Star Trek - TOS - Death Count

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Star Trek - TOS - Death Count Page 24

by L. A. Graf


  her usual grace, scooping a bowl-shaped plastic and metal object off the

  floor. Sulu frowned, then recognized it as her environmental suit

  helmet when she turned it right side up and tapped the communicator

  panel inside the chin. "The crystal chips in our suits survived the

  surge just fine. With our shields down, I didn't have any trouble using

  them to contact the Enterprise."

  "I would never have thought of that." Despite the ache in his jaw,

  Sulu's mouth twitched into an appreciative grin. "Have I told you

  lately that you're awfully good at your job?"

  The communications officer's dark eyes warmed to rich mahogany with her

  smile. "Well, so are you. Most pilots would have gotten us killed if

  they tried playing hide-and-seek with an Orion destroyer."

  "That's true," Sulu agreed immodestly. Uhura snorted and tugged at his

  elbow.

  "Come on," she said. "We should be in visual range of the ship by. now.

  There's a viewport on the next deck down." She slanted another concerned

  look at him. "Can you climb down the ladderway in that heavy suit?"

  "Well, I'm certainly not going to take it off." Sulu grinned again at

  the puzzled look she gave him. "After all the sweating I've done since

  we left the Hawking, even I don't want to know what I smell like."

  The Enterprise swam through the darkness toward them, phaser burns dark

  as bruises across her long platinum sides. Sulu's lips tightened into a

  soundless whistle as he scanned the damage. The worst destruction was

  concentrated near the unshielded area around the breach in the primary

  hull, but a long rippled impact scar also ran the length of the

  secondary hull, level with the shuttle bay. Even from here, Sulu could

  see suited crews of engineers crawling out to reinforce the stressed

  sections of metal.

  "They're lucky that didn't cause another hull breach," Uhura said,

  watching quietly at his shoulder. The words made Sulu wince, bringing

  back the memory of his vacuum-shattered belongings and ransacked room.

  He'd been vaguely planning to collapse in the plant-scented warmth of

  his cabin after Kirk finished debriefing them. Now, all he had to look

  forward to was the cold comfort of emergency quarters.

  The thought made him recall something else-he'd forgotten, and he

  scanned the impact scar .more closely. "That doesn't look like photon

  torpedo damage," he pointed out to Uhura. "I wonder if the Orion

  saboteur did it?"

  "Well, he must have hidden in the shuttle bay at some point, to rig his

  phaser-bomb inside the Hawking." Uhura's dark eyes widened as the

  tractor beam pulled the Shras around to face the massive landing bay

  doors, now splitting open to admit them. The back half of the shuttle

  bay lay shielded behind a vacuum barrier, but the transparent aluminum

  wall couldn't hide the torn and crumpled shuttles piled up along the

  rear bulkhead. "Oh, my God. Maybe the saboteur did rig all the

  shuttles."

  "It looks more like he just wreck ed them." Sulu counted the empty spaces

  along the walls while the tractor beam deposited them gently inside the

  landing bay. "Brahe, Clarke, Kahoutek--dammit, he took out all our good

  interstellar shuttles! If they haven't already caught him, I'll hunt

  him down and strangle him myself!"

  Uhura gave him an amused upward glance as the bay doors slid closed

  behind them. "Sulu, I'm sure

  Starfleet will give us new shuttles when we dock for refitting."

  "That's not the point!" Sulu trailed her back toward the ladderway. He

  could already hear Haslev complaining about something on the deck below

  them as the Andorians gathered by the hatch. Outside, compressed air

  roared around them, rattling the ship's hull as it flooded back into the

  landing bay. "I liked the shuttles we had! I knew which ones handled

  best in microgravity, and which ones were good on atmospheric reentry--"

  The rumble of the hatch door opening interrupted him, and Sulu dropped

  down the last few feet of ladderway with a thud. He followed Uhura out

  past the hesitant Andorians, as eager as she was to be back in the

  familiar air of the Enterprise.

  "Sulu, Uhura." Captain Kirk emerged from the turbolift exit across the

  bay and strode to meet them, Spock just behind him. Despite the bruise

  darkening his forehead, the captain moved with his usual restless

  energy. "You're both all right?"

  "We're fine, Captain." Sulu swung around to survey the destruction in

  the shuttle bay, more clearly visible now that they were out of the

  ship. "Did the saboteur rig more of the shuttles for explosion, sir?"

  "No. Apparently, he only had time to sabotage one other besides the

  Hawking." One corner of Kirk's mouth turned up in rueful amusement as he

  glanced back at the mess. "Chekov did the rest of this, trying to stop

  the saboteur."

  "Chekov did?" Uhura and Sulu exclaimed together. They exchanged puzzled

  looks. "I guess we must have beamed him into the shuttle bay," Uhura

  said blankly. Her eyes darkened with concern as she glanced at the

  wrecked shuttles. "Is he all right, sir?"

  The captain nodded. "A little battered, but that's usually what happens

  when you get into a fist fight with an Orion. Dr. McCoy's standing by

  to take him to sickbay as soon as the engineers cut him free."

  Uhura looked dismayed. "You mean he's trapped inside one of those

  shuttles?"

  "Yes." Kirk smiled at her, a quick, understanding smile that lit his

  eyes to gold. "I'm sure he'd be glad to have your company while he's

  waiting, Commander."

  She threw him a grateful look and turned toward the turbolift. "Thank

  you, sir. You'll have my full report in the morning."

  "Good." The captain swung to face the clatter of feet coming off the

  Shras. "Captain Kanin." Kirk stepped forward and gave the Andorian

  officer the polite bow his race favored. "We're grateful for your

  assistance with the Orions. Your ship's courageous performance in this

  battle will be duly noted in my report to Starfleet."

  "Thank you, sir." Kanin returned the bow, antennae flushing pale

  lavender with pleasure. "Most of the credit must go to your pilot,

  however. He did an excellent job evading the Orions."

  "Yes." Kirk rubbed at the bruise on his forehead, casting an amused look

  back at Spock. "We could have used him aboard the Enterprise." His

  amusement faded to a steely smile when his glance fell on Muav Haslev,

  now handcuffed to a stocky Andorian security guard. "Ah, Mr.

  Hasicy--the cause of all this havoc. We have a visitor who would like

  to speak with you." He nodded at Spock, and the Vulcan crossed to speak

  into the nearest intercom.

  "I'll have you know that none of this was my fault," Hasler protested.

  "If you hadn't decided to send me back to Sigma One--"

  "--the Hawking would have exploded right here,

  and we would all be dead now," Sulu finished sharply. The Andorian

  physicist glared at him. "Listen, you're the one who started all

  this--"

  "Little weasel!" The distinctive roar of an Orion voice crashed over the

  argument
like a storm wave. Sulu swung around to see the bulky form of

  the Orion military commander emerge from the turbolift and stalk toward

  them, flanked by a brace of security guards. The white swath of bandage

  taped across his bearded face didn't make him look any less dangerous.

  "You lied to us!"

  Haslev tried to sidle back, his antennae curving defensively downward.

  "Urn--when, Commander Ondarken?"

  "You told us your trans-shield anode would make any transporter beam go

  through a shield." The Orion shoved through the group around Haslev,

  Andorians scattering before him with yelps of alarm. "But when we tried

  to beam our agent out with it from this ship, nothing happened." He came

  to a halt, looming over the gray-faced physicist. "Why?"

  "Urn--" Haslev's antennae quivered. "Well, there were a few minor

  details about the trans-shield anode I didn't have time to explain."

  "Such as?" Ondarken's bronze eyes narrowed to slits.

  "Well, in the first place, you can only beam to the anode, not away from

  it." Hasler swallowed. "And I'm afraid you can't beam the transshield

  anode itself anywhere--you have to carry it to your intended

  destination."

  "Not to mention the fact that it creates a subspace pulse on board ship

  every time you use it," Sulu added.

  "What?" Kirk's exasperated voice rose over the Orion commander's growl.

  "Using the trans-shield anode was what made all our instruments go out?"

  "It's only a minor flaw," Haslev quavered, shrinking when Ondarken

  leaned over him with bared teeth. "I'm sure I can iron it out with just

  a little more research--"

  "I am afraid not, Mr. Haslev." The note of certainty in Spock's quiet

  voice sliced off the physicist's spluttering. "Constance Duerring's

  original theory of transporter electrodynamics clearly states that

  energy is generated whenever a transporter beam encounters a force

  shield." The Vulcan thoughtfully steepled his long fingers in front of

  his chin. "In most cases, the energy is absorbed by the random

  rearrangement of molecules within the transported objects. Your anode

  device prevents that by diverting the energy to the surrounding subspace

  boson field, where it is re-emitted as low-frequency radiation." Spock

  lifted a quizzical eyebrow. "Really, Mr. Hasler, you should know that

  you cannot evade the first law ofthemody-namics. Energy can be neither

  created or destroyed, only transformed."

  "Exactly so," Pov Kanin agreed, his lean blue face creasing with a smug

  smile. "That's why the Andorian government refused to fund Haslev's

  transporter research to begin with." He needled a malicious glance at

  the Orion commander. "We never thought other governments would be

  obtuse enough to believe Muav Haslev's wild Pr9Posals--"

  Ondarken growled, spinning around to face the

  Andorian. "What did you just call me, weasel?"

  "Let me elaborate--"

  "Gentlemen[" Kirk stepped between them, apparently oblivious to the fact

  that either of the high

  gravity aliens could have crushed him where he stood. His voice rang

  with stern authority. "We're here to decide on the fate of Muav Hasler,

  not to squabble with each other." He glanced at Kanin, ignoring the

  renegade physicist's squeak of alarm. "The Orion commander has asked

  for permission to extradite Mr. Haslev so that his government can try

  him for trea

  "I must refuse," the Andorian captain said politely. "On the grounds

  that Mr. Haslev committed treason against my government first."

  Kirk's mouth twitched up into a smile. "That certainly seems

  reasonable." He turned to face Ondarken when the Orion commander growled

  in protest. "I'm sure that when Mr. Haslev has finished serving his

  prison sentence on Andor, they'll be more than willing to let him face

  charges on Orion, as well."

  "If he's still alive by then." Pov Kanin ignored Muav Haslev's piteous

  groan from behind him. "Now, Captain Kirk,. may I have your permission

  to find temporary housing for my crew on board your ship--and a secure

  cell for my prisoner?"

  "Permission granted." Kirk glanced at Spook, amusement glittering in his

  eyes. "I'll have my first officer arrange it for you, Captain Kanin.

  Perhaps he can explain the first law of thermodynamics to Mr. Hasler

  along the way."

  "Thank you." Kanin motioned to his crew to follow the Vulcan, pausing

  only long enough to cast a silent look of triumph at Ondarken before he

  went along. The Orion commander scowled after him, anger rumbling

  wordlessly in his throat.

  "I believe that concludes our business here, Commander Ondarken," Kirk

  said crisply. "Unless you

  would like to stay to answer some questions about how your agent got on

  board--"

  "What about our stolen property?" The Orion glared down at Kirk. "What

  about the fate of the other criminals?"

  "Other criminals?" Kirk followed Ondarken's glance to Sulu, and his

  mouth hardened. "Commander, my helmsman was carrying out Starfleet

  orders when he diverted your companion ship's fire toward your ship."

  "Not that!" howled the Orion in frustration. "What he did before, on

  Sigma One! He received the stolen property from Haslev's conspirator,

  the human plant merchant who helped him escape from us. That's how the

  trans-shield anode got smuggled aboard this ship!"

  "Oh, my God." Sulu felt his stomach contract in shock when he realized

  what Ondarken meant. "The trans-shield anode must have been hidden

  inside my lily pond!"

  "Not that black marble thing Chekov kept calling a swimming pool?" Kirk

  looked equally stunned. "Oh, my God! That's what he was trying to tell

  me--" He turned to meet the Orion's scowl with a grim look of his own.

  "I'm afraid your stolen property is gone-- . blasted out into space

  along with the shuttle your

  agent rigged to destroy the Enterprise."

  "Agent? What agent?" Ondarken tried to arrange his bus hy eyebrows into

  an expression of surprise. "I deny all agents--"

  "Of course you do." Kirk motioned the security guards forward. "Escort

  Commander Ondarken to the transporter room and see he gets back to his

  ship."

  "Aye, sir." Lemieux tugged at one beefy forearm,

  unintimidated by the glare she earned. "Let's go, Commander Ondarken."

  "My government will pursue the criminals on board your ship!" the Orion

  warned, shouting over his shoulder as he was led away. "We will sue for

  extradition and punishu"

  The turbolift doors cut off his diatribe midword, and Sulu felt his

  tense shoulders relax at last. He heard Kirk sigh, and suddenly

  realized how tired the captain looked. It was a mark of Kirk's force of

  will that Sulu hadn't noticed it at all during the confrontation.

  "Sir?" he asked tentatively. "May I have permission to see if Chekov is

  still in the bay?" Something deep inside him wouldn't believe the

  Russian was really alive until he saw him.

  "Let's both go." Kirk headed down the vast shell of the shuttle bay,

  toward where engineers were rolling aside the multisectioned vacuum

  barrier. The vol
atile smell of spilled lubricant mingled with the sharp

  ozone scent of metal being hit by phaser torches. Bright lights among

  the shuttles showed where engineers still worked to cut them apart.

  Medical aides picked their way through the morass of twisted metal, a

  gravsled steadied between them. A single environmental-suited figure

  scrambled after them, her dark face vivid with concern.

  "The engineers must have just gotten him out." Kirk lengthened his

  stride to meet them. "Bones! Is Chekov all right?"

  McCoy looked up from the blanketed form on the medical sled, his face

  lighting with a crooked smile. "Well, considering that I thought we were

  going to need a can opener to get him out, he's doing pretty well. Some

  broken ribs, a whole raft of bumps and bruisesu" He glanced down as

  Chekov made a

  bubbly mutter. "--and one punctured lung. Nothing I can't fix."

  Kirk paused beside the gravsled, Sulu crowding at his heels. Chekov

  looked awfulface red-purple with bruises where it wasn't crusted with at

  least two colors of dried blood. His chest moved with painful

  shallowness beneath the blanket, thick, liquid gurgles catching in his

  throat with every breath. Sulu felt his own throat tighten in sympathy.

  The security officer squinted up at Kirk. "I heard Orions."

  "The commander of the Umyfymu came over to talk with the traitor-weasel

  Haslev." Kirk's voice turned wry. "And to demand his stolen property

 

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