Takedown

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by John Jackson Miller




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  To Maggie Thompson,

  mentor and friend,

  and to the memory of Don

  HISTORIAN’S NOTE

  The main events in this story take place in late November 2385, after Kellessar zh’Tarash of Andor takes the oath of office for President of the Federation (Star Trek: The Fall—Peaceable Kingdoms) and concurrent with the visit of the civilian science ship Athene Donald and the arrival of the People of the Open Sky to Deep Space 9 (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine—The Missing).

  “Too much knowing causes misery.”

  —Lorenzo de’ Medici

  One

  The one good thing about having a job that took you to hell and back was that you slept soundly. All your nightmares had already happened during the day.

  William Riker had always slept well. But this morning, rising was the hard part—and he wasn’t surprised in the least to discover he was already dressed. He’d slept in full uniform many times as an overworked ensign, never as an admiral. But this behavior made perfect sense: He’d been through the wringer in recent days. He was just glad he’d made it to the bed. Falling asleep in a turbolift wouldn’t have done, at any rank.

  He knew he’d earned being this tired. There had been another voyage to perdition—or worse—just behind him, but it made his head hurt to think much about it. It didn’t matter. The best way to escape a bad day was to start the next.

  Or to try to start it, at least. Riker’s muscles objected as he attempted to sit up in bed, and he nearly fell back down. Standing was the next frontier, and that took longer to accomplish as well. Finally, he succeeded. Looking groggily around the VIP quarters aboard Starship Titan, he wondered for a moment where his wife was—before remembering the vessel’s destination was Betazed, her homeworld. That was one of the last things he’d heard before going to sleep. Deanna had hoped to take their daughter to Betazed’s capital city on a visit, if they had the time.

  The time. He checked it as he shambled to the mirror. Sixteen hours, he’d slept. Riker shook his head. It was a good thing he wasn’t on duty of any kind. But then, oversleeping was the bad dream of an ensign. Admirals’ problems were a lot worse; he’d held the rank just long enough to learn that. And his body showed it. The face in the mirror was a fright. His dark, gently graying hair had gone this way and that during his repose, and a whole lot of new whiskers had appeared.

  “Must have been some party,” he mumbled. His condition owed to something else entirely, but it didn’t matter. Drydock was about cleanup work, and that went for people just as well as their ships. He set to making himself presentable.

  A short time later found Riker in the turbolift. He didn’t fall asleep on this ride either—but he wouldn’t have been able to snooze for long in any event. The doors weren’t halfway open when a firm Vulcan voice declared, “Admiral on the bridge!”

  “You make a fine wake-up alarm, Tuvok.” Riker looked over to the tactical station, where the dark-skinned Vulcan didn’t acknowledge the joke. Tuvok simply bowed his head slightly and turned back to his console.

  Stepping onto the bridge, Riker looked up and saw through the forward viewport that Titan was indeed orbiting above Betazed, the vessel parked near a large mushroom-shaped space station. The ship had been ordered here for replacement of faulty parts for some subsystem or other; it wasn’t Riker’s job to know about it anymore. That responsibility lay with the woman who looked back at him from the captain’s chair.

  “Welcome, Admiral,” Christine Vale said. “How are you?”

  “Shipshape,” Riker said, scratching his beard. “If the ship is a garbage scow that’s seen better days.”

  “Forgivable, after what you’ve—” Apparently thinking better of her comment, Vale stopped in midsentence and gestured ahead instead. “I’m afraid you missed Counselor Troi by a few minutes. She said to let you sleep.”

  “She’s nice like that.”

  Walking past the command chairs, Riker studied the scene outside more closely. He’d never heard of Betazed Station 4 before, much less visited. Its spacedock doors were open, waiting to accept the Luna-class vessel. Just beyond the station, he could see a shuttle heading for the blue-green planet below.

  That’s one of ours, he thought. But before he could ask about it, a chirp came from the communications officer’s panel. “Shuttlecraft Armstrong hailing us.”

  Riker looked back to see Vale smiling at him. “Someone wants to say hello,” the redheaded woman said. “On-screen.”

  Turning back forward, he saw the giant image of his little dark-haired daughter waving at him. “Hailing frequencies open, Daddy.”

  “Hello, Natasha.” Riker put up his hand in a slight wave and smiled wanly. “You flying that alone?”

  “She wants to,” Deanna Troi said, appearing over the child’s shoulder. “She takes after her father.”

  Riker nodded. Titan’s bridge wasn’t really the place for a family call, and out of the corner of his eye, he could see members of the crew turning away to hide their amused expressions. Several seconds passed, silently, with neither of them talking: Deanna would have known he wouldn’t want anyone else asking about his health, not here. She, at least, looked well rested—and as beautiful as the day he’d met her. “Why did you take a shuttle?”

  “Admiral,” Vale said, “we’ve taken the transporters offline in preparation for the new upgrade equipment we’re getting from spacedock.”

  “Natasha thought it’d be more fun to fly over this way,” Deanna said. “She likes to look at the clouds as we—”

  Before Deanna could finish the sentence, an alarm screeched aboard Titan—and Riker heard an echo from Armstrong’s cabin, where a similar alert went off. “Warning,” announced a computerized voice aboard Titan. “Plasma storm approaching, high magnitude.”

  “Here?” Vale seemed startled. “We weren’t expecting anything like that.”

  “Origin unknown. Danger posed to orbiting vessels.”

  “How soon?”

  Tuvok had the answer. “Four point seven seconds!”

  “Shields up!”

  Riker looked up to Deanna on the screen. “Deanna, shields, now!”

  He grabbed for the railing at the rear of the bridge even as the world around him went sideways. Titan shook, apparently battered by a flood of plasma ejected from Betazed’s sun. Yet his eyes never left the forward viewscreen. Lit by the unholy fury of whatever was outside the shuttle, Deanna clung desperately to Natasha. Riker could barely hear the child screaming over the din of impact.

  Riker looked around, not understanding. Like many other populated areas, the Betazed system was monitored by satellites that transmitted information faster than light, via subspace. Even a freak plasma storm should have been preceded by some warning before a tsunami of fire and radiation struck. And yet, here it was, shaking Titan like a tree in a hurricane.

  And Armstrong was bearing it far worse. “Counselor!” Vale yelled, clutching the armrests of her chair. “What’s your condition?”

  “Not good!” Internal lights strobing across her terrified face, Deanna punched at controls with one hand while hanging onto Natasha with her other arm. “Shields failed. Losing structural integrity!”

  Forgetting who was in command, Riker barked, “Beam her out of there!”

  “Engineering reports transporters will take three minutes to be placed back online,” Vale said. “Helm, put Titan between t
he solar wind and Armstrong!”

  “It’ll take a moment, Captain,” came a voice from behind her. “We’re still oriented for spacedock approach.”

  Damned repair mission! With the ship turning into the storm, Riker lurched over to a control panel whose operator had fallen away. Titan rocked and quaked, fighting against the fiery tide. Riker found his bearings and checked the ships’ relative positions, trying his best not to focus on Natasha’s wail, now in the background but unmistakably there. “Any ideas?”

  “I have one, Admiral,” Tuvok said, his fingers a blur over the keypad. “I may be able to extend Titan’s shields to cover the shuttle.”

  “At this range?”

  “It will require reshaping the shield on the side of Titan facing the shuttle into a hyperbolic paraboloid, to maximize its range and effectiveness.”

  “Do it!” Vale ordered.

  “The spatial geometry needed is complex,” Tuvok said, seemingly calculating even as he tried to make himself heard. “And Titan is in motion, further complicating—”

  A deafening crack came from above—followed by plummeting metal beams as the supports holding part of the bridge’s storm-weakened ceiling gave way. One girder swung down like a club, belting Tuvok from behind and slamming him into the console. He collapsed, bleeding and senseless.

  “Tuvok!” Without regard for his own safety, Riker dove into the area near the collapse. Tuvok was alive but out cold.

  Vale called out to him. “Armstrong’s hull is failing!

  Riker stepped over the fallen Vulcan to reach his console, hoping against hope that he only needed to push a button to enact Tuvok’s stratagem. No such luck, he saw. “He never finished entering his equations!”

  “Will, do something!” It was Deanna. He looked back at the huge display screen nearly in a panic. His wife and child were in mortal danger. He was powerless to help them—unless he could complete a mathematical sequence that it would take most people a lifetime to figure out. Still, he turned to the panel, looking at the maze of numbers and variables controlling the shields. There had to be something he could do, anything.

  Another shock shook the ship. He heard Vale’s voice. “Finish the sequence, Admiral!”

  And now, Deanna. “Do it, Will!”

  Riker focused on the figures on the screen—and suddenly saw clearly.

  “I won’t,” he said, turning around to face the bridge crew. “It’s not necessary.”

  Vale was flabbergasted. “What do you mean?”

  Titan quaked again—but this time, Riker wasn’t swayed. “I mean there is no plasma storm.”

  From his right, a plaintive call. “Daddy!”

  “That’s enough.” Looking stern, he faced the terrified pair on the screen. “Whoever’s doing this, you can stop now.”

  The bridge shook again, and then again, until all went silent. “As you wish,” said a gravelly male voice behind him. Then the lights went out.

  Two

  When the lights came back up again, Riker was standing alone in an empty black room, glowing gridlines stretching across the space where Titan’s bridge had been.

  Riker turned to see a holodeck entryway arch standing behind him, with a slender white-haired man dressed fully in black leaning against it. “How did you know,” he asked slowly, “that this was a holographic simulation?”

  The admiral crossed his arms. “Christine Vale’s a kidder—but she respects decorum too much to make me take a personal call in front of her crew. You did that for my benefit, so I’d see my family was on the shuttle.”

  The new arrival nodded. The short, pointy-eared man looked ancient to Riker, his face pale and gaunt. Silver cane helping him to walk, he stepped toward Riker. “That could not have been your only clue,” the man said. “Not with stakes like this.”

  “Deanna and Vale both know what kind of a mathematician I am. I’m no Tuvok.”

  A white eyebrow arched. “Hardly material evidence of deception.”

  “You also got the number of pips wrong on Vale’s uniform. She’s still a commander, running Titan while I’m on assignment for the Federation.”

  Black eyes looked up keenly at Riker. Then the trace of a smile crossed his face. “Always getting the ranks wrong. I forget how closely people pay attention. Your mind really went there?”

  Riker stared down at the man hobbling past. “I’ve been through something like this before. I wake up in what I think are my quarters aboard ship—and then everything that follows is a lie.”

  He might have been having trouble recalling the past few days, but he remembered that experience well: years earlier, there had been a being of another species with tremendous powers, who had tried to make him think he was captain of the Enterprise. “Now why don’t you cut out the nonsense and tell me who you are?”

  “I’m more interested in who you are.”

  “Riker, William T., Admiral, Starfleet—”

  “—on special assignment as diplomatic envoy for the United Federation of Planets,” the old man finished.

  “If you knew, then why’d you ask?” Riker studied the newcomer. “Never mind. And you are?”

  “Simus.”

  “You’re Vulcan.”

  “I could be Romulan,” the old man said, looking back and making a show of pawing at his wrinkled forehead. “Of course, I don’t have the characteristic cranial flaring over the bridge of the nose.”

  “But not all Romulans have it.”

  “You are the one for details. So yes, I could be Romulan.”

  “If you exist at all.”

  Simus seemed a little offended. “I’m not a simulacrum.”

  “Prove it—and let’s both walk out of here.” Riker was tired already when he woke up—and this game was wearing on him. He turned back to the archway. The doors closed before he could get there. He tried giving vocal commands, but nothing happened.

  Simus shook his head. “I would like you to remain. Just for a while.”

  Seeing no way to open the doors, Riker looked back. “This doesn’t look like a Titan holodeck,” he said, surveying the size and shape of the room. “You’ve beamed me off the ship while I was asleep.” Whoever had pulled off that trick knew what they were doing. Titan had gone into warp just before he went to bed. Had it arrived at Betazed, or dropped out somewhere short of it?

  He didn’t know—and the old man didn’t say. Riker just knew that the way he felt, he didn’t need another headache. “I’d appreciate it if you’d tell me what’s going on.”

  Simus weighed his words carefully. “The people I represent brought you here, to me.”

  Riker couldn’t help but grin at the evasive answer. This was how things were going to go with Simus, whoever he was. “Well, they’ve taken a Starfleet admiral captive. There are probably consequences for that, somewhere.”

  “The people I represent—”

  “Those people again.” Riker rolled his eyes.

  “—believe it is important to see how you will respond to certain stimuli.”

  “Like endangering my wife and child? Whoever they are, they’ve got pretty poor taste.”

  “Nonetheless,” Simus said, “it is imperative that we understand you better.”

  “What more do you need?” Riker waved around the big space that had been used to simulate Titan’s interior. “You were able to depict all this. You must also have my service record. What part of William T. Riker could you possibly not know about at this stage?”

  Simus placed both hands on the chrome knob of his cane and rocked for a moment, evidently thinking something over. Finally, he nodded. “All right. There is something I’d like to know more about.” He drew back one of his sleeves and tapped on a small wrist control unit. “Watch.”

  “Another simulation?”

  Simus said nothing. He walked away from Riker—and as he did, the scene around him shifted. It was another Federation starship bridge, but different from Titan’s. The ship was Saber-class, Riker quickly
surmised. It was likely a Starfleet Corps of Engineers vessel. Several crewmembers were at their posts; none of them paid him or Simus any mind. He didn’t recognize any of them.

  Riker was about to say something when, behind him, the turbolift doors opened. A stocky Tellarite woman in a Starfleet captain’s uniform emerged. Clutching a padd in hand, she walked toward—and then through—Riker, rounding the command chairs to take her seat at the center.

  “I’m obviously not an actor in this sketch,” Riker said.

  Leaning with both hands on the cane, Simus stared at the floor contemplatively. “You don’t recognize the captain?”

  “Should I?”

  “Hmm.”

  The vessel’s captain read from her padd and spoke to her crew happily and easily. “The new upgrades are working out better than we’d hoped. Helm, bring Laplace around for a look at the new transmitter units.”

  “Aye, Captain Kwelm.”

  Riker felt motion—or the simulation of it—and over his shoulder, he saw the space scene on the viewscreen changing. A sprawling space station composed of alternating gray hexagons with triangular assemblies nested between stretched off into space before them. A massive, towering metal prong tipped each triangular section.

  “The Corvus Beacon,” Simus said. “A deep-space transmitter, designed for contacting civilizations beyond the reach of starships.”

  “I’m familiar with the program,” Riker said. His brow furrowed as he tried to remember the details. “It’s near the edge of Federation space.”

  “Things that look to the beyond usually are,” Simus replied.

  Riker studied the station. He knew it was near the border with the Typhon Pact members. An alliance of convenience between the Romulans, Gorn, Tzenkethi, Breen, and other anti-UFP powers, the Typhon Pact had made life difficult for the Federation and its allies in recent times. He looked back to Simus with suspicion. “These people you represent—are they with the Typhon Pact? Is that your big secret?”

 

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