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Star Trek - Sarek

Page 26

by A. C. Crispin


  would back off if they knew they'd lost the element of surprise, and

  that they couldn't push the Federation and the Klingons into

  hostilities."

  "It is possible," Sarek pointed out, "that they might evacuate the

  Freelan colony and deny everything. Taryn, I believe, is ruthless enough

  for such an action."

  "In that event, what would happen to the second-generation Vulcanst'

  Spock wondered. "Technically, they are hostages. We are under a moral

  imperative to free them."

  "If these Vulcan kids have grown up brainwashed by the Romulans, they

  may think of themselves as Romulans, rather than as Vulcans," McCoy

  pointed out. "They may not want to be rescued." He turned to Sarek. "Do

  you have any idea how many there are?"

  The Vulcan shook his head. "From the numbers of Vulcans who were

  abducted, I can speculate that there may be as many as one hundred ...

  perhaps two hundred. No fewer than fifty, certainly."

  Kirk's hazel eyes were bleak as he held the Vulcans' gazes.

  "Knowing the Romulans, they're perfectly capable of simply eradicating

  the hostages, rather than taking any chances of them being used as an

  excuse for a military rescue by Federation forces."

  Father and son nodded silently, grimly.

  "I think we should--" Kirk began, only to be interrupted by the

  intercom. "Kirk here," he said.

  "Sir," Uhura said, "Commandant Anderson is standing by."

  "Put him through," Jim ordered.

  A moment later, Kyle Anderson's features coalesced on the small screen.

  He was a distinguished looking black man, balding, with a heavy,

  iron-gray beard. "Captain Kirk," he said. "You received my message?"

  "Just a few minutes ago," Kirk said. "What's happened to Peter?"

  "He's vanished without a trace, Captain. Our security people have

  determined that he disappeared shortly after midnight on Wednesday

  evening of last week. But we're having finals here, so nobody realized

  he was missing until the day before yesterday. It took us a day to track

  down your ship ... I'm sorry for the delay."

  Kirk drew a deep breath. "But.. he's been gone for days! And you still

  don't know where he went?"

  "No. He's disappeared so thoroughly that we now suspect he was taken

  off-world. We're in the process of tracing all ships that departed from

  Earth or Earth orbit that night," Anderson said. "But, as you can

  imagine, that's a tall order."

  Kirk nodded wordless agreement. "What makes you suspect foul play?" he

  asked.

  "We managed to retrieve the last message that came in for him at his

  apartment. It had been automatically scrambled after playing.. but they

  unscrambled it just this morning." He pressed a button. "Here it is."

  Kirk watched with growing horror as his own features replaced Anderson's

  on-screen. He listened to himself demanding that Peter come over

  immediately. Then the screen flickered, and Anderson's dark features

  were back. "I never sent that message," Kirk said bleakly. "But it's no

  wonder he fell for it ... he was expecting to hear from "We know that,

  Captain. We have a record of Peter encoding a Priority One message for

  you. May we have your permission to decode it? It might give us a clue

  to his whereabouts."

  Kirk hesitated. They'd agreed to keep their suspicions of the KEHL being

  linked with the Romulans secret. "We'll investigate on our end," he

  said, finally. "I'll let you see the message as soon as I clear it with

  Starfleet Security. Can you please transmit everything you've got on

  that message to my communications chief, Commander Uhura? There's nobody

  better at tracing transmissions."

  "Certainly, Captain," Anderson said. "We'll do that."

  "I'll get back to you as soon as I get that clearance," Kirk said,

  crossing his fingers underneath the table.

  "My people suspect they were waiting for him on the street," Anderson

  said. "And that they grabbed him there."

  "So you're thinking kidnapping, rather than ..." Kirk swallowed." ...

  murder?"

  "We just don't know, Captain. But if somebody simply wanted your nephew

  dead, why the elaborate hoax with the faked message?"

  "Logical," murmured Spock and Sarek at the same moment.

  "Abduction ... possibly kidnapping?" Kirk's mind was racing. "Has there

  been any kind of message? Any demands for ransom?"

  "Not so far."

  "If any message comes through," Kirk said, "TII let you know. Maybe we

  can trace its source, and learn something from that."

  "Good idea. If I hear anything, I'll contact you immedi lately,

  Captain," Anderson promised in his turn.

  "Thank you, Commandant."

  "Rest assured, we're doing everything we can," the man said, before

  cutting the connection.

  Kirk turned to the others sitting around the table. "If Scotty is as

  good as his word, we should be casting off moorings by now. Ambassador

  ... you and Spock should begin working on those valits you mentioned.

  I'll have Uhura get to work on tracing that message. I've got a hunch

  this is all going to wind up connected, somehow."

  Minutes later, Kirk was on the bridge, ensconced in his command seat.

  With a glint in his eye, he surveyed the cavernous interior of the

  Vulcan drydock through the viewscreen. "Status, s'bysh?" he asked his

  helmsman.

  "All moorings cleared, Captain. Docking bay doors will open in two

  minutes, thirty-five point six seconds," she reported, crisply.

  "Lay in a course for Freelan, Lieutenant." Kirk settled back in his

  seat, his eyes level, jaw set. He watched s'bysh's

  green fingers fly. "Ready, Lieutenant?" he asked, scarcely more than a

  minute later. "Course laid in7"

  "Aye, sir." Counting seconds down in his head, Kirk reached thirty-four.

  "Ahead one-half impulse power, Lieutenant," he ordered, and thought he

  heard Chekov mutter, "Not again?

  "One-half impulse, aye, sir." Enterprise sprang forward like a cheetah

  sighting prey.

  The ship closed on the parting bay doors with a terrifying rush of

  speed, blasted through them with only a few hundred meters to spare on

  either side, and then they were out, into free space. Chekov's sigh of

  relief was audible all over the bridge, and Commander Uhura chuckled

  softly when she heard it.

  "Ahead warp six," Kirk ordered grimly.

  "Warp six, aye, Captain." Kirk settled back in his seat. No matter what

  speed Mr. Scott managed to coax out of the warp engines, it was going to

  be a long trip ...

  After a long day spent refining valit programs, Sarek was weary, but

  sleep eluded him. Remembering his promise, he extracted Amanda's

  journal, and opened it, noting the date at the top of the page.

  November 12,2231 It is the middle of the night, and quiet. I am tired

  ... but I am also too excited to sleep. I cannot neglect my journal

  tonight of all nights!

  I have a son.

  Sarek and I have a son. He was born in the early hours of this morning.

  Never having been through labor before, I worried that it mightprove too

  much for me to bear (no pun intended) with
out shaming myself before the

  Healers, but I believe I did well ... And our son is perfect. Even

  though the Healers reassured me that all their tests showed that the

  baby was normal, still I worried. After all, I had to be treated before

  I could conceive, then monitored carefully throughout the pregnancy to

  allow me to carry to term--nearly a full month more than the human norm!

  Carrying a child for almost ten Earth months is not fun, and that is the

  understatement of the century. I was so big yesterday that I felt as

  though my sides would split open. I spent hours staring in wonderment at

  my belly, unable to believe the size of it. I could barely waddle to the

  bathroom unassisted! When I felt that dull ache in my back sharpen into

  an actual contraction, I could have jumped for joy. What a relief it is

  to return to something like my normal size!

  For a while the Healers were afraid I would not be able to deliver

  normally ... my son is very large for a human infant, though not

  particularly so for a Vulcan baby. If it had not been for the

  Healer-midwife coaching, I might have given up in despair. But she was

  amazingly supportive for someone who must have been wincing inwardly

  every time I betrayed what I was feeling.

  My labor was intense, and seemed to take forever. I was surprised that I

  was able to handle the pain as well as I did. It hurt, yes ... by all

  the gods that ever were, it felt as though some diabolical presence were

  trying to hammer a spike into the base of my spine, while simultaneously

  squeezing my belly in a vise. But, unlike hangnails, stubbed toes,

  barked shins, and sprained ankles, this was pain with a purpose. As long

  as I could focus on that purpose, the pain did not ... could not

  overwhelm me. I vaguely remember the midwife encouraging me, reminding

  that my suffering was for a purpose, and that helped me to focus on the

  results, not the pain.

  Sarek was there for most of the time, holding my hand and thus sharing

  what I felt. In a way, that seemed to lessen the agony. Perhaps he used

  a meld to mind-block some of the worst of the pangs ... or perhaps it

  was simply the quiet strength he projects that gave me courage.

  I wish I could have my child with me tonight, but they have taken him to

  the science academy, to run tests and keep him under close observation.

  ds I held him in my arms after his first feeding, I beheld a tiny face

  that was so Vulcan that I wondered if there was anything of me in him.

  But just as I thought there was nothing human in him at all, my son

  opened his mouth and began to wailresounding just like a human baby. I

  saw somethingcould it have been disappointment?--fiicker across my

  husbandg face as he heard those infant squalls.

  Vulcan babies cry only for a reason--hunger or discomfort. And our son

  was dry and fed ... and thus had little or no reason to wail.

  Which proves that he is partly mine, after all.

  Was Sarek disappointed? I suppose I will never know.

  I love our son too much to ask--and risk "yes"for an answer ... The

  newborn infant squirmed in his tiny, heated cocoon as his father watched

  every movement, enthralled by the new life that he had helped create. My

  son ... he thought, noting the tiny veins that pulsed greenish blue

  just beneath the thin, delicate skin. My son ... what will we name you?

  Your Name Day will not arrive for nearly a month, so we have some time

  to choose a suitable appellation. Your mother will not even be able to

  pronounce your 'rst" name ... Vulcan first names were always a

  combination of syllables in Old Vulcan that denoted lineage and birth

  order. But Sarek's son would be called by his last name, even as his

  father was. Traditionally, in honor of Surak, the name would begin with

  an S. The infant moved restlessly again, then opened his mouth, uttering

  a faint squeak. His eyes opened, moved aimlessly for a moment, then

  fastened on his father's face.

  The birthing puffiness had lessened; the child's eyes were now far less

  slitted, and Sarek could easily discern their color. Dark, like his own,

  not blue, as his mother's were. Not surprising. All the Healers' tests

  during Amanda's pregnan cy had indicated that Vulcan genes would prove

  dominant in a human/Vulcan pairing.

  The nursery attendant, noting that the child had roused from the

  readings on her monitors, approached Sarek and his son. "He is awake,"

  he announced unnecessarily.

  "He is," she agreed. "Soon he will be hungry. I will give him his

  supplement now. Do you wish to take him to your wife for his feeding,

  Ambassador?" Sarek hesitated. His son was very small ... his own hands

  could nearly span that tiny body lengthwise. He had never held an infant

  before ... "If you would prefer," the nurse said, "I will do it." Sarek

  watched as she quickly, efficiently, lifted the baby and administered

  the oral supplement that would provide him with the nutrients that

  Amanda's human milk did not contain. But before she could turn away, he

  held out his arms. "I will take him," he said, firmly.

  Obediently, the nurse placed the small, warm bundle into his arms. The

  Vulcan stood rigid, his arms stiff, as she settled the baby into place,

  making sure his head was properly supported.

  The ambassador was faintly, illogically surprised to discover that his

  newborn son, who appeared so fragile, so helpless, actually had

  substance. The baby occupied space, and had mass ... he was a warm,

  squirming, living, breathing entity. Sarek stared down at him,

  fascinated. Dark eyes regarded him, locked with his own in an unblinking

  regard.

  As he stared into the child's eyes, all at once the infant became real

  to Sarek, in a way he never had before. For all these months he had

  watched his wife's belly grow, touched her delicately to feel the

  movement beneath her skin, observed the child's heartbeat on the

  monitors ... but part of him had never truly comprehended that an

  actual child was forming within Amanda, and that that child was half

  his.

  Reality had not begun to manifest itself until he had grasped Amanda's

  hand during labor, had directly experienced the agonizing pain that his

  wife was enduring. He had been amazed that a human could endure such

  pain without

  blacking out--Amanda's fierce concentration, her comparative silence

  except during the worst of the birthing contractions had impressed him.

  His wife had always seemed frail to him, delicate, with her human

  constitution. His own strength had always been so much greater--and yet,

  today, he'd found himself admiring her stoicism as she'd endured such

  intense pain. Amanda was stronger than he'd ever realized. Even the

  Healer had expressed approval of her fortitude during labor and

  birthing.

  Now the ambassador gazed down at the tiny face with its fuzz of black

  hair, noting the faint traces of the slanted eyebrows, the delicately

  pointed ears, the slightly squashed nose.

  Looking at his son, Sarek of Vulcan experienced a moment of insight so

  intense it was nearly painful. Past and fu
ture, then and now and

  tomorrow seemed to swirl around him, blending and coming together in the

  small body so warm and breathing in his arms. This child was a link to

  the long-ago, and he would be the future. Someday he would stand up and

  walk the sands of his homeland, would gaze at The Watcher with wonder,

  would go to school and learn the logic of his forebears. He would grow

  to adulthood, tall and strong and handsome, and someday he might hold a

  son of his own in his arms ...

  "Our preliminary tests are complete," the nurse said, breaking into

  Sarek's reverie. "They indicate that his intelligence potential is above

  average, Ambassador. Considerably above average."

  Sarek was not surprised, having gazed into the infant's eyes for these

  long seconds, but he felt a surge of pride that he did not trouble to

  repress.

  The rigidity had somehow gone out of his arms. He held the child against

  his chest, instinctively cradling him close.

  "I will take him to his mother now," he said.

  The nurse nodded, and Sarek, moving carefully so as not to jostle his

  son, walked away ...

  Closing the journal, the Vulcan sighed as he recalled his encounter with

  his son yesterday at Amanda's memorial

  service. If his wife knew the things they had said to each other, she

  would have been terribly distressed. Remembering how she'd begged him to

 

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