonded by a common enemy, shook hands to make the agreement official. “Captain Ramius, I have many questions.”
“Of course”, Ramius replied. “But I have a promise to keep. You require additional medical attention and rest. We can speak in detail on this matter as soon as you recuperate from your recent ordeal otherwise, my chief medical officer will likely have my head on a silver platter. For your sake and mine I suggest you report to sickbay.
Akina nodded as he headed for the doors which Ramius unlocked.
“Captain Akina – my trust and my faith on what we have discussed I have never confided. You are the first – do not make me regret my decision to do so.”
“My word is my bond Captain. I do not give it lightly. You also have exposed yourself, no doubt at great personal risk, to forge a relationship based on a mutual enemy. I respect a man who is willing to take such risks – it shows courage, integrity, and honor. Qualities I value. While your concern is not unfounded you have my personal word as a man and as a Starfleet officer that this matter will stay between us for as long as you deem necessary. I can see you are far more acquainted with the facts than myself and look forward to our next meeting.”
Ramius nodded slightly. “Get some rest Captain. We shall speak of this again soon. There is much to discuss if we are to pursue this dangerous course together.”
“Aye.”
Akina noticed Ramius’s arm bore little trace of ever being injured other than a general reddish swelling. The cuts and bruises he had seen moments before had vanished.
“Do not concern yourself with my well being or my desk’s, we’ll be fine", Ramius said noticing the Captain's glances. "You’re the one who needs the medical attention Captain. I suggest you return to sickbay.”
“Aye”, Zane replied stepping through the doors to the captain’s quarters to return to sickbay.
Ramius rubbed his arm which throbbed. A minor demonstration of his unusual abilities wouldn’t cause any severe effects, but it was enough to keep him off the bridge for the next hour in the event his body paid the usual penalty for using his enhancements.
Tapping his comm. badge, Ramius called a trusted security guard.
“Ramius to Lt. Vannaire, see to it Captain Akina makes it to sickbay please and inform me when he arrives.”
“Aye sir”, came the reply.
Ramius had a good feeling from their initial talk. Trust would take some time to develop, but they were both linked by a common enemy – NeoDyne. That alone should help them form a lasting relationship. If the company was to be stopped – Ramius would have to find allies he could trust. The official channels were out – no one would believe the horrors NeoDyne was engaged in, and Ramius himself, was a target. If word ever leaked out about his condition – Starfleet themselves might decide to stick him under a microscope for the rest of his life – and that was a outcome that he could never let happen whatever the cost – even if it meant forfeiting his own life. The secrets coursing through his veins had began with him and would end with him – the universe’s ultimate mistake, Taverain Ramius and his twin brother were victims of a terrible curse that was there’s to bear and protect and as Ramius himself had learned – it might someday cost him his own life to forever erase the dark secrets within him from ever again threatening the peace of the galaxy.