by Peter David
“Yes, yes, speak freely,” said Jellico impatiently.
At which point Shelby promptly tossed aside any attempt to speak in a diplomatic or tactful manner. “Dammit, Admiral, what the hell is going on in Starfleet?” demanded Shelby, the fury practically exploding out of every pore.
“I didn’t quite mean that freely. . . .”
She didn’t hear his dry response. She was too angry, waving her arms so vigorously that she looked as if she might go airborne any moment. “Putting aside that the Excalibur should be my ship . . . putting aside that I should have received my own command ages ago . . . putting aside all that . . . I find it personally infuriating that preference is being given to a man who walked away from Starfleet over an officer who has served unwaveringly and unstintingly!”
“I see you’re determined to make this about you.”
“Frankly, sir, since I’m the only one here aside from you, I think it’s a thing for me to do.” She shook her head. “May I ask whose decision this was? I know perfectly well it wasn’t yours.”
“Picard suggested it. . . .”
She rolled her eyes. “I might have known. Payback. Payback because I gave Riker a rough time.”
Even though he knew it wasn’t exactly the appropriate time, Jellico couldn’t help but smile slightly. “Believe it or not, Commander, the galaxy doesn’t revolve around you. Situations occur, decisions are made, people are born, grow old, and die, all without having anything to do with Elizabeth Shelby.”
“I’m sorry, sir.”
“Don’t apologize. At the rate you’re going, someday maybe it will all revolve around you. The point is, although Picard suggested Calhoun, it was Admiral Nechayev who sealed the deal.”
“Nechayev?” She was clearly surprised. “I thought there was no love lost between Nechayev and Picard.”
“The last time I checked, there wasn’t. There’s something else going on, though. Something I haven’t been able to completely find out about.” He drummed his fingers on the desk thoughtfully. “There’ve been rumors floating around.”
“What kind of rumors?”
“Stories, really. For instance, shortly after he resigned from Starfleet, Calhoun was alleged to have gotten into a serious drinking match with some admiral, and made a wager involving the world of Zantos.”
“Zantos.” Shelby made a face. “Wasn’t that the world where a survey party got caught by the natives years ago, and they took the leader of the party and cut off his, uhm . . .” She shifted uncomfortably. “ . . . his . . .”
“Privileges,” Jellico said judiciously. “That’s the place, all right. Never let it be said that Starfleet can’t take a hint. We’ve steered clear of Zantos since then. However, Zantos apparently also produces the best ale in the quadrant. Better than Romulan ale, and tougher to get. Apparently, on a bet, Calhoun snuck onto Zantos, acquired a case of ale, and hotfooted it off the planet with half the Zantos fleet on his ass.”
In spite of herself, Shelby smiled. “That sounds like Calhoun, all right.” Then she shook her head. “But I don’t understand what that has to do with anything.”
“Perhaps nothing.” Jellico shrugged. “Perhaps everything. Someone with that sort of attitude and resourcefulness might have been of interest to Nechayev. She has her fingers in a variety of ’unofficial,’ ’behind the scenes’ pies.” He saw that Shelby was looking at him blankly and he sighed impatiently. “Do I have to spell it out for you, Commander?”
“Are you saying that Calhoun may have been involved in some sort of . . . of under-the-table information gathering, sir?”
“It’s possible, Commander. We live in a universe of possibilities. What it all boils down to,” and he leaned forward on his desk, “is that Calhoun apparently has powerful backers. And those backers are inclined to give him the Excalibur and turn him loose in the former Thallonian Empire.”
By this point Shelby had sat in a chair across from Jellico. But Jellico’s final statement seemed, to her, to more or less finish off the meeting. She slapped her legs, rose, and said, “Well, Admiral . . . I appreciate your candor.” Trying to keep her voice even, to battle back the disappointment, she continued, “I hope you will keep my service record in mind for potential future assignments in—”
“Sit down, Commander, we’re not done.”
“We’re not?” She was genuinely confused, even as she obediently sat again, “With all due respect, I’m not certain what else there is to say.”
“I may have been overruled in the matter of the captaincy,” said Jellico, “but I can pull enough strings to jump you to the top of the list for first officer.”
She stared at him for a long moment. Then a short, disbelieving laugh jumped out of her throat, followed by longer, sustained laughter. Jellico displayed remarkable patience as he waited for the mirth to subside. It didn’t happen quickly. Finally she managed to compose herself enough to say, “You’re joking. You’re not serious.”
“Commander,” he said evenly, “I have a reputation for many things, but it has come to my attention that ’comedian’ is not one of them. Do I look not serious?”
“It’s ridiculous.”
“Ridiculous why?”
“For starters, I’m not interested in the post. Second, Calhoun would never accept me. Third . . .”
“Not interested in the post? Commander, I shouldn’t have to do a selling job here,” said Jellico impatiently. “It’s a first-officer post on a ship with which you already have some familiarity. A ship that is about to embark on a very high-profile mission which offers excellent opportunities. As first officer, you’d be taking point on any away mission . . .”
She snorted. “You don’t know Mackenzie Calhoun very well, Admiral. If you think he’s going to sit around on the bridge while I spearhead away teams . . .”
“It’s the first officer’s job to make damned sure that the CO doesn’t thrust himself into those types of high-risk situations.” He leaned back in his chair and looked at her with what seemed to be faint disappointment. “Are you telling me, Commander, that you would be incapable of riding herd on Mackenzie Calhoun? That his bootprints would be all over you every time you tried to do your duty as you see fit? Well. Well well well,” and he shook his head. “I guess I overestimated you.”
Jellico could practically feel the waves of barely contained anger radiating from Shelby. “I did not say that, Admiral.”
“I beg your pardon, Commander, but you most certainly did. . . .”
“I said Calhoun wouldn’t sit still for it. That doesn’t mean that I would just knuckle under.” She smiled thinly. “To a certain extent, that’s why we broke it off years ago. I wasn’t his image of what he wanted in an ideal woman. I didn’t jump to his tune, and I wasn’t willing to make my career secondary to his.”
“What a very old-fashioned attitude.”
“He can’t help it. It’s part of his upbringing. When all is said and done, Xenexians aren’t the most socially advanced of races.”
“That is exactly my concern, Commander. Calhoun is a tricky devil. Very resourceful and very sneaky. I think he’s going to need a first officer who knows all his tricks. Someone he can’t pull any fast ones on, or try to steamroll over. Someone who can stand up to him.” He permitted a small smile. “I’m not stupid, Shelby, nor am I completely disconnected. I knew damned well before you set foot in here that you and Calhoun had history together. In my opinion, that’s exactly what he needs. And you have other . . . positives . . . that I think contribute to your viability as candidate for first officer.”
“Those positives being that I’m ambitious,” said Shelby. “That I want my own command. That if Calhoun screws up, I’m going to be there to note down the screwup in every detail so that, with any luck, we can get him out of the captain’s chair and replace him with someone who deserves the position.”
Jellico nodded. “I’m glad to see we’re on the same wavelength, Commander. With your permission, then, I will
put forward your application with my strongest recommendation.”
She considered it for a long moment. “You do realize that he’ll never go for it.”
“Perhaps. Perhaps not. If I need to narrow the options available to him, I can pull a few strings in that department. I wouldn’t do that immediately, of course; only if he proves ’reluctant.’”
“Ah. Well.” She folded her arms and looked squarely at Jellico. “There’s two other things that I think I should clarify, Admiral. The first is, reverse psychology is a fairly obvious tactic, and I wish you had not had to resort to it.”
“Mmm-hmm,” he said noncommittally. “And the second . . . ?”
“The second is,” and she leaned forward with her knuckles on the desk, “if I should get the assignment, understand: My loyalty as first officer will be to my captain. It doesn’t matter if we were once lovers. It doesn’t matter if I think he’s pigheaded, or stubborn, or a first-rate pain in the ass. If I sign on, I sign on for the entire package. I accept it and I deal with it. And if you think that I’m going to weasel my way on board and then turn around and be some sort of snitch, spy, quisling, rat, or in some other way, shape, or form search out means by which I can undercut or disenfranchise my superior officer, all for the purpose of advancement, then you, Admiral, with all due respect, can go screw yourself.” And with that she turned on her heel and walked out the door.
Jellico sat there, staring at the space which she’d just vacated with undisguised amazement. And then, to no one in particular, he said, “Just once I’d like it if someone coupled the phrase ’with all due respect’ with some sort of sentiment that was genuinely respectful.”
SI CWAN
II.
SOLETA HAD BEEN CAUGHT completely flat-footed . . . a condition that was, to her, extremely annoying.
She was standing in her apartment in San Francisco. Her marvelous view of Starfleet Academy out the window had always provided a curious comfort for the Vulcan woman. Now it seemed to serve only as a sort of ironic counterpoint; out there would be possible rescue for her current odd situation, but it might as well have been on Venus.
On her computer screen, the words “Don’t Move” . . . a message which had seemed very odd indeed when she first read it . . . still glowed at her in dark letters. “What kind of message is that?” she had demanded of the empty room.
That was when she had learned that the room was, in fact, anything but empty. From directly behind her, she’d felt the gentle but disturbing firm prodding of a weapon, and coldly spoken words: “It is the kind of message,” a soft but threatening voice said, “that you should pay attention to, if you know what is best for you. Now . . . you shall do exactly what I say . . . and may God help you if you do not, because no one else will be able to help you. That, I can assure you.”
Soleta was too well trained to let her astonishment show in either her voice or her demeanor. She acted, in fact, as if the identity of her unknown visitor were of no interest to her at all. “I am impressed,” she said. “My hearing has always been rather keen. That you were able to gain access to this apartment and hide in here without my detecting you is, as noted, impressive. That you were able to then get close enough to me to threaten me with a weapon, again without my hearing your movement, is nothing short of amazing,” and then, as an afterthought, she added, “which would have more impact, of course, were I capable of being amazed.”
“You are unafraid,” said the voice. “You have not changed.”
The voice struck a cord in Soleta’s memory. She frowned almost imperceptibly. “We have met, have we not.”
“Think of an opulent corridor,” the voice told her, almost seeming to relish prolonging the moment. “Think of an escape attempt gone awry . . .”
“On Thallon,” she said slowly.
“Correct.”
“Si Cwan.”
As if saying the name somehow released her from the threat of impending violence, Soleta turned to face him. Towering over her was indeed the formidable Lord Si Cwan, late of the Thallonian Empire. He had taken two steps back, clearly a respectful distance. “Stay where you are,” he said firmly. “I am not interested in leaving myself vulnerable to the assorted Vulcan tricks at your disposal.”
“Nor am I interested in utilizing them,” replied Soleta, eyeing him with undisguised curiosity. “I still do not understand how I was unable to hear you come up behind me.”
He shrugged as if it were an insignificant matter. “It is a technique I once learned. It is convenient for one who is as conspicuous as I to be able to blend in when such is required. I had a good teacher.”
“I should say so.” She gestured to a nearby chair. “Would you care to sit?”
Waving the barrel of his weapon slightly, he indicated another chair a few feet away. “After you,” he said with exaggerated cordiality.
She nodded slightly and sat. A moment later he followed suit.
“The last time I saw you,” said Si Cwan as casually as if they’d run into each other at a local pub, “you and Ambassador Spock were endeavoring to escape from Thallon. You’d staged a rather impressive breakout from your cell and were hoping to flee the palace when we happened to run into each other. Do you recall what happened?”
“Of course,” she said. “You allowed the ambassador and myself to depart . . . after returning this to me,” and she tapped the IDIC pin she wore in her hair.
He nodded. “All this time and you still wear it. It is comforting to know that some things in this ever-evolving universe remain unchanging.”
“What happened after our escape?”
“Guards were disciplined. Palace security was improved. Drills were held.”
“Nothing more . . . severe?”
“If what you are asking is if anyone was executed over their inability to keep you prisoner, no,” Si Cwan assured her. “After all, the fundamental truth is that I allowed you to escape. Had I not done so, you would not have done so. It was a private decision I made, and one that I elected to keep private even as the investigation of your breakout was held.”
“Why? You were a nobleman. Certainly you weren’t afraid of retribution.”
“Even noblemen have no desire to appear weak to their subordinates. It increases the difficulty of maintaining control.”
“And yet,” Soleta said evenly, “you lost control anyway. Your family lost control of the Thallonian Empire.”
“A valid point,” he admitted. “And, in fact, the reason that I am here.” He seemed to regard her with intense interest for a moment, and then abruptly he holstered his blaster and placed his hands in his lap. The meaning of the gesture was unmistakable: It was time to put threats and attempts at intimidation aside. To be candid with, and trusting of, one another, if such a thing was possible.
“There are other things in this ever-evolving universe that should also remain unchanging, I should think,” Si Cwan told her. “One of those is gratitude. Gratitude and appreciation for services provided, particularly when those services result in prolonging one’s life.”
“I would assume you are referring to the fact that I am indebted to you for having allowed me to escape Thallon.”
“I am indeed.”
She looked down for a moment, and there was a slightly rueful expression on her face. “Were I fully Vulcan,” she said, “my attitude would be that, in allowing my departure, you acted in a most illogical manner. Behaving illogically would have been your prerogative as a non-Vulcan. Once you had decided to behave in an illogical manner, however, my attitude toward you would have been one of . . .” She paused, searching for the right word. “Contempt, I should think. Contempt and even a bit of fascination that one could achieve a position of power while pursuing such illogical thought patterns. ’Gratitude’ would never enter into it.”
He nodded grimly. “That would explain Ambassador Spock’s attitude. I appealed to his sense of gratitude during a private meeting, asking him to do my bidding. He refused, a
nd even seemed puzzled as to what I was talking about when it came to feeling obligated to me.”
“Ambassador Spock is likewise not fully Vulcan. However, he has had far more time to come to terms with that fact and compensate for it. Out of curiosity, did you threaten him with a weapon as you did me?”
“No,” he admitted. “I decided to utilize it this time around for the purpose of emphasis.” He considered the situation a moment. “May I take it from what you just said that you are not fully Vulcan? What are you?”
She fixed him with a level gaze and then said, with a softness that almost hinted at vulnerability, “I would prefer not to discuss it.” There was silence for a moment, and then she said, “What did you want of Spock? For that matter, what do you want of me?”
“I need to get aboard the Excalibur. I need to be brought along, back into Thallonian space. It is important to me and, furthermore, I can be of use to you.”
“You have already put in this request with Star-fleet, I take it.”
“Yes, and I was denied. They denied . . . me,” and it was clear that the thought still rankled him.
“Why?”
“Because they are fools. Because I am not a member of Starfleet. One man, a man named Jellico, forbade it, and the others would not gainsay him. They united against me,”
“And what would you have me do?”
“Get me onto the ship.”
She stroked her chin thoughtfully. “I do not know the captain,” she said, “but I can certainly speak with him once I am there. Arrange a meeting between the two of you . . .”
“I am tired of meetings,” Si Cwan said angrily. He rose from the chair, pacing furiously. “I am tired of groveling, tired of begging over matters that should be accorded to me out of a sense of correctness, of respect.”
“Are you expecting me to sneak you on board somehow?” she asked skeptically.
And Soleta was completely unable to hide her astonishment when he replied, “Yes. That is exactly what I expect you to do.”
“How? You’re not exactly a Nanite, Si Cwan. You’re over six feet tall. How would you suggest I smuggle you aboard? Fold you in half and put you in my suitcase?”