STAR TREK: TOS #2 - The Entropy Effect

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STAR TREK: TOS #2 - The Entropy Effect Page 25

by Vonda N. McIntyre


  Kirk leaped to his feet and started out the door.

  “Captain—” Spock said.

  Kirk glanced back.

  “The Enterprise is in no danger,” the Vulcan said. “The process will continue for another six days at least.”

  “Oh,” Kirk said. He returned to Spock’s side. “All right, Mr. Spock. What happened?”

  Spock reached up and touched the bullet wound in his temple. It was barely perceptible, for McCoy had put more skin synthetic on the gash, and sealed it with transparent spray. His brown and gold silk shirt lay crumpled on a table across the room ... and Jim held the remains of the time-changer in his hands.

  “You were in the observatory,” Jim said. “Snarl heard you fall. Jenniver Aristeides brought you to sick bay. Do you remember?”

  What Spock remembered, he recalled all too well. He glanced from Jim to Dr. McCoy. As they were now, neither had existed in the alternate time-stream. And Spock had quite clear memories of a time-stream in which his observations proceeded smoothly: the singularity indeed did appear, and though he could not deduce its cause, it was clear from the beginning that it would soon self-destruct and cease to be a danger. The Enterprise had never been called to Aleph Prime. Dr. Mordreaux had never come on board, and Spock had detected no acceleration in the increase of entropy.

  And then he had reappeared in his observatory, dragged back to the Enterprise through space and time, to the place he belonged, and, simultaneously, it seemed, the miscalculation of his stamina caught up with him. Journey, or exhaustion, or both, caused him to lose consciousness.

  “Spock?” Jim asked gently. “Do you remember?”

  “No, Captain,” Spock said quite truthfully. “I cannot understand what happened.” He had not expected to remember the events in the time-loop he had turned back on itself and wiped out of existence. But he did.

  He had learned how fragile the continuum was. He had not restored it to its original form. He had only managed to-stitch it back together where it had torn most seriously; he had put patches over the worst of the rents, and hoped they would hold: perhaps he should not be so startled that the seams were not quite straight and the grain not quite smooth. If the inconsistencies were no worse than an inexplicable astronomical phenomenon that would have to remain a mystery, and conflicting sets of memories in his own mind, then perhaps he should accept them gracefully, and gratefully.

  “I apologize, Captain. I cannot explain what happened.”

  “You’ve got a bit of a concussion,” McCoy said. “Your memory may return when you’ve recovered from that.”

  Spock sincerely hoped it would not, but he did not say so.

  Kirk hefted the broken section of the time-changer. “Maybe you can at least explain what this is.”

  “Of course, Captain. It is an instrument which helped me to complete my assignment.” Though that was technically accurate, it was close enough to a lie for Spock to feel ashamed of himself for it.

  “Where did you get it?”

  “I made it, Captain.”

  “There aren’t any bioelectronic components on this ship!”

  “Hey, Jim,” McCoy said, “lay off, will you?”

  “Sure, Bones, as soon as Mr. Spock answers my question.”

  “That was not a question, Captain,” Spock said. “It was a statement. However, it is quite true that the Enterprise carries no bioelectronics. If I may point it out, though, one of the most interesting properties of bioelectronic crystals is that they can be grown.” He reached for the time-changer.

  Kirk glared at him, then, quite suddenly, grinned. “Well, Mr. Spock,” he said. “I never thought of you as having a green thumb.”

  Inexplicably, McCoy groaned. “That’s it! Out!”

  Spock glanced down at his hands. He did not understand Captain Kirk’s remark, for if the captain were, for whatever peculiar reason, to think of Spock’s thumbs, he must surely note that they were, in fact, slightly green.

  “Spock,” Kirk said, serious again, “you’re not telling me everything, and I don’t much like that.”

  “Captain ... in the vicinity of a singularity, the only thing one can predict is that events will occur that one could not predict.”

  “I take it you don’t care to elaborate on the nature of these unpredictable events.”

  “I would prefer not to, Captain.”

  Kirk scowled, and Spock thought he was going to refuse to give him the remains of the time-changer. Abruptly, Kirk grinned again and held the device out to the science officer.

  Spock accepted it.

  “All right, Mr. Spock. I trust you, and I trust in your judgment that whatever you can’t explain won’t affect the safety of this ship or anybody on it.”

  “Your trust will not be betrayed,” Spock said.

  McCoy folded his arms across his chest. “Now that you two have exchanged expressions of undying confidence, I want you—” he glared at Kirk—“to get out of here, and I want you—” he transferred his irritated gaze to Mr. Spock—“to go back to sleep. Right now. That’s an order.”

  Jim laughed. “Okay, Bones. Mr. Spock, can we get out of here?”

  “Yes, Captain. My observations are complete.”

  “Good.” Kirk stood up and turned to leave. Spock pushed himself up on one elbow. “Captain—Jim—”

  Kirk glanced back.

  “Thank you,” Spock said.

  As he rounded a corner, Jim Kirk saw Mr. Sulu ahead of him, walking toward the turbo lift.

  “Mr. Sulu!” he called. The helm officer did not turn around; Kirk called to him again.

  Sulu stopped short, and faced him. “I’m sorry, Captain. I was ... thinking about something.”

  They continued down the hall side by side.

  “Are you going up to the bridge?”

  “Yes, sir. I go on duty in ten minutes.”

  “I’m glad it’s your watch,” Jim said. “Mr. Spock’s work is finished and we can get out of here. I’d rather have you at the helm than any of the other helm officers, when we’re maneuvering near a singularity.”

  “Why—thank you, Captain,” Sulu said, obviously astonished by the spontaneous compliment.

  Sulu’s been looking preoccupied lately, Kirk thought. And he needs a haircut very badly. He’s starting a mustache, too—what’s this all about? He’s beginning to look like he belongs in the border patrol, not on a ship of the line. Of course, he has been under a lot of stress ...

  He almost made a joke about Sulu’s hair, a joke that Sulu would of course take as a suggestion to get at least a trim.

  Why do you want him to cut his hair? Jim Kirk asked himself. It doesn’t make any difference to his work; it isn’t as if he’s going to get it caught in the rigging.

  He thought, again, Grow up, Jim.

  “Are you happy on the Enterprise, Mr. Sulu?” he asked.

  Sulu hesitated. His tone, when he answered, was as serious as if he had been thinking the question over very hard for a very long time. “Yes, Captain. It’s a better assignment than I ever hoped for, and the best I’m ever likely to have.”

  Kirk started to demur, to shrug off the implied compliment, but he saw an alternate interpretation for what Sulu had said. Kirk knew Sulu’s record well; he knew how a desk-bound bureaucrat would look at it. “Insufficient variety of experience” would be the most likely analysis, despite the fact that no one could ask for more variety of experience than serving on the Enterprise provided. Unfortunately, the record was what counted, and Sulu knew that as well as anybody.

  Kirk realized abruptly: If he wants to advance, it’s almost inevitable that he’ll transfer off the Enterprise. You’re going to lose the best helm officer this ship has ever had, if you don’t do something, and do it fast.

  “I’ve been thinking,” Kirk said. “And what I think is that it’s about time we talked about making sure your record reflects all the responsibilities you have, not just the formal ones. It would be a damned shame if somewhere dow
n the line you wanted a position and it went to some semi-competent instead just because they went up the ladder in the usual way and you didn’t.”

  Sulu’s expression gave Jim considerable excuse for self-congratulation.

  “The solution isn’t to normalize your record,” he said. “It’s to make it unique, so you have to be judged on your own terms. I think a good first step would be a field promotion to lieutenant commander. There’s no question but what you’d get the promotion anyway in a few years, but a field promotion is unusual enough to stand out even to a red-tape shuffler.”

  “Captain ...” Sulu sounded rather stunned.

  “It would mean more responsibility, of course.”

  “That would be all right,” Sulu said. “I mean—it would be wonderful!”

  “Good. Let’s get together and talk about it. You give fencing lessons in the afternoons, don’t you?”

  “On alternate days. The other times I take a judo lesson from Lieutenant Commander Flynn.”

  “What time are you finished?”

  “About sixteen hundred hours, sir.”

  “Then, what do you say to seventeen hundred, tomorrow, in the officers’ lounge?”

  “I’ll be there, Captain! Thank you, sir.”

  Kirk nodded. They reached the turbo lift, got on, and started upward toward the bridge.

  “By the way, Mr. Sulu, I think that’s going to be a very distinctive mustache once it gets a little longer.”

  Color rose in Sulu’s cheeks.

  “I mean it,” Kirk said.

  “I wasn’t sure that you’d approve, sir.”

  “I grew a mustache myself, a few years ago.”

  “You did? Why didn’t you keep it?”

  “I’ll tell you if you promise not to tell anyone else.”

  “Of course I promise, sir.”

  “It came in red. Brick red. Most ridiculous thing I ever saw in my life.”

  He laughed, and so did Sulu.

  “I don’t think mine will come in red, Captain,” Sulu said.

  The lift doors opened and they went out onto the bridge. Kirk grinned at Sulu.

  “No, I don’t suppose you’ll have to worry about that possibility.”

  Kirk took his place; Sulu relieved the junior helm officer and checked over the controls.

  “Mr. Sulu,” Kirk said, “plot us a course out of here.”

  “Yes, sir!”

  It took him only a few seconds: he had been prepared to get the ship away from the singularity at almost any moment; he was ready for any sort of emergency.

  “Course entered, sir, warp factor one.”

  “Thank you, Mr. Sulu.”

  Like a freed bird, the Enterprise sailed out of the grasp of the singularity, through the flaming curtains of disintegrating matter that surrounded it, and out into deep space.

  Captain’s log, Stardate 5001.1:

  We are now a day away from the singularity, and the unease that gripped the Enterprise and my crew throughout the entire mission there has faded, leaving In its place a feeling of relief and even contentment. Morale Is better than it has been in some time, particularly in the security section: though I personally find the new commander rather prickly, she does her job splendidly.

  I have decided to take the Enterprise through the border region between Federation space and Klingon territory, which Is guarded by Captain Hunter’s fleet. The Klingons have been more aggressive than usual; they have inflicted some losses on the squadron, and until replacements arrive, the appearance of a ship of the line in the area cannot do any harm.

  Administrative notes: I have forwarded to Starfleet my recommendation for Mr. Sulu’s field promotion to lieutenant commander. As this will make him one of the youngest officers of that rank without formal front line experience, I may have to wrestle down a few bureaucratic hair-splitters in order to get it approved; on the other hand, If serving on the Enterprise doesn’t qualify as some form of front line experience, I don’t know what does.

  On the recommendation of Lt. Commander Flynn, I have also approved the transfer of Ensign Jenniver Aristeldes from Security to Botany, and Mr. Spock has asked her to take charge of a project he wants to begin, that of growing more bioelectronic components. Before now, Aristeides always seemed to me to be hardly any more the emotional type than Mr. Spock, but she is clearly delighted by her new job.

  Mr. Spock is recovering from severe overwork. He has assured Starfleet that the singularity will soon wipe itself out of the universe. My science officer shows no more sign than before that he is willing to discuss the “unpredictable events” that occurred during his observations. Despite a certain temptation to ask him if this is Information we were not meant to know—a question that would undoubtedly grate upon his scientific objectivity—I’m not inclined to press him for more answers. It’s possible that he simply made some sort of mistake that would humiliate him to reveal.

  Whatever did happen seems to have involved only Spock himself; whatever It was, it has not affected the Enterprise at all.

  And that, of course, as always, is my main concern.

  About the e-Book

  (AUGUST, 2003)—Proofed and formatted by Bibliophile.

 

 

 


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