Star Trek - TNG - Vendetta

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Star Trek - TNG - Vendetta Page 29

by Peter David

When the great stand of Starfleet happened

  at Wolf 359, the Chekov wasn't able

  to get there in time. I think Captain Korsmo

  has convinced himself that, had he been there, he would have

  been able to make a difference."

  "He's probably right," she admitted. "But

  he imagines that he could have had some impact. It

  eats at him that he didn't have the chance. And it

  eats at him even more that it was, of all people--"

  "Jean-Luc Picard who turned the tide.

  Are you saying Captain Korsmo is unfit for

  command?"

  "Not at all. He just has a bit of a blind

  spot when it comes to Picard, that's all. We

  all have our blind spots. I know one officer, for

  example, who has a blind spot when it comes

  to realizing the best thing he could do for his career is

  move on to captaincy of another vessel and let

  someone else take his place."

  "Except for that blind spot, he's a superb

  officer," said Riker dryly.

  "Oh, an exceptional officer.

  Absolutely exceptional." She smiled, and

  she had a lovely smile. "And not afraid

  to make the tough decisions."

  Ahead of them, the two captains strode side

  by side, neither speaking, until finally Picard

  said, "It's good to see you again, Morgan. Once

  this business is done, I'll buy you a drink in

  Ten-Forward and we'll discuss old times."

  "Old times?" Korsmo gave a short

  laugh. "I rode you like the devil, Picard. I

  helped to make your life miserable. Don't

  tell me you're nostalgic for that."

  Picard shrugged. "You exaggerate."

  "Not in the least. In a way, you have me to thank

  for your current success."

  Picard looked at him with barely concealed

  surprise. "I do?"

  "Of course. It was my constant haranguing of you

  that drove you to achieve as much as you could."

  "What a fascinating way of recalling our

  Academy days."

  "It's true. I spent so much time reminding you

  of your limitations, that you felt driven to try and

  surpass them whenever possible."

  That, Picard thought, had to be the biggest crock

  that he had ever heard. But something warned him that

  Korsmo wasn't just needling him. He had the

  distinct feeling that Korsmo actually believed it,

  and more, that the belief was important to him.

  And now was definitely not the time to challenge it.

  "My thanks, Morgan," he said simply,

  and then quickly changing the subject, said, "What do

  you intend to say to the pilot of the planet-killer?"

  "Starfleet's position. A position that I

  expect you to back me on. I am the senior

  officer here, after all, Picard."

  "Senior off--"

  "I received my commission as captain before you

  did," Korsmo said. "Or were you unaware of

  that?"

  "Two weeks before," said Picard, trying

  to keep the derisiveness out of his voice.

  "Seniority is seniority, Jean-Luc, and

  I'll thank you to remember that."

  "I will consider myself officially thanked," said

  Picard, and then he suddenly said, "Halt."

  The turbolift came to a stop and Picard

  turned towards the surprised Korsmo.

  "We are dealing with an obsessed woman," he

  said, not allowing Korsmo to even open his mouth.

  "You seem to be under the impression that we, with our

  two starships, are going to intimidate this woman

  just by the force of our presence and our words. You had

  best think again, Morgan. She has the drive

  and the power to do what she wants. We may not be able

  to stop her."

  "We sure as hell will stop her," said

  Korsmo.

  "She may not listen to us."

  "She will listen if I have to shoot her legs out

  from under her. Besides, we've done a scan on her

  ship. There's damage to a section of the

  neutronium hull. We can hit that if necessary,

  possibly damage her."

  "I don't want her hurt."

  "Now listen, Picard ..."

  And Picard stabbed a finger into Korsmo's

  face and said, each word a dagger, "I don't

  ... want ... her ... hurt."

  Korsmo stared at Picard in utter confusion.

  "Have you lost your mind? What is sh e to you?"

  "A victim. A victim many times over, and

  I will not see her victimized further. Clear?"

  Korsmo seemed ready to laugh, but he saw the

  intensity in Picard's face. His expression

  tightened and clouded. "I will do what I have to,

  Captain," he said. "And I trust that you will do

  likewise."

  They stared at each other for a long

  moment, and then Picard said sharply, "Resume."

  The turbolift obediently completed its journey

  to the bridge in stony silence.

  When Picard and Korsmo entered the conference

  room, Deanna Troi and Guinan were waiting for

  them. A ship's counselor Korsmo naturally

  recognized, but he stared with open curiosity at

  Guinan. Picard quickly introduced them.

  "May I ask, just out of morbid curiosity,

  Captain," said Korsmo, "why you feel it necessary

  to have your bartender here?"

  "Hostess," corrected Guinan politely.

  "I have a ... history with the woman in question."

  "May I ask the nature of that history?"

  "It's personal."

  Korsmo seemed slightly taken aback by that

  and turned to Picard to protest this apparent

  attitude problem on the part of someone who was,

  at best, a crew member of questionable need in these

  circumstances. But the firm look in Picard's

  face quickly discouraged Korsmo from pursuing the

  subject further.

  Picard turned to Troi and said, "How is

  Miss Bonaventure? I understand that there was some

  unpleasantness in engineering."

  "She is resting comfortably. Quarters have been

  assigned her," said Troi, "to remove her from the

  rather tense environment of sickbay."

  "Tense?" Korsmo looked at Picard with a

  question in his face.

  "There are Penzatti recovering from wounds there,

  and they react somewhat strongly to Miss

  Bonaventure's presence. She is a female

  Borg whom we have managed to separate from the

  Borg consciousness."

  Korsmo scratched at his salt-and-pepper

  sideburns. "Never a dull moment on this ship,

  is there, Picard? Kind of a zoo."

  "I prefer to think of it as a stimulating work

  environment," replied Picard. "It would be best

  to post a guard outside her quarters--"

  "Lieutenant Worf has already attended

  to that," Troi told him, and Picard nodded his

  approval.

  The doors hissed open, admitting Shelby and

  Riker. Picard looked at them with faint

  disapproval. "Took our time, did we,

  Number One?"

  "Scenic route, sir."

  "I see."

  Moments later Geordi La Forge entered as

  well. P
icard nodded a silent greeting to him.

  Korsmo was circling the briefing room,

  looking annoyed. "So where is this woman?

  We're all here. Where is she?"

  "She'll come," said Guinan.

  "Ah. We have the personal assurance of your

  hostess that she'll be along," said Korsmo.

  "Captain," Picard began dangerously.

  But Korsmo continued, "And what is it with this

  ship of hers? Is she the only crew? How

  does it run?"

  "She claims it runs on the hatred of

  ghosts," said Picard dourly. "Frustrated spirits

  who waited for her to come along and provide them with

  drive. However, Mr. La Forge has been

  working along far more prosaic lines to determine just

  what it is we are up against."

  "Our sensors have managed to punch through some of the

  interference her fields and hull have created," said

  Geordi, and he moved to the main computer screen.

  He called up a schematic he had prepared as

  he continued, "And Data and I have also done

  research into other cultures that have similar

  glimmerings of technology of a more--shall we say--

  mundane nature, based on things that the captain

  said Delcara told him."

  The planet-killer appeared on the screen, and

  Geordi tapped the spike-like extensions. "These

  are definitely what propel the ship. They warp

  space in a manner similar to our own

  nacelles, but appear to do so in a slightly

  different manner. We're detecting warp

  fluctuations on a field pattern at variance with

  our own warp system. It'll take us at least a

  week to fully analyze the structure, and we

  don't have the technology to duplicate it. It

  seems to have tremendous potential, though,

  especially in its more efficient use of fuel."

  "Fuel that comes from planets. Then that's how it

  operates and this nonsense about being driven by

  souls--" said Korsmo.

  "I'm getting to that," said Geordi. "There's

  a race on Orin IV that has technological

  procedures that sound similar to what Delcara

  told the captain exists on her ship, except

  it's not lots of hocus-pocus."

  "Orin IV was a colony world about fifty

  years ago, wasn't it?" asked Picard.

  "Good memory, Captain. And the

  colonists made a fascinating archaeological

  find--an intricate computer net that was still

  functional, developed by an ancient race,

  speculated to be the Preservers, and then long

  ago abandoned. It was crystalline in appearance and

  about the size of a small mountain, and what it

  contained was an intricate network of individual

  memory pockets.

  "Presumably, when members of the race died,

  they would be capable of imprinting the engrams of their

  minds--or perhaps transferring their consciousness

  entirely--into the interlocking network within the

  crystal. There they would provide knowledge and information that,

  to the right operator, was accessible."

  "Accessible how?"

  "Through a central sort of mother board," said

  Geordi. "You see, that was the really tough part.

  In a way, it's the main difference between the setup

  on Orin IV and my understanding of how the Borg

  operate. The Borg are one central

  consciousness. The Orin IV mechanism consisted

  of hundreds, thousands of individual pocket

  memories. Computer files, if you will. But in

  order for them to be accessed, they required a

  central mind to act as a processing station. That

  central mind had to be, first, a living

  individual, and second, incredibly strong. The

  first time one of the Orin IV colonists, who was a

  Betazoid, tried to use his empathic ability

  to access the crystal computer they'd found, the minds

  stored within the computer literally overwhelmed him and

  blew his gray matter inside-out. Finally they

  brought a Vulcan in, but by then it was too late.

  The failed attempt had wiped the data banks

  clean."

  "So the people who created the planet-killer," said

  Picard slowly, "may have transferred their

  collective consciousness to the central data

  banks of the vessel. But they needed a powerful enough

  living mind to process all of their individual

  impulses, to unify them and drive their

  individual functions towards one goal."

  "They need one central mind strong enough to govern

  all of them and direct the ship's functions,"

  agreed Geordi. "Otherwise, they're just random

  bits of data and information without any purpose.

  It's that central, functional imperative that

  enables this planet-killer to be something more

  complicated than just a mindless killing machine like

  its prototype.

  "One of the ship's functions that the mind

  maintains is the process of consuming planets and

  converting them to energy for the ship's drive and weapons

  systems. Those spike towers," he pointed again,

  "can warp space for the purpose of forward drive,

  and also funnel force beams with pinpoint accuracy,

  making it capable of omnidirectional offense.

  Nasty piece of work."

  Korsmo started towards him, about to make some

  point, and he walked right through Delcara.

  He jumped back in shock as Delcara's

  holographic persona turned to face him for a

  moment and look at him with amused disdain. Then she

  looked at Geordi. "So many explanations,"

  she said. "So much effort to try and take the divine

  rightness and wonder of my mission and turn it

  into something ordinary. "Mother board" and

  "functional imperative." These are not words of

  humans who understand what it is to live and breathe and

  hate. These are words that the Borg would use.

  Beware that the enemy becomes thyself, and that you are not

  as blind in intellect as you are in eyes." Then she

  turned back to Picard. "I've heard you,

  Picard. I am here." She spread her hands.

  "What do you wish of me?"

  Picard was staring at her, hard. There was something

  different about her. She seemed older, somehow.

  Some of the luminous quality that had surrounded her was

  diminished. Her face appeared longer, more

  drawn. Her hair, which had seemed to be

  constantly billowing about her, as if puffed up by a

  perpetual breeze, was hanging limply. Her

  eyes did not sparkle as they had. He glanced

  at Guinan and Troi, and they noticed it, too.

  He couldn't dwell on it. Nor did he

  wish to contemplate Delcara's singleminded

  determination to reject every rational answer in favor

  of the irrational. There was business to be attended

  to. "Delcara," he said formally. "This is

  Captain Morgan Korsmo. He and I are

  appealing to you now as representatives of

  Starfleet."

  "Are you, dear Picard?" She seemed

  amused, but there was something haggard in
her smile.

  "And what is Starfleet's business with me,

  Captain Morgan Korsmo?" She walked

  towards him and right into the conference table. She stood

  there, only the upper half of her body visible,

  the lower half obscured by the table, giving the

  impression that she was some sort of

  bizarre centerpiece. It was a most disconcerting

  appearance.

  Korsmo cleared his throat and said, "Captain

  Picard and I wish to express our concern over

  your present course of action."

  "You have a problem with my intention to obliterate

  the most dangerous enemy in this galaxy?"

  Skeptical, she raised an eyebrow.

  "It is our concern," Korsmo said, "that your

  plan of action will cause devastating results

  throughout the Federation. Your vessel consumes

  planets. There are various races, both friendly

  and unfrly, that will not take kindly to the concept of

  your ingesting them or parts of their solar systems."

  "I believe the human phrase is, "You

  cannot make an omelette without breaking a few

  eggs,"" said Delcara.

  "This is more than a few eggs, Delcara,"

  Picard spoke up. "You're talking about the

  greatest destruction our galaxy has known. Far

  more destructive than if the Borg swept through."

  "Truly, sweet Picard, that was spoken as

  someone who has never experienced the full sweep

  of a Borg invasion."

  "We've had our encounters."

  "You've had nothing," she said, her voice

  suddenly harsh. "One Borg ship. A ship that

  smashed through your fleet and cost thousands of lives

  and was stopped as much by fluke as by anything else.

  You have no idea what the full might of the Borg

  would do to you. It would be far more than my humble

  needs."

  "Your humble needs will launch the galaxy into war

  against you!" said Korsmo. "And Starfleet will lead

  that war! You cannot be allowed to traverse the

  quadrants in a device of this power--a device

  which consumes planets for fuel!"

  "A device which will prove your ultimate

  salvation," she replied.

  "Delcara," Guinan said firmly, "have you

  realized the magnitude of what you're proposing?

  It will take you years, even at warp speed,

  to reach Borg space. And all during those years,

  you will be cutting a swath of devastation and

  destruction across populated space. Certainly

  you can see the insanity of that?"

  "Insanity is quibbling over a relative

  handful of lives when the Borg care nothing for

  life! I will try to avoid populated worlds when

 

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