Star Trek: Seven Deadly Sins

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Star Trek: Seven Deadly Sins Page 36

by Margaret Clark (Editor)


  “Did you do this?’ Walsh demanded.

  “I knew the patrol route,” Locarno said matter-of-factly. “All I did was make sure we’d be in a position for them to see us.”

  “Impulse ready,” Thayer interjected. “At your command, Skipper.”

  Walsh kept his eyes locked on Locarno. Reed saw hesitation there, if only for a second.

  “For God’s sake, Nicky. Why?”

  Locarno didn’t flinch. “I haven’t sold you out, Evan. Trust me.”

  Seconds passed. A proximity alarm sounded, piercing the bridge with a harbinger scream.

  “Ten seconds to intercept,” Massey warned. “It’s now or never, Captain.”

  Walsh broke off, swinging his chair forward.

  “Initiate evasive.”

  Thayer punched his console, and Celtic began to shudder. Her spaceframe groaned under the stress of increased power, the thrum of her impulse engines quickly building as stars on the main viewscreen set into motion. Reed kept her eyes fixed on that point, willing the ship to accelerate faster—until a single, impossibly bright flash consumed the blackness of the void directly ahead, making her and the others shield their eyes before the inevitable explosion that followed. Celtic’s deck heaved against the blast, which knocked her off course and sent her into a tight spin.

  Thayer held on to the controls, bleeding off speed before shearing forces tore the ship apart. Peering through the haze of spent plasma outside, Reed could see that they had swung almost completely about, and instead of an empty starfield, they now faced the ominous shape of an approaching Federation starship. It spat more fire from its forward phaser banks, which crossed just in front of Celtic’s bow and cut off that avenue of escape. Thayer forced the ship to a dead stop to avoid being pulverized.

  “Merchant vessel, this is Starship Norfolk,” a crackling voice boomed on the overhead speaker. “You have been identified as a privateer operating illegally in Federation space. Heave to and prepare to be boarded.”

  Walsh shot a glance back at Massey.

  “They’ve got phasers and torpedoes locked, Captain,” she said. “I have a firing solution, but they’ll cut us to pieces before we can get off the first round.”

  “Mister Thayer?”

  “They’ve just activated their tractor beam,” the conn reported back, as a white glow seeped across the viewscreen and took firm hold of the ship. “Directional controls are frozen, Skipper. We’re locked tight.”

  One at a time, the bridge crew turned toward their captain. Their faces already registered defeat, but still held out a glimmer of hope that Walsh had some trick to get them out of this.

  “Merchant vessel,” Norfolk hailed again, even more belligerent than before. “You will respond immediately or be declared hostile.”

  Walsh slowly got up from his chair and composed himself. He then walked to the back of the bridge, where Reed held Locarno by the arm as if he were her prisoner—for all the good it did. Whatever he had planned, Locarno was in complete control—a fact recognized by the captain, who could only lean in and quietly make the last threat he had to make.

  “I’m going to trust you,” he intoned, pulling out a hand phaser. “But if you cross me, you won’t live long enough to see the inside of a prison. Are we clear?”

  Locarno nodded. “Clear as it gets.”

  “What do you need?”

  “A console.”

  Walsh scowled, but he had no choice but to give in. He jerked a thumb toward the vacant engineering station. Reed took Locarno there, hovering over him as he took a seat and retrieved a small electronic device from his bag.

  “What’s that?” Reed prodded.

  “A little something I’ve been cooking up. Good a time as any to see if it works.” Locarno affixed the device to the translucent panel as he engaged its variable interface, then routed communications through the station. “Acknowledge their hail using subspace frequency two-seven-seven-five-seven-point-one,” he told the captain. “Audio only—and keep them talking as long as you can.”

  “Subspace?” Walsh asked. “At this range?”

  “Just tell them conventional communications are out. They’ll accept the transmission.” Locarno then returned his attention to the console, while Walsh opened up a channel to the other vessel. As the gridstalker anticipated, Norfolk’s captain was more inclined to start a dialogue than a firefight. The subspace link quickly appeared as a graphic on the engineering display—a nice, wide pipeline between the two ships that Locarno began to fill with covert data streams, sneaking bytes back and forth using whatever free space he could find. “Subspace provides greater bandwidth than standard radio,” he explained to Reed, as his hands worked the panel in a blur of purpose and motion. “Makes it easier to bury a stealth carrier in the signal.”

  Reed looked on, fascinated. “What are you trying to do?”

  “Build a virtual remote,” Locarno said, changing the display yet again. Pixels arranged themselves in random formations, gathering form and function under his guidance. “Since I can’t access their computer core locally, I have to make a console of my own—and this,” he finished, as the display completed itself, “is the easiest way in.”

  Reed could hardly believe it. Appearing right in front of her, on Celtic’s engineering station, was a gateway into Norfolk’s Library Computer Access and Retrieval System.

  “The programmers who did the latest iteration of LCARS left behind a security exploit that Starfleet doesn’t know about,” Locarno continued, entering a complex combination of passwords and authentication codes. “If you know where to look, you can use it as a back door into the system.”

  “How did you know about it?”

  “I was on the team that designed it.” He finished the last entry, which unlocked the screen and prompted a welcome message from Norfolk’s library computer. “And that is how we take care of business.”

  “What now?”

  “We keep LCARS busy while we find a port into the wider system.” Locarno snaked around the layers of code that poured through the display, navigating the routing pathways so quickly that Reed could barely keep up—until he found a tiny opening and zeroed in on it. “That’s what we need,” he said, taking a deep breath before going any further. “It’s a straight shot from here into the main computer core—and all their mission data.”

  “Can you make it through?”

  “Sure—at least until the automated countermeasures kick in.”

  “How long will that take?”

  “About eight seconds.”

  Reed grimaced. “What’ll they do once they figure out they’ve been hacked?”

  “They’ll probably let their phasers do the talking,” Locarno said. “Look on the bright side—at least you won’t have to pay my bill.”

  With that, he plunged into the core. A flood of kiloquads immediately filled the pipeline—every scrap of information that Norfolk had gathered during her flyby of the Korso Spanse. Images and impressions flashed before Reed on the small display, nearly overwhelming Celtic’s computer as it tried to keep up with the flow. Her heart pounded faster and faster with each passing second, slowing time until it seemed as if their presence in enemy territory might never be detected; but then the console burst open in a torrent of error messages, a chain reaction that kept building until the display cut out—except for the subspace tether that connected Celtic with her Federation captor.

  “He’s breaking off communications!” Massey shouted. Reed looked up at the viewscreen and saw that Norfolk was on the move, taking a position on their flank. “Assuming attack posture, Captain!”

  Locarno flipped open a cap on his mystery device and rammed the button underneath.

  The engineering console lit up again, processing a burst of energy that forced itself into the collapsing subspace channel. The effect was instantaneous, overloading the console and then causing a cascade of failures. The overhead lights dimmed as every panel went crazy, filling the spaces between
the darkness with dizzying strobes. A dozen alarms sounded all at once, pulling the crew in different directions as they scrambled to get control of their stations.

  Reed shoved Locarno out of the way, taking over the engineering station. She reached for the emergency override, but before she could mash down on the hard switch, the console rebooted itself. Reed froze out of sheer astonishment, as one by one the other stations did the same. The alarms that signaled imminent disaster fell silent, the bridge returning to its normal pulse of operations.

  What the hell?

  Recovering herself, Reed flipped through a quick series of status indicators. Everything came back nominal, as though nothing had happened. “All systems are green, Skipper,” she said in utter disbelief. “Maybe if we can focus engine power on their tractor beam, we can—”

  But no one else was paying attention.

  Their eyes were cemented on the viewscreen, where they expected to see their doom coming at them in a barrage of photon torpedoes. Instead, Norfolk appeared to be drifting, her kill strike thwarted, her hold on Celtic gone.

  Walsh looked back at tactical. “What happened?”

  “I don’t know,” Massey replied, checking her own panel. “Norfolk’s shields are down. So are weapons.”

  “Picking up only residual impulse traces,” Thayer added. “Sub-light propulsion is down, Skipper—warp drive, too. Looks like they’re maneuvering on thrusters.”

  Bright chemical plumes erupted from Norfolk’s reaction control vents, pushing the starship away at a painfully slow speed. She tried to put distance between herself and Celtic, not caring which direction she went—on the run, because she was helpless do anything else.

  “Reacquiring target,” Massey said, an adrenaline edge in her voice. “Phasers are locked and ready to fire.”

  “Not so fast,” Walsh cautioned. “We don’t know what we’re dealing with here.”

  “We have a shot, Skipper!” Massey protested. “We need to take them out while we still have the chance!”

  “I said, stand down.”

  Massey, eager for blood, wasn’t so easily persuaded. She remained poised for a fight, her breath coming hard and fast—but gradually, under a withering stare from Walsh, she took her hands off the fire control. The captain then made his way back over to Locarno, his expression somewhere between gratitude and fury.

  “What was that?”

  “A subspace pulse generator,” Locarno said. “I fed it directly into their computer core—wiped everything clean, paralyzing their systems.”

  Walsh sighed. “You could have told me that in advance.”

  “I wasn’t sure it would work.”

  Walsh shook his head, but managed to come up with a brief smile.

  “Did you get what we needed?”

  “It’s all in Celtic’s core,” Locarno assured him. “The way I figure, the Feds will need two full days to restore everything from backup—and with only sub-light communications, it’ll be at least that long before anybody can hear them calling for help this far out.”

  Reed had to respect the sheer audacity of it. Locarno had thought of everything.

  “Forty-eight hours at Korso, Skipper,” he finished. “All the time in the world.”

  “Then we better not waste any more of it here,” Walsh said, returning to his command chair. “Mister Thayer, plot a course for the Castis system. Tell engineering that I’ll need every last scrap of warp power at our disposal.”

  Locarno took that as his cue, and started to head out.

  “Not so fast, Nicky,” Walsh interrupted.

  Locarno stopped, looking over his shoulder at the captain.

  “Somebody has to work that data,” Walsh said. “I need you.”

  Locarno blinked in surprise, caught momentarily off guard. “Your people are good, Skipper,” he said, motioning toward Reed. “They can handle it.”

  “Not as fast as you,” Walsh replied, then nodded at Reed. She knew exactly what the captain wanted. Leaning over the engineering panel, she called up the emergency release for Celtic’s docking clamps. Locarno caught on to what Reed was doing, and made a dash to stop her, but by then it was too late.

  A loud thump reverberated through the deck as Reed cut Locarno’s shuttle loose. He could only stand there as his one means of escape floated away.

  Reed was deadpan. “Must’ve taken a hit during the attack.”

  “Must have,” Locarno agreed, not hiding his admiration of her technique. Both of them looked out across the bridge and watched the crew resume their normal duties, while the specter of Norfolk’s hull receded into the distance. The void then started to shimmer, stars elongating into dazzling streaks as Celtic made the jump to warp speed, time and space compressed on a relativistic curve. “You guys play a pretty good game. This should be interesting, to say the least.”

  “Is that the way you see it?” Reed asked. “As a game?”

  “Everything’s a game, Jenna.”

  The way Locarno spoke her name gave her pause, if only because she liked hearing it—a dangerous precedent, considering who he was. “And what part do you play?”

  “The same one as always,” he said, staring down the horizon. “I’m just a guy along for the ride.”

  Rendezvous

  Jenna Reed felt the Spanse before she ever saw it, opening as a wide circle of nothing around her—a sudden dearth of the sensory input she took for granted in the confines of a small ship. She knew her crewmates felt the same thing, a kind of animal intuition that could express itself only in unfocused agitation, though nobody dared speak of it openly for fear of making it that much more real. Instead, they just carried on as if holding their breath—moving in slow motion against a palpable dread, seeking out but finding no solace in the company of others.

  Walking down the corridor from engineering, Reed quickened her pace, not wanting to spend too much time among those faces that now looked to her for reassurance. She did her best not to make eye contact with anyone, acknowledging those she passed with a simple nod and trying to make herself look busy—purposeful, as the captain liked to put it—as if she were part of some greater plan that the rank and file had yet to discern.

  In truth, however, Reed didn’t know much more than they did. She had spent the last six hours helping Nick Locarno sift through all the intercept data, but neither of them had even come close to nailing down any specifics. Norfolk hadn’t done much better than the Bolians in identifying the phantom signal, although they had been able to get a broad fix on its location—a region near the dead center of the Korso Spanse, choked by swaths of gaseous terminium.

  With nothing more definitive to go on, Celtic had simply plunged into the cloud on the most likely bearing Reed could find. The metallic gases, however, reduced sensors to an effective range of less than a hundred kilometers, so they were practically blind, given the vastness of the search area and the small size of the target. The ship could do little more than plow back and forth, overlapping her path, covering as much territory as possible before the clock ran out. Under those circumstances, the chances of actually finding anything amounted to little more than the wildest stroke of luck.

  Still, given where they were and what they were doing, Reed couldn’t help but think that it might be luckier if they found nothing at all.

  “First mate, this is the bridge. Acknowledge.”

  It was the captain’s voice that beckoned her from the intercom. Reed went over and pushed the button to answer.

  “Aye, Skipper.”

  “Jenna, you better get up here—and make it fast.”

  The ominous tone gave nearby crewmen pause. They stopped long enough to let her know they heard before moving on.

  “I’m on my way up.”

  The array of patterns outside the ship was beautiful but menacing. Tendrils of energy carved intricate paths through shimmering clouds, forming a complex latticework that burst into existence one moment and then collapsed the next. What struck Reed the most
when she walked onto the bridge was the unnatural silence that accompanied the show—like powerful thunder that hid behind distant lightning, masking the full force of an approaching storm. It held most of the bridge crew in thrall, the same as it did Reed, as all of them searched for patterns amid the chaos.

  Because something was out there.

  The proof of it flashed on Rayna Massey’s tactical display, as sensors tried to coalesce around an object buried deep within the cloud. The contact would just start to take shape, assuming the smooth, engineered contours of intelligent design, before retreating back into the ether. It teased everyone with random flickers, so much that Reed wondered if the thing was even real—until it revealed itself again, stronger and closer than before.

 

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