SAREK [066-118-4.7]
   By A.C. CRISPIN
   Synopsis
   Sunset on Vulcan.
   In the west, 40 Eridani A--Nevasa--was setting, staining the magenta sky
   with swaths of deep amethyst, gold, and coral. But the tall figure
   silhouetted against the sunset was blind to the glory behind him; Sarek
   of Vulcan faced east, watching his world's sister world, T'Rukh, at full
   phase. The giant planet orbited a mere 149,895.3579 Federation Standard
   kilometers from her companion world--and filled thirty degrees of sky.
   Because the two worlds were tidally locked, Vulcan's sister planet,
   T'Rukh, was only visible from this side of Vulcan. Looming perpetually
   against the high, jagged horizon, the giant world went through a full
   set of phases each day. Only at sunset did the bloated sphere fully
   reveal her ravaged visage.
   Sarek had chosen this remote location for his mountain villa in part
   because of its view of T'Rukh. Here at the edge of the civilized world,
   the ambassador never tired of watching T'Rukh poised atop the Forge, an
   inhospitable continent-sized plateau seven kilometers higher than the
   rest of the planet. Few indeed were the individuals who saw the sister
   world's whole face on a regular basis; only the ancient retreat and
   shrine of Gol lay farther east than Sarek's villa.
   The wind, cooling now that Nevasa had set, plucked at Sarek's
   light-colored tunic and loose trousers. As he watched T'Rukh intently,
   his lean, long-fingered hands tightened on the balustrade of the terrace
   overlooking the eastern gardens. The ambassador was attempting to reach
   a decision.
   Logic versus ethics... Should the needs of the many outweigh the
   conscience and honor of the one? Could he compromise what he knew to be
   right, in order to accomplish what was necessary?
   For orders other than by individual consumers, Pocket Books grants a
   discount on the purchase of 10 or more copies of single titles for
   special markets or premium use. For further details, please write to the
   Vice-President of Special Markets, Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the
   Americas, New York, NY 10020.
   For information on how individual consumers can place
   orders, please write to Mail Order Department, Paramount Publishing, 200
   Old Tappan Road, Old Tappan, NJ 07675.
   New York
   POCKET BOOKS
   London Toronto Sydney Tokyo
   The sale of this book without its cover is unauthorized. If you
   purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that it was
   reported to the publisher as "unsold and destroyed." Neither the author
   nor the publisher has received payment for the sale of this "stripped
   book."
   This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents
   are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any
   resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is
   entirely coincidental.
   -- POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster Inc. 1230 Avenue of the
   Americas, New York, NY 10020
   Copyright 1994 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
   / STAR TREK is a Registered Trademark of Paramount Pictures.
   This book is published by Pocket Books, a division of
   Simon & Schuster Inc., under exclusive license from
   Paramount Pictures.
   All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or
   portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Pocket
   Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
   ISBN 0-67179562-7
   First Pocket Books paperback printing February 1995
   10987654321
   POCKET and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster Inc.
   Printed in the U.S.A.
   To Michael Capobianco, with love
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
   Many people helped me produce this book. With the caveat that any errors
   are assuredly my own, I wish to thank
   Mark Lenard, whose evocative portrayal of the character inspired Sarek.
   Mark is a fine actor who is also a gracious and warm human being. He
   took a personal interest in this novel from its earliest inception.
   For technical information
   Michael Capobianco, fellow author and amateur astronomer, for
   information on planetary orbits, rings and the like. (Not to mention
   driving me to the Fed Ex depot, faxing hunks of the manuscript, fixing
   dinner and providing much-needed shoulder rubs and encouragement during
   tough times.)
   Irene Kress and Judy May, for information on the effects of stroke. ix
   ACKNOWLEDGMENTS For STAR TREK brainstorming, viewpoint and lore
   John Jobeck and Ellen Marie Konicki, my favorite Klingons
   Margaret Wander Bonanno, my favorite Vulcan... well, my favorite female
   Vulcan.
   Marc Okrand, for inventing words and phrases in Klingonese when I needed
   them. Thanks, Marc. Now I know what to say if I ever make love to a
   Klingon!
   For editorial advice and assistance
   Kevin Ryan and John Ordover, the STAR TREK editors at Pocket Books.
   And, for just Being There when I needed them
   Vonda, Nancy, Merrilee, Liza, Deb and Teresa.
   And last, but foremost, I have to thank my longtime friend and co-author
   Kathleen O'Malley, who provided valuable editorial insight and
   criticism... and much, much more. Without Kathy, I doubt this book would
   have made it into print.
   PROLOGUE
   Sunset on Vulcan.
   In the west, 40 Eridani A--Nevasa--was setting, staining the magenta sky
   with swaths of deep amethyst, gold, and coral. But the tall figure
   silhouetted against the sunset was blind to the glory behind him; Sarek
   of Vulcan faced east, watching his world's sister world, T'Rukh, at full
   phase. The giant planet orbited a mere 149,895.3579 Federation Standard
   kilometers from her companion worldmand filled thirty degrees of sky.
   Because the two worlds were tidally locked, Vulcan's sister planet,
   T'Rukh, was only visible from this side of Vulcan. Looming perpetually
   against the high, jagged horizon, the giant world went through a full
   set of phases each day. Only at sunset did the bloated sphere fully
   reveal her ravaged visage.
   Sarek had chosen this remote location for his mountain villa in part
   because of its view of T'Rulda. Here at the edge of the civilized world,
   the ambassador never tired of watching T'Rukh poised atop the Forge, an
   inhospitable continent-sized plateau seven kilometers higher than the
   rest of the planet. Few indeed were the individuals who saw the sister
   world's whole face on a regular basis; only the ancient retreat and
   shrine of Gol lay farther east than Sarek's villa.
   The wind, cooling now that Nevasa had set, plucked at Sarek's
   light-colored tunic and loose trousers. As he watched T'Rukh intently,
   his lean, long-fingered hands tightened on the balustrade of the terrace
   overlooking t
he eastern gardens. The ambassador was attemptins to reach
   a decision.
   Logic versus ethics ... Should the needs of the many outweigh the
   conscience and honor of the one? Could he compromise what he knew to be
   right, in order to accomplish what was necessary?
   Sarek gazed across the Plains of Gol, considering. Long ago, he had
   studied with several of the Masters there. What would his teachers do if
   they were in his place?
   The ambassador drew a deep breath of the evening air, then let it out
   slowly as he regarded the surrounding mountains. He had chosen this site
   for his private retreat decades ago, when he and his second wife had
   first been married. These remote hills were cooler, even during the
   daylight hours, and thus easier for humans--in particular, one special
   human--to endure than the scorching heat of the rest of his world.
   Night deepened around Sarek as he watched T'Rukh.
   Evening on this hemisphere of Vulcan did not bring darkness, though.
   T'Rukh, the huge world humans called Charis, provided forty times the
   light of Earth's full moon. At full phase, T'Rukh was a swollen
   yellowish half-sphere, a dissipated eye that never blinked, even when
   spumes and geysers of fire from her volcano-wracked surface penetrated
   her cloud cover. Sarek noted absently that a new volcano had erupted
   since yesterday; the large, fire-red dot resembled an inflamed abscess
   on the planet's sulfuric countenance.
   T'Rukh was only one of The Warchef's names; her name varied according to
   the time of the Vulcan year. More than twice as large as Vulcan, T'Rukh
   boasted a moon of her own in a low, fast-moving orbit. Tonight
   T'Rukhemai (literally,
   "Eye of The Watcher") was visible as a dark reddish sphere almost in the
   center of the planet--a pupil in a giant eye.
   The little worldlet, slightly larger than Earth's moon, or bited The
   Watcher so quickly that its motion was almost perceptible to the naked
   eye. Sarek watched The Watcher, and she stared back at him balefully.
   It was his habit to stand here and watch The Watcher whenever he faced a
   difficult decision. And the one he faced now was proving to be one of
   the most difficult choices of his career. Logic chains ran through his
   mind, presenting pros and cons relentlessly, over and over. Should he
   act? The action he was contemplating went against all the rules of
   diplomacy and interstellar law. How could he abandon those rules, he who
   had devoted his life to upholding the tenets of civilized society?
   But ... if he did not act, did not gain proof of the insidious threat
   that faced the Federation, millions of innocent lives could well be
   lost. Perhaps billions.
   Sarek's mouth tightened. Proving his theory would require that he break
   the law. How could he himself flout what he had helped engineer? And yet
   ... this was definitely a case where the needs of the many must be
   considered. Could he risk the impending threat of war?
   Sarek stared fixedly at The Watcher as he thought. Somewhere in the
   distance, a lanka-gar called. The ambassador turned his head, catching
   the wheeling shape of the night flier as it swooped after prey on the
   slopes below.
   Glancing over his shoulder, Sarek noted absently that the garish colors
   of sunse t were muted now. In a few minutes they would be entirely gone,
   and T'Rukh, though no longer full, would rule the night.
   The breeze touched him again, chill against his cheek. By midnight it
   would be cool even by human standards.
   Even though the ambassador's aquiline features were composed, as usual,
   his mind would not be still.
   The logic chains flowed, slowed--and the equation crystallized in his
   mind. The decision lay before him. In this case, logic and necessity
   must outweigh ethical considerations.
   Sarek nodded slightly at T'Rukh, bidding the giant planet farewell,
   knowing that his decision would require that he journey off-world. The
   Watcher would wax and wane without his presence for many nights. He
   would leave as soon as possible.
   Turning away from the vista before him, the ambassador headed back
   toward the house, his strides quick and sure.
   For a moment he envisioned Spock's reaction if he were to discover what
   his father was planning, and experienced a flicker of amusement. His son
   would be surprised, possibly shocked, if he knew that his sire was
   logically and rationally planning to commit a crime. The ambassador had
   little doubt that, in his place, Spock would choose the same course. But
   his son was half-human--he'd long ago learned to dissemble, to
   equivocate ... even to lie. Yes, Spock would condone his
   decision--which, in a way, made his father's conscience trouble him even
   more.
   But there was no help for it--his logic was faultless. His course was
   clear. He would not turn back.
   Reaching the villa, a low, sprawling structure with thick, protective
   walls, Sarek entered. The house was decorated for the most part in
   typical Vulcan fashion, austere, with only the most essential
   furnishings, but its very bareness lent a feeling of spacious comfort.
   In the living room, presence of the villa's human occupant was reflected
   in the antique desk with its faded petit-point chair, in the matching
   coffee table, and in the handwoven hangings that lent soft touches of
   rose, turquoise, and sea green to the walls. A water sculpture made a
   faint susurration within the protective field that prevented evaporation
   of the precious liquid.
   Sarek paused in his office and contacted his young aide, Soran,
   instructing him to make arrangements for them to travel off-world. The
   Ambassador's office was devoid of ornamentation, except for the painting
   of an icy world beneath a swollen red sun.
   Next door to his office was the bedroom, and through that lay his wife's
   sitting room, with its view of the eastern gardens. Sarek already knew
   from the bond they shared that Amanda awaited him there. He hesitated
   for a moment before the caryen portal leading into their room.
   Knowing that his wife had sensed his presence through their bond, Sarek
   opened the door and passed through the bedroom to the sitting room.
   Amanda occupied her favorite chair as she sat gazing out at The Watcher
   and the rocky spires of her garden.
   The light from Vulcan's sister world shone on her face, revealing new
   lines that had not been there a month ago.
   Her bones seemed more prominent, the lines of cheekbones and nose
   showing through flesh. He studied her for a moment, noting that Amanda's
   flowing garment now clearly outlined the angles of her shoulders and
   collarbone; she had never been a large woman, but during the past month
   she had clearly lost weight from her already small frame.
   "Sarek," she greeted her husband, her mental and audible voice filled
   with warmth and welcome as she held out her hand to him.
   "Greetings, my wife," the ambassador said, permitting himself the small
   smile that he reserved for her alone.
   Extending two fingers, he ceremoniously touched them to hers. The
 &n
bsp; gesture, so simple on a physical level, was, between a bonded couple,
   capable of nearly infinite shades of meaning--at times merely a casual
   acknowledgment, the mental equivalent of a peck on the cheek, at times
   nearly as passionate as anything experienced in the throes ofponfarr.
   Sarek's touch conveyed a depth of feeling that the ambassador had never
   voiced, for speaking of such things in words, aloud, was not the Vulcan
   way.
   "Is it cool out tonight?" Amanda asked, gazing out at her garden. She
   had planted it shortly after Spock's birth, using unusually shaped and
   colored stones to complement the native Vulcan cactuslike trees, as well
   as desert plants from a dozen Federation worlds.
   "The temperature is normal for the season and time of day," Sarek
   replied.
   "I thought of joining you on the terrace," Amanda said, glancing out at
   the garden, "but I must have fallen asleep. I only awoke when I felt
   your presence next door."
   Sarek sat down next to her, his gaze traveling over her features, noting
   with disquiet how drawn and pale she appeared. And she tired so easily
   these days ...
   Concerned, the Vulcan raised the light level in the room, then studied
   his wife's face intently. Even without The Watcher's eerie illumination,
   Amanda appeared drawn and pale. No trace of pink remained in her cheeks,
   
 
 Star Trek - Sarek Page 1