Star Trek: The Next Generation™: Slings and Arrows

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Star Trek: The Next Generation™: Slings and Arrows Page 12

by Phaedra M. Weldon


  “It won’t happen, Snowden,” Daniels said. “We know what you’re doing.”

  “That’s a threat?” He smiled. “You seem to forget, Mr. Daniels, I’m one of Leyton’s key officers. I have his protection. And soon I’ll have a ship of my own. Maybe even the new Enterprise.”

  “Ardra?” Picard stood between La Forge and Barclay, staring at the amphitheater projection. Travec stood to their right, his attention focused on them. “But our encounter with her was…five years ago? I thought her ship was confiscated and she was turned over to local authorities.”

  “She was,” La Forge said. “This isn’t her ship, but it is based on her technology. I recognized the holographic signature. It’s nearly the same combination of force fields, holography, and transporter technology. Only this system’s more sophisticated.” He tapped a panel, and the image moved to close in on the strange star pattern in space. “Barclay and Porter have been seeing the ship since we arrived, only it was sporadically appearing and reappearing.” He shrugged. “Everyone thought it was residual images.”

  “Meaning their holography,” Barclay said hesitantly, “was—was tied to the shields. When whoever beamed on board and off, they had to lower their shields.”

  La Forge added, “It’s possible this is where Admiral Hahn was when he disappeared—whether voluntarily or involuntarily we can’t say.”

  “I’m more likely to believe involuntarily.” Picard crossed his arms over his chest and rubbed the fingers of his right hand against his lips as he tried to put the pieces together. “What if Hahn discovered this ship, just as you did?”

  “Then I’m positive whoever’s been hiding in it would have wanted him dead.” La Forge shook his head. “I’d also rule out any Dominion involvement.” He held his hands out to his sides. “Why would a shape-shifter need this kind of technology to change forms?”

  Picard lowered his arms. “A shape-shifter wouldn’t. But someone trying to imitate a shape-shifter would. It appears Lieutenant Daniels’s suspicions were well founded.” He turned to his right, looking around the holodeck. “Where is Mr. Daniels?”

  “He said he had to get something from his quarters,” Travec said. “But that was over an hour ago.”

  The captain tapped his combadge. “Picard to Daniels.”

  No answer.

  “Computer, locate Lieutenant Daniels.”

  “Lieutenant Daniels is not on board.”

  Picard gave Riker a sharp glance. “Computer, locate Lieutenant Abidah and Captain Snowden.”

  “There is no record of a Lieutenant Abidah in Starfleet service. Captain Snowden is not on board the Enterprise.”

  “No record?” Porter said.

  “No,” Picard said. “Computer, give the last known location of Cadet Bael Nomine.”

  “Cadet Nomine was last located in guest quarters 712.”

  Travec stepped forward. “Those are Daniels’s quarters.”

  “I’ve got a bad feeling about this,” Sage muttered.

  “As do I,” Picard said. “Geordi, can you get a lock on that ship? Possibly beam someone over?”

  “Its shields are up,” La Forge said. “Pinpointing it can be—”

  A klaxon sounded inside the holodeck. Picard looked up at the ceiling as Sage and Porter returned to the main console.

  “We have a bigger problem,” Sage said as he looked at the controls, his golden eyes widening. “It’s a bomb.”

  “Where?” Picard said.

  “Engineering.” He turned and looked up at Picard. “It just appeared suddenly. Its components match the schematics of a Dominion bomb. Some of those chemicals when cooked together don’t play well with plasma coolant.” He glanced back at the screen. “The Enterprise will have a very nice veranda overlooking what’ll be left of the starbase if it blows.”

  “Travec, t’Saiga, Porter, get down there and clear out engineering. Number One, start evacuating the ship to the station.” He looked back at the amphitheater and the ghost image just visible in the stars. “Geordi, get me on that ship. I’ll wager that’s where I’ll find Daniels, Nomine, and Snowden.”

  CHAPTER

  11

  From Whose Bourn

  Daniels watched as Snowden operated a few of the ship’s systems from the copilot’s chair. “Ah—it appears the Enterprise is attempting to acquire a transporter lock on this ship.” Snowden looked directly at Daniels. “That means their shields are down. Time to go.”

  “Wait—” Daniels put up his hands, desperate to find a way to give the Enterprise more time. If they were trying to get a lock on this ship, it meant they’d discovered the ship and they suspected either himself or maybe Nomine or Snowden was on board. “None of this is necessary. You can’t honestly believe Admiral Leyton wants the Enterprise destroyed.”

  But Snowden wasn’t listening.

  Daniels watched his movements, tracked his hands over the panels. “You’re setting the self-destruct.”

  “You don’t think I can allow this ship to be found, do you? No, it’ll destroy itself in ten minutes, along with you and whoever is attempting to beam on board.”

  Daniels heard the hum of a transporter as Snowden shimmered away and was replaced by Picard, his phaser out and aimed at Daniels’s chest.

  Picard narrowed his eyes. “It is you, isn’t it?”

  Daniels nodded as he went to Nomine’s body and placed his fingers on the man’s neck. “He’s alive. Stunned.”

  Picard knelt beside him. “I take it this is Bael Nomine?” He and Daniels locked gazes. “Mr. La Forge briefed me about the padd and the chip. He was also able to retrieve enough data in the communications logs to court-martial Leyton, Snowden, and the cadet here.” He looked back at the console. “I take it he’s set a self-destruct?”

  Nodding, Daniels moved to the copilot’s chair. “Snowden figured he’d get rid of what he saw as an incompetent liability.” He checked the shuttle diagnostics.

  Picard eased Nomine out of the way and took the pilot’s chair on Daniels’s left. “I take it you’re going to change the security overrides?”

  “Yes, sir, that is, if he hasn’t changed them. Which is a distinct possibility.”

  He tapped the codes into the computer.

  “It’s no good.”

  The countdown grew closer to zero. Daniels stared at the console, thinking back to his training, back to what Sage always said about thinking outside the box. On a whim, Daniels used several old DPO codes he’d acquired after one of the trams leading in and out of the building malfunctioned, locking several passengers inside.

  “Auto-destruct terminated,” came the computer’s voice.

  Picard breathed a visible sigh of relief. He looked at Daniels. “What did you do?”

  Daniels smiled. “I thought outside the box.” He disengaged the remote keys and returned helm control to himself and Picard. “Snowden plans on blowing the Enterprise up—”

  “Hoping to gain more sympathy from the Federation—initiating a call to arms,” Picard said as he moved the shuttle forward. “But that’s not what he’s going to get.”

  “…to Captain Picard, can you read me…”

  Picard tapped his combadge. “Here, Number One. Report.”

  “Snowden’s beamed into engineering, sealed it off, and set up an inhibitor. We can’t beam him or the bomb out. Luckily, all personnel had been evacuated.”

  “The bomb still in place?”

  “I’m afraid so,” Riker said. “And, Captain, we can see your ship now.” Riker’s visage showed on the main viewer. “Wow. That’s a vintage shuttlecraft.”

  “Will, I’m going to need you to get into engineering to disable the bomb. That might drive Snowden out, and I wouldn’t be surprised if he doesn’t have another shuttle cloaked and waiting somewhere nearby.”

  Riker looked over at Daniels. “Do we know what the bomb looks like?”

  Daniels paused. That was a good question. With a Changeling bomb it could be anything. In Antwe
rp it had been something as innocuous as a carafe. But in engineering, it could look like a million other gadgets.

  “It’s not—” came a voice to Daniels’s right. He turned and saw Nomine staggering to his feet. His face was bruised and he was bleeding from a cut on his cheek. Probably where Snowden had struck him. “It’s not armed.”

  Daniels and Picard turned to stare at him.

  “What was that?” Riker said.

  Nomine licked his lips. He reached inside his left pants pocket. Daniels instinctively reached for his phaser—which wasn’t there. He was relieved when the cadet pulled out a slim, golden disk-shaped stone. “It won’t be activated without this.”

  Daniels recognized it. So did Picard. “A Changeling key.”

  Nomine nodded. “I arranged it so your sensors, as well as those on the starbase, would find it in their sensor sweeps. The components are all there.”

  “But that means there’s no initiation switch.” Daniels smiled. “Does Snowden know?”

  Nomine shook his head. “No. He believes it’ll go off in less than five minutes.”

  Picard almost smiled. “He’s in for a rude awakening. Number One, my guess is Snowden has set up his own means of escape whether or not the bomb detonates. Keep an eye on all shuttles. We’ll be docking in a few seconds. Picard out.”

  Picard brought the impulse engines online as Daniels did a quick diagnostics check on the shuttle’s systems.

  Glancing to his right at the cadet standing between them, Picard said, “I want to know what happened to Admiral Hahn.”

  Daniels looked back at the young Betazoid as well. Nomine swallowed and kept his head bent down. “Admiral Hahn found my subspace transmissions to Admiral Leyton. He also found this shuttle and managed to beam on board while Commander Snowden and I were here. He threatened to expose the entire operation and claimed he had the proof needed, hidden in a safe place.”

  “So you killed him?” Picard’s voice was filled with bitterness as the shuttle rounded the Enterprise’s saucer to come about as the shuttlebay doors opened.

  “No, sir. I didn’t kill Admiral Hahn. He and Snowden fought. They were arguing. We knew the Enterprise was on her way, and Red Squad was already beaming on board the Lakota for their mission.” He looked at Picard without flinching. “They were to sabotage Earth’s power relay network. Hahn took a swing at Snowden, but he missed, and Snowden…” Nomine looked down. “Snowden took a drill from the open tool storage in the back and hit the Admiral with it in the head. The admiral staggered to the console—and he grabbed a padd. But he then stumbled away and collapsed. When he lay still, Snowden told me to hide both of them in the blast.”

  Daniels watched the controls as the Enterprise’s tractor beam guided the shuttle inside. He glanced back at Nomine. “Why did you believe Hahn hid the chip in the padd?”

  “I didn’t until you found it. I left Hahn there, on the floor, too terrified to touch him. I maneuvered the shuttle into position just as you arrived—shorted out the external sensors on the starbase, and then ordered my people to fire at the coordinates I gave them.”

  “Disabling our sensors.”

  “Yes, sir. I didn’t remember the padd being missing until Mr. Daniels found it on deck twenty-seven, and then I realized it would be the perfect place to hide a memory chip since we’d not been able to find anything in his quarters or on the starbase.”

  The shuttle docked. Picard moved from the seat and headed to the side door. Daniels requested a security detail to the shuttlebay before standing, but remained in front of the controls. He gestured for Nomine to follow the captain as he took up the rear to keep an eye on the cadet.

  Once into the shuttlebay’s main hangar the security team—with Ensign Lynch in front—appeared with phasers drawn. They surrounded Nomine, and Lynch handed Daniels a phaser and combadge.

  Picard looked at Nomine. “You do know your career in Starfleet is at an end. But if you cooperate, you could receive a lighter sentence.”

  Nomine nodded, his head held low as the team escorted him away.

  The captain started moving, with Daniels beside him. Once they were in the turbolift, Picard touched his combadge. “Report, Number One.”

  “Snowden reacted pretty much the way you suspected he would when the bomb didn’t blow. Pitched a bit of a fit and transported out of engineering.”

  “Where is he now?”

  “We tracked him beaming back to the starbase—then his signal disappeared.”

  Picard looked at Daniels. “Another cloaked shuttle?”

  “Possibly. Shields would have to be down for a cloak to work,” Daniels said. “Which means he could have beamed on board.” He sighed. “But looking for a cloaked ship is often like the proverbial needle and haystack.”

  “Then, Mr. Daniels, are you ready to search the haystack?”

  Daniels smiled. “Always, sir.”

  Once on the bridge Picard strode to his command chair as Riker stood. Daniels relieved the ensign at tactical.

  “Report.”

  “Snowden’s decloaked. He’s in another type-6 shuttlecraft.” Daniels checked external sensors. “He’s equipped with type-4 phaser emitters. Looks like he’s sacrificed warp capability to house the cloaking device. But he still has the advantage of maneuverability.”

  “Hail him,” Picard said. When Daniels nodded, Picard spoke. “Captain Snowden, this is Captain Picard. Your ship is no match for the Enterprise. We have Cadet Nomine in custody. We know what happened to Admiral Hahn.”

  After a pause Daniels shook his head. “No response.”

  “He’s coming round toward us,” Riker said.

  “On-screen,” Picard said.

  A view of the shuttlecraft making a tight arc over Starbase 375 to the left appeared in front of the bridge crew. All eyes tracked it as it straightened and bore down on the Enterprise.

  “What’s he doing?” Riker said. “He knows a shuttlecraft is no match for a Sovereign-class ship.”

  “Shields up,” Picard said.

  Daniels complied, again amazed at the speed and efficiency of the Enterprise-E computers. He maintained a tactical view of Snowden’s shuttle, all the while trying to figure out what the man was up to. Riker was right—a shuttlecraft had no chance against the Enterprise. In fact, the only way any smaller ship could take down or damage a starship was—

  Oh no.

  “He’s firing,” Riker said before Daniels could report.

  The phaser fire knocked against the shields but did little damage. “Shields at one hundred percent, Captain.” Daniels reached out and gripped the edge of the tactical console. “He’s been in engineering!”

  Picard frowned at first, but then the realization of what Daniels feared dawned on his face. “The prefix codes—Mr. Hawk, hard to port. Mr. Daniels, lock on that ship and fire. Mr. Data, can you change the codes before he can send a signal?”

  Data’s fingers flew across his operations console, but it was too late. Daniels watched the shields drop on his tactical. He tried to circumvent the action, but nothing worked. “Shields are dropping.”

  The ship rocked hard to starboard as Snowden fired aft, making a strafing run over the back of the ship. Panels burst from several centers as Daniels held on to the tactical console. He saw crew members hurled from their chairs as the panel behind him shorted.

  The ship rocked as Snowden fired again, and the lights dimmed on the bridge.

  Abruptly the crashing stopped. Daniels found himself on the floor behind the console. He reached up, gripped the edge of the tactical station, and pulled himself up to view the board.

  “Report!” Picard said.

  “Emergency lights,” Riker said from the side.

  “Captain,” La Forge said over the intercom, “warp core’s offline. So are the external sensors. We’ve also lost two forward phaser emitters. He knew where to hit us.”

  “How long before you can have shields back up?” Picard asked as the remainder of the brid
ge crew picked themselves up from the floor. A medical team arrived with Crusher in front.

  “Captain, we’re not getting anything back up if he keeps firing on us. And without external sensors, we can’t pinpoint his location.”

  Daniels coughed as he did a quick diagnostic of the deflector shield. “Captain, with your permission, sir—I can have Porter and Sage reroute the sensors for the rogue system in holodeck three through the deflector array. They won’t be able to detect his weapons, but they could at least give us a visual.”

  “Make it so.”

  Daniels called down to Porter, but Travec and Sage were already ahead of him and Barclay was seconds away from routing the channel to the bridge viewer. “We have it, Captain.”

  The viewer came to life again. The image wasn’t as clear as before, but it showed the shuttlecraft veering off and heading away from the starbase.

  “Where is he going?” Riker said.

  “There is an asteroid cluster approximately ten kilometers away, at 631 mark 2,” Data said as he turned from ops.

  Hawk pounded a fist on the navigation console. “Where we can’t go in after him.” He turned to Picard. “But a shuttle can.”

  Daniels licked his lips. “Sir, we can use the same tactics Snowden used on us. I can rig a transmitter to broadcast a series of DPO codes to his shield modulation. But it’d have to be a line-of-sight pulse.”

  Riker frowned at him. “Can you pilot a shuttle in that?”

  “No, sir.”

  Hawk stood up. “I can.”

  Picard turned to Hawk. “Make it so, gentlemen.”

  Daniels and Hawk entered the turbolift together. “Shuttlebay one,” Hawk said. He narrowed his eyes at Daniels after the doors closed. “Can you really lower his shields with a DPO code?”

  He shrugged. “Can you really pilot a type-9 shuttlecraft through an asteroid cluster?”

  Hawk smiled. “Dunno, but I’d like to try.”

  Daniels smiled back. “So would I.”

  Once launched, Daniels brought the sensors online and downloaded one of the protocol engines into the array. Hawk brought the impulse engines up to full as Daniels raised shields.

 

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