OOC: Backpost. Takes place around the
time when the Galaxy was still at Risa. "Pull
Out Your Party Hats Pt 2"
Lieutenant (jg) Dhanishta Eshe
Engineer
Lt. Commander Ethan Suder
Chief Engineer
Lieutenant (jg) Michael McDowell
Engineer
Lieutenant Zack Jackson
Damage Control Systems Chief
*** Ten-Forward ***
Dhani ordered a Blood wine at the bar and then made her way through Ten
Forward to an empty table, ignoring the eyes that followed her and the
guitar she carried. She slipped the guitar under her chair and sat down
to wait for the others.
The other Engineers, Zack Jackson, Melvin Frohike, Emma Saturn, Victoria
Alabama and Angel Gaven followed promptly, each with a beverage in hand
and sitting round the large table that Dhanishta had chosen.
After several minutes, Ethan strolled into Ten-Forward and approached
the bar. He ordered his usual drink and scanned the few people around.
Of course, most people were down on Risa, yet he expected Ten-Forward
to be completely empty. He approached the Engineers crowding a table in
the corner and gave a nod as he took a seat and listened to several small
conversations going on at once.
Entering Ten-Forward, Michael looked around to see where Dhanista or
any of the others had sat down. Once he saw Dhani sitting at the other
side of the room, he walked towards the bar and ordered some Bajoran beverage
that Shinta, his ex-Counselor, had told him to try out. Now was a time
as good as any.
Moments later he placed a second but more unusual order. First there
were surprised looks coming from behind the bar, but right after that
it all turned into smiles and grins. Shortly after they replicated what
he needed, Michael walked towards Dhanista and the others.
"Alright you party animals, I have enough funny, crazy, and silly
party hats for everyone..." Michael briefly waved with one of the
hats before placing it on his own head. "and on this party wearing
one is mandatory."
Dhanishta gave McDowell a stern look before taking one of the hats. She
removed a clip from her head letting her long black hair cascade down
her back. She shook her head slightly, flicking her hair back over her
shoulder and teased her hair with her fingers. Reluctantly she placed
the party hat on her head. ~ Don't worry Michael, ~ she thought, ~ I'll
get you back for this....... one day. ~
Ethan frowned and reluctantly took a hat from Michael. Still, frowning,
he waited until the others had put theirs on before he quietly placed
his hat on. He looked at the small group of Engineers and felt a little
more comfortable than usual. He was going to try and enjoy this time.
The stern look of Dhanishta was not lost on Michael and he wondered why
she looked at him that way. Maybe it was nothing, but it didn't sit well
with Michael. He was only joking around, she must know that. Besides,
he promised he would get them those party hats. Deciding that it would
be better to ignore Dhanishta's reaction for now he asked, "So, how
does it feel to be Lieutenant?"
Suder looked up from his drink at Michael and then over to Dhanishta.
He knew the promotion must have taken her by surprise. It was pretty damned
quick. But she was a good engineer, it only made sense to reward the best
of the best. Unfortunately, he had been unable to help with Michael's
situation...
Dhani looked at all the faces of her fellow engineers, she wasn't quite
sure what to say. Her promotion was unexpected to say the least and she
felt a little lost. "Erm..." she said standing up and clearing
her throat, "Most of you don't know me very well, and I you, as I
haven't been here very long. So first I'd like to share a little about
myself. And don't worry you don't all have to follow suit." She smiled
slightly as they all looked relieved. "This is my fourth year as
an acting Starfleet officer, and so much has happened in this last year.
After years of badgering my CO he finally let me transfer, here, which
I must say is amazing. For all of you here it probably....."
Ethan cut in pretty quickly. So far he had been very quiet. "You're
transfer was accepted for a reason. We take only the best here."
His face was blank. It was clear that he had finished saying what he was
going to say and was wanting the conversation to continue.
Dhanishta tilted her head slightly in acknowledgment of Suder's comment
and continued, "Well for all of you it's every day life, but for
me, being here on a Starship..... well its a dream come true. Not only
that but on the day of my transfer I was also accepted by the Symbiosis
Commission to be joined. My family thought it would not be possible, being
only half Trill, but again another dream that one day will hopefully come
true. And now here I am a newly promoted Lieutenant junior Grade, and
you ask me what its like. It's a hard question to answer, with all that's
happened I'd say its kinda overwhelming, though my mentor would tut at
me for using such an expression. But being a Lieutenant means I can send
some other Ensign to fix that dammed replicator in the mess hall, so I'd
say its pretty damn good." She looked over at Michael and smiled,
before sitting down, hoping that was an adequate answer to his question.
"Uh oh, she's already thinking of delegating that problem."
Michael said jokingly. However, he continued with a more serious tone.
"But you're joking right? I recall me assigning you to that problem,
so it was and still is yours to fix. Being a Lt. doesn't mean you can
automatically toss it into someone else's lap."
Dhanishta shook her head slightly and sighed, her humor was obviously
lost on him.
Ethan raised an eyebrow at Michael and then looked back at Dhanishta.
Had Michael missed the catch line? Of course not, just making sure that
she was kept on the straight line. He cleared his throat and leaned forward.
"I'm sure she has no intention of doing so." Ethan grabbed the
cool drink off the table and took a sip. "Besides why not?"
he asked with a slight smile. "I used to." he said sitting back
in the chair and smiling at Michael. Ethan was surprised at himself, he
couldn't even remember the last time he made a joke.
"I think you both need another drink." Dhanishta said standing
up. As she walked past Suder she paused and whispered in his ear, "Especially
you." Then she continued up to the bar.
Michael was looking a bit surprised at both Dhanishta and Ethan. He'd
obviously missed something. "Wait a minute, you actually mean that...or
are you just joking around here?" He said while turning to Ethan.
Ethan looked back at Michael and then over at Dhanishta who had approached
the bar. He half smiled and looked back at his best friend. Sipping the
last of his drink, he gave Michael a wink that said 'you'll never know'.
He sat back in the chair and interlocked his fingers. "I couldn't
share all my secrets could I?" he asked. "I didn't become a
Chief over nothing." He commented with a slight smile again, trying
to get something out of Michael.
"No, no way, that's too weird a story. Even for you." Michael
shook his slightly while grinning. "I should have known earlier that
you were pulling me a leg."
"You can say that again." Zack Jackson laughed "All this
time and you didn't know the Chief was making things up?"
"Hey, what can I say? I'm used to him being serious." Michael
said in defense.
Zack shrugged. "Say whatever you want but, man, he fooled you big
time." He took a sip from his synthehol and placed back on the table
again. "Easy prey, right Chief?"
"Sometimes. But then he is right, I don't often joke. It's a sure
way to let people take advantage of you... I've been hurt before."
he joked again, still with a serious face though. He liked keeping Michael
thinking.
Dhanishta returned from the bar with a tray in each hand; each one held
several jugs. "I don't know how you lot party but I learnt from the
best." she set the drinks down on the table. "Chief, how much
have you had to drink?" she asked.
"Clearly not enough." he said with raised eyebrows as he watched
Dhanishta place the large amount of drinks on the table.
"Good." she replied, "Here, drink this." She poured
something into a shot glass and handed it to him.
Ethan held the glass up to his face and observed it for a few seconds
and then raised it higher. "Here's drinken' my health away to you
lot." He said. He then quickly downed the shot and sat back in his
chair as the shot burned its way down his throat. He remained still with
a continued serious look as his lungs fired up inside. Then his stomach
followed, feeling like it was boiling. Then a cold rush seemed to follow
down his throat and lungs. He was a little shocked, he'd never had that
nasty drink before, but he sure as hell was going to have more of that
later!
"Think you can stand another?" Dhani asked with a cheeky grin.
"Hey, I was drinking when you were still in school." he said
with a wink.
She poured out another and handed it to him. She watched as he downed
it and chuckled slightly. "Good, now that your on your way you hopefully
wont mind that I..... erm, removed a little something from your office
before we left Engineering." She returned to her seat and removed
the guitar which she had stashed there earlier. She handed it to him,
"Now the party can really get started!"
Ethan took the guitar and then realized what she meant. At first he looked
a little shocked and then began moving to put the guitar down the side
of his chair. "I shouldn't, don't really do big public.... gigs,
for want of a better phrase."
This was a surprising move by Dhanishta. Michael hadn't expected her
to be so bold to take away Ethan's guitar and suggesting he should play
something,...in front of a 'big' crowd no less. Confronting him with it
in this way didn't seem to be a smart move to Michael. But, seeing everyone
else smile, maybe he was wrong? Maybe, but he didn't really want to witness
Ethan singing here. It would be kind of embarrassing if,...well, you know.
She looked at him and then around at everyone and winked. She started
clapping and everyone joined in with hoots and cheers. "Your audience
awaits, better not turn em down, they look like they could get ugly."
~Oh no... Guess I had to come to the rescue sooner. Now it's too late.~
Michael sighed and reluctantly joined the others by clapping his hands.
~Okay then, let's get this over with. The sooner the better.~
Ethan looked around at the few concerned looks that others in Ten Forward
were giving the loud crowd around him. Reluctantly, under the influence
of alcohol and pressure from his Engineering team, he grabbed his guitar
and after a few more seconds, softly began a song...
Dhanishta sat back in her chair. She was happy that she was no longer
center stage it was Ethan's time to shine.
"It's been a long road, getting from there to here... It's be a
long time, but my time is finely here... I can feel the change in the
way right now, nothings in my way... And their not going to hold me down
no more, no their not going to hold me down, cus I've got faith, of the
heart, I'm going where my heart will take me, I've got faith to believe,
I can do, anything, I've got strength... Of the soul, no ones gonna to
bend or break me, I can reach, any star.... I got faith.... I've got faith...
Faith of the heart...." He continued strumming for a few seconds
and took another deep breath. For most of the song, he kept his eyes closed.
It was easier to sing when pretending no one was there, but occasionally,
he would glance around at the people not only surrounding the table, but
the others in Ten Forward. He continued singing and finally reached the
climax and softly began unwinding.
After a while, he strummed the last chord and took a deep breath. He
had shocked himself just now. He could never imagine singing in front
of people, and there he was... singing and playing his favourite musical
instrument. For a long time, he remained in the chair grasping the guitar,
frozen but making it look like he was just appreciating his own song.
The entire occupants of Ten Forward stood and applauded, calling for
an encore. Dhani smiled and nodded at Suder.
Michael smiled and, like all the others, applauded. He had to admit,
hearing Ethan singing wasn't as bad as he'd feared. What was he thinking
anyway? Here he was, almost inwardly criticizing Ethan, while he himself
couldn't sing at all!
After a few moments the room calmed down. Michael walked up from behind
Ethan and patted him on the back to get his attention. "Nice show.
Never knew you could sing that well." Michael said with a grin. "Come,
lets have another drink, shall we?" He then turned back to Dhani
and the group of Engineers who still sat at one of the large tables in
the far corner of Ten Forward.
"Belly of the Whale"
By Legate Kylar Curran,
Chief Liaison Officer
USS Galaxy
Hours crept by, with no luck. Other than the occasional
casual conversation with other cell occupants around him, Curran floated
in place. He simply couldn't locate an exit. The chamber was spherical
in shape from what he could gather. The walls felt like living material
after more careful examination.
It... pulsed. It... writhed. It... shifted.
His eyes drooped, without feeling tired. The singing echoed
in his ears.
He gave himself over to the euphoria. The tempo of the music undulated
him onto the waves. If he was dying, then he would die with a peaceful
restitude as the last thoughts on his mind.
In the belly of the whale, the Kelvan drifted. He assumed
the songs were of the herd and he was slowly being digested in its belly.
He wasn't a Marine Biologist by any stretch, but he knew that if they
had beamed down into some form of mammal or creature on Quentin, the possibility
exists that even if he were to break free from this prison of sorts, he
might still face greater perils beyond.
And so, he stretched out, and inhaled the sweet delirium
that transfixed him.
That is until an ominous thump and grind trembled its
way through him. The music emitted a piercing shrill, then stopped altogether.
Curran's eyes snapped open as the feeling of being truly alone set in.
Fear began to take hold. He knew the Quentishari had gone back to their
primitive roots. Had they attacked the herd?
Fear and elation mingled when the possibility of rescue
came to the fore of his thoughts. He swam to Dallas' chamber, touched
the material, and instantly withdrew his hand in shock at the brittle
cold that permeated the material. The room beyond was growing dark, and
he couldn't see Karyn easily. It darkened as the room rumbled and shook.
He shivered.
Then, a gentle pull dragged him upwards. He paddled against
it, but it completely enveloped him. It pressed him against the fabric
that was formerly one of the delegatory aides, but now completely dark.
His extremities were numbing.
Then, just as suddenly as he was feeling the light crush
against the wall - thankful it was pliable - it let go, and he drifted
back out to the center and downwards of the chamber when the fabric repelled
him.
A stream of light cracked into the liquefied environment.
Curran blinked, not fathoming what was happening. His body dropped to
the floor surprisingly as the gap grew wider. He heard a roaring in his
ears where he looked up.
The water level was fast coming down. His heart pounded,
fearful of the theft of his soothing fluid. The ballads must have been
ceased by these invaders!
At once, he was yanked out by the rush of the waters,
pulled out of the tear onto a cold surface.
It was bright, too bright, and he was drowning. He couldn't
breathe! He coughed and retched, bent over double and gagged. Things were
touching him all over. Something was draped around him. He fell to the
ground, taking great gulps of air. His numb fingers touched the liquid,
and pained for it.
His one moment of solitude, of utter peace, of his Elysium,
stolen from him.
A tear rolled off his cheek, but no one would notice in his soaked state.
Mumblings, blobs of shape, touching, probing. He couldn't
see through the lights that had dimmed, couldn't hear what the forms were
saying, couldn't fight them as something was pressed to his neck, dimming
his own lights, winking them out of his existence.
OOC: I am stealing the title for this
post from Andrew who made it up, but then decided not to use it. I thought
it was too clever to pass up. Kudos Andrew.
"This Episode brogue to you by the letter 'G' "
Starring Rebecca von Ernst
With unauthorized appearances by
James Corgan
Klaus Fienberg
Ahdjiia D'Tinya
and various NPC's
(Surface of Quentin---or is it?)
~~~If you want something done right. . . . .~~~ Rebecca
von Ernst grumbled to herself as she trudged down the sandy hill toward
where the others were congregating, ~~~. . . . .get in their face and
yell REAL loud.~~~
Trapped on the strange world of Quentin, the Galaxy Away
Team was supposed to be busily exploring a set of buried ruins recently
exposed by one of the frequent Quentin-quakes that rocked the dusty little
world.
Instead, the majority of the Team had halted its investigation
of the buried ruins , and had instead clustered themselves into a neat
little semicircle at one corner of the site.
>From the excited buzz of whispers Rebecca could hear
as she approached
>from
behind them, they were apparently quite excited about some new discovery.
~~~Bunch of Noodleheaded slackers,~~~ Rebecca thought,
~~~Do they think we're out here just for the heck of 'exploring strange
new worlds' or some hoo-ha like that?~~~
"One side folks, make a hole. . . .mean little redhead
coming through!" she ordered as she elbowed her way through the assembled
crowd.
"What the noodles are you folks standing around for..
. . . get back to work, if I have to . . . . . . .OH!"
The sudden squeak of surprise escaped Rebecca's lips before
she could bite it off.
"Actually Commander, we think its a 'G'. "
"I can spell Ensign, I meant 'Oh' as in 'AHH!"
"Ah."
Stretched before the half-crescent line of Starfleet officers,
lay a large sinkhole, exposed perhaps by the recent quakes and resulting
aftershocks. It was perhaps 5 meters deep, and 100 across, and covered
by a jumbled collection of sand, rock, and various debris. Below them,
perhaps 10 meters away , the stalwart figures of Dr. Fienberg, and that
D'Tinya lady were standing in the midst of that vast sand-covered floor.
What they had discovered however was. . . impossible.
In the exact center of this floor, the good Doctor had
cleared away a large patch of sand and rocks to reveal. . . . . .a giant
30 foot tall letter -G- painted on some strange blue-gray metal that appeared
to be buried beneath the sinkhole.
Even as they watched in amazement Fienberg was continuing
his attempt to clear off more of the debris.
"Stand aside people. . . .make a hole. . . .Security Chief coming
through."
Behind Rebecca, James Corgan was just now working his way through the
crowd coming at last to stand behind her in awe.
"Gee. . ." he exclaimed in wonder peering over
the top of her head at the floor below.
"Very astute James. " Rebecca said, "It
is a 'G'. "
A few giggles were heard throughout the crowd of onlookers.
"Allright, " Rebecca addressed them, "What
happened? Where did this come from?"
There was a nervous pause until a lonely Ensign stepped
forward. "It was Fienberg sir. . . errrrr ma'am. He was making some
scans right here when all of the sudden the ground dropped out from under
him exposing this sandy floor. . . . .After some poking and prodding it
became apparent that there was something metal underneath, and thats when
he discovered the 'G'. "
Nodding, Rebecca turned her attention back to the scene below. The Doctor
and D'Tinya were attempting to use a phaser on low setting to clear off
more of the sand, but it was proving to be a difficult process. Teh shifting
particles more often than not crytalized into glass under the phasers
heat creating a molten, gooey mess.
"Ensign Whateveryourname is." Rebecca pointed to some random
crewmember, hike back to the OPAKA and bring back some excavating gear.
. . .we need better tools for this."
The Ensign paled briefly at the order. OPAKA was over
6km away, and lugging that heavy gear back would not be an easy trek.
"Aye. ..a. . aye Commander."
Watching the Ensign trudge off into the sunset, Rebecca's
attention was drawn to the darkening skies above. "And bring some
LIGHTS!" she called after the Ensign's receding back.
The faint pin pricks of starlight were becoming visible
in the oncoming darkness, reminding Rebecca of the results of the Starshot
that James Corgan
had done for her. There was no doubt about it . . .they were on the
surface of Quentin, but considering the difference between were they though
they would land, and where they did land it was almost unthinkable.
A flash in the sky suddenly drew Rebecca's attention, and as she turned
her mind was already dismissing it as a nothing more than an errant meteor
scorching its way through the atmosphere.
That was until she saw the other flashes.
"Holy moley look at the stars!" someone breathed
in awe, and as the officers raised their faces, the night sky explode
before them in a shower of lights and flashes high in the blackness of
space above.
Green streaks shot across the sky, followed by silent
explosions. . .making no noise, but somehow eerily disturbing.
"The Galaxy!" Someone explained. . ."Ive
seen this before during the Dominion War. . . Its a battle in orbit between
Starships of some sort."
For herself REbecca had never seen a space battle from
the ground, but as she watched the dance of lights above, her mathematical
mind could pick up the subtle tactical patterns that were her forte'.
"A reverse Yamaguchi Defence Pattern. . ." she whispered to
herself.
Somewhere above them. . . .The Galaxy had engaged in combat
with unknown forces, and was even now fighting for its life.
Trapped on the surface, Rebecca suddenly felt small and insignificant.
She was supposed to be the one fighting the Galaxy's battles. . . .She
wondered idly if the people of Nar Hallas had seen a similar lightshow
before a young Ensign von Ernst had panicked and allowed their world to
be burned to a crisp.
"Communications?" she turned towards James Corgan
who was already shaking his head. Comm systems with the Galaxy had been
down since their arrival, and there had been no change.
Rebecca studied the lights. . . .trying to analyze. .
. .trying to visualize what was going on. . . . .
"COMMANDER!" the excited shout from below drew Rebecca's attention
back to the pit. "We found something . . . we found. . . . . ."
"Oh!"
"Begging your pardon Ma'am, but this time its an
'A' " put in a helpful onlooker.
And so it was. The giant 'GA' was clearly readable in
sand below, painted in large black letters on that strange metal.
An uncomfortable feeling began washing over the assembled
crowd. Above them the silent explosions in space were briefly forgotten
as two and two wre being put together.
"No. . .way. If the Galaxy is in combat above us.
. .then what is . . . .
." said someone to themselves.
Rebecca was already sliding her way down the sandy embankment
kicking up a storm of rocks and debris on her way to the bottom of the
depression. A look of intensity blazed in her eyes.
~~~Impossible . . . . . .~~~ she said to herself.
Reading her mind, James Corgan followed her amidst his
own cloud of dust, pulling out his hand phaser in the same motion.
Fienberg and D'Tinya stood back from the pair already
knowing in their minds what they were planning, but all the same they
cast leary glances at the lightshow in the heavens.
Reaching the bottom, Rebecca drew her own phaser, and
pumped its power up to pretty darn well near maximum. Beside her Corgan
did the same, the small phaser buzzing in his hand.
"If this is the center of the 'G' and that way is
the 'A'. . . . .then. . ."
he said
"Then we need to look 182 meters to the Southwest
. . . . ." Rebecca completed his thought, already raising her firing
arm.
They fired together, the white-hot beams of destructive force blasting
aside rock and stone in a manner unlike the lower settings used by Fienberg
and
D'Tinya. The ground before them litterally disolved itself into great
sheets of glowing ionized gas, only to be carried away by the churring
vortex of superheated air created by the twin phaser beams.
As quickly as they had begun, the phasers quit. The high
power settings had quickly drained the charges down to nothing, but James
and Rebecca calmly turned to accept a new pair of phasers from the others
behind them.
They wanted answers fast. . .and were not willing to wait
around using low setting.
The high pitched whine again crackled through the dry
Quentin air. . . .
.while overhead the space battle continued in flashes of red, green, and
fiery orange.
And those phasers ran dry. . . .
It was only with the third pair of weapons that enough of the sand and
rock had been vaporized to tell the tale that everyone had already guessed.
'Gee. . ." James whispered holstering the phaser.
"I wish thats all it was. . . . ."Rebecca murmured
still holding her weapon limply in her hand.
Spread out in a fan before them, still smoking from the heat of the phaser
beams lay a vast expanse of blue-gray duranium, pocked with tiny holes,
and occasional scorch marks that had nothing to due with the recent excavation.
most horrifying however were the additional series of
Letters exposed by the blasts.
'LAXY'
Which put together spelled the impossible in huge 30 foot
tall letters. . .
.'GALAXY'
"how long did your instruments figure this was buried
here Doctor?" Rebecca inquired shaking her head.
"Thir. .Thirty years at the minimum. Maybe as long
as 60 years." Fienberg answered in amazement.
"Impossible. this is frigging impossible!" someone
said, but sure enough Commander von Ernst was walking across the hissing
metal to the exact center of the 'X' where . . .sure enough there lay
the faint outline of a small airlock hatch.
"It. . .it. . its upside down. . ."someone else
stuttered, "It. . .must have flipped over during reentry and crashed
upside down. . . ."
"If. . that's the Saucer section down there. . .
" another wondered, "Then who the heck is fighting in orbit?"
At the Airlock, Rebecca found no power available to open
the tiny hatch, but with one of the Engineer's assistance, a small bypass
was run through a portable powerpack, and the tell-tale display screen
flashed in neat blue lettering :
>>>USS GALAXY NCC-70637<<<<<<
>>>Auxillary Maintenance Hatch <<<<<
>>> # 47-B <<<<<
>>>>>>>>>>>>><<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<<
"Shit"
"Belay that and just open it!" Rebecca snapped,
her normally pale features had already whitened a further shade. The flashes
of light in the sky behind her highlighted the wild look in her eyes.
Nodding the Engineer produced a small hand tool, and slowly
but surely cranked the hatch back into its recess with a groan of metal.
The square of darkness before them mocked all present.
Rebecca leaned forward to give a cautious sniff. . . .
. . and withdrew quickly her freckled nose crinkling in distaste.
She glanced at James Corgan, a memory of their time on
the K-4 Research Station and its tomb of dead bodies coming to mind.
>From his expression it was apparent he remembered
the experience too.
"There's bodies inside. . . . "she whispered,
"Lots of them!"
=/\=
OOC: TOS people will remember the
references to the K-4 station which had been attacked by the Hirogen and
held hundreds of floating corpses. It proved to be a pivotal point in
the development of Corgan and Rebecca, when she turned from stuttering
idiot to ice-cold queen, and he felt their friendship dissolving.
"Worst Fears"
Lt. Jeremy Savoie
Chief Helmsman
Lt. Curtis Geluf
Chief Operations Officer
Trudging across the dusty surface, Jeremy muttered grumpily to himself.
Anyone hearing the short, grunt-like syllables coming from the helmsman's
mouth would have found it incomprehensible gibberish, but Savoie knew
what he was saying. Or at least, the thoughts that he was partially vocalizing.
The away team hadn't been here all that long and already they had lost
a shuttle and the chief engineer and now Von Ernst was sending him back
to the Opaka to get some supplies.
"Mmfnmn stupid supplies," he groused as small
clouds of dust rose under his feet. Maybe this was a great mission for
an archeologist, but for a pilot,
it was quickly becoming a great pain in the ass. "Nothing but a stupid
glorified gopher . . . ." And to make it worse, Rebecca had ordered
him to take Curtis Geluf with him. "The little prick . . . . he'll
probably want to take control of the shuttle himself."
Coming over a small rise near the far edge of the site
of the ruins, Jeremy stopped and squinted, scanning for the Kerelian past
the various monoliths and chunks of debris. Pretty sure he'd found him,
Savoie figured he wouldn't have to shout too loudly to get his attention;
old bat ears was sure to hear him.
"C'mon Geluf, we're going for a ride," he stated
more than called.
Curtis, who had been surveying the ruins, but frankly
couldn't make heads or tails of them, perked up his ears at the voice
behind him and turned.
Squinting a bit to make out the figure, Curtis quickly identified him
as Lt.
Savoie and then wished he hadn't acknowledged him.
"Wonderful...." the Kerelian muttered to himself,
"As if this planet trip wasn't bad enough already...."
Sighing, resigned to his fate, Curtis made his way over
to the helmsman, all the while cursing his bad luck. What exactly had
Jeremy meant by 'going for a ride' anyway? Surely he didn't mean they'd
be working together.
"Oh God...I hope not." he said to himself, as
the figure of Jeremy became clearer until the two were finally face to
face.
"Glad to see you too," Savoie agreed tartly,
catching Curtis' words and look as he approached. "Von Ernst wants
us to get over to the shuttle to bring some supplies over. Then she wants
us to head up to the Galaxy and find out why they haven’t been responding."
Curtis' eyes stayed on Jeremy.
"So, we're delivery boys then?" Curtis asked
disdainfully. Then, cracking a smile, "And the Commander felt both
of us were required for it? Doesn't she think you can handle it by yourself?"
It was starting already. "No, I imagine she figured
since you weren't doing anything useful down here she might as well send
you out to get everyone some lunch," he quipped.
Fighting the urge to retaliate, Curtis decided the sooner
they left, the sooner they'd be back, and the sooner he'd be away from
Savoie.
"Well then, I guessed we'd better get a move on,
eh? Did she place a specific order, or should I just bring everyone a
chicken sandwich?"
Without bothering to reply, Jeremy turned and headed back
toward the shuttle. "She wants a buncha surveying stuff. Don't ask
me what the hell it all is. I'm a pilot, not a coal miner," he muttered.
"And there's more of the same on the Galaxy to get. Let's just get
this done with."
"Right." Curtis agreed. "Long walk, and
the earthquakes aren't going to make it any easier."
Jeremy didn't need reminding. It was perhaps a strange
incongruity, but as a pilot he could endure the worst kind of turbulence
and shock in flight with little concern for his own safety, but shake
up the ground and he was certain the end was near.
"This place is a pit," Jeremy finally griped
after a few minutes of silence.
Curtis nodded in acknowledgement, he had to agree. Quentin
was a dead zone.
There were no redeeming qualities about it at all, nothing but a giant
wasteland.
Walking next to Jeremy, Curtis' thoughts were suddenly
interrupted by the faint sounds of rumbling in the distance. By now he
knew what that meant, and wasted no time in dropping to the ground.
"Savoie! Quake on the way, might want to take a seat."
"What're you talking about? I don't feel anything,"
he argued, turning to give Curtis a peculiar look.
"Just drop! You've got about three seconds!"
Curtis pleaded with him. As much as the Kerelian dislike the helmsman,
he didn't want him to get injured.
Scowling, Jeremy rather slowly got to the ground. "This
is ridic-- " Then
the first tremor hit. "Shit!" Jeremy yelled, his tone drastically
changed.
"Goddamm .. .." he cursed, baling up into a fetal position.
He knew this would only get worse.
"This one's gonna be a quickie!" Curtis shouted
over the noise, "It'll be over in a few seconds!"
"Stupid fucking hunk of rock!" Savoie yelled,
beginning to feel a little nauseated. A few seconds was a few seconds
too long as far as he was concerned.
But as Curtis had predicted, the tremors soon ceased,
though Jeremy wasn't quite ready to feel relieved just yet.
Curtis popped his head up, straining his ear to listen
for more tremors, but there were none to be heard.
"It's alright, it's gone for now." the Ops officer
said, standing up and dusting himself off.
"I hate those damn things," Jeremy said, tentatively
coming out of his curled position. "Are you sure it's done?"
"Positive." Curtis nodded, "If there *is*
another one, it's at least fifteen minutes off. I can't hear any tremors
in the immediate area, about ten kilometers all around.
Warily regarding Curtis as if expecting another tremor
to sneak up and give Geluf a good laugh, Jeremy dusted himself off. "Let's
get off this pile of interstellar refuse," he grumbled, resuming
the trek to the shuttle.
The hike continued in uneventful silence. The landscape
wasn't getting any prettier, and the two officers seemed to have resumed
their normal dislike for each other. Curtis was once again facing noiselessness
and he was finding himself slipping into that state of paranoia. Voices
came into his head; screams and cries of pain echoed in his brain. The
unbearable pain of it was starting to take its toll. His options were
grim; continue on with the possibility of insanity, or try to talk with
Savoie.
Desperate, he chose the latter.
"Well...quite a planet eh?" Curtis offered, quietly.
Savoie turned his head and silently shot the Kerelian
a glance as if he'd just asked if he'd just said he could go for some
hot gagh.
Curtis, immediately realizing he had said the wrong thing,
opted to change the subject.
"Not too much further, then we can get off this rock."
he corrected.
"And none too soon," Jeremy sourly added.
His quest for noise having ended, Curtis figured he could
make it to the shuttle without trying to drag out more conversation from
Savoie. Besides, Jeremy didn't seem to be in much of a talking mood. In
fact, Curtis wasn't sure Jeremy *had* another mood.
After a few more minutes, it was Savoie's turn to break
the silence. "Don't tell me you can hear those things," he said
abruptly.
Curtis looked toward him, "The quakes?"
"Yeah."
Curtis nodded, surprised at Jeremy's sudden interest.
"I can hear the rumbles the quakes emit and judge the distance they
are by it."
"Wonderful," came the flat reply. "Is there
anything you can't hear?"
"Out here? I could be hearing lots of things, a wide
range of frequencies, if only there was something *to* hear. Until a few
minutes ago I could still hear the away team over by the ruins."
Curtis explained.
"Bunch of geeks, falling all over themselves over
some big letter," he snorted. "Now -there's- a much more interesting
sight," Jeremy continued, pointing to the faint outline of the Opaca
ahead.
Curtis followed the finger to the shuttle, a welcome sight
indeed.
"Finally. Let's get this done with." he said,
pausing a moment to listen.
"Hmmm...." he exclaimed, slightly concerned.
Stopping, Jeremy faced Curtis. "What?" he demanded,
his brow knitted in annoyance.
Curtis stood perfectly still, taking in all he could of
the sound.
"Odd...I hear something, sounds like a quake...but
it's at least 8 kilometers off...." Curtis said, abruptly cutting
himself off, though it was obvious there was more to the story.
This time Jeremy wasted no time for further warning. "Let's
go!" he shouted, ready to sprint for the shuttle.
Curtis didn't move, still in a trance.
"This is different...it's not like that other one.
It's so loud already, I shouldn't be hearing it at this intensity until
its a lot closer. That can only mean...."
Curtis' eyes suddenly became wide with horror, "Jeremy....this
one is huge, we have to get out of here....now!"
[Backpost]
"Make way for the Blonde"
Major Jaiana McCormick
Vanguard Division Commander
Starfleet Marine Corps
----------Star Base 212----------
Starfleet Marines were held to a certain high standard.
They were the best of the best, people able to endure strenuous physical
training and were often the first into a dangerous situation and the last
out. People had a certain image of how a Marine was supposed to appear:
they were supposed to be heroic, the type of figure one wanted to see
riding in to save the day; muscular and handsome, hard, serious, someone
who takes no-bullshit from anyone. A Marine was an all around large and
powerful presence.
At first glance, Jaiana McCormick was far from any of
this and for reasons beyond the fact that she was a woman. She was barely
five foot seven, and even then, only so with her boots on. While she certainly
had an athletic build, her body was slender with small shoulders and feminine
curves. She was also blonde. Very blonde: platinum blonde. And she had
a light, perfect tan, large blue eyes, and immaculately manicured pink
fingernails. To say the least, she was a different type of Marine, and
one
who got a bit of sick enjoyment out of that difference. In her mind, she
could not find the point of being a stereotype.
She had received her new assignment only a week earlier,
on the heals of a promotion she had not been expecting. Unlike the typical
Marine, Jaiana had a small part of her which doubted her abilities and
questioned the motivations of her rise in the ranks-- not that she would
allow that to show. Honestly, though, pretenses and image aside, she found
it disturbing how quickly they were putting new pips on her collar, and
while it was not exactly unusual in a post-Dominion War/Militarized Starfleet
society to promote promising and militarily minded individuals, Jaiana
still thought of herself as a bit of a mediocre novice. She found herself
to be rather unimpressive. She did what she did because she had too, and
did no more than what any Marine would. The counselor she saw once a month
on her last posting (done only because of regulations) decided this inner
self-confidence issue was her psyche trying to deal with the comments
and opinions of others -- the counselor said that even though Jaiana's
consciousness ignored the comments and jokes on the outside, her sub-conscious
she was battling with the self-doubt those words would induce within anyone.
Of course, the newly commissioned Major found that all
absolutely ridiculous. In her mind, counselors were a joke. But Starfleet
got tired of Marines cracking from all the stress and pressure and so
she would be relieved from duty if she did not attend monthly sessions.
A pair of yellow shirt security officers stood outside
the airlock doors leading to the Galaxy, checking the credentials of all
who wanted to come aboard. It was standard since the war. Jaiana frankly
found it an excellent idea; she had never been too comfortable with the
idea that they were safe, especially docked. Terrorism was too real and
could happen anywhere. It took a while for the Federation to realize it.
It was beginning to disturb her again because they were slowly relaxing
the
security: it had once been marines patrolling the docking bays. Now it
was just a pair of security personnel standing outside and checking padds.
She presented hers to the ensign closest to her. He cocked
an eyebrow her direction, then glanced at the padd, then looked back at
her. She wasn't in uniform: she hated wearing her uniform when she wasn't
on duty and she was scheduled to report to any superior officers for another
three hours yet. Major Jaiana McCormick wore low-slung black pants and
a fitted baby pink top which bore her flat, tan stomach and pierced navel.
She had a black leather jacket pulled over the off-duty ensemble which
was completed by dark sunglasses, large hoop earrings, and her jewel studded
lip and nose piercings. Her platinum hair, woven (for the moment) with
thick black extensions, was pulled back into a messy half ponytail. She
had her large standard-issue (and stuffed full) duffel bag thrown over
her shoulder-- it probably weighed as much as she did, but they were trained
to carry that and more without breaking a sweat.
"Major?" the Ensign questioned, half-amused.
She took off her sunglasses and looked firmly at him.
"Major Jaiana McCormick, Starfleet Marine Corps. Is there something
funny, Ensign?" she asked, the New York accent she inherited from
her parents thick, blunt, and abrasive. "Because unless there is
a problem with some of my paperwork there, I suggest you wipe that smirk
off that mug of yours, stop gawking and step aside so I can board that
ship. I take a lot'a shit from a lot'a people, but not from navy security
ensigns."
They hesitated a moment, glanced between one another,
and then typed something and handed the padd back to her. "Your quarters
assignment is on the padd. Welcome aboard the Galaxy, Major," the
second said.
"She's lucky to have me," Jaiana replied snatching
the padd away from him and brushing by into the airlock and through to
the corridors of the large galaxy-II class starship.
-----------The Galaxy------------
Her quarters were on Deck 16 with the rest of the Marines,
which was exactly the way she'd wanted it. Her direct commanding officer
was a man by the name of Corran Rex, a joined trill, and navy fighter
pilot. A lieutenant junior grade. That annoyed her slightly-- in the customary
rank comparisons, she outranked him by two levels, but he was standard
Starfleet and therefore looked upon more favorably. At least, so she saw
it. She usually did not care for the 'navy', but since he was a fighter
jockey she would give him a chance.
Jaiana nodded at the officers who acknowledged her as
she made her way down through the ship and onto Deck 16. Being an officer--
and the division commander at that-- she had her own quarters, and they
weren't exactly small. She wouldn't go so far as to call them large, but
they were certainly larger than on her last assignment.
She dropped the duffel by the door and brushed back strands
of hair as she surveyed them: the general Spartan design. Perfect for
sprucing up, which she would proceed to do over the next few days in between
drill training and completing all the formalities.
"Computer, compose message to Lieutenant junior grade
Corran Rex -- 'Lieutenant', this is Major Jaiana McCormick, Starfleet
Marine Corps; I have just arrived aboard the Galaxy. Please contact me
at your earliest convenience so I can formally report in.' End message
and send." It beeped in response and Jaiana nodded, hefting up the
duffel again and throwing it on the bed so she could begin to unpack.
She hoped this would not be as frustrating an assignment as it had the
potential of being.
OOC: Hey all, happy to be back and
looking forward to role playing on the Galaxy...
"Arrival"
Written by
Ensign Aayla Me
Counselling Officer,
USS Galaxy
NPC Cadet Cassandra Quaid
"Yes Mother, I will be sure to stay safe." Aayla
spoke as she played absently with a piece of ribbon.
"You know that I worry? I worry about your father
as well when he is out there! There has been many problems lately in the
Galaxy and it is you who is now out there with it." Her mother finished
then smiled ?But I am proud of you Aayla.? Her mother finished with a
smile and moved assigned for her father to come on screen.
"Aayla you look wonderful in that uniform, better
than that uniform you were in at the academy!" her father said proudly
before continuing "Tell me when does you ship arrive at the star
base?"
Aayla leaned forward and smiled to her father, she had
always wanted to join Starfleet and she was a little worried when she
decided that she had wanted to be a counsellor and not a diplomat like
her father was. She remembered the day she told him she wanted to be a
counsellor, it had been long before joining Starfleet. Her father back
then had simply smiled and given her his blessing, something that still
to this day made her feel somewhat strange for she knew how he enjoyed
his work and how much he had wished for her to work with him.
"My ship docked about an hour ago, a lady by the
name of Cassandra Quaid will be coming to meet me and then take me on
a tour of the ship, my rooms and my office." she smiled at that last
part, finally she would have her own office. "I am so excited father,
I've not had my own office before!" she looked the screen and laughed.
"I was even sent my first patient file by the Commander Dallas"
she laughed picking up the data pad.
"I cant say much about this person, I don't know
her yet but I am looking forward to actually getting to know these people!"
Aayla placed the pad down and looked back to her father, seconds later
her doorbell chimed. "Father I love you, pass on my love to mother,
I will speak to you in a few days time!" She closed the terminal
off and spoke, "Come in!?"
She stood and straightened her uniform as the door to
the sparsely furnished room opened. The woman standing at the door spoke
first. "Aayla, my name is Cassandra Quaid, I am here to escort you
to the Galaxy and see that you are settled in. Karyn Dallas will be in
to see you later, it's been rather hectic as of late. But if you would
follow me, we can go now and take you to your room." The woman spoke
as she smiled watching Aayla.
Aalya smiled and picked up the small suitcase, inside
the case lay the few small items that were precious to her heart. The
kimono that her mother gave her when she blossomed into womanhood, a Japanese
tea set that was wrapped delicately in rice paper. And a few sets of clothes
that she would wear when off duty and roaming around the ship, she knew
uniforms could be replicated easily once on board so she packed the things
that mattered.
As the two women left the small room, Aayla took one last
look at the small room to make sure nothing had been left. In her hand
the small piece of ribbon she had been twisting around in her fingers
hung loosely. She turned and left the room the door shutting behind her
as her eyes looked over the woman she was following. Aayla wasn't sure
what to ask the woman she was following, she knew from the rank pip on
her collar that the woman was a forth year cadet. She was more than likely
an assistant or an intern thou without asking she wasn't sure which. She
looked out one of the large viewing windows, the same one she had passed
for the past few days while waiting for the Galaxy to arrive.
This time instead of seeing one of the older fleet ships,
the USS Galaxy sat berthed and floating in the weightless ness of the
docking bay. The size of the ship was surprising, easily dwarfing the
smaller Norway class that was closest to the window.
"She's a big ship isn?t she?" Cassandra spoke
up, catching Aayla off guard.
"It's much larger than I thought it would be."
Aayla admitted as she looked on in amazement, her eyes tracking the large
ship as she passed by the view port window. The two women moved through
the endless corridors of the star base and finally turned into an entrance
ramp, she passed a small scanner and found herself confronted by two security
guards. Aayla and Cassandra were allowed access onto the massive star
ship after a few routine security checks, her eyes suddenly adjusting
to the bright lights of the ships corridors.
"This way Ma'am." Cassandra spoke and motioned
for Aayla to follow.
Aayla looked for a second and laughed, she had no idea
where she was and realised that for the mean time she would have to carry
around a map of the ship on a data pad. Cassandra looked up to her with
a puzzled expression, the cadet obviously not knowing what Aayla was thinking.
"Cassandra, the last time I was on a star ship was when I was 5 years
old. I don?t even remember what it was like, now I am on one massive star
ship and already I am lost!" She laughed some more thinking to herself
that it must of sounded silly. But a few moment's later Cassandra spoke
"Ma'am I was the same as you when I first arrived,
but trust me when I say that you will get used to where things are. It
takes a little while, but you'll get there? Cassandra's face had a rather
large smile on it as they entered the turbo lift. "Deck 5" she
spoke to the computer.
Aayla felt the lift rise up her hands held onto the strapping
of her small suitcase as she felt the lift come to a stop, the two women
left the turbo lift and walked out into a nearly identical corridor. Aayla
laughed to herself knowing that she would dare not try and go anywhere
until she at least knew where her quarters were without second guessing
herself.
They snaked through a series of small interconnecting
corridors and reached a inconspicuous door, Cassandra smiled and stood
to the side "Ma'am this is your room, I can wait out here if you
wish?" Cassandra looked to Aayla as the door opened to expose the
bare but large room.
Aayla looked to Cassandra and smiled "No that's okay,
I think I need to get this room sorted out before I go anywhere else."
she looked into the room and turned back to Cassandra "When should
we do this tour?"
"When ever you are ready Ma'am, but I will return
in say two hours and we shall go from there?", the cadet asked. And
then with a nod from Aayla, she turned and left the Orion ensign to sorting
out her room.
Aayla entered what was now her home and opened up her
suitcase, she had a lot of work to do to make this comfortable.
"Descent"
Starring :
Rebecca von Ernst
Lt Shelby (NPC)
ENS Blather (NPC)
(Aboard the derelict Galaxy)
Crunch. . .'POP'!
Crunch. . .'POP'!
Crunch. . .'POP'!
Crunch. . .'POP'!
"Lieutenant Shelby, Are you going to step on every single light fixture
in the entire ship, or are you just trying to drive me out of my mind?"
GULP--"S. .s. .sorry Commander von Ernst. . .its. . its just hard
to walk on the ceiling without my foot 'popping' a lightbulb every few
meters. . . .
.I'm not used to looking at things this way."
"Then stand on your head or somthing. . .you're giving me a headache."
"Aye Ma'am."
Sighing to herself Rebecca turned her attention away from the sheepish
looking officer and back to the hallway in front of her.
The interior of the wrecked USS GALAXY was dark beyond
imagination. Buried as it was under tons of rocks and debris, and with
all of its primary power cells drained years before, the eerie pale light
from Rebecca's flashlight was the only real source of illumination.
~~~It is weird looking at things this way. . .~~~ she
had to admit to herself. Apparently the Saucer section had crashed Upside
down, and as a result everything was inverted.
The soft beige carpeting that had one graced the GALAXY's
floors were now stretched across its 'ceiling' above her head, and the
numerous glowing light fixtures now covered much of the 'floor' beneath
her feet. (much to the consternation of Lt. Shelby whose boots kept exploding
the long inert
bulbs)
Directions were reversed too. Hallways that Rebecca could
have navigated
blindfolded beforehand were now a strange mirror image of their former
selves requiring her to stop frequently and consult friendly signs that
designated her location.
~~~Too bad I cant read upside down. . . ~~~ Rebecca grumped,
as she twisted
herself into knots trying to view an inverted placard. ~~~Deck 6. . .or
Deck 9 maybe. . . I'm so turned around.~~~
"This. . .this is impossible ma'am." Lt. Shelby was saying,
mostly to himself. "I. .I mean we just left the Galaxy this mornig
on the shuttles. .
. .I had breakfast down in Ten Forward just one deck up. . .err down from
us. How can the ship be buried here on Quentin?"
Rebecca turned to glare at the nervous Lieutenant annoyingly. "Are
you asking me a question Shelby, or are you just blathering to yourself?"
she asked.
"Er. . . . nevermind Ma'am sorry."
Shaking her head, Rebecca turned to continue down the hall.
The bodies. . . . unfortunately. . . were everywhere.
Hundreds upon hundreds of 30 year old corpses littered
the floor (ceiling) of the derelict. The method of their demise unfortunately
hidden by the deterioration of their bodies.
Rebecca grimaced at the smell as she stepped over the
shriveled corpse of someone wearing an Engineers uniform. Hopefully Dr.
Fienberg would finish up his autopsy examinations soon, and give her an
answer.
=/\= ENSIGN BLATHER TO COMMANDER VON ERNST=/\=
The buzzing of Rebecca's Comm badge in the dead silence
of the passageway almost made her jump out of her skin.
"G . .g. .go ahead." she answered, mentally
ordering her heart to slow down.
=/\=WE'VE FINISHED OUR CLIMB DOWN. . .ERRR. . . UP
TO THE BRIDGE LEVEL MA'AM. . . .UNFORTUANTELY IT LOOKS LIKE THE SHIP WAS
IN A STATE OF RED ALERT, SO THE SECURITY BULKHEADS ARE ALL IN PLACE AROUND
THE BRIDGE ACCESS PORTS.. . . .IT'LL TAKE US A WEEK TO CUT OUR WAY IN.=/\=
Rebeca nodded grimly. One of the safety features aboard Starships was
a set of metal barriers that sprung into action whenever the ship was
on high alert. This prevented any invading force from gaining easy access
to the bridge during a combat situation.
"Aknowledged Ensign," Rebecca answered, "Try
to contact Lt. Commander Corgan to come enter his access code for you,
otherwise I will be up there shortly with my own overrides. Suder's the
only other officer with access but we still have not heard form him since
that last big quake."
=/\=AYE MA'AM. . .ILL SEE IF COMMANDER CORGAN IS BUSY.=/\=
Silence once again reigned on the Galaxy wreckage, and
for the briefest of moments Rebecca had the unerving feeling of claustrophobia.
Her dancing flashlight in the black corridor seemed to dim eerily, but
she shook it off as merely her imagination.
Crunch. . .'POP'!
"Oops. . . .sorry Ma'am.. . .my foot slipped."
Rebecca grit her teeth in friustration and set out once again. She wasnt
sure what she was looking for, but somewhere aboard this 30 year old ghost
there had to be some answers.
"Report"
By:
Lt. Commander Rose Isis MacAllen,
Chief of Archology
Lt. (jg) Kay Elizabeth MacFarland,
Science Officer (APC)
Ensign Edward Ti,
Science Officer (NPC)
**Science Lab 1**
Kay and Edward have been at their post for the past 24
hours trying everything they can to track down the away team but everything
they came up with failed.
"We better good tell Rose." the young Bajoran
male spoke up while rubbing his dark blue eyes.
Then the young MacFarland yawns and the rolls her eyes
alittle, "That wouldn't been an good idea but we do need to tell
her, we just have to wait and see what the Captain can come up with...that
going to piss her off royaly." With light steps
the reported to their boss Rose Isis MacAllen with bad news.
*******************************************************
Rose who was falling asleep at her desk with PADDS all
around her jumped up when she heared the door bell rung, "COME!"
she yelled in an tired voice.
Both MacFarland and Ti walked into the Betazoids office
with sad looks on their faces, "I'm sorry Commander we try everything
to see if we can locate the away team, no success ma'am." MacFarland
reported while looking at her boss.
~Gods she looks tired, her eyes are blood shot already.~
"Ok, we will wait for to see if the Captain or anybody
else have some ideas. In the mean time go and get some rest and report
back around 0600 hours alright?" Rose replied while looking though
her PADDS and reports.
Both officers left as their worried about their boss,
Kay when to Rose's apartment to watch the children.
"One Mad Prophet"
Lt. Commander Adrian An'quinsos
Acting Chief Counselor
USS Galaxy
The Commander had walked past him, taking no consideration
into what he had said to her. In fact, it felt like a blatant slap in
the face. The little sprite may have outranked him, but not out aged him.
A dark frown had seeped on his face as he glared visibly at her form behind.
'Perhaps next time, she can have the temporal slip and I can give the
orders!'
The Away Team moved forward, all except for one wide eyed
Humanoid who stared silently at the massive wreckage before him. And now
they had arrived to main source of the disturbance he had felt earlier.
The Away Team moved forward, all except for one wide eyed Humanoid who
stared silently at the massive wreckage before him. An almost tangible
metallic taste lingered in his mouth as he felt the temporal echoes entering
his mind. They reverberated from the hull like a blue shifted Quasar against
a field of blackness.
If he were epileptic, the amount of spasms this would
have created, would have kept him in the Medical Bay for Months on end.
The rest of the Away Team seemed to ignore him, which
was just fine. They probably wanted the Counselor out of the way anyway.
However, his concern for them was secondary to the ripples that passing
through his body. He stepped closer, until, he was looming over a section
of the hull in an ominous fashion. His intense, blue eyes were still wide
and wild, while perspiration drifted down his face unnoticed.
He was within inches of it now, the ripples were far more
tangible than before as they threatened to overwhelm his higher senses.
It was a dizzying feat though he managed to keep his head on his shoulders
without bringing up his own natural, mental defenses. Curiosity was eating
at him, which seemed to garnish one action.
Unlike the others, who seemed to have been handling it
as though it was nothing, Adrian lifted his hand towards it, as though
limp, and slowly pressed it against the hull. A far away look took his
visage and he closed his eyes in concentration.
The timeline surrounding this paradox unraveled itself
briefly, but enough for the El-Aurian to get a general glimpse of what
had occurred. Though a statue in appearance, several tears fell unabated
from his eyes as continued to touch the hull. Then, abruptly, he withdrew
his hand, as though it had been scalded and looked over at the Away Team,
his lower jaw shaking.
"Death." He pronounced darkly, wiping the leftover
tears from his eyes. "Undercurrents, ripples coming to the surface
spilling through the air in temporal flux." He looked at all of them,
trying to gauge a reaction, and then continued to speak. "I sense
death, emanating from it, an oncoming storm that wasn't prepared for."
His head slowly ascended upward and his voice fell into
a foreboding whisper.
"And we may be too late."
“Tempus Fugit Part One.”
Ramir Omar had left from the medical bay just several
hours ago. He was apprised of the current situation and it disturbingly
reminded him of another situation that was very similar to their predicament.
It is true that time does fly.
2368. Beta-Delta Quadrant Border.
“We’re receiving a call of distress.”
Centurion/The Acting Captain Ramir Omar looked at his helm officer. He
had been the commander of the Revenge since the recent death of the captain
and the first officer.
“Where from?”
“Several parsecs away from one of our pre-warp conquests.
It appears that several earthquakes have occurred and they’re asking
for assistance with various medical supplies. Might I set a course for
it sir?”
“Yes At Warp Eight-”
“Sir there is a friendly warbird that is decloaking
directly off of the port bow!” The young tactical officer shouted
at him.
Omar frowned. There should not be other warbirds around
of this area of Romulan territory. “You are to activate hailing
frequencies.”
Five seconds later then an old man wearing the military
uniform of a captain appeared. “You are to immediately return to
Romulus.”
“We’re just responding to a call of distress
though,” Omar said to the captain.
“Centurion you must accompany me to Romulus immediately,”
The man then repeated to the centurion.
“We must respond to a call of distress though.”
Omar ignored the fact that the captain had not utilised his honorary rank
of captain.
“No. I Am Captain Toba. You shall comply with my
orders. We’ve detected a subspace conduit inside of that system
and it has a Borg signature.”
Omar suddenly understood but that did not alter his responsibility
to the people of that damaged planet. “I do understand that there
is a risk to us but-”
“You obviously do not understand that there is a
risk to us,” Toba hissed at him. “If any of our warp signatures
are detected inside of that region then the Borg Collective shall come
out of the conduit. It is very fortunate that those distressed people
are a pre-warp civilisation or the Borg would certainly destroy them.”
“Yes but-”
“No Centurion. You are to return to the home-planet
or you shall be destroyed.” He then ended with the transmission.
An uneasy silence permeated the bridge for one minute.
The helm officer finally said to the centurion. “I’m returning
to the home-planet sir.”
“No.”
The whole of the bridge crew looked at him with astonishment. “Sir?”
The helm officer asked of him.
“We’re going to respond to that call of distress.”
None of them did anything.
“It is my understanding that insubordination is
a greater offence than the disobeying of an order.” He looked at
all of them calmly.
“Aye Captain.” The helm officer finally decided
to say to him and then the rest of the bridge crew just nodded to him
with agreement.
“Red Alert! Hands To Battle Stations! Red Alert!”
He smiled to himself.
“Galaxy Attacks!?!”
By Various ‘Dallas’ Written NPC’s
Location: USS Galaxy
**************
Security Department, deep inside the ship.
**************
Klaxons rang like church bells on Sunday, singing out
the battle hymns.
Gopherlike in their reaction, the security staff popped
up their heads and looked around. It was reaction more than anything else,
much less useful, to look up at the red, flashing warning lights to see
what was going wrong. But look they did, and the red angry glare screamed
at the men and women of Starfleet Security to move out. That following
split second, the men and women dashed out of coffee tables, seats, desks,
and sprung from whatever tasks they were doing and RAN!
All that was left in security was steaming mugs of coffee
(some spilt in their haste), discarded PADDs, half eaten doughnuts, and
the screams and flashes of the warning sirens.
Next door, the armory was the new happening place to be.
As the chief armory officer stood by the seemingly endless rack of phaser
rifles and combat packs, security personnel lined up by the dozens. Each
officer was served with a snap and a click, the armory officer thrusting
compression rifles into the other officer’s arms. The newly armed
officer would then move on down the line, as another armory officer slapped
a sidearm to their hip and a security tricorder to their belt. The officers
then moved down the line, separating into different squads, as squad leaders
prepped them for action.
O’Rourke was now the epicentre of the armory’s
activities. Now the interim leader (until someone else showed up), she
directed traffic while trying in vain to instruct her group.
“Hey T’lan! You got Squad Gamma ready?”
She screamed out.
The Vulcan mistress, rifle in hands and the same flat
face she wore everyday answered, “Yes, sir. Squad Gamma is ready
for operations.”
O’Rourke redirected to Marsh, “Hey Marsh!
How’s Squad Omega?”
Marsh tied a strip of white cloth on his head, and said,
“They’re ready to kick ass, sir.”
“E’xch! Tell me you have Squad Epsilon ready
to go to deck 8!”
E’xch shrugged his shoulders. “They’re
still getting armed, sir!”
O’Rourke helplessly threw her hands up over her
head and sighed. ~”Oh dear god! A red alert, and we aren’t
ready? Corgan wouldn’t have allowed that!”~ She looked over
the security department. Though their readiness times were some of the
best in the fleet, it never seemed fast enough when the ship was in imminent
danger, or when one was in charge themselves. “Come on! Move it!
Move it! Ship’s not gonna defend itself!” She screamed as
she slapped people on the shoulder each time a rifle was handed to them.
“Sir?” T’lan yelled for attention, “Sir!
What’s going on? All we have are friendly targets in proximity of
this ship! What are we doing at red alert?!”
This caused Lieutenant O’Rourke to pause herself
for the moment, and reflect on that thought. Good question! What were
they doing, arming up while there was nothing but a weak warp shuttle
and a small fleet of friendly vessels waiting for them?
”T’lan… I don’t know. It’s
strange.” O’Rourke confessed.
T’lan carefully explained through the din of activity,
“Think about the circumstances logically, sir. We may or may not
have inadvertently destroyed an entire planet. All that is left of the
Quentite race is a warp ship. We have not one ship attending to the situation,
but a small fleet waiting for us in a surrounding ambush attack pattern.
And from what I can guess of the position of the Quentite ship, we are
in a protective stance. Sir… it looks like...”
The lightbulb of reason illuminated O’Rourke. She
gasped in rapt horror, “They’re going to attack us…”
“Yes sir. That is the logical conclusion.”
T’lan spoke, not changing in tone or flatness, “Therefore,
we will have to come to a… difficult decision.”
”We… we… we’re going to…
we are?” O’Rourke stuttered. Her head conjured up images of
death, tooth and nail fighting, and the destruction. Her head couldn’t
evacuate the sights of battle, and it disturbed her. “Other Starfleet
officers?”
“Correct.” She replied, “Whatever we
have to do… better make it clear.”
O’Rourke froze in indecision. She never had to deal
with such responsibility before, and it was much different than command
training on holodecks and in classrooms (she avoided both). She didn’t
trust herself with the big calls, didn’t want anything to do with
the important decisions. She was a lawyer. Not a leader. What was she
doing here? How could she do it?
What would James do? Commander Corgan could always make
the difficult decisions, and damn the consequences later. But then again,
hearing about his reputation as a rather tortured soul, she could see
her commander as having a bit of a martyr complex.
~”James isn’t here!”~ She reasoned with
her head, ~”He isn’t going to be here on time! He’s
on that planet and he left me in charge for the time being… or until
someone higher ranking than me comes along to take over. The ship’s
at red alert, and T’lan’s really trying to ask me whether
or not we should shoot on other Starfleet officers in the unlikely event
that they came to take us all to the penal colonies for destroying that
rinky-dink planet! Oh god… they do horrible things to lawyers in
penal colonies… what am I saying? This is beyond me. I can’t
do this!”~
”Sir?” T’lan urged.
”What?!” O’Rourke snapped, “You want me to say
yes, we should kill other Starfleet officers?!?”
”But sir, it might be the…”
”OH COME OFF IT!” O’Rourke growled,
“The Quintite ship has nukes! They can’t harm us! We would
be at yellow alert if it were just them! Face it; we are all going to
be charged with crimes of humanity for wiping a whole planet clean! The
fleet out there…” He hand sweeped in the general direction
of the other Fed ships, “Are here to bust the captain’s ass
for killing billions of people, whether he did it or not! And if we are
at red alert, it means Captain M’Kantu is going to pounce first…
or the other ships will! Either way, we’re going to be fighting
other Federation citizens!”
T’lan didn’t flinch from O’Rourke’s
verbal assault, “I see your point.”
“And now you want to leave me to give the order
to fight other Starfleet officers? Fine!” O’Rourke threw up
her hands, frustrated, “Everyone! We might be boarded! It’s
our duty to protect this ship, and by law protecting the citizens of this
ship supersedes laws preventing an engagement between two Starfleet forces.
In otherwords, we fire on those officers whom board… we commit treason!
However… they move against the civilians and harm any personnel
on this ship… we have the right to stop them!”
Everyone hung onto O’Rourke’s words. “Your
orders are to not fire unless fired upon. Use stun only. I don’t
want to kill fellow officers. Block access to key systems unless ordered
by Captain M’Kantu. Make it clear that any boarding officers will
not be allowed to go within an inch of restricted area, including the
Captain. If they stop us from keeping them away from sensitive areas….
All bets are off. NOW MOVE MAGGOTS!!!!!!!!!!!”
*************
The computer core was bathed in red light.
Engineers scrambled like ants over their beloved colony,
protecting the computer, their queen, from the fright of the red alert.
Somebody was going to squash their colony flat, and they
knew it.
Lieutenant Eleanor Pharrel, computer core specialist,
graduating class of ’75, daughter of a civilian computer programmer
and a homemaker, didn’t like what she was seeing.
Neither did the computer geeks she had to work with. Of
all the personnel, the trio of Specialists Reinhardt, Smith, and Andreas
knew better than anyone (with the exception of a few tactical officers)
what kind of trouble they were in. All three geeks, on the Galaxy since
its refit, knew the ships system as well as almost everyone (to such a
knowledge that it put Lt. Pharrel’s head in a tailspin) what this
ship was capable of.
A whole lot of whup-ass, as Specialist Smith eloquently
stated a week ago.
Then again, they were more than capable of understanding
the threat outside the ship. All three NCO’s were also starship
geeks. What started as a hobby to better expand their knowledge of Starfleet
ships to make the ultimate strategy starship battle game gave them knowledge
that sometimes they wish they didn’t know.
“Elli! They’re in a Reverse Yamaguchi patter!”
Specialist Andreas waved her over, “We’re getting the live
feed from the Tactical Department!”
”Jesus Christ!” Smith cursed, “All three
of ‘em?”
“All three. Check it!” Andreas tapped the
screen. “Now the Hood’s weak. An old Excelsior, latest Mark
with some upgrades. Could sting us, but would have to get a lucky shot
in order to stand a chance. But the other two are different.”
Elli was disturbed by their banter. “Don’t
you guys have work to do?”
”What are we going to do? The core’s working
fine. And I’m… monitoring the situation so that we won’t
be caught off guard.” Specialist Smith shot back.
“Check it, Elli!” Specialist Reinhardt explained,
“The Hood is nothing. We could frag her to spacedust if we wanted.”
”HEY! That’s a Fed ship we’re talking
about!” Elli yelled out. “And you’re talking about blowing
up a friendly and killing fellow servicemen?”
“Hell yeah!” Specialist Reinhardt retorted,
“They’re in a reverse Yamaguchi. They don’t use that
to subdue starships. They use it to frag capital ships. We might be more
tricky with phaser strips and superior firing angles, but it worked wonders
on the Dominion for outflanking their battleships. Now it’s on us.”
“We’re not worried about the Hood.”
Specialist Andreas said, “It’s the other two that scare me.”
Elli let the geeks rapid fire their analysis. “The
Pershing’s well built. A good blend of old school design meets high
end tech. It’ll be reliable in a fight. A little stinger. Alone,
it wouldn’t stand a chance against us, but she’ll bloody us
good with support on its side.”
“And then there’s the Nimitz.” Smith
pointed out, “She’s an equal match to us. Shields are about
the same, though we could probably get more. Her weapons aren’t
as heavy as out phaser cannon, but with quantum torps and multi-phas’s,
that gun gap isn’t that great. And worse yet… Nimitz is a
Sovereign. You know what that means?”
Elli’s voice chilled. “No?”
”She’s a lot more nimble than us. We’re
a barbarian with a clumsy mace. She’s a fencer with a foil. We can’t
move. She can. Who do you think is going to outsmart and kill who?”
The cold realization dawn on the Female officer. A few
days ago, she was facing death until she was ‘saved’ by Lieutenant
Commander Corgan.
Now she was facing it again, with their own people as
the aggressor.
It seemed that death wasn’t going to escape her
after all.
"Master of the Ship"
Starring Rebecca von Ernst
Robert Blather (NPC)
(BRIDGE: sort of)
"Aten-hut! Captain von Ernst on the Bridge!"
The call to attention echoed off the dusty, fire-scorched
walls of the USS GALAXY, and the lethargic shuffling of boots as all present
popped to, gave credance to how exhausted everyone was.
"At ease," Rebecca von Ernst said softly from
the badly damamged turbolift doors. The melted slag of what were once
solid duranium bands were evidence of how the intrepid away team had to
cut their way in to access the bridge.
"This isnt a formal inspection, and this is hardly
an active dutyship anymore so forget about formalities." she added.
The weight of what was going on around everybody was begining to drain
her mentally as well.
~~~Captain. . . ? ~~~ she rolled the word around in her
head. Technically it was correct now, but it sure sounded darn weird.
As second in Command of the Galaxy, Rebecca was naturally
the first in line of succession to assume command in case of disaster.
That had obviously occured, and as far as the AWay Team was concerned,
Von Ernst was now in command of the USS Galaxy. . . such as it was.
Then came the fact that naval tradition demanded that
the master of any vessel (regardless of rank) must be addressed as 'Captain'.
A lowly second Lieutenant in charge of a Space tug was a 'Captain,' and
now, it seemed, Rebecca was as well.
~~~Admiral Hoth would be so tickled.~~~ she thought with
a wry sense of humor. ~~~Captain of the USS GARBAGE-HEAP~~~
As the assembled workers turned back to their tasks, Rebecca
gave the bridge a long slow once over, feeling as though she had never
been here before.
(Though in actuality she had only left the ship that morning)
With power out, the Galaxy bridge was half lit by an eerie
spiderweb of flashlight lanterns whose beams crisscrossed the dusty room
in a labyrith of murky light.
Most immeadiately apparent was the fact that the Bridge
was UPSIDE DOWN. The graceful Tactical Arch, and streamlined Ops and Helm
positions now decorated the 'ceiling' above them such as it was, and the
single circular skylight that once looked out onto the stars, now lay
in the center of the 'floor', shattered and clotted with mud and dirt.
Idly Rebecca toed arandom clod of dirt, and watched as
it rolled away into the darkness.
Unfortuantely, not everything that once sat on the floor
had remained there. Somehow the Massive Captain's Chair had become dislodged
in whatever disaster befell the Galaxy, and it now sat crookedly on the
'ceiling' at Rebecca's feet.
Then there was also the matter of the thirteen long -
decomposed corpses that the Away Tema had found strewn about the bridge.
It was hard to tell, but many seemed burned, and/or crushed in a manner
to suggest some violence done to them beyond the crash of the Saucer section.
Rebecca sighed.
Thankfully, the Away team had gathered up the scattered
bodies, and lined them up neatly near the aft bulkhead, and covered them
with a shimmering silver tarp.
"S. .s.. status report Ensign." she asked, a
slight crack creeping into her voice.
Ensigg Robert Blather turned from his project, and considered
the Commander with weary eyes.
"It. . .its slow going Ma'am." he admitted,
"We're trying to patch a portable power unit into the Main ODN network,but
we're running into some technical difficulties. "
He paused to sneeze, the dry dusty air was giving his
sinus's fits.
"Pardon me Ma'am, but the problem is that all the
computer hookups. . . . .well. . . .they are all waaaaay up there."
Blather indicated the ceiling above them that was easily
two meters out of reach.
He shrugged,
"Its just that these ships were not to be designed
to be worked on from upside down."
Rebecca considered all the control surfaces dangling over
her head and frowned. Sillyhow the littlest things could be so infuriatingly
difficult.
"Right. . . . .": she said. "Well try and
see if you can scrounge up an antigravity scaffold, or even an old ladder.
We need to access the Computer core. . . if possible. . . as a matter
of priority."
Blather nodded and wiped a sheen of sweat from his face.
"Aye Ma'am. . .well figure it out in a bit, but if you dont mind
me asking what are we looking for?"
Normally Rebecca the Ice-Queen would have frozen Blather
in his spot for such an impudent question. However, truth be told, she
was feeling less and less 'Ice-Queen-ish' for the past few hours. She
suspected the exhaustion had somthing to do with it.
"Two things Ensign." she sighed and eased herself
down onto a small pile of rubble with a tired groan. "First to access
the ship's logs and figure out what the noodles happened here."
"And second?"
Rebecca frowned, ". . . .and secondly to possibly
trigger the Saucer section Self Destruct Mechanism."
~~~SELF DESTRUCT?~~~ Blather gaped in obvious confusion.
~~~The dang thing is already wrecked beyond recovery and buried under
100 feet of rock. . . . . . what more does she want?~~~~
Rebecca seemed to read his thoughts. "If the ship
cannot be salvaged Ensign. . . " she explained, " The computer
cores still hold gigabytes upon gigabytes of valuable Federation Proprietary
information. . . . .Any detailed examination of the wreckage by an outside
power. . or pirated for that matter would be a serious breach of security."
After a moment the Ensign nodded. It seemed rash, but
he could not argue the point. "Aye Ma'am. . .I suppose you're right.
Now if you'll excuse me. . .I'll see about that ladder."
Rebecca watched him go and stood again with a yawn.
Giving the little row of bodies one last nervous look,
she strode back towards the turboshaft- ladder that she had climbed up
(down) on.
It would be some time before they really needed her on
the bridge. . . . . .and there were a few other places on this ship she
wanted to explore.
“Dust and Bones”
By Lieutenant Commander James Lionel Corgan
Chief of Security, USS Galaxy
Location: ‘The Galaxy’?
”Dust and bones.” James mumbled, the dirt
crunching in his feet, “Dust and bones… dust and bones…
nothing but dust and bones.”
An upside down world, a mirror into the last world he
thought he was in a mere hour before. Literally, in an upside down world.
One was clean and uprighted by artificial gravity, the other was upside
down and dirty from what seemed like years of neglect.
Just a whole lot of dust and bones.
James was walking down the corridor of deck 6, the same
corridor where a few days ago, he took his goddaughter to see the whale
tanks. The time she told him about her favourite things with such delight.
The same deck a day earlier where he saw a helpless engineer pinned under
a bulkhead, whom he had to cut the unfortunate officer out before she
could perish. The same deck, where a few days earlier, he saw the living
going about their duty, not suspecting the destruction of a planet and
the ensuing space/time madness that followed.
There was nothing but dust and bones. Panels were blackened
out, popped open and charred. The carpet was overhead, a faded red with
furry dust in its weaves. Scorches pock marked the beige walls, as crisscrossing
lines or straight on dots of dead aim fire.
James saw his fair share of death. The Dominion War was
a prime example. He saw starship boardings, and trench warfare on insignificant
planets. He slew others for the Federation. Jem’Hadar, Borg, Cardassians.
He was once considered one of the best marksmen on the front. Yes, James
knew full well about death.
What made his current predicament unique was not only
the sheer amount of shrivelled, dried, dust covered, uniformed corpses,
but of their age. Everything was old on this ship, and from his guess
there was at least a half to a quarter dozen decades of dust covering
the ship.
The dead were in heaps. He saw a group of a dozen corpses.
Phaser rifles were either scattered, or still clutched in the victim’s
hands. James experimentally tried one of the abandoned mark 3 rifles,
checking it over with a careful eye. He tried activating the old weapon.
Not even a chirp. The batteries were dead.
~”All mark 3’s.”~ He looked down at
the dead security team, ~”Must be new guys. They give the older
weapons to the newbies. Don’t have any clips for the Mark 3’s…
but I can jury rig something.”~
James opened up the rifle and slid out the clip. With
much effort, the energy clip popped out. Rusted, eaten away by acid, the
rifle was too aged, the battery and elements too corroded for the rifle
to work ever again.
“So much for that idea.”
He tossed the junky rifle away. There wasn’t a chance
in hell he could access its firing log. And there were no Compression
Rifles in good enough condition to access their mission recorders.
The dust and bones were going to have to stay as an enigma,
like everything else. Such as the phaser fire outside. It was all red.
All red beams. Experience told him that they were Federation, and nothing
but Federation phaser fire above the planet. Too much experience to discount
otherwise, for he knew the difference between friendly and ‘not-so-friendly’
and even the rare ‘extremely-pissed-off’ fire. Then there
was the change in scenery. A desert, but not much else. As would be expected
from an apocalypse blasted landscape, but old with the stench of still
air and artificially flattened mountains. The spear, a primitive device,
was found in the badlands. The ocean was settled, nary a hiccup in sight.
Everything pointed to one theme. Old. Dead. Resting. It
was all so jammed far into the past James doubted they were in the present.
Though he saw the phaser fire in the sky, it would go contradictory to
being flung into the past. He suspected, as much as anyone on the surface,
that the Galaxy fought for her life in the sky. M’Kantu might not
have stood down, and for good reason, to stand by his claim of innocence
for blasting an unsuspecting planet. Whomever was up there might have
tried to bring the Galaxy in, and for good reason, because their duty
demanded the guilty be brought in for justice.
Was it the Galaxy up there, among all those lights? He
was in the future, or so it looked. The Galaxy was right here, dead and
buried. Were the lights some other ships? An alien shooting gallery? A
Fed shooting gallery? Both? Civil War? Unknown threat?
The answer was right in front of him, as hard as it was
to accept.
“We got f**ked.” James admitted, “They
came in to reign us in… and did it hard. But how could I see it
up there, and be here? F**k, I wish I didn’t skip those temporal
physics classes.”
He heard the distant clopping of boots on the other end
of the hall. It was Ensign Blather, unmistakably. He was always in a rush,
always out to impress, though a bit of a dolt when doing so. Blather came
in, slid to stop his momentum, and puffed for desperate breath.
“Sir!” Blather saluted. James half heartedly
saluted back, “We need your help at the bridge. We need to see if
your code will work on the blast doors.”
James raised his eyebrow. The doors were sealed on the
bridge. Now that settled it. The doors didn’t usually seal if it
was a plain crash and burn. The doors sealed when the ship was in combat,
to prevent boarders from coming in (though transport technology usually
went around these measures).
“Have you restored power to that section?”
James asked.
Blather gave his best ‘uhhh… I don’t
know’ look, and predicatably said, “Not yet, sir. We gotta
get some power cells. If that fails, we gotta break out the plasma torches
and cut our way through.”
“Well then… ensign. You seem to know what
to do. Don’t be afraid to show some initiative. Get the gear from
the Opaka. We’re going to the bridge.”
”Aye, sir!”
***************
Half hour later, at the bridge entrance.
The turbolift shaft leading to the bridge was clogged
by debris. The slow climb down, with plasma torch kits and power cells,
was not easy to navigate. Punching through the turbolift pod to get to
the bridge entrance was almost as tricky. But the trek was over. James,
Ensign Blather and Ensign Bonner were at the promised land, waiting to
force open the gates.
“Let’s hook ‘em up.” James ordered.
The ensigns snapped open a plastic case containing the
power cell kit. They linked a sparkling cable from the kit, then pried
open a panel to an access port of the ODN relays. The battery and the
panel were linked together, and the Ensigns fiddled with the age decayed
equipment.
“Try it now, sir.” Blather gave the go ahead.
Lights shone in the turbolift, in a haunted flicker. The panel sparked
and crackled, but stabilized like a dangerous bug zapper.
James cracked his knuckled, then said, “Ok…
here goes. Computer. Open emergency blast doors. Authorization, Corgan
Echo Zulu Foxtrot five five four…”
The panel heaved, the access code clogging its age addled
brain, causing the electronic components to haemorrhage on the new stimulus
of fresh power and processor commands.
It let out a dying groan like a doomed bird, and then
blew completely out.
“Awww… I mean… oh man…”
Ensign Blather’s head bobbed around, looking for the problem.
Acrid smoke drifted in Corgan’s nose. “Don’t
sweat it. We’ll do it the hard way.”
**************
Yet even more time later…
In an age-old tome, if they’re ever was an observer
alive on the inside, there was nothing but darkness. The crypt had no
light. Didn’t have light for an estimated six decades. Couldn’t
see the wall even if they ran into it. A duranium shell, buried under
dirt and rock wind swept for years, pounded by cataclysms untold. If there
were someone inside, it would be an isolation of pure madness.
Imagine how surprised the person or ghost would be to
see, for the first time in ages, a glaring white light shining straight
in their eyes. The light would astonish anyone in isolation. In rapt amazement,
the ghost could watch as the torch had to torturously make an ‘arch’
around the door. The slow burn, followed by a sudden disappearance of
the light.
And then, a huge crash as a slab of the old door gave
way!
Corgan cautiously shined his light into the doorway, sweeping
the area in light. He stepped in first, into the dark unknown, and then
waved the other two officers to come in.
His light scanned the remains of the bridge. What should
have been up was now down. Consoles were over his head, out of reach even
at his best jump, and scarred beyond recognition. The viewscreen was busted
open, spilling burned electronic entrails. Walls were black and burnt
out. The captain’s chair was ploughed straight into the overhead
dome, which he was now circling.
There were bodies, shrivelled like Peruvian mummies, twisted
in death throes. He could identify a few of them. The body over the helm
console looked like Savoire, the one over the science station Lieutenant
Egi. There was a few he couldn’t guess, but one he thought might
have been Lysander, and the grimness of the reality didn’t leave
him the luxury to laugh at irony.
He saw a body near the captain’s chair. Four pips
were on the mummified corpse’ uniform. He knelt over the corpse,
as if in prayer, and squinted to see the pips. He brushed the dust off
his glasses and shook his head.
“Rest in peace, Captain M’Kantu…”
The Chief of Security mourned.
"Heart of Darkness"
A Jp Starring
Lt Commander James L. Corgan
Commander Rebecca von Ernst
Imagine if you will , a world without light.
Imagine a darkness blacker than the blackest night sky.
A darkness like unto the deepest cave at the roots of
the highest mountains. . . . . a world untouched by the sun . . . . .
.a world tha never knew the gentle brush of an autumn breeze, nor the
intoxicating warmth of a sunny day.
Rebecca von Ernst sat alone in the Dark.
Here in the deepest recesses of the remains of the USS
GALAXY. . . .here surrounded by a solid shell of imprevious duranium which
was in turn buried by tons upon tons of wind-swept rocks above. . . .here
in a land that had not known the touch of light since the last power cell
burned out 30 years ago. . . . . .. . . .here Rebecca
found what she was looking for.
Nothing.
With literally miles of gloom-filled corridors between
her and the surface, and with the rest of the away team off exploring
other parts of the ship. . . .here she found peace in her solitude.
The flash-light that she had used to find her way down
(up) to this level lay beside her switched off.
Now that she was here she did not the world of light intruding
on her lonliness.
The darkness was strangely comforting. Like a warm blanket
of blackness that wraped its dark arms about her slender form in a motherly
embrace.
Rebecca was sitting on an old dusty couch in what used
to be the Deck 14 Cetacean Navigation Lab. It was here the Starship kept
its mammoth Whale Tanks filled with tons of water, and two of the most
unique mammals she had ever seen.
In her first days aboard the Galaxy years ago, a young
Ensign von Ernst had gotten lost, and had found the tanks quite by accident.
She soon felll in love with the isolated viewing lounge that had one wall
entirely composed of afloor-to-ceiling plate glass window looking out
onto the huge whale tanks.
The low lighting and soft gurgling of the water filters,
along with the haunting songs the Whales sometimes sung had made for a
favorite retreat for the skittish young Ensign. That and the fact that
nobody else from the crew botherd her down there also helped.
Now. . . .years later on the upside down derelict, Deck
14 was actually UP from where she and the rest of the Away Team had gained
access to the wreckage. Fortuantely the Jeffry tube ladders worked both
ways.
The lounge was much the same. . . . The soft blue carpeting
was now on the 'ceiling' above her, and the plush lounge sofa that she
had enjoyed so often was smashed in its fall to the 'floor' below, but
with a grunt of effort REbecca had been able to right it, and had since
sat there enjoyng the silence.
~~~Why cant people leave me alone~~~ she thought for the
milionth time in her life, ~~~Is that so hard?~~~
The answer came quickly as the soft -CRUNCH- of a footstep
at the door drew her attention.
"Crap!" A soft voice hissed.
She sighed, "Come in James, and pull up a piece of couch." she
said without turning.
James looked at his companion, and then dejectedly at
the spiderwebbed screen of the PADD he stepped on. ~"Now that was
sloppy."~ He bemoaned himself. He kicked the offending PADD aside
and helped himself to a couch cushion from the other end of the room.
Plopping it on the floor, she sat on the couch cross legged,
his pistol safely at his hip, the wristlight at the side of the cusion,
and his rifle resting on his knees. The way he sat was like a dark meditation.
"How did you know I was coming before I gave myself
away?" He asked.
Rebecca twisted slightly in the halflight of Corgan's
flashlight, its dusty beam casting strange shadows across her pale features.
"Because you are the only person who knows me well
enough to find me down here." she said simply.
"Figures." The dark mooded security officer
grumbled, "Every time I see you here, you've been upset. I thought
you might come back here to... sort things out."
He gestured towards the whale tank, "I thought I
could find a place I could hide out as well. You beat me to it. Guess
i'm not the only one disturbed by this. You know what's really bothering
me right now?"
Rebecca shrugged. normally she's pull a gruff answer out
of thin air or somthing, but James knew here well enough to know she hadnt
a clue what was going on most of the time. "No," she admitted.
"It's those phasers in the sky." Corgan mourned, looking up
at the plush ceiling as if it was the starry sky outside, "It reminds
me of the war. Did you ever see what it was like at the warzones?"
A far off look crossed Rebecca's brown eyes as she consulted
her memories of that time. . . .the Time of The Dominion Wars. "No.
. .not the way you did. Right after graduation I was hustled off to Starbase
108, about as far from the fighting as you could get." she sighed,
I spent my times being in charge of opening and closing the giant Starbase
doors for every ship that happened by.. . . . . .That was the war for
me."
"It was like what I saw outside... but different."
He explained, "While you were operating starbase doors, I was doing
combat duty on the USS Thunderchild. Mostly it was shipboardings and relief
efforts for the boys on the ground, but for a few months, I was stuck
on Oddissar V in the Cardassian DMZ."
The smells returned to him. Damp earth mixed with cold death. Screams
and wails. The whine of energy weapons and the whistle of artillery came
back. "Ugly muck everywhere. Local rats were a problem. We couldn't
put our heads up or the Jem'Hadar snipers would pick us off. Either that,
or they came to us in swarms, and we would gun them..." His arms
held an imaginary rifle, as he popped off imaginary shots, "Bang...
bang... more go down. For three months, it wouldn't stop."
"But what scared me the most was the lights in the
sky. The red lights was friendly fire. The white... Jem'Hadar. Amber for
Cardassian, when they did show up. The boys and I at the trenches... we
would look up at the skies whenever the local fleets clashed. We'd watch
and count how many red lines... white lines... yellow lines... there would
be. And we'd know who was winning. The more red lines... the better. If
the fleet got the better of the Jem'Hadar, they would help us by strafing
the Jem'Hadar trenches clean. But when there was nothing but white and
amber lights..." His voice shivered, "We were in trouble."
In spite of herself Rebecca shivvered.
He gasped in horror, "All I saw were red lights. I can only guess
what is going on. And i'm more concerned about the red lights than anything
else."
~~~Meaning what?~~~ Rebecca wondered, ~~~Meaning there
are only Federation ships in the sky? Meaning that GALAXY is up in the
sky?~~~ she looked around the darkened room she was sitting in. ~~~Then
where the noodles are we sitting?~~~
She turned and watched the blond haired man next to her
tremble slightly at the memory of his War horror. She though back over
the years that she had known James, and how this topic always bothered
him. . . tortured him actually. About how she had never. . . . ever listened
before.
"J. .James," she began softly, "R. .r..
.do you remember when we first met?"
"How can I forget?" James bowed his head until
the darkness hid his eyes.
She half smiled. "It was in one of Counseller Anquinsos's silly little
group therapy sessions. . . . .a room full of crazy Ensigns."
Her smile faded, "So many thngs have changed since
then. . . .for better or for worse. . . . . .I. . . . .I . . I've changed,
but it sometimes seems to me that you have not."
She paused and turned her head to study him closely in
the dim flashlight glare.
"I. . I have not been a good friend. . . .Heck I
didnt want to be friends in the first place with you. " She smiled
"But you kinda twisted my arm into it."
"Yeah..." He sheepishly blushed. Was she onto
him? "Sorry 'bout that. I pushed you a little too hard sometimes.
Expected too much. And because I wanted someone to talk to. It was selfish
of me. I'm sorry."
"I dunno," she toyed idly with a strand of her red hair. "Its
like. . . you have always worried about me. . . always bugged me to death
about trying to find out what was wrong with me. . . .and I never once
gave a second thought to what was going on in your mind. Is that harsh?"
He digested her thoughts for a second. Their relationship
was of two self destructive people. James at one point let her spin off
to destroy herself, knowing it was hopeless to share any closeness. In
retrospect, he was selfish of him to try. All he wanted was to be close
to someone. They why did he pick the soul equivalent of a cross between
a cactus and a pool of liquid nitrogen?
"Why would it be harsh?" James replied empathetically,
"You have so much... stuff to deal with. Its hard to focus on things
outside your own problems when they are so... in your face. You know what
I mean? Before the Galaxy, I couldn't see past my own problems, and my
relationships with people have been exploitative, to fulfil a need to
not be alone. You... used your problems to fulfill a need for isolation.
Are our situations any different?"
Rebecca thought about that. Social situations were stil
a mystery to her, but the Mathematical part of her brain could actually
see the sence in their opposite desires actually being one and the same.
Like the Absolute Value of an integer. It didn't matter
if it was positive or negative. . . . the value remained the same.
She shook her head.
"I dunno. . . . I dont know why you bother with me.
After all the noodleheaded things I've done. . . . . After Lysander. .
. .That Dinner at Momma's Farm. . . . After the K-4 station." she
shrugged.
She'd run out of words, and wondered what it was he needed
from her.
"I care about you." He said out of the blue.
"Not sure if its selfish or not, but I care about you. I just wanted
to be close to someone at first, and I still do. But doesn't that sound
selfish? I should have considered that you didn't want me around... or
that you would rather be alone. But what can I say? I care..."
~"What the hell is going on?"~ He backtracked, ~"Should
I be saying this?"~
He thought again, ~"Oh for f**k sakes, James! FESS UP!"~
~"About what?!?"~
Rebecca looked silently across the room to were the once magnificent Whale
Tanks had once been. The Glass was now shattered and laying in great shards
across the 'floor'.
~~~A perfect analogy for James and my lives, ~~~ she mused.
"I dunno James. . . . there once was a time when I just wanted to
the entire Universe to leave me alone. I couldnt understand why people
kept beating down my door trying to 'save me' or 'cure me'.
She sighed.
"I never asked to be cured of anything. . . . . .
. until maybe now."
"Last time I tried to help you, it ended up backfiring."
James warned, "But i'll hear you out. Maybe all you need to do is...
just get some things off your chest."
She shrugged, I'm one step away from fulfilling my purpose
with Starfleet." she said. "One step away from the big chair,
and once I'm there. . . . .I'm afraid there will be no turning back. The
shy stuttering Rebecca you met in group therapy
will be gone forever, and the Ice Queen you met on K-4 will be here to
stay."
"Does it have to be that way?" James asked.
"Like what? Do I have to follow Hoth's silly little
plan. . . . . .?"
"You know, do you have to be the Ice Queen or the Shy Girl? I don't
see why you have to be one or the other."
Rebecca didnt see where James was coming from. Her personality traits
seemd pretty much mutually exclusive as far as she was concerned. In fact
she had no idea where the Ice Queen persona had even come from to begin
with.
"Both had their good points." James smiled. "The Ice Queen
was confident. She could face down a Jem'Hadar Dreadnought with a shuttle
and not even blink. She was brave... and I admire that. As for the shy
Rebecca, I liked how she was more in touch with herself, and more open
to others. But the ice queen lacked empathy and humanity, and both are
vital if you want to command. The shy girl couldn't step up to the plate,
another command trait needed. The way I see it, you may become one or
the other. But you can't afford to be. Somewhere along the line, you're
going to have to take the best of both and work with it."
Rebecca almost smiled. Its amazing how other peoles problems seemed so
much simpler than one's own. "Mix oil and water James? Sounds easy
enough."
"You know what?" James waved off his confusion,
"I came because we got access to the bridge. She is restoring a corrupted
file... it is the final moments of the Galaxy." He uncrossed his
legs. Holstering the rifle on his shoulders, the Dominion Veteran rose
off his cushion, "It may hold some answers. Maybe it can tell us
why..." His finger pointed up to the air, "Federation ships
are firing on each other up there."
Rebecca shook her head as if to clear away the cobwebs.
Of course it was back to duty. "Aknowledged Lt. Commander, "
she said crisply as she stood and brushed the dust off her uniform. You
are quite right. . . . we have duties to attend to. Lets go see about
accessing those Computer logs."
"Yeah." He sighed. "Back to the salt mines."
Crunching past settled dust and debris, James took one last look at the
whale tank. The whale tank wasn't his favorite haunt. There were too many
stressful times with Rebecca.
~"Why do I put up with her?"~ He thought, ~"I
know I care about her, but how much? Enough to stand by her, even if she
allows herself to be eaten up like this? Geez... if she's in trouble,
i'm going to sink with her, and sink deep. Hell with it."~ James
decided silently, ~"I'm in too deep with her. It's all the way or
no way at all."~
"Shocking Discoveries"
by Dr. Jannelle Reynolds
Thankfully, the Away team had gathered up the scattered
bodies, and lined them up neatly near the aft bulkhead, and covered them
with a shimmering silver tarp.
Reynolds, being the CMO, was asked to view the bodies
then see if she could identify the bodies. She didn't understand how she
could identify them if she never knew them. It was then that she figured
it out. When she walked over to the aligned bodies, she was surprised
to see that they weren't just bones and teeth. Most of the bodies were
mummified. With limited means of finding out who they might be, it would
take her a while to find out.
Walking among the bodies, she looked at uniforms, and
also any rank insignia that would clue her in who they might be. She found
all sorts of different races but then one body caught her eye. He was
wearing a major insignia and the uniform gave her more information. She
could tell it was a male but there was something different about this
body. It seemed that the body was in better shape than the others and
a little bigger than the other males. She wondered if this person was
maybe the last to die or close to it.
This one was approximately 5'10" or 5'11" and
around 200 pounds at least. She took her tricorder which seemed to be
working somewhat and scanned him. Her scans revealled that this body was
a product of eugenics. His body mass and muscular build suggested that
he was physically stronger than most human males.
Dr. Reynolds remembered reading the medical files of the
crew and only knew of one body that matched this but she was in denial.
If this was who she thought it was, then this meant that they were not
in their timeline. This body had been dead for more than 28 years. She
refused to believe that this could be their crew, the same crew they just
left not too long ago. No, she would examine the other bodies before she'd
admit the worse.
Another body that caught her eye was about five bodies
down...a Lieutenant by the rank insignia. She bent down and something
was under him. She turned him slightly then gasped. This couldn't be a
coincidence, the odds were too great. It was definately a Fruna'lin. The
6'2" body and the physique of this one could only be...Cutter Kara'nin.
She remembered him because he was so unique. She had never heard of his
race until she came aboard the Galaxy.
Dr. Reynolds fell down on her knees in disbelief. "How
could this be possible?" she asked herself. It was time to let her
findings be known. She went over to the one in charge and began to tell
of what she found. Further tests would verify her findings.
"Conversations"
Lt. JG Dr. Klaus Fienberg, Medical
Lt. JG Ahdjiia D'Tinya, Security
Location: The Unearthed Duranium Surface.
Time: Shortly before "Brought to you by the Letter G"
Dr. Fienberg stood, arms folded, in the center of the
black G. He looked up to see the Security officer that stood on the ledge.
"Lieutnant D'Tinya, Be careful! That ledge is unstable!"
"I'll be careful.", she said as she made her
way down and headed over to Dr. Fienberg. Her puzzlement was clear on
her face as she looked down at the G he was standing on.
"My scans say this was a habitation of sorts.",
she said as she continued to scan the object. "Any Ideas on what
it is?"
"From what the scans are reporting, it is made with
standard Federation materials common to starships.", Ahdjiia said
as she shared her findings with Dr. Feinberg.
Klaus stomped on it, and it reverberated. "I wonder
how long it's been here?"
"I'm trying to determine that now.", she said
with a slight frown as she started to pick up organic remains. She handed
the tricorder over to Dr. Feinberg for his expert opinion on what they
could be and how long they'd been dead.
"Thats odd....I can't get a conclusive scan, I'd
need to get inside."
Ahdjiia nodded. "Shall we try cutting in with phasers?"
"I'm no engineer, but I guess it could work. I wish
Erik was here. He's a former engineer."
"A pity he is not here.", Ahdjiia agreed.
"Bleh........."
The Rest of the away team had arrived on the scene.
"Everyone's a Little Crazy"
Lt. JG Corran Rex,
CO, Vanguard Squadron
Major Jaiana McCormick,
CO, Vanguard Division
(BACKPOST TO BEFORE THE ARRIVAL AT QUENTIN)
Corran Rex absently ran a hand through his thick hair
as he reviewed his seventy-third personnel file straight.
~Gods, can't Starfleet make these things more interesting?~
he mused, pretty much to himself.
As was normal, he got an unwanted reply. ~It was your
idea to join Starfleet, Kid~ Vorrin said.
Corran sighed aloud, not noticing his office door swishing open. ~Shut
up, Vorrin.~
Major Jaiana McCormick studied the red-shirted Lieutenant(jg)
with a skeptical expression before clicking her heels together and taking
a very firm at attention stand. "Major Jaiana McCormick, reporting
for duty." She left out the 'sir' on purpose, fixing her gaze on
him firmly.
"Eh?" Corran said, snapping his attention upward.
The Trill stared blankly at the small blonde officer for a moment, before
remembering that she was the officer SFMC had sent to take over Vanguard
Division, leaving him with Vanguard Squadron as a joint Fleet-Marine command.
"Oh, yes. McCormick. A full Major, hunh? Well, that's awkward."
"You're telling me," her heavy New York Bronx
voice stated. "A bit of a slap in the face if you don't mind me saying;
we're not even at the same level. The Marines and the Navy." In her
mind there was a difference between her Commanding Officer and her Superior
Officer -- he was the former, not the latter, she wasn't going to even
try not to be blunt. "But.
Who am I to question, yeah?"
The Trill just shook his head. "Don't ask me, Major.
I just wanted a fighter squadron, and someone much higher up than us decided
I should be your boss.
Being responsible for a buttload of groundpounders wasn't what I had in
mind either. I just want to fly."
"How about we resolve that you'll stay in your little
cockpit and I'll keep those groundpounders in line for yah. Marines and
Starfleet Fighter Pilots barely even speak the same language. So I see
it two ways: we can work well together or this can be a living nightmare
for both of us, and that's not just me doin' that Marine thing that people
make fun of all the time. I really am this tough and obnoxious."
She offered a smirk.
Corran laughed. "Eh. I've got voices in my head that
are scarier. But that, Major McCormick, sounds like a deal."
"Excellent. Maybe we won't hate each other completely
after all." She paused. "Voices in your head? Considering you're
still allowed to fly I'm assuming this isn't a medical issue -- joined?"
"Joined, yes." the Trill affirmed with a nod.
"And we might as well get this out of the way. Yes, I have a medical
condition. No, I am not crazy. Yes, my symbiont sometimes forgets who
it's bonded to, and my past.. hosts take over. Yes, Medical is fully aware
of it, and yes, I am still cleared for duty."
McCormick arched an eyebrow, smirking. "Alright,
thank you. Yes, I am a natural blonde. No, I am not a bubble head. Yes,
I am a woman and a Marine and damn good at being both. Yes, I like the
color pink, and yes, I too am still cleared for duty."
"Fantastic. I think we'll gel along just fine."
Rex said with a smile, then looked around the office. "I'll have
OPs come down tomorrow morning and split this office into two. Or bring
another desk, or something."
"Well. Do what you feel is necessary, but regardless,
I won't be in here much. I'm a Marine, not a paper pusher. It's looking
as though that is going to be your job, 'sir'." She chuckled, bright
blue eyes gleaming.
"I'll be spending a bulk of my time making sure the other-- what
did you call them? Groundpounders? are up to par. I've found that Marines
who have been on a Starship for too long get a little soft, which is--
Wait -- your symbiont forgets who it's joined to? Is it an old one? That's
gotta be a bit've a pain in the ass."
Corran blinked at the sudden shift in conversation. "Well,
uh, yes, it is actually. But if I behave oddly someday, like an old smuggler
or an uptight doctor... er, you'll know why."
Corran thought for a second. "Actually, if I'm acting
like an old smuggler, just go away. It's really better that way."
She laughed out loud. "Oh, I don't know-- all the
old smugglers I've known've been kinda interesting. Hey. At least you'll
never be lonely and you literally have a built in excuse. You go a little
too far with something or... cough someone, ya just pull the multiple
personality card.
Great way to dodge responsibility. 'Specially with the alien babe of the
week. Though I wouldn't suppose you'd have too much a problem with something
like that though would you?" she asked, studying him critically again
as she threw herself into the chair across from his desk. "It's your
job to bring me up to speed on this boat here. Who should I piss off,
who should I keep from knowing my true identity, that kind've stuff."
Corran frowned a moment, not sure if he'd been insulted
or complimented.
Then, in the manner of all men of all species everywhere, he simply decided
it was better if he didn't know, and forgot about it. Vorrin and Jaal
thought that was an excellent idea. "Well, let's see..." the
Trill started.
"Most of the officers on this ship are allright, actually. Captain
Bhrode was pretty much a real asshole, but he's gone. Don't know much
about Captain M'Kantu yet. Seems a decent sort."
"Then there's Commander Von Ernst. She's either really
quiet, or really psycho, depending on which week it is. Steer clear of
her if you can.
Curtis Geluf's this kid in charge of Ops, he's a good guy. Ella Grey in
Engineering's allright too - a little odd, though, only speaks on PADD."
he said with a shrug, as if to say "humans..."
She wasn't sure if he'd noticed the thinly veiled insult,
and considering he was a man, she decided he probably hadn't, which was
just as well. She didn't need to go about alienating her direct CO this
early in the game.
She should save that until at least tomorrow.
"Er....oh yeah. Steer clear of Jeremy Savoie, the
Chief Helmsman. He's a walking bag of testosterone stuck in a mindset
that's about eight centuries old. " the Trill finished with another
shrug. "Outside of Ops and Vanguard Squadron, I don't really know
anyone else to be honest. "
"Sounds like an... interesting group," Jaiana
said. "I've heard of Bhrode.
Starfleet sure can pick the SOBs out of a crowd, can't they. How a man
like that got any kind'a command is beyond me. I also hear stories of
von Ernst before I came aboard -- one'a the guys in my outfit was giving
me a hard time, said the Ice Queen was one tough bitch-- guess he knew
that from the second cousin of a friend of a friend, one'a those things.
I don't plan on having too many dealings with her myself, I don't exactly
get along well with other women, especially other women who consider themselves
hard asses.
Just kind'a pisses me off." She shrugged, and then-- "Does she
seriously only speak with a PADD?"
"You get used to it." the pilot offered.
"I could never do that. I'm kinda... boisterous,
if ya hadn't noticed, so it'd drive me insane. I'm the type'a person who
always lost 'the quiet game' when I was a kid. Couldn't go five minutes
without yammering.
Though, I guess it could be argued that you'd have to be a little insane
to do something like that in the first place."
"I like to think everyone's at least slightly crazy."
Corran mused aloud.
"Otherwise the universe is just one fucked-up place."
"Now this is a good point, I kinda like that. 'Course,
even thinking everyone's at least slightly crazy isn't going to change
the fact that the universe is still just one fucked-up place."
"Well, I haven't worked out the explanation for that
one yet. Give me time." 908 |