Star Trek - TNG - 08 - The captain's Honor

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by David


  named Hjalmar Foch at the conn. "Still headed

  directly for atmospheric entry. Suggest

  we fire soon, sir."

  "M'dok ships, this is Captain Picard.

  Your actions are clearly hostile. You must

  withdraw from the red zone. I am empowered

  by Starfleet Command to enforce this order with whatever

  action I deem necessary."

  Still there was no reply. Picard said,

  "M'dok ships, if you do not withdraw immediately,

  we will be forced to open fire." He turned

  to Foch and said, "Mr. Foch, at my order,

  one-second burst at each ship, with

  all phasers at lowest power."

  "Aye, sir," the young Andorian said with an

  eagerness that disturbed Picard.

  Worf said, "M'dok ships continuing their

  approach, Captain."

  "Fire phasers," Picard growled.

  "Why?" he muttered to himself. "They must know

  by now that we can destroy them if we have to."

  He was oblivious of the whoosh of the

  turbolift doors, which opened to admit

  Counselor Deanna Troi to the bridge.

  She made her way to her usual seat.

  On the viewscreen, two brilliant

  beams of light speared across the blackness of

  space, obscuring the starfield as the computer

  controlling the visual display instantly lowered

  the illumination level to compensate for the bright

  flash. The beams diverged slightly, vanishing

  into what was, to the human eye, empty

  space.

  "Two direct hits," Worf said

  calmly. "No damage to either ship."

  Foch said, "Both changing course now,

  sir." There was a strained silence on the

  bridge, during which the computer collected

  sensor readings on the two M'dok ships.

  Finally Foch said, "Projection is that they're

  transferring to geosynchronous orbit, sir."

  Picard pursed his lips. "Interesting.

  Raise our own orbit to geosynchronous,

  Ensign. We'll keep them in line of sight.

  And, Mr. Data, keep trying to contact

  them."

  "Yes, sir. Captain Sejanus has

  requested that you speak with him, sir. As soon

  as you're free, he said."

  "I'm ready now, Data."

  "Yes, sir."

  Sejanus filled the main viewscreen,

  replacing the two M'dok ships. "Well

  done, Captain. But why fire your phasers with

  no intent to damage or destroy the target?"

  Picard rose and stood before the main

  viewscreen, dwarfed by Sejanus' face, the

  image of which filled the screen. But even though

  the image made Sejanus seem like a giant

  towering over the merely human Jean-Luc

  Picard, the Earthman met those giant eyes

  and held them in a contest of equals.

  Watching, Troi was struck by the

  way any meeting between the two men, whether

  face-to-face or by means of electronic

  imaging, always contained an element of

  confrontation. They're too much the same,

  she thought. The same, but different. There's

  always mutual respect, but also a contest of

  wills--brothers and rivals.

  "I choose to appeal to their intelligence and

  good sense," Picard said. "If they make

  any move to attack Tenara, the Enterprise

  will be within phaser range. That will force them

  to keep up their shields, which will prevent them from

  either launching a shuttle toward the surface of

  Tenara or beaming anyone down to the planet."

  "Stalemate," Sejanus said.

  Picard nodded. "That's all that's really

  needed, Captain. The M'dok will realize that

  it's pointless to stay here in hopes of eluding us

  and they'll leave, carrying that message back with

  them."

  "Well-thought-out," Sejanus said. "Te

  saluto." I salute you. "Not how a

  Roman would approach the problem, but I

  believe it is a worthwhile strategy."

  The giant face faded away, and the

  Enterprise bridge crew saw the seemingly

  empty starfield once again.

  Picard relaxed. Only now did he

  realize how tense he had been during his

  conversation with Sejanus. "Magnification," he

  called out. "Let's keep an eye on those

  ships."

  The viewscreen display rippled, and then

  both M'dok ships appeared. The blurring of

  deflector shields surrounded both.

  Picard nodded in satisfaction. "They're

  not taking any chances. Well, that's what we

  want. Conn, what's our trajectory

  relative to theirs?"

  "Transfer to geosynchronous orbit under

  way, sir," Foch replied.

  "Mr. Worf, constant surveillance of

  both M'dok ships. I want no

  surprises."

  "Yes, Captain." Worf was hesitant

  to speak out on the subject troubling him, but he

  forced himself to do so. "Captain, may I ask a

  question?"

  "Of course, Lieutenant."

  "Sir, Captain Sejanus

  seemed to be advocating a direct attack

  on the M'dok ships. It would be possible

  to follow that advice without causing death or

  injury to the M'dok, but rather just enough damage

  to frighten them away from Tenara. As it stands,

  we're tying down the manpower and scientific

  resources of the Enterprise just to keep these

  two ships under surveillance."

  Picard was impatient. "Your question,

  Lieutenant?"

  "Why don't we attack them, sir?"

  "Because of who we are, Lieutenant."

  Unsatisfactory as that answer might be,

  for the moment it would have to do. Before Worf could say

  anything else, Picard turned to Deanna

  Troi. "Counselor, can I see you in the

  ready room?"

  "Of course, Captain." The Betazoid

  followed Picard off the bridge. When the

  door had shut behind them, cutting them off from the

  sight and hearing of the crew, she said,

  "Captain, you seem as worried about Captain

  Sejanus as you are about the M'dok."

  Picard bristled. "I asked you in here

  to obtain your opinion, Counselor," he

  snapped, "not to have you analyze me!"

  Almost immediately, he apologized. "Sorry.

  You're right, of course."

  He went behind his desk and fell into his

  chair. He gestured toward a chair facing the

  desk, and Troi sat down. Though she moved

  far more gracefully than the captain had, her

  tension and fatigue almost matched his, because at

  such close quarters, she felt almost

  overwhelmed by the powerful negative emotions

  Picard was transmitting.

  He said, "I need to be sure that I'm

  following the best tactics."

  Deanna gestured helplessly. "I can't

  advise you on that, Captain."

  "No, no, of course not," he said quickly.

  "Nor would I want you to try. Someone said a

  long time ago that if a starship captain has

  to order his ship to fire on another ship, then

  he's alr
eady failed in his mission. I suppose

  that's only a generalization, but you know what they

  say about generalizations."

  "No, Captain. What do they say?"

  Picard smiled suddenly. "That no

  generalization is worth a damn,

  including this one." His expression grew grim

  once more. "The choice not to fire on an enemy

  can be as momentous as the choice to fire. Either can

  lead to war, either can result in the destruction of a

  civilization. It's not a morally simple

  question."

  "Few moral questions are simple,"

  Deanna observed.

  Picard grunted. Then he said, "I grew

  up surrounded by cats."

  The remark might have seemed irrelevant

  to anyone else, but Deanna sensed its

  significance, and she waited patiently.

  "My parents were unusual in that way." He

  smiled at the memory. "Some of our

  neighbors thought they were eccentric. Anyway,

  they loved both cats and dogs, but cats

  especially. I grew to love the beasts too,

  despite the way the creatures destroyed my

  belongings." He looked at Troi sharply.

  "I don't mean that I'm confusing the M'dok

  with the pets I remember from childhood."

  "I understand that, Captain. Go on,

  please."

  "What always struck me," Picard said,

  "was the way our cats watched me to see

  whether or not I was watching them. As long as they

  knew I was observing them, they behaved themselves.

  However, as soon as they thought my attention was

  directed elsewhere, they would head straight for

  my room and tear things up. That trait, the

  M'dok share with them not exactly deviousness,

  but rather an aptitude for finding the moment when our

  attention is diverted. So I want the

  M'dok to know that we're watching them constantly

  --that our eyes are not directed elsewhere."

  "But you worry about leaving Captain

  Sejanus behind by himself," Troi concluded.

  Picard nodded, mildly surprised at his

  counselor's intuition. "It's absurd I

  should feel this way! The man's a Starfleet

  captain with a brilliant record, commanding a

  Starfleet ship. And yet I find myself

  reacting as though he were something else

  entirely."

  "As you know, Captain, I cannot read

  minds," Deanna said carefully. "I can't

  tell you what Captain Sejanus actually

  thinks, sir. All I can do is sense

  feelings, emotions, attitudes--

  none of which, I'm afraid, can tell you any more

  than you already know."

  Picard nodded wordlessly.

  "The line-of-sight view between ships is

  psychologically important in sensitive

  security situations," Picard said

  obliquely. "Every starship captain knows that.

  With Enterprise in geosynchronous orbit and

  Centurion in standard parking orbit,

  Sejanus will be out of our direct view

  roughly two-thirds of the time." He said no more,

  but he radiated unhappiness and worry.

  "Sir, something puzzles me," Deanna

  said. "After their previous attack ended in the

  destruction of their ship, why have the M'dok

  tried to attack Tenara again? Surely they can

  see it's pointless."

  "It would be pointless for us," Picard

  replied. He sat on the corner of his desk

  and stared in thought at the wall opposite. On

  it was a small framed photograph of Mont

  St. Michel at high tide, bathed in

  brilliant sunlight. The ancient monastery

  had been a favorite of the Picard family

  during Jean-Luc's childhood, a place

  they had visited frequently, and usually he

  found the photograph re/lly nostalgic.

  This time, he didn't even see it. Instead,

  he saw bloody images of M'dok raids

  on peaceful farming villages.

  Picard shook his head as if that could ward off

  those terrible images. "The M'dok are a

  different species. Completely different.

  They do not reason as human beings do. All we

  can do is observe their behavior and react to it

  when necessary. To predict their behavior, we can

  rely only on experience of their past

  behavior, not upon logic or our familiarity

  with our own ways of thinking."

  All of this was of course elementary to

  Deanna Troi, but she knew that Picard

  wasn't really lecturing her. He was thinking out

  loud, working his way toward some conclusion.

  "Certain things are basic to all

  creatures," he continued. "Hunger is one.

  This famine in their empire is terribly

  severe. It may be that the M'dok are mad with

  hunger. Or they may feel humiliated by their

  earlier defeat." He paused, then added with

  trepidation in his voice, "Their

  defeat at the hands of Captain Sejanus.

  "The final possibility is that they may be

  quite unaware of what happened to that other ship. It

  may not have sent any kind of message back

  home before Sejanus destroyed it. In which

  ca se," Picard added, "Sejanus should not have

  destroyed that ship. I'd much prefer that the

  M'dok be warned and undertake no further

  attacks."

  "Captain Sejanus' own cultural

  background may make it impossible for him

  to see that," Deanna warned.

  "Yes. That's what I'm afraid of."

  Picard grimaced. "If only we knew more

  about him ..." He snapped his fingers and pushed

  a button on his desk.

  "Mr. Data," Picard said.

  The android's voice came over the

  intercom. "Yes, sir?"

  "I'd like you to research something for me in our

  historical data base."

  "Of course, Captain."

  Picard paced slowly about in the wide

  space between his seat and the operations console.

  "I'm interested in knowing more about a clan on

  Magna Roma called the Volcinii gens.

  At least, I assume it's a clan; that's

  what "gens" meant in ancient Latin.

  I want to know about their past, their present, and

  their cultural significance."

  "I will do my best, sir," Data

  replied.

  "I know you will, Lieutenant." Picard

  closed the channel and looked up at

  Deanna. "Is there anything else,

  Counselor?"

  "Well ... yes, sir. It seems to me

  that normally, with two ships like ours stationed together

  this way, there'd be a great deal of fraternization

  between the two crews. But with the Enterprise and the

  Centurion, that has never happened. I was just

  wondering if that was your decision or Captain

  Sejanus'. If you don't mind my asking."

  Picard grunted. "I do mind, but I've

  found that you tend to ask anyway."

  "Yes, sir. It's my duty."

  "And your inclination?"

  "Perhaps my nature, sir."

  Picard smiled, then laughed. "Fair

  enough, Counselor. The truth
of the

  matter is that I've not initiated any kind of

  joint social activities between the crews, and

  I've managed to avoid approving any

  requests for such activities that have come my

  way. I admit readily that my reasons

  aren't based entirely on reason. I

  respect Sejanus professionally, but I

  dislike him personally. Admittedly, this is

  an irrational basis for command decisions. I

  must tell you that the Centurion hasn't made

  any overtures to us for social events, either.

  Perhaps Sejanus feels the same way toward

  me. Is that the explanation you expected,

  Counselor?"

  "Pretty much," she admitted.

  "Captain, I would like your permission

  to initiate such activities with the Centurion

  --on a limited basis."

  "What do you suggest?"

  "Well, first I'd like to visit the

  Centurion, talk to their ship's counselor,

  maybe Captain Sejanus as well."

  "I can read your mind," Picard suggested with

  some irony. "You want to visit the

  Centurion and see what Sejanus is

  really made of."

  Deanna smiled. "I wish I could see

  that much. But, yes, I would like to speak to him in

  person to get more of a sense of his true self.

  For a number of reasons, sir." She told

  Picard about her meeting with Jenny.

  "I would hate to lose an officer like de

  Luz," Picard said.

  "So do I have your permission to visit the

  Centurion?"

  "Very well, Deanna."

  As she turned to go, Picard was suddenly

  seized with the urge to tell her to be careful.

  Ridiculous.

  During the hours that followed, the

  Enterprise kept a geosynchronous

  orbit, with the two M'dok ships always within

  direct line-of-sight sensor view. Under

  Picard's standing orders, whenever either M'dok

  ship dropped its shields, the Enterprise

  increased the power to its own shields and

  approached closer to the M'dok ship in question.

  Each time, the M'dok responded by quickly

  raising their shields again. As Picard

  had intended, the M'dok could not use their

  phasers or transporters, and their power

  levels were slowly but steadily decreasing.

  Sooner or later, Picard hoped, they would

  give up and leave Tenaran space, headed for

  home.

  Or something else would happen.

  "Civis Tenarus sum," the little boy

  said carefully, frowning at the floor. Then he

  looked up quickly at Marcus, seated in the

  teacher's chair at the front of the classroom.

  They were using the large room that occupied the

 

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