New Frontier
Page 5
She slung the pack over her shoulders and bolted for her craft . . .
. . . and stopped.
The craft was gone.
Her eyes narrowed and then she saw the nose of the craft protruding just above the ground. The entire thing had descended into what appeared to be a sinkhole of some kind . . . a sinkhole large enough to swallow her entire vessel.
She stared at the sinkhole and said flatly, “That was not there before. If it had been there, I would have not landed my ship on it.”
Suddenly she looked up as, just over the crest of a nearby rise, several riders appeared. They were five of them, astride great six-legged beasts with gleaming ebony skin. One of the riders, curiously, was a young girl, several years shy of adolescence. She kept near one of the adults, a man who . . .
Well, now, he was definitely an interesting-looking individual. He held the reins of his mount with one hand, as if imperiously certain that the creature would not dare to throw him. It was hard to get a reading for his height since he was riding; if she’d had to guess, she’d have pegged him at just over six feet. His skin was the typical dark red of the Thai-Ionian upper caste, and his brow was slightly distended. His head was shaven, and he had small, spiral tattoos on his forehead. His jaw was outthrust, his eyes rather small. Indeed, she would have not been able to see his eyes at all, had he not been looking directly at her. He sported a thin beard which ran the length of his jawline, and came to a point that made him look slightly satanic.
The girl to his right had skin a slightly lighter shade of red. Her head was not shaved, and her hair grew thick and yellow. But she had a single tattoo on her forehead.
Neither of them spoke, however. Instead the lead rider, a massively built Thallonian astride a mount who looked as if his back would break, said imperiously, “I am Thallonian Chancellor Yoz, and you are under arrest.” He had guards on either side of him who glowered at the woman as if annoyed that she was disrupting their day.
As if he hadn’t spoken, the woman pointed at the area where her ship had vanished and said again, “That was not there before. That sinkhole. The topography simply cannot change that way, not so abruptly.”
Yoz stared at her as if she’d lost her mind. “I said you are under arrest. Submit to my authority.”
“I’m busy,” she said brusquely, her immediate difficulty forgotten.
The imperious-looking man at the girl’s side half-smiled at Chancellor Yoz. “You have her nicely intimidated, Lord Chancellor. She should be begging for mercy at any moment now.”
“Worry not, Lord Cwan. She will not retain her insolence.”
“I was not worried,” said the one called Cwan. “Worst comes to worst, she can always replace you as Lord Chancellor.”
Yoz did not appear amused by the observation. Angrily he demanded of the defiant female, “What is your name?”
“Soleta. Now please leave me to my work. This is a scientifically curious situation, and it takes precedence over the famed Thallonian inhospitableness.” She began to unsling her pack so she could pull out her tricorder.
With annoyance, Chancellor Yoz urged his steed forward and it moved with confidence toward the woman who’d called herself Soleta. She glanced with impatience at him and said, “Go away.”
“Now you listen here . . .” he began.
With an impatient blowing of air between her teeth, Soleta reached over and clamped her left hand at the base of the mount’s neck. The creature let out a brief shriek of surprise and then collapsed. It rolled over to the right, pinning Chancellor Yoz beneath it.
Surprisingly, Soleta heard a peel of laughter from the girl. It drew her attention just long enough for one of the guards to pull out a weapon and fire it, point blank, at Soleta. It knocked her off her feet with such force that she felt as if she’d been slammed with a sledgehammer in the chest. She hit the ground and was busy making mental assessments as to just what precisely the nature of the weapon was when she fell into unconsciousness. And the last thing she heard was the voice of Cwan saying, “You certainly showed her who was in charge, Chancellor. Perhaps she should replace you at that . . .”
II.
SOLETA STARED at the four walls of the dungeon around her and wondered just how much one was reasonably supposed to suffer in the pursuit of scientific knowledge. Unfortunately, the skeleton lying next to her didn’t seem inclined to provide an answer.
She suspected the Thallonians left skeletons lying around their dungeons for dramatic effect. Perhaps even to intimidate prisoners. Certainly it didn’t seem to serve any logical purpose.
The dungeon itself was hideously primitive-looking. The floor was strewn with straw, the walls made of rock. It was a contrast to the other parts of the palace, which had a far more contemporary look. Far in the distance, her sharp ears were able to take in the sounds of celebration. The Thallonian royal family was having one of their famous “do’s.”
“Pity I wasn’t invited,” she said dryly to no one in particular.
She pulled experimentally on the bonds that attached her wrists to the wall. They weren’t anything as arcane as chain, which would have been consistent with the decor. Instead they seemed to be some sort of coated cable. They were, however, rather effective. They seemed solidly attached to the wall, without the slightest interest in being broken by her efforts. They were firmly attached to her wrists by means of thick wristlets. The key was securely in the possession of the guards outside. She was having trouble brushing her hair out of her face since her movement was impeded. Her IDIC pin was gone; she had no idea whether someone had stolen it or if it was just lost in the desert. She was saddened by the loss. The pin had no intrinsic value, but she had had it for quite some time and had become rather attached to it.
Her chest had stopped hurting a while back. She was reasonably sure that the weapon had been some sort of sonic disruptor device. Very primitive. Also very effective.
She heard footsteps approaching the door as she had many times in the two days since she’d been tossed in here. She wondered if, as had been the case those other times, they would just walk on past. But then they seemed to slow down and stop just outside the door. There was a noise, a sound of an electronic key at a lock, and then the door swung open.
Standing framed in the doorway was the guard who had tossed Soleta into the dungeon upon the instructions of no less prestigious an individual than the Chancellor of Thallon. Standing next to him was another individual whom Soleta could not quite make out. He was cloaked and robed, a hood pulled up over his head.
“You have company,” said the guard. “You can rot together.”
Soleta said nothing. Somehow it didn’t seem the sort of comment that really required a reply.
The guard seemed to display a flicker of disappointment, as if hoping that she’d beg or plead or in some way try to convince him that she should be released. It was a bit of a pity; in times past, he’d been able to milk the desperation of some female prisoners for his own . . . advantage. Ah well. If she was made of sterner stuff than that, it was of no consequence to him. For that matter, it meant that if she eventually came around it would make her capitulation that much sweeter.
He guided the hooded and robed figure over to the opposite corner of the dungeon. “Sit,” he snapped, his hand tapping the sonic disruptor which dangled prominently from his right hip. The newcomer obediently sat and the guard snapped cuffs identical to Soleta’s into place around the newcomer’s wrists. The guard stepped back, nodded approvingly, then turned to Soleta. “In case you’re wondering, you had a trial today.”
“Did I,” Soleta said levelly. “I do not recall it.”
“You didn’t attend. Thallonian law feels that matters proceed more smoothly if the accused is not present. Otherwise things are slowed down.”
“Far be it from me to stand in the way of efficient Thallonian justice. I was found guilty, I assume.”
“The charge was trespassing,” the guard said reasonably, arms
folded. “You’re here. That makes it fairly indisputable. The penalty is death, of course.”
“Of course. Is an appeal possible?”
“Naturally. Thallonian law may be strict, but we are not unreasonable barbarians. As a matter of fact, your appeals hearing is scheduled for tomorrow.”
“Ah.” Soleta nodded and, with a sanguine tone, said, “You will be certain to come by and tell me how I did.”
He inclined his head slightly in a deferential manner and then walked out, the door slamming shut solidly behind him.
Soleta turned and stared at the figure in the shadows. “Who are you?”
The figure was silent for a moment. When he spoke, it was in a tone that was flat and level, and just a touch ironic. “A fellow guest. And you are the famed ’Soleta,’ I assume.”
She made no effort to hide her surprise. “How did you know?”
“Word of you has spread. Apparently you dispatched the high chancellor in a manner not keeping with his dignity. Si Cwan informed anyone who would listen. He was more than happy to—what is the expression—take Chancellor Yoz ’down a few pegs.’” He paused a moment. “May I ask why you are here?”
She sighed. “Scientific curiosity. In my wanderings, I’d heard some rather odd reports about the surface structure of Thallon. Some very unique geophysical, high-energy readings.”
“Your ’wanderings,’ did you say?”
“Yes.”
From within the folds of his hood, he seemed to incline his head slightly. “You are a Vulcan. Vulcans do not generally ’wander’ aimlessly. There is usually more direction and purpose in their lives.”
She was silent for a moment. “I am not . . . entirely Vulcan. My mother was Vulcan . . . but my father, Romulan.” She shrugged, a casually human gesture which was in contrast to her demeanor. “I’m not sure why I’m telling you. Perhaps because you are the last individual with whom I shall hold a relatively normal conversation. I have very little to hide.”
“Indeed.” He paused. “You are far from home, Soleta.”
She raised an eyebrow and said—with as close to sadness as she ever got—“I have no home. Once, perhaps, Starfleet. But now . . .” She shrugged.
“Ah,” said the newcomer.
“’Ah’what?”
“ ’Ah,’ the guard is returning as I had surmised he would.”
There was something about the voice of the man in the cell with her that she found almost spellbinding in its certainty. For Soleta had undergone a tremendous crisis of confidence, and a man who was so clear, so in control . . . she could not help but be fascinated by such a man. Sure enough, a moment later—just as he had said—the door opened and the guard entered quickly. He glanced at Soleta and the newcomer. Neither had budged, of course. Soleta was on her feet but still nowhere within range of the guard. And the newcomer was seated on the floor with such serenity that it appeared he was ready to stay there until the end of time. Quickly the guard looked around on the floor. As he did so, he was patting down the pockets in his uniform.
“Problem?” asked Soleta. Not that she cared.
“It’s none of your concern,” the guard said brusquely.
And the newcomer, from his position on the floor, inquired, “Would you be seeking this, by chance?”
The guard glanced over and his jaw dropped. For the prisoner was holding up the electronic key. The multipurpose device that opened the door of the cell . . .
. . . and also the prisoners’ shackles.
Barely did the guard have the time to register this fact when the stranger was on his feet. It did not seem possible that anyone could move so quickly. A second, two at the most, had passed in between the time when the guard realized his peril and when the newcomer was actually making his move. Soleta hadn’t even blinked. It seemed to her that the newcomer had not even really moved with any apparent haste. It was simply that one moment he was upon the floor, and the next moment he was upon the guard. His hand snaked out, lightning fast, and for a moment Soleta thought that the newcomer was in the process of strangling the guard. Had he done so, Soleta would not have mourned the guard’s loss in the slightest. Oh, she couldn’t have done the deed herself, but she wasn’t going to shed a tear if someone else dispatched him on her behalf.
But the guard did not die. Instead his head snapped around in response to a hand clamping securely on his right shoulder. Reflexively his hands came up, grabbing the hand at the wrist, but by the time his hands clamped onto the arm of his assailant, it was already too late. His eyes rolled up and, without a sound, he slumped to the floor.
“That was a nerve pinch,” said Soleta.
The newcomer made no immediate reply, but instead took the electronic key, which he clasped securely in his palm, crossed quickly to Soleta, and opened the shackles that held her. She rubbed her wrist. “Who are you?” she demanded.
He pulled his hood back and Soleta found herself staring into the eyes of an individual who looked as if he could have passed for a Thallonian. His skin had the dark, almost reddish tint and arched eyebrows that were distinctive to Thallonians. His hair was long on the sides, and she looked inquisitively at it. In silent response, he pulled back the hair just a shade to reveal distinctive pointed ears. Vulcan. An older Vulcan, to be sure. He had the face of one who had seen every reason in the galaxy to give up on logic and surrender oneself to disorder . . . and yet had refused to do so.
“The skin tone . . .” she said.
“Simple camouflage, to blend in with Thallonians,” he said. “However . . . your predicament put me in something of an ethical bind. I could have remained an impostor . . . blending in with the Thallonian people . . . but that would have required my allowing your demise. The security into the dungeon is too effective. Revealing that I myself was likewise a trespasser onto Thallon was the only means I could discern to get sufficiently near you to be of assistance.”
“What is your name?”
“I am Spock,” he said.
She looked at him, and her inability to disguise her amazement a sure tip-off to her mixed lineage. A purebred Vulcan would have made do with a quizzically raised eyebrow. “Not . . . the Spock. Captain Kirk’s Spock?”
And now he did, in fact, lift an eyebrow, in a manner evoking both curiosity and amusement. “I was unaware I was considered his property.”
“Sorry. I’m . . . sorry.”
“Your apology, though no doubt sincere, is both unnecessary and of no iterest.” He glanced briskly around. “There is no logical reason for us to remain. I suggest we do not.”
She nodded in brisk agreement. “You lead the way.”
“Of course.”
They headed quickly out of the cell, pausing only to securely close the door behind them. The guard lay on the floor, insensate.
They made their way carefully down a hallway. In the far distance they could still hear the sounds of merriment. The party was apparently in full swing. With no one around, Soleta could indulge herself in a low whisper. “I studied so many of your exploits, back in the Academy. It . . . it’s difficult to believe that everything they told us really happened.”
He paused, his back against the wall of the corridor. “Do not believe it,” he said.
“So you’re saying it didn’t happen.”
“No. It happened. But if it simplifies your life to disbelieve it, then do so. It is of no consequence to me. Of far greater concern is our departure.” He started moving again, and gestured for her to follow.
“You said security was tight.”
“Coming in, yes. Departing, on the other hand, may prove a simpler matter.”
Indeed, Spock’s theory was correct. There were guard stations placed at intervals along the way, but the guards were lax. Never within recent memory had there been any sort of breakout from the dungeon area, so no one anticipated any now. To exacerbate matters, the sounds of the not-too-far-off party were a sort of aural intoxication. The guards could hear the sounds of laughter and
merriment and—most distracting of all—peals of feminine laughter. It was, to say the least, distracting.
Cataclysmically distracting, as it turned out, for Spock and Soleta had no trouble sneaking up on the guards and dispatching them from behind. Indeed, Spock found himself in silent admiration of Soleta’s technique. She moved so quietly that it almost seemed as if her feet did not touch the floor. Her technique with the nerve pinch was not as sure and smooth as his, however. Spock had so fine-tuned his ability that the merest brushing of his fingers in the appropriate area was enough to dispatch his victims. Soleta, on the other hand, would grab her target with an almost feral ferocity. If there was a more deft means of taking down an individual by means of nerve pinch, Soleta didn’t seem interested in learning it. She noticed Spock watching her at one point.
“Problem?” she asked.
“Increase the spread of your middle fingers by point zero five centimeters,” he said. “You will find that you will render a subject unconscious precisely eight-tenths of a second more rapidly.”
They came around a corner and suddenly found themselves face-to-face with a guard. He opened his mouth to let out a shout of alarm. Soleta’s right arm swung around so fast that it seemed nothing more than a blur. It cracked solidly across the guard’s jaw, breaking it with a loud snap that ricocheted up and down the hallway. He dropped insensate to the floor, unconscious before he reached it.
“Of course,” Spock continued as if there had been no interruption, “there is something to be said for brute force.”
“Thanks,” she said. She had already unloaded a disruptor from the belt of one of the guards. She pulled this guard’s disruptor from his belt as well and extended it to Spock. He took it, glancing at it in a sort of abstract distaste . . . as if he saw little use for it, but nonetheless had no desire to simply toss it aside. He tucked it safely within the folds of his cloak. “Why are you here?” she asked, taking the brief lull to inquire. “You’re an ambassador now, but the Federation doesn’t have diplomatic ties with Thallon. No one does. So why are you here?”