Star Trek: The Next Generation #53
Double Helix: Red Sector
Book three of six


Chapter One

"ATTENTION! THIS IS A STARFLEET SPECIAL SECURI-
TY FORCES EVACUATION SQUAD! WE ARE ABOUT TO
LAND A DIPLOMATIC COACH AND FIVE FIGHTER
ESCORTS. ALL CIVILIANS MUST CLEAR THE COURT-
YARD IMMEDIATELY! ANYONE REMAINING WILL BE
STUNNED AND REMOVED TO A SECURITY BRIG! ALL
PERSONS... ATFENTION!... THEY'RE NOT CLEAR-
ING OUT. CAN THEY EVEN HEAR ME? PERRATON, IS
THE TRANSLATOR ON? PECAN, GET YOUR WING
BACK INTO FORMATION! WHERE'S THE BROADCAST
GREENLIGHT? WHAT KIND OF DUNSELS INSTALLED
THIS SYSTEM?"
    "AH, PERRATON HERE... STILES, BE AWARE THE
BROADCAST SYSTEM IS GREEN AND TRANSLATING.
YOU JUST CALLED THE WHOLE PLANET A BUNCH OF
DUNSELS."
 "SHUT IT DOWN!"
    "OAK ONE, THIS IS BRAZIL. FORMATION'S SHIFT-
ING STARBOARD. THE EMBASSY'S GOT A BIG GAR-
GOYLE ON IT AND I'M ABOUT TO CLEAN ITS TEETH."
 "LATERAL THRUST. ABORT LANDING PATTERN--




PERRATON, WOULD YOU RED THE P.A. BEFORE I
COUGH UP A LUNG?"

    "Copy that. Public address speakers are shut down. Fighter
formarion's still too cramped for diamond grid, Stiles. Acorn
just bumped a water tower."
     "All wings, pull up! We'll modify formation and try our
approach again. Did the whole city hear us arguing?"  
"They heard you arguing."
    "Ahhh, I should've become a medic... Nuts, Oak One. Go
to Ruby formation. Pecan, move two degrees port. Brazil, get
off his tail. Acorn, keep your wings trim. Why can't you peo-
ple hold a hover grid?"
    "Oak One, Acorn. It's not us. Stiles, it's you. You have to put
the coach down and vertical your stabilizers to give us enough
room to land in that courtyard."
    "Stabilizers... I hate stabilizers... I was supposed to go
in for multi-vehicular flight school this week, but nooo, I
had to grab a mission. Listen up! I'll land the coach first,
then all wings settle around me five seconds later. Keep it
sharp!"
     "What's the matter with you, Stiles?" Pilot Andrea Hipp's
 Geman accent seemed crisp over the comm. "This isn't syn-
 chronized swimming, you know."
  "I said no chatter! The ambassador's watching!"
     A prattle of aye-ayes settled the issue for the moment, but
 did nothing for Eric Stiles's stomach, or his icy fingers, or his
 tingling feet. This command stuff left a lot to be wished for.
 And his hair was in his eyes... he was looking through a
 blond curtain. Didn't help.
     On the screens of his fully carpeted cockpit, Stiles saw the
 platinum glitter of the Federation Embassy at PojjanPiraKot
 seem to rise up to meet him. Actually, he and the coach he
 piloted were descending into the brick city courtyard, but the
 illusion of a floating building disoriented him briefly. On the
 secondary side monitors, the five fighter escorts regrouped into
 Ruby formation and found the space to wiggle into the brick
 court, seffiing around the main coach vessel like baby ducks
 crowding a drake.

    "Doesn't look like I expected ~t to," he commented. "What
are those metal bands on all the buildings?"
    "The city's all reinforced." Ensign Travis Perraton's blue
eyes peered with fresh curiosity at a smaller monitor as he
adjusted the coach's shields to let them land, irritating Stiles
with his eternal good mood. "They've got some kind of gravi-
tational problem on this planet. All the buildings have had to
be structurally rebuilt over the past few years since it started."
  "What kind of gravitational trouble?"
    "Something like high tides or earthquakes, I guess. That's
what I've heard, anyway"
    Stiles wanted to comment, but was busy settling the coach
onto its extender pads. The fantasy of brilliant artisanship in
moving spaceborne vessels into an atmosphere and landing
them in a surefooted, graceful manner had shriveled in his
hands. At least that part was over. He trembled with irritation
as the system's check barberpoled. Perraton had managed to
clear the belly shields. Otherwise, the coach would've sat in
the air like a beachball on the water--and probably rolled over.
 "You're down" Perraton confirmed. "You can unclench
now."
 "I'm fine!"
    "Yeah, sure you are. You worried about coming in shielded for
the whole twenty hours it took us to get here from the starbase"
    Stiles bristled at the suggestion that he wasn't in control.
"Emergency diplomatic evacuations have certain regulations
attached. Not getting a second chance is just one of the
assumptions. Evac regs assume the situation is hostile and pre-
cautions have to be--"
 "Don't quote the book."
 "Give me a view of the whole courtyard."
    Screens around the cockpit flashed views of all six lander
pads with irritated civilians scooping dirt out of huge potted
plants and dumping it on the ship's pads. So much for respect.
 "Are they throwing rocks?" Stiles asked.
    "It's garbage." Eying the same screen, Perraton stood up and
pulled on his torso armor, buckling the padded vest over his
chest. "Some of 'era are throwing balls of mud from those pots.

    Stiles straightened. "Secure the coach and scramble the evac
squad. Nuts, Oak One. Remain in your cockpits. Do not get
out, understood? Sit tight and let Oak Squad flush the digni-
taries. I'll escort Ambassador Spock personally."
"They're pushing on my struts. Our light-stun phasers can--"
"Negative!" Stiles broiled. "Let 'em crowd you. Keep finger
shields activated in case they touch the wings. And all of you
shut up! I don't want the ambassador to hear the slightest dis-
respect."
  "Oh, we respect you. Don't you respect him, Cashew?"
  "1 drip respect."
  "As you were!"
    "As I was? Did I change? I like me this way. Did you
change, Acorn ?"
    "Animals;' Stiles grumbled. "I'd like to get you disrespectful
slugs on starship duty for five minutes, just five minutes...." He
buffed himself in padded insulation as he pulled his flak vest
over his head, then slipped into his gauntlets, adjusted his
sidearm, and led Perraton out into the coach's main seating area.
     Here, six other members of Oak Squad were already suited
 up and looking at him from inside their red-tinted helmet
 shields. Travis Perraton, Jeremy White, Bill Foster, Dan Moose,
 Brad Carter, Matt Girvan---the'Lr names and faces swam before
 his eyes like a manifest, and for a moment he thought the blood
 was rushing out of his head. Midshipmen and ensigns, all in
 training for what would eventually become specialties, for now
 they were assigned to Starbase 10 in the Security Division,
 under their senior ensign---Stiles. At twenty-one, Eric Stiles
 was the old man of the outfit. Perraton was next, at twenty
 years old and forty-two days junior to Stiles' ensign stripes.
 Knowing that they had heard the ribbing he took from the
 wings, Stiles felt his face flush. He had to lead the mission.
 He'd gotten himself into this on purpose. He had to address
 them as a commander. Nobody to hide behind. They'd seen the
 landing. His dream of a crisp textbook military approach and
 regulation landing had gone up in an ugly puff. Now the squad
 members were blushing and snickering, burying grins, trying
 not to look right at him--that was hard to take!
  "Heads up." His voice cracked. "There's a riot going on out-
side. Some kind of local political trouble. The embassy is
beam-shielded, so we have to go in the security door. As we
approach, the guard will drop the door shields. We'll have to
go in and come out in single file. We're going to put the digni-
taries between us, at two or three in a row. llqere are about
twenty of these people, so the seven of us'11 be just about right.
I'll go last, with the ambassador right in front of me. He's the
primary person to guard, and if he gets so much as a hangnail,
somebody's gonna answer to me in a dark alley. After we
get--shut up, Foster!"
 "I didn't say anything!" Bill Foster protested.
 "Quit snickering! This is... this is--
 "Serious," Perraton supplied.
 "I know, Eric;' Foster muttered.
 "You call me 'Ensign,' mister!"
 "Aye aye, Ensign Mister."
    "I want this mission to go like clockwork! I don't want a
single twitch that isn't in the rule book! Don't snicker, don't
slip, don't do anything that isn't regulation!"
    A hand was pressed to his shoulder and drew him backward
a step on the plush carpet.
    "Everything'11 go fine, Eric," Perraton mildly interrupted.
"We're ready when you are." His short dark hair was buffed
under a white helmet with Starfleet's Delta Shield printed on
the forehead, now obscured by the raised red visor. The shield
glowed and sang at Stiles. Starfleet's symbol.
    And Stiles had to make it look good. In the wake of Perra-
ton's mental leashing, the symbol now lay heavily upon him. If
he couldn't yell at his men, how would he keep them in shape?
    He huffed a couple of steadying breaths, but didn't lower his
voice. Now that he'd gotten up to a certain level of volume, it
was hard to reel in from that. He took a moment to survey the
squad--bright white helmets, black leggings, white boots, red
chest pads against the black Starfleet jumpsuits, and the bright
flicker of a combadge on every vest. Elbow pads, chin guards,
red visors... looked fair. Good enough. Time to go.
    "There are riots going on," he repeated, "but so far nobody's
tried to breach the embassy itself. Our job is to clear a path
between the coach and the embassy and get all Federation
nationals out. These people don't have a space fleet, but their
atmospheric capabilities are strong enough to cause a few
problems. I won't consider the mission accomplished until
we're clear of the stratosphere. When we get out of the coach,
completely ignore the people swarming around unless they
come within two meters or show a weapon. Clear?"
    "Clear, sir!" Carter, Girvan, Moose, and Foster shouted. Per-
raton nodded, and White raised his nile. Had they accented the
"sir" just a little too much?
Stiles stepped between them and the hatch. "Mobilize!"
Perraton took that as a cue, and punched the autorelease on
the big hatch. The coach's loading ramp peeled back and lay
neatly across the brick before them. Instantly, the stench of
burning fuel flooded the controlled atmosphere inside the
coach. At Stiles's side, Perraton coughed a couple of times.
Other than that, nobody's big mouth cracked open. Stiles led
the way down, his heavy boots thunking on the nonskid ramp.
    They broke out onto a courtyard of grand proportions with
colonnades flanking it on three sides and the diplomatic build-
ings on the fourth side--a battery of fifteen embassies, halls,
and consulates. Most of them were empty now. The Federation
was the last to evacuate. Two of the colonnades were in ruins;
part of one was shrouded in scaffolding while being rebuilt.
Most of the buildings showed signs of structural damage, but
generally the Diplomatic Court of PojjanPirakot was a stately
and bright place, providing a sad backdrop for the ugliness of
these protests.
     A quick glance behind showed him the positions of the five
 fighters landed around the coach. Their glistening bodies,
 streamlined for both aerodynamics and space travel, shined in
 the golden sunlight. There was Air Wing Leader Bernt Folmer,
 their best pilot, code "Brazil," parked like a big car in front of
 Greg "Pecan" Blake. Behind the coach the tail fin of Andrea
 Hipp's "Cashew" fighter caught a glint of sun. On the other
 side, hopefully parked nose to tail, were Acorn and Chestnut,
 brothers Jason and Zack Bolt--but Stiles didn't bother to
 check their position. He only hoped they were in sharp order.
  All around were angry people waving signs, some in alan-
gnage he didn't understand, others scrawled in English, Vul-
can, Spanish, Orion Yrevish, and a few other languages famil-
iar from courtesy placards all over Starfleet Command where
multitudes wandered.
    The ones in English jumped out instantly before Stiles's rac-
ing mind. OUT ALIENS... LEAVE OUR PLANET... GET
OUT STRANGERS... ALIENS UNWELCOME... CURSE
ALIENS ALL ....
    Some of the people were calling out in English, too, though
clumsily and without really understanding the arrangement of
nouns and verbs. The anti-alien message, though, afrowed
directly through to the team.
    To the music of enraged shouts from the people raffling
gates and creating a din by banging small silver knives on the
iron posts, Oak Squad broke into a jog and flooded into a
broad shield of sunlight glaring between the embassy and the
consulate next door. The doorways and lintels were heavily
reinforced with titanium T-girders, and titanium bands swept
around every building, two on each story, like shiny ribcages.
Stiles glanced around at his squad, making sure nobody pulled
ahead of the formation. This had to be crisp. The ambassador
was watching from some window inside that embassy. Every-
body was watching. Fifty meters...
    Oak Squad thundered forward relentlessly, their phaser
rifles tight against their chests. As Stiles led his men across the
patterned brick, he saw that just the raw heat from the coach's
VTOL thrusters had scorched some of the bricks nearly black
and pitted them beyond repair, destroying the geometric design
in the historic courtyard.
    His boots felt secure and thick as he crunched over the litter
of broken glass, smashed fruit, and rocks that had been thrown
by the doters, who were now milling around the fighters and the
coach. These Pojjan people were stocky and thick, with strong
round cheekbones and bronze complexions tinged with an olive
patina, reminding Stiles of Aztec paintings seen under a green
filter. They wore various clothing, from the men's ordinary
shirts and pants or the women's shiftlike dresses to the brightly
beaded tribal tunics and leggings he'd seen on travel posters.

    The travel agencies might as well rip those posters up.
Nobody was going to want to come to this dump anymore.
    He cast the rioters a threatening glance or two, but although
some were touching the ships' landing struts they weren't
doing anything destructive. Not yet anyway. If anything hap-
pened, the escort pilots would zap them. So he kept moving
forward at a pace, letting the natives swerve out of his way. He
led the squad manfully through a large puddle of fuel, some of
which was still gulping out of a discarded and dented contain-
er. Their boots splattered it and freshened the stench.  Thirty meters.
    Cries of anger, protest, and insult at Starfleet's intrusion into
their courtyard grew louder, as the squad jogged across the
brick plateau. Stiles didn't understand the Pojjan language, but
some of these people were shouting in English or Vulcan and
waving get-out-of-town banners in English, apparently smart
enough to know how to get to the Federation personnel.
    It's getting to me. I'm allowing it to shake me. Just do the
job, get the people out of the embassy, into the coach, and lift
off Ignore the crowd. Just ignore them.
     At his right elbow, Travis Perraton was watching a gang of
 Po'ljan teenagers on the other side of the embassy fence. A flash
 of flame--the teenagers were lighting up a fuel-soaked towel.
     "They can't throw that this far, can they?" Blake asked from
 behind Stiles.
     "They don't have to," Perraton said. "We're jogging toward
 puddles of kerosene."
     "Gasoline;' Midshipman Jeremy White corrected from the
 flank.
      "Stinks" Dan Moose added, then cast to the man on his left,
 "Make room, Foster"  "Sorry."
     "Bag the noise;' Stiles snapped, turning his head briefly to
 the right. "Don't splash through the gas. If we get it on our
 uniforms, we're in big trouble."
     And that was his error--that one glance over his shoulder.
 A stunning force struck his left shin just below the kneepad,
 driving his entire leg out behind him. Blown forward by the
 force of his own movement, Stiles let out a single strangled
yell, leaped forward over a slick of gasoline, and crashed to
the bricks just beyond the slick. Though he evaded the gas, he
slid sidelong into a pile of garbage dumped on the courtyard.
Managing to thrust his arms out, he somehow kept from land-
ing on his phaser rifle, which instead clattered to the brick and
butted him in the face shield, then scratched across his bared
jaw. If his visor had been up, the rifle would've taken out his
teeth.
    A blunt force rammed into his lower back--a boot--as
Carter tumbled over Stiles, crumpling to the bricks on top of
the garbage. Carter rolled and ended up on one knee.
    With his jaw and knee throbbing, Stiles tightened his body,
twisted onto his side, and brandished his weapon at the laugh-
ing crowd as his face flushed with humiliation. They were
laughing at him. His fantasy of a clockwork mission had just
cracked and blown up before his eyes.
    Bile rose in his throat, a rashy heat down his legs. His lungs
tightened as he felt slimy garbage soak into his uniform and
the stench of petroleum knot his innards. The sky wheeled
above him, cluttered with white helmets and flashing red
visors reflecting the afternoon sun.
    Smiling, Perraton reached to pull him to his feet. "Nice
going, lightfoot."
  "Don't help me!" Stiles blurted.
    As if bitten, Perraton retracted his hand. Stiles rolled to his
feet, now smudged with the gummy remains of garbage and
mudballs.
    When he got to his feet, Stiles staggered a few steps in the
wrong direction and was forced to endure the foolish chicken-
scratch of turning around and struggling back to the front of
his squad, and the further embarrassment of realizing his men
were deliberately slowing down so he could get in front. He
slammed his way between them, elbowing Perraton and White
cruelly out of his path. He didn't need their charity!
    At the gates, two Pojjan guards immediately opened the iron
grid and let them in without a word. The embassy's medieval-
looking carved wooden door, three guys wide and set between
two gargoyles, also opened automatically.
  No, not antomatically--this door was manual. Another
guard or servant of some nationality Stiles didn't recognize
was now peeking around the door's iron rim like a shy cow
peeking out of a barn. He was an elderly man, with bent shoul-
ders and bright green eyes set in a jowly dark face with stripes
painted on it. More tribal weirdness.
    Moving further into the heavily tiled foyer, Stiles suddenly
felt ridiculously out of place. The foyer was splendid, its
mosaics of gold-and-black chipped stone and glossy ceramics
portraying some kind of historic battle scene and the corona-
tion of somebody. Must be from way back, because this wasn't
a monarchical culture anymore.  Was it?
    The guard pushed the big door shut and swung a huge titani-
um bolt into place to lock them safely inside, then turned to
the clutch of evac troopers and gasped, "One minute! I'll get
the ambassador's assistant!"
     And he disappeared into a wide archway that was two sto-
 ries tall.
     Oak Squad stood in the middle of the gorgeous tile floor,
 their uniforms scuffed and stinking, and looked around.
     "I'd hate to be the guy who cleans the grout" Perraton com-
 mented.
     White grunted as he scanned the mosaic on the ceiling.
 "How long you think we'll have to wait?"
     "Not long," Stiles filled in. "They called for us to come get
 them, so they're probably ready to leave. And they're Vulcans,
 so you know they're efficient."
 "How do you know they'll be stiffs?" Moose asked.
 "Because Ambassador Spock's a st--a Vulcan. They like to
 have their own kind around. They understand each other better
 than we do"
     "Oh, fight;' White drawled. "They do everything better than
 we do"
 Stiles scoured him with a glare. "Don't start on me, Jeremy"
 He turned away, but in his periphery he noted Perraton's
 quick motion to White, erasing any further mmoying com-
 ments.
     Though they stood in this wide foyer feeling dirty and
 small, they were not alone. Sounds of footsteps and voices
leaked from the depths of the embassy halls, and twice Stiles
saw ethereal forms slip from one office to another. Did they
trust him to get them out safely? Had they seen the botched
choreography of the landing? Did they wonder whether the
ensign in command was competent enough to handle this?
    He gripped his phaser rifle until his hands hurt and shifted
from foot to foot, halting only when a young woman--a
human--skittered through the grand main door and into the
huge foyer. Stiles didn't pay attention .... The small-boned
woman, with tightly wrapped brown hair, tiny pearl earrings,
and a twitch in her left eye, went directly to the tallest of
them--Jeremy White--and breathfly said, "I'm Miss Karen
Theonella, Ambassador Spock's deputy attach6. Are you
Ensign Stiles?"
    She had a tight foreign accent that sounded Earth-based, but
Stiles couldn't pinpoint the country.
"He's over there, ma'am;' White told her, and gestured.
Stiles stepped through the cluster of Starteeters and took
his helmet off, revealing his sweat-plastered blond hair. "Eric
Stiles, ma'am. I'm here to evacuate the entire embassy.
Nobody should be left behind."
    "We understand." Miss Theonella rubbed her tiny pink
palms as if kneading bread dough between them. "All embassy
envoys, functionaries, ministers, delegates, and clerks will be
going, as well as four Pojjana defectors who lost their homes
in the last Constrictor. They're being given asylum here and
we have clearance for them to be evacuated with us. In all
there are thirty-five of us."
    'Whirty-five!" Perraton blurted. Then he insrandy clammed
up, but the number twenty kept flashing in his eyes like bea-
cons.
    How could seven of them safely escort thirty-five dignitaries
through fifty meters of rioting?
    "We're prepared, ma'am;' Stiles shoved in, more loudly
than necessary, before anyone else could speak up. "About the
landing... the ambassador is probably wondering why we
were so... out of formation .... "
    "What?" Miss Theonella's white temples puckered and her
brows came together like pencil points. "We can't see the
courtyard from here. There are only reception rooms on the
court side of the building. Was there some reason you wanted
us to be watching you? Was there a signal?"
    He stared at her, caught between relief and disappointment
that nobody had been watching. "Uh... no, no signal"
    Preoccupied, the thin young woman simply said, "Continue
to wait here, please, Ensign. I'll get the ambassador."
    Again the evac squad stood alone, holding their rifles,
standing in the middle of the gleaming tile floor, listening to
the drumming chants of angry people outside in the square
and trying to imagine how they were going to hustle thirty-
five dignitaries through that. The unpleasant possibility of
rushing half of them out to the coach, then coming back for
the second grouIv--Stiles winced. Two trips through that
courtyard full of alien-haters? Was that safer than one big
rush? If he ordered two separate groups, would the angry
people see that as their last chance to get them and attack the
second group?
  "Wonder why they hate aliens" Dan Moose voiced.
     Stiles noted that his men were looking at the windows and
 doors, but his own eyes were focused on the long hall of
 offices into which Miss Theonella had disappeared. The
 ambassador was in there somewhere.
     All the men turned to face the hall to their left as a crowd of
 elegant dignitaries bobbed toward them. In the midst of them
 was the tall, instantly recognizable figure of the famous
 Ambassador Spock.
  Bow? Kneel? Handshake?
  "Don't faint! Eric, stand at attention!"
     Perraton's anxious whisper boomed in Stiles's ear like a
 foghorn.
  "Stand at attention!"
     "Attention...." Stiles planted his boots on the tile, but
 wasn't able to get them together. He squared his shoulders,
 raised his chin, held his breath, clutched his rifle, and forced
 an appearance of adept steadiness and control. Cool. Calm.
 Military. Crisp. In control. In charge. Confident. Smelly.
     The ambassador and his party approached them, but Spock
 wasn't looking at them. Instead his dark head was bowed as he
spoke to Miss Theonella, who was clipping along at his side.
The ambassador listened, nodded, then spoke again while a
male attendant slipped a glossy blue Federation Diplomatic
Corps jacket onto the boss's shoulders.
    The sight was a shock--Stiles had expected the flowing cer-
emonial robes that Vulcan seniors were usually seen wearing,
but now that he saw Spock in the trim gray slacks and dark
blue jacket with the UFP symbol on the left side, that outfit
seemed to make more sense for a spaceborne evacuation.
Robes might be harder to handle on boarding ramps and in
tight quarters.
 Why hadn't he thought of that?
    Though Spock--tall, narrow, controlled--possessed all the
regal formality common to his race, his famous form was
somehow less imperious in person than Stiles had anticipated,
his angular Vulcan features more animated, and framed by the
fact that he was the only Vulcan in the bunch. Of course, Stiles
had only seen still photos or staged lecture tapes. Seeing
Spock in real life was very different--he wasn't stiff at all.
    As they approached, he could hear Miss Theonella's thready
voice.
    "... and the provincial vice-warden will be sending his pro-
1ocutrix as proxy to speak for the entire hemisphere at Federa-
tion central. Also, sir, the consul general's wife and children
are waiting in the Blue Room, and Chancellor De Gaeta's wife
is in his office"
    Miss Theonella finished her sentence just as she and the
ambassador and their party came into the foyer.
    "Thank you, Karen, very good work," Ambassador Spock
said gently, countering her quivering report with his silky bari-
tone voice. "Suggest to the Sagittarian military attach~ that he
post a Pojjana communications sentry, and that person must
speak both Bal Quonnot and Ronmlan."
    That voice! That famous voice! Stiles had been heating it all
his life! Historical documentaries, training tapes, mission
interactives, holoprograms--now he was here, in person, right
in the same room with that voice!
    "This is Ensign Stiles," Miss Theonella added with a ges-
ture. "And the evacuation escort men, sir"

    The ambassador scanned the team, then fixed his gaze at
Stiles. Directly at him. Right in the eyes! He was looking right
at himl
 Those eyes like blades! Black blades!
    Stiles tried to take a breath, but all he got was a gulp of
garbage fumes from his soaked trouser leg. As his lungs seized
up, he felt the boink-boink of Perraton's finger poking him in
the back.
 Report, you idiot.t
    "Ev... Evacuation Squad reporting as you requested, sir!
Ensign Eric J. Stiles, Starfleet Special Services reporting, sir!
One G-rate transport coach, evacuation team, and five fighter
escorts, sir?
    The ambassador's black-slash brows went up like bird's
wings. The chamber fell to silence. Stiles' fervid report echoed
absurdly.
  Calmly Spock said, "At ease, Ensign:'
  His deep mellow voice took Stiles utterly by surprise.
  "Aye aye, sir!" Stiles choked.
    "We'll be ready within five minutes," the ambassador told
him fluidly, then turned to the attendant who'd put the jack-
et on him. "Edwin, please bring out the consul general's
family and Mrs. De Gaeta and turn them over to Ensign
Stiles."
  "Right away, Ambassador."
    As the man left, Spock turned again to Miss Theonella.
"You have our records and diplomatic pouches? The legal
briefs and service files? Personnel manifests?"
    She held up a stem black pilot's case with a magnetic lock,
hanging from a strap on her shoulder. "All here, sir"
    "Very well. We should also bring the jurisdictional warrants.
They could be confiscated and used to gain passage into
restricted areas."
  "I'll get them, sir."
      "No, I'll get them." The ambassador turned to leave, then
 paused and gazed briefly at the tiled floor, thinking. "Stiles..."
   "Here, sir!"
     Spock looked up at the inflamed response. Coolly he repeat-
 ed, "At ease, Ensign"

     Stiles shivered, glanced at Travis Perraton, and again met
the ambassador's eyes. "Yes, sir...." "Are you by chance related to---"
    "Yes, sir, I am, sir! Starfleet Security Commander John
Stiles, Retired, is my grandfather, sir! He served with you
under Captain James T. Kirk, Stardates 1709 to 1788 point 6 as
Alpha-Watch navigator aboard the U.S.& Enterprise, NCC
1701, commissioned stardate--"
 "I recall the ship, Ensign."
 "Oh... oh... aye, sir...."
    "You have a long line of Starfleet service officers in your
family heritage, I also recall."
    "Yes, sir! Several active-duty servicemen lost in the Romu-
lan Wars, sir! A captain, two lieutenants, two---"
    "Commendable, Mr. Stiles. Carry on:' Spock turned to the
little gaggle of people behind him and said, "All of you please
stand by until everyone else arrives. Then you'll take your
instructions from Ensign Stiles as to how you will arrange
yourselves during the actual evacuation. As you know, the
building is beam-shielded, and therefore we must go out the
door and board the transport coach on foot. Unfortunately, our
general safety compromises our safety during emergency evac-
uation. Karen, keep them in order. I will return momentarily."
    With that he disappeared down a different hallway and into
an office, leaving a confused clutch of embassy persons stand-
ing here in the foyer, wide-eyed and obviously frightened. By
nature, the two groups divided to opposite sides of the foyer,
embassy folks over there, Oak Squad over here.
    Stiles let himself be tugged aside, and barely registered the
low mutters of his men around him through the afterglow of
his meeting with Spook.
    "Beam-shielding" Matt Girvan grumbled. 'Ilaere's plan-
ning. What if they had to get out under more dangerous condi-
tions than mudballs and molotovs?"
  "It's beam-shielded so assassins or terrorists can't beam in."
  "Why couldn't they make it one-way?"
  "Too unstable. Sucks too much energy to maintain over time."
    "Doesn't matter. We'll get 'era out. Eric'll carry them all on
his back if he has to."
 "If he doesn't choke up a lung first."
    "We'll be lucky if he doesn't make us bow backward out of
the room."
    The team laughed. A cluttered sound, muffled... like a
storm coming.
    Beside Stiles, Perraton raised his helmet visor and smiled
with genuine sympathy.
 "You okay, Eric?" he asked.
    Stiles felt his lips chapping as he breathed in and out, in and
out, like a landed fish. He'd just met his hero and he didn't
know if he'd liked it.
    And it wasn't over. In fact, it was just beginning. He'd have
to do everything perfectly from now on. No more botched for-
mations. No more stammering. He had to be perfect. Smooth.
    "Ease up, lightfoot," Perraton suggested privately. "He's just
a guy."
    "Just a guy" Stiles rasped. "He's a hero, Travis... a
Starfleet icon... the first Vulcan in Star fleet...Captain
James Kirk's executive officer... I've heard every story a
hundred times all my life---do you know how many times he
participated in saving the whole Federation? And even the
Klingon Empire?"
    "Doesn't matter now. Anyway, the hard part's over. You met
him, you survived, and the experience didn't suck out your
brains. He was a Starfleet man for half a century. He knows
the drill. So get a perspective. Here he comes." Do the job. Do the job.
    The ambassador flowed back into the foyer, now carrying a
slim red folder and followed by more than a dozen people and
his attendant Edwin. Suddenly the foyer was swarming with
civilians. At least they were mostly adults, a few teenagers--
Stiles didn't relish the prospect of herding toddlers through
that mess out there. He stiflened as the ambassador came
directly to him.
 "We're ready, Mr. Stiles."
 "Yes, sir... how would you like to do this?"
 Spock handed the folder to Miss Theonella. "Pardon me.9"
    "I... I figured you'd have some preference about... what
order you want them in and... how to do it."

    The ambassador thought about that briefly, his dark eyes
working, as if he hadn't considered such an option. After a
moment he vocally shrugged. "Your mission, Ensign."
    Over Spock's shoulder, Perraton smiled and gave Stiles a
thumbs-up.
    Sustained by that, Stiles forced himself to rise to the
demand. "Uh... if you people would form a line, two by
two, and Oak Squad situate yourselves between them, uh,
one every... uh--"
    He paused, *died to do the math, but couldn't remember
how. His brain had been sucked out!
    Maybe he wouldn't have to count and add and divide--his
men were already arranging themselves into position. Perraton
was taking the lead, and motioning the others into the queue at
intervals.
      'Tll take the rear guard" Stiles said. "Ambassador, would
you mind coming back here with me, sir?"  " Thank you, Ensign, I will."
    "All right, let's--no, no, you can't do the door" Stiles
motioned to the funny-looking butler who was still standing
his post at the door, waiting to open it for everybody. '~rravis,
put that man in line behind Girvan and you do the door. Then
fall in."
 "Copy that."
 "Okay, phaser rifles ready."
 "Ready!" his men shouted.
 "Rifles up!"
 "Up!"
 "Very well!"
    Stiles took one more look at Ambassador Spock's steady
form in line before him, at the large UFP shield printed on the
back of the blue jacket. The stars of the United Federation of
Planets swam before his eyes.
    He drew a breath. His voice echoed under the high tiled
ceiling.
 "Mobilize !"




Chapter Two

BRASH SUNLIGHT BLARED into Stiles's eyes, smashing his
dream of frictionless success. The sun courted the horizon
now, directly ahead of them, as they charged the protesters
crowding the courtyard. Curtains of fire roiled around them
where the gasoline puddles had been ignited by molotovs. On
the other side of the licking flames stood the coach and fight-
els and a half-dozen unconscious rioters. Apparently Brazil
had needed to enable his stun phasers to back them off.
    Now the rest of the protesters were giving the fighters a
wider berth, and turned instead on the jogging queue of
embassy personnel and their six Starfleet guards trying to
wend through the pockets of stenchy flame.
    A fist shook in his face--and Stiles rammed his rifle butt
into somebody's chest. Mudballs slogged through the line,
striking the civilians. One caught Moose in the helmet. He
staggered, but got back in line before Stiles could react.
    Crack.t----a molotov bottle smashed in front of the ambassa-
dor. New flames broke out, flooding the bricks, dividing Spock,
Stiles, and one woman from the rest of the line. Spock instantly
veered sideways, caught the woman in front of him, and steered
her around the flames and back behind Moose's protective form.

    "Oak Squad!" Stiles shouted over the noise. "Phasers on
stun, fire at will!"
    He didn't know whether or not they heard him until White
and Perraton opened fire on a group of protesters blocking the
way to the coach. The rifles blanketed the area with a red bulb
of energy, and the rioters went down in a heap.
    "Wish we could just toast 'em," Stiles grumbled, tactlessly
boiling with contempt for this civil unrest. Why couldn't they
just follow rules and stick within the law? Why'd they have to
cause trouble?
 "Stiles Oak-One! Ramp!"
    The coach's automatic ramp opened before them with a
whine. Perraton led the frantic evacuees right to it, then angled
to one side and shouted warnings to the crowd as the diplomat-
ic people clomped up the ramp. Luckily nobody had to yell at
them to stay in line. They were perfectly satisfied running for
the cover offered by the coach's maw. Just as the middle of the
line was swallowed by the coach, Jeremy White veered away
from the queue to drive back the stone herd of angry teenagers
that had harassed them on the way in. Now those teenagers
were armed with iron bars--and the bars were red hot. White
held back on firing his weapon, instead using it to bash away
the iron bars threatening him.
 "Jeremy!" Stiles called. "Stun 'era!"
    But White couldift get enough room to turn his phaser rifle
barrel down and take aim. He tried twice, and each time was
pummeled by a hot iron bar--the teenagers were too close,
surrounding him so he couldn't move forward or back. If he
tried to stun them at hand-to-hand range, he'd end up stunning
himself too. And White was getting angry. Stiles could hear his
furious grunts and barks as adrenaline took over and defen-
sive/offensive training got a grip on him. Step by step he drove
the teenagers back, inch by inch, but not enough for rifle stun.
And they were hitting him with their hot bars until his protec-
tive padding smoked and sparked.
    "On board, on board? Stiles shouted to the civilians. He
couldn't help White until these people were all present and
accounted for in the safety of the coach. When Ambassador
Spock was finally on the ramp, Stiles wheeled around, jumped
off the footboard, and rammed through the enraged teenagers.
He drove one of them to the ground, then rammed his rifle butt
into the ribs of another, until he could see White's scratched
helmet and smell the burning padding of his uniform.
  "Jeremy ! You're covered ! About face !"
    White tried to turn, but was caught in the neck by a vicious
blow and tumbled to the brick at Stiles's feet. Stiles stepped
over him, aimed his rifle, and fired.
    A burst of bright energy engulfed four of the teenagers, so
close that Stiles felt his skin go numb even under the protec-
tive gear.
    "Get up!" he ordered, kicking White uncharitably. "On your
feet! Board the ship!"
    White rolled out from under him, possessing the presence of
mind to keep a grip on his weapon, because they sure didn't
dare leave it here, and stumbled to the ramp. Perraton skidded
down and caught him, then shoved him into the coach and
shouted, "All clear, Stiles! Stiles! Eric!"
  "Acknowledged! Power up!"
  "Aye aye!"
  "Nuts, Oak One, power up for liftoff!"
  "Copy, Oak One."
    Instantly the fighters began humming with power buildup.
Perraton disappeared back inside, and Stiles was two steps
behind him, scrambling up the ramp on two feet and a hand,
his weapon clutched in his other hand. Perraton was there to
yank him inside, and backhanded the ramp control. The ramp
whined upward and clacked shut, then the hatch bolts slammed
into place.
     Inside, Bill Foster was collecting the phaser rifles and slam-
 ming them back into their wall rack while the other men
 dumped their helmets into the reception locker.
     "We're secure," Perraton reported. "Dan's powering up for
 you:' He hit the hatch lock for takeoff, turned to Stiles and
 shrugged. "Wasn't so hard."
     "It wasn't?" Stiles gasped, scanning the crowd of frightened
 evacuees. "Is anybody hurt?"
     They all looked at each other, but no one spoke up. They
 were braised, dirty, coughing, no longer the prim bunch he'd
seen in the embassy, and one woman was sobbing, but most of
them were in their seats and belted in. Now he saw that
Ambassador Spock was buckling up two of the family mem-
bers. So Spock was responsible for the organization. No sur-
prise there.
     Stiles dumped his helmet on the carpet and peeled out of his
flak vest. "Where's Jeremy?" 'T m over here."
    Jeremy White's lanky form, smeared with dirt now, was
sprawled in one of the crew seats, pressing a hand to his neck.
His helmet was off too, and his uniform was still smoldering.
Stiles stuffed his vest into Perraton's hands and hurried for-
ward to Jeremy White.
 "You all right?" he asked.
 White blinked up at him. "Affirmative, more or less."
 "Why'd you break formation?"
    White's glare roughened. "Gosh, Eric, I got this irre-
sistible crush on a girl way over there and figured to ask her
out if I could just get through those terrorists with the hot
irons and broken bottles--what the hell kind of a question is
that?"
  "You follow orders from now on, have you got that?"
    Slumping back a little more, White grimaced. "Put a leash
on it, will you? We're doing everything you say!"
    Stiles almost snapped a reprimand, but what good would
that do? And all the dignitaries were looking at him. Should he
throw a tantrum?
    Instead he surveyed White's dirt-flecked face and sandy
hair, and decided on a better choice.
  "You're all right, though?" he asked. "Not burned?"
    The anger flowed out of White's heat-blotched cheeks.
"Except that now I have to tell my mother I scratched the little
body she cooked for nine months."
    "Then take the portside defense guns. Let's get off this
planet."
    "Aye aye." White pushed out of his seat and made sure his
neck wasn't bleeding.
  "Girvan, starboard gun."
  "Starboard, aye."
    "Travis, navigate. We got a mountain range in our liftoff
path."
 "Right."
    The three men went in three different directions, two to the
defense pods and Perraton to the cockpit. A second later, Dan
Moose came out of the cockpit and said, "We're powered up. I
can't pilot this thing, though. You're the only one who can fly
it in an atmosphere."
    "I 'know, I'm coming. Sir, are you comfortable?" He paused
before the ambassador on his way to the cockpit and asked a
silly question. What difference did comfort make?
    "I'm sorry about the trouble out there, sir;' Stiles babbled.
"If it were up to me, we'd sweep the whole courtyard with
wide stun. Why do people have to behave that way?"
    Spock straightened from helping Edwin buckle up. "Those
people are frightened, Ensign, and disheartened. The political
situation here is volatile. This was our last chance to evacuate
Federation personnel. Prudence dictated that we get out while
we can. The Pojjana have abandoned any overtures toward
Federation membership, despite our efforts to help them pro-
tect themselves. This is an interplanetary squabble between
them and the Bal Quonnot now, lacking clear rights and
wrongs. Federation policy will now be hands off. The sector
will be declared 'red.'"
    "Then why were they trying to stop us from leaving? If they
don't want us here--"
    "A number of factions on this planet may find advantage in
preventing our leaving. I should warn you," Spock added, and
lowered his voice, "they never attacked the embassy itself
because that would have been an act of war according to the
Articles of Confederation. The embassy building is Federation
soil. However, once we're in the atmosphere, they can shoot us
down and claim any number of scenarios. We must be on our
guard and ready to fight."
    "We're ready, sir! I've got five fully armed fighter escorts,
and this coach has two defense guns and a detachable midwing
utility jump-plane."
    Spock raised one eyebrow and drawled, "Yes... of course
it does."

 Now what did that mean?
    Stiles was about to ask, then realized that all these innocent
civilians were looking at the two of them, hanging on every
word. From the ambassador's expression, Stiles got the idea he
wouldn't get any answers even if he did ask. He shouldn't have
asked anything. Gum stuck on your shoe doesn't ask, "where
are we going?"--it just sticks to the shoe.
    Spock, having been around humans all his life, seemed to
recognize the look. Stiles was instantly mortified that the
ambassador had read the questions in his eyes. Why hadn't he
taken the time to study the political climate here? Wasn't that
his job as mission leader? Thirty-five diplomatic persons
including the famous adventurer Ambassador Spock killing
them would send vibrations across the quadrant. Kidnapping
them would be an even bigger cout>--for somebody. A
shipload of diplomatic hostages, and Stiles had to make a fool
of himself by needing the most elementary facts explained to
him.
    Shriveled like a prune, he glanced around at all the people
watching him, judging him, and croaked, "Prepare for lift-off?'
    "Very well." Spoek simply took a seat in the first row, next
to Miss Theonella and Edwin.
    Feeling completely shrunken, Stiles threw off his gauntlets
and stepped through the hatch to the cockpit and into the
pilot's seat. Stinking of garbage, his jaw swelling up like a
melon, he kicked the foot controls and threw the coach into
antigray so abruptly that the fighters were left below. Too bad.
They'd catch up.
    On his cockpit screens he noted all five Nuts coming up
quickly on his flanks.
    "Nuts, Oak One, I want some maneuvering room out of the
city. Spread out. Attempt Emerald formation."
    They each acknowledged with a green light, and he knew he
was free to maneuver the bulky craft out over the countryside and
toward the mountains. It would take the coach about five miles to
reach escape velocity and make it up to an altitude at which they
could veer up and out of the atmosphere. Soon the city pulled
away beneath them, and he steered around two water towers and
a radio antenna and was clear. Now for the mountains.

    Since the mountain range surrounded the city on all sides,
there was no way to avoid them. Coming in for a landing was
less of a problem than accelerating to escape velocity, espe-
cially since they had to get up to speed as quickly as possible.
This planet had an air force. He knew that much.
     "Several Pojjan fighter aircraft just scrambled on an inter-
cept course, Eric," Perraton reported. "Behind us?"
    "Angle two-five zero, port side and closing. Spreading out
across our aft flanks."
    "I'm increasing speed. As the atmosphere gets thinner, we'll
get fasten They'll never catch us."
 "Don't you want some defense back there?"
    "Yes--yes, I do. Nuts, Oak One. Take up Diamond forma-
tion. Guard our aft flanks. Fall back, repeat, fall back.
Acknowledge as you take position."
    In his side ports he saw Pecan and Brazil fall away toward
the aft, and soon all five green lights flashed in acknowledge-
ment.
"Nothing'11 get by our guys," he muttered with satisfaction.
'q'he Pojjan planes are trying to come around, Eric;' Perra-
ton warned. "All four of them coming around on the starboard
side."
    "Moving to port," Stiles accepted, and steered the coach out
of the way so the nuts on the starboard flank could deal with
the encroaching Pojjan fighters. "I don't know why they're
even trying. In two minutes they won't be able to catch up with
space-ready vessels."
  "Oak One, Chestnut."
 "Oak One. Go ahead, Zack."
    "The Pojjans aren't firing on us yet, but they're trying to
slip by us. Don't they know what our weapons can do ?"
 "Maybe not," Stiles said. "They don't have a space fleet."
    "I don't know--it's like they're touring or something here.
Should we open fire?"
    Determined not to ignite a situation the ambassador already
described as volatile, Stiles tried to use reserved judgment.
He'd looked idiotic enough already. He had to make Spock
proud of him.

     "As long as they're not shooting," he said, "just stay
between me and them. They can't catch me now."
  "Understood."
  "Ensign?"
    Stiles glanced over his shoulder at the chilling sound of that
voice. Ambassador Spock stood at the hatchway, gripping the
rims and peering through to the wide forward screen.
    "Yes, sir?" Stiles responded. "Is there a problem? We're
almost to flank speed. The mountains are coming up under us.
We'll be in space in about ninety seconds. I've positioned 'all
my fighters in a rearguard, between us and the pursuit fleet,
just in case the bad guys have more speed than they seem to.
Nobody can catch us now, sir."
    "Unlikely," Spock accepted, deliberately not stepping into
the cockpit. "Ensign, may I make an observation?"
    Stiles almost fainted with the depth of that question.
An "observation" from Science Officer/Captain/Ambassador
Spock? A Starfleet superior for as long as Stiles and his whole
team had collectively been alive? That was virtually a direct
order!
    Stiles steered the coach through the first mountain peaks
that reached toward them from a skirt of low snowclouds. "Of
course you can, sir!"
     Spock now stepped through the hatch way and knelt beside
Stiles to get a better view of the mountains. 
Why was he looking at the mountains?
     "As I am sure you know," Spock began, "it is unlikely those
planes pose any danger to us." "Yes, sir. I mean, no, sin"
    "And it is likely that the Pojjana know their planes cannot
overtake us."
 "Well... they might know it, sir...."
    "Then perhaps you should consider," the ambassador quietly
advised, "that while the Pojjana do not possess strong space-
faring, their atmospheric capabilities are formidable. Those
planes behind us could be diversionary."
    Stiles heard the words, but for a moment they made no sense.
Then, gradually, the picture of reality crystallized in his mind
and he abruptly understood the ugly mistake he was making.

    "Oh... oh!" Stiles's mouth suddenly went completely dry,
and he gripped his controls. "Oh, God!"
    Suddenly Travis Perraton tensed at his own console. "Tacti~
eal display shows something in front of us! Coming up
through the clouds! It's an A/I! They've got an A/I blocking
our way! There are mountains on both sides! Eric, can we
climb?"
    By not taking any chances, by pretending to be a topnotcher
who knew how to do his job and going for finesse instead of
humility, Stiles had left everything wide open. Eric Stiles, man
about town, citizen of the galaxy, had left the ship without for-
ward protection. No vanguard!
    Now he was coming into the targeting sights of whatever the
Poijans wanted to throw in his way--he'd let those planes
steer him into its firing range, and all his defensive fighters
were five miles behind him, guarding him from planes that
couldn't catch up. The Po'jjan planes didn't have a chance of
catching him, but they sure had a chance of steering the coach
toward an assault net hidden in the mountains!
    Stiles felt his throat close up around the realization that he'd
been completely duped. Spock hadn't interfered until it
became obvious that Stiles was being suckered into a vulnera-
ble position.
  And no, he couldn't climb yet. Not that high--not yet.
    He stared at the forward screen as a huge, nasty-looking
assault/interceptor moved merrily through the mountain pass,
essentially a giant gun platform, on an intercept course with
the coach. And certainly that would happen, because in this
short space there was no way to gain enough velocity to rise
any higher, and there were mountains funneling them on both
sides. All that Pojjan A/I had to do was move toward them in
the sky and let the cricket fly into the web.
    There were only moments left before the two craft would
intersect. Seconds--
  Stiles bolted to his feet, driven by a rash decision.
    "Ambassador, can you pilot this coach? Ah--what am I say-
ing! I'm so--I'm such---of course you can!"
    As Stiles stepped through the hatch, Spock stood aside as if
he were clairvoyant about Stiles' intentions.

    "I understand, Ensign," the ambassador said as he slid into
the pilot's seat. "You know your nominal weapons will be
ineffective against an assault/interceptor."
    Stiles yanked open the equipment locker and pulled out an
air mask and gloves. Dry-mouthed and ashamed, he rasped,
"It's my duty to try, sir." "Commendable."
    Perraton twisted around in his seat. "What's going on? Eric?
What're you doing? Where do you think you're going?" Then
his blue eyes flashed with shock. "You're not going out in the
Frog !"
    Harnessed by his failure to master the savoir-faire of com-
mand, Stiles didn't respond. He yanked on his gloves and
slipped the air mask's strap over his head.
    "Oh, no!" Thrusting to his feet, Perraton grasped Stiles's
arm, forcing Stiles to shake him off in order to yank on a ther-
mal jacket. "Eric, you're not serious?
    "As you were, Mr. Perraton;' Spock advised, steering the
coach masterfully through the angry mountains.
    Perraton shrank back into his seat, cold with astonishment,
his lips working as he tried to think of something to say.
    Spock adjusted his pitch controls, but continued speaking to
Stiles. "The midwing is unlikely to be able to divert a craft of
that mass," he attempted again.
 Was he trying to talk Stiles out of going?
    "I know that, sir," Stiles said. "But by my calculations you
only need an additional fifteen seconds to get up enough speed
to break out of the atmosphere over that thing." "Eleven seconds."
 "Oh... well, I'll try to get it for you. Good luck, sir."
    Even in the midst of piloting the heavy coach, Spock both-
ered to turn and give him the gift of eye-to-eye contact, a
deeply meaningful effort that Stiles didn't miss.  "And to you, Mr. Stiles," he said.
    Stiles closed his thermal jacket around his chest as he ran
down the aisle through the glances of frightened passengers.
He wanted to forget about the jacket, but training had kicked
in. If he didn't have the jacket, he'd been too cold to be effec-
tive inside the uninsulated midwing.

    As he passed the side-gunner pods, Jeremy White cranked
around with surprise. "Eric, where do you think you're going?
Who's piloting?"
 Stiles ran past him. "Mind your gun, Jeremy."
    Spock hadn't tried to stop him. Why not? Travis was right--
this was hopeless. A twelve-foot one-man defense plane
against a hundred-foot assault/interceptor?
    As Stiles crawled into the Frog, the smallness of the utility
craft struck him like a club. The little detachable was a
holdover from previous technology, just something people
expected to see on a transport coach and could be used now
and then to scout a landing area or as a spotter. It had phasers,
yes, but hardly more powerful than a hand phaser, and not very
useful against large targets. It was amphibious, hence its nick-
name, but was almost never used in water; mostly it gave pas-
sengers the illusion of safety and options which it really
couldn't deliver. It hung from the belly of the big coach, more
of a wart than anything useful in a battle situation.
    And he was about to launch himself in this crackerbox and
pretend he could do something about a hundred-foot A/I plat-
form.
  He had to do something. This was something.
    They didn't need him anyway. Spock could pilot the coach,
probably better than Stiles could, so he was useless here.
Might as well take a wild shot at clearing the coach past the
platform out there. The A/I was big, but not maneuverable. It
was made to do exactly what it was doing--hover out there,
block the path, and pounce on whatever those planes funneled
through to it. If the coach could just get past it, the A/I
couldn't chase them.
  One chance... one chance ....
    He dropped into the pilot's seat, which accepted his back-
side like a big hand, and didn't bother buckling himself in.
No--better buckle in, just in case he had to spiral or yaw hard.
Wouldn't help to fall out of the seat onto his head, would it?
    The belts were hard and stiff over his shoulders and around
his chest. His feet fell upon the lower trim controls. His gloved
hands gripped the yoke. The Frog's comm system would auto-
matically tie in with his cornbadge... he could still communi-
cate with his team, with the ambassador... they'd be able to
both see and hear him making a further fool of himself.
    Though it seemed minutes were going by, in fact it was only
seconds before he had yanked the release and the Frog had
drifted away from the coach, instantly going to its own power
once it felt itself let go.
    Stiles rammed the throttle, and was suddenly rushing out
from under the belly of the big gray-white transport as if burst-
ing out of a cloud.
  "Mr Stiles, Spock here."
 The voice in his ear startled him.
 "Stiles, sir," he responded automatically.
    "You are at full throttle. You realize that the Frog will burn
itself out quickly at that speed. In less than three minutes,
you'U have nothing left."
    "I know that, sir. I figure there won't be much point in doing
any less."
  "Your choice, Ensign."
     "I'm coming into range, sir. I'm opening fire. I'll try to dis-
tract them enough that you can get by."  "Understood."
    Oh, that was charity. What were the chances his little pop-
gun phasers could do any damage to the enormous assault craft
rushing toward him between the snowy crags of the mountain
belt?
 He opened fire anyway.
 Shoot/Shoot/Again/Direct hit/
    Bolts of red energy cut through the mist and skittered across
the big gunladen maw of the A/I. He was way ahead of the
coach now, in range of those guns, but they weren't firing at
him. Why not? He was firing on them, so why weren't they
returning fire?
    No point. They knew the Frog wasn't worth the trouble,
couldn't pose a threat to them, couldn't possibly stop them
from taking down the coach.
    And judging by the way his phaser energy sparked and fiz-
zled on that ship's shielded skin, they were right. In seconds he
wouldn't have any power left, at this speed, this effort.
 The Frog rocketed over the top of the A/I, treating Stiles to a
vision of bristling guns just waiting to skin the coach to death.
All he had to do was distract them for eleven seconds, but they
weren't playing. His last chance to be a hero was fizzling just
like his phaser shots. They were ignoring him.
    "They're ignoring me," he muttered. "Sir, how close are you
to escape velocity?"
  "Twenty-five seconds, Ensign."
    "Sir... they're not paying any attention to me. How can I
get them to chase me instead of you?"
  "It's unlikely that you can," Spock bluntly told him.
    Oh, why not? He'd come this far into the valley of the stu-
pid. One more step couldn't do any worse.
    "Sir;' Stiles began, "I need a suggestion. I'll do anything for
that eleven seconds."
      "Very good, Ensign. Consider this--that interceptor is not a
space vessel. It depends upon lift."  "Thank you, sir!"
  "You'll be in extreme danger, Ensign."
    "Doesn't matter, sir. In a couple of minutes, the Frog won't
have anything left anyway. Here I go .... "
    Spock didn't respond to that. Stiles waited for the zing of
heroism to strike him, but nothing happened. He was too laden
with the silliness of his mistakes to take much credit for what
he was about to do. Pulling back on the Frog's steering mecha-
nism, he vectored full about and once again streaked toward
the interceptor when he heard the decisive Dutch accent of
Fighter Wing Leader Beret Folmer.
    "Oak One, Brazil. Stiles, what're you doing? You can't fight
that thing off with a Frog.t"
     "Maintain position, wing leader," Stiles told him. "Never
 mind me."
  "Eric, you're making the wrong decision."
  "No, it isn't. Cut the chatter"
     Before him he saw the A/I piercing the clouds on its way
 down the natural path formed by mountains on both sides, and
 beyond that the rushing coach heading directly toward him, its
 nose up slightly as it tried to reach up and over the A/I and
 gain escape velocity. Not being a fighting craft of any kind,
 rather the kind of vessel that would be protected rather than
protect itself, it did nothing fast, nothing fierce. Everything
was slow and steady--eleven seconds too slow.
    In just a moment the coach would be in range of the blunt
force of the A/I's guns, and be driven down with its precious
payload.
    Stiles aimed the nose of his Frog downward, directly at the
AtI's tail fins. A slave to lift... to the air it rode upon. Not a
space vessel... why hadn't he thought of that himself?.
    Like a mosquito buzzing a raven, he shot downward from
the high peaks until all around him became a spiky blur. The
A/I's big black body grew before him with stunning speed
until it filled his forward canopy and he could see nothing but
the interceptor and the nearing form of the coach beyond it. All
he could see of the coach was the gleaming underbelly--what
an angle Spock was piloting! The stresses--could the coach
take that?
    "Didn't know it could do that" he gasped, but there was
hardly any sound. "Ambassador, this is Stiles. If I disable that
interceptor, the five fighters can drive it out of your way. Do
you copy?"
    "Understood. Three fighters would probably be sufficient,
Ensign. The other two can effect rescue--"
    "No," Stiles said. "Not again. Keep them in formation, all
five of them."
 "Explain your plan."
 "I'm gonna clip that thing."
    He was surprised when Spock didn't argue. Stiles found
himself both gratified and humiliated by his hero's silence.
    Then, abruptly, a giant hand reached out and slapped him
blind. A crash like thunder deafened him.
 Collision !




Chapter Three

ThE FROG RAKED its port wing hard across the A/I's tail pec-
toral, shearing the fin off halfway down. With a sickening
pitch, the tiny defender skidded over the metal top of the inter-
ceptor, then scraped off to one side like water sheeting off,
now hopelessly damaged, and for a silly moment hung side by
side in the sky with its enemy. As Stiles watched, the big inter-
ceptor almost casually yawed and lost altitude, falling away
beneath the coach and rolling almost on its side, which pre-
vented it from firing its forward guns at anything but the near-
est mountain. The A/I took a couple of shots, but missed the
coach entirely.
    As if in a dream, Stiles listened to the reactions of his fight-
er pilots.
      "The interceptor's falling off! All wings, attack formation.t
Get under the coach and drive the A/I down!"
  "Affirmative. Formation Attack-Alpha."
  Brazil's voice--giving the strike order.
    Falling apart around Stiles, the Frog shook violently and rat-
tled enough to make a man insane. Nothing responded as
Stiles fought for trim--hopeless. The big interceptor was veer-
ing out of control, but unfortunately so was he.

    "I'm going down!" he shouted, more to himself than anyone
listening. He was glad when Spock didn't try to give him last-
minute instructions. The Frog was croaking and there was
nothing to be done about it.
    "The A/1 is veering off. They've got no control. Beautiful...
Stiles, you did it. Eric?"
  "I can't see him anymore.t Bernt, have you got visual?"
  "That's negative. He's of!my screens. No visual."
  "No visual, Travis."
  "Oak One, do you copy? Do you copy.t"
"Pecan, Chestnut--stay information! We're not out yet/"
Then, Spock's voice, like an oasis amid the youthful cries of
the others. "Coming to fiank speed. All wings maintain forma-
tion."
    Without control he skimmed through the mountains, past
knives of rock and white slopes of snow, scratching and plow-
ing through whatever scooped up into his path, buffeted fierce-
ly by winds and the force of his own fall. Around him the Frog
cracked, broke, screamed, until finally an insurmountable crag
caught the starboard wing and whipped him into a snow drift.
  "Formation Emerald, all wings."
    "I saw where he went. Right into the snow crest on the sun-
side of mountain on the starboard beam. Permission to break
formation and effect search."
  "Negative. Maintain formation."
    Spock's voice. Stiles clung to the low steady tone. It was the
last thing he heard as his craft smashed into a snowy crevasse,
as if the boot of a giant had scuffed a sandcastle. As the Frog
plowed through fresh snow at flight speed, the impact 'knocked
Stiles roughly left and fight, held in place by the straps he
almost hadn't bothered putting on. He saw only a spray of
white pitted with rocks as the Frog's nose drove itself into the
mountainside. The din of contact with mountainous matter and
hard-packed snow muffled his helpless shouts and gasps. He
crammed his eyes closed and waited to die. Pain raced up his
left arm so hard, so sharp that he tried to turn away from it. His
left arm tingled, went numb. Had it been cut off?.
    And suddenly, sharply, like a flat stone dropping, there was
silence.
    No... not quite. He could still hear the skitter of bits of ice
and rock settling outside. He opened his eyes.
    Nearly dark... the Frog was completely buried in snow.
Entombed... and where? On top of an Alp? Even if he could
get out, he could never survive.
    Blood ran down the side of his face. Into his eye... and
stung a little.
    He was lying nearly on his back, with his knees up before
him and the cockpit controls where the open sky should be.
Just lucky to have landed on his ass instead of his head...
could're been worse, could be hanging here upside down with
the blood rushing to his head, looking dopey and unable ....
  "Spock to Stiles. Can you hear me, Ensign ?"
    The voice from the comm unit jolted him as if he'd been
stricken bodily. He flinched. "What... ?"
    "Ensign Stiles, this is Spock. We've reached escape velocity.
Sensors indicate you've crashed and are stationary, but intact.
Is that true? Are you down?"
    Stiles coughed and tried to focus his aching on the instru-
ment panel. Yes, he cotfid still see... tiny emergency lights
cast a soft red glow, just enough to see by.
    "Yes, I, uh... I'm crashed" he muttered, coughed again,
then winced at the searing pain in his arm. "Down behind the
lines...."
  "Are you stable?"
  "No idea."
    Above him, the canopy was completely darkened to a severe
gray by a ton of snow and ice and dirt, only the tempered
windshield preventing him from being crushed or suffocated.
    How much fallout was he buried under? No way to know.
Should he try to push out? Would it hold him here or let him
slip down into a fissure? Was snow heavier than soil?
    "Snow...." he murmured, perplexed. Then a gurgling laugh
rose in his throat. "I'm from Port Canaveral."
    The sound of his voice drummed in his ears. Should he be
doing something? Trying to get out?
    There was no getting the canopy open under that much
weight, and he sure couldn't do it with only one arm.
  Still numb?

  3(up.
    "All wings, come to stratospheric formation. Transfer to
space thrust."
  "Coach, Brazil. Copy that. All wings comply."
    "But I can still get down there. ! can land on that moun-
tain-"
    "Don't take action until I get a fix on him. These readings
aren't steady."
 That was Travis's voice. He sounded strange ....
    Several seconds went by, long ones. Almost a minute. Well
past the time when the coach should're been clear of the
mountains. What was happening?
    Then Ambassador Spock's smooth words broke through the
crackling sounds of the pilots. "The pursuit aircraft are mov-
ing away. They have given up. The coach is no longer in dan-
ger, Mr. Stiles."
    Stiles cleared his throat and muttered, "Thanks for telling
me, sir."
    "One of the wings can now break formation and effect res-
cue with relative dispatch."
 "Rescue?... oh... me...."
    With a grunt, Stiles pushed off his helmet, surprised to see a
crack in it, and realized his head had been driven into the
canopy's side support strut. No wonder his head hurt.
    "They may want us to try that," he decided. "There might be
other hostiles out there. One ensign against five pilots and thirty-
five dignitaries... Leave the fighters where they are, sir. I'll
just... stay here."
    It was all bravado. If Spock insisted, Stiles knew he wouldn't
stand up to him. He could feel his friends listening, see Travis
Perraton's friendly face blanked with astonishment that they
were leaving a man behind, see Perraton's European features
turn ruddy, his blue eyes widen. Suddenly Perraton--and all of
them, really--seemed too young for tiffs job. Maybe Stiles was
fooling them, but he wasn't fooling the ambassador.
    No one said anything. Nobody wanted to interrupt with the
ambassador talking.
    Glad they didn't say anything... that would've been even
harder. Hearing their voices...


    Spock... a half-dozen Starfleet officers rolled into one. An
ambassador of high standing and galactic respect. A name
known in the farthest reaches, on the tiniest colonies, on the
lips of every Federation enemy. Spock and Starfleet were
almost the same word. He could're insisted on a rescue
attempt. Stiles would've backed down, let himself be rescued.
Looked like a dopey kid being pulled out of the water because
he'd showed off and fallen in.
 Was he refusing rescue to avoid that moment?
    Spock didn't press him. Stiles knew what that meant--he
was being given something. Spock wasn't countermanding
Stiles's decision to sacrifice himself. Ensign or not, Stiles was
in charge, even if only in a token way. Nobody thought this
would be a hard mission. He felt a little silly that Spock was
giving in to him, handing him some kind of lollipop. On the
other hand, was Spock going out of the way not to take some-
thing away from him? Maybe...
    A hard bump made the mountainside vibrate. He felt
it, through the Frog's skin, through the snow, through his
jacket.
    "There's somebody outside," he spoke up. "Something just
landed near me... it's got to be them! They're here--they
found me!"
    "Yes, we have them on sensors. A Pojjana jump-jet just set-
tled on the mountain near you."
    Stiles's mouth went suddenly dry. "How long... do you
think they'll take to get through to me?"
    Spock didn't answer him. Maybe he was busy up there,
steering that coach into space, avoiding the three Pojjan moons
that looped the planet so far away, so much farther than Earth's
moon.
    "I didn't know the coach could take that much stress;' he
sighed. "You put a lot of angle on it. Why didn't it stall? How
do you do that?"
    "Simply, but the Academy prefers not to teach the tricl~ I
forced the P/T levels over tolerance so the thrusters had more
power."
  "Why didn't the tanks blow from the extra pressure?"
  "Tolerance levels are standardized at point of safety. Going
over tolerance only means that measurement becomes unreli-
able."
 "You mean you were just taking a chance?"
 "Exactly."
 "Wow . . ."
    Listening to thumps and thuds from the deep outside, Stiles
saw a picture in his mind of the transport coach, piloted by
Spock instead of himself, angling more steeping into the late-
day sky than Stiles thought it possibly could. He never guessed
a ship like that could take so much lift stress. He wouldn't
have known to take the chance of added stress, wouldn't have
been able to get the coach up fast enough to make use of the
eleven seconds.
    "I can hear them outside." He gazed up, only seven inches,
to the snowed-over canopy. 'q'hey're looking for me in the
snow. They're digging through... I hear the shovels...
Maybe they're putting explosives on me. Maybe they're not
going to dig me out at all. Why should they?"
  "Steady, Ensign. You will not be killed."
  "Respectfully suggest you don't know that, sir"
    "Of course not. Ensign, this sector is now red. Some time
may pass before the Federation can negotiate for your release.
Do you understand?"
     A tremor ran down Stiles's spine. "You mean... it might
take a couple of months?"  "Or longer."
    "Well... six months?" His hands chilled even beyond the
cooling temperature in the cockpit. Sweat broke out on his
brow in spite of the chill.
    Spock didn't answer him. That meant something. Longer
than six months?
 "Sir, tell my family... tell them I didn't... or just say..."
 "I will, Mr. Stiles. Be assured of that."
    With a sudden groan, Stiles shut his eyes. His request sud-
denly seemed silly, melodramatic. But more than anything else
it was pointless. He reviewed in his mind the faces of his
father and grandfather, his aunts and uncles, the wide extended
legacy of Stiles service to Starfleet and several other notable
planetary corps within the structure of the Federation. Wher-
 ever they lived, wherever they were, the Stiles family made a
 show for themselves.
     He shifted this way and that, but there was no room for
 movement. He was denied even that pitiful comfort and was
 forced to sit bere and look back.
     "Sir," he began again, "never mind about my family. Don't
 tell them anything. Just tell them I'm... not around anymore."
     There was a brief silence, heavy and notable, like the pause
 between movements of a symphony. The baton remained in the
 air, the audience didn't applaud, the instruments were up.
     "1 shall tell them you performed your duty most admirably,
 young man," Spock slowly promised. "You rose to an unfore-
 seen challenge."
     A mirthless chuckle broke from Stiles's chest. More chari-
 ty. Good words for a pathetic slob, so he wouldn't feel so
 pathetic.
  Too late.
     "Rose to it? I caused it. It was only unforeseen because I
 didn't foresee it." He shivered deeply, to his bones. "Don't
 bother with my family. Starfleet'11 send them the official
 report. Don't tell them anything else... they won't be
 impressed. This story isn't that good. Doing duty's not enough
 for them. I'd be better off just lost at sea. No stories."
    "Ensign," Spock began again, "you needn't cheat yourself
You fit into an age-old tapestry of military valor. Even the
small deeds are knightly."
    "Oh, please, sir, I've heard that since I was six. We take an
oath... we wear uniforms... we take action... when there's
trouble, we go toward it instead of away from it. We're nfili-
tary. Can't argue with that. It's got to mean something. if it
means I stay here, then that's what it means."
    A mechanical whine, muffled by the snow, found its way
down to him. Drilling. Or cutting, maybe. He must be trapped
under rocks or--were there trees up this high? He hadn't both-
ered looking.
    His cold face cracked with a sorry smile as he reviewed the
last few seconds. "I hope the other guys can't hear you talking
to me this way."
 Spock's voice crackled. Growing more faint. Distant. "1 sent
Ensign Perraton to tend to the passengers. I have no need of a
navigator. We are quite alone."
    Overhead, the scratching sound was louder now, more delib-
erate. The diggers weren't searching anymore. They were pur-
posefully digging. They'd pinpointed this spot. Maybe a fin or
wing was sticking out of the snow. Or maybe they had sensors
that had caught him. They'd sure found him fast. Things sure
could change suddenly.
    Stiles let his head fall against the high seat back. "So...
how'd you know I wanted to be alone? All my life I've heard
how Vulcans don't have intuition... y'know, no... hunches.
No emotional anchors, like us fallibles do."
 "And you have believed the stories," Spock said.
    Stiles touched a swelling on the side of his head and
laughed minimally. "Oh, you're making fun of me now."
    "With you, Ensign," the ambassador offered gently, "not of
yoU."
 "Everybody always says Vulcans can't joke."
  "Of course not. Nor do we love, fear, lie, or doubt."
    Stiles laughed again. Strange that he could laugh... strange
that this particular person could make him feel better when
none of his friends had been able to.
    The shovels, diggers, drills... getting closer now. Some-
thing scratched the nose of the Frog. Stiles saw a finger of
golden sunlight appear in front of his left knee. They were
almost here. In minutes, he'd be in the hands of the enemy.
Would they kill him?
    They had a lot of options. He had none. Here he was,
trapped in his capsule, probably about to die, and even though
his mission was successful, he crashed because of his own lack
of foresight. His family was going to be disappointed in him...
all those commanders, captains, lieutenants, heroes of the
Romulan Wars--and one kid who never made it past ensign
because he made a mistake on hits first mission and got himself
shot down.
    He'd blown it. Allowed himself to be distracted. Put all his
fighters behind him and figured nobody would think to come
up in front. He was ashamed that Spock had been forced to
point out something so obvious. That's what would go in the
report, and on top of it all, after everything else, Spock was
seeing that he was afraid.
 "It's hard to breathe," he wheezed. Life support off?.
    "The blue marker dot on the upper left of your emergency
grid, ensign. Push it upward."
"Blue dot... oh. Got it--I hear the fan now. That's better.. :'
Fresh air, siphoned from outside. Not warm, though. In fact,
the incoming air was frigid. But air was air and it cleared his
head.
    At the very least, he'd be captured now. Maybe tortured.
Maybe killed. Would it be better to get killed fight now, here
on this mountain?
    A crawling aneurysm of mortal fear moved through his
brain, infecting his body until he was cold and shuddering. He
felt it working on him even as he tried to keep it in check. It
tightened his throat and changed the timbre of his voice. Could
Spock hear that in his voice? Hear that he was afraid?
    The sound of shovels scratched the top of his packed snow
prison.
 "It's getting cold...."
    Stiles shuddered through a sigh and this time saw his breath,
as the chill from outside permeated the cockpit.
    Another scratch--broader, brighter. They'd have him in a
minute or two. Now he could hear voices above. Bootsteps.
Shouts.
  "Sir..."
  "Yes ?"
  "I don't know... how well I'm going to do," he admitted.
    "This is hardly routine for you," Spock offered. "You are
twenty-two."
    '~l'wenty-one." Miserable now, beginning to feel the pain in
his shoulder through fading numbness, he tried to shift his feet
but failed even to do that.
  What did Spock mean? So he was twenty-one. So what?
    Old enough to control simple fears. Old enough to put fear
aside. What was a veteran like Spock really thinking of him?
    He sank more deeply into his seat, let his legs go limp,
flexed his good hand, and touched the frosted canopy near his
face. "I guess this is where you tell me everything'11 be all
fight eventually, and I'm brave and ought to be proud of
myself."
    "I hesitate to quote poetry," Spock said, and Stiles could
almost see the hint of a smile.
    So he smiled too. "Sir, I wouldn't know what to do with it if
you did. I don't even read the insides of my birthday cards."
    For a moment there was no sound from the now-distant
coach, no response, no coddling. The comm unit crackled,
struggling to pull in the spaceborne signal through systems
that were probably broken or fried.
  "I'm losing you, sir," Stiles said.
  "Yes, your reception signal is thready."
  "Should I try to boost?"
    "Distance is a factor. No need to strain yourself I'U boost
from here."
    Stiles's hand fell back to his side and he let himself go limp,
trying to ease the ache in his head. A little shaving of frost fell
from the canopy where he'd touched it. The flakes landed on
his fight cheek and stuck there, like a frozen tear. His face was
too cold even to melt it.
    "The Federation will negotiate for your freedom," Spock
told him placidly. "l'll see to it personally."
    "Don't make a spectacle," Stiles grumbled. "I don't want to
be known as the little goof with the big rescue. Then some-
body else'11 be the hero and I'll just be the jerk who crashed in
enemy territory and cost a mint to get back. I don't need that...
God, my shoulder hurts... think they know how to set a
human arm?"
  "Yes, they know how."
    Spock's voice was small now, but clear of static, patient and
gentle, laden with understanding of what he was feeling. How
could that be?
    "I have worked with many humans in my lifetime. There is
great comfort for me among them, and much to admire. Above
all traits, ! believe, I most admire their resilience. Be pliant,
Eric. Once you survive this, you 'tl be a more valuable officer.
And a better man."
    Stiles heard the words, but it was as if he were listening to
wind. Substantial, effective... but he didn't understand what
made it happen. An instant later he could barely remember
what Spock had just said--all he remembered was the sound
of his own name spoke so adaptably by that famous voice.
    "What do you think I should do?" he asked simply. His
throat was raw now. There were fumes in here. "If they don't
kill me... what do I do to change? I already try so hard...
how can I be better?"
    Now that the question was asked, he steeled himself to lis-
ten, to remember a long sermon, the kind his grandfather used
to lay on him when there was some lesson to be learned or
some grave social gaff to be corrected. All the way home from
wherever they were, talk, talk, talk, preach, preach, preach.
    And that was why he was surprised. As sunlight broke
through above his face and the snow was scraped away from
the cockpit's canopy, as he saw the faces of Poijana soldiers
peel back the rocks and crud from his Starfleet coffin, Stiles
absorbed Spock's final word. Only one word... it echoed and
echoed, rolled and settled, it chimed a resonant bell tone. He
would hear it for the rest of his life.
  "Relax."

Chapter Four

HARD TO BREATHE. STUFFY.
    Metal banging against metal. The whine of mechanical
treads. Lower pitch than the aircraft. A hatch breaking open--
and Stiles fell inelegantly forward and landed on a stone floor.
    His head throbbed, his left shoulder and arm ached... at
least the paramedics, or whatever they were, had bandaged the
arm before stuffing him into the brig box on their plane. He'd
thought it might've been broken, but it wasn't. His shoulder
had been jammed into the side of the cockpit, numbing his
whole arm. They'd given him a drug he thought might be poi-
son, but turned out only to be a pain pill. For some reason,
probably leverage, they didn't want him dead. Not yet.
    Now he was here. He knew a prison cell when he saw one.
Unlike Starfleet's fancy bright brigs, this one just had the old~
fashioned titanium bars. Sure. Why use expensive energy
beams to hold prisoners in when plain metal would do the
same job and couldn't be shorted out?
    Pressing his right hand to the stone floor, Stiles pushed him-
self from his knees to a sitting position. Tile, not stone. Big
squares of rough-glazed tile. What was it his mother had called
that color? Terra cotta.

    Over his shoulder, the oval door or hatch or whatever it was
that he'd come through clanked shut and barked loudly as it
was locked from outside. Nobody had talked to him, nobody
had counseled or advised him, nobody had told him what was
going on or how long he would be here, or what the legal
process would be. Did the Pojjans even have a legal process?
How much of a coup was going on here? Was there a govern-
ment in place at all?
    Ashamed of his failure to do simple mission homework, Stiles
realized he had no idea what to expect or any way to judge what
had happened to him. The Pojjan soldiers had pulled him off the
top of the mountain, bandaged his arm, mn some kind of scanner
over him, flown him back and dumped him into this cell. Was
this a prison? Or just a holding cell? Would he be here for six
months, or moved to a trial, a sentence, a hotel room'?
    "I'm not a criminal," he murmured, trying to sort all this
out. "Not a rebel or terrorist... so what am I?"
    With notable effort, he stood up on shaky legs. His head
throbbed relentlessly. The cell was dry at least, and warm
enough. Well, at least they weren't barbarians. And there was
light. Not much--enough to see by, not enough to disturb
sleep. All the lights were outside his cell, beyond the titanium
bars. Probably they had learned that light fixtures could be
cannibalized into lock-blowing bombs. He remembered that
from the Academy alternative-energy course.
 A bunk and mattress, a woolly blanket, a toilet, a sink.
    "Welcome to Alcatraz," he grumbled with a sigh. "Hope
they feed me."
 "You'll be fed."
 Stiles flinched back a step. His heart drummed.
 "Who's talking?" he yelped. "Where are you?"
 "In the next cell."
    Stiles pressed against the bars, trying to see, but the cells
were side by side and there was no doing it. The bars were
cold against his cheek.
 "Are you a prisonefT' he asked.
 "Seems obvious."
    A male voice. Sounded young. Not old, anyway. Sounded
like it could be one of his own team.
 "Are you a crinfinal?"
 "My incarceration is political."
     "Political... so's mine, I think. What're they going to do to
us? Have they got courts on this planet? Are there laws?"
 "Yes, they have laws."
 "How soon will they--"
    "Not soon. They're in turmoil here. The Federation is leav-
ing."
 "Yeah, l've heard that rumor..."
    This was getting him no where. He couldn't see the other
guy, and if he asked too many questions, that guy would be
justified in asking questions also and Stiles would feel obliged
to answer.
 Then again, why not?
 "Who are you? What's your name?"
 "gevon."
 "Just 'Zevon' ?"
 "Yes. Who are you?"
 "Eric Stiles."
 "Human?"
 "Uh-huh."
 "Starfleet, then."
 "How do you know that?"
    "The only humans on this planet are either Starfleet person-
nel or Federation diplomatic corps workers. The Poijana would
never put diplomatic staff in prison."
    "Ah... they'll harass the ..military but not the civilians.
There's brainy."
    "The military understands that capture is part of the job. The
Pojjan know that."
    Stiles shuffled to his cot and sat stiffly down, then sank back
against the wall. "Are you saying that if I weren't Starfleet,
they wouldn't put me wherever we are7"
    "That's correct. They wouldn't have captured you at all. The
Federation would be hostile if civilians were made political
pawns. Starfleet is fairer game." "Oh, that's great .... "
    Lying back as he was, Stiles gazed at his uniform, at the
black field of shirt and pants, the ribbed waistband, and the
poppy-red shoulder band under his chin. It looked strange with
the eombadge missing. They'd taken it. So they knew it wasn't
just jewelry.
    "But wait a minute," he began. "I was guarding a coach full
of civilians and the Pojjana tried to shoot us down Why would
they do that? Isn't that making them political pawns?"
    "The Pojjana could have claimed the coach crashed. If they
gained possession of the civilians alive, they probably would
have put them back in the embassy and claimed some delay or
other."
  "Buying time?"
      "Most likely. The Pojjana are clumsy with politics. They do
things without knowing why."  "Just hedging their bets?"
    "Perhaps. The lingering of a thousand civilians is easier to
justify than the disappearance of one soldier."
    Stiles flexed his legs and winced at the stiffness. "What
you're saying is that I'm small potatoes."
    "I would suspect so," Zevon confirmed quietly. "If that
means what I infer."
  "Yeah..  mmm... ow..."
    From the other cell, the man called Zevon quietly asked,
"Are you injured?"
    "My ship crashed. I got knocked around. I thought my
shoulder was broken, but it's not. Mission was simple.. if
headquarters... if they'd just cued me in to the situation, none
of this would've happened. They should're briefed me. I'm
just an ensign. I'm not supposed to know everything. Some-
body should've known this would happen... so they can have
it. They don't come and get me? Fine. I'll stay here I don't
need Starfleet if they don't need me." Staring at the floor files
between the frame of his bent knees, he sighed. "I have a date
tomorrow night .... "
    Prison. Prisoner of war? But there was no war. why was he
a prisoner? Did a cold war have prisoners? How long?
    Ambassador Spock hadn't told him how long this might
last. Now Stiles understood--the ambassador had just not
known. He had deliberately evaded answering. The answer
was bad. More than six months?

    How long would it be before his hair got long enough to
braid? How much longer before he actually started braiding it,
just for something to do?
    Staring ahead at the next few minutes, with an aching shoul-
der and a throbbing head, somehow the concept of months
eluded him. Right now even the concept of lunch was eluding
him. How long before he got hungry? Would they feed him?
Was deprivation part of the torture regime? How much did this
Zevon really know about Pojjan habits? If Zevon himself was
Pojjan, he might not really know how they'd treat a human
prisoner.
  l'm on my own.
    "I wouldn't be here if I'd had a better team;' he complained.
"Travis was the only one with any off-station experience. It's
not my fault what happened."
  "You were in command of a landing party?"
  "It wasn't my fault!"
    The other prisoner fell to silence. Stiles's own protest
echoed briefly, then died. Ashamed and angry, he sat up and
stared at the floor tiles, memorizing the grout. As if framed in
each octagonal file, scuffed and scratched, he saw his team-
mates' faces.
    "Sorry..." he whispered. The faces all merged into one
face, his own--scarred and shriveled like the picture of Dorian
Gray sitting in the attic, hidden, corrupted with excesses.
    He pressed a moist palm to his forehead, brushed back his
hair, now gritty and sweat-matted, closed his eyes. Thoughts
tumbled. Blames and guilts blended into a single nauseous
mass.
  "I shouldn't ...."
    His voice pierced the tomblike quiet, then dissolved. He
clamped his lips shut before he lost control of what popped out
of them. Didn't know whether Zevon could hear him. Hoped
not.
    Hot in here. It hadn't been hot when he'd been dumped
here Was somebody playing with the temperature controls?
Trying to break him down?
    "It won't work!" He vaulted to his feet, skidding on the tile.
When nothing changed, he paced Across the cell, around the
perimeter, along the bars, to the toilet, back to the bunk. There,
he faced himself again.
     He turned and continued pacing. His arms and legs ached.
Why was he hurting more now than when he'd crashed? "Do you feel anything?"
 "I feel insulted. I feel like I'm being laughed at. ! feel--"
    "That's not what I mean. Do you feel anything unusual--
anything physical?"
    Stiles paused at Zevon's sudden return to the conversation.
"Like what?"
 "Pressure..."
 "I've got a headache, if that's what you're asking."
 "No! Are you standing?"
 "What?"
    Suddenly his eyes began to sting fiercely, his head to throb
horridly, as if he'd fallen into a vat of acid. Had he been shot?
Phasered? Some kind of Potjan weapon? Cramps gripped his
midsection and he grabbed the titanium bars of his cell, con-
tracting against them until his knees couldn't fit between them
anymore and he began to slip toward the floor. The floor was
shaking! The walls were rumbling!
    As he forced his eyes open, he saw the stone wall across
from his cell now tattered and flaking before his astonished
gaze.
    Over a whine in his ears he shouted, "What's happening!
What is this? An earthquake?"
    "Lie on the floor! Quickly!" The other prisoner called over
the increasing roar of collapsing stone and cracking mortar.
"Lie face up! Put your arms flat at your sides! Breathe
deeply !"
 "What is this? What is this! Why is this happening?
 "It's the Constrictor! Lie down!"
    Stiles pushed off the bars and rushed to the hatch through
which he'd been dumped in here. He pounded until his fist
rang with numbness. "Hey! Let us out of here! The building's
coming down on us! Let us out of here!"
  "Lie down, you fool," the other man said one more time.
    "Ow--ah--ah--!" Grasping at his tinging head with both
hands, Stiles staggered across the tiled floor, insane with new

agony. As if iron bars were hanging from his limbs, brute
force, like sheer invisible tonnage, pushed him to his knees.
The floor came up to meet him and he collapsed forward,
pressed physically to the cold tile as if crushed by a giant's
palm.
    With one last effort he dragged his tight arm under him and
managed to turn halfway over, then partially onto his back.
After that he gave in to the rule of sheer might. He gasped as
his flesh flattened against the files with such duress that he
could feel the edges of the tile and the shape of the gout lines
creasing his body. He stared, consumed with fear, at his own
arms stretching out before him.
    As his face lay against a tile, he saw a crack develop in the
floor, small at first and then larger, running through the bars
and out into the corridor, then up the wall. The building--
    Trapped on his side, Stiles tried to raise his head, to follow
the crack with his eyes, but his skull alone weighed a hundred
pounds. His am~s, sprawled out before him, actually began to
bow into the shape of the floor over the indentation of a drain
he hadn't even noticed until now. Insane with shock, he wit-
nessed the surreal horror of his right arm breaking, his unsup-
ported limb molding itself to the squared-off shape of the
drain. His lips peeled back with sheer agony.
    There, where his tight arm lay shattered and compressed
into the shape of the drain, a fissure opened in the floor, swal-
lowing the drain's metal grate, dismembering the tiles, uncou-
pling the titanium bars as shriveling compression took over
trod the planet opened up.
    Stiles felt himself fall, deadweight, strong-armed through a
cracking floor, and saw in his last glance the mangled building
unravel itself and cleave down upon him.
    Beneath the grind and roar of utter demolition, he listened
as if disconnected to the echo of his own cries.




Chapter Five

"CAN YOU HEAR ME?"
 "You don't have to yell, Eric."
 "We're doing whatever you say."
 "Stiles?"
    "The Federation will negotiate for your freedom. I'll see to
it personally."
 "Wasn't so hard."
 "This is hardly routine for you. You needn't cheat yourself"
 "Eric Stiles! Can you hear me?"
 "Relax."
    Voices pumped through a haze of agony. Had to answer
them. How else would they find him?
    Cold stuffy air lay against tons of crushed stone and the
sharktoothed edges of cracked and disrupted floor tile that now
formed more of a wall, bracing one side of a deep fissure.
    Faint light swam above, dusty shafts of light, offering no
comfort but instead flaming the ugliness of what lay above and
around.
 Water dripped somewhere nearby. Hear it, smell it.
 Feel it--his left thigh was soaked.
 At least l've still got a leg.

    Eric Stiles tried to raise the leg he'd just rediscovered. The
knee came up a few inches, which forced him to balance by
raising his head and shoulders--agony seating through his
right arm, shoulders, and right side. He threw his head back
aud gritted his teeth. The effort drove him all the way to con-
sciousness, suddenly, like hitting a rock, and his eyes shot
open. The light he had seen as a blur now focused far over-
head. It must be... forty feet up. Had that been the ceil, up
there? Was that the same light in the corridor outside his bars?
 "I hear you. I'm trying to reach you."
 Who was that?
    Until he heard the other voice, this one clear and not far
away, Stiles hadn't been aware that he was moaning, wincing
out the sheeting pain in his right arm. Broken. He remembered
now. It had been sucked into the shape of the tile drain, broken
in at least two places.
    Were the bones popping through the skin? Would he bleed
to death from a broken ann?
 "Eric Stiles, speak if you can."
    No, leave me alone. I'm almost dead. Let me finish. Com-
plete one thing. Follow through on this one thing.
    Slowly, more slowly than the trickling of thought or water,
his body adjusted to the constant pain. As he stopped strag-
gling, stopped trying to lift himself, gradually his ann settled
from searing mind-numbing agony to an acceptable throb with
his fingers numb. The numbness itself hurt, but after a time he
was able to concentrate on the hazy light far overhead and play
mental games with it. He endured its mockery, accused it of
fickleness, fielded its insults, and claimed it was impotent.
Surging in and out of awareness, he conducted a conversation
with the faint light and imagined that it was singing to him.
    At that point, the fleeting thought that he might be delirious
finally settled home and he cleared his throat just to hear his
own voice. Just as he began to drowse again, something
crashed---the sound of brick and tile falling.
 Stiles flinched bodily and raised his head. "Who's there?"
 "Zevon."
 "Where are you?"
 "Making my way to you. Can you come toward me?"
    "My leg" Stiles gasped roughly, "it's pinned under some-
thing."
    Only now did he comprehend that his leg was caught, only
when he actually heard the words, even though he'd spoken
them himself. Was the leg cut off?. Just an imagined sensation?
He could feel his toes. Was that important?
    "Did the building collapse?" he asked. His words echoed
slightly, enough to offer a sensation of cave dwelling.
    Zevon's response filtered uneasily from far away. "A sink-
hole has opened beneath the jail building. We fell into it. It
may have saved our lives by relieving the stress at the critical
moment."
 "What stress?"
 "The Constrictor. A particularly harsh one this time"
    Stiles paused and concentrated on breathing. He'd heard that
Constrictor word before. Where?
    Resting his left hand on his chest, he felt himseft breathe.
In, out, in, and a sigh.
 "This is... this is really... what's the word--ironic?"
 "What is?" Zevon sounded closed-in, muffled.
 "I pulled rank to get this mission"
 "How did you?"
    "The ensign who was up for duty that night, he was on my
watch rotation. When I heard about somebody getting a chance
to evac Ambassador Spock... what an opportunity! I rotated
the other guy to an escort mission off the starbase. When the
name for duty officer came up, it was mine."
    Glancing around his jagged stone prison, Stiles noted with
clearing eyes the truly freakish surroundings which would now
only in the most generous of mists have resembled a building.
Twisted pipes and structural supports lay in tatters around him,
the walls of former street-level chambers now fractured in
dozens of places, so that plasterwork, concrete sections, brack-
ets, lathe, joists, and support rods showed their gory broken
edges. His jail cell had been on the street level. Now he was
forty feet below the street, in what could be described as a
wide well-shaft walled in on all sides by the remains of the
floors above.
 "Still in the cell" he muttered.

    Stone and metal collided somewhere in the dimness, behind
a huge slab of concrete that must be the remains of the wall
between his cell and Zevon's. How much of the broken build-
ing had wedged itself between them?
      "Is there anybody else in here?" Stiles raised his head.
"Wish I could move... rm so... cold..."  "Can you see your bunk?"
    Bunk? Oh--S~es blinked and forced himself to figure out
his surroundings. There was the toilet, standing on its head
with a piece of support rod piercing the bowl. What if he had
landed over there? What would that rod have done to his body?
    "Has your bunk fallen somewhere near you?" Zevon asked
again, more forcefully despite the muffling of the wall material
between them.
 Stiles turned his head to the left. "It's right next to me."
     "Pull the blanket or the mattress on top of you. Cover your-
serf with it." "Why?"
 "Because you're going into shock:'
    "Oh, I'm just... it's just that my leg's stuck and... I
can't...."
"You're getting cold. The temperature down here is still--"
"Look, I don't even know you! You could be some kind of a
murderer or a criminal. Why should I listen to you? You're
coming over here to kill me, aren't you?"
 "Pull the blanket over you. Cover your body."
    "You just don't want me to see what you're going to do to
me:'
    "Cover yourself, Stiles. Do it immediately. This is an
order!"
    His right arm shivered violently, transferring the shivering
to his chest, his neck, and he suddenly tensed. The collapsed
cell around him echoed with a grievous moan. He couldn't dis-
obey orders. Starfleet officers had an obligation. Set a good
example. He was older than all the others.
    His left hand cramped briefly, shifted--he forced it upward.
The bunk lay on his left, tipped up on one of its points and
leaning against whatever was behind it. Supported by some-
thing he couldn't see... supported, as he had been by Travis,
Beret, Andrea, the Bolt brothers, the whole team. The Evac
Team.
 "Come on, Eric, lift your hand. You can do it."
    Travis Perraton stood up behind that bunk, holding the metal
rim, edging the bunk toward his hand until Stiles's fingers
touched the blanket.
 "Pull it down." Jeremy was there too.
    The woolly fabric was cool, but warmed almost immediate-
ly as he clutched it. Looking down at him, Travis and Jeremy
detached tile blanket from where it was tucked under the thin
mattress, and the blanket fell onto his arm and shoulder with
just a tug.
 "Thanks" he murmured. "I knew you'd get here."
    Travis nodded and looked at Andrea Hipp and Beret Folmer.
They reached down through the rubble and pulled the blanket
over Stiles's chest.
    Jeremy White's hand floated forward and tucked the blanket
around Stiles's right ribs. "There you go, chief."
    "What took you guys so long?" Stiles grumbled, smiling.
"My right arm's broken... you guys really butchered this
building. What'd you have to hit it so hard for? You could're
just blown one wall. I could've walked right out. I guess you
didn't want to take any chances. What a team... you're so
great to me... I'm sorry I yelled at you."
    "You always yell," Travis told him. "We quit listening a long
time ago."
  "Long ago" Andrea Hipp agreed with a grin.
     'Tm glad to see you," Stiles told them. "There's some guy
in the next cell... I think he's going to kill me." "why should he?" Andrea asked.
    Bernt Folmer shook his head. "You're just nervous. Don't
worry about him."
 "But he's a criminal or something," Stiles protested.
 "How do you know?"
 "He's in jail, isn't he?"
    Travis smiled and jiggled Stiles's knee. "So are you, light~
foot."
    Heartened by the presence of his team, Stiles raised his head
again and surveyed the sheered-off slab of wall that pinned his

right leg. "Why don't you lift this off me? I think I can stand
up if you do. My toes are moving."
    Uneasily Jeremy White glanced at Berut. "Well... we
can't."
    "Why not?" Stiles blinked at him, then looked at Andrea
and Bernt, then finally at Travis, from whom he would get the
straight answer. "What's wrong?"
    Travis Perraton leaned against a jagged rock pieming a
crack in the wall. "We didn't make it"
    "We tried to get you" Andrea added. "But they got us
instead."
    "what?" Shoving up on his one good elbow, Stiles almost
immediately collapsed in a surge of shock and misery. "Aw,
Travis... how'd you and Jeremy get out of the coach? Why'd
you leave? Berut, the fighters were guarding the coach! You
were the Wing Leader... you had your orders...." 
"We didn't want to leave you," Bernt said.
 "You're such a bag of emotions, Eric," Travis commented.
    Jeremy splayed his hands in a shrug. "So we're ghosts.
Could be worse. Eric, you're going into shock."
    "Stay awake, Eric." Travis knelt beside him. "Eric, stay with
me, lightfoot. Don't go to sleep. Are you listening? Open your
eyes ."
 "Cover up" Andrea reminded.
    "Okay, I've got my own orders, I get it:' Pulling the blanket
over his chest again, Stiles felt a series of moans run through
his body. The sound was detached, as if made by a wheezing
wind or a sighing pipe deep in the plumbing.
    "Stay awake, Eric," Bernt warmly repeated. "That's an
order."
    "Aye aye," Stiles murmured. "I feel better now. I'm warming
up. Thanks for looking after me."
    Travis offered his continental maitre-d' smile. "Sure, light-
foot."
 "We've got to go," Bernt said.
 Stiles forced his eyes open again. "So soon?"
 Andrea shrugged. "It's just that they hate aliens."
 "See ya;' Jeremy threw in.
 Stiles sighed. "See ya. Hey, what about my arm?"
"I can set your arm, ensign." Another voice. Soothing and
stable.
    He turned his head to his right, and there in the haze of fee-
ble light saw the one person who could sustain him in any cri-
sis.
    "Ambassador... you came" he rasped, as if thanking the
famous man for dropping in at a party. "And I'm just gum on
your shoe...."
    Spock tilted his elegant head accommodatingly and with his
long hands caressed Stiles's demolished arm. "You're under
great strain, ensign. I shall set your aim before I go. I have a
splint here, but the arm will have to be lifted briefly. Relax."
    The words were clear and inspired confidence. Stiles closed
his eyes, understanding that there would be terrific pain and he
would do better if he relaxed as ordered. Spock pressed a reas-
suring hand to Stiles's chest, as comfortingly as Travis or Jere-
my might have done, then cradled Stiles's shattered limb. His
expression became studious and determined.
    Stiles closed his eyes tighter, turned his face away, and
braced for punishment. When it came, the gripping anguish
took him completely by surprise despite his preparation. To a
young man in the prime of youth who had never had a broken
bone, pain's sheer overdrive utterly disemboweled him. His
head cranked back into the stone, his teeth gritted, and he was
dimly aware of his body as it wrung and twisted. With every
shred of self-control he possessed, he forced his right shoulder
to relax and his arm to disengage from the cruelty as he felt his
own bones grating.
    A disembodied voice phasered gasps into the cool cellar, but
he barely registered the sound as his own. Why was it taking
so long? Did it take hour to set a bone? Why didn't Spock just
cut the arm off?. Stiles dealt with the loathsome pain and the
sudden heaving of his stomach at this, his first taste of dynam-
ic physical torment.
    "Another moment.." Spock's voice was his lifeline, but
for the first time he didn't believe the hollow reassurance.
"Almost finished, ensign."
    "why do you have to hurt me?" Stiles moaned. "You're the
only one I ever respected...."

    "One more wrap... relax now. Let me secure this. Your arm
will adjust in a few minutes. Relax, Ensign... relax."
    A gentle hand pressed to the hollow of his shoulder, poised
there, and beneath the steadiness and reassurance of that con-
tact Stiles let his neck and shoulders go limp, and finally con-
vinced his legs to lie quiet. Then the nausea set in. His brow
furrowed and his lips clamped against the surging in his stom-
ach and throat. Moans shuddered through his body. He heard
them, felt them, but could no more control them than harness
the shattered building that now cradled him so far below the
street.
    His own groans wakened him from the drowse brought on
by pain. The first concrete thing he noticed was that the sear-
ing jab of broken bones in his arm had drained to a manage-
able ache. Or perhaps it hurt more than he thought it did, but
he was conditioned now to the racking and this was better than
that. Desolation of spirit sank in on him, and he opened his
eyes and looked to his right.
    A narrow form stood over him, plucking at the wrappings
on his arm. The slick dark hair seemed so familiar... the
features somewhat less angular than he remembered, but
close enough... soft light from overhead dipping into the
curves of those famous pointed ears, which had come
to represent such style and trust to anyone in the Federa-
tion ....
     Stiles blinked his eyes clear and moved his right leg. The
knee came up where he could see it. Torn pants.
 His right leg? Wasn't it pinned under a rock?
 "Did you move that by yourself?."
    "With a lever," the other man said. The voice was different.
"A piece of rod from the broken wall." He held up a three-foot
remnant of wall rod, then set it down again. "It broke, but it
did serve to move the slab from your leg. You're free now.
Don't move, however. You're injured."
    'TII be fine;' Stiles protested. "Takes more than an earth-
quake to get a Starteeter down."
    "Of course. Try not to move. I've splinted your arm with
two bent pieces of linoleum and strips of my blanket. I hope it
holds. Does it seem to pinch at all?"

     "Where's everybody else?" Stiles asked, ignoring the other
question. "Where'd they go?" "Who?"
    "The Evac Team. They were here... sit me up, will you,
sir?" Stiles drew a full breath, the first one in a long time that
wasn't cramped and tight. Oxygen surged into his body, clear-
ing his head.
 "You need not call me 'sir.'"
 "But I can't just..."
 "You may call me Zevon. I don't care for the other."
    Stiles gazed briefly at the long fingers holding him gently in
place. Now that his eyes were adjusted to the dimness and no
longer blurred by pain, he surveyed that hand, the long dark
red sleeve, the velvety padded jacket of gunmetal gray and
with a turtleneck collar of the same dark red, and above that a
stranger's face with somehow familiar features. The upswept
eyebrows, dark eyes, becalmed face but a young face. And
the hair was not cut in the typically Vulcan slick helmet, but
instead a rather roughly cut shag of cordovan brown, longer
than Spock's, less orderly, tucked behind the lovely shell-
shaped ears, the left of which had a small but noticeable scar, a
slight nip out of the side edge. So he'd been through some-
thing, some time in the past.
    Young, though. Not a hundred-plus-year-old ambassador
with a stunning history spanning back to the first openings of
deep space--someone else. Stiles straggled briefly with trying
to figure Zevon's age, but in his condition he couldn't compute
human years against anybody else's.
 "Did I lose consciousness?" Stiles asked.
    "Briefly" Zevon admitted. "I have no anesthetic to give you,
nor any pain medication. Sad thing, for a scientist to be unpre-
pared;'
    His expression was efficient, as one might expect, yet some-
how unashamedly sympathetic. Odd...
    "I guess we've been down here alone the whole time." Stiles
glanced past Zevon, just to make sure he wasn't seeing Travis
or Jeremy anymore. Or even the ambassador he so deeply
revered. Somehow they'd gotten him through the worst, and
refu'ed.

    "In fact;' Zevon confirmed, "I believe we were alone in the
jail building when the Constrictor came."
 "Constrictor... so what are you doing here, anyway?"
 "I am a political prisoner. I was hunted and kidnapped."
 "You personally? They wanted you?"
 "No. Anyone of my race."
    "Why? I mean, I'm just here because my ship crashed.
That's how they got me. Nobody hunted me down. Why would
they hunt you down? Is it just because they hate aliens?"
    "Some, but I command a particular kind of ship. They
thought my presence here would give them leverage:'
    "You command a ship? You said you were a scientist, not a
captain !"
    "Primarily I am a scientist. The command is a position of
royal favor"
    With a small shake of his head, Stiles frowned. "I never
heard of anything like that in the Vulcan fleet."
    "Not Vulcan." Zevon passively adjusted the position of
Stiles's fight arm. "Romulan."
    Stiles drew one breath, sharply, and heaved himself to a par-
tially sitting position, up on his right hip. The blanket slipped
from his body and felt to one side. He reached over his own
form, fished for the piece of rod he knew was here. His fingers
struck the rod, knocked it a few inches, and he found it again.
In a single swipe he raised the rod, knocked the Romulan
along the side of his face, drove him away, and pointed the
sharp end of the rod.
    "You get away from me!" he shouted. "Stay away from
me!"




Chapter Six

FROM ACROSS THE RACrGED REMAINS of their two crushed cells,
Zevon pressed a hand to his face where Stiles had struck him.
    "I am not your enemy;' he said. "I have no reason to hurt
you. We'll both die if you hold me off like this for long"
    "All Romulans are our enemies;' Stiles blistered. "You just
keep your distance!"
 "But I freed you from the stone. I set your arm"
    "To use me as some kind of hostage! I've been stupid
enough for one day! I'm not being stupid again. You stay back.
I'm getting out of here."
    Zevon lowered his hand. His face showed a single bruised
cheekbone, but no open wound. "We must help each other. The
prisoners are the last ones they'll dig out. You can't possibly
climb out of here, ensign. I doubt you can take a single step."
    'Tll take all the steps I need." Stiles held the metal rod
between them like a club or sword, ready to use it either way.
His right shoulder and arm pumped fiercely now as he exerted
himself, throbbing inside the splinted wrapping. Zevon had
managed to splint the arm with the elbow bent instead of
straight at Stiles's side, and that would prove an advantage as
he tried to get out of this hole.

     The nasty pit of broken rock wall and plaster sheets and
 plumbing spun around him suddenly, jagged edges and smooth
 sheets blending into a single blue-gray cylinder.
  "Lie down," Zevon suggested, "before you pass out."
  "I don't listen to Romulans!"
    His chest heaving with effort, Stiles let his body rest slightly
on the edge of a folded bolt of linoleum flooring. He had no
idea where the flooring had come from--there had been noth-
ing like this in the holding area. Probably from one of the
floors above. How many stories had collapsed on them? Since
he had never seen the building from the outside, he had no way
of knowing.
    Thinking of something else, he looked at his right arm. One
i~Tegularly cut sheet of linoleum had been formed around his
lower arm and another around the upper arm, held in place by
strips of wool. A single wedge of metal slat, some kind of cor-
ner brace, had also been strapped there, and was holding his
arm in a bent position. By resting the ann on his lap, he could
relieve the strain in his shoulder.
    "We'll just wait," he gasped. "Somebody'11 come to rescue
us. They'll come for us... they'll get here."
    "Ensign Stiles," Zevon attempted slowly, "we are prisoners.
There's been a Constrictor, a bad one. The Pojjana will be
cleaning up for months. They'll be digging the survivors and
bodies out for at least two weeks. Two of your weeks, I should
specify. While we may live that long, certainly you can't hold
that rod against me for so long. Is there a point in holding it
BOW?"
    '`There is," Stiles forced through a tight throat. "You're a
Romulan. I'm Starfleet. I don't have to believe a thing you say.
Maybe this wasn't an earthquake at all. Maybe you bombed
the building, you or your people. The Pojjans could dig us out
in an hour."
    "And so a standoff begins?" Zevon folded his arms, shook
his head, and offered a parental gaze. "You make yourself suf-
fer for nothing. I am no soldier."
    "I know what you are." His hand and ann shuddering under
the weight of the metal bar, Stiles drew his legs up under him
and tried to maneuver to a better position. The effort exhausted
him, made his head spin. A dark tunnel formed on either side
of his vision and he realized he was passing out. With a single
heave he rearranged himself. Fighting a sudden clutching mus-
cle spasm in his back, he twisted sideways and managed to
shift until he could lean back against the tilted mattress on the
bunk he had never yet slept upon.
    Sleep... sounded so nice fight now... deliberately he
drew long, steady breathes until his head cleared and the
tunnel-vision faded back. "We'll starve in here, like this."
    Zevon nodded. Had he just said something like that? Stiles
thought the conversation sounded familiar.
    "I hear water" the Romulan said. "If we have water, we can
survive."
    "Yeah? How long's a week on your planet?" Stiles blinked
to focus his eyes. He saw his bandaged left arm shiver as it
held the metal rod toward Zevon. One arm bandaged, the other
broken and splinted.
    Tightening his folded arms, Zevon leaned back against the
cracked wail behind him. "I'm counting in your weeks. I know
how humans think."
    Stiles raised his head from where he had allowed it to rest
back on the upright mattress. "Oh? And how is that? Just how
do we think? Since you know us so well, you who've never
met one of us before, how do humans all think? For your
information, soldier, humans are the least like each other of all
the races around. That's what my grandfather told me, and he
got it from nobody less than Captain James Kirk himself. So
you just tell me again how all humans think."
  "I meant no insult."
  "Stay away from me."
    Zevon held up a peaceable hand and nodded. "You must pull
the blanket back over yourself. You'll go into shock again if
you fail to stay warm."
     'Tll take care of myself, thanks." Trying to appear in con-
 trol, Stiles held the rod higher between himself and the Romu-
 lan, doing has best to convey an ongoing threat. "Spock
 expects me to act fight... get along here and... be an officer.
 I won't let him down. Somehow he'll know how I did. I've got
 to make him proud. ~.."

     Tilting his head, Zevon asked, "The ambassador? Is that
 who you were evacuating?"
  "Sure was. Did it, too. He's out and you can't have him."
     "We don't want him, ensign. Please try to relax and put
 that "
     "Don't you tell me to relax! Don't you say that word to me!
 That isn't your word."
     "Very well... I'll find another word... with whom did you
 have a date tomorrow night?"
     "Huh?" Stiles narrowed his eyes. Was this man telepathic?
 "How'd you know... her name's Ninetta. Ninetta Rashayd.
 She works down in atmospheric control at the starbase.
 Y'know, the base life support. Air. Took me two weeks to pro-
 nounce her name right so she wouldn't give me that look when
 I asked her out. Not that it matters much now...."   
"What kind of look?"
    "Well... that look. The one that tells you to keep your
mouth shut and don't even ask." His quivering left arm sagged
a little, the rod now resting on his knee. '~I'ravis used to rib me
about it. Jeremy used to imitate the look. He was really good at
it... really funny. I wonder if they're really dead ...."
   "I beg your pardon?
    "I shouldn't have yelled at them," Stiles murmured, scouring
the recent past, smelling his mistakes. "They were doing
everything I said to do... they were with me. And I gave thean
hell because I couldn't take a little fibbing."
    "Hardly matters now. Please put the blanket back on your-
self. Your face is going pale--"
    "What did you say made this Constrictor thing happen? Did
you tell me? If you did, I forgot it all."
    "Grayiron waves;' Zevon patiently explained. Clearing a
place for himself, he sat down on something Stiles couldn't
see. "They originate in space and bathe the planet. A recurring
disaster for the Pojjana. As unpredictable as lightning-lit wild-
fires. When the waves strike the planet, everything suddenly
gets two, three, or even five hundred percent heavier. What you
felt was the pressure of yourself suddenly weighing several
hundred pounds. Blood trying to slog through compressed
veins, muscles screaming for reliefi..."


 "I remember that part."
    "The Constrictor causes massive shifts in tectonic plates,
tidal waves, earthquakes, as you call them. Buildings collapse,
air vehicles crash... some people suffocate if it lasts more
than a few seconds... elderly people are crushed to death by
their own weight...." Waving his hand at their surroundings,
Zevon glanced up into the cylindrical pit that trapped them.
"Sinkholes and fissures open up under people while they're
pinned helplessly to the ground...."
    The rod sagged a little more, finally resting against Stiles'
leg with his limp hand upon the close end. He gazed at Zevon,
listening to the ghastly narrative just as he had listened all his
life to the stories of trial and triumph with Captain Kirk and
Mr. Spock at the helm of their legendary starship. This story,
though, had a glaze of the horrific. It was real. He'd just been
through it.
    How many other people out there were suffering? What had
happened to those rioters in the courtyard? The people in the
other embassies lining that brick area?  "How 1ong's this been going on?"
    "Nine years," Zevon said. "The first Constrictor wiped out a
fifth of the planet's population. Nearly a billion people died."
    "A billion ?" The word pulsed in Stiles' head, cooling down
the throbbing of his ann and back. How many million was a
billion? Why couldn't he do the mathematics? He was a pilot...
he could multiply figures... do the trigonometry for atmos-
pheric ... for... landing ....
    A billion. The number grew and grew, pressing him down
beneath the utter oppression of its swelling. If so many could
die, he could endure some discomfort. A broken arm abruptly
seemed surmountable, his moans and winces petty.
     "Yes," Zevon said. "At first I could scarcely absorb such a
 number. Now I can put a face to each one."
     "Why would you care so much about this Constrictor
 thing?" Stiles asked.
     But Zevon did not answer that. "Half the buildings were
 destroyed," he continued instead. "Countless trillions of tons
 of planetary material suddenly heavier for a few critical, dead-
 ly moments... even the most stoic among us was disturbed to
his core. The people of the planet worked valiantly to rebuild.
Then it came again, and we knew it was a recurring phenome-
non. After the second time, they gave up rebuilding and con-
centrated on structural shoring of the buildings and bridges
which had been strong enough to survive the first two. They've
constructed pressure-tolerant housing and connected buildings
so the structures could hold each other up... I could liken this
to a meltdown in a nuclear plant. Now the Po'jjana hate all
aliens, who brought this thing upon them. If they could put the
aliens off the planet, perhaps the Constrictor would go with
them. They've scrubbed their planet clean of all who were not
native, and still the blight from space has struck on. It will
continue to strike, and they will continue to hate you and me
and all aliens for what we have done to them. Periodically the
Constrictor will send out a roaring burp of radiation into sub-
space, which causes waves of gravitons. There is no turning it
off... it will go on indefinitely now. Our meager lifetimes
will never see the end of it."
    Something in the Romulan's voice, something in his beating
and the set of his shoulders caught Stiles with an unexpected
wave of empathy. Zevon's arms were still folded, as if to pro-
tect himself, and he gazed not at Stiles but at a nearby pile of
russet files that no longer resembled a floor. He seemed
resigned to the facts, but troubled by heating them so clinically
reviewed in his own voice.
    Again, with a different tone, Stiles raised the question that
his clearing mind insisted needed asking.
 "How do you know so much about this?"
    In a clear silence that now fell, moisture dripped from an
unseen pipe, draping its solemn percussion on Stiles' question
and Zevon's answer.
 "I caused it."

    "Nobody told me the Ronmlan Empire was at war with
these people!"
    At such a declaration, the walls crackled and vibrated, peb-
bles shivered down the tilted slabs into the sinkhole that had
trapped the two unfortunate prisoners.
 Across the well, the young Romulan's brows rose at Eric
Stiles' abrupt statement. "War? Oh... no, no, there is no war.
This was... utterly unintentional."
    Curbing a lifetime of parochialism for the moment, Stiles
reined in his assumptions. "Well... what happened, then?"
    "This sector is run by the Bal Quonnot, on another planet in
this system. They allowed us to conduct quantum-warp experi-
ments here."
 "Us? The... Romulan Empire?"
 "Yes."
 "You?"
    "Yes. The Pojjana have been struggling for identity amid the
Bal Quonnot administration. The Pojjana did not want to deal
with the Empire."
    "I don't think I'd deal with you either," Stiles said. "If you
caused this thing."
    Zevon actually nodded, perhaps in agreement, but certainly
in understanding. "The Pojjana let the Federation court them
for membership, to see if an alien science could retract what
another alien science had done to them. The Federation went
so far as to establish a planetary outpost."
  "How many of these things have happened?"
    "Six, now. In nine years. Not in predictable intervals. The
Pojjana led the Federation along, but avoided committing to
membership, hoping you would help. They wanted the benefits
but not the obligations."
    "It's happened before" Stiles confirmed. "I've heard of
planetary governments trying to get the best of both worlds,
refusing to make the decision but still accepting Federation
protection and help."
    "The Federation is disappointed," Zevon went on. "To
your credit, you practice what you preach. The sector is red
nOW."
    Stiles paused to fill his lungs with a full breath. His shoul-
ders squeezed in a muscle spasm, and he closed his eyes
briefly. "That's what Spock said... red sector. I don't know
what it means .... "
     "It means many things. Many banishments, many edicts,
 many restrictions."
  Stiles cleared his throat, and the effort made his ribs ache.
 "How do you know so much about... stuff I'm supposed to
 know?"
     "All Imperial royal family members are well-schooled in
 astral politics."
  Raising his head sharply, Stiles blurted, "Royal family!"
  "Yes."
     He stared, but Zevon did not meet his eyes. "How close...
 how high..."
     "The Emperor is my mother's brother. I am fourteenth in
 line for the throne."
  "Is that... close?"
     "In a population of two hundred billion inhabiting ninety
 planets, it is considered very close. However, it's unlikely that
 I shall ever actually take the throne. Certainly I have no desire
 to take it."
    A cold rock formed in Stiles's chest as he digested the fact
that he was involved in something with far more depth than he
had first imagined. What moments ago had been two minor
players in somebody else's huge drama now became some-
thing entirely different.
    "How did they capture you?" he asked. "If you're so...
royal"
    "I made the error of accompanying a landing party to take
measurements of--not that it matters. I forgot I'd been
declared a public enemy. There were bounty hunters. They
turned me over to the government. That riot out there... it
was sparked by my presence here in the city."
    "And the government is holding you here? Sounds like they
wanted the riots to spark. Why else would they keep you
here?"
    With a nod, Zevon congratulated him. "Very possibly. This
is not a usual holding area for political prisoners. They're usu-
ally held in the mountains." "So we're hostages?"
    "Certainly we carry some incendiary value for leverage"
Zevon contemplated, "but neither the Empire nor the Federa-
tion can cavalierly enter a sector declared red by any major
power. That is one of the few agreements between the Federa-
tion, the Empire, the Ktingons, Orions, Centaurans, and others
that has in fact stood the test of time and trouble. Compromise
of that is considered irremediable. Relations, friendly or
strained, would change instantly. The Pojjana may hope to
tempt all that, but..." The young Romulan shook his head, a
gesture of clear understanding of the situation. "You and I...
we are on our own here for some time, I should think."
    "Alone," Stiles echoed, "on a planet full of people who hate
everybody who isn't them."
    Shift the legs again. He forced himself to adjust. His shoul-
ders seemed like water now. In his hand the metal rod was like
ice and suddenly heavy. His elbow quivered as he tried to con-
tinue holding the rod up.
"You're a captain?" he asked, fighting for concentration.
"Centurion. I have... I had command of a science vessel.
My command was a royal favor. It's common to give lower
royalty command of royal barges. I thought myself very lucky
not to be carting one of my own relatives about in a barge. I
always remained aware that I hadn't earned command. I ceded
most ship responsibility to my subcommander. The crew
understood... they never spoke ill of me. What I earned was
status as a fully qualified astrophysicist. I was supervising the
unit conducting quantum-warp experiments that set up a sym-
pathetic subspace vibration of free-floating gravitons. Now the
Constrictor breaks on the shores of the Pojjan planet. And no
one will ever stop it."
     Zevon dropped his gaze to the messy excuse for a floor. He
 didn't look up anymore.
     "I'm something of an embarrassment to my family," he
 went on, so quietly that Stiles could barely hear him. "I'm
 not..."
  "A 'leader of men'T' Stiles supplied.
     As odd as it now seemed to see someone who looked like
 Zevon return a smile, the Romulan did in fact grin mildly.
 "Just to prove it, if you said that to any of my uncles or broth-
 ers, they would kill you just to prove differently"
      Returning the grin, Stiles chuckled. "Call my mother a sow,
 but don't tell me I'm no leader of men?"  "Something like that."
  As Stiles felt his small troubles shrink to inconsequence, he
gazed at Zevon and absorbed what he had heard. A hundred
questions--none good---crackled in his mind.
    "Well, here we are then," Stiles groaned. "A senior duty
ensign who finagled his way into command of a landing party
because of a family connection with Ambassador Spock. Big
me, I thought I could distinguish myself. You know what I see
when I look up the ladder? Captain Stiles, Lieutenant Stiles,
Lieutenant Commander Stiles, heroes of the Romulan wars,
officers on starship service... and little Ensign Stiles, who
died in the pit after botching a simple evac." He let his head
drop back and gazed up, far up, to the patch of dim light at the
top of the hole. "I wish I were Ensign Anybody Else."
    "Surrounded by giants," Zevon offered. "No wonder you
could barely see."
    Registering only slightly the favor just done him, Stiles
clung instead to the sorrow and shame. "So here I am," he
trudged on, "trapped in a sinkhole with a Romulan duke who
doesn't want the command he's got, and a collapsed building's
about to come down on us. Aren't we pathetic? If you had any
emotion, you'd probably cry."
    Sharply Zevon kicked at a plank that lay between them,
sending it clacking into another position. His eyes hardened. "I
am not Vulcan" he snapped, and instantly looked away again.
    The reaction was so sincere that Stiles almost reached out
physically to yank back his words. "Sorry," he offered. "You
can pretty much count on me to say the wrong thing. Look, if
you were in the sector conducting experiments--everybody
does that. Quantum warp... that's tricky business. There's
nobody who knows everything about that. It's almost not even
science. It's practically magic. ff something went wrong, it's
not your fault."
    "It was my fault," Zevon insisted. He pressed a hand to his
left thigh and seemed to hurt himself with his own touch. "I
should're stood up to my superiors when I first saw what the
result might be. The grayitoh impulses were too erratic. I knew
that. I knew it before we started. I should never have condoned
the switch-on. As senior scientist, I had the right to postpone."
 "Why didn't you, then?"
 "I was... thnid. Yes, I was the senior authority, but only
because of my bloodline. There were other scientists who were
more qualified quantum specialists. They warned me... but I
was afraid to fail."
    So familiar. Why did everybody have to go through this?
Just doing their jobs, and all this had to happen. Sitting here in
the near-darkness, three levels below the street, cradled in
wreckage and out of the line of sight of any judgmental forces,
Eric Stiles released himself from the bondage of prying eyes
and pointless opinions. How foolish did he have to be to keep
holding this weapon on Zevon? If only he could put it down.
    With a cleansing sigh, he muttered, "Listen, I... I feel .... "
In his left hand, the metal rod wobbled between them, stub-
bornly holding its position. "Do me a favor, will you? Come
over and... hold this for me."
    Across the wreckage, Zevon blinked, stood up stiffly, and
moved toward him.
    Stiles parted his lips and started to say something else, but in
sudden punctuation of Zevon's dire prophesy, a loud crumbling
noise erupted over their heads. Buffed in a gray cloud burping
from above, Zevon disappeared as several large chunks of
building material and a gout of rabble shattered through the
hole in the floors above them, chittering like a rockslide, and
came sheeting down into their chamber. The rain of rock and
pebbles hissed furiously and crashed in a million pieces onto
the desk of their little area. Stiles threw his working arm over
his face and bent to one side, but he couldn't move far enough
to avoid being painted with dust and grit. The metal rod he had
claimed as a weapon flew out of his hand and clanked some-
where in the dimness. Cold, stinging debris sheeted his body.
The Pojjan guards had taken away his padded vest, gloves, and
knee pads, leaving only his daywear uniform to fend off the
sharp bits. He felt himself being cut in a hundred tiny places.
    As soon as the sound faded, he shoved himself up on his left
elbow and twisted around. "Zevon? Where are you?"
    In response, he only heard the sound of Zevon coughing
somewhere in the cloud of dust. Alive, at least.
 Stiles pushed up on his elbow. "Are you okay?"
 Out of the puff of stone dust, shimmering paint fragments
and insulation, Zevon finally and slowly came to his feet. Rock
bits sheeted off his back and shoulders as he stood and limped
over the jagged wreckage to Stiles' side, where he braced him-
self on the thing Stiles was sitting upon.  
"You okay?" Stiles asked again.
  Zevon wiped dust from his face. "What is 'okay'?"
    "You don't know? Something tells me you speak English,
right?"
  "Classroom English."
    "Oh. I guess it got started with two alphabetical letters, O
and K. It means... agreement. All right. Well. No idea why it
would mean that."
 "I see... yes, then, I am both O and K."
 "But you're limping."
 "A piece of this rod went through my thigh. I pulled it out."
 "What? You got speared by a piece of that stuff?."
 "Yes, when we first fell--"
    "Come here! You could be bleeding to death! Let me see
your leg."
    Tunting to show Stiles a crudely bandaged part of his thigh
above the knee, Zevon winced and tolerated Stiles's tucking
the strips of blanket which now bound each of them. "A few
moments ago you were willing to spear me with a piece of this
material."
    "Well, never underestimate the capacity of Eric Stiles to
make a dunderhead of himself. You're still bleeding here. That
stuff's blood, isn't it? The green, uh--" "Yes. I thought it had stopped."
    "It hasn't. Let me---come a little closer. Your pant leg is
soaked with blood. God... we gotta stop this. Pad the wound
with something... just a minute."
    As Zevon gripped a standing slab and winced, Stiles ripped
apart the edge of the mattress near him and pulled out a wad of
stuffing. He folded the stuffing into a crude pad, then worked it
between the blanket strip and the wound on Zevon's leg,
unfortunately causing considerable pain, until Zevon could
barely stand when it was over.
    "That'll help," Stiles hoped. "Come here. Take the weight
off it. Sit here next to me."

    He smoothed a place on his slab and pulled Zevon to his
side. They sat leg to leg, facing each other, as Stiles adjusted
the knot on Zevon's bandage. "It didn't pierce through your
leg, did it? You could be bleeding in two places. I can't tell--"
    "No," Zevon told him, his voice weak now. "No... a simple
puncture .."
    Stiles looked at him and paused. "You dragged yourself all
the way from your cell to mine, through that wreckage, with
your leg impaled like this?"
    "I thought you would die if I didn't come" As pebbles con-
tinued to trickle around them, Zevon dug through the rubble to
the blanket that had fallen off Stiles. Without meetAng Stiles's
eyes, he pressed the blanket back around the ensign's chest
and hips and tucked it as well as possible. "We must keep you
warm. You could still go into shock."
    Surveying his companion, Stiles allowed himself to be cared
for by these unlikely hands. "Don't take this wrong," he began
a moment later, "but why would you care? We don't know
each other. I could've been just a garden-variety criminal. Why
would it matter so much to you if I died?"
    For many moments Zevon was silent, though obviously
troubled. He tucked and retucked the blanket two or three
times before the ringing question demanded attention.
  "Because the count is crushing me," he said.
  Stiles frowned. "What count?"
    Settling his hands in his lap, Zevon sat suddenly still. He
sighed roughly, and his expression took on a shield of burden.
His eyes crimped. He couldn't look at Stiles. Again he sighed.
    "Tyrants have made names for themselves by murdering a
thousand people," he slowly said. ''Ten thousand, a hundred
thousand... a million. I have surpassed them all. There are no
Hitlers, no Yum Nects, no Stalins or Li Quans who can com-
pete with me. Among all the men and women of the galaxy,
you have the privilege of sitting with someone who is utterly
unique. You see, I'm the only person, anywhere, on any world,
living or dead... who has killed a billion people."

    As he sat on his rock, gazing at Zevon and hearing the
echo of true burden, feeling as if he had known this man all
his life, Eric Stiles grew up ten years in ten seconds. The
urge to say something, to trowel away the grief with mere
words, failed him entirely. There were no words for this. Not
this.
    Rather than flapping his gums as usual, he was completely
disinclined to speak at all. Instead he shifted his good hand a
few inches and gripped Zevon's forearm in a sustaining way,
and did not shrink from the contact. Empathy flowed through
the simple touch. The concept of billions of people dead at a
single sweep overcame them both and seemed oddly tangible.
For an instant or two, critical instants, Stiles totally compre-
hended the number.
    Then, as all huge things do, the grasp of such volume fled
and he was left only with the tremendous drumming regret that
Zevon must have borne all these years. It wasn't the kind of
thing that got better with time. Some things didn't.
    There had to be another effort, a different one. One that
looked forward for a change.
    And that view was tricky for Eric Stiles, but for the first
time in his life he didn't care what had happened in the past.
For the first time, the future was everything.
    With his hand still pressed to Zevon's arm, Stiles spoke qui-
etly, firmly.
    "I'm here now. This is where I am. Things are going to be
different for both of us. We're getting out of here eventually,
and when we do, everything's changing. You and I have both
been dragged along by our situations like being caught in a
river current or something. It's all we've been able to do just
keeping our faces up out of the water all our lives. This... it's
got to stop. We have to get our own grip on things."
    Zevon gazed at him with 'all the fascination and confusion of
a child looking into a kaleidoscope. "How can we?"
    "By making sure that things are different because we're
here." Stiles hitched himself up to a better position, still hold-
ing firmly to Zevon's arm. "When they pull us out of this hole,
we're going to still be alive. Then we're going to go to work.
We're gonna pay back the universe for all the goofs and gaffs
we've made before. We're not going to think about escaping or
fighting. This is our planet now. We have a lot to do before the
next Constrictor hits."
    Mystified, perhaps wondering if his companion were deliri-
ous, Zevon narrowed his eyes. "What?"
    Heartened by his own words and by the new determination
welling in his heart, Stiles willed his conscience into line and
saw the future as a clear tunnel of purpose.
    'Tll tell you what;' he said. "We're going to save a billion
people."

Chapter Seven

Four Years Later,
Federation Standard Time

"ZEVON, I THINK WE'VE GOT something this time! Look at
this!"
    "If I'd had the right equipment, this could've been found
months ago."
    "It reads like a Richter scale! We're actually picking up
spaceborne disruption. Watch this."
    "But not focused. No way to tell if we have minutes or
hours, or even days."
"But we know this time that it's coming. That's something!"
"There hasn't been a Constrictor in more than two years.
We've predicted it twice before. The first time we predicted
the Constrictor would come in three weeks. It came in three
hours. The second time, nothing happened at all"
 "But we learned from those mistakes!"
 "They won't believe us, Eric."
 "But this time we know!"
 "They won't believe us."
    The lab smelled of a burning circuit. Off to Stiles's right, in
the comer, the tired dust collector clacked and whirred, creat-
ing a sense of action where in fact there was little.
 His taxed back muscles shuddered as he sank back in his
chair. "How can we convince them? What do you think we
should do? It's not like we can threaten Orsova, and he's got
the keys to all the telephones."
    Beside him in the only other chair, Zevon seemed more
troubled than vindicated by their good work today and the
breakthrough they'd been waiting for, which now blinked
before them on the overworked spectrometer, its flickering
screen data reflected in the cold contents of their two soup-
bowls.
    "You need to eat," Zevon said, his voice a rasp of fatigue
and frustration.
    Only now did Stiles realize that his partner was looking not
at the glimmering jewels on the screen, but at the filmy soup.
    Stiles pressed back and stretched his arms. "Four years of
horse-drool soup. So I skip it once in a while. So what?
Limosh t' rui maloor."
 Zevon looked at him. "Telosh li cliah maheth."
    Stiles felt abruptly self-conscious and guilty about his appear-
ance. He almost never looked in the mirror over the sink back in
their cell anymore---he even trimmed his beard without looking.
If he didn't look, he could convince himself from moment to
moment that his cheeks were not so sunken beneath the scruffy
yellow beard he'd allowed to grow there, his eyes not dull, he
could imagine the fullness of youth and the sheen of health he
had once possessed and not even noticed in those days. He could
ignore the bruises on his temples mid the black blotches under
the sleeves of his sweater. At least they'd given him a sweater.
    He'd stopped looking in mirrors a long time ago, right about
when the beard had stopped helping him hide his deteriorating
physical condition. All he could tell from the beard was that he
was still blond and hadn't gone prematurely gray from the
daily stress and struggle.
    Over the past four years the Pojjana behavior had been fre-
quently baffling, inconsistent, sometimes maddening, some-
times solicitous, as political temperatures surged or chilled.
Things changed every few months---except for a couple of
things. The most consistent parts of his life and Zevon's were
this lab and the prison's assistant warden, who unfortunately
did not have enough to do.

    "They've let us come to the lab almost every day;' he
voiced, shifting from just thinking to also speaking his
thoughts. "Why wouldn't they listen to what we find out?"
    Weary, Zevon simply gazed at him, seeing something other
than the problem of convincing the Pojjana that there might be
a way to save lives from the Constrictor. Lately Zevon had had
more trouble concentrating, and Stiles was worried. They
needed this breakthrough, not just for the billion, but for the
two of them. They needed sanity and purpose, some reason to
rise above the endless sense of being broken down and dull as
barbells. After four years, they needed a win.
    Stiles shifted uneasily under Zevon's toil-worn gaze, know-
ing that the Romulan saw him clearly and hated the sight. A
shaft of burning pain ran through Stiles's innards, but he bat-
tled to keep it out of his face. He knew Zevon didn't miss it,
though. He wasn't fooling anybody.
    "Stop watching me," he protested when he could speak
again.
 "You're in pain, aren't you?"
 "No."
 "You should eat. It always helps."
    "It helps because it makes me throw up, and then I'm too
weak to feel anything. Typical Romulan logic."
    "Typical Eric defiance," Zevon muttered, his eyes deeply
solicitous and sad.
    For a moment they simply looked at each other. Eventually,
in his mind Stiles stopped seeing his own demolished physical
condition and started seeing Zevon's. Zevon had started out
typically lean, as was natural for his genetics, but four years
ago he'd been strong and well-nourished, with good muscle
tone in his arms and shoulders and a glow of privilege in his
face. Now his complexion was sallow and his arms were thin.
His hair had lost its mahogany luster and had grown below his
shoulders. He kept it out of his way by simply pushing it
behind his ears. Being Vulcanoid ears, they did the job very
well. He was less inclined to bothar cutting his hair, though
Stiles occasionally offered a trim when he was cutting his own.
Strange---Stiles, so used to Starfleet spit-and-polish, had made
a silly effort to clh~g to neatness during their four years as
political prisoners, even trimming his nails and cuticles just to
have something to do. He was the one who did their laundry
and mended the rips in their clothing.
    He would've expected the same, even more, from a prince
of the Romulan royal line, but Zevon didn't really care what he
looked like. His long-suffering uniform, stained and tired,
would've dissolved from his shoulders if Stiles hadn't both-
ered keeping the seams stitched. The only echo of civilization
offered them here was their privilege to use the lab, and the
fact that every couple of days they got showers. The Pojjana
hadn't built a new jail. They'd just pushed the old one back up
from the pit and nailed it together. A concrete floor now
replaced the filed one Stiles had first seen when he'd been
thrown in here. Generally speaking, though, the food stunk,
the quarters were dank, the mattresses sagged, the floor was
cold, and the light was bad. Otherwise, home sweet home.
    "I wish I had a communicator," Stiles mentioned. "Just one,
and I could broadcast this new information to the whole plan-
et. Somebody'd listen." Shifting his weakened legs, he added,
"I don't miss home very often, but at moments like this I do."
    Zevon rubbed his chilly hands. "The silence from home is
an old story now. The royal family must not know I'm here, or
they would have come by now. They must think me dead. The
Pojjana must not be communicating with the Romulan govern-
ment, or word of my presence would filter out."
    "The Pojjana aren't about to tell the empire you're here.
You're their trump card. Why should they stir up trouble? And
if it comes, they want you here as leverage."
    Uneasy with this line of talk, Zevon grew irritable. "My
people would come if they knew. We've discussed this enough
before."
    "Well, mine wouldn't" Stiles concluded. "Obviously.
Because they sure as hell know I'm here."
    "The Federation declared the sector red, so they have to
observe it or they can't expect anyone else to. It has nothing to
do with you personally, Eric. Ambassador Spock would've had
you out of here if influence mattered."
    "If they made it away from the planet alive. They could all
be cosmic dust for all we know."

    Zevon turned to him. "Eric, you must cling to better hopes.
I've had to watch you deteriorate physically, it's taken its toll
on us both, but I refuse to watch your hopes turn to dust.
Spock expects you to behave like an officer and a gentlemen. I
expect that also."
    Stiles grinned. "Talk, talk." He gestured at the vibrations
playing out on the data screen. "Look at that... here we sit
with information that could save the billion, and we can't fig-
ure out how to get the word to anybody farther up than Orsova.
He'll eat it, probably choke, then hit me."
    "He is a victim of alien backlash. The Pojjana no longer
know whom to trust. You and I are convenient representatives
of all the trouble brought down upon these people by the Con-
shfictor. If they knew it was I personally who had----"
    Defying the numbness in his legs and shoulders, Stiles
launched forward and grasped Zevon's ann. "Quiet! Shut up.
Don't take chances."
    Zevon's gaze fell. "I wish, now and then, just to tell them
and be done with it. I deserve whatever they do."
    "You keep your alien mouth shut. You want to risk these
plush surroundings? If they 'knew, they might put us someplace
... oh... tacky."
    Now Zevon looked up, and his expression tightened. "We
have to risk a change, Eric. You can't stay here much longer. You
can't stay on this planet, much less in this prison complex---"
    He was interrupted by the sharp clack of the lab door lock.
They both tensed visibly, though Stiles was too weak to do
much more than uncross his legs. "Uh-oh--"
    Assistant Warden Orsova came in first, as he always did. He
was a typical Pojjana northern-hemisphere male, built like a
brick, a head shorter than Stiles or Zevon, but nearly as wide.
His coppery complexion shimmered in the lab light. His eyes
were black as the drawer knobs around the lab. Following him
was one of the guards of the lower ranks, with an infantry
symbol emblazoned on his uniform front and the colors of an
unfamiliar unit.
    "Hello, you men" Orsova slurred the words as he drawled
his way through his own language.

    He was drank. They recognized the signs. Orsova held his
liquor well, but there was a certain lingering odor, and his
behavior would change, submerged anger bubbling behind his
eyes. On days like this, his frustrations and boredom fluttered
to the surface, and he would eventually come to act on them.
    The soldier, though, seemed perfectly sober. His dark eyes
glowed with anticipation, and his fists were clenched.
    Orsova looked at Stiles and Zevon. "What are you doing
today?"
    Fighting his nerves, SOles fiddled with the spectrometer,
making sure not to do anything by mistake that could wipe out
their newfound readings. "Just sitting here making up my mind
that zebras are white with black stripes instead of the other
way around."
 "Get up," Orsova ordered.
    Suddenly icy, Zevon turned to the clutter of equipment on
the lab table. "We have twenty more minutes."
    "Not you, ears," Orsova corrected, and looked at Stiles.
"Just him."
     Stiles chuckled and shook his head. "Orsova, your timing
smells to Tarkus. So does your breath, by the way" "Get up."
 "He can't get up," Zevon protested, but too quietly.
    Orsova buried his wide hands in Stiles's collar and dragged
him to his feet. Holding Stiles with one hand, he held the other
hand out to the soldier. "Pay."
    Grinding his teeth, the soldier dug into his thigh pouch and
came up with several of the thin nonted chips the Pojjana used
as a medium of exchange and piled them into Orsova's hand.
    Without ceremony Orsova handed Stiles over to the soldier,
who by now was fairly gasping with the thrill.
    Zevon said nothing, did nothing as the soldier hauled Stiles
to the middle of the floor, reeled back his muttonlike arm, and
backhanded Stiles across the jaw. Lacking the strength to
counter the sheer force, Stiles whirled into the far wall. As he
slid down, a streak of blood smeared the dirty plaster.
    As he landed on his knees, Stiles pressed the back of his
hand to his cut lip and hoped the blood would clot. He didn't
want to die of a slap. That'd be so stupid.

    He turned and slipped farther down, but looked up as Orso-
va's barn-wide shoulders blocked the bare light from the ceiling.
"Picked a weakling this Ome" he choked. "No loose teeth."
 "He'll try again;' Orsova said.
 "Sure. I can't feel much these days anyway."
    Beyond the soldier's balled fists, Stiles could see Zevon
seated at the lab table, both hands pressed to the edge of the
table. As the soldier's fist plunged into Soles' gut and the
familiar lights of agony flashed, Stiles let his mind go blank.
That little trick was getting easier as the months and years
drained away the defiance Zevon somehow still saw in him.
He was glad he was on his knees already, for he could never
have stayed on his feet and he didn't want to be seen falling
again. His lungs cried for air. If Orsova's soldier hadn't been
holding him by the collar again, he'd be on the deck, shriveled
up like a jellyfish.
    "You aren't afraid anymore," Orsova commented from over
there.
    Stiles blinked at him, still seeing only the flash and pop of
pain's decorations. "Well, what's another pound to an ele-
phant? So you hire me out again. So what? One of these days
you ought to beat me up yourself instead of auctioning me off.
Or can't you handle it?"
    Furious, the soldier heaved his victim to his feet, then
rammed his thick elbow into Stiles' ribs and flung him into the
wall again. Stiles tried to go limp, but this particular soldier
didn't fall for the trick. Some did, but this guy knew to drive
the air out of his plaything's body before flinging him, assur-
ing that Stiles was tense as he struck the wall. Worked.
    Shuddering, helpless, Stiles writhed like an unlicked cub on
the cold cement. His own moans rattled from his throat, but he
had no connection to them nor any control, and was blinded by
the lights popping behind his eyes, so familiar he'd started to
name them. He was up to Louise when they began finally to
fizzle and he blinked back to the apparition of Orsova's left
boot near his nose, as the big warden pulled the rabid soldier
off and held him to one side.
    "Let me finish him!" the soldier bellowed. "He's an alien!
There's no other 'alien anywhere!"
 "No;' Orsova flatly refused.
 "Then let me kill the Romulan !"
 "No."
    "You dumb drunken mule," Stiles straggled. "You're blow-
ing a--chance to--save half the planet. We've found a way
to--predict the Constricton Pound me all you want--but get a
message to the--authorities. We've finally--done it!"
    "Done it" Orsova echoed. "You know we're tired of keep-
ing you. There's talk of just executing you."
    "Fine," Stiles grunted. "Execute me. But bury me deep. I
don't want to come heaving up when the big one hits."
    Orsova's reddened eyes turned hard. "There hasn't been a
Constrictor in two years. Maybe it won't come again. Why
should we feed and keep aliens here, and give you a lab and let
you work, after what you gave to us?"
 "It wasn't him," Zevon said without turning. "It was--"
    "Shut up, Romulan," Stiles barked from the floor. "I don't
need your--pointy help."
    "And it will come again" Zevon persisted, looking now at
Orsova. "Like seismic activity, it doesn't go away. It builds up
to something worse. The two of us have used our time learning
to read the spaceborne graviton pulses---"
    "You two aren't as much fun as you used to be." Orsova cast
a furious glance at Zevon and added, "I know the game. Pre-
tending."
    Stiles wiped blood from his mouth with a shaking hand.
"Not--pretending. We just don't--give a damn anymore.
You've had two---two years of good crops... that haven't
been squooshed... two years of "
"I paid you!" the soldier roared, shoving at Orsova's arm,
Orsova held him back. "Less and less reason to let enemies
work on our equipment," he said to Stiles. "We should put you
on trial and execute you now. It isn't enough that we stop tak-
ing care of you when you're sick." Might as well talk to the wall.
    "Take the message;' Stiles attempted one more time.
"There's another Constrictor coming. The planet... can get
ready. Save the billion "
 The effort of speaking coiled Stiles into a knot and appar-
ently gave Orsova the idea that this was the best satisfaction he
would get today.
 "I paid!" the soldier shouted.
    "You paid to beat an alien," Orsova said, "not to kill one. Go
out now. Go."
    Orsova yanked the door open and shoved the soldier out,
then left the lab and shut the door behind him.
    That was the paradigm of their life Orsova sold opportuni-
ties to beat up the human alien, while he got his own jollies
from watching the effects on the Romulan alien.
    Zevon watched the frosted glass door, saw something that
held him in his place--Stiles couldn't see the door from where
he lay, but knew to simply lie gasping and wait. Ultimately a
shuffle in the corridor spared him, and Zevon broke from the
table and rushed to his side.
 "Curses," Stiles wheezed, "foiled again."
    "Eric..." Zevon sorrowfully turned him enough to raise
him to a nearly sitting position and held him there. Stiles could
never have held himself, but would simply have slumped back
into a supine position and probably suffocated on the deck.
"Look at you .... "
    "What a way to---live--aw, God--I hate that son of a
bitch...."
    "Orsova is a walking symptom. He lost his children in the
last Constricton Now he tortures us to ease his bitterness. The
soldiers he brings here... they're the same."
    Zevon got to one knee, then hoisted Stiles up and deposited
him on the only cot in the lab. The Romulan's face was
creased with misery, overlaid by a firm mask of bottled rage.
 "Hey" Stiles gasped. "Your emotions are showing."
    "I keep telling you--I am not Vulcan." Zevon angrily
snatched a beaker of purified water from a shelf, soaked a rag,
and pressed the cool compress to Stiles' bleeding lip.
    "We'll never convince him to let us talk to the chief warden
or anybody;' Stiles murmured. "How can we convince them
that this is their chance?"
    "We're not that certain of our readings," Zevon reminded.
"The prediction might be off by months. Stop moving."
 "I'm not moving... I'm writhing in agony."
 "Exercise some self-control."
 "But you're not a Vulcan."
    Obviously troubled, Zevon frowned. "All we know is that
another Constrictor, a very strong one, has been building for
two years and will certainly strike. The phenomenon hasn't
gone away at all."
 "But we know, Zevon, that's something. Help me---"
    With Zevon's help, Stiles jerkily shifted onto his side as his
aching ribs and stomach muscles cramped again. His eyes
clutched shut as he bore through the spasm, feeling worse for
Zevon than himself. Zevon could do nothing more than grasp
him and wait until the torment worked its way out. Stiles
paced himself, breathing chunkily, until he could finally count
through ten long breaths and his face and hands stopped invol-
untarily flinching.
    "Orsova and his kind" he began when he could speak again,
"they think we're just stalling to avoid execution... we've got
to convince them somehow. Or go over them to the consul
general."
 "They will be convinced when the Constrictor comes."
    "And we can laugh in their faces, if Orsova or some other
anti-alienite doesn't find a way to kill us first."
    Zevon sat down on the cot beside him and gazed at the dirty
floor. "I can hardly blame them. A billion people dead...
what would we do to anyone who caused that on our planets?"
    "If we can predict the Constrictors," Stiles muttered, "then
it's only a matter of time before we can reduce the effects"
    "A thousand years of time, perhaps, between those two mir-
acles."
    "But if we can just predict them, then planes can be landed,
people can put on compression suits, get into reinforced build-
ings, put the babies and old people in antigrav chambers--you
know how to build those. Why won't they listen?" "I don't know"
    Stiles managed a sustaining sigh, let the lungful of oxygen
flow through him and clear his head a little more. When he
could relax a little more, he gazed at Zevon. "You think I can't
feel what's happening to me? I know how sick I am. My mus-
cles are deteriorating. I can feel my innards slowly dissolving.

When Orsova's customers kick me now, it doesn't heal any-
more. I won't survive the Constrictor when it comes. You don't
have to pretend. Even without the Constrictor I don't have that
long. Orsova'11 have me beaten up once too often, or i'll fall
down and my heart'11 collapse... I can't have more than a few
more weeks."
    "If I hadn't caused the Constrictor, you would be some-
where else today. Probably a lieutenant." His sharp features
creasing, Zevon pressed the heels of his hands into his thighs
as if the mental torture caused him some physical pressure too.
Several seconds passed before he could finally say, "Now my
great mistake has killed my only friend"
    Stiles gazed at him, feeling supremely wise. The inner peace
would've knocked him over like phaser stun if he'd been
standing. He was completely content, as if lying in a hammock
under a bower of autumn leaves. Zevon's grief actually
amused him, and he smiled.
    "Jesus, do you do Irish tragedies too?" he chided. "Zevon of
the Sorrows... Listen, clown, you gave me four extra years.
My own mistake killed me that night, the night we met. I was
in the hole. I died there. You crawled through the wall and
gave me four years I wasn't gonna get."
    Irritated by the compliment, Zevon shook his head. "You
wouldn't have been here at all--"
     "Yeah, well, flog yourself again. Gimme that broom over
there to hit you with. If I could get up, I'd beat your ass blue."
 "It's 'already green."
    Stiles laughed, despite the fact that his midsection had
cramped again. He stiflened and moaned, but then he laughed
again. Zevon smiled as he stuffed a rolled lab apron under
Stile's head. For a moment they retired into peaceable silence.
Over the years, they had learned to be silent together. In fact,
they seldom talked like this anymore. Seldom needed to. They
knew each other so well, and what a great feeling it was to be
silent, silent together.
    The lab seemed quiet, but now as they sat together Stiles
focused on the chitter of the computer as it doggedly worked
on the last problem fed into it, the burble of chemical proces-
sors trying to separate molecules for identification of space-
borne particles brought to them by the Pojjana Air Patrols, and
the plink of the faucet in the sink dripping Plink... plink...
plink ....
  Nice sound.
    He dared to draw a longer breath, which forced him to
cough convulsively. When that cleared, he wiped spittle from
his beard and tried to relax.
    "I was pointless back ill Starfleet," he wandered on. Why did
he feel like talking? Oh, well. 'Where were a thousand of me.
Ensigns by the carton. Probably most of 'em officers by now.
Wouldn't have happened to me... botched the mission like I
did... might as well be here, distracting somebody like Orsova.
I mean, if he wasn't hitting me he'd just be... hitting you."
  "Quiet."
    "After I die, you go on without me. Don't you quit. You
don't need me. Don't let Orsova slow you down. If you can
predict the Constrictor within days, you can save thousands.
Within hours, you can save millions. If you can get the Pojjana
to listen, they can save ten million this time, maybe a half bil-
lion the next--"
  "Without you, I have no wish to keep working."
    "You don't need me." Stiles raised his head and grasped
Zevon's arm with a ferocity of strength he didn't think he still
had. "I've never been anything much more than raw material
anyway. Starfleet tried to whip me into something worth hav-
ing, and I thought they'd succeeded, but twenty-one-year-olds
never think they're young. They'll go out and hoe a row of
stumps before they realize they forgot to bring seed. That was
me... was it ever me."
    "Eric," Zevon pointlessly admonished, but had nothing new
to say about that.
    "You think you can do it, right? Whether I'm here or not,
you can do it, right?"
    "I can improve the predictions... if this first one is accurate
within days, I can learn to fine-tune it. Bring it to hours. After
the first one, I'll know how. If they let me continue--"
    "They'll let you. You'll convince them. Don't you stop try-
ing, right? If you stop trying, I'll be dead for nothing. I don't
mind being dead, but dead for notlfing stinks."

Inexpressibly disturbed, Zevon nodded. "I promise, Eric."
Scarcely were the prophetic words out than the door sud-
denly rattled and both men flinched they hadn't even noticed
the sound of footsteps in the hall. Abruptly aware of the great
serviceability of silence and how much they sacrificed if they
talked too long, Stiles willed himself to a sitting position and
shifted until his legs hung over the end of the cot and Zevon
was sitting almost beside him. They didn't stand. That
would've been taken as threatening. They'd learned that too, a
long time ago, the hard way.
    Orsova rolled in, a little less drunk than before, his bulky
guard uniform somewhat askew and a bundle under his arm.
    Desperate at the prospect of two beatings in a single day,
Zevon bolted to his feet between the big Pojjana and Stiles,
standing out of the way of Stiles's grasping hand. "Leave him
alone! If you want me to beg, Orsova, this time I will."
    But the big assistant warden skewed a glance at him, then
said, "I didn't come to beat him. I came to give him clean
clothes."
     The astounding claim literally drove Zevon back a step,
enough that Stiles could get a grip on his arm. "Why?" Stiles asked.
    Orsova dumped the bundle of clothing onto Stiles's lap.
"Because a deal's been made. They're coming to get you.
You're going home."

 "Starfleet's conting?"
    "Somebody is;' Orsova confirmed without commitment.
"The orders to free you come all the way from Consul Belli-
horn, and he hates everybody."
     At the name of the chief provincial judiciary consul, Stiles
felt the air fly from his lungs. "We're. . we're going home?"
  Orsova shrugged. "Just you."
  "What? What about Zevon!"
  "He's Romulan."
    Stiles used his grip on Zevon to yank himself up despite the
protests of his body and rage gave him the strength to be there.
"You're kidding! I'm not going without him?
 "Yes."
  "No! You're doing this on purpose!"
  "Stop, Eric." Zevon pulled him back.
    Orsova blinked his reddened eyes, peered with something
like sentimental regret at the bundle of clothing, shrugged
again, and simply left the room, bothering to chink the door
shut behind him, as if to give them a few final minutes alone.
Courtesy? Since when?
    Shuddering like an old man, Stiles stood beside Zevon, and
the two of them stared at the door. They couldn't look at each
other. Not yet.
    "He's lying," Stiles rasped. "He's tricking us for some rea-
son... he wants something. That's got to be it, Zevon. He's
telling lies. This is Red Sector. Starfleet wouldn't come in
here. It's a lie."
    "Perhaps something has changed," Zevon suggested reason-
ably. "If the sector has been declared green, how would we
know it, here in prison?"
    "We'd hear about it... somebody would say something.
We'd hear rnmors."
    Slowly shaking his head, Zevon stood with his arms at his
sides and common sense on him like a cloak. "No, Eric. No."
  "We'd hear about it ...."
  "No."
    Barely aware of where his legs were, Stiles sank back onto
the cot. The metal frame squawked under his weight and the
sound nearly knocked him unconscious. His head drummed,
hearing the squawk again and again. Before him, Zevon's legs
seemed to be surrounded by a slowly closing tunnel.
    After a moment, Zevon came to sit beside him. Together
they stared at the lab, still not looking at each other. Their
world, this lab, this prison, this planet, turned inside out for
them both in the next ten seconds. Suddenly everything was
changed, heaving as if in some kind of earthquake, and for a
ridiculous moment there seemed to be a Constrictor holding
them both to this cot, to this floor, to the bedrock beneath the
building.
    Who was coming? If the Sector had turned green, they prob-
ably would've heard about it, and there hadn't been a whisper.
Not a thing had changed, not a flicker of instability--nothing.

Who was strong enough to come through Red Sector after Eric
Stiles?
    "It must be the ambassador," Zevon said, as if reading
Stiles's mind. "He must finally have found a way to bring you
out."
     "I don't care if God Himself is coming," Stiles uttered. The
words gagged in his throat. "I don't want to go." 
"You must go," Zevon told him firmly.
    "I don't have to go. Nobody can make me... I won't go.
Not even for Ambassador Spock... no, not even for him.
Everything I've done, I did so he'd be proud of me. If I go
back, everything'11 fall apart. If I die here, he can be proud of
me. I'tl be lost in the line of duty. If I'm alive, I'm headed
back to disgrace. Court-martial. Home to humiliation. Zero
purpose... complete uselessness. I cheated my dopey destiny
for four years. Now I'm twenty-five and dying, about to be
crushed in name as well as in body... and you and I...
Zevon... we'll never see each other again. I don't want to go.
I'm not going."
    Without really turning to face him, Zevon glanced down at
his side, at his own arm pressing against Stiles's, and he
moved enough to clasp Stiles's hand. Still, they did not look at
each other.
    "You must go," Zevon told him firmly. "They can save you.
The Federation will cure you. You will go."
    Despite the physical abuse, the sickness, the deterioration,
the pain, Stiles found himself looking fondly back upon the
years of working side by side with Zevon, at first concentrat-
ing on keeping each other alive, later on the goal of decipher-
ing the erratic Constrictor pattern. Their discoveries--that
there was no pattern, but that waves did build before a Con-
strictor and could be measured... the possibility of predicting
the disasters before they hit...
    "Y'know, I didn't mind the pain or the beatings, or any-
thing," he said. "I didn't mind the chance to stay here and do
what I perceived as my duty. It's better for me to die here
than go back and die humiliated. You understand, you're
Romulan--it's better for my family to believe that I died in
battle."
    "That is often best," Zevon conditionally agreed, "but not
always. Not this time."
    He squeezed Stiles's hand, careful of his own strength and
the possibility of actually crushing the weakened muscles and
the thready bones.
    Stiles gazed at their clasped hands, and sucked each breath
as if it were his last.
     "You're the only friend I've got," he uttered. "I'm dying and
they're taking me away from my only friend" "They'll cure you. You'll live."
    "I don't want to live humiliated. I want to die here. At least I
died trying, instead of going back disgraced and a failure,
court-martialed--"
 "No, Eric. You must go"
 "Why'.7 Why do I have to go? I'd rather die here"
 "You must go for the billion."
 "Huh?"
     "You forget, as usual, that others are involved who are not
looking at you orjudging you." "Who?"
 "The billion we can save."
 "You son of a bitch... don't do this to me."
 "And me, Eric. You'll save me too."
    For the first time, the idea of going home seemed less prick-
ly. "How?" he demanded.
    In a measured tone, Zevon explained, "If you go back and
they cure you, you can get word to the Romulan Empire that I
am here, that I'm alive. The royal family will have no choice
but to breach Red Sector and get me out. My people don't
think I'm alive, or they would have come already. They can
find resources to make a deflection system. Look what I'm
working with--ancient trash, chips and coils and conductors, a
spectrograph the age of my mother, and still we've found a
way to predict. Look at those copper wires! On my ship~ I had
more facilities in my cabin than we have here. Mathematics
based on assumptions of certain things happening at the same
time--think what I could do with real technology!"
    Zevon paused, seemed to dream briefly, then leaned back
until he could rest against the wall. He had to tip his head for-
ward a little to avoid scuffing the points of his ears against the
wall when he turned his head to glance at Stiles.
    "I am still royal family, Eric. If they know I'm here, they'll
get me out. They'll negotiate, they'll threaten, but they'll gain
my freedom. And I will come back--I'll wring cooperation out
of my people for what we've done here. The Pojjana will final-
ly believe, when I come back with resources. I know what can
be done. You must go out of Red Sector, Eric. Go out and get
cured, and tell my people. And they will come. This is the
greatest favor you can do, of all the good you have done here."
    Stiles blinked, surprised. "Me? What'd I do? I'm barely an
assistant. Don't treat me like that."
    "1 would never bother to patronize you," Zevon said, giving
him a glare of inarguable clarity and conviction. "You are noth-
ing like the young man in the pit. That boy, yes, he died there.
But the boy in us always fades, Eric, if we're fortunate. Now
you're a different man, a better man. Look at what you've
learned in four years. I know technical things, but you're the one
who had the breakthrough with the flux meter. You're the one
who told me to check for invisible phase shifts in the infrared. I
told you how ridiculous that was, but you insisted I check, and
you were right. Look what you and I have done here, with tricks
and dirt and screwdrivers. I explain what I'm doing, and you
provide the leap of imagination that sends us to the next step.
We... Romulans and Vulcans, even Klingons, we were all in
space before Termns, but look at you. Look how fast your
progress has been... You've caught up in a century and
charged beyond us. You are the people who see things the rest of
us miss. One day together, with real facilities... your people
and mine, working together... some day we'll stop shooting at
each other, and think what we can do then!"
    Now Stiles did look at him, and did not look away. Zevon's
dark umber hair had long ago lost its polished-wood gloss, his
complexion its glow of youth, and his face was creased now
with weariness, starvation, physical stress, and the unending
worry that their time would run out, yet still his brown eyes
held a glimmer of purpose and hope that had never once
flagged in all these years. Zevon had been in the pit with
Stiles. Together they had crawled from the lowest place a man
can go, the place of worthlessness and damage, and they had
made something of it. They had made a bond with each other,
and they had achieved a breakthrough that could save a billion
people.
 if things went right... just a little more right.
    "If I go," Stiles murmured, "we'll never see each other
again."
    The words struck them both with the force of a physical
blow. It was the one thing they'd never mentioned. Excuses,
platitudes, hollow reassurances dodged through his head. The
Federation would make peace with the Romulans. There'd be a
treaty. Most Favored Systems status. Mail. Visits. The curtain
rising so the two of them would be able to... see each other.
    No matter how the story played in his mind, the final scene
was the same. None of that would happen. He and Zevon
would never see each other again.
    He held on to Zevon in mute torment, the light touch
becoming a sustaining grip, and he didn't know what in the
universe to say.
    "You must go," Zevou quietly insisted, "because you must
live. You must live because I have to get off this planet so I can
save these people even against their will. If I leave, I will come
back. If you leave... you must never come back."
    The faucet dripped, the computer clicked, and with a palpa-
ble crack Eric Stiles's heart broke in half for the second time in
his life. In Zevon's angular features he saw the blurred echo of
the face of Ambassador Spock, calling him from the distant
past, beckoning one more act of Starfleet honor from the
carved-out gourd of failure.
    Zevon squeezed Stiles' hand again and thumped it placidly
against the edge of the cot in punctuation, as if instructing a
child about something which must, absolutely must, be the
choice of the day.
 "Go home, Eric," he summoned. "Go home, and live."

Chapter Eight

"THAT'S NOT A STARFLEET SHIP. What is this? Who in hetl's
coming for me?"
    Stiles wrestled back against the grip of Orsova and one of
the prison guards. They had him by the elbows, and there was
no breaking away. He was too weak to do more than protest
with anger and suspicion in his voice.
     Orsova clapped a wide hand to Stiles's chest and said,
"Stand still or I'll be happy to take you back to your cell."
 '"Fake me back, then! Fine!"
 "Stand still."
    There was no chance to run, even if he could. The landing
field was dotted with Pojjana soldiers, their red-and-brown
jackets flashing in the landing lights, their coppery faces
flinching at the approach of the unwelcome craft. Alien space-
craft hardly ever landed on the planet anymore. They just
weren't welcome. This was a bizarre occasion and Stiles still
didn't know what he was watching.
    His head swimming with regrets, fears, and rough-edged
anguish, Stiles begged the stars to put things back the way
they'd been this morning, but no miracle came his way. The
clanky-looking merchant trader, bulbous and utilitarian, with
its exhaust hatches flapping and its hull plates chattering, con-
tinued its inartistic approach.
    "If that's a Federation ship, it's second-hand," he comment-
ed. "No Federation spaceport ever built anything like that."
    Unable to wrestle Orsova or the other guard, Stiles con-
demned himself to watch the landing. Port fin was high... too
much pitch... not squared on the strip markings... lateral
thrusters going too long.
    Ah, the echoes 'almost hurt, echoes of another landing, not
so far from here. He'd come to this planet an outclassed hot-
foot who let haste get the better of him, overwhelmed by prox-
imity to greatness, the approval of his hero, whose face he'd
seen in the back of his mind all these many, many months, urg-
ing him to rise above the mangled messes he'd made. His life
had imploded, his preconceptions defoliated, his internal forti-
tude hammered to a fine edge by circumstances he'd never
anticipated, and he'd been preparing himself for a long time to
die. Now living was a lot more scary than dying of whatever
was eating his muscles. Strange... he and Zevon didn't really
even know what illness Stiles had. The Pojjana doctors hadn't
been able to identify it. Of course, since the patient was a pris-
oner and an alien, they hadn't tried all that hard.
    So Stiles had gotten ready, over the months, to pass away.
Now he was suddenly afraid not to go. Today, once again, the
universe turned on its edge for him. He stood now at the
municipal landing field, barely an echo of that reckless and
slapdash boy, but he was still trembling like a kid, so fiercely
that Orsova and the other guard had to hold him up. Would
Ambassador Spock himself step down the black ramp of the
unfamiliar vessel landing out there?
 "I don't want to go," he muttered in his throat.
    Beside him, Orsova watched the ship settle. "I'11 miss you,
tOO."
    This time there was no Zevon to talk sense into him. Zevon
was back in the prison. For him, nothing had changed. Except,
now, he would be alone.
    Terrible guilt racked Stiles's chest. All the words of sense
and reason from the lab suddenly seemed to leak like cheese-
cloth. How could he leave Zevon like this? Here in this dump,
alien and hated, alone, powerless, with another Constrictor
coming mid nobody to Believe him about it? Before this, they'd
at least always had each other.
    "Who's doing this?" he demanded as the ship settled and its
thrusters shut down with a wheeze. "Who're you giving me to,
Orsova? This is your doing, isn't it? You weren't getting any-
thing out of watching Zevon while you tortured me anymore,
so now you're up to something else, aren't you?"
    "You're going home" Orsova drably said. "I would enjoy
keeping you, but you're going."
    "Why?" Stiles glared at him. "Why would you let anybody
shove you around? Who are you afraid of?."
     "You're an alien. Your own filthy kind have come to get you.
Shut your mouth and go with them."
 "what about Zevon?"
 "He's mine from now on"
    Summoning his last threads of energy, Stiles raised his
elbow and rammed it laterally into Orsova's round face. The
big guard staggered, but never let go of Stiles' arm. Before
even regaining his balance, Orsova shoved Stiles viciously
sideways, into the rocky substance of the other guard, who
pivoted to provide a backboard for whatever Orsova wanted
to do.
    Stiles tried to brace himself, but he might as well be skinned
alive as drum up a vestige of physical superiority--hell, he
could barely keep standing. Orsova reeled back a thick arm
like a cannon, poised to turn Stiles into mashed oats.
     Refusing to close his eyes, Stiles winced and prepared for
pain and flash. "Stop!"
    Though he attempted to turn toward the sound, Stiles found
his head reeling and comprehended that somehow Orsova had
gotten a lick in there someplace. He shook his head, squeezed
his eyes shut briefly, and fought to focus.
    When he could see again, he frowned at a clutch of odd-
looking aliens he didn't recognize, yellow in the face with
some kind of green growth on their heads that might be their
idea of hair. Their cheeks were smooth as babies' butts, they
had no recognizable nose, and two eyes pretty far apart. Their
clothing was a mishmash, obviously not uniform in any way,
so this wasn't anybody's military unit, just a ship's crew from
some ungodly where. Sure wasn't Starfleet. Why were yellow
aliens coming for him?
    From the middle of the clutch came the sharp voice again.
"Stop that. Get away from that man."
    Abruptly--and that was the shock--Orsova flinched back,
and so did the other guard.
     And so did about a dozen other Pojjana soldiers who were
standing within flinching distance. What?
    Stiles found himself struggling to stand up all alone, without
even the assistance of his daily tormenter to help.
    An old man strode bonily up to him, right up until there
wasn't even a foot between them. Human. Old, darn old. Over
a hundred, maybe, with a full head of frost-white hair, a simple
flight suit framing his narrow body. The old man flicked a
medical scanner between them. Pieming blue eyes watched the
instrument's indicator lights.
  "You Eric Stiles?"
  "Who wants to know?"
    "I'm your new grandad, son. Grew a beard, huh? I had one
of those once. Itched." The ancient man turned to the yellow
aliens who flanked him and said, "Get him aboard, boys."
    Stiles backed up a clumsy step as two of the yellow aliens
stepped toward him. "Who are you? Where are you taking me?
You're not Starfleet. There's nobody like them in the Federa-
tion-what do you want?"
    From behind, Orsova and two other Pojjana guards shoved
him forward again roughly, but the narrow old man snapped
his fingers and his blue eyes flashed with confidence and
barked, "Hands off him!"
    So abruptly that Stiles almost collapsed between them, the
guards--even Orsova--relaxed their threat.
    The old man approached and leered at Orsova. "Don't get
any ideas, hutch. I'm old, but I'm ornery"
    Amazing! The burly Pojjana all backed away again, so fast
that the suction almost dragged Stiles off his feet.
  "What the hell--" Stiles glanced at them, then glared at the
frail white-haired codger. "Who are you that you can make
them flinch like quail?"
    The old man was completely unimpressed by the lines of
Poijana soldiers, and indeed they shied away from him. "Let's
just say that once upon a time I removed a thorn from the
lion's paw. Now the lion thinks I'm powerful. Of course, he's
right."
    Weird--somehow this old man's voice... it sounded famil-
iar. The way he snapped at those men--
 "What's all that mean?" he asked. "What thom?"
    But the codger, without taking his eyes off Stiles, waved at
the yellow guys, who moved forward again. "Don't look back,
son," he said. "It doesn't pay."
    As the yellow aliens pressed toward him, Stiles stumbled
back. "You keep your alien paws off me!" He slapped at them
as they attempted to get a grip on him. "I don't want to go
without Zevon! Orsova, I'll get you for this someday! All of
you get away from me!" "Hypo."
    "I don't want to go! I don't want to go... I don't...
want .... "

    Familiar voices. How secure they sounded, how wondrous!
The anchorage of life, those voices. All the hours upon hours,
watching historic mission tapes, memorizing the fiery defiance
of Captain James Kirk during the M5 experiments, the Nomad
occurrence, the incident at Memory Alpha, sinking into Mr.
Spock's baritone warble explaining where the probe came
from, listening to the counterpoint of Dr. McCoy's perplexed
and concerned protests, the voice less of an officer than a
humanitarian trying to expand his humanity beyond natural
limits... those men, they always pushed themselves, teased
every limit, never backed away ....
    Wish I'd been there, with those men in those times, taking
those orders. I could're followed those orders and given them
ten cents change! Just imagine--First Officer Spock saying,
"These are your orders, Ensign Stiles." Imagine ....
    Their voices were more familiar than his own family's, more
familiar than Travis Perraton's calming tone behind him mak-
ing sure he didn't make quite as much a fool of himself as he
otherwise might, or Jeremy White taunting him while the oth-
ers laughed. But it had been a good laugh... he hadn't appre-
ciated it back then. They were having fun, enjoying themselves
all because he was with them. That was worth being laughed
at. It never hurt so much, except that he let it hurt. If they were
enjoying themselves, then the existence of Eric SOles was
doing some good.
    He wanted to wake up. Usually he could will himself out
of unconsciousness after a short struggle. Orsova commonly
knocked him into a dither, and he had learned to claw his
way out of the tunnel to the light place where Zevon would
be waiting for him, usually stitching a cut or stanching a
nosebleed. Wounds could actually heal without a tissue-
bonding beam.
    That medical scanner, it looked like a super satellite to him
after four years in a culture backed off a hundred fifty years
from what he'd grown up with. Funny how quickly he'd gotten
used to the downteching. Before, he'd never thought a person
could get through a day without Federation flash and spark.
He'd gotten through a day. "At a time:'
    Oh--his own voice this time. Didn't sound so bad. Come
on, fight out of the hole. Zevon would be at the top of the tun-
nel, pressing a wet cloth to Stiles's head. "Mmmm..."
    "That's it, son, wake up. You're bound to have a headache,
Don't fight it."
    Stiles fought anyway. He defied the thrum in his skull and
finally found the power to force his eyes open when he sensed
there was some kind of light on the other side of the lids.
Zevon would be there when he got them open.
    Red lights? Familiar too... shipboard lights in an alert situ-
ation. Red, so the eyes could s011 adjust. Most eyes, anyway.
Human eyes...
 "Let me get the lights."
 That gravelly, homespun voice again. The codger.
 "Where's Zevon?"
 Stiles registered his own voice and clung to the sound,
which brought him all the way up to consciousness. When he
could see, he realized the lights weren't red anymore, but were
a soft golden light, shining in small, obviously ship-built quar-
ters rigged as some kind of sickbay. He saw a shelf with rows
of bottles, piles of folded cloth, several pieces of medical scan-
ning equipment, hyposprays, and a dozen other recognizable
and somehow foreign contraptions. He knew what they all
were, yet they were foreign to him, and unwelcome.
 "So I'm out," he managed.
 "You are," the old man said.
    Forgetting himself for just a moment, SOles fixed upon the
old man's face and tried to register that voice. He felt like a
computer with a new search order--identij% identify.
 "Who are these people running this ship?"
 "Smugglers."
    "Why would a human ride with them? And why'd you come
into Red Sector? Are you an expatriate or something?"
    The old man's icy blue eyes flickered and one brow arched.
"I came because of typical pointed-eared hardheadedness,
that's why." "Huh?"
    "And once in a while a man's got to slip into forbidden terri-
tory. Inoculations, contraband chemicals, antitoxins... makes
the stars spin."
 "But... if you... why would they...."
 "Why don't you just relax, Ensign?"
    "Ensign... haven't heard that in a while. You better call me
something else."
    The doctor tilted his snowy head. "why should I? You
haven't surrendered your commission, have you?"
     "It got surrendered for me. I'm not that kid anymore.
Starfleet gave up on me. I gave up on them." "You're here, aren't you?"
    "Look, don't you think I know pity when I see it? Guilt? It's
not Eric SOles they came after. It's their own reputation for not
leaving a man behind." Stiles huffed. "I grew up back there. I
did leave Startleet behind. I could handle myself. I didn't want
to be rescued. Starfleet can't just fly in and order me to leave
when I don't want to go."

    "Well, actually, Ensign, they can. You're still on the duty
roster"
    "What do I care? And I told you not to call me ensign. All
this is just a joke on you anyway. I don't care how many
famous people they send after me, Starfleet's not getting its
pound of flesh out of Eric Stiles. I'll never make it home."
  "Oh? Why not?
    "Because I'm dying. There's hardly a pound of flesh left.
Can this boat turn around? Do these yellow guys have a
reverse button?"
    The old man wiped his pale, gnarled hands on a blue towel.
"You're not dying, boy. I just cured you."
    Stiles rolled his head on the pillow and challenged the
codger with a glower. "I'm too far gone for that."
    "Not too far for me. You had a viral infection of operational
tissue. Your heart, your muscles, intestinal walls, a few internal
organs... it's just something that hits humans on that planet.
We had to watch out for it back when we maintained an
embassy. To the Pojjana, it's barely a common cold, but to
humans, it eats muscle. In five or six months, with some physi-
cal therapy, your tissues will be rebuild. You'll be young again,
kid. Just call me the fountain of youth."
    "Starfleet sent us on a mission to a planet with a human-
killer virus?"
    "They had a vaccine, but didn't bother to vaccinate the evac-
uation team. You boys weren't supposed to come in contact
with any native Pojjana during the evac mission, and that virus
requires twelve weeks of repeated exposure. Nobody expected
any of Oak Squad to stay there for four years. You probably
got it from the food supply at the prison."
    Stiles stared at him. "How do you know so much about
me?"
 "Ambassador Spock sent me. Ring a bell?"
    Taken unaware by the dropping of that name, Stiles heaved
up on his elbows--and then the second shock came. He was
up on his own elbows!
 "What's wrong?" the old man asked.
    "I haven't been able to sit up by myself for..." All at once
Stiles dropped back on his pillow, but not from weakness. He
stared at the old man and watched decades peel away before
his eyes as he suddenly realized--
    "Ambassador Spock sent you...of course! You're--
you're--my God, you're--"
     "Yes, that's who I am. The Supreme Surgeon. The Mighty
Medicine Man. The Hypo-Hero. The Real----" "McCoy ! Doctor McCoy !"
    "You can have an autograph later." The elderly man snapped
the top back onto a bottle and placed it back on the nearest
shelf. "Now relax before you have a bacterial flareup. Where'd
I put that sedative?"
 "Are you Doctor Leonard McCoy? The Doctor McCoy?"
 "Betcha?'
 "Then it is' an official rescue?"
    "No. I convinced the consul general to remand you into my
custody. When we cross into Federation territory, you'll be
officially handed over to Starfleet."
 "You gave the Pojjana some kind of medical help?"
 "That's the short version, yes."
 "Then you broke the Prime Directive?"
    "Sure did" the esteemed elder proudly confirmed. "You
would've too. The P.D.'s been through so many incarnations
and reinterpretations in my lifetime you'd think the thing was
written on rubber. In a changing galaxy, you've got to have
that."
 "But you're a Starfleet surgeon--"
    "Retired. If I come into Red Sector, it's my own affair. I'm a
free agent. Took me a year and a half to get the Pojjana to owe
me enough to get you out. It's a damned shame what happens
to you kids who get caught in the crossfire--"
    "I'm not that kid anymore," Stiles bristled. "I'm an old man
now. I can stick up for myself."
    Leonard McCoy lasered him a scolding glower that cut him
off in mid-thought. "Boy" the doctor said, "I got socks older
than you."
    Perfectly intimidated, Stiles settled back and shut his mouth.
He'd have to keep it shut until he figured things out. How
much had changed out there? Four years in prison was an eter-
nity. Stiles knew he'd broken Federation rules by helping
Zevon try to learn how to predict the Constrictor. And he'd
have done more to help those people, done anything he could
to curb the results of all-encompassing natural disaster. Plain
decency didn't allow a man to sit by and watch. What other
rules had he broken in his distance and ignorance?
    He didn't care. Even after a lifetime of family conditioning,
Starfleet had been surprisingly easy to leave behind. Now, this
force in his life that had faded to an echo, something he could
ignore and forget, now it held ultimate sway over him. Four
years ago, though restricted in a jail, Stiles had taken control
over his own life. That control was about to be wrested from
him again. He was an ensign again, a man in uniform. Today
he was free--but more imprisoned than ever.
     Then he thought of something else and pushed himself up
again. "Can you get Zevon out?" "Who?"
    "Another prisoner. We were together the whole time. We
kept each other alive."
 "Not another Starfleet man. I'd have known about that."
 "No, he's... he .... "
    As the doctor waited for the word Stiles was about to
unthinkingly spit, Stiles held himself back. For four years he'd
said whatever popped into his mind, careless of consequences
because there weren't any consequences, heedless of hurt feel-
ings because he and Zevon endured so much hurt that feelings
stopped making any difference a long time ago.
    He'd made a promise to Zevon to inform the Romulan
Empire that their prince was a captive, not dead as they proba-
bly suspected. Was it a good idea to tell anybody else Zevon
was Romulan?
    l'll get the message to them myself, somehow. l'll figure out
a way.
    "One miracle at a time," McCoy told him. "We can make a
report on your friend, see if Command has a process "
    'Tll take care of it." Stiles lay back again, enjoying the sen-
sation of getting a lungful of air without pain, entertaining
thoughts of breaking away and running back to the Pojjana and
continuing his work with Zevon now that he was cured. Cured
.. the idea of dying was easier to grasp.

    But how would that be? The sector was still red. Zevon was
right--he'd be better served to tell the Romulans and let them
get Zevon out, then let Zevon pressure his own people into
helping the Po'[jana. It's the least they owed... and the Poj-
jana still saw both Stiles and Zevon as evil aliens. They might
have to be forced to accept help.
    The Constrictor was coming, he was sure of it. Zevon would
be caught in the middle of it, maybe even killed if the Pojjana
wouldn't listen to him.
    "I've got to fight my way to somebody with influence"
Stiles grumbled aloud, gazing at the scratched brown wall of
the small quarters. When he realized he'd spoken aloud, he
turned to the elderly surgeon, but the famous old man was
busy with something medical and apparently hadn't heard him
or didn't care.
 "They're going to court-martial me, aren't they?"
    "Hmm?" McCoy glanced at him. "I wouldn't know. Why
would they?"
 "I botched a critical mission."
 "Did you?"
 "I thought i knew everything."
    "Show me a twenty-one-year-old who doesn't." McCoy
pulled a hypo off his shelf and fitted it with a newly load~---
whatever that thing was called that held the medicine. "I'11
give you something to make you sleep. Tomorrow we'll start
your physical therapy. You might as well relax for a while. It's
a long ride back from Red Sector to whatever Starfieet's got
waiting for you."


Chapter Nine

"ORsovA." "Mffbuh... muh?"
  "You're not unconscious. Stand up."
 "Huh? Stand up?"
    "You're not dead. Stand up and shake off the daze. Find
your feet."
 "Who... who... r'you?"
    "This mechanism distorts my voice. Forget trying to recog-
nize me. You will never know me."
 "Where is this? Where have you brought me to?"
 "You're on a space vessel."
 "Space7 Space!... Prove it."
"Look out that portal. See your planet, your moons."
Disoriented, nauseated, Orsova tripped over his bootlace
and stumbled from the cool floorspace to a carpeted area
where there was a hole in the wall. There he fingered the port-
hole ledge and peered out three layers of thick window.
    Breath stuck in his throat. He choked and wobbled. There,
before him, near enough to touch, hung planetary bodies he
had seen hanging in the distant night since he was a child. He
had seen them as egg-sized etemalities, and today they were in
his lap. Crisp sunlight and shadows like hats rode the bold
sandy satellites.
    "Oh!" he gasped. "Oh--moons! Too close! How did you
make me come here! How did I come here! Oh... those
moons are close ...."
    "Beautiful, aren't they? You were transported here with an
energy beam."
 "A beam... through space..."
    He tried to remember, but there was only the hazy idea of
being trapped in his tracks, of looking down to see his knees
dissolving and his boots disappearing. He had heard of those
trailsport beams, but thought they inight be myths.
    But he was here, and he had not walked or flown here.
Something had flickered and brought him here. He accepted
that.
 The buzzing mechanical voice spoke again.
 "Now you know you are really in space."
    Where was the buzzing voice coming fi'om? It was speaking
fluent enough Pojjana, but with an accent. Machines didn't
have accents. Somewhere, there was a person talking.
 Nothing familiar in the voice. No accent he'd heard before.
 "Who are you?"
    "These are the conditions. You will not try to look at me. We
will speak through this device."
 "Where are you? Are you in this ship with me?"
    "Nearby. Stop trying to find me. Take your hand from that
latch or you die here.t... Yes, back away. Remain in that
chamber."
    Orsova chose silence for a moment, to think. Failing that, he
asked, "Why do you come here? And why now?"
    "The Federation has come here," it went on. "Why did they
come ?"
 "To get their man," Orsova told it. "How did you know they
callle?"
    "l foUow the medical trail," the voice said. 'The old doctor
came here. I kept watch."
 "Why would you keep watch on doctors?"
    Stepping foot by foot, toe by toe around the dim cabin,
Orsova looked at every panel of the glossy interior plating.

Was the metallic surface thin? Was he seeing shadows of a liv-
ing form? Just a haze? Or were these echoes of his own reflec-
tion deep in the polished surface?
      As he moved around, pressing his fingers to each panel,
leaving prints on the sheen, he asked, "What do you want?"
  "1 want to help you."
    "We accept no help from aliens. How did you get past our
mountain defense?"
    "We are nowhere near your defenses. We have beamed you
far out. You can see how far."
    The strange mechanically disguised voice reminded Orsova
of the growling of awakened rezzimults in the swamps near the
capitol city.
    "What do you want?" he asked, abruptly nervous, as if
someone had turned off the heat. "Why did you bring me to
space? What do you need me for?"
    "Tell no one that I spoke to you, and you will have greatness
beyond your dreams. I will help you gain influence, become
powerful. You will find my friendship wondrous. When I need
you, you will be here."
  "I don't even know who you are."
    "You will never know me. I must not be known. You are one
of many pawns throughout the galaxy. 1 tend many fronts, light
many candles. Do as 1 say, and we will see what the years
may bring."

Chapter Ten

SEVEntEEN WEEKS LATER, after a blur of physical therapy, drug
treatments, rebreaking and re-fusion of his old fractures--so
they'd be somewhat recognizable as human bones to the
archaeologists of the distant future--and a flurry of puzzling
comments from Dr. McCoy, Eric Stiles stood in the loading
area of a smelly livestock transport ship that stocked colonies
with cows or sheep or something. After weeks of treatment, a
trim of the beard he couldn't quite yet bear to shave off, and
fresh clothing--blessedly not a uniform--he felt as if someone
had cut off his head and spliced it onto a new body. He could
stand here by himself for a long time before even feeling the
first shivers of weakness. He was far from rosy health yet, but
a lot farther from the death he'd been passively anticipating.
    He and McCoy had transferred nine times in the past seven-
teen weeks, in a flurry of passage notices, manifests, bribes,
seamy personages, and shady deals. Stiles scarcely had an idea
of what ship he was on, except that this one had obvious Fed-
eration markings-and stank. Generally the ships were hardly
distinguishable one from the other, and he and the doctor had
remained relatively confined, to keep from "seeing" anything,
whatever that meant.



    Seventeen weeks of physical therapy and quaint tales. No
matter how many times Stiles asked what was going to happen
to him, Dr. McCoy always played old and swerved into some
tall story about the glorious past, or the irritating past, or the
past that could're been done better if only so-and-so had lis-
tened to him. Stiles got the idea. The doctor didn't want to be
the one to tell him what was coming.
    Now they were about to rendezvous with the first Starfleet
ship Stiles had seen since he'd been dragged out of his tighter.
On one of the courtesy screens, he and Dr. McCoy watched the
brand new Galaxy-class Starship Lexington pull up to docking
range. Then a transport pod came out of the starship and made
its way toward the livestock transport.
    "Why don't they just get it over with and beam us over?"
Stiles complained. "The sooner this is done, the better for me.
I can take my dishonorable discharge and vmfish."
    "Discharge?" Mceoy didn't look at him. The lights of the
airlock flashed on his papery face.
    "It's the only way to get out of a long, drawn-out court-
martial. I don't care if they put me on trial, but I don't have the
time to waste. I've got a message to deliver. They'll offer me a
deal. Dishonorable discharge. And I'll take it" "Don't blame you"
    The vessel around them endured a slight physical bump, and
a moment later the nearest airlock clacked and rolled open.
Two Starfleet security men stepped out, with holstered phasers
and full helmets. One of them stepped forward.
 "Dr. Leonard McCoy and Ensign Eric Stiles?"
 McCoy stepped forward. "That's us, son."
    "Ensign Pridemore, sir, and Ensign Moytulix, here to escort
you to the starship. If you don't mind my saying so, sir, I'm
honored to have this duty."
    "Thank you, Ensign," McCoy allowed with a practiced nod.
"Carry on."
 "Yes, sir. If you'll both follow me--"
    The security officers parted, and Pridemore led the way
back into the pod. Stiles let McCoy go first, though he was
feeling the bristling power of strong legs again and nearly
plowed into the pod just on the hope of getting this misery

over with sooner. There was no getting around the next few
days. He'd have to face the music, take the stain on his record,
plead guilty to whatever they threw at him, and get out so he
could find a way to notify the empire about Zevon. That was
everything, Zevon was everything, and Stiles was in a perfect
panic of worry for him.
    His head was swimming. Yes sir, no sir, carry on... all the
common phrases he'd abandoned so easily... they spun him
like coins on a table. He felt as if he were reliving somebody
else's life, detached from any real involvement of his own.
    "Right over here, sir." Ensign Pridemore gestured Stiles to a
seat in the cramped back of the transport pod.
 "I'd rather stand and look out the viewport."
 "Sorry, sir. Regulations."
    Stiles stepped to the seat. "You don't have to 'sir' me. I
don't outrank you."
    "It's my honor, sir." Pridemore took off his helmet, hung it
on the bulkhead hook, and turned toward the piloting console.
    "Yeah, year." Stiles dropped into his seat and slumped into
the cushions.
    McCoy sat across from him. The other security ensign, his
helmet obscuring his face, stood at the aifiock hatch at full
attention. Seemed kind of silly.
    Within twelve minutes, they were landing in the bay of the
starship. The pattern of approach and responses from the bay-
master seemed like echoes of his past, as Stiles eavesdropped
on the cockpit action and imagined himself in the pilot's seat.
    As the interior lights of the starship's hangar bay flooded
the pod, Dr. McCoy clapped his 'knees with those gnarled
white hands and said, "Ready to get this over with?" Stiles sighed. 
"Do elephants have four 'knees?"
    McCoy stepped over and helped Stiles to his feet, which
seemed bizarre and distorted. Being helped by a man well over
a hundred--and needing it--reminded Stiles that he had a few
months of recovery yet to go.
    Ensign hidemore got up and stepped to the hatch. "This
way, gentlemen," the young man said.
    Young... yes, Pridemore seemed young to Stiles. A long
time since he'd seen a person younger than himself in any
authority. He felt a sudden pang of sympathy for the two
ensigns here with him today. So much was expected of them--
    "If you'll stand here, Mr. Stiles," Pridemore said, motioning
him to the middle of the hatch entrance, only then motioning
to McCoy. "Doctor? Here, sir."
    Without comment the old surgeon came to stand beside
Stiles. The staging was mysterious, but Stiles assumed a secu-
rity team was stationed outside the door and would be escort-
ing him to quarters under guard. The brig? Probably not. He
wasn't a criminal, after all. Just a turkey being led to the
slaughter.
 "Ready, sir?" Pridemore asked.
"We're ready," the doctor confirmed. "Open'er up"
Pridemore, curiously, stepped aside then instead of leading
them down the ramp that must be out there, and punched the
hatch controls.
    The hatch swung open and for a moment Stiles was blinded,
after weeks of dim smugglers and tramp ships, by an unfortu-
nately placed spotlight somewhere in the hangar bay that
plunged instantly into his eyes and made him blink.
    Then a sound rushed up the ramp and engulfed him. Was
something exploding?
    He moved slightly to one side, enough to get out of the
direct beam of that one culprit light, and let his eyes adjust. As
he blinked, he identified that unfamiliar sound. Applause.
    He stepped forward to see what was happening, and saw
sprawled out before him a field of Starfleet crewmen, officers,
civilian guests and dignitaries, all knocking their hands togeth-
er and looking up the ramp at him and McCoy.
    "Sorry!" Stiles gasped. He was standing right in the way.
Careful of his new physical coordination, he stepped quickly
to one side, faced the famous Leonard McCoy, and began to
politely applaud also.
 "What're you doing?" Dr. McCoy asked.
 Stiles kept applauding. "I was in the way"
    The doctor's leathery face crumpled in disapproval and he
grasped Stiles by the arm and pulled him back to the middle of
the ramp. "They're not applauding me, hammerhead?
 "Honor Guard! Atten-HUT!"

    The sharp disembodied order echoed in the huge hangar
bay, answered by the crack of heels on the deck as a tunnel of
uniformed men and women came abruptly to attention, flank-
ing the red carpet which stretched out from the end of the
ramp to the edge of the crowd.
    "What?" Stiles stumbled a few steps down the ramp,
baubling drunkenly as he realized Dr. McCoy wasn't following
him down the ramp. He stopped in the middle of the slope and
stared at the throng of people applauding before him.
    And there was music--trumpet fanfare in vaulting military
tradition. He hadn't heard music in years.
    A stimulating cheer rose now above the continuing ap-
plause, and some of the people in the crowd were jumping and
waving, calling, "Eric ! Eric ! Eric !"
    Stiles turned halfway around and looked back up the ramp
at Leonard Mceoy. The doctor wagged a scolding hand at him,
waving him the rest of the way down the ramp.
    Spreading his hands perplexedly, Stiles complained, "I don't
get this..."
    But he barely heard Iris own voice over the cheering. As he
turned back to the crowd, confused and overwhelmed, a flicker
of sense carne into the picture Ambassador Spock now stood
at the end of the tunnel of uniforms. The senior Vulcan now
looked more ambassadorial than the one time Stiles had met
him. That day four years ago, the ambassador had been wear~
lug a jacket and slacks. Today he wore a ceremonial robe of
glossy purple quilted fabric and a royal blue velvet cowl.
Apparently this was some kind of ceremony. With him stood a
captain and some officers and a couple of dignitaries. They
continued applauding as Stiles meandered down the red carpet,
entertaining ideas of slipping between a couple of these guards
at attention and maybe getting out of here somehow without
anybody noticing.
    He stopped five feet short of the end of the runway, staring
like a jerk at the ambassador and the captain and all those
other spiffy dressers.
    The ambassador waited a few seconds, then came forward
into the honor guard tunnel. The other dignitaries just followed
him in there.



    Ambassador Spock's weathered face shone every crease in
the harsh hangar bay lights, but under the Vulcan reserve there
was an unmistakable sheen of pride and delight. In fact, a hint
of a grin tugged at his bracketed mouth and his slashed brows
were slightly raised. As he stood flanked by the captain and the
dignitaries, all facing Stiles like a vast wall of phaser stun, the
applause tapered off and then suddenly stopped in deference
and respect.
    "Welcome home, ensign," the ambassador said warmly. The
soft knell of victory rang in his words and triggered a whole
new wave of applause and cheering. As he turned toward the
captain beside him, the applause almost instantly fell off again.
"I am honored to present Captain James Turner of the U.S.S.
Lexington."
    "Ensign Stiles, I'm pleased to finally meet you in person,"
the thin officer said, smiling broadly and pumping Stiles's
hand. "I first heard about you when I was in command of the
Whisperwood. Your story was very compelling to me, and I
used it to train my fighter squadrons. 1 admit to pulling some
strings so the Lexington could be the ship to meet you
today."
    "Oh... I... thanks." Stiles leaned closer and urgently told
him, "This is some kind of mistake!"
    The captain grinned again and took Stiles's elbow and
turned him slightly. "My first officer, Commander Auch'ey."
    "Welcome aboard, Ensign," the smiling woman said, "and
welcome home."
    The captain turned him a little more, while Ambassador
Spock watched in passive approval despite the desperate
glance Stiles tossed him. In a whirl he was introduced to a half
dozen other people.
    "Federation Ambassador Whitehead... Provincial Ambas-
sador Oleneva... Chief Adjutant Kuy, representing Admiral
Ulvit... Governor Ned Clory from your home state of Flori-
da... Port Canaveral's Mayor Tino Griffith, Princess Marina
from the Kingdom of Paln,s on our host planet here in this
star system .... "
    They each greeted him and pumped his hand and patted his
arms, some even hugged him,, but he scarcely caught a sylla-

ble, registering only the mention of an honors breakfast in the
ward room.
    "You've--got the wrong guy," he protested again as Captain
Turner steered him back to Ambassador Spock. By now, Dr.
McCoy had shuttled down the ramp and was standing beside
Spock, and for an instant as Stiles turned the years peeled back
and he saw them as they had been so many decades ago.
Spock, streamlined and subdued in his blue Science Division
tunic, his black hair glossily reflecting a single horizontal band
of light from the hangar ceiling. Leonard McCoy, in a short-
sleeved medical smock, strong arms casually folded, his thick
brown hair glistening in a much more raucous way, his
supremely human expression enjoying a proud and friendly
grin, cirrus-blue eyes set in a square face now famous through-
out the settled galaxy. Two legends, standing together, for Eric
Stiles.
This couldn't be happening. They had something so wn)ng.
He was whisked to a podium mounted at the far end of the
hangar bay while a team taxied the pod into its cubicle and the
crowd closed in on the hole it made. Somebody ushered him to
a row of chairs and put him between Ambassador Spock and
Dr. McCoy--good thing, too, because then he had a buffer
from those adoring grins. As Captain Turner and those other
ambassadors stood up to make speeches--heroism, selfless-
ness, sacrifice, fortitude, survival, strength, pride of Starfleet,
son of Federation dynamism--Stiles caught only the odd word
or phrase, none of which struck him as applying to himself,
and he leaned slightly toward Dr. McCoy. Through his teeth he
implored, "Will you please tell them?"
    "Just smile and nod a lot," McCoy wryly advised. "Let 'em
have their ceremony. Next week the president's giving you the
Federation Medal of Valor."
    Stiles stared at him briefly. How could anybody be so casual
with a sentence like that coming out of his mouth?
    "The m--" Nope, couldn't get it out of his own. "God... I
don't get it... I just don't get this at all...."
    "Indeed?" Ambassador Spock offered a solemn gaze. He did
look amused! "A hero's welcome is a mystery to you after
your Meat sacrifice, Ensign?"
    "I didn't sacrifice anything," Stiles argued, keeping his
voice way down while the speaker's boomed over the P.A. sys-
tem. "I crashed into a mountain, and sat there about to wet my
pants because I was afraid of the big bad aliens. I must're
looked like a kid to you !"
    "You were a kid," the ambassador blithely told him, star-
tlingly familiar with the vernacular.
    Dr. McCoy leaned forward a little. "My eighth psychology
textbook, Spock," he explained, speaking from the comer of
his mouth. "Chapter Four."
    The ambassador looked past Stiles to the doctor, and they
communicated with a few eye movements.
 After a moment of this, Spock leaned back. "I see."
    They were both silent for several minutes while listening--
or pretending to listen---to the princess of somewhere happily
welcoming the famous survivor Ensign Stiles and all the vari-
ous dignitaries to her star system. Stiles heard part of her
words as if listening to a training tape. The words bore no
attachment to himself, except that he had the feeling he was
getting into deeper and deeper trouble. When they found out
what really happen~--- "Stiles."
    Maybe he should stand up and just explain what occurred
and the mistakes he made and then offer to quietly retreat
while they went on with their party. Would it be a good idea to
compromise Starfleet's perception, point out this big mistake,
right here in front of all these people? He'd hardly spoken to
anybody but Zevon for so long... get up and talk to this
crowd? His knees started shaking.
  "Kid. Psst."
  "Huh?"
    McCoy still didn't turn to speak to him, and kept his voice
barely above a whisper. "Now, listen and listen good. You did
all right four years ago. Some deskbound paperpusher sent a
bunch of kids into a tricky, dangerous political powderkeg
without an experienced senior officer "
    "Without briefing them about what they could be facing,"
Spock took over, very quietly, "to rescue some very important
personnel--"

    "With Romulans all over the place and riots going on,"
McCoy interrupted. "They took a pack of untried kids barely
out of officer school, with no black space experience at all, and
sent you into a civil war and said, 'Go, do.'"
    "Without a second thought," Spock added, "you took the
initiative, sacrificed yourself, and allowed everyone else to get
out alive. Then you kept yourself alive in an untenable situa-
tion long enough to be rescued. You are a hero, young man, by
any measure."
    Stiles felt his legs quiver, his hands grow cold as they spoke
to him of these indigestibles as if telling tales of some uncon-
tinned legend. The crowd of dress uniforms, court gowns, and
Sunday best shifted before his eyes and swam with applause as
the speaker handed over the podium to the next one.
    "Twenty-one-year-olds fail to see themselves as young," the
ambassador explained, able to speak up now in the cover of the
applause. "They lack the perspective of experience. In
Starfleet, they are frequently older than everyone else around
them. That is the curse of being a 'senior in high school,' if
you will."
    "You're one of the older kids," Dr. McCoy said, "so you fig-
ure you're not a kid at all. I'm bigger than everybody, so I'm
big. Kids feel as if they should know everything. Starfleet
handed you a situation that should've gone to a lieutenant. You
improvised. You did what you thought was right. We don't
damn people for inexperience."
    "To you," Spock added, "your mistakes looked like crashing
failures. To me, they simply looked like inexperience."
    Now the ambassador did turn and fix him with those eyes
nobody could look away from. "All these people are proud of
you."
"And you deserve it," the doctor finished. "So shut up."
Another round of applause. Another speech, more apprecia-
tion, more applause, cheering. They were as insubstantial as
dust. All he heard was the ambassador's words and the doc-
tor's over and over in his head, like some musical echo or siren
song drawing him along. His memories were of a butter-
fingered ensign crowing his own authority and trying to win
his spurs, fumbling every ball and landing ass-backward in a
flat failure. He balked at any other explanation. They were
being kind to him, he knew, and to themselves for their part of
the mistake. Starfleet was better at admitting its errors than
Eric Stiles ever had been.
    He had been young then, too young to know it was okay not
to already have all the experience of life. It was all right not to
know everything. Or much of anything. It was okay... it was
okay.
 l'm okay, Zevon. Don't worry.
 In a flush of emotion and self~examination he endured the
next half hour of applause and honors without really register-
ing much of it. By the time Spock took his arm and drew him
to his feet, Stiles was humbled beyond description. He collect-
ed his only pleasure from knowing his survival was making so
many people feel good about themselves. That was pretty
good, really. When they teased him and spoke poorly, he'd at
least been giving them something to converse about. Today he
was doing the same sort of thing, deserve it or not. He shook
hands and denied his way across the platform, then down to
the crowd as the people smiled and then left him alone. They
seemed to understand that he was overwhelmed, and the crowd
funneled politely to the exits, heading for the ship's mess and
ward rooms where the banquets were waiting. Music played
again over the PA, and everyone was laughing and cheery, all
because of him. On this astonishing day, he had everything
he'd once thought he ever wanted. And now he didn't want it.
    "If you'll come this way," Ambassador Spock was saying,
"there are some other people who're been waiting a long time
to meet you."
    "Not more," Stiles moaned. He lowered his eyes. Maybe
whoever it was would just get the idea he'd had too much and
leave him alone. The ship's captain had gotten the message
and corralled the princess and the mayor and governor and
were waiting with them about halfway to the exit, giving Stiles
a few minutes to breathe. They were conversing with each
other, obviously waiting for him, but also deliberately not
looking at him.
 He needed the time too. He stood at the side of the slowly
emptying hangar bay, with Spock and McCoy providing a wel-
come buffer between himself and the throng.
 "Eric !"
 "Hey, Eric!"
    With a notable wince, he turned away from the sound. If he
kept his back to the masses, maybe they'd think he just didn't
hear.
 "Lightfoot!"
    Something sparked in his head. Now he turned toward the
calls. Not twenty steps away, held back by a couple pillars of
meat in security uniforms, were the last people in the universe
he had expected to see alive, never mind here.
 "Travis?" Stiles's voice caught in his throat.
    At his side, McCoy gave him a little push. "Go ahead, son.
Go see 'em."
    Behind Travis Perraton, also crowding the guards, were
Jeremy White, Matt Gitvan, Greg Blake, Dan Moose, and both
the Bolt twins. At the front of the group, Travis Perraton's dark
hair was grown out from the Starfleet junior-officer close-clip,
and his blue eyes gleamed and bright smile flashed like a star
as he reached between the guards and said, "They won't let us
through !"
    "Security guard," Ambassador Spock smartly ordered,
"stand down."
    In unison the four guards snapped, "Aye, sir? and came to
at-ease, allowing Perraton, White, Blake, Girvan, Moose, and
the Bolts to flood into the reception area. All at once Stiles was
engulfed in a coil of embraces, until finally he was clinging to
Travis Perraton and getting his back slapped by everybody
else.
    Spock and McCoy graciously moved away, leaving the
young men together without interference. The row of guards
between them and everyone else would assure that the former
evac team would have a few private moments before all the
ringing and tickertaping started again.
    Stiles shook like a scarecrow as he clutched at the physical
reality of Travis and Jeremy and the Bolts.
    'q'hought you were all dead!" he gasped, tears flowing
freely down his balanced face.

    "Dead?' Jeremy White repeated. "Where'd you get that
idea?"
    "You showed up in the... I heard you... you said... the
anti-aircraft guns--"
    "We got clear, Eric," Travis said. "You gave us the extra sec-
onds we needed to get away."
    "You gotta be kidding," Matt Girvan protested. "He knows.
He's just making us say it over and over"
    Zack Bolt laughed. "And he'll never let us forget it. Wait
and see."
    "What is this?" Jason Bolt reached out and grasped Stiles'
beard and shook it warmly. "Nonregulation Stiles! Since
when!"
    Dan Moose poked at Stiles's ribs. "And he's skinnier than
Jeremy?
    His eyes blurring as he shuddered under the coil of Travis's
arm, Stiles blinked from one face to the other, then ran the
route again. Without a bit of the shame he would've once felt,
he wiped tears from his cheeks. "Where... where are.. ?'
    Typically, Jeremy took over with a clinical explanation.
"Well, Beret and Andrea left Starfleet and went back to Hol-
land, but they send their good wishes and denland a crew
reunion as soon as you feel up to it. Bill Foster got promoted,
and he's stationed on Alpha Zebra Outpost. Brad Carter's a
civilian now too, and he's coming in tomorrow. He's just fin-
ishing exam week at college, so he couldn't be here today"
     Only now did Stiles register that Travis, Greg, and Matt
were not wearing Starfleet uniforms. Civilians?
    Jason held up a stern finger. "But they're all waiting for a
communique on when and where we're having a crew reunion.
Those of us still in the service have been given special dispen-
sation from our current duties just so we can attend. The dope
civvies among us, who shall remain rankless, are being offered
free transportation and hotel, as if they deserve it."
  "Troublemaker," Travis said with a laugh.
    Greg Blake shrugged. "So I'll re-enlist;' he tossed off.
"Eric's bound to need a new wing leader. Can't do without me,
Call yOU?"

    "He can't do without any of us," Zack said. "Who'd pick
him up when he trips?"
    Matt laughed. "Who'd stop him from putting his hand in
front of a phaser?"
    "Who'd he have to shout at when things didn't happen fast
enough?"
 "You need us, Lightfoot," Jeremy punctuated.
    "Not so fast." Travis protected Stiles from them and held up
his free hand judiciously. "Don't be a tidal wave. Eric made it
through four years in prison on a hostile planet without any-
body to help him keep from making a jerk of himself. Maybe
he doesn't need our help for that anymore."
    Stiles laughed with them. The ribbing that would've unset-
fled him once today felt like cool pond water.
    Travis gave him a comradety squeeze. "Maybe he doesn't
even want to stay in Starfleet."
 "I sure wouldn't," Jason commented.
 The other twin added, "He's done his duty."
 "Twice over" Matt agreed. "They owe him now."
    "What a life," Travis went on. "Speaking engagements all
over the Federation--"
 "Scholarships," Dan Moose said.
 Blake made an exaggerated bow. "Honorary degrees--"
 "Ceremonial dinners" Matt fed in.
    "Starring in training films, have books written about you--
hell, write your own book! Any idiot with a pen can do that!"
Perraton looked at him admiringly. "You're gonna get rich and
fat, Eric. Wish to the devil it could're been me!"
    Until this moment Stiles had been lost in a daze, but Travis's
latest sentence snapped him into biting clarity. He straightened
his shoulders--a miracle in itself--and slipped abruptly back
in command. Escaping from Travis's cordial embrace, be took
hold of his friend's arm and control over the moment.
    "No, you don't," he said. "I'm glad it wasn't you and you're
glad too, and don't forget it, Travis. I'm so happy I could cry
to see all of you, but I'm not the kid you knew"
    Theft faces changed, subtly, though even after all this time
he could still read them. Perhaps even better than before. Some
were arguing with him in their minds. Others were realizing
they may have made a mistake to say what they'd been saying,
perhaps even to be here today.
    From the captain's group nearby, Ambassador Spock and
Dr. McCoy finally breached the bubble of intimacy encircling
Stiles and his crewmates.
    "Mr. Stiles," the ambassador began, "excuse me. As soon as
you're ready, the captain and dignitaries are ready to go to the
wardroom for the honors banquet. We have a table set aside for
you and your friends?'
    "Yes!" Travis beamed, and shook hands victoriously with
one of the Bolts.
    "You're most welcome, gentlemen," Spock allowed. "And
Dr. McCoy has something for Mr. Stiles."
    "Me?" Stiles rubbed his clammy hands on his thighs as Dr.
McCoy stepped past Spock.
    "Here you go, son." The doctor handed him a leatherbound
packet with a Starfleet seal.
    "What is it?" Stiles asked, as he took the plush folder with
its satin ribbon and official wax seal.
    "It's your way out," the doctor said. "Clean and legal. A
medical discharge, issued directly from the surgeon general,
with a retroactive field promotion. You'll go out as a full lieu-
tenant, with commensurate pension."
    Stiles looked up. "But you cured me. I don't have a legiti-
mate medical claim."
    "I cured your body" McCoy told him. Those active and
ancient blue eyes flared. "Your soul is still scarred."
    As the moment turned suddenly solemn beneath the doctor's
prophetic words, the men around Stiles fell silent and stopped
shifting. Their hands fell away from him and they made clear
by their demeanor that he was once again in charge, once more
the man who would make the important decision of the
moment for them all.
 A man, making decisions...
    He glanced at thein, saw the civilian clothes on some of
them, Starfleet uniforms on others, and his two worlds sudden-
ly collided. They looked young to him, young and unscarred
and inexperienced.
 "Thank you, sir." He handed the pouch back to Dr. McCoy
and straightened his shoulders. "But I've got too much to do.
My soul's just gonna have to heal."
    His friends erupted into silly cheers around him, as if they
understood something he wasn't registering at all. Over there
Captain Turner, the princess, the governor and mayor were all
looking at him, and now they had started applauding politely.
Not the cheers of the huge crowd this time, but something
much more substantial and wise.
 How come everybody knew what he had just thought of?.
    Ambassador Spock reached out and took Stiles's hand.
"Congratulations, Lieutenant. And welcome back to Starfleet."




Chapter Eleven

Eleven Years Later...

U.S.S. Enterprise, Starfleet Registry NCC1 701 -D

"T}m~ ~vE BE~ over fifty major outbreaks of raids or
attacks on the Neutral Zone by angry Romulan commanders
who before this made no violent overtures at all--and with no
apparent reason. We've got to get some better intelligence."
    Captain Jean-Luc Picard's comment would generally not
have traveled beyond the ears of his first officer and the physi-
cian who stood at his side on the command deck, but Ambas-
sador Spock's Vulcan hearing brought the private conversation
to him as he stepped from the turbolift. These were troubled
times. Despite them, reverie clouded his thoughts.
    To step from a turbolift, to hear the sibilance of the door and
sense anticipation, the murmur of a starship's bridge electrical
systems softly working--these were mighty memories.
    For a brief moment in a frozen pocket of his mind, the car-
pet changed texture, the bulkheads drained from tan to blue-
gay, the rail turned glossy red, lights dimmed, and there were
crisp shadows over his head. More blue, more black, and at the
center that oasis of mesa-gold. The center of his universe, that
dot of gold.
 Memories only. He dismissed them, but they pursued.
 He failed to escape them, as he stepped down to the corn-
mand deck, also failing to understand--until his foot struck the
lower carpet--that he was treading the sacred ground of offi-
cers aboard a starship, of the captain and his chosen few: and
that he was no longer among them. For decades he had not
been among them. How swiftly these automatic impulses
flooded back! Perhaps this was why he spent so little time
aboard ships anymore.
    He nearly stepped back and waited to be invited, but by now
Captain Picard had risen and turned to greet him.
    "Ambassador, welcome aboard," the captain began, his deep
theatrical voice communicating undisguised delight, and he
even smiled.
    Spock took his hand, a gesture he had come over the years
to find suspiciously comforting, and thus held it longer than
necessary for courtesy. When embarking on difficult missions,
especially those couched in mystery, he had come to depend
upon the sustenance of the human tendency to get to know one
another quickly and with a speck of intimacy. Few races in the
galaxy had that talent. He had come to cherish it.
"You know Mr. Riker," the captain invited pleasantly.
"Ambassador, hello!" William Riker, yes the ship's first
officer. A bright smile, and no attempt to subdue his pride that
a distinguished Federation identity had come aboard his star-
ship.
    "Good evening, Mr. Riker" Spock offered, and also took
Riker's hand.
"And Dr. Crusher, of course," the captain added, turning.
Only the ship's doctor, Beverly Crusher (in fact the person
he had come here to meet), restrained herself from offering to
shake a Vulcan's hand.
    She was a stately woman, tall, reedy, and red-haired, with a
sculpted face that echoed a Renaissance painting Spock had
once seen in the Manhattan Museum of Art. He found it a
credit to Dr. Crusher that he remembered the painting now for
the first time in nearly nine decades, but recalled also his
thoughts at the time that the woman in the picture was pale and
too thin. Understanding that humans' emotional condition fre-
quently communicated itself to their physical appearance, he
surmised that the doctor was strained and troubled. She did not
smile as did her captain and first officer, and that he also found
suggestive.
 "Good evening, Doctor. I'm gratified to have you involved."
    "Now you'll get some answers, Beverly," Captain Picard
told her with a placating smile.
 She glanced at him, then stepped closer to Spock.
    "I'd like to say it's my pleasure, Ambassador" the woman
said, "but unfortunately I doubt any of us will enjoy the next
few weeks."
 "That will depend upon the outcome, as always:'
    Spock slipped his traveling cloak from his shoulders and
let his attending yeoman take it from him, leaving his arms a
little cool with unencumberment. Though he felt obliged by
tradition to wear the Vulcan robes and plastiformed emblems
when moving among the public or visiting Starfleet locali-
ties, such dress aboard a ship seemed provincial. Among
these men and women, he could feel comfortable in simple
black slacks and his cowlnecked daywear tunic. The cobalt-
and-purple quilted strips running from his shoulders to his
thighs were the only jewel-tones on the bright tan bridge,
excepting only the shoulder yoke of medical blue on Beverly
Crusher's uniform.
Again, he found himself wading in memories unbidden.
And a few he had dismissed freely--the officers here on this
bridge were people he knew, had encountered in a previous
mission, and since allowed to fade from his mind. He had
learned long ago to remember the names of ships, captains,
and some officers---but that cluttering one's mind with lieu-
tenants, yeomen, and others tended only to inaccuracy. Eventu-
ally those crewmen and officers either disappeared into the
mists of service or civilian life, or became commanders and
captains themselves, in which case their names and ranks and
ships turned into a long roster he would just have to amend
later.
    He remembered Captain Picard's senior security officer, the
noted Klingon who defied so much to be here, but he could not
summon the name. The android at the science station, howev-
er, had a name that no mathematician could forget--Data.
 "There're been two more skirmishos this mortting, Ambas-

sador," Captain Picard reported. "The Starfleet ships Ranger
and Griffith were set upon just outside the Crystal Ball Nebula,
and the Ranger was actually boarded."
  "Is everyone all right?" Spock asked.
    "No fatalities, sixteen casualties, and apparently one of their
passengers was kidnapped. The details are hazy so far."
    Troubled by these unpredictable rashes, so obviously driven
by emotion rather than by tactical plans, Spock paused a
moment to gather his thoughts.
    "Unfortunately, events are moving forward with the rapidity
typical of a national crisis. We can now officially call the dis-
ease an epidemic." Spock lowered his voice and significantly
added, "Captain, the proconsul of the Senate died yesterday."
 "Uh----oh," Riker opined.
    Picard grimaced. "That means instability at the top of the
empire."
    "Dr. McCoy should be arriving soon," Spock told them,
"with current information about the medical aspects of the
Romulan crisis. You should shortly be receiving a signal from
a Tellarite grain ship upon which he's traveling at the
moment."
    "Leonard McCoy" Dr. Crusher observed, "is the only man
I've ever known who can shuttle in and out of nontreaty cul-
tures as easily as the rest of us visit the stores in a shopping
promenade. He can charm his way past border guards and
squirm past warrants like some kind of spirit."
    "Hardly charm;' Spock commented. "In any case, we
should shortly have fresh information. The massive sickness is
causing havoc throughout the empire."
    "We've been feeling the effect." Captain Picard validated.
"These border eruptions are like wildcat strikes. Isolated lead-
ers are finding excuses to attack Federation outposts and ships,
staging incidents on purpose, hoping one of them will flame
into all-out conflict. Nothing that smacks of coordination.
however, not so far."
    "They are not coordinated attacks at all," Spock concurred.
"As certain members of the royal family die, their followers--
and sometimes the fanfily members themselves--are flaring
up in frustration and anger."

    "And fear" Crusher added. "The royal fmnily is spread all
over, and they're all in charge. And they're all terrified.
They're not only dying themselves, but also watching their
children die. It's not a gentle disease, Ambassador... it
attacks quickly, painfully, then inflicts a stow death. It behaves
like a curse. Some people think that's what it is. Terrified peo-
ple do terrible things."
    "We've got a reason to be terrified too," her captain said.
"As more and more of the royal family die, others who have
had no chance for power are seeing an opportunity for
upheaval. The Federation's managing to handle these spurts
without considering any one of them an act of war, but how
long can we hold out? If the structure breaks down too
much "
    "Could that happen?" Dr. Crasher asked. "Could the
empress really be deposed because she and her whole family
are sick?"
    Riker looked at Crusher. "If the empress dies, all the hungry
near-orbiters who never had a shot at the throne will start
smelling velvet."
    "With too many decisive defeats of Romulan flare-ups by
Starfleet crews," Picard added, "the empress cotfid be deposed
very quickly and someone more hungry for war could take
over` No matter how you look at it politically, there's every
reason to stir up trouble and virtually no reason not to. So our
goal in these skirmishes is to prevail, but not so decisively that
the Romulan commanders are deeply humiliated or destroyed.
We try to push them back without squashing them, stalling for
time, seeking a biological solution. If the empress falls and her
relatives are all infected too, there could be decades of instabil-
ity on one of the Federation's longest borders. We have a stake
in restoring the status quo."
    "True;' Spock agreed, relieved that they shared his hopes.
"Better to have a stable empire as a neighbor than anarchy at
our gates."
    "Well, we've done a good job so far," Will Riker injected,
"of keeping these flare-up attacks from turning into acts of
war"
 "As the family breaks down," Spock said, "some dissident

elements are striking out at the Federation, even though the
core of the royal family is not yet ready to do that. Some of
these elements are in control of ships."
    Spock turned a fraction toward him, careful not to mm his
back on the captain. "Those closest to power--the empress,
her immediate relatives, and their immediate relatives--seem
more concerued about stopping this biological attack than
using it as leverage to foment trouble."
    "Wouldn't you, sir? They see a chance that they nfight not
have to die."
    "Not everyone craves havoc, Mr. Riker. As Dr. Crusher
pointed out, many of these victims wish only to live and see
their children live, and to do so in a fairly stable civilization.
Unfortunately, the empress must walk a very thin tightrope.
For her own survival as a ruler, after nearly two hundred years
of anti-Federation propaganda, she must not be seen as cow-
ardly or complacent toward the Federation. The Romulan peo-
ple on the outskirts, including those in command of ships, have
been told all their lives to distrust the Federation. Now all the
Romulan leadership is suddenly dying. What would you
expect them to think?"
    "Yes..." Riker's eyes widened. "How much of a leap
would it be to assume the Federation is doing this?"
    Spock rewarded him with a nod. "The propaganda is turning
on them."
    "And now they need our help," Dr. Crusher folded her long
am~s. "It figures. Has it occurred to anyone that this may be a
genetic anomaly?"
    "Isolated to the royal familyT' Picard protested. "How likely
is that?"
    "Pretty damned likely, Jean-Luc." Crusher held out a hand.
"The Ronmlans used to do genetic experiments--about a cen-
tury ago, a little more. Those experiments could just now have
incubated to mutancy and be coming back to bite them. It
could be completely incurable. tn that case, are we getting
involved just to prove we didn't do it? I'm not sure I can prove
a negative that big. If that's what the Federation expects, I've
got an impossible mission here."
 Wondering if indeed all physicians were necessarily cantan-
kerous, Spock found himself sympathetic to her dilemma. The
ball she had been cast was a familiar one to medical specialists
with deep-space exploration, for they had the most experience
dealing with the unknown, the foreign, and the unheard-of as
commonplace. He had in his long life seen this first-hand, seen
that expression in the eyes of many doctors into whose hands a
monumental task had been shoved.
    "Like myself, Doctor," he placated, "I know you prefer clar-
ity to choices. However, choices are the more frequent curse of
authority. The Romulans are advanced, but the Federation is
much more advanced in the medical field. We've had to deal
with so wide an array of alien members."
    Will Riker cocked a hip and leaned against the navigation
station, drawing a glance from the crewman manning the helm.
"They might as well accept our help. They can always kill us
tomorrow."
    "Whatever the sociopolitical ramifications," Spock added,
"they simply need our help"
    "Captain, short-range emergency sensors," the fierce voice
of Picard's Klingon officer erupted suddenly. As they all
turned to look up at him, towering there over the tactical sta-
tion at the back of the wide bridge, the surly lieutenant raised
his eyes from the board and glared at the forward screen. "A
Romulan Scoutship just decloaked off our bow!"
    "Shields up, Mr. Worf. Red alert. Battle stations. Helm, hold
position."
    Lieutenant Worf watched the incoming angular feather-
painted Romulan wing on the wide forward screen. "Should I
arm photon torpedoes also, sir, considering their duophasic
shields?"
 "Ah, certainly:'
 Spock turned. "Captain, may I suggest "
    "I understand, Ambassador, but no Romulan commander
expects less and I don't intend to show squeamishness."
     Retreating, and somewhat embarrassed at this change in
himself, Spock instantly acceded, "Forgive me."
  "Captain, they are hailing," Data reported.
  "Ship to ship, Mr. Data"

 "Frequencies open, sir."
    'Whis is Captain Jean-Luc Picard, U.S.& Enterprise, Star-
fleet. Identify yourself, please."
    "Subcommander Cul, Captain, Imperial Reconnaissance
Scout Tdal."
    "You're in violation of the Neutral Zone treaty by several
light-years, Subcommander. Explain your presence here."
 "Our weapons are cold, Captain. We have a passenger"
 Picard paused, then glanced at Spock.
    Spock was careful to keep his expression subdued, although
this was probably a fruitless attempt, for even that subtle effort
belied involvement.
     "Yes" Picard drawled. "Mr. Worf, shields down. Subcoman-
der, prepare for beaming."  "We are prepared."
    Impressed, Spock once again looked at Picard. "How did
you know, Captain? Even I was not sure."
    ~Because it's logical, Ambassador" the captain responded,
his dark eyes glinting. "Mr. Data, please scan for human physi-
ology and beam their passenger directly to the bridge."
"Understood, captain. Transporter room, this is the bridge."
The android relayed the captain's orders, and in 49 seconds
the shaft of glittering energy appeared as expected on the port-
side deck ramp leading to the captain's ready room. Spock
noted the angle of the n~np and hoped it would cause no trou-
ble or surprise.
    As the colunto of lights coagulated into familiar form, he
stepped toward it, then again restrained himself, not wishing to
appear too custodial. He was relieved when Mr. Riker stepped
to the ramp and put out an assisting hand in anticipation.
Another two seconds brought the white-haired, pin-thin form
of Leonard McCoy fully onto the bridge, shouldering a simple
canvas satchel. The work of the Romulan wing was done.
    "Sir, the Tdal is bearing off;' Worf reported immediately.
"They are vectoring back toward Romulan space at emergency
high warp."
    "Very good--and I don't blame them," Picard said. "Stand
down from general quarters. Welcome to the Enterprise,
Dr. McCoy."
    "Captain Picard, nice to be aboard" the doctor's elderly
voice scratched. "Can you turn the heat up in here? That
Romulan shoebox was cold as a coffin nail. Hi, Spock:'
  "Doctor."
 "You're looking stiff?'
 'Whank you"
 "Back trouble?"
 "ff you like."
    "I brought a big hypodermic needle from my medical
antiques collection:'
    "A display which ideally fits your personality, I have always
reflected."
 "I... all... all right, I owe you one. Morning, Beverly"
    "Leonard" the other physician chuckled. "And it's evening
here"
    "Dammit. Why can't the galaxy just go to Federation Stan-
dard Time?"
    William Riker smiled again and took McCoy's sticklike
ann in his to escort him down the ramp. Spock resisted the
urge to reach out and stop Riker's robust gril>---McCoy's spi-
dery limbs seemed so frail then chided himself for his
absurdity.
    "That was hardly a Tellmite grain ship, Doctor," he com-
mented instead.
    "So I lied. It was the only way I could get a ship with high
warp to bring me all the way back. Anything else would've
taken ten weeks. We don't have ten weeks."
    "No, we don't," Crusher endorsed. "The Romutan royal
family is not a dozen people. It's over a thousand, installed in
positions of power all over the empire. How close you are to
the current ruler causes a lot of jockeying and marrying and
even assassinations, but there's never been anything like this.
This certainly isn't just some jealous cousin maneuvering for
the crown." She turned specifically to McCoy. "What have you
concluded?"
    "Concluded? Oh, I did say that in my message yesterday,
didn't I? What I came up with is that the Romulans are right.
The infection is definitely man-made. Not an accident."
 "How did you come to this?" Spock asked, careful to phrase
the question in a way that would dodge McCoy's still-youthful
barbed humor.
    "I've made some progress. What else do you expect from a
man old enough to call Moses by his first name? Anyway,
that's why I need Beverly's help."
 "You need my help?" Dr. Crusher asked.
    "Hell, yes, I need help. I'm old, all right? Besides, you're
the one who worked on this mess before."
    She regarded him with a gaze startlingly similar to the way
Captain Kirk used to regard McCoy. "You mean this Romulan
disease is the same multiprion nightmare,--?"
    "That's right. The same thing you and Dr. Spencer of the
Constitution encountered back on Archaria m. It's mutated or
been artificially mutated. That's why you haven't recognized
it. It's been targeted to the genetics of the Romulan royal fami-
ly."
    Clearly irritated that her victory was being compromised,
Crusher scowled. "How did you recognize it if it's mutated?"
    McCoy's white head bobbed in a nod. "My dear, you
remember the line 'Methinks he doth protest too much'? Well,
me have begun to think this infection doth show up too much.
Prion-based infections just don't appear randomly this often,
and certainly not in a pattern that leaps from one planet to
another, infecting a vastly different DNA makeup. Somebody's
forcing mutations, combining prions that would never hook up
naturally, then targeting whole races for infection. This biolog-
ical terrorism smacks to me of experimentation" "My God!" Riker blurted.
    Spock heard the exclamation, but was himself focused on
the doctor's unexpected declaration. "Someone is working
toward a larger go'd? The Romulan royal family is not the tar-
get?"
    "I don't think so;' McCoy said. "I don't think the goal is to
kill off the royal family at all. I think they're being used as an
incubation test site. I think the goal is to develop a bioagent
that can be neither cured nor treated."  "Upon what do you base this?"
    The doctor's gravelly voice took on a surge of confidence.
"On the same multiprion sickness popping up all over the
place, sometimes in isolation, other times in populated areas,
but each time with some new aberration. A plague here, a flu
there, an infection yonder, a couple of them leaping racial
boundaries... until now, nobody's tied the incidents together;
but I've seen this kind of thing before on a smaller scale, and I
got suspicious. So I started ordering some quiet information
gathering about three years ago. And, folks, this isn't just an
epidemic. It's a pandemic."
    The word sent a chill through the bridge that Spock found
nearly palpable. Even he discovered his hands suddenly
clenched and forced himself to control his reaction. Ever since
the first armies began forming and moving in the first civiliza-
tions on the earliest planets, pandemics had been a far more
insidious scourge than any war.
    Dr. McCoy paused long enough to see his revelation run its
course of shock and nervousness, then enjoyed center stage
again.
    "When the Romulan royal family popped up with this dead-
ly strain," he went on, "I started gathering the results of tests
all over the quadrant, and sure enough they've got enough
common characteristics to eliminate either the idea of coinci-
dence or the idea of any other cause. These aren't dozens of
isolated biological occurrences--they're all mutations of a sin-
gle strain."
    "So it couldn't be remnants of genetic testing?" Riker
jabbed, leaning a little toward Dr. Crusher.
McCoy swiveled to him. "Genetics? Whoever said that?"
"Nobody said that," Crusher injected quickly. Her face
masked a cold and bottled fury, as a knight's who had just
been told the dragon is still alive. "Did you bring the results of
all these tests? I'd like to examine them."
    He patted his satchel. "Along with a cache of Scaffold Mints
for the wardroom."
    "As ever" Spock commented, "you keep your eye on the
future ?'
    "Watch it, pal, or I'll sit on you and give you a lecture on
how long two cockroaches can live off the glue on the back of
a postage stamp."
 Dr. Crusher clasped her hands in a manner of controlled
anxiety. "Who ever heard of 'two cockroaches'? Doctor, have
you isolated the matrix on this Romulan mutation?"
    McCoy's ancient blue eyes fixed on hers with the zeal of
youth. "First thing. And, bless us all, it's a DNA strain, not
RNA, which mans we can beat it with one medication if we
can come up with the right one. Healthy blood cells can
replace the atrophied cells. All I need is a continuing source of
uninfected royal blood for about a week to generate healthy
plasma. But first, we've got to keep the members of the royal
family who're still alive from dying. That's going to be your
job. Keep them alive long enough to throw the infection off or
for me to synthesize a cure." "Treat the symptoms."
    "But treat them in the right order. It might not be the right
thing to do to lower a fever. The fever's something that I think
helps. You're going to be treating the empress herself and over
twenty of her family members on the home planet. You'll be
communicating with physicians all over the empire, telling
them how to treat the family members they've got. Meanwhile,
I'll be trying to find a cure for the mutation. I've had my
network of spies quietly sifting through information on the
whole empire and the Federation---even through the Klingon
Empire----for weeks now. So far, we haven't found a single
family member who's not infected."
    "Ripple-effect contamination," Crusher breathed. "God,
that's a new twist...."
 "What's that mean?" Riker asked.
    Spock almost answered, but restrained himself. He was curi-
ous to hear Dr. McCoy's analysis of what was happening to the
Romulans, and forced himself to remember that his role on a
starship was no longer to provide information and move events
along.
    "Means we can't synthesize a cure without an uncontami-
nated family member. I need clear blood, and I can't find any-
body. Also means this is no accident. Somebody's doing this
on purpose. Somebody planned this plague in such a way as to
make sure it can't be cured. That's why;' McCoy added, now
turning to Picard, "I arranged to have this rendezvous on board
the Enterprise?'
  "I beg your pardon?" Picard asked.
    "Three years ago, Captain, you picked up a Romulan defec-
tor. He left the empire in disgrace after leading a coup against
the empress. When that failed, he fled to the Federation and
you offered sanctuary. Correct?"
    "Oh... yes, a minor incident for us. We gave him sanctuary
and resisted the extradition police on the planet where we
found him. What was his name, Mr. Riker, do you remember?"
  "Uh... believe it was Renn something, wasn't it, sir?"
  "Check on the man, would you, please?"
    "Aye, sir." Riker moved to the science station and looked
over the android's shoulder. "Check ship's log and all ancillary
documentations for Stardates 41099.1 through the ensuing six
months. It's in there somewhere."  "Checking, sir"
    "Then link into the archivist's computer at Starbase Ten.
We're still in range, aren't we?"
    While they worked, McCoy said, "Disgraced blood's as
good as any. This defector's the third cousin to the empress on
her mother's side, so it'll be undiluted blood and give us a
strong base for immunological work."
    "That must be what the message means," Picard said, glanc-
ing at Spock. "The admiralty gave me orders to cooperate with
you both and transport you to any location in Federation space
that you specified. They must mean for us to take you to this
Rekk person, once we find where he is."
    Spock nodded. "Rather than risk transpolting him from sta-
tion to station, we hoped to use the starship, for safety and
security reasons."
 "We're at your disposal, of course," Picard assured.
    "If I can't find any uncontaminated plasma," MeCoy con-
templated, "then it's all over. Ninety-five percent of the infect-
ed people are going to die and there's no way to stop it. You
get this thing, you are dead."
 His flat statement had a chilling effect.
 "The next trick," McCoy added, "is getting us in there."
    "What?" Crusher asked. "Why don't we just go in? They
know why we're coming, right?"
 'They'll give special access to Dr. McCoy and to you,"
Riker told her, "but not to the starship. Medical access is a lit-
tle different from military access."
    "CorrecC' Spock said. "If any starship moves through the
Neutral Zone and into Romulan space, the imperial leadership
will be forced to act against us. Their own people will stand
for nothing less. The empress knows Federation medical sci-
ence may be their only chance, no matter who concocted this
attack, but she would be forced to respond against a ship of the
line or she could lose power before she loses her life."
    "That's why we're not going" Picard explained. "At least,
we are not." And he looked worriedly at Beverly Crusher.
    "Arrangements will be made" Spock assured her, and felt
suddenly remiss in having delayed securing passage. In fact,
permission for passage into Romulan space had been secured,
but not the method of passage.
    "It's a problem;' Captain Picard said. From the captain's
expression, Spock could tell that the blueblooded commander
of this Enterprise thoroughly understood the ramifications of
secured space, and when a starship could and could not be of
service.
    "Yes," Spock reluctantly admitted. "Even the UFP diplo-
matic corp cannot breach imperial space. This time, the
royal family wants us in, but no one else does. Perhaps...
secrecy required concessions I should not have made this
time."
    "Sir?" Riker straightened at Data's side. "We've got some-
thing here"
    The android touched his controls and read off, 'I'he Romu-
lan defector Rekk Devra Kilmne is no longer living in the Fed-
eration"
"Where is he, then?" Picard asked. "We'll go get him."
Data swiveled around in his chair, his expression particular-
ly childlike. "No, sir... he is no longer living in the Federa-
tion."
    Riker held out a hand that stopped what seemed to be turn-
ing into a debate of unclarity, and looked at his captain. "Rekk
Devra was murdered, Captain... fifteen months ago, during a
visit to Deep Space Nine."
 A mantle of chill descended upon the bridge, as winter
cloaks northern hills. Spock felt it, and saw that all the others
also felt it. Shoulders tightened, pensive glances traveled, fists
clenched, lips pressed, Strange how a revelation could be so
tangible, so very present.
    The last living uncontaminated royal fanlily member, dead.
Whoever was driving the force of this plague was a critical
step ahead.
 And now... what?

Chapter Twelve

Combat Support Tender Saskatoon,
  Starfleet Registry CST 2601

"DAMAGE COntROL, TOP DECK!"
 "Take some of the new midshipmen up there with you."
    "Right. You and you, and your friend over there, come with
me."
 "And this one."
    On the severely angled bridge deck of the Saskatoon, Eric
Stiles hooked the nearest midshipman and handed him to Jere-
my White as Jeremy rushed past him, dragging the other three
kids.
    "Did it hit us or just skin us?" Stiles tossed as an after-
thought as he brushed hot bits of plastic from his shoulders.
"Mr. Perraton, have somebody trim the deck gravitational
compensators, please. Rafting hands, man umbilicals one, two,
and four."
    "Direct hit, midships upper quadrant, lateral shield, port
side."
 "Did you say upper quadrant?"
    "Upper. At least I think it's there--" Jeremy's words became
garbled as he disappeared into the bulky body of the CST,
jumping through hatch after hatch until he got to the tubular
companionway that would take him to file operational deck
above the middle of the ship. Smoke rolled freely from cham-
ber to chamber through the body of the CST, a ship built on
lateral lines to avoid transfer of equipment up and down ladder
wells. Despite its 200-meter LOA, the tender only had three
decks. Factories didn't need stairways.
    "Rats," Stiles muttered, surveying the shattered trnnk hous-
ing that had just been blown all over the deck. "Ship to ship."
    To his right, at the comm station, Midshipman Zelasko con-
trolled a cough and squeaked, "Ship to ship, sir."
    Nearly choking on the acrid smoke from fried circuits in the
deck and sparks on the smoldering carpet, Stiles held onto the
helm stanchion as the CST rolled noticeably under him. "Cap-
tain Sattier, I've got to be able to get closer than this. If both
our ships can't move off as a unit, you've got to kick those
fighters off harder when they come into range. I know you've
never done this before, but--"
    "Sorry, Commander--Fire!" The captain's voice from the
Destroyer Lafayette crackled back at him through the electrical
charges of phaser and disruptor fire in open space. "Sorry
again. Two units got past us. I can't move off with a kinked
nacelle, not even on impulse, without knowing what else is
damaged up there."
    "The arbitrariness of battle is for you to worry about, Cap-
tain, thank the god of problems."
    "He said cheerily" Travis Perraton edited from the other
side of the narrow horseshoe-shaped bridge, where he was
dodging from station to station coordinating the next few
moves. To somebody on the upper deck, he spoke into a corem
unit. "Just control the damage, Adams, don't repak it yet. We
don't come first out here, remember?"
    Spitting dust from his neatly trimmed moustache, Stiles
turned forward again and wrapped up his communication with
the destroyer. "We'll have your external diagnostic in a minute,
Captain."
    "Are you damaged? You're venting something off your
upper hull."
    "Yes, we've got some damage, but we'll repair it later. Your
ship comes first. Keep the corem lines open if possible. You'll
have to drop your shields while we raft up and do the work.

That'll be the tricky part. You'll want to have one of the other
Starfleet ships run a cover grid."
    "I'll contact the Majestic and--tactical, broad on the bow--
fire! Deflectors, shift double starboard! Hail the Majestic--
fire at will, Samuels! Majestic, Sattler here--"
    "She's got her hands full." Stiles turned and called back into
the scoped hatchways, not bothering with the comm. "Tell me
when you know something, Jeremy! Those Ronmlans can see
we're vulnerable, so work faster."
    Jeremy's disembodied voice trailed back through three sec-
tions. "Scanning... naceUe hasn't been breached... not on
the outside, anyway... couM be internal feedback from a hit
someplace else, though. The main injector's secure... there's
a crack in the sliding bulkhead. Let me follow it down... I got
it, Eric', i see a fractured buckler. It's not the naceUe. It's the
struL "
    "Great!" Stiles clapped his hands once, and startled the
socks off his new hehi~sman. "That's a relief. Ship to ship---
Captain Sattier, good news. It's not the nacelle that's kinked.
It's only the strut. We'll raft up right here and square it, but
you've got to keep those stingers off us for a solid fifteen min-
utes. I have to put extravehicular crew on the skin of your ship
and I don't want anybody barbecued on your hull."
    "Commander, you fix my nacelle in fifteen minutes in the
middle of this mess' and I'll owe you a big soppy kiss and a
crystal decanter of your favorite. We'll put out the warning
pennant and anybody who comes near your workers will feel
the heat. There's nothing like a movable starbase when we
need one!"
    The charming---oh, yes--and sultry voice of the destroy-
er's captain made Stiles smile again. For a moment, he had
trouble imagining her in a uniform. "I'll take the kiss and
send the decanter to my grandfather. Maintain standby com-
munications and let us handle the rafting. Drop your shields
on our mark."
      "Pennant%' flashing. Standing by for rafting approach. Do
you intend to use tractors or umbilicals?"
 "Both," Stiles told her.
 "Aren't tractors faster?"
    "Usually, but if we get hit and there's a power failure, our
ships would just drift away from each other and we couldn't
help each other. With umbilicals, we'll be netted together no
matter what happens,"
  "Good thinking. Ready when you are."
 "Three... two... one... mark."
"Affirmative, shields down. Approach when ready."
Glancing at his bridge crew, Stiles said, "Okay, boys, we've
got fifteen minutes! That's two to raft up and thirteen to effect
repair. Let's clone that destroyer a new nacelle strut. Sound
off."
     From deep through the body of the combat support tender,
team leaders and section masters called off. 
"Internal repair squad ready, sir!"
    "Rafting hands ready. Umbilicals one, two, and four
manned, magnetic tethers hot."
 "Rivet squad suited and ready, sir"
 "Caissons ready."
 "Gun team?"
 "Weapons armed and ready!"
 "Where are the evil twins?"
 "Already in the airlock, Eric."
 "Beautiful Lateral thrusters one half. Let's move in."
 "All hands, brace for action rafting! Shields down!"
 Ah, the chatter of activity. What a good noise.
    Out there, not far away on the cosmic scale, a half dozen
Romulan fighters darted around two Starfleet destroyers, one
patrol cutter, and three merchant ships caught in the crossfire.
Bursts of phaser fire, disruptor streams, glancing hits and
direct detonations lit the fabric of black space like flashing
jewels. There was a startling beauty about it, stitched firmly
into the crazy quilt of hazard and excitement.
    "Okay, you lot---tea time! Battle Cook Woody reportin'
f'duty, sah !"
  Stiles rolled his eyes and groaned. What timing.
    At the port entryway, Ship's Mess Officer Alan Wood came
rolling in as he always seemed to in moments of critical action,
or did critical action always happen at teatime?
  Stiles didn't argue, as their in-house real-live London butch-
er distributed cookies, tea, and coffee to an obviously busy
crew.
    "Them y'go. Two sugars, Tray. Told y'I wouldn't f'get.
Eric, sir, no caffeine for you, double cream, honey, and ye olde
ginger snaps."
    "You always know what calms me down, Alan. And don't
call me 'honey.'"
 "Aye aye, dear"
    "Put the tray down and take over Jason's driver coil balance,
Battle Cook."
 "You got it."
    They were completely vulnerable now. Both the CST and
the destroyer were shields down. These were the crucial min-
utes during which any enemy shot could cut all the way
through any bulkhead or hull plate and take out anything
inside, man or machine.
    He glanced around at the bridge crew, peeked back through
the infinity mirror of hatchways leading into the depths of the
Saskatoon and its work areas, saw the unit leaders looking
back at him from their various places, and satisfied himself
that all segments were ready to work. He turned now to watch
the two main screens, one always viewing forward, one always
aft, and the sixteen auxiliary screens around the horseshoe. On
the screens, shown from a dozen different angles, there was a
hot battle going on at this edge of a small solar system. He
stood beside the command chair, so seldom used that it held
parts and charts and anything else they needed handy at any
given time. He almost never sat in it. Should have it removed
altogether.
    "Watch your aft swing;' he told the helmsman. "There's a
solar current here."
    "! can do it manually, i think" the helmsman boldly
claimed.
    "You think, sir." Travis turned at the brash helmsman's
statement, reached across the auxiliary board on the upper
controls, and tapped one of the pads. "I've got it. Stabilizers
on."
 The young helmsman fumed, but said nothing.
 Stiles glanced at Travis and shrugged. Kids.

    He stepped a little closer to the helm, just to intimidate at
the right level. ff only he could remember the kid's name.
    "Okay, junior" he decided, "this is your first battle rafting.
Let's do it fight."
 The midshipman gfiued his teeill. "Aye, sir."
    "Adjust to starboard on the transverse axis... watch your
amplitude of pitch... not bad. Don't let the roll go... quarter
reverse on the port lateral. More thrust to port... less under-
thrust... never mind the bumpers, don't try to be graceful...."
    On the starboard deck, Travis clamped his lips to keep from
laughing at the helmsman's obvious annoyance with help he
clearly needed. St:des saw the effort, but any possibility of
amusement for himseft was lost in the sheer danger of what
they were about to do. An action rafting was never routine, no
matter how well-drilled the crew could possibly become.
    When the CST and the destroyer were snugged up beam-to-
beam and in line, and the CST had been raised to near-
touching level with the Lafayette's starboard nacelte, Stiles
called, "Pass line two."
 "Pass two!" the response came from amidships.
    On one of the small monitors, umbilical number two snaked
out and grappled the attraction bracket on the high side of the
destroyer.
 "Capture two!" the line handler called.
    Suddenly the destroyer heaved up on its port nacelle as a
Romulan fighter veered in too close and opened fire. Bright
light washed Stiles and everyone around him from all the star-
board screens, a fierce shining glitter of destruction and raw
heat.
 "Whoa," Stiles murmured, shielding his eyes. "Close one."
    Travis flinched at the proximity of death. "Lafayette. steady
your position, can you?"
    "We're attempting to hold as steady as possible, Saska-
toon," the other commanding officer responded. "That current
came up under us just as that Romulan fired on us. Double
whammy."
    "I know you're taking firel' Stiles interrupted, "but we only
need thirty seconds to finish this. Hold still that long."
  "Understood."
    "Spring in closer now" he said to the helm trainee. "Keep us
trim. Work a little faster. Don't overcompensate. Let the gravi-
tational umbilicals do the heavy lifting."
    "Closing," the kid said. "Twenty meters... fifteen
meters..."
 "Pass one"
 "Passing one!"
 "Hold two"
 "Two holding"
 "Capture one!"
    "Forward starboard thruster one quarter and shift down port
bow 10 degrees."
 "Forward one quarter, port bow down ten, aye."
 "Pass four, hold one."
 "Passing four!"
 "Hold one, aye."
 "lkvo and four, haul away."
 "Haul away two{"
 "Haul away four!"
    Music, music. the church chimes of efficient rafting. Thirty
seconds to spare. Snuggling his CST up to a big, powerful,
scarred, smoldering battleship in the middle of a flashing fire-
fight--ahl The chunky hull of the CST didn't fit well against
the streamlined multihulled destroyer, so he had to pick and
choose which umbilicals would line up best, then cast one and
pivot in on it. What a gorgeous process.
     "I love skirmishes" he effused happily. "That's good! Cut
thrust. Engine crew, stand by. Mr. Blake! Scan for stress"
 "Scanning, sir."
    As disruptor fire flashed on some of the smaller monitors,
showing the ongoing space battle between another destroyer
and those Romulan buzzsaws, Stiles nodded in satisfaction,
even though Blake couldn't see him. Greg Blake had known
him since they were both fifteen years old. The "sW' was
almost silly in that regard, but he knew his long-time crew
threw it in for effect at moments like this. There were always
impressionable midshipmen and junior officers serving on the
CST, most of whom would move on 'after the grueling training
they would receive here.

    On the screen to his left, the streamlined body of the
Destroyer Lafayette drew close to the lurebering CST, in fact
close enough to touch if that viewport had been a window they
could open. He saw the gleaming hull plates and the button-
head rivets as clearly as his own fingernails.
    "What a great way to live," he muttered. "She gets all the
glory and the headaches, she has to guess what the enemy's
doing--and on top of that she has to protect us in the middle
of a battle. This is the best damn duty around."
    "You could ask for a date," Travis suggested. "I bet she'd
go, the way she sounds when she talks to you. Maybe if you
grow your beard back---"
    "I'm not dating anybody who outranks me," Stiles com-
mented, aware of the glances from Midshipman Zelasko at the
corem station and the two little ensigns over at the engineering
board. "Bad enough having a cocky Canadian first officer
around. And the beard itched."
    Outside, close enough to smell the gunpowder, seven other
ships were engaged in a spark battle, a border skirmish with
hotheaded Romulans. These eruptions had been going on for
months now, sparks of aggression that seemed like temper
tantrums from isolated Romulan units~ The empire kept claim-
ing nothing was wrong, that these were just dissatisfied com-
manders venting their frustration, but Stiles didn't believe it.
Something was going on in the Romulan Empire that was
causing rogue attacks. The Federation wanted to be prudent.
Ignore acts of war. Avoid any one of these bursts turning into a
lit fuse that couldn't be put out by anything other than full-out
conflict.
    "Okay, Travis," Stiles said when he was satisfied that the
ships were as close as possible and the umbilicals were taut.
"Go do that voodoo that you do so well."
    "Ten seconds and counting," Travis responded, and hit a
comm button. "Rivet team, hit open space. Signal when you're
on the davit boom."
    "Acknowledged," one of the Bolt brothers responded.
"Ready."
 "Launching." Travis hit his controls.
 The hiss of the airlock shot through the whole ship. There
was no place on the CST to get away from that big sound as
the lock depressurized and the repair crew sprayed out from
the tender on a spider web of cables from the swinging davit,
two men to a cable, a total of twelve men in spaceworthy snits,
each fully armed with a trapeze harness and a tool vest. Their
job wasn't to fight the enemy--it was to fight the enemy's
results.
    The interior of the CST fell oddly silent, giving way to the
bleeps and whirs of shipboard mechanical redundancy, and a
symphony of eyes swept the wall-wide grid of screens.
Dozens of angles, each fixed on some aspect of the repair
job---only a few were dedicated to the fight that was still
going on within phaser-striking distance of this oddly protec-
tionless refuge.
    Stiles settled back on his heels and listened to the critical
exchange between Jeremy White, back in the engineering con-
trol room, and Travis here on the bridge, whose job it was to
manage the rivet squad. In less than a minute, the two men had
the rivet squad swung over on the external davits to the nacetle
of the Lafayette, crawling all over it with their magnetic boots
like a tidy infestation.
    The open comm lines brought in the work as if it were
happening right at his feet, bits of dialogue overlapping oth-
ers as the squad split up to do a half dozen jobs in a matter of
minutes.
  "Got some burnoff plating infecting this binding strake."
  'Tll help you."
  "Stand clear."
  "Two more centimeters."
      Travis talking at the same time: "Don't crowd him, Zack.
You're too close to the welding stream."
  "I'm Jason."
  "Clone."
  "1 need the spreader over here."
  "--swing that caisson under me, will you?"
  "---and engage the thrusters so you're got balance--"
    Then Jeremy's voice from two sections back: "Mr. Evans,
countersink those outer rivets before you caulk them in."
  "You sure, sir?"
  "We always countersink. Maintains a flush surface."
  "What difference--"
    "A big one at hypefiight. Morton, what are you doing?
Move your ann so I can see."
  "Crocking the vertical bracket stringers?"
    Stiles touched his comm button and interrupted. "Chock
'era in under the shell plating, Mr. Morton. Then caulk it with
foam."
  "Won't hold more than a week."
      "It only has to hold a day. Just double-secure the center of
effort and wrap it up. You got nine minutes left."
  "Thank you."
  "Welcome."
  "Mr. Lightcudder?"
    Startled by a completely unfamiliar voice only inches from
his shoulder, Stiles cranked around and found himself face to
face with a total stranger. Total! Never seen the guy before.
Right here on the working deck!
    Civilian. No uniform, no identifying patches or badges.
Work clothes.
 How could this happen?
    It couldn't, but here he was, grinning like a Halloween
pumpkin. No escort, no nothing.
    Oh--actually there was a nervous ensign standing at the
bridge hatchway, evidently having just brought the man in.
Why hadn't the ensign done the officer approach? The ensign
shrugged as Stiles raked him with a glare.
    The civilian was stocky, wearing a bulky tan jacket with big
round buttons and a heavy neck scarf, which gave the man an
illusion of being short. Actually Stiles looked him nearly in the
eye, so he was at least five feet nine. He had a round face with
flush-dots on the puffy cheeks, a halo of metal-shaving hair
mounted behind his balding forehead, round brown eyes,
round shoulders--the guy was round.
 "Are you Mr. Lightcudder?" the round guy asked.
    "What?" Stiles stepped back and got a better look. "Who are
you? How'd you get on my bridge?"
    The odd newcomer kept his eyes fixed on Stiles. "They just
put me on board from the Lafayette. I was told to report to Mr.
Lightcudder. My name's Artsue Hashley and I'm so grateful
for--"
    "A civilian is transferred to my CST and this is the first I
hear of it?"
    Greg Blake strode by and handed him a padd on the way
past. "Nobody likes to talk to you:'
    "We avoid it" Matt Girvan said from the engineering sup-
port station.
     "Any of you know about this?" Stiles asked, swiveling a
glance around the bridge.
 Nobody did.
 "Well, Mister--"
 "HashIcy. Ansue HashIcy. I'm "
    "You'll have to stand by a few minutes. We're in the middle
of an operation. Just park fight there and don't do anything and
don't touch anything"
    "I will, Mr. Lightcudder, I mean I won't, and I'll stand fight
here." Hashley planted both feet and pointed a sausage finger
at his boots.
    Stiles glanced at Travis, who frowned and muttered,
"Lightcudder..."
    "Stiles, Jason. There's some kind of Charlie Noble sticking
up here and it's actually hot."
    Turning back to his job, Stiles twitched at the proximity of
the stranger. "Hot? Electrically?"
 "No, it's actually radiating heat. ln fact, it's glowing."
 "That can't be fight .... "
  "No kidding. I don't want to touch it."
 "No, don't touch it. Jeremy!"
    "Copy that," Jeremy called from two hatches back. "Pretty
weird, Eric. You want me to suit up?"
    "Talk to the destroyer's CE first. Have him tell you what
that thing is and turn it offif he can. I don't want a hole burned
in somebody's EVS."
    "Closing the breach now... two more centimeters... one
more... hold.t"
  "Hold the crane.t"
  "Holding."
 "What's all that they're talking about?" Hashley asked.

    Annoyed, Stiles quickly said, "Just shortcuts we take, Mr.
Hashley. We have to get the Lafayette back into action so they
can press the Romulans back."
 "Are they going to kill the Romulans?"
 "Not if they can avoid it."
 "Isn't this a battle?"
    "No, it's just a commercial blockade. Some hothead venting
off at us."
    "But the Romulans attacked your patrols, didn't they? Isn't
that an act of war?"
 "It's more complicated than that."
    "I thought we were having a war and that's why they wanted
me."
    "No war yet." With his demeanor Stiles did his best to com-
municate that he was preoccupied.
    "Rig a gantline over here. We'll just horse the strut with
brute force and tribolt it."
  "I love brute force. Gives me a sense of superiority."
  "--the magnetic coupling ?"
  "No, the spreader. l'll hand it--"
  "--the only way you'll ever get any respect."
    "What kind of a ship is this?" Ansue Hashley looked all
around. "It's not a starship--"
    Stiles watched the screens, told himself that he should
ignore the man, then decided he would enjoy showing off a lit-
tle. "No, not a starship."
  "Cruiser?"
  "No."
  "Battleship."
     "Hardly. Jason, Stiles. Pull that spreader all the way out of
the bridle and discard it. Don't be tidy. Six minutes."  "Six, aye."
"What kind of ship are you, then?" Hashley asked again.
"We're a combat support tender. Some people call us a
'floating starbase.' We're a heavy-laden, multipurpose vessel
made to support more specialized Starfleet vessels. We carry
structural and weapons-repair specialists, materiel, fuel,
ammunition and dry stores. We can resupply a ship on the fly
or right in the lpJddle of active engagement, like we're doing
now. One of our jobs is to quickly make operational any
ready-reserve ships on standby. We did that to Lafayette last
week."
    "And now she needs you again!" Hashley's eyes flew wide.
"Right in the middle of a fight! How do you do something like
that!"
    "With step-by-step processes. Being fast is a matter of sur-
vival, not just success."
    "You must've been busy lately, with all the trouble that's
been erupting."
    "We've been nonstop for months," Stiles agreed. "Wish we
knew why all these skirmishes were erupting--"
    "I know why! Do you want me to tell you? I know all
about it !"
    Stiles leered briefly at the man, sure he didn't actually know
more than Starfleet frontliners, but disturbed by Hashley's con-
fident claim.
    "Crossfire! Incoming!" Ensign Ashikaga shouted from the
tactical sensors.
    "Detonate!" Stiles authorized, and the shots lanced out
before the sound his words had died.
    At the weapons console, Matt Girvan fell on his controls
instantly, obviously expecting the authorization to fire while
there were extravehicular crew out there. He'd been ready to
defend the CST, despite the attempts by Lafayette and Majestic
to protect the wounded destroyer and her rafted repair ship.
Phaser fire blew from the Saskatoon, cutting across the paths
of two streams of disruptor fire that actually were meant to hit
the Majestic but had missed. The shots detonated in mid-
space--good work, though the power wash and the stress of
opening fire rocked the CST and caused the umbilicals to sing
through their hull mounts. The inside of the ship whined freak-
ishly, buffeted by the power wash.
    "Oh, what happened?" Ansue Hashley's arms flew wide as
the deck rocked. "Did we get shot?"
    Not a direct hit, but the wash did enough damage to fritz
several of the monitors. Two went completely dark, and a half
dozen flashed and became garbled, losing the view of the rivet
team on the destroyer's nacelle strut.

    His ears aching, Stiles crossed to the portside monitors and
called over the whine. "Check the men!"
    Horrified by the shouts and calls rattling over the comm
from the repair team, he fixed on the nearest monitor, which
showed a closeup flurry of elbows and parts of suits, but didn't
give a clear view of any one person.
    Frantic for a wide view, Stiles muttered, "I'd really like a
look."
    "I'm getting ~een on all the life-support signals," Travis
said with undisguised relief. "The body of the ship deflected
the wash."
    "Lucky angle. I hate to fire when I've got men out." No one
paid any attention except Ansue Hashley, whose eyes some-
how got even wider at the declaration. Stiles punched the near-
est comm link. "Rivet squad, running out of time. Minute and
thirty left."
    "Shouldn't you be out there, Mr. Lightcudder?" HashIcy
asked. "If you're in command?"
  "No, they don't need me out there."
  "Maybe there's something I can do ...."
  "Not fight now, thanks."
    "Stiles, Bolt. Strut cradle's secure, riveted, and caulked.
Main injector's flowing and the sliding bulkhead is jury-rigged
over the cofferdam and--Monks, is it glazed? Yes, it's glazed
and chemical-bonded. Ready to retract the caissons and the
davit."
    "A whole minute early!" Stiles whooped. "You guys are
singing! Back inside before we get another visitation."
    He stood back to listen to the tumble of orders as the rivet
team handled their own reshipping. This was when all the
hours of brain-frying drills paid off.
    "Mr. Stiles, this is Sattier. We saw the crossfire. Do you need
assistance ?"
    "Don't worry about us, Captain. Your ship's the important
one here, not ours. Soon as I get my men aboard, we'll shove
off and you can do your job with those Romulans. Con~atula-
tions on your first combat rafting."
    "You're a piece of work, Mr. Stiles. Now I know where you
get your reputation."
  "All lies. Stand by, please."
    Travis met his questioning gaze as if cued in psychically.
"The caissons are boarded, davits coming back in, and all
hands will be aboard in another few seconds."
      "Ready on the umbilicals. Prepare to shove off;' he called
through the ship, not bothering with the comm.
 "Ready one!"
 "Ready on two!"
 "Ready four!"
 "Release four."
 "Release four, aye!"
    "Slack one. Helm, swing out on number two." Yikes, he sure
had to find out that kid's name soon. Always happened when
they got a new batch of trainees. "Hey, I said slack one!"
 "Slacking one]"
 "Haul away, four."
    "Hold it!" Jeremy suddenly called from three compartments
back. "Four's fouled."
    "Hold all lines!" Stiles poked his head through the hatch,
but didn't actually leave the bridge. "What's the story?"
    "Looks like the retractor's jammed. Must've taken a hit we
didn't notice."
 "Disengage the line."
 "Cut and run from our end?"
    "Right, let it float. We'll pick it up later if we can. It's not
fouled onto Lafayette, is it? Because we'll have to go out again
if it is. They can't trail a line into baffle."
 "No, line's free. It's our retractor housing."
 "Cut it?
    "Aye aye..." They all waited until a loud chunk boomed
through the ship's body. Then Jeremy spoke again. "Line's
detached. We're clear, Eric."
    "Ship to ship? He watched while the communications kid
tapped in, then looked at the screen displaying the nearby
plates of the destroyer. "We're clear of rafting, Lafayette. Bear
off laterally. When you've cleaned up the mess out there, we'll
reprovision you and the Majestic."
    "EocceUent job, Saskatoon. Bearing off. Shields up. And
thanks again, double trouble."
    "No problem. Good work, Mr. Perraton, Mr. White, every-
body."
    He turned to the main screen as, with nothing less than
heart-stirring dynamism, the great shining gray form of the
destroyer peeled off at quarter impulse and drove into the
swarm of Romulans.
     "This is wondrous !" Ansue Hashley hopped on his toes and
spread his hands wide. "You should be in the headlines!"
  "Nab, no headlines. This is nuts-and-bolts duty."
    "But you should get recognition for this kind of wonderful
thing!"
    "Do without food and bandages for a while. Helm, hard
over. Come full about and give them room to fight. I don't
want the destroyers to have to protect us." "Hard over, sir."
    "I could write an article!" Artsue Hashley insisted. "I know
some people where I could send it! You do such a vital, glori-
ous thing !
    Stiles watched the screens, deliberately not looking at him.
"It's vital, not glorious. Headlines are for the Lafayette and the
Majestic."
    Shuddering as its great engines vibrated, the muscular com-
bat tender turned on an axis and hununed away from the center
of the dispute, leaving the cloud of Romulans and the two Fed-
eration ships behind in a sparkle of weapons fire.
    "Secure the ship, Travis," he said casually, knowing that the
actual activities were hardly casual. Punching the comm, he
added, "Clones, Stiles."
    "Bolt and Bolt, Ship Riveters-at-Large. Would you like an
appointment, sir?"
    "Great work, rivet squad, excellent. You get an 'A' for speed
and an extra minute to sleep tonight."
  "Wow."
 "Bailiff, shoot that man."
    As the laughter of relief and satisfaction rippled through the
CST, Stiles turned like an old-time gunfighter and hooked his
thumbs in an imaginary holster belt.
 "Okay, Mr. Hashley... what's your story?"
 "Oh! Me--yes!" Artsue Hashley stuck out a computer car-

tridge. "I watched while they composed this. It says right on
here to report to Mr. Lightcudder and give this to you. Is it all
right to?"
    Shies pushed the card into the nearest terminal, which
clicked, and flipped, but nothing came up on the monitor
above it.
 "Where is it?" he wondered.
    From the tool alley, Greg Blake called, "It's back here, Mr.
Lightcudder."
 "Uh... yeah, would you pass it back up here, please?"
 "Certainly, Mr. Lightcudder."
    The screen flickered once, then a message came up on it--
printed, not vocal. Obviously somebody didn't want this read
aloud by anybody, including the ship's systems.
    "Mmm... explains... almost nothing." Stiles looked at the
printed message, sensing Travis and the bridge guys looking
from behind him. "You don't deal much with Starfleet, do you,
Mr. Hashley?"

ATTENTION MR. LTCDR
EYES ONLY DO NOT BROADCAST
HOLD ITEM TOP SECURITY

    "Not even the name of the ship in the message," Travis said
as he came up behind Stiles. "what item?"
    Stiles cocked a hip and glared at him until Travis uttered,
"Oh... right."
     They both turned to Hashley, who looked back and forth
between them again and again. "Smuggling?" Stiles asked.
    "Oh, transporting. I'm an agricultural broker. Usually, any-
way. Well, I used to be. Sometimes I take other cargo. Well,
most of the time. Well--" "what other cargo?"
    "Anything anybody wants. Mostly stuff the Romulans want.
Most of the time I don't even know what's in the crates and
casks. I don't ask much. I've been running the same twenty-
light-year relay for the past seven years. The Romulans had
laws that said I shouldn't be doing it, but they were liking what
I did. They coutd've stopped me any time, but they bought
what I had and paid me to move more. If the patrols stopped
me, they usually settled for a quarter of my cargo." Ansue
Hashley smiled, and suddenly looked like a carved pumpkin.
"I give very generous bribes."
 How could you hate a jack-o-lantern?
    "First of all, 'Lightcudder' isn't anybody's name. Those let-
ters mean 'Lieutenant Commander.'"
    Hashley blinked as if he'd been slapped. "But aren't you...
the captain? Oh, no, did I make a terrible mistake?"
    "No, you didn't make a mistake. Combat support tenders are
piloted by lieutenant commanders, officered by lieutenants,
and crewed by chief, ensigns, midshipmen, and able crewmen.
Most of these young people are here for experience and train-
ing. CST duty is considered good experience because of the
active labor, tactical judgment, and hands-on ship handling.
You also get a taste of battle situations without actually having
to fight. Not usually, anyway. So I'm not 'Captain Lightcud-
der.' I'm Lieutenant Commander Stiles."
 "Oh... oh, goodness, oh, my goodness, I made such a big
mistake ....Stiles, Stiles, I won't forget again. Oh, I'm so
sorry ...."
 "No, no."
 "But I feel just awful, horrible--"
    "It's not important. What is important is how you got trans-
ferred here without my knowing about it, and why the
Lafayette would do that."
 "Oh, I'm top secret! At least, my location is."
 "Why?"
 "Because the Romulans are trying to kidnap me."
    As Travis finished his mediate duties and came down to
the center of the squatty bridge to stand behind him, Stiles
folded his arms and insisted again, "Why?"
    "Because I know too much. I'm the one who knows why the
Romulans have been skirmishing with the Federation on all
the border fronts. You said you didn't know, remember? But I
do."
    Stiles glanced at Travis, who made a subtle shrug with just
his eyes.

    "The Lafayette slipped you on board here to sort of shuffle
the cards so the Romulans wouldn't know which ship you're
on?"
    "Yes! Also to get me out of the line of fire. The Federation
doesn't want me to be a scraping goat."
    "Well, how do you feel about telling me this big secret that
suddenly makes my ship a target?"
    "Oh, I feel fine about it! I know everything. I know why the
Romulans are panicking."
    Hashley stepped closer and poked Stiles in the folded fore-
arm, and his eyes got big as golf balls.
    "Poison! The whole Romulan royal family! Every single
member of the emperor's bloodline, no matter where they are,
all over the empire. They're all dying?
  "What?"
    Astonished, Eric Stiles sank back on the edge of the helm.
His feet felt molded to the deck. His arms wouldn't unfold.
    "We haven't heard anything about that}" Travis blurted,
glancing custodially at Stiles, then back at the funny agricul-
tural broker who had been dropped on them.
    "It's a big, huge secret," Hashley went on. "The Romulan
royal family is trying to keep it secret. They don't want any-
body to know their empire's leadership could all be dying, one
by one. It'll be just a mess if such a big weakness gets discov-
ered, even if only by people inside the empke."
    Behind Stfies' shoulder, Travis asked, "And they think the
Federation's behind the... the whatever's killing them?"
    "Poisoning," Hashley said. "Or maybe an engineered
virus---anyway, it's something definitely artificially con-
structed. A hundred and ten members of the royal family
have died already, and all the others are infected. I'm the
only Federation citizen running the Neutral Zone, so they
know I'm smart and I know why they're attacking Federation
ships,"
    Stiles swallowed a hard lump and registered that his feet
were suddenly blocks of ice. That didn't sound right. Nobody
cared that much about one Federation guy running cargo, and
Hashley sure wasn't the only one.

    "What's this thing they've got?" he asked. "How does it
manifest itself?."
    "They've got a blood disease. First they get real weak, real
suddenly. Then their arms and legs start hurting. Pretty soon
they can hardly walk and breathe. It's infected every single
member of the emperor's bloodline. It's specialized to the
blood of the royal family, so they know this is a mass-
assassination attempt. It's supposed to be a secret, but I found
out about it, so they tried to kidnap me." "The Romulans?"
    "That's right. And the Majestic came in and rescued me, and
they were trying to get back to Federation space with me when
the Romulans attacked them. They beamed me to the Lafayette
to confuse the Romulans, and now the Lafayette beamed me to
you, to keep confusing them. Now they don't know where I
anl."
 The bridge fell to an uneasy silence.
  "Aren't you kind of... blabbing a lot, Mr. Hashley?"
    "Oh, yes! That way I'm never the only one to know any-
th'mg!"
"Pretty cavalier about it, aren't you?" Travis commented.
Hashley shrugged his round shoulders and showed the
pallns of his hands, then abruptly clapped them together and
drew a sharp breath. "Stiles! Are you Eric John Stiles?"
  "Well---"
      "I remember you! You're Eric John Stiles the Hero! You got
the Medal of Valor eight years ago!"  "Ten," Stiles mumbled.
    "Eleven;' Travis corrected, and he took Hashley by the arm
in a stem manner. "We don't talk about that around here very
much, Mr. Hashley. He's just our lightcudder and that's how
we keep it."
  "Oh, I'm so happy to be here and meet him, though!"
    "Mr. Hashley" Stiles interrupted, "is there anything you're
not telling us?"
    "Me? No! I'd tell you anything I knew. I don't want to know
any secrets, not ever. Secrets can get you killed. I never want
to be the only one--"
  "Okay, okay" Stiles pushed himself off the helm and

uncracked his tingling arms from around his fibs. 'TI1 keep
you in protective custody until I can communicate with some-
body about you... if you'll just... quiet down a little. We'll
assign you a bunk... Travis, uh... get some crew up here to
clean up all this broken plastic and chips."
    "Oh, I'll do it!" Hashley dropped to his knees fight where he
was standing and began swiftly plucking the residue of dam-
age off the deck and stuffing it into his pockets. "I love to help.
Sitting in quarters while everybody else is working, that's just
not for me. I'm an action kind of man."
    "Yeah... Travis, take us back over the Neutral Zone border
and... hold position in case they need us again. I'll be in my
quaffers."

    With icy hands clenched, Stiles paused in the dimness of his
quarters and closed his eyes. The computer had clicked and
whirred, but it had provided only poor answers. A thousand
memories shot back as if rocketing from yesterday instead
of--what was it, now, fourteen, almost fifteen years ago? Did-
n't seem so long.
 The door chime sounded.
 For a moment, he thought of not answering.
 "Yeah."
     The panel opened and Travis looked in. "Hey, Lightcudder.
Can I interrupt?" "Sure."
    Travis came all the way in, carrying a steaming cup of hot
chocolate and a particularly concerned expression he was try-
ing to disguise as something else. He stood at the door for a
moment as it closed behind him.
 "You all fight, Eric?" he asked.
    Warmed by the solicitous effort, Stiles tried to appear
relaxed by brushing the remains of his breakfast toast off his
desk chair. "Eh, I guess so. Sit down, Travis. And I, in my infi-
nite wisdom, shall sit also."
    He slumped into the chair, and put one boot up on the edge
of a drawer that wasn't quite closed and his elbow up on the
desk.
 Depositing the hot chocolate on the desk near Stiles' resting
hand, Travis sat down on the bunk. The quarters were too
small for two chairs, so the bunk was almost constantly rum-
pied, being used more often as a couch than a place to sleep.
"Ship's secure. Jeremy's handling the damage we took--it
should be repaired in about twenty minutes. And Artsue Hash-
ley's crawling around the chambers sucking up damage with
the shoulderheld vac."
    "You guys are getting the process down fast with these new
kids."
    "That's what we do. The fight's still going on, but the
destroyers seem to have it locked up. The Romulan fighters
are trickling away one by one. I think they'll leave us
alone."
    "Good;' Stiles muttered. "1 need to be left alone." As Travis
planted both feet and leaned forward, Stiles quickly amended,
"No, no, I don't mean you."
    The door chimed and Greg Blake poked in when the panel
opened. "Eric, okay if we shut down the warp injection system
so we can flush the lines?"
    "How many of the Romulan fighters are still in the
vicinity?"
  "Only about four now."
  "'About' four?"
  "Guess I better check."
    "Guess you better. But listen, hail Captain Sattier and make
sure we're not pressuring her by staying in the vicinity. If she
needs us to bear off, we'll move out before we shut anything
down. Be nice about it."
  "Will do. Sorry to interrupt."
  The door panel slid shut again.
    "You never try to push, do you?" Travis observed. "That's
why all the captains appreciate you so much."
  "It's just that I'm sweet and polite and I know my place."
  "Know your place. . . ?"
    "Sure, think about it. CST's are usually commanded by the
guys who couldn't qualify to run the glory machines, so they
get out among the starshippers and try throwing their weight
around. They're impolite. They take it out on the captains, who
they think surpassed them. I'm just not like that. I try to be
 accommodating and patient and helpful without being ub--
 ob--what's that word you used last week?"  "Obsequious?"
    "That's it. I'm satisfied with what I'm doing. Remember
when we got assigned the CST duty? The team was
depressed and down because they thought we'd get some-
thing fancier, but they all adjusted, and it's turned out to be
great work."
    "They adjusted because you packed 'em off to special train-
ing for combat-ready missions. You made sure we all had
skills in hands-on operations management, not just Academy
certificates in theories and simulators. Then you juggled us
around until you found our strengths. You even pushed Brad
and Bill back out to the private sector."
    "I had to push them. We had a good relationship going
among all of us, and nobody wanted to be the first to leave.
They were ready to go. Starfleet couldn't make as much use of
them as free enterprise could. Not everybody flourishes in uni-
form. CST duty didn't make good use of their natural abilities.
For others, this is the best they'll do, or this is where they're
most useful. Better this than have them go out and try to be
hotshots and wash out. Maybe cost some lives."
 Travis grinned coquettishly. "What about me?"
    "You? You're a bum. I just keep you here as my first officer
out of charity. And me... this is perfect for me."
     "Eric?" One of the evil twins knocked on the door, not both-
ering with the chime. "You asleep?" "No, come on in."
    One of the Bolts appeared and stuck his tousled blond head
around the doorframe. "Permission to put a team outside and
patch the PGV meter?"
 "As long as Jeremy says it's safe to go out."
    "Right. And do either of you know where the cylinder punch
went? As my mother used to say, 'You had it last.'"
    Travis spoke up before Stiles could bother saying he didn't
know. "It's in the aft locker in the tool alley, Zack, on the
inboard side, underneath the conduction paper." 
"Thanks. Sorry to interrupt."
 When they were alone again, Stiles regarded Travis with
quizzical respect. "How do you tell those two apart so fast?
Fifteen years, and it still takes me half a conversation."
    "Just doing what any good exo does. So... what do you
think of Hashley?"
    "I think he's into something a lot more complicated than he
believes," Stiles said. "I checked the Bureau of Shipping records
just before you came in. Ansue Cabela Hashley, human, Federa-
tion citizenship, most of the right licenses, skirts the law now
and then but not much, originally from Rigel system, nothing
much worth putting on record. He's been running the same
patch of space back and forth for years like a bug, shuffling
minor contraband into Romulan space. The Romulans have
pretty much encouraged him by not enforcing their own laws in
his case. He probably brings in things they can't get, and they
like it. He hasn't been hurting anybody and more people like
him than not, so he's been considered small potatoes."  "T'fll now."
    Stiles nodded. "He's a cosmic worker-insect. Now he's
stepped in goo and he's stuck. Probably he doesn't even realize
that the reason he's been safe is that things haven't been too
tense with the Romulans over the past twenty years. Now that
they're tensing up, well, he has been breaking Romulan law
right along. I'm guessing the Federation doesn't have good
cause to protest. Then he stumbled on this poison thing and
suddenly the small potato is a hot potato."
      "What do you think the connection is between the blood
thing and Hashley?"  "No idea."
    "It's got to be more than he thinks," Travis surmised. "More
than just his 'knowing' about the poisoning, or whatever it is.
Nobody would try to kidnap him just because he knew about
it."
    "He said it could be an engineered virus. Some kind of
assassination plot. If a hundred or so imperial relatives
have died, I can't believe Starfieet's not working on it
already. We're a day late and a dollar short to make it our
problem."
    Stiles sank deeper into his chair, rocked back some, and
rested his head on the worn neckrest. As the chair protested
 with a squawk, the hot chocolate finally drew him with its rich
 scent, and he scooped up the cup and blew across the milky
 warmth.
     Watching the stemn rise, Travis smiled. "You're a contented
 man, Eric."
    "Oh, Travis... I lived for four years at the mercy of whim.
Would they decide to beat me up? Would they feed us today?
Would the Constrictor come? We had no control. After that,
even a little control seems terrific to me. I love the day-to-day
activities of being alive. Walking freely to and from my cabin,
my friends around me, going all over space, meeting alien
races, a new batch of trainees every few months... I meet all
'kinds of people and I talk to and like most of them. I kind of
enjoy getting through things. People are a lot less prickly when
you don't return it."
    "You sure don't talk like a man who did the heroic deed and
got awarded the Medal of Valor" Travis observed. "What a
dismal example for all those punks out there who're shooting
for the braids and brass, know that? They want glory"
    "Not all it's cracked up to be." Stiles sipped his hot choco-
late again and breathed into the steam. "I didn't get the MV for
any deeds. I got it for sitting on my bruised ass for four years
and not dying quite fast enough."
      Leaning sideways, Travis lounged on an elbow and huffed
disapprovingly. "What's Romulan for 'crappola'?"
  "I think it's 'enushi.' 'Enushmi.'"
  "Figures you'd know."
    Allowing himself a little smile, Stiles drew a deep breath
and sighed also. "I washed my hands of Red Sector nine years
ago, Travvy, when I was finally sure the message about Zevon
had gotten all the way back to his fanfily. It took me a year to
get the message through, and another year to make sure there
hadn't been any snags and that his immediate family and the
empress definitely knew he was there. He was sure they'd
come get him. I made sure he got back home, and now I find
out it might have been his death sentence."
    "You acted above and beyond the call," Travis tried to
confirm, obviously relieved they'd broken through to the
real reason he'd come in here. "It's not even in the widest
perimeter of imagination your fault, and you flipping well
know it."
    Stiles nodded. "In my three rational brain cells, I know it.
But in the rest of them... he's dying because I made sure he
got home."
 "That's nutty."
    Taking a long draw on the hot chocolate, Stiles gazed with
growing sentiment into the thick warm drink and saw in there
all the wonders of freedom. The foam turned like ebb tide, the
swirling dark cream like clouds and wind. "You ever been a prisoner of war?"
    His question moved softly between them as if made of
music. Travis had no reason to supply an answer.
 Stiles watched the foam bubbles pop in his mug.
    "You live together in a way that no two other people ever
do. You mop the other guy's blood and bind his wounds, listen
to his dreams and watch his hopes decay... you can't get
away from the smells, the sweat, the fears crawling on you like
cancer... after a while you run out of words to hold each
other's brains inside, so you just stop talking. You start com-
municating without words. Just a look, or a touch... or you
just sit there together. The intimacy can't be described. You see
each other so raw, so demolished... more than you ever want-
ed anybody to see you. Weak, sick, scared, sobbing...
crushed by loneliness like a plague, till you finally turn to each
other and pray the other guy's lonely too."
    He raised his eyes. Deeply moving to the point of sorrow
was the expression on Travis's face, a shivering guilt that
threaded its way from the distant past and prevented forgetting.
    "I survived because of two forces moving in my life" Stiles
continued softly. "One was the ghost of Ambassador Spock in
my mind, telling me I could survive, I could rise above all this,
that he'd be proud of me if I did... I heard his voice every
night for the whole four years, narrating the plan for how I
would behave and what he expected of me. I don't have any
idea if it was all in my mind and I was making it up in some
kind of hero-worship fantasy, but Travis, I swear to eternity it
kept me alive. Just knowing what he expected of me and hear-
ing his voice from the other side of the snow... calling me by
my first name... he kept me alive by making me believe it
was my duty and that I could prevail. The other force," he
added softly, "was Zevon. Whenever the ambassador's image
faded and that leash started to fray, Zevon would be there in
the haze, some kind of echo of Spock, holding himself above
the trouble we were in, always reminding me without even
saying it that something bigger was expected of me. I needed
him and he needed me, and together we worked for a common
purpose. He gave me a reason to struggle out of my cot morn-
ing after morning. If I didn't come, he came to get me and
made me get up. If he's out there somewhere, sick, maybe
dying... I can't let him face it without me."
    Travis looked at him and a moment later sat bolt upright.
"You mean--you don't mean try to make another contact! The
last one took you a year!"
  "Zevon might not have a year this time, Travis."
    "Oh, my God! This is a little sudden--" Breathing in gulps,
Travis glanced around the quarters as if looking for the writing
on the wall. "My God... I'll contact Starbase Fourteen... get
another CST out here to cover the precinct... I'll have to give
them some kind of excuse,"
    The fact that Travis Perraton so quickly absorbed and didn't
question the moral imperative came to Stiles as a compliment,
a vote of loyalty, and it bolted into place his flickering plan.
 'TI1 come up with something," he said.
    Travis pressed his hands to his face, shook his head, then let
his hands fall to his lap and sighed. "You and your causes. Just
when I think you're settling down, you come up with some
lofty goal."
    "I don't have any lofty goals," Stiles told him. "I've got my
goal. Save Zevon if I can, and if I can't, be with him when he
dies. That's my goal."
    "What about averting an interstellar conflict? If we can
make a solid contact in the royal family, somebody inclined to
trust us the way Zevon and you trust each other, maybe
Starfleet can help the Romulans with this poison thing they've
got going."
    "That's not my problem. If it's in the cards, great. We're one
ship with limited influence and we're better off keeping a leash
on our aspirations. If there's a conflict, somebody else'll han-
dle it. If we're there, we'll help. We can only do so much in
life. Things change. Then they change again. I've been a hero.
Got what I thought I wanted, and it was nice, but how long can
you keep that up? Once the handshaking and the medals are
done with, the heroness just fades. You can't strut around for
the rest of your life being heroic. I can't, relyway. I'm not
James Kirk. The good thing is that I don't want to be. I'm
gonna do my part, not his part."
    Travis leered at him with narrowed eyes. "That's the most
depressing nobility I've ever heard."
  "Works, though. You prepared for the hard part?"
  "I'm always prepared, Eric."
  "That's it then. Ready about."
  "Ready about, aye."

Chapter Thirteen

NOW WHAT?
    The last living Romulan royal family member, the last
chance at uncontaminated blood, was no longer living.
    Riker's profound words tolled through the silence on the
bridge.
    Spock was particularly aware of Dr. McCoy's expression
and longed to have a few private moments, but that would not
come today. Decades ago, Leonard McCoy had lost his abili-
ty--or even desire--to hide his feelings. Now his bent shoul-
ders further sagged, his wrinkled eyes crimped, his dry lips
pursed, and he seemed to weaken. This news portended a gru-
eling struggle for the physicians, with no possible short cuts.
Spock knew McCoy had seen many failures in his long life,
and together they had fielded many fears and changes, and yet
somehow McCoy had never lost his hope to alter one more
arrow of fate before the years finally caught up to him. Failure
this time might mean failure in his last attempt to make the
galaxy better.
    "Captain," Mr. Worf interrupted, "another ship on long-
range, siC'
    Picard looked up at him. "The Tdal returning for some rea-
son?"
 "No, sir. Starfleet encryption."
 "Identify her as soon as you can, Mr. Woff."
    "Sensors are reading the vessel now, sir" the Klingon
obliged. "Heavy keel... double hull. ~. multipurpose config-
uration... It's a tender, sir, combat support. The... Saska-
toon."
    Picard turned to the forward screen, but nothing was visible
yet. "Signal recognition and render salute pennants as we
pass."
 "Aye, sir"
    Instantly shedding despair of Riker's news, McCoy came to
life and found the nimbleness in his ancient fingers to poke
Spock in the ann. "A CST! Give you any ideas, Spock, ol'
man?"
 "I beg your pardon?"
    "Double-hulled, industrial, strong enough to defend herself,
but doesn't attract much attention? Get it?"
    "Ah "Spock felt his brows flare. Decades ago he may
have been embarrassed, but such social pressures were long
withered from disuse. "Yes... conveniently unprovoking, yet
combat-ready... possibly, Doctor!"
    McCoy turned gingerly to Picard. "See if you can get 'era to
stop! Pull 'em over on a traffic violation or something!"
    "I don't think that'll be necessary, Doctor" the captain
said as he watched the helm console from where he stood.
"The CST is on an approach vector. They're reducing
speed."
  "Captain" Data reported, "Saskawon is hailing us."
    "Mr. Data, go ahead and give us ship to ship," Picard
ordered.
  "Aye, sir. Frequencies open."
    "This is Captain Picard, Saskatoon. Do you have a prob-
lem?"
    "What a relief that we found you before you moved on! I've
got to speak to Ambassador Spock."
    Spock wondered if he had heard incorrectly, though he
knew that was unlikely. He had been cautious to keep his

whereabouts private. Who was this CST commander that he
could pierce top security?
    Glancing at Spock, obviously surprised that anyone else
knew, Picard sedately required, "Identify yourself, please."
    "This is Lieutenant Commander Eric Stiles. Is Ambassador
Spock there? It's an emergency."




Chapter Fourteen

COMMANDER STmES AP}'~'~D in the turbolift within ten min-
utes of the first message, instantly flooding Spock with nostal-
gia for the young man he had once counseled, for today there
appeared on the upper bridge another kind of young man alto-
gether. His blond hair slightly darkened to an ashy shade, and
the beard he had grown while in captivity was missing. His
face had lengthened to a manful form, lacking the baby-fat of
the twenty-one-year-old, and his hairline had changed. He
looked like a wizened echo of the boy who had stormed the
embassy.
    Hesitating only an instant, as if unsure whether to come
down the starboard ramp or the port ramp, Eric Stiles virtually
ran to the command deck.
    "Commander Stiles," Captain Picard greeted. "It's a pleas-
ure."
Stiles said. "Sorry, Captain. I'm sorry to barge in .... "
Riker reached for Stiles' hand and shook it. "I remember
your return from captivity, Mr. Stiles. I was in the audience on
board the Lexington. It's a privilege to have a Medal of Valor
winner visit us--"
  "Thanks." Stiles turned instantly to Spock, and it was as if
they had spoken only yesterday. "I've got a problem. And I
think I can help you with yours. Can we talk alone?" How odd.
    Stiles's eyes were filled with complexity. The years
sheared away between them and once again Spock was
speaking candidly with the frightened boy who so needed the
lifeline of an experienced voice sounding around him. Yet
there was more.
    Captain Picard gestured to the port side. "My ready room,
Ambassador. Help yourselves."

    "Manna from heaven," McCoy uttered, stating. "Spock! A
Romulan royal nowhere near any other Romulans! And you
don't believe in luck!"
    "Yes, I do," Spock fluidly contradicted. '`This is most star-
tling. You remain certain that your cellmate was a member of
the Romulan royal family?"
    "Absolutely, And if he's still alive and you help me go get
him, you'll have an uncontawfinated member of the royal fam-
ily."
"How the devil do you know about that?" McCoy raved.
Stiles blinked. "Well... you've had your contacts searching
all over the Romulan Empire for an isolated member of the
family... I've got a few contacts too... y'know, Medal of
Valor and all... you get some connections, even if you don't
want them .... "
    McCoy blew a breath out his nostrils. "What's it take to
keep a secret in this galaxy?
    Spock turned to him. "This is troubling. It means the news
is leaking out."
    '`This is the part that hasn't leaked out!" Stiles quickly told
them. "I haven't told anybody about Zevon. The only people
who know are me and my first officer and a couple members
of my original evac squad who stayed with me. And now the
two of you."
    "How is it possible that nobody else knew?" McCoy asked~
"Ten years ago when I pulled you out of there, Starfleet
debriefed you thoroughly--"
 "Eleven years."
 "Ten, eleven, twenty, what's the difference?"
    "I was debriefed for weeks," Stiles agreed. "I told them I
had a Romulan cellmate and they notified the Romulans. At
the time there weren't any formal relations, no exchange of
ambassadors .... I made sure the message got through to the
precinct governor, who would have to report directly to the
Senate, and they'd have to report to the---well, back then it
was the emperor. So I thought the royal family would take it
from there.
    Spock had listened to these words with growing trepida-
tion, but certainly also with a rising sensation of possibility.
"This is a profound blessing in disguise, both for Zevon
and for the Romulan Empire. If he is indeed still in Red Sec-
tor, isolated, still alive, then he presents a distinct ray of
hope."
    McCoy pointed a crooked finger. 'Tll send Dr. Crusher to
the Romulan royal family to treat them and try to keep them
alive. In the meantime, I need to get to this Zevon and synthe-
size a vaccine from his blood, before anybody else gets to
him."
    "Who else could get to him?" Stiles asked. "Why would
anybody want to?"
    "Whoever's inflicted this biological attack, that's who. You
don't think this is accidental, do you?"
  "I thought it was just a plague! Something natural!"
  "Nope."
    His face a pattern of fears and troubles, Stiles frowned with
consternation. "That's just what Hashley tried to tell us... ail
his talk about viral terrorism and mass-assassination... I
thought he was exaggerating."
    At that name, Spock felt his back muscles tighten. He
glanced at McCoy, who, if possible, was more pale than usual
at the casual mention of a key figure. Stiles clearly did not
understand the full ramifications of how the puzzle pieces fit
into place.
     "Hashley again," McCoy complained. "He's as bad as the
 infection."
  Stiles squinted. "Huh? What's that mean?"
  "Ansue Hashley" Spock said, "is important to maintaining

stable relations between the Federation and the Romulan
Empire, Commander. How recently did you speak to him?"
    Stiles's eyes widened, and he swiveled his gaze between
them. "You mean the same Hashley I'm talking about? An ag
broker? That guy?"  "Yes, that guy."
    "You've got to be kidding! He didn't seem capable of being
part of a mass-assassination scheme. Starfleet captains had
been tossing him from ship to ship like a hot potato to keep the
Romulans from knowing where he was. I couldn't figure why
he'd be so important. I thought they just didn't want to bother
with him!"
    McCoy explained, "The Romulans tracked the royal infec-
tion back to his cargo. That's why they think the Federation
started it. The Romulans wanted him so they could have a
scapegoat and tell their people they'd caught the culprit, that
the Federation was definitely to blame for the deaths of their
royal family."
  "Where is Hasbley now?" Spock asked. "Aboard Saska-
tOOn ?"
    Stiles shrugged hopelessly. "No, I don't have him. I didn't
want him. He's safe, though. We remanded him to the custody
of the first Starfleet law-enforcement ship we found."
 "Which ship?"
 "The Ranger."
    Spock immediately turned and depressed the keypad of the
bridge comm unit. "Captain Picard, do you know the name of
the passenger who was kidnapped from the Ranger this morn-
ing?"
  'Tll pull the report, ambassador. One moment."
    "I'll put Dr. Crusher on it," McCoy said. "They want her
help. They'll treat Hashley well."
    "It's my fault," Stiles said. He had left the conversation they
were having and was having one with himself. "I never
checked... never confn'med that Zevon had been rescued. He
was so sure his family would get him out--he made me sure
too. Until five days ago I was completely convinced that he
was back home. Now I find out he never... they just didn't
bother to go get him. All these years he's been trapped in Poj-
jana space, by himself, without me... because of me. When I
found out they'd left him, the only filing I could think to do
was try to get your help."
    In all his years Spock had witnessed many examples of
human fidelity and found he appreciated them all. At first he
had looked down his nose at such demonstrations. Later he
had learned to accept them with some curiosity, and even to
accept that part of himself.
    Spock moved to stand near Stiles, to make sure he had all
the attention he needed.
    "You and Zevon were friends," he began. "I deeply appreci-
ate that. You depended upon each other in the worst of times.
Today you still understand what happened to you, the forces
that worked upon your lives. Time has not dulled your decen-
cy. Today, as I watch you in your effort and your torments, I
cross yet another barrier to fondness. I enjoy the humanity I
see in you, this childlike sense of justice that defies all forces.
Like a whirlpool you draw us all into your devotion. We will
go to save the Romulans, yes. But because of you will we go
also to save Zevon."
    McCoy watched them both with a charming softness. Spock
noticed the doctor's gaze, but did not meet it.
    Stiles clearly battled the pressure of tears behind his eyes.
Solemnly he murmured, "Every time I see you... you rescue
me in some way."
     A swelling sensation of completeness satisfied Spock
 deeply. While before this there had been only a duty, a mis-
 sion, now there was a quieter and more profound purpose.
 Crossing the quadrant to save a nation had its appeal. Crossing
 to save a friend had even more.
     "Well, Spock" McCoy interrupted, "you and I seem to have
 a mission in Po'jjan space."
     Stiles came abruptly to life as a balloon suddenly fills with
 air, apparently afraid that they would make some other choice
 for some reason he failed to see. "Let me take you! We've got
 a thick hull, nonaggressive configuration, support registry--
 completely unprovoking in nature, just a big industrial muscle.
 We've got full regulation defensive weapons, and we all know
 what that really means. Let me take you through Romulan

space in the CST. It's perfect! It's a good option. And I know
the way!"
    McCoy raised his frosty brows. "Imagine never thinking of
that. Silly us."
    Stiles took that as a threat. "If you don't clear me to go with
you, I'll go anyway."
 McCoy looked at Spock. "Remind you of anybody?"




Chapter Fifteen

" O RSOVA. "
    "What do you want now? Why do you bring me to space
this time? You always call at bad times for me! I was busy!"
    "The Pojjana lion of science. Genius savior of the planet.
Engineer of the Constrictor meter. Conqueror of the Constric-
tor. Still amazed to see open space. You know nothing about
science."
  "I know eveLything. I have power now"
  "You have Zevon now."
    Picking himself up from the strange carpet where he had
fallen after the dizzying effect of a transporter beam, Orsova
bristled and tried to appear confident. "Zevon works for me."
      "Zevon does all the work you take credit for. 1 know the dif-
ference. I helped make it happen. Now I want something from
you. A Federation ship is coming your way,"
    "Federation? Why! This is Red Sector! How can they come
here!"
    "They have new business here. They have visited Romulan
space."
    "Romulan? Why would they go there? They have no treaty!
Have they... ?"

    As the Voice summoned him again, Orsova felt the sting of
being completely out of touch with the space-active civiliza-
tions of the quadrant for so many years. All this time Red Sec-
tor had been a huge favor for him, a sanctuary where a prison
guard could rise to power if he 'knew how to play on public
opinion--and if he had a Voice to tell him each step.
    That had been easy. Play to the hatred. The Pojjana had
been ready, eager, to despise and distrust. The Voice was right.
Orsova had used that. Found it easy. Surrounded himself with
those eager to hate most, happy to have theft distrust bring
them also to power, and learned how to nurture the distrust
even when there was no one around to hate anymore.
    Making them accept Zevon, an alien... that had taken time.
But it had been the most important part.
    Now this ghost, this Voice, came to him when he no longer
needed it. Orsova knew in his gut that this speaking person
was an alien.
    "Why would the Federation come again after all these
years?" he asked. "What do they want here? We have no Fed-
eration people in Red Sector."
    "They have their reasons. You will have to be prepared to
stop them. Crash their ship, destroy it, or drive them off. Kill
them if you can."
 "But why are they coming?"
    "Can your planetary defense destroy a Starfleet ship? This
is not a starship, but a utility vessel--"
    "You don't know why they're coming, do you?" Suddenly
emboldened, Orsova blurted his revelation. "You don't know,
do you, Voice?"
 "Information is diaphanous. It changes."
 "Means, you don't know why they're coming."
 "When 1 need you again, I will beam you to me."
 "In space?"
 "Wherever I must be."
 "Means, you have to hide from them."
    "Go back now. Go now, and get ready to face the Federa-
tion. Make them go from here, and there will be even bigger
rewards for you."




Chapter Sixteen

The Imperial Palace,
Romulan Star Empire

"MY NAME IS BEVERLY CRUSHER, Commander, Medical Corps,
Starfleet. I'm here to treat the empress."
    "Yes, Dr. Crusher, we have agreed to give you cooperation. I
am Sentinel Iavo."
 "Sentinel? Not Centurion?"
    "I am a member of the Royal Civil Attach~ to the Imperial
Court, not pan of the Imperial Space Fleet. We discovered
long ago that military titles for our civil officials only caused
dangerous confusion. Where is your ship docked? At the
municipal spaceport?"
    "No. We were dropped off. The ship has left. It's just the
two of us now."
 "The two of you? No guards? No Starfleet security?"
 "I don't need them, do I? We have an agreement... don't
we?"
    Standing before Beverly Crusher, Sentinel Iavo was a very
handsome Romulan with typically dark brown hair but
remarkably large and pale green eyes. He wore his Imperial
Court uniform with a certain casualness, and his clothing
indeed was not like that of the military guards stationed in the
hallways they'd passed through. She couldn't guess his age--

that was tricky with Romulans--though he didn't strike her as
particularly young. He stood in the expected Vulcanlike pos-
ture, straight and contrived, the only clue to any nervousness
his constant rubbing of the fingernails of one hand against the
palm of the other hand.
    The palace was a four-century-old monolith, its stone walls
dressed in tapestries and heavy draperies like any Austrian cas-
tle, except the rooms and corridors were lit by modern fix-
tures-not a torch in sight. Funny--she'd expected torches.
    And there was music playing. Harp~like music, backed
sometimes by the hollow beat of a tenor drum and a hint of
something similar to a cello in the background. No musicians
visible--nope, it was a sound system.
  She smelled incense, too, faintly. Or dinner.
    The Sentinel gave her a moment to look around, then asked,
"What would you like first?"
    "I want you to close up the palace completely," she began.
'Total security. Nobody in or out without high clearance,
nobody at all. You're the highest advisor?"
    "Correct, Doctor, I am the empress's senior civil authority. I
have held this post since before the emperor died, and my
brother before me, and our father before him."
    "Oh, isn't that nice... then you have the authority to enact
my terms. No changes of personnel from now on. Whoever's
in the kitchen will stay there and keep working. The same
maids, the stone servants, the same everybody. These same
guards will stay on duty here. They can sleep here if they have
to, but I don't want to see anybody new. When you have your
security in place, I'd like everything and everybody cleared
through my lovely assistant here."
    Crusher made what she hoped was a graceful half-turn and
held out a hand. At her side and a polite couple of steps
behind, Data offered her the medical tricorder. He also held
their two duffel bags and Crusher's hospital-ima-bag medical
satchel, full of all the instruments, medications, and a comput-
er with both an immunological database and a general medical
lexicon. The load was a little cumbersome because she'd
packed everything she could think of. There was going to be
no calling for supplies.
    Data said nothing. The only expression of personality was
the poignant lack of it, and perhaps the sheen of soft lightning,
reflected off the velvet, casting a glow that turned his metallic
complexion herbal.
    "You needn't have brought so many medical supplies, Dr.
Crasher" Iavo told her as he took one of the duffels from Data.
"We have eight major hospital complexes in the city, which
will bring anything you require to treat the empress."
    "Mr. Iavo, when I say I want security, I mean absolute secu-
rity. I want nothing delivered from anywhere as of right now.
Nothing comes into the palace. Not medicine, not food, not
people, not weapons."
    "There are no weapons here, madam" the Sentinel assured.
"The palace is completely energy-secure. Our security office
constantly monitors any active energy, and would instantly
identify an armed disruptor or phaser--"
    "Hmm. I wondered why all your guards carried daggers,"
Crusher recalled. "I thought it was just traditional. Where's the
empress?"
  "This way, please."
    Another corridor. An obviously private series of chambers,
more guards, one more short corridor... finally, Iavo cleared
Crusher and Data into the empress's bedchamber.
    And what a place it was. Draped in soft green velvet
embossed with ancient symbols, softly lit by unseen fixtures,
carpeted with something that seemed like rabbit fur, the room
was warm and thick with the scent of burning herbs. In the
center of the room was a sitting area with a generous couch
and an oblong blackwood table with a single chair.
    There were two female attendants hovering near the bed,
and four imperial guards, each in a uniform and helmet, stand-
ing near the bed posts. The bed had six posts, each as thick as
a full-grown man's body and carved with angular features of
hands and faces, each hand holding one of the faces and push-
ing it toward the ceiling. Each face grimaced hellishly, and in
its teeth held a carved skewer that stuck out from the totem, so
that the bedposts bristled like a bottle brush with wooden
spikes. Some of the spikes were broken off, yet the blunt ends
darkened and showing no wounded wood, hinting that the bed
was very old. The wood had never been stained, it had just
blackened with sheer age.
    And in the bed, bundled in velvet and fur, was the young
empress. Her eyes were closed, but not in rest. Her hair was
meticulously combed yet lusterless, almost crispy from her
long fight to stay alive, as her body sapped whatever healthy
cells it could draw back into itself in its last desperations.
    All over the empire, members of the royal family looked
like that, or had, or soon would.
    Crusher approached the bed, aware that Data was right
behind her, maintaining a student-like silence. She listened
briefly to the empress's respiration, looked at her complexion,
noted her skin color, an obscene russet--very wrong--but did
not touch her.
    "Communications relays have been set up all over the
empire for you. Attending physicians are standing by for your
instructions."
    "Are they willing to cooperate with a Federation physi-
cian?" she asked.
    Iavo seemed embarrassed, or perhaps hopeless. 'Taey have
tried everything they know."
Crusher folded her arms. "Yes... I suppose they have."
And she simply stood there, a hip cocked, said nothing
more, and did nothing, while the harp nmsic plucked the
draperies.
    Data's amber eyes flicked between her and Iavo, but he also
said, as she had instructed, nothing.
    Iavo watched as his empress moaned softly, unattended. The
two female attendants peered uneasily. The hehneted guards
remained at attention, but their eyes shifted.
 "Are you going to treat her?" Iavo finally asked.
 "Yes, but I'll need something from you," Crusher said.
 "What do you want from us?" Iavo asked.
 Now he got it.
    She took one step toward him, then locked her stance. "I
want Ansue Hashley. Bring him here, alive."

"All right, Mr. Hashley, I've heard enough."
"But I want to finish telling you about--"
"No, that's enough talking. Sit still while I finish sealing this"
Crusher stood over Ansue Hashley's ragged bulk and shook
her head in disgust. He was bruised, cut, flushed, nicked in a
hundred places, and pale from loss of blood, yet somehow that
mouth kept running and running.
    "You know, Sentinel Iavo," she began as her seamer's beam
sketched closed the last cut on Hashley's face, "you people
didn't have to torture this man. If you'd open up your borders
and deal with humans more, you'd know after talking to this
man for ten minutes that he doesn't have it in him to organize
a mass-assassination plot. And we would've told you about the
prion-based epidemic we've been fighting. Imperial isolation-
ism has hurt you this time."
    Near the empress's bed, Iavo rubbed his forefingernail
against his other hand's thumb knuckle and protested with his
expression. "The infection was imported on his vessel. We
tracked it back to a low-level medication in his cargo bound
for--"
    "He's a busy little gossip, not a biologicM terrorist" Crusher
insisted as Hashley's big sopsy eyes blinked up at her. "That
medicine has been coming in here for more than forty years
from a pharmaceutical company sympathetic to Romulans. All
Mr. Hashley did was bring it in. Somebody else engineered the
tainting of the shipment and then the delivery of the tainted stuff
to all the royal family members. Hashley here is just a dupe."
  "Whose dupe?"
    Crusher shook her head and let herself rattle on, spilling her
thoughts. "Nobody clever enough to distribute this infection
would run a little trade route for ten years. If you knew more
about humans it's kind of obvious this man's not biding his
time to take over the universe. Romulans might be that tena-
cious, but humans don't have the patience. Or a two-hundred-
year lifespan. Why do you think we're always in such a damn
hurry? Gotta get things done before we die."
    Pacing uneasily nearby, Sentinel Iavo switched fingernails
and leered doubtfully at Artsue Hashley, who sat like a bruised
puppy. "Whose dupe was he?"
    "We're not sure," Crusher admitted. "Dr. McCoy's right,
though. It's got all the earmarks of a series of cross-raciM mul-
 tiprion plagues. Until recently, nobody put them together. The
 first clue was just three years ago at Deep Space Nine. Well--
 then the station was called Terok Nor."
     "I remember that!" Hashley offered. "Cardassians, Bajorans
 and Ferengi all got the same sickness! They were 'all accus-
 ing--"
    "Oh, I missed a scratch right next to your lip," Crusher cut
off. "Here--let me seal it up. Don't move, now .... The Car-
dassians suspected a Bajoran rebel group of manufacturing the
disease, and they were partly right. The rebels were happy to
make sure the Cardassians caught the disease, until they found
out that Bajorans could get it too. And there was no way the
Bajorans at that time had the resources or the science infra-
structure to develop something as advanced as cross-species
vital infection. They can't even do it now, and back then they
were subjugated. Not only the Deep Space Nine infection, but
we also found out that two years earlier several human-alien
hybrids were infected with an unidentified virus, and that's
unheard-of in nature. This thing's being systematically mutat-
ed, targeted, and delivered."
    Iavo stopped pacing briefly. "I take it those were not all
human and the same alien hybrids."
    "No, they were all mixed up. People with that kind of genet-
ics just can't 'catch' the stone thing naturally. There you go,
Mr. Hashley, all patched up. You'll be sore, but you'll live.
Now, I want you to just stay right here with me and Data va~d
help us do what we have to do." She straightened, handed Data
the seMer to put back in the reed-pack, then turned to Iavo.
"All fight, Sentinel, I'm ready to start treating the empress. Are
you ready to help?"
    The tall imperial official glanced at the two femme servants,
then met the gaze of one of the four guards. They seemed to be
communicating, but not in the way one would expect of a sen-
ior government official and a clutch of underlings from way,
way under. Iavo clutched his hands before him, flexed them,
stretched his fingers, looked at the furry carpet for a moment
then raised his eyes again at the nearest guard.
    Such a simple step took a very long time, as choices go.
Finally, seeming to make a decision or part of one, Iavo
turned his back to the guards as if deeply troubled by their
presence. "What do you need from us?"
    Crasher watched the guards for a moment. Were they avert-
ing their eyes on purpose? "First of all, I want these women
out of here. Data and Mr. Hashley can be my assistants. And
I'd like you to cool it off by fifteen degrees in here. Clear that
incense or whatever's burning out of the chamber and circulate
some fresh air"
 "But this is how we always--"
    "If 'always' was working, you wouldn't need me here,
would you? Coot, and air, please."
    Iavo paused, seemed to be deciding between being insulted
and some other reaction Crusher couldn't make out.
    Once again the Sentinel met the eyes of the guard nearest to
him.
    "We'll do as you instruct, Doctor," he agreed, speaking
slowly. Hypnotically he robbed a single fingernail. "Do you
think you can save her?"

Chapter Seventeen

STILES' HANDS SHOOK as he stood beside the Saskatoon's com-
mand chair. On the other side of the chair, Ambassador Spock
placidly standing, the elderly Leonard McCoy sitting in a con-
sole chair--both men watched the approach of a forbidden
planet in a forbidden sector. Stiles had offered the doctor the
command chair, but McCoy had demurred, saying that only
the "golden boy" should sit there. Stiles hadn't been able to sit
in their presence, so the chair went empty through the entire
voyage. Even when Alan brought tea.
    Every regulation in several civilizations prevented their
coming here, yet here they flew. The hoops of outposts, sta-
tions, guard ships, patrols, and bureaucratic drumbeating
they'd had to jump through had left Stiles with a headache that
was still here days and days later. The tension of moving into
Romulan space to drop off Dr. Crusher and Data had been
enough to peel fruit, and now Saskatoon was deep inside Red
Sector, trailing deals and bribes and threats and name-dropping
that had gotten them all the way here.
    For Stiles, though, this was the door of purgatory. He
couldn't keep his hands warm any more. The self-examination
was no fun either. Why was he so nervous? He had these heavy
hitters with him, didn't he?
    Why was his stomach twisted up into a spiral? The absence
of foolish cockiness should're been reassuring and mature, but
the fact was he wished he still had it. That zing of thinking he
knew everything had protected him from a whole lot of scared.
Wishing he could feel his fingers, he wondered if those two
men over there had ever preferred to pull their own teeth out
than go in someplace they had to go. Duty, cause, purpose,
rank, ability--aU those things fell short of the driving force he
needed to overcome what he felt. There was only one thing
drawing him forward, against all the forces pushing him back.
    Gripping one hand with the other to hide the trembling, he
looked briefly to portside, to Travis and Alan. Alan winked
reassuringly, and Travis gave him a thumbs-up. They were
willing to go.
    Embarrassed, he puckered his shoulders. His friends were
reassuring him, supporting him into the unknown. It should be
the other way around.
  "Hero," he muttered.
  No one heard. He barely heard himself.
  Spock glanced at him.
    The planet of his dread swelled on the main screen and six
of the ancillary monitors.
  "Approach, Eric?" Travis prodded from the port side.
    "Hm? Oh... sorry. Helm--let's see... come to point nine,
equatorial approach vector, angle four one. No---four two.
There's a constant thermal over that big canyon"'
     "May I ask what you're reading on the planer's surface?"
 Ambassador Spock asked. "Anything unfamiliar? Any sign of
 destruction by the Constrictor?"
     "I'm picking up airstrips;' Jeremy reported, % couple of
 things that might be missile deployment facilities... heli-
 ports... some satellites... pretty typical. Maybe mid-or
 late-twenty-first-century equivalent or so. I could be all
 wrong, though."
     At tactical, Zack Bolt commented, "You get to a certain
 level of atmospheric aeronautics and yours is as good as any-
 body's:'

     Stiles waved an icy hand toward Spock. "Why don't you
 have a look for yourself, sir? You were here too, and I'm sure
 you knew the layout a lot better than I ever did. After all..."
     If Spock's dark eyes saw through the layers of reasons and
 excuses, he made no hint of that, except perhaps for the hesita.-
 tion before accepting.
    "Very well," he said, and took the place at the science sta-
tion as Jeremy moved out of his way. He bent over the readout
hood, tapped some of the controls, causing monitors to flicker
and change, focus or choose new subjects.
    Stiles knew what Speck expected a devastated planet, a
civilization crushed nearly out of existence, the people who'd
managed to survive suffering in the few remaining caves and
wreckage that hadn't been smashed, hardly any old people,
hardly any kids ....
  But that's not what came up.
    Maps of the planet's cities, boundaries in some places
marked off by electronic border markers readable from space.
Stiles recognized some of what he saw from that first approach
all those years ago, and he was stirred by new apprehensions.
He recognized the mountains showing up on geographical
long-range, and flinched. The idea of returning in triumph,
healthy, alive, in command of a ship, dissolved and crumbled
away. Suddenly he was twenty-one and out of control.
    The hum of the ship around him as thrusters moved them
toward orbit pounded like blood in his head. He was grateful
when Travis quietly took over the approach orders, doing so
smoothly enough that nobody seemed to notice. Or at least
they pretended they didn't.
    Stiles wasn't much for puffing on airs, but he'd have liked to
give them a little command puff-up right about now, just for
Christmas. Couldn't find it, though. Just couldn't find it.
    "Cities seem intact. No signs of catastrophic damage;'
Speck commented as he clicked his way through the scanner's
offerings. "I recognize several of the buildings at the main city
complexes on the primary continent...." Now he leaned clos-
er and seemed almost to frown. "Although... the architectural
style has changed significantly. Many of the old constructions
are missing, replaced by complexes with only one or two sto-
ties" He turned his head, without straightening up, to look at
Stiles. "During your incarceration, did you hear any word of so
broad a cultural change?"
    "Me? Zevon and I used to talk about what could be done to
help buildings survive the Constrictor... elastic brackets and
joints, different construction materials---either much heavier
so they could withstand the pressure, or much lighter so they
wouldn't be crushed... but nobody ever paid attention to us.
That was just us, just talking."
    "They seem to have implemented many changes" Spock
commented, looked at what he saw on the screens. "Even the
colors of the cities are different now. I believe they may have
changed materials significantly. They seem to be primarily
using quarried granite rather than timber and brick. And I'm
reading quintotitantium and dutronium reenforcement mem-
bers rather than conventional steel and iron. When I evacuated,
they were incapable of such a development at their industrial
level."
    "Granite.. ,' Stiles sifted his memory. "Dutronium...
Zevon and I used to design--we used to think up all kinds of
things. Maybe the Pojjana just figured out some of them on
their own. It doesn't take that much to figure out how to build
a spandex house, y'know... most of our ideas just made basic
sense. It's not like we had much to work with or anything .... "
    McCoy watched the continent slowly turn on the large for-
ward screen. "Do you think he's still alive and influencing
their development?"
    "I hope so, I sure hope so" Stiles said with his heart
squeezing fearfully. "Zevon doesn't have a prime directire.
But I don't know how he could get anybody to listen to him.
We could never get past the assistant warden. And I don't
know if... they turned on him after I got pulled out or...
maybe they just..."
     No one said anything to comfort or refute his tortured sup-
 positions or stem the racing of his imagination.
     'qlaere's only so much he could do" Stiles grumbled, his
 thoughts taking on a life of their own. "After all, the sector's
 been red for years. Nobody's been in or out, right?"
  "We watch the sector constantly," Spock undergirded.
"There has been extremely little breaching, give or take the
odd delinquent shaman."
    Dr. McCoy's white brows danced. "Or the occasional sublime
wise-ass. Other than that, a skinny bird couldn't slip in and out of
Red Sector without somebody's noticing. Mr. Stiles, you think
your friend could be somewhere other than the capital city? Run-
ning some process that engineers those new buildings?"
    "Even Zevon couldn't make industries all by himself, even
if he were in charge of the whole planet, never nfind a prison-
er. Besides, he wasn't an architect. Is eleven years long enough
to make sweeping changes on a whole planet? Nah... proba-
bly not. He'd have to get all the way up to somebody trusting
him first, and, believe me, on a planet of people who really
don't like aliens, that could take... well, more doing than
either of us could manage from a prison cell or our lab. Travis,
adjust the trim, will you?"
 "Trim, aye. Give it another three degrees level, Stinson?'
 "Aye aye, sir, three degrees starboard."
    "We must not assume;' Spock mentioned, "that anything is
the same after eleven years"
    Stiles strode around to the other side of the bridge, where
Spock was still scanning the readouts of the planet below. "Are
you saying you think he's dead?"
     Spock glanced at him. "You spare yourself by accepting the
likelihood. You nearly died yourself." "I was sick."
 "And ill-treated, poorly fed, ignored, imprisoned--"
 "Zevon's Romulan. He's stronger than--"
     "Not stronger enough" the ambassador cautioned, now stand-
ing straight and looking right at him. 'q'he odds... are troubling."
 McCoy was watching him. Stiles could sense it.
    He could sense--and see the fretful averted attention of
everybody around him. They all knew his past. He was too
close to this. Maybe it was a mistake not sending somebody
completely impassive. There was more at stake than just
Zevon. Was he thinking clearly enough?
 "What do we do?" Stiles wondered. "Just... approach?"
    "Almost to the atmosphere, Eric" Travis reported. "What do
you want to do?"
 "I don't know yet."
    "We've got to have an order either to enter or veer off. At
this point we can't hover."
    "No doubt the planetary monitoring system has already
noticed us;' Spock told him. "Although they had no space-
borne fleet, they were perfectly able to effect short-range scans
of the immediate area, for defensive purpose~ I'm sure they
have identified your ship as a Starfleet unit. If you don't mind
my suggesting we broadcast a "
    A shriek cut him off as the CST bellowed around them and
the whole ship was jaw-kicked. The deck canted to an instant
30-degree list, as if they'd struck something out in the middle
of space. Were they too low? Had they hit a mountain?
    Pinned to the side of the helm for a terrible few seconds,
Stiles gritted his teeth and fought against the thrust. He heard
the cries of his crew as they were thrown violently against the
side of the tender, crammed into bulkheads and equipment and
each other in a tangle of pressure and shock.
 "What is it!" he called. "Did we hit a satellite?"
    Jeremy clung to the console one chair down from where
Spock was pressed to the science ledge. "Energy funnel! It's
pulling us down?'
    Dr. McCoy clasped his chaff and grimaced. "I hate this kind
of thing--"
    "Is it coming from the planet?" Twisting, Stiles jabbed at the
helm over the shoulder of the flabbergasted trainee pilot. "Oh,
no, I know they shouldn't have this! They didn't have anything
like this! Not that could pull in a CST! We can tow a starship!"
    Travis scrambled for the engineering mainframe to see if
there was an answer there, but when he turned again his face
was a mask of baffiement.
  "It's as if the planet itself has grabbed us!"

The Imperial Palace

    Cool aft, finally, moved through the ancient hails of the
crown family's traditional home. The soft harp music played
eternally over the sound system, just sweet enough to drive

anybody crazy after the first twenty hours. The tape had
looped a few times, and by now Ansue Hashtey had taken to
humming harmony to the tunes he recognized.
    This, in bitter contrast to the suffering empress, who was
roused now and then by Crusher's ministrations and wakened
to relentless agony because from time to time medical tests
required her cooperation. Even when the young woman was
allowed to sink back into unconsciousness, her struggle just to
breathe provided a pathetic percussion to the damned harp
music. It had been a difficult two days.
    "Mr. Hashley, please take these two instruments and clean
them thoroughly, the way I showed you yesterday, and then
bring them back;' Crusher instructed. She'd only caught a few
catnaps and was feeling the stress of fatigue. This was like
being a resident again.
    "I just love helping you," Hashley said. "Maybe when we
get out of this, I can join Starfleet and come to the Enterprise
and be your assistant."
    "You could certainly do something like that;' she said. "No
reason you couldn't take a few paramedical courses and start a
new career. I'm thinking of switching to professional wrestler,
myself. Whew... could you bring me that pillow and put it
behind my back? I can't let go of this IV pump right now. I've
almost got a result... stand by, Data"
    In her periphery, Crusher saw Data look up from his com-
munications center, formerly the empress's dressing-room van-
ity. "Standing by, Doctor."
    The imperial communications relays were tied in to over six
hundred stations throughout the empire. Data had taken nearly
three hours to confirm, through codes, geological information,
and star-mapping devices, that the relays were actually work-
ing and in contact with a spiderweb of stations on several plan-
ets. After all, what good would it be if they were just talking to
a con artist next door?
    Her head swam as she took a moment to relax her brain,
while her hands worked under the blue light of the portable
sterile field she'd set up. She even indulged in closing her eyes
for a few moments, until the feld readings bleeped. Sounded
like a cannon going off.

    Crusher forced her eyes open and blinked a couple of times,
focusing on the readings rushing across the miniature monitor
screen. "Good, very good... I was right. Data, confirm that
the physicians should stop fighting the fever. Let it run its
course--it stresses the attacking prions."
    "Relaying that, doctor. Your progress is remarkable for only
two days."
    "That's me--Remarkable Bey. Look at that! I knew it was
there... add that they shouldn't inject supplements of kelassi-
urn, no matter how low the levels get."
    Data stopped working the console and looked at her. "Doc-
tor, is it not true that Vulcanolds can suffer irreparable intesti-
nal scarring from lack of kelassium?"
    "Absolutely, but this test is hinting to me that the kelassi-
um's not leaving the body at all. Look... see these protovili-
um levels? Those only show up when there's a repository of
kelassium. They shouldn't be reading this way ff she is really
K-deficient."
    Hashley looked up from organizing the medical instruments.
"I've heard of that kind of thing! When I was delivering indus-
trial incendiaries to Carolus, one of the company medics told
me about how the body defends itself with some really weird
stuff"
    Crusher only half-registered what he said. She had learned
over the past hours to pick on a word or two without really
committing herself to listening. "Mmm, this is weird, all
fight... if these chemical bonds are leading me down the
right track, the kelassium's being stored in the second liver.
That tells me the attacking prions feed on kelassium. At least
partially--Data, are you getting this?" "Yes, Doctor."
    "Storing kelassium deprives the infection of an energy
source. I think low kelassium's part of the body's natural forti-
fication. Let's take a chance."
    "Is that wise?" the android asked. "Some of these patients
are dangerously ill already."
    Crusher leaned closer to her patient and checked the moan-
ing young woman's temperature in a particularly unscientific
yet somehow instinctive way--with the back of her hand.

"Mmm... brink of death's a prickly place, Data. Sometimes
you gotta dance to keep standing there."
    Even though she wasn't looking at him, she could still
somehow see, perhaps only in her mind, the android's per-
plexed expression. He didn't counter her comment, though, or
question the risk she was taking. Instead he turned back to the
portable corem console and relayed the latest thread of hope.
    She wished she could speak more freely, venture some
opinions about the crassness of hereditary rulership, mutter a
few truths about how it always compromised freedom some-
where down the line--and not usually that far down either--
but the four guards were always there, and one of the two
women. The guards took turns standing watch every six
hours, never leaving the immediate chambers or sitting rooms.
And Sentinel Iavo floated in and out... at the moment he
was floating back in.
 "Any success, Doctor?"
    Crusher looked up and took the moment to stretch her back
and shoulders. "A little. Nominal. Enough to give us an idea
that we might eventually beat some of this."
    Iavo went to the fireplace, which until now had been stone
cold, and turned the head of an unrecognizable carved creature
on the mantel; a hissing sound was heard, as flames jumped up
in the fake logs, rose to a certain height, adjusted themselves,
and settled as if they'd been burning all night. The royal cham-
ber was instantly haunted, medieval.
    'Whe empress may live because of your ministrations," Iavo
gauged. All across the empire, the royal family members are
beginning to slowly outlive their symptoms."
    "So," Crusher said, "you've been listening in on our relays,
Sentinel?"
He paused. After a moment, he admitted, "Yes, of course."
Still he did not turn from the fire. Turning in her chair,
Crusher surveyed his tall form, narrow and dark against the
flickering golden glow from beyond it, and marveledmnot for
the first time--that no matter where she traveled in the stars,
no matter what strange forces she witnessed or what bizarre
life forms she encountered, what twisted trees grew or weeds
crawled, all over the galaxy fire was always the same color.

    And also the same was the smell from the cauldron of ambi-
tion.
    Sentinel Iavo held his hands toward the fire. Crusher saw
them spread before him and slightly to the side, framed in
paint-by-number fireglow.
    Stretching one arm out, Crusher snapped her fingers once,
quietly, toward Data. Flinching as if awakened, the android
swiveled away from his console and sat watching. With her
other hand, she waved Ansue Hashley into the comer behind
her, then put a finger to her lips and gave him the evil eye. The
man paled, his eyes widened, and with some wisdom garnered
from years running an illegal route, he measured the sense of
not arguing or even speaking.
    Crusher leaned over the empress and touched the pallid
cheek whose changes of color and heat had been the cusp of
the doctor's life for many hours. The empress moaned softly. A
tear appeared in the comer of the quiet girl's eye. Perhaps she
knew.
    The two standing guards moved away from the end of the
bed. The two who had been resting now stood up.
    "I suppose," Crusher began quietly, "you've never had a
problem like this come your way, Sentinel."
 Iavo gazed into the fire. "Nothing like this."
    "How does temptation taste to someone who has been loyal
all his life?"
    For a moment he was silent. He sighed. "It has a certain bit-
ter spice."
    "Are you enjoying the chance?" she asked him. "Or are you
comered by other pressures?"
    This time Iavo did not answer. The guards stood now in a
line, three on one side of him, one on the other, all four facing
Crusher, Data, Ansue Hashley, and the dying empress in her
bed.
    "It must be frustrating" Crusher said, "always to be on the
periphery of glory, nearly able to touch it, always condemned
to taste but never swallow... and now to see yourself within a
step of supreme power... and your followers to see them-
selves jumping all the obstacles in one leap---advisors, at-
tendants... Sentinels... they all see an opportunity that
otherwise would never have occurred. The murder of the
empress would be hard for the people to accept, I'm sure, but
no one here will care if a Federation doctor and her party sud-
denly turn up missing. Enterprise officers aren't exactly on the
empire's favorite-people list, are we? Therefore, the empress
and her family will die without continued treatment."
    Despite the fact that there was no real wood, the fire was
engineered to crackle and snap---even to put forth the scent of
burning autumn leaves. Still with his back to her, Sentinel Iavo
lowered his head as if watching her words spin inside some
kind of crystal bail in his mind.
    Barely above a whisper, he told her, "You came here with no
guards, madam."
    Crusher turned fully in her seat and robbed her hands on her
knees. "Now that you know I might save her, you have to go
through with it, don't you?"
    The guard at Iavo's right drew his ceremonial dagger. A sec-
ond guard did the same while the others watched and gripped
the handles of their own weapons. Crusher stood up.
    Sensing the change, Iavo now turned around to face her.
Now the line of Romulans and the threat they posed clicked
gracefully into place. For a brief moment Beverly Crusher
stood in awe of this elegant race, so Vulcan in their stature, so
human in their passion.
    The last two guards pulled their knives. Firelight played
upon the blades. And Iavo himself touched the still-sheathed
ceremonial dirk that was the symbol of the highest nonroyal
office in the Romulan Star Empire.
Data came to her side. Ansue Hashley stood behind them.
Crusher pressed back her shoulder-length hair, steadied her-
self, lowered her weaponless hands to her sides, and looked
directly at Iavo.
 "How are we going to do this?"




.Chapter Eighteen

"WHAT'VE WE GOT?"
    Jeremy White responded with typically terse calm. "We've
got thirteen minutes before we crash."
 "Yellow alert, everybody;' Stiles ordered.
 "Yellow, aye!"
    The CST shifted its manner substantially, as certain lights
and meters went dark and others popped on, systems deciding
which were important and which could wait. The din was mad-
dening--the ship screamed and strained, engines howling right
through the bulkheads, setting up harmonic vibrations in every
member.
    On the main screen and all the other exterior visual moni-
tors, black space and a planet gave way to the filtering gauze
of clouds. They were entering the atmosphere!
    While he tried to keep control over his voice, to keep from
shouting or sounding excited, it was necessary to speak up
over the tin bray of the engines fighting to keep them in space.
  "Veer out!" he ordered. "Get us some kilometers."
    Both hating and loving the fact that Ambassador Spock and
the irascible Leonard McCoy were watching him through a
dangerous moment, he forced himself to concentrate on any-

thing but the two of them. For a second he thought Spock
might stay at the science-readout station, where he so obvious-
ly and eternally belonged, where he fit so well on a starship or
any ship, but the famous officer subtly stepped aside for Jere-
my White to take that position.
    Stiles hesitated an instant, soon accepting the appropriate-
ness and grandeur of the sacrifice. Spock was letting them
handle their own destiny without interference. How did he
know to do that? How could he hold himself in check like
this?
    His stomach turning, Stiles stepped to the starboard side.
"Come on, Jeremy, analyze it."
    Jeremy's usually sedate expression was screwed into annoy~
ance, possibly because of Spock's presence. "It's some kind of
hybrid of a tractor beam and a grayitoh ray. I've never seen
energy combined this way. If a CST can tow a starship, how
can they be holding us?"
    Travis asked, "Did they have this tech when you were here,
Eric?"
 "No, hell, no! Matt, can we---"
    Realizing he couldn't be heard five sections back over the
scream, of the engines, he struck the nearest comm.
 "Matt, can we effect any kind of a fair-lead landing?"
    From section five, Girvan called over the mechanical
scream, "Not at seven thousand feet per second at this angle
we can't.t "
    "Okay, let's come up with something else. How long before
the beam pulls us into the mountain?"
    "Calculating;' Jeremy said. "Draw is increasing incremen-
tally with our thrust ratios. They're pouring the coals to it."
    "Let's pour our own;' Stiles said. "Let's try impulse point
zero five, helm."
 "Point zero five?'
 "Don't shout."
    Stiles shrugged at the kid, a simple gesture that had a visible
effect on the young terrified teenagers, who were all watching
him to measure how many points they should go on the panic
meter. Going into a battle situation, with rules to follow and
procedures to rely on, had been something they could handle
after Starfleet training. Having the ship tilt and scream under
them as a planet sucked at itmthat was something nobody'd
ever trained for. Of course, having it smash into a planet's sur-
face would be hard to come back from, too.
    Stiles found orders popping from his lips and responses
coming from the crew in a step-by-step manner that had saved
thousands of spacefarers in the past, a protocol upon which he
now relied.
    "Let's have all the rookies to support positions. Primary
crew take your emergency stations. Alan, watch the gyro dis-
play and tell me personally if it starts jumping. Let's have red
alert."
 "Red alert!" Travis echoed.
    A dozen changes erupted with that order. The lighting all
over the CST shifted to muted cherry. The hatches between
sections slammed shut and pressure locked--sssschunk.
    "Keep up the thrust." Stiles knew they were doing that
already. Just wanted to make sure nobody pushed the wrong
button. The ship's sublight engines whined valiantly. "Let's see
what we've got to fight with. Give me some numbers and col-
ors."
    Immediately Travis called into the comm. "Engine thrust
control, give us numbers and colors."
    Almost immediately section leaders' voices from all over
the ship started bubbling through the corem system to the
bridge, because now all the hatches were closed. Travis, Zack
Bolt, and CJreg Blake relayed what he needed to know and left
out what he didn't. "Six GCG, sir."
 "Red over yellow on the plasma injectors, Eric."
 "Green on the pellet initiators."
    "WeDre nine points overbudget on the MHD. They're trying
to equalize."
    To his shipmates across the bridge Jeremy called, "Just
compensate when it spikes!"
 "Hear that, Jason? Compensate the spike only! Jason?
    The engine noise swelled to a howl, as if a hurricane were
transferring itself from section to section right through the
sealed hatches. Beneath the engine noise squealed the grind of
real physical stress, as the ship twisted and cranked against the
planetary force hauling on them. It was as if they were towing
some great body that insisted upon moving in the opposite
direction. And they were losing ....
     "Thrust increasing!" Greg Blake called. "No effect, sir!
We're slipping down even faster!"
 "Put more power to it, then."
 What else could they do?
    Stiles glanced sideways at Leonard McCoy, glad the doctor
was sitting down. He didn't want to be responsible for the
famous elderly physician being scratched, spindled, or mutilat-
ed from falling down in the Saskatoon. Spock, too, seemed
stable enough, despite the ravaged tilt of the deck and the slow
spin that tore at the artificial gravity.
    Travis punched at the controls with one hand while holding
himself in place with the other. "Maybe we can twist out side-
ways--use the lateral--"
    "We'd gulp too much fuel," Jeremy argued. "We're already
burning the deuterium at fail-safe rate! It's all we can do to
hold position. Ten more minutes and we won't have anything
left at all. We've got nothing to twist with:'
    Pulling himself bodily upward to Jeremy's side, Stiles tried
to make sense of what he saw on the maps and visual analyses
of the planet below. "What's the source of this beam? Anybody
reading the surface?"
    Greg Blake was the one to answer. "Reading an energetic
pulse station at the northern foot of the valley. It's east of
the... looks like a swamp. No lifesigns. It must be automated"
 "Yes, there's a swamp. Zack, target that facility."
 "Targeted," Zack Bolt responded. "Phasers armed."
 "Fire phaser one;' Stiles ordered.
    A single phaser beam broke from the ship's weapon array
and bolted down toward the planet, but hadn't made it a half
second away before suddenly bending sharply and bouncing
like a ricocheted bullet off an invisible field between them and
the planet.
    Alan Wood covered his head, as hot sparks and bits of melt-
ing metal blew into the bridge from section two.
 "Insulate!" Stiles yelled at the same time. From where he
stood he could see his experienced shipmates grab the trainees
and yank them to the interior areas of the CST
    Sure enough, the phaser beam lanced around, bending every
time it hit the egg-shaped energy field and shooting back past
the ship, until finally, inevitably, it struck hull.
    An explosion ripped through the midsection electronics,
blowing sparks, hissing--and somebody cried out in pain.
Shouted orders and desperate measures shot forward, audible
even through the closed hatches. "So much for phasers..."
    "Rupture! Section four, starboard PTC! Automatic sealant
nozzle heads are fused--"
    "Tell 'em to do it manually;' Stiles called. "Is everyone
okay?"
    Jeremy looked at him grimly. "It's a reflector envelope! Our
own phaser hit us! We can't fire out!"
 "Pardon me... would you take a suggestion?"
 Spock!
    The voice jolted Stiles. He spun around and looked up to the
grand figure on the starboard deck. "Are you kidding?"
    The stately Vulcan kept a grip on the buffer edge of the
science console and somehow made his awkward position
look graceful on the wickedly tilted deck. "Quicksand. If we
struggle, the beam sucks us down at a commensurate rate,
drawing upon our own energy to exert more pull than we can
exert thrust. If we hold still, all it may do is hold us in
place."
    While the engines howled and the hull peered, Stiles gazed
at the ambassador and Spock back at him as if they had all
week. Doubt and illogic spun through Stiles's training and
experience, then jumped the gully to irrational trust.
    He looked at the readouts, at Jeremy's face skewed with
doubt, at Travis desperately trying to make sense of what the
ultrascience officer had just suggested... as precious seconds
slipped away, Stiles found himself adding up the crazy num-
bers.
    His eyes flipped again to Spock, and he shook his head and
winced. "I was about to fall for something again, wasn't IT'
 "Literally."
    "Sir... I hope you're everything I think you are." Without
turning away from Spock's steady eyes, Stiles tossed over his
shoulder, "Cut thrust?'
    "That can't be right!" the panicked trainee at the helm
protested, his eyes swiveling wildly. "We'll get pulled into the
planet!"
    Stiles started to explain, then cut himself off and waved.
"Travis !"
    Perraton instantly yanked the midshipman from the helm
and slid into the seat himself. "Cutting thrust. Sorry, kid. Go
sit down till we see how dead we are."
    His own order eating at his stomach, Stiles leered at Spock
as if to share the burden. His mind raced, as he scoured his
memory of all those recorded missions on the first Starship
Enterprise, when Spock faced the worst mysteries of the cos-
mos as Captain Kirk's unswerving sidekick.
     The whine of the engines depleted noticeably, like howling
wolves running over a hill and disappearing into the mist. 
"Is it working?" Stiles dared to ask.
    Quiet with victory, Travis half-turned to confirm with a
good glance. "We're slowing down...."
     "We've just bought ourselves about twenty more minutes,"
Jeremy assessed. "I wouldn't bet on more." "Keep measuring"
    Irritated with the knowledge that he wouldn't have been
able to save his ship if Spock hadn't been here, Stiles bristled
with selfconsciousness, fighting to think with a divided mind.
    "Can't fire out... can we beam through the reflector bub-
ble?"
     "I don't know that!" Zack Bolt rebelled at the idea. "I know
for sure I could never beam you back up through that thing!"
 'What doesn't make any----"
    "Beam out?" Travis swung around. 'When what? Find the
beam housing and kick it down? That thing can take hand
phaser fire!"
 "We'll use the nacelle charges" Stiles told him.
    "Those are only five-minute charges," Travis explained,
with sudden fear in his eyes. "They'll take out a mile and a
half. You'll never get away in time."
    "We'll do something," Stiles shabbily assured. "Let's try it.
Ready the transporter."
    "Are you nuts?" Jeremy grabbed at Stiles's ann, keeping
one hand on his controls. "Give me tune to analyze the reflec-
tor envelope! Maybe you can't beam through it."
 "How long before it pulls us down, did you say?"
    His face sheeting to white, Jeremy shook his head. "All
right, all right."
    Some inner checklist rang in Stiles's head, and he turned to
Spock, prepared to use all the resources he had at his dispos-
al-and this was one dynamite resource. "Can we?"
    Now that he'd been invited, Spock leaned to look at Jere-
my's science monitors that gave them the energy analysis of
that beam. Even after several seconds of study and two signifi-
cant frowns, Spock could only postulate, "Possibly."
 Stiles's leg muscles knotted. "Let's try beaming through."
    On his other side, Jeremy protested, "Let me beam some-
thing solid out first."
    "You got thirty seconds. Somebody get me a jacket. I'm
going myself."
  "You are?" McCoy asked. "Damn! Another hotshot!"
    The comm button was hot under Stites's finger. "Jason,
bring me two of the shaped charges we use to blow off
nacelles. Meet me in the transporter section." He accepted
and yanked on a jacket somebody handed him from the
aft bridge locker. "I've got to find Zevon. Nobody else
knows--"
    "Neither do you know the way around the city;' Spock
pointed out. He stood squarely before Stiles. "You were a pris-
oner. But I do."
 That's what he needed--a super-shadow.
    But he couldn't think of any reason that didn't make
absolute sense. Pushy, pushy Vulcan...
    "What about me?" Dr. McCoy made a rickety effort to
stand up.
    Stiles gaped at him, instantly in a bind. His mouth opened,
closed again, openedmwhat could he say? McCoy couldn't
possibly run or fight, but if he stayed here... and what about
the others? Offer to beam a hundred-and-some-year-old man
down to save his life and leave the entire young crew behind
with their lives dangling?
    McCoy's ice-blue eyes sharpened. "Are you going to refuse
one of the greatest explorers and pioneers in Starfleet history?"
    Choking on what he hoped was damage smoke and not
something else, Stiles uttered, "I... I... uh...."
    "Eric," Jeremy interrupted, "We're slipping. They're not
pulling us down with our energy now, but it's still pulling us
with whatever energy it can muster itself. We're slipping
deeper into the atmosphere. Sixteen minutes till we hit the
surface."
    Travis looked at him. "Can we turn so we don't hit engines-
first?"
 "No chance."
    Spock stripped out of his ceremonial robe and dumped it on
the deck. "We should go, Commander."
    But Stiles was still gawking at McCoy without 'knowing
what to say.
    The aged physician leered back at him with singular deter-
mination.
    Spock snapped up the front of his formal jacket--it turned
out the big clunky Vulcan molded jewels also had a clasping
mechanism--and simply preempted, "Doctor, please."
    Levering a finger at Stiles, McCoy huffed, "If you don't
come out of transport with your arms sticking out of your head
and you find that Romulan, you bring me the whole package,
not just a sample of his blood. I've got to have a constanL
warm, living source for several days to do what I need to do. I
need him, got it? Not a sample. Him, himself"
 "Thank you" Spock said. "We shall do our utmost."
 "You'd better"
    And McCoy stepped aside, out of the way of everybody
who was working to keep the CST in the atmosphere.
     "Travis, come here." Stiles grasped his friend's arm and held
it fiercely. "Backup plan three, got itT' "Really?"
 "Yes, really. Got it?"
 "Got it."
 ''Travis... don't let my ship sink."
    Somehow Travis found a smile. "W&ll do what we have to,
Eric."
    Stiles started to respond, but his words stuck in his throat.
Travis assured him by returning the grip, and said nothing
more.
    Drawing a tight breath, Stiles jumped to the hatchway and
grasped the hatch handle, then looked back for Spock. "Mr.
Ambassador? Let's fly or fry:'
 "After you, Mr. Stiles."

The Imperial Palace

    What had begun as a complex and troubling medical mis-
sion had first metamorphosed into the glimmerings of suc-
cess--a chance to save a thousand royal family members and
shore up the stability of the Federation's closest and most dan-
gerous neighbor on this side of the street--and had now once
again altered its form and function. Now Crasher, Data, and
the hapless merchant named HashIcy were about to fight for
their own lives. As abruptly as wind shifts, they had become
the targets of an assassination plan that had seemed as distant
to them as stars were apart.
    As her stomach muscles spun into spirals, Beverly Crusher
thought fast, conjuring up a half-dozen 'alternatives before set-
tling on one. She couldn't sedate them all. She couldn't seduce
them all... there had to be something better.
    "Allow me to play to your sense of honor" she began, with a
bluntness she hoped Romulans would appreciate. "If your men
can take my man, Sentinel, I'll pack up my instruments and
leave, and let the empress and her family die. You won't even
have to kill me."
    Sentinel Iavo tipped his head as if he hadn't quite heard her
right. He nodded once at Data after deciding she couldn't pos-
sibly be talking about Hashley. "Him?"
 "Yes," Crusher said. "Him.'~
 "A duel?"
 "If you have the integrity."

    Iavo glanced at the sergeant of his guards. The sergeant
frowned in suspicion, but said nothing.
    "How is it honorable," Iavo parried, "for five men to do bat-
tie with one man?"
    Crusher shrugged. "Well, he works out a lot. You know
Starfleet."
    The five Ronmlan men, warriors all, looked at Data and saw
a lanky, wiry human who carried Crusher's medical bags.
    Crusher held her breath. Come on, men, think... how do
we spell Romulan chivalry?
    "He has no weapon" one of the other guards protested as he
finally drew his own blade.
    "You told us no active phasers or disrupters could get
through the palace's security screen" Crusher said, %0 you
can either give him a dagger, or fight him like he is."
    Despite being obviously intrigued by the wager, Iavo's
expression hardened. "There is no integrity in sacrificing
everything on a game. I refuse, Doctor. I cannot afford to let
you leave here now. You will die today."
    Crusher shrugged. "Have it your way. You still have to fight
him."
    Data stood alone in the middle of the carpet, cahn and waiting,
seeming very small. Perfect--lhe Romulans didn't like this at all.
Whether they won or not, they were petty about fighting and too
chicken to bet on themselves. And she'd piqued their sense of fair
play. Conscience could be such a burden, couldn't it? She hadn't
expected them to take a silly wager, but now they were ashamed
to fight Data in what appeared to be a no-win for Starfleet.
    The Romulans glanced at each other in waves of hesitation,
doubt, suspicionmand a flash of guilt?
    Over her shoulder, Crusher heard the faint voice of Ansue
Hashley. "I... I can fight... a little .... "
 "Shh" the doctor murmured. "Go ahead, Data."
    Without verbal acknowledgement, Data moved forward.
Crusher pressed Hashley back, and the line of battle drew itself
across the fur carpet. There before her, like a museum painting
on a wall, stood the stirring vision of four distinguished Romu-
lan charioteers and their Sentinel in rebellion, and thus they
descended to the ranks of hatchet men.

    Between the two factions in the bedchamber stood the
couch and the oblong table and its chair. For a moment these
three objects seemed as insurmountable as any moat. The
recorded harp lyficals continued mindlessly to play, the fire to
skitter and glow, the empress to suffer through her next
breaths.
    Ultimately the tension in the room became tangible, break-
able---or maybe it was just the accursed twangy harp music--
and the standoff was shattered by the battle cry of the sergeant
of the guard. He flung off his helmet, dashed it to the hearth
stones, and charged.
    Blocked by the table, the sergeant drove forward anyway
and leaped into the air, took two steps across the tabletop,
spread his arms, dagger down, and dive-bombed Data where
he stood.
    Barehanded, Data's arms shot up; he clasped the sergeant's
nubby silver uniform with both hands and parried the man
over his head. ff Data had simply completed the arch, the ser-
geant would've landed on Crusher, but Data's shock-fast com-
puter brain measured the pivot--angle, force, velocity,
energy--and he twisted exactly right. The sergeant bellowed
his shock and surprise, slashed downward with his blade--rak-
ing Data across the back of the neck--and then flew into the
wall as if shot from a cannon. Though it looked as if he had
just struck the velvet drapery, his body made a distinct thok of
bone and armor striking against sheer rock. He crashed onto
the corner of the vanity and thence to the floor.
    Enraged, the three other guards now charged in unison,
vaulting and smashing past the furniture. Data's hands struck
out like cobra tongues, skirting the slasldng blades of his
attackers with such blinding speed that two of the guards cut
each other instead of him and stumbled back. The third
received a kick in the gut and was thrown off. The first guard
now flew from his position on the floor and jumped onto
Data's back, clinging and grimacing viciously while trying to
position his knife at Data's throat. Data merely turned under
them as freely as a weathervane, his expression completely
unfazed.
 Sentinel Iavo, astounded by what he saw, rushed between
the table and the couch, his ceremonial dirk's long blade gold-
en in the firelight, as he drove it forward into Data's fibcage.
There the blade lodged.
    Data reached over his head with one hand to clasp the cling-
ing sergeant by the hair and down with the other hand, to grip
Sentinel Iavo's dirk hilt as it protruded from his chest. Crusher
winced as the three men waltzed together.
    Behind her, Ansue Hashley's gasps and gulps narrated every
move, and he somehow had the sense to stay back, no matter
what he thought he saw.
    "He'll be slaughtered!" HashIcy empathized. "That knife--
it's in him!"
    Restraining herself from idle boasting, Crusher said, "Don't
worry yet. Data's the best concealed weapon around."
    In a spin of color and firelight, the sergeant slammed to the
floor at Crusher's feet, dazed, his face bleeding, lungs heaving,
weapon completely missing. Crusher stooped and heaved him
up onto his knees. "There you go. Keep fighting:'
    She stepped back, watching tensely to see if the seed of guilt
she'd planted would sprout quickly enough to turn the tide.
Already she sensed a halfheartedness in the Romulans'
effort---or was she imagining it?
    With a prideful roar, the Romulans surged back into the
fight just as Sentinel Iavo and one of the other guards crashed
into the couch and drove the whole thing fight over backward,
dumping them into a stand of shelves, whose contents came
shattering down upon them.
 "You're making a mess;' Crusher commented.
    "I shall be happy to tidy everything later, Doctor;' Data
responded as he whirled and took a blaze of vicious stabbings
to the arms and upper body and blocked hard-driven blows that
were meant for his face. In return he drove his fists, knuckles,
and the heels of his hands into the soft tissues of his oppo-
nents. "By the way, I am expecting a communiqu~ from the
empress's first cousin's physician on Usanor Four. Would you
mind activating the channel?" "Oh, sure."
    Completely rattled by the casual conversation going on
while they were panting like dogs, the Romulan guards let
their anger get the better of them. Data's hand-eye coordina-
tion was at computer speed, he had the strength of any ten
Romulans all equalized throughout his body, and he wasn't
getting tired. When the next one came within grasping range,
attempting to body-blow Data to the floor, Data instead
grasped the man fully about the chest and heaved him into the
air, propelling him up and into the comer.
    "Data, it's getting out of hand. Wrap it up as soon as you
can."
 "Certainly"
    Sentinel Iavo was poised ten feet from them in an attack
stance, staring at the body of his guard. Summoning the com-
mitment he had made, he forced himself to swing once again
at Dam with his dirk blade slashing. The blade fell on Data's
shoulder and glanced off. Iavo stumbled.
    In that instant, Data managed to drive off all three remaining
attackers at once, just long enough to grasp the dagger hilt that
was still sticking out of him. With a finn yank, he drew it from
his body. The blade dripped with colored fluid as he turned it
toward the charging guards and the Sentinel. He was armed.
    His eyes narrowed and his teeth gritted, Data's jaw locked,
and there was a flush of effort in his complexion. The Sentinel
and two of the guards attacked him as a unit with their blades,
met with driving force by Data's weapon. The clang and shriek
of metal against metal erupted over the harpsong.
    "Uh-oh, he's getting mad," Crasher observed. "And they say
he doesn't have those emotions... apparently he's got some-
thing like adrenaline on his side."
    "How can he do this?" Hashiey asked. "How can he throw
those big guards around!"
    "He eats his broccoli. This is what happens to all conspira-
tors, Mr. Hashley. Sooner or later they have to show them-
selves."
    Iavo spun around and glared at her while two of his men
lunged at Data and were thrown off. "Conspirators?"
    'l'he Sentinel did it, didn't he?" Ansue Hashley reckoned,
taking the topic and running with it while the other men fought
their way around the arena. "He poisoned the royal family! He
wanted power all the time. He's been close to it all his life, like

the prime minister waiting for the queen to die, but he gets
impatient. I've heard of that."
    Crusher rewarded him with a nod, then accused Iavo with a
glare. "I guess he thought he could get away with killing the
entire royal family."
    In the middle of a dagger-swipe, Iavo let his move be par-
fled without challenge as he sang out, "I did nothing to make
this happen! I have no idea why they turned ill at the same
time! I thought it was their blood!"
    Wondering how good an actor he was, Crusher moved side-
ways, keeping behind the periphery of Data's slashing weapon.
"Who helped you engineer the vital terrorism?"
    "I did not do it!" Iavo shouted. He actually stopped fighting,
backed away from Data, and stood there waving his weapon in
a kind of helpless gesture, as one of his guards writhed in pain
at his feet and the other braced to charge again. 'q'his was
providence working] I had the power to see what could be! I
wanted to change the hearts of our people, not this... this--
stop it!"
    He lashed out at the last guard, driving the charging soldier
sideways into the table just before the other man would've
plowed back into Data's circle of engagement.
"Stop, all of you!" Iavo ordered. "Stop... stop. No more.. :'
The other guards--the two conscious ones---clasped at their
bleeding and broken limbs and obeyed him. Mindful of Data's
dangerous abilities, they shrank back, away, and crouched near
the fireplace. Somehow Crusher could tell that they weren't
obeying because they were beaten. They were obeying because
they knew they were wrong.
    Emotionally destroyed, baffled and sickened by the rank-
ness of what he had been tempted toward, Iavo stalked the
width of the room, then finally sank into the chair at the center
table as if some magical pry bar had opened a valve and let the
air out of him. He raised his striking jewel-like eyes to Crush-
er, and she saw mirrors of anguish.
    "A thousand loyalties," he mourned, "a thousand pres-
sures... these days have been torment for me... I have spent
my life in the service of the royal family, never once thinking
such thoughts, until along came tiffs miracle, this disease that
struck every one of them... at first it seemed tragic, soon
changing to a glimmer... the allure of opportunity... to cut
away the throne's ancient core... change the future of the
empire, dilute the power of blood succession that causes these
terrible dangers and finally try something new--this might're
been the only chance in history to try. But I can't finish it--"
    Demolished, Iavo sank back on the vanity, his head hanging,
his arm draped across the console.
    "I could let them die," he moaned, "but I could never kill
them. You must believe me...."
 "Data, stand down," Crusher ordered.
    The android lowered his weapon, although Crusher was
reassured when he did not put it away, and remained poised in
the middle of the room, ready to spring in case anybody got
any ideas.
    "Good work," she said as she came to the android's side.
"How badly are you hurt?
 "A little lubricant leakage, Doctor."
 "I'll fuse you up in a few minutes."
    Emboldened, Crusher crossed the furry carpet in three
strides and got the dazed Sentinel by the collar, her hands
knotted like cannonballs at his throat. She leered into the
crumple of his face.
    "All right, Iavo. Look at me. I'm willing to have seen noth-
ing here today, do you understand me? Data's not only the
devil with a handweapon, he's also got what you might call a
photographic memory. We've got a record of everything that's
gone on here, but I'm willing to keep it between us if you do
exactly as I order. You get your buddies out of here and don't
show me another armed guard for the duration of my visit.
You're now the empress's one and only bodyguard. Monar-
chies are stupid, but that little girl didn't do anything except
get born into the royal family. It's like a curse, y'know? It's not
her fault,"
    "You must believe me" he beseeched. "I know nothing of
the plot to make them all ill...."
    "I believe you." She dropped his collar so abruptly that he
flinched. "This biological assanlt's been going on all over the
quadrant and it's never involved the Romulans till now. As

much as I'd like to hate you right now, nothing points to you.
You're just an opportunist. A clumsy one, at that. You think I
can't tell that you've never done anything like this before?"
    "I never have... please forgive me... 1 never expected you
to be so brave. We have always been told that humans whim-
per and sneak, stab in the night... I have served loyally all my
life, until this opportunity raised it head--"
    "And you can still have your coup d'etat someday, I'm all
for revolutions, but not while the opposition is lying helplessly
ill and I'm around to make them betten It' the empire falls this
way, this fast, you'll take all the rest of us down the drain with
you. You threatened to kill me, so here's the counter often You
won't kill me, and Data won't have to kill you. 1 keep treating
her and the rest of the royal family, and you and your men pre-
tend none of this happened and quit thinking that this is a good
way to change things. You can all keep your positions and get
another chance some day to do it right. I'll send you a biogra-
phy of Benjamin Franklin and you can get some ideas, but
until then be patient and do your jobs with some statesman-
ship. For now, you'll back off and let me do my job without
any more theatrics. Simple enough?"
 The fire snapped, and the harp chimed.




Chapter Nineteen

"MR. STILES..."
    The devil's own carnival ride. Hands still tingling. Hate bad
dreams... Orsova, loom'mg over him while some creepzilla
who'd won an auction rayed the flesh off him with bare fists.
Arms throbbed. Legs, back... wake the dead with that drum-
beat.
 Leave me alone. Can't go back, can't go back there ....
    Lips clamped together and teeth gnashed, coming down on
gritty shme. Stiles swam back to consciousness. Threads of
grit made way between his teeth, file side of his tongue, the
back of his throat he gagged himself awake.
    As if something were crawling across his face, he backhand-
ed himself in the mouth and wiped moist filth from his face,
then heaved up spitting, weed pods netted with slime sheeting
off the left side of his uniform as he rolled.
    Someone groaned--he opened his eyes and seemed to see
the sound of his own complaint rush into the sky like a bkd.
Pressing grit from his watering eyes, he forced himself up on
both arms and hovered there on hands and 'knees, as his head
battled to clear.
 He was kneeling in shoulder-high ferns. The ground was
soft, sticky, made of pea-like pods in a great carpet, light green
like duckweed on an everglade. And stank like a bilge.
 "What's that awful smell?" he complained.
    A few yards from him, Spock rose to his knees in the ferns,
his hands dripping with green stuff. "The great outdoors."
    As if afflicted, Stiles stood up on a pair of rattling maracas.
"God, we lived... that was the longest beaming I've ever been
through. My head feels like a stone."
    "The restraint shield they put around us is apparently geared
toward weapons energy, fortunately. It allowed us to beam
in is your phaser active?" Spock was holding his phaser,
looking at it critically.
    Stiles pulled his own phaser. "Drained! These were fully
charged !"
    "The shield sensed the charge" Speck said, "and neutralized
them. Useless." Just like that he dismissed their lack of
weaponry.
    "Where are the grenades?" Spock slashed at the ferns with his
hands, looking for the only thing they'd had time to bring with
them--a pouch loaded with heavy-duty shaped grenades normal-
ly used by CST crews to blow off an irreconcilably leaking
nacelle before the nacelle exploded and took a whole ship with it.
    All around and above them, black trees spindled high and
low, wretched branches dipping low into the marshy weeds
and snaking up again with newly absorbed nutrients. Hands
shaking, Stiles dug at the thickly shadowed overgrowth and
wished there were more sunlight. Those clouds up there,
blocking the light, those were the ones he'd seen displayed on
the Saskatoon's screens as the energy from the planet drew the
ship deeper and deeper into the atmosphere. The clouds
seemed so passive and blanketing, he had to struggle to recall
that they were as deadly as venom, blinding his crew as they
were sucked closer to being milled to dust.
    Seemed like the ship was a million miles away, down here
with the peace and quiet and ferns... be easy to lie down and
take a nap.
    "Twelve minutes" Spock reminded. "At this rate, the CST
will crash at six hundred ten miles per hour."
 "And disintegrate~I know" Stiles pawed furiously through the
ferns now. "It's got to be here. It came through, didn't it? What if
the envelope let us through and stopped the grenades somehow?"
  "The pouch would be here empty."
    "Oh... right. Here it is!" He came up from the ferns with a
weed-matted satchel, and half a bush attached to his hair.
Through the pouch's mock-leather skin, he felt the presence of
two charges in their camstem.
  "We must hurry" Spock urged.
      After a moment's clumsy hesitation, clarity struck him that
Spock's statement was meant to let Stiles lead the way.
  "Right--this way."
    The transporter had put them down at the edge of the weed
forest. As they broke out of the knotty growth, tripping on hid-
den roots and fingers of dipping branches coming up again as
independent plants, Stiles immediately saw the center of his
universe--a blocky gray beam housing nestled in a meadow,
positioned so that it had almost 170-degree firing clearance in
every direction, even over the mountain range to his right--
those mountains sent a javelin through him, which seemed to
drive him backward... moving his feet to go toward the build-
ing caused such physical stress that his legs nearly went numb.
    The blocky beam housing was nothing more than a platform
of granite blocks and a spidery dutronium arrangement that
acted as legs for a conical device standing about thirty feet
above the ground. From that device at this moment a blinding
blue beam was being emitted, that bellowed like a concert
band trying to tune up.
    Maybe they could're brought it down with hand phasers, but
it would have taken a while to melt, Stiles noted with some
satisfaction. At least the right choice had been made there.
They hadn't taken the time to get hand phasers out of the secu-
rity lockers and had brought only the canister charges. A dumb
mistake. A dumb midshipman's mistake. Why did his mind
always turn to taffy when Ambassador Spook was around?
     "Both sides of the base?" Stiles asked as he handed one of
the charges to the ambassador. "Yes."
    "These are shaped charges, sir, so be sure to point the open
end down so the force'!l go into the ground and not up to the
ship. Saskatoon's not much more than fifteen miles over our
heads by now."
    'q'welve point two. These are five-minute charges? No
more, no less?"
    'q'hat's it. When you're blowing off a nacelle, all the alterna-
fives have been exhausted. The decision's already been made.
All you need is a small safety margin. Five's usually enough."
    "It will not be enough today." Spock glanced around as he
positioned the canister between the bolted fingers of a stan-
chion. "Other than the trees, there is no cover here."
    "Most of those 'trees' aren't even trees. They're tendrils of
an ancient root system. They just keep going up and down out
of the glade like some giant's sewing them all over the coun-
tryside. They're hollow with liquid inside. They'll be blown
down and act like a big net on us. The bark'11 just crumble and
turn into shrapnel."
 "Perhaps we should head in another direction, in that case."
    "We'll head over that way, on the open meadow. How far
can we run in five minutes?"
    "Hardly matters, Mr. Stiles. We're unlikely to survive the
blast wave. If the ship is freed from this beam, Dr. McCoy can
lead a landing party to collect your friend and continue with
the medical mission."
    Stiles peered through the dutronium spiderweb. "Is that why
you left him up there? To lead a second landing party if we got
killed?"
 "Yes. Two fronts are better than one."
    "Hmm... I left him because I figured he couldn't run."
With feelings appropriately scornful to that little step down,
Stiles pressed the charged canister into place. "Ready ... it's
set. Now what?"
 "Four minutes, fifty-five seconds."
    Ambassador Spock set his own canister, then stepped back
from the granite block, his black eyes vibrant with the mo-
ment's risk. He was actually enjoying himself.
 "I believe the operative phrase," he said, "is 'run like hell.'"

"Three minutes."
How long can five minutes be?




As Spock ticked off the time in thirty-second intervals,
Stiles's legs pumped in unison with the pounding of his heart.
    The longest Constrictor on record (the last time Stiles had
experienced one) was three and a half minutes. The last erup-
tion of Mount Vesuvius had lasted nine hours. A two-minute
earthquake was really long. A ten-minute tornado. Minutes
stretched into drawn-out experiences that seemed never to end,
seemed to make the whole universe turn slower and slower,
until a heartbeat itself became a sluggish kettledrum with the
drummer falling asleep.
    Five minutes of running across a swamp meadow, splashing
through rancid fluids, anticipating the platform back there to
blow sky-high and sweep him off the face of the planet--that
five minutes shot by faster than a snapped finger. What hap-
pened to all those stories about minutes becoming hours?
    As the five-minute mark approached, they were only a third
of the way across the meadow, running toward a blister of
stony hills. At thirty-six years old, Stiles could devour some
ground, and he had been holding back somewhat because he
didn't want to outpace the ambassador in case Spock needed
help. Soon that showed itself to be unnecessary--Spock was
tall, long-legged, and Vulcan.
    They ran. Hindered by the knee-high meadowgrass and the
uneven ground beneath, the exercise became a venture into
hopping, tripping, sprinting, and catching on thorns and tan-
gles. Another ten feet... another... each step drew him deep-
er into misery. His brain shut down, he couldn't think of what
to do but keep running. In his periphery he saw the flash of
purple and black--the ambassador's clothing moving at his
side, the flick of Spock's fists and arms pumping as he force-
fully kept up with a much younger man.
    Stretching out his right leg to pass over a depression that
opened before him, Stiles gasped suddenly as a cramp tore
through the bottom of his thigh, wrecking his stride. His foot
connected with the upward slope of the depression, but his leg
instantly folded and he crammed into the compacted dirt knee-
first, down onto his side, skidding on his right cheekbone into
the grass. Not the kindly patch of green at the end of the block,
this Pojjana idea of grass had serrated edges and left his hands
and face reddened as if he'd just shaved with a sawblade. He
was on the ground, and the last seconds were gobbled up.
 "Keep running!" he shouted into the dirt. "I'll catch---"
    But then the landscape opened up and reached for the sky.
Black noise concussed between the mountains and the swamp
forest, a great stick striking a great drum, and Stiles's skull
rang and rang. He tried to rise, to run again, but the flash
blinded him and the raw force drove him into the depression,
not more than eight inches lower than the level of the ground
they'd run across.
    Suddenly tie was lying in a furnace, pressed down by weight
he couldn't fight. He turned his head to one side and opened
his eyes in time to see the blast wave blow over him in a sin-
gle, solid white-hot sheet. The side of his face turned hot mid
he buried his head in his arms and waited to die.
    Into the muffling warmth of his sleeve, he murmured, "Go,
Sassy, go, go... push .... "
    The carnivorous shock wave sheeted across his body, raising
the hairs on his neck and limbs. He couldn't breathe--he
sucked at a vacuum--
    And just as the compression was about to crush his chest,
Stiles took one more desperate attempt to breathe and got a
lungful of warm dusty air. His head cleared almost instantly.
    As he maneuvered his elbows, pinned under his chest, and
tried to shove himself upward, a weight across his shoul-
derblades pressed him down and held him. A wave of cool air
now flooded over him, replacing the rushing scalded air of the
blast sheet.
    "Stay down." Spock's voice rang in his ear. "Cover your
head."
    Drowning out Spock's words, a shattering hall of granite
bits and shards of metal pulverized them as they lay crushed to
the floor of the depression. Stiles shrank into the smallest
crushed-up ball he could manage as his back was hammered
by his own success. The wreckage of the beam housing had
taken a little tour flight and was now coming to visit the two
little elves who'd arranged the trip.
    His chest heaving, he finally managed to press up onto his
elbows, then to his 'knees.

    Crouched at his side, Spock was slapping him on the back
over and over.
    As Stiles was trying to figure out a way to tell the ambassa-
dor that he wasn't choking and didn't need to be patted, Spock
simply explained, "Your clothes were burning."
"Oh... thanks. Was that... one... explosion... or two?"
"Two. One concussion wave." Spock spoke as if nothing had
happened at all, then coughed. The cough made him seem per-
fectly mortal and gave Stiles a bit of comfort that otherwise
might've slipped on past him.
    As a shimmering cloud of debris--the last of the pulverized
housing---drifted around them as if it were a theatre curtain
lowering, he winced his way to a standing position and had to
lock both legs to stay up. His whole body trembled and pulsed
with aftershock.
    Through the drifting dust, he peered at the mass of wreck-
age, completely flattened, in fact depressed into a crater. The
steel structure that had held the beam's emitter lay in mangled
messes all over the grass, which had itself been seared brown.
    "Think it worked'?" Stiles wondered. "Is the CST okay
now?"
    "If they veered off at the correct tangent, yes." Spock made
moves to stand up, but fakered. Instead he looked at his legs,
first one, then the other, in a strangely clinical manner. 
Stiles turned to him. "Sir?"
    Before he could ask the question that came up, he flinched
bodily at what he saw--a shard of metal the size of a writing
stylus embedded in the side of the ambassador's left thigh,
with a good two inches sticking out.
    "Oh, sir..." Stiles knelt beside him. The cloth of Spock's
pantleg was stained with his blood, and the Vulcan was plainly
stiff with pain, although he pretended this didn't bother him
much. "How deep in do you think it is?"
    "No way to tell," Spock said, and looked around at the sky.
"The blast was substantial enough to have alerted the author/-
ties. Someone should be arriving soon."
    Shaken by that, Stiles also looked around at the gray sky.
"And here we are, out on the lone prairie, with no way to
defend ourselves--sir, don't!"

    He put out a hand, though he didn't really know what to do
when the ambassador abruptly grabbed the protruding two
inches of the metal shard and simply slid it out of his leg.
    "You're not supposed to pull out something that's sticking in
you like that!" Stiles protested. "What if it hit an artery? You
could bleed to death!"
    "I clot well." Spock tossed the shard into the scorched grass
and pressed the heel of his hand tightly to the wound. "I must
be able to maneuver, and certainly a metal implement in my
leg would be troublesome."
    Stiles stood up again and looked around. "They'll be here
any minute. We can take cover in those hills... I've heard of
people digging down a few feet and findiqg the hollows made
by ancient root systems that aren't there any'nore." In the
blast-flattened grass, tie found a large piece of a support strut
with the bolt still attached in one end. "We can dig with this. I
think I can hide you for a while in there, mid after nightfall we
can make it into the foothills."
 "Commander... would you consider--"
    "No, I will not consider leaving you and going off on my
own. That's not even in the picture, so don't think about it. If
you'll let me help you up .... "
    Holding his digger in one hand, he slipped the other arm
around the ambassador, who allowed himself to be pulled to lfis
feet. Smeared with Vulcan blood, their clothing scorched, hair
filthy, they hitched their way out of the ahnost invisible depres-
sion that had saved both their lives by allowing the blast wave to
pass over them instead of deep-frying them into the ~ound. Any
minute now a patrol would show up to investigate the blast,
which probably showed up on every scanner on this part of the
continent. Obviously, too, the Po~jana nmst've known they'd
caught something in that gravity-weird contraption.
    "This way, sir." He drew Spock along, dismayed that the
Vulcan seemed not to be helping much. "We'll hide until
night, then we can make a bivouac in the hills and figure out a
way to defend it. There they are! I see a plane! Come on,
before they spot us!"




Chapter Twenty

STILES PRESSED FORWARD, aiming for the shadowy protection of
the rocklands ahead. He could hear the distant murmur of the
plane's engine, recognized the type of aircraft, and made his
bets.
    "They're still miles away," he gasped, pulling Spock along,
"but even if they spot us they can't land on this terrain. They'll
have to send a recon hoverscout with a patrol team to flush us
out. If we can make it to the hills---" "Commander?"
    "Don't worry, I can take more of your weight. We can't slow
down. If we can make it to---"
 "Of course, Mr. Stiles, but I do have a question."
 "What's that, sir?"
 "From whom are we hiding?"
 "Watch that rock---don't trip!"
 "From whom," Spock repeated, "are we about to hide?"
 "The authorities. They'll be here any time--"
 "And to whom... did we come here to speak?"
    Stiles dragged the ambassador along another five or six
steps before this sank in.
 As the drone of the aircraft drew closer to the bomb site, he
felt his face screw up in a frown of confusion and doubt.
Something just didn't seem right about this.
    The ambassador tentatively put more weight on his injured
leg.
    Stiles shifted back and forth on his own feet and finally met
Spock's eyes. "I'm doing it again, aren't IT'
    Spock bobbed an eyebrow, flattened his lips, and charitably
avoided nodding.
    While digesting that little nugget, Stiles lowered the ambas-
sador onto the first sitting-sized rock they'd come upon, a har-
binger of the fact that they could're made it to cover if logic
hadn't gotten in the way.
    They remained still, unresisting, out in the open, as the Poj-
jana aircraft buzzed the scene of the explosion and Stiles
thought his arms and legs were going to fall off with the urge
to mn again, hide, defend--
    The plane strafed the flattened beam emitter for several sec-
onds before veering abruptly toward them. His spine shriveled.
They'd been spotted.
  'They've seen us," Spock said with quiet satisfaction.
    "How are we going to explain blowing up their emitter?"
Stiles circled behind the ambassador and came around the
other side as if stalking the plane on its approach. "We had to
do it. I couldn't let it pull my ship down--" "Of course not."
    The plane soared over them, one wing tilted low, and they
could clearly see the pilot in his helmet looking down at them.
He was contacting the Pojjana security forces.
    They'd never get away now. Stiles battled inwardly,
wrestling with the idea that getting away wasn't the best idea,
wouldn't get them where they needed to be, wouldn't find
Zevon.
    "You needn't call me 'sir,' "Spock told him, as if they were
sitting over a dinner table or playing badminton. "I have no
Starfleet rank any longer, and you are the commander of the
vessel that matters in our lives today."
    "Yeah, well... well, it'll be long time before I can think of
you as anybody other than Science Officer Spock of the Enter-
prise."

    The plane circled the area, keeping them inside its survefi-
lance area while no doubt calling for backup. Stiles never let
his back turn to the plane, moving constantly to stay between
the aimraft and the ambassador, a shield of vellum against
rockets if they decided to open fire. Each step drove him deep-
er into his troubled thoughts.
    "Do you know," he began, "do you realize how many hours
on end I rehearsed calling you 'Ambassador' before that evac
mission? I just knew I'd get down to that planet and call you
'Mister' or 'Captain' or 'First Officer' or 'Your Honor' or
'Your Highness'--something stupid was waiting to pop out of
my mouth and I could just taste it. All the way in Travis and
the evil twins kept saying, 'Eric, will you quit mumbling the
word ambassador?' I'll bet... 1 just bet Captain Kirk never
had that kind of problem."
    Spock paused a moment. His eyes never flinched nor did his
expression change much. He peered solemnly into the past and
seemed to enjoy what he saw.
    "No," he said. "He had others. Those were excellent days.
But they are passed now."
    Despite the circumstances, Stiles found himself sighing.
"Maybe for you. Not for the rest of us."
    Looking up now, Spock said, "Because you feel you must
live up to them?"
    Somehow there was no right answer to that question.
Damned if he did, damned--
    Apparently the ambassador didn't expect an answer,
because he kept talking himself. "If James Kirk's mission logs
are the barometer against which you measure yourself, you set
too high a task for yourselfi You must temper your awe. You
can never attain so high a standard."
    Even though a patrol scout craft now appeared over the
mountains and streaked toward them across the meadow flats,
Stiles turned to Spock and didn't bother to look at the patroller
as he heard its humming engines approaching.
    "Oh, is that right?" he challenged. "I 'always admired you for
the things you did and the--I guess 'style' is a good way to say
it... I never got the idea you were filled up with yourself. Till
now, anyway .... Why are you nodding? I just insulted you."
    "Rather, you just complimented yourself" Spock corrected.
"And you must not expect me to argue with the ship's com-
mandeL"
    His tone was somehow cagey, manipulative, carrying palpa-
ble ulterior messages. And that eyebrow was up again. Stiles
scoured him silently, wondering what to make of the ambas-
sador's expression. Was he being teased?
 "Are you feeling ill?" Spock asked him then.
 Stiles flinched. "What?"
 "You're very pale?'
 "Well... it... isn't easy getting needled by a... by a..."
 "A super-eminence?" Spock supplied.
    Stiles peered at him, able for a moment to ignore the
approach of the Pojjana security scout. Was Spock smiling?
Was that a little smile? Was it?
    As the Pojjana scout came to a hover over them with its
warning lights flashing, its containment field snapped on to
enshroud them in red spotlight--they could no more walk out
of it than through a vault wall.
    "Stay quite still," the ambassador warned. "They will
assume we're armed."
    With the flat of his hand Stiles shielded his eyes from the
containment field's glare. "We should've been. I botched it."
    His hands were ice. Erablazoned on the flank of the scout,
the Pojjana symbol of a gray lighming bolt crossed by a red
arrow seemed alive to him, a swollen symbol of his captivity.
Those terrors and miseries rushed back at him. His legs trem-
bled so violently that he could barely stand. Only Spock's
steadying presence kept him from bolting, a spontaneity which
would've fried him to a flake at the edge of the containment
field. Strange--he knew that if he were the senior "eminence"
here and his crewmates were with him, he wouldn't be so
shaky. He would never let them bolt. How there could be two
men in one suit--
    "HOLD POSITION? the scout's broadcaster boomed, so
loud it knocked Stiles back a step.
    Spock held up both hands in a surrendering gesture. Stiles
couldn't manage that. His hands were frozen at his sides, his
chest heaving, his leg muscles bound up.

    "Relax, Mr. Stiles," Spock called over the scout's hum as the
craft nestled into the crusty burned stubble, his dark eyes
squinted into shafts.
    Without looking at him, Stiles gulped, "Remember what
happened last time you told me that?"
    The Pojjana craft settled completely and gave off a loud hiss
as its antigrays equalized. The sight of Pojjana guards lumber-
ing down the hatch ramp as it crashed down gave Stiles a
cramp in the middle of his gut. All four guards and a sergeant
came thundering out and leveled firearms at them.
    "Our sidearms are completely drained," Spock stated in
passably fluent Pojjana to the sergeant who came to face them
down. "We wish to speak to the planetary authorities."
    "You are aliens," the sergeant said with malice, and confis-
cated their phasers instantly, drained or not. 'q'his is Red Sec-
tor. We're supposed to be left alone."
    Beside Stiles, the ambassador struggled to stand despite the
fact that everyone could see his leg was bleeding. Spock faced
the sergeant at eye level.
    'Whings change, Officer," he said. "I am Ambassador Spock
of the United Federation of Planets, former emissary to the
Pojjana Assembly. This is--"
 "Don't tell them," Stiles whispered.
    Spock instantly revised. "This is the commander of the
transport ship you nearly brought down. We destroyed the
emitter in self~defense. We have no aggressive intentions. We
have a proposal for the provincial exarch."
 "We have no exarch anymore. That position was eradicated."
 "Who is in charge?"
 "The provost of the works."
    Spock tipped his head. "That is the supreme authority on the
planet?"
 "That's right."
 "Please take us to this person."
    The sergeant shook his head. His helmet reflected light from
the clearing sky. "You'll be incarcerated in the provincial
prison until you come to trial for invasion."
    "We must be allowed to see the senior authority. This is a
matter of interstellar importance."

    "I'll put you where I want to put you" the sergeant said.
"Then I'll wait to be asked what happened?
 Stiles beat down a shudder. "Nothing really changes."
    "We cannot wait," Spock told the sergeant. "If you withhold
us, you will be blunting advancement of a critical mission. Do
you wish your name to be prominent when the provost discov-
ers that he was not informed?"
    The sergeant stood with an unreadable expression for a few
silent seconds, then gestured them toward the scout's ramp and
the four other guards waiting to funnel them inside.
    "Clear them for energy signals," the sergeant ordered to his
men, and one of them came forward.
    The guard lowered his firearm, whipped out some kind of
scanner, and ran it over Stiles from ears to toes, then over
Spock, front, back, and both sides.
    "No active energy or signals of any kind," the guard con-
firmed. "No readings"
    "He told you we were unarmed" Stiles complained, know-
ing that he wouldn't have believed it either.
    The sergeant stepped aside and leveled his own weapon.
"Go in."
    Obviously there wasn't much more to be done here. Stiles's
jaw ached to speak up, spit who he was and insist on some
kind of instant retribution, but a thousand warnings clogged
his throat. He was in command of the ship, not the mission. ff
they found out who he was, would they take offense or insult?
Stuff him back in a cell and start auctioning beatings again?
    Stiles sta~ed toward the scout, pausing only when the
ambassador took a step on his injured leg and crumpled to one
knee. The sergeant stepped forward to assist. Stiles met the
uniformed guard with a fierce shoulder butt to the chest.
    "Back off" he snapped, and took the ambassador's arm him-
selfi
    None of the other guards made any attempt to touch them
further. Stiles escorted the ambassador into the scout and to the
first of only three passenger seats. They were in custody.
    Stiles straightened and maneuvered to take the next seat. As
he raised his eyes to scan the interior of the scout while the
guards came aboard, he found himself no longer seated but
rather standing ramrod straight and stating at a mounted pho-
tograph in a gilded frame on the port bulkhead.
    After a wicked choke, he blurted, "Who in salvation is
that/"
    The sergeant, just coming aboard, glared at him as if he and
the ambassador were complete idiots. 'I'hat's our provost of
the works. He saved half the planet from the Constrictor. He
developed a way to predict the waves. He sponsored engineer-
ing schools and guided architectural renovations all over the
planet. Don't you even know who you came to see? We owe
him our lives."
    The idling engines of the scout roared in his ears as Stiles
stood riveted to the carpet. His voice gravelly, he managed, "I
owe him a couple things too .... "
    Spock surveyed the picture briefly, seeing that something
more than a portrait of a guy beside a tiger oak desk was going
on here. "Mr. Stiles? Do you have something to say?"
    Confused, demolished, Stiles blinked at him, at the sergeant
and finally again at the picture.
    "Yeah. Yeah, I do. I know how we can get in. Tell the
'Provost'... that Eric Stiles is back."

Chapter Twenty-one

"STILES. EPdC STILES. You didn't die. They cured you some-
how."
 "Orsova. Somehow, it figures."
    In one withering instant, all of Eric Stiles's fears and viscer-
al reactions bonded into a single living form. There, behind an
enormous orange-and-black desk carved out of that wood that
reminded Stiles of tiger oak, except even stronger, back-
dropped by polished paneling and a dozen plaques and awards,
there sat the drunken mess that had represented misery to him
for four years.
    Orsova was less slovenly than before, indeed had lost
weight, though he still carried the wide shoulders and stocky
build that came naturally to so many native Pojjana. His black
hair was now shot with gold their idea of getting older--and
he no longer wore the uniform of the prison hierarchy but the
tweedy suit of a Pojjana planetary official. Stiles had only seen
that uniform twice before in person. A long time ago.
    Orsova sat behind his huge desk, which had hardly any
work upon it, and scoured Stiles with the look of a man who
was being shown both the past and the future in one picture.

    How could events turn this way? How could a devious slob
like that become somebody with a title?
  "God in a box," Stiles chafed, "what am I seeingT'
    His words barely scratched from his throat. As he stood star-
ing, he thought perhaps that only Ambassador Spock, standing
with some effort at his side, had heard him at all.
    He felt Spock's peripheral glance. But the ambassador never
said a thing to him about his reaction to the person they were
both standing before. This was crazy. This was a dream.
    Spock stepped forward, favoring his bloody leg, to draw the
provost's attention away from Stiles and onto himself.
    "Provost, I am Ambassador Spock of the United Federation
of Planets. Fifteen years ago I was the emissary to your govern-
ment. We are here to negotiate the greening of Red Sector. Cir-
cumstances have caused the Romulans to need Federation
assistance. On an Interstellar Temporary Pass, we have come
here to make an offer. The sector can be reopened, allowing for
trade, assistance, technological exchange, and limited diplomat-
ic relations without requiting membership. We can help the Poj-
jana in many ways--agricultural efficiency, technological--"
  "We don't want help."
    Orsova stood up behind his big desk, and there was some-
thing prophetic and distant about him. The desk sprawled like
an emblem--tiger oak. That was something Zevon had talked
about a long time ago. The memory sparked to life.  
"What do you want?" Orsova asked.
    "We wish to negotiate for custody of the Romulan prisoner
named Zevon."
    Please let him still be alive, please let him still be alive,
please--
    Orsova said nothing about Zevon, clearly determined not to
give anything away. Instead, he simply asked, "Why do you
want one of our prisoners?"
  "Damn you," Stiles grumbled.
  Spock looked at him.
    In frustration and contempt Stiles wagged a hand at Orsova.
"what am I--chopped cabbage? He damned well knows
Zevon's not just 'one of their prisoners' to me! Is he alive or
not, you bastard?"

    At Stiles' single step forward, two of the Four guards
launched forward from the sides of the office, blocking his
way to Orsova. The guard closest to him drove the butt of his
rifle into Stiles' stomach, and he was driven down.
    Spock grasped the guard's arm, avoiding the weapon, and
pushed him back in such a way that somehow the movement
wasn't threatening. As Stiles gasped at the ambassador's feet,
battling crying lungs and a bruised rib, Spock spoke again to
Orsova.
    "If the Pojjana strike a deal with the Federation, the Bal
Quonott and all others in the sector will be pressured to deal
with you on favorable terms. That would give the Pojjana sub-
stance beyond just your planet. Indeed, you would be a power
to be reckoned with in the entire sector. Certainly that offers
some value."
    Orsova's round bronze face tilted a little like a ball rolling.
Maybe he was trying to think. Looked like it hurt.
    Stiles's legs were watery as he waited. He had to force him-
self to stand still, not flinch or shift around, to bury the cloying
nervousness, cloak the haunt of old terrors.
    "You'll be held," Orsova ultimately decided, "as part of the
foreign ship that invaded our planetary space. You'll be held as
hostages until the rest of your ship up there surrenders. The
ship is mine now, property of the Pojjana people. The crew
will be turned over to your government after a healthy fine is
paid for destruction of property, violating our space... and
any other things I think of."
    This was Orsova's playing ground. That showed clearly, as
he stood up behind his big fancy desk, made of the wood
Zevon had long ago discovered did not compress during Con-
strictors. He came around the bright orange piece of furniture,
touching it only lightly along the edge. At the comer of the
desk he paused, only steps from Stiles. His eyes burned into
Stiles' eyes.
"Except you," he said. "I'll keep you for the memories."
Cued by some secret signal or habit, two of the four armed
guards in the room came forward as Orsova moved out from
his desk and paused again at Stiles' side. The guards were
close enough to threaten against any attempts to attack the
provost, so Stiles was careful to remain perfectly still. Being
frozen into place by past horrors helped some.
    Orsova's eyes drew tight. "It was an insult to me when they
took you away. I promised the planet I would get you back. I
kept your cell waiting. Didn't even clean it. Part of the prom-
ise."
    With eyes flat and still as a doll's, Orsova motioned to the
guards.
 "Take them away."

  "Orsova."
    "You brought me back already? Why? I stopped the Federa-
tion people. Their ship ran away."
    "Their ship did not leave the solar system. I have been mon-
itoring. They're hiding somewhere. I have discovered why they
came here."
    At these words from the Voice, Orsova paused and frowned.
He had been sure the Federation ship had run away. He had the
Federation's Vulcan ambassador and Eric Stiles where no one
would find them, and the Federation ship had run off. But this
person, this ghost who spoke to him in unexplained terms,
with impossible knowledge, said otherwise.
    "1 have changed my plans. I must have these people alive.
The doctors, and Zevon."
 "And Stiles?"
  "Do what you wish with him."
    "Why do you want doctors? why don't you just kill them?
We've killed plenty of others--"
    "The have found a way to do the impossible, cure the incur-
able. I must know how. You must capture them and bring them
to me."
    Trying to make sense of a puzzle when he had only half the
pieces, Orsova paced the small chamber of the humming craft
as the planet of his birth rotated outside one of the little holes.
    "1 have something here," the Voice began again, "that will
make the Pojjana supreme in Red Sector Even the Bal Quonott
will shrink before you."
    Suspicious of such a brash statement, Orsova narrowed his
eyes. "what will make spaceships bow before our planes?"
    "You will have more than planes if you do as 1 tell you. Look
in the space chest."
    Space chest... this brass case? It had a lock, but the lid
opened for him anyway. He looked inside. There was only one
thing in there. "A bottle?"
 "A medical vial."
 "Poison?"
 "Something similar"
     Orsova straightened sharply. "Is this biolo~cal war? You
want me to put a plague on my own people? I won't!" "No."
 "I have no one else to poison."
 "You have Zevon."
    At this, Orsova paused and grimaced. "Why should I poison
Zevon? who are you to want it?"
    "You'll never know me. All these years, and I am still a
stranger. You were a jail guard. You became assistant warden,
but you would never have grown beyond that but for the day I
spoke to you and told you to believe that Zevon could predict
the Constrictor. Now, Zevon's usefulness is coming to an end
here. Give this to Zevon before he is enticed away, and the
galaxy moves forward by a leap."
    "Away?" orsova reacted. "Why should he go away? He
hates his own people. We're his people now! He says it every
day."
"He is royal family. They need him. He may go."
"He'll never leave. No one could get him to leave now"
"The Federation and the Romulans both have reasons to
make him want to go. If he leaves, you lose your power and 1
lose my chance to have what I want. The vial will end the
Romulan threat and make the Pojjana strongest, because it will
stop Zevon from leaving."
 "Because he'll be dead? What... what do... if I kill Zevon
for you, what comes to me?"
    "This will force the collapse of the Romulan Empire. When
it falls, you will get Romulan ships."
 "Warwings? You'll give me those?"
 "And birds-of-prey, and at least one full-sized converted
heavy cruiser... for the sector governor, so he will become
accustomed to fiying in space."  "Sector governor..."
    He discovered a series of small cracks--or were they open-
ings? seams?---in the panels ....
    "You will get a Romulan fleet, enough ships to control the
Bal Quonott and make the Pojjana the power in this sector.
Rather than cowering before the Federation, the Romulans, or
any other aliens, you will be the winner."  "Winner..."
  "Stop... trying... to see me.t"
    The cabin vibrated with the voice's sudden rage. Whoever
this ghostly person was, he would not be discovered.
    Orsova felt his curiosity wane and let it go. Some things, he
didn't have to know. "Zevon's alien," he protested. "How do
you know this will kill him? Are you an alien too? Are you a
human?"  "No."
    "Are you Romulan, Voice? Is that who you are all these
years?"
  "No."
 "Are you---"
  "Zevon will be contaminated. Then the Federation won't
have any reason to stay in Red Sector, and Zevon will have no
reason to leave. Either way, I will honor my agreement with
you."
    Standing in the middle of the cabin, Orsova gazed at the
reflection of himself. An older man, no longer as fat as the
prison guard had been, a glowing copper complexion on his
cheekbones and streaks of dignified gold in his black hair. This
was the leader of a planet, perhaps the leader of a whole sector
of space? Dominion over the Bal Quonott, who had lorded
their spacefaring capability over the Pojjana since before he
was born?
    Liking what he saw, he squared Iris shoulders and imagined
a fur cape. The voice remained silent until he decided to ask a
question.
    "Every time you speak," he attempted, plumbing for more
information, "I still have no reason to believe what you say."

    "Believe because you can be in charge of this whole sector
instead of just one weak and troubled planet, and I will be in
charge of you. You will have more power, more comfort, more
stability than ever you dreamed on the day you were happy to
become a jail guard, the day you were astonished to be made
warden, or the day you realized Zevon was right about predict-
ing the Constrictor and that he would be silent for you. This is
easy for me because you have already seized power here. With
Zevon dead or ill, you will be my wealthy, powerful little pup-
pet. Number two is still very high. Do this, and you will be sec-
tor governor when the Romulan Empire falls. Don't, and I will
kill you now and find someone else~ I don't care. Is this diffi-
cult?"
 "No."
    "Take the vial. You no longer need Zevon. Killing him is bet-
ter. I will be happier. lf you cannot kill him, infect him."
    The small undecorated bottle was slightly warm, as if it had
been kept heated. He noted the temperature and planned to
keep it insulated. If he was going to do this thing, he would do
it right.
 "Needle?"
    "It must go in the body. Skin contact is not enough. Only
Zevon's DNA will absorb the virus. Get it into him any way
you can. Report to me on this frequency when you have suc-
ceeded. The Romulan family dies, you become sector governor
and get more than your dreams. You're a small and greedy
man, Orsova. But take no insult... I need small and greedy
men."
    Orsova tucked the vial deep into his jacket, against the
warm skin of his chest, and looked up to the faceless persona
that promised him glory.
 "Small and greedy governors;' he corrected.

    "Something weird's going on. Why wouldn't they want
help? The Constrictor still comes---~at's obvious from the
architecture. And that pig's no provost or magistrate. I don't
know how he got that kind of power, but he's nothing but a
glorified jail guard. You saw how he acted! Nobody runs a
planet honesty and forthrightly and then turns down help."

 "He did seem somewhat cross-purposed."
    "He's got some kind of racket going on here. How else in
hell could a brutal superficial lout like Orsova end up in con-
trol of a whole planet?"
 "How could a corporal become Fiihrer?"
    Stiles felt his face pinch. "Who?... oh. How's your leg?
It's still bleeding?"
    "Yes, it seems to be." The ambassador turned his leg for a
better look at the wound. "You were right. I should have left
the projectile embedded." "Let me wrap it up."
    Forcing himself to put Orsova aside in his mind, at least
long enough to open the first-aid kit they'd been given, Stiles
knelt beside the cot where Speck was sitting. The smell in here
was so familiar--that combination of dust and moisture that
never quite goes away ....
    Speck pressed his hands back on the cot, tightened up visi-
bly, and endured the stinging pain as Stiles cut the trouserleg
away from the wound. The puncture bad clotted some, though
blood and tissue still leaked from it. Stiles tried to remember
how big the projectile had been. Details failed him. All he
could do was apply antiseptic, then pressure, both of which
caused Speck to stiffen noticeably. Typically Vulcan, Speck
was suppressing both the pain and any appearance of it. Stiles
wondered if he could do that well if somebody put an arrow
through part of him.
    "At least they gave us a medical kit," he muttered as he
gauzed the leg.
 "They may have an ulterior motive," Speck suggested.
 "You mean they want us to escape?"
 "Possibly. What do you think?"
    Confronted with having to cough up an answer, Stiles felt as
if he were back in grade school and hadn't done his reading
assignment.
    "If anything made sense, I'd have something to think. Orso-
va as a planetary leader, no sign of Zevon... all sorts of tech-
nology and architecture that wasn't here ten years ago... that
composite beam reaching out of the atmosphere and grabbing
a ship as big and powerful as a CST--even Starfleet can't mix
those properties that way. How could the Pojjana do that in
just ten years?"
    "From what you tell me," Speck contemplated, "Zevon
knew what every civilization needs to make its quantum leap.
Energy. Yet, to build and use high energy, he would need to
influence the use of resources and manpower on the planet. If
somehow he obtained influence, gained trust... yet how does
an alien, particularly a Romulan, come to gain trust in a cul-
ture as xenophobic as this?"
    "He couldn't. Something else must've happened. Orsova
would never let us get past him to talk to anybody else... he
kept everything to..."
    Everything he'd seen, the inconsistencies and irritating
facts, stewed under his skin. He thought of those last few hours
with Zevon, with Orsova, the last beating that had been auc-
tioned to an alien-hating Pojjana. Bruises nearly rose on his
skin as if by habit, summoned by the nearness of those old
miseries. Suddenly, as if being tapped on the shoulder, he
remembered what he had said to Orsova during that last beat-
ing.
    "That's it! Orsova as planetary leader makes no sense at all
unless it finally sank through that iron skull that Zevon really
could predict the Constrictor! I told him myself! I tried to con-
vince him! If after I left he decided to check it out and Zevon
convinced him, orsova could're taken that message to the
government, succeeded in warning the planet, saved a bunch of
people and parlayed that into power "Grasping his head to
keep it from blowing off, Stiles raved, "That's got to be itl
Orsova's getting credit for Zevon's work!"
    Speck stretched his leg, thinking. "Why would Zevon agree
to such an arrangement?"
    "Oh, he'd agree in a flat minute," Stiles tossed. The familiar-
ity rushed back. "Zevon didn't want power. He was never
afraid for his own life. He wanted to redeem himself in his
own eyes by saving more people than he killed when his
team's experiments started the Constrictor"
    "A composite graviton-traction beam with polarity that high,
as well as the phaser-resistant envelope the CST encountered,
can only be generated with very delicately balanced quantum
charge generation. They plainly have warp energy, but it seems
to be planet-bound."
    "I know why" Stiles said. "Zevon wasn't interested in
space. He'd been there. If he'd had influence and resources, he
would've turned all the energy he could control to saving the
planet from the Constrictor and other outside threats. Looks
to me like the Pojjana turned out to be pretty sharp, at least
sharp enough to follow instructions, learn physics and engi-
neering... even Zevon couldn't do this by himself. They still
don't have massive warships or anything, but in spite of that
we were in for a real surpfise when we got here."
    "If Zevon is the real genius behind the planet's sudden
advancement," Spock continued, "and I agree that is likely,
then Orsova is in constant danger of his secret's being found
out."
    Stiles looked up. "He sure wouldn't want you and me blab-
bing it around, would he?"
    "No. Nor would he want Zevon taken away. No deal or
favor from the Federation could be as beneficial to him as hay-
hag Zevon here, with a pact to remain behind the scenes."
    Coming to his feet, Stiles paced a few steps. "If all this
is fight, then if Zevon leaves or dies, the jig is up. Orsova
couldn't keep up the illusion of being brilliant all by himself."
    "Sounds like a threatening symbiotic relationship," the
ambassador surmised. "Zevon has managed to bridge the Poj-
jana through this period of Constrictors which otherwise
would have killed vast numbers of them. Instead, they thrive
despite the Constrictor."
    "They thrive. Orsova thrives. Zevon's here somewhere,
alive, working for Orsova. And we're here, locked in a stone
crate."
    His words fell to the floor. With nothing more to do for the
ambassador's leg, Stiles sat on the other cot against the other
wall, and descended into captivity as naturally as into a warm
tub. Its arms folded around him. They'd been waiting.
    The walls around them, stone and mortar, lichen and leak-
age, uttered their opinion. All the old perceptions came rushing
back. Someone was using an autovac on a floor one story up.
Water ran through the pipes. Other prisoners, probably, taking
showers in the next wing. A flicker of the lights. Circuits need-
ed adjustment.
 He stared at the opposite wall.
    "Somehow I knew," he murmured. "I knew I'd end up back
here. It's been like one of those nightmares that won't quit
coming back. Look at me... I can't breathe right, there's no
blood in my hands... I used to get like this before academy
exams. Or before meeting you."
    Across the cell, the ambassador observed him as if he were
watching bread dough rise, which annoyed Stiles right to the
hairs on the back of his neck. Kicking at a loose stone that had
been loose ten years ago too, Stiles vented, "Did it ever happen
to you that you didn't know what to do next?"
    Spook did not venture an answer to that. Instead of the
ambassador's voice, Stiles heard a thousand voices from the
past speaking to him, echoing against the hard-learned lessons
of a young officer, the struggles of living with crewmates, and
finally learning to live with himself. He seldom looked in this
kind of mirror any more. He'd never liked the reflection when
he had.
 Today, though, he didn't look away.
    "Funny;' he began aloud, "when we were about to die
because something grabbed the ship and we had thirteen min-
utes to live, I wasn't afraid. Standing up there looking at Orso-
va over the top of that big desk... I about crapped my pants."
    "I'm glad you restrained yourself," Spock conunented
lightly.
    "Ship disasters don't scare me" Stiles said, keeping on his
track. "Disastrous people scare me."
    It seemed there was somefiring just around the corner, just
beyond his grasp, a whisper in the fog.
    After a few seconds, Stiles found himself asking, "Did peo-
ple scare... him?"
    The last word, revered somehow all by itself, came out as a
pathetic sigh, a comparison that shouldn't be made if any
progress was ever to be accomplished. Instantly Stiles regret-
ted that he'd asked.
    Spock's answer took some time coming. "Helplessness
scared him."

    For the first time, Stiles felt a steely connection forged in
the cool cell. "Did he ever think of himself the way I think of
myself?. Like I don't belong where I am?"
    Veiled contentment settled over Mr. Spock as the past
opened briefly before him for viewing and he enjoyed what he
saw. His voice was low, even soft, yet carried a scolding tone.
    "'He'... was an exceptional man. He was also my friend.
As such, we had our disagreements. We saw each other's ugli-
er moments. The mission logs fail to show those aspects."
  Stiles looked up. "Are you saying the logs are inaccurate?"
  "Not at all. We simply left things out."
  "Like what?"
    Spock paused to think a moment. "The logs, the legends, the
tall tales, the song and story--these are spirit-charging powers
for us ~1. But legend is selective and usually written by the
winners. The legends of the first Enterprise... they reflect the
heroic, not the human aspects, of our life together in those
years... Jim Kirk, Dr. McCoy, the others, and myself. Legend
is a great filter. The traits that shame us most, the ones we
leave out of the stories, are often the flaws that give us texture.
Without them, we would be only pictures."
    Speck leaned back on an elbow, maneuvered his leg to a
better position, and considered the past through scopes in his
own mind.
    "I have come over these many years to understand what it
means to be a captain not so much in rank but in manner.
There are captains of rank, captains of ships, and captains of
crews. A few men are all three. I once commanded the Enter-
prise as her captain. I was capable of giving the proper orders
and expecting proper behavior, but I was never captain of the
crew's hopes and devotions. That is a different passion. A dif-
ferent manner of man than I."
    At first it seemed Spock might be selling himself short,
judging the past too harshly--but no. Stiles knew too well the
symptoms of that, and didn't see them here. This, instead, was
a kind of personal honesty, a stunning depth of self-respect.
    He wanted it. He wanted to know how to do that. Spock was
so graceful at understanding subtle differences that mattered,
and didn't recoil from knowing his talents and limitations.

 "Different how?" Stiles asked, somewhat abrasive.
    Spock tipped his head in thought. "I see chess," he said.
"You see poker."
    Broiling with envy and impatience, Stiles rubbed his
cracked hands on his trousers. He didn't understand that,
exactly, but something about it lit a fire under him.
    "We've got to get out of here," he announced. "It's time to
go. We've got to do something."
 "Then you have decided to act?" Spock asked.
    Bitter, humiliated, and angry about it, Stiles held back the
answer that bit at his tongue. He looked up, met the ambas-
sador's keen eyes. If only he could slap back the undercurrents
of mockery and deserve better!
    Spock gazed at him with sharp-eyed significance. "Eric, you
underrate yourself and it makes you hesitate."
    "I hesitate because I get things wrong so much," Stiles said.
"And I don't want to get things so wrong it gets somebody
killed. Or a whole lot of somebodies."
 "That is what everyone likes about you."
 Stiles looked up. "Huh?"
    "Your reputation among the captains of front-line ships is
well known. Every service commander knows you are a Medal
of Valor winner. You could have pushed, jockeyed for position,
used your commendation to leap over the heads of everyone on
the promotions list. Even in civilian life you might have used
your hero status to become a senator or gain other power. You
could easily have become one of those people with much rank
and little experience, but you chose a wiser and less vainglorious
way. You went back out into space for more experience, working
your way up rather than forcing your way up. You may not real-
ize it, but you are deeply respected and liked by the people who
get all the attention. They speak of you fondly. They hope Eric
Stiles is the one who comes to repair their ships."
    Astonished to his socks, Stiles gawked in complete stupid
amazement. His men had said things like that to him, but he
thought that was in-house loyalty and dusted it off with the
debris of a day's work.
    "Sir," he began, "there's something the history tapes don't
show about you."

 "What would that be?"
Stiles voice was low and sincere. "You're a nice person."
Though Spock's face remained passive, his eyes dropped
their guard. "A supreme compliment," he said. "Thank you.
Now I suggest we vacate this ceil."
 "I'm ready," Stiles said. "How do we do it?"
    Offering a moment to absorb what they had said to each
other, the ambassador raised a brow in punctuation. Then he
brought his right hand to his ear and pressed the skin just
behind his earlobe, and said, "Spock to Saskatoon."
    For two or three seconds there was nothing. Then, out of
nowhere, the very faint buzz of a voice, unmistakably human,
spoke up from thin air, sizzling as if on a grill.
    "McCoy here. What are you clowns waiting for? We've had
you located for a half hour! Why'd you wait so long to signal
us? You always did have lousy Vulcan timing."
    Touching his ear in a different place, Spock tilted his head
to clear the signal a little more. "The comm link has been
charging, doctor."
  "Have you found that Romulan yet?"
    "Not yet. We have been incarcerated, but will be remedying
that momentarily and effecting a search. Are you and the ship
under cover?"
    "You bet we are. You can track us with this signal, can't
you ?"
 "Yes. Stand by. No unnecessary signals."
  "Standing by. McCoy out."
    Astonished all over again, Stiles squawked, "How'd you do
that! How could you contact--"
    "A micro-transponder embedded in my cochlear cavity."
Spock gestured to his right ear as if to display something that
couldn't possibly be seen.
    "But the guards scanned us!" Stiles asked, "How'd they
miss something with a broadcast range?"
    "The mechanism was nonactive. Dr. McCoy was under
orders to activate a charge by remote after two hours had
passed, with short-range microburst--"
 "Remote? From the ship? Wouldn't it get interference?"
 "The good doctor has many connections on this planet who
owe him favors. I suspect he had the signal relayed through
several private sources." "You 'suspect'?"
 "He delights in not telling me."
"But can't the Pojjana key in on an outside signal like that?"
"Why should they?" Spock pointed out. "Until today, there
were no Federation frequency combinations being used on the
planet. Why would they militate against it?"
    As he spoke, the ambassador firmly gripped one of the sym-
bolic polished stones on his jacket. The large stone unscrewed
as if it were the top of a jar and came off in Spock's hand. He
turned it bottom up. In the center of what had looked perfectly
well like a real stone was instead a molded chamber, and in
that chamber was a black mechanical nugget which Spock
plucked out and examined.
    Overwhelmed, Stiles stared at the black nugget and recog-
nized it, the little green "charged" light glowing against his
skin.
 "You've got a utility phaser!"
    Surveying the little palm-sized weapon with satisfaction,
Spock said, "Like the comm link, it needed time to charge.
Enough time for us to beam down and clear all the security
scans. If we had allowed ourselves to be captured with the link
and weapon charged, the Pojjana guards would've detected the
active energy. Also, I supposed the shield might neutralize
them if they were precharged "
    "So you're saying you knew they probably wouldn't deal
with us. And you knew that ahead of time."
    Spock eyed him cannily. "Of course, Mr. Stiles. One hopes
for the best, but prepares for the worst"
    At the sounds of those casual words, put across so matter-
of~factly by one of the last living pioneers of space explo~
ration, shock descended upon Eric Stiles as if he were under a
collapsing bridge. It pressed the breath from his lungs and dis-
played a shame within him and a smoldering anger that for
much more than a decade he had suppressed. Now, today,
finally, it sparked.
 Prepare for the worst.
 He leaned forward on the rusty cot, gazing downward at the
empty floor. His knees before him might as well have been
distant planets. What had he done all his life? Revere the best,
expect the worst, and be prepared... for neither.
    His skin felt tight, preformed. He drew anohher breath,
huffed it out.
    Across the cell, Spock pressed against the brick wall, mov-
ing slowly from place to place. He seemed to be listening for
outside activity. Listening... trying to decide where to aim
the phaser, how to break them out.
    His own breath rumbled in his ears. Just outgoing, in huffs,
short and hot. Dry lips.
    As if in a dream he watched Spock prime the freshly
charged little pahn phaser. Green light, blue, yellow...
    The Vulcan now stood sideways to present a narrow profile
to the blast field, and extended his arm to aim at the portion of
the wall he had chosen as their best bet to open an escape route
without bringing the building or the Pojjana army down upon
them. Orange... red.
  "Sir!" Stiles bolted to his feet.
The ambassador hesitated and held fire. "Something?"
Shadows lay across Spock's Vulcan features, harsh limited
light on the other side, a life-size paper doll of ideals Stiles had
thought were bigger than life.
      "I'm sorry about this," Stiles announced. He met Spock's
gaze without flinching. "From now on I'm thinking ahead."
  "What does that mean, specifically?" the Vulcan asked.
  "It means you don't have permission to open fire."
    This time both of Spock's brows went up. "I beg your par-
don?"
    Putting out a cold hand, Stiles noted that at least now he
wasn't trembling.
    "So you've got a phaser. So what? Once we get out of the
cell, they've got energy detectors, tiers of fences, guards,
weapons. We'll never get through."
  "You have a suggestion for me?" Spock asked.
    "No, sir" Stiles said. "I have an order for you. This is a mili-
tary mission. I'm the ranking Starfleet officer here. This is
probably the most boneheaded thing I've ever done in my life,
and I don't know if... yes, I do know. I've been deferring to
 you for half my life whether you were there or not, and it's
 time for that to stop. They're expecting us to escape but, sir,
 we're not here to escape."
    Another step brought him right up to Mr. Spock, face to
face, man to man.
    "I've been acting like a kid ever since I first saw your face
on a history screen. It's time for me to start acting like the
commander of this mission."
  He turned his hand palm up and did not lower it.
    Standing before him in what appeared to be amazement and
a few other emotions Stiles couldn't quite identity, Spock
passed the next few moments without moving so much as a
facial muscle.
    His eyes moved first, shifting down to the phaser in his grip.
He gazed at the nugget-shaped weapon for several seconds as
if it were the mean center of the universe.
    Then, quite accommodatingly, he placed the weapon in
Stiles' open hand. "As you wish."
    Stiles found himself in the middle of a prison cell, holding
the center of the universe.
    Limping back a step or two, the ambassador gave Stiles
room to use the phaser. There was a particular quality to his
voice as he asked, "What is your plan, Commander?"
    As he checked the phaser to be sure it was set where he
thought it was, Stiles felt suddenly warm 'all over, and strong.
    "Orsova thinks he's being cute putting me back in the same
cell. He's an idiot. I spent years here. I helped rebuild this
place after my first Constrictor. I know more about it than he
does or any guard ever did. It's his big mistake. I'm not a
twenty-one-year-old kid anymore."
 "And this is an epiphany for you?"
     Stiles blinked at him. That look was back on the Vulcan's
face, that almost-smile, with the sparkle behind the eyes.
 Amusement? Or something else?
    "Your men knew their lives were in danger," the ambassador
said, "yet you gave them confidence without deception. You
marched them past the frozen moment that kills so many, and
gave them a chance to fight for their ship and their lives.
Against the checklist that counts more than legends, with all
flaws and hesitations understood as cells of the whole... you
are a captain."
 Had the lights changed in here? Was it warmer?
    Both peeved and flattered, Stiles shifted his weight and
waved a hand at the cot. "You mean, all this time you believed
in me and you let me sit there and snivel?"
    "It was never enough for me to believe in you," Spock said
handily. "You had to believe--"
    "Please!" Stiles laughed. "Don't finish that! I smell a
clich&"
    Spock rewarded him with that hint of a smile and a very
slight bow. "I stand rebuked."
    Bewildered and amazed that he was actually smiling, Stiles
sighed roughly and looked down at the utility phaser in his
hand. He aimed it, but not at the wall. Instead, he pointed its
bluntly conical nose in a completely illogical direction.
    The ambassador looked at the concrete floor. "Where are we
going?"
 "Sir, we're going straight down."
    And the cell lit up in a million lights, and the floor blew up,
and the ceiling shredded. And Eric Stiles was in charge.

Chapter Twenty-two

BLISTERING HEAT SHOT through the cell. Pressure struck Stiles
from all sides and spun him silly. The floor tilted, then disap-
peared under his feet and gravity dragged him down. It almost
felt like a Constrictor.
    He struck the griddle of hot rock with his right hipbone and
scraped down fifteen feet until a carpet of muck received him
up to the ankles. Somehow he managed to stay on his feet,
leaning sideways on a nubby slab that was suddenly very
familiar. Funny how the years rushed up to remind him of
things.
    Took out too much of the floor--probably shouldn't have
used the full-destruct setting. Too late now.
    "Where's the phaser? Oh, I still got it. Couldn't feel my
hand...."
    No wonder. His whole forearm was tingling. Probably
bumped the funny bone. His fingers had convulsed around the
utility phaser, luckily, and he still had it. He craned his neck to
look up at the hole they'd created. Had anybody heard the
cracking and crashing of stone? There hadn't been a blast
noise, instead just the whine of the phaser before the rock
cracked. If there wasn't a guard on the floor, maybe the crash
hadn't been noticed. Please, please, please. Where was the ambassador?
    Not waiting for his eyes to adjust, Stiles glanced around in
the dimness, then started pawing at the broken flooring. Six
feet away, the rocks shifted. Springing over there, Stiles
tripped and landed on a knee. Recovering, he dug until a Vul-
can ear appeared, luckily still attached to a Vulcan head.
  "Sir!" he called.
    Now, how would this look! Eric Stiles, the man who let First
Officer Spock get buried alive!
     The rabble scratched his hands. Some of the stones were hot
to the touch as he pushed them off the ambassador. "Sir? Are you hurt?"
    Dust and pebbles sheeted into the muck and Spock sat up.
"Quite well, thank you... where are we?"
    Stretching off to both sides of them, bending into infinity
not far away, the octagonal passageway was lit only by
mediocre pencils of light through wrist-width drainage holes.
Stiles knew that they could only see at all because the sun was
almost directly overhead and the sky had cleared. In another
couple of hours, the tunnels would be pitch dark.
    "It's a network of tunnels. We built them fight after my first
Constrictor. The civil engineers thought the gravity effect
would be lessened by a layer of planet strata and that maybe
people could hide below, but it didn't work. They were death-
traps. Eventually we just gave up and sealed them. I used to
imagine using it to escape."
  "Why didn't you?"
  "And go where?"
  "Mmm... pardon me."
    "I couldn't get off the planet and nobody would help an
alien. And I didn't exactly have a way of cutting through the
floor either."
    Spock accepted Stiles's support as he got carefully to his
feet and tested his injured leg. "How long do you suppose our
escape will go undiscovered?"
    "Depends on whether Orsova wants to auction off a visit
now or later. We'll know, because we'll hear the alarms go off.
Until then, we can just make our way through to the fresh-
water ducts and get out. Darker in here than I remembered...
looks like the roots are getting in too. Watch your step, Ambas-
sador. With that comm link implant, can you tell me the direc-
tion the CST is in?"
    "Yes." Spock paused a moment, and even though it seemed
that he was doing something psychic, Stiles knew there was
nothing like that going on. "East northeast... by north. Four
miles... one eighth."
 "East by--four miles from here?"
 "Yes."
 "Are you sure about that?"
 "Very."
 "Perfect. I know just what they're doing."
 "Why do you ask?"
 "Because we're splitting up."
 "That may not be wise," Spock protested.
    "Well, it wouldn't be my first time," Stiles flatly told him,
and left no room for alternatives. "Come this way."
    Picking through the crushed flooring into the muck-layered
tunnel bottom, even with Spock's bad leg they moved along
faster than Stiles expected. The stink was incredible. Heavy
roots searched their way down from the surface, hairlike ancil-
lary tendrils unbroken until his hand tore them away, proving
that no one had come down here in years. He led Spock in a
direction he knew the search would never go if they were dis-
covered gone. That was the plan, all part of where he had told
Travis to bring the ship down--away from the mountains,
which was the natural place to hide. Hmm... been thinking
ahead all this time and never knew it.
    "Up at that intersection there," he said to Spock, "you go
left. You'll be able to get out in about a half mile. That's where
the municipal slab ends. I'll go to the right and find Zevon and
catch up, and I'll be better alone in case it's a trap. All due
respect, you'll slow me down and I'm tired of being slow. I'm
sorry if this isn't what you had in mind."
 "I had nothing in mind."
 What'd he say?
 Must be clogged ears. Didn't hear fight. Stiles looked over
his shoulder, seeing only the gray silhouette of the Vulcan two
steps back. As he held aside a thick root for the ambassador to
step by, he heard that sentence again in his head and finally
just asked.
    "You didn't have a plan? I thought the great amazing Mr.
Spock always had a plan."
    The ambassador tipped his head in a kind of shrug and
spoke as they picked their way along.
    "You remember what I told you about captains. I know my
shortcomings. Discipline can be limiting. This is why Vulcans,
with all our stringent codes of behavior, have not generally
prevailed as great leaders, and humans, with your elastic spir-
its, have. I've learned over the years to provide information
and opportunity, then step aside and rely upon the more
vibrant among us for actual tactics. I hoped you would rise to
the occasion."
  "Are you saying," Stiles marveled, "you just fake it?"
    In a shaft of light from a drain hole, Spock's black eyes
flickered smartly. "No. I trusted you to fake it."
    The ambassador offered that canny look for several seconds
without even taking a step. Apparently he wanted a point
made.
    Overwhelmed, Stiles hovered in the middle of a step. Only a
brainless drizzle of water somewhere in the underground sys-
tem drew him out of his amazement and reminded him of what
had to be done, and done soon.
    "Said Frankenstein to the monster," he cracked. "Bear left
and you'll get out. Once you get outside, keep to the low trail.
They'll be looking high first, the way to the mountains. We'll
rendezvous east northeast at the lake."
    Spock reached out to grasp a root, ready to pnll himself for-
ward. "Aye aye, captain."
    Flushed with delight and newly emboldened, Stiles looked
up and laughed. "Thanks!"

    Beverly Crusher took her latest series of biological readings
on the shuddering body of the Romulan empress, and compared
them with the readings from one hour ago. In the room, only
the snap of the fireplace and the bleep of Data's computer, as he
processed more information and sent what they had discovered
onward to the other physicians across the empire, could be
heard. There was not that much more that could be done.
    For days now she had kept the empress and dozens of others
alive by treating the symptoms. Over the past day, success had
noticeably shrunk.
    Crasher sat back, exhausted, and pressed her hands to the
sides of her head. As she squeezed, her eyes throbbed and her
thoughts bundled up into a lump. When she put her hands
down, they were holding the only thought left that made sense.
    She turned on her chair and sighed. Data noticed the move-
ment and looked around at her. Over on the couch, still battered
and bloody from the earlier encounter, Sentinel Iavo sat alone
with his own guilts and troubles. He'd hardly moved all day.
    'q'ime for drastic measures" Crusher told him. "She's not
making it. She's slipping away. I can't hold on to her life much
longer. Are you ready to do what I ask?"
    A destroyed man, Iavo's face had paled and his eyes were
sunken with weariness. "Anything."
    Satisfied, Crusher stood up and strode to him. 'q'his is what
I want. You're going to get me a fast ship with an escort battal-
ion. I don't want any trouble at the border. I'm taking the
empress into space to hook up with Dr. McCoy and a treatment
serum."
 "There is no such serum," Iavo protested. "Is there?"
 "There may be. If she is to have any chance, we have to go."
 "Go where? Who has this serum?"
    "I'll give you the course once we're spaceborne. I don't
want to take any more chances than that. Once again, Sentinel,
you have a choice to make. Who's side are you going to be on
for the next few hours?"
    Iavo stood up, wavered briefly, and clearly noted that Data
also came to his feet behind Crusher.
    "Your wisdom and silence have given me a new life," Iavo
confirmed. "I will help you save hers. Tell me where you wish
to go."

    The air seemed a bit too cool in the lab office today. Zevon
had thought about turning the heat up several times, but had
regularly been distracted by suggestions pouring in from the
students at Regional Spectroscopy. He had been reading them
all day, between adjustments. The deflectors required almost
daily adjustments now. Each adjustment worried him a faction
more. The network of deflection stations operated fairly well,
though only fairly. He had able technicians working the grid,
but not skilled scientists. Several more years would go by
before anyone on this planet was skilled enough in quantum
physics and space science to replace Zevon's own advanced
abilities. He was in a race now, a slow and deliberate race to
the next Constrictor.
    Some of these students had promise. There were occasional
glimmers of hope beyond the daily push and grind. If be had
more freedom to move about on the planet--
    An old argument. Orsova's reins were tight upon Zevon.
Their mutuality was fragile. He dared not jar it.
    A long morning. The afternoon stretched before him with a
dozen problems. The electrical system in the complex had
begun having fits a few minutes ago, and he could do nothing
effective with the Constrictor system if the power kept blinking.
    Perhaps he could accomplish something by remote while he
waited. Yes, that would be better.
    His chair rolled slightly under him as he reached to the cor-
ner of his desk and keyed the external communications system,
touching the autochannel.
  "Sykora, are you there?"
  "l just arrived. You nearly missed me."
  "Did you visit the physician?"
    "They can do nothing for me here. I'll tend myself as I
always have."
  "Sykora.."
      "I'm much stronger today. The welts are responding a little
to the poultice l made yesterday. If only I had--"  
"You're not a nurse, you know."
    "On this planet, I am all there is for us. Would you like to
argue now or later?"
    "Later, I suppose. Would it be possible for you to route yes-
terday's matter-discharge telemetry readings to Light Geolog-
ics at Laateh Mountain?"
  "Are you certain I have them here?"
  "Certain beyond life."
    "1 suppose that means I have them here. Give me time to
arrange thefiles for relay."
      "You'll have it. For some reason, several power centers in
the complex have failed. They're tracking the source."  
"Why would several fail at once?"
    "I hesitated to ask. It's enough that I must handle satellite
electrical problems. If I begin solving local ones, I may forget
to adjust the deflector grid."
  "1 would never let you forget."
 "I owe you my happiness."
    "Yes, you do. Who else would cook you Romulan dinners to
keep you from choking on the pathetic Pojjana palate?"
    Zevon smiled. "No one on this rock. I shall signal you with
the relay channel as soon as the power returns."
 "What do they say on a ship?--Affirmative?"
 "Affirmative, they say 'affirmative.' Are you--"
    He never finished his question. The conununications system
crackled suddenly as if he'd put his hand into the den of a spit-
ting animal. Almost as abruptly, it went dead.
 "Sykora? Do you read?"
 Nothing.
 He tried a reroute of the local flow.
 "Sykora?"
    But there was still nothing. The system lay quiet. Someone
would get to it.
    Ah--there were the alarms from the central bunkers. Would
the alarms go off for an electrical power failure? Strange.
Power didn't even go off after a Constrictor anymore. He'd
made sure of that. Perhaps some work was being done some-
where. He should're been notified.
He thought about calling to ask, but how could he call?
"Possibly the reason for the chill," he murmured to himself,
and slipped into the leather-fringed chenille cardigan Sykora
had given him at the precinct bazaar last year. The six shades
of moss green, brushed soft as moss itself, threaded with dyed
leather, comforted him when things went wrong. He liked to
see the cardigan hanging on the wall hook next to his desk
even better than wearing it. When he had it on, he couldn't see
it so well.
    However, today it would keep him warm. He pulled it over
his shoulders, hitched it into place--awkward, since he was
still sitting down and apparently too lazy to stand and began
tying the leather lacings over his chest.
    A green chenille Pojjana cardigan with dyed leather lacings,
leather lacings threaded through his shoulderlength hair...
there was so little left of him from that other life, he could no
longer find hints of the times before. Only speaking to Sykom
occasionally reminded him that he had ever lived anywhere
else.
    Through the closed window, he could still hear the alarms
going off. Possibly there was some trouble. A revolt, perhaps.
They still happened sometimes, after a Constrictor, in fear of
the next one. He could hide here, in retreat from such mundane
troubles, and do his science, battling the next Constrictor in his
own way. He hadn't won yet, but the enemy feared him.
    Someone was pounding up the stairway down the hall.
Through the old walls of his office he could hear the elop-clop
of boots on the wooden stairs. Good. That meant someone else
was as bothered by the electrical burping as he was. Only
when the footsteps pounded up the corridor toward his office
did he look at the door in wonder. Why would the maintenance
team come to this end of the hall?
    The door rattled as if someone had kicked it, but did not
open at first. Then, it did. It blew open as if knocked by a hard
wind.
     A thousand times Zevon had seen this instant in his mind,
played out in a dozen ways, and it still surprised him.
  "Eric? he gasped.
    The years crumbled and dissolved as they stared at each
other, comparing what they used to look like with what they
looked like now. Zevon knew he must look different. His hair
was longer, thonged with the tiny leather strips many Pojjana
wore... but as a Romulan, eleven years meant less to him
than it had to Eric Stiles.
    Zevon's long-ago friend looked like neither a rosy-cheeked
boy nor a dying waif, the only two personae Zevon had ever
seen. He was a healthy man now, more slender, less clumsy,
his blond hair a shade darker, his face clean-shaven. He still
wore a Starfleet uniform, but of a new design. There were
unborn weed pods stuck to the side of his trouserleg, and dry-
ing muck on his boots.
    Scarcely able to breathe, Zevon clasped the arm of his chair
with one hand and the side of his desk with the other.
    Eric's chest heaved from running, from climbing the stairs,
and whatever other trials had brought him here. Behind their
communion of astonished gawking, the alarms rang and rang
in the main complex.
 "So I'm a little late," he flipped. "So what?"
    Zevon pushed himself around a little more to face him, but
still could not find the power to stand up.
    Seeing that, Eric simply stepped to him, took his arm, and
drew him to his feet. "Let's go."
    Zevon canle to his feet and gripped Eric's arms in a waltz of
amazement and disbelief. "You look--you look--"
    "Yeah, got a shave too." Between his fingers Eric spun a
piece of the fringe on Zevon's decorated vest. "You look like
one of those goofy dancers at the Spring Cotillion when they
used to make us work the kitchen. I know you gotta get along
here, but do you gotta wear their clothes?" "I like these clothes."
 "Great. Bring 'em along. We're leaving."
    Not really surprised, Zevon did find himself startled by the
abruptness of the demand. How could he possibly begin to
explain?
 "No, I can't go."
 "Yes, you can. Come on."
    "No--I must not leave the planet." He drew back with some
force as he realized the serious intentions of what seemed
ridiculous. "Eric, I have plans--get your hands off me, Eric!"
    "I haven't got time to argue." Eric let go of him, as request-
ed, but instead raised his other hand and aimed a small black
device directly at Zevon.
 Zevon threw both hands up. "No, no!"
    In the sanle instant a pop of yellow light blinded him. He
felt his head snap back and his body convulse. His senses spun
wild. His knees buckled, but he never felt the floor strike him.
A jostling sensation--his eyes were still open enough to see
the ceiling reel, the light flop about, and deliberate movement
at his side. His own moan of protest boomed in his head. Vol-
untary movement sank away.
    Through the thickness of semiconsciousness Zevon heard
the voice that had come to him so many times in the broken
hours of early morning.
    "Plenty of seats down in front. Welcome to the opening
night of 'Prepare for the Worst,' starring the always efferves-
cent Eric John Stiles. Reset your phasers and enjoy the show"

"Zevon... Zevon. Wake up. It's only light stun. Come out
of it. You'll feel better in a few minutes."
    Some kind of bird cawed in the high tangled roots overhead.
The surroundings were ridiculous, an oasis of picnic quality,
trying to tell them nothing was wrong and they could just sit
here and maybe take a nap.
    In the distance, though, more than two miles away, the
alarms of the prison still hooted through the open sky. They'd
seen airborne patrols sprint from the city toward the moun-
tains, and at least two spotter planes veer toward the valley.
None yet angled toward the swamp. Most escapees had more
sense than to come in this direction, at least not first.
    Stiles glanced around to make sure there was enough root
canopy over them that a spotter couldn't easily see them. He
knew that if a plane got close enough the infrared scanners
would pick up the heat off the tops of their heads. There was
nothing to be done about that if it happened.
    Zevon lay in a cradle of velvet-coated roots, the kind that
were about to plunge into the nearest puddle and release their
spores. Till then they were a bony cushion that offered a few
minutes' rest. Stiles sat with him, absorbing the leather threads
in his head and the Pojjana cardigan, pleased that at least
Zevon didn't seem to be starving anymore. They were at least
clothing and feeding him for all he'd done for them.
    Still drowsy, Zevon gazed at him warmly, with shieldless
affection and relief that they were both alive to have this
reunion.

  "Eric..." He smiled again.
    Stiles smiled back, knowing the drug of phaser stun was
giving them this uncrystallized and uncluttered moment. His
hand closed on Zevon's wrist as it had that last day so long
ago. For a moment there was nothing around them, no planet,
no problems, no past or future troubles to distract them. Cer-
tainly nothing to drive them apart anymore.
    Gradually, though, inevitably, Zevon's perceptions cleared
and he shifted his shoulders. They held onto each other, absorb-
ing the wondrous confirmation that neither was dead, as each
cemainly had entertained in the troubling hours before sleep.
    "I didn't think you'd even speak to me," Stiles attempted.
His voice cracked on the last couple of words.
    Zevon rewarded him with a kind of glow in his eyes. "Why
would I not?"
  "Well, I am a little late ...."
  "Yes, you are."
  "I swear, I thought they got you out."
  "I know you did. Why did you stun me?"
  "Oh, because you resisted my charms."
    Taking a better grip on Zevon's arm, Stiles helped him sit up
and lean against a particularly large and ancient root. Nauseat-
ed, Zevon closed his eyes briefly, fielding a wave of dizziness
from the change of position.
  "Are you okay?" Stiles asked.
  Zevon leered at him with unfocused eyes and finally a clear-
ing head. A perception of irony brought the faintest of smiles.
 "Yes, Eric, I'm okay?'
    The buzz of distant aircraft funneled down to them from the
foothills. Stiles didn't look away as the awkward moment
passed between them.
  "So," he began, "how y'been?"
    With a grimace of irony and another smile, Zevon sat up and
shook pods from his hair. "I've been busy." His face patterned
by the shadows of roots overhead, he blinked into the sinking
sun. "Where have you taken me?"
    "We're out on the swamp flats. Cuffo Lake's a mile or so
that way. I was hoping you'd come around so I didn't have to
carry you any more. We're under cover, at least."

    Another shadow came over them, this one long, crisp, and
near. Stiles didn't look around. He knew.
  'Whis is Ambassador Spock," he said to Zevon.
    Zevon peered up at Spock, fitted the puzzle pieces into
place, and accepted what he saw. He bowed his head courte-
ously. "Your fame precedes you. I am honored."
  Spock returned the gesture. "As am I, your excellency."
  "Centurion, please."
  "As you wish."
    As Spock came to sit beside them on a fat root, Zevon said,
"Royalty is the mantle I was born to. Centurion is the rank I
earned."
    "Then Mr. Stiles's report is correct? You are fourteenth in
line for the throne?"
 "Thirteenth, now."
    Spock paused. "Yes, of course. Pardon my error. If you will
indulge me for a few minutes, Centurion, I shall explain our
problem."
 Zevon glanced at Stiles, then back to Spock. "Explain."
 "So they're dying. So what?"
    A shaft of guilt ran through Eric Stiles at hearing Zevon
using affectations of language he had obviously learned during
their incarceration. He felt as if he were looking into a curved
mirror. Even after all these years, Zevon sounded like Stiles,
and it was both nice and weird.
     "I understand," Stiles allowed. "They didn't come for you.
But it's important, Zevon. And you're the only one." 
"I hardly believe that. I am the convenient one."
    Stiles winced inwardly. Better let that go for now. "What
happened after I left?"
    "Once Orsova carne sober again that day, he thought about
what you said, that we might be able to predict the Constrictor
waves. He came to me and wanted to know how. I told him.
He understood none of it, of course, yet I suppose it sounded
to him as if I understood something. He went to the authorities
and warned that a Constrictor was coming."
 "I'11 bet they listened hard," Stiles chided.
 "They hardly listened," Zevon confirmed, his frustration

long scabbed over. '~Fhen the Constrictor did come. Millions
died. And the people thought Orsova was a genius."
 "Ugh... what people won't swallow...."
    "Orsova used his new influence to get me more equipment.
He became the 'head' of the Constrictor project."
    Spock clarified, "The science of which he knew nothing at
all?"
 "Are you kidding?" Stiles said. "He doesn't have a clue."
    "Nothing," Zevon confirmed. "He manipulates the power, I
tell him what the science can and cannot do."
    "You've been working at the pharoah's counting house
while he gets the glory."
    "I could never have had the glory, Eric. Don't mourn it. If
the population had ever found out I was the one who started
the Constrictor, they would've killed me. I cannot be replaced
in Red Sector. If I am not here to do this, all the Pojjana will
suffer. I would gladly slit my own throat if I thought that
would stop the phenomenon. Orsova is the umbrella shielding
me from the limelight. He can have the attention."
    Witness to humility and guilt taken to the extreme and
somehow transmorphed into a positive, Stiles glanced at Spock
and noted the Vuican's unmistakable respect for a much
younger and much less accomplished scientist. That caught
Stiles in a grip between Spock's generosity and Zevon's humil-
ity.
 Danre, was this confusing.
    "Also, one must say," Zevon began again, "Orsova was most
tricky and skilled at playing the politics, in which I had no
interest at all except what he could get for me. The Constric-
tors were coming every few months and I quickly became very
busy. Everything depended upon my predictions becoming
more accurate. The more accurate, the more people thought
Orsova was a genius. He developed a network, he controls
many resources and lives like a king--" 
"And how do you live?" Stiles asked.
    "That matters not at all, not in the least" Zevon warned,
hearing a defensiveness that wasn't necessary for him. "He's
welcome to it. My purpose is served. The Pojjana would never
have accepted a Romulan as the genius of the Constrictor.


Orsova allowed me to succeed much earlier than ever would
have been possible. I invented new types of antigrays, com-
pression suits, architectural implements, metallurgy--many
things that Orsova has parlayed into a huge Constrictor-
survival industry. He has the power to decide where all the
resources go, all the revenue, new materials, technology, the
buildings--and I tell him what to say. He wields so much
power now that he is the de facto head of the government. As
he works his plans and I work mine, fewer and fewer people
die with each Constrictor. In the last one, only six thousand
planetwide. Six thousand, Eric!"
    The victory in Zevon's voice and the emotion in his expres-
sion cut Stiles to the core. He pressed Zevon's arm in approval,
knowing what that meant to him.
    "I knew we had to control energy to survive," Zevon went
on. "I have an energy division, a school of physics, a school of
mechanical science, defense division, deflection-grid network
all over the continent .... "
    "Why a defense system?" Spock asked. "Have you had
problems with the Bal Quonott?"
    "Not yet. And they've had no interest in us. Yet. We have no
spaceborne fleet with which to defend ourselves. I knew I
could never develop conventional weapons sitting trapped on a
planet. Instead I've used tricks I learned while trying to read or
deflect the Constrictor waves. Using the mass of the planet as
an anchor for--"
 "The composite beam that almost killed us, I bet."
 "Killed you... ?"
    "Well, how do y'think we got here? Magic? We came in a
ship that got sucked into that damned thing!"
    "Oh--" Zevon moaned as if he'd just remembered, just real-
ized. A sheet of pallor drained across his face. "I never imag-
ined you might come yourself...."
    Now that he'd gotten his pound of flesh, Stiles gave him a
light punch in the chest. "That's okay, we got out of it. Come
on, let's get moving. We've got work to do."
    He pulled Zevon to his feet, while at their side Mr. Spock
also stood up and scanned the horizon for trouble.
 The trouble, though, was right here.

    "Eric, I want to go back to my lab." Zevon announced. "I
don't want to go with you."
    Stiles huffed out his disbelief. 'Tm serious, Zevon. Don't
kid around. Lives are at stake. The stability of a hundred star
systems are at stake, the Romulan Empire's--"
    Zevon squared off before him. "I want to go back to my life.
This is where I belong now, where I do good work. I refuse to
go."
    "Sure, refuse. I'll just stun you again and carry you the rest
of the way if I have to."
 "Commander" Spock began, "perhaps we should--"
    Stiles waved his stun-set phaser demostrably. "Sir, I'm
sorry, but there's no time. I want my ship away from this plan-
et. We can talk while we move. That's the direction. Go on,
Zevon, unless you want another dose."
 "Eric, this is not at all like you."
 'q'oo bad. Ambassador, which way?"
Hesitating only a moment, Spock said, "Follow me, please."
The traipse through the root swamp was messy, tedious,
and most of all uneasy. Stiles didn't like holding a phaser on
Zevon, but he never let it waver. Whenever Zevon looked at
him, he brandished the phaser and made sure his thumb was
on the fire pad. How many times did he look at the weapon
himself, making good and sure it was set on stun and nothing
worse. It had been years upon years since he'd been in a
position to use a hand weapon against another person. The
idea of making a mistake absolutely petrified him to the
bone.
    Before him, Zevon's moss-green cardigan flickered in the
rays of the lowering sun through the huge twisted roots over-
head and around them. He endured delirious joy that Zevon
was still alive and here with him, tempered by the obvious ten-
sion of Zevon's resistance. He'd been brainwashed or some-
thing. He'd given up on being rescued and, surviving any way
he could, had conditioned himself to live here, convinced him-
self it was right.
    I'll talk him out of it. Now that I'm back, everything can go
ahead and change. I'll walk him through it. He'll like it in a
week

    "Eric, I don't wish to go" Zevon attempted again after a
half mile. "How can you force me?"
  "You're a Romulan, you understand force, right?"
    "Orsova will do everything he can to keep us from leaving
the planet. If you let me go, I can convince him to allow you to
leave Red Sector. He wants no outside--"
    "What's wrong with you?" Stiles blazed, pulling up almost
to Zevon's side so they could look at each other between steps.
"Don't you understand? Of course he doesn't want outside
interference! I saw the looks in those soldiers' faces. The Poj-
jana see Orsova as if they wouldn't survive without him, like
he's holding up the planet all by himself. If you or the Federa-
tion or anybody manages to stop the Constrictor, suddenly he
wouldn't be the great savior anymore. That's why he stuck Mr.
Spock and me in a cell and wouldn't deal. He doesn't want
anybody to stop it!"
    "I have to stay here, Eric, I have to be here every day. We
have succeeded in reducing the effect of the waves, but my
system requires almost daily adjustment and no one else call
do that. I have no one thoroughly trained enough yet to take
my place. Every day I breathe, I extend to the Poijana the
chance of someday outdoing my expertise. That has been my
goal. I have arranged for Orsova to sponsor engineering and
science colleges, apprenticeships and clinics so that some day
the Pojjana can go on without me. That day has not come."
    "You're taking this self-blame too far, Zevon." Stiles tripped
on a cracked root and almost fired the phaser by accident.
Ahead of them, Spock glanced back while Stiles recovered,
then moved on.
    Why didn't he come back here and lay some logic on
Zevon? Why didn't he talk about the numbers? The rational
analysis of what a collapsing Romulan Empire would do to
everything around it? Why didn't he talk about the political
and military and trade black hole that would suddenly suck the
life out of everything that had been so carefully balanced for
so long? What good was a genius hero Vulcan monument if he
didn't come back here and lay down a case nobody could
resist?
 "You've been brainwashed;' Stiles said with contempt. "It
happens. Prisoners go through it all the time. Sympathizing
with their captors' causes, forgetting where they came from,
forgetting their native language----"
    Zevon grasped a network of root filaments and ripped them
from up to down. "I do not wish to leave, Eric! Not for the
sake of the royal family or the empire or the Federation. I also
do not wish to be exposed. Orsova provides me with cover and
lets me work. Every day I can make up a little of what I have
done. Do you know I am virtually the only alien this planet
trusts?"
    Stiles paused as his uniform shirt caught on a thorn and he
twisted to disengage it. "Just because you were part of what
started all this, you don't owe them your whole life. They can
do a few things on their own, can't they? You've become way
too custodial about these people. You even dress like a Poj-
jana!"
    Zevon whirled and stopped dead in front of him, enraged
and insulted. "I am Pojjana!"
    They stood in a sluice of muck. Up 'ahead, Spock stopped
and waited, his expression grim; curious.
"And elephants have four knees" Stiles chided. "So what?"
A flurry of anger rose in Zevon's face. "You should know
better than anyone! Your own people would never have come
for you if not for that elderly physician with so many tricks.
Have you forgotten? Since coming here my eyes have been
opened. I was stifled in the imperial system. Here, unfettered,
unrestricted, with Orsova to field the--"
    "I know, I know, you've proven yourself brilliant;' Stiles
confirmed. "You've kept a lot of people alive. I always knew
you could. Even the Federation doesn't have that beam you put
on us. If you could be that brilliant and save that many lives
and you still have to hide behind Orsova because these idiots
are so xenophobic that they won't accept help from an alien,
then to hell with 'em. You've done enough. Somebody else
needs you more now."
    "The royal family? All these years I knew you were not the
one who failed. I knew they had simply decided not to bother
getting me out. Did you think I had no comprehension of my
own blood ties? I have worse than apathy for the Romulans,
and their way, and their crown. I have hatred for them. Some
day, either the Federation or the Bal Quonott or the Romulans
will come and overran the Pojjana, and when that happens I
am determined that my people, these people, will be able to
defend themselves, hold their own, and even prevail. I have no
prime directive. I am free to help anyone I want to help."
    Fired by the depth of Zevon's conviction, Stiles raised the
utility phaser. "I won't leave you here a second time. Just turn
around and walk. I swear to God I'll stun you."
    Zevon did move forward after the ambassador, but contin-
ued his point with ferocity. "Even without space infrastructure,
we have learned to build and operate survival equipment and
refined the barometer so that we not only have warning, but
can also predict to some degree the intensity of the waves. My
equipment requires almost constant attention. If I leave and
intensity is ntisread, millions could die. Does that mean noth-
ing to you? Have you changed so much?"
  "Keep walking. I don't want to hear any more."
    He kept it that way. With his manner and his expression he
cut off any further discussion, as they made way through the
swamp and finally broke out into the open valley beyond. Now
they couldn't see the city at all, nor hear the alarms anymore,
only hear the occasional drone of a distant search plane. So far,
so good.
    When Stiles broke out of the ferns and growth, freeing his
leg from the last of the grasping roots, Zevon and Spock were
already standing on the open meadow, looking out over the
elongated expanse of Cuffo Lake. The eternally yellow-green
water, rich with biology and nutrients that reflected the sun-
light with a nearly neon intensity, was enhanced that much
more by the sunset. The sun, resting now on the tips of the far
away mountains, illuminated the valley and showed them
unequivocably that the valley was empty. Three hills, a rocky
ridge, the meadow flats, and Cuffo Lake. Not so much as a tree
more than that.
    The ambassador strode a few yards out into the meadow and
swept his gaze in all directions. "The CST should be here...
I'm certain of the coordinates... The directional signal deft-
nitely indicates this location, but I see no sign of them"
    Zevon turned to Stiles. "You have to let me go now, Eric.
Your ship is not here."
    "Yes, it is. Ambassador, can you hail them with that
implant?"
    Spock touched the pressure point behind his ear where the
microcom was either situated or had its subcutaneous controls.
"Spock to Saskatoon. We are at the rendezvous point. What is
your location?"
    The soft buzz of the tiny mechanism was hard to under-
stand, but good to hear. "This is Perraton. Is Commander
Stiles with you ?" "Yes, he is."
 Stiles said, "Tell him 'Lightfoot confirms.'"
 "Mr. Perraton, 'Lightfoot confirms.'"
 "Acknowledged. Here we come."
    "This is bewildering." Spock frowned and looked at Stiles.
"These are the coordinates. The ship should be virtually on
this spot. From where are they broadcasting?"
    Stiles didn't bother answering. He didn't need to. The
answer shimmered on the lake's surface. The still water began
to froth, then to erupt as if it were suddenly the center of a
resting volcano. Zevon and Spock both looked up into the
darkening sky to see if the power were coming from a
descending ship, but the sky was still clear.
    They looked now at Stiles and saw him watching the lake's
surface. They too turned in time to see sharp nonreflective
metal formations break the surface and sheet free of the cling-
ing water and the biorich glaze living there. The disruption got
bigger and bigger, destroying the beautiful flat lake water with
a violent commotion. In the rattle and swoosh of water and
engines, the Saskatoon's industrial nose surged furiously out
of the water, and the rest of the ship broke free of the suction.
     The ship emerged enormously from the water, like a blue
 whale breaching and not bothering to dive back in. It hovered
 over the lake while the last of the water drained from its
 nacelles and spiraled back into the lake, creating a sheen of
 droplets that sparkled in the setting sun.
     "The bottom of the lake" Spock marveled. "Of course. A
 scan-proof shelter."

      "Just thinking ahead." Stiles grinned proudly and eyed him.
 "You spent too much time on starships."  "Apparently."
     "This is Perraton. We'll set down on the plain directly to
 your right, on the other side of that ridge."
  "What's wrong with the transporters?" Stiles asked.
  "Is there something wrong with the transporter?"
     "Yup. You broke 'em when you beamed through that reflec-
 tor envelope. They're under repair."
     Politely Spock asked, "Permission to grant them permission
 to land?"
 "Permission granted to grant permission," Stiles responded.
 The ambassador seemed impressed, maybe a litfie embar-
 rassed that he hadn't thought of this, and cued his microlink.
 "You have permission to set down, Mr. Perraton. We shall
 stand by."
    "Let's go over the ridge;' Stiles ordered, "and be there when
they maneuver down. It'll take us a few minutes to climb over
the ridge."
  "I don't want to go, Eric."
  "My finger's on the button, Zevon."
    The ridge was the only rapture on the otherwise pristine
meadow landscape, created over a hundred years ago by ambi-
tious roots from the swamp moving below the surface till they
hit rock and tried to find the surface again. The roots had
grown and grown beneath the crust, fattening and searching
and hitting stone, until the stone began to surge upward eight
or ten meters. Sometime along the way, the roots had died off,
leaving the rocky ridge as the only scar on the meadowlands.
    The ridge wasn't very high, only a couple of stories at most,
but footing was treacherous and picky. They could hear the
hum of the CST as it maneuvered on the other side of the
ridge, but could see nothing but the abutments of stone and
hard dirt.
    Stiles glanced into the sky behind them, fearful that the
CST might be picked up on scanners now that it was out of
the protective cover of the deep lake. They were only minutes
from safety now. Once inside the Saskatoon they could buzz
away from this forsaken planet and get out there and do some

real good. Then he could talk some sense into Zevon. Once
Zevon got back into space, saw how wide the galaxy really
was, remembered things that Stiles had also forgotten during
his incarceration here--everything would be good again. It
would be.
    Stiles took the rear, holding the phaser where it would do
some good as he picked and climbed his way up the rocky
slope behind the ambassador and Zevon. He was watching the
rocks, nursing out footholds and handholds and avoiding the
dangerous sharp edge of the mica-like slabs, when a hard force
caught him across the jawbone.
    The mighty blow drove him backward and spun him side-
ways. He skidded onto his side on a sheet of pebbles. As his
head rang, he managed to put out an ann and stop himself
from sliding all the way down. "Stand still or die!"
 Stiles blinked up through a wave of dizziness.
    There above them, taking an attack stance between them
and freedom, stood two armed Pojjana assault troopers and an
even more heavily armed woman. A Romulan woman!
    "Drop your weapon!" The woman aimed her own rifle fero-
ciously at Stiles' head. "Or I will kill you now!"




Chapter Twenty-three

"SYKORA, DON'T KILL HIM!"
    Zevon rushed to Stiles's side and put himself between Stiles
and the woman's rifle. Spock, luckily, stood aside and let
events play out as he watched with attentive interest. He put
his hands up, though, so the guards wouldn't arbitrarily open
up on him either. A Romulan woman! Or was she Vulcan?
Either way, she shouldn't be here at all.
  "How can she be here?" Stiles demanded.
    From higher on the rocks, Spock agreed. "This is Red Sec-
ton Did the Romulans violate that without the Federation's--"
    "The empire has nothing to do with me. I came on my own
to protect Zevon," the woman snarled with a toss of her long
braids. She was absolutely fierce in her intent. "Anyone who
threatens him, I will mutilate!"
    As she brandished her weapon at Stiles, Zevon held up a
hand to back the woman off. "Sykora, please. This is Eric."
     "Eric--" Her tone changed instantly. Her eyes narrowed.
"Eric Stiles?" "Yes."
    "What's going on?" Stiles asked as Zevon pulled him to his
feet. "What's she doing here?"
 "Drop your weapon !" Sykora denlanded.
    "No," Spock interrupted. "Dropping a phaser could be dead-
ly. If the trooper would simply take it--"
    Sykora snapped her fingers at one of the guards, who
snatched the utility phaser out of Stiles' hand. That quickly
were the tables turned.
 Frustrated, Stiles griped, "How'd she find us out here?"
    "He is my husband;' Sykora said for herself. "I took after
him."
 "Husband? Since when!"
    Zevon nodded. "Sykora is the reason I knew you got the
message through to my family. And why I knew they were
never planning to come for me."
    "I am a subcommander" Sykora interrupted, "in the Imperi-
al Solar Guard. I could never stomach the royal family's aban-
donment of their prince. I want nothing to do with those
disloyal monsters. I confiscated a three-man ship and came to
rescue trim myself."
    "My own defense systems destroyed her ship," Zevon
admitted with some sheepishness. "Her two crewmen fought
and were killed by the Pojjana planetary guard, but Sykora
succeeded in finding me."
    "And I will kill any who threaten him," the determined
woman said. "Even Orsova fears and respects me."
      Even deprived of his weapon and his moment of success,
Stiles leered at Zevon in private admiration. "She's pretty tough."
 "Yes... she is."
 "How'd she find us?"
    "I actually don't know." Zevon looked at his wife. "How did
youT'
    A little more agreeable, though no more mellow, Sykora ges-
tured to Zevon's cardigan. "You're always too careless with your
own well-being. I take care of you. The fringe is a homing grid."
      Zevon touched his sweater, then gazed at her in what could
only be adoration. "How kind..."  BZZZZZWA P!
  Phaser stun! No mistaking that sound!
     The Pojjana troopers sprang like stricken cats and flopped to
 the ground, only an instant before a third beam struck Sykora
 and she was pitched into a convulsion that left her unconscious
 in a crotch of stone.
    Zevon gasped in anguish and scrambled to his wife's side,
but there was nothing to be done for her but wait for the effect
to wear off. The tables had turned again.
    Over the crest of the ridge appeared a beautiful sight--
Travis Perraton leading a landing party that included the evil
twins, a handful of security trainees, and Dr. Leonard McCoy.
      "We heard the trouble," Travis said. "Ambassador Spock cued
his comm link and we heard everything. You all right, Eric?
  "Why? Am I bleeding?"
  "Some blood on your neck there."
    "I'm okay, Tray, thanks." Stiles accepted a service phaser
and looked at the handiwork. "Round up those three and stuff
'era into the equipment locker."  "Even the lady?"
    Stiles met Zevon's hopeful eyes, but he had certain deci-
sions to make and certain dangers to consider. "That's no lady.
That's a subcommander."
 "Uh-huh. Got it. Lock her up, boys."
    The Bolt brothers assisted Dr. McCoy down a fairly stable
rock incline, where he stopped before Zevon and gave the
Romulan prince a good looking over.
    "Good evening," he said. "I'm Count Vladimir McCoy. I
vant your blod."

  "Orsova."
    "Again? What do you want now! I tried to put that poison in
Zevon, but he's gone!"
    "They have escaped through the root swamp. I will give you
the coordinates of their space ship. You still have a chance to
bring them to me. The doctors and Zevon. Alive if you can.
Dead if you cannot,"
    "How can I chase them if they go into space? I have no
spaceships."
    "You ask too many questions, You will have my ship. I will
arrange for you to be close to Zevon. Prepare yourself. You are
about to become a spaceman."

Chapter Twenty-four

As THE TWO POJJAN guards were heaved off into the waiting
CST by the crewmen, Zevon hurried to his wife's side and
knelt beside her, touching her face. "I will not even speak to
you about this unless you treat her first."
"She'll recover," Stiles complained. "It's just phaser stun"
"No, sh&s ill. Like you when you were trapped here, we
have no way to treat her on this planet. She's not Pojjana.
Their medicine has been working only poorly for her since--"
    "Uh-oh," McCoy preempted, and immediately came to
Sykora's side. "Better check that."
    Stiles glanced at Spock. Were they too late? Did Sykora
have the royal family thing? He scrubbed the conversation
they'd just had to see if there'd been any mention of Sykora's
bloodlines. Had he missed something? Did she have this
plague that had everybody so worked up?
    While McCoy scanned the unconscious woman with some
kind of double-built medical scanner, Stiles turned to Travis.
"Go back on board. Get ready to lift off."
 "Aye aye," Travis said.
 'Tll be right there. Go on."
  Over the fallen form of the Romulan woman, McCoy let
Jason Bolt pull him back to his feet. "She's not royal family.
No trace of their DNA at all. She's got hyperplexic myelitis.
I've only seen it twice before in Vulcanolds."
    Fearful just at the sound of that, Zevon looked at him
beseechingly. "Is it dangerous?"
 "Eventually, it would be fatal."
  "Can you stop it?"
 "I need to get her on a table."
 The noncommittal answer clearly frightened Zevon.
    Stiles watched him. The whole Romulan royal family was
sick and dying, and all that meant anything to Zevon was this
one woman. He parted his lips to utter some words of assur-
ance, but never got the chance. As the ship sat ducklike on its
landing struts, the skin of the CST crackled with an electrical
surge that threw sparks all over the people standing on the
ridge. For an instant Stiles thought something in or on the ship
had exploded; then the culprit came into view. Over the resting
form of the CST rose a hovering craft of unfamiliar design,
made of dark blue metal and etched with white bolts in an
industrial pattern of hull plates. Against the darkening sky, the
blue ship was nearly invisible except for the pinpoint etchings
of white dots that appeared almost like free-floating constella-
tions.
 Would've been pretty if it hadn't been firing on them.
 "On board!" Stiles shouted. "On board! On board!"
    As Spock and two CST crewmen hustled McCoy down the
other side of the ridge and Zevon hoisted his wife's limp form
over his shoulder, Stiles aimed his service phaser at the roaring
newcomer and opened fire.
    His phaser scored the body of the other ship with a great
show of noise and sizzling, but the wounds were only superfi-
cial.
    The blue ship fired again, but not at him. Instead its
weapons scored the body of the CST as it had before, leaving
steaming gashes on the nose and side of the big tender. As he
skittered down the incline, he heard the CST's impulse engines
throb to power. In a few seconds, they'd be ready for escape
velocity.
 That is, if they weren't fried right here on the ground. Gouts
of smoke blew across the bottom of the ridge, blinding him to
the people running in front of him toward the tender's ramp.
 "Keep going!" he shouted, and fired again.
    A third time the lumbering blue ship screamed at them.
Once more the deadly energy weapons scratched the body of
the CST. If that beam hit the defenseless people running
toward the ship---
    A hard form--metal--slapped the bottom of his boot and
tripped him. He skidded forward, almost dropping his phaser.
The ramp! In the smoke he hadn't seen how close he was!
    "Travis, get us out of the atmosphere!" he called, scram~
bling on all fours up the treaded surface. "They can't come
after us!"
    The ramp whined up behind him. He found himself on the
midships deck, with Alan Wood pulling him out of the way of
the closing ramp.
    "Always an English butcher around when you need one"
Stiles choked, gagging the last of the smoke out of his lungs.
    ''Tea's good for that;' Alan offered. "I'11 get you some. Want
cake?"
 "I want red alert!"
    "Red alert, aye." Alan swung him to his feet and Stiles raced
through the hatches to the cluttered little bridge, where Zevon
sat on the deck, holding his groggy but awakening wife.
Beside them, Dr. McCoy had been planted firmly in one of the
anchored chairs at tactical. Jeremy manned the science station,
Travis was just ordering full power to the escape velocity
thrusters, and the evil twins were at the helm and navigation.
Spock was standing beside the helm.
    Stiles skidded into place behind the helm and in front of his
command chair, but did not sit. "You look good there" he
commented.
    Spook seemed surprised that he'd even been noticed. "Com-
forting to know one is picturesque."
    Indulging in a nervous grin, Stiles watched the main screen,
which showed the thinning atmosphere as the CST powered
toward space, and the side monitors, which showed the blue
ship with its constellation of white hull buttons moving delib-
erately after them.

    Quite abruptly, the mist on the main screen parted with a
nearly audible swoosh, and they broke out into the blackness
of open space. Unlike the darkening evening on the planet's
surface, here it was once again day, bright and fierce, as they
moved away from the protection of the planet with the sun on
their port side.
    "They're following us!" Jeremy White gulped. "Coming
right into space after us!"
     Zevon left his wife's side, bolted to his feet and grasped the
edge of the helm and stared at the main screen. "Impossible!"
  "Well, here they come anyway !"
    The whole CST jolted then with a terrible butt-stroke from the
pursuing ship, a blow that peppered the tender with hot energy.
    Stiles glanced at Zevon, fielding a bitter distrust. "Shields
up. Battle stations."
    "I'm not imagining things, am I?" Stiles asked. "That's not a
Pojjana ship, is it?"
 "No!" Zevon insisted.
    "Nor do I recognize it," Ambassador Spock said. "I have
never seen that configuration or those markings."
    "Neither has the computer" Travis confumed. "No cata-
loguing at all."
 "Increase speed as soon as you can" Stiles said.
    Zack Bolt frowned at his nav controls. "They're hailing us
through my nav impulses. Must not be compatible with Feder-
ation tech."
 "Can you make it so we can hear it?"
    "Well... attempting." He poked at his controls, and a
moment later a completely unexpected sound burbled from the
other ship.
    "Surrender. You have no chance against this fighting space-
ship. Turn back now and you will live."
    Rage boiled up in Stiles's head till he thought his hair would
blow off. He pounded the fight button.
    "Orsova! What are you doing in that ship! Where'd you get
a thing like that!"
    "Surrender now or be killed. We have more speed and more
weapons. I will kill you before I let you leave the sector."
    "Cut him off!" Stiles roared. "I don't want to hear his voice
again! He can't want me back that badly--he can't care about
me that much! Travis! What's the gasball got?"
    Travis bent again over the tactical scanners. "High shield-
ing... full warp capacity... strike-force shields... weapons
are--" He paused and shook his head in worried admiration.
"It's a fighting warship, Eric. We're completely outmatched:'
    'q'wins, get us out of this stupid solar system? Stiles ordered.
"Full impulse as soon as you can. Travis, you take weapons
yourself. Transfer all the reserve from the cutting phasers and
find some distance power. Get ready to use the welding torches
if they get too close. I want to skin that bastard!"
    At the nav station, Zack Bolt turned to look at him. "We're a
combat support tender, not a battleship! We can't beat that
thing!"
    "We don't have to beat it. He wants us alive for some rea-
son."
 Everybody looked at him as if he'd grown feathers.
 "You're gonna have to explain that one," Travis said.
    "ff he wanted to kill us," Stiles told them, "why would he
shoot at the CST instead of nice bald helpless people on the
ground?"
    Unsure of that, Spock tightened his brow and waited for
more explanation, so Stiles gave it to him.
    "That gives me an advantage. It means I should run harder
than I fight. Getting away is more important than beating
them. All we have to do is knock 'em down long enough to get
away."
    The CST hummed and cranked its way toward full speed,
chased easily by the constellation ship with Orsova impossibly
aboard. Against the pure blackness of night, the enemy ship's
blue body nearly disappeared and its hundreds of white plate
bolts didn't, so that it looked indeed like a set of stars rushing
freely after them in space. But every few moments the other
ship made its solid presence known with a full-power blast that
shocked the CST to its bones and made everybody grab for
something to hold onto.
    "How're we doing?" Stiles asked when he thought enough
time had gone by.

    "Not an inch," Jeremy sourly reported. "In fact, they're clos-
ing."
    His teeth gnashing, Stiles growled at the side screens.
"Maybe if I give myself up, he'll be happy and leave the rest
of you alone."
    Even in the midst of rocking and rolling, Spock found a way
to face him gracefully. "No, Mr. Stiles. That is one decision I
will not allow."
 "You can't tell me what to do, with all due respect, sir"
    "I know. Orsova has no ship like that. Someone is either
supporting or manipulating him. That power must have farther-
reaching goals than being entertained with your capture. And,"
he added, rather gently, "once in a lifetime is enough to sacri-
fice yourself to that man."
    In spite of everything, Stiles smiled at the sentimental
reminder that Spock knew all the mistakes he'd made, and
liked him anyway.
    A javelin of weapon power struck the CST and backhanded
it across space. The engines screamed. The crew and passen-
gers were throttled, bouncing off the equipment around them.
Stiles tried to stay on his feet, but ended up sharing a chair
with Jason Bolt at the helm as the ship went howling on its
edge through space.
     While Jason struggled to recover, Jeremy called, 'What was
our port engine! We can't make top speed any more, Eric!"
  "Can we have emergency warp?"
 "If you don't mind a complete meltdown."
'What's it. No more running. Get ready to turn and fight."
From the glances of the crew, he might as well have ordered
them to cut off their hands and throw them in a pot. They were
brave enough going into battle situations when necessary to
repair the important ships, but it wasn't often that they were the
center of the baffle---the thing actually being shot at on purpose.
    He saw it in their faces. l'llm and fight? Fight that warship
coming at them at flank speed?
    "It's me he wants;' Zevon spoke up. He came around the
helm to face both Stiles and Spock. "I am the key to his con-
trol, Eric, not you. Let him take me. Then you and your ship
can go."

    "I can't let you go, you know that," Stiles said. "We need
you. Your blood--"
    "I hate the Romulan ruling family" Zevon claimed bitterly.
"I hate the government that flagrantly caused the Constrictor. I
hate the relatives who abandoned me. I deride the stupidity of
a system that allows birth connections to command important
missions. I hate those of my heritage, and now I am told I must
go save them? I have no interest in saving my philosophical
enemies."
    "Travis, keep firing on that ship," Stiles ordered. "Just fire at
will, any chance you get to hit 'era." That done, furious and
frustrated, he barked at Zevon. "So it would be better to go
back there and serve a system that allows a scumsucker like
Orsova to end up in control of a whole planet? What's the mat-
ter with you?"
    "My husband is a genius!" Sykora rose from the deck, still
pale from the phaser stun, her face a mask of defiance. She
moved forward and steadied herself by gripping the back of
the command chair. "He has designed a spaceborne barricade
that will funnel the Constrictor waves around the planet. If we
help you, will the Federation come and build our barricade in
space? No! You will go your way and let the Pojjana planet
crumble behind you!"
    As enemy fire rocked the CST again, the real challenge was
right here, right now.
    "Why should I mast the FederationT' Zevon confirmed. "After
I save the Romulans, you will leave again as you did before"
    "We can help the Pojjana" Spock firmly told them both,
"but they must be receptive to our help:'
    Zevon spun to him. "why should I trust you? Why were you
not more persistent? When you saw your presence was good
for them, why did you leave?"
 "The Pojjana asked us to leave."
 "But you left!"
    Spock seemed to be searching for a way to explain when
Stiles took over. "Never mind, Ambassador. Until today, the
only Federation citizen Zevon's ever spoken to in his life was
me. He doesn't get it." Fixing his glare on Zevon, he forced
himself to ignore the pounding the ship was taking. "You're
going. I didn't go through this for nothing! We need you to go.
ff the Empire falls, the whole sector is going with it. Like it or
not, you're the last royal family member with unadulterated
blood and you're coming with us:' "No, Mr. Stiles. He is not."
    Spock's announcement, without a hint of doubt or question,
took Stiles completely by surprise. Everyone else, too, from
the looks on their faces.
    Digesting the words from his idol as quickly as he could,
Stiles jabbed a finger toward Zevon. "But he's wrong!"
    "He is wrong according to us," the ambassador contradicted
evenhandedly. "He has that right."
    "Why did we come all this way! Why didn't you say some-
thing down on the planet!"
    "I entertained the hope that you might be able to convince
him."
    Setting aside annoyance at being used, Stiles argued, 'The
Romulans are attacking the Federation for something we didn't
do!"
     Spock offered only a nod in limited agreement. "I will not
force any individual to act against his will." 
"Even if it means a war?"
 "If that is the price of freedom... so be it."

    "They're almost in phaser range," Jeremy White reported, a
thread of fright rising in his voice.
    Stiles didn't blame him a bit. The sight of that dark ship
with the white buttons all over it streaking toward them with
the posture of an angry bumblebee it scared him too.
    "Jeremy" he ordered, "tell me the two biggest differences
between us and them."
     With something specific to do, Jeremy concentrated on his
instruments while everyone else waited through the tension.
  "Their weapons..."
  No surprise there.
 "And shields. Way better than ours"
    Unsatisfied with the lack of specificity, Spook leaned over
Jeremy's shoulder at the readouts. "High-intensity plasma-fed
shielding with direct warp feed. At least four times the power
of ours. I must assume their speed capacity and weapons are
comparably advanced."
 Stiles leered at him. "Situation hopeless?"
 "So it seems," Spock said.
 "All the odds against us?"
 "Correct."
    Stiles eyed him. "This is one of those 'leap of creativity'
things, isn't it.'?"
    Spock clasped his hands behind his back in a ridiculously
casual posture. "That is my hope."
 "You wanna just... come over here and give me a shove.'?"
 "If you prefer"
    From the port side, McCoy offered, "I'll come and push you
if you want."
    Stiles gave him a floppy wave with his free hand. "Thanks,
Doctor, consider me pushed. We need to even things up.
Shields first."
 "How7" Spock asked.
    At the same time, McCoy beefed, "Rhodinium against tissue
paper!"
    Stiles glanced at them. "Oh, we're a little tougher than that,
Doctor. Jeremy, we've got that warp trigger box with the surg-
er for emergency ignition of cold warp cores, don't we? We
replaced the last one, right?" "Always."
     "Go back there and take it off the clamps and put it in the
airlock, activated. We're going to dump and detonate." 
"It'll short out our shields !"
    "If we're close enough it'll short out his too. He wants us
alive--let's use that and play some chicken."
    Flushed, Jeremy raced through the hatch toward the aft sec-
tion.
    "Ambassador" Stiles requested, "I'll bet you can take the
science boards, can't you?"
    "Most certainly I can." Spock moved with fluidity across the
bridge and settled at Jeremy's station as if he'd been painted
there. Darned if he didn't look happy.
    "Travis, fire up the magnetic grapples. Two and four on the
port side."

    Travis swung full about and gaped at him with his mouth
open and eyes like eggs, but talked himself out of asking. "Aye
aye," he responded, and got to work.
    Stiles stood beside his command chair and watched the
screen that showed the approaching blue tighter. "Ready
about !"
 "Ready about, aye!"
    A flurry of activity blew across the bridge, and everybody
was suddenly working. Luckily they'd stopped asking what he
was up to. Good thing, because he didn't know.
    "Helm, you know what to do. Come about and meet him
head on, as if we were rafting for a repair."
 "While he's moving?" Jason Bolt confirmed.
     "Just as if we had to grapple a damaged ship under power.
Do it by the numbers. We'U see what happens. Helm over."
  "Coming about."
    "Then what?" Travis asked--not in challenge, but because
to make it work he had to know the next move.
    Stiles shook his head and shrugged. "Oh, I dunno, I'm prob-
ably about to get us all killed."
    Okay, not the greatest slogan to stitch on a banner of war, but
there was something to be said for being honest with them. He
drew one long breath and held it, watching the forward screen
now as the CST mined on its midships keel and the constella-
tion fighter came around. Broad on the bow... three points...
two points... one... fine on the port bow... dead ahead.
     Now the two ships were heading at each other in a game
that would destroy one of them if somebody didn't flinch.
  "Incoming!" Travis called. "They're shooting at us!"
    A bright white blast blew from the other ship, looking as if
somebody had fired talcum powder out an exhaust port--but
when it hit them it didn't feel like powder. The CST shuddered
violently but did not turn off her course. Rather than striking
them with a single impact, the powder-beam slathered all over
the ship as if they'd plunged into a glass of milk, washing
along from the prow to midships before dissipating, snapping
systems all the way back.
    "Hold course!" Stiles called over the shattering of circuits
all around them.
"Intentions?" Spock asked. "Do you mean to ram them?"
"We've got an asteroid-cutter prow" Stiles told him. "If they
want to try it, I'm game. We can't outrun them. All we can do
is make them flinch."
    Spock straightened from watching the science panel. "Do
you know this man well enough to predict his response?"
    "Orsova? Sir, we're willing to die for a cause. Orsova isn't.
All we have to do is stand him down."
     "Yes, Mr. Stiles, but remember--Orsova has little or no
spacefaring experience. It's unlikely he's piloting that ship."
 Stiles looked at him. "Who do you think is?"
 "I should say whoever provided him with the tighter."
 "Oh, good, I love unknown quantities."
    Annoyed with himself for not realizing that Orsova couldn't
possibly be driving that ship, that he was in fact fighting some-
body he'd never met in a ship he didn't recognize, with
weapons he'd never seen before, Stiles dealt with a tumbling
stomach and a dry mouth as the ships drew speedily closer.
    He struck the nearest comm link. "Jeremy, blow that trigger
out the hatch right now."
  "Ready... it's away!"
    They waited as the octagonal warp trigger box drifted out
into space, visible on a side monitor at starboard, floating lazi-
ly out there, brainless to what else was going on.
 "Distance?"
     "Eight hundred kilometers," Spock ticked off. "One thou-
sand... twelve hundred..." "Ignite it."
    Before his words were even out, space at their side blew
bright with disruption and the whole ship was swept sideways
away from it. Half the crew was thrown down. Stiles kept his
feet only by hanging onto the command chair with both hands.
He found himself looking at Dr. McCoy and thanking all the
lucky stars out there that the old doctor had been sitting down.
Travis was also holding McCoy in place with one hand, him-
self with the other.
    Over the crackle and fume of their own damage, Spock
reported, "His shields are losing integrity. They're flickering."
 "Ours are down completely" Travis announced, taking the
gloss off their victory. "Whatever happens now, we'll feel it
hard."
    "Enemy vessel is slowing down," Spock announced briskly.
There was a clear ring of win in his voice. "You've called their
bluff"
    "Either that or they're not willing to die for whatever we
represent to them," Stiles said. "Doesn't mean they won't keep
trying to kill us." "Incoming!"
    Stiles gritted his teeth as they rode out another hit of the
powder-beam. Damage reports came chattering in from all sec-
tions, none of them good. Stiles ignored them.
  "Travis, are the grapples ready?"
  "Ready, aye."
    "Keep up speed until we're at proximity range. Let me know
when we get there--"
 "We're there!" Travis said. "We can reach now."
    On the main screen, the dark blue enemy ship drew up its
braking thrusters and surged upward so they could see its
underbelly, just as a rowboat surges up on a swell before set-
tling into the sand. They really didn't want to get hit by the
Saskatoon's cutting prow.
    Stiles couldn't help a little snicker. "Magnetic grapples two
and four--launch!"
 wheeeeeeeeeeeCHUNK--CHUNK
    "Got 'era!" Travis yelped. "Both grapples are on their hull.
Now what?"
    "Let you know soon as I think of it" Stiles muttered. "He
can't blow us up if we're riding him. Pull up as close as you
can, Travis. Zack, heat up the welding phasers? 
"Where do you want me to cut him?"
    "Any place you can reach. I want you to connect those white
dots into my initials. Right there where I can see."
    The Bolt brothers both laughed in spite of the moment's
heat.
    Heat--yes, it was getting hotter on the bridge, proof that
systems were damaged and the ship's computers were selec-
tively saving what they could and sacrificing what they
couldn't while waiting for repair. The CST's welding phasers
lit up under the viewscreen and scored the blue body of the
other ship, leaving trails of white-hot melted metal and snap-
ping circuits exposed to open space. Still... how much of this
could they do?
      As the two ships danced in their locked-together waltz,
Spock peered into his monitor. "Reading a power buildup."
 "Weapons?" Stiles asked.
    "No, sir. Routing shield power, I believe...." He didn't
sound sure at all.
    Heavy-legged with damage and with the weight of the other
ship pulling on the ~apples, the Saskatoon lumbered around,
pushed by the pointless power of the two ships exerting force
on each other while going absolutely nowhere.
 "Jeremy, can you still hear me?" Stiles called.
  "You're breaking up. Boost your signal."
    "Forget it." Stiles stalked to the aft hatch, cranked the han-
dle, yanked the hatch open, and yelled through the body of the
ship. 'q'um on the external hoses! Seal up their impulse ports!
Got it?"
 "I like that !"
    Stiles turned back to the main action, grumbling. "Yeah, I
like it too."
    Within seconds, the CST's external hoses clacked on. Clear
on the main screen, attached to them so closely that they
could're touched it if the screen hadn't been there, the blue
enemy ship cranked and yanked against the magnetic grapples,
trying to break the hold. Now tons of semiviscous compound
spewed from the hose nozzles and splattered all over the aft
section of that ship, totally clogging the impulse exhausts as if
the gods were spewing milkshakes into goblets.
     Except this wonderful composite milkshake stuck like glue
and hardened chemically within four seconds of contact.
 "What's that stuff?." McCoy asked.
    "It's chemical fiber bond," Stiles told him. "We use it to coat
repairs before putting the hull plates back on. Nasty stuff."
    "Their impulse ports are clogged," Spock noted. "They're
attempting to fire impulse engines anyway."
    On the screen, in the upper comer, they could just see the
impulse ports turning yellow, orange, then red with backed-up
energy. Volcanic spurts of power blasted through the fiber
bond, only to be almost instantly sealed up again. Another
kind of battle was going on--between the power of the
engines and the strength of a resealing compound that
wouldn't take no for an answer.
    Flash... flash... sizzle... flash... The constellation ship
fought with itself, spitting and surging, taking the CST with it
on every blurting ride.
    The whole CST then began to shake furiously, as if it would
break into a billion pieces around them. The sound was horri-
ble, terrifying, the kind of sound that made Stiles wonder what
the hell he was doing here in the first place, why anybody
would want to come to space when he could stay on a nice
solid planet somewhere. Suddenly all the screens flashed a
nasty yellow light. A snap of electrical surge ftailed through
the ship, popping everybody's ears. "What happened!" Stiles called.
    "Feedback along the magnetic lines!" Spock called back.
"They've thrown us off--power surge is running up the grap-
ples!"
 "Damn !"
 "What do we do now?" Travis cried. "Surrender?"
    "Not since Gabriel's last tea party in hell! Full about! Make
some speed!"
    McCoy tingemailed Spock in the arm and pointed at Stiles.
"I like the sound of that, don't you?"
    Still spitting fire every few seconds as the impulse engines
coughed through the clinging fiber bond, the enemy ship
wheeled clumsily around to face them with its main weapons
ports.
    "Uh-oh..." Stiles' whole body went cold. "Doesn't look
like they want to take us alive anymore .... "
    Spock straightened and watched the ship out there. "Your
logic is impeccable... we are in grave danger."
 His memory nerve tingling, Stiles looked at him. "What?"
 "Just a bit of nostalgia. I suggest we distance ourselves."
 "Travis, disengage! Jason, full impulse!"
    At point-blank range the other ship opened up on them in
what could only be described as a fit of anger. Its weapons cut
into the CST's unshielded body, blowing systems all around
the bridge and all the way through the ship. Stiles agonized as
he heard the screams and shouts of his men and knew they
would have to see to themselves for now. He hated that--the
urge to go back there nearly crushed his chest.
 "Speed, Jason," he implored.
 "Doing my best."
    "Reading power-up on torpedo launchers," Spock warned.
"We cannot possibly gain enough distance."
    No distance and no shields. No weapons worth spitting back
at that ship. Stiles felt his heart sink. He'd bought time, but
there was nothing more to do with it. He'd stopped them from
maneuvering in space-normal, but the CST couldn't get away
fast enough to take advantage.
    "Shoot," he ordered. "Fire at will, whatever we can throw at
them. At least we'll go out shooting."
    The CST's internal systems crackled and complained. His
men fired what little working phasers they had left. But they
weren't a starship--what could they do? Go over there and
rebuild the enemy to death?
    As Stiles watched the enemy ship on the screen, pursuing
them in fits and bursts with those clogged impulse tubes, he
knew that despite its falling behind they couldn't possibly out-
run its firepower.
    The whole main screen and two lateral ones--the two still
working--blasted bright white with incendiary drama. Stiles
crimped his eyes, but refused to close them. He wasn't going
to die with his eyes closed.
 Then he didn't die--couldn't even do that right.
    "Romulan bird-of-prey on our starboard stem!" Travis
called, horrified. "It's fired on that blue ship! It's driving them
off!"
    Spock bent over the science station. "Confirmed. Romulan
standard warbird... in battle mode."
 "Now what?" Zack cranked around. "Fire on that one too?"
 "No!" McCoy rasped.
    "Don't shoot!" Stiles countered at the same time. "Give me
ship to ship!"
 "You've got ship to ship."
    Stiles leaned over the arm of his command chair's comm.
"Dr, Crusher, I assume that's you inside that ugly thing."
    "It's me, Commander. Everyone all right? Mission accom-
plished, I hope?"
    "Accomplished so far, Doctor" He blinked at the bronze war
wing hovering on their flank. "Ugly or not, I'm glad to see that
big-eyed bug !"
    "It worked." Spock's announcement was reserved, but victo-
rious. "Enemy is moving off at emergency warp one on a
retreat vector."
    "They're moving off, Commander Stiles. What do you rec-
ommend we do? Chase them down?"
    Stiles sucked a long breath and heaved it out with a shudder.
"No, no, don't chase them. Let them go, Doctor. And... stand
by."
  "Standing by," Crusher acknowledged.
    "Do they show any signs of turning back?" he asked his
own crew.
 "None," Spock congratulated.
Jason's hands shook on his controls. "Think we beat 'era !"
Looking around the deck, Stiles had a hard time believing
they'd beaten anybody at all, considering all the wreckage and
mess and sparking components. He hadn't even noticed the
parts and pieces blowing around him and now cluttering the
deck. But the rush of victory was undeniable on the bruised
faces of his crew.
 "What's that whine?" somebody asked.
      "What whine?" Stiles wasn't even sure who asked, and
didn't hear anything at first. Then he did.
    "Transporter? Spock called over the noise that suddenly
filled the bridge.
    They pressed back, not knowing what was happening until a
band of energy crackled into formation in front of the helm
and coalesced into humanoid shape. As they stared in amaze-
ment, the sparkling form hardened into Orsova.
    Stiles opened his mouth to shout an order, but Orsova was
already moving, leaping like an attacking lion at Zevon. Stiles
didn't see a weapon until the last second before Orsova and

 Zevon's bodies collided. A flash of metal, as if he were watch-
 ing a scene from a swashbuckling movie--unmistakably a
 blade.
     For just a flash this made no sense--why would Orsova,
 who had at his disposal every weapon on a whole planet, use a
 blade?
    Sykora cried out some unintelligible protest, but Spock and
Travis managed to hold her back. Zack and Jeremy sprang
from their posts, dove forward over the helm and snatched at
Orsova's clothing. It took both of them to pry him off Zevon.
By then, Stiles was there.
    "Hold him back!" he shouted. He clutched Orsova's left
wrist and the metal weapon in it--some kind of spike, pol-
ished to a silk finish, with a wooden handle like an ice pick.
It's silver surface was spackled with Zevon's blood.
    As Jason Bolt joined the effort to hold Orsova, Stiles handed
the weapon to Travis and rushed to Zevon. He grasped Zevon
by both arms and held him up. Was he hurt? Was he dying?
    "Zevon?" Stiles held him and looked for a wound. He found
it under Zevon's right hand, pressed to his left side. Pulling
Zevon's hand away, Stiles cajoled, "Let me look, let me look."
    As Zevon stiflened in pain against him, he found the entry
wound, and blessedly an exit.
    "It's just a flesh wound, I think." Weakened by relief, he
grinned at Zevon. "You just got a good poke!"
    Fighting the shock of having been stabbed, seriously or not,
Zevon winced and nodded but couldn't manage to let go of
Stiles just yet.
    Stiles had other ideas. He twisted around and glared at
Orsova. "You missed, you filthy ox!"
    Orsova slammed an elbow into Jason Bolt and smacked
Zack in the face, driving him back. After that, though, he
didn't attack anybody, instead crossing to the port panel where
the long-range scanner was showing a clear picture of the con-
stellation ship getting smaller and smaller as it ran.
     "Voice! Voice, save me!" he cried. "Beam me away, Voice! I
did what you wanted! Where are you! Come for me! Voice!"
 But nobody came to rescue him.
 "Pathetic," Stiles commented.

    Apparently just now realizing he was in deep trouble, Orso-
va cranked around and glared as if trapped in a box. He could
do nothing as Stiles closed on him, pressed his fingers into the
flesh at Orsova's throat, backed him tight up against the port-
side scanner panel. "I was afraid of you? You're just a quiver-
ing little coward when you're standing alone, aren't you?"
    "You better not hurt me!" Orsova pressed backward against
the panel. "The Voice is coming back for me!"
    "Not soon enough." Letting loose a dozen years of frustra-
tion-and even anger at himself, that he'd been haunted for a
third of his life by the face now crimping before him Stiles
bent Orsova back over the panel until he could push no more.
Orsova choked and gagged as Stiles's knuckles kneaded into
his throat.
    As Orsova's face flushed from copper to almost beet red
with strain, quite abruptly, even absurdly, the satisfaction
meter began to fall. Stiles glared into the hated face, saw the
panic and desperation, and snarled as if looking into a garbage
pit.
 But he stopped pushing. He even let go a little.
    "Damn," he uttered. "You're just a toothache! You're not
even worth hitting!"
    To the obvious amazement of everybody around him, he
pulled Orsova back to his feet and let him reel.
    Stiles found himself strangely amused and pleased at Orso-
va's pitiful display. Over there, Travis was smiling at him in
some kind of ironic pride. That felt good.
    Shaking his head, he leaned one hip against the helm and
commented, "At least I was worth beating up!"
    His crewmen rewarded him with a laugh and a round of
applause that made him feel like--well, like royalty.
    "Just stay there, you puscup;' he said to Orsova. "You're as
imprisoned as I was. Dr. McCoy, would you have a look at
Zevon, please? Zack, escort the doctor around the other side of
the helm, away from this mulchy moron."
    Playing out his win, he freely turned his back on Orsova as
if his former guard were hardly more than a bug on the wall.
For the fast time, he turned his back on his greatest fear, the
ghost of all his nights, and completely dismissed him.
    He turned instead to Zevon, as Dr. McCoy probed the
Romulan's wound. "How is he?"
    "Superficial," the elderly doctor confirmed. "Hardly raising
a welt. Punched through the skin, scored the intestines--no
ruptures, though. Let me have a better look...."
    He drew around his medical tricorder and a scanner and
started taking readings.
    "All right, Zevon," Stiles began firmly, "you can have what
you want. In fact, you can have more than you want. I'm going
to take you back to that stupid planet and dump you there with
your wife, just like you want. And then I'm coming back into
space and demonstrate to you exactly what a Federation prom-
ise means." Leaning forward with theatrical flair, he an-
nounced, "I'm going to build your barricade." 
"You, yourself?." Zevon challenged.
    From the other side of the bridge, Sykora gasped, "Zevon,
can he do it?"
    "NOV' Her husband flinched as McCoy scanned him. "He
certainly cannot possibly do it. The barricade needs raw mate-
rials, infrastructure, parts, support--.Federation interest will
fade before the barricade is built."
 "It*s not going to fade," Stiles boasted. "I won't let it."
    Zevon gazed at him in something like disappointment. "And
you have so much influence, Eric?"
    "I don't need influence. I have a CST" Stiles swept his hand
wide to illustrate the ship around him, and the suddenly proud
crew. "We can build it. A combat support tender is a movable
starbase, a flying factory!"
    "Of course!" Spock breathed. Even he hadn't thought of it,
and that gave Stiles a particular zing of pleasure.
    "Impossible," Zevon argued. He pointed at Spock, but spoke
to Stiles. "You're saying this to get what he wants, because
you worship him!"
    A rumble of frustration rose in Stiles throat. Better let that
one go. "My crew is packed with trained technicians,
mechanics, and engineers. We can build almost anything,
darned near anywhere, all by ourselves. And even though
you're refusing to help us, we're going to go back there and
build it."

Zevon squinted with doubt. "But we have no treaty!
Starfleet will not give you permission--"
    "I don't need permission," Stiles recklessly sparked. "I'm
not even going to ask for it. And on top of that, I'm going to
use a few other resources available to me right here and now.
For instance, Dr. McCoy over there is going to treat whatever's
making your wife sick. 1 don't have to let him do that, y'see,
because I'm in command here and he has to do what 1 say. But
I'm going to tell him to do that anyway, Zevon, because not
everything in life is a tradeoff. And then we're going to fly
away and leave you alone with your planet and your wife and
your barricade, and we'll see if you can forget who did for you
what you couldn't do for yourselves." He jabbed Zevon in the
arm. "You and everybody on that stupid planet are going to
find out what real freedom means."
    Across the bridge, Ambassador Spock settled back against
the science station and looped his arms into that casual appre-
ciative fold that Stiles had seen so many times on the historical
tapes. Stiles got a rush of delight at seeing Spock fold his arms
like that, right here on Stiles's bridge, just as if he liked being
here.
    Astonished, Zevon could do notlfing but stare at him with a
thousand emotions pushing at him. Stiles did not turn away
from that gaze, determined to show that nothing would stop
him from doing what he said he could do, exercising both the
power of his command and the industrial might of his ship.
    Dr. McCoy looked up then, and clicked off his medical tri-
corder. His face was stiff, his voice rough.
    "He's not going to find out any time soon. There must're
been something on the spike." He looked first at Stiles, then at
Spock. "It's all over, gentlemen. He's infected."

Chapter Twenty-five

McCoY's WORDS SHOOK STILES to the bone. Spock too, he
could tell, was inexpressibly disturbed. Only seeing the worry
on his ido!'s face caused Stiles to finally absorb just how rare
Zevon's uncontaminated blood had been to them all. What
would come now? Decades of instability in the galaxy? The
suction of a collapsing empire on the Federation's doorstep?
Endless struggles and endless repairs, so ships and crews could
go back into more endless struggles?
    "Call Dr. Crusher to beam over here," McCoy tersely said.
"I want a corroborating opinion. Not that it'll change a god-
damn thing...."
    Wordless, his throat too tight to make a sound, Stiles nodded
the order over to Travis, who spoke into his comm. "Dr.
Crusher, would you beam over please? Dr. McCoy's request."
  "Acknowledged. One moment."
    The bridge fell to silence. Except for the snapping of electri-
cal systems that had been violated, there was hardly a sound.
The squawk of the transporter beam sent a ripple up every
spine. Soon Dr. Beverly Crusher stood right there on the
bridge, providing a mere haze of hope. But nobody here doubt-
ed Leonard McCoy's diagnosis, not for a moment.

    The elegant lady doctor looked around, noted everybody,
including the only two Romulans, hesitated briefly over Syko-
ra, then silently concluded that Zevon was the only one who
could be the person they'd come here for.
    "I think we're too late," McCoy told her in a funereal tone.
"Doublecheck me, will you?"
    Crusher kept control over her expression, connect-
ing momentarily with Spock as she stepped across the
bridge to Zevon and ran her reed scanner over him. Then she
brought up her own tricorder and compared notes with what-
ever she had collected while she was gone in Romulan
space.
    Stiles watched her, worried. Over the doctor's shoulder,
Zevon's fearful eyes met his. He stepped to Zevon's side, as if
he'd never left, as if his presence alone could protect Zevon
from the scourge that was apparently inevitable.
    Dr. Crusher shook her head. "It's spreading fast. In forty or
fifty seconds, he'll be completely contmninated. How did this
happen out here in the middle of nowhere?"
    "Hah!" On the other side of the bridge, Orsova bellowed
with joy. "You see? You lose! Your civilization will fall
apart now! The Voice is coming! You lose now! You can't
hurt me now! I'm going to be governor of the sector! I won!
I won!"
    As retorts reeled in his head, Stiles turned toward his old
tormenter. Never got the chance, though.
    Sykora, until now still fazed by the effects of the stun, came
very sharply and dangerously to life. She shoved Travis harsh-
ly off his balance and snatched the bloody spike from his hand.
As if shot from a cannon, she streaked to Orsova. Before any-
one could think of stopping her, she drove the spike through
Orsova's neck with a disgusting pop and a faint crunch of shat-
tered bone.
    At Stiles's side, Zevon gasped and jolted with shock, but
made no move toward his wife. She was an imperial subcom-
mander, after all.
    Orsova gurgled as frothy blood welled up into his mouth
and he clasped at his demolished throat with both hands,
blinked in surprise, then couldn't suck another breath. No one
offered to cushion his collapse onto the deck. There, in a pud-
dle of his own fluids, he died. Just like that. Over.
    And Stiles was glad. And he didn't feel ashamed of it either.
He promised himself he never would. There were more appro-
priate things in the galaxy to feel bad about.
    Even the sight of Orsova bleeding on the deck couldn't raise
the pall that suddenly descended on the bridge. They'd failed.
After all this.
    Dr. Crusher huffed in frustration. "He's right. He won. We
don't have any more alternatives for this mutant doomsday
virus. We can't even get the empress back to her home in time
for her to die in her own bed." Angry, she stuffed her med
scanner back in its case and looked snappishly at Dr. McCoy.
"Unless you've got a rabbit to pull out of your hat, we're
skunked."
    "What do you take me for?" McCoy spread his amls and
crowed, "I'm going to stop this venom campaign if it's the last
thing I do--and at the age of a hundred and thirty-odd, every-
thing I do could be the last thing I do."
    "You've got something?" Spock stepped to him. "Another
uninfected royal family member?"
    Invigorated, Stiles pointed at Sykora and blurted, "It's her,
isn't it? I should've known! It's got to be her! Did he marry his
own cousin or something?"
    "No, he didn't," McCoy denied. "I told you the truth. She's
got no royal family blood at all. Not even close. She's peasant
stock if I ever saw it. Couldn't be infected if she took a bath
in that toxin. But I've got something even better." He looked
at Crusher with a winning expression. "You know what they
say... fetal-cord blood is about twenty times more potent
than the ordinary vein stuff. I won't even have to wake the lit-
tle fella up."
    Suddenly the center of attention, Sykora eyed the doctors,
then her husband, then Stiles. "What does he mean?"
 "You're pregnant, that's what!" McCoy announced.
    "You knew?" Stiles accused McCoy as both Sykora and
Zevon gawked in undeniable surprise. "You knew that and you
still let Zevon be a target for assassination? A decoy?"
    "Well, of course!" The elderly doctor nodded proudly.
"After the first eight or nine decades, you learn to keep your
mouth shut. Now, I know what you should name him, y'see.
You've got to pick something flashy and unique. Leonard
James Eric Spock Beverly Saskatoon the First. He'll be the
only one of his kind. You won't regret it. Wanna see it written
down? Hey, kid, got a pen?"

Epilogue

THE CRAMPED LITTLE SICKBAY on board the Saskatoon had
never seen so much fame. Over a matter of a couple of days,
the midsection of a combat support tender had become the
center of the universe. Starfleet's Lord High Oracle Leonard
Mceoy and its state-of-the-art shamanness Beverly Crusher
were collaborating with every medical facility within comm
range. The first several attempts at synthesizing a serum failed,
but only by tiny fractions. Gradually the fractions became
smaller, and hope swelled.
    Busy as he was with construction, Stiles broke away from
his crew on the evening of the second day, and with an admit-
ted rush of nerves went to check on Zevon's progress.
    Zevon lay on the portable diagnostic couch that McCoy had
ordered brought in. He was clearly in some pain from whatev-
er treatments the doctors were giving him. Sykora was at his
side. She hadn't been able to leave the chamber all this time.
After all, she was the center of the center of the universe.
    In the small sickbay, Dr. Crusher was bending over a cache
of tubes, vials, beakers, microprocessors, and analytical equip-
ment they'd had shipped in. Engrossed in her work, she didn't
even look up when Stiles came in.


    McCoy hovered nearby, peering at a colored liquid in a test
tube.
    Stiles felt he was interrupting something private as he crone
to Zevon's side, opposite Sykora, and fielded the obstinate
woman's glare, still loaded with suspicion. Oh, well, couldn't
win everything at once.
    Pressing a hand to Zevon's shoulder, he gained his old
friend's attention through the blur of pain.
 "Hey, lightfoot," he greeted. "You all right?"
    "Oh, Eric," Zevon moaned. "I think I would rather get the
plague and die than deal with the cure .... "
    A smile of empathy broke on Stiles's face. "No, no, you've
got your orders. Get better or face the consequences. You don't
want the vindictive captain to find out."
    "If only... he were vindictive enough to... put me out of
this misery...."
    "Not much longer," McCoy said. "Don't make me break out
my hip-pocket psychiatry, boy. I'm whuppin' a dragon here."
    Even through his discomfort, Zevon managed a smile. Stiles
tightened his grip in silent reassurance.
    He tried to come up with something more to say but was
rescued when Ambassador Spock stepped in over the hatch
coaming.
    "Mr. Stiles, I thought you might be here," Spock said with
not particularly well-veiled contentment.
    Stiles instantly saw the undercurrent of success and asked,
"How does it look, sir?"
    His face expressive in defiance of legend--Spock spoke
almost merrily. "Looks quite well. Your defiant declaration has
stirred the resting spirits at Starfleet Command."
    "They're not going to challenge me or throw me in a brig or
anything?"
    "Hardly. The admiralty has a longstanding policy, albeit
unspoken, of backing up their captains' flares of caprice.
Admiral Douglas Prothero has offered the Zebra-Tango Divi-
sion of the Starfleet Corps of Engineers and the services of the
Industrial Trawler True North to assist the Saskatoon in build-
ing the spaceborne Constrictor barricade. Within a matter of
months, the waves will go from deadly to harmless." He turned
to Zevon and Sykora, amicably adding, "Your planet will final-
ly be safe."
    Battling a rush of deep emotion, Zevon gripped Sykora's
hand and took a few moments to gather himself. "I will go
before the Pojjana people" he offered, "and convince them of
the Federation's integrity. I can do that... they will believe
me ."
    "Such a collaboration" Spock said, "will give Starfleet the
leverage to stabilize the sector and declare it ~een."
     With both admiration and suspicion, Stiles quipped, "But
you didn't have anything to do with that, I'll bet."
 "Nothing at all;' Spock loftily claimed.
 Stiles grinned. "Thanks."
"You're very welcome. And how is construction going?"
"Oh, we've had to modify Zevon's diagrams a few times.
Luckily, we're an innovative pack of wolves. Sir, might I say a
few things? They're kind of... personal."
    Spock seemed a little surprised. "Would you like to speak in
private?"
    "No, I'm not embarrassed anymore. I just wanted to thank
you, for everything, past and present. You had faith in me that I
didn't have in myself. I'll believe in myself as I am, as I can
be--not as my father or my ~andfather or Starfleet thought I
should be. I'll believe in the Federation, as long as people like
you are speaking for it. And I'll never forget something else
you taught me. Probably the most important thing."
    Spock's dark eyes glowed. It seemed he knew. But he asked
anyway. "What would that be?"
    As he gazed at his friends both new and old, Stiles absorbed
the value of this moment and swore to himseft that he would
never forget.
 "Freedom is never free," he said.











