THE VALIANT

Home > Science > THE VALIANT > Page 12
THE VALIANT Page 12

by Michael Jan Friedman


  The captain frowned and got to his feet. “Go to red alert, Commander. I’m on my way.”

  Picard was right behind him as he headed for the doors. His stomach muscles clenched as he wondered what they were up against. And then, all of a sudden, it came to him.

  The Nuyyad.

  Chapter 7

  As Picard pelted along the corridor in pursuit of Captain Ruhalter, he turned the idea over in his mind. The Nuyyad.

  It was just a hunch, of course. He had no proof to back it up, no information on which to build a case. For all he knew, they hadn’t been detected by the Nuyyad at all, but rather by some other species—one that only meant to investigate the Stargazer’s unfamiliar presence here.

  But his instincts—the kind his commanding officer always spoke about—were working overtime, and they had come to a conclusion on their own.

  Ruhalter might have been thinking along the same lines, but he needed some corroboration. Slightly more than halfway to the turbolift, he tapped his communicator badge. “Jomar,” he said, “this is the captain. I need you on the bridge immediately.”

  The Kelvan replied just as the lift compartment arrived. “Coming,” he said over the intercom system, his voice as empty of inflection as ever.

  Then Picard and his commanding officer were inside the lift, the doors closed, moving silently toward the Stargazer’s bridge. Ruhalter scowled, but he didn’t say anything. There was no point in doing so, Picard recognized, until they could see the problem for themselves.

  Finally, after what seemed like an eternity, the turbolift doors opened and they emerged onto the bridge. The place was bathed in the crimson light of a red alert. As the captain replaced Leach in the center seat, Picard took in the sight depicted on the viewscreen.

  “You see?” Leach asked Ruhalter.

  The captain saw, all right. And so did Picard.

  He saw an almost flat, silver diamond—one so large that it seemed to dominate the dark spaces around it. The similarly diamond-shaped appendages on either side of it were probably its warp nacelles, or whatever analogous equipment the vessel’s occupants used for propulsion.

  A cold and efficient-looking ship, Picard reflected. No doubt, it had been built by a cold and efficient people.

  Ruhalter turned to Gerda Asmund. “How much time do we have before our paths converge, Lieutenant?”

  “At the alien vessel’s current rate of speed,” said the navigator, “she’ll reach us in less than six minutes.”

  The muscles in the captain’s jaw rippled uncomfortably. “Keep me posted,” he told Gerda.

  Just then, the lift doors hissed open again. Glancing over his shoulder, Picard saw Jomar come out onto the bridge. The Kelvan’s pale-blue eyes were immediately drawn to the viewscreen.

  He uttered a single, colorless word: “Nuyyad.”

  Ruhalter grunted. “I had a feeling you were going to say that.”

  Jomar turned to him. “Captain,” he said, “we did not expect to encounter the enemy so quickly. The modifications to the deflector grid have not yet been completed.”

  Ruhalter swore under his breath. “How far along are we?”

  “We have finished perhaps eighty percent of the job,” said the Kelvan. “But it would take several hours to do the rest.”

  “And we don’t have several hours,” Leach reminded them.

  Picard looked at the first officer. Leach’s expression seemed to say “I told you so.” He had predicted that they would run into trouble if they followed Santana’s instructions—and now, it seemed, they had.

  “Four minutes,” Gerda announced.

  The second officer moved to the navigator’s console, planted the heel of his hand on its edge and leaned in to get a better look. He could see a green blip crawling across the black background of Gerda’s monitor.

  The blip seemed so abstract, so theoretical. But the ship it represented was making warp eight, if their sensors were correct, with no sign whatsoever of slowing down.

  “Activate what we have,” Ruhalter said, referring to the shields. “And keep working. Let’s see if we can get some more capacity on-line.”

  “As you wish,” Jomar responded dispassionately, and made his way back to the turbolift.

  The captain eased himself back in his seat, his expression as grave as Picard had ever seen it. They were at a disadvantage, the second officer told himself, and the captain knew it.

  On the other hand, the Stargazer was a fast, well-equipped ship, and her crew had been battle-tested on other Starfleet vessels. They could yet prevail, Picard told himself.

  “Three minutes,” said Gerda.

  Ruhalter’s eyes narrowed. “Battle stations. Raise shields where we have them. Power phasers and arm photon torpedoes.”

  “Done, sir,” said Lieutenant Werber, working at his weapons console aft of the center seat.

  The second officer looked around the bridge. In addition to the captain, Leach, and himself, there were four officers present—the Asmunds, Werber, and Paxton. Every one of them was going about his business cooly and methodically, as if this sort of thing happened all the time.

  For a moment, he almost thought he saw Idun Asmund smiling. Then the moment passed and he chalked it up to his imagination.

  “Two minutes,” Gerda told them.

  The captain glanced at his communications officer. “Hail them, Mr. Paxton. Let’s see what they do.”

  “Aye, sir,” said Paxton.

  Everyone waited for the results of his efforts. Finally, the communications officer looked up from his console.

  “Nothing,” he told Ruhalter.

  The captain nodded. “Can’t say I’m surprised.”

  “One minute,” said Gerda, “and closing. Fifty seconds. Forty . . .”

  Picard latched onto the back of the navigator’s chair with his free hand. It made him feel a trifle more secure.

  “Thirty seconds,” Gerda announced. “Twenty. Ten . . .”

  “Weapons range,” said Lieutenant Werber, sounding too eager by half for Picard’s taste.

  “They’re firing!” Gerda announced.

  A barrage of green witch-lights streamed from the Nuyyad’s weapons ports and exploded to spectacular effect on the viewscreen. The Federation ship bucked under the impact of the vidrion assault, but not so badly that anyone was hurt.

  “Shields down twenty-two percent!” Werber called out.

  Not good, Picard reflected. But if not for the Kelvan’s modifications, they might have been destroyed altogether.

  Ruhalter leaned forward in his seat, a look of determination on his face. “Target and fire!”

  A moment later, the Stargazer released a series of yellow-white photon torpedoes—packets of matter and antimatter bound together by magnetic forces. They found their target in quick succession, returning the enemy’s attack blow for ponderous blow.

  But the Federation vessel couldn’t continue to trade punches with her adversary—not when the Nuyyad possessed a weapon as devastating as a vidrion cannon. She had to make her move—and quickly.

  “Evasive maneuvers!” the captain barked. “Pattern Delta!”

  Idun Asmund pulled the Stargazer into a tight upward turn, taking her out of the enemy’s sights for a moment. The Nuyyad obviously hadn’t expected such an action, because they sent an emerald-green vidrion volley slicing through empty space.

  “Target and fire!” Ruhalter bellowed.

  Again, Werber released a flight of photon torpedoes. Again, they found their mark, wreaking havoc with the enemy’s shields.

  Picard’s heart leaped. They were winning. If they could keep it going, the battle would be over in short order.

  Unfortunately, the Nuyyad seemed to have another outcome in mind. They pumped out yet another round of vidrion particles, hammering the Stargazer even harder than before.

  An aft console erupted in flames, prompting the second officer to grab a fire extinguisher and douse the blaze with white spray. Before he w
as done, he heard Gerda’s status report.

  “Shields down forty-eight percent, sir! Damage to decks six, seven, eight, and eleven!”

  “Dispatch repair crews!” the captain told her.

  It was a setback, Picard told himself, but no more than that. If anything, the enemy had only evened the odds.

  “Pattern Episilon!” Ruhalter called out.

  This time, Idun sent the ship veering to starboard—just as the Nuyyad hurled another barrage at them. For a heartbeat, the second officer thought the maneuver would do the trick.

  Then he found out otherwise. The deck slipped out from under him, pitching him forcibly into an aft console.

  “Shields down eighty-two percent!” Gerda thundered. “Damage to decks five, nine, and ten!”

  She had just gotten the words out when the viewscreen flooded with bright green fury. Picard barely had time to brace himself before the ship staggered hard to starboard, jerking his fellow officers half out of their seats.

  Ruhalter thrust himself to his feet and came forward to glare at the screen, as if he could stop the Nuyyad by force of will alone. “Pattern Omega!” he snarled.

  Idun sent them plummeting in a tight spiral, vidrion bundles bursting savagely all around them. Somehow, they emerged unscathed—but the enemy didn’t let them go far. The Nuyyad ship banked and dogged their trail, like a predator that had smelled its victim’s blood.

  “Pattern Omicron!” the captain cried out, trying desperately to give them some breathing room.

  Idun coerced the ship into a sudden, excrutiatingly tight loop, causing the hull to groan and shiver under the strain. But the maneuver worked. Unable to stop in time, the Nuyyad vessel shot past them.

  “Maximum warp!” Ruhalter commanded.

  The Stargazer tore through the void at a thousand times the speed of light, putting a hundred million kilometers between herself and the enemy with each passing second. Picard eyed the viewscreen, but he saw no sign of the Nuyyad. All he could see were the stars streaming by.

  The tension on the bridge eased a notch. Commander Leach, who had lost all the color in his face, sighed and eased himself into a vacant seat by the forward engineering console.

  “Report,” breathed the captain.

  Gerda consulted her monitor. “Hull breaches on decks twelve, thirteen, and fourteen. Repair teams have been deployed to all damaged areas. Sickbay reports nine injured.”

  “Dead?” asked Ruhalter.

  “No one,” the navigator replied.

  The captain seemed relieved. “Well,” he said, “that’s something to be thankful for. What about our shields?”

  Gerda glanced at him and shook her head. “There aren’t any, sir. That last volley took out the last of them.”

  No shields, thought Picard. It was a good thing they had escaped when they did. Another barrage like the last one, and—

  “Captain!” exclaimed Werber, his face caught in the ruddy glare of his control panel. “They’re on our tail again!”

  “Give me a visual,” said Ruhalter.

  Once again, the viewscreen showed them the Nuyyad ship. Picard felt his jaw clench. Though they were pushing the Stargazer’s warp drive as hard as they dared, the enemy was slowly catching up to them.

  “Weapons range,” Werber told them.

  “Stand by, helm,” the captain told Idun. “If we can’t outrun them, we’ll have to outfight them.”

  Picard stared at him, wondering about the wisdom of Ruhalter’s strategy. As if he sensed the younger man’s scrutiny, Ruhalter looked back.

  I know, Jean-Luc, his expression seemed to say. Without shields, we don’t stand much of a chance. But what choice do I have?

  Picard wished he had a good answer. None, he conceded silently.

  “Target photon torpedoes,” said the captain.

  “Aye, sir,” came Werber’s response.

  Ruhalter’s eyes narrowed with resolve. “Pattern Alpha.”

  All at once, Idun swung them hard to port. The Stargazer wheeled more quickly and gracefully than she had a right to, coming about a full one hundred and eighty degrees. Before the second officer knew it, he found himself face-to-face with the Nuyyad.

  And the enemy hadn’t cut his speed one iota.

  “Fire!” the captain roared.

  A swarm of photon torpedoes took flight, illuminating the void between the two combatants. At the same time, the Nuyyad vessel unleashed its most devastating attack yet.

  It was a glorious, breathtaking spectacle, emerald green min gling with gold, brilliance weaving its way through brilliance. Unfortunately, it lasted only a fraction of a second.

  Then the Stargazer reeled under the hull-buckling onslaught, sending Picard crashing into a bulkhead. Pain shot through his ribs and the side of his head and blackness began to overwhelm him.

  No, he told himself, fighting to regain his senses. I cannot give in. I need to know what has happened. The taste of blood strong in his mouth, he pulled himself up along a console and took stock of the bridge.

  The air was full of smoke and sparks and fire. Unmanned consoles beeped frantically and open conduits hissed deadly plasma. The second officer blinked, trying to see through the haze with badly stinging eyes, and spied someone sprawled on the deck near the captain’s chair.

  It was Ruhalter—and he wasn’t moving.

  Darting to the captain’s side, Picard saw why. Half the man’s face had been burned away in the explosion of a still-sputtering plasma conduit.

  The second officer shook his head. No, he thought, denying it as hard as he could. It cannot be. It is not possible.

  But it was.

  Daithan Ruhalter was dead.

  Abruptly, he realized that someone was standing next to him. Looking up, he saw that it was Paxton.

  “My god,” said the communications officer, gaping at the captain’s corpse in disbelief.

  Picard saw the look on Paxton’s face and imagined the same look on his own—and a feeling of shame welled up inside him. He had to accept the situation, he told himself. He had to move on.

  After all, the ship was in deadly danger. Their shields were down and they had an enemy taking shots at them with impunity.

  As Picard thought that, he felt another jolt run through the ship—but it wasn’t nearly as bad as the last one. Obviously, Idun Asmund was still at the helm, doing her job.

  They needed a leader, however. And with Ruhalter dead, that left Leach—whether the man was up to the task or not. Starfleet protocol wouldn’t tolerate anything less.

  “Commander Leach!” Picard hollered into the miasma of fireshot smoke.

  There was no answer.

  Leaving Ruhalter’s side, the second officer made his way forward. He had last seen Leach at the engineering console. With luck, the man would still be there.

  But when Picard reached the spot, he couldn’t find any sign of the first officer. He looked around, hoping to catch a glimpse of him—and instead saw Gerda Asmund hunched over near her navigation console.

  His first thought was that the woman had been hurt. Then, as he got closer, he saw a body stretched out on the deck beyond her. Gerda turned and looked up at the second officer.

  “It’s Leach,” she told him, her concern evident in the knot of flesh at the bridge of her nose.

  Picard moved around her and saw the first officer. His eyes were closed, his features slack, and there was blood seeping from a gash in his smoke-blackened temple.

  “Dead?” the second officer said numbly.

  Gerda shook her head. “No. He still has a pulse.”

  “Get him to sickbay,” Picard told her. “And send some hands up here to see to the captain.”

  “Aye, sir,” said the navigator.

  Picking Leach up with athletic ease, she headed for the turbolift. The second officer watched her go for a moment, open plasma conduits and flaming consoles illuminating her passage.

  As the lift doors opened, Picard felt another impact. But l
ike the last one, this one had been tolerable.

  He looked at the officers still left to him. Idun, who was battling her controls to keep them in one piece. Paxton, who had returned to his post at communications. And Werber, who looked eager to fire again if only someone would give him the order.

  With Ruhalter and Leach victims of the Nuyyad, Picard would have to be the one to do that. In fact, he would have to give all the orders.

  “Mr. Paxton,” he barked, “take over at navigation.”

  “Aye, sir,” the communications officer replied, and moved forward to do as he was asked.

  Picard turned and gazed at the viewscreen, where a reverse perspective showed the Nuyyad ship clinging to them in pursuit. It only took him a moment to realize that there was something curious about the sight—and another moment to figure out what it was.

  The enemy vessel was slightly atilt as it sped through space, slightly off-line relative to the axis of its forward progress. Picard knew enough about propulsion systems to understand the reason for such an aberration.

  One of the Nuyyad ship’s warp nacelles was misfiring. The one on the port side, it seemed to him. That suggested a weakness of which his helm officer could take advantage.

  “Lieutenant Asmund,” he said, “the enemy will have difficulty turning to starboard. Reprise Pattern Epsilon on my mark.”

  “Aye, sir,” the helm officer replied.

  Next, the second officer turned to Werber. “Target photon torpedoes.”

  “I’ve been doing nothing but targeting,” Werber told him.

  Ignoring the man’s tone, Picard eyed the screen again. “Lieutenant Asmund—execute your maneuver. Lieutenant Werber—fire when ready.”

  The words had barely left his mouth when the Nuyyad spewed another wave of green fire at them, trying to finish off the Stargazer. But by then, Idun had gone into her turn.

  The vidrion assault shot harmlessly by them. And as the Federation vessel continued to perform her maneuver, the enemy shot by as well—much to Werber’s delight. Cheering beneath his breath, the weapons officer released a hail of golden photon torpedoes.

  The first wave ripped into the Nuyyad’s flank, shredding what remained of her shields. The second wave clawed chunks out of the vessel’s hull. And the third penetrated to the very heart of the ship, finding and obliterating critical power relays.

 

‹ Prev