Book Read Free

Star Trek - TNG - Vendetta

Page 30

by Peter David


  I can, but my ship--even with improved

  matter-to-energy conversion--has needs. Those

  needs will be satisfied. Sustenance will be derived

  when needed, and if lives are lost, I will mourn

  them, but it is necessary. And if some race tries

  to stop me with deadly force, I will stop them with

  deadlier force. And again I will mourn them, but it is

  necessary, and their souls will come to know that they served a

  greater good. Mourning loss of life, promising

  to try and be as careful as possible--these are not

  claims that you could make in reference to the Borg's

  operations."

  "Promising to be as careful as possible is

  hardly enough," said Picard. He leaned forward

  on the table, facing the holographic image.

  "For example, you'll be entering Tholian space

  in half a day. Your very presence will be anathema

  to them, as will ours. They will attack you with everything

  they have!"

  "My father," said Riker, "was the sole

  survivor of a Tholian raid fifteen years

  ago. They're fierce and unrelenting."

  "You speak to me of unrelenting? Me? Let

  them come!" shot back Delcara, her voice even

  more harsh. The spaces where her eyes were darkened

  even more than before. "They cannot stop me. You cannot

  stop me."

  "But years of devastation--" Guinan said.

  "What are years to me? I have all the time in the

  universe."

  "Delcara, you have made clear you intend to use

  your vessel for destructive purposes," said

  Korsmo. She turned away from him and he

  circled around the table so he could face her.

  "Starfleet cannot permit that. You are hereby

  ordered--"

  "Captain," warned Picard.

  Korsmo ignored him, saying even more firmly

  and loudly, and pointing a finger at Delcara so

  forcefully that it shook with rage, "You are hereby

  ordered to surrender your vessel to myself or

  Captain Picard, as authorized

  representatives of Starfleet. Failure to do

  so will result in direct action against you."

  Delcara turned on him, ebony with fury.

  "You pitiful, insignificant fools!"

  "Delcara," said Guinan, trying to calm her.

  Troi was flinching from the raw emotions that were pounding

  against her like an angry surf.

  "Have you no idea what you're saying? No

  concept of whom you're challenging?" said

  Delcara angrily. "I am your savior! You

  should be on your knees, thanking your gods that I have

  been sent to aid you. Your hopeless little race would

  have no chance for survival if it weren't for me!

  Do you think the Borg are simply going to forget

  about you? That their defeat is going to prevent them from

  trying again? No!" She stalked through the conference

  room, passing through whatever was in front of her like

  an angry ghost. "No! They'll just keep coming,

  and coming, and coming. They won't stop. They won't

  tire. They won't give up. They'll just

  batter you down until you're dead or absorbed,

  and they don't care which it is, because they have no heart

  and no soul and no humanity. They just kill and

  kill and kill. Is that what you're fighting for?

  Is that why you wish to stop me? So you have the

  privilege of being wiped from existence by the soulless

  creatures called the Borg? I won't permit

  it!" She slammed a fist down that passed right through

  the table, but she didn't seem to notice. "I will

  save you, whether you want me to or not. Whether you

  understand or not."

  "You're crazy!" snapped Korsmo. "You

  half-witted woman--"

  Guinan threw up her hands. "Oh, that's

  wonderful. Way to smooth-talk her,

  Captain."

  Korsmo spun and faced Picard. "Are you

  going to allow this "hostess" to talk to me that

  way?"

  "Morgan, be quiet!" thundered Picard with such

  force that Korsmo actually took a step back.

  And Delcara laughed, a deep, unpleasant

  and slightly demented laugh.

  "He's right, you know," she said softly. "Perhaps

  I am a half-wit. But half of my mind,

  Korsmo, is worth more than the nothing that you have.

  My obsession has brought me to the brink of

  madness and beyond, but your ignorance has blinded you

  to the reality of the situation. I," she said, spreading

  her hands wide as if acclaiming her victory, and

  her voice rising in triumph, "am the

  One-Eyed Man! Look at me! Fear me!

  Yes, the One-Eyed Man am I, and I walk

  the Kingdom of the Blind. And in the Kingdom of the Blind,

  the One-Eyed Man is king."

  She turned, placed her hands above her head as

  if she were about to execute a perfect swan

  dive, and leaped straight through the bulkhead.

  Korsmo moved as if to pursue her and

  quickly stopped, realizing the futility of the notion.

  "Charming woman," said Korsmo.

  "Captain," said Picard icily, "May we

  have a moment alone, please."

  Immediately the others cleared out, the last of them being

  Guinan, who tossed a final, disdainful glance

  at Korsmo before the doors closed.

  "Do you wish to tell me what the hell you thought

  you were doing?" demanded Picard.

  "Acting in accordance with the wishes of

  Starfleet," shot back Korsmo.

  "Nonsense! In a situation that required

  patient, gentle negotiation, you came into it with

  phasers blasting. You did everything I told you not

  to do!"

  "And since when do you give me orders,

  Picard?"

  "Since you started acting like a damned fool!"

  snapped Picard. "Calling people names is no way

  to negotiate with them. And trying to bully someone

  is a distasteful tactic under any circumstance.

  To bully someone when you're not dealing from strength is

  sheer lunacy!"

  "I had to show her who was in charge," said

  Korsmo forcefully. "Your problem, Picard,

  is that you bend over backwards not to offend anyone.

  How many times have you swallowed your pride? How

  many races have you left laughing at us because when they

  stared you down, you blinked first?"

  Picard stepped back and eyed Korsmo as if

  he had discovered some new strain of bacteria.

  "I perform my duties with an acute awareness of

  my ship's safety, and with the concept that this is a

  galaxy that is endeavoring to attain harmony. That

  goal will never be reached through anger, threats, and

  intimidation."

  "And it won't be reached through cowardice!"

  snapped Korsmo.

  Immediately the air chilled even more than it had

  already, and mentally Korsmo cursed at himself.

  What the hell was he talking about, implying that

  Picard was some sort of coward? Certainly the

  man was insufferably self-confident, and a

  goddamn hero from one end of the galaxy to the other,
r />   but that didn't mean ...

  Picard said nothing, although rage was seething through

  every pore. He was too disciplined to say all the

  things that were racing through his mind and instead said

  simply, "I will not even dignify that comment with an

  answer."

  Korsmo opened his mouth to reply, but before he

  could, the doors slid open and Riker was standing there.

  With no preamble he said, "The planet-killer

  is on the move. It has resumed course, and just

  lit out of here at warp seven."

  Picard and Korsmo exchanged glances, and

  Korsmo bolted out of the briefing room. Not even

  taking time to get down to the transporter room,

  he tapped his communicator and said, "Korsmo

  to Chekov."

  "Chekov here," came the reply.

  Shelby stepped to his side as Korsmo said,

  "Two to beam over, immediately," and he glanced at

  Picard as he said, "You know what we have to do."

  "Yes," Picard said simply, and as

  Korsmo and Shelby transported off the

  bridge, he could not help but wonder how in hell

  they were going to do it.

  Chapter Seventeen

  She could hear the anger of the Many in her head.

  We are hungry, they said. We have

  spent time talking about the Picard and thinking about the

  Picard. We need food. You don't care about

  the mission of vengeance or of us, the last comment

  extremely accusatory.

  Suddenly Delcara felt inexplicably

  tired. "Of course I care about you," she said.

  "We are all. We are together. We are great.

  You know that."

  Prove it. Find us food.

  "We will be there very shortly," she said. "There

  is a star system just ahead. But you cannot truly be

  hungry. The conversion engines have more than enough power for

  now from the planets we have already consumed. How can you

  be hungry already?"

  We think you don't want us to feed

  anymore. We think you are concerned that the Picard

  will be angry with you if you do.

  "This is some sort of test, is that it?" Now

  she knew she was tired. There seemed to be a great

  fog hanging over her mind, and she came to the

  sudden realization that she could not remember the last

  time she had slept. "Testing my feeling for

  Picard against my feeling for you."

  Yes, said the Many.

  "All right, then. I will show you that my resolve

  has not wavered. I will show you all."

  The planet-killer cut straight

  towards the heart of Tholian space.

  "Twenty-two minutes until Tholian

  space, sir," said Data.

  Picard sat motionless in his chair, watching the

  stars hurtle past. Forty thousand kilometers

  to starboard, matching their warp speed, was the

  Chekov.

  "Sir," said Worf suddenly, "sensors have

  detected a Tholian ship dead ahead. Energy

  emissions are extremely low."

  "Used up their shipboard weapons in combat,

  no doubt," said Riker.

  "Take us out of warp, Mr. Chafin," said

  Picard, standing. "Open a hailing frequency

  to--"

  "Chekov to Enterprise," came

  Korsmo's voice, and without waiting for Picard

  to reply, he said, "Picard, why are you slowing

  down?"

  "To offer assistance to the crippled Tholian

  ship," Picard said. "We aren't going to be able

  to do anything against the planet-killer. Nothing

  short of the entire remaining fleet could do that, and

  perhaps not even then. We've got to help where we can

  and wait for our communications to get through

  to Starfleet."

  "The Tholian ship," said Korsmo acidly,

  "would not slow to help you. We're going after the

  planet-killer. You do whatever the hell you

  want. Korsmo out."

  The Chekov leaped forward and, moments later,

  was gone from the screen. The Tholian ship now

  hung visibly in front of them.

  Thinking no more on the bitter exchange that had just

  occurred, Picard ordered, "Give me a

  channel to the Tholian ship."

  "Open," said Worf.

  "Tholian ship, this is Captain Jean-Luc

  Picard of the Enterprise."

  The triangular ship seemed to be twisting and

  turning, as if on a string. Then the ship

  vanished, to be replaced by the blinding blue-and-red

  glare of a Tholian. Picard winced

  automatically, as he always did on the rare

  occasions when he was confronted by one of these bizarre

  and notoriously short-tempered beings. Nothing was

  worse to have to deal with than an angry Tholian,

  and yet Picard felt constrained to do something.

  The voice was shrill and fractured

  over the speaker. "Enterprise again?" said the

  Tholian.

  "Again?" said Picard. The last time he'd seen

  a Tholian was in his Stargazer days. He had not

  encountered one since taking command of the Enterprise.

  "I don't understand."

  "I am Commander Loskene," warbled the voice.

  "Ninety of your years ago the Enterprise

  trespassed into our territory. We dealt with a

  lying Vulcan named Spock. Is he among you

  now?"

  Picard looked at Riker, who shrugged. The

  Tholians were renowned for their punctuality, but

  obviously had very little concept of the length of time that

  had passed by human--or Vulcan--standards.

  "Not at present," he said, declining to make the

  obvious rebuttal that Vulcans did not lie.

  "We are in pursuit of a ship, large enough

  to swallow planets ..."

  "You have released it upon the Tholians in order

  to destroy us," said Loskene angrily.

  "That is not true," snapped Picard. He was

  getting damned tired of being accused of things this

  day. "It is helmed by an individual who is

  acting of her own accord, and against the wishes of the

  Federation and Starfleet. Am I correct in

  assuming that you have engaged it unsuccessfully?"

  "Federation officers lie, especially those in

  command of ships named Enterprise," Loskene

  informed them.

  "Sir, respectfully submit that this is

  getting us nowhere," Riker offered in exasperation.

  "The Tholian fleet will stop the destroyer

  ship," Loskene said. "And once they have defeated

  it, we will seek revenge on Starfleet for this

  unprovoked attack."

  "Starfleet is your only prayer for

  survival," said Picard, his anger barely in

  check. "Enterprise out." He turned and

  stalked back to his chair as he said, "Mr.

  Data, take us in pursuit, warp eight.

  Engage."

  The Enterprise hurtled into high warp in a

  desperate bid to overtake the planet-killer.

  They needn't have hurried.

  When the Chekov caught up with the

  planet-killer, it was calmly devouring the

  outermost planet of the Tholian star system.

  "Warn her off, Mr. Hobson,"

&
nbsp; snapped Korsmo.

  Hobson did as he was told, but the

  planet-killer calmly went on about its

  business. Tractor beams hungrily licked

  up pieces of the world and dragged them into the monstrous

  maw.

  "Target the section where the neutronium hull

  was damaged," ordered Korsmo. "Load front

  torpedoes."

  "Torpedoes loaded and armed," said Hobson.

  "Fire."

  The forward torpedoes darted out into space and,

  seconds later, impacted in the small area to the

  rear of the planet-killer.

  "No visible damage," reported Hobson.

  "There's a secondary coating of castrodinium

  beneath the neutronium hull."

  "Perfect," muttered Korsmo.

  "Sir, we're picking up about seventy ships

  heading towards the planet-killer," Hobson

  suddenly announced. "It's the Tholian fleet,

  sir."

  "The more the merrier."

  Shelby glanced at Korsmo, who eyed her

  appraisingly. "What would you do, Commander? Hang

  back and let the Tholians fare for themselves? Or

  augment their attack?"

  "She has to be stopped," said Shelby without

  hesitation.

  "My thoughts exactly. Bring us around, helm.

  Open a channel to the Tholians and let them know

  that they've got help, whether they want it or

  not."

  Delcara was in ecstasy. She fondled--almost

  sensually--the powerful beam that sliced apart the

  planet, and was at one with the glorious rejoicing of the

  Many as they consumed their latest morsel.

  More, they cried out, we want more.

  "You can have more," she said. "As much as you want.

  There is another dead planet up ahead--"

  Not dead. Not this time.

  She hesitated, not understanding. "What?"

  We have looked into the hearts and minds and

  souls of these beings. They are petty. They are

  territorial. They launch raids upon those weaker

  than themselves. They are no better than the Borg

  in many ways. We want them.

  "No," said Delcara uncertainly. "For all

  their faults, they are not the soulless

  ones."

  They would destroy us if they could.

  "They cannot."

  They will try. They come even now.

  And they were coming.

  The Tholians had greatly improved the

  tractor field weapon that had become their

  trademark. Whereas once it had taken hours for

  their notorious web to be completed, they were now able

  to accomplish the intricately interwoven construct

  in a matter of minutes.

 

‹ Prev