STAR TREK LOG ONE Alan Dean Foster STAR TREK The show that would not die . . . Back in 1966 Gene Roddenberry convinced NBC-TV to give sophisticated science fiction a try, and Star Trek was launched. Getting the show on the air was a triumph in itself; keeping it on the air was something else again. Toward the end of the second season there were rumors of impending cancellation. Viewers passionately devoted to the series deluged the network with letters of protest. Loyal fans picketed NBC'S offices both in California and New York. The Save Star Trek Campaign one of the most phenomenal expressions of viewer interest in the history of tv worked. So Star Trek was back on the air for a third season. Alas, however, many factors combined to lower the program's ratings, giving the network the ammunition it needed to cancel the series. But still the fans wanted more . . . Books about Star Trek were published, each one selling hundreds of thousands of copies to the faithful. Star Trek conventions all over the country attracted thousands of fans. YOU CAN GO HOME AGAIN... Spock's voice as he addressed the Guardian was clear and precise: "I wish to visit the planet of Vulcan." "TIME?" rumbled the Guardian. "Thirty Vulcan years past, the month of Tasmeen, before before the twentieth day." "LOCATION?" "Just outside the border city of ShiKahr." By way of reply, the pastel mists that filled the circular Gate started to swirl and boil, until the blur of time pictures began to steady as the Guardian locked in to the requested time line. Then, abruptly, the Gate was filled with a view so familiar to Spock that it immediately relaxed all inner tensions. A hot, dry, orange world Vulcan! "TIME AND PLACE," the Guardian shouted, "ARE READY TO RECEIVE Y." Suddenly Spock was running, running forward . . . and he took that short, final leap into the time portal . . . STAR TREK LOG ONE Alan Dean Foster Based on the Popular Series Created by Gene Roddenberry A Del Rey Book BALLANTINE BOOKS tilde NEW YORK A Del Rey Book Published by Ballantine Books Copyright A) 1974 by Paramount Pictures Corporation All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Ballantine Books of Canada, Ltd., Toronto, Canada Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 74-8477 ISBN 0-345-25042-7-150 Manufactured in the United States of America First Edition: June 1974 Fourteenth Printing: May 1977 Cover art by Stanislaw Fernandes CONTENTS PART I Beyond the Farthest Star 1 PART 11 Yesteryear 71 PART 111 One of Our Planets is Missing137 STAR TREK LOG ONE Log of the Shrship Enferprise Stardates 5321 -- 5380 Inclusive James T. Kirk, Capt., USSC, FS, ret. Commanding transcribed by Alan Dean Foster At the Galactic Historical Archives on S. Monicus I stardated 61 10.5 For the Curator: JLETTER PART I BEYOND THE FARTHEST STAR lAdaPted from c" scrips by Samuel A. Peeples) Veil of stars. Veil of crystal. On the small viewscreenthe image of the Milky Way glittered like powdered sugar fused to black velvet. Here in the privacy of the captain's cabin on board the Enterprise, James T. Kirk had at fingertip's call all the computerized resources of an expandineae. organized galactic Federation in taped and microfilmed form. Art, music, painting, sculpture, kinetologv, science history, philoso- phy the memory banks of the great starship held enough material to satiate the mind of anv civilised being. Satisfy and fulfill him whether in the mood for matters profound or trivial, fleeting or permanent, whether curious about the developments of yesterday or those as old as time itself. Yet, now, in this particular off-hour, the man responsible for guiding the Enterprise safely through the multitude of known hazards and an infinitude of imagined ones that lay strewn throughout space when he could have devoted his thoughts to little things of no importance and rested his mind chose instead to study a smaller though no less awesome version of the same scene he was compelled to view so many times from the commander's chair on the bridge of the starship. His eyes strayed idly to the lower corner of the screen. Gossamer thin threads of crimson and azure marked a spectacular nebula of recent origin the flaming headstone marking the grave of some long vanished star, perhaps 3 4 STAR TREK LOG ONE marking also a cemetery for a great, doomed civilisation, caught helpless when its sun exploded. Men m his position who would have deliberately chosen to observe such a sight fell into three categories. Pirst were those for whom natural creation was too small Men who found universes of greater magmtude within artists, poets, landscapers and dreamers of hologram plays, sculptors in metal and stone and wood. The second group would be that now dwindling but still sizable number of individuals who also looked inward but whose gaze was forever out of focus the catatonic, the insane, the mad . . . The third and last asssemblage fell somewhere in between, not quite artists, not quite mad. These were the men and women who forsook the solidity of Barth, gave up the certain knowledge of a definite sky overhead and Inarguable ground underfoot, to ply the emptiness between the stars. Starship personnel. James T. Kirk was a captain among such, a leader of this kind which made him, depending on which extreme you tended toward, either a frustrated artist or a wellcomposed madman. He sighed and rolled over on the bed, temporarily trading the pocket-view of infinity for the cool, pale blue of the preformed cabin ceiling. A visit to the Time Planet, where all the time lines of this galaxy converged and who knew, perhaps those of others as well, for men knew nothing of other galaxies except what little they could see through their attenuated glass eyes was their present assignment. A pity that time lines did not choose to make themselves visible to man's puny instruments of detection. Only one race had found that secret. It hadn't saved them. A visit to the Time Planet was always interesting. That wasn't its designated name, of course. But popular conceptions had a way of overwhelming scientific notation. He smiled slightly. There were enough new shocks, enough running discoveries taking place every time a new section of space was charted to cause the once unbeliev STAR TREK LOG ONE 5 able Time Planet to recede into the land of the commonplace. Kirk was a starship captain, not a historian. So his prime interest in the Time Planet was from the standpoint of its curious chemistry and even more curious physics. The trip promised to be at least as interesting as previous ones. But it was no longer possessed of that special thrill. The remarkable view of the Milky Way in the tiny screen was as complete a portrait of the galaxy as anyone was ever likely to see. Few probes, even unmanned ones, had flown further outside the galactic rim than the Enterprise was now speeding. Starships were too expensive to operate and too scattered for Starfleet Command to waste them on, say, just convoying experiments from world to world. That's why the Enterprise had swung wider than its best course to the Time Planet, to enable it to take readings and star-map this section of the galaxy's fringe; Kirk flipped a switch on the tiny console by the bed and was rewarded with the view out the starboard side of the shipcoma view of almost unrelieved blackness. Here and there were tiny dots of luminescence, dots which were not individual stars, but rather distant galaxies some vaster, some more modest than our own. Thoughts uncommon to most men raced through the deepest pools of his mind as he contemplated that yawning, frightening intergalactic pit. Someday, he mused, someday we'll have engines that won't burn out at warpmaximum eight or nine. Someday we'll have engines capable of driving a ship at warp ninety, or even warp nine hundred. Someday. Of course, the spatial engineers and physicists were agreed that it was impossible for any form of matter to travel faster than warp nine. Kirk thought that this belief was simply a modern superstition. It had also been said that man would never be able to fly or, wonder of wonders, exceed the speed of light. An inship communicator buzzed insistently for attention. Again. Kirk looked at it irritably, then remembered that he'd blocked off the channel. IQ effect, he'd hung out 6 STAR TRBI-THAT LOG ONB a Do Not Disturb sign. He sat up and rubbed his eyes. There was nothing for it but to answer. There vrere only two men on the starship who were on permanet, round-the-clock call. Doctor McCoy was one. He was the other. He opened the channel. "Kirk here." "Spock, Captain." It was only a trick of aural mechanics, true, but somehow the monotone of his assistant commander seemed less distorted by intervening kilometers of solid-and fluid-state circuitry than the voice of anyone else on board. No, not completely monotone for now he heard a definite hint of puzzlement in Spock's tone. "Captain, I hate to bother you dunag your rest period, but we have encountered what appears to be a unique and extremeb peculiar situation his That woke Kim up. "An extremely peculiar situation" to Spock could be anything from just mildly serious at best to imminent disaster at worst. "Be Aght up, Mr. Spock." He flipped the switch off, threw on his captain's tunic, dilated the door, and headed for the badge double-quick. Behind him, the miniature glowing panorama of the intergalactic gulf, forgotten, patiently awaited his return. The elevator paused once, at Bedeck, where Spock joined him. At the same time, the lights in the lift car and in the disappearing corridor beyond began to flicker. An an too familiar uneven yowling sounded. "'General Alarm." He looked at Spock, who replied to the unasked question. "Lieutenant Commander Scott should be the officer of the deck, I believe." "tilde Why didn't he call me direct?"'" ""He did not say, Captain. But I think, if I interpret Mr. Scott's actions correctly, that he did not feel qualified to interrupt the Captain's rest period for a phenomenon of as get undefinable proportions. He left that up to me." Kirk considered that as the lift halted once more at the last level below the bridge. Dr. McCoy joined them. "Jim . . . Spock . . . what's happening?" STAR TREK ONE 7 Hiswere' don't know yet, Bones," Kirk said honestly. 44allyou know as much as we do. Something that SCOKY felt strongly enough about to sound the general alarm for." Seconds later the doors split, and the three walked onto the bridge. Helmsman Sulu was working busily at the navigation station. Uhura glanced back and forth between her communications console and Sulu. And from the engineering station, SCOK looked up at their arrival and let out a visible sigh of relied "Glad to see you, Captain. I wasn't ready for makin" too many more decisions. Not considerin' the nature of this thing, whatever it is." Spock went directly to his library computer seat the control station for the brain and nervous system of the Enterprise. As Kirk took his own place in the command chair, he noted that the alarm system was still sounding its howling warning. "That's enough noise, Mr. Sulu." Sulu nodded. Lights and alarm returned to normal status. '4Situation, Mr. SCOK?" Kirk was already studying the projected vector-grid Sulu had thrown up on the main screen. In a lower righthand quadrant, the white dot of the Enterprise was moving rapidly centerward too rapidly, Kirk thought. He envied the old sea captains of learns ancient days, when a vessel's energy came only from the blowing winds, envied a skipper who could feel a change in his ship's speed through his feet. Out here in black, uncaring vacuum, there was nothing to push against, nothing to feel against you. Compared to a rambunctious sea or strong gale, artificial gravity was a poor stimulant. Man's senses only operated here artificially, through enormous mechanical amplification and the only waves one could get the feel of were in wave mechanics. '4We've picked up speed, sir," informed Scott, confirming Kirk's analysis of the situation depicted on the screen. '4A great deal of speed!" "Cut back, then, Scotty." "I've already done so, sir cut back twice but we continue to gain momentum!" 8 STAR TREK LOG ONE "Now don't get excited, Mr. Scott was The question had to be asked, despite any damage that might incur to the engineer's pride. was but have you checked your instlucom mentation?" "Aye, Captain, checked, and triple-checked. I'd prefer the instrumentation were off, than to have to proceed with these readings. No sir, the information is correct." He gestured in the direction of the vector-equals do. Kirk swiveled slightly in the chair. "Mr. Sulu?" If anything, Sulu's expression was twice as worried and half again as uncertain as the chief engineer's. "She's not answering the helm, sirl We're was he paused to check his own readouts, was two minutes right ascension off course." He hammered at the stubborn controls in front of him, as if that might have some naturalising effect on the incredible information coming in. "And drifting farther off every second, sir." "Mr. Spock." "Captain?" "tilde Do me an in tilde epth computer-library scan on all Icuown major stellar bodies in this fringe sector." "Yes, Captain." "And put it up on the big screen when it's ready." There was a brief, quiet pause. Nothing moved on the bridge except the white dot of the Enterprise on the viewscreen. Then the vector-grid was replaced by another, an overlay star-map. Or rather, part of the grid was replaced. Thre tilde quarters of the screen did not light up with the light blue of completed mappings. It remained maddeningly blank except for one large word in yellow, a word Kirk had almost expected to see. IINB equals LORE-LDo A second later, information appeared beneath this first disappointing word in the form of the legend. To Be Mapped No Accurate Data Currently I bailable. "That's what I thought, Mr. Spock. But there was a chance. Information comes into Starfleet's banks so fast these days." "Evidently not fast enough, Captain." "No. Not fast enough. That'll do, Spock." STAR TREE:: ONE 9 The uninformative star-map overlay blanked out and the vector-grid dominated the entire screen once more. "Captain?" The call came from the rear of the bridge. "Yes, Uhura"...9" She seemed confused. "iCaptain, I've been picking up strong, but very strange radio emissions for the past two hours. Both source and direction were at first far to the right plane of our course. But since our position has been shifting the source of emission and the course of the En" terprife are lining up." Kirk considered this piece of news. It was not especially foreboding. Not yet, anyway. "All right, Uhura, I'll keep it in mind." He looked back at the screen. "At least there's something out there." The white pinpoint continued to move purposefully across the grid, drawn by ... what? He could reach out with a forefinger and blot the great starship from view. At the same time he reached a decision. While whatever was pulling them off course had shown nothing that could be definitely interpreted as a hostile action it was probably a natural phenomenon anyway it still behooved them to put up some form of resistance. "Mr. Sulu, stand by to back engines." "Standing by, sir." Sulu divided his attention between the screen and his bank of controls. "Back engines." The helmsman's hands moved over the navigation console, flipped a last lamb 180 degrees. A slight far traveled through the bridge, followed by a distant but distinct rumbling. Everyone made an instinctive grab for the nearest solid object. But only the c light jar gave evidence of the tremendous stresses operating on the starship. Kirlc stared at the vector-grid intently. The white dot slowed perceptibly, slowed ... but continued on its new path, moving inexorably forward. "Mr. Spock," Kirk demanded, "have you got anything yet?" We'd operate a hellova lot more effectively if we had some idea of what we revere up against, Kirk thought. Spock had remained glued to the hooded viewer of the computer readout. Now he looked up and over at the captain's position. 10 STAR TREK ONE "At this point, Captain, I can only say we are headed toward an unknown object probably natural, probably of at least planetary mass that is generating a remarkable amount of hyper-gravity. Hyper-gravity more concentrated than any we have ever encountered." "Well, if there's something like that out there," and Kirk gestured at the screen, "that can put out that kind of pull plus radio emissions, why aren't our evaluative sensors picking it up?" He rolled his fingers against one leg. "Open the forward scanners all the way, Mr. Sulu, and close off everything else. Divert all sensor power forward." "All of it, sir?" "All of it." There was a moment's rush of activity as Sulu hurried to comply with the order. It left them uncomfortably vulnerable to anything that might choose to sneak up on the ship from any direction but ahead. But what could be sneaking around, out here on the galaxy rim? The screen flickered. The vector-grid vanished. l3'ctending from the left side of the screen two-thirds of the way across now was the outermost arm of the Milky Way. A distant, ethereal packing of rainbow-hued dust. The other third, except for a few scattered, lonely spots of brilliance, was black with the blackness of the intergalactic abyss. But iDo the confer of the screen . . . ID the center, something was taking a smooth, crescent-shaped bite out of the Lowing star-mist that formed the arm. Something spherical, small but growing. A globe of nothingness that was obscuring star after star. No, not entirely nothing. now. As they moved nearer, a distant, faint flint gave evidence of a solid surface. Pascinated, Kirk and the rest of the bridge personnel stared at the unknown, dark wanderer. They tried to define, pin down, regulaffize its maddeningly elusive silhouette. Uhura finally broke the silence. "Captain, that's definitely the source of the emissions. They've changed considerably since I first detected them. And they've also grown much stronger since we've moved close." "Pipe them over the communicators, Uhura. Don't keep it a secret." STAR TREK LOG ONB 1 1 She hit a single control. Immediately the bridge was filled with a shrill, piercing electronic hum. She smiled apologetically and reduced the deafening volume. As the sound became bearable one thing was instantly obvious to the lowliest ensign. That whine was too wild, too powerful to come from an artificial source. It was as natural an extrusion of the object ahead as a solar prominence or a man's arm. It was definitely At the product of a constructed beacon or station. Everyone listened to the alien hum as the outline on the viewscreen continued to grow, eating away at the distant star-field. "Mr. Scott, ready your engineers for a maximum effort." "Aye, sir." Scott turned to his direct line back to englneering. "Davis, Gradner, get off your cuffs! The captain's going to be wantin" some work out "o ye in a moment his "Mr. Sulu," Kirk continued, "stay on these back en- gines." "Yes, sir." "Mr. Spock," and Kirk tried not to sound desperate, "anything yet?" "Sir, I've had the computers working since we first ens tered the peculiar gravity-well, but I hesitated to offer an opinion on preliminary sensor data alone. Now that we have achieved visual confirmation, I no longer hesitate." Spock's eyebrows shot way up, which surprised Kirk For Spock that was an expression of astonishment equivalent to an audible gasp from a human. Something unique was surely in the of fflng. 'It is a negative star-mass, Captain, Spectroanalysis confirms finally ninety-seven point eight percent probability that the object ahead of us is composed of imploded matter. Every reading on material composition records in the negative." "Great! That means we're headed toward an immensely powerful aggregation of nothing?" "That is rather more colloquial than I should put it, Captain, but it is effectively descriptive." 12 STAR TREK LOG OF Sulu chose that moment to interrupt with additional happy news. "Captain, our speed is increasing agl" That did it. "All engines, full reverse thrust!" There was a long pause as another jar and a following rumble ran through the Enterpnse. Then Sulu looked up from the helm. He didn't appear panicked he was too good an officer for that but he was clearly worried. "It's no good, sir, we're stiDo faring toward it." "Mr. Scott," said Kirk tightly, 'hvhat's the matter with those engines of yours?" "There's nothin" wrong with the engines, sir," the chief engineer replied evenly. "They're coin' their best, sir, but they're badly overmatched. They're designed to push ... not puBut against a gravity-well as deep as this! I'm not sure we could pus free now if we had ten times the power." Kirk looked back at the screen, where the negative stellar mass now an but fined the forward view. blotting out the last visible stars. With the decreased distance, more of the surface had become visible. Dull black in color, it was pockmarked with ancient craters uneven and clearly, inarguably dead. Occasionally a startlingly bright bolt of electrical energy would arc between high points on the surface, leaping from crag to crag like a stone skipping over a pond. To be visible at such a distance the bolts must have been enormous. "How much time do we have?" Spock replied easily, evenly, without looking away from his viewer. "impact in ninety-three seconds, Captain. Ninety-two . . . ninety-one. . ." Stunned silence suddenly filled the bridge. It had all happened so fast. One minute they revere in minor difficulty, experiencing some strange, slight course defection, and then No one saw the strange expression come over Uhura's face. She flicked a long nail against one earphone, then the other. No, the instruments were working properly, an right "Captain, I'm picking up a new signal. Listen." She moved delicate fingers over the console. The drone of the dead star filled the bridge. But sound STAR TREK LOO ONB 13 ing over it now was a second, distinct whine, almost a wailing cry. More importantly, the sound was clearly modulated, obviously emanating from an artificial source. It faded in and out at lonely, regular intervals. "Forty seconds, Captain," intoned Spock. For all the excitement he exhibited he might as well have been reciting the time left on a baking cake. " -- irty-nine . . . thirty-eight . . .?? Inside, Kirk was fuming. Time, time . . . I They couldn't go forward and they couldn't go back. That left . . . "Mr. Sulu!"? he barked abruptly. "Flank speed ahead! Declension thirty degrees." "Ahead, sir?" "MOVE IT, MR. SULU!" The helmsman moved. Maybe the hyper-gravity helped. "We've got one chance at this point. That's to make a safe orbit. After that? we can figure out a way to break away at our leisure. I need more than thirty seconds for that." Sulu moved rapidly at the controls. His body became a soft, fleshy extension of the Enterprises navigation system. Like Aladdin, he had only to present his wishes in comprehensible form and the electronic genie would handle the details. But would it have enough ability to counter the titanic black demon sucking them forward to destruction? Kirk stared at the screen? now wholly occupied by the shape of the dead star. E their bid for orbit failed? no one would ever know it. The death of the Enterprise wouldn't even be recorded by an idle astronomer on some distant planet as a tiny flash in far space. The massive gravity-well of the negative mass would swallow light as well as life. ""Nine seconds," came Spock's calm voice. Only a slight rise in pitch betrayed any hint of anxiety, excitement. "Eight....seven...." It was absurd Kirk thought, holding tightly to the command chair! That wouldn't prolong his life by the minutest fraction of a second. But his hands continued to grip the unyielding metal nonetheless. An electrical discharge thousands of kilometers in 14 STAR TREK LOG ONE length lit the screen for an instant, impossibly close. Then, it was gone and so was the blackness. Ahead once again lay the friendly, fluorescing mists of the galaxy, and the honest darkness of open space. But Kirk knew this vision of escape was illusory. A second later Sulu confirmed it. "No breakaway, Captain. but insertion accomplished." He sighed in visible relief. "Details of orbit to follow. Well have a low perigee, damn low, but was he smiled, "not low enough to drop us out of orbit." "Praise the Lord and pass the ammunition!" called Scott. "I beg your pardon, Mr. Scott?" "Nothin", Spock, nothin'." "I beg your pardon again, Mr. Scott, but you definitely said something, not nothing." Scott gave him a pained look, and Spock suddenly comprehended. "Ah, I see. The use of nonreferential archaic terminology served to audibilize the otherwise inexpressable emotions you felt at the moment." "So would a punch in the scoot, pointy-ears!" warned the chief engineer. "Is that a further audibilization?" Kirk looked away so they wouldn't see the broad grin spreading across his face. "Give up, Mr. Scott, you're fighting a losing battle." "Aye, Captain," acknowledged Scott disgustedly. "I've an easier time communicatin' with a number-four automatic welder!" Then he too smiled, but only briefly. Current thoughts were too serious. "Speakin' of which, Captain, if eve don't need the power right now, it'd be a good thing for the engines to go on minimum, aver all the time they spent puttin' out maximum reverse thrust." "Yes, of course, Scotty. Mr. Sulu, compute the minimum drive we need to hold this orbit without falling and feed the data to Mr. Scott for issuance to engineering." "Yes, sir." Moments later, "Ready, sir." "Fine, Lieutenant. Now activate rear scanners and put our stern towards the mass." There was a wait while the view in the big screen STAR TREK LOG ONB IS seemed to rotate. Actually it was the ship that was changing position and not the universe. The star-field was gradually replaced by a fresh picture, a view of the ebony sphere turning slowly below them. "Mr. Spock, final orbit confirmation?" "We are holding this orbital configuration easily, Captain. Effectively standoff has been achieved." "Good. Steady as she goes, then, Mr. Sulu." "Aye, aye, sir." The lieutenant couldn't keep an admiring tone from creeping into his voice. Kirk glanced away, slightly embarrassed. Dr. McCoy observed the captain's reaction and grinned. No one had noticed his arrival on the bridge. They had all been, to say the least, otherwise occupied. For his part, McCoy had kept quiet. He had had nothing to say that could have been of any help, and the situation when he had arrived called for anything but a dose of his dry wit. Now, however, some idle conversation might have its therapeutic values. He had a degree in that, as well as in medicine. "If its pull is so strong, Jim, how do we ever break out of its grip?" "What? Oh, hello, Bones." Kirk turned his chair a little. "One thing at a time. If we'd known Neat we were heading for soon enough, I'd have at least tried a cometary orbit. But by the time we knew for sure what we were up against, it was too late." He looked over at the library console. "But you're right it's a question we'll have to deal with eventually. How about a slingshot effect, Mr. Spock? Have we got enough popover to break out at the last sew and? We can run on maximum overdrive for the necessary time. We'll have to dive as close as possible to the surface before pulling out, to make maximum use of the gravity-well's catapulting power. If we don't make it, we'll end up so many odd-sized blobs on the surface. Don't for- get, Bones, it's attractive force increases exponentially as we near the actual surface." Spock didn't answer the opening query right away, instead stayed bent over the viewer and continued to work. 16 STAR TREK ONE "You'll need some time for the computations to go through, Captain. Power, orbit, proper distance from the stellar surface, angle of descent, crucial altitude Information is still coming in through our sensors at a tremendous rate. Our knowledge of hyper-gravity is woefully slim. This is the first time a starship has been so close to a negativo stellar mass. At least, the first time one has been this close and survived. "There are too many variables at this point for hasty calculation. I can't give you an answer yet." "AU right, Spock. Set the computer on the problem. We'll loam as we orbit. We've nothing else to do, anyway. Starfieot will go crazy over the data." As if on cue, Uhura broke in. "Excuse me, Captain, but I'm picking up that secondary signal again. We lost it temporarily when we powered into orbit, but I've got it back." She paused. "Or else it's got us back. Nine seconds north inclination, dead ahead and closing fast." "Is it . . . ?" he began, but Uhura guessed the question. "No, Captain. We're coming up on it, not vice-versa. Still, I wonder." "The universe is full of coincidences, Lieutenant. How soon till sensor contact?" "It should be on the screens in a minute, Captain." Everyone on the bridge turned full attention to dhe Hefting view in die main screen. For long moments There was little change in dhe picture. Then a faintly luminous jumble of tiny lines appeared. It began to increase rapidly in size. Even at This distance it divas easy to see chat the object was an artificial construct and not a natural body. But there must be something wrong with The sensors. It was too far away to appear so large. "Can we slow enough to match orbits, Mr. Sulu, wI0hout dropping beyond the safe range?" Sulu fumbled wiationh the navigation computer. "Have the answer in a second, sir." He paused. "Yes sir, no difflculty, sir. We have a respectable margin." "Then put us alongside as we come up on it." The object grew speedily until it dominated die viewscreen as the dead sun had before. Sulu had to reduce STAR TREK BY ONB 17 perspective twice to keep the entire shape in full view. Suddenly there was silence on the bridge when it became apparent what the shape was. The starship was beautiful. AU the more so in contrast to the stark dead giant that held them trapped in this isolated corner of the universe. The huge Enterprise was an insignificant spot, a parasitic white shape alongside it. "'A thousand cathedrals an thrown together and then they added star-drive," whispered an awed McCoy. "Tossed an together and lit like a Christmas tree." "Can it really be a starship?" murmured Uhwa softly. Spock's reply was equally hushed. "The probability is . . . considerable." Vast arches and flying buttresses of multicolored metal and plastic soared up and out, racing in and around metallic spirals and pyramids. Here and there. gracefully den signed yet massive metal pods nestled at regular intervals amid cradling arms of silver and gold and iridescent blue. Faery arms of spun alloy. The race that had built this vessel was a race of artisans as well as engineers, poets as well as shipwrights. ""Bring us in, Mr. Sulu. Mr. Sulu?" The lieutenant seemed to shake himself awake. "Aye, sir." He touched controls. and the Enterprise responded. The intricate gleaming tapestry began to move closer and then past them. Under Sulu's skillful hands, the Enterprise drifted 18 STAR TRER t tilde ONB deeper into the tangle of alien crossbeams and spars. He adjusted speed and they drifted towards what seemed to be a major pod. "It's got to be a starship!" McCoy muttered. "But, Aesculapms, the size of it!" "True, Bones," Kirk agreed and then gestured, "but it seems that neither size nor beauty renders it invulnerable. Or maybe to something else, it wasn't so beautiful Look1" As they continued their inspection, it became clear that despite its massive bulk, some time in the past the alien ship had undergone stresses and strains of as yet unknown but undeniably powerful origin. Arches and soaring spans of binding metal were torn and scorched bent unnaturally in some places, sliced in half in others. The huge pods exhibited the most obvious, ominous signs of disaster. They were lined with rows of odd, hexagonal-shaped ports. All were cold, dark. Dead. Every pod was damaged. There were no exoeptions. The metal floated easily in space, bloated with ruptures and tears. Deep gashes split one pod like a chrome grape. "She was probably pulled in like we were," murmured Kirk. He didn't voice the attendant thought. Had this total destruction taken place before the alien starship was gathered in by the negative sun's gravity or after? And if the latter, why? More importantly, how? Two surprises from outside were enough for any one station, but Uhura was destined to get yet a third. Idly adjusting receivers and amplifiers, she suddenly threw the sound of the secondary signal the signal that came from this dead enigma into the bridge again. But it was different now. More of a stutter than a moan. And while there were no reasons, no facts to support it, everyone sensed that the strange call was now more urgent, more insistent than before. "Confirmation, sir, final," she said excitedly. '1 though! that signal was coming from the alien. Not only is there no longer any question about it, but somehow the transrnitter, at least, has reacted to our presence! That's the STAR TRER LOG Ours only reason I can think of to explain this sudden change in broadcast pattern." "I have secondary confirmation, Captain," added Spock, his eyebrows rising again, "and I should agree. But it isn't possible. That ship is utterly, unequivocably, dead. All life-support sensors read negative. All ship-support sensors read the same. No energy is present. Temperaturo on board the alien is identical to that of open space absolute zero. I have no reason to even faintly support the contention that there is life aboard . . . biological or mechanical." "Also, there is no evidence of any stored energy capable of generating these radio emissions. I read only a slight magnetic flux probably normal for the vessel's metal." "Yet you reconfimn Uhura's readings that the signal is coming from the ship?" Spoclc seemed reluctant to restate his position, but, "A have no choice, Captain. That is likewise what the sensors read." "That doesn't make sense, Mr. Spock." The science offlcer's reply was drier than usual. "We find ourselves in complete agreement, Captain. Yet," he paused briefly, "that is the case." "You're positive?" "Probability ninety-nine point seven, Captain." "Ummmm." Kirk leaned back, drumming a mildly obscene ditty with his fingers on one arm of the command chair. Pursuing a confessed paradox was going to get them nowhere. Better try another tack. "Can you identify the design of the ship or its composition, Mr. Spock?" ""Negative to both, Captain," Spock replied after a glance at the computer readout. "The readings I have so far on the alloy itself barring actual analytical confirmation from a specimen of same indicate a material both harder and lighter than any registered in the ship's library. As for the design, it is not a recorded type." He hesitated, glanced back at the readout. "Something else, Mr. Spock?" "Also, Captain, silicon dating or the vessel's spectra in 20 STAR TREK LOG ONE dicates Ohat it has been floating in orbit here for . . ." he checked Ule computer figures one last time, "dis . . for slightly more and not less than three hundred million terran years." There was a concerted gasp from the bridge personnel Everyone's attention was drawn back to the screen. Back to The delicate arches, to tile dreamlike design alien in bodh pattern and function to the solid, prosaic shape of the Enterprise. "if should clink, then, chat that precludes our chances of finding any survivors aboard," Kirk murmured. "I couldn't have put it better myself, Captain," agreed Spock. "I just know that it's beautiful," put in Uhura, halfdefiandy. "To have put such grace and perfection of form into somedung as functional as a starship I wish I could have known the race that built it." "Beauty may have nodling to do with it, Lieutenant," suggested Spock conversationally. "The design may merely conform to Their own conceptions of spatial dynamics." She turned back to her instruments, an expression of distaste coming over her perfect features. "I might have guessed you'd say something like that, Spock." "Don't give it a Thought, Uhura," chipped in McCoy quickly. "According to his own system of spatial dynamics, Spock probably finds your form purely functional, too. Don't you, Spock?" Sulu grinned, and even Kirk was distracted enough to ernile. Spock's reply barely hinted at mild distress. "It is very easy to tell when you are joking, Doctor which is most of the time. It is when your statements make absolutely no sense which is most of the time." While The byplay continued behind him, Kirk let his attention drift back to the picture of the alien starship. He envied the long-dead commander. And yet there was a hint of unease back of all The admiration. What could have happened to so totally destroy such a magnificent vessel, with all its unknown potentialities and STAR TREK LOG ONB 21 abilities? Certainly it must have possessed defensive powers commensurate with its size. "A civilisation advanced enough to build such a craft three hundred million years ago! Man wasn't even an idea then in the mind of nature," he murmured. "A second or two in the span of eternity, Jim," McCoy commented, switching abruptly from the silly to the sublime. Sometimes McCoy's comments grew wearisome, even annoying. But when he was right, he was the rightest person on the ship. Kirk sighed. "All right, Spock. There's got to be an answer to this. You read no power from the vessel now. Any indication what its power source might have been?" "No, Captain. There is apparently something new and undetectable at work here, capable of avoiding even the most delicate sensor pickup. But this far from any star with a planetary system, it goes without saying that they possessed some form of warp tilde rive. A most efficient one, beyond doubt, judging from the size of the craft." Kirk continued to study the vast alien ship. As usual, the sudden flash of insight that would solve all and make him appear the most brilliant spacer since O'Morion didn't occur. He had no business ordering what he was about to order. Every second should have been devoted to extricating the Enterpnse from its present perilous position. Still, the lure of the incredible vessel was too strong to ignore. He hesitated. At least he could make one last check. "Mr. Spock, how is the computer coming on the computation for a slingshot course?" Spock consulted his viewer. "It appears it will take some time yet, Captain, for all the variables to be considered and an optimum program to be devised." That settled it. He rose and spoke firmly. "We'll board her, then. Scatty, Bones you'll come with us. Life-support belts, of course. Lieutenant Uhura, you're in command. Sulu, have the transporter room stand by." "Yes, sir," Sulu replied as he moved to notify the trans 22 STAR TRBX L tilde ONE porter chief. The four officers were already heading for the elevator. "Captain," said Spock, "may I inquire as to your reasons for boarding the alien?" "Nothing extraordinary, Mr. Spock. We have the time. Curiosity. Plain old ordinary human curiosity." ""That is what I thought. However, if that expression of exclusivity is intended for my benefit, Captain, you ought to know by now that it's misplaced." "Why, Spockl" McCoy exclaimed, rising to the challenge, "don't tell me that you're subject to an emotion like curiosity!" "Your evaluation of the phenomenon is typically inaccurate, Doctor. Curiosity is a natural, logical function of the higher mind not one of the baser emotions." "That all depends on how you choose to interpret it," McCoy countered. "Now . . ." The argument divas continuing full force as they entered the transporter room. Transporter Chief Kyle was at the console, waiting for them. The console itself emitted a barely audible hum, an indication that it was prepared and ready to perform its usual functions. Kyle had also removed and checked four life-support belts from the nearby lockers. Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and Scott buckled them on, each double-checking his own and then throwing the activating switches. Each passed before Kyle's console for a last, mechanical check. Kyle's voice read out the results. "Captain ... check. Commander Spock ... check. Lt. Commander Scott ... okay. Lt. Commander McCoy ... check." He looked up. "All belts operational, Captain" "Thank you, Mr. Kyle." "If you'll take your places, sirs...." A lime-yellow aura now surrounded each man a comforting, vital field put out by the life-support belts. They stepped up into the transporter alcove and took their places on four separate transporter disks. "Ready, Captain," warned Kyle. "Ready, Chief," Kirk replied, then grinned. "Try not to materialise us inside any solid objects, hmmm?" STAR TREK LOG ONB 23 Kyle essayed a slight grin at the old joke. Safety overrides on ad transporters made such occurrences quite impossible. "Effnergize, Chief," instructed Kirk. Kyle carefully brought the necessary levers up, keeping a watchful eye on the vast array of monitoring instrumentation. A familiar, part-musical, tinkling hum filled the transporter room as the alcove was energised. The bodies of the four men slowly diffused, as if seen through squinted eyes in early morning . . . until they became four cylinders of multicolored particles glowing on the platforms. Kyle hit a switch, drew the four levers rapidly down. He was alone in the transporter room. Pour pillars of speckled fire appeared on the cold surface of the largest pod of the alien starship. The pmars faded quickly, to be replaced by the frighteningly fragile figures of three humans and a Vulcan. Bach stood bathed in soft lime-yeBow light. Spock was the first to survey their harsh surroundings. They revere standing next to one of the huge, dark, hexagonal ports. Just beyond the port was an enormous, gaping hole, a black pi* fringed with torn, twisted metal clawing at empty space. Clear indication that whatever cataclysm had ruptured the skin of the pod had come from within. As soon as everyone had recovered fully from the effects of transporter dislocation, they began to move toward the forced opening. AU paused briefly by the dark port. Spoclc ran the thin force-field of the life-support system under his heel over the black, glassy surface. "The six-sided shape of the port suggests a similarity to the natural designs of certain terran insects. The honeycombs of bees, for example, where the individual bee cells possess a similar shape. Such a similarity is, naturaUy, purely superficial. To read any possibilities into it would be unreasonable." Kirk knelt and tried to peer Trough the thick glass which wasn't necessarily glass, or thick. In any case, it was like staring at an onyx mirror. If anything remained inside the pod, they'd never get a look at it this way. 24 STAR TREK LOG ONE Engineer Scott was standing near one of the torn flanges of metal, running his hands over it. He had his face so close to it that the force-field over his nose was nearly touching "Would ye look at this, nowl" he whistled in surprise. His lifebelt radio carried the eerie disembodied sound to his companions. "What is it, Scotty?" Kirk rose and moved toward him from the unrevealing port. "It's this metal, sir. I don't know much about terran insects, but I do know metal. This stuff wasn't cast or rolled or flextruded. And it's got a faint but definite graze, like fine grains in good wood." He looked disbelievingly at Kirk. "I'm willin' to bet, sir, that this metal was made by being drawn out into long, very thin filaments and then formed into required shapes. There's layer on layer on layer of "em right here in this one small section. Like laminating in plastics, only on a much finer scale." He tapped the metal silently. "The way a spider spins its web," Kirk mused. "If you will, sir," continued Scott. "Such a method of metal formin" even with our own alloys would make for material far stronger than anything known." Spock had his phaser out. The brilliant beam of the tiny weapon lanced across space and sliced free a small segment of the metal. Spock caught the sample before momentum imparted by the phaser could shove it away, examined it closely. "Lighter and stronger than anything we have now," he whispered, echoing an earlier reading." Then he looked in turn at McCoy, Scott, Kirk. "If this can be analysed, Capta tilde his "And duplicated," Scott added. "I know, I know," Kirk admitted. He didn't want to put a damper on their enthusiasm he felt pretty much the same but they were in no position to get carried away by any discovery. "Providing, however, that we're not trapped here ourselves, for some other unfortunate starship crew to stumble across a hundred million years from now." STAR TREK LOG Of 25 Stepping back along the graceful metal beam that emerged from this section of the torn pod, he moved to get a better view of the rest of the alien vessel. Staring upwards he scanned the fronds of the metal jungle, eyed the other shredded and shattered pod-shapes. - Nearby, one thin soaring arch, as delicate as the finest example of the wood-carver's art, dangled crookedly, distorted by mmnaginable stresses in the far-distant past. "Look," he instructed the others. "Every pod every one. Notice any similarity?" For a change, McCoy was the first to reply. 'they've all been burst open, Jim. Funny there doesn't seem to be an intact one on the entire ship. Maybe on the other side, but . . ." "Aye," acknowledged Scott, "and all from the inside, too. But we already saw that." almost have been some accident," the doctor added, "to get every pod." Spock replied without looking, choosing instead to speak while studying the ruins of the ship. "Accidents seldom operate according to a system, Dr. McCoy. The destruction here is too regular. too obviously managed for 'accident" to be given as cause. No, I believe we must give serious consideration to the alternative possibility that the crew of this vessel voluntarily destroyed her and, incidentally, perhaps, themselves." Leave it to Spock, thought Kirk, to voice what all of them were thinking but none could say. They stood there four insignificant animate forms, on the skin of a starship tens of millions of years in advance of anything their own civilisation could produce and considered what threat might be serious enough to prompt her crew to suicide. Dwelling on morbidity brought no answers. Kirk started off toward the beckoning black cave and the others followed, striding with the aid of belt-gravity across the smooth hug. Without breaking stride he brought out his communicator, flipped the cover back. "Kirk to Enterprise.", 6'Enterprise," came the prompt reply. Kirk was grati 26 STAR TREK LOO ONE fled. That gal would make a fine captain someday. "Uhura speaking." "Lieutenant, are you still receiving radio emissions from this vessel?" "When did you develop telepathy, Captain?" came the startled reply. "A was about to can down when you checked in. It ceased broadcasting the moment you stepped aboard." Kirk considered this. "Whatever machinery is stiDo somehow operating on board this craft, Captain was theorized Spock, "is also sensitive." Kirk nodded agreement, spoke into the communicator again. "Thank you, Uhura. Inform Chief Kyle to lock on with the transporter and be ready to yank us out of here on a second's notice." There was a pause while Uhura relayed the necessary inform at ion . "Expecting trouble, sir?" 'Otto, Lieutenant. But we're going to try and enter the ship. There may be surprises other than finicky radio transmissions, something of a less indifferent nature." Another pane, and then a second voice came over the compact speaker. "Kyle here. Don't worry, Captain, I've got all four of you right on frequency. And I'm not budging from this console until you're all back on board." Kirk smiled. closed the communicator. "Sounds like the chief," smiled McCoy. Another few steps had brought them to the edge of the gaping, metalfringed cavern. Kirk spent a long moment examining the dim, shadowy interior. Clearly nothing was alive here. He swung lightly over the edge. Scott followed. McCoy stepped aside and gestured inward. "After you, Spock." "Why. Doctor, don't tell me that you, a man of science, are afraid of the dark?" "Very funny, Spock say, that wasn't intended to be no, that's impossible. Vulcans don't joke." "Joke, Doctor?" Spock's expression was unreadable. STAR TREK L tilde 0 tilde 27 "Oh, well," McCoy sighed. "Hope springs eternal." He followed the science officer into the abyss. They moved slowly, carefully down the wide passageway. If necessary, the glow of their life-support belts would have been sufficient to see one another by. As it developed, that glow wasn't needed. Faint light issued from long panels of translucent, polyethylenelike material inlaid in the walls of the airlock for such it clearly was. Or had once been. Both air and at least the outer lock had long since departed the air by natural forces, the lock by apparently unnatural ones. Spock studied one of the lmnmescent panels. He couldn't see a tube, a bulb, or a strip beneath it. The light seemed to come from the plastic material itself, but he couldn't be sure. "Something in the ship is stilt somehow, generating power that our sensors were unable to record, Captain. Or else there are other devices that somehow generate their own power as these light panels seem to do." "Don't look a gift horse in the mouth, Spock. It's a darnnsight easier than moving with only belt-light to see by." They continued deeper into the tunnel. Eventually they came up short against what appeared to be a solid wall of metal. It blocked further passage very thoroughly. Initial inspection produced nothing but disappointment. It was Scott, who first noticed the slightly brighter stream of light up near the "ceiling." Sure enough, the metal there was bent. Some titanic force had wrenched at the very structure of this inner lock. "Some kind of emergency shutoff seems to have been in action here," Scott guessed. "Energy was operating on a tremendous scale. It would have had to be, to bend this alloy like that." He nodded up at the revealing gap. "This passage is big enough for one of the Enterpriso's shuttlecraft to fit in." Kirk put out a hand and touched the dull metal He couldn't feel it, of course the force-field blocked the sense of touch which was just as well, since the metal was as cold as open space. His hand would have frozen to it. 28 STAR TREK L00 0 tilde He knew the door was solid because something halted the progress of his palm. The gesture was more hopeful than anticipatory. As expected, nothing happened when he shoved. The enormous lock didn't budge. "Let's try up near where the top buckled," he suggested. "If it's only jammed and not really locked, we might be able to jar it loose." He and Scott took out their hand phasers. Two beams of incandescence began to play about the top d the lock. Two minutes of concentrated beaming, however, produced nothing more than a slight red glow in the affected area. "Useless," he murmured, watching the red glow fade along with all hopes of entering the ship. "Captain." The two men put their phasers away. "What is it, Mr. Spock?" Kirk squinted. Spock was off on the other side of the passageway. "I believe I may have had some luck, Captain." 'if hope so, Spock. We haven't. We may have to bring the Enterpr tilde se's main phasers to bear in here. I'd hate to do that. Either we'll surely damage whatever's inside the main batteries aren't as delicate as Bones" cutters or else we won't be able to cut through at all." They moved over to where Spock was waiting. He said nothing, only pointed upward. About three meters off the floor was a large square panel, recessed into the wall of the tunnel. Three hexagonal-shaped plastic plates were set into the recess. "I think, Captain, that that may be a key. Probability would suggest some form of manual backup system to operate any airlock." "I agree, Spock." Kirk studied the panel, made an experimental jump. "There's only one problem artificial gravity seems to be in full operation here. For the moment, our key is out of reach. Someone can beam back aboard and bring back a . . ." "I do not believe that will be necessary, Captain." Spock moved to the curving wall and braced himself against the metal. "If you will climb onto my shoulders, you should be able to reach the panel." STAR TREK ONE 29 "Isn't science wonderful?" murmured McCoy. It took Kirk, a trained gymnast and tumbler, only a second or two. Then he was securely braced on the Vulcan's shoulders. Even so, the recessed panel was still over his head. But by straining his arm he could manage to reach all three hexagonal plates. "I always said you were a supportive influence, Spock," ventured McCoy. "And I've always felt your humor was in execrable taste, Doctor." Spock's voice barely hinted at the strain of keeping Kirk's weight on his shoulders. "However I feel that in all honesty I must revise my opinion of your puns. "Well, it's about time! I always knew you'd come around, Spock." "They are," the science officer continued, "not merely bad. They are atrocious." McCoy's expression fell. Kirk pressed firmly on the nearest plastic hexagon. It sank inward under his fingers, but nothing else happened. Trying the one to its left produced a similar lack of results. When he hit the third panel, however, the plastic suddenly pulsed with a soft green glow. The brilliant reaction from something three hundred million years "dead" was startling so much so that Kirk nearly fell. "Careful, Captain," Spock admonished, tightening his grip on Kirk's legs. "I can support you like this for a long time, but if you insist on shifting your weight, well, I'm not an acrobat." "tilde Don't worry, Mr. Spock. I'm the one who'll end up falling. I don't plan to, not even in this light gravity." He kept his hand on the depressed disk and was rewarded with a faint but massive grinding sound. 'allyt's movie", Captain!" shouted Scott. Sure enough, there'd been a slight hint of motion from the massive lock door. And the space near its top admitting light from somewhere within had grown a lithe wider. But the grinding stopped immediately and the green light faded from the disk. "Try again, Captain," Spock suggested. Kirk pressed andence disk once more. The glow returned. So did the grind 30 STAR TREK LOG ONE ing noise. He kept the disk forced down, trying to watch the lock door at the same time. He heard a deep and echoing ripping sound, as of ancient joints and bolts giving way. The massive door shuddered, started to swing wide on unseen hinges ... then stopped. This time not all Kirk's jabs on the disk could move it. But there was a gap between door and tunnel wall now wide enough for a man to slip through. "That's good enough. Spock! Coming down." He jumped carefully clear of his second's shoulders and moved to the new opening. They had seen nothing so far to indicate that any excessive caution was required. Nonetheless. Kirk stepped softly as he edged through the gap. Spock followed, with Scott and McCoy bringing up the rear. The captain's last real fear was eliminated when they were all inside and the gigantic lock door failed to slam shut behind them. The interior of the chamber in which they nobler found themselves was built on an enormous. inhuman scale. The walls were the color of pale chalcedony dull and warlike whites and blues. They curved upward and outward. forming a room vaguely hexagonal in pattern. Apparently the six-sided format was repeated throughout the interior of the vessel as well as in the construction of the superstructure. The walls and sections of floor were lined with shattered, smashed machines of unknown, indefinable purpose. It was unlikely their purposes would ever be divined. Even the smallest device partook of the same feathery, lacelike design as the peat ship itself. It was almost as though the builders had selected the internal structure of a leaf as their pattern for interstellar craft. Some shapes more solid. less ethereal of form were still intact. And still operating ... or at least dormant. They pulsed with different shades and blends of the visible spectrum. Violet and umber emerald green and deep maroon and a light pastel pink each seemingly too beautiful to be functional. The men moved toward the center of the room, where a monstrous amorphous shape squatted like a jeweled toad. STAR TREK LOG ONE 31 From its top, graceful appendages radiated roofward in all directions wands of flexible crystal. The four men moved closer. As they advanced, the crystalline strands began to move. Slowly, gently, swaying to the ebb of some unseen tide. As the strands moved they were accompanied by a strangely melodic, somehow nocturnal music. McCoy murmured, "I heard something like that, once. Not exactly the same, but close. Ever hear electric cello, Jim?" "Close, dose," Kirk agreed. "I wouldn't swear to any similarity, though. You know me, Bones, I'm more partial to classical stuff." They stopped next to the enigmatic structure. When they halted, the floating fronds also stilled, the haunting music fading out in a last, triUing pianissimo. "What do you make of it, Spock?" Kirk asked. As he spoke, the translucent limbs fluttered slightly and invisible fingers ran ever 80 lightly over a faraway harp. "Look here, Captsin," interrupted Scott before Spock could answer. He was pointing to the upper surface of the stocky construction. A thin, sparkling band of pink light had suddenly appeared around the upper trunk of the main body. Spock made a quick reading with his tricorder. "Captain, it's registering energy output. Quite weak, but definite." "Still functioning, then," mused Kirk softly, "after all these millennia. The lock door I can understand it would operate off any oddball emergency power source. But AL thing?" Spock was circling the object, constancy consulting his tricorder. He was shaking his head as he rejoined Them. "I am still getting tricorder readings, Captain." When he spoke there was music and movement in the room again. "A would hazard an opinion that those strange appendages are accumulators, receptors that pick up any faint form of kinetic energy motion, movement in the air from sound waves . . . our voices . . . anything." "It absorbs this energy and metamorphoses it, returning it or 'playing it back" in at least two readily observable 32 STAR TREK LOG ONE ways. As motion in its "arms" and as music ... if those sounds are indeed an alien conception of music." "Yes, but what is its function?" Kirk pressed, staring at the wands. They threw his words back at him and added a lithe tune. "As to that, Captain, your guess is as good as mine. This could be anything was and he gestured at the shape, "from an energy-acceptance station for the starship's engines to a recreation area for her crew. We do not have enough information to deduce." "It gives me the creeps was announced McCoy firmly. It wasn't a dip evaluation. either. "I feel like somethin% that ought to be dead is watching us." Scott looked equaDy uneasy an of a sudden. Machines were his province. He knew them beKer than mast people, but this thing "Aye, Captain. I feel it too." "A standard phvsiogg'o tilde cal symptom of latent primal supersfftion." Spock said. "the fear of primitive peoples confronting something utterly incomprehensible to them." Kirk was studying the rest of the silent chamber. He spoke idly. "Compared to the beings that built this craft, we are primitive peoples. You too, Mr. Spock." "I did not mean to imply otherwise, Captain. Merely to attempt an evaluation of his "AD right, an right, never mind, Spock. Let's keep moving." He painted to the far side of the chamber where another door waited. STAR TREK LOG ONE 33 Whereas the inner airlock door had been a single massive plate of unadorned metal, this portal was both more elaborately designed and more formal-looking. It was deco orative as well as practical. The flat surface was seamed by triple lines, forming three triangles, each engraved deeply with alien words and cryptography. To the men of the Enterprise they were so many scratches. Spocletter located another recess with its three inserted hexagonal disks. But when he depressed them, nothing happened. All four stared at the seemingly impenetrable barrier for a while. "Of coursel" blurted Scott suddenly, as the others turned. "The other door was bents damaged, so only one disk was enough to operate it. Or maybe the circuitry was jammed together. But three triangles three disks. Press them an at the same time. Mr. Spock." "Ouite so, Mr. Scott," concurred Spock, sharing-in the chief engineer's revelation. His hand was not quite wide enough to cover all three disks, but both hands managed the trick neatly. This feat gave them some idea of the size of the starsbip's crew members, or of their manipulative digits, anyway. Spock pressed in. The three disks glowed green. Seconds later the three sections of door slid back silently disappearing into wafts, roof, and floor. Another huge chamber opened beyond. The interior of the pod was circular in design, with 34 STAR TREK LOG huge rooms spaced around a common core, and they were walking around it. This particular chamber was lined with a long row of the dark, hexagonal ports they'd seen from outside. Whether it was from starlight they admitted or the presence of more of the ubiquitous plastic strips, He light here was much brighter. "No, Captain," mused Spock as they discussed the continuing puzzle of the strange illumination. 'A think the light has been on in here all the time." "Why couldn't we see in through the ports, then, from out Oh, of course." Kirk answered his own question. "One-way ports, to protect the observer from external light and other radiation sources." They moved deeper into the long, curving chamber. One interior wall was dominated by a huge reflective shape. It resembled a giant convex mirror and was also six-sided in form, though greatly stretched-out. Objects with even stranger patterns weird instrumentation and peculiar machinery lined all the visible walls and domi- nated rank on rank of high, slanted consoles. There was something else unusual, more unusual than any individual piece of apparatus. The destruction that had blasted the rest of the starship, including the room they'd just left, was not in evidence. Whatever catastrophe had torn the great vessel asunder had passed over this room. As they moved further into the chamber and close to specific instruments, lights began to appear, glowing, emanating from scattered dials and panels and hidden strips of plastic. "Proximity activation," noted Scott absently. "Huh-oh . . . Iook there." They stopped, turned. The gigantic mirror, which was doubtless anything but So simple a device, began to exhibit a milky opalescence. Colors commenced to flow and drift and blend across its surface. A moment later there was more music. But this was quite different from the sounds produced by the octopi poidal machine in the odher chamber. They were more rhythmic, insistent and yet sounding.. They moved toward it, curious. Spock began to adjust STAR TREK LOG ONB 35 his tricorder, preparatory to taking some preliminary readings. "A most intriguing phenome . . ." The gentle light on the clustered console to Kirk's right abruptly exploded in brilliant green. A lurid, blinding emerald flare bathed them all. Formerly stolid. calm music changed suddenly to an enraged percussive clamoring. An enormous outpounog of emotion that even over three hundred million years and unfathomable differences in shape and physiology still sounded unmistakably like an alarm. Behind them the three segments of the tripartite portal slammed silently shut. McCoy took a couple of steps toward it, slowed, stopped when he realized the futility of the gesture. The light dimmed; the music ceased. They were trapped in the cyclopean cave. There were the thme familiar disks set in a familiar recess to the left of the doorway. McCoy sauntered over slowly and depressed the three plastic plates. Lightly at first, then with all his strength. Then he tried them in various combinations. All attempts produced equal msults none at all. The door remained resolutely closed, as obstinate as the dead star circling below them. Not even the faint light appeared from within the disks. Various imprecations and comments on the dubious parentage of the door's designers also failed to have a salutary effect. "Somehow I didn't think it would work, Bones." Kirk smiled grimly. "Analysis, Mr. Spock?" Spoci consulted the all-purpose tricorder once more, wishing instead for the mythical terran supercomputer JWG. Wishing was not logical, but under the circumstances, he permitted himself the tiny private deviation. The tricorder singularly uninformative. "Nothing available on whatever activated the door mechanism. Captain. But an atmosphere has been supplied now." He sounded surprised. 'It approaches tilde arthnormal. Shall we deactivate life-support belts? We may be here for a while and this gives us an opportunity to conserve the power supply since we can't return to the Enterprise for recharging." 36 STAR TREE LOO ONE Kirk hesitated. Force-fields could be more of a problem than a benefit at the damndest times, but . . . "No, Spock. This is just a bit too neat, too easy. That door could open again as fast as it closed. Whatever established an atmosphere in here might not have had the foredght to do the same in the other room. No, we'll keep our life-wpport systems on." He flipped open his communicator, eyed the now ominous walls uncertainly. "Enterprise, do you read me? Mr. Sulu?" He paused, tried again. "Lieutenant Uhura, acknowledge. This is the captain speaking." - A faint, rhythmic humming was the only sound the speaker in the compact unit produced a normal blank receptor wave. That proved the communicator was operaUng "No use, Captain," said Spock, still working with the tricorder. "Some sort of blanket interference has been set up. Its efficiency approaches totality." He looked up from the 'corder. Hiswere' do not like this at all, Captain." McCoy had ambled back to rejoin them. "You always did have this marvelous ability for under- statement, Spock. A gigantic alien zombie could come crashing through the near wall, spewing fire and dripping venom from poisonous fangs, and you'd sum the situation up by declaring that its intentions were other than benign!" Kirk noticed that Scott had his phaser out. "What are you going to do with that, Scotty? We can't cut our way out any more than we could cut our way in." "No, sir," the engineer admitted. "Not exactly." "You've got an idea, Scotty. Don't keep us guessing." "Well, sir, these walls are tough, I'll give you that." He gestured towards the trisected door with the phaser. "But those control disks don't look like they're made of any- thin' near as strong a material. If I can burn through the covering plates and short the controls assumin' they're shortable there's no reason why the door shouldn't re- lease." "It's a good thought, Scotty," Kirk confessed. "I don't like being destructive, but . . . Give it a try." STAR TREK LOO ONE 37 Scott walked over and eyed the recessed disks briefly. He lined up the phaser on the lowest one, carefully set the power level, and pressed the trigger. Nothing happened. He tried again, turning up the power all the way. This time he produced a very faint red glow which quickly faded and disappeared. At a sudden thought Kirk pulled out his communicator again. This time he didn't try to activate it. Instead, he turned it over and checked the power telltale set in the base. "No energy rating. Something's drained them. Blanket interference my eye! Something', at work in here that drinks energy like a sponge." His eyes darted around the innocent-seeming chamber, saw as expected nothing. "And whatever it is, it's selective. These panels and dials are still glowing, still activated. I'm surprised this even picked up a carrier wave, before." McCoy had his own comm unit out, checked it and then repeated the check with his phaser. "Mine too, Jim." "And mine." Spock added. "But not the tricorder." He made his own survey of the silent room. "Odd." "So we're stuck," said McCoy unsubtly. "No communications and no weapons . . . no way of telling Kyle to pull us out of this." He jammed the useless instruments back in his belt. "Only for the moment, Bones. Things are happening awfully fast here. They might happen in our favor any moment. We'd better be ready to take advantage of them if we get a chance. You miss a lot mooning over current disappointments. Por example, notice anything new?" They all searched the chamber. Creamy opalescence still washed across the face of the convex mirror. Lights still flickered and stuttered from different instruments. "I see. Everything's returned to normal." McCoy studied the mirror. "Or at least, what was passing for normal when we came in." He paused a moment, listening. "Even the music's back if that's what it is." Kirk noticed the large, hexagonal dais in the center of the room. They had just been passing it when everything 38 STAR TREUE LOG ONE had gone crazy. Now, staring at it intently for the first time, he kicked himself mentally for not noticing the similarity before. Despite its size and shape it bore an unm tilde takable, if faint, resemblance to another smaller, more familiar object . . . his own command chair. Recessed knobs, oddly curled levers, and triple-disk controls lined the slanted face of consoles inside the "chair," along with a vast array of multicolored, winking dials and band indicators. There were markings over the transparent dials and plates that might have been instruct lions, directions. Whatever secrets they held were locked up in a long-extinct alphabet and mathematical system. ""Control and navigation instrumentation, maybe," he mused. He turned to scan the room, suddenly seeing it in a new light. "I'll bet this was the ship's bridge." He touched the peculiarly formed seat. 'The captain must have sat here, in this same chair cons ago." He stood on tiptoes and let himelf down gently into the seat. Whatever the nature of his long-dead alien counterpart, one thing was certain, their backsides had differing configurations. Spock was fiddling with the tricorder as he circled the command chair. "I don't think so, Captain. The source of the interference is here, somewhere. Also, various aspects of construction taken together with certain readings lead me to believe that this was not a part of the vessel's original equipment. It seems much more like something that was made up for a special occasion 'jury-rigged" I chink you cad it. To handle an emergency, for example. "One thing is certain . . . it's generating an kinds of energy patterns. I suspect that the signal which activated the door came from here, too." "Sure some sort of automatics were designed to seal off this room'" agreed Scott, suddenly uneasy. "But seal it off from what?" "Not from us, obviously," added McCoy. "This ship, despite its size and probable power," Spock continued, "has been all but totally destroyed. liven the last chamber we were in. But this room, these instruments, this console especially this console they remain intact. STAR TREK 39 "Something, gentlemen, once came aboard this ship. Something formidable enough to not only destroy it here, but enough to cause her crew to commit suicide ... yet leave His one last room intact. As a precaution, I should Heaink." "But the door closed when we entered here," protested Scott. "Surely we didn ..." He stopped and his moudl gaped. "Oh, come on now, Spock! No known form of life could survive three hundred million years of exposure to naked space!" "Quite right Mr. Scott," agreed Spock grimly. "No known form of life. McCoy interrupted them aD. "Jhn, Spock, Spotty . . . the door . . . 1" They whirled as one. In the confer of She still eighty closed portal, lines of glowing emerald energy, shading occasionally to aquamarine, now to deep olive, were playing freely across Ule metal surface. "No," McCoy whispered, taking a step backwards. Spoclc studied tricorder readings and spoke without emotion.. "Something is trying to get in here Captain. The interference energy put out and directed by dais console is reacting with another outside energy source of unknown propoffiong and capabilities. The flux that is the result of this interaction is now visible on the surface of The door." "Will it hold?" Kirk asked. Spook nodded slowly. "If The energy involved holds at present levels and does not increase." Kirk studied Uhe door. It was hard to turn away from that threatening. shockingly silent conflict of energies. But he forced himself to, to look down and study The alien controls. Somewhere in the maze of dials and switches designed for digits other than fingers there had to be a clue to what was happening. Something. anything at all, to give them a hint of what They might be up against. Cggtion a hunch andwitha lack of any real information to proceed on (not a very promising base) he began pressing in disks, moving switches as best he could with clumsy hands. Por a while nothing happened. Then, when he ac 40 STAR TREK ONE ddentally nudged a spiral-shaped knob, the lights in the console began to intensify. Spock murmured something, and Kirk glanced up at his science officer.l. 'The mirror-thing, Captain." Kirk turned so that he could see the huge, hexagonal reflector. It was beginning to pulse softly. The rippling waves of diffuse color started to flow more rapidly across its shifting surface. The mirror shuddered, turned to face them on some kind of hidden swivel mounting. For a moment the four of them were reflected in the gleaming, curved- material, enlarged and grotesquely distorted. "What is it, Jim?" McCoy demanded. "What's it doing?" "I don't know, Bones." Kirk tared to watch the mirror and handle the console at the same time. Something had activated the mirror this far. Very well. His hands played over controls as yet untouched. After a few moments the colors started to fade, the mirror itself to brighten. Then the chaotic display of color solidified, coalesced into blurred images fluttering across the screen. That's what it was, a screen! And sound emanated from it now, too ... a husky chittering like the song of a gigantic cAcket. But the sound divas much more varied, much richer in invention. Somewhere behind those sounds there was a guiding intelligence. A picture began to form in the mirror-screen. The image sharpened. In the background was a control room of some sort. A familiar control room. The control room they were in now. More interesting still was the creature that dominated the screen. It was insectlike but not ugly. Its surface features were smooth, streamlined not spiky, honey, or sharp. It was difficult to get an idea of its true size because of the way it dominated the mirror-screen. It must have been sitting very close to the visual pickup. But it was clear that it was much bigger than any man. Big enough to need the trio huge doorways they'd encountered thus far. Big enough to make use of a ship this size. Big enough so that each pod might be quarters for a single crew member. Not big enough to prevent its destruction. STAR TUBE LOG ONB 41 Now they could match up the strange sounds coming from speakers behind the screen with the being's mouth movements. There was a definite tone of urgency in its peculiar, rasping words. It seemed though it was hard to tell duo to vast differences in voice-box construction that some of its message was being repeated, over and over. Kirk finally broke the silence that had settled over the lithe group. The creature on the screen didn't react to the sound of his voice. If there was any lingering doubt about that, there divas none now. They were watching a recorded message, and none cared to think how old it might be. "Could be the ship's log," he thought out loud. "Or a warning. Or a religious service, or instructions for game playing, or music lessons." "I think not, Captain," said Spock. "This preparation and care hints at more than mere frivolity." "True . . . there, there's that same collection of sounds agl" Kirk insisted. "It's repeating itself, all right at least part of the time." McCoy manured, "A message from three million centuries ago." "It is possible, it seems," nodded Spock. "That much of their amazing technology has survived." He was working with the tricorder again Kir right-brace divided his attention between his busy science officer and the strange alien on the mirror-screen. "Can you get anything out of this, Spock?" "I may be able to affect a translation," he replied. "The basic voice pattern does not exhibit any impossible aural characteristics. Perhaps we are deceived as to its potential complexity by sheer age." A sudden change seemed to come over the voice of the ancient speaker. His speech was louder now, more insistent. McCoy glanced back at the triple door. Scott followed the doctor's glance with a worried one of his on The green and light-blue bands of energy sparking across its surface Severe thicker, less intermittent than before. Whatever was at world on the incredibly tough alloy was definitely working its way through ""Hurry up, Spock." "Patience, Doctor." He activated some switches on the 42 STAR TREK LOG ORB tricorder. Leaving the compact instrument, he started to scan the console, examining switches and dials. Eventually he seemed to find what he was looking for. He removed the tricorder from his shoulder and placed it carefully on the panel, setting it on top of a small sixsided grid set into the metal. A last switch depressed on the tricorder and then he stepped back, turning to watch the screen. Instantly, the voice of the alien started coming from the tricorder speaker instead of from the mirror-screen. The chittering sounds began to seem less garbled, more comprehensible. Blank spaces in the speech replaced chitters, where the tricorder's marvelous abilities were unable to translate delicacies of alien syntax. "Danger . . . (more chittering sounds) . . . star . . . drawn to it . . ." Spock reached up and made some final, fine adjustments to the "corder. The voice was suddenly clear and understandable in the huge chamber. "... Rather than carry this malevolent life form to other worlds," came the voice from across time, "we have decided to destroy our own ship. The Them had been trapped here by the tremendous gravity-well of the dead 6un. So it must remain So, sadly, must we. We have studied the problem quite thoroughly in the time remaining. There is no other solution." Kirk desperately lavished he could read the expressions on the face of the speaker. "The others are dead. Only I am left, to give warning. If you are understanding this message, comprehend that you are protected in this room only for the moment. The Thing . . . grows ever stronger . . . it wants . . ." A spectacular flare of green phosphorescence erupted from the region of the doorway. The voice of the speaking alien was drowned out by a violent, hysterical flow of pure energy. Then the three segments of the door exploded inward as though struck by a small meteor. The shock threw Dr. McCoy and Scott off the dais. Kirk and Spock were knocked down, but managed to hold onto the control chair and console. Fortunately, the splin STAR TRBR LOG Of 43 ters of flying metal from the ruined door somehow missed everyone. The great curved mirror-screen began to vibrate, shiver as tremendous unrestrained power was played through it. A wash of stunning olivine boomed across the surface, absorbing the milky opalescence, drowning out all other colors. There was a deep rumbling. The polished surface started to quiver at fantastic speed, then to flow. A crackling sound followed, then another, and another as shards of mirror material broke free, fell from the screen to the noon Another powerful explosion tore the remainder of the wonderful device into tiny pieces of shining metal and blew a deep hole in the structure of the interior pod wale Clinging desperately to the unsteady, rocking console, Kirk and Spock watched as even the smallest fragment of mirror tilde creen was enveloped in soft green light. Each bit was then melted into a tiny, shapeless blob of hot metal. At that point the command chair and console began to glow faintly green. Spock noticed it just in time. "Off, Captainl" Kirk was already jumping clear. Seconds later the tempt porary control confer began to glow white-hot beneath enveloping green mists, then to run and drip like hot buttes All around the great chamber, the other previously untouched mechanisms and devices started to show the now deadly green fire. Kirk had a supportive arm around a dazed but otherwise unhurt Scott. Spock aided McCoy, who likewise had only been stunned. "Out of herel" Kirk shouted into space. ""Hurryl" Several pseudopods of translucent green started to advance towards them from various melting panels. The men froze. Glaring light played suddenly over their forms. They dissolved, became four small shapeless masses of colored particles. "... Located them right after you pinned down the area of that last explosion, Mr. Sulu," said Transporter Chief Kyle into the intercom. His hands were smoothly operating the transporter controls as he spoke. 44 STAR TRBX LOG ONE "Locked on and beaming them aboard," he finished. "Good work, Chief." Uhura's voice echoed back over the grid from the distant bridge. y thought we'd lost them when we were first cut off. And then when the pod they entered started to blow . . ." Kyle looked up into the transporter alcove, saw flashing pillars beginning to take on solid, familiar outlines. "Piece of cake, matm. They're coming through now." The gleaming cylinders continued to build and take bipedal form. Kyle studied his dials and indicators intently, moved the levers down the final notch. Kirk was in the foremost transporter disk. He blinked, took in the transporter room at a glance, and grinned in relief at Kyle. His expression changed fast when he noticed the chief's face. Kyle wore the strangest expression, of shock, perhaps. He was staring and pointing at Kirk no, not at him, behind him. "Chief," he began, "hvhat's the his "Captaint" Kyle finally managed to gasp out, gesturing. "Something beamed aboard with your" Kirk whirled, looked behind him. So did Spock and Scott and McCoy. The fifth disk was occupied . . . by a glowing and pulse tog shapeless green mass. ""Transport it bacl: outl" In an instant Kirk was dashing for the transporter console where the chief stood frozen. He dove for the activating switch. He'd think about saving Spock and McCoy and Scott later. Too late. The entire transporter room was suddenly drenched in light the color of deep rain forests, in diffused energy that tingled and sent waves of terror over every man present. Then the walls seemed to suck up the light like a sponge. Kirk recovered, his hand precious centimeters short of the activating lever. Might as well have been parsecs. Standing slowly he looked around and saw that Spock and the others were staring at the walls. Then he noticed it also. The walls of the transporter chamber were now radiating a faint, greenish glow. At the same instant a roar of sound burst from the STAR TREK LOG ONF 45 ship's speakers. A bizarre, untranslatable, somehow triumphant cry. It was repeated, once. In space, the Enterprise infinitely tiny compared to the giant alien starship suddenly flared with a halo of pale green. Then the seething mist thinned as the ship's hull seemed to reabsorb the color into itself. Kirk let out his breath slowly, trying to regularise his metabolism. "Mr. Scott, are you all right?" The engineer was staring blankly at the no longer friendly walls. His gaze held hints of panic. 4'MR. SCOTT!" The engineer shook at the verbal blast, but it was what vas needed. He drew himself up, holding his right shoulder with his free arm. "Yes, Captain. This is just a bruise. But what . . . ?" "Bones?" McCoy rose slowly from his kneeling position on the platform, brushed at his lower back and grimaced, then nodded. "I'll be all right, Jim." Two unrelenting forces flowed through the EnterpAse then. A green something that had lived at least three hundred million years ago now permeated the entire ship, and a holocaust of thought racing through the mind of her captain, who had lived somewhat less. IV Kirk, Spock, and Scott moved toward the bridge. Despite his continuing curiosity, McCoy had left them at another level. His job was elsewhere now. 46 STAR TREK LOO ONE To their credit, the crew on the bridge had remained reasonably calm. Less highly trained personnel might have done something drastic. The three returning officers took up their regular stations. A glance served to pass command back from Uhura to Kirk. They had no time to waste on formalities. Reports were starting to filter onto the bridge from the rest of the ship as different sections responded to Kirk's request for status reports. His initial nervousnesss relaxed, but did not disappear, as section after section reported neither damage nor loss of life no harm done by the strange discharge of green energy. Or whatever it was. He sighed as Uhura relayed the report he most wanted to hear. "Sick Bay reports, sir. Dr. McCoy on alert no injuries." "No damage to engines or hull structure, Captain," came Scott's report a moment later. So the Enterprzse was still healthy, organically and inorganicaUy. That was something, at least. They'd been given some time. But how much7 "Automatic bridge defence system activated and operating, Captain." This from Spock. Kirk spared an idle checking glance up and behind. A small metal globe, looking rather like a child's toy ball studded- with tiny pipes Boar protruded downward from a small hatch in the ceiling. A tiny red light on its side winked on, showing that the automatic phaser mechanism was powered up and ready to deal with any intruder. Kirk had sees the last-gasp defences of the enormous alien ship fail in an attempt to halt the forays of the green light. He didn't pin much faith on the powerful phaser. He nodded in acknowledgment and turned to study the main viewscreen. The now familiar shape of the ancient traveler, in reduced perspective, still coated against the vast blackness of dead sun, empty space. He thought a moment, then activated the chair comm unit, leaning slightly forward to project clearly. "Uhura, give me all intership speakers. Open channel" - STAR TRBR L tilde ONB 47 "Channels open, Captain." "All sections are to remain on full alert until further notice. Section reports from Sick Bay indicate your companions are all unharmed. Engineering reports no damage to the ship. Nevertheless you will remain on full alert until told otherwise. All personnel will wear . . ." He caught himself. He'd almost said "will wear sidearms." What would they shoot at green light7 "AU personnel will wear clothes." Sulu and Scott tried to stifle laughs, failed. McCoy would have approved. He tried to think of something brilliant to conclude with, failed as usual. "Everybody do your job . . . be ready for developments .. . and relax. Further orders and information will be forthcoming." He switched off the communicator and found that everyone was watching him expectantly. "So we're in great shape, aren't we? But whatever was on that ship was and he indicated the floating alien starship, "used our transporter beam to come aboard when it was good slid ready. I don't think there's any question but that it allowed the alien's defense system to jam our communicators, the transporter, and our phasers until it was prepared to board the Enterpnse itself." "This in itself says that it has some limitations, Captain," suggested Spock. "R it was forced to rely on our transporter, then it seems certain it cannot move freely through space." "That's true. We may have occasion to hope it has other limitations, Spock." "That alien commander, sir," said Scott slowly, choosing his words with care. "At least, I assume it was the commander. His message confirmed that they had to destroy themselves. Why?" Kirk didn't reply. He sat and stared closely at his left foot. It was as good a subject to focus concentration on as anything Use. Staring at Uhura would be more pleasant, but would have the opposite effect. Despite his concentracom tion he was aware that everyone was still watching him, waiting. As usual, they expected him to get them out of this. It was so goddamn unfairl 48 STAR TREK LOG Of Kirk's opinion was not unique in the thoughts of captains. When he finally spoke, the words came slow but clear. "Until we learn more about this creature. Scotty, perbledaps we should be prepared to do the same." He paused, but ScoKnowledge wasn't going to help him out on this one. He'd have to say the fronds himself. "Take two of your men and arm the self-destruct mechanism in the engine core." "Sir?" "You heard, Mr. ScoK. Carry out your orders." ScoKnowledge came erect, snapped off a sharp salute. "Aye, girl"" An interval of solemn, respectful silence followed as the chief engineer left the bridge He could have delegated the task to his assistants, but that was not Montgomery Scott's way "Mr. Spock, any change in the Enterprises readings? Anything to indicate what this creature may be up to?" "Nothing obvious or immediate, Captain. We are registering a slightly higher than normal magnetic flux. It's not dangerous not as it reads now. However, if it should go higher ... and the level isn't constant. It appears to be fluctuating irregularly. There is some slight pattern, some half rhythm to these pulsations, but nothing recognisable enough to . . ." Kirk barely heard the rest. "Like the beating of a heart," ho muttered, half to himself. A light blinked on wddenIy on Uhura's board. No one turned immediately to watch her. At the moment, private thoughts were of greater importance. "Bridge here." She paused, listening. Her life-support aura formed a lemon-colored nimbus around her, contrasting sharply with the red uniform of a communications officer. "What?" The loud exclamation brought Kirk around. "Thank you, Lieutenant." She swiveled to face the (,aptain. Her voice was grim. "Sir, decks five and six report shutdown of all life-support systems." An anticipatory shudder seemed to run STAR TREK LOG ONE 49 through the bridge. "They'd just gone over to life-support belts there was barely enough time." She paused. "If you hadn't given the order for full sir ..." She left the obvious unsaid. "What about manual override?" Uhura shook her head. "According to the officers in charge, manual overrides have failed to respond. and his The raucous blare of the general alarm drowned out her concluding statements and all other sounds on the bridge. Kirk spoke angrily. "Cut that Mr. Sutu." Flashing lights and siren died quickly. He shifted in his chair. "Mr. Spockl" "Still checking, Captain," came the science offlcer's calm, reassuring tones. "Here it is trouble in the engineering core, Captain." "Damn. Any injuries?" "I do not know, Captain. Apparently the atann was sounded, but no one remained at the engineering communicator to supply answers to queries." Kir right-brace shook his head in disbelief. Didn't alone remember his training? "Bridge to Sick Bay," he began, speaking into the communicator he'd been pounding for the last ten minutes. "Bones, get down to Lngineering Central, on the double. No, I don't know what it is, but that's where the general alarm was sounded." Another call switch down. "Life-Support Central . . . LI tilde SUPPORTI" "Life Support here . . . Lt. CrandaDo, sir." "Get on those dead systems on decks fire and six, Lieutenant. Draw any additional personnel you need from other sections, but get on theml" If the hard-pressed Crandall desired to reply, she didn't get the chance. Kirk was already heading for the elevator with Spock close behind. The lights in the elevators ticking off the different decks seemed to pass with maddening slowness. "What now, Spock?" he muttered tightly. ""I cannot say, Captain but I venture to guess that the problems in engineering, as well as in life-support, are due 50 STAR ORBS BOO ONB to the conscious intervention of the creature that managed to beam aboard with us." "Yes, of course but what's it doing, Spock? Conscious, perhaps, but is it random or gLuded consciousness that's at work here? What's its purpose? Or does it have one?" "Xenopsychology is not one of my specialties, Captain. At this stage we can only be certain that its intentions are both destructive and combative in nature whether guided by intelligence we cannot yet say for sure, though its actions would tend to suppport such a hypothesis." The light to the engineering core banked solid green, inviting egress. Kirk smiled sourly. "Bones was Aght about your facility for understatement. "Combative!"" They stepped out. This was the real heart of the Enterprise, JUS-THAT as the bridge was her "brain." Awesome energies worked quietly here, tremendous force was channeled, contained, kept domesticated. It was an awkward place to have trouble. A number of engineers, technicians, and a few security personnel were clustered at the far end of the chamber. They shifted, moving wordlessly aside as Kirk and Spock approached. Dr. McCoy was already there, kneeling next to a pardy opened hatchway. The hatch leading to the maintainance tube that in turn led out to the central core was closed nearly all the way. Nearly, because chief engineer Scott was holding it open. He was pinned securely between the enormous weight of the power-activated hatch cover and the noon It pressed against his waist, and the lime-yellow glow of his life-support force-field eared redly at the point of contact. Another few steps and Kirk divas able to kneel next to the trapped engineer. Scott looked up at him and smiled grimly. He was in no real pain, as yet. Kirk touched the smooth metal of the hatch cover its engaged closing mechanism now humming softly, irregularly and felt as helpless as it was possible for a starship captain to feel. Spock had detached himself from the group and had moved immediately to the nearby control panel. Now he was conferring intently with the assistant engineer in charge. The assistant was a thin young man with a wisp of STAR TRBR LOG ONB 51 blond mustache and an earnest expression. Just now he was perspiring heavily. Meanwhile Kirk managed to dredge up a smile, somehow. It wasn't much, but Scott apparently appreciated it. He smiled back. "How are you doing, Scotty?" Kirk finally said to break the silence. "Y'm all right, sir." Kirk reflected on how adversity made liars of all men. Scott's voice was tinged with nervousness, if not pain. "There's a good side to everything, I suppose. If the general alarm hadn't been given, I wouldn't have been wearing my life-support belt. And if the belt hadn't been activated, well was he grinned faintly, "there'd be two of me now." "The force-field M his belt won't hold against that kind of constant pressure for long Jim." noted McCoy softly. Kirk, who was about to admonish McCoy for mentioning it so loudly, reflected that if anyone knew the capabilities and limitations of the belt fields, it was Scott. "I know that, Bones." He looked over toward the control panel. "Override system, Mr. Spock. Open the core hatch." Scott shook his head slowly. "It's no good, Captain The mechanism's been frozen in the close mode. We tried everything." Spock looked over from his position at the controls. "Engineer Scott is correct, sir. Something has jammed all circuits. Very effectively, too." Think . . . think . . . I Kirk studied the massive hatch cover closely, sought ideas in the intermittent hum of the servomotor. "Scatty, is there a manual device for handling this baby?" "No, sir. Its designers never envisioned a situation where it might be necessary to move such a heavy, vital piece of machinery by hand. Security has something to do with it. too. Anvhow. the last command it received was to close. Only the computer can tell it otherwise, sir, and it's blocked, as Mr. Spock says. Nothin" mere muscles can do is gain' to force it backwards against that command." As he finished, a desperately bright flare of red came 52 STAR TRBX LOG ONE from the place where the cover rested against his forcefield and waist. He squirmed uncomfortably. The brighter flare was the belt's way of warning its wearer that they were approaching a critical point. "Gettin'a little weak, sir," he said unnecessarily. lairs spun and glared at the watching engineers and technicians. "Well, what are you all mooning at? The Em terprzse can survive without one hatch cover. We'll have to. Maybe we can jury-rig an emergency radiation shield. Get those cutter beams out, Movet" "tilde Yes, sir!" replied one of the mesmerised engineers. Then they an seemed to be moving at once, like an army of toy soldiers. Kirk studied his trapped chief engineer, and Scott smiled reassuringly back at him. Which was damned odd. It ought to be the other way around, he reflected. But that vas the kind of person Scott was always warned about others first. Quiet, more reserved than Spock in some ways, less ebullient than McCoy, Kirk tried to think of some way to make small tally, but nothing that came to mind seemed in any way appropriate. Despite the fact that starship captains were not permitted the option of being maudlin, for the moment, at least, the alien invader was completely forgotten. Two of the engineers finaRy returned and began setting up a complicated arrangement of spools and spheres and silicon spirals on a flexible tripod. Kirk backed away. One of the engineers gave a ready signal. Scott bent his head down to his chest and turned away as much as he could, covering his face with his army Both engineers wore thick goggles. Kirk put his own hands over his eyes to shield himself There was a soft click. An incredibly brilliant, seemingly solid line of violent, violet light lanced out from the tip of the heavy-duty cutter. It touched one of the thick hinge at the back of the hatch cover. immediately the hinge began to glow a deep red, shading rapidly to white. A moment more and the metal began to flow like grey milk. The hissing of the melting metal was the only sound in the engineering section. STAR TREK LOG ONE 53 What seemed like ages later there was a dull snap, and the hinge was cut through. The engineers instantly switched off the cutter. Now pressing shut with only a single activated hinge, the hatch cover was canted at a definite awkward angle. Scott was just able to struggle free, arefully avoiding the stin white-hot area where the one hinge had been melted away. Kirk gave him a hand up. The chief was unhurt, only badly shaken. "Be nice to be able to be in two places at the same time, sir," he commented. "but I don't fancy managin" it in quite this way. In the final reckoning it's a mite too divisible." Sulu's voice sounded over the open intercom before Kirk could reply. "Bridge to Captain Kirk." He moved to stand near the pickup. "What is it, Sulu?" "Sir, something's taken over the ship's phaser banksl They're locking on the alien starship." Now what? He dismissed the engineers and security men to their normal duties, then moved to the small wallscreen set close by the communicator. A quick touch and once more they were treated to a view of the magnificent, ancient vessel. Suddenly, two thick beams of destroying energy licked out. They struck the alien, struck again. Huge sections of metallic lacework were blasted apart. Archwork and shattered pods disappeared as bolt after bolt of phaser energy tore at the helpless derelict. Bits and pieces vanished in a maelstrom of organised destruction. Torn free and impelled by the force of the Chasers' power, segments of the ship began to spin end over end. They dropped out of ages-old orbit, falling into the crushing gravity-well of the waiting dead sun. Kirk's comment came in a whisper. "The creature has no respect for beauty, either." "Of history, Captain," Spock added, equally shocked by the invader's actions. "All that knowledge . . . all those potential discoveries lost forever." "Perhaps even more, Mr. Spock." 54 STAR TREK LOG Of Sulu showed obvious relief when the others reappeared on the bridge. He'd watched the dissolution of the alien vessel and experienced an unusual feeling of impotence as the phaser banks, usually under his control, failed to respond to repeated attempts to halt firing. Kirk listened to his helmsman's comments as he resumed his command position. "Phaser banks were off, Captain. They activated themselves. I tried, sir," he half-pleaded, "but his "Override systems refused to respond?" "Yes, sir. How did you know, sir?" "The same thing just happened in engineering, Mr. Sulu," informed Spock. "The same thing which has affected the life-support systems on decks five and sin About all that can be said in favor of our visitor is that * is not capricious. It is clearly about some private plan of its own. One which we seem quite unable to alter." "If we only knew what it wants!" Kirk muttered through clenched teeth. The familiar hiss of the elevator doors operating sounded. He turned to see Scott and Dr. McCoy appear. "No internal damage, Jim," said McCoy, nodding in the chief engineer's direction. "He's fine." Scott's expression, however, was less encouraging. "Let's have it, Scotty. Nothing you can say could really upset me any further not now." "Sir, we cannot get into the core. All exits are sealed. And that means . . ." "That you can't arm the Enterpr tilde se's self-destruct mechanism. What about cutter beams? They still seem to work. Can't you cut your way . . . ?" He paused. Scott was shaking his head slowly. "They might've worked a little while ago, sir. They're drained of all energy now. Apparently this creature has to sense something in operation before it can drain that something of power, or counter its command source. I don't pretend to understand how the creature does it, but there isn't a cutting or weldin' or seaming tool in the whole engineering section putting out enough juice to rearrange a loaf of stale bread." "Captain was Kirk turned his gaze to Uhura. "What new good news do you have now, Lieutenant?" STAR TREE ONB 55 "Cargo holds three, four, and five report shutdown of life-support systems. They've gone to belt-support." '1errific tilde that's just marveloust" He spared a glance for the emergency telltales located at Scott's station. Spotted among the normal greens and blues were an uncomfortablv large number of flashing reds. Even one of the galley lights was winking crimson. "what the hell would the thing want in the galley?" "Sir?" asked Spock, failing to sense the irony in Kirk's voice "Power is now out on all but key levels. Captain," informed Scott. 'I'm getting a strong magnetic flux reading on all out decks." "Captaint" Uhura shouted. She was staring in disbelief at her instruments. "Something's going through every computer bank on board. every microspool, every tape, every storage bin and fast!" Spock had backed slightly away from his station, watching while his dials and checkouts gave back impos tilde sible readings. Sulu's hands hovered hesitantly over his own console. The telltales of all the bridge computer systems navigation, library, communications. engineering were alive with myriad flashing, sparkling lights. All indication. revere that information was being processed through them simultaneously at an unbelievable rate. Then the double-red local emergency lights went on, and the bridge alarm howled. They had very little autonomy left or time. tilde Kirk was going to do anything he'd have to do it now. His mind raced. One last computer was as yet uncontrolled, unread, by the invader a delicate marvel that could also process information with more insight, if not more speed, than all the onboard ship computers put together. "Spock," he murmured finally, "can you rig a tem- porary, low-frequency shield, like the one we found on the alien ship, for our own navigation console?" Spock hesitated briefly. "It would have to be a very small field, Captain." "That's all right, Mr. Spock. Just the navigation console. I don't expect you to be able to whip up a conve 56 STAR TREK LOG ONE nienteainvader-proof, bridge defense system in a couple of minutes. We're short on time." That was enough for Spock. He bent over the navigation console and started to work smoothly, efficiently, among the instruments. Occasionally he asked Sulu for help and advice on this or that particular piece of circuitry or had him depress this or the other switch at a certain time. Meanwhile, the force-fields of both men flared and gleamed bright as Spock played with local but powerful energies. The resulting radiance and field interaction gave each man a satanic silhouette. Scott was bursting to complain about the lack of adept quate safety precautions for such work, but he managed to contain himself. They had no time to be careful anymore. After an interval of minutes that seemed like years, Spock stood and walked back to his station. Scott eyed the critical meters on his board and let out a sigh of relief. It's activated and in operation, Captain but only for an area three meters square." "How's the flux reading there now?" Kirk asked. Spock took his tricorder off a rack and moved back to stand close by the shielded section of console. He played the compact instrument over the affected section. "Negative reading, Captain. The shielded area is completely normal." He moved the tricorder randomly over other sections of the helm. "Especially now, compared to wbat t e rest of the panel reads. Readings here are rising McCoy took a couple of steps forward and stared at the slightly lime-yellow section of shielded console in disbelief. "Jim, you don't think this is going to help? Whatever this monster is, it's survived cons alone in a dead, empty hulk. All it has to do here is outlast us and take over n Kirk's reply was rich with a certain morbid satisfaction. "No, Bones. It is obviously trapped here by the gravitational power of the negative star-mass. We have already ascertained that it cannot travel freely in open space. Therefore it doubly needs a starship this starshi tilde to STAR TREK LOG ONB 57 break free. And it must also need a crew to man it. Otherwise it would have left here long ago in the alien vessel we explored. Because his Further elaboration was cut off as the room suddenly was bathed in shades of color as brilliant as cut emerald. Something . . . spoke using the computer speakers. The phrasing divas oddly rushed, childishly impatient. But it was not the impatience of uncertainty, for no voice was more self-assured, more fully confident than this. This is what it said. "YOU ARE CORRECT, CAPTAIN JAMES T. KIRK! I POSSESS A GREAT MANY ABILITIES. BUT THE ABILITY TO BREAK PREB OF THE PULL OF THIS GRAVITY-WELL IS NOT ONE OF THEM. SO I DID . . . I DO . . . NBED A STARSHIP. NOW I HAVE ONE." The voice rose to a shrill, almost hysterical scream. "A BODY . . . TO HAVE A BODY . . . TO HAVE FORM . . . SOLID, SENSUOUS, AGATNI SO LONG . . . SO TERRIBLY LONG:" The voice ended abruptly. The flashing lights on the computer telltales suddenly died. Only the normal blink of standard activity now registered. If anything, the panels were even quieter than usual. Spock ventured back to his library station and tried the controls. They worked normally. Only their readings and the information they now provided were abnormal. He studied them a moment, then looked back at Kirk. "It has absorbed the computer banks, Captain. All of them. Language was naturally but one small section of the total information it gleaned." Kirk eyed the walls thoughtfully, trying to penetrate to the heart of the softly ominous green glow that pulsed there. "All the information in an the worlds of the Federation won't give it what it needs, Spock. A manipulative digit. In going through your library, I'm sure it discovered that we carry no manipulative robots on board that it could control." If the captain expected that statement to provoke the creature, he failed. The alien seemed to have only a single tone of voice. One continuous flow of nervous emotion. The voice was a mirror image of its actions violent 58 STAR TREK LOG ONE and quick. It ignored the mild sarcasm, if indeed it was sensible to such subtleties, and spoke with single-minded purpose. "YOU WILL NOW REMOVE THE STATIC SEIIBLD PROM THE NAVIGATION CONSOLE, CAPTAIN JAMES T. KIRK." Kirk considered his reply carefully. It might still be posssible to reason with this thing. "You've shut down life-support systems and threatened the lives of my crew. I'll remove the static shield if you restore those systems first." As he half-expected, even that modest request was denied. No, not even denied. It was ignored, treated as unworthy of comment. For this being, nothing existed outside of self. "ALL NONPSSBNTIAL SYSTEMS HAVE BBBN EXTINGUISHBD IN THE INTBRBSTS OF SIMPLIFYING CONTROL. OBBY MBI"" That made his decision simpler, if not more pleasant. "And if I refuse?" A phaser beam darted out of nowhere as Kirk rose in the command chair. No, it issued from . . . the automatic bridge defense systeml The beam impacted on his forcefield squarely and knocked him stumbling into a bulkhead. "OBBY ME-THAT" the alien thundered from all speakers. Kirk tried to dodge out of the phaser's line of fire and searched frantically for cover. But he couldn't dodge the beam of the phaser anymore than one could escape sun in a desert. As for finding cover, the automatic defense system was very thorough. It had been carefully designed to permit a hostile intruder no cover. The beam cut off for seconds, shot out agaul, and slammed him against a wall. It pinned him there like some shriveled, colorful insect. His force-field flared pink, then red, turning slowly to a deep crimson. Beads of sweat began to form on his forehead. Though it hadn't broken through, the intense concentration of heat was starting to hurt like blazes. He felt himself weakening, slumped against the wall. "Captain!" Spock ran toward him, stopped. The beam left Kirk for STAR TRIM ONB 59 a split second, affording him little relief. It moved to Spock. But when the science officer remained frozen in place, it swung back to batter again at Kirk's shield. Spock took a heavy, metal-spired reference manual from a shelf and stepped quickly toward the bridge defense module. As he threw, the phaser beam looped around and struck at his ankles. The thrown book fell far short, bounced over the command chair. Moving higher the powerful beam shoved Spock back against the base of the library computer. Then it shifted slightly and he was washed down the floor along the wall like a leaf in the ip of a powerful hose. It finally pinned him upright against a far bulkhead, holding him there until his force-field also flared pink, red, and crimson. Kirk put a hand to his singed chest and rolled over slowly. He staggered to his feet. The first thing he saw was Spock, pinned up against the wall. Swaying, he took a step toward the science officer. It was the shock of the near-fatal phaser assault that had affected him, more than any actual physical damage. He knew what an uncontrolled phaser of even mild strength could do to something as fragile as a human body. At that moment there was a deep red flare, almost black, from Spock's life-support belt. Then his force-field was gone, overloaded by the concentration of energy from the phaser. Immediately the beam stepped down to low power. It continued to focus on the center of Spock's chest. Kirk could have continued to advance, but now dared not. From somewhere in the depths of the ship, from all around them, the implacable alien consciousness spoke. "OBBY MB-LIKE" It was Kirk's turn to scream. 4'allyou'll hurt him!"'7 "REMOVE THE STATIC SHIELD PROM THE DRUB CONTROBS AND NA tilde GA tilde ON PANEL' DO IT NOW-LIKE" No hint of compassion not even a mention of Spock. There was absolutely no doubt in Kirk's mind that the creature would kill Spock slowly, without thought. 60 STAR TRY ONE The subject Iying under that threat still had his voice, if not his mobility. ""No, Captain!" The phaser beam intensified ever so lightly. No cry of pain escaped Spock's lips, but he writhed. A tensing in the knuckles showed what he was feeling. Inwardly, Kirk slumped. "I will obey. Let him go." As quickly as that, the phaser beam was gone. Spock stood leaning against the wall for a moment longer. Then his legs gave way under him and he collapsed to the floor. Kirk took a step in his direction, but that damnable, allseeing voice interrupted again, bellowing. "NOW! IGNORE THE PABBBN BIPED AND PROCBBD We THB FIRED RBMOVAB!" He turned and started reluctantly to the helm-navigation console. McCoy moved to Spock's side. There was a small but neat hole in the confer of the science offlcer's shirt. McCoy dug out a tiny spray vial and began to work on the injury Kirk thought furiously. It was the end of everything unless . . . He looked down at his chest, where he'd been lightly burned . . . Iower, to his stomach. His hand slipped slowly ever so slowly, down to his life-support belt. "It's too fast for us, Doctor," Kirk said quickly. "So don't try deactivating the defense module with one of your sprays." McCoy looked up, puzzled. Had the alien learned enough to read a human expression? It had not. Mc)cceaoy's response was to look at Kirk. In doing so he automatically brought the spray vial away from Spock, and up. The phaser shifted to cover McCoy and the almost awake Spock. In that brief, unguarded instant Kirk whipped free his life-support belt with one hand, hit a switch on the console with the other, and dropped the activated belt across a certain unshielded section of it. He jumped clear as the panel erupted in sparks and fiery flashes. He'd been gambling that the creature wouldn't turn off STAR TREK LOG ONB 61 the bridge life-support systems and risk killing them alp He was right. But the phaser beam swung to burn an opening in the floor. Desperately he rolled to get away from it. It eventually caught up with him at the other end of the helm console. Stopping, the beam focused just a few centimeters to one side of his head. He could feel the deadly heat on his cheek. The beam had been raised to killing force. "REPAIR THE WARP-DRIVB CONTROLS! OBEY MEI", The now maddened voice had risen to a tremulous shriek. Kirk got to his feet slowly, cautiously, making sure he made no rapid gestures that might be misinterpreted by the trigger-happy alien. As he rose the beam stayed centered parallel to his skull. He walked to the command chair. "Mr. Scott." ""Yes, sir?" "The warp tilde rive controls have burned out. Commence repairs immediately. Install the auxiliary bypass system." If Scott suspected anything, he gave no sign. "Aye, Captain." He looked around, his gaze coming to rest on the somnolent bridge defense mechanism. It was as good a point to direct his voice to as any. 'ally'll need some cuttin" and repairin' tools." He pointed to a nearby locker. "I can get what I need in there if you'll allow them to energise." "YES, YBS-THAT" came the anxious voice. "BUT MAKE NO 62 STAR TREK LOG ONE WRONG MOTIONS. I HAVE THB ENTIRE WARP-DRIVE AUXILIARY BYPASS SYSTEM AND REPAIR PROCEDURE FROM YOUR OWN COMPUTER RECORDS. HURRYI'" "Do as it says, Mr. Scott." "Aye, Captain," Scott replied, keeping a determined pokerface. Not that he knew what Kirk had in mind, but he suspected the captain was up to something. And it was up to him to give Kirk as much time as posssible to prepare for it. He walked slowly to the locker, at the same time being careful not to move unnaturally and thus make the creature suspicious. There was a nervous moment as he energized the precision microwelder. SmaUs as it was, it could still easily burn a hole even in a bridge defense modulecom if given the time. However, the alien apparently felt secure in its control It permitted him the necessary small tool. He walked to the fused section of helm, examined it, and shook his head like a doctor clucking over a sick patient. Then he moved to the back of the bridge, near Uhura's station, and a small wall panel that needed to be removed. Controls and switching points were revealed within. There were also several long coils of fine cable. As he brought the activated welder close and began to make the necessary connections, the voice again reverberated around the bridge. "ANY ATTEMPT TO SABOTAGE THB AUXILIARY WARPDRIVE CONTROLS, CHIRP BNGINBER MONTGOMERY SCOTT, WILL RESULT IN IMMEDIATE OBSTRUCTION OF ALL OTHER BRIDGE PERSONNEL. I WOULD RATHER NOT RESORT TO THB USE OF INFERIOR, SECONDARY PERSONNEL TO CARRY OUT MY COMMANDS BUT I WILL NOT HBSITATEI" "I'll be sure to try and keep that in mind," Scott mumbled, concentrating on the delicate work at hand. Spock was on his feet again. He touched his chest once, looked at McCoy. "A fine, professional job, Doctor. Fortunately, your medicine is more effective than your jokes." For once, McCoy didn't feel up to a reply. The science officer walked over to stand next to Kirk. Both faced casually away from the bridge defense system's STAR TREE LOG ONB 63 video pickup. Apparently the creature's abilities did not also include mind reading. It had divined nothing of Kirk's series of delaying actions beyond their immediate practical effects. The defense sphere's sound pickups were not designed to detect whispering. It was primarily a visual device. Normal ship noises would have drowned out soft talk and only confused an efficient mechanism. So the two men felt reasonably secure in conversing. "Let's have it all, Spock. You've had enough experience with this creature's actions to have formed some solid opinions about it, at least. What are we dealing with?" Spock rubbed his chest again. "Beyond its undeniable belligerence, Captain, we know nothing about its mental composition. We can theorize more thoroughly about its physical makeup. "It seems to be some form of pure energy organism, without much actual mass, and it is essentially electromagnetic in nature. At the same time, it appears capable of a strong parasitic relationship with a solid host body. A starship could provide such a body, it seems. "It appears to utilize the electronic network of the En" terpr tilde se the way a man or Vulcan uses the nervous system of his body. It has, in effect, become the Enterpnse. We, on the other hand, are only marginally beneficial organisms in its structure, like the white corpuscles in human blood. That is, some of us are. Apparently it regards most of the crew as unwelcome growths germs simply to be disposed of as rapidly and with as little effort as possible. "And, Captain, the computer library still operates. It has indicated that the flux readings are growing in strength. The longer this being has to adjust to its new body, the stronger and more secure it grows." Kirk dropped his voice even lower. If the alien could somehow pick it up and understand it, then all was lost. But it had given no sign of being able to so far. And devilish subtlety did not seem to be one of its characteristics. They had no choice but to try. Spock was looking at him expectantly and Kirk remembered that he couldn't read minds, either. "The slingshot effect, to throw us free of this gravity 64 STAR TREK LOG ONE and out of orbit can you do the necessary math in your mind, Spock? I've got reasons for not using the navigation computer." Spock nodded. "I see. Yes, the alien would know. I believe I can, Captain. Soon I will to aid Mr. Scott, but my mind and hands can operate on different projects at the same time." Kirk turned and raised his voice as he addressed the rotating sphere of the defense mechanism. "The chief engineer will need assistance from my first officer to complete repairs. Is this permitted?" Circuits continued to open and close. Human diaphragms operated somewhat slower. Otherwise there was little motion on the bridge. Spock strode slowly, cautiously, to where Scott was working. Kirk kept a wary eye on the dormant phaser, but no punishment, no warning was forthcoming "I guess it is," he murmured. "WHEN REPAIRS ARE COMPLBTBD," came the voice suddenly and, as usual, Without any warning, "YOU WILL LEAVE THIS ORBIT AND PLOT A COURSE TEIIRTY-SDE POINT REB TWO ONE PROM OUR PRESENT LOCATION." Sulu spoke up. 'That's the heart of the galaxy, Captain!" "Set the course, Mr. Sulu." Sulu looked back at him incredulously and made no move to obey. Spock glanced over from his work and spoke. "Captain, we've seen this creature separate itself into different parts. If it can divide and grow, it could take over every starship we meet. It could control entire computer centers perhaps whole planets." "I am aware of that, Mr. Spock. But we have," and he looked downcast, "no choice, I'm afraid." "COMPLBTB REPAIRS!" screamed the voice. "OBEY ME-LIKE" "Set the course, Mr. Sulu! That's an order." "Yes, sir." Sulu's reply held a hint of bitterness. Scott and Spock unwound two small cables from the recess in the wall and ran them along the deck to the burnedout navigation console. Working with the microwelder STAR TREK LOG ONB 65 and Spock's assistance, Scott proceeded to install a small metal box to one side of the melted panel. The box's face contained a basic, simplified version of the ruined warp-drive controls. The engineer made a last connection, wiped his forehead with the back of a hand, and took a deep breath. "Auxiliary controls ready to activate, Captain." Everyone on the bridge divas staring at Kirk. The Captain looked up at the sphere, hardly daring to breathe and yet forcing himself to maintain a normal tone of voice. "The auxiliary controls can only be opened manually." At that, the memory banks of Spock's computer-library station suddenly hummed into operation. No one needed to be told what was taking place. The creature was checking Kirk's statement against the operations manuals stored deep within the ship. Eventually the lights at the computer station returned to normal. There was a short, screaming silence. Kirk willed himself not to sweat. "THAT IS CORRECT. OPBRATB THB MANUAL CONTROLS. OBBY!" Kirk breathed an unseen sigh of thar"3rfulness and offered prayer to all supernatural deities who looked after starship skippers. Then he nodded slowly to Scott. The engineer moved back toward his own station. Kirk rose and walked calmly to the auxiliary control box. He placed his hands on the simplified device. It divas only illusion, but the smooth metal controls and knobs felt hot. "Control activated." He paused, started toward another set of switches. "Setting cour was His hands moved in a blur. The Enterprise's engines slammed into emergency dAve. Not away, toward the beckoning mist of the Milky Way, but down, down and in, toward the devouring black maw below. Sulu jerked in his seat as the dark bulk of the dead sun grew suddenly enormous in the main viewscreen. He spun to face Kirk. "Captain, we're falling out of orbit! We're falling into the start" 66 STAR TREK BOG ONE "APP tilde y PUI B POWBR REVBRSB BNG tilde BS-THAT" shrieked the disembodied alien. "OBBY MB, OBBY ME-THAT'" The bridge defense phaser came on, swung around to touch Kirk's back. He jerked and hung grimly to the controls. He had no force-field to protect him now, with his life-support belt fused to the original controls. Picking up speed with every microsecond, the Enterpnse rushed toward the destroying gravity below. The phaser abruptly cut off and Kirk cursed silently. The creature had guessed what he was trying to do. If it killed him while he was hanging onto the controls and failed to cut his hands free in time . . . It tried something else, and for a few seconds Kirk was forced to fall away. The entire console section and even the deck around the manual control unit began to glow with heat. At the same time the walls of the bridge began to fluoresce an angry, pulsing green. The vivid color deepened and dimmed in indecipherable, distorted patterns. The voice of the alien rose to a terrible, frightened scream. "NO, DECEEBRATB! DO NOT DESTROY THE SHIP" OBBY OBBY OBEY'" Kirk had glanced down at his hands, then back at the glowing console. If the alien realised that at any second it could now safely kill him and induce another member of the crew to operate the controls . . . He threw himself back on the metal box and its burning knobs and dials. There divas a sizzling sound and the odor of burnt flesh filled the bridge. Uhura screamed. Tears streamed from Kirk's eyes, but his hands stayed frozen on the controls. "Stand by to activate warp dnve!" he gasped. Spock instantly took the vacant assistant helmsman's place next to Sulu . . . in case. "NO . . . DON'T:" came the terrified voice. The Enterprise dove toward the extinct solar furnace. It filled the viewscreen now, as complete a grave as any man could wish for. Its surface was alive with brilliant discharges of electricity. The starship glowed all over with a soft green aura This rapidly coalesced into a single, bright blob of STAR TRBR LOG ONB 67 beating, living light. On the bridge the green luminescence of the walls suddenly faded and seemed to sink into the metal. The phaser beam of the defense sphere abruptly cut off. That was the first sign. Now for the final blow. "Activate warp tilde rivel" Kirk managed to cough out. The white heat of the panel had vanished at the same time as the phaser beam, but the metal was still fearfully hot. If it was a last, desperate ruse by the creature to get him away from the controls, it failed. "Activated, Captain," came Spock's prompt reply. The ship shuddered briefly as the titanic warp-drive engines cut in. There divas a last faint pulse of green radiance then it was gone. A final, despairing cry, shrill and weak now, came from the speakers. "PBBASB . . . DON'T:" Suddenly the Enterpnse seemed to leap toward the black sphere, toward the very horizon of the sun that was no more. It seemed impossible that it could miss that sucking, grasping target. It must strike, vanish in a blank flash of instant annihilation. The image of the starship wavered as it reached the critical point of that bottomless pit of gravity, seemed to flow like a liquid . . . and disappear. An instant later the combination of emergency overdrive and the tremendous pull of the star had flung the Enterprise far beyond any threat far beyond any clutch of its relentless tug. For a few seconds the star wore a ring of incredible thinness. A tiny narrow band of soft green circled the black sphere, revealing a last, hopeless grab for a ship safely out of its reach. Forever out of its reach. Then the green ring contracted, shrunk in on itself, to become a single bright, emerald blob of incandescent life an amorphous mass of now harmless malevolence. "You can let go now, Captain," said Spock gently. "Let ... go ...?" Kirk mumbled. His eyes glazed. Spock reached over and gripped the captain's wrists. They pulled easily but that death grip was not so simply broken. Spock reached around more firmly and pulled, pulled 68 STAR TRBR LOG ONE again, hard. This time both hands came free of the controls. Kirk slumped in Spock's arms, unconscious. The second-in-command of the Enterprise carried his captain over to the command chair. Sulu immediately put the helm on automatic and took over the warp-drive controls, his hands safely encased in a pair of thick protective gloves. He brought the Enterprise down from emergency to normal cruising speed. McCoy had been waiting. Spock watched him at his work. When he spoke, his tone was as emotionless as ever and as lucid, curious. "Well, Doctor?" McCoy was already working with a second kind of spray, then rapidly applying some white cream to Kirk's hands those blackened, terribly burned hands. The cream hardened instantly to an almost plastic consistency. He smiled just a little. "I don't find any serious nerve damage, Mr. Spock. Nothing that won't repair itself. As for the skin, that's easy to regenerate. Oh, someone will have to feed him for a few days, but other than that ..." He smiled wider. "He'll be as good as new." Sulu, Vhura, and Scott all turned away so that no one else could see how relieved they were. McCoy moved to the nearest intercom, which happened to be the one in the command chair, and thumbed the switch. "Sick Bay? Doctor McCoy here. I want a medtable on the bridge, double-time." Spock was watching Kirk. The captain's eyes fluttered as both anesthetic and stimulants took effect. "Is it . . . it . . . gone?" "Affirmative, Captain." At moments like this Spock almost lavished he could smile but only for the therapeutic effect it would have on Kirk, of course. "It left the ship when it thought we would crash into the negative stellar mass. In the end it seems that the alien's instinct for self-preservation, even after all these millemlia, was stronger than its analytic abilities. If it had gambled and stayed with us another few seconds it would still be with us. Now it is trapped back there once more. "And now that we know it is there, we can enter its de STAR TRBX LOG ONB 69 scription, dangerous characteristics, and location with Stardeet, so that any other exploring vessels that visit this sector can give it a wide berth." The elevator door dilated, and a pair of medical techs with a mobile medtable between them entered. Under McCoy's direction they lined it up parallel to the command chair. Both techs gave a little start when they saw that the patient-to-be was the captain, but McCoy reassured them. "It's all right Darrell, Elayne nothing too serious." Kirk eyed the medtable and then shifted his gaze to the face of the good doctor. "What's that for, Bones? I'm all right. You just said so yourself." "I know, Jim. There's nothing wrong with you at all that a pair of new hands won't fix." He patted the table. "Be a good boy and climb aboard without forcing me to tranquilize you, hmmm? I will if I have to, you know." "Okay, okay to Don't threaten me, Bones." "Threaten, Jim?" McCoy grinned. With the help of the two techs and Spock, Kirk slid onto the table. The table was convoyed to the elevator. "Wait a minute, Mr. Spock Captain," Uhura broke in. McCoy froze the elevator open. Her brows drew together as she fiddled with her controls. "We're still picking up emissions from the area of the dead star. It's growing faint as we move away, but . . . ah, therel" She did things with the amplifiers. A tremulous, desperate voice filtered through the speaker. A familiar voice, made harmless now by increasinBut distance and hopelessness. "DON'T LBAVB MB ALONE AGAIN! OH, PEBASB, PLBASB!" No one on the bridge said anything. There was a crackle of static as a different source of distant energy from another star announced its own presence. Then a final, faint piping. "SO LONELY . . . OH, DON'T GOI DON'T . . . DON . . ." The voice vanished, swallowed down and digested by distance. "It doesn't sound so dangerous now, does it, Mr. Spock?" Kirk whispered. 70 STAR TREK LOG ONE "The creature? No, Captain. Not now. But the danger behind it remains." "If only the alien had tried to cooperate, to communicate instead of threaten ..." He shook his head tiredly, beginning to feel the side effects of McCoy's ministrations as they rode down the elevator. He stared at the steady light set in its roof. "What makes a thinking, intelligent being act in such a fashion?" "Who knows, Captain? We know not where it comes from. And eve do not even know what makes certain men or Vulcans act the way they do. The creature's instincts, in the final analysis, are not so incomprehensible or even alien." "Now you're acting unnecessarily rational, Spock." "To me, Captain," Spock replied, "that is a contradict lion in terms." "You know," said Kirk abruptly, "I think I can feel my hands again. They're beginning to tingle slightly." He felt a pressure on his upper right shoulder. "What was that?" Turning his head slightly he saw that they were entering Sick Bay. "Bones, what have you done to me now?" McCoy smiled down at him reassuringly. "You're coming out of shock, Jim. I just gave you a good dose of something to keep your mind off it. If I didn't, despite the local anesthetic, in a few minutes those hands would do more than just tingle slightly." "Shock? What do you mean, shock? I'm not in shock, Spock." McCoy had to grin. "And nothing you slipped me, Bones, is going to make me go un . . ." - PART 11 YESTERYEAR [Adapted from a script by D. C. Fontana) Vl A world of silvery sky. There seemed to be no oceans; but they were there, rolling and heaving under the shining clouds. There seemed to be no deserts; yet they existed, too. Dry, bone dry, and inhospitable, and old. There seemed to be no green forests or rolling hills. True, they were rare; but they too held a real existence. There only seemed to be sky. There was a peculiar atmospheric aura to this world a kind of shimmer in the stratosphere that rippled and flowed with strange effects other than merely meteorological. Kirk finished his glass of reconstituted rombouton inice, prepared on a distant South Pacific isle on Earth itself, and studied the image on the viewscreen before him. He touched a button on the arm of the command chair and leaned over to direct his voice into the open grid. "Captain's Log, stardate . . ." He burped, rather loudly, and looked around in mild embarrassment. Everyone on the bridge studiously avoided looking back at him. But at the helm, Sulu made a sound suspiciously like a stifled chuckle. "You find our approach maneuvers amusing, Mr. Sulu?" Kirk was not in the best of moods. His newly regenerated skin on his hands itched something fierce. "No, sir," deadpanned Sulu in return. He examined the readouts of the navigation computer most intently. Satisfied that digmty had been maintained, Kirk hit the 73 74 STAR TREK LOG ONE switch once more. "Erase that last," he muttered, then began again. "Captain's Log, Stardate 5373.4." He paused, formed his thoughts. "After an unexpected delay of some substantial awkwardness . . ." "What was that I once heard you say about my tendency to understate, Captain?" came Spock's quiet voice from the area of the library-computer console. "Quiet, Mr. Spock. I'm recording. Or trying to." He hit the unlucky switch again, irritably. "Cancel that last. "Captain's Log, stardate5373.4 After an unexpected delay of some substantial awkwardness ., ." he glared around, but this time no one saw fit to interpose a comment, "dis . . we resumed our original course and are now lying in orbit around the planet of the time vortex. "Commander Spock and I will land to carry out basic research for the Institute of Galactic History, in conjunction withand in support of similar research to be conducted by historians Jan Grey, Loom Aleek-om, and Ted Erickson. "Dr. Leonard McCoy will also accompany us, as ..." He held the panic button down and looked back to where Dr. McCoy was standing, idly observing the view of the planet rotating lazily below. "How do you want to go into the record on this, Bones?" 'iWhat?" McCoy dragged his attention away from the fascinating image of the time planet. "Oh, might as well play it linear, Jim. 'Interested onlooker" will do. I'm not hunting for academic credits." "Attaboy, Bones. I thought you'd say something like that." Kirk let the pause switch up. "dis . . as interested onlooker." Satisfied, he switched off the log and thumbed a communicator switch. "Historians Grey, Aleek-om, and Erickson report to the transporter room, please. We are ready for descent." He flipped the communicator off and rose. "Lieutenant Sulu?" The younger officer glanced up from the helm. "You're in command in my absence." "Yes, sir," Sulu replied. He hesitated, then spoke quickly, earnestly. "I sure wish I was going down with STAR TREK ONE 75 you, sir. I've heard a great deal about the Guardian of Forever." Spock and McCoy were waiting at the elevator, and Kirk moved to join them. "It can be very interesting at times, Mr. Sulu that's true. It can also be infernallly dull. Either way, you know the regulations. No one is permitted on the surface outside the reception station except authorised research personnel and StarDeet officers with the rank of Lt. Commander and above." He smiled. "You'll be there in a couple of years, Lieutenant." When they'd left, Sulu looked back at Uhura. "Somehow, Uhura, I get the impression the captain's not terribly enthusiastic about this expedition." Uhura replied while taking the opportunity now that the commanding officers were absent to touch up her makeup. "I suppose even the most exciting of pasts can grow dull with repetition. Seeing a famous person or witnessing an important historical event could be offset by bad smells and unsanitary plumbing. "Besides, you can blame him for being a bit blase after what we just went through with that that thing on the fringe?" She whistled. "Substantial awkwardness . . . wowl" The three historians were already waiting in the main transporter room when Kirk, Spock, and McCoy arrived. All appeared outwardly composed, but their faces betrayed the excitement they were feeling. Two had made the trip to the surface once before. Their anticipation was understandable history was their chosen profession. The discovery of the Time Planet and the subsequent development of the Guardian of Forever and the Time Gate as a research tool had been to the study of galactic history what the invention of the war tilde drive had been to interstellar travel. Kirk could empathise with their special excitement, even if he couldn't wholly share in it. Of the three, Erickson and Grey were human, Erickson was a small, intense man in his mid-forties, with thinning grey hair cut in bangs in the front Vulcan style. His 76 STAR TREK LOG ONE limbs seemed to be in constant motion, like the legs of a millipede. The most noticeable facet of his personality was his finding absolutely everything, to be "fine, just fine" and said so. Jan Grey was slightly younger, taller and she had a pleasant narrow face that Divas now glowing with inner anticipation. Both humans wore plain grey jumpsuits emblazoned with the crossed Ionic column and short spade of physical history. They carried elaborate tricorders in shoulder harness. The third member of the official research party, Loom Aleek-om was neither human nor Vulcan. The native of Aurelia stood head and shoulders above Spock, though he was thinner and lighter than any of them, even Grey. His wings he kept neatly folded along the line of his back. Short anus ended in a spread of delicately taloned claws, which could manipulate the extremely fine controls on his own, smaller tricorder. Tattooed on his beak was an intricate scroll sign of manhood above which wide, black eyes shone piercingly. They were in startling contrast to his brilliant gold and blue-green plumage. "Ladies and gentlemen," Kirk smiled, "are you ready?" A rhetorical question. Erickson couldn't resist waving his pudgy arms in reply anyway. "Ready7" he chirped, feigning disbelief. "We've been ready for days, for months for this minute, Captainl Pirst we encounter that terrible monster and I thought we'd never get here at all. Then more days of unexpected travel and waiting. And you want to know if we're ready?" "I do not believe I shall ever understand this extraordinary affectation of humans," mused Spock as they took their places in the transporter alcove, "for answering a simple, direct question with half a dozen inane ones." "Don't worry, Spock," replied Kirk, scratching at his newly grown right palm, "it's not contagious." "I sincerely hope not, Captain," said Spock fervently. Beaming down was convenient and quick, though uneventful. They missed the spectacular sights of shuttling down through the silver atmosphere. STAR TREK BOG ONB 77 No one would miss a descent to the dry, semidesert sew lion they would eventually arrive at, however. Oddly, very little was know of the early civilisations of the Time Planet itself. Nor of how its inhabitants were able to unite a seething infinitude of time lines and tie them to a single point on their world. Nor why. Oh, the usual reasons were given . . . curiosity sparked them, and the spirit of scientific exploration. But Kirk and many others couldn't help but believe that the builders of such an incredible device as the Guardian of Forever must have had some other, unknown, more potent reason for constructing it. There was irony on a grand scale present, too. For in tying together thousands upon thousands of time lines, the builders of the Guardian of Forever had apparently neglected to tie in their own. So historians could use the Guardian to research the reasons behind any great invention except the Guardian. A distant chance existed that this was not in fact the case, that the time line of the Guardian's inventors was in truth accessible. But if so, it had not yet been discovered. It's builders had covered their own past too wed. The research party materialised at the modest, clean reception station of the Historical Institute. The reception port was fully automated, proceeding on the logic that machines couldn't be bribed. Anyone attempting to beam down to another part of the planet, illegally, would have found himself materialised instead thanks to elaborate transporter intercepts inside one of the well-armed armored fortresses that circled the time planet with unceasing, never-tiring vigilance. The station was near the southern sector of the best preserved portion of the massive urban ruins that rose near the Guardian. The city of Oyya, all two thousand square kilometers of it, was itself a formidable subject for historical and archaeological study. Excavations had revealed that at one time the city was even greater in extent. And there were ruins of other enormous cities scattered around the planet, many even larger than Oyya. But none were so well preserved. Had the Time Planet, then, once been severely over 78 STAR TREK LOG ONE populated? Was the Time Gate a last, desperate means of finding a way to relieve population pressure before it overwhelmed its creators? There was evidence to support such a theory. Most particularly, despite the unquestionably high degree of civilisation on this world, there divas no hint, no sign that its inhabitants had ever discovered a drive capable of carrying them from star to star. And there were no other planets, uninhabitable or otherwise, in the Time Planet's system. It didn't have even a single moon. The Time Planet was alone in space. Its visionaries and explorers had been forced to go adventuring in time. The automatic checkpoints at the reception station were thorough and efficient.. As soon as they'd cleared, they were met at the exit lounge by the head of the Institute's main station on the planet, Dr. Vassily. Dr. Vassily was elderly, silver haired, scintillating of mind, very female, and built like a hockey puck. Notwithstanding, she had the voice of a pixyish eleven-year-old. She invited them into the nearby central building, a spartan yet comfortable facility, for a light snack and some heavy conversation. Visitors were still a rarity on the Time Planet. Brandied tea, cake the tea was good, even if reconstituted. Somehow, though, reconstituted brandied tea, in all its varied brands and types, never approached the real thing. Of course, the natural product was far beyond the financial reach of pioneer historians however revered and respected. Kirk forced himself to make easy conversation with the good doctor. It wasn't hard; she was fascinating But before long Brickson was squirming like a jellyfish with the fidgets, Aleek-om was beginning to flap his wings nervously, sending feathers into everyone's tea, and even the normally imperturbable Jan Grey was showing signs of severe impatience. "We certainly appreciate your hospitality, Dr. Vassily," Kirk said smoothly and honestly. "But as you can probably tell, my professional charges are anxious to be about their job." STAR TREK LOG ONB 79 "Of course," she nodded sagely. "Thoughtless of me. I've been working here for so many years I'd forgotten what the experience of a first trip to the Gate means to outsiders." Her voice turned brisk and workmanlike. "There's a ground car waiting for you outside in the motor-pool hangar. Take the black and yellow one. I've had it pre-checked and fueled for you." She rose, her coveralls falling in shapeless wrinkles around her stout form, and walked them to the door. It stood open to the dry desert air. The climate here sucked moisture from unprepared bodies, but the temperature was not as severe as on other parts of the Time Planet. She directed her attention to Aleek-om. "By the way, Loom, what time line are you going to search out?" Aleek-om's upper and lower beak clicked several times in rapid succession a sign of humor among his kind. "Why, that of the city Oyya's, of course tilde her-w*!" Dr. Vassily smiled at the injoke. "It's been tried, believe me. With every semantic variation you could think of. Every play on words, every stretching of definitions. The Guardian's reply to such requests is always the same. was "There is no access through the Gate to the requested time line"." Aleek-om looked suddenly serious. "Dr. Vassily, do you really think the builders of the Guardian forgot to tie their own time line into the device?" "No one can say for sure, of course," she replied, wholly professional now. "Personally, I tend to the belief that any race which could construct such an astounding phenomenon as the Guardian would not overlook something that affected them so deeply and so closely. I prefer to think that for their own unknown reasons they denied access to their own past to themselves and to those who might come after them. "We may never know the truth, and I want to!" She grinned awkwardly, a little embarrassed at the sudden outburst of emotion. On the way to the motor-pool hangar, this was commented on. Grey found it unseemly. Aleek-om attributed it 80 STAR TREK By ORB to too lithe fresh contact with others. Erickson thought it only human. Spock, as usual, pinpointed it. It was called dedication. The ground car carried them easily and rapidly over the dry terrain. It was fifteen kilometers from the reception station to the site itself. There was no Gate, no artificial barrier in evidence around the Guardian. It had value beyond measure, value that transcended mere monetary considerations. Anyone who wished to try and destroy it if, indeed, it could be destroyed might seemingly have free and clear access to it. It had been demonstrated time and time again that madmen would attempt most anything. Nor was there any visible bar to potential misusers of the device. It seemed that anyone Leo could manage the time and expense necessary to reach the Time Planet and who shuttled instead of beaming down to its surface could make whatever use of the Gate he wished. Of course, there was the small matter of slipping past the four superbly equipped orbital fortresses that covered every square meter of the planet in a ring of destructive power. Power reserved elsewhere only for protecting prime military canters. It meant avoiding the gigantic phaser and missile batteries buried deep in the innocent-looking sands that drifted in low dunes around the Guardian itself. But anyone who could get past that well, access to the Time Gate was quite free to an such. Such elaborate precautions revere more than justified. It would not do to allow the frivolous or unstable access to the malleable past. So the missiles that remained locked in their racks and the phasers that sat on their stores of ravening energy and did not disturb the desert bushes around them were occasionally publicised. Thus far no one had yet tempted them. A well-mounted military expedition might possibly have succeeded in seizing the Guardian by force, if it managed to avoid total destruction in the battle that would ensue with the planetary defences. STAR TREKOG ONE 81 But that would mean war. Access of a belligerent to anenemy's past, well, it was unthinkable. So three empires and two interstellar federations cooperated in policing the Time Planet. They were reassured by the certain knowledge that anyone of them who dared try to make use of the Guardian for its own purposes would invite the immediate wrath of the other four. It might not have been the most civilised of arrangements, but it worked. Not that the setting of the Guardian was unimpressive, oh no. Hydrogen missiles might be larger, planet-to-space phasers more intricate, but none could match the nearby city of Oyya for sheer splendor. It stretched on and on, magnificent ruins dominating the horizon as far as one could see to east and south. And of course, there was the Guardian of Forever itself. Physically, it was impressive without being massive. Certainly in size it was nothing to match such awe-inspiring artifacts of ancient civilisations as the Temple of Halos on Canabbra IV, or the Alja.ean Wall on Qahtan. In color it was the shade of rusty iron, spotted here and there with overtones of grey. In shape it resembled a lopsided doughnut. The central hollow of that doughnut was the actual Time Gate. It was always filled with luminous, shifting images of a thousand pasts, all racing by at speeds far too rapid for even scanning tubes to pick out and dis- seminate. They left the ground car near a clump of some hearty green-brown desert bushes and walked up until they stood a couple of meters in front of the cut stone base. Kirk and Spock, having been here before, chose instead to spend a moment observing their fellow observers. Grey just stood there quietly, her eyes shirung. Aleekom's wings fluttered gently and thin claws drew small preparatory beeps from his special tricorder. As for Erickson, he shoved both fists into chubby hips, blew out his cheeks, and beamed. "Well, isn't this fine just final" he said reverently. He turned to his companions. "Let's get a-move on." 82 STAR TREK LOG ONE Grey seemed to float back to reality from some distant place. "Yes, by all means. You know the rules." Aleek-om no.ded, a thoroughly humanoid gesture. "Only one of us is permitted to undertake the actual entry and journey with Captain Kirk and Commander Spock acting as supplementary observers and escort. The rest of us win remain here in the present time to record and interpret the subsequent flow of regularized time-sequences." Then the three historians did a curious thing. They bent over and spent several moments searching the ground. When they stood, each placed his or her open palm face up towards a common center. Two pebbles of varying size lay in each palm. "AU right, get ready" Grey instructed. Hands were placed behind backs, Grey doing likewise. "I beg your pardon, Captain," murmured Spock curiously, "but what, exactly, is happening?" "We're going to decide which one of us goes and which two stay behind, Commander," Grey told him. Spock considered this. "I see no, I do not see. You will pardon me, Historian Grey. I am not familiar with the intimate interworkings of professionals in your field 60 perhaps I should not venture to comment upon them but this does not strike me as an-especially scientific way of determining the composition of this expedition." Aleek-om shook his feathered head again, set brilliant gold plumes dancing. "If I live for a thousand mating flights, I'll never understand you Vulcans." "Ready?" queried Grey. "Ready," the two males echoed. "Nowl" Each thrust a closed fist into the center of their little circle while Grey counted, "One . . . two . . . three!" Three hands opened. A single pebble rested in Grey's open palm, another in Aleek tilde more's. "Ah, that's fine, colleagues," announced Erickson, "truly fine!" He tossed both his revealed pebbles over his shoulder. They dropped their own, downcast. It didn't last but a moment. STAR TREK ONE 83 "Well, good luck, old boy," said Aleek-om, and Grey concurred. "Yes, good luck, Theodore." They proceeded to a solemn shaking of hands. Aleekom curled his hand in a peculiar way so as not to scratch a sensitive human palm. Then the two unlucky historians began to prepare their tricorders. "Captain," intoned a thoroughly puzzled Spock, Hiswere' confess I am still confused by this method of selection for such an important mission. I don't believe I have witnessed anything quite so arbitrary since . . ." "Ill explain it all to you later, Mr. Spock," Kirk grinned, "in the future. Right now, Mr. Erickson seems impatient to be on his way." "Yes, yes," insisted the little historian, waving his warms like a semaphoring turtle, "let's get going." The other historians turned their tricorder's visual pickups on and aimed them at the flowing Time Gate. Erickson mounted the stone platform and took up a position just in front of it. Kirk flanked him on the right side, Spock on the other. Then his voice boomed out a squeaky parody of an old-line politician's. "Guardian of Poreverl" For a long moment nothing happened. Then, from somewhere out of the air in front of them, a ponderous, rolling voice replied. It was heavy with age and weighty with infinite patience. Was this an accumulated effect, from answering thousands of inquiries? Or was it the Guardian's original voice? Kirk wondered. It always responded with perfect fluency to any question, no matter what language it was framed in. Regardless, the effect produced by those thunderous yet gentle tones was sobering. The last vestiges of humor disappeared from the little assembly. Everyone was all business now. "TO WHBNCB DO YOU WISH TO TRAVEL, AND PROM WnBNCB COMB YB," rumbled that mighty voice. "We come from elsewhere," answered Erickson formally, his words ridiculously inadequate in counterpoint to that stentorian thunder. "And we wish the elsewhen of the Empire of Orion." The Empire of Orion! Kirk started. He'd never both 84 STAR TREK LOG ONE ered to inquire which time line the historians intended to explore. They hadn't struck him as a particularly adventurous bunch. Erickson's request came as a double surprise. He'd figured this group of academicians for something much duller and more mundane than this. Say, the Butterfly Wars of Lepidopt, or the ceramic- and porcelain-making era of Sang Ho HiLn. But, the Empire of Orion! He found himself getting just a little bit excited. This vas going to be rather more fun than he'd anticipated. There was a clouding effect obscuring the Gate. A creamy blue-green blur filmed over the hazy surface of the circular center. As it did so, the dizzying array of time scenes began to slow. It was like watching a projector gradually wind down from a high speed the visual equivalent of a slowing tape. Eventually only a single alien scene remained. It did not shi*, did not ripple, but held steady and clear. The blur started to fade. As it did so it was replaced in the scene by natural colors. When they passed through the Time Gate, their first task would be to obtain a change of clothing. In the barbaric Empire of Orion, two starship uniforms and the casual dress of Historian Erickson would render them something less than inconspicuous. No one knew what passed for casual dress in that time period. Kirk knew this was so because if they did know, the historians would have had their necessary costumes prepared in advance. Fortunately, the medium of exchange was only gold, and Erickson was amply supplied. They'd have no trouble making any needed purchases. Erickson divas probably pleased. It gave him an excuse to bring back three sets of the genuine article for study, of course. It was forbidden to profit materially from a journey through the Gate. Otherwise, the most dedicated researcher might be tempted to travel back in time to, say Earth's past and return with some little valuable knickknack like Praxiteles lost gold statue of Pallas Athena. They could touch things, move about, and purchase, STAR TREK LOG Of 85 but nothing of real value could be brought back except for study purposes. Once through, they would spend some thirty minutes objective time. That might be several days in the subjective time of the Orionic Empire. Then, wherever they happened to be in space in that ancient civilisation, the Guardian would reach out and pull them back to the present, ejecting them once more on silent desert sands. Thirty minutes! Even the great, still unexplained energies that powered the Guardian could not hold open a time vortex any longer than that. And the amount of power necessary to hold a time dilation for even five minutes objective time was nothing short of astronomical. It was generally agreed on that the Guardian somehow drew directly on the local sun for power but exactly how this was ac- complished was still a source of mystery and controversy. "Captain Kirk, Commander Spock," piped Erickson, "if you're ready, gentlemen?" "Whenever you are, Mr. Erickson," acknowledged Kirk. Erickson turned to glance back behind himself. "Ready, colleagues?" "Ready, short stuff,") grinned Grey. "Go get "em, Ted," cheered Aleek-om. "Then, gentlemen," he said importantly to Kirk and Spock, "if you will, on three one, two, three . . ." They stepped forward. Two seekers of knowledge ... one human, the other faintly so, stood alone on the sandy plain where a moment before they had been five. Two seekers of knowledge and one interested onlooker. McCoy had chosen to remain quietly in the background. The early Empire civilisation turned out to be a rnaelstrom of colors and sights and fascinating detail through which Kirk, Spock, and the little historian moved like wraiths in a dream. The sounds matched the barbaric imagery the unexpected and incredible exceeded the wildest expectations. They spent two and a half days, Orion time. When their thirty real minutes were up, seemingly seconds later, Kirk was as sorry to leave as Erickson. One moment they were changing clothes in the back 86 STAR TREK LOG Of room of a disreputable inn in a gaudy bazaar, while meters away an equally disreputable personage was auctioning off modest examples of local feminine pulchritude. The next, they were standing once again on the stone platform facing the Guardian. Grey and Aleek-om made no move to approach them as the three travelers swayed uneasily. There was always a moment or two of nausea that followed any passage through a time vortex. Then their systems had readjusted to the sudden change in climate and gravity and other variables, and they stood easily once again. Both historians appeared excited and pleased by the stream d slowed time pictures from different time-sequences that they'd been able to examine and record. Apparently that had been exciting enough. No one seemed the least upset now at being left behind. Erickson, for his part, was flushed With a glow that on a more imposing individual might have been interpreted as maniacal. Kirk noticed McCoy staring at Spock. There was an expression of mild concern and some puzzlement on the doctor's face. Studious physician to the end, the Captain reflected. Come to think of it, Aleek-om and Grey also seemed to be staring at the science officer.. But in the first flush of excitement at their successful journey and return, Kirk didn't notice the intensity of their stares. For that matter, neither did Spock or Erickson. "Relax, Bones, we're all fine. Usual upset stomach, and that's all but gone. Orion at the dawn of civilisation, Bones! Just watching, not interacting significantly for fear of changing some tiny bit of history . . ." He paused. The others were paying absolutely no attention to him. Instead, they continued to stare at Spock. Por the first time, Kirk took notice of their odd fascination with his assistant. "What's the matter?" He still smiled. "Bones, what's wrong?" Dr. tilde McCoy did a rather startling thing, then. He jerked his head in Spock's direction, then pointed at him. His voice was open, curious. STAR TREK L tilde ONE 87 "Who's he, Jim?" This outrageous comment took some time to register. Kirk looked over at Spock reflexively. It was the same old Spock, all right, down to his unwavering expression and peaked aural receptors. For his part, Spock's eyebrows made an upward leap of Olympian proportions. In fact, the science officer looked as close to total befuddlement as Kirk could ever recall having seen him. The captain turned back to McCoy, mildly irrritated.theexcitement of their return had been stolen from him. "What do you mean, 'Who's he?"' You know Mr. Spock." McCoy's nonchalant attitude and indifferent manner were much more shocking than his casual reply. was Braid I don't, Jim." Spock's expression changed only slightly at that. Just the veriest hint, the merest touch of annoyance seeped through his otherwise stony visage. Kirk, however, was much more expressive in his display of facial contortions. He started to speak further to McCoy, became aware of his imminent loss of self-control, and thought better of speaking just now. There was no point in getting upset, yet. It was a practical joke. Yes, of course! Bones probably authored the whole thing himself. It would fan apart any minute, as soon as someone made a slip and said something relating to Spock. For now he would go along with the gag. He pulled out his communicator, nipped open the grid, and glanced over at Grey and Aleek-om. "You've both concluded your observations, then?" Jan Grey sighed reluctantly. That was the most blatant show of emotion she had yet displayed. Maybe she had Vulcan blood. "Sadly, yes, Captain. It was an too short, too brief. But yes, our work here is finished." They all climbed back into the shuttle car. Kirk, Spock, and McCoy rode in silence while the three historians chattered in the back. "We should stop before we depart and thank Dr. Vassily for her help and consideration," noted Aleek-om 88 STAR TRBR LOG ONE when they'd returned the car to its stall in the main hangar. Erickson agreed. "Yes, by all means." He nodded vigorously. Kirk interposed a negative as he toyed with his open communicator. He'd put off calling the ship. Erickson's call to remain here longer woke him from idle daydreams. "why not, Captain7" The stout researcher was pouting. Then he smiled slyly. "That brandied tea wasn't half bad, even if it was reconstituted." "It's not the quality of the refreshments, Erickson. There's something else." Kirk looked around at the now curious faces. At first they'd an stared with unconcealed fascination at Spock. Now they were studiously ignoring him. If this was a practical joke, then someone was carrying it off in style. Too much style. Kirk was starting to feel that any overtones of humor to the situation were becoming shaded in tones of Uack. He activated the communicator. Anyone could beam freely up from the surface of the Time Planet. Getting dawn was the problem. "Kirk to Enterprise." "Enterprise," came a familiar voice with sharp vowel sounds. So Scotty was working with Chief Kyle on the transporter now. So much the better. "Six to beam up, Scotty." "Aye, sir." Aleek-om had been thinking. Now he spoke delicately to Kirk. "If you don't mind, Captain, I should like to remain here a while longer, to record and study some of the artifacts Dr. Vassily has unearthed. If we have some time before departure, that is." The Aurelian's expression was hopeful. "Me too, Captain," added Jan Grey. Kirk nodded, turned to the other historian. "How about you, Erickson?" "Oh no, I'm satisfied. AU I want to do is put my tapes in a big viewer and play them back. I was so busy recording and taking notes that I didn't have half a chance to STAR TREK LOG ONE 89 enjoy the journey." His blissful look turned momentarily serious. "But you've got to understand, Captain Kirk, that this is a once-in-a-lifetime experience for most historians. We can't hold you up." Aleek-om and Grey indicated agreement. 'A know starship time is precious. But if my compatriots could have even a few additional minutes . . ." dis"...AII right. all right." Kirk grinned, spoke into the communicator. "Cancel that, Scotty. Four only to come up. Myself, Mr was he hesitated, "and the others." The two historians who would remain a while longer thanked him profusely and then hurried off toward the reception station. They promised to be ready for transporter pickup at the first call from the orbiting Enterprrse. "All clear, Scotty. Bring us up." "Aye, sir." There was a familiar feeling of disorientation. The four figures dissolved into four roughly cylindrical columns of luminescent particles. In the transporter room, Chief Engineer Scott personally handled the delicate task of transporting while Chief Transporter Kyle, himself a master at the job, watched admiringly. Those calloused, practiced hands operated the transporter controls even more smoothly than his own. The first thing Kirk noticed when he regained sight was the startled expression on his chief engineer's face. The first thing he heard when he regained hearing was the startled tone of his chief engineer's voice. "Captain was Scott paused, unmistakably confused. "I was expecting two of the historians with you and Dr. McCoy. But a Vulcan his Kirk decided that was quite enough. If this was a prac, tical joke, it was going too far. "Explain yourself, Mr. Scott!" he snapped. Scott's mouth worked. His puzzlement seemed honest. "So... sir?" Kirk chewed at his lower lip and stepped out of the alcove, off the platform. "I don't know what's going on here but the Jirst officer of this ship will be treated with respect!" 90 STAR TREK LOG ONE "Captain," came a strange voice from the elevator, "I assure you no one has ever treated me otherwise." It was Kirk's turn to look dumbfounded. His gaze snapped to the right. The humanoid who'd just brazenly laid claim to Spock's title walked easily into the room. He was an Andorian, clad in the blue shirt of starlleet science officer, and wearing the insignia of a full commander. Like most Andorians he divas slim, rather fragile-looking, and had the pale blue eyes and silver hair of most of his people. Kirk noticed the two slightly curved, flaring antennae which protruded from his forehead and ended in dull, round knobs. These were his organs of hearing. He had no shell-shaped ears as did human or Vulcan. Where distance was involved the knobbed antennae had less range than other humanoid sensing organs, but they could pick up much higher and lower frequencies. The Andorian's slim build belied his agility and strength, characteristics which certain other races had learned about the hard way. Kirk took a couple of steps towards this alien, and his jaw dropped in amazement. He looked the other up and down without fazing him, finally managed to blurt out his thoughts. "Who the hell are you?" This time it was Dr. McCoy who replied, wryly. 'A thought sure you'd know Thelin by now, Jim. He's been your first officer for five years." "Is something the matter, Captain?" queried the Andorian. His tones were soft, slightly accented. And he too seemed openly puzzled. Kirk could only stare at hirn. Spock finally broke the silence, summing up both his own and Kirk's thoughts in his usual terse fashion. "Captain, I have come to the conclusion that this is not a game." "No no," Kirk muttered. "I agree, Mr. Spock. But if it's a reality and everyone else here seems to think it is then what happened?" He stiffened. "All right, I don't know what's going on here, but I'm going to get to the bottom of ill Spock, Mr.... Thelin. I! you'll both come with me to the main briefing room. STAR TREK LOG ONE 91 There's no point in upsetting anyone else on board." They started off. "Me too, Captain?" asked Erickson. He had no real part in the problem, but if something was the matter with Spock well, he'd formed enough of a friendship with the starship officers to at least be concerned. "Yes, by all means, Mr. Erickson, join us." V11 The command briefing room was small, with a single free-formed table of dark mahoganylike wood from the forests of IandBut dominating the center. Holographic portraits of various alien landscapes decorated the walls, along with a framed copy of the Federation charter, and there was a musical rain sculpture shifting and chiming softly in one corner. The seats were also free-formed, lush and comfortable, but they could do little to ease the tenseness of the four humanoids who now sat in them. Erickson immediately set to work with his tricorder, keeping his verbal requests to the machine to a whisper. He had thought about the unbelievable situation, and decided that maybe the compact instrument had noticed something significant they had not remembered. "I will pass over the obvious, gentlemen," began Kirk. "I can think of only one explanation for what seems to have happened, and I'm sure it has occurred to you also." "When we were in the time vortex, something happened to change the present as we know it. No one seems to recognize Mr. Spock. And neither he nor I nor Mr. Erickson 92 STAR TRB tilde L tilde ONE recognises Mr. Thelin. The only answer must be that the past was somehow altered when we were in it. Instead of emerging into our own time line, Mr. Spock, Mr. Erickson, and myself have reemerged into an alternate secondary one as a result of that as yet unidentified change." He paused for breath. "And if that sounds confusing, gentlemen, I assure you it's a fit description of my present state of mind." Erickson chose that moment to interrupt. He shook his head and looked disappointed. "Nothing, Captain Kirk. I've just done a double-speed review of our entire journey. The tricorder has no record of anything we did while in the vortex that could conceivably have affected the future. Any future." "Please, Mr. Erickson," requested Kirk. "I don't doubt your readings. But could you . . . try once more? Take all the time you need." "I don't need any more time, Captain. I've done this sort of review a thousand times before." He shrugged, bent over the tricorder once more. When he looked up again a while later, after completing the second run-through, the stocky historian found all eyes were on him. The sameness of his expression was eloquent. "Nothing, Captain. I've even run down any changes in the atmospheric content while we were present, and there's absolutely nothing." Kirk slammed a fist down on the smooth wood. One of these days he was going to break a hand doing that. "But, dammit tilde omething was changed!" "It seems, Captain," interposed Spock easily, "that I am the only one affected. The mission, the ship, the crew except for myself remain the same." ""Not entirely, Mr. Spock," Kirk countered. "I still know who you are. So does Erickson." The historian nodded vigorously. "But no one else aboard does. While we were in Orion's past, the time revision that apparently occurred here didn't affect us." He looked thoughtful. "I wonder how extensive it is?" "If you'll pardon me, Jim," began Thelin. Then he smiled faintly, uncomfortably. "Captain, I might be able STAR TREK LOG ONE 93 to answer that. While we were on our way down here, I took the liberty of placing an informational request with the library. It should tell us how complete the time change has been." "I didn't hear you put in any request, Mr. Thelin." "You were in deep conversation with Mr.... Spock, at the time," the Andorian replied. As if on cue, the bosun'swhistle sounded in the room. Thelin looked pleased. "That ought to be the reply now." Kirk pressed a halfhidden switch under the rim of the table. A three-sided viewer popped up from the center of the dark wood. He hit another switch. "tilde Kirk here." The picture of a young, neatly turned-out ensign appeared on the three screens. The ensign started to speak, but Kirk waved him off. "Just a minute, Ensign." He turned to Spock. "You know who that is, Mr. Spock?" "Ensign Bates, Captain. Inexperienced, but studious, tilde vell-intentioned, reasonably efficient.. Graduated OTS Starfleet with high honors but not the highest. Sewed one year apprenticeship on the shuttle tender SCOPUS. Transferred to Enterprzse starda . . ." "That'll do Spock." Kirk looked satisfied. "That would approximate my own evaluation of Bates" abilities at this stage, Captain," Thelin added casually. "Transferred to Enterprise stardate 5365.6." "Ummm." Kirk's tone was noncommittal. He directed his attention back to the screen. "What have you got for us, Ensign?" "Sir, we've checked Starfleet records as Commander Thelin requested." Even though he thought he was growing used to the present impossible situation, Kirk still gave a little mental lump every time he heard the Andorian referred to by his own crew as "Commander Thelin." Deep down he knew that in the original time line, at least the Andorian didn't really exist. Or was this the real time line, and the other merely a secondary copy? One problem at a time . . . 94 STAR TREK LOG ONE Yet McCoy, Scotty everyone seemed to know Thelin intimately, and not Mr. Spock. He blinked, remembered Bates. The ensign was patiently awaiting Kirk's orders to report the researched material, destroy it, stand on his head, play dead, or do something. "Findings, Ensign?" he said crisply. The ensign's reply had the directness of truth. "There is no Vulcan named Spock listed with Starfleet in any capacity, sir. Neither as commander, nor cook no listing whatsoever." Spock's only visible reaction was the moderate ascension of one eyebrow. "I see," Kirk muttered. He thought a moment, then, "You have your visual pickup on?" "Of course, Captain. I was not told this was to be a closed meetin . . ." "No, no, it's not. Relax, Ensign. Now, can you see the Vulcan sitting to my immediate right?" Bates' head and eyes moved. He showed no reaction. "Yes, sir." "Do you recognize him?" "No, sir," responded Bates, who was one of Spock's regular science-library assistants. "I've never seen him before in my life." Thelin leaned forward and addressed the screen. "Did you also research the Vulcan family history requested?" "Yes, Commander," said the ensign crisply. "There are some related visual materials. I can put them on the viewer pickup, if you wish." "We so wish, Ensign," Kirk ordered. Bates hit a button below screen pickup level and his image vanished, to be replaced immediately by a still hologram of a distinguished-looking male Vulcan clad in formal ambassadorial attire. Bates continued to speak. "This is Sarek of Vulcan, ambassador to seventeen Federation planets in the past thirty t-standard years." Soock broke into the Ensign's speech. "That is not correct." Kirk only grinned sardonically. "In this case or this time, Mr. Spock it seems that it STAR TREK LOG ONB 95 is." Spock gave a slight nod of understanding and looked back to the tripartite viewer. "I wish to ask a question." "Yes, Commander?" Bates might not know Spock, but he could still recognize the uniform and rank of a starship commander, even if not his own. "What of Sarek's family? His wife and son?" The picture of Sarek disappeared, to be replaced by another hologram. This one was of a lovely human woman in her early thirties. She was fair-haired and slim, delicate one of those rare women who you know instantly will retain her youthfulness well into old age. The young officer's voice impersonal voice, doom voice, continued "Amanda, wife of Sarek, known on Earth as Amanda Grayson." Kirk gave Spock a sympathetic look as Bates droned on. "The couple separated after the death of their son." That finally drew a visible reaction from Spock, though, as Kirk knew, ninety percent of it was still bound up tightly inside his first officer. Bates continued. "The wife was killed in a shuttle accident at Lunaport, on her way home to Earth. Ambassador Sarek has not remarried." Everyone was watching Spock now, and he was watching none of them. His eyes remained glued to the picture on the screen. When he finally did speak, there was a pause, a bare hint of a catch in his voice that could have been no, ridiculous. "My mother was he whispered softly. Then he spoke well, almost normally. There was no uncertainty in his tone, only a desire to satisfy perverse curiosity to the utmost, to draw out the thing to its ultimate mad conclusion. "The son what was his name and age when he died?" "Speck," came Bates reply. "Age . . ." he seemed to be checking some off-screen reference, "dis . . age seven." "Sympathy is not among my race's primary traits, Mr. Spock," said Thelin, "but I believe I can understand a little of what you are feeling now. I'm sorry, truly I am." He gave the Andorian equivalent of a shrug. "But I am me and you are you, and there is nothing to be done for it." 96 STAR TREK LOG ONE "Not in this time line, no," mused Kirk. "You are, of course, correct, Captain," Spock added. "But if we didn't change anything in the past his "We didn't!" insisted Erickson. "We didn't!" Suddenly his forehead creased and he repeated, softly this time, "We didn't!" insisted Erickson. "We didn't!" Suddenly "Of course! Jan and Loom!" "Surely," said Spock, "they didn't enter the Guardian while we were in the vortex?" "No, no!" Erickson was nervous as a mouse. "They would never do a thing as potentially dangerous as that. But scanning they must have been scanning! We might at least get some useful information from them if they . . ." "... were looking into my past while we were in Orion's. Yes, I see what you are leading toward, Historian." Spock rose, looked at Kirk. "Captain, we must go down to the Guardian again. And as quickly as possible. The longer we stay in this time line, the stronger our position here grows, and the less chance we have of returning to and correcting our own my own." "Certainly, Spock. Erickson, come on!" The four rose and left the briefing room. "You're sure you don't recognize him?" Kirk asked Scott when they'd returned to the transporter room. They were mounting the transporter platform prior to beamdown. Scott studied Spock carefully, indifferently, and shook his head. "There are few Vulcans on the Enterprise, Captain. I'm not likely to forget any, let alone a commander." "Thanks, Scotty. Beam us down, please." On the way back to the Guardian in the ground car, they tried to explain the situation to Grey and Aleek-om. Since Kirk was still confused himself, he wasn't sure they made things much clearer to the two historians who had remained behind. But they seemed to grasp the idea behind what had happened better than he had. I-'me was their business, space was his. Of course, neither of them recognised Mr. Spock. And both seemed to know Thelin. The Andorian had insisted STAR TREK LOG ONB 97 on coming along, as was his privilege both as commander and scienceflicer. By the time they had returned to the quiescent Guardian of Forever, mutual agreement had reached on an approximation of sequential probabilities. Nevertheless, Kirk continued to examine every salient fact with the three historians as they all made their way toward the Guardian. As always, the Time Gate was modest in appearance, overwhelming in capabilities. Glowing cream-colored mists flowed and danced patiently, langorously in the central hollow, oblivious to the petty problems of the small knot of approaching humano tilde ds. "If we didn't change anything while we were in the time vortex," Kirk insisted, "someone or something else must have." He turned to Aleek-om and then Grey. "You were using the Guardian while we were gone." "Yes, but it was nothing unusual," said Grey matterof-factly. "We were merely scanning occasional sequences of recent history." "Any recent Vulcan history?" asked Kirk. "Why, yes!" She smiled in sudden realisation. "I see the way your thoughts have been going, Captain. I don't see what we might have done, but of course it seems the only other possibility." "What time period?" asked Spock as they mounted the last step leading towards the Gate. 'Em not sure." She fumbled with the omnipresent tricorder. "Just a momnet ..." A quick recheck provided the desired information. "No specific dates listed approximately twenty to thirty Vulcan years past." Kirk had a sudden thought. His question beat Spock's by a few sew onds. "Was there any notation recorded on the death of the son of a Vulcan ambassador named Sarek and his human wife?" Both historians looked thoughtful, glanced at each other before turning back to Kirk and Spock. "I don't recall any, but there was so much information was Aleek-om looked a little tense as he worked his own tricorder. Thin, powerful claws clicked over the sen 98 STAR TREK LOG ONE sitivecontrols, too fine for any human to manipulate. It hummed softly, then stopped. Aleek-om jabbed a recessed switch, ran something back and played through it more slowly. The hum deepened. He stopped again and nodded, his crest bobbing and dancing in the dry desert breeze. "Cggier-wz tilde to Yes, the death is indeed recorded." "How . . ." Kirk all but choked on the peculiar-sounding words, "how did he die?" He still found it hard to believe he was living this nightmare. It was no consolation to know that it must be a hundred times worse for Spock. Again, Aleek-om checked the instrument readings. "The child is recorded as dying during some form of ... maturity test. Yes, that's it. It is recorded only because the father was a notable figure in government and in Federation history." Spock spoke absently. "The Kahs-wan a survival test for young males. It is traditional, a holdover from less peaceful, less civilized days." "The death is recorded as was Aleek-om continued, but Spock finished it for him. "dis . . falling on the twentieth day of Tasmeen." AU but Kirk and Erickson looked at Spock in surprise. "How do you know this?" asked Thelin. Spock paused, spoke slowly. "That was the day my my cousin saved my life when I was attacked in the desert by a wild animal." But how could Spock know that that was the parffcular day and that that incident was crucial? Inspiration hit Kirk then, wthout warning at warpeight speed. "This cousin, Spock, what was his name?" Spock frowned, shifted his position on the rocky surface underfoot. "That I'do not seem to recall clearly. I was very young. He caned himself yes, Selek. A common enough name in my father's family. He was visiting us." Spock frowned slightly. "Odd, but I never saw him again after that though I wished to, many fames. Nor, I believe, did any of my family." The frown grew deeper. STAR TREK LOG ONB 99 "Captain, your expression, I believe you ..." Spock seemed to hesitate. Kirk looked directly at his first officer. Inside, Spock knew. But he was so close to the answer that it hadn't yet come to him. "Spock this Selek did he by any chance look like you do . . . now?" Even then, Spock was reluctant to accept the idea. Alternative lines of possibility, however, suddenly looked more barren than ever. He nodded slowly. 'ally believe he did, Captain. And I see what you are thinking. That other time, it wasn't my 'cousin" who saved me it was I. I saved myself." "But this time," continued Kirk, pushing the thought forward, "you were in Orion's past with Mr. Erickson and me. At the same time, Aleek tilde m and Grey were here, playing back that section of Vulcan history. You couldn't exist in two time lines simultaneously, so you had to vanish from one of them. In other words, you had to die as a boy, since you couldn't be there to save yourself." He shook his head. Much more thinking along paradoxical lines like that and they'd all be candidates for the silly station. He spun to face the Gate. "Guardian, did you hear that?" The shifting colors seemed to flow a little faster, shine a touch brighter. When it spoke, the colors pulsed with internal light as each syllable was intoned. The words themselves were, as always, neither masculine nor feminine nor even machinelike but instead a kind of strange sexless and timeless neuter. "I EIBAR AB[." "We could resort to the Enterprise's computers," Kirk murmured, as much to himself as to the Gate, "but in all the Universe, no one, nothing, knows as much about time as you. TeDo me is it possible for Spock the Vuican to return to the period when he was not (god, this was insane!) and repair the broken time line so that all is the same as it was before our last journey?" A pause, then, "IT IS POSSIB[B," the Guardian boomed indifferently, "IP NO OTHER MAJOR FACTOR HAS BEEN CHANGED. OR IS CHANGED IN TIIB CHANGING." 100 STAR TREK LOG OF Kirk turned to his science officer. - "Do you remember enough, Spock? You heard the Guardian. You can't risk changing anything when you go back. You've got to repeat what happened when you were seven years old." Spock shook his head slowly, the strain of recall showing plaunly. "I do not remember everything, Captain. There are vague memories, from a child's point of view. But as is common to youthful memories, a child's details are blurred and run together. The memory is there but slightly out of focus." "You'll have to try!" Kirk insisted. "For you and your mother to live." Spock nodded slowly, considering. "Yes. I will need the following items: a Vulcan desert soft-suit and boots, and a small selection of plain streetwear accessories circa 8877 Vulcan years. The matching obhgatory carry-bag should be of the same period and look well used.)"' "You've got them," nodded Kirk quickly. "I'll have quartermaster section drop whatever they're doing and run them off now." He flipped open his communicator and moved slightly to one side. The three historians were already engaged in animated discussion of what had become for them a fascinating socio-mathematical exercise in conflicting time lines. This curiosity was touched with tragedy only for Erickson, since among the arguing historians only he had been intimately involved with the actual expedition into Orion's past. But his academic concern outweighed the desire to offer further consolation to Spock. He wasn't very good at such things. anyway. That left Spock alone with his quiet doppelganger Thelin. The Andorian studied him closely. "This proposed modification of time lines will put you in my place on a different plane . . . replace another Thelin somewhere." He paused. "Yet, I am not aggrieved." "Andorians are noted for many things," said Snock conversationally. "However, as you yourself admitted, symnathv is not one of them." "True," Thelin nodded. "A warrior race has few sym STAR TREK LOG ONE 101 pathies and little time for same. Yet it is not a normal situation we find ourselves in. I, personally, do not feel threatened. Yet, in a way, I am actually contributing to the murder of a distant cousin." "Who should not be there in the first place," concluded Spock evenly. "Perhaps. Yet one empathy we Andorians do possess is for family. On this time plane, you will lose and so would your mother. The knowledge that this will be prevented, at least, is acceptable mental compensation for me." He gave Spock a smart Vulcan hand salute. "Live long and prosper in your own world, Commander Spock in your own time." Spock returned the salute. "And you in yours, Commander Thelin." There was nothing to do now but wait for Spock's requested clothing and materials to be sent down from the Enterprise. There'd be no problem there planetary defenses could recognise the difference between a suit of clothes and a photon torpedo. But it left them with nothing to do but think, and after a while that wasn't too comfortable for the historians, either. The little group spent several nervous, awkward minutes wandering around the base of the now familiar Guardian. Kirk studied it idly. Certainly it possessed some strange unknown variety of organicstinorganic intelligence witness its answers to questions in many languages. But no one knew if this intelligence lay dormant until evoked. Might it not be always alert, constantly observing? Was it even now looking down on them from some uncomprehensible alien OI-YMPUS and musing on their problems? He could ask, of course. But the Guardian of Forever did not deign to answer any questions about anything but time. As for other sights to study, they were too far from Oyya for the city's ancient and distant attractions to hold their interest for very long. The area around the Guardian itself was singularly barren. Even the Time Gate was beginning to seem like no more than a pile of oddly hewn rocks and stone by the time a small transporter effect, a chromatic glow of atomic 102 STAR TREK BOO ONE action, began to take shape nearby. As it faded, the glow congealed into the form of a Vulcan carry-all bag, a small pile of goods and knickknacks, boots, and a neatly tied bundle of sand-colored clothes. "Nice to know that the crew in this time plane is efficient, too," Kirk commented appreciatively. He hesitated, then held out a hand to Spock. Words were unnecessary. It took Spock a few moments to make the change of clothing. He stacked his uniform and boots neatly to one side, then turned and moved away from them, walking up to the base of the Gate itself. Thelin moved to stand next to Kirk. Not Front to miss even a blurred glimpse of what might take place, the three historians activated their own special tricorders. Spock's voice as he addressed the enigmatic intelligence known as the Guardian was clear and precise, as always. ""I wish to visit the planet Vulcan." "Tams?" rumbled the Guardian. "Thirty Vulcan years past, the month of Tasmeen, be" fore before the twentieth day." There, that ought to provide a reasonable margin of time in which to get reacquainted with himself. "BOCA equals ON?" "Just outside the border city of ShiKahr." By way of reply, the pastel mists that filled the circular Gate started to swirl and boil. flowing slower and slower, until the blur of time pictures began to steady as the Guardian locked in to the requested time line. Then, abruptly, the Gate was filled with a view so familiar to Spock that it immediately relaxed all inner tensions. A hot. dry orange world Vulcan. "Yes," was an Kirk heard him say though there seemed to be other words, voiced too low to be understood. "TOMB AND PBACB," the Guardian shouted in tones as stable and final as the Universe, "ARB READY TO RBCE-RVE Y." "Yes," Spock murmured again. One word worth a thousand pictures. Then he was running. running forward, and taking a short leaf into the time portal. His body faded from view as though he were slinging into a transparent sponge. As soon as he touched the field, STAR TREK LOG ONE 103 the picture began to blur from the temporary distortion of the time vortex. For several moments after he'd vanished, Kirk stood staring at the now resumed blur of time-patterns racing across the Gate. Then he turned to one side, where the blue uniform of a Starlleet commander, science section, and a pair of boots Starfleet standard issue, offlcer's lay on the broken gravel, awaiting their owner's return. In another, unknown time line, another James T. Kirk was staring at another set of clothes, thinking the same thoughts, hoping the same hopes. And on a different line, perhaps, yet a different Kirk. And another, and another an infinitude of Kirks waiting for the return of a billion Spooks a million variations of a certain awkward see" and or two in time .... Spock stood on the sands of the world of his birth. Behind him, the land was desert, painted in harsh ocher-yellows and umber-browns spotted only reluctantly here and there by an occasional winsome patch of greenery. Further back, a range of forbidding black mountains clawed at the sky with great ragged talons of granite, basalt, and gneiss. The thin atmosphere inspired a roof of flinty orange-red instead of the soft blues of Earth. But the clouds that spotted it were just as cottony white. Before him lay the city of ShiKahr, like a neat, orderly oasis in the wastes. A wide band of lush, landscaped parkland formed a civilising barrier between urban environment and raw, arid sands. Flowers and other vegetation tended toward soft, warm hues of yellow and brown, with a few isolated sprinklings of pink or purple. The park bufl'er zone was as modern as the rest of ShiKahr, which nevertheless was an old city. Buildings were geometric, regular, and aesthetically as well as architecturally sound. A logical city designed for relentlessly logical inhabitants. A person standing next to Spock at that moment might have heard him mutter something vaguely like, "thirty years . . ." Or it might have been the wind rippling through a desert bush. In any case, no one could have stood close enough to 104 STAR TREK L tilde ONE see what was going through Spock's mind. That mind was considering. From here on, he was quite aware that his very continued existence depended on repeating with as much precision as possible events he could barely remember events that had taken place thirty years ago now. He shifted the carry-bag higher on his shoulder, ran his right thumb underneath the strap, and started off towards the city. At the city gate he experienced an instant of apprehension. There was always an outside chance that something else about him, something unseen but vital, had been altered by interlocution of time lines. If the automatic sentry defense systems which were designed to keep out fierce desert carnivores sensed anything suspicious about him, he would be, not killed, but immobilized and held helplessly tranquilized until the arrival of a detention squad from the city reasoning force. That wouldn't be fatal. But subsequent questions and examinations could be embarrassing as well as time delayinR. At the very least, serious alterations in this time line might be produced. That could jumble matters beyond repair. They might be damaged beyond change already, but there was little benefit to that line of thought. Besides, it was very depressing. He needn't have worried. Unseen radiation probed him, hidden sensors clucked approving mechanical tongues. His shape and composition were familiar Vulcan. No challenge was offered as he walked through the park. No tranquilizing darts phocked out at him, no stun rays sought to bar his passage. He experienced no difficulties whatsoever. His only barrier to progress was confusion of a mental variety. He'd forgotten the beauty of ShiKahr. The calm efficiency and palpable sense of security that made a Vulcan city so different from the hectic, albeit exciting urban hodgepodges of so many other humanoid worlds. He passed by the last of the flowers, past a gentle fountain that dispensed a constant stream of fresh well water, and suddenly found himself on a walking street. This pathway was broad and paved, but designed for pedestrian use only. It was quiet and tree-shaded. Every STAR TREK LOG ONE 105 effort every stone, every bush, all but the actual placement of the leaves on the branches was predesigned and executed to enhance one's serene appreciation of podal locomotion. High walls kept homes and gardens discreetly secluded from passersby. Delicate symmetrical blossoms on creeping vines trailed over many of the stone walls and brightened the rustic scene even further. There was a main artery in the distance ahead, busy with ground-car activity. Old-style, outmoded ground-cars, he noted. That mechanical sound was distant. But soon, another clamor reached his ears. A group of young voices male. Their tone was biting and sarcastic a near-emotion to which even Vulcan youth were not immune. The words matched the tone of delivery. "Barbarian . . . Earther . . . throwback . . . emotional, squalling, uncontrolled Eartherr He'd heard those same insults long ago, it seemed. Surprising how painful they could still be, after all those years. He moved to a corner, turned it, and looked ahead. A high wall fronted on an intersection of several small pathways. He moved a few steps further, halting in front of a high, solid old gate of polished, engraved wood. Nearby, another lower gateway led to a flourishing garden. In front of this second gate stood a very young version of himself. There was no question of who it was. Inwardly, he'd dreaded this moment from an intellectual, not an emotional, standpoint. How would he react to the first sight of . . . himself? Kirk had equated it to an old terran expression being "on the outside looking in." Now that Spock comwas actually confronted with the experience, the result proved anticlimactic. There was no abrupt sundering of mind, no shattering of preconceived images. No, no emotional damage. This younger, smaller version of himself was only a young boy who looked somehow familiar. But another person entirely After all, he'd met a universe full of aliens and to an adult, children are often the most alien of all. He blinked. Three other Vulcan youngsters stood in 106 STAR TREE LOG ONE front of young Spock, taunting him. Old memories came drifting back, long-lost little pains that made small wrenching tugs deep in his mind. That one, there, with the light-colored hair that must be Stark. Then Sofek, next to him, and the tamest one standing between them had to be Sepek a persistent childhood tormentor until later years, when they grew to become great friends. But for now . . . "You're a terran, Spock," shouted Stark. "You could never be a true Vulcan." "That's not true!" yelled young Spock in reply, barely managing to lettereep a grip on his temper. "My father . . ." Sepek's reply touched each noun, each syllable, with contempt '7erran! Your father brought shame to Vulcan! Marrying an Farther worn his comThat was more than enough for young Spock. Sadly, his physical reaction was more emotional than reasoned. He rushed forward blindly, arms flailing, to crush and rend his tormentors. Old Spock's first reaction was to observe that one against three with one of the three much older, heavier, and more experienced was an illogical arrangement to aggravate. Not to mention an unnecessary one. But he'd been different as a youngster. Now the rather astonishing emotional outbursts of childhood rushed back to him. Had he really been so ready to react belligerently to mere words? Had he actually been so impulsive, so blind, so so emotional? There was no denying the evidence of his eyes. Any last concerns he might have felt about meeting his younger self disappeared. The child really was a different person. Any mother could have told him that. Sepek the nearest and strongest, easily dodged young Spock's blind, angry punch. Sepek deftly tripped him backwards while avoiding the clumsy grab. Young Spock landed unceremoniously on his backside in the smooth rt. STAR TREK LOG ONE 107 He didn't appear to be hurt not physically, anyway. Sepek's voice dripped contempt. "You haven't even mastered a simple Vulcan neck pinch yet!" he said nastily, concluding with the ultimate insult, "Earther1" The three youths walked quietly away. Young Spock sat there in the settling dust, alone and insulted and hurt, obviously trying to keep control of himself. Alas, he failed in this, too. Scrambling to his feet, he dashed into the nearby garden enclosure and slammed the gate heavily behind him. He didn't even have the satisfaction of a terran child, of hearing a loud slam behind him. The garden was designed as a place of peace and contemplation. The cushioned gate hinges automatically absorbed the shock of closing and snapped shut with a quiet click. Spock remained standing quietly across the way, watching the direction his departing younger self had taken in disappearing among the thick vegetation. That green domesticated jungle had been his favorite place of h tilde dmg and solace as a boy. This had been only one of many similar difficult mom meets in his childhood. It was not as painful to watch as it had been to live, but it was hard nonetheless. "My apologies, visitor," came an unexpected voice a deceptively quiet, unhurried, immensely powerful voice that he'd recognize anywhere. A voice that could impress whole worlds or little boys. A second was sufficient time for him to compose himself. Then he turned, carefully keeping his expression open and receptive. 108 STAR TREK LOG ONE V111 Sarek of Vulcan stood opposite him, looking very much like the familiar picture Spock had seen earlier on the small triple screen in the command conference room. The only immediately obvious difference was that this living version had far less grey in his hair and eyebrows, far fewer age lines in his forehead and around the eyes. A tall, broad-shouldered Vulcan he was, perhaps no athlete but in fine physical trim. He had sharply planed, strong features and deep-set eyes. Altogether an attractive man. An older, tauter, more severe version of Spock. Spock calculated rapidly. His father should now be seventy-three standard years old, in the prime of Vulcan 1ife. He wore the sandy-hued, neutral clothing Spock remembered so well. No loud shirts or bold prints for himl It was brightened only by a single spot of color, the adhesive badge of his office. "I regret you were witness to that unfortunate display of emotion on the part of my son." If there was any lingering hesitation in Spock's mind as to the identity of this man, that brief, so-typical phrase instantly dispelled it. This was Sarek, all right. Spock raised his hand in salute. "In the family, an is silence. Especially the indiscretions of children. No more will be said of it. Live long and prosper, Sarek of Vulcan." The ambassador hesitated for a second before returning the salute. "Peace and long life." Then he spoke uncertainly while STAR TR-EKnowledge LOG ONB 109 studying Spock with understandable puzzlement. "You are of my family?" "A distant relative. My name is was He paused. It wouldn't do to give an easily recognisable false name here. was Selek. A humble cousin, descendant of T'pal and Sessek. I ... am journeying to the family shrine in Dycoon to honor our ancestors." There, that was a plausible reason for traveling the way he was. "Family is family, and I thought to give greeting to you on my passing. Sarek nodded approvingly. "A pilgrimage, then?" "Even so." "You have a long way to go. Will you interrupt your journey to remain with us awhile, cousin?" "I have already come quite a distance, and in good time," Spock murmured. "I have a little time to spare. I would be honored." He dipped his eyes, uncomfortably aware of Sarek's unwavering, intense stare. There was nothing he could do but try to ignore it. "Is something wrong, cousins" Spock asked. Sarek seemed to return from a region of far thoughts, formless musings. "No, no. It was only that I seem to . . . know you. To have met you before." The best defence, Spock reflected, was a fast retreat through forward enemy positions. "I, too," he countered, "have been struck by the physical resemblance between us. A common ancestor among our forefathers, no doubt." "No doubt," agreed Sarek quietly. Then, as though suddenly remembering that to continue such a line of inquiry with a strange relative would have been impolite, "Well, come then. Allow me to welcome you to my home." He turned and opened the beautifully caned gate behind them. Familiar, so familiar, was the interior of the house! Spock tried not to let his eyes stray overmuch. Everything was as he remembered it, everything fit so comfortably in his mind. Except that most everything was just slightly smaller. Sarelt indicated a well-stuffed lounge of a type no longer made there seemed to be few craftsmen left anymore and then a nearby mechanical senitor. Spock eyed 1 lo TREK LOG ONE the quaint antique and tried not to feel superior. There were so many things he could tell his father, if only . . . No. Impossible. Forget it. "A place to rest and comfort yourself, cousin. Refreshments at hand, if you thirst. Excuse me. I shall return shorOy. I have . . . an errand to perform. Meanwhile, my house is yours." He walked out of the room. Spock had a fair idea of the nature of his father's "errand." Young Spock had buried himself against a shaggy Wall of fur. He might have been crying, though it would have been difficult for an observer to tell. There was no sound. The wall of fur filled out to north and south, completing the form of the youngster's pet sehlat, Ee-chiya. The sehlat looked rather like a cross between a lion and a giant panda, with a pair of downward projecting, ten-centimeter long fangs. It was fluffy, but not cute. A temperamental sehlat would have been a poor choice of pet for a young human. But for the logical, never cruel or brutal Vulcan child, he was ideal loving, intelligent and protective, as well as fiercely loyal. This particular sehlat had a brown coat faded in spots to patches of pale beige. One of the worn, yellowed fangs was broken off at the tip, and there were other indications of the creature's advanced age. Young Spock heard his father enter the garden, but he didn't look up from the massive flank. "Spock . . ." The boy slowly detached himself from the warm haven of Ee-chiya's furry side. He knew his father wouldn't repeat himself. He got slowly to his feet and shuffled over, presenting himself to his father in the traditional attitude of youthful respect back straight, chin out, hands clasped firmly behind his back. Sarek stood, looking down at his son for a moment, and then shook his head slightly, sadly. His voice was soft, but the words were not. "Spock, being Vulcan means following disciplines and philosophies that are difficult and demanding of both mind and body. Do you understand?" "Yes, Father." STAR TREK L tilde ONE 1 l 1 "Your schoolwork has been disgraceful. You constantly display your emotions in public. You've even been seen fighting in the street, and your attitude in such conflicts is reported to have been somewhat less than experimentally martial." A hint of defiance crept into the youth's voice. "Personal combat for a worthy cause is not dishonorable." Inwardly, the reply pleased Sarek. However, the situation was serious. It could no longer be put off. This was not the time or place for him to express appreciation for such a sentiment. "Brawling like a common deckhand off an alien freighter is not." Young Spock lowered his head. "Yes, Father." Sarek took a deep breath, paused, then continued more fi -- Y. "The time draws near when you will be forced to deeide whether you'll follow Vulcan or human philosophies. Vulcan offers much. No war, no crime, with logic and reasoned guidance operating in place of raw emotion and unbridled passion. Once on the path you choose, you cannot turn back. "Yes, Father." Sarek lifted his gaze briefly, in a tiny display of disgust. That constant, meek "yes, Father" was beginning to annoy him. Perhaps he'd been, not too easy, but firm with the boy in the wrong ways. Spock finished his drink and looked around the eomfortable room. Still no sign of Sarek returning. He noticed old touches of Amanda's Parthwoman's influence a easeade of brilliant blue flowers pouring over a flowerbox built into a wall. A dizzyingly eolorful afghan tossed easually across a chair-back. And the books especially the books, on the shelves. Real books, to handle and read, not to be flashed and turned on by a dial on an electronic reader-viewer. He smiled inwardly. For those, at least, his childhood assoeiates had envied him. Impractical they might seem to many adult Vulcans, but they brought back a thrill of pride and memories to 112 STAR TREK LOG ONE him. There was something about having the words there, in your hand. Any page, any chapter, at your personal beck and call instead of having to plead for them through an electronic middleman. He rose and walked to the large, open door that faced into part of the lush garden. Distantly, he could hear faint sounds of conversation between his father and his younger self, engaged in some deep discussion. There had been many such discussions. A soft, shocking voice made him whirl. "I hope you were not disturbed by my son's behavior, cousin Selek." Amanda stood there, even more beautiful than her picture, more lovely than any memory. Intelligent, gentle, and gracious. For the first time, he could admire her as a woman in the prime of her life, instead of as a boy seeing his mother. And more than any other quality, he remembered, far more than beauty or wisdom her constant understanding. Understanding for the ordeal of his childhood. "No, my lady Amanda." He didn't even think the word "mother." This was one meeting he'd prepared for well and one mistake he was determined not to make. "Any child has much to learn. My young cousin has a more difficult road to travel than most others." Now it was Amanda's turn to study him closely. "You seem to understand him better than my husband." Careful now' Sarek you could err withand cover up, but one slip with this woman and there would be trouble. She would not fool so easily. "It is difficult for a father to bear less than perfection in his son. Spock will find a way, I suspect his way." His mother looked anxious. He'd succeeded in diverting attention back to her son from her son. "I do hope so. I respect Vulcan and all its traditions, or I would not have married Sarek, but it's such a demanding life. It's hard enough on a young boy, without the added complications my son must endure." The conversation was getting to be too painful for Spock. STAR TREK L tilde ONE 113 "The boy appears to be of a certain age. He goes through the Kahs-wan ordeal soon, does he not?" Amanda nodded. "Next month." Visions of catastrophe, of a helix of mad time lines meeting in a common crazed confer and dissolving into chaos, sprang into Spock's mind. "Next .. . month?" He couldn't keep all the confusion and puzzlement out of his voice. "But tomorrow, tomorrow is the twentieth day of Tasmeen?" His mother looked up at him, disturbed a lithe by his controlled intensity. "Yes, it is." That was reassuring, at leastl The universe had not gone completely insane though something was very, very wrong "Is something the matter, cousin Selek1" Spock struggled to regain his composure. "I've been traveling for quite awhile. I seem to have lost track of time." "dis .. And that is all I have to say on the subject, for now," Sarek concluded. "Soon you trill undergo your test of manhood, in the Kahs-wan. To survive for ten days without food, water, or weapons on Vulcan's Forge as our human associates have so quaintly renamed the Sas-ashar desert. "It will demand more of you than anything else ever has. To fail once is not unusual, nor is it a disgrace for others." Young Spock lowered his eyes again, studied the ground. But his father wasn't through. "If you fail, there will be those who will nevertheless call you coward an your life." These last words rang like steel being hammered out on a Vutcanian forge of another type. That stentorian tone had been employed more than once for the glory of all Vulcan, in interstellar diplomacy. The tone was not softened for delivery from father to son. "I do not expect you to fail." Young Spock considered and looked up. "What if I do, father?" Sarek could not admit to himself that there was anything so alien as emotion swirling through his mind. "There is no need to ask that question. You will not disappoint me. You will not disappoint yourself. Not if your heart and spirit are Vulcan." 114 STAR TRIER Lob ONE He turned abruptly and walked back toward the house, leaving the youngster standing alone amid the silently watching blooms, the eloquent ferns. A few pebbles were lightly kicked by a small foot, a little earth disturbed. Then he turned to the sehlat. The big mammal had dozed somnolently through the entire discussion, oblivious to the verbalisations of father and son. Now it stirred as his young master sat down beside him. "Ee-chlya, what if I'm not a true Vulcan, like they say? What if Sepek and the others are right?" The sehlat was not that intelligent. It did not understand. But it was sensitive to emotions. It snuffled and nudged nearer the boy, edging close in rough affection. Young Spock put his arms around as much of the massive neck as he could and hugged hard. Spock maintained his own cover with near perfection throughout the rest of the day. He always managed to produce a plausible answer to any question Sarek or Amanda might pose, to turn awkward lines of inquiry neatly into other channels. It was a performance worthy of a diDlomat's son. He'd passed a pleasant, no, an ecstatic day, reliving the company of a younger mother and father, able to enjoy them as equals. to respond to them on entirely different yet eanallv Pratifving levels. He committed his one potentially serious error wed after the sun had vanished below the horizon. Slee tilde time approached. As the guest, it was his place to mention such. "I have had a long, full day, cousin Sarek, and your hospitality has been spoiling. I find myself more than ready for sleep." Sarek and Amanda both rose. "Rest well, cousin," said Sarek. "We shall talk more tomorrow. I have enjoyed our evening immensely." "It is the highlight of my journey, cousin Sarek," replied Spock, adding with an unseen smile, "perhaps I may remind you of it again some day." Sarek looked at him oddly for a moment, then nodded politely. Amanda gestured, and Spock started to follow STAR TREK LOG ONE 1 lSo her towards the bedrooms. He almost turned in the direct tion of his own young Spock's room. Fortunately, it was dark in the hallway and Amanda hadn't noticed the motion. He was barely able to recover before she glanced back at him. She seemed willing to talk further at the door to the guest room, but he made further excuses of exhaustion. Too much close contact in the sometimes revealing dimness of evening might lead to unwanted questions. He then attended to matters of Vulcan hygiene, enjoying once more the use of the interesting, old-fashioned washroom facilities. Then he returned to the guest room and turned on the single overhead light. There was a lock on the door, but for a relative, a guest in another's house, to have bolted it would have been inexcusably bad manners. So, of course, would be the unannounced entrance of any member of the household. Still, he would have felt better with it bolted. He'd have to chance leaving it open. The single shuttered window he didn't worry about. Sitting down on the edge of the bed he brought out his carry-bag. The little tricorder that came from it was far too modern and compact. The sleepwear he now wore was thirty years old, a simple garment of pale yellow worn like a loose toga. One last time he considered locking the door, but discarded the idea. Instead he turned on the bed and put his back to it, shielding the potentially embarrassing tricorder with his body. And while recording, he kept his voice low. A passerby in the hall would have to strain to hear him and press an ear to the door to make any sense of what he said. "Personal log, stardate 5373.9, subjective thee. "The time line seems to have changed once more, yet I cannot discover on thinking back anything I have done that might have affected it. My memory is quite clear regarding the actual day my cousin saved my life. That day is tomorrow." Then, as much to refresh his own memory as to provide information for future listeners: "The Kahs-wan is an ancient rite of Vulcan's warrior days. When Vulcans turned to logic as the ruling element 116 STAR TREK LOG ONE of their lives, they reasoned that it was necessary to maintain the old tests of strength and courage. Otherwise devotion to pure reason might make them grow weak and incapable of defending themselves from barbarians who might be less advanced mentally and socially. "This, in itself, was of course a logical decision." The house was very quiet. There was no pedestrian traffic on the surrounding pathways this late at night. A door opened quietly in the rear of the house, and a very small, very young figure crept out. Young Spock was dressed in a desert soft-suit and boots. He closed the door carefully behind him and surveyed the area cautiously before moving any further out. He took 4 couple of steps into the garden. There was a rustling sound from the shrubbery on his left and he froze. A large, familiar shape lumbered into view China, snuffling in the early morning air like an old man with a sinus condition. The boy shook his head, then held out a hand, palm up. The sehlat halted at the hand signal, but continued to puff and grunt. He certainly showed no sign of returning to sleep. "No, Ee-chIya," he whispered. "This is my own test. I have to do it alone. Stay!" He moved away from the sehlat, heading for the garden gate. Ee-chiya looked after him, considered this in his slow, patient mind, then turned and loped off after his young master. Meanwhile, Spock had clicked off the compact tricorder and had carefully repacked it with other items deep in his carry-bag. His head dropped halfway to the headrest on the bed before he seemed to convulse. His head and upper torso came instantly erect. Realization hit him subtly like a small nova. Of course, he yelled to himself, I should have remembered! It wasn't the actual Kahs-wan ordeal his "cousin" had intervened in to save him! Reaching for the carry-bag he made haste to unpack his clothes It took only minutes to lay out the desert suit and boots, moving with as much speed as quiet would permit. STAR TREK LOG ONE 117 When the sun rose over the black mountains, it turned the hard-baked desert floor the color of molten lead. Eechiya still trailed close on young Spock's heels. They revere headed for those same forbidding dark peaks. Under the circumstances and given the task he'd set himself, the peaks seemed as logical a place to prove himself as any other. Quick physical collapse was an early threat of the real Kahs-wan. That was one test Spock no longer worried about. He strode along easily at an even pace, seemingly untired. Of course, all of his walking so far had been in the pleasant chill of night and the cool of early morning. Soon it would grow hot and the sun would pull moisture from him. That is, unless he elected to stop and find shelter for the day. He hadn't decided yet. He refused to let such dismal possibilities intrude. were it not for his anguished state of mind he could have enjoyed the hike. As for any unpleasantness that might lie ahead, he was determined not to let his spirits drop. The most important element in the Kahs-wan was mental. Ee-chiya continued to mope along slightly behind. In his case it divas not the mental aspect that was most important. The big animal was unused to such extended hiking. Eventually young Spock had to pause and wait for the sehlat to catch up. Several long strides and his huge pet had done so. It promptly lay down on its belly, panting from the unaccustomed exertion and trying to catch its breath. Ee-chiya's spirit was willing, but the flesh was too old. Besides, a sehlat's normal environment was the cool, high forests of the south. He managed well enough in his cool stall and in the thick shade of the garden at the house. But here, in open hot country his thick fur divas a heavy burden. The rapidly rising heat would put a tremendous strain on the body of even a young, vigorous animal. Young Spock stopped again and turned to face his pet squarely, hands on hips. His tone was gentle, but frustrated. "Ee-chiya, go home! You are too old and too fat for this." 118 STAR TREK LOG ONE Ee-chiya leisurely examined this statement from his position on the warming sands. Then he put his great head down on his forepaws and assumed an air of patient dignity. Young Spock shook his head determinedly. "Huh-uh, that's how you always get your way with father. It won't work with me. Go home, Ee-chiya." The sehlat took no notice. He seemed quite prepared to spend the rest of his existence on this spot. It was clear to young Spock that the only way the beast would return home would be while trailing its master. And he had a great deal to accomplish before that return journey could take place. He sighed, shrugged, and lifted his shoulders in a very human gesture that said, "I've done what I can." Then he turned and started off towards the high range at the same steady pace he'd maintained since leaving home. Ee-chIya waited only a few seconds. Then he lurched to his feet and shuffled off to join his master. After a while, another, taller figure reached the same spot. It paused to examine the depression left in the sand and soft gravel by Ee-chlya's relaxing bulk. A light breeze off distant desert plains swept sand and twigs into miniature dust demons, threatening manifestations of Vulcan's turbulent atmosphere. He pulled out the tricorder as he resumed his walk. The trail of young Spock was clear enough, that of the sehlat was unmistakable. "Personal log the boy Spock should be moving toward the Arlanga mountains. He . . . ," Spock hesitated, "I . . . had much to prove to myself. The personal ordeal, I now remember, on which I embarked was meant to determine the course my life would take. Many things are coming back to me now, as I retrace my steps of thirty years past and as I become more familiar with this time of my youth." Sarek was just entering the garden. Amanda spotted him and left the shady seat to rush into his arms. She was calmer, more controlled than most terran women would have been in a similar situation. But to one of her Vulcan neighbors, she would have appeared almost hysterical. STAR TRBK [tilde ONB 1 1 9 "Sarek, I've looked everywhere. Our son and the guest are gone." "And Behlya?" asked Sarek calmly. Amanda frowned. She didn't know what she'd expected him to say, but that was not it. "Ee-chlya?" ""He would go with our son," Sarek noted, "as he always does." "I haven't seen him, now that you mention it, Sarek." Sarek nodded. "I feel more secure knowing that. Eechiya's getting old, but it will be difficult for the boy to get into any serious trouble with the sehlat around. You're certain he's with the stranger?" Amanda looked uncertain. "I don't know, really. Spock's not anywhere in the neighborhood I've checked and it's not like him to go off any distance without telling me. I don't know what else to think." "This cousin," mused Sarek, 'lie puzzles me. Something very odd about him. I sometimes think I can see it, and then it suddenly eludes me again." Amanda gave an anxious start. 'Lou don't think he'd harm Spock?" 'if don't know what to think, Amanda. The man claims to be a relative and is frb enough, yet there is this lingering strangeness about him that all his good-naturedness cannot conceal. However, I will take no chances. I shall notify the proper authorities immediately to watch out for either of them." Amanda bit her lip. That was the only logical thing to do The desert ended abruptly in the first rugged ramparts of the mountains. Spock knelt to study the fresh trail of boy and sehlat, then rose and began his first real climb. The morning sun exceeded his rate of ascent. The various formations he passed as he moved higher into the foothills were of igneous rock, stark and weirdly shaped. Not from wind erosion, but by the primeval forces of Vulcan itself. This was an area of geologically recent platonic activity. 120 STAR TREK LOG ONE Once the ground turned upward his path became more difficult. Spock climbed slowly and carefully. Something sounded in the air, distant. He stopped climbing and turned his head to listen. Nothing. Several steps later he heard it again and this time it was unmistakable and much louder. A sound ... no, there were two sounds, separate and distinct. One was a deep, grinding snarl, the other the scream of an animal with a much higher-pitched voicebox. The sounds conveyed anger and fury rather than fear. He began climbing faster. Each boulder seemed intent only on slowing his progress, every small fissure designed to catch and trip him. Then he was running along a channel out through naked rock. The old watercourse twisted and turned before finally opening into a broad natural amphitheater. On the far side young Spock was scrambling for safety, trying to stay behind protective rocks and at the same time gain height. The le-matya swung at him with venomous claws. They barely missed a trailing leg, digging shallow gouges in the soft stone. As young Spock dodged behind another boulder the le-matya screamed in frustration. It was built like a terran mountain lion, but huge. The nearly impenetrable leathery-grey hide was more reptilian than mammalian, as was the poison in its claws. Again the high-pitched scream sounded, like the sound of metal rubbing on metal at high speed, grating from the depths of that awful gullet. The youngster moved higher and reached for a handhold. Instead of a handhold he found himself confronted by a sheer wall of shining black obsidian. It was no more than three meters high not much of a barrier. But there was no way up it and no way around. It might as well have been three thousand. He turned his back to the volcanic glass and awaited the le-matya's charge. If he could dodge the first swipe of the monster's claws, he might be able to slip past on that side before it could swing again. The le-matya snarled and drew back a paw for a last, final blow. It was never delivered. STAR TREK LOG ONE 121 An aging Ee-chiya struck the le-matya like a runaway war tilde drive, rolling it over completely on the high ledge. The heavy, square head, neither cuddly nor benign now, bit quickly and with surprising speed. Yellowing old teeth made a deep double slash in the le-matya's flank. Spitting and squaring, the carnivore twisted free, clawing at the sehlat. Ee-chlya darted out of the way and threw a blow with one massive paw that barely missed crushing the le-matya's skull. The half-reptile glared and leaped at the sehlat with both sets of claws extended. Eechiya dodged that multiple death and in doing so lost his balance. Both animals clashed together, off stride and on crumbling, uncertain footing There was a moment's pause while they overbalanced. Then, locked in each others grips, they tumbled over and over, clawing and biting, down the short slope. Ee-chiya's low, rhythmic snarls boomed in counterpoint to the le-matya's high-pitched, hysterical screams. Spock hesitated only a moment. To chaDange a lematya unarmed was certain death. But for a while, the sehlat had * fully occupied. Maybe, just maybe . . . He ran straight for the massive collage of fighting flesh. Young Spock saw him coming. But the sudden unexpected appearance of his cousin generated only mild concern. He was too worried about Ee-chIya. The sehlat had managed to bury his fangs in the lematya's thick hide. Powerful teeth failed to do much damage. His jaw muscles were too old and weals. There wasn't even much blood oozlog from that armored skin. But the considerable bulk of the sehlat kept the writhing, spinning le-matya continuously off-balance. It never saw Spocl: moving close by, eyeing it, waiting for a chance. The le-matya dug in and started to rod Eechiya over on his back preparatory to a hiding strike. As the armored spine came up Spock saw his opening, ran, made the short leap. He landed firmly on the carnivore's back. Incensed at the sudden new weight on its shoulders the le-matya exploded in frenzied anger. It jerked and twisted, trying to buck Spock off. Ee-chlya skidded back out of the 122 STAR TREK ONE way as the le-matya frantically tried to deal with this tiny but unrelenting tormentor. It screamed again and again. By simply lying still and rolling over it could easily have dislodged Spock. But a le-matya, while long on ferocity and strength, was notably deficient in matters mental So it did not roll over. Instead it kept spinning in circles and leaping high in the air, trying to bite at the thing on its back. It had no luck. Making a vise of his thighs and digging one hand into loose, flying hair, Spock leaned forward along the smooth neck and felt for the certain special joining on the animal's neck. If it suddenly decided to roll over, or jump back first against a boulder . . . He couldn't hold on indefimtely, and to let go now was an easy way of committing suicide. There! That should be the place. Small but powerful fingers touched, moved. The le-matya gave a long, drawn-out shudder. As the wild eyes closed it sank unconscious to the earth. Now the muscular form started to roll over on its side, but Spock was not worried as he jumped clear. Turning, he glanced up the slope, but the boy was alreadv down off the dark rocks and running towards the sehlat. l tilde chiya was getting slowly to his feet when young Spock reached him. He threw his arms around the big animal's neck. The slight boyish shape had no effect on the huge furry mass. It shook itself, a long rolling oscillation that commenced at the nose and fluttered back to the short tail. It seemed that his pet was unharmed, merely out of breath. "0chiya," muttered the Youth. unable to enjoy the emotional release of crying. "Good boy, good old boyl" Forgotten but not upset by the neglect, Spock dusted himself off and walked over to the two companions. He'd bruised his thighs with the shifting, frictioning grip he'd held on the le-matya's back, and there was a possibility of a broken toe, but otherwise he was intact. He cleared his roat. "I suggest we move away from this area before the le STAR IBM tilde 123 matya regains consciousness I do not thin it tilde 1 follow us, now, but it would be better not to tempt it." 'qtrue," replied the boy, then, 'allyank you for helping me and China." "It was only my duty, Spock," the elder version of himself told the younger. The reply held a slight hint of reproof. 'mother says you should always say 'y're welcome." was That caught Spocl: a little on guard. There tilde an awlrward sBenco. Some sort d repair seemed called for. "The lam Amanda 1e noted for her gracion tilde so." The youngster looked over at the motionless lo tilde matya, a tlireatening shape eyed whine unconscious, then back up at trig cough He continued to strolls l tilde chlya tilde fur. "Do you think 1 tilde ever be able to do that new pinch as well as you, comin Sele right-brace his '51 dare sag yew arm," admitted SpoclEvery drug. "Come now. Let us leave this place." They moved off, heading up the 810pe. A little while later they had circled the far cam of the amphitheater and were heading deeper into the mountains. Neither of them noticed the occasional shiver that passed through the sehlat's body. Nor could they see inside to learn that the big Emil was moving with increasing difflcultg. They'd entered an area where huge bonders and tilde worn volcanic rock had began to mix wit' 80iLike The first dwiduow trees am' here, marching down in friendly ranks from the wetter high plateau. Young Spock spoke again, his Solos fog d open childish curiosity. "You followed me why?" For a quick moment Spoclc felt that he didn't have to be as careful as hold had to be with his mother and father. But ho paused before replying. Overcanfidenoe might be his biggest danger. After alp his Coal inquisitor, though young had an undeniably brilliant mind. "I suspected you might attempt something of this sort. I sensed your worry about the tilde Cah tilde wan. Such an expedition seemed a very natural gesture." Young Spock loolred up at him. 124 STAR TREK L00 0 tilde "I had to see if I could do it. A personal test first, a test for me and no one else. I cannot faill" "That is your father's desire?" The boy spoke slowly, choosing his words with care. "Yes, and my mother's. They ... they confuse me, sometimes. Father wants me to do things his way, and when I ask her, Mother says that I should. But then she goes and was He stopped and looked away from Spock, suddenly embarrassed over what he was about to confess. Remembering, Spock continued the thought himself. "She's a human woman with strong emotions and sensitivities." He kicked at a loose pebble, unaware that he was repeating a gesture performed several times by his younger self the previous day. "She embarrasses you when she displays those traits. And you are afraid when you see them in yourself, be cause of what your father wishes." "How ... how did you know?" young Spock mur- mured, quietly amazed. Uh-oh it took Spock some fast thinking to find a way around that one. "There is also some human blood in my family line, Spock." Then he added, taking some of the solemnity off the conversation, "It is not fatal." "What you do not yet understand. SAID-OCK"" me first offlcer of me Feanterpase continued, "Is mat Vulcans do not lack emotion. This is- an all too common misconception among many Vulcans as well as among other races. It is merely that ours are controlled, kept in check. This adherence to principles of logic offers a serenity mat omers excepting certain theological and philosophical orders rarely experience in full." "We have emotions, you see, so that is nothing to be ashamed of. It is as natural as having a sense of sight, or touch. But we deal firmly with Hem and do not let them control us. Nor are humans, like your mother, wholly ruled by their emotions. Instead, they must walk an uneasy, nerve-wracking tight-rope between the Vulcan principles of logic and reason and the his He would have said more suddenly mere were so many things he wanted to say to mis boy but they were interrupted by a low moan. It came from behind mem. STAR TREK Startled, they both turned. l tilde chlya was no longer right behind them. Instead he stood far back, half-leaning against a broken cliff-face. He showed no sign of moving toward them. They ran to the sehlat's side. Up close, they could now see that the huge animal was swaying unsteadily on his feet. By the time they reached him he'd sunk slowly to the ground, his eyes glazed and .. . cum. "tilde chlya!" young Spock shouted, completely forgefflng Spock's recent lecture on logic and emotion.. The science officer made an efficient, rapid examination of the distressed animal. If he could only remember the details of his own childhood, he'd know exactly what was the matterJust He'd been through this experience once before or had he? Everything was so vague. The time was so distant, so insubstanffal, so . . . Nonsense, he told himself. The past was now tilde nd it was very real. Then he found what he was looking for but didn't expect to find. Puzzled, he stared at it until he greyer aware of young Spock's anxious gaze. "It appears that the le-matya grazed him with a claw, here. A slight wound, not too deep. But that does not matter much, not with a le-matya. It should not have happened. I don't seem to recall his The boy interrupted. "Is he dying?" Spock considered. When he finally replied it WaBut with a double pain. Pain for himself, pain for what he must say. "Yes." The youngster looked stricken. He stared down at the rapidly weakening, moaning sehlat. Spock walked away a few steps, his thoughts spinning. For the second time something completely unexpected had happened. Try as he might, he couldn't remember anything like this taking place before. But musing on the perversity of the time vortex would do no good at all. The animal was dying. He would be dead already, only the strike had been a shallow one. So Be chive had not received a normal dose of venom. There might be a chance. But the boy's pet his pet would die for certain un 126 STAR TREK LOG ONE less they could bring a healer here, and soon. He told young Spock as much, making no effort to sugarcoat the news. "tilde We cannot Bet him back to the city to a healer. He is too large to move without special equipment." "Then what," and young Spock's tone was agonized, "can we do? There must be something." "You are 8 Vulcan. What would be the logical thing to do?" The boy thought, looked up brightly. "I have medicines in my desert kit. Can . . . ?" Spock shook his head slowly. "Bven if by some chance you have a proper medication, there could not possibly be a large enough dose for an animal the size of Be chiya. Try again." The youthful brow twisted with concentration, the mouth grimaced with the strain of furious thought. He looked up again. "I can bring a healer here." "It is a long journey back across the desert," Spock Warned. "There are many dangers. And it will be night again qoon. I will go." But his youthful self stood up, his voice defiant. determined. "No. He is my pet. It is my duty. No one else can do this for me. B. will you stay with him?" Spock considered, trying to keep events sorted out. If this had actually happened before, then his younger self should succeed in the journey. If it hadn't already tilde curred, and this was yet another variant in the time line, he might he rhkine his own life in all time lines by letting the boy go. Then he remembered the uncertainties of his early adolescence, the constant burning desire to prove himself again and again. He nodded his acquiescence, but reline tartly. Young Spock took off immediately, disappearing over the rolling, heat-warped horizon in the direction of ShiKahr. Once the boy was out of sight, Spock relaxed and regarded the dying sun. It turned the desert floor to deep purples and threw maroon shadows in the lee of small dunes. He reached out and idly stroked the massive head of the sehlat. The big fellow looked up at him trustingly. But STAR TREK [00 00 127 it was also confused. That was no surprise. This was the first time it had gotten a close whiff of Spock. Obviously this tall stranger was not his young master. And yet smell and to a small extent sight, said othermse. It was very puzzling. "This did not happen before, I am sure of it," Spock said to him, ruffling the warm fur behind an ear. "My life's decision was made without the sacrifice of yours, old friend. Ee-chIya moaned softly and stayed calm under Spock's ministering hands. "I know there is pain. I can help a little. Sleep now." He reached over and moved both hands on the sehlat's neck, probing. Then he made a motion similar to, and yet unlike, the thing he had done to the le-matya. The great eyes closed an the way and the entire massive body seemed to slump. Spock sat back and watched the desert. Absently, gently, he continued to stroke the now supine head. Kirk would have found the present tableau incongruous. Doubtless Dr. McCoy would have seen in it opportunities to apply his own particular brand of humor. But to Amanda or Sarek, the pose would have looked entirely natural and very very much in character. It grew dark rapidly and soon young Spock had to depend on his natural, well-developed night vision. Vulcan had no moon. He moved at a fast jog across the black, shadowed landscape. His eyes rarely took note of dim shapes and distant moving objects. They stayed fixed on the ground in front of him. A few small nocturnal animals observed the passage of the slim, ghostly shape. They scurried instinctively for the safety of their burrows. Once, the predatory shriek of a night-hunting le-matya cut the air. It was distant, and young Spock didn't break his stride. But he did look back over his shoulder. And in not looking ahead, he failed to see the coil of dark vines half-buried in the sand. Another step the vines suddenly uncoiled, snapping out like a dozen whips and grabbing at his legs. He made a 128 STAR ORBS LOG ONE half-running, half-standing leap that would have done credit to any athlete in his age class and fairly flew over the powerful thin tentacles. tilde tilde There was a sharp, popping sound. One convulsing, clutching coil had just missed his ankle and snapped instead against the heel of his left boot. He continued on, resolving to keep his eyes on the rough gravel and sand immediately in front of him even if a le-matya screamed right in his ear. The writhing unthinking vines of the carnivorous d'mallu did not ponder on the near miss. They merely recoiled and reset as the plant with the inherent patience of all growing things arranged itself once more to wait for less elusive prey. There was a peculiar emblem on the door, cut into the highly varnished yellow wood and inlaid with shiny metal. Below this an odd-shaped plaque, functional as well as decorative, was also recessed in the wood. A soft, tinkling clash wind playing with distant tem. ple bells. It stopped, started again as young Spock shoved insistently against the plaque. It seemed ages passed before the door finally opened. A tall, middle-aged Vulcan appeared, dressed in a togalike night garment. This toga was red with garish blue stripes. A private expression of a publicly prosaic physician. The elder eyed Spock with evident displeasure. He was not in the mood for idle chitchat. "The hour is late. I trust your errand is urgent?" "Yes ," young Spock panted, trying to catch his breath and speak at the same time. "Most urgent, Healer. My sehlat fought a le-matya in the foothills. He suffered a small wound. The poison of the le-matya's claws is working in him now. Please was The carefully maintained, even tone began to crack. "You must come with me. He needs your knowledge!" The healer considered, studying his late-night caller. The dim light at the door made recognition difficult, but not impossible. "You are Spock, son of Sarek, are you not?" "Yes, Healer." The physician nodded in satisfaction. STAR TREK LOG ONE 129 ""I have heard of you. You have a tendency toward vhat humans call "practical jokes." his The youth nodded knowingly. He'd expected something like this. Vulcan gossip reached far and lasted long. "It's true, I did that two years ago, and did not repeat it. Healer, I would not call you out at such an hour if it were not deathly serious. You have heard several things about me, it seems. Have you ever heard the son of Sarek called a liar?" The healer's tone softened. Such direct challenge from one so young could only be admired. ""No. That has never been said." A quick glance at the boy's disheveled clothes and flushed face brought him to a decision. "Very well. Wait here and I win gather my things." Young Spock caned after him as he disappeared into the house. "Healer, please hurryl" Inwardly, he was relieved. He'd delivered himself and his message so quickly, so urgently, that the healer had not thought to ask a most obvious question. What was a young lad of seven doing in the black mountains with his sehlat in the middle of the night, and why had he come alone to get help? Spock was not ready to waste time on embarrassing explanations. It was wondrous strange to be sitting alone at night with a dying figure out of one's old childhood, instead of in the commander's cabin on the Enterprise. The sehlat moaned softly, conscious once again. A quiver of pain ran down its Banks. Inside Spock's belly something tightened. There was nothing more he could do for the suffeilng animal. To put it under again might prove fatal in itself, given the advanced state of weakness of the creature's systems. There was another soft moan. At first he ignored it. Then he rose and stared into the night. The moan was still distant. but growing rapidly louder. It had not come from the sehlat. It was a thick purr now, rough and mechanical. He 130 STAR TREK LOG ONE scanned the dark horizon wishing, wishing for a battery of portable lights from the starship. But the Enterprise had not even been built yet. He didn't have so much as a flare. It was needed. Silhouetted against the night sky, he saw the source of the sound. A desert flier, a streamlined version of the standard city skimmer. Low and rakish, but practical, built for emergency bursts of speed. An ordinary citizen would not rate such an expensive, compact craft. Logically, he had no need of it. It was also bigger than the average skimmer, big enough to carry several passengers. There were only two figures in it. As the craft drifted closer he recognised his younger self and another, older man. That could only be the healer young Spock had gone to find. The skimmer came close. It whined to a halt and hovered a meter or so off the ground. The rocks where he waited with E -- chlya were jagged and close together, so the skimmer pilot had settled down in the nearest flat space. It raised a cloud of sand and dust before the older Vulcan cut its power. He climbed out, and young Spock began to lead him up into the rocks. Spock turned and walked back to stand next to the heaving bulls of the sehlat. He stroked the head, scratched it behind weakly fluttering ears. "It will not be long now, old friend." A moment later young Spock and the healer appeared, scrambling over the last rise. They moved to join hirn. The healer took only the briefest of looks at the long scratch where the le-matya's claws had struck. Then he removed several compact medical sensors from his carrycase and began a thorough examination of the stricken animal. Spock stood and placed a hand on the youngster's shoulder. From the first there had been no shock at the sight of his younger self. He'd been well prepared for that. But this first actual physical contact brought home thealienness of the situation in a way that mere sight never could. The full, true incredibility of it slammed home for the first time. Under his hand the boyish shoulder stirred. Spock felt a need to mumble something, anything. STAR TREK LOG ONE 131 "tilde You made The crossing most efficiencyeaity, Spock. And at night too. I have a hunch call it a preliminary evaluation based on sound initial observations Uhat you will not fail your father in the Kahs-wan." Young Spock didn't look up at him, instead kept his gaze focused on the sehlat and The healer. "y wanted only to help Ee-chlya. He was my fadher's before he was mine. I didn't want him to come with me, but he wouldn't stay behind. To lose him was Spock interrupted as gendy as possible. "A Vulcan would face such a loss without tears." "How?" Controlled or not, there was a universe of emotion packed into chat one word, Ulat single desperate exclamation. "By understanding Chat every life comes to an end when when time demands it. Believe me, Spock, when I say Nhat the demands of time are not to be argued wide. Loss of life is to be mourned, true, but only if that life was wasted. "Such was not Uhe case with Ee-chlya." The healer looked up from The sehlat. He had to hunt a moment before locating Them in The dark. "Spock?" The youngster turned. So, automatically, did the older Spock. The boy glanced up at him curiously, but there were other Heaings on his mind. He dismissed The incident as he moved closer to The healer. Spock followed, thankful that the healer had not witnessed the lapse in his meticulous masquerade. "Yes, sir?" The sehlat was moaning louder and continuouslv now. The healer glanced down at the animal and shook his head slowly. "It has been too long, I fear, and the scratch was deep enough. No known antidote can save his life." The boy stood silently in the dark, contemplative. "Iq there nothing you can do?" ""To save him, nothing. But I can prolong his life though he will always be in pain. Or . . . I can release him from life. In this I will need your decision. He is your pet." The healer did not look up at him. Alien, unchildish thoughts vied for attention within young Spock's mind. He turned away from the two adults 132 STAR TREK ONE so they could not see the effort he was putting into his answer or the anguish that might be visible. Spock waited several minutes, then moved up quietly to stand behind the boy. He put his hand on the small shoulder once more. This time there was no shock, no sense of unnaturalness. For the first time, he truly was Selek, the wise cousin. Young Spock glanced up at him, then back down at Be chlya. When he spoke it was in a fiat, mechanical voice, to the healer. "Release him. It is fitting he dies as he lived with peace and dignity." The healer nodded expressionlessly and reached into his case. He withdrew a small tube whose size and looks belied its effectiveness. There were only three controls on it two tiny dials and a button at one end. He adjusted the settings. Young Spock watched for another moment, then walked over and knelt beside the sehlat. He sat down on the hard ground and took the massive head in his lap. IZ-EVERY-CHIYA stared up at him and burrowed himself deeper, closer to the boy. There was an ethereal, minute hiss as though from a tiny spray. Young Spock's face remained unchanged, emotionless Vulcanl "I regret that my actions troubled you in any way, Father," young Spock said, "but I am convinced my actions were necessary." Sarek blinked in the strong light pouring in through the garden window as he studied his son. There was something in the youth's attitude and speech pattern that the elder Vulcan had not detected before. In fact, both seemed somehow rather like . . . he chanced a quick and hopefully unnoticed glance towards his odd cousin, standing impassively by a far bookcase. Spock divas studiously examining an ancient terran book. It happened to be a fantasy, a childhood favorite of his by a terrau with an odd name. Sarek could not see the title and it probably wouldn't have set any thoughts going in his head anyway. The paper books were Amanda's province. His mother, however, might have made something of the coincidence, but she was too relieved to notice much of anything but her son just now. STAR TREK LOG ONE 133 Sarek turned back to the boy. "I hope you can explain why it was necessary. Your mother and I were . . . worried." "There was a decision to be made," said young Spock firmly. "A direction for my life had to be chosen and before the artificiality of the Kahs tilde wan. I chose Vulcan." On the other side of the room, Amanda turned away briefly in her chair, fighting off tears. She felt a slight sense of loss, common to all mothers at those strange, offcenter times when they realize their child is growing up. Her son had elected to follow the more difficult path. Sarek exhibited no outward reaction to this announcement but he was naturally pleased. Of course, it would be unthinkable to show it, or to smile. He nodded solemnly. "It is welt You have comported yourself with honor." He paused. "We will see to it that Ee-chlya is brought home from the mountains." "Thank you, Father." Young Spock shuffled his feet impatiently. "If you will excuse me now, I have some business to attend to." "Business?" queried Sarek suspiciously. "With some schoolmates. A demonstration of the Vulcan neck pinch. Our cousin taught me." He nodded by vay of excusing himself and left the room. When he'd departed, Spock replaced the friendly old tome in its slot on the shelf and moved towards Sarek and Amanda. "I, too, must beg to be excused. I must make my farewells now. Your hospitality has been most kind, more than you can know. But I must journey on. Already I have spent too much . . ." he paused and almost, almost gunned, "too much time here." "Just enough time," said Sarek gratefully. "You saved my son's life. There is no way I can ever repay you for that." Spock interrupted him smoothly, his voice turning serious. com"...Try to understand your son, Sarek of Vulcan. His troubles, his confusion, his battles with his emotions. That will be repayment enough." "An odd and intimate request from a stranger, but I 134 STAR TREK LOG ORB will honor it. I am bound to honor it. If you ever pass this way again, or if there is anything I can ever do for you all that I have tilde yours." "if should like to, but I *tar that circumstance will dictate that I not retrace this path again." This divas becoming too painful. It was thne to leave. He raised his hand in salute. "Peace and long life, cousin." "Peace and long life," saluted his mother and father in return. "Long life and prosper, cousin." Ho didn't look back as he left the garden gate and started down the path leading back toward the desert. But he could feel their curious eyes on his back, watching, watching . . . He remembered now that his parents had never mentioned a cousin Selek. He smiled inwardly. Even so, ho understood now why he had never forgotten that remarkable individual . . . James T. Kirk paced nervously back and forth in front of the Time Gate. He was alone on the rocky platform in front of the Guardian d Forever. Unresolvable shapes drifted across the confer of the time portal, cloaldog unknown mysteries, enigmatic paste. Suddenly he stopped paclag and stared at the rippling mists. They began to slow, to organise and coalesce into a definite pattern. The Gate divas activating. It was confirmed a second later as a deep, now familiar rumble issued from somo stiBut indeterminate locale. ""THB TRAVBBBR D RIO." Kirk studied the Gato with painful expectation. At first there was nothing. He began to worry. Then, in the distance, a transparent flowing form seemed to jump towards bim. It was solidifying as it came through the Gate. A familiar lanl tilde y frame, clad in the attire of another world's bygone dam, stepped out and shook hands with him. Speck didn't say anything but Kirk had had enough experience reading barely noticeable Vulcan expressions to tell that the trip hadn't been a total disaster. Spock went immediately to his waiting pile of normal clothing. Off came the worn soft-suit and tight boots, STAR TREK L00 0 tilde 135 swapped for the daytime uniform of a Starileet commander. "I sent the others up to the ship," Kirk volunteered in response to the unasked question. He nodded in the direction of the again blurred time portal. "What happened in there? You were only gone twenty-four minutes ... subjective time." "Nothing deferent happened, nothing unexpected, Captain." He paused. "Oh, one small thing was changed, nothing vital. A pet died." Kirk looked relieved. "A pet? WelLike that wouldn't mean much in the course of time." "It might," Spock replied, "to some his Kirk eyed his first officer more closely as he swapped Vulcan carry-bag for utility belt, communicator, and other modern necessities. Kirk hesitated, decided to ask no further questions for now. There were more important ones to be answered. He flipped open his communicator. "Enterprise . . . this is the captain. We're moving away from the Guardian. There'll be two to beam up." "Aye, sir," came Engineer Scott's reply. A moment later both men stood still as a luminescent glow enveloped them and turned them into pieces of sun. This state was quickly reversed in the main transporter room of the starship. Both Kirk and Spock held their positions, however, after remateriali tilde ing Kirk uncertain, Spock apprehensive. "Well, well, well!" Dr. McCoy stepped into view from behind the transporter console as Scott concluded final shutdown. The doctor looked at them and nodded knowingly, his tone as irascible as ever. "So you two finally decided to end your vacation. While You've been running an over creation, I've been stuck performing semiannual crew physicals. You two are the last ones." Captain and commander exchanged glances. each certain he was more relieved than the other. "Welcome aboard, Mr. Spock," said Kirk. McCoy moved closer, shepherding them out of the alcove and toward the elevator. "Never mind the chitchat. I've got the mediscanners ad set up for a Vulcan. I have to recalibrate every time I run 13 6 STAR TRBR LOO ONE a check on you, Spock." He made it sound like the biggest job since the hammering out of the Federation-Klingon peace treaty. "Dr. McCoy," said Spock, moving towards the closed doors, "you do not know the half of your good fortune. If things were only slightly different you might have to recalibrate for, say, an Andorian." He and Kirk activated the call switch simultaneously. "What's that supposed to mean?" McCoy inquired. When neither man replied. "If that's supposed to be a joke, I have to remind you that Vulcans don't tell jokes." He followed them into the waiting elevator. "Times change, Doctor," suggested Spock meaningfully, "times change." McCoy grunted, sensing something more than mere argument in the first officer's voice. "Just give me time enough for a physical, that's all." "All the time in the world, Doctor." Kirk grinned as McCoy hit the necessary button and they began to descend to lower levels. It wasn't often he enjoyed something as much as that simple elevator ride. PART 111 ONE OF OUR PLANETS IS MISSING (adapted tilde from a script by Marc Daniels) lx Precisely two and a quarter ship-days after leaving the Time Planet the crew of the Enterprise received a general emergency call. There were undoubtedly rarer things in the universe than general emergency calls but not many. "What I'd like to know," Kir right-brace inquired of no one in particular, from his seat in the bridge-command chair, "was why someone didn't notice and chart this thing before it slipped into inhabited Federation space?" Lt. Arex was seated next to Sulu at the helm-computer. Now he lifted all three arms in a popular human gesture and swiveled his thin neck so that he was facing the captain. Bright, intelligent eyes stared out from under projecting ridges of bone. "Quien sake? Who knows, Captain?" Uhura's reaction was more reasoned. "Maybe no one thought it worth an emergency alert, Captain, until it did move so deep into Federation territory. It hasn't made any aggressive moves. Why should it attract much attention while in free space?" "liven given its benign nature, Lieutenant something of which we have as yet no proof," countered Spock, "the fact that a cosmic cloud of this size and density not to mention its other peculiar characteristics has never been observed before should have been sufficient to pique the interest of at least a couple of astronomers. I cannot help but wonder if there are other reasons why it was not detected." Kirk grunted. They'd been examining and reexamining 139 140 STAR TREK ONE these same arguments ever since the call had been received. He didn't make a point of it, but he was upset. They'd been returning to starbase from the planet of the time vortex when the call had diverted them. RandR for the crew, not to mention needed ship-servicing, had to be postponed yet again. "Just our usual luck the Enterprise being the only starship of any size in the phenomenon's vicinity. Sometimes I get the feeling Starfleet Command picks on us." "I suspect, Captain," Spock suggested, "that if we were to Derform below expectations a few times, Starfleet would be in less of a hurry to select us for such tasks." "Don't tempt me. Mr. Spock." "I was not tempting you, Captain. I was merely proposing an alternative mode of operation with an eye toward alleviating your apparent discomfort at being so often chosen by Starneet Command for such his "Oh. never mind, Mr. SAID-OCK." If he thought SDOC-KNOWLEDGE was capable of ironic humor, he'd have suspected that no, ridiculous. "Mr. Sulu. Iet's see the grid." "tilde Yes, sir." Sulu's hands moved over the complex navization console. A brilliant star-chart appeared on the main viewscreen. The overlying grid network permitted fast, crude calculation of speed and distances. Kirk's interest was on the Pattas XIV system. The exaggerated diagram showed close to one side of the moving white dot that was the Er tilde rpr tilde se. Three planets tilde Bezaride, Mantilles, and Alondra, plus a fair-sized asteroid belt extended outward from Pallas I and II. Att were smart, inner-system type worlds. There rere no gas giants. The system revolved around a double star. Double-star systems were far from unusual, but those with planets were. And those with inhabited worlds were very much o. The Pallas system was very carefully studied before settlement was recommended. Not that Pallas II Mantilles was not a hospitable world. Quite the contrary. But Federation authorities wanted to metre, well, double certain that the twin-star system was stable enough to sup" STAR TRBX LOG ONB 141 port MantiMian life for at least a minimal period of time. Say, four or five hundred million years. In addition to being blessed vnth two shadows per person, Mantillians enjoyed the notoriety of being the most remote inhabited world of consequence in the entire Federation. And while the planet was now safely populated and well beyond the initial stages of colonisation, the MantiUians still Iiked to think of themselves as pioneers their backs to the populous Federation and galactic center, their faces turned to the beckoning gulfs of intergalactic space. They were a proud, self-reliant people. But the sudden appearance of Ibis strange cloud had made them nervous. So the Mantillian government had shouted loud enough for Stardeet Command to hear, and Starneet Command had shouted for the Enterprise. And Kirk Kirk could only shout at the gods of coincidence and bad timing. At least they didn't shout back, they only snickered. He sighed. They were here. Find out what the thing was, reassure the Mantillians, and head for starbase once again with closed channels this time, maybe. "Mr. Sulu, let's have some timings." The helmsman's reply was quick and crisp. "We will intercept the cloud in the Vicinity of Pallas m Alondra. The outermost planet, sir. It is not inhabited. There are only a few automatic scientific stations." Spock looked up from his hooded viewer at the computer-library console. "Also, Captain, I might add that we are now ap- proaching sensor range of the cloud." "Initial readings, Mr. Spoclc? Stardeet wasn't very specific. I kind of got the impression they expected us to dig out our own information." He tried to show some interest as Spoclc looked back into his viewer and adjusted controls. Probably the cloud was a loose piece of nebula, a relatively harmless collection of thin cosmic gases. Spock's report changed all that. There was nothing ordinary about this cloud. "It is an irregular shape with shifting, undefined boundaries, Captain. On the mean, I would estimate some eight 142 STAR TREK ONE hundred thousand kilometers across and perhaps half that in depth. And it is quite dense." The soft-spoken Arex looked up from his seat at the helm and whistled, impressed "Immense! Twice the diameters of Sol m's three biggest gas giants combined!" "tilde We're all well grounded in basic astronomy, Lt. Arex," said Kirk drily. "Put up our present position, please." Arex, looking slightly downcast, went to work at the console. "Yes, Captain." Inwardly, Kirk chastised himself. There was really no call for coming down on Arex like that. He was only expressing a sense of awe and wonder at the sight of the peculiar intruder, a feeling everyone else probably shared. It was a liberty Kirk couldn't permit himself. Captains weren't supposed to be awed. Anyway, it wasn't the thing's size that had suddenly worried him. It was Spock's information that the cloud was "quite dense." Sizewise it was small stuff compared to even a little nebula. But if the gas was thick, and could actually have some effect on an atmosphere The scene on the screen shifted. The vast mass of the cloud now appeared on the screen. It bulked to the right, galactic inclination, of Alondra. Now it was very close to the uninhabited outermost planet. Then further, more worrying sensor readings started coming in. According to the Enterprises detectors, the cloud divas composed of gaseous matter so thick in some places that it bordered on the solid. It was too thick to be a nebula, too thin to be a world. It neither rotated nor tumbled, showing splendid disregard for all the usual effects of motion and solar gravitation. Pallas I and II should be having all kinds of effects on it now, yet sensors continued to claim the cloud ignored the twin SUDS com pletely. And it moved rapidly. Much too rapidly. There it was, then. The seemingly bottomless Pandora's box of the universe had confronted them with yet another surprise. "Come, Mr. Spock. Keep at the computer. Let's have STAR TREK LOG ONE 143 further information," and, he didn't add, information that made a little more sense. Spock paused, looked up from his viewer. "I'm sorry, Captain. I find myself quite intrigued by the phenomenon. There is both matter and energy active in the cloud, it seems. But to say the least, the combination is highly unorthodox. lyor example, the quantities of each do not appear to remain constant, but rather exist in a continual state of Box. "This would impb that matter within the cloud is being steadily converted to energy. Yet it does not radiate more than a trickle of thy apparent production." "You're right, Spoclc, that's very intriguing." Kirk pondered. The closer they got, the more information they obtained, the more impossible this thing became. ""It's very odd. It almost suggests . . ." "Lookl" Everyone whirled to face the screen at Sulu's abrupt shout. The cloud had reached Alondra. Sulu switched hurriedly to long-rango visual pickup and before their horrified eyes, the cloud slowly crept amoebalike across the face of the planet. It traveled over the planetary surface patiently, inexorably, and one couldn't help but feel deliberately. Only Arex, mindful perhaps of Kirk's earlier reproof, kept his eyes on his instruments. "Captain," he announced finally, "Aloridra has disappeared from navigation scan." That sent Spock's gaze back to his library viewer. Uhura suggested, "Tho cloud has come between us and the planet. Somehow that's interrupting scan." 'ationo, Lieutenant," said Spock quietly. "The cloud has engulfed Alondra." A long paws followed. The bridge was silent except for the tiny, nonconversational ticks and hums of various instruments. The next time he spoke, the science officer's voice conveyed an unmistakable feeling of alarm. "Captain! The planet seems to be breaking up. Sensors indicate a definite and rapid reduction of planetary mass." A hurricane of thoughts had roared through Kirk's 144 STAR TREK ONE head in the past few minutes. Now he found himself voicing the least palatable of them. "Spock," he asked quietly, "is it possible that this 'cloud" cons planets?" "Captain, I believe that your question is unnecessarily replete with emotional overtones." '4This whole situation is unnecessarily replete with emotional overtones, Mr. Spoclc. Please answer the question." "extrapolating from all available sensor information, sir," his Fist officer replied, argumenative to the last, "it would seem a reasonable assumption." "Sir?" Kirk looked over at Sulu. "The cloud is changing course." "Ridiculous, Mr. Sulu. It's not a powered vehicle. A natural object should not his "Course change verified, sirl" added Arex excitedly. 41nitial course computation revision indicates was he paused, triplo tilde choc right-brace + his figures, 'allyndicates it is moving now in the direction of the second planet." "4But if * continua on that course was Uhura called. Kirlc'a voice was grim. was Eighty-two million people will die." Very quiet it was on the bridge then.-Only the computers continued to converse. "Mr. Tutu, prepare to increase speed to warp tilde eight. Push it to the limit. deform Engineer Scott of the reasons, if he so Inquires." "Yes. sir was Sulu nodded. Kirk continued. "At tilde varp tilde eight. Mr. Sutu. we will intercept the cloud." At that Sulu loolred back hesitantly towards the command chair, his gaze full of questions. '4Wo . . . will . . . intercept . . . the . . . cloud," Kirk repeated distinctly. He was well aware everyone on the brides was staring at him. Well, Splat the hell did they expect? 44And before it reaches the inhabited planet Mantilles. Despite the fact that we are still uncertain as to the cloud's trao nature. Despite the fact that it masses many millions of EntcrpAse's. ""Ready, Mr. Sulu!"" "Course plotted and set" Captain." 44War tilde eight, please, Lieutenant." STAR TRERL tilde 0 equals 145 Sulu did a small thing. Only God and helmsmen could warp the very fabric of space and at times like these, some helmsmen got the two confused. That's why navigation officers and chief engineers had the highest rate of turnover and mental crackup in Starneet. The Enterprise responded and leaped ahead. "If we can't stop it, Jim millions of people will die." Kirk swiveled his chair. "Hello, Bones. I know. Perhaps more." "True, Doctor," continued Spock. "If planetary annihilation is indeed a part of this shine's nature, it might seek out woridq tic instinctively as any animal seeks out food. It may even consume stars as well as planets though it seems woefully small in comparison to even a small star." "Almost as small as we are in comparison to it?" Kirk mused. Snack. naturally. did not smile. "Almost. CddaDtain. Yet we Icunw nothing of the cloud's limitations. If it has such selective ability, it could prove a threat to every world in our galaxy." "Bones?" McCoy moved to stand close to Kirk. Everyone on the bridge could imagine, or thought they could what was Heroine on in the captain's mind right now. So they resolutely ignored the resultant conversation. "Bones, I need an expert medical opinion on mass psychola tilde you. tilde , "Then you've come to the wrong place, Jim." The jest fen flat. "Seriously, I can venture opinions, but not expert ones." "tilde You're the best I've got, Bones. Ten me do we dare ten the people on Mantilles what we know? So that they can attempt to save at least a portion of the population? They have instruments, they can guess but they won't know until it's too late." McCov looked up at the screen at the moving cloud. The distant view showed no bulging eyes, no gaping jaws. In appearance-it was no more threatening than a cloud of steam. "How much time do they have?" Arex supplied the answer, and Kirk didn't even think 146 STAR TRBR[OG ONE of reprimanding the lieutenant for evesdropping. "Four hours, ten minutes, sir." McCoy looked at Kirk. "I suspect the people on Mantilles are organised, well-educated, civilised, thinking human beings, Jim." Kirk nodded in confirmation. "That's how I see it, too, Bones. They'll panic, an right." McCoy grinned tightly. "On the other hand, Captain," reminded Spock, and it was natural that he should be the one to voice the thought, "they may still manage to save some small portion of the populace." "A great deal could depend on the executive in charge, Jim," McCoy continued. "Who's the governor of Mantilles? Do you know anything about him?" "Robert Wesley," Kirk murmured, thinking back in time to a long-past incident. "He was in Starfleet once. Left it to accept the governorship." He glanced meaningfully up at the doctor. "He's no hysteric." McCoy didn't hesitate. "Then tell him." "Coming up on the cloud," interrupted Sulu. "ETA five minutes ten seconds." "Very well, Lieutenant." Kirk whispered back at McCoy, "Thanks, Bones." Then he raised his voice and gave orders to Uhura "Lieutenant, send a priority one call to Governor Wesley on Mantilles." "Aye aye, sir." As the Enterprise gained distance on the cloud, viewscreen perspective had to be forced down once, twice yet a third time. Then it was impossible to widen the view or reduce it any further. There was nothing in the screen now but the shifting, enigmatic, threatening cloud-shape. It blotted out the universe. Bland as the actual picture was, it exerted a tremendous fascination. Everyone stared at the nearing, gaseous form. Everyone but Spock. He found more of interest in his computer readouts. "Captain, I'm getting anticipated readings from the chemical analysis sensors." STAR TREK L tilde ONE 147 "Anticipated, Mr. Spock? Oh, you mean . . ." "Yes, Captain. They are most unusual, in keeping with the unique nature of the cloud." "Well. keep us in suspense any longer, Spock. What kind of readings?" "There are indications of elements present in the cloud that are utterly unknown in our periodic tables, sir both natural and artificial.. I am now ninety percent certain of what has heretofore been only theory." "Which is7" Kirk prompted. "That this object has originated outside our galaxy." "Captain!" yelled Sulu abruptly. They all turned back to face the screen. A segment of the massive shape was twisting, bulging with ponderous speed. Prom the bulge long tendrDo-like spiral streamers of thick cloud suddenly reached out. out, in the direction of the FeanterprJse. Once formed, the fluffy pseudopods moved with uncanny speed and flexibility. "Evasive action!" Kirk shouted. hands reflexively trying to die into the metal of the command seat. "Aye, sirl" shouted Arex as he and Sulu worked frantica11v at the helm. But this close to target. evasive action was nearly imDossihie to coordinate. The Enterprise was no humminabir tilde like. to SAID-IN on its own axis or suddenly fly backwards. Even if the fabric of the ship could have survived such a makeover, everyone and everything on board would have been thrown out through the forward superstructure by sheer inertia. It was like being attacked by a ban of loose cotton. The long streamers entwined themselves gently about the Ens terprise. Then, warp tilde eight or no war tilde eight, space-twisting engines or no space-twisting engines, the ship began to retract steadily back into the cloud. "Full reverse thrust," ordered Kirk, more hopeful than sanguine. "Full back engines, sir," Sulu confirmed. The bridge shuddered under the strain. Except for computer-field compensation, the Enterprise would have been torn apart by the titanic convicting 148 STAR TREK LOG ONE stresses suddenly imposed on it. But the immense power of her engines was insufficient to pull her free. "Not enough it's not enough," McCoy said tightly, verbalising the obvious. "Some sort of antiplasma," Spock informed them, as if he were analysing the composition of a candy bar. He looked up from the viewer. "It generates an unusually powerful attractive force. Not gravity as we know it, but similar." Kirk hardly heard him. "Prepare to fire all phased into the cloud mass. If possible, aim at where these tendrils connect with the mass itself." "Locked on," said Sulu mere seconds later. "Phasers ready," added Arex. "Firer" "Meg phasers."" Ravening, destroying beams of pure force lanced out from the Enterpnse tilde nly to vanish with no visible effect into the cloud mass. They might as well have been beaming at the sun. "Nothing, Captain," reported Sulu. Spock supplied an answer for the incredible. "The cloud appears to have the ability to absorb energy, Captain. This is not surprising in view of what we already know about it. The beams of our phasers were not reflected by any sort of shield. Of course, anything that can manage the breakdown of a planet's molten corecom n There was no need to finish the thought. Try to harpoon a whale with toothpicks! The streamers continued to pull the Enterprzse closer to the cloud. Sulu was the first to notice the rippling in the surface of the roiling mass. A small opening appeared, expanded. Its warp-drive engines still fighting in reverse, the starship disappeared into the cloud. Kirk's stomach, on the other hand, was moving upwards and any minute now he was sure it would pop right out his mouth. The lights on the bridge fluttered, dimmed, and fluctuated wildly. Uhura was thrown out of her chair by an especially violent concussion. Sulu was tossed a meter into the air before being STAR TREK LOG ONE 149 slammed down to the deck, while Kirk and Spock held onto their respective chairs for dear life. Only Lt. Area, his three arms and legs, managed to retain anything like a stable position. Fortunately, the severe shaking lasted only a few sec- onds. Buffeting became rapidly less and less violent. In a little while the ship had completely recovered its normal equilibrium. ""Uhura?" She scrambled back into her seat, grimacing at the lin- gering pain, and started checking her console for break- age. "Sore backside, Captain, that's all. Nothing vital dam- aged." "That's a matter of opinion," McCoy disputed. Every- one was too tense for a really honest laugh, but the sortie took the edge off their initial shock. Kirk even managed to smile. As usual, Spock stared blankly at his chuckling comrades. "Mr. Sulu?" Kirk called when the stifled laughter had stilled, "are you operational?" He tried to make a joke of it. The navigation officer was in obvious pain and just as obviously trying to hide it. "I believe there is a possibility my left leg is broken, Captain." "Report to Sick Bay, Lieutenant." But Sulu showed no signs of leaving. "If you don't mind, Captain," he replied, already checking his computer to establish their position, "I'd like to stay at the helm." Another flash of pain showed on his face, but he turned away from the others and Kirk had only a glimpse of it. McCov n1'iected loudly, heading in Sulu's direction. "Lieutenant, I order you to was Then he paused. Now more than ever Kirk was going to need the senior navigation officer's abilities. "All right, Mr. Sulu, you can remain at station as long as I can put that leg in a temporary plint n " - McCoy set about his task. Sulu watched his viewscreen, wincing only now and then. 150 STAR 1 tilde Ktoa ONE "AD right, Mr. Sulu," Kirk caned. The viewscreen had gone blank. "See what you can get on the scanners." Sulu worked several controls. Nothing happened. Emergency backup, Mr. Sulu." Immediately Sulu was manipulating an alternate set of switches. The screen started to clear, a picture to form and there was a concerted gasp from the bridge. The scene in the main screen divas weird and beautiful. They appeared to he Boating in a misty fog over a wavering, fantastic landscape of muted grey and brown. Huge, monolithic iceberg tilde shards of the planet Alondra drifted with them in the mist. Many of the fragments were the size of large asteroids. They dwarfed the Enterprise whenever they moved clove. McCoy found further reason for amazement 'We're still intact," he mused wonderingly, ""but we must be inside the cloudl" Uhura checked in. "AU decks report considerable shaking up, Captain, but only slight damage." Sulu looked up from his station. "Captain, objects approaching off the bow. Coordinates, well," ho gestured at the viewscreen, "there they are." A moment later a pair of huge, irregularly shaped blobs hove into view. I[trk didn't need sensor readings to tell him that they were heading towards the Enterprise. They wore moving with impressive speed. Their size increased to threatening proportions as the distance between them and the trapped starship decreased. "Deflector shields up and operating," informed Arex. He'd initiated defector operation without Kirk's command in this cave, the sign of a good officer.. There was a time and place for protocol and a time and place to ignore it. "More objects approaching aftl" added Sulu excitedly. " Rirk studied the clumsy, growing shapes intently. There was nothing to mark them as belligerent. They were utterly devoid d stinger, Law, fang, or for that matter, any other surface feature. It was the deliberateness of their approach, ache indication of clear purpose in the way they STAR TREK LOG ONB 151 moved towards the Eriterprzse that hinted at unfrly intentions. The cloud was also devoid of surface features. "Analysis, Spock?" 'ationothing elusive or concealed about these, Captain," the science officer responded. "They are some organlzed form of highly charged antimatter." At Mat point the highly charged voice of Chief lingineer Scott filtered over an intercom. 'engineering to Captain Kirk." Kirk hit the broadcast switch on the arm of his chair. - "Kirk here. What's up, Scotty?" "Captain," answered Scott ominously, Ibis drain on the deflector shields is too great for them to hold for any length of time." "I know, Scotty." Kirk took another quick glance at the screen. Now the distinctive bright red of the blobs was pulsing visibly. As their color heightened in brilliance, one couldn't escape the impression that they were readying something. "Scotty, prepare the shields to deliver an antimatter charge. I can't tell You how strong it has to be, but you can be ready to give more than a tickle." There was a brim pane, as though Scott was thinking about saying something. But only a firm, "Aye, Captain," came from the speaker. Sulu shifted his eyes from the screen, kept them glued to the console until a rarely activated light winced on. "Antimatter charge ready, sir." The gigantic blobs were almost on top of the ship. 'mischarge!" Sulu lammed in the switch. Instantly, although there was no visible explosion, no blinding flare of light. the two amorphous masses fell back from the Enterprise. There divas an isolated cheer from Uhura, but it died quickly. Their relief from the alien as-sault was only temporary. A short distance away the blobs slowed, paused, and stopped. Everyone on the bridge waited breathlessly. Then they began to advance on the starship once again. But there were hopeful signs. The powerful antimatter charge the Enterprise's engines had delivered had had some effect. 152 STAR TREK LOG ONE The bright crimson color of the two aggressive forms had faded, the sharp pulsing seemed weaker. Now both were a light shade of pink. "Double the charge, Mr. Sulu." 'iSir?" Sulu looked doubtful. Kirk's reply was not. "I said double the charge." Sulu did things with the console. ""Ready, sir." Kirk watched, waited until the two monstrous shapes seemed ready to envelop the ship, then, "lggischargel" The lobs hesitated, shuddered Hand began to fall away from the Enterprise. As they did so their color shifted from pinlc to light pink, to white. Then the massive shape" started to brea right-brace up, to dissolve into smaller and smatter pieces which then vanished into nothingness. Nervous conversation filled the bridge. Everyone seemed to have something to say, except Spoc right-brace . His mind was obviously elsewhere. "tilde Well, Spoc right-brace , any conclusions "Only the beginning of a theory, Captain. A hint of a hypothesis." He dropped the bombshell with maddening calm. "lit is possible that this cloud in which we are entrapped is a living thing. A conscious, animate entity. It is my considered opinion, barring future data to the contrary, that it is alive." Area whistled. There were similar exclamations of surprise and shock from the others. "That's a sweet one, Spock." Kirk's initial impulse was to reject the incredible statement out of hand. A living being eight hundred thousand ldlometers acr1 Insanel Yet Spock, while unshockable himself, would be fully cognizant of the effect such a pronouncement would have on the rest of them. He might call it a theory, ho might call it mere hypothesis, but he wouldn't mention it unless he felt pretty damn sure of trig supportive evidence. So Kirk swallowed his natural reactions and instead turned calmly to Bones. Such caution had saved him embarrassment more than once. "How about you, Bones? Any opinions?" McCoy, he noticed, had been using the library-computer annex to run some questions of his own. STAR TREK L tilde ONB 153 "There's certainly some resemblance, Jim. I don't know how much eve can depend on that. But I can tell you one thing. We have to get out of this area. Those mists out there," and he nodded in the direction of the screen, which showed only a thin grey fog, "have, according to the latest readoub from our chemical sensors, many of the characteristics of macromorphase enzymes. "If the shields should failsiond they won't stay up forever, not under this pressure the hull will be rapidly corroded through and we'll all be broken down into nice, bite sized, digestible particles." 'I am inclined to agree wail the doctor, Captain," said Spock, staring into Uhe computer viewer. "I have been running continual check on tile planet Alondra Its ruptured mass has been steadily growing smaller ever since we entered She cloud. Energy levels, concurrency, are up. The obvious analogy is inescapable." 'It's converting mass into energy, of course," Kirk agreed, startled at how easily the stunning words came. 'Liven 80, we his Everyone glanced up in alarm at a loud, raucous blast of sound. It came from Uhura's station. She recovered from her initial surprise, checked her station, and hastily lowered The volume. "Captain, I have a subspace message from Governor Wesley on MantiUes." She paused, looked away in mild embarrassment. 'I forgot. I was able to initiate the requested can to him before we were pulled in." Kirk considered. He could tale Ule call right here, of course. But a e fewer people who knew of The ultimate de" cisions falcon with regard to the doomed world, the better. Word could always slip out somehow, and there might be personnel on board the E tilde erprrse Ah relatives or close friends on The outpost planet. He had enough crises to handle. He rose. "I'll take the call in my quarters, Lieutenant." "Yes, sir." "Mr. Sulu, Mr. Spock utilize our scanners to assemble a chart of the cloud's composition and interior structure. Then give it to the library for analysis and preparation of 154 STAR TRBK LOG initial diagrams. It's time we knew where we were." He turned and was on his way to his cabin before the two "yes, sirs" reached him. The short walk from the elevator to his quarters gave him a few precious seconds to think. The number of options open to him now was severely limited, and growing smaller by the minute. It didn't take much time to examine them an. Eighty-two minion souls. Poof. He shook his head and cursed the vilest curses he could think of. There were times when he wanted to take the old, antique projectile weapon out of its protective case in the offlcer's lounge and blast away at everything fragile and delicate in sight. That was the trouble with modern weapons. Phasers had no recoil, made no more noise than a door buzzer. Their destructive capabilites were considerable; their psychological value to the wielder, nit Eighty-two million. The death of ten or twenty intelligent beings at one time he could grasp, could comprehend. But this it was too overwhelming, too enormous a figure to terrify. An entire world reduced to a loose mathematical abstraction. Only the people who lived on it were real. Bob Wesley was only slightly older than Kirk His manner as he stared out from Kirk's private screen was calm, steady, competent. His face held a few more lines STAR TREK LOG ONE 1SS and his hair was greyer. The subtle assassins of politics could be harder on a man than all the terrors of space. Now he looked even older than his years. He made no attempt to conceal the burden he was feeling, to hide the agony he felt. When the image first materialised on the tiny screen, Kirk was shocked. Kirk tersely gave Wesley the facts. "Three and a half hours, Jim," said Wesley slowly, each word rolling and booming like the clang of a great bell. "It's not enough. Not nearly enough. Oven if I hadthe ships available to really evacuate." Kirk tried to think of something encouraging to say, could only come up with honesty. "You have time to save some people, Bob." Wesley mumbled a reply. "If the word gets out and it will, no matter how hard we try to keep it secret it will only start the panic sooner." He coughed softly. "But you're right, of course. We must do what little we can." Kirk had never seen a man look so helpless. He wondered how he'd be standing up to the pressure if their positions were reversed. Strong men had committed suicide out of inability to cope with far less crushing situations. Self-destruction, at least, was not Bob Wesley's way. "How ," Kirk found himself choking on the Words, "how are you going to choose?" Wesley's answer was expected. "There is no choice, Jim. We'll save some of the children." He made a tired gesture of dismissal. "And now if you'll excuse me, Jim. I'd like to talk it's been a long time but live many things to do. There's not much time left." "Sure, Bob." Kirk strove to sound cheerful. It came out false. "Ill talk to you later, if there's anything new." Wesley shrugged slightly. "E you want." He sounded like a dead man already. Composed and resigned to an inevitable fate. The screen abruptly went dark. Kirk stared at it for long minutes, thinking. Gradually his brows drew together, and his teeth ound against one another in silent anger. By the time he'd reached the bridge again the cloud of 156 STAR TREK LOG ONE depression that had begun to overtake him, too, had been thrown aside by an invincible determination, a resolve to do son tilde thinB. But how? In three hours and twenty minutes the cloud would reach Mantilles. If that were permitted to happen millions of people would die. The elevator reached the bridge, and he stepped through the doors. Very well it must not be permitted to happen. It was as simple as that. He stopped, returned stares of each and every one of the officers present. When he finally resumed his seat again and spoke, the words were directed at Spock and McCoy. "Come on, gentlemen. I need your help. Your analyses, evaluations, opinions no matter how wild, how outrageous. Exercise your minds, dammit! We're going to find a solution tilde nd no one on Mantilles is going to die." To an outsider familiar with the situation, it would have sounded futile. But somehow, at that point in time on the bridge, it didn't. In fact, it seemed almost reasonable. "Start with basics," he finished. There was silence on the badge. "If we assume the cloud is a diving being," said Spock slowly, "then it must follow that it requires some form of continual nourishment to sustain itself." Kirk nodded. "And eve have postulated that the cloud lives on the energy it converts from the mass of the planets it consumes in this case. the planet Alondra. Though as yet we have no firm proof of this." "Quite so," Spock added. "But it is apparently like some huge animal grazing here and there in the pasture of the universe." That poetic phraseology caused Doctor McCoy to miss twelve full lines of computer biological analysis. He had to back up the tape and rerun the information. "All right," agreed Kirk, hand caressing chin. "Let's follow that line of thought through. Bones, what about those antagonistic blobs?" "Offhand, judging from the way they reacted to our STAR TREE: LOG ONE 157 presence, I'd say they perform essentially the same function as teeth, Jim. They break up the largest chunks of matter for easier digestion. Maybe they sensed us as being larger than we were, because compared to those chunks of planet floating around in here, we're digestible-size already. Possibly our engines give off enough energy to fool them into thinking we're more nutritious than we really are." Kirk nodded, turned to face Sulu. "Lieutenant, the computer scanners should have come up with something on the cloud's internal composition and makeup by now. Let's see it." "Yes, sir." Sulu turned to his console. "Computer schematic readied. Coming on." He hit a switch. On the screen, for the first time, they had an overall view of the interior of their massive host. In shape it was rather like a fat pair of disembodied human lungs, joined directly together. Instead of a trachea or esophagw there was a bottle-shaped bulge in its middle. Rising from the top of this pear-shape was another long, narrower cavity. From the top of this area a long cylindrical passage appeared to open into space at the top of the cloud. Thus reduced to screen-size and roughly drawn, the diaBram looked insignificant, almost comical, like a child's drawing. But after what had happened to Alon*a, no one felt inclined to laugh. The problem was that the chart put the alien into tooeasy perspective. The tiny white dot representing the Em fcrprtse, for example, could not be shown to scale. It was much too big. In reality the cloud was too big to comprehend. As a diagram, it was reduced wrongly to a harmless crude shape. Still, there were things to be learned from it, and Kirk studied the *awing intently. For him, at least, the drawing induced no false sense of security. The outlines of the cloud's interior were not fixed, but appeared to flow and change as befitted a mostly gaseous organism. Anyhow, it was still solid enough for him to comment, "It seems to have some kind of regularised 158 STAR TREK [equals 0 tilde anatomy. That opening where we were first pulled in doesn't show. It must have closed fast right behind us. "But there looks to be some kind of permanent opening up near the top." 'if don't know, l m," chipped in McCoy, immediately picking up the captain's line of thought. "If this thing also has some bud of co10's tilde sal digestive system ahead of us, I don't see how we could make it that far." "Three hours, five minutes, sir," announced Arex disna tilde qIonately, tilde 11 the cloud reaches Mantilles." Kirk nodded acknowledgment of this information. He'd already made his decision. If nothing else, time dictated a move at this stage. "Since we appear to have only one way out, we must try it. Mr. Sulu. take us to that central core area." "Aye. arm sir." Kirk put his fight elbow on the arm of the control chair and rested hits chin in the waiting palm. A slight smile resorted his lipa "And if this thing does have a stomach, we just might be able to give it a bad enough case of indigestion to make it turn from Mantilles his It didn't tales long for them to reach the edge of the area the computer had pinpointed as the cloud's central cavity. There was only one bar to further progress. The entrance to that cavity W88 closed. Closed by a pulsing, vaguely irLdike valve. 'we've reached the entrance to the central core, Cap" fain," confirmed Sulu. McCoy laughed nervously as he studied their intended path. "tilde What do eve do DOW knock?" The ship gave a sudden lurch. But this one was bearable and no one was hurt. It was nowhere near as violent as the severe jolts that had pounded them when they were first drawn into the cloud mass. "'ationo need, Bones," murmured Kirk tightly. "Here we go . . ." The iris was opening. Swept like a leaf on a tidal bore, the Enterprise was tossed into the core area, along with floating mist and sev STAR TR-EKnowledge LOG ONE 159 eral still gigantic chunks of the planet Alondra. Then the iris closed ponderously behind them. The scene in the central core was as radically different from the areas they'd already passed through as it was from the Salted blackness of space itself. This core section was a kaleidoscope of colors, a flaring, scintillating, rainbowed chamber spotted with constant awesome explosiona Hugo slender pyramid shapes protruded from the tide of the core wall they were drifting near. As they stared at the screen, a large section of planet drifted close by one, seemed to hesitate in space, touched A detonation that would have shamed arly tilde bing smaller than a sunspot filled the viewscreen with blinding, pure white light. The glare faded rapidly. If the scanners hadn't automatically darkened to compensate for the shocking flash their eyes could have been seriously damaged. As it was, they were only impressed. When they could see clearly again the first thing everyone noted was that the section of Alondra had dippy peered. But the slender pyramid it had impacted on was gloving incandescent with residual energy energy produced by their meeting and the resultant explosion. A shock wave struck the Enterprise soon after, but the first flash had given the ships computers necessary sect ends to brace for the powerful side effects. After alp they were still operating at planetary distances from the walk The ship wasn't damaged. Explosions continued to occur at regular intervals, some weaker, some more powerful than the first. While the EN terprise rode the resultant shock waves easily, the constant rocking and buffeting hampered observation and made accurate navigation increasingly difficult. Still, the starship managed to pick a path through the central core. By keeping it in one piece and on course, a sweating Sulu and Arex were earning their rank. Uhura watched the pyramid destructionstgrowth cycle wonderingly. "What are those things?" McCoy had been making analogies as wed as observations. "I'm going to make an educated guess." He took a deep breath, let it out slowly. "I think we're now moving 160 STAR TREK tilde OF in what corresponds in man to the small intestine. Those shapes growing out of the core wall seem to be somewhat similar in basic function to human villi." "Villi?" Kirk looked back questioningly at the doctor. Physiology, human or otherwise, had never been one of his favorite subjects. It comteemed he'd spent too much time on spatial physics, astrodynamics. sod administrative operations. True, a starship captam is supposed to have at instant heck and call only slightly less information than a shin'q computer banks, but even so . . . M'ov padded. ""The human qmaBut intestine is lined with millions of them, although they are more or less permanent. They don't destroy themselves on contact with food, so these seem to. They absorb nutrients into the body by his As McCoy droned on with his biological comparisons, everyone on the bridge had plenty of time to study the actual Drollness. Though it was hard to compare the titanic forces at woe* on the screen to what was taking place beneath He's own stomach. A section of some great mountain was drawn to a villas amblea following the now familiar pattern. disintegrated brilliantiv on contact. The villus crew alarniingly as it absorbed the energy generated by the explosion. At the comtame time the Inne Pyramid shape disappeared. Or more accurately, shrank back into the core wag. Immedintelv. a new Dyramid heean to fawn and stretch out" wool qli tilde htlv to the left of where the first had vanished. That'q when Spock looked up excitedly from his position at the library. "Captain. according to conclusive sensor readings, those villi-analogs are composed of solid antimatter! If the EnterDrlVe qhnnld touch one . . ." "dis . . we'll disappear faster than a piece of chocolate in a phaser beam," Kirk finished. "Mr. Sulu, keep those shield," UD at an costsl" "1311 try, sir." Kirk returned his affection to the screen. The Enterprise continued to drift through the chaotic core. In some ways, the continuous mass-energy conversion cycle re STAR TREK L tilde ONB 161 minded him of a thermonuclear reaction slowed down many times. "Incredible, simply incredible," he whispered. "So much power was He watched another chunk of world vanish in a shattering display of energy. There was enough power being produced here to drive endless fleets of starships, to light entire inhabited worlds. AD wasted. However, he reminded himself, the creature would consider it otherwise. If it was capable of considering anything, which he sincerely doubted. "The villi reabsorb with the energy they take in and immediatelv begin to regenerate preparatory to repeating the cycle." Spock agreed. "It is clearly an part of the natural digestive process in operation here, Captain. Sensors indicated when we first entered that a natural force-field of vast dimensions was in operation in this core area At first I was unsure as to its purpose. Now it is perfectly clear. The field serves to contain the matter-antimatter contactst.solution sequence and keep it within manageable bounds. "Otherwise the creature would quite literally eat itself to death." A telltale on Uhura's main board winked for attention, was instantly shunted to the main speaker. "Eneineerine to badge." Kirk hit the reply switch. "Yes. Scotty?" "Keepin" the deflectors this high is putting an enormous strain on the engines. Captain. Especially on our antimatter power supply. What with the continual maximum pow" er demands on the shields as wee, our reserve energy supplies are faDin' fast. Too fast." Too fast, too fast I Everything was happening too fast. Damn a universe which had infinity at its command and yet no time to spare! "How much time have we got left, Scotty?" "Twentymne minutes, Captain and there's no safety margin figured into that. That's everything. But if the popover indicator drops below two antikilos, we'll not have even that. The engines won't have enough antimass to sustain reaction. We'll lose motive power as well as shields and deflectors." 162 STAR TREK LOG ONE "Thanlfyou, Mr. Scott. Ill keep that information in mind." He snapped off the intercom and looked to the helm. "tilde Push our speed, Mr. Arex. I know it isn't easy to maneuver in here, but we must make our way through the opening at the other end of this core." Arex'is voice was tight in reply. "tilde Yes, sir. We'll make it, cr." Long minutes passed while the Enterprlse picked its way at high speed through the weWill jungle of gigantic vile, smrounded by unceasing detonations of unimaginable power. Por a while it seemed they'd make the core exit with no trouble. Thea perhaps Arex or Sulu miscalculated slightly, or maybe their speed was simply too great for a particularly tight passage. Spatial gyro' screamed in sudden protest as computer emergency overrides strove to correct position. They were drifting towards one of the waiting viUi. '1 can't hold * on course, sirl" Sulu yelled desperately. 6Tomorrow using full power)" Increase deflector screens to maximum." "DeBector screens to maximum," Arex acknowledged. The starship shuddered, straining to pun away. One of the huge slender pyramids seemed to leap out at them, reaching hungrily and growing gigantic in the viewscreen. Enormous It Hayed enormous, but abruptly was growing no larger. And then it began to move, to shift out of view as the Ehterprisc shuttled pass. Kit* tried to relax a lithe sod found he couldn't. His muscles revere knotted fighter than a reaction coiLike Another pasts that clove to Otto of the villi and the deflector shields would surely collapse under the immense load. Once that happened, 80 would every atom that comprised the Enters prism and her crew. The spealrer cleared again. Another cat from Scott. Kirk was half expect)" it. That last narrow escape had used up any safety margin they might have had. The question now was, did they have any margin at all? 6"Take over, Mr. SpocLike," he said when Scotty had fin STAR TREK LOG ONB 163 ished detailing their present status. "I'm going down to Engineering." "Very well, Captain." Scott was waiting for him fallen the elevator opened onto the main engineering deck. The chief said nothing, but went instead to a nearby console and indicated an especialty eloquent gauge. The instrument said everything for him It showed the level of reserve power currently available in the central antimatter reaction chambers. Showed it hovering uncertainly right around the twokito mark. "There it is, Captain. All the wishin' in the world won't change that level. If we don't stop the excessive power drain right now, it'll be the end of us." "It'll be the end of us if we do, Scotty. You're a master engineer in many ways this is more your ship than it is mine. Think of something!" "Welt," Scott's expression showed that he'd been pondering an idea for some time but even now was reluctant to voice it. "Come on, Scotty if it's anything more concrete than prayer, I'm witting to listen to it." He'd already tried the former, to no avail "Captain, all our sensor reports indicate that those Anti' pyramid converters are antimatter antimatter of high energy potential, to say the least. "If we could somehow obtain a bit of it an infinitesimal amount to the creatur tilde it might serve just as well as normal antimatter fuels. Put it in the engine, and unless it has utterly unique physical properties, it ought to regenerate reaction. We'd have enough power to drive the ship at maximum and hold both shields and deflectors at same." Kirk looked thoughtful. "That would take care of our lack of antimatter, sure. But we also need matter engines regenerated." Scott smiled. "Matter's no problem, sir. I've already had my people working on bearaing aboard some of the loose planet ftoatin' free around us. There's enough matter here to power a million starships. "As for the antimatter, we can't touch it or let it 164 STAR ll backslash BlCan LOG ONE touch anything solid, of course. Eve the difficultia fully, Captain. It's not like cuttin' firewood. But I think there's a good chance we could cut it with a neutral tractor beam and then transport it aboard." ""Transport it aboard?" Kirk looked uncertain. "If it contacts the inside of the ship or any of us, for even a microsecond, it'll be the finish dust as surely as if we'd rammed one of the villi." "That won't happen, Captain," Scott objected eagerly. 'Tomorrow sure I can rig a force tilde field box that will hold the antimatter suspended in its center. A smaller, cruder version of the machinery normal fueling stations use. Then I can shift the whole thing by portable tractor beam into the antimatter nacelle. The small generator and controls for the field itself can be disintegrated the second the engines start to regenerate. "Once we manage the initial transportin", the rest should be a simple matter." He noticed the odd expression on Kirk's face. "Sorry, sir, no pun intended." "won't give it a thought, Scotty it doesn't matter." They smiled together. Then Kirlc gave the chief engineer's proposal some serious consideration. "My. Scott, this idea qualifies you for incarceration as a mental case. You realize that, don't you?" "Yes, girl" "You've been under tremendous pressure lately and it's affected your thinking. Obviously you've been operating with several circuits loose." "Yes, sir. Thank you, sir." "Let's try the goddamn thing his Seconds later Scott was at the main engineering console, communicating his needs forward to Sulu. Then the two men headed for the transporter room on the run. The Enterprisc began to leave its weaving, bobbing course. It shifted as near as it dared to one villi. This protrusion had been selected because it was a little more isolated from its neighbors than most. As Arex positioned them carefully, a tractor beam its normal radiance lost in the glare of nearby eruptions darted out from the ship and neatly excised a two-meter square chunk of the villi. STAR TREE LOG ONB 165 If the cloud-being felt this minute biopsy, it gave no sign. "Got it, sir," announced Scott. Kirk was standing next to him in the main transporter room. "Mr. Kyle," Scott said to the transporter chief, "bring 'er aboard." Kyle nodded. A large, dull metal cube with handles set into two sides rested on one of the transporter disks. Another side of the cube was filled with dials, switches, naked components and generating equipment. These produced and regulated the invisible force-field inside. The field-cube Divas not impressive, but it would hold with stability enough antimatter to destroy a fair-sized continent. A familiar little multicolored glow appeared just above the upper rim of the box. Kyle made a hurried adjustment of the controls. The glow vanished. Slowly. he brought down the single transporter lever in operation and let out a relieved sigh as it hit bottom. "Sorry, sir," he said to Kirk. "Close. Almost materialized it Outside the field." "Good thing You didn't," Kirk agreed calmly. Meanwhile his insides were still jumping. All the antimatter had to do was contact the air in the room. That would have been enough to set it off. "I Dresume it is inside now?" Kyle felt secure enough to nod even without checking his instrumentation. Kirk, Scott, and a pair of technicians moved forward towards the placid yet threatening box. Scott held a small control device in one hand. They mounted the transporter platform and one by one, took a look into the open cube. Inside, floating easily in vacuum, Divas the loose piece of virus. "So that's what antimatter looks like," whispered Kyle uneasily. Like most of the Feanterori tilde e tilde s personnel, his job never brought him in contact with the incredibly dangerous stuff. He could have done without this novelty, too. 'doesn't look real, does it?"'" murmured Kirk. "It belongs more properly to the imagination. This material used to be the unicorn of atomic Physics." He glanced abruptly at his chief engineer and his tone turned urgent. "Scotty, we've got ten minutes left." Scott was checking the small instrument he held. 166 STAR TREK ONE "Just wanted to make sure there was no oscillation in field strength, Captain. It's holding fine. Lot's go." He clipped the tiny rectangle to his belt. Then he and Kirk moved to stand on apposite sides of the cube. They gripped the handles and lifted. A tractor beam would have been easier, but nslder, too. Scott didn't want to use one field to move another. Funny things could happen sometimes when energy fields d different properties and fund lion intersected. Theoretically. the cube was full of nothing. There should be only the weight of the force-field box itself. But dammit" it seemed heavier! Dropping it would have no effect on the field inside, of course. Nevertheless, they wallced very, very carefully. Certain sections of the human mind were sometimes select tent to believe what another part might eeBut it. When the elevator door" dilated and they stepped into the main engineering room again, it seemed lilts the whole technical section was waiting for them. No one offered greeting. No one made idle conversation. They knew what was in the cube. Still moving cautiously, lurk and Scott angled towards the door marked: ACCESS ROUTB-ANT-NMATTER CONTROL And underneath! ABSOLUTELY AUTHORISED PERSONNEL ONLY--Still tilde Bet Reg.e-11634." One of the engineers operated the automatic safety door, and they entered the smart service lift thus revealed. Neither man said anything as the lift carried them down and forward. It was a short ride. The door slid back. They were in the antimatter nacelle. A narrow walkway led down the middle of the chamber. Like the lift exit it "towed faintly with its own unceasing, permanent force-field. If everything else on the Enterprlse was to shut down, all power including tife-support systems to fade phasers, lights, engines the small prelocked power supply that maintained this most vital function of the starship would remain activated and functioning. STAR TREK LOG ONE 167 If the entire crew were killed and every instrument on board destroyed, the starship would still be salvageable. The field was necessary because nearly everything in the huge, caverr tilde like chamber except the lift exit and walkway and themselves, of course was composed of antimatter. This was the greatest accomplishment of Federation technology engineering in negativity. The main- tenance Hallway they were on was suspended from valls, floor, and ceiling by force-field insulators. Cell-lilce bins lined the wags like the inside of some enormous insectoid hive. Each had simple red, yellow, and green indicator lights on the outside. Everything in here was ample and functional. Antimatter was difficult to work with. and there was no room for extraneous detail. It would have been too dangerous. Red lights gleamed on an of the bins except for the one closest to the lift-exit door. As they passed it, this single remaining green light faded out. At the same time, the middle indicator began to glow a bright yellow. Scott glanced quickly at it and then ahead down the valkway. 6'Well, that gives us two minutes." They moved as fast as they could. almost running now. They had to be careful. Normally the force-fields surrounding the waUc tilde vay formed impenetrable barriers even a ground-car couldn't break through. But now, as the main engines of the Enterpnse began to die. the separate Dower supply that maintained the protective fields started to shift over to salvage mode. That meant using only enough power to keep the matter of the walkway, say, from contacting the antimatter of the cham If they slipped and felt they'd never feel the final impact. never know the moment of death. Because touching the door here Cold mean destroying the instrument of touch, the attached you, and the entire ship. It was a place for people with the patience and maninulative skill of surgeons. That's why the personality profile requirements for antimatter engineers were among the highest in the Federation. At the far end of the walkway, which had seemed kilom 168 STAR TREE LOG ONE eters away, was a huge, unspectacular-looking circular chamber. Tubes radiated from it in an directions. An insulated instrument panel was set into the walkway nearby. Scott used his free hand to trip the comm switch. "AII right, Davis, we're hero. Open it." The single door of the chamber slid back with agonist ing slowness They carefully put the box inside the inner antimatter acceptance alcove. The door slid back automatically. There was a pause while the field cube was transferred to the inside of the main chamber. Speck and Kirk hadn't waited to check on the automatic process They'd dashed back to the lift door. Once there, Scott took the small control device from his belt. There was no time for a procheck, no time to see if the automatic partitioning device would dissolve the matter of the field cube in time. A thumb descended at the same time as the yellow light on the nearby bin faded out. A loud crackling noise like a ton of tin foil being crushed came from the area of the main chamber. There was a breathless pause. Then, a gentle violet hue appeared around it, seeming to issue from the chamber wall. Another crac right-brace iing, softer, and suddenly the myriad webbing of tubes and lines extending from the central sphere also shone with violet radiance. The luminescence reached to the bins. Rapidly, the indicator lights began to change from red, to yellow, to bright emerald green, winless on in a reassuring fugue of colon Even more reassuring was the steady hum of energy that had been nearly absent when they'd entered. Now it filled the antimatter nacelle. "Scatty," breathed lOrk slowly, too exhausted to feel satisfied, "you've just given the Errterprise and Mantilles a chance to live." Scott looked totally drained. "Thank you, sir. I don't think I want to go through this sort of thing very often. I'd much rather do it in theory." STAR TUBE LOG ONB 169 Xl Kirk was feeling rather optimistic unreasonably so when he resumed his position on the bridge. They had coped with a seemingly impossible power situation; they could cope with anything else. He spoke to his left. "Situation update, Mr. Spock?" Spock looked up from the computer again. As usual, the recent emergency had had no visible effect on him. His expression was neither elated nor discouraging only neutral. "The cloud is now only forty-two minutes, fourteen see" onds from Mantilles. Captain. And while you were with Mr. Scott in the antimatter nacelle, I was able to ascertain an important fact. I might venture to say, even, a vital fact." His eyebrows went up, and as usual Kirlds attention intensified at that inadvertent signal. Something significant vas up. "This creature does have a brain." If the creature had a brain, that implied the chance that no, no it was too much to hope for. Mad, in fact. But then, this whole situation was mad. Why mightn't it be consistently mad? "Could . . . it possibly be intelligent, Spock?" "It is far too early to guess, Captain. We really have no basis for such a supposition. Our information thus far is of purely anatomical nature. It has made only one action which might conceivably be interpreted as intelligent. It changed course from Alondra to move towards Mantilles." Kirk shook his head bustratedly. ""Not enough. We 170 STAR TREK OF can't go by that. It might just have been an involuntary response to a new source of food." What now? "Let's see what the computer cartographic sensors have put together. Mr. Spock." The first officer adjusted controls. A diagram of the cloud's interior appeared again on the screen. It was much enhanced since the last time he'd seen it. Considerable information had come in since then. "A great deal of electrical activity emanates from that big, irregular-qhaped object at the top of the core, Captain. Dr. McCov has been studying that activity and I be" lieve he has something to add." "That'q right, Jim. The impulses fan in regular patterns to an extent that would seem to preclude random generation. They might be normal for where this thing comes from, but . . . I'm inclined to regard those patterns as similar to those I've comteen before." "Before? Where. Bones?" "tilde verywher tilde whenever I take a cranial check on any crew member. They sure look like intelligent brain waves." "let's so big"" Kirk muttered. "Hellishly big." He paused thoughtfully. ""But if we can reach it before the creature reaches Manblles, we might be able to save the planet, Whether it's intelligent or not." "Jim? I'm not sure T follow you." "I'm not surDnsed. Bones. You're a physician. Your mind, Devour thoughts, your instincts are geared towards Dreservine life. You wouldn't think of using photon torpedoes to destroy a living mind." "Captain," interrupted SHOCK, "this is as you say, a living creature. I am compelled to mention that Street regulations tilde was But Kirk had no time to listen to a lecture on regulated morality. "Sometimes, Mr. Spock, through no conscious fault of your own, your recourse to logic in every matter makes you sound something of an idiot. I am aware of the regulations regarding the killing of intelligent life-forms, ""But as you yourself admit, we don't loom that this life-form is intelligent. When I have to balance that re STAR TREK LOG ONE 171 mote possibility against the lives of eighty-two million Mantitlians welt how long would you hesitate?" "Of course, you are correct, Captain," replied Spock quickly. In moments like these he was reminded that he was a Vutcan speaking to humans. In such emotional moments it was often better to say nothing to them than to be logical. "I did not mean to imply that his "I know, I know, Spock," admitted Kirk tiredly. "iallyou really had no control over what you said." "Are you implying, Captain, that my reaction was emotional?" Even tempered or not, Spock managed to sound outraged. Tense moment or not, there were some things that couldn't be permitted to go unquestioned. "No. no, no. Spockl You could only say the first logical thing that this being being oh heft; lefts drop it." "A most logical decision, Captain." Kirk started to retort, then remembered that Spock had no emotional need to resort to sarcasm. Faced with disaster after disaster he was Pennine to retreat into inanities. That was no way to inspire the confidence of his crew. Kirk stared resolutely at the screen and thought. l tilde ventua11y they reached the borders of the area the computer had labeled a brain. The new sector turned out to be made up of deep yellow cloud crisscrossed with putsing white cables and lines thee vanished in all directions. Spock and Uhura were using the sensors to prepare a detailed chart of the brain interior so that the Enterprise'a powerful torpedoes might be used to best advantage. Scott was still keeping a close watch on 0a precious engines. so Uhura was handling the basic programming. McCoy remained on the bridge. He always felt though Spook would have considered it absurd completely useless in such moments. At the same time McCoy hoped fervently his talents wouldn't be required. This constant paradox in tight situations was rough on even a well-balanced individual. That was one reason he made so many jokes. Laughter's therapeutic value was vastly underrated. But he wandered aimlessly about the bridge, trying to stay out of everyone's way and for the most part, succeeding. 172 STAR TREK LOO ONE In fact, this kept him free for one of his primary tions. "Am I doing the right thing, Bones?" Kirk asked him quietly. "Stardeet prime directing number two prohibits the tatting of intelligent life. I once Ad myself that man would not rise above primitiveness until he stood up and vowed, "1 wilt not kilt today." his "tilde You also said you couldn't let this thing wipe out over eighty million lives," McCoy countered gently. "tilde ertai tilde y that takes precedence owr the second directive." "at know, I right-brace nowl Viewed objectively, or logically, as Speck would prefer there is no choice. But I'm the one who has to live with the decision to Icilt." Spock spared him farther introspection. "Captain, I've completed the analysis of the target ares. T am afraid your Initial estimation of the destructive capability of the 8hip'But photon torpedoes was badly overrated. According to my calculations, our entire offensive armament is in8ufflcienccment to insure the creatore's destroy, let done incapacita. tion." He paused. "4Howewr, there tilde one ather possibility. The brain could be completely destroyed if we aimed the Enterprise at its canter and then converted the entire ship to energy. Such a single overwhelming strike should prove mortal. It voutd certaluly cripple the creature sod remove in ability to hunt out specific worlds." "That sounds lice you're telling us to blow up the ship." messed McCoy incredulously. "I believe that is what I just said, Doctor." McCoy had no argument to counter with. Like the rest of them he'd been caught completely unprepared for the science offlcer's words. Only Rir right-brace wasn't shocked. "y expect those figures on the limits of our photon torpedoes are accurate. Mr. SpockThat" he queried. "Youths checked and rechecked them. no doubt." "NatoTalty." Spock replied. '1 do not profess to be en. amored of the idea of destroying ourselves Csptain. I have no more wish for self destruction than anyone else. I merely report the facts as they exist and suggest slternative lines of operation for your consideration." STAR TREK ONB 173 "But that is your recommendation?" Spock nodded. "We seem to be left with no other alternative$7' "Thank you, Mr. Spock." Kirk drummed fingers on the arm of the command chair. Spock was right. They'd run out of options and were rapidly running out of time. Even so, he hedged. "You're sure it would do the job?" "Yes, Cptain. Quite sure." Kirlc leaned over and spoke into the communicator grid. "Kirk to engineering." "pioneering," mine the distant voice. "Scott here." Kirk composed himself and rehearsed the words in his mind. He wanted Scott to get it right the first time. He remembered the last time he'd uttered the words, when they'd battled the strange energy-being in orbit around the bulls of a dead star. But in his mind he'd known that was a feint. A desperate one, but still a feint. A trick to frighten their unwanted passenger away. It had worked. This time, however, it was different. He had no tricks in his mind, no hidden surprises to spring on this lumbering, alien entity. It was to be a kamikaze strike, plain and simple. Idly, he wondered where that strange-sounding word had come from. "Mr. Scott, prepare the self-destruct mechanism in the engines. Computer control for triggering the device will be here, on the bridge.. Rig it with Lt. Uhura." There was a long pause at the other end. "Mr. Scott?" "Aye, sir." Kirk clicked off and sat back. The following comment turned the atmosphere in the room topsy-turvy. It was typical of McCoy. "tilde Well, gentlemen, that's one decision you won't have to live with." right-brace Iven Kirk smiled. "Wait Ill you hear the next one, Bones. It'll kill you." "What on Vulcan is the matter with you two?" queried Spock blankly. "Nothing, Spock," McCoy was quick to counter. "You're right, as usual. As a comedy act, we're dying." 174 STAR TREK LOG ONE Kirk chuckled. "Stop it, Bones. That's an order." He paused, grinned even wider. "You're ldllingme." Spock shook his head wonderingly. "Humans!" There was no contempt in the friendly exclamation. A little pity, perhaps. Kirk's smile faded. They didn't need pity right now. They needed miracles. Meanwhile, Uhura had nearly finished programming the cerebral diagram. A light flashed on her console as she was setting the schematic for display. She checked it, then swiveled around in her chair to look over at Kirk. "Incoming communication, sir. It's Governor Wesley on Mantilles." Kirk considered retreating to his cabin again to take the call, immediately squelched the idea. BY THE time the information reached the rest of the crew the fate of the EN terprlsc and the eiehtv-two millions on Mantilles would alreadv have been decided. "Put it on the viewscreen here, Lieutenant." "Yes, sir." She made the necessary connections. "Go ahead, Governor." Wesley's image strengthened on the screen. Verv little time had passed since his last conversation with Kirk. but he seemed to have aged years, not hours. "Hello. Jim." Oh is the evacuation Drnceediner' Wesley nodded wearily. His words were delivered in a flat, even tone, interspersed with long sighs. The fresh attitude of determination that had Dipped the Eraerprise had no such counterDart on Mantilles. "Yes, its started. We're chine as well as we can. Oh, there was comtome hysteria at the h tilde innin tilde Put the tilde overnment's been very candid with them and they appreciate that. Thev've taken it well. all things considered. Damn well. Much hefter than we had am right to expect. "I think the announcement that wore going to take only children made the wlentiallv dangerous ones sit down and do some serious thinking. The few real nuts we were ready for." His face was a study in frustration. "But it's only five thousand, Jim. Five thousand, out of STAR TRBK roe 175 "I know," Kirk murmured compassionately. It sounded woefully inadequate, even presumptuous but Christ, what else could he say? Wesley's frustration found release in a burst of anger. "The hell you dot You sit up there safe in your starship and was He caught himself right away. The anger vanished as quickly as it had come and he slumped in his seat. "I'm sorry, Jim. I'm . . . sorry." Kirk said nothing this time. It was amazing that Wesley had managed to hang onto his sanity. "We can see the cloud approaching, Jim. We have no more ships left." Sulu's voice intruded, charonlike. "Thirty-one minutes, four seconds to MantiUes, sir." Kirk nodded absently. "Bob, where's Katie?" "Hero." Wesley smiled and looked off-screen to his right. "With me." That, somehow, settled things. He'd been ninety percent sure. Now it was complete. "iDon't worry, Bob. She'll be all right. I promise you that." Ho paused, tried to think of something else to say. There were many things, going an the way back to their days at Starfleet together. And no time. No time for any of them No time for anything more than a "Goodbye, Bob." "Goodbye, Jim." The image faded from the screen. After a pause, McCoy spoke up. "Who's Katie?" "Hmmmbleg"" Kir right-brace had been deep in thought. Should he have told Wesley what they revere going to try? No ... best not to raise false hopes. The Mantillians, it seemed, were resigned to their probable fate. McCoy was waiting patiently. "Oh, sorry Bones. His daughter. She's eleven, I think. Spock, you commented on the vast area of this brain. Is there anyway at all we could contact a mind so huge, any way at an we could determine if it's intelligent? Perhaps a Vulcan mind touch ?" "I had not considered it, Captain," replied the science officer, genuinely surprised. "I expect I was too close to the idea. But it would require physical contact. That is quite impossible." He paused, thinking. 176 STAR TRBRLOG OF "However, I might be able to reach out with my mind. There is an enormous quantity of electrical energy playing about the shipcomthe creature's thoughts. E we focus our sensor pickups on them, the resultant information could be routed through the library's phoneticsstlanguages section for breakdown in!comprehensible abstract idea structures words. There is the strong possibility that none of these impulses represent anything as developed as reasoning thought . . ." "But it's damn well worth a try," agreed Kirk. "Question is, can we handle it?" "I can link in the universal translator," added Uhura excitedly, "and route the results through the audio systems from herel" "Too many complicated lineups," Kirk complained. "But that's all mechanical. What really worries me is . . . can you do it in time?" Spock considered. "It is impossible to calculate a" the variables, Captain. There are a great many unknown factors. T make an Dromises." Kirk noticed that he didn't mention another possibility . . . that contact with such an enormous mind might fatally overload his OWD. Sulu, "Twenty-six minutes exactly to Mantilles, sir." Now who Iraq wasting time? "All fight, Spock. Get on it." Spock and Uhura's stations became a center of feverish activity as technicians poured onto the bridge to held modify existing circuits and systems for a task their designers never dreamed of. Kirk took a moment to take care of one other detail. "CaDtain's foe, star date S372.1. This may very well be the last entry in the log of the U.s.s. Enterprise. "fit is only a matter of minutes before the cosmic cloud referred to in previous entry reaches Mantilles." He glanced back at Uhura's commnnicatio tilde q alcove. As his or her respective task was completed. the technicians began to leave the bridge. There were quiet munchers of encode agement for Uhura and the rest of the regular bridge complement esDecia11v for Mock. "Science officer Spock has been working on the problems involved in reaching the cloud's thoughts if it has STAR TRBRLOG OF 177 any. But even should he succeed, I doubt there is enough time left for any meaningful exchange to take place. The possibility that we could persuade it to avoid Mantilles is . . ," He stopped. If Uhurs Ed Spock failed, no one would ever read this entry. It would vanish with the rest of the Enterprise and her crew in a matter-destroying holocaust of stellar magnitude. If such a possibility appeared imminent while they were in free qnace. he could have shot the too clear. It was permanently mounted in a special. super-fast courier torpedo equipped with a powerful homing beacon. The entire setup waq qunDaqed to insure that even if a starship was visited tilde with total destruction. it lowland perhaps the reasons for xeaq de tilde cti tilde ld survive. Its builders had not envisioned this particular situation" however. --nce free of me Feanternrisc tilde sustained shields and deflector,, the torpedo would be barely a snack for the cloud's energy tilde converting viBi and amorphous drifting "teeth." No, he would finish this entry only if SDOC-KNOWLEDGE and Uhura were successful. The entry would conclude on a positive note, or not at an. Located on the helm-navitation console between Sulu and Arex was a lards digital chronometer. tilde ,fflciont and obedient * shifted a seven out tilde sight and replaced it with tilde qix. It took no notice of its impending aor tilde ilation. Kirk dared only tilde brim glance at the elevator when the last of me technicians filed out and Engineer Scott arrived. He'd have to handle the engineering from Oxbridge station now. Uhura would be completely occupied with monitonne the complicated commumcatio tilde s linkop tilde stem. Domineering report an tie-ins completed and operatine. Or. The Procedure tilde ready." "Thank you. SC-OTTALLY."" He looked at Snock and waited. Spock made two final connections, checked an audio lead. and then moved to the library-computer station. "Ready, Captain." Kirk and McCoy exchanged looks . . . perhaps their last, though neither man regarded it as such. 178 STAR TREK LOG ONE "You may proceed, Mr. Spock," Kirk whispered, not knowing why he did. Spock turned in his chair and swiveled it towards the main viewscreen. Ho leaned back, closed his eyes, and extended both arms, hands and fingers together, straight out in front of his chest. Several seconds passed. They seemed like days. Then his wrists began to torn 810wly from side to side, rotating with near mechanical precision. Kirk had seen this before, but he watched with as much fascination as everyone else. No one dared make a sound. With a sudden move that starded everyone, Spot hands jerked inwards and his tinged, still spread, started to shift backwards. They moved back, back, until the fingertips touched his head. The thumbs rested just under the earlobe and both little fingers met in a connecting line above the eyebrows. The other fingers revere funy extended and spread over his head, from forehead to just above the back hairline. He sat perfectly straight in the chair rigid, motionlesseatilde even to the point of not appearing to breathe. A voice spoke then . . . but it didn't come from epoch It had an eerie, faraway quality and emanated from a speaker in Uhura's console'. The phenomenon was startling to hear. It was even more startling to see. It was Spock . . . and it wasn't. "Listen To Me . . . Listen to Me. You Are Not Alone Here. There is Someone Else. Listen To Me ... Listen To Me . . . Listen to Me." Seconds. Gono. Now. Silence. The chronometer changing. Five to Four. An explosion ... a tsunami of sound washed over them, swilling, to fill the bridge. Uhura gave a little jump. Her free hand rosined reflexively to her earphone. She'd been prepared to detect, pick up the tiniest reply and had taken the full force of the aural jolt. It partially deafened her for a moment. She adjusted a dial and bmught the volume down. What came over the intricate farrago of circuitry and speakers was filtered Vile the slightly feminine alternate STAR TREK LOG ONE 179 computer voice. It was hesitant ... only one word, but clear and recognisable . . . "dis . . WEIAT . . . ?" "You Are Not Alone Here," Spock repeated. "There is Someone Else. Listen To Me . . . Listen To Me . . . Listen To Me .... Silence again. Then the voice that could only come from one place ... and every place. From all around them. "dis . . WEIAT . . . YOU . . . ?" "I Am Another Being," said Spockvoice from the console. It was like watching a shadow play. There was the silent, motionless figure of Spock. his lips unmoving and his voice spealdag from a grid halfway across the room. And another voice replying from out of nowhere. Spock repeated the words. agam. "I Am Another Being." Vast immense slow voice. "BEING . . . 7 BBING . . . ORB . . . ?" "I Am Tnside Y." tilde NSIIGGB . . . t B equals L tilde . V tilde ME . . . ?" "I Am Very SmaUs, And There Are Many of Me. We Are Within a Starship Which Is Within Y." "dis . . BXPLAIN . . . BLUCIDATB . . . CLARIFY . . ." "A SmaUs Thing That Holds AU We Smaller Things. We Beings." Somehow the great voice managed to sound astonished. "dis . . T right-brace I[S . . . WITHIN MB . . . ?" "Within Y." And now, curious . . . "dis . . BXPLAIN. . . ?" Kirk and McCoy exchanged desperate looks. At this rate it was going to be a long, complicated process . . . too long. The digital chronometer read 04. "We Came To Think To You," Spock continued. "You Consumed U. You Thought We were F-ood." "dis . . WHY . . . his wnally YOU THINK TO . . . MB . . . ?" Spock explained. "It Was Needed Done. Many of Us Live on Things You Consume." 180 STAR TREK LOG ONE hi. . . YOU LIVE ON IAMB TONGS tilde CONSUMB . . . ?" "Yee. Many of Us Lhre on One Such Thing Near You Noiv. Do Not Consumo X." hi. . . BLUC1DATB n Who Spherical Mass Ahead of Y. The Matter You Intend to Ingest. Sense It Closely. Sense It ... As You Sense Mo. Do This Now ...." There was a pause . . . they couldn't afford. "How near is Mantilles now, Mr. Ares' Kirk whispered. "The cloud win impinge on the Mantillian atmosphere in three minutes, twenty seconds, sir." "YBS," came the voice finally. tilde PBRCBIVB MANY SOMB tilde NGS. S. . . SMALL . . . l" "They Aro SU-LITTLE Beings," pressed Spock. "Alive . . . 1 tilde Y. It You Consume Their Sphere-Thing-Homo They WE All Die." Another pause. Navigational control' all but forgotten, both Sulu and Arex stared fascinated at the chronometer. Their unwavering gaze failed to halt 04 from shifting down to 03. Sweating cold sweat, they looked back at Spot "dis . . TOO SMALL . . ." "Explain," said Spock. tilde AM SMALL . . . SOMBTE-NNGS tilde PBRCBIVB . . . TOO SMALL. NOT ALIVE BBINGS ...." Kir right-brace hammered once, soft, on the arm of the command chair. There was no way, no way Spock could explain to it in time. How cordage he explain? Hoer could a creature that dwarfed planets be convinced that there lived on those surfaces an intelligent mold ceded man? "Listen To Me," Spocl tilde voice murmured. "if Am Going To Como Into Your Mind. At The Same Dime, You Must Come Into Mino. Do You UnderstandThat" "dis ., RBASONGGSo) . . . ?" "Then You WE Be Able To Sense What Kind of Beings We Are. You WE Sense We Are Alive." "dis . . NBCBSSARY. . . ?" Was there a hint of fear in that voice? Was the titanic, stellar-sized mass afraid?" "Yes, Very," Spock insisted STAR TRIER 181 Yet another wait . . . Ionger, this time. A... PROCI-LIKE tilde Do...." The first ounces hands reached out from ho head again HE arms remained outstretched in front of him, fingers mead, palms ups No one bread No one moved. Seasonal prayed. Churn forced herself to glance at her own console chronometer. Saw the 03 become 02. she stared at it, hm zag like a bird tilde rprlsed by a snake. Spook tilde Iy relaxed. He opened his eyes and looked around crossly blame Rlsing slowly from his seat ho started to Ivan Mound the bridge. Re stared at Kirk, Dr. McCoy. At Arex and Sulu and Uhura, at the instruments on the console, the floor, the viewsc tilde eem and then at his own hands and feet. "Bones,. Birk whispered, reaHzing once more that the va/s of the universe it was often the Par that was truly awesome, "he's the cloud. Its thoughts are here." Attracted by the sound of his voice, the Spockstcloud turned and wallced over to him, stared, examined. As though using a strange new tool for the i tilde t time it put out a hand and touched Kirks face. The hand moved awhardly, roughly, and sensed what it touched. McCoy made a move as if to interpose himself between Kirk and the Spockstcloud. Kirk's order was sharp. Don't mover" Spockstcloud concluded its examination of Kirk and walked around the command chair. It looked curiously at the viewscreen. which sell showed the diagram d the cloud's brain. Kirk kept his voice low as he spoke to Uhura. "lieutenant. use the library computer. Put some views of the Bard un there." 'quotes, sir." She moved cautiously to Spotty station, but it wasn't necessary. The Spockstcloud was thoroughly engrossed in the screen. Buttons were depressed switches struck. The screen changed to a view of Earth talren from space. R * rose and stood next to Spockstcloud, talked to * smoothly. "his is the thing we come from." EITHER-EVERY backed up a few steps, toned and whispered to Uhura 182 STAR TRIM LOG ONE "Lieutenant, this is what I want . . ." The image on the screen changed, closing in on Earth until the continents so familiar to Uhura, Sulu, and Kirk showed. The picture moved in tighter on the Western Hemisphere, then on North America. Uncaring of the frantic controlled activity going on around it, the chronometer adjusted from 02 to 01. Still deeper moved the scene, for aerial views of cities. Closer and closer, as the timer began ticking off seconds. People began to fill the screen . . . lots of people. People working, people playing, people eating and producing and reproducing and caring for children. Children playing as the chronometer went to thirty seconds. "Awaiting your orders," said First Engineer Scott calmly. He stood waiting at the engineering console, his thumb over the flip-up protecting the double combination self-destruct lever. Kirk held up a warning hand. "A few seconds yet, Scotty. We have to give Spock that much." The pictures flashing on the screen concluded, fittingly as Mantilles might with children. The chronometer said twenty seconds. Uhura wanted to scream. She backed away from the library as the Spockstcloud turned slowly and walked back to its chair. It sat down easily and leaned back a little, slumped. Kirk returned quickly to his command seat. McCoy's voice was husky. "Jim, it's got to be now. If we don't self-destruct now, all those people will be killed." At McCoy's words, something suddenly died inside the captain. He felt amazingly calm, unafraid. And tired, so tired. Just give the command, James, and you can rest It'll be over in an instant He turned to face Scott. Like a man gasping his last breath while suddenly recalling his life, the chronometer went from 01 to 00 . . . Sulu nearly leaped out of his seat. "The cloud has stopped, Captain! The edge is just touching the outer atmosphere, but it has stoppedr" "dis . . cot" boomed the thunderous drone from Thatgg'hura's open speakers. "dis . . NOT DESIRE TO CON SUME OTEIER BEINGS . . ." STAR TREK LOG ONE 183 The cheering that erupted on the bridge was spontaneous and thorouibly undisciplined. "Quiet!" Kirk shouted. "There Are Manv Things in Our Galaxy Like The One You Now Perceive," Spock continued, apparently unaffected by the outburst. He hadn't joined the cheerioand "...TRUTH...?" rumbled the voice. Youth. You Do Not Desire To Consume Other Beings. It Wauld Be Best Therefore If You Returned To Your Place of Ongin The Way You Came. Will You Do This?" "...A LONG JOURNEY..." ""wm You Retmn?" The console Spockvoice was persistent insistent. Eventually the voice replied. Its tone was almost indifferent, as though its decision were of no consequence. "...PBRCB tilde E. tilde nLITTLE RBTURN TO ORIGIN PLACE..." There was a long wait. Then Arex spoke excitedly without shifting from his place at the helm. "Sir, sensors indicate the cloud is moving awn from Mantilles. And picking up speed rapidly!" Kirk left his chair and moved quickly to Spock. "Lieutenant Uhura, contact Onvernor Wesley and tell him he can bring his ships baclc. If he asks how and why, tell him it seems that annaggedon has a conscience." "Yes. Captainl" Uhura's voice was alive with relief. Kirk studied his first officer. He started to put a hand on Spock's shoulder. Maybe the slight touch tilde but it wasn't needed. An exhausted Spock blinked his eyes, held them open, and looked up at Kirk. "Soock, you did ill The cloud is leaving." "I believe so, Captain. There is no way out from this sector. But there is a wehlike arrangement of cloud-substance at the top of the brain. The cloud uses this thick grid to 'sense" it is not exactly like sight other things with. A combination eye. ear, and many other senses too alien. ton strange, to attempt description." He shook his head. blinked again. "I have had but the slightest touch with it ,.. fortu- nately. Its intellectual potential is astounding, but * has developed in ways utterly different from anything previously imagined. 184 . STAR TREK L tilde 0 -- "This web at the top is dense by its own standards, yet comparatively empty by ours. We can escape through it." No time for idle questions here. "Mr. Sulul Let's get out of here. That "[id's on the schematic . . . take us through." Sulu's response was ... well, agreeable. His hands played the helm dike an organ. Kirk started back to his chair, paused at a sudden thought. "Spoclc, while the cloud was here, in you, perceiving us, where were was His eyes widened slightly. "You must have been in the cloud. What did you perceive?" Spoclc's mind had returned to his body, but his thoughb were still elsewhere. He murmured sofay. "The wonders of the universe, Captain," he shook his head at the incredible memories. Momenb later they were free of the cloud, having encountcred no trouble in passing between the moon-sized gaps in the cloud's sensing grid. Once baclc in free space, Kirk ordered the Enterprise in a tight circle that would bring her rapidly back to Mantilles. The starship could help supervise the return of the overcrowded evacuation ships. But for the moment, his attention was focused on the screen. It showed the vast cloud-shape, now shrinking rapidly M it picked up speed, heading towards the outer fringes of the MiUcy Way. Spock was still staring after it, his mind filled with wonders he'd never be able to properly share with anyone else. "Someday, Captain, when we are able to protect ourselves a little better, we may be fortunate enough to meet it again, or others line it." "And when that day comes," lairs agreed softly, caught up in Spoclc tilde own sense of wondersiond his own emotional release "when that day comes, Mr. SP-OCK, the ant will stand on its hind legs and converse with the man . . ." Together they stayed watching the screen until the last faint hint of cloud was gone. Only infinity and a few stars remained.