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Star Trek - TNG - Section 31 - Rogue

Page 31

by Andy Mangels


  The door chimed again. Batanides quickly removed her hand from Picard's, and sat back in her chair.

  "Come," Picard said, and Commander Riker stepped into the room a moment later.

  "Captain, the Tian An Men is standing by. They're requesting that we beam Zweller over immediately, along with all information pertaining to our Geminus Gulf mission."

  Picard looked up at Riker wearily, and handed him a padd.

  "Number One, I'd like you to go to the brig and supervise the commander's release. I... It's probably best that I don't see him again for a good long while."

  "I understand, sir."

  Looking into his trusted first officer's eyes, Picard knew that he did understand.

  Sean Hawk and Ranul Keru rounded a corner in the corridor, and came face-to-face with a security contingent led by Commander Riker. Two burly security officers accompanied him, flanking Cortin Zweller, who was dressed in a fresh Starfleet uniform.

  "Hello, sir," Hawk said to Riker, nervous.

  "Lieutenant," Riker said.

  "Congratulations again on your derring-do in the Geminus Gulf. I'm sure Ranul is at least as happy as we are that you're back among us."

  Keru grinned.

  "It wouldn't be much of an anniversary celebration without him."

  Hawk smiled as well. To Riker, he said, "Thank you, sir."

  "See you on the bridge. Lieutenant," Riker said, leading his party on in the direction of the transporter room.

  As Zweller moved past Hawk, he stopped and grabbed the young man's arm lightly. Riker and the security officers stopped as well.

  "It looks as though you've made your choice," Zweller said, his voice low.

  "It was the only choice I could make," Hawk replied, looking Zweller defiantly in the eyes.

  Without another word, Zweller turned and followed Riker. Hawk watched him go, without a trace of regret.

  Hawk looked over at Ranul, who smiled and playfully ruffled his hair as they continued down the corridor toward holodeck three. Swashbuckling combat against Bluebeard and his pirates--which he and Keru had postponed for several days now--awaited them. It would be a tame diversion compared to the events of the past week. They might even get to enjoy some time together on a sandy beach after defeating the enemy's galleon full of brigands.

  We have all the time in the world together now. Hawk thought as the holodeck door beckoned.

  Chapter Twenty

  Romulus, Stardate 50454.1

  Senator Pardek looked out from the cliff side veranda, his dark, deep-set eyes surveying the sun-dappled surface of the Apnex Sea, which lapped gently at the jagged rocks far, far below. A small flock of mogai wheeled lazily overhead in a muted gray sky. Beneath them, blood-green waters stretched placidly to the horizon, and lapped at a shoreline teeming with multicolored succulents. Pardek thought, as he often did when he came here, that this must surely be the most beautiful vista on all of Romulus, the jewel in the Romulan Star Empire's crown.

  It was also possibly the safest place he could be.

  There were no air- or watercraft anywhere to be seen, thanks to the warning messages broadcast by his automated security system. But Pardek also counted on the protection of his own flesh-and-blood security staff, an experienced cadre of loyal Romulan soldiers who were as accomplished in the art of repulsing unwanted visitors as they were at keeping out of sight when not needed.

  The villa was the one place to which he could retreat from the often vexing intrigues of the Senate and the incessant infighting of the Continuing Committee. Here, he could almost convince himself that the vast length and breadth of the Empire contained nothing that might serve to trouble him, from his principal home in the Krocton Segment to the most remote Neutral Zone outpost; that young upstarts in the Senate weren't constantly gunning for his position; that the Vulcan radical Spock wasn't still at large somewhere in the Empire, spreading the subversive doctrine of RomulanVulcan unification to ever-increasing numbers of willfully gullible souls.

  And that headaches such as the Tal Shiar's fiasco in the Geminus Gulf were merely bad dreams from which he would awaken.

  Pardek had already decided that he would remain at the villa until tomorrow morning. Then, the Continuing Committee would begin its probe into the fitness of Chairman Koval to continue leading the Tal Shiar. Only then, once Pardek was forced to return to the Senate chambers to take gavel in hand before the board of inquiry, would he pause to worry about the possible consequences of Koval's inquest.

  At least, that was the plan, Returning to the central courtyard, Pardek tried to banish all thought of Koval and the Tal Shiar by concentrating on his garden. Here were the finicky Terran roses he so valued for their sweet scent, there the fast-growing crystalline life-forms, which the Tzenkethi called nirikeh; their crystals twinkled, silver and emerald and violet in the subdued sunlight, seeming to grow before his eyes. He continued walking, passing under the fronds of the ripple berry tree the Dominion Vorta Weyoun had given him last month as part of a nonaggression-pact overture. That offer was going to require some serious thought and debate, Pardek told himself; he trusted the Vorta even less than he did the Tal Shiar.

  Beyond the ripple berry tree lay the patch of ground he reserved his prized Edosian orchids. The pink-edged, yellow flowers, which now stood on knee-high stalks, required specially prepared soils and a great deal of attention.

  This particular variety had come into his possession many years ago, introduced to him by an unusually well-mannered and talkative Cardassian groundskeeper he had met at the Cardassian Embassy, a few weeks prior to Proconsul Merrok's tragic demise. The orchids had provided Pardek with an agreeable diversion from that unpleasant business--Merrok had been a personal friend, despite their many political differences--and the orchids' delicate blooms had delighted him ever since, despite the constant labor they demanded.

  Perhaps, Pardek thought, kneeling beside the orchids to inspect them more closely, they serve as a metaphor for politics.

  He rose and walked into the house's sunlit central atrium, where he watched as his daughter, Talkath, practiced her martial arts exercises. So intent was the nine year-old on the slow, intricately flowing motions of her hands, elbows, and legs, that she did not seem to notice his presence. He smiled silently as he watched her executing her precisely timed movements, delivering slow motion kicks and blows in a lethal yet exquisitely lovely ballet.

  She was a beautiful girl, bright and strong, her movements well-coordinated. Since his wife's untimely death in a shuttle accident four years prior, Talkath was all he had. She was his future, his legacy, his very life. Nothing in all of the Empire was more important to him.

  Pardek walked farther into the house, got a warm cup of kali-fal from the replicator, and took a seat in the breakfast nook. The ethereal strains of one of Frenchotte's oratorios gently wafted in from the atrium. From his vantage point in the kitchen, he could still watch his daughter without her noticing his presence.

  "She's such a lovely child," said a voice from behind him.

  Startled, Pardek splashed the pungent blue-green liquor down the front of his tunic. He stood, turning quickly toward the voice.

  Tal Shiar Chairman Koval stood in the spacious kitchen, craning his head to look at Talkath.

  "How did you get in here?" Pardek demanded, his heart in the grip of an icy fist. He pitched his voice low, not wishing to alarm his daughter. But a quick glance in her direction revealed that she had heard nothing.

  "A Tal Shiar chairman would be most ineffective if he were unable to come and go as he pleased," Koval said enigmatically.

  "Besides, your villa's transporter scramblers appear to be last year's model."

  "We shouldn't even be speaking, Chairman Koval," Pardek said, realizing that he was still holding his cup-and that his grip had grown nearly tight enough to shatter it. Pardek carefully set it down on the breakfast nook table before continuing.

  "The hearing about the Chiarosan debacle will be held
tomorrow. Not before."

  "And that is why I am here today. Senator. I am well aware that some on the Continuing Committee have characterized my efforts in the Geminus Gulf as a failure."

  Pardek found himself stifling a sardonic laugh.

  "Hence my use of the word "debacle," Chairman. How

  else could one describe vsthat happened in the Chiaros system?"

  "The Praetor now controls three new sectors of previously nonaligned space," Koval said, apparently unfazed by Pardek's comment.

  "That, in itself, should be cause for celebration."

  Pardek wasn't convinced. The cost had been too high.

  "Three sectors of nothingness. Chairman. And the information you traded to acquire them--" "Consisted," Koval said, interrupting, "of the identities of Romulan operatives who were already scheduled for termination. In addition, the so-called 'spy-list" I sold to the Federation includes the names of several Starfleet officers who have not engaged in espionage on our behalf, but whose continued existence our Praetor regards as dangerous. These individuals will therefore, in the eyes of Federation authorities, be strongly suspected of treason. And new double agents are even now planting evidence against these individuals, while getting in line to occupy their soon-to-be-vacant positions."

  While Koval spoke, Pardek studied his face. Was Koval's right eyelid drooping slightly? Lately there had been whispers in the Senate chambers that the Tal Shiar chairman was showing incipient signs of Tuvan syndrome.

  Pardek could only hope that this was so; the man had thus far proved immune to all other threats.

  Whether ill or hale, however, Koval still both impressed and unnerved Pardek. The Tal Shiar leader seemed to have a contingency plan for every eventuality, a talent for survival not seen in the Empire since the halcyon days of the bird-of-prey commanders of two centuries past.

  "So, some benefit may accrue to the Empire after all," Pardek said noncommittally.

  Koval nodded.

  "I would regard your public recognition of those benefits as a boon to the Praetor, to the Empire ... and to the Tal Shiar."

  "The disappearance of a strategically invaluable subspace phenomenon notwithstanding," Pardek said coolly.

  "That is a minor thing, in the overall tapestry of history," Koval said with a slight shrug.

  "Not nearly so important, really, as what is to come."

  "And just what is to come, Mr. Chairman?"

  Koval looked thoughtful. He paused for a protracted moment, as though deciding just how much it was safe to reveal.

  "War," he said finally.

  "War on such a scale that I doubt you can imagine. And with that war will no doubt come efforts on the part of some to make .. . questionable alliances."

  "Efforts by whom?" Pardek said, frowning.

  Koval brushed the question aside.

  "The Empire will need the guidance of a firm hand if it is to survive its immediate future. Therefore the Tal Shiar must not be compromised. None of us. Senator, can afford to relax our vigilance."

  Smiling beneficently, Koval gestured toward Talkath.

  The girl was now sitting on the atrium floor and engaging in some stretching exercises.

  "She really is a lovely child. Senator. You would do well to do everything in your power to protect her from harm."

  With that, Koval touched his right wrist with his left hand, and an almost-inaudible chiming sound gently suffused the room. As a shimmering curtain of energy enveloped the spymaster, Pardek surmised that he had activated a site-to-site transporter unit. In the span of a few heartbeats, the dreaded Tal Shiar Chairman was gone.

  Alone in the breakfast nook, Pardek sank back into his chair and looked into the atrium at his daughter, who was still intent on her workout. She was so young and innocent, so blissfully unaware of the evil that men did so casually. KovaTs meaning could not have been plainer: He wanted Pardek to understand that he could spirit her away as easily as he had broken the villa's security protocols. Pardek realized only then that his hands were shaking like the spindly legs of a newborn set'leth.

  For Talkath truly was all he had. She represented the future, a future he was determined to safeguard, regardless of the cost. A future that meant far more to him than any cause, any law, any principle.

  EPILOGUE

  Mans, Stardate 50915.5

  Jean-Luc Picard hadn't been to Mars for quite some time; usually, it was to visit the Utopia Planitia Fleet Yards, where his current starship's predecessor, the Enterprise-D, had been built. During his departures from the shipyards' orbiting dry docks and hangars, he had often glimpsed Cydonia, a region located in the windswept northern lowlands, the site of a pair of human settlements--as well as the alleged location of the infamous "Martian face" formation, according to the myths of centuries past.

  Now, he was on his way to Bradbury City with Lieutenant Commander Ranul Keru, in a shuttlecraft. It had been three days since the Enterprise-E had returned to McKinley Station, following its excursion into Earth's past, where the crew had fought the Borg and helped Zefram Cochrane make humanity's first warp-powered flight. During his time on McKinley, Picard had met with engineers, dealt with the well-being of his surviving crew members, and spent an interminable amount of time being debriefed by Starfleet's higher echelons --both from Starfleet Command and Starfleet Intelligence. He had even had to endure a protracted grilling by a pair of officers from the Federation Department of Temporal Investigations.

  Picard understood that Agent Dulmer and his junior partner, Lucsly, had genuine concerns about the inadvertent creation of temporal anomalies; after all, such effects could be every bit as dangerous to history's fragile tapestry as an incursion by the Borg. Still, their painstaking, exacting lines of questioning had sometimes tempted him to lose his temper.

  But for all of his frustrations and problems, Picard knew that his own agonies did not cut as deeply as those carried by Keru.

  The shuttle flight had been awkward and uncomfortable, and though both men tried to discuss topics unrelated to the grim reality of Hawk's death, the lapses into silence came often. It was during one of those interludes when Keru spoke, his eyes on the red-and-ocher world before them on the viewscreen.

  "I don't blame you. Captain." He hesitated, and added more softly, "Well, I'm trying not to."

  "I can see where you might, Ranul," Picard said quietly.

  "I was responsible for the specific mission that cost Sean his life."

  "He volunteered, though. It was his own choice. His last great adventure." Keru shifted in his seat, as if uncomfortable.

  "I'm not sure I want to face Commander Wort any time soon, however."

  Picard had expected this.

  "You know that Worf only did what he had to do. If there had been any way--" "But there was a way," Keru said, interrupting.

  "You're proof of that. They were able to recover you

  after you were assimilated. And that was after quite some time. Hawk had just been .. . infected. He could have ... he might have been saved."

  Picard kept quiet. Any response he could give would only deepen the pain. He concentrated instead on the consoles, his fingers tapping in coordinates as Mars loomed larger in front of them.

  "I've thought a lot about it the last few days ... about leaving the Enterprise," Keru said.

  "On the one hand, I think it holds too many bad memories. I wonder how I'd respond to you. How I'd feel if Worf came back aboard.

  How I'll feel when I'm walking those corridors, entering the mess hall or holodecks, even our quarters. All those things will remind me of him. Of losing him."

  "I'm sure that if Deanna were here, she'd probably counsel you that the pain will grow less every day," Picard said.

  "Yeah, she said something similar to that, along with quite a bit of other... crap." Keru turned to look at Picard, his eyes wet with tears.

  "You know, when you've lost the person you love most in life, the pain doesn't ever feel like it's going to go awa
y. It's not going to be okay. You're never going to hold them in your arms again, never going to laugh at their stupid jokes, never going to quarrel over something trivial... they're never... just never there again."

  Picard felt his own eyes well up with tears as he regarded his officer, and found himself again unable to respond.

  Keru sniffed, and wiped his eyes.

  "I know you've lost family, and officers who've served under you. We've all lost people in our lives. Death is inevitable. We're supposed to realize that, we're supposed to celebrate the lives of those we've lost, we're supposed to take comfort in some place beyond death--Heaven, Sto-Vo-Kor, Valhalla, whatever. But there's no comfort for those still

  alive other than their own continued existence. And I'd give up years of my life to have more time with Sean.

  "I always dreamed I would find someone I could love as much as Sean. I've forgotten so many of my dreams in life, but he... he was real. And he was mine. And I was his."

  Keru turned away from Picard, wiping at his cheek again. Picard closed his eyes for a moment, then opened them again and began procedures for entry into the Martian atmosphere.

  Leaving the shuttle docked beside one of (he peripheral pressure domes, Picard shouldered a small duffel bag, and he and Keru entered Bradbury City through a tube-shaped extrusion of the municipal force field Mindful of their awkwardness in the low Martian gravity, the two men made their way through a series of airlocks and settlement streets before entering an area of the city that seemed older and more antiquated than anything else they had seen here thus far. Picard noticed several people using archaic technology, and the modern, redundant interplexed forcefields-through which the salmon-tinged sky could be seen--gave way to older atmospheric domes composed of semi-opaque nanoplastic membranes; Picard noted that these antique pressure domes were of the same design as those used by the first Martian settlers more than two centuries earlier.

  Picard followed Keru, who knew his way quite well, no doubt from past visits. They eventually found themselves walking along a broad, pebbled walkway. As they moved forward, surrounding them from the sides and above was a trellis, entwined with brilliant blue and red vines and creepers. Multiple forms of flowering plants, their forms elongated by the light Martian gravity, peeked through in strategic places, purple and white and green splashes amongst the bright primary colors of the vines. The scent of growing things reminded Picard of his family's vineyards in Labarre, France, which his late brother Robert had tended for so many years.

 

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