Time for Yesterday
by
Ann Crispin

This is a sequal to Yesterday's Son.

"THE PERSON WHO COMMUNICATED WITH THE GUARDIAN WAS MY SON...

Admiral Morrow looked at Spock incredulously.

"Your-" Kirk doubted that Morrow could have looked more thunderstruck if
the conference table had come to life and danced a hornpipe. It was a
full thirty seconds before the admiral could speak.

"I apologize, Mr. Spock ... but your personnel records never . . ."

He cleared his throat. "At any rate," Morrow continued, "the important
thing is that contact was established. What your son did once, he may
be able to do again. Where is he?"

"I am afraid that will be impossible, Admiral," Spock said levelly, but
something shadowed the dark eyes for a moment. "My son has been dead
for five thousand years."

POCKET BOOKS

New York London Toronto Sydney Tokyo Singapore

This novel is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and
incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used
fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons,
living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

Excerpt from "Me Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock" from Collected Poems
1909-1962 by T. S. Eliot, copyright 1936 by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich,
Inc.; copyright 1963, 1964 by T. S. Eliot. Reprinted by permission of
the publisher.

Excerpt from "Being to Timelessness As It's to Time" copyright 1950 by
E. E. Cummings. Reprinted from Complete Poems 1913-1962 by E. E
Cummings by permission of Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Inc.

An Original Publication of POCKET BOOKS

POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon Schuster Inc. 1230 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, NY 10020

Copyright C 1988 Paramount Pictures Corporation.

All Rights Reserved.

STAR TREK is a Registered Trademark of Paramount Pictures Corporation.

This book is published by Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster
Inc., under exclusive license from Paramount Pictures Corporation.

All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or
portions thereof in any form whatsoever.

For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New
York, NY 10020

ISBN 0-671-70094-4

First Pocket Books printing April 1988

10 9 8 7 6 5 4

POCKET and colophon are trademarks of Simon & Schuster Inc.

Printed in the U.S.A.

This book is dedicated to my friend Deb Marshall, who patiently
listened, enthused (as only she can) and encouraged me from the moment
of Zar's conception, through the long years of gestation, and proudly
midwifed the printed birth with champagne, flowers and hugs.

Thanks, Deb.

Acknowledgments

For editorial criticism, advice, hand-holding and an occasional
(well-deserved) kick in the pants

The Whileaway Writers Co-op Teresa Bigbee, Deborah Marshall, Anne Moroz
and, of course, Kathleen O'Malley

(who is truly a rare bird, genus rubricatrix splendiferous)

Special thanks also to Jannean Elliott for patient, longdistance
listening My friends Howard Weinstein, Bob Greenberger and Dave
McDonnell Rusty Wornam, who discovered D'berahan's secret identity Also

Merrilee Heifetz, my agent-who sold it Karen"Haas-who bought it David
Stem-who edited it For scientific information pertaining to black holes
and other astronomical phenomena (any errors are exclusively my own)

Dr. Robert Harrington of the U.S. Naval Observatory, the man who saved
Centaurus from a horrible fate, for information on Alpha Centauri and
its three stars

INTRODUCTION

Trek story began emerging from the typewriter-Yesterday's Son. To be
honest, I didn't really write that book ... it wrote me.

I was obsessed. I bought a used IBM typewriter for 400 (a fortune to
me, then ... I had to borrow the money from my credit union and pay it
back at the rate of 18 a month, and there were times I scraped to make
that payment), but by that time, I'd have mortgaged my soul to keep
going.

Writing fever is worse than gold fever, and I had it bad.

Every night I'd call my long-suffering best buddy and read her whatever
I'd produced that day. It's a wonder Deb didn't move to Outer Patagonia
to escape.

By the time I was three chapters into the story, it had become more than
a lark, more than "just fooling around" -I wanted to sell that book. And
there was a little voice inside me that kept whispering I would sell it.
Even when I snarled at it to shut up, that the entire notion was nuts,
the little voice in the back of my head kept insisting that the book
would be published-somehow, someday. It whispered at me the entire year
it took to write the five drafts of the novel. It continued to whisper
when the manuscript was submitted. It whispered for the next three
years, while the fate of the book hung in limbo.

But you know the rest, if you read Howard Weinstein's introduction to
Yesterday's Son.

What you may not know is that the story not only got published, it
surprised everyone by becoming the first Star Trek book (excluding the
movie novelizations) to make it onto the New York Times bestseller list.
Since then, that occurrence has become fairly commonplace, but at the
time, it was a minor phenomenon.

(And you, the readers, were responsible for putting it there, so I'd
like to thank each and every one of you who plunked down your
hard-earned cash and bought the novel.

While I'm on the subject, thanks for buying this one, too' Maybe you
should pick up a second copy for a deserving friend, as long as you're
in the bookstore. I wouldn't object ... )

All kidding aside, the success of Yesterday's Son gave me the
opportunity to become a full-time writer, and I now realize that, all
those years ago, I was telling Mrs. Duckett the truth-I just didn't
know it then. I never wanted to be anything else than a writer.

But when Yesterday's Son was released in 1983, I thought I was finished
being a Star Trek writer. Zar's story was over, as far as I was
concerned.

Hah!

Then in 1985, I was sitting at my word processor, and my treacherous
mind suddenly said, "What if?" again. And, so fast I could scarcely
believe it (about a month, as I recall), I had a contract to write a
sequel ... the book you're holding in your hands.

Oddly enough, a couple of months after I contracted to write Time for
Yesterday, many of the fan letters I received began asking if I'd ever
considered doing a sequel to Yesterday's Son. Telepathy? Empathy? A
Star Trek group consciousness? Your guess is as good as mine ...

Speaking of fan letters brings me to my real reason for writing this.
Since the advent of my first Star Trek book, I've gotten literally
hundreds of letters. (Most with an SASE, bless you, Howie!) The
overwhelming majority have been the kind that gladden a writer's heart.
So far I've answered over five hundred, and am currently about fifty to
sixty behind. (I'm always behind, so if you write me c/o Pocket Books,
please be patient. If you just want a quick response to a specific
question, or an autograph, try enclosing a stamped, self-addressed
postcard.)

I love hearing from fans, please believe me. I really enjoy knowing
what you think about what I've written. However, answering dozens of
letters does take time away from my writing schedule. Especially since
fully three-quarters of the folks who write ask me the same question. So
I'm taking this opportunity to respond en masse to that most-oftenasked
question, which is

I have written a Star Trek book of my own. How do I get it read and
published?"

I'm truly sorry to say this, but you probably don't.

Pocket Books no longer reads unsolicited Star Trek manuscripts, as they
did back in 1979 when Yesterday's Son was submitted. Due to the
overwhelming number of submissions they have received, they now only
read and purchase manuscripts submitted by professional literary agents.
My editor tells me that they currently have books scheduled for years
from now.

So what is my best advice for people who want to sell a Star Trek book?
It's to write an original book or two set in your own universe. Rewrite
until your book is good enough to publish (aye, there's the rub!) and
then keep submitting it to publishers until it's sold.* When that
happens, you'll be able to get an agent without much difficulty. Your
agent will submit your Star Trek novel, it will be read, then maybe
Pocket Books will want to buy it. (And, yes, they're the only company
with the legal right to publish Star Trek novels.)

Unless you're dead-set on becoming a professional writer, that's a lot
of trouble to put yourself through just to get a Star Trek book
submitted. And nobody makes a decent living off simply writing Trek
novels. You can't sell enough of them.

If you're dead-set on becoming a professional writer, my advice is about
the same Write in your own universe, sell your books, get a reputation
in the field, then Pocket Books will be pleased to read your Star Trek
manuscript when your agent submits it.

Believe me, I understand the attraction writing Star Trek stories has
for Star Trek fans. It's a siren lure ... wanting to put words in the
mouths of characters we know and love so well. And for me (and for
other writers I know), part of the enticement is that it's much easier
to write Star Trek stories than to write original stories.

To me, writing a Star Trek novel is like swimming in a nice heated pool.
You grow tired, you get exercise, but it's comparatively effortless.
But, as I discovered when I began working on other original stories,
plotting one of my own novels, or the first book in my upcoming Star
Bridge series, writing in my own universe was like trying to swim in the
cold ocean surf. You have to work harder just to stay afloat; making
headway is slow, difficult going. (For example, I've been working on
o ne book of mine, Suncastle, for five years.)

But writing stories set in your own universe is infinitely worthwhile
... though there are times when you have to keep reminding yourself of
that. There are days when you feel as though you can't write another
page, another paragraph ... sometimes even another word.

But you do. If you're a writer, you can't stop.

Best of luck to all of you out there. Here's hoping you enjoy reading
Timefor Yesterday half as much as I enjoyed writing it.

Ann Crispin August 1987

Historian's Note Time for Yesterday takes place after the events
chronicled in Star Trek The Motion Picture and Howard Weinstein's novel
Deep Domain.

Prologue

SECOND-IN-WAR CLETAS PACED nervously before the guarded door to his
Sovren's office, toes squashing inside his boots with every stride. Even
through the thick stone walls of the fortress, he could still hear the
dull booms of thunder, the furious hissing of the rain. His dark gray
cloak was black with water; it dripped soggily, but Cletas barely
noticed the discomfort-he was too tired, too worried, too miserable.

The torches in their wall sconces flickered in the draft as the door
opened and Voba, the Sovren's aide, peered out.

"You can come in now," he whispered, stepping into the hall. "Ingev and
Reydel are just finishing up their report on the range we can expect
from the new-what do they call them?-catapults."

Cletas beckoned to the aide-de-camp, a short, slight man with reddish
hair and a comical blob of a nose. "How is he tonight?" he asked,
pitching his voice for Voba's ears alone.

The wiry little man shrugged. "The damp is playing rough with his leg,"
he said, sotto voce. "But is it true what I heard? That today the High
Priestess of the Danreg foretold-"

Cletas silenced the aide-de-camp with a glare, knowing that his refusal
to speak would be taken as assent, even so.

Voba flushed angrily as he signaled the guards to open the door.

Cletas stepped into the study, a small, almost cozy chamber in
comparison to the rest of the fortress. His empty stomach lurched, then
knotted with anxiety. As the three figures seated at the massive inlaid
table turned toward them, Voba announced formally, "Second-in-War Cletas
requests audience, sire."

" It looks more like Second Cletas should be requesting a hot meal and
bath," the Sovren said, his mouth quirking in what Cletas, from long
association, recognized as a smile.

"Come in and shed that waterlogged cloak! You're dripping on my rug."

Cletas swung the steaming folds off his shoulders, nodding to Ingev and
Reydel, First and Second Heavy Weapons Commanders, as he crossed the
planked floor (avoiding the brightly woven blue rug with his wet
footgear), then saluted and dropped to one knee, head bowed. "My
liege."

"Tonight is hardly the night for formality, Cletas," his Sovren said
mildly, one slanting eyebrow rising with amusement. "Sit down and ask
Voba to help you off with those boots. I could hear you squashing from
out in the hall."

As Voba wrestled with the Second's feet, the Sovren turned back to his
other two officers. "So we can expect nearly twice the range of the
experimental model?" he asked. "What about the size of the stones?"

"We can adjust the size of the throwing-cup from that of twice a man's
helmet to nearly half a meter in diameter, sire," Ingev reported. "Of
course, the heavier the stone, the shorter the range. Perhaps 450
meters at most for the biggest missiles, those weighing more than
twenty-five kilograms."

"Good. Shore up the bankings on the paths they must travel and check
the drainage."

"Yes, sire," Ingev and Reydel murmured, rolling up their vellum lists
and drawings.

"Voba, please bring the Second something to eat," the Sovren said to his
aide-de-camp, as Cletas moved his chair to join them at the table. "Will
you have sufficient troops and draft vykar to move all six of the
machines, Commander Ingev?"

Ingev, a short, squat man with the bowed legs of a cavalryman, exchanged
a sideways look with his tall blond Second-in-Command. "We could use
another 120 troops, my liege," he said, after a moment's thought.
"Twenty for each machine."

"Very well. Cletas, see to it that Commander Ingev is detailed 120 of
your auxiliary infantry. Most of them should have time to rejoin their
companies before they engage. The catapults will only be useful while
the enemy is crossing the Redbank, before we engage."

The Second-in-War caught himself before he could grimace outright, but
the keen gray eyes opposite him had picked up his reluctance, he knew
... they missed very little. "As you order, sire," he said, stiffly.

Ingev and Reydel were already standing. "Have we your leave, sire?"

"Of course," the Sovren nodded, sketching a salute in answer to theirs.
"Try to get some sleep."

As their footsteps faded in ' the hall outside, Cletas turned to his
Sovren, his protest no longer hidden. "A hundred and twenty infantry
fighters, my liege! That's a whole company and more I may lose if they
can't rejoin their ranks. And for what-to nursemaid and push along
those-those-" he sputtered to a halt, realizing he was on the verge of
insubordination. "Why, sire?"

"Because, Cletas my friend, those catapults may spell the difference
between outright defeat and stalemate for us. I don't dare even think
the word 'victory'-that would be rank folly considering the odds we
face." The Sovren's lean face was hard and drawn beneath his clipped
black beard and moustache, and his gray eyes held his Second's with a
bleak intensity. "But the Asyri, the Kerren, and the Danreg have never
seen anything like what we've so painstakingly built, and the terror
their hordes will feel when faced by a sky raining boulders will cause
them even more harm than the rocks themselves."

"But can you be sure the things will actually work in a combat
situation? They've never been tried-"

"Oh, yes, they have. Not here, not now. But they'll work.

Have I been wrong before?"

Cletas ran a hand through his salt-and-pepper hair in tired resignation,
thinking of all the changes the Sovren had introduced in the twenty
years he'd known him. New ways ofcounting, oftneasuring, even
ofspeaking and reading ...

lamps, drainage systems, schooling the children, riding the vykar in
addition to hitching them to wagons, better armor, smelling iron instead
of the softer, more malleable bronze ...

"No, my liege. You haven't been wrong," he admitted.

"Still . . ." He grinned ruefully. "I wish we didn't have to try them
for the first time in the last battle we both may see.

If you've finally made a mistake, I'd hate to miss the chance to sa. "I
told you so."

His Sovren's mouth- softened into a genuine, rare smile.

"I'll keep your wish in mind." He rolled up a parchment map, his hard,
long-fingered hands moving with his customary quick efficiency. "Did
you meet with your spies, or did they all drown on the way?"

"We met, sire," Cletas said. "The situation hasn't changed much.
Heldeon of Danreg Ford has set up camp on the northern slope of Big
Snowy, and this afternoon the War Queen Laol and Rorgan Death-Hand met
with him there.

They talked for about two hours, then rejoined their troops.

"My informant said that the meeting was interrupted by the discovery of
three spies, which caused some finger pointing, but then they calmed
down and shared wine and broke bread like the best of friends. Even the
rain couldn't damp the greed in their eyes as they looked down at New
Araen."

The Sovren's face retained its usual impassivity, but Cletas was quick
to note the sagging of his big shoulders.

"So we can't even hope they'll cut a few of each other's throats before
they open ours," he said softly, bitterly. "And with this rain still
continuing, Moorgate Plain will be so soft the enemy will scarcely need
shovels to dig our graves.

Presuming they have the decency to bury us, which is doubtful."

Cletas nodded, knowing that, although he could no longer hear the
downpour outside, his ruler could. "If this rain keeps up, we might as
well forget about fighting. The troops won't be able to march, the
catapults won't roll, and the cavalry will look like pottery figures
ready for firing."

"We'll need two days of sun in order to have decent footing."

"I know," Cletas agreed, staring gloomily into the savory stew Voba slid
in front of him. Absently, he broke off a chunk of hard reddish bread
and began chewing on it. "We may be forced to abandon the cavalry
flanks if the ground is this bad. After all that drilling . . ." he
sighed. -Vykar Troop Commander Yarlev will cry, you know."

The Sovren ignored the levity this time, his eyes intent on his Second's
face. "The meeting with your spies and scouts," he said. "How did it
go? Something is disturbing you. I could feel it as soon as I saw
you."

Cletas shivered a little, thinking of all the times his Sovren had
somehow sensed matters that he would have rather kept secret. At times
it frightened him to realize that this man, so different physically from
his adopted people, was also different inside. He thought differently,
in some manner Cletas couldn't explain. He could sense thoughts and
emotions and, sometimes, the coming of death.

"I'm sorry, old friend," the Sovren said gently. "Did I rattle you
again? You ought to be used to it by now. But what about the rest of
your report? Is the Redbank still flooded? Has the High Priestess of
the Danreg pronounced the battle oracle yet? When will they march?"

"No," Cletas said heavily, "she hasn't pronounced it yet.

We know that Heldeon's people-and, for the moment at least, we can
include Rorgan Death-Hand's Asyri and Laol's Clan Kerren also-won't
fight without it. As for the river, my sources estimated that they
won't be able to cross the Redbank until day after tomorrow at the
earliest. More likely three days."

The Sovren watched him intently as Cletas spooned gravy onto his bread.
"Then what did happen today? Voba knew something, too ... I could
tell. What is it?"

The Second took a huge bite of the gravy-sopped bread and chewed, while
trying desperately to think of a way to phrase his news. Perhaps if he
started with the plan he'd developed, it wouldn't seem so ... final.
Cletas swallowed the bread, aided by a swig of rochab wine. "The High
Priestess, Wynn," he began, "is Heldeon's daughter, in addition to her
service to the Goddess."

"So?"

"She's a widow, who lost husband and child two years ago in an Asyri
raid. Not a lass anymore, but still of bearing age, my liege ... they
say her father values her counsel more than any of his clan chiefs. And,
it's reported, likely looking ... tall, with-"

"I repeat, so?" The Sovren's voice was as hard and flat as his eyes now,
and Cletas felt himself flinching away from the palpable wave of anger
emanating from his ruler.

"Explain what all this has to do with her battle oracle, damn it!"

..Sire," Cletas met those nearly colorless eyes, then, all his
resolutions toward subtlety forgotten, blurted, "it's been nearly a
score of years now since the Lady Araen-the Goddess keep her-passed the
Final Veil. If you wish, it could be a matter of State, no true union!
Consider it, my liege, please!"

"Cletas, if you're implying what I think you're implying, you're out of
line." The Sovren's face was drawn, its harsh, angular planes making him
appear almost inhuman. "if I've misread your admittedly disjointed
statement, then clarify your meaning."

"My meaning, sire, is this If the High Priestess Wynn could be captured
before she can pronounce the oracle for the coming battle, then the
Danreg will be thrown into confusion. Their troops may even refuse to
march."

One slanted brow rose in surprise. "Hmm ... Cletas, that's a far more
logical suggestion than most of the ones the Council voiced today. Do
you think a small raiding party could engineer such a capture?"

"I would volunteer to lead it personally, my liege," Cletas said.
"Tonight." He braced himself. "However, that only constitutes the first
part of my plan, sire. Once the woman is within our walls, it may be
possible to . . ." he hesitated, searching for words, "it may be
possible to ... reason ...

with her. Convince her that an alliance by marriage would benefit both
our peoples. Bride-raiding is common among the Danreg, something they
will excuse if done for the purpose of honorable marriage."

With an abrupt, furious movement, the Sovren stood up and turned his
back on his Second-in-War. Cletas went on, stubbornly, "Heldeon's
people hold the ties of blood-kin and marriage-kin so sacred that they
would never fight against one of their own. If you could convince this
woman to ally with you in a State handfasting, Heldeon might even be
moved tojoin our cause. At worst, he would withdraw his troops to avoid
the sin of raising sword against one who is blood-by-marfiage."

As Cletas finished, the Sovren began pacing, and even his limp (caused
by a spear he'd taken through his left thigh years ago) could not mask
the anger plain to read in every stride. "Did the Council put you up to
this?" he asked tightly. His face was still impassive, but his eyes
made the Second shudder, knowing he'd reopened an old-but still
agonizing-wound.

"No, sire," he said, forcing himself to gaze steadily at his ruler. "It
might be a way to save New Araen, and that's all I'm thinking of ...
that, and the fact that you've been alone too long. Nineteen years . .
." He hesitated, thinking of his own Marya and their son and daughter,
trying to imagine life without them. "That's too long to be alone."

"I spent seven years in total solitude, once. I'll manage," the
Sovren's voice was curt. He stood with his hands clasped behind his
back, facing a wall painting he'd done twenty years ago, when his
stronghold was first built. The Second had never understood the subject
matter-stars, and an outspread hand, beneath an odd, disklike shape.

Once he'd asked his ruler what it meant, only to be told, "It's a
message for someone who hasn't been born yet."

The Second dragged his thoughts back to the present with an effort-there
was something strangely hypnotic about those painted stars. They
weren't just white specks of light the way they appeared in the
nighttime sky, but tiny spheres of all colors, hanging like scattered
jewels against the black background. Cletas had never seen stars like
that.

"Sire, won't you even consider my plan? It could mean life instead of
death for all the Lakreo Valley. Would it be such a terrible price to
pay, to take a consort? Heldeon has nearly eight thousand troops, and
if he could be swayed to our side . . ."

The Sovren sighed, turning back to face him, weariness of more than body
cloaking him, shadowing his features beneath his thick black hair. "Very
well, Cletas. I promise to consider the second part of your plan,
assuming you're successful in capturing the woman tonight."

"Thank you, my liege."

"But you're sure she hasn't given the battle oracle yet?

Third-in-War Trebor Damas mentioned that there was some kind of ceremony
going on up on the hillside today, and that the High Priestess was
speaking."

Cletas sighed. Here it is, then. I should have known I couldn't keep
it from him. "I'm positive about the battle oracle, sire. What the
High Priestess announced today was that she'd had a Sending concerning
you."

One eyebrow went up in wry amusement. "Me? And how stands the Lady
Wynn's record in these matters?"

"She ... has never been wrong, sire. At least, not that my sources
could discover," Cletas admitted.

"Cletas, you look as though your favorite hunting cat had died. What is
it? What did she say?"

The Second-in-War forced himself to meet those tired gray eyes. "She
said. "Only if he who is halt walks healed, if he who is death-struck in
battle rises whole, only then can victory slip from us-then only will
the Goddess turn Her face away. "

This time the eyebrow nearly vanished beneath the black hair. "Indeed,"
the Sovren said slowly. "So, today Wynn, High Priestess of the Danreg,
who has a perfect record in her prophecies, foretold my death in the
coming battle."

"But, sire-" Cletas made a helpless gesture. "Maybe this time, she's
wrong."

"As my own estimable sire would remark," the Sovren paused, clearly
remembering, "fascinating."

"Is that all you can say?" Cletas snorted indignantly. "A few moments
ago you looked ready to break me in two for suggesting you take another
consort, and now, when I tell you it's been prophesied that you won't
survive this battle, you just look mildly interested"-he thumped his
fist on the table with exasperation--and quote your father? Was he as
coldblooded?"

"Well, actually, no," the Sovren said, amused at his Second's outburst,
"both of us are rather warmblooded, by comparison with the rest of you.
By about three degrees, or SO."

Cletas gave him a measuring glance. "This must be a night for
revelations," he said. "I've never heard you mention your father
before. Does he still live? Where is he?"

The gray eyes softened suddenly, wistfully, in the stern face. "My
father. . ." he mused. "Someone I haven't seen in more than twenty
years, now." He twisted a heavy silver wrist-guard absently, not looking
up. "I still miss him, you know? Almost as much as I miss Araen. I
knew them both such a short time . . ."

"Is he dead?" Something about his Sovren's manner of speaking made
Cletas think not.

"Dead?" The ruler made a small sound, almost a chuckle.

"No, he's not dead."

"Is he . . ." Cletas hesitated, "like you?"

"You mean physically?" The Sovren ruffled the hair over his ears, hair
deliberately left shaggy to disguise his most obvious "difference." He'd
learned early that minimizing his differences made his rule easier.
"Yes, I definitely take after his side of the family, Cletas."

"Was-is-he a ruler too, my liege?"

"Well ... no, not really. Actually, the last I knew, he was a
Second-in-Command, like you, my friend. He serves his ruler as loyally
and well as you do me. Together, the two of them have had at least as
many adventures, and their exploits have become legendary."

"Great warriors, eh?"

"When necessary, Cletas. But most of the time they tread the paths of
peace."

"Would that we could, too, sire," Cletas said, trying to envision such a
land. "is there any chance you could summon them? We could use two
such fighters, now."

Slowly the Sovren shook his head, the expression in his eyes faraway, as
though he were looking at something wonderful he could never have again.
"No, Cletas. They are farther away than mere distance. If you rode
hard for all the days and nights left in your life, and your son and
then your daughter rode for all the days and nights of theirs, they
could never even draw near to them. Finding them would be as impossible
as pulling down a handful of stars ..."

His words trailed off, then, after a moment, he straightened, his voice
hardening. "Come on, Cletas. Let's go over those armory requisitions
Trebor Damas sent over. We haven't much time left."

Chapter One

THE FOG WAS a tangible thing, muffling the ocean at the foot of the
tall, plunging cliff, concealing the jagged rocks awash in surf beneath
its woolly blanket. Even the whoosh-boom of the mighty Pacific, here at
romantically dubbed Lands End, was reduced by the fog to faint slurping
noises that echoed and rebounded eerily in the heavy mist. The ma n
standing by the edge of the cliff was at one moment wrapped in almost
total silence, then the next, could clearly hear the mournful barks of
the sea lions gathered on the protruding rocks and navigational buoys.

A newborn breeze began whipping his dark wavy hair, and he knew from
long experience that it spelled death for this particular fog. San
Francisco mists were tenacious, but the wind always won in the end,
herding them out to sea, breaking them against the hills, smothering
them in the valleys.

For a moment the man felt a sudden pity for the fog, helpless before the
air currents. You're getting morbid, he told himself. Stop it right
here, or you'll spend the rest of the day depressed. Besides, he
checked his wrist chrono, lunchtime was over ten minutes ago ... you're
late.

But he made no move to turn and retrace his steps back to the dully
gleaming parabolas and towers of Starfleet Command. After all, what
good was rank if you couldn't take an I I extra half hour for lunch once
in a while? It wasn't as if his aide, Lieutenant Thasten, would shake
an accusing blue finger at him ... the Andorian would appreciate the
chance to catch up on her workload from this morning. He kept her busy
... must remember to put her in for a promotion, he made a mental note.
Anyone who can keep my office as organized as Thasten has for the past
few years has earned the equivalent of a battlefield commission ...

He began walking through the moving fogbank, immersed in memories,
memories that crowded his mind whenever it wasn't fully occupied with
work. The echoes in the mist sounded like a voice, and his mind shaped
the sounds into the words he'd heard so often those last three months...

Jim... how soon can I go home, son? Jim, I hate this place... Familiar
pain stabbed him, dulling now after six months, but still there. For a
second he was back in that austere little chapel in Riverside, Iowa,
knowing that in a few minutes he would have to carry the little box to
the rows of wall crypts and slide it into the newest one ... the
polished bronze plate identifying the niche as the final resting place
for the earthly remains of his mother, Winona Kirk ...

The hiss of a two-seater messenger skimmer jerked him back to San
Francisco and the present. It swooped down, hovering a half meter above
the clifftop, and the pilot, a young lieutenant, leaned out, her manner
at once respectful and urgent. "Admiral Kirk, Admiral Morrow requests
your presence, Sir."

James T. Kirk hastily swung up into the little snub-nosed vehicle, and
the lieutenant lifted them with-a rush even before he'd finished
activating his safety field. Lands End dwindled away beneath him as he
looked down; then, as the craft banked and turned east, Kirk watched the
amberorange towers of the Golden Gate Bridge emerge from the white
fogbank like the ethereal spires of some fairyland.

"What's up, Lieutenant? Where are we going?"

"My orders were to take you to central headquarters, Sir,"

the lieutenant said, her expression carefully neutral. "Admiral Morrow
did not tell me why, though he did say it was urgent."

Minutes later, the skimmer docked in the central shuttle bay at
Starfleet Command, and Kirk headed immediately for Morrow's office. He
was still wondering why the commander, Starfleet, had summoned him, and
spent a few moments mentally reviewing the status of his current
assignments. Nothing wrong there-he was ahead of time on most of them,
and, barring bureaucratic snafus (a continual menace), all would be
completed on schedule.

His boots clicked impatiently up to the lifts in the northern tower and
the admiral scowled, seeing that all were in use. He forced himself not
to fidget as he waited, his hazel eyes traveling impatiently over the
magnificent vista of San Francisco and the Bay visible through the
fifty-story sweep of plex filling the tower's lobby with polarized
sunshine. The fog was completely gone, now, and Sol turned the pale
bronze, gold, and white lobby into a shining marvel, broken only at
ground level by splotches of green, vermilion, and cobalt-colored
plants.

Come on, come on, he thought, forcing himself not to turn and stab the
lift button again. Morrow said it was urgent ...

The lift chimed softly, apologetically, behind him. "Level 43, Section
17," Kirk announced, stepping into the glassy bullet.

The lift deposited him in the corridor before the admiral's office. As
the entrance portal hissed out of his way, Kirk was startled to find
himself facing Lieutenant Thasten, who was just leaving. "Thasten,
what's going on?"

"I brought your things, Admiral," she said, indicating his packed travel
bag sitting on the carpet in the reception area.

"Do you know when you'll be back, Sir?"

Kirk grimaced. "I didn't know I was going until this moment. I'll let
you know, Thasten. In my absence, please ask Commander Arex to attend
the services for Captain Ikeya and the Constellation's crew."

"Yes, sir."

Kirk turned away to find Morrow's aide busy keying his voder. "Admiral
Kirk is here, sir."

"Please go right in, Admiral," he said, almost immediately, then ushered
Kirk into Morrow's private office, the admiral's travel bag grasped
firmly in his topmost talons.

Harry Morrow was waiting for them, his dark, handsome face drawn and
sober. "Hold the questions, Jim," he said.

"One of our ships is in trouble. We haven't got much time.

Cochise is standing by. I'll brief you as soon as we're underway."

Kirk nodded, taking his bag from the aide. Morrow pressed a button and
avid-screen wall swung aside, revealing a small transporter unit with
two pads. As they stepped up, the aide spoke softly into a
communicator, then Kirk felt the familiar sensation of displacement as
the walls shimmered, then solidified, revealing a different location.

The first person he saw as he stepped forward into the Cochise's small
transporter room was his former First Officer. "Spock!" he exclaimed,
striding over to the Vulcan.

"What the hell are you doing here?"

"Admiral Morrow sent for me," Spock told him. "I just arrived."

"You're looking well," Kirk said. "How long has it been?"

"One month, six days, seventeen hours, nineteen min-"

"The question was rhetorical, Spock-as you very well know," Kirk broke
in, grinning. "It's good to see you."

And you, Jim."

"Gentlemen," came Morrow's voice from behind Kirk, "I hate to break up
old home week, but we don't have much time."

Kirk turned to follow the admiral. "All right, Harry, let's hear a few
of those answers you promised me. Where are we going? Why all the
secrecy?"

Morrow nodded. "The secrecy is because you're still James T. Kirk,
media darling, and I didn't want reporters getting wind of this
situation. The last thing we want is a panic."

"A panic?" Kirk's good-natured smile faded.

Morrow nodded. "The briefing room is this way, gentlemen."

As they left the transporter room, the barely felt vibrations of the
ship's engines altered, and Kirk realized they'd already left Earth
orbit at full impulse power. Morrow wasn't kidding about being in a
hurry, he thought, following the admiral. We must be halfway to Pluto
already. Where are we headed? Which ship is in trouble?

Cochise was one of the Hermes Class I Scouts, with a usual complement of
about 200 crew and officers. But as he trailed Morrow's broad back
through the nearly empty corridors, Kirk realized that the ship must be
running with just a skeleton crew.

The admiral led them to the small briefing room, activated the security
screens, then waved them to seats. "We have a big problem, gentlemen.
Something is threatening the Federation, something with a potential for
destruction that is . . . limitless, I suppose. Worse than Vejur,
much worse. The aspect of the problem that is our immediate concern is
Alpha Centauri B, and the Kismet, a Federation courier ship which is now
stranded about 100,000,000 kilometers from the star."

"Stranded?" Kirk leaned forward, frowning.

"Yes. It's been there for nearly sixteen hours now, helpless, its
computer system entirely shorted out."

Spock's eyebrow climbed nearly to his hairline. "The entire system?
Most ... unusual. The backups are nonfunctional?"

Morrow nodded brusquely. "It's all part of what's happening to Alpha
Centauri B. The star has been enveloped by a wave of time displacement
that is speeding up its aging.

It's consuming itself at an incredible rate-converting its hydrogen into
helium as though millions of years were passing in minutes. We're
evacuating the population of Kent to Centaurus, praying that we have
enough time to finish before the star swells into a red giant and
engulfs its planets. That could happen as early as twenty hours from
now, by some estimates."

Kirk stared at the admiral, stunned. Alpha Centauri was a triple star
system. Alpha Centauri A was a yellow sun slightly larger and brighter
than Sol, orbited by Centaurus and fourteen other, uninhabited planets.
Alpha Centauri B was its nearby (thirty to forty A.U. distant) smaller,
orange companion. Both were distantly orbited by a small red dwarf, a
flare star named Proxima Centauri. Kirk had known that Proxima Centauri
was the closest star to Earth's solar system before he could read.

Alpha A had shown signs of instability for hundreds of years, but its
slight fluctuations were negligible on a stellar scale. Kirk had never
heard of any problems with Alpha B-under normal circumstances, both
stars should have remained unchanged for billions of years. Alpha B was
orbited by six planets. The most Earth-like one, Kent, had been settled
by humans over a hundred years before. Kirk had visited there more
times than he could recall.

He also owned property on Centa urus, only one system away ... a valley
he'd bought over the years and named Garrovick Valley, in honor of his
first captain. Kirk had a brief, piercing memory of his little cabin
there, the hours of peace and quiet-of fishing in the Farragut River.

It took him a moment to find his voice. "And the Kismet?

It's caught in this ... wave . . . of accelerated time, too?"

"No," said Spock, positively. "Logic dictates that if it had been,
everyone aboard would have been killed instantaneously. Aged and fallen
to dust before they could even realize what was happening to them."

Harry Morrow was nodding agreement. "Right. Though they had to explain
that to me in words of one syllable too, Jim, so don't look like that."

Kirk had been feeling stupid. "You'd think I'd have gotten used to it
after all these years of working with Vulcans. So what is the problem
with the Kismet's computers?"

"The EMP effect," the commander of Starfleet told him.

"Any massive thermonuclear reaction-whether it's from a bomb or a
star-causes an electromagnetic pulse that shorts out computers-and
communications. Anyway, the ship is drifting in space, and if it's
there much longer. . ." He shrugged, making a curiously final flick of
his fingers.

"Can we get close enough to the ship to rescue the crew without getting
caught by the EMP effect ourselves?" Kirk asked.

"I don't know," Morrow said. "Communication is impossible, of course,
since their systems are down. Our deflector shields will protect
us-that's how they're managing to evacuate Kent-but as to whether we can
get close enough to the ship to attempt a rescue . . ." He frowned,
shaking his head. "Kismet got caught by the EMP before it had enough
warning to activate its shields. All we can do is get there as fast as
we can and see what we can do. My science staff is working on the
problem of how to stay shielded and still use the transporter ...
though, as you know, we've never figured out a way to do that yet."

"I will offer my assistance to them," Spock said. "What is our ETA?"

Morrow's eyes flicked to the chronometer. "At warp eight, we should be
there in about fifteen hours."

"Cutting it pretty close," Kirk muttered.

"We only found out about it an hour ago. Kismet was in communication
with Kent when it was hit, but it took awhile for the news to reach us.
Communications from the evacuation area have been sporadic and
confusing, as you might guess."

"What percentage of the population of Kent has currently been
evacuated?" Spock asked.

"Our last report said seventy-five percent."

"Hell of a lot of people left, then," Kirk said grimly. And then,
because he had to know, he said, trying to keep his concern from
showing, "I gather this won't affect Centaurus?"

"Alpha B may engulf or sear the outermost gas giants in the Centaurian
system,- Spock said, his quick glance at his friend acknowledging the
reason for Kirk's anxiety, "but Centaurus itself should be far enough
away to escape the heat. As to the cosmic rays . . ." He raised an
eyebrow at Morrow.

"We've got special planetary shielding rigged," the admiral told them,
"to deflect the rays. Don't worry, Jim, your valley will be safe. I
still remember the fishing there."

Kirk sighed. "Thanks, Harry."

Spock steepled his fingers, a familiar gesture to Kirk from all the
briefings they'd shared over the years. It meant he was thinking hard.
"You said this was only one aspect of a larger problem, Admiral Morrow,"
the Vulcan said. "Is that larger problem, by any chance, connected with
the loss of the Constellation ten days ago?"

Kirk stiffened, glancing quickly from the Vulcan to the admiral.

Morrow nodded, reluctantly. "Yes, it-"

The admiral was interrupted by the signal above the door flashing. When
he keyed it open, a Tellarite ensign hurried in, saluting, her tiny eyes
crinkled with anxiety. "This message just came in for you, Admiral.
Priority One, Sir."

Morrow reached for the cassette the younger officer held out. "Thank
you, Ensign."

While he watched the admiral scan the message, Kirk's mind flashed back
to Morrow's revelation about the Constellation and her fate. He'd known
her captain, Carmen lkeya, for over ten years. She'd been the first
woman to command a starship, though now there were several others.

He could see her in his mind's eye, almond eyes beneath unruly
salt-and-pepper hair, a reckless, "give 'em hell" grin on her lined
face. Whatever had happened to Carmen-and it was apparently more than
the official Starfleet designation of "missing, presumed destroyed"-Kirk
was willing to bet she'd gone down swinging.

His musings were interrupted by Morrow's soft curse.

The admiral's broad shoulders sagged suddenly. "What is it, Harry?"

Spock, too, was leaning forward in his seat, though his expression, as
usual, remained unreadable.

Morrow shook his head. "I just got confirmation that the Kismet carried
a passenger. I'd hoped that perhaps he'd been delayed somehow and
wasn't aboard . . ." he sighed, "but he is."

"Who is? What passenger?" Kirk was beginning to feel as if he'd fallen
down a rabbit hole.

"I wanted to talk to the three of you together," Morrow went on
mumbling, half to himself. "You're such a wellknown team, so I ordered
him to catch the next ship for Earth."

"The three of us . Kirk looked over at Spock, who nodded solemnly at
him. "You're telling me Kismet's passengeris ... Dr. Leonard McCoy."

"Yes.

Chapter Two

"OH, SHIT," KIRK SAID. "This is a hell of a mess."

"Indeed," agreed Spock.

Morrow nodded grimly.

Spock finally broke the ensuing dismal silence. "Admiral Morrow,
perhaps you might explain the entire problem -and why you felt 'the
three of us' were uniquely suited to advise you."

Morrow took a deep breath. "First, remember that this is all Priority
One Secret. I wasn't given the complete picture until day before
yesterday. Only the Secretary General of the Federation Council, and
four other people-two of them theoretical physicists-know everything
that I'm going to tell you."

Kirk watched the admiral, wondering why the theatric buildup-he'd known
Harry Morrow for years, and drama wasn't his style. It's as though he
has to nerve himselfupjust to put it into words.

"More stars than Alpha Centauri B are dying prematurely," Morrow began.
"I expect Mr. Spock has seen articles in scientific journals
speculating on the sudden increase in star deaths." He glanced over at
the Vulcan.

Spock nodded. "Yes. Statistically, there have been fully ten times as
many star deaths in our galaxy as there should have been during the past
two solar months. Astronomical TWE FOR YESTERDAY

physicists have been unable to account for this increase, but,
extrapolating this trend to include stars of ten-plus solar masses, the
projected result is indeed disquieting-"

"You mean terrifying," Morrow interrupted. "What you haven't read in
those articles is the reason for these star deaths."

He paused, and Kirk guessed, "More of these time waves?"

"Yes. Fortunately, until yesterday, none of the stars that had been
affected has had inhabited planets. But now Alpha Centauri B is dying.
Picture what one of those waves of accelerated time would do to Sol. Or
40 Eridani. Kent has a population of fifty million. What's the
population of Vulcan?"

"Seven billion, seven hundred and fifty-two thousand -as of the most
recent full-count census."

"And Earth has nearly twice that many." Morrow rubbed his forehead as
though to ease a headache. "I've ordered every freighter, every
pleasure yacht, every Starfleet vessel within range to assist in Kent's
evacuation. We just might make it."

"And the Constellation?" Kirk asked. "What happened to it?"

"The ship came out of warp too soon," Morrow said.

"It-" He was interrupted by the bosun's whistle. The admiral activated
the small vid-screen. "Morrow here."

"Admiral," the communications officer was a middleaged Native American
man, "I've just received a shielded signal from the Secretary General of
the Federation Council."

"Decode and patch through to me here."

A moment later, he scanned the translation, his face drawn and gray with
shock. "Neutrino detectors have located signs of growing instability in
Canopus. The secretary general wants to know how many
Federation-registered vessels in that sector could be used for
evacuation purposes."

Morrow activated the screen again. "Lieutenant Buck, respond that I'll
have to do some checking," he said, slowly.

"I don't know how many private yachts we may be able to commandeer.
Inform the secretary that I'll get her an answer as soon as possible."

Morrow switched off the unit, his expression a study in frustration.
"Two inhabited planets in the Canopus system," he growled. "Eight
billion people. I'm afraid this briefing will have to wait until I get
that information through to T'Kyra. Jim, I'll need your help to chase
down some commercial shipping figures. Spock, report to the scientific
team."

During the next hours, Kirk pushed his worry about McCoy to the back of
his mind, forcing himself to concentrate on the difficult task of
tracing the routes and schedules of potentially available cargo ships in
the Canopus sector.

Once he looked up at a diffident, "Sir?" to find the Tellarite ensign
waiting with a pot of coffee and a plate of sandwiches. He ate them
mechanically, hardly noticing that they were his favorite, chicken
salad. It was only when his fingers marched blindly across an empty
plate that he realized he'd been ravenous.

The coffee he drank black, grateful for its scalding energy boost. When
he got up to find the head, he looked at his chronometer and was
startled to realize he'd been sitting there for nearly fiv e hours.

Two pots of coffee, a sonic shower, and a twenty-minute nap (when he
inadvertently nodded off over his figures) later, he had finished the
analysis Morrow wanted. Kirk keyed the final data into the banks, then
transmitted copies of his findings to Morrow. His eyes were gritty and
raw as he rubbed them, trying to will away a throbbing headache.

Ought to get my eyes checked, he thought, standing up and stretching.
His back creaked.

I've only been awake for thirty-four hours, he thought, disgustedly.
Must be really getting old. Time was when I could put in thirty-six
hours and still be readyfor afight. For the first time in hours he let
himself think of Bones, wondering how his friend was faring. It's got
to he hell, trapped in that little ship with all the systems dead, blind
and deaf waiting for that star to swell up and swallow them ...

The portal slid aside and Spock entered. The Vulcan, Kirk noted sourly,
appeared far more rested and alert than he had any right to look. He
raised an eyebrow at Kirk's expression. "Are you all right, Jim?"

The admiral nodded wearily. "How long till we reach Kismet?"

"We are almost within sensor range of her last recorded position now.
Admiral Morrow said he could use our help on the bridge, since Cochise
is carrying a minimal crew."

"Good. Anything is better than sitting around worrying."

The two officers headed for the bridge. Though the scout ship was much
smaller than the heavy cruisers such as the Enterprise, it was designed
along similar lines. Kirk stood for a moment looking at the captain's
seat, the viewscreen, each station, and drew a breath of contentment to
be back in space, with the feel of a ship beneath his feet. It was
impossible to feel happiness, of course-Bones was out there, in danger.
But it had been months since he'd even left Earth orbit.

It's only when I'm back out here that I realize how much I miss it, he
thought. I leave something out here when I'm planet-bound ... a part
of my soul.

"Jim, can you take the helm?" Morrow asked, turning in the captain's
seat to regard him. "I just sent my helm officer and navigator down to
the shuttle deck, in case we locate them."

"Aye, Sir," Kirk said, giving his best "eager ensign" salute and heading
for the control and navigation console.

"Mr. Spock, please take the sensors. I want a constant monitor."

"Understood, Admiral," Spock murmured, assuming his station beside the
science officer.

"Are we clear, Mr. Spock?"

"Yes, Sir. Our best orbit for sensor scanning will be at a distance of
120,000,000 kilometers, Admiral, and we will need to maintain our
shields. The EMP emanations are continuous."

"Very well. Ahead one-quarter impulse, helm. Heading three-four-two,
mark four."

Kirk found himself scanning the console for the proper controls. Wish
Sulu were here. He set the course, then eased the switch up in its
slot. Cochise glided smoothly on her way Alpha Centauri B stood out
clearly in their forward screens by now, as a small yellowish-orange
sphere slightly smaller than the sun as seen from Earth.

"I am detecting considerable neutrino activity, Admiral," Spock said.
"Alpha B could begin expanding into an orange giant at any moment."

"Magnification on forward viewscreen. Increase filters."

Alpha B rippled larger, then larger still. Kirk stared at the star.
Look at those sunspots. Never seen so many. And the solarflares!

"Any sign of Kismet, Mr. Spock?"

"Negative, Admiral."

"Increase speed to one-half impulse, Jim. Same heading."

"Aye, Sir." Kirk found he was failing back into his days as an ensign
helmsman on the Farragut. His fingers danced over the controls with
fewer and fewer hesitations.

Slowly, Cochise settled into orbit around the star. At this rate, it'll
take us daysjust to circle it, Kirk thought anxiously.

Yet he knew they couldn't afford to miss the tiny Kismet on their
sensors-they wouldn't get a second chance. If, indeed, they were
granted afirst chance.

The electromagnetic wave disrupted communications, so they could not
even check on how the evacuation of Kent was proceeding. Kirk guided
Cochise in her orbit, keeping a careful watch on their power levels.
"Admiral," he said, after nearly an hour had passed, "keeping our
screens up at full capacity is draining our power reserves faster than
projected."

"How long can we keep searching at this rate?" Morrow asked.

"Not more than another two hours," Kirk told him. "Did the Kismet's
last communication give her location coordinates?"

"Yes," Morrow said. "Her last reported location was where we entered
orbit."

"But she's had nearly thirty-two hours to drift away from there," Kirk
pointed out.

"Inertia," Spock said, nodding approvingly at his former captain.
"Logically, we cannot afford to ignore the fact that a body traveling at
any given speed tends to remain at that speed unless acted upon by an
outside force."

Morrow rubbed his forehead. "I see what you mean ...

but can we afford to take the chance that we'll miss them by skipping
part of our search pattern?Kirk took a deep breath. "Can we afford not
to?"

"How fast was Kismet going when she encountered the EMP wave?" Spock
asked.

"She was due for a brief message relay at Kent," Morrow told him, "which
is why she came out of warp. If Captain Perez was following a textbook
approach, he should have been traveling at three-quarter impulse power."

"That gives me something to go on, then." Working with feverish haste,
Kirk set up the problem on the navigation computers, double-checking his
figures, remembering to allow for the increased buffeting of Alpha B's
solar wind on a powerless-but still gliding-vessel. He fed all
available data into the computer, then asked it to plot a projected
course in three dimensions. Moments later, he had his answer.

"Spock, it's been a long time since I did anything like this.

Will you check my figures?"

In his absorption, Kirk had forgotten that he wasn't in command. Spock
glanced at Admiral Morrow for permission, who nodded. Kirk transferred
his data to the science console, then sat tensely, trying not to think
that McCoy's life might depend on what they did in the next few minutes.

The Vulcan straightened after a moment. "Verified," he said, glancing
over at Kirk. "Logically, that is where they should be."

"All right, Jim," Morrow said, after looking over the projection, "lay
in your course. Warp factor one."

Cochise leaped ahead beneath Kirk's fingers. Twenty minutes later, Kirk
announced, "We've reached my projected coordinates, Admiral. Decreasing
to sublight."

"Any sign of them, Mr. Spock?"

"Nothing, Admiral."

"Implement standard search grid. Slow to one-half impulse."

Kirk piloted Cochise through the maneuvers of the search grid
automatically, his mouth dry with anxiety. What if he'd been wrong? We
might have passed them by already.

Bones could be ten thousand kilometers behind us, on that ship with no
life-support systems ... he could be dying, right this minute, they
could all be dead ...

Ten minutes ... Fifteen ... Thirty ... One hour.

One hour and twenty minutes.

"Power status, Jim?"

"We can maintain full shielding only another fifteen minutes," Kirk said
quietly, feeling despair settle over him like a shroud. "If we search
any longer, we won't be able to keep up our shields long enough to get
away ourselves."

Morrow's dark features held nothing but sympathy" "We'll search, then.
You did everything you could, Jim.

Don't look like that."

Kirk shook his head, numb with the realization that this time, they
weren't going to pull a miracle out of thin air.

This time, they were "I'm picking up something." Spock's flat tone held
an undercurrent of excitement.

"Kismet?" Morrow leaned forward.

,"Verified, Admiral. The vessel is dead ahead, heading mark three point
four-two."

Kirk felt relief wash over him, relief that was almost immediately
replaced by increased tension. Are we too late?

Are they still alive?

Cochise approached the drifting courier ship. Except for her emergency
running lights, she was dead in space. "Well, we've found her," Morrow
said, to nobody in particular, now, how do we contact her? All her
communication systems are down. She can't see or hear us."

Cochise's science officer, a woman named Lisa Washington, turned to
regard the image on the forward viewscreen.

"Send someone out to knock on their airlock?" she suggested, deadpan.

Despite his worry, Kirk's mouth twitched at the picture her suggestion
conjured up. "Too bad we can't, Lieutenant." Then, abruptly, he
straightened in his seat. "Hey, that's it! We'll knock on their hull!"

"Huh?" Washington said, frowning.

"Fire our phasers over her bow, just close enough to rattle them a
little! Do it in a regular pattern, so they know we're here!"

Spock was already nodding. "It could work, Admiral Morrow."

"Let's try it. Jim, fire when ready."

"Aye, Sir. Firing phaser one." Kirk pressed the firing button, and the
deadly beam shot out.

By firing in shorter and then longer bursts, he was able to create a
pattern. He gave them the old "dot-dot-dot, dashdash-dash, dot-dot-dot"
of the SOS, repeated it, then, on impulse, followed it up with
"shave-and-a-haircut."

Then they sat waiting, rigid with hope and fear, praying for some sign
of life aboard the crippled vessel. Kirk found himself wishing they
could drop their screens, just for a second, so their sensors could lock
onto the crew and beam them aboard, but he knew that was impossible. The
next move was up to Kismet.

Five minutes crept by. Ten.

"Should I signal again, Admiral?" Kirk asked, trying to keep his voice
level.

"Yes-no!" Morrow was on his feet, his gaze never leaving the viewscreen.
"The airlock's opening!"

Automatically, Kirk increased the magnification, so they could all make
out a bulky figure in a thruster suit, hanging against the backdrop of
space and the side of Kismet's hull.

As they watched, the figure uncapped a safety line. The lock cycled
again, opening to disgorge three more figures in ordinary spacesuits. As
each spacesuited figure left the airlock, the occupant of the thruster
suit hooked them together with the line. In ten minutes, there were two
thruster suits, with ten spacesuited figures linked to each.

With their white, slightly reflective suits, they resembled misshapen
pearls strung together, suspended against a velvet case of infinite
blackness.

They'll have to use the manual overrides when they activale the thruster
suits, Kirk thought. The computers wont work. They'll have to mentally
compule their trajectory and how many seconds of thrust to allow.

"How will we get them aboard?" Lieutenant Buck wondered.

"If they get close enough, that's where we use the shuttlecraft," Morrow
said. "if we turn Cochise so our hangar deck entrance faces away from
the star, the ship's bulk will block the EMP. We can drop our forward
shield long enough to let the shuttle leave and return."

"Shuttle deck," Morrow continued, into his intercom.

"Ready cargo shuttle Onizuka to retrieve Kismet crew."

"Aye, Admiral. Standing by."

"They've triggered thruster ignition!" Kirk said.

He watched, mouth dry, as the thrusters cut in, sending the suited
figures zipping toward Cochise. Each ofthe linked spacesuits jerked, in
turn, as the line tightened, then was towed willy-nilly behind the
thruster operator. Like a giant game ofcrack the whip, Kirk thought.
There are going to be some stiffnecks and backs tomorrow.

Finally, just after both pearl strands of spacesuits passed the forward
viewscreen at a distance of several kilometers, Kirk saw the braking
thrusters fire. Did they gauge it right?

Will they stop where the shuttle can reach them?

"Shuttle deck here," said the intercom, a minute later.

"We have them in range. Navigator Ferguson says we'll be launching in a
minute. Stand by to drop number four deflector shield."

An excited whoop went up from the bridge crew. Kirk sat poised, waiting
to drop, then reactivate, the screen.

Finally, after what seemed an interminable interval-but was actually
about fifteen minutes-Ferguson's contralto reported "We have them,
Admiral Morrow. They're A-OK.

Shuttle deck doors are closing behind us. You may reactivate number
four deflector."

Kirk held himself together long enough to trigger the shield, then
leaped up to grip Morrow's hand. The admiral's eyes were shining. "We
did it!"

"Thank God," Kirk said softly. Relief washed through him, making him
feel light, free. He smiled when Morrow slapped him on the shoulder.

"Put yourself in for a medal, Admiral Kirk," Morrow chortled. "If it
hadn't been for you we'd never have figured out where they were."

"Just a little logic at the right time." Kirk's grin grew so broad it
felt as if it might split his face. "Guess after all these years some
of it finally rubbed off on me, right, Spock?"

The Vulcan stood surveying the celebrants, hands clasped behind his
back. "Admiral, with your permission, I would like to join the medical
team on the shuttle deck."

Morrow nodded. "You can both go. As soon as McCoy's able, notify me
and report to the briefing room. We've got a lot to discuss."

Kirk and Spock reached the shuttle deck just as the last of the
spacesuited figures was helped out of the crowded confines of the
Onizuka's storage compartment. "Do you see Bones?"

"There." The Vulcan pointed. Both officers hurried over to a
spacesuited figure that sat slumped on the shuttle's cargo ramp,
obviously having trouble removing its helmet.

As they approached from the doctor's blind side, Spock triggered the
emergency release mechanism at the rear of the helmet, suddenly freeing
the stubborn headgear.

McCoy's irascible tones abruptly emerged. "-stupid damn idiotic
spacesuit-ouch!"

Kirk lifted the helmet out of the doctor's hands, then stepped around to
face his former chief surgeon. "Easy, Bones. Spock and I went to too
much trouble to rescue you, just to watch you knock yourself out with
your own helmet."

Leonard McCoy's jaw dropped with an almost audible clunk. "Jim? Spock?
What the hell-?"

Somehow the doctor was on his feet and suddenly, without knowing quite
what he intended, Kirk had both arms around his friend and was thumping
him on the back-and being thumped in turn. They laughed until they
choked, and then, just as their laughter was threatening to turn into
something far more embarrassing, Spock ostentatiously cleared his
throat. "if you two intend to continue, I shall wait for you in the
briefing room."

McCoy mock-glared at the Vulcan. "Why, you coldblooded sonofa-"

"Now, Bones," Kirk interrupted hastily, smothering a grin.

McCoy glanced at him, then a slow, reluctant smile lightened the
doctor's haggard features. "Hell, I couldn't be mad at Lucifer himself
right now-especially if he just helped save my life. How the hell are
you, Spock?"

"I am well, Doctor," the Vulcan replied, only his dark eyes revealing
his relieved pleasure at seeing his sparring partner again. "Gratified
to find you in such good-if profane-spirits."

"Come on, let's get you out of this suit," Kirk said. "I hate to rush
you, after the trip you've had, but we've got an emergency on our hands,
and Admiral Morrow-for some reason we don't yet understand-wants our
advice in trying to solve it."

"Is that why he ordered me back to Earth?"

"Apparently," Spock said. Together, he and Kirk helped McCoy pull off
his spacesuit. Kirk's nose wrinkled.

The doctor bridled at his expression. "I've been living in this
double-damned thing for the last fourteen hours, Jim.

You were no bed of roses after the Tholian incident, remember?" And I
haven't had a bite to eat in more than a day-not that I wanted to eat
much after the artificial gravity cut out. Good thing their infirmary
had plenty of anti-nausea medicine. I had so many patients I barely had
time to worry. What a mess!"

"I imagine we can delay long enough to get you a shower and some food,"
Kirk said, as they made their way through the crowded shuttlecraft deck.

"I don't know as my stomach's that settled, yet. I haven't done a
spacesuit drill since basic ... hanging there, feeling like every part
of you is falling forever ... in different directions." The doctor
gulped, shuddering. "Even that damned transporter is better than being
towed through space. I hope to hell I never have to go through that
again."

"Small chance of that," Kirk reassured him. "We're back in warp drive,
heading for Kent to pick up as many refugees as Cochise will hold before
we go back to Earth."

After the doctor had taken his shower and the three officers had shared
food and coffee in the small galley, they informed Admiral Morrow that
they were assembling in the briefing room.

While they waited for Morrow to arrive, Kirk lounged back in his seat,
looking across the table at McCoy and Spock, wondering just how many
times he'd sat with these two men trying to solve tough problems before.
It's been a long time since we've worked together ... hope we havent
lost the old touch.

Kirk hadn't seen his former medical officer in nearly a year. Until
yesterday, McCoy had been teaching a course in Xeno-anatomy at the
Starfleet medical school on Prima, parsecs away.

Kirk hadn't seen much of Spock either, though they were at least
stationed on the same world. The Vulcan was an instructor at Starfleet
Academy and spent much of his time accompanying his students on training
details.

"Despite everything, Jim, you look great." McCoy's craggy features were
tired, the lines around his eyes and down his cheeks etched so deeply
with fatigue that his eyes looked sunken. But their blue was as bright
as ever.

"Thanks, Bones. I've been trying to keep up the workouts."

"How is Peter?"

"Fine," Kirk said. "Mom's death hit him hard at first, but the
resiliency of youth . . ." He shrugged, turning to look at the Vulcan.
"By the way, Spock, how are the cadets?

Whipped 'em all into shape yet?"

"It is a never-ending struggle, Admiral," Spock said, straight-faced.
"Many of them are human, and they tend to ... infect ... the others."

McCoy grimaced. -Vulcans have no honor, Jim. He knows I'm too tired to
muster a comeback, so he's taking advantage of me."

"You'll be here awhile, is my guess, so you'll have plenty of time to
resharpen the old wit, Bones."

"Yeah," the doctor agreed, pensively. "No telling when .... get back.
My class is probably offering up sacrifices to Hippocrates-I had a test
scheduled for today. It's anyone's guess when they'll get it."

The door slid open, and Harry Morrow entered. "Dr. McCoy, I'm glad
you're safe." He shook hands gravely.

"Have Jim and Spock explained why we're here?"

"No. But I gather that something is happening to Alpha Centauri B-that
it's going to blow up, or something."

Spock was already shaking his head. "No, Doctor, it will not explode.
But what is happening to it is fully as dangerous for Kent. Very soon
it is going to swell into an orange giant, then it will cool slightly to
become a red giant."

"What will happen to Kent?"

"When Alpha B begins to swell, it will engulf all of its planets-not to
mention several of Alpha A's gas giants."

"What about Centaurus?" McCoy asked quickly. The doctor had lived on
the planet for some years, and it was still his official residence of
record.

"Safe," Kirk reassured him. "They're shielding it."

"But if we ev acuate all the people on Kent-" McCoy began.

Spock shook his head. "The problem does not end with Alpha B, Doctor.
Admiral Morrow has explained that several other stars are also aging at
a greatly accelerated rate, due to waves of time displacement that are
causing them to speed up consumption of their internal hydrogen."

"You want to explain all that in Standard English, Spock?" McCoy glared
at the Vulcan. "Preferably words of one syllable? Remember, I'm a
doctor, not a-"

"Cosmological physicist," Spock supplied, as the medical officer groped
for a term. "Very well." He steepled his lean fingers and thought for a
moment. "Perhaps the best way to begin is to remind you that stars,
like living beings, possess finite lifespans. When they have converted
enough of their internal fuel supply of hydrogen to helium, they die."

"I know that much," the doctor growled.

"Good," said Spock, unruffled. "Small or medium-size stars, like Sol-or
Alpha A and B-swell into red giants, then dwindle into white dwarfs. The
fifespan of a small-tomedium-size star is approximately ten billion
years, plus or minus one or two billion."

"I thought you implied this was an immediate problem," McCoy observed
sarcastically. "Doesn't sound like anything I should stay awake nights
worrying over."

Spock made a small, impatient sound ... not quite an ahem."

"Dr. McCoy, since there is nothing you or anyone else could do to
prevent the natural or unnatural consequences of aging in a star," the
Vulcan raised his eyebrow, staying awake worrying about the eventuality
constitutes a completely illogical reaction."

"Don't, Bones," Kirk put in hastily, seeing the light of battle in the
doctor's eyes. "We're with you, Spock. Go on .

"Very well. The larger the mass ofthe star in question, the shorter its
lifespan. Massive, heavyweight stars will exhaust their internal
supplies of hydrogen in only ten million years or so. The star then
balloons outward, becoming a red supergiant, and ultimately explodes-a
supernova."

"And that's been happening a lot lately?" Kirk remembered Morrow and
Spock's previous talk.

"Correct, Admiral. To be more precise, there has been a marked increase
in star deaths of all types."

"What happens to the supernovas?" McCoy asked, intrigued in spite of
himself. "Do they just blow themselves into atoms?"

"The correct plural is supernovae, Doctor. Yes, some stars do just
that, becoming clouds of ionized hydrogen we term nebulae. Others,
however, collapse back into themselves. Those with lesser mass become
neutron stars. The remains of the most massive stars, however, collapse
into gravity wells so intense that not even light can escape."

"Black holes," Kirk said.

"That is the popular term for the phenomenon."

"But we've discovered them before," the doctor protested. "They swallow
up anything that gets trapped within their gravity pulls, but mostly
that's just space gas or dust, and occasionally a stray asteroid or
something. They've never posed a threat to a planet!"

"You mean they haven't yet, Doctor," Morrow cautioned.

"But that's because the explored universe is a big place, and there
aren't many of them. But with more developing -possibly many more . .
." he trailed off with a shrug and an expression that spoke more
eloquently than words. "I received word only hours ago that Canopus is
affected."

"Canopus, too?" McCoy was visibly upset. "I've got an old friend who
retired on Serenity."

"Starfleet is currently evacuating the population of the system," Morrow
said. "We just hope we can move eight billion people off two worlds
before the star goes supernova and its interior collapses. Fortunately,
our estimates indicate we'll have several months, so we can probably
save those lives. Canopus is a younger star than Alpha B."

The commander, Starfleet, sighed. "But it's too late for Carmen Ikeya
and the crew of the Constellation."

"What happened, Harry?" Kirk asked. "I knew Carmen, you know."

"So did L" Morrow rubbed his eyes tiredly. "We can only guess at how it
happened, but we know what happened.

Constellation came out of warp too soon and emerged in real space within
the event horizon of a new black hole just discovered in Sector 87.
There was a Cepheid-class star there, just like Canopus, named
Achernar-was. Now there's a black hole, and the Constellation is
trapped within it."

"Can't it get out?" McCoy demanded.

"No, Doctor." Spock was matter-of-fact. "The nature of a black hole is
that it exerts such a pull of gravity that nothing can escape-not even
light itself. Hence the term 'black' hole."

"And the starship's been swallowed up?"

Spock hesitated. "Time, space, and gravity are intermingled terms when
discussing black holes, Doctor. Insofar as the crew of the
Constellation are concerned, their lives were snuffed out by the
enormous gravitational stresses within the hole approximately 6.7
nanoseconds after crossing the event horizon-the point of no return, to
express it colloquially."

The Vulcan misinterpreted McCoy's shocked stare for lack of
comprehension. "A nanosecond, Doctor, is onebillionth of a second. If
their engines were still functioning, they may have experienced perhaps
an additional nanosecond or two-"

"Damn it, Spock!" the doctor snarled. "You ought to know by now how
sick and tired I am of listening to you rattle off facts and figures
cool as a cucumber when you're talking about people-sentient
beings-dying!"

"Doctor, I am as distressed by this development as you are," the Vulcan
replied levelly, "but raising my voice or evidencing extreme agitation
will hardly help the Consiellation. Even though their image will remain
on our gravitational sensors for all eternity, the ship and its crew are
gone."

"You mean the Constellation is still there?" Kirk was confused. "How
can it be on our sensors if it's been destroyed?"

Spock expressed frustration with a small sigh. "it is difficult to
explain without recourse to equations, but to the distant
observers-us-the Constellation will remain trapped within the event
horizon forever, like an insect in amber."

"Hub?" McCoy frowned. "Why?"

"Because observed elapsed time virtually ceases once the event horizon
is crossed. To our sensors, the Constellation is there, and will be
there, for all time. But from the point of view of anyone aboard the
vessel, the starship was destroyed immediately."

McCoy glanced at Kirk incredulously. "Waitaminit, Spock. Are you
trying to tell me the Constellation is in two places at once? That's
crazy-impossible!"

"No, Doctor." The Vulcan permitted himself another sigh. "But to
explain more fully would require time we do not have. I am afraid that
I must ask you to accept my explanation on faith."

The medical officer snorted, but, after a warning glance from Kirk,
subsided. "Okay. I believe you. But why is all this happening? What
made the Constellation miscalculate coming out of warp?"

"We don't know for sure, it all happened too fast," Morrow said. "Matter
of fact, if it hadn't been for the team of scientists monitoring the
black hole, she'd have been listed as just another missing vessel."

"Know for sure," Kirk repeated. "You have a theory, then?"

"Not me," Morrow smiled wryly. "You think I understand that kind of
math? R't'lk of Hamal is the one who correlated the data. She believes
that the Constellation's chronos were running fast, so the ship came out
of warp too soon."

Kirk tried unsuccessfuly to fathom that theory. "The chronos were
wrong-but that's impossible! There are backup systems, fail-safes,
computer tie-ins-!" He shook his head stubbornly. "Starships measure
time by stardate. It's the most accurate time constant ever discovered-
Kirk broke off, hearing his own words. Sudden comprehension began
coalescing in his mind.

Spock was already nodding. "I see," the Vulcan said slowly. "The
Hamalki physicist was not suggesting that the Constellation's
time-keeping devices were at fault. Instead, Professor R't'lk is
theorizing that time itself was running too fast aboard the vessel."

"What would that do?" McCoy asked.

"For one thing, if that is indeed the case, it would mean that Captain
Ikeya and her crew were already dead when her ship crossed the event
horizon. Aged and disintegrated into nothingness between one breath and
the next."

"Well," Kirk said, feeling a little sick, "at least they didn't suffer."

"They would've never known what hit them," Morrow agreed.

"Admiral Morrow," Spock said, with quiet urgency, "in following this
possibility through to its logical conclusion, I conjecture that R'Ok
also believes this speed-up in time is responsible for all the premature
star deaths?" The Vulcan's eyebrow rose inquiringly.

Morrow nodded. "My compliments, Mr. Spock. It took me nearly ten
minutes of explanation to comprehend all the ramifications of what they
were trying to tell me-and you figured it out like that, " he snapped
his fingers.

"Now you've done it," McCoy muttered slowly. "As if his head weren't
swelled enough already . . ."

The Vulcan ignored the doctor. The angular planes of his face tightened
and even as Kirk watched, the faintly greenish skin paled visibly. "This
is ... most alarming," he said, his voice a near-whisper. "if this
phenomenon continues, it will mean the end . . ."

"Of what?" McCoy asked blankly.

"Everything."

"You mean . . ." The doctor's hands closed on the table as though he
wanted to reassure himself that it was still solid. "Spock, are you
talking about the end of the universe?

How? They discovered the first black hole over two hundred years ago,
and we're still here."

"Indeed we are," the Vulcan agreed, but his calm voice held a hollow
ring. "But if time w ere to be speeded up, or run irregularly, it would
create enormous stresses on the space-time fabric, Doctor. We live in
an expanding universe, but its motion, for the most part, is only
detected by examining the redshifting in the spectra of distant stars
and galaxies."

McCoy nodded slowly. "Okay, I remember about that.

It's hard to picture, though."

"It may help you to visualize this expansion if you think of the
galaxies as individual seeds in a seedcake dough.

When the dough begins to rise, the seeds move away from each other. The
motion of galaxies in our universe is somewhat analogous."

"So what does this have to do with star deaths and black holes?" Kirk
asked.

"We do not really know what the end of the universe will be like, Jim.
We can only theorize-and most of the prevailing theories today agree
that billions of years from now, the stars will have burned themselves
out to ash, or collapsed into black holes-which will then engulf most of
any remaining matter before dying themselves. The universe will end, as
T. S. Eliot said in'The Hollow Men,. "Not with a bang, but a
whimper."

Kirk tried to imagine an infinite void, bare of matter, even of atoms.
Nothing but a few scattered decaying protons or electrons, perhaps. "And
you think this decay might be speeded up, so the universe ends much
sooner than it otherwise would?"

"it is possible, Admiral. We also do not know what effect many black
holes appearing would have on the fabric of Space-time. It could be
that poking too many holes in an expanding universe would result in
massive rips-rather like punching holes in a mesh that is being tugged
on from all sides. Eventually, it would unravel completely. Of course,
the cosmos has at least four dimensions, not two," the Vulcan added
meditatively.

"Who gives a hell how many dimensions there are?"

McCoy demanded, throwing his hands up. "Does all this mean we're going
to blink out like soap bubbles tomorrow?"

"Hardly, Doctor," Spock said, in a tone of excessive patience. "The
universe is approximately fifteen billion years old. If it ages
normally, it will last more than a trillion years. The immediate danger
here is presented by the star deaths, and how long it will take before
any 'rips' begin to appear."

"R't'lk has already calculated how long we have to stop this," Morrow
said, glancing down at a printout. "Since the phenomenon is originating
in our own galaxy, we have approximately ninety days before the damage
will become irreparable"

"Ninety days!" Kirk felt his heart trying to squeeze itself out of his
chest, then begin to slam in hard, fast, waiting beats. Adrenaline rush
made him shake. "Harry, if you called us in here just so we could
update our wills, I wish you'd let me die in blissful ignorance." He
took a deep breath, controlling his wash of fear with an effort,
thinking hard. "But there's got to be something we can do about this,
or you wouldn't have called us. And why the three of us, as opposed to
all the officers in the Fleet?"

Kirk thought he heard Spock murmur, "Logical," even as Morrow gave him
an approving glance. "You're right, Jim. I did have a special reason
for needing you three. We've discovered the source of the
time-distortion waves that are causing time to accelerate, and it's
located in Sector 90.4."

"You mean Gateway? Are you saying the Guardian is causing all this?"

Sector 90.4 was located in one of the older portions of the explored
galaxy, a desolate stretch of space containing only a few burned-out
black dwarf stars plus a scattering of rocky planetoids. The only
marginally habitable world (it possessed an oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere,
but no life) was the one the Federation had code-named "Gateway."

Gateway was covered with ruins from a civilization so unthinkably
ancient that little was known about it even after years of study by
Federation archeologists. The only intact structure (if one could call
it that) was the monolithic stone wheel that called itself "The Guardian
of Forever."

The Guardian was sentient, self-aware, yet nonliving as Kirk understood
life. It was also a time portal possessed of vast and quixotic
powers-able to project the entire history of a world in minutes. Any
observer foolhardy enough to jump through its central opening ran the
risk of altering history; the time portal instantly transported
travelers back to whatever world and time requested.

The Enterprise had discovered the Guardian years ago, by tracing the
"ripples" of time-displacement the entity gave off. Kirk, Spock, and
McCoy had been the first men to use the time portal. Nightmares about
that "trip" still occasionally woke Kirk, leaving him lying wakeful in
the dark.

The admiral was jerked out of his memories by Morrow's voice "I'm
afraid so, Jim. And, since you three discovered the Guardian, I thought
you might have some insights "Precisely what is the Guardian doing?"
Spock inquired.

"Nobody is sure about anything except that it will no longer respond to
questions, and that the nature of those time-displacement waves it gives
off has altered. They are now being emitted at widely varying
intervals."

"And those waves are speeding up time?" McCoy asked.

"Is that why the stars are aging and dying prematurely?"

"We don't know any more about these emissions than we did about the old
ones, Doctor," Morrow said. "It's equally possible, I suppose, that all
these years the Guardian has been slowing down the aging of the stars to
lengthen their lifespans. We just don't know."

"It said that it had been there 'since before OUI SU burned hot in
space," Kirk mused. "We knew it had many strange powers, but I never
dreamed it was capable of anything like this. Have the archeologists on
Gateway been able to get any response from it at all?"

"None," Morrow said. "It hasn't responded to any inquiries or attempts
at communication for-" he glanced down at the report in front of him,
"for 174 Solar days now.

We lost contact with the current archeological team and the patrolling
ship two months ago. We're presuming the worst."

"Have you tried a telepath?" Spock asked suddenly.

"A lelepath?" Morrow's eyebrows rose. "No, that is one thing no one has
tried. What makes you think a telepath might be able to communicate
with the Guardian? As far as I know it's actually some sort of
incredibly advanced computer, isn't it? Besides, there aren't that many
espers around."

"At the time the Guardian was first discovered, Spock was one of the
scientific team chosen to study it. He knows as much about it as anyone
living," Kirk told the admiral, with a sharp glance at the Vulcan.

"I know," Morrow said, his eyes never leaving Spock's face. "I read his
report several times. It never mentioned that he had attempted a
mind-meld with the time portal."

Kirk heard McCoy's soft, indrawn breath, and knew that the doctor was
remembering, just as he was, the identity of the person who had
successfully contacted the Guardian mentally. Hastily, he began,
"Spock's theory that the Guardian can be contacted by a mind-meld is-"

Without looking at him, the Vulcan raised a hand, and Kirk subsided into
uneasy silence. "No, Admiral Morrow, I did not attempt telepathic
contact with the Guardian. I saw it done, however."

"Since the Guardian is one of the best-kept secrets in the Federation,"
Morrow said evenly, "I think I am justified in requiring you to identify
this individual."

"A young Vulcan relative of Spock's-" Dr. McCoy began, then Spock
turned to the medical officer with a spark of amused affection in his
eyes. "I appreciate your attempt to protect me, Doctor, but such a
grave situation requires nothing less than the truth." He faced Morrow
again.

"Admiral, the person who communicated mentally with the Guardian was my
son, Zar."

"Ybur-" Kirk doubted that Morrow could have looked more thunderstruck if
the conference table had come to life and danced a hornpipe. It was a
full thirty seconds before the admiral could speak. "I apologize, Mr.
Spock, for intruding on your privacy, but your personnel records never .
. ." He cleared his throat. "However, as you said, the situation is
extremely threatening. But I had no idea . . .- Morrow cleared his
throat again. "At any rate, the important thing is that contact was
established. What your son did once, he may be able to do again. Where
is he?"

"I am afraid that will be impossible, Admiral," Spock said levelly, but
something shadowed the dark eyes for a moment. "My son has been dead
for five thousand years."

Chapter Three

SPOCK WATCHED MORROW trying to recover from this second, greater shock.
The Vulcan kept his features from betraying his amusement. That is the
second time he has opened his, mouth, then closed it without emitting
any sound ...

"Perhaps I should explain," Spock gently offered.

The admiral nodded wordlessly.

"Approximately 14.5 years ago, now, the Enterprise was assigned to
observe the imminent nova of the star Beta Niobe, as well as warn the
inhabitants of the planet Sarpeidon of their star's fate. But we
discovered when we beamed down that all the inhabitants had taken refuge
in their planet's past. Through a mischance, Dr. McCoy and I were also
thrust through their time portal into the planet's last ice age ... some
5,000 years ago."

Spock glanced over at McCoy. He is surprised that I can speak about
what happened with such equanimity. Before Kolinahr, I could not have
done so ...

The Vulcan turned his gaze back to Morrow. "in Sarpeidon's past, we
discovered Zarabeth, a woman who had been wrongly exiled to that harsh
time period alone. It would have been fatal for McCoy and me to remain
in the ice age, and equally deadly for her to go back through the
portal. We had to leave her there."

"And she was . . .- Morrow trailed off delicately. -Zar's mother."
Spock nodded. "I had no idea, of course, that he had been born until we
analyzed prehistoric records the Enterprise's computers had copied from
Sarpeidon's main library. Zar had painted his own likeness on the walls
of Zarabeth's cave. There was," he steepled his fingers before him, "a
pronounced resemblance."

"I see," the admiral said. "But how did you get back there to meet him,
if that world no longer existed?"

"T'Pau secured permission from the Federation Council for me to employ
the Guardian to visit Sarpeidon's past," Spock replied. "Zar then
returned to the present of 14.5 years ago with me."

"And Starfleet Command never knew?"

"Admiral Komack did," Kirk spoke up. "We told him the whole story,
after the Romulan mess was over and Zar had gone."

"Romulans?" Morrow was looking increasingly dazed.

"They tried to take over Gateway. Spock and Zar were most of the reason
they failed."

"Was that when the archeological expedition was massacred?"

"Yes," Spock said. "I believe the details were mostly supressed under
the heightened security prevailing after the incident."

"And Zar? Where did he go? I gather he was an adult?"

"Zar was about twenty-eight," Spock said, the memories racing through
his mind in a series of flashing mental pictures. "After the battle for
Gateway, he elected to return to Sarpeidon's past. The planet's history
showed that he had, in fact, returned-and he did not want to chance
creating a paradox, after all we had gone through to safeguard the
integrity of the time-stream."

"I see," Morrow said, after a long moment's pause. "And I appreciate
your honesty, Mr. Spock. Be assured that I'll respect your confidence.
Back to the problem at hand, you say your son contacted the Guardian
telepathically? How many times?"

"Once," Spock said.

"Twice," Kirk corrected. The Vulcan turned to him, his eyebrow rising
in surprise. "I saw him do it right after he first came through," Kirk
explained. "He ... told me that the Guardian was alive, but not in any
way that he understood life. He said that it communicated with him."

"Fascinating," the Vulcan commented. "You never told me."

"Frankly, I completely forgot about it until this moment."

"And you also saw him in contact with it?" Morrow asked, turning to
Spock.

The Vulcan hesitated, searching his memory so deeply for the precise
sequence of events that for a second he was back there, feeling the
chill slash of the wind, hearing its everpresent moan, and seeing Zar,
his fur cloak whipping about him, hand touching the unthinkably ancient
stone of the Guardian. Seeing him-and knowing, again, the pain of his
leaving. I did not want you to go, he silently told that vivid
memory-image. I almost went a er you ... scarcely a day fit has gone
by since, that I have not thought ofyou and wished you well, across the
years ...

Spock came back into the present with a rush, realizing Morrow was
waiting. "The second time was just before he left. He touched the
monolith, and it presented him with a view of a valley on Sarpeidon-just
that view, and no other-which is in complete contrast to the portal's
customary modus operandi. I believe he communicated mentally, giving
the Guardian a silent command-which it obeyed."

"I see . . ." Morrow shook his head. "Too bad he can't help us this
time. But there are other telepaths-"

"Admiral Morrow," the vid-screen brightened into life.

"We're within hailing distance of Kent."

"Can we talk to them?"

"We can talk to the group that is controlling the evacuation on the
planet's nightside. The dayside blocks off the EMP."Get me whoever is
coordinating the evacuation."

Moments later, an older woman's face filled the screen.

Spock had never seen anyone look more exhausted, yet her eyes, though
bloodshot, met Morrow's steadily, and her speech was clear. "Martha
Hardesty, Coordinator for Planetary Civil Defense, Admiral Morrow."

"How many left to come aboard?"

"Just the remainder of the evacuation team, now. About two hundred and
fifty of us."

"That'll be tight." Morrow glanced over at Spock.

"How's Alpha B holding out?"

The Vulcan shook his head. "I checked status with Lieutenant Washington
before we began this briefing, Admiral, and she informed me that the
star was already beginning to swell."

"Damn it ... how much time do you think we have?"

"Insufficient data to speculate, sir."

Morrow opened a channel to the bridge. "Lieutenant Washington, how long
do we have to get those people out of here?"

"Admiral," Washington sounded extremely nervous, "the sooner we're at
least another A.U. from that thing, the happier I'll be. I can see it
growing, Sir."

"We've run out of time," Morrow told Hardesty. "Send your people up in
whatever shuttles you've got, and we'll keep a steady flow through the
transporter. Are all civilians gone?"

"No." Hardesty's gray features took on even grimmer lines. "There are
184 idiots who refused to leave."

"Damn! Stubborn fools-"

"We couldn't force them. Some of them were old, said they were ready to
go anyway. Some wouldn't believe us, no matter what we told them. A
few-" she fought down a surge of hysterical laughter, "said they wanted
to watch, if you can picture that.

"Oh, I can believe it," Morrow said bitterly. "Never mind, Hardesty.
You did what you could. Send your people UP."

"We're coming."

An hour later, Spock stood with Kirk, Martha Hardesty, Dr. McCoy, and
Admiral Morrow on the bridge as Cochise pulled out of orbit. When the
ship emerged from behind the planet's bulk, he blinked in dismay.

Alpha B was swelling even as they watched. The star was already twice
its normal size. Spock stared at it, riveted by the sense that here was
something out of control, something malignant, growing without reason,
against nature.

The screens wavered as Alpha B took on new, even larger contours. The
star was still orange-yellow, but Spock knew that would not last. Soon
it would cool even as it ballooned, wantonly consuming its inner fires.
Eventually it would become a red giant, so huge that, four years and
four months from now, when its light reached Earth, it would dominate
the skies of the southern latitudes, visible even during daylight hours.

Cochise headed out and away at impulse power. "Olson's gone," Lisa
Washington said calmly, referring to Alpha B's innermost planet.

The consumption of the little, dead world, similar in size and makeup to
Mercury in the Sol System, hadn't even caused a flicker on their
screens. As Cochise backed away from the burgeoning star, slowly,
recording the event, Washington stoically reeled off the names of its
planets as they died. "Perry is gone . . ." Then, minutes later,
"That was Lang, it's gone."

And, finally, "Kent . Her voice broke, and Spock knew she was thinking,
even as he was, of the 184 sentient beings and the wildlife seared into
nothingness.

Martha Hardesty began sobbing. "My home ... I'll never see it again
... my home, my home. . ."

Kirk patted her shoulder, and the old woman broke down completely. The
admiral held her, patting her back gently, whispering comfortingly.
Watching Kirk's face, Spock realized, with a sudden surge of empathy,
that the old woman's words had brought back memories of Winona Kirk's
last days, of her anguished pleas to her son to take her home.

Jim's mother had forgotten that her home had been destroyed when
lightning struck the 350-year-old farmhouse, burning it to the ground.
Had it not been for young Peter Kirk, home on vacation from Starfleet
Academy, Winona would have perished, but her grandson had carried her,
unconscious from the smoke, to safety. The accident had provided a
setback she never recovered from, either physically or mentally. She
died six months later, of pneumonia.

"Well, guess I'd better go see if I can help out the doctor," McCoy's
voice broke into Spock's musings. "Some of those refugees are
undoubtedly going to need sedatives. We're too crowded to afford mass
hysteria."

"The medical staff aboard Cochise, unlike the rest of the crew, is at
full strength, Doctor," Spock told him. "Admiral Morrow anticipated
this situation. I believe your time, and Jim's, would be better spent
in rest. We will need to be alert when we reach Starfleet
Headquarters."

McCoy paused, considering. "I hate like hell to saylit, but you're
right, Spock. But only if you rest, too. An don't want to hear any
crap about Vulcans and how long they can postpone sleep. Deal?"

Having won this round, the Vulcan could afford to be gracious. Spock
inclined his head. "Very well, Doctor."

The three officers wound up bunking in a three-bed room with three other
officers-and, due to their importance to the mission, they had been
given favored status. Little Cochise nearly bulged with people.
Refugees cluttered the hallways and filled the small rec deck. There
were long lines to use the lavatories. Sobbing became part of the
background noise, mingling with the faint vibration of the warp engines.

Spock had decided he would lie down until Kirk and McCoy drifted off,
then get up and offer his services to the medical teams, but the events
of the past two days had tired him more than he'd realized. Within
minutes, he felt himself sinking toward sleep, and, with a sigh, gave in
and let it take him.

The Vulcan dreamed he was standing in a featureless void, extending to
infinity in all directions-and yet, somehow, he could see infinity, and
knew that nowhere was there anything else. No stars, no planets-no
dust, no atoms TjME FOR YESTERDAY

... nothing. Nothing, nothing, nothing. He shivered, realizing that
this was what they had all feared-the end of the universe.

He had never felt so alone.

There must be something, he thought, glancing carefully around.
Something ... someone ... He twisted, turning completely around. There
must be someone ...

And there was. For a moment, he thought he was looking into a mirror,
then realized he was seeing Zar, though his son was considerably older
than when he'd last seen him.

They stared at each other, and Zar spoke, but no sound emerged. Ofcourse
not, Spock thought. We are in vacuum.

Sound does not travel through vacuum.

"Zar," he tried to say. "Son-"

But he could make no sound, either.

We cannot be alive in vacuum without spacesuits, Spock realized, then. I
must be dreaming.

And awoke.

Somewhere one of the refugees was shrieking with pain and despair. The
engines had changed their barely perceptible vibrations. Impulse drive,
the Vulcan thought. We are nearing Earth orbit.

"You could've knocked me over with a feather, Jim," Leonard McCoy said
irritably, picking up his drink. He glowered at the collection of
ancient weapons hanging on the wall of Kirk's San Francisco apartment.
"I swear, every time I think I've got that pointy-eared sonofagun
figured out, he does an about-face like the one he pulled yesterday.

It's pure cussedness on his part."

"Forgive me for sounding skeptical," Kirk said mildly, "but don't you
think a desire to help in the face of such a potential threat might be
part of what triggered Spock's revelation?"

McCoy shot him an Et tu, Jim? look, then sighed and shrugged. "Well,
you can't blame me for getting sore. I was in the middle of lying like
a rug for him, only to have him yank it out from under me." He shook his
head, a smile touching his blue eyes. "Wish I'd gotten a holo of
Morrow's face. I don't think he'd have looked any more poleaxed it both
the Romulan Praetor and the Klingon Emperor had toe-danced into his
conference room wearing pink tutus."

Kirk couldn't repress a grin. "He was pretty surprised."

"I guess he never saw that report you filed with Admiral Kornack."

"Why should he? The commander, Starfleet, has too many responsibilities
to sit around reading old reports."

Kirk sipped his brandy. "Besides, I'm not sure I ever got around to
stating Zar's exact relationship to Spock. I may have left it a little
... vague."

"I see."

"Don't give me that 'holier than thou' look, Bones. You were the one
who never mentioned the fact that our estimable Vulcan and Zarabeth
discovered the pleasure of each other's company back in ice-age
Sarpeidon. From your report, nobody could have guessed they ever got
past the handshake stage."

McCoy's glance was sardonic. "Reports are supposed to be composed
offacts, Admiral. All I had until we found out about Zar's existence
were speculations." He took a quick, nervous sip of his drink. "After
all, it's not as though I was there when ... I mean he trailed off,
staring fixedly down at his bourbon.

Kirk took pity on his friend and rescued him by changing the subject.
"This whole business with the Guardian has me stumped," he said. "After
untold millennia of operation -if we take what it has told us as
truth-what could be wrong?."

"A loose connection?" McCoy hazarded, grinning.

Kirk got up and went into the kitchen. "You've got a warped sense of
humor, Bones. Have I ever told you that?"

"Constantly, for the past nineteen years or so."

"We might as well eat." The admiral began scanning menus on his kitchen
terminal. "What would you like?"

"Fried chicken and mashed potatoes."

Kirk's fingers skipped over the keyboard. "Coming UP."

The doctor hooked a leg over the stool at the breakfast bar and sat
down, watching as Kirk tossed salad with quick, expert motions. The
food preparation unit beeped, and the admiral withdrew two steaming
plates. "Here you go, Bones."

"Thanks. At least the condemned will have time for a few hearty last
meals." McCoy scooped up a forkful of mashed potato.

"The whole notion is so . . . incomprehensible." Kirk picked at his
own greens. "I mean, for all the years I've been in Starfleet, I've
traveled maybe ... I don't know ... one tenth of a percent of space as
far as we've been able to see or measure it? One one-hundredth of a
percent? One millionth? What's one millionth of infinity, Bones? If I
can't imagine it, then how the hell is the end of it going to seem real
to me, either?"

"Yeah, I know what you mean. I've always been more comfortable poking
around in inner space-inside the human body, that is-than I ever felt
thinking about out there. " McCoy sighed. "But after watching Alpha B,
I find that I can now imagine Sol swelling up and steaming off San
Francisco Bay out there-not to mention the rest of the oceans."

"I dreamed about just that last night," Kirk admitted.

"If only we had more time!" McCoy stabbed savagely at a slice of tomato.

Ninety days, the little mantra repeated itself in Kirk's mind, as it had
been doing ever since yesterday. Ninety days. If we can't change
what's happening, at least that's enough time to get out to that
research station to see Carol and David ... maybe I ought to tell
David, this time ...

Spock's reference to Zar had made the admiral think even more about his
own son, David Marcus. At least the Vulcan had met his adult son, had
gotten to know him, even if only for a few weeks. In the face of this
new threat, the admiral felt his own mortality weighing on him again,
more strongly than ever before.

I always thought there'd be time ... years, decades ...

but now ... ninety days ... Kirk shook his head, frowning.

That's it, he decided. No matter how this turns out, I'm going to
arrange a meeting. I'm going to tell him ... no matter what Carol and
I agreed long ago, it's past time.

Maybe we can spend some time together, get to know each other ...

The communications system flashed, interrupting his thoughts. "Admiral
Kirk here. Go ahead."

The screen filled with Morrow's dark, handsome features.

"We've found one, Jim," the admiral said, without preamble.

"One what?"

"A telepath. She's got one of the highest sensitivity ratings
around-not surprising, considering that she's a Marishal. Spock helped
me interview candidates."

"Where is Spock?"

"On his way over to your place now. Can you leave tomorrow?"

Kirk reached over and began programming a vegetarian meal. "You mean
for Gateway?"

Morrow nodded. "I want you to take charge of getting that telepath out
there as quickly as possible. Can you leave tomorrow?"

"Of course," Kirk said, then smiled. "Harry ... ?" he began.

"What, Jim?"

"Do I get the Enterprise?"

Morrow shook his head bemusedly. "I should have known. Can she be
readied in time?"

"She can. Scotty's never failed me yet."

Morrow sighed. "You want Chief Engineer Scott, too?"

"Along with Commander Uhura and Commander Sulu -has he gotten that
promotion to captain yet?"

"It's in the works."

"Tell him I need him. He'll come." Kirk turned to McCoy. "And ...
let's see, where's Dr. Chapel?"

"Researching Hephaestus fever on Vulcan."

"Too far. And Reliant's been assigned to a long-term mission, so
Chekov's out. But at least Scotty, Uhura, and Sulu, Harry. And anyone
they request for their departments."

"Yanking that many key people off their jobs is going to disrupt half of
Starfleet!" the admiral protested.

Kirk smiled serenely.

Morrow scowled. "But you've got me over a barrel, and you know it.
Okay, you've got them." He smiled with grim amusement. "Will there be
anything else, 0 Hero of Starfleet?"

"That ought to do it," Kirk said, blandly.

"And you'll leave tomorrow?"

"You bet."

"All fight, I'll have my aide contact your crew immediately," Morrow
said.

"Tell them to meet me aboard ship. Bones, Spock and I will beam up as
soon as he gets here."

"Right." Morrow broke the connection.

McCoy surveyed his former captain in amazement as Kirk calmly resumed
his interrupted dinner. "Harry Morrow wasn't kidding when he said half
of Starfleet is going to be in turmoil because of this! Not to mention
the academy having to find other berths for all those cadets. I'm
surprised Morrow didn't tell you to go to hell, Jim."

"Nope," Kirk said, complacently, around a last mouthful of eggplant
parmesan. "He needs us. This mission is too important to settle for
less than the best."

The door signal chimed. "That's Spock," Kirk said, triggering the
unlocking mechanism and wiping his mouth. "I'm going to get into
uniform. Tell him his dinner's ready."

Kirk's bedroom door closed even as the Vulcan walked in.

"Hello, Spock. Here's your dinner," McCoy told the Vulcan, taking the
plate out of the unit. "Jim's getting dressed.

We're beaming up to the ship right away, so don't dawdle."

Spock sat down and picked up his fork. "The Enterprise, I presume?"

McCoy grinned. "How'd you guess?"

"Vulcans never guess. Knowing the admiral, it was the only logical
response."

Enterprise! Just to be back aboard his ship lifted James Kirk's
spirits. He stood in the turbo-elevator and could barely restrain
himself from touching her. You're arting like an ensign with hisfirst
assignment, he chided himself.

But why not? He was alone; there was no one to see. Kirk put out a
hand and patted the olive-gold padding inset into the walls. "It's good
to be back," he whispered. "I've missed YOU."

He grinned, feeling foolish, but not caring. The turboelevator
decelerated, then stopped.

"Bridge," the destination readout flashed.

Ever since the Enterprise had been refitted prior to their encounter
with Vejur, Kirk had felt a bit disconcerted by the redesign of the
bridge. He missed the red doors, his feet didn't auto matically know the
number of strides it would take to reach the command seat ... some of
the consoles were in the wrong places. Little things, but it always
took him a few minutes to adjust.

Most of the crew was now aboard; Commander Nyota Uhura swung to face him
as he entered, a warm smile brightening her dark, tired features-he knew
she'd been working without relief so she could personally double-check
all of communications, and he silently blessed her for it.

Spock was there, too, bent over the science station beside
Lieutenant-Commander Naraht, the Horta science officer.

"Sulu?" Kirk asked, looking around.

"He and his staff just beamed aboard," Spock responded.

Kirk sank into the command seat, then signaled the engineering deck.
"This is Admiral Kirk. Mr. Scott, are you there?"

"Aye, Sir," came the familiar Scot's burr.

"Estimated time till departure?"

"I've just completed nd'systems checks, Sir. We'll be ready whenever
you give the word."

"I knew I could count on you, Scotty. We'll be heading out as soon as
our passenger is beamed aboard."

"Verra good, Admiral."

"Admiral," Uhura said, "transporter chief reports the Marishal is safely
aboard, Sir, and that Dr. McCoy will escort her to her assigned
quarters."

Behind Kirk the bridge doors opened, and a moment later Commander Hikaru
Sulu walked by, pausing with a brief salute and smile for his commanding
officer. At Kirk's signal, he slipped into the helmsman's seat that a
junior officer hastily vacated.

"We have clearance, Admiral," he said, as a light on his console flashed
green.

"Stand by to depart spacedock, Mr. Sulu," Kirk said.

"Uhura, signal Admiral Morrow, please."

"Go ahead, Sir."

"Harry, we're on our way. Good luck keeping things together here."

Morrow's voice was warm. "Good luck to you and your crew, Jim. We'll
be keeping our fingers crossed for you."

"A few prayers might not hurt, either," Kirk muttered under his breath
as Uhura terminated the transmission.

Slowly, cautiously, the Enterprise drifted through the cavernous maw of
the Starfleet spacedock. The doors slid back, then they were free, in
temporary orbit. "Beneath" them Earth turned, the Pacific uppermost,
clouds gleaming white over azure water. The brownish-green landmass of
North America was still visible on the far right.

"Lieutenant s'Bysh," Kirk said, to the green-skinned navigator, "compute
our course and best speed to Sector

"Aye, Sir."

Kirk sat gazing around the bridge, mentally rehearsing the "all crew"
speech he would give as soon as they were underway. He'd barely gotten
past "vital," when the Orion woman turned around from her navigation
console.

"Course computed and laid in, Sir."

"Mr. Sulu, prepare to implement course."

"Aye, Sir." Sulu's long fingers danced over his helm console surely,
without a moment's hesitation.

The admiral's mouth quirked as he watched the helmsman. "I'm grateful
that you consented to join us, Mr. Sulu.

I'd have given a lot for your skills a couple of days ago, when I found
myself trying to handle a tricky piloting job."

The helmsman looked deliberately inscrutable, but the dark almond eyes
twinkled. "May I respectfully inquire whether the admiral's ship
successfully reached its intended destination?"

Kirk chuckled.. "Eventually, Hikaru. After a few wrong turns. Are we
ready?"

"Course laid in, sir."

"Then take us out, Commander. Impulse power."

"Aye, sir!" Sulu's voice betrayed excitement, and Kirk knew just how he
felt.

The helmsman increased speed to full impulse power, and suddenly the
stars blurred ahead of them and Sol was gone. Within minutes they were
nearing the gas giants.

Still watching Saturn as it receded into the blackness, Kirk pressed the
button for the all-ship intercom. "This is-" the captain, he almost
said, but corrected himself in time, "Admiral Kirk, commanding. First,
let me congratulate all crew members on the speed and dispatch they've
shown in readying the Enterprise for a deep-space mission. I am unable
to reveal the details of our assignment, but it is vital to the safety
of the Federation. I know you will continue to give one hundred percent
of yourselves." He paused for a second, realizing there was nothing more
to say except 'thank you."

"Thank you. Kirk out."

He leaned back in his seat, gazing at the viewscreen.

Ahead of them lay nothing but innumerable stars, blazing with all
colors, all hues. So beautiful, he thought. I've come home again.

He found himself wondering-for the hundredth time -why he'd ever
accepted the promotion that had turned him into a desk-bound,
planet-bound administrator. Part of it had been that he knew Starfleet
needed competent people for high command slots; at the time it had
seemed like his duty. But more and more often, he wondered whether his
duty really lay in doing what he now knew he did best -commanding a
starship. Exploring. Solving problems.

Averting threats.

Ifonly we can handle this one, he thought, feeling the fear stir again.
For all her speed, Enterprise could not transport him fast enough.
Ninety days ...

If only, he found himself thinking, he could figure out some way to stay
aboard his ship, even after the mission to Gateway was finished-one way
or the other. If the universe were going to run down, James Kirk knew
where he wanted to spend his last months or years-in space. Was there a
way to gain that freedom? Could he manage to talk Morrow into returning
him to space duty?

I could always do something to make them demote me, he thought. Disobey
orders, or go AWOL. He grinned sourly.

Sure, that'll be the day.

"Admiral, we're nearing the orbit of Pluto," Sulu said.

Kirk opened the channel to Engineering. "Scotty, arc we clear for warp
drive?"

"Any time, Admiral."

"Thank you, Mr. Scott. Ahead warp factor seven, Mr. Sulu."

Enterprise quivered for a split second, then flung herself into
infinity. Kirk felt the change immediately, throughout his body, as he
watched the stars blur, sliding past, leaving their afterimages to
shimmer, rainbow-colored, in his eyes.

He stood up. "Mr. Sulu, you have the con. I'll be in the VIP cabin.
Mr. Spock, let's go welcome our guest."

Kirk walked into the rightmost turbo-elevator, remembering the days when
there had been only one exit from the bridge. They'd all had occasion
to regret that fact more than once-the new design was infinitely better.

But he still missed the red doors.

Spock joined him in seconds and Kirk keyed their destination into the
turbo-lift. The doors closed. "Ten days to reach Gateway," the Vulcan
said.

Kirk nodded. "And no doubt Scotty's going to be pulling his hair out by
the time we reach there. Sustained highspeed cruising puts a strain on
his beloved 'baims."

His former First Officer's mouth curved infinitesimally.

"I well remember."

"So do L" Kirk admitted, diffidently. "I miss it, Spock.

Do you?"

The Vulcan's gaze was level. "At times, Jim. But I also value my
current assignment; teaching the young carries its own rewards."

"I agree. I wish I could spend more time doing just that."

Kirk frowned, ruefully. "Harry keeps promising me that soon I'll be
able to teach at least half-time, but every time I make plans to do just
that, there's another brushfire to put out." He sighed. "Well, I've
almost cleared away my current projects. After that, I swear, if anyone
waves another memo to initial at me, I'm going to run off and join the
space marines."

The Vulcan's eyebrow rose, but he only said, "You know how much we value
your experience, Jim. Your record as a starship commander has never
been equalled-much less excelled. The cadets learn a great deal from
you."

Kirk smiled. "And when I'm teaching, we get to see each other more
often."

The turbo-lift slowed and stopped, and the two officers stepped out.
"Before we meet our guest, refresh my mind on the Marishal, Spock. I've
seen references to Marish, but I know very little about its people."

"The Manishal," the Vulcan said, "are a race of nontechnological bipeds
from a planet located near the Procyon sector. They are gentle,
prolific herbivores, completely nonaggressive. Their discovery by the
Federation nearly two decades ago came as a fortunate occurrence in
their history; they had seriously overpopulated their world, to the
point where only strict reproductive control would save them from
starvation. Vulcan teams were brought in to teach them biofeedback
techniques of population limitation."

"Have you ever met one?"

"No, they seldom travel off-world. I will be interested to discover why
this D'berahan chose to do so."

"What else do you know about them?"

"They are a nocturnal people, and possess no ears or other auditory
organs. Instead, they appear to have developed telepathy as a survival
characteristic against the many predators on their world. Current
research indicates they developed the telepathy first, then, later,
sentience, which is unusual. Most known telepathic species developed
sentience first."

"And they're powerful telepaths," Kirk said.

"Very. So powerful that they never developed any form of spoken or
written language. Physically, they are small and furred. The Marishal
have three sexes females, that produce ova, males, that produce sperm,
and carriers-who receive fertilized ova, nurture them until birthing,
then suckle them for the first months of their lives. From that point
on, the young become part of the herd, and the responsibility of all.
Marishal mature very fast, and their lifespans are comparatively
short-fifteen years from birth to death."

"That is short," Kirk said. "This D'berahan ... is it male, female or
a carrier?"

"Unknown, Jim. All Marishal sexual orga ns are concealed in a pouch near
the being's abdomen. Since all the Federation's contacts have been with
Marishal who identified themselves as female-once they understood the
concept of a mere two sexes, which reportedly amused them-I would
hypothesize that perhaps D'berahan is female. Admiral Morrow did say
'she," did he not?"

"Yes, you're right. Okay, then, 'she' it is."

Kirk stopped before the VIP suite and raised a finger to press the
intercom, but he never completed the action.

Instead, a "voice" filled his mind.

[Enter, welcome you both.]

Kirk had no trouble understanding the nonverbal concepts filling his
mind with a soft, somehow furry warmth.

The portal slid aside, and Kirk walked in, blinking. The cabin
illumination had been darkened to considerably less than normal ship's
lighting. Doctor McCoy was seated on the couch, and a creature crouched
near him. As the two officers entered, the being-she, Kirk reminded
himself -scrambled down and drew herself up to her full height.

The top of her head came to just above Kirk's belt.

The Marishal vaguely resembled a wallaby, in that she balanced herself
on a stubby tail and two powerful hind legs, and had two arms extending
from almost nonexistent shoulders. She wore no clothing; her fur was
short and plushy, a mottled brown and green, shading to palest amber on
the belly and whiskered face. Her head was narrow, with a domed
forehead rising above a blunt muzzle. A topknot of brownish fluff began
just above her huge, wide-pupiled amber eyes.

"Ma'am." McCoy's Georgia drawl was in full force, as was his "old-time
Southern gentleman" charm. "May I present James T. Kirk and Mr. Spock.
This is D'berahan, from Marish."

"How do you do," Kirk said, bowing slightly, and on his right, Spock
gave the Vulcan salute and murmured his greeting in his native tongue.
Of course, Kirk realized.

Languages are almost extraneous when communicating with a being
possessing this level of telepathy.

He tried clumsily to phrase his greeting mentally, without verbalizing,
but the furry warmth was in his mind again.

[Vocalize, Admiral, please, for your comfort. This one]-an image of the
Marishal sprang into his mind, vibrant and individual-[comprehends your
good wishes delivered in your normal manner. Comfort is best between
those who must strive together for the good of the All.]

Kirk nodded, noting that Spock was doing the same.

What message did she send him? he wondered. The same?A different one?

The Marishal waved a graceful, fully opposing "hand" -the digits moved
so fast Kirk hadn't yet counted them -toward the seats. [Rest/comfort
yourselves. Tell this one more of our shared peril.]

Kirk looked over at Spock. "As our science expert, I'll turn this one
over to you."

The Vulcan nodded, then, after a moment of staring into the Marishal's
enormous eyes, put out a hand to lightly touch her forehead. Several
seconds later, he broke contact, and Uberahan turned back to Kirk.

[This one fully comprehends, gratitude to]-Spock's saturnine features
flashed across Kirk's mind-[Be assured, this one will utmostly strive to
contact]-the Guardian of Forever's bagel-shape flickered-[so that
harmony/ continuity of the blessed All may be preserved to its natural
conclusion. But, truth to tell, this one's extremities tremble with
flight-urge whenever the thought occurs that failure may prove disaster
of such completeness.]

"That you try 'utmostly' is all anyone can ask," Kirk said, liking the
being for her honesty. "And I've been having some of those
'flight-urge' feelings, too."

"As have we all," Spock agreed, gravely.

Spock had little free time during the voyage to Sector 90.4, and
ordinarily would have spent it in solitary meditation in his quarters,
but instead, he chose to spend it visiting D'berahan. He liked the
Marishal; she was a gentle, sensitive creature with a quiet sense of
humor. Her religious belief in the "All" reminded him of the Vulcan
philosophy of NOME. Best of all, she did not demand emotion from him
the way Humans often did; he knew she accepted him for the way he was.

Uberahan benefited even more than Spock from their friendship. The
Vulcan was the only officer aboard who was telepathic; only with him
could she freely discuss her mission.

And telepathic contact, Spock realized almost immediately, was essential
to the alien's mental well-being. She explained that the Marishal were
very social beings, with every waking hour (and much of their dream
time) given to telepathic interaction. Mental solitude, to D'berahan,
was nearly as painful as the presence of a shipful of nontelepaths, most
of whom were unable to "shield" their thoughts.

He also learned her personal history. Uberahan was eight years old,
and, compared to the rest of her rather insular species, she had an
adventurous, unconventional turn of mind-which explained her presence on
Earth. She had been attending college, studying literature, drama, and
art.

Despite her people's lack of a written language, D'berahan wanted to
record some of their mentally told legends and images so non-telepaths
could read, see, and appreciate her people's art and myth.

[This one has learned to distill words from thoughts], she told him,
[and the method of inscribing such words by keying them into your
electronic think-machines]-an image of a computer terminal flashed into
the Vulcan's mind. [This one will use words and visuals to render an
approximation oQ-she hesitated, searching for a concept-[our
"mind-plays,"

"mind-dances," and mindpaintings."]

I am pleased to know that, Spock responded. The ones you have shown me
are indeed beautiful and worthy ofpreservation.

[If only this one may prove worthy of her ambition. This one has but
little talent for the arts in the eyes of her people], D'berahan
admitted.

I do not agree with their perception, Spock reassured her.

Perhaps you, like many artistic pioneers, will need time to make you
honored on your own world, but your work will certainly be lauded in the
Federation, if what I ha representative. ve seen is

[You are kind to tell me thus)-her mental projection carried extra
warmth, the telepathic equivalent of a smile -[This one hopes she may
prove worthy of your confidence.]

During their visits, the Vulcan discovered that D'berahan was actually a
carrier, not a female. But you refer to yourself as "she, " he told
her. Please, teach me the correct term in yourlanguage.

[The thought/concept/word you have grasped is correct) came the amused
reply. [Among my people, we have but one way of expressing all gender
... as "life-giver." Your universal translators rendered this as "she,"
and so we are all known ... males, females, and carriers. Are we not
all givers-of-life?]

Indeed, Spock responded. I had not thought of it in that way before.

[And you, my friend? Are you not a life-giver?]

Spock had a sudden memory of Zar, as he had glimpsed him in his dream,
and knew the Marishal shared the image.

Yes, I am, he answered. Though I have not seen my son for years. We
are separated by-death, he started to say, then, for some reason he did
not analyze, said instead-time as well as space.

[Nevertheless], the Marishal told him, [in the immensity of the All, you
are forever his father.]

I find that thought, Spock told her, seriously, to be a singularly
comforting one. You are wise, Dberahan.

[But I am not logical, as you have told me many times already] her
thought was gently teasing. [Can there then be wisdom beyond logic?)

There have been times I have found that to be true, the Vulcan admitted.
But do not tell Doctor McCoy I said so, please. I would never hear the
end of it.

"Entering Sector 90.4, Admiral," Sulu announced.

Here we go, Kirk thought. He took a deep breath; he'd made his peace
with the cosmos last night, sharing a Saurian brandy with Spock and
McCoy in his quarters. They'd talked a little, but mostly they'd just
sat, companions for so long that words were no longer necessary at such
a moment.

Kirk saw that the Vulcan was watching him, waiting for his signal.
"Prepare for full sensor monitoring, Mr. Spock."

"Ready, Admiral," Spock said, and turned to his board.

Commander Uhura sat on his right, and a Ryjhahx lieutenant on his left;
their task was to monitor the newly installed auxiliary sensors that
would give the Enterprise additional wtsws range.

"Decrease to sublight, helm."

The star-rainbows blurred, ran, then darkened into the inky blackness of
normal space-time. Everyone aboard felt the translation into sublight
velocity, as their bodies gave a brief, nonphysical twitch.

Sector 90.4 lay around them, dark with the remains of burned-out and
exploded suns. The star residue glowed faintly once they were inside
it; it was only when viewed from outside the system that it appeared as
a dark blot against the normal luminous stars.

"Time wave!" 6hura called. "Bearing four-three-six mark two-eight!"

"Evasive, Mr. Sulu!"

Enterprise heeled over so fast that her internal gravity systems lagged
half a second behind-everything lurched for a moment, then steadied.
Kirk slapped his restraint system button, and felt the field grip his
torso, while the clamps settled over his thighs. Guess we made it, he
thought dazedly, a moment later. Since we're still here.

"Mr. Spock, can you give us a schematic showing the waves, so s'Bysh
and Mr. Sulu can plot a course in?"

"Difficult, Admiral." Spock sounded abstracted, and even his calm tones
held an edge of tension. "They spread out after they are emitted ... in
some places they even overlap."

Great, just great. "Well, do your best. We need guidance, we can't
just go on leapfrogging over them-we'll plunge into another one."

Spock was programming so fast he didn't even respond.

Kirk waited until he paused after transferring the requested data to the
navigation and helm consoles. "Well? Can we get in?"

"Yes, though doing so will require pinpoint navigational and helm
accuracy."

"Lieutenant s'Bysh? Mr. Sulu?"

The Asian's tone was abstracted. "Still working, Admiral."

Kirk leaned over and saw the glowing schematic on the navigational
console, showing the time disturbances in violet. They coiled around
the small red sphere that was Gateway like a nest of cobras, and the
many places where they overlapped gleamed yellow. Kirk wet his lips.
"s'Bysh, Sulu, if you can get us through that labyrinth, I'll he trailed
off, unable to think of a reward or incentive wonderful enough. "I'll
be very glad," he finished anticlimactically.

"I'm trying, Admiral," s'Bysh murmured, in her soft, throaty voice. Sulu
gave his commanding officer a quick nod that said he understood, without
ever looking up from his board. Tense moments crawled by as they
drifted, monitoring the time waves, waiting.

Finally the helmsman turned back. "Course plotted and laid in, sir."

"Very good, Mr. Sulu, s'Bysh. Stand by to implement."

Kirk keyed his intercom. "Mr. Scott, prepare for a rough ride."

"Aye, Admiral. Wengines won't let you down."

"Take us through, Mr. Sulu."

Enterprise gained speed slowly, until they were traveling at half
impulse power. The heavy cruiser swung back and forth, up and down, as
it followed the wildly looping course through a menace they couldn't
even see. Kirk forgot to breathe as Sulu's fingers made minute course
corrections and changes.

"Time wave dead ahead, seven-six-nine mark oh-four!"

the Ryjhahx's voder shrilled.

Sulu's hands were there, and the Enterprise's brilliant green blob on
the schematic sailed over the undulating violet coil that was the
computer's representation of the time wave.

The admiral let out his breath after ten more seconds had gone by, and
they were still there, growing ever closer to the little red sphere. He
just sat there, feeling helpless, wishing there was something he could
do as the minutes dragged by.

And then, when his uniform felt clammy with sweat and his heart was
tired of jumping with fear, just when he thought he couldn't stand it a
moment longer, the red sphere wasn't little anymore-and there was a
small planet in their viewscreen.

"We made it," Sulu mumbled, wonderingly. "Hey, we made it!"

"We did," Kirk said. "Congratulations on a difficult job well done,
everyone. That was one hell of a course you plotted, Lieutenant."

s'Bysh gave him a grateful smile as she pushed sweatdamp black curls off
her forehead. "Thank you, Admiral."

Kirk turned to his helmsman. "Sulu, words are inadequate. I'm
convinced nobody else in this entire galaxy could have accomplished what
I've just seen you do today."

Sulu tried, without much success, to look suitably modest.

Kirk turned to the Vulcan. "Mr. Spock, are we safe here?"

"As long as we hug the side of the planet opposite to our destination,
we can remain beneath the trajectory of the waves, Admiral. Unless, of
course," the Vulcan's voice was very level, "that trajectory changes."

"Will we be able to get within range of our target?"

"We should be able to take the shuttlecraft down in safety. On the
surface, I will be able to continue monitoring using my tricorder tied
into the ship's computers."

"Commander Uhura, can you raise the archeological expedition? Any
response from the El Nath?"

She tried for several minutes, then shook her head. "No response on any
frequency, sir."

"Spock, what do your sensors indicate?"

"No life forms at all, Admiral."

Kirk sighed. "I guess that comes as no surpfise. Two starships, now .
. ." He gave himself a mental shake and keyed the intercom. "Mr.
Scott, you have the con. If you don't hear from us in an hour, assume
the worst, and get the Enterprise out of here. Understood?"

"Aye, Admiral," Scotty said, resignedly. "Good luck."

Chapter Four

SPOCK PILOTED THE SHUTTLECRAFT through Gateway's erratic winds, rolling
and pitching, cruising only a hundred meters above the jumbled,
grayish-white ruins that covered the entire surface of the ancient
little world.

Nobody spoke aboard the craft, though the Vulcan was conscious of a
subliminal mental "hum" from D'berahan -the telepathic equivalent of
nervous pacing, perhaps.

Finally, after a last buffeting by the constant wind, Spock swooped them
toward a relatively level space, setting them down onto what might have
once been a courtyard, or street. He powered down the shuttlecraft
automatically, hardly daring to take his eyes off his sensors.

They were only 137 meters from the Guardian, and, though his instruments
told the Vulcan this particular spot was not in the line-of-sight of the
time waves, they would be directly in their path as they approached on
foot. If a time wave erupted, there would be no time to escape ...

Spock frowned as he adjusted his tricorder. There would be no time,
period.

"We must hurry," he told the others as they climbed out of the craft.
The Vulcan glanced over at the alien, who moved with her customary
half-hop, half-shuffle.

"D'berahan, if you would permit ... T' He made a mental picture for the
Marishal.

[Certainly. This one's feet are unused to heaped stone for footing.]

Bending down, Spock picked up the little alien, cradling her as he would
a child, and began picking his way across the buckled stone. The Vulcan
glanced over at the site where the archeologists' camp had stood, but
saw no sign of it.

Logically, it crumbled to nothingness when the first time wave hit, he
thought, remembering the informal concert he had attended there long ago
with a twinge of sadness. I wonder why Gateway itself is seemingly
immune to the time waves. There must be something unique about this
world and these ruins. If we succeed, I must ask the Guardian ...

Kirk and McCoy followed them, all three men scrambling a little as the
broken rock underfoot shifted with their weight. As they drew closer to
the massive stone monolith that was the Guardian, the ruins became more
intact. The three officers were forced to detour around crumbling
walls, duck beneath half-fallen columns. The sky overhead remained
black and star-filled, unchanged for millennia, and the same wind moaned
among the stones, forlorn.

. Spock felt something move against his chest, and glanced down to see
a bulge ripple beneath the Marishal's abdominal fur. Even as he looked,
another small bulge heaved and subsided. Dberahan! Spock thought, his
mental voice the equivalent of a groan. You are carrying?

[Of course. I am a carrier, after all. Do not be concerned, SpockJ the
Marishal's mental "voice" was tranquil. [Think, my friend. This threat
we face is too great to let individual concerns affect our actions.]

You should have told us, he protested.

[Why? Doctor McCoy has some very odd ideas about life-giving ...
almost, he regards it as an illness. He would have forbidden this one
to try what she must. And when this one is carrying, she is at the
height of her thoughtsensitivity. It is always so, for protection of
the unborn. So this one could have no better chance at success.]
But[Besides, it is too late to turn back.)

Spock was reluctantly forced to concede the logic of her statements. He
stumbled on, his jaw set, his eyes grim.

They reached the Guardian, and Spock put the Marishal down. She stood
next to it, looking doubly small and fragile against its enormous stone
bulk. [Does it have a name that I may call?]

"It calls itself the Guardian of Forever," McCoy answered.

She motioned them all to step back. [Very well. Please do not
interrupt this one's concentration.]

The Marishal's presence was abruptly gone from Spock's mind as she
turned to face the monolith, closing her eyes.

He glanced over at Kirk and McCoy and could see the anxiety in their
expressions. He tried, without much success, to regain his customary
inner calm.

Gradually, Spock became conscious of a strong telepathic calling. It
was not aimed at him, so he caught only the fringes, and, glancing at
Kirk and McCoy, the Vulcan realized they felt nothing. But the sheer
surnmoningforce behind it left him awed. Uberahan's mental cry went on,
and on ...

He sensed that she was concentrating her entire being on picking up the
mental emanations from the Guardian, trying to track them, to follow
them through a vast, trackless void ... and she was succeeding! He
glimpsed her triumph as she touched -then D'berahan stiffened and gave a
small shrill cry (the first audible sound he had heard her make). Her
huge eyes opened, wide and blind, and Spock leaped toward her, seeing,
sensing, agony-both physical and mental. "Doctor!" he cried.

McCoy was already moving.

Uberahan crumpled where she stood. Spock and McCoy barely reached her
in time to keep her head from striking the rocky ground as she fell.

"What happened?" Kirk crouched over Spock and McCoy as they eased the
Marishal to the ground.

McCoy ran his medical scanner over the small form.

"Cardiac arrhythmia! Damn!" He began scrabbling through his belt
medikit.

Spock clamped his fingers against the fluffy topknot on the alien's
skull. Dberahan?

Her consciousness was only a fading spark in a rush of darkness, like
the light of a single candle trying to stand against a hurricane. Spock
lost contact with his surroundings, his own body, as he sent his mind
racing after hers. It was like being in space, out of control, speeding
through darkness shot through with images that were totally alien -for a
moment Spock remembered his journey through Vej u r.

But Vejur had been a m achine, Sterile, devoid of all passion except a
programmed compulsion to ingest data.

D'berahan was a person, lively, whimsical, humorous-to realize that she
was dying filled the Vulcan with grief, and an iron determination to
save her. He launched himself after her with every bit of will he
possessed.

Even though his consciousness no longer responded to external stimuli,
his ears automatically picked up and recorded the sounds of concerned
voices "Can I help, Bones?"

"Hold her arms. She keeps trying to curl up. I've got to get some
cordrazine into her."

"Won't that hurt her? She's an alien."

"Dying's gonna hurt her a lot worse. There." The hiss of the hypo
followed. "I've been studying Marishal physiology ever since I knew
there'd be one aboard, Jim. Give me a little credit!"

"Sorry, Bones."

Spock was gaining on the tiny spark. He increased his speed, ignoring
the alien images assaulting his mind.

Flashes of Marishal faces, of a world he'd never seen. A total absence
of sound. Telepathic "voices" in such profusion that they jumbled into
a single mental scream.

"She's stabilizing a little, Jim."

"Spock's trying a mind-meld."

"We'll have to monitor him, too. If she goes, she could drag him with
her."

"Should we try to separate them, Bones?"

"I don't know, Jim. He might be able to save her."

Spock caught the flickering life-spark and thrust his consciousness into
it. There was no time for finesse.

Dberahan! This is Spock. Use my strength to regain yourself Link with
me!

There was no response.

Only then did Spock become aware of the reason for the alien's collapse
and imminent demise. If he'd thought D'berahan's mind alien, it was as
nothing to the mental chaos surrounding him now. The Vulcan was jolted
as though he had been struck by a massive electrical shock.

The Guardian. The force of the time-entity's consciousness enveloped
him-vast, ancient, powerful. Allencompassing.

He was linked with an awareness that made all of Vejur's knowledge and
logic seem infantile. And yet that awareness, while it was
fundamentally artificial in nature, was not passionless. The Guardian
loved, it hungered, it was lonely -all on a level that made Spock feel
that, by comparison', he had always been the happiest of beings.

Words/concepts took shape in his mind

SUMMONING ... SEARCHING ... LONGING. FULFILL PRIMARY PROGRAMMING. BUT
WHERE? SO MANY UNIVERSES ... INFINITY.

INFINITE LOOP? SURELY NOT... BUT ... THE LONELINESS. THE SUMMONING.
THE SEARCHING...

The intensity of that communication nearly blasted Spock's mind into
gibbering withdrawal-now he understood why D'berahan had collapsed. The
little alien had absorbed the full force of that questing, anguished
superconsciousness, absorbed it at a far greater level than the Vulcan,
with his lesser telepathic abilities, ever could.

He wrenched his attention away from the Guardian and cast about for the
Marishal. She must be here-or had that minuscule spark been engulfed?
Had it gone out forever?

"This isn't good, Jim. Now Spock's heartbeat is becoming irregular."

"Damn it, Bones, he's going to kill himself! We've got to get him away
from her!"

"D'berahan will die if we do."

"She'l ' I die anyway. I-we-can't lose Spock."

"His muscles are spasmed, Jim. Can't ... budge ...

them . .

"Let me try, Bones. Oh, no. We'll have to break his fingers."

Dberahan? Spock thought, casting about, feeling desperation for the
second time in his life. Dberahan?

CANNOT NEGLECT SECONDARY PROGRAMMING. MANY SUCH JOURNEYS ARE POSSIBLE.
LET ME BE YOUR GATEWAY. ACTIVATE SECONDARY INTELLIGENCE PERIPHERAL TO
REINSTATE TEMPORAL PROGRAMMING FUNCTION.

D'berahan? Spock began withdrawing his consciousness, suddenly
convinced she was gone, and he was in terrible danger.

But even as he started his retreat, he became aware of a faint presence.

[?) D'berahan!

There was no concrete response, but Spock knew that as much of her mind
as remained was with him. He fled, "towing" the Marishal.

"Wait a minute, Jim! His heartbeat's evening out and getting stronger."

"What about the Marishal?"

"She's not dead, Jim-but I'm not sure whether she's really alive."

"Catatonia?"

"Similar, I think. I'll need to do brainwave scans."

Spock came back to his body like a swimmer who has been submerged far
past the lung-bursting point. He gasped, all his muscles jerking, then
sagged, exhausted, darkness threatening to engulf him. Only Kirk's
supporting arm kept him from collapsing. "Spock! Are you all right?"

The Vulcan shut his eyes, concentrating on slowing his breathing,
controlling his muscles. "I am ... well." Painfully he sat up, then
steadied himself, and Kirk let him go.

"D'berahan?"

"She's still alive," McCoy said grimly, "physically, at least. Mentally
... I don't know."

Spock wavered to his feet. D'berahan was limp, eyes closed, her chest
rising and falling. The Vulcan hesitantly touched her, but could detect
only a faint echo of her mental presence. "She has withdrawn," he said.
"The force of the Guardian's communication was too intense for her to
withstand it and remain sane. And I haven't the mental strength to
reach her."

"Will she recover?" Kirk anxiously asked both officers.

"Unknown," Spock said.

"I have no idea," McCoy admitted. "All I can do is make sure she's
given all possible supportive treatment. She may pull out of it by
herself. We'd better get her back to the shuttlecraft." The doctor
moved to pick up the Marishal. As he touched her body, it stiffened.

"Another seizure?" Kirk dropped to his knees beside the medical officer.

"Nooooo . . ." McCoy ran his scanner over the little alien. "More
like-" He broke off, running the instrument over her belly again. His
eyes were blazing furiously when he raised them to meet the Vulcan's.
"Did you know about this?"

Spock placed a gentle hand on the Marishal's abdomen.

"Not until we landed. She would not allow me to tell you, Doctor. She
is experiencing contractions?"

"Apparently." McCoy's mouth twisted bitterly. "Damn you, Spock! I
would never have let her. . ." He began palpating the Marishal's
midsection with cautious, capable fingers.

"That is what she said," Spock replied, levelly. "She considered this
mission worth the risk to herself and her unborn."

"Oh, no!" Horror replaced confusion on Kirk's features.

"Are you trying to tell me she's going to have a baby?"

"Three," McCoy said. "Either the shock or the cordrazine has acted to
induce labor. I only hope they're full-term. It'd be hell trying to
rig an incubator."

"Can't we get her back to the shuttlecraft?"

"Let's try. Jim, you go ahead, and collapse the rear seats onto the
floor in the cargo space. Activate the emergency sterile field."

"Okay-and then I'll have to check in with the ship," Kirk responded,
already moving. "If Scotty doesn't hear from me by the end of the hour,
we'll wind up marooned here."

With infinite gentleness, McCoy scooped the little alien into his arms.
"Hell! The whole goddamn universe is failing apart and I get to play
midwife!"

"You have done so before, successfully," Spock reminded him, as they
picked their way across the rock-strewn ground.

"Yeah, and a fat lot of help you and Jim were, too," the doctor snarled.
"As I told Jim, I've been studying Marishal physiology, but I doubt I'm
ready for this. You'll have to assist, Spock. I read that with
Marishal, immediate telepathic contact is essential. And if you faint
on me, those pointed ears will never hear the end of it, I swear by all
that's holy."

"I will not faint," Spock promised, for once too concerned to take
umbrage at the gibe.

When they reached the shuttlecraft, Kirk anxiously helped McCoy lift the
Marishal into the cargo section, where he had arranged the seats to make
a makeshift bed.

"Is it safe to remain here, Spock?" the admiral asked. "Or should we
take off and try and make it back before the next time wave?"

"My projected time for the next one to occur passed while I was linked
with D'berahan," the Vulcan said. "That we are still here tells us that
it did not happen. Also, I chose this location because my sensors
indicated that this area is located on a sufficient angle to protect us
from the wavepath."

The Marishal gasped sharply. "I'd rather not move her, Jim," McCoy
said. "This is apt to be tricky enough, without any roller-coaster
rides like we went through to get here."

"Okay," Kirk said. "We'll stay. I'll go tell Scotly."

The first infant was born forty-five minutes after they reached the
shuttlecraft. McCoy carefully picked up the tiny creature to suction
its nose and mouth, then dried it off.

Under his ministrations, it squeaked faintly, opening its eyes wide.

"Dim the lights," McCoy instructed Spock.

When its fur dried, the baby resembled a fuzzy copy of D'berahan, so
tiny that McCoy could hold it cupped in his palm. The doctor quickly
checked the heartbeat and respiration, then handed it to Spock.

The Vulcan concentrated for long moments, his features all angles and
shadows in the dimness. Finally he nodded, handing the baby back to
McCoy. "My mental contact cannot, of course, match what D'berahan would
have given, but the child's mind is now telepathically 'awake." It can
begin to develop."

"Good," McCoy said, placing the infant back near the now-distended
opening of the Marishal's abdominal pouch.

As soon as the minuscule body encountered its parent's warmth, the
infant Marishal began crawling upward, toward the pouch. "Where's it
going?" Kirk demanded.

"The Marishal pouch conceals the mammaries as well as the sexual
organs," Spock explained, as the infant burrowed under the loosened
folds and disappear ed. "Their young nurse and sleep inside the
carrier's pouch for the first few months of life."

"Like kangaroos?"

"Not really," McCoy said. "The Marishal resemble mammals more than they
do marsupials, in that the young are born furred and capable of spending
time away from the parent's pouch immediately after birth. My reading
says that as soon as the first infant is safely nursing, the next one
will probably arrive, so be ready."

Within ten minutes the birth opening located just inside the lower end
of the pouch dilated again, and a second baby emerged. The third
followed about forty minutes later.

As Spock finished establishing mental contact with the last-born baby,
Kirk hesitantly reached over to gently stroke the top of the downy
little head, grinning as it blinked its huge eyes at him in the dimness.
"You're going to be all right, little guy, or girl-or carrier-as the
case may be.

We'll take care of you, till your mom's better." The baby Marishal
opened its mouth, nuzzling inquiringly at his finger.

"Nope, there's nothing for you there," McCoy said, placing it near the
pouch opening. "Go find the real stuff."

The infant crawled unhesitatingly into the pouch.

"We'd better get underway," McCoy said. "I want to get D'berahan onto a
diagnostic couch as soon as possible."

Kirk glanced around at the never-changing landscape.

"We've been down here"-he checked the chrononearly three hours."

Spock nodded as he settled into the pilot's seat. The little craft
quivered, then rose and banked.

Kirk activated his seat restraints absently. "And suffered, no time
waves."

"Does that mean D'berahan succeeded?" McCoy called, from the rear of the
craft where he monitored his patient.

"My impression is that her mental summons may have caused the time
entity to recall some of its responsibilities to our universe," Spock
said, as the shuttlecraft swooped low over the time portal. "But I have
insufficient data to speculate whether the waves will resume."

"I'm ordering you to speculate, Spock," Kirk told the Vulcan. "Were you
able to get any sense of what's happened to the Guardian from
D'berahan's memories of her contact with it?"

Spock hesitated. "Nothing concrete. I did gain a strong impression
that the time portal is ... preoccupied. That its attention is
elsewhere. Literally elsewhere. In another universe, or dimension.
Searching."

"For what?"

"I do not know. Something very important to it. Something it longs
for, and has missed for eons."

"And this ... preoccupation ... is causing the time waves?"

"It seems likely that it is in some manner related."

Kirk sighed. "Now what? We're back to square one. Or negative one,
really."

"I could attempt "No. " Kirk said. "I can't afford to have you out of
commission, too. And the time waves have stopped."

"For the moment. But it is entirely possible-even likely -that they
will resume. The impression I gained from linking with Uberahan's
fading consciousness is that the Guardian will require all its unique
resources of mental and physical energy to complete its search
successfully. The moment it returns its complete 'attention'-for want
of a better term-to its goal, the time waves will resume."

"What makes you think that?"

"I am beginning to believe that the Guardian gives off time waves much
as most entities breathe. But that when it is conscious, aware, it
deliberately controls those waves so they will not prove harmful to the
space-time continuum."

"I see . . ." Kirk thought for a moment. "So there is nothing
malicious in what it is doing."

"Not malicious, no. Merely ... negligent."

McCoy snorted disgustedly from the cargo area. "I'd hate to think what
it could do to us if it intentionally got nasty."

Commander Nyota Uhura was sound asleep when her intercom buzzed. Huh?
she thought fuzzily, automatically checking the chronometer. Still six
hours before Igo back on duty. What's going on? The 'com buzzed again,
insistently.

Uhura pushed her hair out of her eyes and swung her legs out of the
bunk. This had better be good.

She activated the voice-only circuit with a vicious poke.

"Uhura here."

"Commander Uhura, this is Spock. I apologize for disturbing you while
you are off-duty, but I have an urgent request to make of you."

Uhura blinked. "Mr. Spock? Is anything wrong? Am I needed on the
bridge?"

"No, no, Commander. The ship is fine."

Uhura activated the 'com for one-way viewing only, and the Vulcan's
familiar features coalesced before her. He cleared his throat, then
swallowed. He only does that when he's really upset or nervous, she
thought. "What is it?" she asked, gently.

"I have a ... personal ... request."

"Anything I can do, Mr. Spock, I will," she assured him, completely
baffled now. A personal request? From Spock?

"I can best explain in sickbay. Can you meet me there in ten minutes?"

"Give me twelve," she said. "I was asleep."

Even through the habitual Vulcan control, she could read his dismay. "Of
course. I apologize again for disturbing YOU."

"No problem, Mr. Spock. I want to help."

With a puzzled frown, she cut the circuit, rose, and pulled on an
off-duty caftan. After splashing water on her face, she slid a pick
through her hair, fluffed it, then grimaced at her reflection. Good
thing it's only Spock 1711 be seeing-if I shaved my head and painted it
green, I doubt he'd notice.

With a rueful chuckle, she hurried out into the corridor.

The Vulcan was waiting for her in the tab next to McCoy's office,
pacing, hands clasped behind his back.

"Commander," he said, inclining his head in a brief but formal
salutation. "Come with me, please."

Spock led her into one of the infirmaries, dimly lighted.

Uhura paused in the doorway, blinking, but Spock never hesitated as he
made his way over to one of the beds that was surrounded by a
waist-high, rectangular enclosure.

A Coridian duty-nurse looked up as they approached, and the Vulcan,
pitching his voice low, requested that they be allowed to see the
Marishal in private. The huge, redskinned creature nodded. "Doctor
McCoy has given orders that you be allowed to visit, sir. I will be in
the next room should you need me." He saluted and withdrew.

Uhura stood staring down into the bed-enclosure. "It's D'berahan," she
said, recognizing the small, furred figure.

"I was on duty when you docked, and I relayed Doctor McCoy's order for a
stretcher unit. What happened?"

"She attempted mental contact with the Guardian of Forever," Spock said,
his usual calm tones bleak-edged.

"But the time entity's mental energy overwhelmed her -she has withdrawn
from the here-and-now. She is buried deep inside herself, and I do not
know whether she will recover."

"The poor thing," Uhura murmured. "I wish I could help."

"You can. That is why I asked you to come here."

She was startled. "Me? How?"

"While she was unconscious, D'berahan gave birth to three infants. They
are currently inside her pouch, but they will emerge several times each
day. It is vital that they not be mentally isolated-just as it is
important for D'berahan to receive mental warmth and reassurance."

"But I'm not a telepath . . ." Uhura began.

"I know. But you are the most empathic person I know.

Your warmth and sensitivity to others, including nonhuman beings, is
well-documented. The Thygetians, the Eeiauoans ... even"-did his mouth
quirk upward a fraction? In the dimness Uhura could not be sure-"even
the tribbles."

Uhura felt herself blushing for the first time in years.

"Why ... thank you, Mr. Spock. How can I help D'berahan?"

"Spend a few minutes with her and her children, as many times a day as
you can spare. Sit beside them and create positive mental images of
strength and health. Reflect on your own most pleasant memories, those
you feel comfortable sharing. Or read your favorite poetry or stories.
The benefit comes from having warm and gentle thoughts in close
proximity, where the Marishal will sense them easily."

"It's a pity they're deaf," Uhura mused. "I could sing to them."

"Please do so. They cannot hear the sounds, true, but they may well
sense the vibrations, and they will understand the lyrics as you think
them. Positive images will-"

"Oh! What's happening?" Uhura broke in, watching fascinated as one of
the infants burrowed out from beneath the edge of the unconscious
carrier's pouch. "That's one of the babies ... it's adorable!"

The tiny creature blinked solemnly up at her. It was soon joined by its
two siblings, and all three stared inquiringly at the Vulcan and the
human. "Mental companionship is essential to Marishal," Spock
explained. "They need it as urgently as they require their carrier's
pouch for food and shelter. Since their parent cannot supply it, we
must."

Uhura nodded. "I understand, Mr. Spock. I'll come as often as I can."

"Thank you, Commander. I will so inform Dr. McCoy."

They left the infirmary together, but when they reached the waiting
lounge, Uhura stopped suddenly. "Mr. Spock," she said, hearing the
urgency in her own voice, "why me?"

He raised one eyebrow in surprise. "I already explained about the
Marishal's need for mental contact-"

"No, I understand that," Uhura broke in, shaking her head, troubled.
"What I meant was, why me as opposed to you? You're the telepath,
therefore you are the," she gave a small, ironic shrug, "logical choice
for the job. What's preventing you from maintaining contact with
Uberahan and her children?"

The Vulcan was clearly uncomfortable with her perception, and for a
moment Uhura thought he was going to tell her to mind her own business
(though he'd never put it like that, she thought. He'dfind some
incredibly stuff y, civil way to say it).

But after a second's hesitation, the calm mask of the Vulcan's features
relaxed slightly. "A logical deduction, Commander. One I should have
foreseen you would make.

There is a ... possibility that I may not be able to continue visiting
the Marishal, therefore I have asked you to do so, in the event of my .
. . inability."

"You mean, your ... absence?" Uhura guessed.

"I did not say that," Spock said, stiffly.

But that's what you meant, Uhura thought. What's going on? Where are
you going? She gasped softly as realization dawned. He's going back
down to Gateway to mind-meld with the Guardian!

She knew by the flicker of the dark eyes that he had seen and catalogued
her reaction, and knew what it meant. "Mr. Spock . . ." She cast
about for words. "I've served under you for a long time now. You're
one of the best commanding officers I've ever had-you and Admiral Kirk.
I'd hate to lose you."

He relaxed slightly when he saw that she was not going to put the truth
they both knew into words. "We all have our duty, Commander. There are
times when each of us must ... interpret ... the nature of that duty
according to our individual consciences. I believe that the exigency of
our current situation makes this one of those times."

"I understand," she said, but she could not keep the slight tremor from
her voice. What is my duty here? He'd hardly call me down here for a
"personal request" if Kirk had authorized him to do this-therefore the
admiral doesn't know. But, on the other hand, I don't know for certain
that Spock is planning to act against orders ...

"But, Mr. Spock . . ." she bit her lip, then plunged on, "I don't
know much about the Marishal, but from what I've heard, they're powerful
telepaths. More so than Vulcans.

And if Uberahan failed . . ." She hesitated, not wanting to put the
rest of it into words.

"It may be, Commander, that Uberahan failed precisely because of her
telepathic strength. It is possible that a being of lesser mental power
and sensitivity-one with stronger mental shields-would not be similarly
overcome."

"Anything's possible, but it's terribly dangerous. Nobody's ever done
it."

"There is no logic in denying the danger of such a mental link," Spock
admitted. "However, you are wrong, it has been done. The only person
to accomplish a successful telepathic contact with the Guardian was
trained in Vulcan mental disciplines. He possessed considerably more
esper abilities than I, but he"-Spock's dark eyes were opaque,
unreadable-"is no longer available."

"Who was that?" she asked, intrigued.

"Zar," Spock said. "I believe you would remember him."

"Of course I do," Uhura whispered, her throat tightening at the memory
of the young man she'd known so briefly.

"How could I forget? I was in command of the landing party that day on
Gateway. It was I who sent him to create a diversion so we could rescue
you and Captain Kirk"-she took a deep breath, then finished, softly--and
that diversion, of course, was the explosion that killed him. I ...
sent him to his death."

Spock was staring down at her, obviously troubled.

"Commander," he said, after a long pause, "there is something you must
know. Zar did not die during that explosion.

Instead, he chose to use the Guardian to return to his own world, which
exists only in the past. Admiral Komack ordered the tightest security
surrounding the entire Gateway incident, so then-Captain Kirk and I were
under orders not to discuss it. But if I had known . . ." He
swallowed. "I would have found some way to let you know. I did not
realize that you ... felt responsible."

The Communications Officer blinked. -Zar didn't die?"

She felt a huge sense of relief sweep over her, followed almost
immediately by anger. "And all these years I thought . . ." She bit
her lip. How could they have kept silent! Surely they had to have
known how I'djeel!

Spock had obviously sensed the direction of her thoughts -the Vulcan's
dark gaze held undisguised regret. "I apologize, Commander. I deeply
regret that you were forced to carry such a burden."

"There's no need to apologize, sir," Uhura said, her tone formal. "As a
Starfleet officer, I understand about security directives."

"I know that, Commander. Nevertheless, I should have realized that you
would feel responsible, and entrusted you with the truth. But after Zar
left, I was somewhat ...

distracted. That is no excuse, I know, but the Vulcan trailed off,
shaking his head slightly.

Distracted? I've never heard Spock admit to such a thing!

He mustve cared more about Zar than he ever let on ... of course, Zar
was a member ofhisfamily ... though we never found out just how they
were related ... though they looked so much alike. .

Nyota gazed up at the angular, alien features, remembering Zar, and
experienced a sudden, startling revelation of herown.DearGod.
qfcoursehewasdistracted!Whowas she? When did it happens 11 can't be
true ...

But, instinctively, she knew it was. -Zar was your son, wasn't he?" she
asked softly, her eyes never leaving his.

He blinked, startled, then the grim mouth relaxed, ever so slightly.
"Yes," Spock said, his voice becoming deeper, rougher. "He decided that
to protect the integrity of the time-stream, he must return to his own
world. I often wonder how he fared in the past."

"I want to thank you for telling me the truth, Mr. Spock," Uhura said.
"It's such a relief to me to know that Zar was able to live out his
life, instead of dying violently in battle.

He was a fine person ... we all liked him."

The dark-velvet voice held a hint of wry amusement.

"You are correct, as usual, Nyota."

It took Uhura a second to puzzle that one out, and when she did, she
smiled. "It's a pity you can't activate the Guardian and use it to
contact him again. You said that he was able to mind-link with it.
Perhaps he could discover what's gone wrong with it."

Spock stared at her intently. "Yes, it is unfortunate that he is . . .
unavailable." The dark eyes grew suddenly distant. "But I was his
teacher, so perhaps there is a chance . . ."

"A chance for what, Mr. Spock?"

Even though his features retained their usual impassivity, the Vulcan
couldn't hide the hope in his eyes. "A chance for all of us," he told
her. "Thank you again, Nyota."

Before Uhura could question him further, the Vulcan was gone.

Fifteen minutes later, as she was sitting by Uberahan's bed, singing
softly to her wide-eyed children, Uhura was jerked out of her musical
reverie by the sound of the ship's intercom, paging the Vulcan.

The voice of her communications duty officer went on for nearly a
minute, then fell silent. Uhura lowered her head, knowing there would
be no answer to the summons. Fighting tears, she offered up a silent
prayer for the Vulcan's safety to anyone who might be listening.

Chapter Five

THERE WERE ONLY two things Spock, son of Sarek, son of Skon, citizen of
the planet Vulcan, feared. Death was not one of them. While he would
prefer to continue living, Spock knew that if logic or duty demanded it,
he was fully capable of risking his life, or even choosing his own
demise, without regret or fear.

But now as he stood on Gateway, facing the Guardian of Forever, Spock
knew that he was confronting his worst nightmare . . - and the Vulcan
could not deny that he was afraid.

Afraid of mental disability-either through insanity, or brain damage.
Spock could visualize nothing worse than existing with a crippled or
irrational mind.

He cleared his throat and turned on the recording unit in his tricorder.
"This is Spock," he said, evenly, without preamble. He did not have
much time. "In the event of my physical or mental death, I wish it
understood that I am ... was ... in full possession of my faculties at
the time of this recording. Admiral Kirk is in no way responsible for
my decision to make this attempt-as a matter of fact, he has expressly
forbidden such an action."

The Vulcan hesitated, then continued. "I find the idea of life without
full mental awareness and acuity abhorrent, and, in the event that this
attempted contact disables my mind, I hereby remind the finder of this
record of the terms of my will ... that no life support measures
whatsoever -including liquid or solid sustenance-are to be used to
preserve my existence."

And, he thought, since I am alone, and there is no one to whom I can
entrust my katra, my living spirit, the absence of physical existence
will mean true death. So be it.

He took a deep breath. "To my shipmates ... my friends ... aboard the
Enterprise, farewell. It has been a privilege to serve with you. May
you live long and prosper."

He touched the pause control and considered leaving Kirk a more personal
message, but such a communication was already appended to his will;
duplication here was illogical. Jim would understand. He flicked the
tricorder back on. "Endit."

Spock laid the tricorder atop a nearby fallen column, then set its
homing signal to activate after a twenty-minute delay.

A gust of wind struck him and he shivered, wishing he had donned his
uniform exploration jacket; but wearing it would have advertised his
intention to beam down to Gateway. He moved into the shelter of the
stone monolith, out of the wind.

The Vulcan raised his hands and, taking a deep breath, touched the
Guardian.

Harsh stone beneath his palms, but not cold ... warm.

Like something living. A faint glow flickered within the rock, making
it nearly translucent. Spock concentrated, thrusting his consciousness
outward, seeking to link his mind with that of the ancient entity.

He had the sense of balancing on the edge of a limitless black abyss.
The Guardian's "mind" was far, far removed from Gateway, even though its
physical existence remained tied to the planetoid. Spock concentrated
harder, trying to probe that darkness ...

Faint echoes of contact tantalized him, but he could not break through
... his mental ability was not strong enough to establish the meld.
Spock tried again, but it was like trying to grasp a handful of gas-too
diffuse, too allencompassing. He sagged against the Guardian's bulk,
exhausted.

TwE FOR YESTERDAY

The entity is. . occupied, he thought, remembering the impressions he
had gained while trying to save D'berahan.

With what? Why?

Slowly he began pacing before the time portal, hands clasped behind his
back, thinking. Zar's success at communicating with the time entity
fourteen years ago had given him hope that he, too, might be able to
forge a link. But no; he was not a strong enough telepath to break
through and follow the entity's trail.

D'berahan's telepathic abilities had been powerful enough, but her
personal mental shielding had not been -the force of the Guardian's mind
had enveloped hers, smothering her sense of identity. Spock sighed.
There is some way to make contact, there must be. There are always
possibilities.

The Vulcan tried to remember exactly what the time portal had "said"
while his mind had been linked with the Marishal's. At the time he had
been concentrating all his mental and physical energies on breaking the
alien's mental link with the Guardian. Something about initiating ...
no, activating ...

Suddenly it was there. Activate ... activate secondary intelligence
peripheral. . . reinstate temporal programming.

Spock looked up at the Guardian, experiencing a renewed flare of
excitement, of hope. "Guardian," he said, saluting the time entity.
"This is Spock, of Vulcan. I have traveled with you before. May I
again make use of your temporal relocation properties?"

After a long pause, the stone shape spoke-but it was not the deep, warm,
welcoming voice Spock had heard before.

This was a high-pitched, jerky, artificially generated sound.

"Request acknowledged. Destination?"

"The planet Sarpeidon, which formerly orbited the star Beta Niobe before
that sun exploded 16.4 Terran Solar years ago."

Again that long pause. System response is far too slow, Spock thought,
concerned. It is possible that the entity's temporal transportation
abilities are similarly circumscribed ... but there is, ofcourse, no
way to ascertain that, short of attempting to use them. His mouth
tightened as he waited, counting seconds.

"Location reference unacceptable," the portal said, finally. "Access to
primary memory limited. Please specify location."

Spock sighed and requested the entity to project star maps of the
Sagittarius Arm. Once the time entity understood which portion of what
galaxy Spock was referring to (Does that mean the Guardian could
actually transport me to a location in another galaxy? the Vulcan
wondered. Fascinating. I, its central hole began filling with
threedimensional images. The starfields slowly took shape before the
Vulcan, one after another. Spock shivered as he watched, wishing again
that he had worn his jacket.

Finally "Stop."

The projected starfield held steady.

"Eliminate all but top right quadrant."

"Magnifying specified quadrant."

"Eliminate all but lower right quadrant."

"Magnifying."

"Eliminate all but top left quadrant."

"Magnifying."

"Stop. Beta Niobe is the diffuse cloud third down and fourth over from
upper left."

The indicated stellar object began to pulse. "This one?"

"That is correct. 16.4 Terran Solar years ago that nebula was Beta
Niobe, a red giant orbited by seven planets.

Sarpeidon, located fourth from that sun, was the only moonless world."

"Acknowledged and located."

Spock hastily retrieved his tricorder, setting it to record at maximum
speed. "Initiate history of Sarpeidon."

images began swirling within the central opening. Spock watched as the
tricorder whirred, and saw, for the fourth time in the presentation,
massive ice rivers flooding the northern continent. Zar is there,
alive, on the other side of this portal, he thought, remembering his
conversation with Uberahan. Time is the true barrier between life and
death ...

Forcing his gaze away, he concentrated on monitoring his tricorder.
After a minute or so he glanced up again to see sophisticated buildings
and transportation systems, and, knowing what was coming, shut his eyes.
The searing flash that marked the end of this world came only a second
later, so bright that he could see it even through both sets of closed
eyelids.

"History of Sarpeidon concluded," the Guardian stated.

"End of request?"

"For the moment," Spock told the entity. "As soon as I complete my
analysis of requested data, I would like temporal transport. Is that
also within your programming?"

"Yes. Many such journeys are possible. Let me be your gateway," the
time portal responded, parroting its customary phrase in its new,
mechanical voice.

"Acknowledged," Spock said. Behind him he heard the faint whirr of a
transporter beam, and turned to find Commander Beranardi al Auriga's
massive, two-meter-plus form materializing beside the column. Two of
his Security people accompanied him Lieutenant-Commanders
Snnanagfashtalli, a ruby-fanged felinoid being, and Max Arrunja, a
past-middle-aged gray-haired human, with a unique talent for remaining
unnoticed-unless he wanted to be. Then Arrunja's eyes were colder than
the snows on Europa.

A formidable force, indeed, the Vulcan thought, amused.

More than enough to subdue one erring Vulcan officer.

"Commander al Auriga," Spock nodded politely at the black-skinned
Commander of Security, while slinging his tricorder over his shoulder.

"Sir," al Auriga saluted him dispassionately, his scarlet eyes carefully
expressionless, "Admiral Kirk has requested that we escort you back to
the Enterprise. If you will accompany us, sir?"

"Certainly, Commander," Spock said, and walked over to take his place in
their midst. To make such a public display, he thought with a rueful
sigh, the admiral must, indeed, be in a rare temper.

The transporter beam shimmered the air before his eyes.

"Damn it, Spock!" Kirk, pacing, confronted the seated Vulcan across the
length of the briefing room. "This is the second time you've pulled
this stunt! First Vejur, now the Guardian! I swear, if you ever sneak
off to try mind-melding with an alien intelligence again, I'm going to
boot you out the nearest airlock without a suit! We'll see if
keelhauling is possible in space! Understand?"

Spock raised an eyebrow. "Keelhauling? The term is unfamiliar to me,
Jim."

"Well, look it up in your unabridged file," Kirk snapped.

"Don't try to change the subject. I ordered you to leave the Guardian
alone!"

Spock swallowed. "I apologize, Admiral. I believed I saw a chance to
establish communications with the entity, and I took it. I was
successful," he finished, hearing a faint defensive note creep into his
voice and hoping Kirk hadn't noticed.

The admiral grimaced. "That doesn't excuse your action, Spock, and you
know it. The whole ship knows you went off without orders! How does
that make me look?"

The Vulcan said nothing, only sat waiting. Finally Kirk sighed gustily,
then sank into a seat opposite his former First Officer. "All right.
I'll court-martial you later. What did you find out?"

"I discovered that we can now utilize the Guardian.

Apparently D'berahan's attempted contact triggered a reminder of its
responsibilities in the time portal, for it has set up a secondary
'brain' to handle its temporal functions."

"How does that help us?"

"It means that, although I was unable to establish a mind-meld with the
Guardian, we now have access to someone who has done so."

Kirk looked startled. "You mean ... Zar?"

"Yes. His telepathic abilities exceeded mine considerably, though they
were overshadowed by his empathic skills.

With the vedra-prah disciplines I taught him, he may be capable of not
only contacting the Guardian, but also protecting his mind from being
overwhelmed, as D'berahan's was."

"But can we pinpoint his time precisely enough to locate him?"

Spock tapped his tricorder with a lean forefinger. "Given the
technological improvements of the past decade, this instrument was able
to record at sufficient speed to have scanned all of Sarpeidon's history
when the Guardian showed it to me. If Zar's presence 5,000 years ago
was of any historical significance, I should be able to actually see
him. Then I can calculate-"

Kirk was holding up a hand. "Wait a minute, hold that thought. I want
McCoy in on this."

Spock nodded, then sat back as the admiral talked to the doctor on the
intercom. The Vulcan began scanning the tricorder's images, searching
for his son's presence in the planet's history. Zar's painting of the
Enterprise had appeared on the wall of an ancient stronghold in the
Lakreo Valley; thus it was probable that he had gone back to become
someone of at least minor historical note ... court painter, teacher,
or perhaps a councilor to the ruler of the city called New Araen ...

Spock scarcely heard McCoy enter and Kirk's briefing of the doctor; he
was intent on the tiny screen of his tricorder.

"Well, it's a helluva time for a social call, but I'll be glad to see
Zar again, no matter what the circumstances," McCoy said, warmly. "I've
missed him."

Spock stiffened, then his forefinger stabbed hard at the pause control.
Carefully, his face an impassive mask, he backed up the battle sequence
he'd found and focused in on one figure on a small hilltop. He played
it through again -seeing the armed warrior's stained weapon rise, then
descend Watching the spray of blood, and the crumpling, lifeless body
...

"Spock?" Distantly, he heard Kirk's voice, realizing this was the second
time the admiral had called him. "Spock, what is it? Did you find
him?" Worry sharpened his friend's tone.

"Are you all right?" McCoy demanded anxiously.

The Vulcan realized he must have paled; both Kirk and McCoy were staring
at him. He cleared his throat. "Yes, I found him," he said, not quite
steadily. `Zar evidently became some kind of ruler in Sarpeidon's past.
He reigned successfully for nearly two decades, then fell in battle. I
just . . ." The Vulcan drew a deep, shaky breath. "I just watched him
die."

McCoy uttered a sound that was half-protest. "Are you sure?" He shook
his head, dazedly, and his eyes, usually a vivid blue, were faded and
old. "Stupid question ... I'm sorry, Spock, of course you're sure . He
slumped, rubbing his face wearily.

"I knew, of course, that he had died the Vulcan muttered, half to
himself. "But it was ... unsettling ... to witness." Struggling to
regain his composure, he looked back up to meet Kirk's eyes, seeing the
sympathy there, and for once not rejecting it.

But then, as Spock watched, the admiral's gaze sharpened suddenly.
"Spock!" Kirk said, urgently. "Has it occurred to you that this may be
our chance? Why couldn't we go back in time and yank him out of that
battle just before that final moment? If Zar died anyway, then there
would be no reason he couldn't just come back with us and finish out his
life here, right?"

"it is possible," the Vulcan admitted, feeling hope stir within him. "I
would have to study the ramifications of his death on the time-stream to
determine whether it could be done. Also, we cannot simply 'yank' him
out of his time without his permission. That would not be ethical."

"So, we just go back in time to a couple of days before the battle!"
McCoy's eyes lit up with excitement. "And we ask him! We'll explain
that he's done his duty to history, and now he's free. He didn't really
want to go back, remember?"

"Yes," Spock said. "But it would be best if I went back alone. Anyone
using the Guardian in its present condition will be running a
considerable risk."

"No way!" McCoy protested. "I'm going!"

"So am I,- Kirk said, grimly. "And don't tell me about risks. We're in
terrible danger just being in this system. The three of us will
probably be much safer in Sarpeidon's past."

Spock's eyebrow went up. "In the middle of a war?"

"Compared to the way the Guardian's time waves could blink us out of
existence like that," McCoy snapped his capable surgeon's fingers, then
deliberately broadened his Southern accent, "why, shucks, a little
native fracas on Sarpeidon sounds downright friendly by comparison,
doesn't it, Jimmy?"

Kirk rolled his eyes at the doctor, then sobered. "Seriously, this
mission is too important to take the chance of sending someone in solo
... and the three of us have been there before. We know Zar. We have
the best chance of convincing him to help us."

"But, Admiral," Scotty protested, "I knew th'laddie, too.

He'd listen to me."

"I'll volunteer to go, too, sir," Uhura said.

"So will I," Sulu put in.

"There's no need for you and th' doctor and Mr. Spock t'risk
yourselves," the Chief Engineer said.

Kirk sighed. "I appreciate your offer, Scotty, but you can't be spared
here. If those time waves resume, you're the only one who can get the
Enterprise out of here. Ditto for you, Hikaru. It was hard enough
getting in, remember?"

Privately, Kirk was also thinking that the Chief Engineer was getting
along in years, and that Sarpeidon was a cold, higher-than-Earth-gee
planet, with some very unfriendly natives.

"But out here you don't need communications, Admiral," Uhura said in her
most persuasive tones. "So I can be spared. Lieutenant-Commander Riley
and I could accompany Mr. Spock."

I wonder why she, of all my officers, automatically accepts Spock's
presence as a given, Kirk thought, glancing at his communications
officer. Does she know? How could she?

The admiral considered for a moment. The idea was tempting ... but of
all of them, Bones had had the best relationship with Zar, and he wasn't
about to send the doctor anywhere he wasn't willing to go himself.

And, let's befrank, Jim, he admitted to himself, it's been too long
since you've set your feet on alien soil. You've been pining for a
chance to do fieldwork.

"Thank you, Nyota, but no," he said. "I've got a hunch about this one."

"We all know about your hunches, sir," she said, nodding. "Good luck,
then, Admiral."

The rest of that "day" went by in a blur as the three officers prepared
for their venture, studying the available data on Sarpeidon's history,
then trying on the native clothing the computer produced-"hide"
breeches, homespun "woolen" tunics and jerkins, knee-high "leather"
moccasins, rough-knit caps and hooded "fur" cloaks. ("I'm getting a
rash already," McCoy mumbled darkly, trying to scratch discreetly.
"Can't I even keep my damn synthetic skivvies, for heaven's sake?"

"Oh, go ahead," Kirk told him, disgustedly. "It's a good thing you're a
doctor, not an actor.

You'd never have made it in costume drama.")

While the admiral gave Scotty his final instructions, Spock finished his
calculations for their jump into the past.

Finally, dressed as poor herdsmen, weaponless save for belt knives, the
three officers assembled in the transporter room, and Scotty beamed them
back down to Gateway's surface.

McCoy checked the medikit he wore strapped against his body, then the
miniature tricorder in his belt pouch. He shivered as the wind poked
chilly fingers beneath his cloak. I hate this place. Always have. Ever
since thatfirst time, when I was so high, so crazy, thinking myfriends
were trying to kill me. Theirfaces kept shifting and dripping ...
running like candlewax ... horrible ... Resolutely, the doctor forced
his attention back to the present. Concentrate on not screwing up this
mission, Leonard. Too much depends on it, remember?

The doctor watched as Spock strode over to the Guardian. "This is
Spock," he said. "If we make use of your temporal displacement
abilities, will you perform standard monitoring and subject-volitional
return programming?"

"All programming will be executed correctly," the portal replied, after
a pause.

"Acknowledged. Implement temporal displacement sequence. History of
the planet Sarpeidon."

"Acknowledged," said the Guardian tonelessly. Its central portion
filled with a hellish view of a newborn planet, molten and turbulent.
Even as they watched, it began visibly cooling.

"What happened to its voice?" McCoy asked. "It used to sound like a
tour guide I once had on Altair VI, but now . . ." He cast a worried
glance at Kirk. "This thing isn't firin' on all thrusters, Jim."

The admiral Shrugged. "We don't have a lot of choice, do we, Bones?"

Spock never took his eyes off his tricorder. "The Guardian has
activated what it refers to as a 'secondary intelligence peripheral' to
handle its primary temporal functions, Doctor."

"I'm so glad I asked."

"Be ready," Spock said, watching the tricorder and ignoring McCoy. "Only
a few thousand years to go."

"The mere wink of an eye," McCoy muttered under his breath.

The three officers gathered closer, shoulders almost touching. McCoy
crouched, ready for the leap, feeling the adrenaline course through his
body, making him tremble.

"On my count of three," came Spock's voice, on his left.

"One. Two . . ."

Time hung suspended.

"Three!"

McCoy jumped (whitestars on black, blackstars on white, his body
expanding to infinity and contracting to a single atom at one and the
same moment) -and found himself falling nearly a meter to the ground.

Rain spattered him. He landed in black mud with a huge,
one-and-a-half-gee splat, knocking his wind out. Icy water needled his
hair (his cap had fallen off) and ran down his face as he gasped like a
landed fish. He could see little beyond the end of his nose-only
patches of mossy aqua ground cover, torn and trampled into the inky
muck.

Finally, after long seconds of struggle, the doctor was able to force
air back into his straining lungs. It seemed to him that nothing would
ever feel so good again as that first sweet gulp of oxygen. He levered
himself up onto his arms, spat filth, and blinked, trying to see ...

Feet.

A circle of feet and legs surrounded him. The feet wore tall hide
moccasins like his own, plus a thick coating of the ubiquitous mud.

A brutal hand seized his shoulder and rolled him onto his back. McCoy
blinked rain out of his eyes and squinted upward. Overhead was an
aqua-tinged sky filled with swollen-bellied purple clouds, and
silhouetted against them, nearly a score of bearded, scowling faces. The
men staring at him were dressed much as he was, except that they also
wore helmets and armor of layered leather reinforced with crude bronze
scales. "What the hell . . ." the doctor muttered. He tried to sit
up.

Immediately, all of the warriors raised wickedly barbed lances with
unmistakable menace. The medical officer let himself sink back onto the
soaked ground. "Okay, I get your point," he said, lying perfectly
still.

He heard a groan from somewhere to his right. "Damn it, Bones, we're in
enough trouble without you making bad puns!"

"Jim! Are you okay?"

"Just muddy and bruised. And surrounded. Where's Spock?"

"I don't know."

"I am undamaged," came the Vulcan's voice. It seemed to be emanating
from the doctor's left, but his view was blocked by the tribesmen.

"Did we make it?" asked Kirk. "Is this Sarpeidon?"

"I believe so, Admiral," Spock said. "The ground cove r appears to be
the correct color."

"Then who are these people?"

"Unknown."

Two of the tribesmen guarding McCoy jabbered at each other. The doctor
expected the universal translator imbedded in his arm to translate, and
was surprised when it didn't. Why isn't it working? he wondered. Then
the light dawned. Of course. The U. T."s hooked into the Enterprise's
computer-parsecs away in space, and nearly 5, 000 years in thefuture.
Damn.

One of the men pointed at McCoy, gesturing him to get up. Every muscle
protesting, I'm getting too oldfor this stuff, the doctor obeyed. He
could see Kirk and Spock now, their caps still in place, each surrounded
by a group similar to his own.

They were standing on a small sloping plain enclosed on all sides by
foothills. Beyond their forested slopes, a whitecrowned mountain
towered ragged and rocky against the lowering sky. No sign of the sun,
McCoy thought, but the light does seem to be on the reddish side, which
would be right for Beta Niobe. The unfamiliar scents of woodsmoke,
animals, and crowded, unwashed people made the doctor wish for nose
filters.

The smells came from some kind of camp-hide tents squatted around them
like malevolent ochre mushrooms, and there were animals on tether lines.
The dun-colored creatures resembled Terran moose, but their heads were
more like those of an elk, slender-horned and graceful. They had
bristly manes and short, bushy tails.

"This is a war camp," Kirk called. "An invasionary force, if I'm not
mistaken."

"Great," McCoy said. "Just where we wanted to end up."

The tribesmen gabbled among themselves for another moment, then one of
them (evidently an officer by his more elaborately scaled bronze
breastplate and helmet) -left the group.

McCoy essayed his best "let's be friends" smile at the warrior nearest
him. "Hello," he said. "Terrible weather you're having, isn't it?"

The man he addressed scowled, spat out words that sounded like
"dioti-gick'nuf," then pointedly looked away.

"So much for that," muttered the doctor. Even if the words were
incomprehensible, it didn't take a genius to realize that they weren't
an endearment.

All the warriors turned at a hail, and then, in response to another
shout, they roughly pushed the three Starfleet officers together, until
they stood within a large circle of armed men.

"I knew I should've brought my phaser," McCoy muttered, to nobody in
particular.

"The presence of phasers when contacting a nontechnological society is
in direct opposition to the Prime Directive, Doctor," Spock said. "You
are fully aware of that."

"Tell it to my corpse," the doctor snapped.

"Knock it off, Bones."

The bronze-armored officer was approaching them again, accompanied now
by a shorter, cloaked and hooded figure.

The circle of tribesmen parted to let them through. Finally, they stood
before the three Federation officers.

McCoy found himself facing the cloaked person, who was nearly on his eye
level. It was only when she raised roughened hands to push back her
hood that he realized the newcomer was a woman.

A beaten gold coronal studded with cabochon rubies held her thick,
bronze-colored hair off her forehead, and the doctor glimpsed a matching
necklet at her throat. Some kind of ruler, obviously. He bowed
slightly, and Kirk and Spock echoed him.

She stood studying the three of them for nearly a minute, her eyes
penetrating and chilly. They were unusual eyes, the clearest, palest
green the doctor had ever encountered, and her lashes were thick and
dark.

The remainder of her face was arresting, but hardly beautiful. Her
mouth was too large, her jaw too square and heavy, and her skin, though
naturally fair, had been darkened by exposure, until the freckles across
her cheeks and nose barely showed. Her front teeth were slightly
crooked.

She was perhaps in her mid-twenties ... not young, as non-technological
peoples reckoned youth. But hardship and responsibility, not age, had
graven the lines around her mouth and eyes.

When she concluded her appraisal of the three prisoners, she spoke to
them in the language of the tribesmen. McCoy shook his head and
shrugged eloquently.

Kirk bowed again and spoke aloud. "I'm sorry, I'm afraid we don't speak
your language."

The woman turned to the officer escorting her and addressed him. He
nodded, then she turned back and spoke in slightly accented Standard
English "I am Wynn, High Priestess of the Danreg. How did you come
here? Who are you?"

Kirk, though obviously surprised, recovered quickly. "I am James T.
Kirk, your Highness, and these are my friends, Leonard McCoy" -the
doctor bowed--and Mr. Spock."

The Vulcan inclined his head as he saluted the woman in the ceremonial
fashion of his people.

"We came here from a faraway place," Kirk continued cautiously.

"Kirk ... Spock ... McCoy. Strange names. And you speak the tongue
of our enemies." Wynn's eyes were cold.

"Commander Madon told me and my father that you dropped into our midst
from the sky. Is that true?"

"Uh . . ." Kirk hesitated. McCoy knew that he was weighing the pros
and cons of telling the truth. Don't do it, Jim, he wanted to say. In
a culture this primitive, they'll think you're talking about witchcraft,
and Id rather be hanged as a spy than burned as a sorcerer. "Your
Highness," Kirk said, finally, "I can't tell you how we got here,
because I really do not understand it myself."

She eyed him measuringly. "Your ... words ... are true, but the
spirit behind them is a lie, Kirk. I do not like being summoned out of
a war council with our allies only to listen to lies."

McCoy didn't miss the admiral's tiny start of surprise -and neither did
Wynn. "You are wise, your Highness," Kirk said, trying to recover,
turning his most charming smile on the High Priestess. "I wish I could
tell you everything, but that is impossible. But we are not enemies, I
assure you. We will not harm you or your people."

She also smiled, but not pleasantly. "Of that I have no doubt, Kirk.
From this moment on, you will not be free to do us any harm. Tomorrow,
before I pronounce the battle oracle, I will give you one more chance to
tell me the truth, and if you do not, then you will find yourself
speaking to the Goddess Ashmara, and She will tell me what I must know
about you. I warn you, She does not like liars, and there is no
falsehood or equivocation allowed on the Other Side."

Turning away, she snapped out an order to Commander Madon, and the three
officers were quickly and thoroughly trussed hand and foot. One tug at
his bonds was enough to convince McCoy that he was going to stay tied
until someone saw fit to release him-or until Beta Niobe went nova,
whichever came first.

Then they were dragged over to several unoccupied hitching posts near
the largest of the tents and tethered to them. The tribesmen had
removed their knives (with much exclamation and wrangling over
possession of the steel blades) but, beyond a cursory search for
concealed weapons, they had not been harmed. McCoy and Spock still had
their tricorders in their belt pouches, and the Danreg had not
discovered the doctor's medikit.

As soon as their captors left, McCoy slumped down, huddling under his
cloak as much as possible, trying to escape the rain. "Thou wert better
in a grave than to answer with thy uncovered body this extremity of the
skies," he growled.

"King Lear, Act Three, scene four," Spock responded automatically, but
his heart obviously wasn't in the game.

"We're all going to drown, damn it. Whose bright idea was this,
anyway?" McCoy complained, hoping someone would rise to the bait.

"Yours," Kirk said, but there was no amusement in his tone. He rubbed
water off his nose on the shoulder of his cloak, then sneezed. "Damn."

The hours crept by as the three Starfleet officers tried to conserve
their energy, to rest, to keep the bone-gnawing damp from sapping their
strength. They were tied too far apart to reach each other; they could
share no physical warmth. They talked a little, at first, but
conversation soon lagged. Their captors ignored them, except for one
time when Commander Madon and two heavyset guards took each of them for
a visit to the midden.

They were neither fed, nor given any water.

"You think they just don't care, or that this is designed to break us
down, Jim?" McCoy asked, as night darkened around them. With the
setting of the sun, chill gusts of wind had sprung up, lashing the rain
before them. The only light came from the sullen torches and protected
campfires.

"Break us down," Kirk said. "Wynn wants the truth about what we're
doing here. I don't blame her, I'd want to know myself." He stretched,
trying to relieve cramped muscles across his back.

"What do you think she meant, that if we didn't talk, tomorrow we could
tell it to her Goddess on the Other Side?" McCoy asked uneasily.

"It seems likely that she meant we would be executed ...

or, possibly, sacrificed in some ritual, Doctor."

McCoy swallowed. "Great."

"I wonder how far away from New Araen we are?" Kirk said, breaking into
the bleak silence that had fallen.

"It is unfortunate that we cannot reach our tricorders," Spock said. "By
scanning the surrounding area, I could determine the location of the
nearest population center.

That should be New Araen."

"Don't count on it," McCoy growled. "Remember how messed up the
Guardian was. It could have dropped us anywhere-not to mention
anywhen."

"Let's hope you're wrong, Bones," Kirk said. "Spock, was there any
mention of the Danreg in the Atoz library records?" He raised his head
just long enough to speak, then immediately burrowed his reddened nose
back into the warmth of his cloak.

"Just of one Heldeon of Danreg Ford, apparently one of the legendary
warrior-rulers."

"Did it say where these Danreg were camped, in relation to New Araen?"

"No. It mentioned only that the forces of four great leaders met in
battle on Moorgate Plain at the foot of a mountain called Big Snowy
Heldeon of Danreg Ford, Laol the War Queen of Clan Kerren, Rorgan
Death-Hand of the Asyri, and the Sovren of the Lakreo Valley. The
records are understandably vague and overwritten with legend. It is as
though you attempted to piece together a factual history of the Trojan
Wars by reading Homer-only the details that constituted 'high drama' are
mentioned, and there is considerable doubt as to their accuracy."

"If we don't get out of this damned camp, the whole question of where we
are is gonna prove moot," McCoy pointed out. "And if we delay our
escape much longer, we'll all be too chilled to move even if the
opportunity comes up.

The natives may be acclimated to this cold, but we're not."

"You are correct, Doctor. I have been using biofeedback techniques for
the past hour to ward off hypothermia, but I cannot do so indefinitely
... especially if the temperature drops below freezing."

"So what's the plan?" McCoy asked.

Kirk thought for a long moment. "If we make enough noise to attract
Wynn's attention, maybe we can get her to talk with us again. If so, I
guarantee I'll tell her something that will at least keep her interested
enough in us to make her give us some food and shelter."

"What are you going to say to her, Jim?" McCoy grinned suddenly. "Don't
tell me ... you're going to point to the stars in the sky and say we
fell from the biggest one-and then you'll gaze deep into her eyes, and
soon all our troubles will be over, right?"

Kirk's response was short and to the point.

McCoy's eyebrow went up. "That's anatomically impossible, you know,
Jim. Anyway, can't you take a joke?"

"Not when I'm this cold and hungry," the admiral retorted, but, after a
moment, his expression softened.

"Sorry, Bones. At least getting mad got my blood moving again. I'll
think up a good story while we wait for the camp to fall asleep. If we
start hollering now, Commander Madon will just gag us."

"It's a good thing we're tied up beside what appears to be the VIP
tent," McCoy said. "With all three of us yelling, she'll be sure to
hear us."

"Looks like some of the troops are bedding down," Kirk observed. "Let's
hope it won't be too much longer."

"Yeah, and as long as we're hoping, let's hope that Wynn doesn't decide
to just cut her losses and have Madon slit our throats," McCoy punned,
gloomily. "In a culture like this, life isn't just cheap, it's
practically worthless."

"We've got to chance it, Bones, since the alternative is to stay tied up
here and die of exposure."

"You're right," the doctor sighed. "It's a safe bet we can't survive a
night in the open."

Kirk sneezed explosively. "Damn! I wish that once, just once, I could
command a mission where everything goes perfectly. Everything. The
transporter functions without a hitch . . ."

"Amen," intedected McCoy.

". . . both the warp drive and the impulse engines stay on-line for
the duration ... nobody from Security suffers so much as a hangnail . .
." Kirk's voice grew stronger as he warmed to his subject, ". . . and
the ship's computer doesn't even hiccup. Not to mention avoiding
power-mad tyrants, megalomanic computers, tribbles, or, God forbid,
Harry Mudd!" He took a deep breath, only to have it turn into another
sneeze. "Just once, is that too much to ask?"

"Jim," Spock said, into the ensuing silence, "there have been a number
of such missions since we have served together. The time we were
dispatched to contact the wave-dancers of Bellatrix V, for example. The
incident with the Giant Rat of Tamuras. The deathday celebration for
the Arch-Duchess sa'Gliszppkk of Rurnon Alpha 111. The investiture of
the Neo-Pope of Ecatholos, which resulted in the peace treaty between
the Ecatholans and the phlyrinigi of-"

"Okay, Spock, I concede your point," the admiral broke in, evidently
realizing that the Vulcan would no doubt go on cataloguing successful
missions ad infinitum. "There have been some ... I just wish that this
could be one of them."

He coughed, then the doctor heard him mutter in a plaintive undertone,
"So much for the adventure of fieldwork . . ."

McCoy peered at the lines of rain visible against the light of the
closest campfire. "Rain's turning to snow," he observed.

"I'm not surprised," Kirk grumbled. He sniffied again, then added
plaintively, "And to top it all off, I think I'm catching a cold."

"BONES... fiSSSSST! BONES!"

Sleep... and warmth. They were the only important things. The urgent
whisper was not. Leonard McCoy buried himself in the warmth, refusing
to hear.

"Damn it, Bones! Wake up, that's an order!"

"Doctor McCoy! Wake up!"

Despite his wishes, the warmth began to fade. McCoy turned over,
seeking it, then gasped when a clump of wet snow slid off the edge of
his cloak and onto his face.

Wmmmph! Huh?"

"Bones, sit up! This minute, understand?"

Groggily, the doctor shook the wet slush off his nose and mouth, then
levered himself up. "I'm up," he mumbled, unhappily. "Wha's
happening?"

"You nearly froze to death, that's what happened. Move your arms! Stamp
your feet!"

"Breathe deeply, in and out," Spock admonished. "Do not lie down
again."

Clumsily, the doctor tried to obey. As his brain began functioning
again, he was frightened to realize how close he'd come to freezing to
death. "How long was I asleep?"

"I don't know," Kirk said, grimly. "I dozed off, too. If it hadn't
been for Spock, we'd have been a pair of ice cream bars by morning. You
all right, Bones?"

Chapter Six

"Better. Is it time?"

"We can't afford to wait. Yell as loud as you can," Kirk instructed,
then bellowed, "Lady Wynn! I have to talk to you!"

"High Priestess Wynn, we must speak to you!"

"Your Highness, hey!" McCoy's lips pulled back from his teeth and a
piercing wolf whistle blasted the sleety air. He grinned, irrationally
pleased to find he could still do that ... it must've been forty years
since he'd had the occasion (or the immaturity) to whistle at a woman.

"Bones!"

"Jim, she's not gonna know what that means back on Earth!"

"Don't count on it. Just yell."

"Wynn! Lady Wynn!"

Before the doctor could draw another breath, they were surrounded by
grim sentries. Commander Madon, carrying a torch, joined them a second
later. "You!" He aimed a kick at Spock, who was nearest. "What you
do?"

"I want to speak to her Highness," Kirk babbled. "I'm so cold, I can't
stand it anymore! I'll tell her the truth, please!

Just give me some food, and a blanket!"

The painted hide curtaining the opening of the largest tent opened and
Wynn, her cloak pulled around her, emerged. Behind her was a massive,
aging man with a shock of faded red hair and a bristling beard and
moustache.

Heldeon, the doctor guessed.

"What is all this noise?" the High Priestess demanded, in English.

Commander Madon bowed, then jammed his hissing torch into a bracket. He
jerked a thumb at the prisoners in silent explanation.

"We're gonna freeze to death out here!" Kirk nearly sobbed, "And I'm so
hungry! Please, I'll tell you the truth!"

His portrayal of a broken man was perfect. McCoy had to smother an
admiring grin.

Wynn wasn't taken in easily. She glared suspiciously at the admiral.
"So I should bring you to shelter and give you food, just to listen to
more lies, is that it?"

"No, no, no lies, I swear by the Goddess! We're spies, all right. But
please," his teeth chattered audibly, "I'm so cold I can't think, your
Highness- Kirk broke off as a clamor of shouting reached them from the
left side of the camp. Even as they all turned to look, two distant
tents burst into flames. Commander Madon beckoned to the sentries, all
but two of them, and he and the main group took off toward the
disturbance, swords drawn.

Wynn and Heldeon shouted something (probably "Fire!"

McCoy thought), and more troops began staggering out of their tents,
buckling on weapons as they ran, bare-chested and barefoot, into the
night.

"Kirk? Are you responsible for this?" Wynn was furious.

"How could I be?" Kirk retorted, indignantly. "I was tied up here,
under guard!"

Heldeon muttered something to his daughter, and she whispered back. Then
the High Priestess demanded, "Who are you working for? The truth, or my
father swears he'll send you to the Goddess right now!"

The admiral hesitated for a moment, then, with the air of a man speaking
against his will, continued, "Rorgan DeathHand sent us, but I don't know
anything about this-"

"Quiet!" Wynn interrupted, listening.

After several moments, McCoy heard it, too. A rhythmic dull pounding .
. . and it was growing louder.

What is that? wondered the doctor. It sounds vaguely familiar ...

The thud of racing hoofbeats suddenly filled the night. As the High
Priestess and her father turned to run, a group of riders mounted on the
homed creatures galloped into the camp from McCoy's right-the opposite
side from the burning tents. They made no outcry as their mounts
skidded to a halt in the icy mud, surrounding Wynn and Heldeon, cutting
off any escape.

Heldeon stopped, howling with rage, and drew his sword.

Wynn shouted, dragging her father away from the foremost rider, just as
the two sentries attacked. McCoy saw the lead rider's arm move, heard
the 1hunk of a blade as it bit deep into living flesh. The sentry fell,
shrieking, sounds of such agony that the doctor fought his bonds again,
trying without success to break free so he could tend the man. The
rider's mount dealt with the second sentry, swinging its homed head,
sending the man flying through the air, to land unmoving.

Heldeon slipped in the slush, then struggled to get up, roaring orders
at his distant warriors. The High Priestess dropped to her knees,
reached beneath the wounded man, and came up with his sword. As McCoy
watched (where in hell did these guys come from?), she dragged her cloak
off, wrapping it hastily around her left forearm, to use as a crude
shield. She dropped into a half-crouch, the blade weaving expertly
before her. In the flickering torchlight she looked like a drowned
wraith in her damp white shift, her long hair spilling down her back.

McCoy heard the yells of the warriors, and knew the tribesmen were
finally aroused to their chieftain I s danger.

The lead rider glanced at the oncoming horde, and his mount skittered,
leaving his left leg unguarded for a critical second. Wynn's backhanded
sword-slash was smooth, economical, and only the battle-trained mount's
reactions saved its rider.

But even as the High Priestess moved, a loop of rope flicked out from
one of the other riders, dropping over her head. She flailed wildly,
trying to bat it aside, but it jerked tight over her shoulders, pulling
her off her feet.

Heldeon lunged to help her, but another noose pulled him down.

In a moment the lead rider had dismounted and bent over Wynn, binding
her arms to her sides, then he threw her thrashing body across the
saddle of his now-kneeling beast.

He pointed at the three prisoners. "Bring the spies, too!"

Before McCoy could do more than blink, one of the riders swooped down on
him and severed the rope tethering him to the post. The man caught the
free end, dragged the doctor over to his mount, then, one-handed, he
grabbed the back of McCoy's jerkin and hauled him up across the animal's
withers. The beast surged forward with a leap, sending the doctor's
breath whooshing from his lungs as they went galloping into the
darkness.

McCoy was terrified. He lay head-down, his face grinding into the
straining shoulder of the mount. His hands were still bound behind him,
and the only thing holding him on was the angle of his body and the
rider's one-handed grip on his belt. The racing animal twisted and
turned to avoid boulders and trees, but bushes whipped the doctor's head
and legs. McCoy froze; if he struggled, his captor might loosen his
hold, sending the doctor crashing, face-down, onto the rocky ground.

Finally the nightmare race slowed gradually, until the beast was
cantering, then trotting. With every stride, its bony withers jabbed
the doctor's midsection. McCoy's abused stomach protested, but it was
too empty and too constricted to rid itself of its scanty contents. He
could only gag and retch dryly.

That broke his captor's silence. "Puke on my leg and I swear that I'll
drop you off this cliff, spy." The only plea for mercy the doctor could
muster emerged as a groan, but moments later the man slowed his panting
beast to a walk.

Did they bring Jim and Spock? McCoy wondered, dully.

Will I ever see them again? He tried to raise his face to look around
him, but his head whirled so badly that he dropped it back against the
animal's sweaty shoulder.

The ride went on, until it seemed to McCoy that they had been fiding
forever, and would continue riding until the end of time. He slipped in
and out of consciousness, but there was never any relief from his
discomfort.

Most of the time they were descending, because the man had to hold him
across the saddlebow to keep him from sliding down his mount's neck.
Dear God, let this be over,
thedoctorprayed.Idon'lcarehowjusiletitendplease. .

Finally, the doctor roused again from his stupor, only to realize they
had stopped. He opened his eyes to see the gray light of predawn, and
tried to raise his head, look around him, but his muscles refused to
obey. After a moment, the rider slung him down-fortunately, not
head-first-onto a hard surface. McCoy collapsed immediately, almost
beneath the hooves of the horned beast, but he could not move, not even
when one of its feet brushed his shoulder.

"Steady, there," came the voice of his captor, soothing his nervous
mount. The creature moved away, then the doctor was half-lifted, and
after a second, his arms swung free and his legs were no longer bound.
They buckled immediately, and with a curse, the man pulled the doctor's
limp arm over his shoulder and began dragging him.

McCoy glanced groggily around him, and glimpsed a stone-walled
courtyard. Beyond its walls rose a short tower that was part of a two-
or three-story stone fortress. His captor hauled the doctor through a
massive, barred door.

Yellow light and black darkness came in blurred flashes, and finally
McCoy realized they were traveling through a torchlit corridor. His
captor cursed again beneath the doctor's dead weight, then, as they
reached a stairway, he halted, easily boosted his prisoner over his
shoulder, and started down.

A wave of dank, smelly air engulfed them. McCoy retched again at the
odor of open privies and sweat-rancid bodies, fighting to stay
conscious. He felt his captor stop, heard a muttered exchange he
couldn't catch, then a grating noise.

The man began moving again, but halted in a few strides and lowered the
doctor onto a slightly yielding surface.

Hands fumbled at his foot, and he heard something clink, then click. His
ankle felt suddenly heavy.

"Here, you'd better fetch him a blanket," his captor said.

"The Second wants to question all of them when they come around. We
don't want this one dying on us."

"Right," came a different voice, and a moment later something rough but
warm settled over the doctor's body.

He made a desperate effort.

"Jim?" he whispered, pawing feebly at the man's arm.

"Spock?"

"What's he want?" the man demanded of McCoy's captor.

"No idea. He kept mumbling that all the way down the mountain. Probably
praying ... he's sure in enough trouble to need all the help he can
get."

"You're right about that." Both men turned away and the doctor heard
their footsteps. Don't go! he wanted to scream, but could only manage
a moan. "I wouldn't want to be wearing their helmets. Cletas doesn't
deal soft with enemy spies."

The door slammed behind them, and McCoy discovered that he could fight
the encroaching darkness no longer ...

The doctor awoke to the sound of gentle snoring, and to a body so
bruised and stiff that just sitting up on his pallet was raw agony. He
saw sunlight streaming in through a narrow, barred window near the
ceiling of the cell-for cell it was, stone-walled, with a huge, timbered
door inset with a barred opening. His leg was shackled to the wall with
a long iron chain.

There were two other narrow pallets with humped shapes in them, and from
one of those recumbent forms the somnolent buzzing sounds emanated.
Despite his pain, McCoy grinned with relief-, he recognized those
snores.

"Jim!"

The noises ceased abruptly and a tousled head appeared from beneath the
blanket. "Bones . . ." Kirk croaked, "is that you?"

"You look just about as terrible as I feel. Is that Spock over there?"

"Affirmative, Doctor McCoy," said the Vulcan. He emerged also. He was
the only one of them who had not lost his cap.

Carefully, not troubling to repress his groans, the doctor managed to
swing his legs over the side of his pallet. "I thought I'd never see
you two again. Are you all right?"

"Even my hair hurts," Kirk said, also sitting up, "but I guess I'll
live." He straightened his back with a hiss of pain.

"I just won't be happy about it for awhile. Spock ... you okay?"

"I am bruised and stiff from such an unorthodox means of transportation,
but otherwise undamaged," the Vulcan allowed, cautiously stretching the
kinks out of his lanky frame.

.,Here," the doctor said, fumbling beneath his jerkin, "I've still got
my medical kit. These should help." He held out two pills, while
popping the third into his own mouth.

Spock took his with a raised eyebrow, but swallowed it meekly enough.

"How do you feel, Jim? Feverish? Do you need something for that cold?"

Kirk took a deep, experimental breath, then looked surprised. "I guess
I was wrong about getting one. I'm all right. Maybe the snow last
night froze all the germs."

Spock raised an eyebrow at him. "Admiral, that speculation is totally-"

Kirk grimaced. "Spare me the scientific lecture, Spock.

Say, is there any water in here? I'm so thirsty!"

The three officers found a bucket of cold water near the door. After
each had drunk his fill, they used the remaining liquid to sluice their
faces and hands. By then the painkiller had taken effect, and they were
moving almost normally.

"The question is," Kirk paced, dragging his chain, "where are we? In
the fire, as opposed to the frying pan?"

"How the hell should I know?" McCoy snapped peevishly, trying to knead a
cramp out of his calf. "For God's sake, sit down, Jim! You look like
Marley's ghost, dragging that thing!"

"Ah." Spock looked up from his tricorder. "Dickens. A Christmas
Carol."

Just then the bolts on their cell door skreeked back, and a stocky
little man with greasy hair entered. From the keys hanging from his
belt, McCoy guessed he was their jailer.

He was accompanied by two armed guards, and carried bowls on a tray,
plus a fresh bucket of water. At his gesture, one of the guards dumped
the remains of the first bucket down the midden hole. "So everyone's
awake, now," he said, eyeing them. "Lookin' a little livelier than you
was, all right. Eat up, now."

He passed out spoons and bowls of warm porridge, each accompanied by a
twist of dried meat jerky. Spock gravely handed his meat over to the
admiral, who divided it bet ween himself and the doctor. In return, they
both spooned some of their porridge into the Vulcan's dish. The jailer
and his guards watched as they ate.

McCoy tasted the brownish stuff tentatively, expecting to find it
repulsive, but, though coarsely ground, it was good, with a sweetish,
nutty flavor. He scooped it into his mouth eagerly, scraping the last
out of the bowl with regret.

When they were finished, the jailer collected the bowls and spoons.
"Thank you, Sir," Spock said. "May I ask whether we have reached New
Araen?"

"I'm under orders to tell you nothin'," the little man said, brusquely.
"The Second will be down to talk with you himself. Though," he grinned
and winked at them jovially, "it's my guess he'll have you
answerin'questions 'stead of askin "em!"

"Great," muttered McCoy as the door banged shut behind them. "We get a
comedian for a warden. Who is this Second?"

"No idea," Kirk said. "But at least these people speak English. And
they fed us." He began gnawing on his jerky.

"Yes, they did," Spock said. "I have noted a number of significant
facts since we awoke. First, my tricorder readings indicate this to be
a sizable population center. Secondly, the condition of this cell
while damp, it does seem to have been designed with some regard for its
occupants' comfort. The window provides adequate ventilation. The
blankets -rough, but uninfested. The food-plain, but edible. The edges
of these shackles have been filed smooth so as to avoid abrading the
skin of the wearer. And- "So?" McCoy broke in. "We can nominate this
place for our list of top-ten favorite jails. Heaven knows we've been
thrown in enough of them to be connoisseurs. What's your point, Spock?"

"That this dungeon seems to be run along rather ...

enlightened . . . lines, in comparison to its time." The Vulcan
thoughtfully fingered the links of his chain. "Thirdly, this is made
from wrought iron, a substance requiring higher technological
advancement than the bronze weapons and armor we witnessed in Heldeores
camp."

"Conclusion we've reached New Araen," Kirk said. "I think so, too."

"I don't care whether this is New Araen or the Emerald City, sitting
here on our butts isn't doing anyone a helluva lot of good," McCoy
protested. -Zar's battle could be today!

We can't just do nothing, we've gotta break out!"

"I calculated our jump to bring us here several days before that
conflict, Doctor."

"Yeah, but don't forget you calculated our last visit to Sarpeidon so
we'd find a cute little pointy-eared tyke!"

"I concede your point, but nevertheless, I do not feel that an escape
would be our most logical course of action at this time," Spock said,
leaning back against the wall and arranging his blanket over his legs.
"I believe we should wait until someone in higher authority turns up and
make our case at that time. If it then proves necessary, I can always
rewire my tricorder to disintegrate the cell door bolt, but doing so
would render it useless for sensoring, and we may need it."

"I agree with Spock," Kirk said. "We all took a beating yesterday. We
can use this chance to get our strength back.

Let's wait a couple of hours and see what happens."

McCoy shrugged. "You're the boss." Idly he took out his medical
tricorder and amused himself taking readings of the life forms within
range. "This is strange," he said, presently.

"What?" asked Kirk.

"This is the first opportunity I've had to get readings from the natives
of Sarpeidon-Zar didn't count, of course, because of his mixed
parentage-and my tricorder shows that these people probably did not
evolve on this world.

There's little correlation between their basic body chemistry and that
of their animals-at least from an evolutionary standpoint."

"Fascinating." Spock looked up. "That observation ties in with an
anomaly which puzzled me from the beginning.

My studies of Sarpeidon's ecology showed that it has no animals
analogous to primates at all. I had speculated that perhaps all the
missing primate-analogues had become extinct due to some disease, but if
the sentient life forms were transplanted here from someplace else, that
would explain this lack."

"Transplanted? From where?"

"I don't know, Jim." McCoy scanned the readings again.

"Not Earth. Their makeup is closer to Rigellian, closer still to
Vulcan. No wonder they're so strong."

Kirk looked doubtful. "Vulcan? But what about their . . ." He tapped
his ear.

"This world is much colder than Vulcan, Jim. If what Dr. McCoy
speculates is true, then the transplanters would know that the Vulcan
ear, evolved to cup sound waves in a thin, desert atmosphere, would not
prove a survival characteristic here. They made suitable alterations in
the basic genetic material."

"They' who?"

Spock shook his head. "Impossible to say. We know that there were a
number of now-vanished races that 'seeded' intelligent life throughout
the explored portion of the galaxy. The Preservers and Sargon's people,
to name two."

"Then if your people and the Sarpeids came from the same genetic stock,
that would explain why you and Zarabeth could, uh . . ." Kirk's voice
trailed off as he searched for words.

The admiral was rescued by the sound of the cell door bolt. The three
officers hastily climbed to their feet as the door opened, this time
admitting a middle-aged man of medium height who wore a chain-mail
shirt, but whose head was bare, revealing a shock of graying brown hair.
He was heavily tanned, and his eyes were blue. At least, McCoy assumed
both eyes were blue ... his right eye was swollen nearly shut and
sported a magnificent shiner. His lower lip was split and puffy.

He was unarmed except for a dagger, but the two guards A

flanking him made up for it. They fairly bristled with steel weapons
... swords, halberds, and knives.

What Jim wouldn't give to have some of those beauties to hang on his
wall back home, McCoy thought, wryly.

"I am Second-in-War Cletas," the officer said. "Who are you?"

"Before we answer that," Kirk said, "where are we?"

"This is the trade city of New Araen," the man answered, scornfully
amused. "Don't pretend you don't know that."

Kirk grinned at his companions. "We did it!"

"Did what?" asked the Second, his eyes hard and wary.

"Who are you? They told me that the Danreg had captured spies, but you
are none of mine. Who are you working for?"

"Listen, we don't have time for that," Kirk said, impatiently. "We're
not spies. I'm Kirk, he's Spock, and that's McCoy. We need to see your
ruler ... the Sovren ...

immediately. There's not much time to lose. The battle hasn't started
yet, has it?"

Cletas's hand went to the hilt of his dagger. "What do you know about
when the attack will begin?"

"Nothing!" Kirk made an exasperated gesture. "That is, we know there's
going to be one, but nothing about the exact time of the attack. We're
not with your enemies we're friends. We must see the Sovren before the
battle beiins, or it'll be too late!"

"We've come to deliver a warning," McCoy put in. "He knows us, just ask
him."

Cletas gave the three of them a long, up-and-down look, his eyes taking
in every detail of their bruised faces, their torn and muddy clothes.
"You do, eh? You expect me to believe that?" He shook his head. "You're
not spies, you're lunatics."

"It's true!" Kirk insisted, a little wildly. "Just tell him our names.
He'll be down here so fast . .

One of the guards snickered under his breath. Cletas shot him a glance
and the man stiffened back to attention. "I may be able to arrange an
interview," the Second told them, "if you will tell me who you're
working for."

"Rorgan Death-Hand," Kirk said, evidently deciding that this was the
best way to handle the situation. "He sent us to spy on the Danreg and
they caught us. Then your people captured us, in turn, during a raid
last night . . ." He peered closely at the Second's face. "You were
the one leading that attack!"

The man shrugged, as though he had no reason to deny Kirk's statement.
"All right, so Rorgan Death-Hand sent you?"

"Yes!" Kirk was as frustrated as the doctor had ever seen him. "Now
take us to see your Sovren!"

"First, tell me why he's calle. "Death-Hand," Cletas said, hooking his
thumbs in his belt and rocking back on his heels.

"Uh . . ." Kirk gave Spock an imploring glance, but the Vulcan gave
his head a tiny, negative shake. "Because he's killed so many men?"

The guard's mouth twitched. "Because," said the Second levelly, "he
wears a spiked bronze mace where his severed right hand used to be. You
never saw him in your life.

Maybe a couple of days on bread and water will convince you that I'm
serious."

Cletas turned to leave. "Wait!" McCoy yelled, seized by sudden
inspiration. His chain clashed wildly as the doctor shuffled rapidly
over to Spock and snatched the Vulcan's cap off. "Now will you believe
we know Zar?"

The Second stared for a long moment, his good eye narrowing, then he
turned to the guards. "Stay here," he snapped. "See that nothing
happens to them. I will return."

McCoy slumped back down onto his cot, limp with relief.

Is it really going to be all right, after all this? He was afraid to
hope.

Kirk sat down next to him. "Good going, Bones. I should've thought of
that."

McCoy lowered his voice. "I almost didn't. I'd nearly forgotten he was
present, he was so quiet."

They both glanced up at the Vulcan, who was standing, hands behind his
back in his accustomed pose, his expression completely serene. McCoy
grimaced and whispered, "He's as nervous as a long-tailed cat in a room
full of rocking chairs, Jim."

"I know," Kirk returned, also whispering. "I can imagine how he feels."

McCoy noticed a c ertain wistfulness in the admiral's expression, and was
puzzled by it. But now hardly seemed an appropriate time to pursue the
matter.

Time dragged by. Even the guards shifted their weight.

"How long has it been, Spock?" Kirk asked, finally.

"Seventeen minutes, fourteen seconds, Admiral."

What's going on? McCoy wondered, fidgeting. Has New Araen been
attacked? Is Cletas dead, his message undelivered?

He passed more time by taking readings of the guards with his tricorder.
They showed neither fear nor interest at the sight of the instrument.

Finally, the doctor slumped back onto the bunk. "I can't stand this,"
he said, his voice doubly loud in the stillness.

"Spock, how much time now?"

"Thirty-six minutes, ten sec-" The Vulcan stopped, listening.

Nearly a full minute later, McCoy heard the footsteps, too.

Faintly, Cletas's voice reached them. "The Lady Wynn will wait a little
longer, sire. I believe you need to see these prisoners for yourself."

The steps halted outside the cell door, and they heard a different voice
say, "Cletas, there is something you're not telling me. What's going on
here?" Even before the guards snapped to attention, saluting, McCoy
recognized the voice. A sudden rush of feeling made him bite his lip
hard.

The bolt screeched, and the door opened. Kirk and McCoy rose to their
feet as a tall, broad-shouldered man who moved with a noticeable limp
entered. He carried a red-plumed steel helmet and wore a scarlet cloak
over his mail.

Zar.

He stood on the threshold, staring, one-by-one, at the three of them for
a moment that stretched almost beyond endurance. Nobody spoke.

Finally, Zar blinked. His voice eluded him for a moment, but when it
finally emerged, it was admirably calm. "I am awake, therefore this
must be real."

McCoy's eyes were stinging as he grinned foolishly.

"Hello, Zar. Long time no see."

Kirk groaned. "If you don't quit making horrible puns, I'm going to
leave you in the dungeon, Bones. Zar, I'm glad to see you."

"And I you," the Sovren said, then his eyes turned back to Spock and his
fingers moved into the Vulcan salute.

Sir. . ." he began formally, "welcome to New Amen."

A faint half-smile softened the stern mouth as the Vulcan returned the
gesture. "Greetings, son. It is good to see you again. It has been
too long."

The younger man's gray eyes began to shine, his voice was no longer
completely steady. "Obviously longer for me than it was for you,
Father. It has been almost twenty years."

"For us 14.5 years have passed." Concern touched Spock's voice. "Are
you well? You were limping."

"An old wound. It's worse when it's damp." Zar had regained most of his
control with an effort. "I missed you, Father." He glanced over at Kirk
and McCoy. "I've missed all of you. I never expected to see you again.
This was a complete surprise."

"You mean Cletas didn't tell you who was waiting?" Kirk asked, with a
twinkle.

"if you told Cletas your names, he didn't see fit to tell me." The
Sovren turned back to his officer, who by now was grinning broadly. "I
see you're enjoying your little joke."

"I am, sire," the Second admitted. "And to think I almost left them
down here on bread and water. . ." He nodded at Spock. "I kept
thinking there was something familiar about the tall one, but it wasn't
until McCoy pulled his cap off that I realized who he must be."

Zar's gray eyes took on a hard, fatalistic expression the doctor had
never seen in them before. "Ah, yes, my doppelganger." He glanced back
at Spock, deadpan. "This means that one of us is fated to die, you
know."

Cletas's grin vanished; the man looked stricken.

"Doppelganger, my liege?"

"An old legend from another ... land," Zar explained.

"If a person meets an apparition who is his double, it's supposedly a
sure sign of impending death."

He knows he's going to die in the coming battle! McCoy thought. But
how? Zar had claimed that the empathic/ clairvoyant abilities he had
demonstrated during his time aboard the Enterprise didn't apply to
himself, only to those he cared for ...

Trying to break the sudden tension, the doctor said, over-heartily, "I
don't know anything about ancient legends, but for a moment when you
first walked in I thought we were back in a parallel universe we visited
once. A mirror universe, where we all had ruthless twins, Zar. I told
Spock I liked him with a beard. He looked like a pirate."

Kirk chuckled, only to have it turn into a cough.

Zar made a "what am I doing?" gesture. "I'm sorry, Captain, by all
means let's get out of this dampness so you can get cleaned up. Cletas,
they'll want hot baths, clean clothes, and food." He waved Kirk toward
the door.

"By the way," McCoy jerked a thumb at Kirk's back, "it's Admiral, now."

"I should have realized," Zar said. "Congratulations, Admiral."

"Make it Jim," Kirk said, as the group started along the corridor toward
the stairs. "We've all come up in the world, it seems. We didn't
expect to come back here and find you running the whole show."

"That condition," Zar said grimly, lines of pain deepening around his
mouth as he limped up the stairs, "may well be temporary. But I can at
least see to your comfort while you explain how you ended up in my
dungeon."

"I will oversee their care, sire," Cletas said. "And bring them to you
as soon as you are free to talk."

"What do you mean? I'm going to personally-" Zar began, then he broke
off and sighed. "Oh. The Lady Wynn. I must speak to her."

"Yes, my liege. She is awaiting you in your study, under guard. Be
careful, sire."

Zar's mouth quirked. "I'll be sure to keep the table between us, seeing
what she did to you. By the way, McCoy is a healer. I'll wager he
could fix that eye of yours."

They left the stairs and went out into an upper corridor, stone-walled
and stone-floored, as before, but narrow, room-high leaded windows
provided light, and occasional tapestries and rugs broke the gray
monotony with bright colors. Zar paused and faced them. "Much as I
wish I could stay, I must go. Cletas will bring you to me when I'm free
again."

"Doesn't sound like he's very eager to talk to her," McCoy said,
watching him walk away, thinking that, despite the limp, he still moved
with a measure of his old feral grace and quickness.

"He is not," Cletas said. "But I believe that the Council and I have
convinced him to go against his personal wishes, to do what he must."

"What's that?" asked McCoy, thinking uneasily about hostages and
examples-of-war.

"Persuade her to marry him, thus either removing Heldeon's troops from
the coming battle, or causing them to change their allegiance so they
will fight on our side. The High Priestess is of limited use as a
hostage; most likely the Danreg have already added her name to the Death
Scrolls for vengeance and are preparing to attack as soon as the waters
of the Redbank subside enough to allow them to cross it. Although," the
Second added, "their lack of a Battle Oracle is bound to make them
hesitate."

"And if they attack?" McCoy asked, with an uneasy premonition that he
wasn't going to like the answer.

We are outnumbered nearly four to one," Cletas said grimly.

The doctor frowned. "I hadn't realized it was that bad.

He's only got this afternoon to gain her consent?"

"Yes," the Second said. "If the Lady Wynn does not agree to the
handfasting today, then by tomorrow night we will all probably be dead."
Chapter Seven

THE HALL SEEMED ENDLESS, barred with shadows that crouched, waiting and
patient ... hunters ready to pull down a maimed prey. Zar gritted his
teeth as he limped through them. His leg hurt, the once-severed muscles
sending dull stabs throughout his body.

In a way the pain was a relief, for it distracted him from the darkness
growing within him. "Depression," McCoy might call it. Or, more
likely, "battle fatigue." But the Danreg had a term, "d'arkeh Westh,"
meaning "deathshadowed," and to Zar that described it better.

For years he had held it at bay, throwing himself into his work,
ignoring the aching void inside. But lately, when he realized that
everything he had come back to Sarpeidon to achieve was crumbling-that
his valley could not escape the invaders-the shadows had overtaken him.

Zar left the long gallery with its high windows, and the unlit corridor
beyond seemed a reflection of what waited inside him. Not today, he
told the darkness, silently. You'll have to wait. Not long now,
though.

Long enough, he reminded himself, feeling again the small spark of
warmth his father's words had kindled down in the dungeon. It fought
the cold darkness threatening to engulf him, fought it as he'd no longer
had the strength, the will, to fight. Long enough to hear him call me
"son, " to see the light in his eyes. He came backfor me, it doesn I
mutter why.

Zar smiled inwardly. It's almost as though he knew this would be his
last chance. The last bit of unfinished business, and now it's done,
over.

A sense of peace swept him, peace and acceptance.

At first he had tried to fight the despair, the feeling of bein. "Varkeh
n'esth," but recently he had given in, let it take him. He was tired of
struggling, he had been tired for years; but, like a warrior too
battle-hardened to feel the pain, to let his wounds stop him, he had
refused to acknowledge it until these last few days. Wynn's prophecy
had plucked a shadowed minor chord within him, and now all his being
vibrated in tune to it.

It was done. Over. Soon, he could rest.

That was why he had agreed to do as Cletas and the Council wanted. What
difference did it make, if he took the High Priestess of the Danreg as
his consort? That counterfeit of a marriage would last only a day or
two a t most, then he would be gone, and she could use her influence as
his successor to beg clemency from the Kerren and the Asyri.

The State handfasting would save bloodshed, would spare lives. His
people might still be conquered, but they would not be massacred.

With all his being, he hoped that was true. It all depended on what
kind of person the High Priestess was, on whether she truly served her
Goddess, Ashmara who espoused life, or whether Wynn only gave
lip-service to her beliefs. From everything Zar had been able to
discover about her, the former was true. But he'd know after he spoke
with her; it was impossible to deceive an empath.

He reached the door to his bedchamber and turned to enter the room,
nodding at the saluting guard. Once inside, he limped past the high,
curtained bed, past his portrait of Araen, to the washstand. Voba was
already there, pouring warm water from the ewer into the basin, a clean
towel flung over his shoulder. Somehow he always knows what I'm going
to do before I know it myself Zar thought wryly.

After stripping to his black leather breeches, he began washing. Mud
and sweat from the parade ground had dried in streaks on his arms; his
nails were black-rimmed. The soap Voba handed him smelled faintly of
herbs.

Finally he was clean and dry. Zar shrugged into the open-necked gray
tunic the aide held out, then cinched it around his waist with a plain
black-leather belt that supported only a sheath for Zarabeth's knife. He
shook his head at the silver and jet Medal lion-of-State Voba held out.

"Nothing official, Voba. That would only anger her worse than she
already is."

Zar combed his hair, smoothed his beard, then, with a sigh, turned back
toward the door. "Has she calmed down?

Eaten?"

"Yes, sire," the little man said, bobbing his wiry red head.

"I thought she might pitch the food at me, but she didn't."

So, she can control her temper, as well as unleash it, Zar thought. A
valuable trait in a leader.

"Incidentally, my father and two of his comrades just arrived for a
visit. Cletas is escorting them to the guest chambers. Please see to
their comfort, Voba."

"Yourfather, my Sovren?" It was the first time in years Zar had seen his
aide-de-camp surprised.

"Yes. You'll know him when you see him. His name is Spock. The others
with him are Doctor McCoy and Admiral Kirk. McCoy is the one with the
blue eyes."

Voba bowed slightly. "I shall attend them personally, sire."

Zar nodded absently, his eyes on the portrait he had painted twenty
years ago. The pictured features were small and oval beneath the masses
of black hair. Huge dark eyes dominated the pale, fine-boned face.
"Araen was beautiful, wasn't she, Voba?" he murmured.

"She was, sire," the little man agreed, and Zar caught his sidelong
glance. He's surprised that I spoke her name, after all these years.

"Is this Wynn beautiful?"

The aide considered. "Well, she's not ill-favored, my liege, but it's
my guess nobody'd call her a beauty. Tall and sturdy-built,
strong-looking. Eyes that go right through YOU."

"What color are they? Not dark?" Zar didn't know why he cared, but it
was important, somehow.

"Oh, no, sire. They're green. And her hair's kind of a light
chestnut."

Zar nodded absently, his momentary interest fading.

What does it matter? He turned abruptly and went out into the hall,
then halted before the guarded door to his study.

Let her listen to me, please.

Taking a deep breath, he unlatched it and went in.

Wynn sat gracefully in the big padded seat, her spine barely touching
its back. She was scared, but it would not do for Heldeon's daughter to
show fear, so her eyes as they surveyed the room (for the hundredth
time) were cool , and her hands lay quietly on the chair arms.

It was a large room, with thick, colorful hangings on the stone walls,
except for the one facing her, where a picture was painted. It was an
odd picture. Wynn sat staring at those strangely colored stars, trying
to unravel its meaning.

it had meaning, she was sure of that ... but she knew suddenly,
intuitively, that it depicted a time and a place completely outside her
frame of reference, something she might not comprehend even if it were
explained to her.

The picture added to her unease.

True, she had been well-treated so far, offered a tub of hot,
herb-scented water so she could bathe, and a selection of finely woven
gowns for her wearing. They had given her food; fruit, bread, cheese,
and meats, plus flagons of water and wine.

The ugly little man who had served her had even ceremoniously taken a
sip from each vessel to demonstrate that their contents were neither
poisoned nor drugged. (Though Wynn could envision several ways to
administer additives that would get around ceremonial tasting by a
servant drying the substance on the lip of a goblet, or placing it on
the corners of the napkins, for example. She was a chieftain's daughter
and intrigues were nothing new to her.)

But the High Priestess had already known the food and drink were
untainted, because she could feel the little servant's lack of
duplicity. So she had eaten and drunk without worrying ... after all,
if they had simply wanted her dead, they could have riven her with a
spear when she was first captured, or tossed her off a cliff during the
ride down-mountain.

Even under extreme provocation, her abductors had not harmed her. When
they had first ridden into the courtyard in New Araen, her captor, the
leader of the raiding band, had reached up to lift her down from the
saddle of his vykar. True to her father's training, Wynn had seized her
chance-first, with a kick to the chin that staggered the officer, then
she'd leaped down and followed up with a hard left before the guards
could grab her.

She'd stood laughing down at him as he sprawled unconscious on the
sodden stones of the courtyard ... and the stony-faced guards had only
escorted her inside. Wynn rubbed her bruised knuckles, smiling grimly.
She shouldn't have lost her temper, but it had felt good to lash out.
Since that incident the guards and servants had treated her with a wary
respect.

No, they definitely wanted her alive. But why?

Wynn got up to pace over to the room's only window and looked out on the
marketplace of New Araen, surrounded by the city that was nestled into
the Lakreo, Valley. Before her, so distant that she could not see them,
massed on the other side of the raging river, the Kerren and Asyri
troops were waiting.

Could it be that the Sovren of New Araen wanted to discuss terms of
surrender? They said he was strange, not as other men, but nobody had
ever implied that he was a fool.

If the Sovren wanted to surrender, he had only to send a party
up-mountain with their swords bound into their scabbards with blue
peace-thongs, and Heldeon would receive them under a banner of truce.
There was no need for a dangerous raid and a kidnapping that would be
guaranteed to leave her father spoiling for every drop of her abductors'
blood.

Perhaps the Sovren wanted to plead for amnesty for his people. That was
far more likely, Wynn decided, studying the stone and timbered houses,
each with its own garden plot. New Araen seemed a well-tended,
prosperous place. If it were possible to capture it without more than a
token bloodshedding, she would do her best to convince her father to do
so.

That would please the Goddess. Ashmara was a woman's deity, and Life
was her concern, not death-except death through natural causes, always a
part of Life.

Even though she had been lessoned in the arts of war, and had led her
father's troops during battle, Wynn hated the looting, killing, raping
sprees that were a conquered city's lot. The wails of the children, the
shrieks of the men and women-whenever Heldeon would listen (and he
usually valued her counsel), she had interceded with her father to
prevent the sacking of enemy towns. The shared pain she felt sickened
her; in the screams of the vanquished she heard echoes of her own cries
when she'd discovered the hacked bodies of Nahral and little Lelinos,
two years ago.

Despite her control, Wynn's fingers clenched spasmodically on the stone
windowsill. She still missed them, with an ache like a cold fist within
her breast. Big, laughing, blond Nahral, with his broad, gentle hands
... and her baby, Lelinos, barely five, his chubby features slack and
aged with death, his huge-pupiled eyes staring at nothing. The Asyri
had not left Nahral his eyes ...

Wynn hated Rorgan Death-Hand, despising the lies the Asyri leader had
told Heldeon to forge the current alliance.

He had smoothly explained that the raiding party which had attacked the
Danreg camp was composed of cashiered soldiers and outlaws who had been
acting on their own, not as his warriors.

It was so plausible it might even have been true ...

except Wynn knew-as soon as the man's gaze met hers -that his words were
false. She had no evidence, beyond those strange flashes of shared
emotion that came to her, and her "power" made Heldeon uneasy-it was a
gift from the Goddess, he said, but she knew he did not trust or
understand it.

Besides, the Danreg needed the troops and supplies the Asyri alliance
had brought, thus Wynn had kept her silence.

Ashmara knew the truth, and the Goddess had no love for liars. Rorgan
would pay, eventually. Wynn trusted Her.

Footsteps sounded outside the door.

Hastily, Wynn returned to her chair and sat down, smoothing her gown and
composing her face as she heard the latch rattle. A moment later the
door swung open, and a man entered.

He was tall, taller even than Nahral had been, though not as heavily
built. But his shoulders were muscled and broad, his waist lean.
Obviously a warrior-except that he wa s crippled.

Absently, he shut the door behind him, then stood gazing at her. Wynn
unflinchingly returned his stare.

His face was . strange. Lean and weathered as any warrior's, but ...
different. Long and sharp-angied in its planes, hollow-checked and
austere. Lines scored it, crossing the brow, running downward from the
nose to bracket the unsmiling, steady mouth. Thick, slightly curling
black hair tumbled across his forehead and grew shaggily down the back
of his neck. He went bearded, a close-cropped beard such as soldiers
favored. No silver mingled in hair or beard, but he was not young.

His eyes were gray, the color of distant storm clouds, and above them
his brows slanted upward. They were cool, aloof eyes, but somewhere
behind them Wynn sensed despair.

The High Priestess was troubled by those eyes, troubled also by the
sense that she had seen him before, though she was equally positive they
had never met.

He was the first to break the silence. "Greetings, my lady," he said,
giving her a formal bow. His voice was pleasant, not as deep as
Nahral's massive-chested rumble, but a hardness beneath the courtesy
told Wynn that he was accustomed to command.

Wynn inclined her head, as to a near-equal. "My lord."

His mouth twitched slightly. "May I sit? I am not comfortable
standing."

She indicated the seat opposite her. "Please do. I suspect it's your
chair."

After he was seated, he gazed across the table at her, and she picked up
the first faint touch of emotion from him ... he was nervous, which
left Wynn feeling almost cheerful. "You are the one they call the
Sovren?"

Yes," he replied. "I should offer my apologies for bringing you here so
... precipitously."

She smiled grimly. "You should. Don't you?"

"No," he said flatly, his tone bitter. "I don't. You were my last
chance, and my people were instructed to keep you safe at all costs,
even at the expense of their own lives. My Second, Cletas, paid the
price for those orders. Believe me, if there had been any other way I
could have arranged to talk to you, I would have employed it."

Wynn lounged back in her seat, expertly feigning an ease she didn't
feel. "I see ... why did you wish to speak to me?"

"Because you are Ashmara's priestess, and thus sworn to Her service,
yes?" One of the slanting black brows rose.

Wynn nodded. "And She is a Goddess who loves life. I hoped that I
might persuade you to join me in an effort to spare many lives. The
lives of my people and yours. Are lives important to you?"

So, she had been right. Wynn nodded. "Yes, they are "If the battle is
joined tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow, not only the lives of
soldiers wil be lost," he said. "As things now stand, the lives of the
people of New"Araen -including the children-will be forfeit if we lose.

Wynn met his eyes levelly-again feeling that haunting stab of
recognition. With an effort she shook it off. ' You are right. Our
forces are overwhelming ... you will be overrun.

Obviously, the fate of conquered cities is familiar to you."

He nodded, his eyes bleak. "I know what happens."

"I will be truthful with you," she began, for something about this man
compelled honesty from her. "I am outraged at the way I was captured
and brought here ... but ... I am also in sympathy with your efforts
on behalf of your people."

Even though his expression did not change, Wynn felt his relief at her
words and raised a warning hand. "It may not help, though. I have some
influence with my father, and I will attempt to intercede with him for
the safety of the noncombatant citizens of New Araen. The city and its
skilled tradespeople will be worth more to us intact, anyway.

She sighed. "But, frankly, Heldeon may be so angry at my abduction that
he will not listen to anything I have to say.

And I have no sway at all over Laol, Rorgan, or their respective troops.
Our alliance has been an uneasy one."

His disappointment reached her clearly. "I see," he said heavily,
steepling his fingers before him. Wynn looked at his hands ...
long-fingered like those of a scribe, but swordcallused and capable,
also. Two scars, old sword slashes by the look of them, crossed the
back of the right hand and disappeared beneath his sleeve.

"I am truly sorry," she said softiy.

"I know," he said. "I can tell. What if I could suggest a tactic that
would diffuse much of your father's anger, and give him a strong
incentive to spare the lives of my people?"

Something about his voice made Wynn's heart begin to pound, though she
had no idea what he was talking about.

She found she could not look away from his eyes. Her own voice sounded
muffled, because of the blood thrumming in her ears. "What tactic? What
are you proposing?"

A faint smile touched his mouth as the eyebrow went back up.
"Coincidental that you should use that particular word. I am talking,
my lady, about marriage."

It took Wynn a moment to find her voice, but when it finally emerged, it
was completely level. "You mean between you and me." It was not a
question, but he nodded.

"How interesting. It's certainly the best offer I've had all day." She
laughed, genuinely amused. "State your terms, my lord."

He took a deep breath. "I am talking about a State handfasting, my
lady. They tell me bride-raiding is an accepted custom among the
Danreg, so Heldeon's anger will be lessened when he hears the reason for
your abduction, if you freely consent to wed me. And then the Danreg
would be my kin-by-marriage, thus unable to march against me."

He shrugged one shoulder. "I will almost certainly still have to face
the Asyri and Clan Kerren-and I will still be gravely outnumbered. But
then there may be a slim chance.

As matters stand now, there is none-although," his voice grew colder and
harder than the walls around them, "our conquerors will pay dearly for
their victory, I assure you."

Wynn leaned back in her chair. "Very well-reasoned, my lord. You are
right, Heldeon would never sin by attacking one who stands
blood-by-marriage. He might even ally with you ... which would still
leave your forces outnumbered, by our latest intelligence, but . .
."-she shrugged, and gave him a wry smile-"you might have a fighting
chance, then-wordplay intended. But tell me, since you seem to have
thought of everything, what is my inducement to enter such an alliance?"

He leaned forward. "I am prepared to declare you my co-regent and
successor. I have no heir. You are accustomed to command, and you
possess both wisdom and compassion. You will rule the Lakreo Valley
well."

"But your people-" she began.

"The Council will uphold my chosen successor, as will the army. My
people worship Ashmara and you are Her priestess, so that will make them
well-disposed toward you -especially if this alliance spares their lives
and property.

The Valley is wide and prosperous, you have seen that for yourself. You
will possess a tidy little domain."

"Providing Rorgan and Laol do not snatch it."

"That is a risk you must take," the Sovren admitted. "But Heldeon will
surely support you with troops, even if he will not aid me. And there
is a chance that they would, instead , make an alliance with you, even
as they did with your father."

"You are right," she conceded, finding to her surprise that she was
actually considering his offer.

This man was correct in thinking she would be tempted by this prosperous
valley; she was her father's daughter, born to rule. An alliance
between the Lakreo Valley and Danreg Ford would be of immense benefit to
her nomadic people, giving them a new market for their herd animals.

And the foothills held sheltered steppes that would provide excellent
winter grazing.

Leaguing with these people would benefit us more than our current
alliance with Rorgan and Laol-there we are committed only to war, and
then only so long as the actual fighting lasts. As soon as the smoke
ofbattle clears, it is likely we will be at each other's throats ...

Wynn covertly studied the man sitting opposite her.

Despite the strange cast to his features, he was not illformed or ugly.
She glanced down again at his hands, hard and scarred, and wondered for
a fleeting second if there could be any pleasure to be had in his touch.
The High Priestess sighed; she had been fortunate with Nahral ...

Ashmara had blessed her. That was too much to expect twice in a
lifetime.

When she looked back up he was staring at her with a tight-reined
eagerness, and for a startled second Wynn wondered if he had somehow
sensed the direction of her thoughts. Her cheeks grew warm. "Your
offer is tempting, if risky," she admitted.

He leaned forward, his gray eyes intense. "if you are willing, we must
act now. A message from you to your father this afternoon, then a
private meeting tonight to settle terms, followed by the ceremony. A
public announcement tomorrow."

Wynn hesitated, thinking of what it would be like to sleep tonight
beside a stranger, then she smiled wryly. State marriages are always so
... you know that.

"There is one thing . . ." she began.

"WhatT, "They say you are not as other men, and I can see with my own
eyes that you are like no one else I have ever met. They say . . ."
She broke off, embarrassed, fighting not to blush.

"That I am demon-spawned?" Wynn sensed his scornful amusement, though
his expression remained unchanged.

"And you believe that?"

"No," she snapped, "of course not. But I think I am justified in asking
precisely how you are different. Believe me, I have no illusions about
State marriages. I am not a girl, someone who demands soft words and
wooing. I am years past that, and glad of it. But I have the right to
know what I contract to bed this night."

He s tared at her, speechless. Finally he cleared his throat.

"My lady ... you have mistaken my meaning. I did not intend that this
alliance should be an actual marriage ... in any physical sense, that
is. I am sorry if I gave you that impression."

"Is that your difference, then?" Wynn asked coolly. "You aren't
capable?"

He gaped at her, then stammered, "No! Well, perhaps ...

it's been a long time . . ." He faltered to a halt, took a deep
breath, then his expression hardened. "My lady, my virility is not the
issue here. I was married, once. She died in childbirth. I ... cared
... for her, very much. I have no wish for that kind of relationship
again."

"Nor do I," Wynn admitted, thinking of her husband and son. They'd had
to drag her away from the bodies. She had wanted to die herself. "I
know what it is to lose those dearest to YOU."

"As to my ... differences," the Sovren continued, "they are minor and
internal, with one-or, rather, two exceptions." He ran his hands through
his hair, then turned his head from side to side, so the High Priestess
could see both ears.

Wynn studied him with narrowed eyes for several moments, then shrugged.
"Thank you for satisfying my curiosity. They are natural to your kind?"

"Yes," he said, seeming relieved at her unruffled acceptance. "So, now
that you understand the terms of my offer, what do you say? Would you
like time to consider it?"

"I was almost convinced," Wynn said, slowly. "But now that you have ...
clarified ... matters, I do not believe I can reconcile your kind of
marriage with my service to Ashmara."

"Why not?"

"What you offer is not true marriage, but only an imitation for the
outside world to view. Ashmara would not look with favor upon such a
hollow sham, or those who lent themselves to it."

She straightened her skirt, not looking up. "Besides, if I to marry
again, I would pray the Goddess to bless me were with children-for the
succession." She kept her voice casual, not wanting him to know how much
she missed Lelinos, how greatly she longed to hold a child of her own
again ... even as she feared to love that much again.

"You speak as though we are talking about a lifelong deceit here," he
said. "You would soon be free to select a true consort, have children
by him, if that is your wish."

Wynn blinked. "I would?"

"Of course. We are speaking of a union lasting no more than a day ...
possibly two. Then you will rule New Araen alone."

"Why do you say that?"

"Have you forgotten? You yourself declared me d'arkeh nesth. I will
not survive the coming battle."

'the High Priestess stared at him in shock, and there was a roaring in
her ears like the sound of a great storm. Now she knew why she had
experienced that haunting sense of familiarity-only yesterday she had
"seen" this man die in a gush of blood and shattered bone.

Wynn seldom retained clear memories of the visions Ashmara sent her-her
priestesses had to repeat for her any prophecies she'd made during the
sacred trance. Her throat grew suddenly, absurdly tight. Are you mad?
she demanded of herself. You barely know him! Why should the thought
of his death trouble you?

But it did-the vision of his body was mixed up somehow with her memories
of Nahral and Lelinos, and for an instant Wynn relived the shrieking
agony of the moment when she'd first found them in the ruins of the
camp.

A second later the haze before her eyes cleared slightly, and Wynn
realized she was clinging to the arms of her chair with both hands,
trembling violently. The Sovren was on his feet, staring at her
anxiously. With a muttered exclamation, he limped around the table and
splashed some water into a goblet. "Are you all right? You're pale as
death."

Wynn nodded as she tried clumsily to take the goblet, but her hands
shook so that she sloshed the liquid onto the tabletop. "Easy," he
said, helping her. With his aid she was able to swallow a few sips, and
that steadied her.

"I'm sorry," she whispered, finally. "I had forgotten. The visions
come, and I speak them, but when the Goddess talks through me, I am only
the mouthpiece. I remember little of what happens in them, or of what I
say."

He nodded. "I know what it is like." He relaxed slightly, hitching his
bad leg up so that he half-leaned, half-sat on the tabletop before her.
Arms folded across his chest, he stared down at her intently. "Do they
always come true?"

"In one form or another," Wynn said. She felt drained and wondered why,
then remembered confusedly that she'd had almost no sleep the previous
night. "The words are right, but sometimes what I see happens in a
different form, or in a different place."

"But when you see death, death is what comes." He did not sound
particularly concerned. Wynn raised her face and studied him. The cool
remoteness was back in his eyes.

They might have been discussing the best soil for planting grain.

"Yes," she admitted.

He gave a curiously satisfied nod. "Well, then," he said.

"Now you know. Will you do it?"

Wynn's back stiffened, and she could not contain her anger. "Don't you
care? You ought to care!"

A one-sided smile touched the stern mouth for a moment.

"Do not go gentle into that good night ... rage, rage, against the
dying of the light."

"Yes," she said, her eyes never leaving his. "That's exactly what I
meant. Are those your words?"

"No, a man named Dylan Thomas wrote them." He shook his head. "You're
right, I ought to care. But it's just not there anymore. And what good
would it do if I did? You said it yourself, your visions are always
true."

"But you are warned!" she cried. "I was never able to warn anyone
before ... I can tell you how it will happen, and perhaps you can guard
against it!"

His eyes never left hers, and Wynn felt the color wash into her cheeks
again. "Thank you," he said, finally. "For caring, when you don't even
know me, after what I've done to you.

You are a good person."

"So are you," she said. "I can tell about people ... what's inside
them. What they are feeling." Up to now she'd told only her father and
Nahral her secret. Wynn did not know why she'd confided in this man ...
but she did not regret her decision.

"Empathy as well as precognition," he said. "I suspected it. I can
tell about people, too."

Wynn had no idea what the two strange words meant, but she couldn't hide
her skepticism. "How could you? It's a gift from the Goddess, and
you're a man."

"I'll prove it," he said. "Take my hand."

Wynn hesitated, then slipped her fingers into his. His sword-callused
palm was hot against her skin, and -and she couldfee/ what was inside
him, despair, aching loneliness, bitter determination. The sharing went
deeper than it ever had, and after a moment, Wynn realized that was
because he was reading her, too-her loneliness, her pain, her
unflinching refusal to give up, her love for life despite its agonies.
They were like mirrors of one another, but his was the shadowed
reflection.

Fighl, she shouted silently at him. Rage!

Wynn experienced his startled, unwilling response to her emotion-for a
moment something vital and alive flared within him, in answer to her
passionate demand.

Then the contact between them lessened, withdrew, and she was back in
her own mind, alone again. After a minute she realized she was still
clutching his hand like a lifeline.

Her fingers felt cramped as she loosened them.

He was staring at her, eyes wide with surprise, but even as Wynn
watched, the shuttered, blank expression closed down over his features
again. But with the brief rapport had come knowledge, and Wynn knew
suddenly that this time his remoteness was a mask, that behind the
impassivity his thoughts were racing. She wondered what they were. "I
believe you, now," she said.

"I'll leave you to consider my offer," he straightened, coming out of
his musings abruptly. "When shall I come back?"

"Y Wynn took a deep breath and rose from her seat. Du don't need to
come back. I've made my decision. I accept your proposal." I must be
mad, she thought, but her mind was made up. "I'll write a message to my
father telling him we'll ride there tonight, under a truce flag."

The Sovren took her hand and bowed deeply over it. "My Lady Wynn ...
thank you. Thank you." Straightening, he looked down at her, and the
sudden light in his eyes was echoed by the rush of hope Wynn
experienced.

"You know m- name," she said, after a moment. "May I have yours? rd
feet foolish wedding a man-for however brief a time-that I could not
call by name."

He smiled, a real smile this time. "Haven't you heard the old stories
that anyone you honor with your name has power over you thereafter?"

"And you believe that?" she retorted, using his own words.

The smile faded and he solemnly raised her hand to kiss her fingers. She
could feel the warmth of his breath against her skin. "My name is Zar.
I would be honored if you would use it."

Chapter Eight

"NO, THANK YOU, VOBA, I couldn't eat another bite," James Kirk said with
an appreciative sigh, waving the red-haired aide-de-camp's offer of
another honey roll away. "Matter of fact, I could almost go to sleep
right here, it feels so good to be warm, clean, and full." He yawned so
widely his jaws cracked.

Leonard McCoy hesitated over the proffered platter in his turn, then
succumbed. "I shouldn't, but I'm going to anyway." He busied himself
spreading jam on the roll. "Do you realize we've been here less than a
day? Seems more like a week."

Spock left the table, pacing slowly over to the window.

The three officers had been given individual sleeping chambers that
opened into this large, high-vaulted living area.

Hand-woven rugs, in bright colors and patterns tha t reminded Kirk of
Zuni designs he'd seen, hung on the walls and were scattered over the
stone floors, and two monstrous fireplaces crouched at either end of the
room. Three big unglassed windows stood with their shutters open,
giving a view of a large, flat plain behind the fortress. It was
evidently the parade ground, for cavalry and foot soldiers were drilling
there. The northern mountains lay in the distance.

The Vulcan stood staring out at the parade ground, hands clasped behind
his back. "You might find this interesting, Jim. Zar is using a
variation on the ancient Roman manipular system, which in turn was
derived from the Greek phalanx. However, he is using archers with
longbows as flankers ... which should prove effective against enemy
chariots."

Spock glanced at the other side of the field. "His cavalry is
well-drilled and armed with lances. I would theorize that he is using
them as a mobile strike force to harry the rear lines of the enemy at
their weakest points."

"But Cletas said they were outnumbered four to one," McCoy said. "What
difference can increased mobility make?"

"You'd be surprised, Bones," Kirk said, rubbing his eyes.

If he sat there a moment longer, he would fall asleep.

Reluctantly, he got up to join Spock. "Three thousand trained soldiers
can inflict a lot of damage against a disorganized force that fights
like twelve thousand individuals, instead of as a unit." He squinted
against the sunlight. "Is the cavalry using stirrups? I can't see from
here."

"Yes," Spock said, without hesitation. "They are

"Were those saddles we saw yesterday in Heldeon s camp equipped with
stirrups?" Kirk asked.

"No, I believe not," Spock said. "That is definitely another asset."

"Stirrups?" McCoy raised an eyebrow.

"The invention of the stirrup was a vital one in the history of mounted
warfare, Doctor," Spock said. "Stirrups allowed cavalrymen to more
effectively hurl lances, since the riders were able to brace their feet.
They also gave the riders increased stability, so they could better
engage in swordplay. It was the development of the stirrup by the Goths
that allowed them to overcome the Roman legions."

"You learn something new every day. Do you think Zar's 'innovations'
could possibly outweigh the sheer numbers of the opposing forces?" McCoy
asked, skeptically.

"They will certainly help. Whether they will help enough is impossible
to predict without more data."

Kirk frowned. "I'm not sanguine about their chances, Bones. At least
the ground is drying out a little-" He broke off at a tap on the door.
Voba moved quickly to open it.

Second-in-War Cletas entered and saluted. "The Sovren is free now. If
you will please follow me?"

Kirk caught up the reddish-brown cloak he'd been given, then followed
the officer; the sun might have been shining outside, but the stone
walls retained the cold dampness, and standing at the open window had
raised goose-bumps on his bare arms.

I'll have to remember this, the next time I sit looking at my weapons
collection, feeling nostalgic for romantic bygone eras, he thought,
tossing the warm folds around his shoulders and pinning the garment at
his throat with a red-gold brooch. Living at the mercy of the elements
... no modern plumbing ...

The Second led them down the halls until they came to a guarded doorway.
Kirk followed Cletas into the room, Spock and McCoy just behind him.

Zar sat on the edge of a massive inlaid table made of varying shades of
golden-colored wood. Sitting in the chair before him was the High
Priestess, wearing a pale amber gown two shades lighter than her hair.
The heavy bronze mass was braided and coiled behind her head, and her
small gold earrings sparked fire in the candleglow. She appeared
perfectly at ease.

Kirk glanced quickly around the room, deciding it was Zar's private
office. A desk sat beneath the room's only window, which gave a view of
the southern exposure, and New Araen.

On the opposite wall of the room, the admiral saw a familiar sight-Zar's
mural of the Enterprise, its colors still vivid.

As the three Federation officers entered, Zar stood, his hand reaching
down for Wynn's. She let him draw her up to face them, standing with
her head held proudly, her expression impassive, but the admiral was
sure that for a second he had glimpsed surprised recognition.

"My lady," Zar said, formally, "may I present Admiral Kirk, Dr. McCoy,
and Mr. Spock. The High Priestess of Danreg Ford, the Lady Wynn."

"Pleased to meet you, ma'am," McCoy said, bowing.

Kirk also bowed, summoning his best smile. "My pleasure, Lady Wynn."

This time, she smiled back at him. "My charming spy," she said. "So
you were working for New Araen."

"Actually, no," Zar corrected. "it was pure coincidence that they
arrived where they did, when they did."

Wynn's eyes widened as they fixed on Spock. The Vulcan gravely inclined
his head. She glanced up at Zar. "Your brother, my lord?"

Kirk didn't miss the gleam of amusement in the gray eyes.

"No, my father."

She looked startled and skeptical all at once, but said nothing. Zar
gave her that faint half-smile. "It is true. A long story, but if we
have time, I shall tell it to you."

"I shall be most interested to hear it, my lord," she said, "but now I
fear I must withdraw to prepare that message for my father." She smiled
at Spock. "How fortunate that you chose this time to visit, sir. By
custom, blood-kin should be present at a handfasting."

Zar nodded to Cletas, who came forward. "This is my Second-in-War,
Cletas, who will escort you and see that your message to Heldeon is
dispatched."

The officer bowed deeply. "My lady."

She regarded him for a moment, and Kirk watched the color rise in her
cheeks before she spoke. "I took advantage of you this morning, which
was an unworthy thing to do, Cletas. I am sorry for it."

The Second, though obviously surprised, recovered quickly. "Doubtless I
deserved far worse, my lady, for the rough handling you were forced to
endure. I can only offer my sincerest apologies-belated though they
are. And now, my lady, if you will permit me to escort you?"

"Certainly," she said, and accompanied him from the room.

Kirk looked over at Zar, even as the younger man dropped wearily into a
chair, signaling for them to join him around the big table.
"Congratulations," the admiral said dryly, as he found a seat. "Talk
about whirlwind romances ... how did you manage it?"

The Sovren's voice held rueful amusement. "I promised to make her my
co-regent and successor. She wants New Araen."

"When will the marriage take place?" Spock asked.

"As soon as possible," Zar said, resignedly. "Tonight. The ceremony
will take place after the alliance negotiations are completed." He
sighed and looked over at the Vulcan.

"Would you ... would you stand with me, Father?"

"it would be an honor," Spock said, gravely.

The exchange gave Kirk a sudden flash of dejiz vu, but the memory eluded
him. Zar turned to him and McCoy. "I would be pleased if you would
attend, also . . ."

Kirk glanced over at McCoy. "We'd like to, Zar. But before you go
through with this ... arrangement, we should discuss the reason we
came. I'm afraid this wasn't purely a social call."

"I suspected that, knowing the restrictions placed on the Guardian of
Forever. What is the problem?"

"You just named it. The Guardian of Forever," Kirk said.

He nodded at Spock, who launched into a concise summary of the
Guardian's erratic behavior, and the danger it posed to the universe
5,000 years in the future. Zar listened intently, frowning a little,
automatically scribbling notes on a sheet of vellum. Kirk watched his
face, noting how he had changed over the years-aged more by
responsibility and power than by time. Jim knew only too well how those
things burdened an individual.

with some difficulty, I was able to establish partial communication with
a strictly mechanical portion of the Guardian," Spock was concluding.
"Enough to ask it to transport us back here and monitor us until we are
ready to return. It is our . . ." the Vulcan hesitated, then went on
quite deliberately, "our hope that you, with your greater telepathic
ability, will be able to fully link with the entity, discover its
problem, and convince it to resume its normal functioning."

Zar gazed at his father, his expression closed, shuttered, then slowly
shook his head. "I haven't done a full mindmeld since that day on
Gateway, twenty years ago. I doubt if I'm capable of contacting a
nonhuman entity anymore."

"I can help you. We can review-" Spock began, only to break off as the
Vulcan took in Zar's bleak expression.

"Even if I could perform the meld, I cannot leave. I'm sorry, but I
have a battle to fight."

Kirk cleared his throat. "Yes, we understand that. And we also know
something you don't, something that may influence your decision." He
held the gray eyes with his own.

"You won't survive that battle, Zar."

The Sovren made a faint sound somewhere between a derisive snort and a
wry chuckle. "I know."

Kirk gave Spock a startled glance. Does he really know?

How could he? "Perhaps I haven't made myself clear," the admiral said.
"Spock watched that battle in his tricorder. I saw it. We both saw
what's going to happen to you. Unless you come with us, Zar, you'll
die.

"Yes, I know."

"How could you know?" Spock asked.

"Because my bride-to-be prophesied my death in the coming battle
yesterday afternoon. Wynn is an esper. An empath, as I am, but also
precognitive. What she regards as sendings from the Goddess are
actually precognitive visions. I think-no, I know-that part of her
reason for agreeing to this marriage was that she felt sorry for me. Her
wa y of honoring a last request, I suppose. At any rate, it will happen;
there's no help for it."

"But, Zar," McCoy spoke for the first time, "there is. You can come
back with us. You've accomplished what you set out to do here. You've
guided your people into civilization now you can stop. Come back to
stay, this time."

"And do what?" Zar demanded, bitterly. "I doubt the Federation has much
demand for unemployed rulers. Don't tempt me, Leonard!"

Pushing his chair back, Zar rose and began pacing, his words coming with
increasing urgency. "You have no idea how much I'd like to escape from
all of this, but if I did, I'd be condemning my people to be massacred!
No, I have to stay. If I stay and marry Wynn, at least New Araen will
have a chance to survive after I'm gone and she succeeds me."

He turned to face them again. "Heldeon has over seven thousand
warriors. If I can persuade him to ally them with my forces, they would
bring our strength up to within five thousand of those Laol and Rorgan
command. With odds like those, my people might stand a chance of
winning!"

"All right," McCoy said, "suppose you go ahead and marry her, then
disappear during the first charge of the battle-what's the difference
between that and becoming a casualty later on? You've given your life
to these people -you don't owe them your death, too! As for what you
could do in our time, don't give me that-competent people who can get
things done are always in the minority. You're young enough to-"

McCoy broke off as Zar's lip curled. "You're wrong, Len.

Soon I'll have forty-five summers, as I used to put it.

That's ... I've forgotten the conversion factor for Terran Standard."

"Forty-nine point four years," Spock said.

"Don't you realize that in my culture anything over forty is old?
Although thanks to those immunizations you gave me, and to my ...
parentage"-Zar glanced over at Spock -"I'd probably have quite a few
years left-if it weren't for this battle." Wearily, he dropped back into
his chair. "But, damn it, I feet old ... too old to change. Better to
go down fighting."

"That's a lot of bull, and you know it!" snapped McCoy, visibly upset.
"You could go to school-you'd have time to learn a whole new profession,
Zar! You could even join Starfleet, if you wanted. The exploration
teams are begging for espers, or a man with your survival experience
could write his own ticket on the colony worlds."

"Bones . . ." Kirk reached over and put a hand on his friend's
shoulder. "Take it easy. It's Zar's decision to make."

But McCoy shrugged off Kirk's grip. He rose and strode over to face the
Sovren, eyes blazing. "Damn it, Zar, I never figured you for a coward,
but that's how you're acting! In my book it takes more courage to keep
living than to give in and die!"

The doctor's voice cracked on the last word, and he paused to regain
control. "Twenty years ago you gave up the stars, to do what you
thought was right. Though I knew I'd miss you, I had to applaud that
decision. Now that duty has been fulfilled, and you've got a second
chance-something most people never get-and you're telling me you're just
going to throw it away?"

Zar stared at him, obviously moved by the doctor's words. When he spoke
again, he sounded wistful. "If only I could, Leonard. But you don't
understand ... morale is a powerful factor in war. My troops know
about this prophecy, but they know I'll lead them despite it-and thus
they'll be prepared to fight to the last, too. Determination like that
might mean the difference between victory and defeat for them. I can't
desert them."

"And if you don't contact the Guardian," McCoy said, softly, "it's going
to mean our lives. Not to mention the population of the Milky Way
galaxy-and, from what Spock tells us, eventually every galaxy."

Zar leaned his elbows on the table with an exhausted sigh, then began
rubbing his temples. "I'll think about it ' Len.

Maybe there's some way ... that's all I can promise at the moment."

McCoy cast a cautiously triumphant glance at Kirk before turning back to
Zar. "Headache, son?"

"That is an understatement."

"Here." The doctor took a small packet out of his medikit. "Swallow
these. With water, not wine."

Zar obediently poured a goblet and downed the medication. "Thanks. The
wine was for Wynn. For some reason my stomach can't tolerate ethanol
... it makes me violently ill. "I remember," Kirk said. "Zar, as I
was about to say," he shot a warning glance at McCoy, "this is your
decision, and we will all respect it. Frankly, it's a choice I wouldn't
want to have to make."

"Well, whatever I decide, I'm still going through with that ceremony,"
Zar said. "One way or another, I've got to declare Wynn my successor."
After a moment, he pulled a platter of bread and cheese over. "I just
remembered, I forgot to eat today. No wonder my head is pounding.

Anyone want a sandwich?"

"Not after the way Voba stuffed us," Kirk said.

Zar poured himselfanother goblet of water. "I'm starting to feel
better. That medicine of yours works quickly, Doc."

He hesitated. "I see that you brought your medikit. Will you do
something for me?"

"Depends," McCoy said, cautiously. "If you want me to stop trying to
convince you to return with us, I won't."

"No, it's not that. I need your services as a physician."

"Of course. I've been meaning to talk to you about that leg." The
doctor broke off at Zar's headshake. "What, then?"

"I'd like you to immunize Wynn against disease, the way you did me
twenty years ago. That's no guarantee of an extended life in this
society, but anything that might help her stay healthy enough to rule
New Araen for a long time . . ."

McCoy nodded. "I can do it, but are you sure you want her running
things? Her people are pretty barbaric, from what I saw."

"She has a conscience, and compassion," Zar said.

"Compared to Laol and Rorgan and the rest of their ilk, she's the soul
of civilization. Don't forget, Wynn is an empath ... which makes it
extremely difficult to be cruel. I believe she'll do well."

The Sovren busied himself slicing bread and cheese for a moment, then
glanced over at the others. "Please, help yourselves. There's wine in
that flagon ... or I can send someone down to the cellar for something
stronger, it' anyone wants it."

"This will be fine," the admiral said, filling a goblet for himself and
the doctor. "Spock?"

"Thank you, no."

Zar finished putting together a massive sandwich. "While I eat, why
don't you tell what you've all been doing for the past 14.5 years?"

Starting with Spock, the three officers briefly sketched in the major
events of their lives. Kirk was last, and, when he mentioned Winona's
death, he was surprised to realize that it had been several days since
he'd even thought about his mother. He felt a twinge of guilt, but
shook it off, knowing Winona would have been the last one to demand
protracted mourning. Matter o fact. if she were here, she'd probably
.f give me a swift kick and tell me to get on with my life, he thought,
smiling a little.

By the time Zar had downed two cheese sandwiches and several pieces of
fruit, they were finished with their accounts. "Your turn, now," Kirk
said. "Tell us how all this--he gestured around him--came about."

"Obviously, it's a long story." Zar put his silver goblet down, then
began twirling its stem absently in his fingers.

"When I left you that day, the Guardian deposited me on the other side
of the mountains from where New Araen now stands. I hiked my way up to
the nearest pass, and that night encountered a group of herdsmen.

"I couldn't speak their language, of course, and once they got a good
look at me, they pronounced me demonspawned and were going to impale
me." Zar raised an eyebrow at his father, who returned the favor, a
glint of amusement in his dark eyes.

A managed to temporarily dissuade them by broadcasting goodwill with all
the intensity I could, so they merely tied me up-rather poorly-and went
off to have a long council about it. I sat there until it was dark, and
used telepathy to pick up some of what they were talking about.

They were worried about a rogue vitha that had come down out of the
mountains to ravage their herds. I began working on the thongs binding
me to my post ...

"The next afternoon they were surprised when I walked back into the
camp, dragging the carcass of the creature

... but the gesture worked. They accepted me. I lived with them until
I learned their language, then accompanied them over-mountain when they
brought their herds to market.

New Araen was then a small, nameless settlement ... a quarter its
present size. Most of the buildings were wattleand-daub, instead of the
way they are now."

Zar took a sip of his water. "The current ruler of this territory was a
man named Tekolin. When he heard about the helpful demon, he sent for
me. We talked. He was a good man, intelligent and something of a
visionary. I stayed with him, serving as a guardsman, and within a few
months he made me his Captain of the Guards.

"That was ideal, as I got to do a lot of traveling out on patrol. I
began gathering a following of young people, mostly men, a few
women-those who weren't already tied down with babies-and educating
them, teaching them my language, all with Tekolin's blessing. You've
met two of them-Cletas and Voba.

"During the next two years they and the others helped me gather all the
available technological advances on this continent. Sometimes they'd
travel hundreds of kilometers to bring back new inventions, new
techniques ... expert stonecutters, for example. Breeding stock for
the taller, more slender-legged vykar that were suitable for riding."

Zar paused for a mom ent, then took a deep breath. His mouth tightened,
and when he continued, his voice was edged with pain. "Araen, Tekolin's
daughter-his only child-was one of my group. A season after we met, she
begged her father to let us marry. Tekolin agreed. Not quite ten
months later, she died."

Zar fell silent, turning, turning the goblet, "I'm sorry," Kirk said.
The words felt as clumsy and inadequate as they usually made him feel,
but, as always, he felt compelled to say something. Nine months ... it
probably was in childbirth.

The admiral remembered Miramanee, who had died without ever feeling
their baby quicken, then he thought of his living child again. Why
didn't Carol fell me about David before I accepted the five-year
mission? I must contact him, he's old enough now to understand when I
explain ... at least I hope he is ...

"I'm sorry, too. But then what happened?" McCoy prompted, gently.

"Tekolin declared me his successor, then he died a year and a half
later. I ruled as Sovren, but I also continued gathering the advances
of my world, educating my group, developing technologies ... writing
books. In the first five years, I wrote ten or twelve texts ... reading
primers, math, grammar, science, physics, even a dictionary. I kept a
staff of clerks busy just copying them, as I had neither the time nor
the underlying technology to build a printing press or develop
paper-yet. I've almost got it now, but . . ." he sighed.

"All these books were on a very elementary level, you understand. My
people weren't ready for quantum mechanics-they still aren't. I've
barely gotten the most educated of them to accept the idea that
everything is composed of atoms. And then it's just an intellectual
conceit."

"Developing technologies?" Spock asked. "Such as mining iron ore and
smelting it into steel?"

"Among other things."

"I have seen the chain-link armor and swords worn by your guards," the
Vulcan said. "is your entire army so equipped?"

"Only two-thirds have chain mail," Zar answered, "but they all have
steel swords, helmets, and breastplates. Production of weapons has,
sadly, taken precedence over everything else for the past four years. At
the moment I have more blacksmiths than teachers here in New Araen."

Spock nodded thoughtfully. "Considering the merits of steel over
bronze, those weapons and armor provide a major asset."

"That's what I'm hoping Rorgan and Laol won't suspect.

They may be careless because their numbers are so huge."

"But, Zar . . ." Kirk was puzzled. "How could you master all those
subjects? It seems impossible for one individual -no matter how
intelligent or comparatively sophisticated -to accomplish so much."

The Sovren nodded, half-smiling. "You're right, it is impossible. The
answer is simple ... I cheated, Jim."

"Cheated?"

"You never saw what I had in that pack I took with me," Zar said,
rising. He limped over to his desk, to return a moment later with an
object he placed on the table before them-a very familiar object.

Kirk grinned admiringly. "You sly sonofagunt A tricorder!"

"Equipped with solar-powered batteries," Spock said, the eyebrow rising.
"I wondered at the time where my spare unit had gone. I assumed you had
borrowed it, and that it had been lost during the fighting on Gateway."

Zar shrugged, looking not at all repentant. "When I first saw my
painting in the Atoz records," he nodded at the mural on the stone wall,
"I knew I must be going to go back-"

He broke off, shaking his head. "Nothing like time travel to confuse
your verb tenses, is there? At any rate, I 'borrowed' spare cassettes
from sickbay-sorry, Doc-and ordered the library computer aboard the
Enterprise to copy all files under certain subjects, especially those
dealing with colonization and survival on primitive worlds. By the time
I left, I had cassettes on everything from making soap to smelting iron,
battle tactics to candle-making and glassblowing. They're so small, I
was able to fit nearly a hundred into that pack. And I had them copied
at the highest possible data density."

He pressed a button on the machine and the unmistakable opening notes of
Beethoven's Fifth Symphony resounded. Zar flicked it off again. "I
brought music, and literature, too." His voice dropped to a
near-whisper.

"There were times when I think the music was all that kept me sane."

"Classical buff, eh?" McCoy said.

Zar nodded. "A complete reactionary, I'm afraid. Nothing more recent
than T'Nira, and she's been dead for two hundred-" He paused, then
sighed. "I mean, she will have been dead for two hundred years, five
thousand years from now."

"Finish your story," Kirk said.

"There's not much more to tell. At first I tried to instill concepts
like democracy, hoping that eventually I could step aside in favor of
the Council, but that's something my people just weren't ready for ...
frankly, I barely managed to get the idea of the Council accepted. The
best I could do was to function as a fairly benevolent despot.

He wiped a speck of dust off the tricorder, frowning a little. "I've
accomplished less than half the things I'd hoped to by now. And, to
make it even more frustrating, just when the valley began to really
prosper, they came-and all they wanted was to obliterate everything we'd
worked for all these years ... destroy it in the space of a single,
bloody day.

"For the first ten years we had peace, but we've been fighting since
that. Small bands, at first. This little valley must've seemed like an
easy mark, but within a few years, they'd learned to respect us. Then,
finally, came this ailiance between the Danreg, Clan Kerren, and the
Asyri ...

and I began to realize that it was probably all over."

"It was the season of Light, it was the season of Darkness," McCoy
quoted.

"That sounds familiar, but I can't place it, Bones," Kirk said. "What
is it from?"

McCoy smiled, nodding at the Vulcan. "Be my guest, Spock."

"A Tale of Two Cities, by Charles Dickens."

"I'm ashamed to say I haven't read it since the Academy," the admiral
admitted. He looked over at Zar and sighed. "But the quotation fits.
Even with all your advances, your troops are going to have a hard time
of it."

"I know." The lines around Zar's mouth grew deeper.

"Every time I pass a dungheap I'm tempted to 'discover' gunpowder. Three
or four blasts, and it would be all over."

"Dungheap?" McCoy looked blank.

"Chemical reactions within middens produce potassium
nitrate-saitpeter-which, along with sulfur and carbon, is a component of
black powder, Doctor," Spock explained.

The medical officer raised an eyebrow. "Well ... why don't you? Just
for this once?"

"Gunpowder won't be invented for another hundred years," Zar said. "I'd
demolish the integrity iof the timestream. And, from what you've been
telling me about the Guardian, that action might have repercussions
extending beyond this one planet."

"You've made the right decision, Zar, but I know that's got to be cold
comfort," Kirk said. "It hasn't been easy, has it?"

Restlessly, the admiral got up and paced around the chamber, finally
stopping by the massive fireplace. "is this your sword?" he asked,
pointing to a sheathed object hanging over the mantel. Zar nodded. "May
IT" "Go ahead."

Grasping the scarred leather-and-wire-bound hilt, the admiral lifted the
blade down, then, careful not to touch the steel, slowly slid it out of
its plain black scabbard. "Beautiful," he murmured, giving it a small
exploratory swing.

The sword was two-edged, pointed, and slightly over a meter long. The
spherical steel pommel was lead-filled to help balance the heavy blade.
Hilt, cross-guard, and pommel were all plain and unornamented.

"Your smith did a wonderful job," Kirk said, admiringly.

Though he obviously had no use for decorations."

"Thank you," Zar said. "They seemed superfluous to me.

Kirk glanced at the other, surprised. "You forged this?"

"Yes. I made it when I became Captain of the Guards.

Took me countless tries to get it right, even though I had a cassette on
ancient weapons-making." Zar smiled faintly. "I suspect that file was
one of Hikaru's additions to the library."

Kirk struck an en garde position, but the weapon was much too heavy for
his wrist-the point sagged immediately. "Surely you don't fence with
this?"

"No," Zar said. "It's too heavy, though it's suprisingly well-balanced.
But in fencing you have to parry, and with a weapon this long and heavy,
there's a major problem. Even carbon-tempered steel can break. So you
need to carry a shield or buckler for parrying. But I have introduced
the use of the point to my troops. They had learned the use of the edge
only ... most bronze swords don't even have points."

The admiral nodded. "This is what they call a hand-anda-half sword,
isn't it? You can swing it either one- or two-handed?" He knew that it
was also called a "bastard sword--an ironic designation, considering the
circumstances of Zar's birth.

"Yes ... that's one of its names," Zar said, giving him a wry smile and
a raised eyebrow.

The admiral cleared his throat and changed the subject.

"By the way, what is its name?"

"Name?" Zar looked puzzled for a moment, then understanding dawned. "Oh,
you mean a name lik. "Excalibur," o. "Fred'-something like that?" The
gray eyes were bleak.

"It doesn't have one, Jim.. "Killer," maybe, because that's what I use
it for. Frankly, I hate what I do with it, but I've learned to be
damned good at it. Lately, none of us has had much choice."

Slightly daunted-there goes another of my romantic illusions-Kirk
cautiously slid the sword back into its scabbard and hung it back up.

"Now what?" he asked, turning to face the others.

Zar glanced at the chronom eter on his tricorder. "Now I'd better check
to see if Heldeon's responded to Wynn's message. We ought to start for
the Danreg camp before sunset. I'll order mounts for you three." He
stood up, steadying himself on the edge of the table, his mouth
tightening as his game leg took his weight. "I get stiff if I sit too
long."

"I'd really like to look at that, son," McCoy said. "Might be something
I could do to help. What happened?"

"Took a lance through the thigh, nearly ten years ago," Zar told him.
"It killed my vykar, and I was pinned beneath the body until Cletas
found me. I suspect nerve damage -that's not something you can repair,
if I recall correctly."

"There have been advances since you were with us," the medical officer
said. "A doctor named Corrigan, working with a Vulcan healer, Sorely,
perfected a nerve-regeneration technique over a decade ago. I have a
unit aboard the Enterprise ... but, of course, you'd have to come back
with US."

Zar gazed at him for a long moment. "I see ... still the expert
gambler. You really know how to raise the stakes, don't you?"

Chapter Nine

RIDING A v-YKAR wasn't much like riding a horse, McCoy discovered. The
beasts moved with a side-to-side motion that reminded him more of a
camel. They wore bitless bridles, and were controlled more by the legs
and voiced commands than by tugs on the reins. Still, sitting upright
on the creature's back was infinitely preferable to being thrown across
its withers.

Darkness had fallen over the slopes of Big Snowy as their little band
pressed onward, up the Mountainside. The guards, their weapons bound
with the blue peace-thongs, carried lit torches, but their light did not
reach the center of the group, where the doctor rode.

McCoy hoped uneasily that his mount possessed better night vision than
he did. Even though tonight was clear, Sarpeidon's lack of a moon made
the darkness seem endless and looming. The doctor glanced up, seeing
stars that were only vaguely familiar from his previous trip here, when
they had brought Zar back for-he hoped-the first time.

McCoy experienced a sudden, aching nostalgia for the clear-eyed youth
with the shy smile whom he had known for those seven weeks aboard the
Enterprise. He'd virtually adopted Zar, becoming the young man's
confidant and adviser. In a way, as Kirk had observed at the time, it
was as though Zar were his son, rather than Spock's. When Zar had
returned to the past, McCoy had grieved for weeks TwE FOR YESTERDAY

almost as he would have mourned his daughter, Joanna, if anything had
happened to her.

The vykar lurched its way up the rocky path and stumbled, sending a rock
spinning away from its cloven hoof.

The doctor sensed, rather than saw, the stone pitch over a cliff two
meters to his left. He listened for the clatter of its landing, but no
sound came. McCoy swallowed. "Be careful, buddy," he admonished the
vykar, patting the beast's warm shoulder in front of the saddle and
catching a whiff of its musky odor borne on the dark breeze. "It's a
long way down."

His mount snorted, unimpressed, as it plodded on.

McCoy returned to his musings.

He was worried about Zar. The man he'd seen today was so different from
the eager, impetuous youth he'd known fourteen years ago, that, except
for brief flashes of familiarity, he could have been a different person
altogether. The Zar he'd known before had been passionate and intense,
quicktempered and proud (at times, arrogant), yet touchingly vulnerable
in his loneliness.

The man McCoy had met today seemed little more than a hollow shell
filled only by a bitter determination to do his duty. All the passion,
the intensity, the pride, were gone.

Only the loneliness was still there-greater than ever. What happened to
him? McCoy wondered, trying to dig deeper than the bare-bones recital
Zar had given them, to unearth the old sorrows.

Obviously, the death of his wife is a good part of it ... he loved her
very much, if I'm any judge. It must have been childbirth. Not
surprising, in a society this primitive. Rather, it's a wonder that any
of them survive ...

McCoy's thoughts turned to Wynn, remembering the tension in her
tough-muscled biceps when he'd given her the immunizations Zar had
requested. She'd been afraid of the hypospray, flinching involuntarily
every time it hissed, but she had obviously trusted Zar enough to accept
his reassurances that McCoy was a healer, that the doctor's actions
would benefit her.

That's a lot of trust to place in a man you've only met today, he
decided, even if you are planning to marry him tonight. A State
marriage, at that, which I gather from Zar will be strictly one of
convenience. A lot of trust ... still, don'tJorgel that she's an
empaih also ... she'd know, surely, if someone meant her harm ...

McCoy sighed, shifting position in the narrow saddle. He i had always
been thin, and had lost weight the last few days, i leaving his rump
even less padded than usual. Added to the stiffness from yesterday's
alarums and excursions, he was undoubtedly going to be saddle-sore.

Damn. But it'll be worth it all, if Zar comes back with us.

Maybe I'll take some of that leave I've got coming, and the two of us
can borrow Jim's cabin in Garrovick Valley for a couple of weeks. Just
take it easy, maybe fish a little. . . he needs it, he's been under
unbelievable stress for years, trying to keep those wolves from ripping
the throat out of New Araen ... no wonder he looks haunted ...

Not to mention the sheer pressures of leadership. Sword of Damocles,
and all that. He'd counseled James Kirk too many times to have any
illusions about how agonizing some command choices could prove. The "if
only I'd-- syndrome was a killer.

The trail (at least McCoy presumed they were still following a trail)
beneath them seemed to be leveling out, and the i doctor glanced up to
see campfires and torchlight glimmering from a plateau ahead. At the
same moment he heard an incomprehensible demand from a shadowy figure,
obviously a sentry's challenge. Cletas, who was riding point, answered
in the same tongue.

Suddenly the torches waved wildly as the lead riders increased speed.
McCoy's vykar snorted and gathered itself, breaking into a rough canter.
The doctor clung unashamedly to the pommel as they thundered over the
meadow and into the center of Heldeon's camp.

"Whoa, damn you!" he yelled, sawing at the reins.

"Stop!"

With a lurch that nearly sent the doctor flying spreadeagled onto its
antlers, the vykar halted.

"Bones, you okay?" McCoy heard a familiar shout. He turned, pushing
himself upright, to see Kirk expertly threading his galloping mount
through the melee, then bringing it to a neat-footed halt.

McCoy grimaced as he nodded. It's positively disgusting how all Jim has
to do is try something once, and he masters it. Why couldn't I have
been born with balance and reflexes like that? Ten to one he isn't even
sore tomorrow.

The admiral swung effortlessly off his vykar without signaling for it to
kneel. "Good girl," he said, scratching the beast's neck while she
grunted with pleasure. "Need some help getting down, Bones?"

"No, actually I thought I'd just sit up here and pose for a
quasi-equestrian statue," the doctor snapped peevishly.

"Damn it, I've forgotten the command to make these critters kneel."

In the torchlight, Kirk's mouth quirked. He tethered his mount, then
approached McCoy's. Reaching out, he tapped the middle of the beast's
shoulder. "Down, " he said, firmly.

Grunting, the vykar ponderously knelt.

"Smart-ass," McCoy growled, swinging off in high dudgeon-only to have
his knees buckle when his feet touched the ground.

"Steady, Bones," Kirk said, grabbing the doctor's arm.

"I'm all right ... or I would be after a good night's sleep, a soak in
a hot tub, a massage, and a stiff drink," the doctor said, fighting back
a yawn as they moved toward a torchlit circle that had been arranged
beside the tent where they'd been tied the previous night. "I feel like
I've been awake half my life."

"Well, try to look alive. You don't want to disgrace Zar by dozing off
during his wedding."

"Where is he?"

"He's off talking with Heideon and Wynn. The ceremony will start as
soon as they can get the succession rights, the property settlements,
and the battle negotiations worked out."

"Where's Spock?"

"As the groom's closest relative, he went with them. From what Cletas
told me as we rode, the connubial couple isn't supposed to talk-their
representatives do it for them. Zar was briefing him on what to ask for
the whole way up here."

McCoy chuckled wearily. "Old Heldeon had better look out. Spock has
negotiated with everyone from the Romulans to the Talosians. Zar's apt
to wind up owning the whole planet."

As she sat in her father's tent, pretending to drink a goblet of wine,
Wynn realized that she was nervous, which surprised her. She had been
nervous eight years before, the night she had married Nahral ... but
that had been a true marriage, and she a maid, which was only natural.
So why, now, did her stomach knot within her, and her hands shake so
badly she was afraid to put the goblet down on the low table, for fear
she would spill it and someone would see?

The High Priestess swallowed a fraction of the dryness from her mouth
and forcibly turned her attention back to Heldeon and Spock. Their nods
told her that they had come to an acceptable compromise on the grazing
rights. They were almost done, then. Soon it will be limefor the
ceremony, she thought, with a stab of real fear.

Vellum rustled as the scribes produced the completed papers, then each
negotiator signed. "And now," Spock said, "about the approaching
battle. What support can we expec t from you, most honored chieftain?"

Heldeon sneezed, then sniffied; he'd taken a rheum from the wetting he'd
received the night before. The older man mopped his nose on his sleeve
before answering. "Support?

You speak of troops? You ask me to go foresworn and fight against my
allies?"

"But they are neither blood-kin, nor kin-by-marriage," Spock pointed
out, his voice and words so calmly reasonable that Wynn smothered a
smile. "Surely the greater transgression would be to allow
kin-by-marriage to come to harm through your inaction."

Heldeon blinked reddened eyes, then scratched his graying hair.
"Hmmmmm."

At first the High Priestess had wondered about her new lord-to-be's
wisdom in replacing the senior member of his Council, old Davon, with
his father as his marriage-terms negotiator. But now she realized why
Zar had done it. Zar's sire was neither intimidated nor overawed by the
Chieftain of Danreg Ford ... an attitude Heldeon was not used to
encountering. Spock's unruffled demeanor put her father off-balance, as
no amount of aggression or attempted bravado could have.

"Of course, I will withdraw from my alliance," Heldeon said, finally.
"The blood of our Lakreo brethren will not stain Danreg hands." He
smothered a cough.

Spock raised a disdainful eyebrow. "Forgive me, but is it not true that
he who stands back and allows his brother to be attacked and murdered.
sins fully as much as the hand that guides the killing blade? Without
your strength, great chieftain, all the Lakreo efforts will likely come
to naught ... your daughter will rule a city blooded, gutted, and hung
for butchering at Laol and Rorgan's leisure. Is that what you wish for
her?"

Heldeon shifted uncomfortably. "You make your point well,
man-from-distant-places, but ... there is the matter of being
foresworn. Ashmara does not look with favor upon oath-breakers."

"Ah." Spock glanced quickly over at Wynn. "That is undoubtedly so. Yet,
this is perhaps a matter of degree.

Which sin does Ashmara repudiate more-the sin of oathbreaking, or the
sin of kin-killing?"

Wynn considered for several minutes. Ashmara, she thought, Great
Mother. Lend my tongue your wisdom, so that I ma - V correctly express
Your will. Finally she looked back up and met her father's eyes. "Honor
is a two-edged blade," she said slowly. "At times it is impossible to
wield it without injury. Yet it seems to me that the sharper wound to a
spirit arises from kin-killing, than it does from oathbreaking. And,
after all," her voice hardened, "it is not as though Rorgan has not
already broken faith with us."

"What do you mean?" her father demanded, speaking in Danrei.

"He ordered that attack on our camp the time Nahral and Lelinos were
butchered," Wynn replied, in the same tongue.

"The Goddess sent me certain knowledge of this the first time I looked
into his eyes. He is already foresworn, Father."

Heldeon snuffled again, looking very grave. "I see. Why did you not
tell me this before, daughter?"

"Because I knew that my Sendings from Ashmara make you ill-at-ease with
me ... and, we needed that alliance.

Now, I believe, we are offered a better one. My counsel is to accept my
lord-to-be's offer and lend him all the support we can muster. I myself
will lead our troops, if your rheum worsens, and you cannot."

Heldeon coughed, the sound coming from deep in his huge chest. "I will
do as you advise," he said. "But, believe me, I shall not miss the
opportunity to ride against the double-tongued liar who murdered my
grandson. Before you leave to lie with your new lord tonight, you must
use your healer's skill to concoct a tisane to lift this fever and
lighten the weight in my chest."

"I will, Father," Wynn said. "And my lord has with him one whom he says
is a powerful healer. If you wish, I will ask him also to aid you. His
name is McCoy."

Heldeon shivered with a chill. "Perhaps. Is this McCoy a sorcerer?"

"No," Wynn said. "But my lord says his healing powers are little short
of magic."

"Very well." The chieftain dropped back into the Lakreo speech. "As
always, my daughter counsels me wisely. Tomorrow I will advise Laol
that I cannot hold to an alliance made with that liar and child-killer,
Rorgan Death-Hand.

Then, after she has been fairly warned as to my intentions, Danreg and
Lakreo troops will march together to rout these invaders. I, Heldeon,
Chieftain of Danreg Ford, will pronounce sword-oath on it."

The grizzled warrior rose to his feet and raised both hands, palm out.
Commander Madon hastily placed the old chieftain's bronze blade across
them. "May my own weapon smite me in this, if I be foresworn," Heldeon
intoned the formal words, his voice hoarse, but still impressive.

"And I, also, offer sword-oath that I will abide by all the covenants
made here between us today," Zar said, speaking for the first time since
the formal greetings. "My lady?" he asked, also standing and holding
out his hands.

Wynn hastily tugged the Sovren's weapon out of its scabbard, thinking
the moment she felt its weight that she had never encountered its like
before. Such a strange color.

What is it made from?

Carefully, she laid the sword across the younger man's palms. "May my
own steel smite me in this, if I be foresworn," Zar said, his eyes
intent on Heldeon's.

Wynn heard Spock give a faint sigh of refief.

"And now, for the ceremonv," Heldeon boomed. "Tell our people to make
ready, Maon. Wynn found herself hustled off to her sleeping tent by her
Under-Priestesses. There she washed, cleansing and purifying herself as
she would for any ritual. Her women loosened her hair and brushed it
until it shone in the lamplight, leaving it to fall free over her
shoulders and spill down her back.

The gown they brought for her was Ashmara's traditional green, the color
of blood, of life. Wynn slipped it on, then fastened her ruby necklace
around her throat. Finally, she placed the coronal on her head, and was
ready.

Escorted by her Under-Priestesses, she walked out of the tent, into the
torchlit circle. She could feel the pulse in her throat hammering until
she thought it might choke her. She tried to swallow, but her mouth had
turned to dust.

What am I doing? she wondered, dazedly. Great Mother, why did I agree
to this? Am I ensorceled?

She stepped into the center of the circle and stood waiting, her chief
Under-Priestess, Lylla, on her right, her father on her left. I can't
do this, Wynn thought. I don't even know this man. Why am I doing
this?

After several minutes the circle of watchers rippled, and she saw him
approaching, his sire on his right, Cletas on his left. He went
unmailed and carried no weapons, for war had no place in one of
Ashmara's rites.

Instead of the traditional green, he still wore black ...

breeches, boots, and a sleeveless leather tunic that left his arms bare
to the night breeze. A silver-and-jet medallion swung against his
chest, matched by his wrist-guards, but he wore no coronal or other
symbol of rank. As Wynn watched, Cletas unfolded and shook out a red
cloak and draped it over his Sovren's shoulders. Zar tossed the folds
back as he approached.

He halted, facing her, then bowed formally. Wynn inclined her head in
the greeting-to-equals, and lifted her hand, palm outward. I could
still stop this. One word, and my will would be obeyed. I could stop
...

The Sovren moved toward her, his hand also raised.

When he stopped, he was so close she could see the pulse beating beneath
his jaw. Slowly, formally, he met her flesh with his own, so they stood
palm to palm and forearm to forearm.

As before, his skin was warm, warmer than hers ... asif he were
fevered. As soon as they touched, the contact between them came alive
again. Wynn drew a deep breath, fighting that link. Why do I feel like
this? Why am I doing this?

She willed herself to resist that mental and emotional merging, refusing
to look at him, staring fixedly at the medallion he wore, struggling to
keep her thoughts and feelings barriered within her ... and realized
that Zar was having the same difficulty.

From the crowd came a slow drumbeat, then a low, insistent chanting.
Lylla was speaking an invocation to Ashmara. Wynn's mind automatically
supplied the words, since she had officiated at many handfastings
before, but to another part of her, they were only gibberish.

I could stop ... I should stop ... my will ... this is too fast ...

Lylla moved forward, still chanting, carrying heavy thongs that had been
dyed green. The Under-Priestess began winding the leather strips,
wrapping their arms together, until they stood bound, fingertip to
elbow, past any breaking free.

Wynn's heart hammered so hard that she was shaking. It is almost too
late. If I am going to stop this, it will have to be now, it must be
now ... Lady Goddess, can this be Your will?

Gasping, she raised her head to shout out the words of denial, but her
eyes met his, and they died unspoken on her lips. Zar was gazing at her
anxiously, she could feel his concern, and she suddenly realized-with
the sureness of a Sending-that she was doing what she must. This man
meant her no harm, she knew it, had always known it.

She stood there silent, still trembling, but her fear was now mixed with
another emotion.

Lylla stood back, leaving them bound together. "The binding is
complete. They can only be separated by death -Ashmara has witnessed
it!"

The High Priestess felt her wrist seized from behind, and knew without
looking that Heldeon was playing his part. At the same moment Spock, at
a signal from Cletas, also stepped forward and grabbed Zar's wrist. Both
men tugged sharply, and Wynn stumbled back, away from her lord, even as
he was pulled away from her.

Chanting filled her ears now, along with the sound of drums, as she was
stretched bodily, her arms spreadeagled by her father's great
strength-three hard pulls-once ...

twice ... thrice-but Lylla knew her business, and the green thongs,
though not knotted, had been bound correctly. They held through all
three ceremonial tugs.

Having demonstrated that Ashmara blessed this handfasting by making it
proof against family attempts to separate the handfasted couple, both
fathers were supposed to release their respective wrists. But Heldeon,
with a ribald guffaw, spun Wynn even as he let her go, sending her
staggering back into Zar's involuntary embrace. The High Priestess
would have fallen if he hadn't thrown his free arm around her shoulders,
steadying her.

Wynn colored, silently cursing her father, as she directed a scathing
glance at the chieftain. As she straightened in her new husband's hold,
she was acutely conscious of his body against hers. She looked up, only
to find him staring down at her, his eyes wide with surprise ... and
something else she couldn't read.

"Kiss her, son-by-marriage!" Heldeon whooped. "She won't bite-much!"

"Is that necessary to complete the rite?" Zar asked softly.

She could barely hear him over the cheering.

"It is traditional, but the handfasting is complete, my lord," Wynn
said, trying to pull away. "Most of those who enter the circle can
barely restrain themselves, but we are different, you and U'

"Yes, we are," he agreed, but, bending his head, he brushed her mouth
with his own. She felt the soft roughness of his moustache on her upper
lip. "There," he said, drawing back and finally releasing her.
"Traditions should be preserved, don't you agree?"

"Of course," she said automatically, and was angry to realize that she
was slightly breathless. Don't be a fool, she thought. He meant
nothing by that, nothing! He was only answering Father's challenge. Any
man would have done the same.

Then they were surrounded by well-wishers, and it was time to undo the
thongs.

Zar was sitting alone in his bedchamber, finishing a late supper (he'd
been too queasy from nerves to eat at the wedding feast), when he heard
the tap on the door. He frowned as he pushed himself up from his chair
by the hearth; if the guard had permitted his visitor to knock, both the
visitor and the reason must be important.

"Come," he called out.

The door opened and Spock stood there, his blue cloak pulled close
around his shoulders. "I thought you might be awake."

"Too tired to sleep." Zar let himself sink back into his seat, then
waved at the chair facing his. "Sit down. I'm pleased you came by. Can
I get you anything?"

The Vulcan shook his head as he sat, stretching his booted legs out to
the fire. "Cletas told us it is nearly summer, yet even here in this
valley there is still frost at night. I confess I am grateful for the
fire's warmth."

"I rarely feel the cold," Zar admitted. "After living on the tundra all
those years, this southern climate still seems warm by comparison. I
doubt I could have managed Vulcan's heat."

"It is not too late to find out," Spock said, glancing over at him. Zar
didn't miss the unspoken appeal in his father's eyes, though his
expression never altered.

The younger man sighed. "We've been through that.

There's no way I can come back with you. My people need me. Besides,
Sarpeidon, for better or worse, is my world.

Vulcan isn't . . . I don't know anyone there."

"You have family there," Spock reminded him.

Zar raised an eyebrow, the movement coming so naturally that for a
moment he forgot that it might seem as if he were mocking his father.
"You mean T'Pau?"

"She died some years ago. No, I was speaking of your grandparents."

"Amanda and Sarek? They know about me? How?"

"I told them," Spock said, flatly. "While I was on Vulcan preparing to
study for Kolinahr, I hung two of your paintings in my room. When my
mother saw them, she inquired as to the identity of the artist." He
paused for a beat. "I had been planning to inform them anyway."

Zar caught his breath, remembering vividly how shamed the Vulcan had
felt by his "krenath" offspring-living proof of his own fallibility. And
he told hisfather about me?Sarek, the person he wanted most to impress?
He cleared his throat, searching for words. "How did they take it?"

"They wished they had had the opportunity to meet you.

If you will come back with us, they still can. Dr. McCoy is correct
... your duty to this world does not demand your death. I have scanned
the events following the battle in question, and the time-stream is free
of any complications or repercussions relating to your demise. It will
not matter whether you die, or are listed as 'missing in action."

"What happens to New Amen?"

"Peace descends. The Lakreo Valley continues to prosper."

It's possible that Wynn succeeds in holding off the invaders, then, Zar
thought. "That's wonderful," he said, without irony. "I'm glad you
told me. It makes it easier.

The Vulcan's mouth hardened, and fbr a second the Sovren sensed his
father's frustration. "It' does not have to happen." Spock's dark eyes
were very serious. -Zar, if you return with me, I will take several
months' leave to see you settled-more, if it is needed. We could visit
Earth, Vulcan -anywhere you wish. The explored universe-and it is very
wide-would truly be yours, so."

Spock drew a deep breath. "And for Amanda it would mean-" He swallowed.
"Understand that for years, my mother has studied Vulcan mental
disciplines, including the control of her human emotions. She has made
considerable progress in this regard. Yet, when I spoke of you, and she
told me that she wished she could have met you, there were tears in her
eyes."

You'refighting dirty, Father, Zar thought, glancing down, refusing to
meet the other's gaze. He cast awkwardly about for a change of subject.
"Which two paintings were they?"

"The Beta Niobe ice-scape, and an enlargement of your self-portrait from
the cave. It was the only image I had of you. But an image is not what
I want . .

He is letting me know how much I matter to him, something that never
happened when we were together before-except once, in the privacy of a
meld, Zar thought.

But to actually hear him say it ... His mouth thinned. I can't let it
matter. I can't let him sway me.

"You've changed," Zar said, bluntly.

"So have you."

"You're right about that," the younger man said. "Twenty years ago I
was about a century younger-or, at least, that's how it feels. And
now," he cocked his head, the eyebrow going back up, "thanks to the
paradoxes of time travel, you're less than a decade older than I am."

"I know." Spock glanced around the room, with its big curtained bed, and
tapestry-hung walls. There were only a few pieces of massive furniture
. . . a wardrobe, and the cabinet where Voba stored the armor and
weapons. The Vulcan's gaze stopped on the portrait. "Your work?" he
asked, as though he already knew the answer.

"Yes. That was Araen," Zar said. "My wife ... that is," he corrected
himself with a touch of bitterness, "my first wife."

"She was lovely," Spock said, gently.

"She was," Zar agreed, keeping his voice steady with an effort.
"Fine-boned and so delicate ... intelligent, but kind. She never used
her wit to hurt, only to make others happy. When she was in a room,
people would gravitate toward her just as they do toward a fire in
winter." He sighed, realizing he couldn't afford to let himself sink
into those memories. "May I ask you a personal question?"

Spock considered. "You may ask. I do not promise to answer."

"Fair enough. Why haven't you ever married?"

It was the Vulcan's turn to raise an eyebrow. "There is no single
reason. Once the liaison the family arranged for me was terminated by
divorce, there was no reason to enter another immediately ... so I
elected not to do so. Time went by ... my contemporaries were all
partnered. Then our five-vear mission was over, and I began the study
of the Kolinahr' disciplines. When one is an acolyte in pursuit of
Kolinahr, one must give up ... external ... links." He steepled his
fingers. "By the time I left Kolinahr, I also left Vulcan. I have not
been home since."

"So, you just haven't met the right woman," Zar said, deadpan.

Shared amusement touched his father's eyes. "You could put it that
way."

"I thought you had a duty to 'the family' to keep the bloodline going."

Spock nodded. "So I have been told. Considering the Vulcan lifespan, I
still have time, even if you choose not to return with me. Although I
do not feel as bound by family traditions as I once did. As one grows
older, one's perspectives and priorities alter."

"The understatement of the evening."

Spock's eyebrow rose again. "And what about you? I gather that the
Council has been urging you to remarry for years. Why has it taken you
this long to do so?"

Zar hesitated for nearly a minute before speaking. "What took place
tonight between Wynn and me won't be a true marriage," he said finally,
deliberately hedging the question and hoping Spock wouldn't notice. He's
the last person I want to discuss that subject with ...

"I see," his father said. "An in-name-only arrangement, then,
contracted for political reasons." The dark Vulcan eyes held his, and
the Sovren knew then that Spock had not missed his evasion. "Why not an
actual marriage?" he asked. "I do not wish to pry, but . . ."

Zar swallowed. "I don't know ... I never met the right woman either, I
suppose. Or, if I did, I never let myself know it. To tell you the
truth, Father, McCoy was right. I'm a coward."

"Not by any measure of the term as I comprehend it. If I may offer an
opinion, you have acquitted yourself well in an admittedly difficult
situation, Zar."

The younger man blinked in surprised pleasure. "Why . thank you. It
means a lot to me to hear you say that."

He mused for a moment. "You know what's been hardest, in some ways,
about my 'situation'? I came back here fired up with determination to
save the world. But it didn't take long before I realized that just
because something is the 'right' thing to do, doesn't necessarily make
it enjoyable. I really don't like'running the show."And a sense of duty
and obligation can take you only so far. I've regretted not staying
with you more times . . ."

"You don't enjoy command?"

"No, not the way Jim Kirk does. He was born for it, he thrives on it,
you can look at him and tell. When he's in charge, even when he's
wrong-he's fight, somehow. It's hard to put into words."

TwE FOR YESTERDAY

"I know what you mean," Spock told him.

"I suppose you do, more than anyone."

"But sureiy your work here must have had some compensations."

"Years ago, when we had peace, it did, yes. I'd visit the classrooms
and know that the people of my valley would one day be literate. I'd
watch the farmers using their new steel plows, and it would all seem
worth it, then. No matter how much I disliked levying taxes, or judging
criminals, any of the day-to-day work of'running the show'-I was
accomplishing what I had set myself to do, and that meant something."

He shook his head. "Even though to do it, I had to give up my personal
freedom-and, if you think about it, my entire life before, I'd been
about as free as anyone could be. No one to answer to but myself. But
when I came here, I was responsible for thousands of lives-nobody is
more constrained than a ruler of a territory this size-" Zar broke off,
gazing down at the table between them. His sword, which VDba had
cleaned and placed there for his inspection, Jay gleaming bluely,
unsheathed.

His mouth twisted as he stared at it. "And then the wars started . .
."

"I understand," Spock said. "But why do you say that you lack courage?"

Zar flexed his hands, absently rubbing one of the old scars. "I've lost
so many people, through the years ...

Araen, and Tekolin ... Alyn, one of my best tacticians, Matric, who was
with me from the first ... others ... and, of course. my mother. With
each death I've received the warning that something terrible was
happening, or was going to happen to them ... just the way I knew that
time when Commander Tal was going to execute you. Sick, dizzy,
disoriented ... the greater the danger, the worse it was."

"I remember."

"It's hard to let yourself care, when you know you're going to be
there-mentally and emotionally, at least -when they die." Zar's voice
faltered on the last syllable.

"I've spent a lot of years now, trying to care as little as possible.
And yet, it still happens to me. Tomorrow I may wake up sick, and
realize that Cletas or Voba will be the next. That's hell to live
with."

"Yes," Spock agreed. "But the alternative is to live without friendship
or warmth ... in a sterile, joyless environment. I experienced such a
barren existence during my mind-meld with Vejur."

"Vejur?"

"A gargantuan computer-generated spaceship we encountered. It had come
to Earth searching for its creator, for something to give purpose to its
and existence- It had accumulated so much data, had achieved such
perfect logic-and yet it had no concept of compassion, of friendship,
and so remained ... empty. Barren. It came very close to destroying
Terra before we could prompt it to search for a higher purpose."

Zar listened intently. "So, what's the moral here?" he asked, when
Spock had finished. "Logic isn't everything.

I'm shocked, Father!" he said with a half-smile.

Unabashed, Spock returned it. "Some things do transcend logic." He
sobered, steepling his fingers together as he stared into the fire.
"Actually, the inherent limitations of logic were only part of 'the
moral," as you term it. More important, I believe, is the lesson that
anything-or anyone -who ceases to grow, to reach outward, even at great
risk or cost ... is spiritually dying."

As he listened to the Vulcan's words, Zar had lost his air of casual
amusement; now he leaned forward, his eyes as hard and intent as the
blade resting between them. "So you're saying that I should take the
risk of caring, no matter who dies, and what it does to me when it
happens? You're saying I should fight to stay alive, even when I have
it on the best authority that I'm a corpse just waiting to fall down?

You're saying I should-" His voice cracked, and he rubbed his forehead,
fighting for control.

After a moment, a hand rested on his shoulder, gently, then was gone.
Zar took a deep, shuddering breath and looked back up at Spock. "I
apologize for that outburst. Just when I think I'm completely resigned,
something wells up, and I realize that part of me is still scared and
doesn't want to die."

"I am vastly relieved to hear you say that," the Vulcan said, his dark
eyes intent. "Ever since we met this time, I have been concerned that
you were, indeed, resigned past the need for all striving. The thought
... distressed ... me more than I can easily tell you."

Zar heard the roughness in his father's voice, even as he sensed the
other's emotion ... even without reaching out, it was there, close to
the surface. Ever since he had watched that bloody little scene in his
tricorder viewer, the Vulcan had been haunted by it ... his pain and
sorrow were profound.

"Oh, Father . . ." Zar searched for words. "I didn't realize ... I
didn't think what it would be like for you, to see me . . ." He
stumbled to a halt. "I'm sorry."

"it is hardly logical for you to apologize for what I saw in my
tricorder," Spock said, gently. "Obviously, if the event had been
something under your control, it would not have happened. Or be going
to happen." He frowned at the tangle of tenses.

"No, but if I hadn't been so self-obsessed, I'd have realized what
effect all this would have on the people who care about me. I'd have
tried to summon a little rage."

"Rage?"

"Something Wynn said on the same subject earlier today."

"For her milieu, she is truly an admirable person," Spock said,
thoughtfully. "Intelligent, compassionate ... I find myself liking
her."

"So do L" the Sovren admitted, then remembered, for no reason, the
expression in Wynn's eyes just after he had kissed her, there in the
firelit circle. As though she thought I was mocking her, when actually
it wasjust an ... impulse. I hope I have time to explain that to her.
She deserves to know ...

The Vulcan stirred. "It is very late," he said. "I expect you need
your rest."

And so do you, Zar thought, seeing the deep lines etched around his
father's mouth. "You're right." As Spock got up to leave, he cleared
his throat. "Father?"

"Yes?"

"You've given me a lot to think about. About whether I should remain
here, or go with you ... whether I should stay still, or risk growing
... whether I should ... rage.

Thank you."

"You are very welcome," Spock said, then added in slow, deliberate
Vulcan, "Rest well and peacefully, my son. Remember that on any world
the wind eventually wears away the stone, because the stone can only
crumble; the wind can change."

Then the door closed with a soft click, and he was gone.

Zar sat for several minutes, thinking about those final words. Finally
he sighed, grasping the arms of his chair as he prepared to rise. It
was then that he heard the faint, cautious click from behind the
tapestry at his back. A soft rustle, as of fabric, followed ...

Soundlessly, he was out of his chair, and his sword was in his hand.
Shifting his weight cautiously, he crept toward the arras, fighting a
wild impulse to shout, "Dead for a ducat, dead!" as he plunged his blade
through it.

Controlyoursel( he admonished himself sternly. Whoever this is, it
isn't Polonius. A second before Zar swept the heavy folds aside, he
knew the identity of the intruder.

"My lady wife," he said, giving Wynn an ironic bow, then holding out his
hand, "wouldn't you be more comfortable near the fire?"

Chapter Ten

I SHOULD HAVE REALIZED, Zar thought, that Clelas would put her in the
room adjoining mine. State marriage or no, she is mv wi and co-regent,
and therefore entitled to all the - fie privileges and honors oJ'her
rank. Including the consorl's bedchamber. Since Araen's death, he had
never entered the room ... he'd bolted the connecting door and had it
covered with the tapestry, and nearly succeeded in forgetting it was
there.

Wynn hesitated for a second, then her chin came up in a way he was
beginning to recognize. "Thank you, my lord," she said, coolly. "I am
somewhat chilled."

The fingers she placed in his felt like icicles; she wore only a thin
linen shift, her cloak thrown over it. Her hair was loosely braided
down her back. Zar led her over to the chair and seated her, then he
busied himself poking the fire up, adding several logs until it was
snapping comfortably.

When he turned back to Wynn, she was staring at him, her eyes defiant.
"I don't suppose you will believe me, my lord, but I never intended what
happened just now. I had fallen asleep, and suddenly - . ." she bit
her lip distractedly, "suddenly I was awake, thinking someone had called
my name. So I approached the door-Cletas showed it to me tonight, when
he unbolted it. It was open a crack, and I heard your voice - - ."

She shrugged, tiredly. "I stepped through, intending to call out, but
then I heard your father speak, and knew that you were both here. I
realized then that no one had summoned me.

"When I hea rd what you were talking about, I was ashamed to admit that I
had listened to such a personal conversation, and turned to leave. But
the door had closed behind me; I could not get it open without making
some sound, so I waited, intending to turn and leave as soon as I could
do so without discovery. When you were sitting there so quietly, after
Spock left, I thought you had fallen asleep and my chance had come . .
."

Her mortification was genuine; Zar could pick it up without even trying.
He nodded, Testing an arm against the high back of her chair. -I
understand. These things happen, don't worry about it. And we were
speaking of you, so it is entirely possible you did hear your name."

"But that is not all," she continued, not looking up.

"While I was standing there, trying not to listen-though of course that
was impossible-it was as though I were receiving a Sending. No vision,
no words-but a strong conviction, my lord, that you should do as our
father wishes. You y need to go ... wherever it is he wants to take
you. You must help him. Helping him may be your only means of saving
yourself Ifee/ this, so strongly ... I am sure Ashmara wills it."

"You don't understand what they want me to do," Zar said.

"You are right, I don't. They are not of this world, are they?" She
hesitated, lacing her fingers in her lap. "I don't mean spirits or
demons, either. I'm not sure what I do mean ... except that Kirk told
me when first I saw him that he could not explain how they had traveled
here. They come from ... someplace else. But that's not altogether
it, is it?"

"No. They come from a place-actually, a world, or worlds-that is
different, not only in location, but in time.

They come from a time that has yet to be."

Wynn sighed. "Perhaps you had better give me that explanation you
promised me earlier, my lord. It is important that I know all I am
capable of understanding about you ... and them. Please trust me about
this."

The Sovren shrugged one shoulder. What difference can it make? She
probably won't believe me anyway "Very well."

Choosing his words carefully, he outlined the truth in the simplest
terms he could. The High Priestess listened, never interrupting,
frowning a little as she concentrated.

When Zar finished, she looked up at him. "All my life I have sensed
that there are things in this world ... in this universe ... that I
might not understand. Now I know that there are many, many things
beyond my comprehension.

You tell me that there are worlds beyond worlds, and stars beyond stars
... and that distance and time can somehow be one and the same thing.
But I do know that no one would undertake the journey those three did
without good reason.

You are the one they need to help them."

Zar frowned. "Just because I contacted the Guardian once . . ."

"I sense that they are right. If anyone can make this-this God of
Time-resume its duties, vou are that one."

"They hope I can. Nobody knows."

She leaned forward, her green eyes shining with excitement-and hope.
"You must, " she said. "You must do as they ask."

"Leave and never return?" Zar raised an eyebrow. "You will indeed
inherit quickly, my lady."

"I do not mean that," she said, brushing his cynicism aside impatiently.
"This Guardian-to it Time is nothing, a roll of fabric folded or
discarded as it wills, yes?"

Zar nodded.

"Then it can return you to before the battle begins. You will be there
to lead our troops. You will fight, and, perhaps, you will not fall.
The Sending is strong, but there is no picture to guide me ... just the
impression! But if I am right ... if you could be saved. . ."

"Yes?" he prompted, as she trailed off. "What then?"

She bit her lip, all animation vanishing from her features.

"Why ... nothing, my lord. Except that a good man would not die."

"Can such a fate be averted?" Zar mused, half-aloud.

"Wouldn't that cause a paradox? I wonder . . ." He considered for a
moment, then abandoned the effort. He was too tired to ponder problems
in theoretical physics.

But there was something else bothering him, something to do with Wynn
herself, and that mystery he felt compelled to understand. He gazed
back down at her, his eyes very direct. "I also wonder why it should
matter so much to YOU."

"It matters," she said brusquely, plainly nervous. "It's none of your
concern why it matters."

His hand clenched on the chairback-, suddenly he was furious. What's
going on here? Why is she being so secretive?

His voice became soft, deadly, and very mocking. "if it concerns me, I
have a right to know, my lady. Why would you wish to delay your
succession? What is all this to you?

Why do you care?" He leaned over and tipped up her chin, so she was
forced to look at him. "How do you care?"

Stung, Wynn surged to her feet, anger written in every line of her face.
"Does everything have to have a reason?

Can't people do things just because they feel like doing them? You
think too much, my lord!" She whirled away from him, heading for the
connecting door.

Exasperated, he grabbed her arm and halted her, turning her to face him.
"if you had experienced what I have," he gritted, so angry he was
trembling-First McCo ' v, then Spock, nowyou! Why can't everyone leave
me alone!-"then you wouldn't be so sure that feelings were such a great
idea, my lady. I learned a long time ago to think, not to feel.

Feeling ... hurts."

She glared back at him. "You imagine you have some monopoly on pain?
Your sire was too easy on you. You're right, you are a coward!"

He gripped both her arms, ignoring her attempt to wrench away "You think
so? I'll show you and you can judge, then!"

"Very well," she snapped. "Show me."

Zar released the barriers between them, so that his mind, his memories,
surged into hers. Wynn ceased struggling, stiffening as the intensity
of the meld claimed her. After a moment, Zar touched the side of her
face, his fingers slipping naturally into the old contact points.

In the meld, years rushed past with the speed of heartbeats

Growing up with only Zarabelh.1br a companion. The loneliness, the
longing. . ..16r a playmate, for a firiend ...

for his father ... the loneliness which had seemed terrible -until he
discovered the true meaning oj'lhe word, the day qfhis mother's death.
Zarftlt again the heaviness other body as he carried her into the
ice-cavern. His only companion, gone ...

And then, Araen, screaming in hoarse delirium as she tried to rid her
body qf the death his child had become lo her. He had waited, delaying
long past the time when he had known it was hopeless, hoping still.for
some miracle, something ...

and then it was over, his hands and the knfe were slippery wet and hot
with new-shed blood, Araen was dead, and his daughter was tr '
vingfiebly to cry ...

Lillie Araen had lived for 'six hours. More than long enough Jbr him
to.forgive her for her mothers death ... to establish an emotional bond
that shattered him as he stood holding her, willing her to breathe. He
had waited too long to take her. Twice he had succeeded in breathing
life into her when her tin ' v lungs failed, but not the third time ...

All the deaths. down the years, all the pain ... all the loss.

And never the solace of lears. He had tried, but they weren - t in him
... why, he didn't know. Instead of healing, the wounds haddrawn
andpuckeredinloa.festeringknot ofgrhf and anger ...

But even as the last of his memories flowed into Wynn, Zar became aware
that the meld was changing, becoming two-way. He began to experience
things out of Wynn's past ... her mother's death, of a lengthy, wasting
illness.

Wynn had nursed her tenderly, had closed her eyes when she finally found
peace.

Then a short time ofjoy with Nahral, the birth of Lelinos, her son a
happiness which only worsened the agonizing shock of finding their
brutalized bodies in the ruins of her home ...

Zar swallowed, his throat aching. Wynn was right. He had no monopoly
on suffering. But, unlike him, she had been strong enough to keep
risking herself, to allow herself to continue caring. She had faced her
own grief and learned to live with it, not shut it away unhealed.

He realized, then, dimly, that her face was buried against his shoulder;
she was shaking violently. And, as the meld between them lessened, he
heard her sobbing, deep, racking sounds that seemed to tear themselves
from her chest.

"Shhhhh," he whispered, drawing her closer. "Shhhhh."

I am sorry, Wynn was repeating without words, in his m i nd. I grieve
for you.

And I for you, he told her. I wish I had your strength.

He never knew how much time went by before her weeping lessened, then
subsided, but his bad leg was throbbing. Inside, though, where the knot
had been drawn so agonizingly tight, there was a loosening. Through
their meld, he had experienced her expression of grief and had finally
gained some inner release. He sighed, feeling drained, yet calm . . .
as though the bleeding from some invisible yet mortal wound had finally
been stanched, allowing healing to begin.

Wynn stirred and sniffled. "Do you have a handkerchief?"

Zar dug into a pocket in his jerkin and managed to locate one. "Here."

"Thank you." She stepped back, away from him, and he let his arms drop,
trying not to notice how empty they felt.

He stood watching her dry her eyes, feeling awkward.

"Are you all right now?"

"Yes," she said. "I regret having called you a coward. I was wrong."

"No, you weren't. And I apologize for my behavior," Zar said, stiffly.
"I don't know what made me act like that ...

you obviously have your own reasons for wanting to help me ... but
whatever they are, they are none of my concern.

I am sorry."

Wynn sighed, turning to leave. She took a step in the direction of her
chamber, then halted suddenly, her chin coming up. She faced him again,
her eyes holding his. Her expression reflected an odd mixture of
emotions . . .

tenderness, amusement, and frustration, all at once.

He watched as she drew a deep breath. "My dear lord, of course my
reasons concern you ... and are your concern.

These things happen, though never before to me. Denying how I feel-as
I've been trying to do for hours-won't make it go away. I should have
known better than to lie to myself ... or to you."

Zar stared down at her, eyes widening. Don't be an idiot, she can't
mean what you're thinking ... He swallowed, then tried to summon words.
"it almost sounds as though you're saying that you ... that you . . ."
He faltered into silence.

She flushed, stepping back another pace, but her eyes remained steady.
"I know what it sounds like. You want it in plain speech? All right,
then. Sometime during this day past-and a truly mad day it has been-I
found myself loving you. Wanting you. I didn't want to admit it, even
to myself, but it's true ... and I'm not ashamed of it." For the first
time she hesitated, glancing away, her next words coming in a whisper.
"I don't expect you to share my feelings."

Zar's heart was hammering now, and without realizing he'd moved, he
found himself close enough to put his hands on her shoulders. Even as
they touched, the link flared to life again, and he could feel her
emotions ... her immediate response to his nearness. His own reaction
was so strong and urgent that his breath caught in his throat.

"Wynn . . ." he began, haltingly. "I'm not good with words at times
like this, but ever since we met, I fell ...

something, I don't know . . ." He reached up and gently touched her
face, blindly tracing the coutours of her cheeks, her brows, her lips.
"I don't know what to think ... what to say ... or do . . ."

'7 think," she said quietly, "that you should stop thinking."

Through the link came the knowledge that she very much wanted him to
kiss her ...

So he did.

Her mouth was cool and soft beneath his, and after a few seconds he
pulled her against him, holding her tightly. As the kiss deepened,
Wynn's hands slid up, caressing his shoulders, the back of his neck. The
link between them flared up again, then grew steadily ... he
experienced her pleasure at the feel of his body against hers, and it
intensified his own.

No. don't! The danger ... a small voice in his mind warned, but was
drowned in the dizzying wave of sensation.

He drew back slightly, began kissing her cheek, her hair, her small,
rounded ears. She murmured his name, softly, on a shaken breath. Zar
ran his lips along the line ofherjaw, then down her throat, feeling her
pulse leap beneath them like a startled animal.

As he did so the link between them deepened into a meld, stifling the
little voice that cried danger, submerging his identity, his very sense
of self, until there was no room for anything but the feel of her in his
arms.

"Wynn . . ." he whispered.

I love you. The words were not spoken, and Zar had no idea which of
them had thought them first. When he raised his head, staring at her
with a silent question in his eyes, she answered him wordlessly by
pulling his mouth back down to hers. Her kiss filled them both with a
starving intensity that blotted out everything except the blind,
instinctive need to unite-mind and body, completely.

The covers on the huge curtained bed were like sheets of ice, but Zar
scarcely felt the shock ofthem on his flesh; there was only Wynn. Their
lovemaking shook and consumed him, their passion seared away the last of
the death-shadow ... leaving only physical exhaustion, and, finally,
sleep ...

When Wynn awoke, she had no trouble remembering where she was ... even
in sleep, the new-forged link she shared with Zar had not disappeared,
only faded until it was now just a comfortably glowing ember in the back
of her mind. She yawned, stretching her arms above her head, then
hastily yanked the comforter back up to her chin-neither of them had
thought to draw the bedcurtains, the fire had died out, and the chamber
was freezing.

But beneath the covers, next to him, it was warm.

Smiling, Wynn rolled over.

Zar was lying curled on his side, arms folded neatly against his chest,
his breathing soft and regular. She studied him, remembering Nahral,
how he had appeared younger when he slept, but Zar looked the same as he
did awake, frowning a little, intent-as though he were concentrating on
a problem.

She wondered what time it was ... late, certainly. The window curtain
was drawn, but bright sunlight seeped around its edges. Dimly, she
remembered seeing the gray of early dawn just as she had fallen asleep.
It must be close to noon, she thought, realizing with a slight shock
that not even a full day had passed since she had first met the man now
lying beside her.

Memories of yesterday-the raid, their first meeting, the council, the
handfasting ceremony-jumbled together in her mind, leaving her dizzy.
It's as though I leapt through that time gate he told me of and years
passed in a heartbeat.

Wynn thought about a world-a universe-where people could travel from
star to star inside great space-wagons. The painting in the study that
had troubled her so was of a space-wagon named Enterprise. Zar had told
her that the Enterprise was capable of traveling so fast that it could
circle this entire world (which he had told her was round, of all
things!) in less time than it would take to blink an eye. He was her
husband, she had been inside his mind where it was impossible to lie, so
she must perforce believe him ... but it was difficult.

He stirred slightly, then relaxed again with a sound that was not quite
a snore. Wynn could see the sharp tip of one car through the rumpled
black hair. He is so strange, at times, so alien ... and yet, last
night it was as though we were truly one being The memory sent a surge
of desire throughout her.

Cautiously, she moved one hand until it rested within a fingertip's
width of his shoulder. Even without touching him, she could feel the
heat of his body-warmer than hers, as though he were fevered, but she
knew now that was normal for him.

What will happen today? she wondered. Will he leave, to try and heal
this God qf Time, the Guardian? lfhe leaves, will he come back to me?
Should I even want him to return, when it may mean his death?

The gruesome vision that Ashmara had sent her flashed across her mind's
eye, and Wynn blinked back tears. Lady, protect him, I beg you. You
brought us together Jbr a reason ... I know you did. If only I could
be sure that last night was a true Sending! That if he goes with Spock
and the others, he will live She wondered whether last night's Sending
meant that Zar would live only if he remained in his sire's time.
Perhaps I should convince him to go, and not return. But to never see
him again ...

Wynn's throat tightened painfully. I must be strong, she resolved. If
Ashmara sends me knowledge that he'll be safe only ifhe does not come
back. then that is what I will beg him to do.

As if her decision had been a silent signal, Zar woke. He lay staring
at her for several moments, his gray eyes shadowed and still weary, then
he smiled and reached over to gently touch her hair. "I hardly know
what to say, my lady.

The customary formal greetings to a visiting envoy just don't seem to
apply."

Wynn chuckled. "Then we'll be informal. Fair morning to you, my
lord-assuming it is still morning, which I doubt."

"Fair morning," he replied, obediently. "Did you sleep well?"

"Very," she said, straight-faced. "I had little choice. You tired me
out."

He propped his head up on one hand, and his eyebrow disappeared beneath
his hair. "I tired you out? I thought Ashmara didn't like liars."

"That's what I told James Kirk, anyway," she said, grinning, then
stretched, enjoying the way his eyes traced her body beneath the
comforter. "is it today that you go back with them?"

"If I go back. I haven't decided yet."

"You should go. You must go."

"But they told me one esper-that's what they call people like you and
me, in my father's time-has already been injured, almost to the point of
death. What if I go, but cannot return?"

Wynn drew a deep breath, feeling actual pain knife through her, but
somehow she managed to keep her expression unchanged. "Then I will rule
New Araen for both of us, as well as I am able, my lord." She glanced
down at her midsection. "And, if I am lucky, our daughter or son will
rule after me."

Zar's features froze, and she felt his shock through the link between
them, even though they were not touching.

"Our ... child? Is that possible?"

She gave him a mock-increduious look. "You've forgotten so soon? I'm
hurt."

He sat bolt upright, his cheekbones like stone, his mouth a grim slash.
"I mean, is it the right time for you?"

Wynn gazed up at him, startled and worried. What can be wrong? "Yes,
it is," she replied. "And I have taken no herbs to prevent conception.
If Ashmara chooses to bless me, there is a good chance." She sat up,
too, pulling the comforter up over one shoulder, her hair tumbling
around her. "Why do you look like that, Zar?"

She could feel the fear that sent his heart pounding even before she put
out a hand and touched his arm-with the physical contact between them,
it was so strong it made her gasp. "Tell me, please! What is wrong?"

He swallowed, and she could feel the effort he was making to control his
reaction. "Araen . . ." he said, in a low voice.

"I was thinking of how she died . .

Wynn shook her he ad. "As I saw her in your mind last night, my lord,
she was a small, delicately boned woman, was she not? Tiny and not
strong?"

He nodded. "Her head barely reached the middle of my chest."

"And that was her first babe, yes?"

He nodded again, refusing to turn toward her.

"My dear," she said, caressing the line ofhisjaw, "look at me. My
people are taller and bigger-boned than your Valley-dwellers. I am
tall, even for my people. As tall as Cletas, or McCoy. And no one
could call me frail. I have home one healthy child already ... my
entire labor took less than half a day. Trust me, as a healer and
midwife, I know about these things. I understand your fear, but I do
not share it. Any risk is nothing compared to the joy our child will
bring me."

"But . . ." he began, then stopped and shrugged one shoulder. "Perhaps
you are right."

Wynn was sure, however, that she had not convinced him.

She considered pursuing the subject, but decided against it.

He would see. She would be fine.

She studied him in the dimness, remembering the way his lean, muscled
body had felt in her arms, smooth skin and scars ... so many scars. Few
warriors lived long enough to collect that many.

Hesitantly, she touched his right shoulder, running her forefinger down
it, feeling the hard sinew beneath the flesh, tracing the jagged ridge
marring it. "How did you get this one?"

He glanced down at himself and raised an eyebrow.

"Those toothmarks?" he said, deadpan. "Obviously, somebody bit me."

She smothered a grin and glared at him in pretended indignation. "No, I
meant 1his one."

"An outlaw's lance. That's the one that made me decide that I couldn't
put off inventing chain mail." At her look of incomprehension, he
explained, "Armor made from links of steel-the metal my sword is made
of. Much stronger than boiled leather, even with scale reinforcement.
It can turn a cut from a bronze weapon."

Wynn's mind was off and running. "Do you have more of this metal? It
would give our forces an advantage."

"I can equip perhaps two hundred of your soldiers with steel swords," he
said. "And three hundred with steel lance-heads. But no more than
that. My smiths have been working night and day for months, just to
forge armor and weapons for my own troops."

"We have smiths, too," she said. "Can your people teach ours to smelt
this new metal?"

"If we make it through the battle, nothing would please me more," he
said. "When do you think they will attack?"

"As soon as the waters ofthe Redbank subside enough for them to cross
with the chariots, they will come," she said.

"My guess is that it will be tomorrow or the day after-no later."

"That agrees with my latest intelligence," Zar said. "I want to meet
them on Moorgate Plain. My battle plan calls for room to maneuver."

She gave him a mock-disgusted look, then nipped his shoulder. "Tactics,
battle strategies ... fine talk for two people in bed on the morning
after their handfasting."

He smiled his half-smile, smoothing her unbound hair back from her face,
then bent to kiss her neck where it joined her shoulder. "Wynn ... just
this time yesterday, I was making you that crazy proposal. Why did you
accept?"

Wynn nestled close to him, resting her cheek against his chest. "I
don't know ... not for your looks, certainly."

She heard and felt his breath release in what she recognized as a
chuckle. "Seriously," she said, "it's hard to put into words. From
those first moments in your study, I knew there was something binding us
together ... asthough we were pieces cut from the same hide. Very
different in the way we were formed, and shaped, but created from the
same material. I didn't let myself realize it, at first ... but it was
always there."

He drew her closer. "I know. But I only began to recognize it for what
it was, when your father goaded me into that kiss."

"I was furious with him," Wynn said, smiling reminiscently.

"I could tell."

"Are you going to help your father, my lord?"

He sighed deeply, his arms tightening around her. "Yes. I have no
choice, now."

. I'm glad."

Wynn shut her eyes, thinking that soon-too soon-they would have to get
up, that he would have to leave, that she might never see him again.
Stop thinking, she told herself fiercely, concentrating on feeling only
warm skin and the soft prickle of black hair beneath her cheek. She
gave herself up to the moment, trying to convince herself (and almost
... almost . . . succeeding) that it would never end.

Zar was sitting at his desk in his study, checking supply requisitions,
when Cletas entered and saluted. "Here are the latest intelligence
reports, my liege."

"Good. I've ordered a meeting of all troop commanders in two hours.
Commander Madon, Heldeon, the Lady Wynn and the rest of the Danreg
commanders will be joining us." He took the vellum sheets and studied
them.

"So, the Redbank will not permit a crossing today ... how did Rorgan
and Laol take the news that Heldeon is now allied with us?"

The Second-in-War smiled. "About as we expected. They were heard
quarreling long into the night."

"Good. If they're fighting each other, they're not planning for this
battle. Status on the catapults?"

"We've moved two, and will move two more this afternoon. Two more
tonight."

"The footing?"

"Drying fast. The cavalry will drill late this afternoon."

Zar let out a long breath. "Then I guess we'll be as prepared as
possible. I want you to break out all the extra steel weapons and
distribute them to the Lady Wynn's selected troops, on her orders."

"Yes, sire." Cletas hesitated. "By the way, I haven't encountered the
lady yet today. Heldeon sent her waiting women down this morning, but
when they went to her chamber, they said she wasn't there. Have you ...
seen her?"

The Sovren glanced up quickly, suddenly remembering just who it had been
that had unbolted the connecting door.

"She's taking a bath," he said, levelly. "In my chamber."

"I ... see," Cletas said, his tone carefully neutral.

Zar raised an inquiring eyebrow. "You see what, Cletas?"

"Nothing, my liege," the Second said, fervently. "Just a figure of
speech."

A rap on the study door saved the Second. Zar gave Cletas an "I'll deal
with you later" look. "That will be Zaylenz, Yarlev, Ingev, Reydel, and
Trebor Damas," he said. "I asked them to assemble before the briefing.
I have something important to tell all of you."

Doctor McCoy grinned exultantly. "You'll come! This is great! I knew
you'd see reason ... wait'll I tell Jim and Spock."

Zar raised a cautioning hand. "Not so fast, Leonard. As soon as I meet
with the Danreg officers, I'll go with you and try to contact the
Guardian. But then I'm returning for the battle."

McCoy felt as though he'd been punched in the stomach.

He sat blinking, then finally took a deep breath, searching for his
voice. "Why, Zar? You know what's going to happen . . ."

The Sovren's mouth was set. "Maybe. On the other hand, now that I know
about it, maybe I can do something to prevent it. Wynn thinks there's a
chance."

"And you're telling me you're planning on staking your life on a
barbarian priestess's superstitious mumbojumbo?" the doctor asked, using
his most cutting tone.

The gray eyes opposite his were nearly colorless in the sunlight. "I
have to come back here," Zar repeated. "And don't forget you're talking
about my wife, Leonard."

"Goddamn it, you're as stubborn as your old man!"

McCoy raged, slamming his fist on the table. "What's keeping you here?
Or do you just have a martyr complex?"

Zar's mouth tightened. "What's keeping me is why I had to see you ...
why I told you first. Doc, I need your help.

Please."

The medical officer drew a long, slow breath, held it, then let it out.
Then another. "All right," he said, finally. "What can I do?"

"While I'm aboard the Enterprise, I want you to sterilize me."

"Sterilize?" McCoy repeated blankly. For one wild moment all he could
think of was Nomad, that weird little robot that had wiped out an entire
system of sentient beings, following its programming directive to
"sterilize."

The thing had nearly killed them all. "What do you mean, Istefilize'?"

"What do you think I mean?" Zar demanded, his control visibly slipping.
"I never had the chance to learn Vulcan bio-control. So I want you to
do whatever it takes to render me infertile ... incapable of fathering
children. How much more explicit do I have to be?"

"Okay, okay, I understand what you want. But why?"

The Sovren didn't meet his eyes. "I'm afraid for Wynn."

McCoy sat back in his chair and raised an eyebrow.

"Oho. I begin to see. So much for the marriage of convenience."

"I also want you to take a tricorder reading on her today," Zar said,
his face schooled to an impassive mask. "And, if necessary, give her
something."

"Like what?"

"Something to prevent conception, damn it!" Zar's voice cracked. "You
have to!"

The doctor sat up. "The hell I do. You're the one who has a right to
decide about your body, and the same goes for Wynn. I gather you ...
have cause to worry?"

The Sovren nodded, tight-lipped.

"Well, how does Wynn feel about it? Does she want a baby?"

"Yes. And she can have them-but not by me. She can choose anyone she
wants, but I'm . . . there's something ... wrong ... with me.
Genetically."

"When I examined you twenty years ago there wasn't."

"There must've been an error in your tests. Araen . . ."

Zar swallowed, fighting for calm. "Araen died as a result of
childbirth."

"I figured."

"And my daughter, too. She lived only a few hours. it must have been
my mixed parentage. My genes are defective somehow . . ."

"For a number of reasons, I doubt that," the doctor said, gently. "First
of all, did Araen have a normal pregnancy?"

"As far as I knew ... I mean, as far as I could determine from what the
midwives said, and from reading the medical texts I brought. But she
was never strong. Her father told me she'd always been frail. But she
was so happy, so full of life, you didn't notice it."

"What about the delivery?"

"She couldn'tZar told him, unsteadily. "She was in labor for two days.
The moment the contractions started, I began to feel sick, you remember
how, and I knew-" He took a deep breath, then cleared his throat. "The
midwives tried everything, but she never dilated more than a few
centimeters. Finally, when she was comatose, and I knew she would die
no matter what, I did what she'd been begging me to do for hours ... I
took my knife, and performed a Caesarean. I-I-it was hard to cut deep
enough ... at first. And I thought I'd seen blood in battles, but-"

"I understand. Take it easy, son," McCoy broke in, feeling his heart go
out to the other. "But what makes you think it was your fault? Was the
child deformed?"

Zar had leaned his head in his hands, and didn't look up.

"No, outwardly she was perfect. She just never breathed properly-"

"Tiny? Premature?" -No, the midwives told me she was a good-sized
baby."

"Well ... it's impossible for me to give a completely accurate
diagnosis in a case like this, of course, but it sounds to me as though
the infant was too large for the birth canal.

It's not an uncommon problem, especially considering that Araen was a
small woman. And after such a prolonged labor, the baby simply didn't
have the strength to survive."

Zar looked up at him, wordlessly.

"Are you listening to me?" McCoy held the younger man's eyes with his
own. "I found out something this trip that I didn't know before. The
people of this world probably evolved from the same basic stock as the
Vulcans and the Rigellians." Briefly, the doctor went on to outline
Spock's theory.

Zar looked thoughtful. "That explains a lot of things that have puzzled
me since I first met you. I was really surprised, for example, to
discover that human blood was red. I'd never seen it that color before
- . ."

"But the most important thing is that there's no reason to think you and
Wynn couldn't have healthy offspring," McCoy said. "What happened to
Araen wasn't caused by some defect in your chromosomes. It was a
tragedy, yes, but nobody's fault. If you want, I'll give you a complete
genetic workup in sickbay, but I know that's what I'm going to find.

And," he finished grimly, "if you still want me to, I'll do what you're
asking at that time. All it takes is one hypo."

"And Wynn? What if she's already . - ."

"If she's pregnant, and wants the baby, then that's her risk ... and
her decision. But, frankly, from my tricorder readings of her
yesterday, I'd say don't worry. She's strong and healthy." He smiled
reassuringly.

Zar nodded, though McCoy knew he hadn't convinced him. "All right,
Leonard. Thanks."

"You're welcome, son." The doctor stood up. "I'll tell Kirk and Spock
that we've got a date with an ailing time portal."

James T. Kirk entered the common room to find Spock standing, hands
clasped behind his back, staring out the window. "Bones says that Zar
has agreed to return with us and attempt to contact the Guardian."

The Vulcan turned, the reddish light from the westering sun highlighting
his features into a satanic mask. "Did he indicate whether he will
remain in our time?"

Kirk nodded, reluctantly. "He says he's coming back to New Araen in
time for the battle. He won't budge on that."

Spock looked away, his mouth tightening. "That is his right."

Kirk nodded. "But maybe we can still get him to change his mind. If we
can convince him to spend a day or so aboard the Enterprise ... remember
how he loved the ship?"

"Yes. But I also recall that Zar is a remarkably stubborn

'the fruit don't fall far from the tree," as the saying goes." At the
Vulcan's raised eyebrow, he translated, "I'd say he comes by that
honestly."

"Are you by any chance intimating that I am stubborn, Jim?"

"Uh ... well, yes. Not that that isn't a good character trait at
times," Kirk added, hastily. "It's saved my hide more than once."

The Vulcan's mouth twitched fractionally. "You are right.

I am stubborn. So are you, by the way."

"Who, me?" Kirk's hazel eyes widened innocently, then the admiral gave
in with a chuckle. "You're right, as usual."

They stood together, watching the swollen crimson disk of Beta Niobe
sink toward the peak of Big Snowy. "Bones tells me he's worried about
whether Zar is up to this ...

he's been under a lot of pressure, trying to hold things together here.
Are we doing the right thing, asking him to tackle the Guardian? What
if he cracks wide open?"

"The same concern has been on my mind," Spock conceded. "Especially in
view of what happened to D'berahan.

Zar has not had an easy time of it here."

"So I gathered."

The Vulcan's voice was grim. "But our duty is to restore the time
portal using any means possible. Zar has agreed to try, therefore we
have no choice but to let him."

"I suppose so," Kirk agreed, reluctantly. He hesitated, individual."

Kirk cleared his throat. "Well and then on impulse asked, "Spock ...
have you ever thought about whether you did the right thing, contacting
Zar?"

The Vulcan raised a surprised eyebrow, and the admiral impatiently shook
his head. "No, that's not what I meant, of course you did the right
thing! Zar was alone in that frozen wilderness, with no chance at a
normal life. But ...

suppose he had had a normal life. School, a job, friends, relatives . .
."

Kirk turned to stare fixedly out the window, watching the first fingers
of darkness crawl down the mountain slopes.

"in a case like that, do you think it's ... fair ... for a father to
contact an adult child? Someone he's seen a few times, but who was
never told who his father was?"

The admiral felt the Vulcan's concerned gaze, but did not turn away from
the window ... could not turn away. "I do not know, Jim," Spock said,
finally.

"Neither do I," Kirk whispered.

After a long moment, he felt a light touch on his shoulder.

"Jim ... is there anything I can do to help?"

The admiral took a deep breath, then turned back to face his friend. He
squared his shoulders. "I don't think so, Spock. Let's find Zar and
get on with it."

The Sovren had obviously just concluded his briefing session when the
two officers reached his study. Heldeon was halfway through the door,
his arm around Wynn, Commander Madon beside him. The rest of the Danreg
and Lakreo officers followed. Kirk and Spock nodded to the Danreg
chieftain, then went in.

McCoy was sitting on the big inlaid table, talking to Zar, who was
surrounded by orderly piles of tactical diagrams, maps, and lists. Spock
immediately walked over and immersed himself in studying the battle
plans.

"Ready to leave?" Kirk asked the Sovren.

"As soon as I say good-bye to Wynn," Zar said. He rose and left the
room, reappearing a moment later with the High Priestess. Kirk's gaze
sharpened as he watched them.

Neither Zar nor Wynn touched or even looked at each other as they
entered the room, but something had changed about the atmosphere between
them ...

Uh-oh, the admiral realized. I suspect this marriage no longer belongs
in the 'in name only' category. This really complicates things. Kirk
gave McCoy an inquiring glance over Spock's oblivious head, and the
doctor, guessing his thoughts, nodded silent agreement.

"Are you leaving now?" Wynn was asking, softly.

"in a few minutes," Zar told her.

"Can I watch you go?"

Her husband shook his head. "I don't think that would be good idea.
The Guardian isn't working properly. There is chance you'd be pulled
through with us."

Her chin came up. "All right." She hesitated, then went on, her voice
carefully controlled, "My lord, I had hoped that Ashmara would give me
knowledge as to whether you should try to return, or not. But She has
remained silent, so I have no way of knowing what is best ... for you,
that is.

So you must decide."

"Don't worry," Zar said, softly. "I will come back." He raised a hand
to brush her cheek, and, turning her head, she kissed his palm.

"I know," she said, steadily. Then she turned and walked out of the
room, head high.

Zar stood watching her until the guard closed the door, before he turned
to look at Kirk. "All right, let's go."

The admiral glanced down at his former First Officer, who was still
intent on the battle plans. He cleared his throat ostentatiously, then,
when the other did not respond, bumped the chairleg with his booted toe.
"Spock?"

The Vulcan looked up. "Yes, Admiral?"

"Time to go. We've got a universe to save."

Chapter Eleven

EVEN AS HIS FEET felt the shock of landing on Gateway's ashy soil, Zar's
mind filled with a terrible, echoing emptiness. He staggered, his bad
leg gave way, then he found himself on his hands and knees, gasping.

Wynn! No!

She was gone, erased, as though she had never been. Black oblivion
flickered at the edge of his vision, and he had no strength to fight it.

"Zar!" he heard McCoy yell, then, "Grab him, Jim!"

Hands clamped on his shoulders, and Kirk's voice, hoarse with alarm,
filled his ears "Spock-what's wrong with him? The same thing as
D'berahan?"

"I do not know-"

"Spock, Jim, turn him over so I can get an airway-"

Vulcan fingers brushed the side of his face, then Spock's voice,
tersely "I should have realized. Suddenly, he has lost contact with
Wynn ... in this time and place, she is dead.

You know what a shock that is for t he survivor of a bonding, Jim."

The blackness was flooding over him in waves, each stronger than the
other. With a final sigh, Zar let it claim him.

But even as he did so, light blossomed in his mind, and a familiar
presence grew, filling the void. Wynn is waitingfor you, it told him,
wordlessly. She is not dead ... she is just on the other side of this
portal. You promised to return to her ...

Yes, he thought, remembering. I did promise ...

Breathe, instructed Spock's presence. I will help.

With an effort Zar drew a long breath, then another, and as he did so
the darkness ebbed and was gone. He still felt Wynn's absence, but now
that he understood what had happened, he could stave off the despairing
emptiness.

Then, with a rush that left him sick and dizzy, he was back in his body,
hearing the moan of Gateway's desolate wind, feeling the ground cold
beneath him.

Zar opened his eyes to find Spock bending over him.

"You okay now, son?" McCoy's voice asked, and Zar turned his head to see
the doctor, with Kirk crouched beside him.

"I'm all right," he tried to say, but his tongue was numb and would not
cooperate. He nodded, instead.

After a moment he tried to sit up, and they let him. Spock studied his
face intently, his own face still pale from the strain of the mind-link.
"I am sorry," Spock said. "I should have warned you. But I did not
realize that you and Wynn were bonded."

"Not your fault," Zar said, his voice still a little slurred.

"I didn't know, either. Is that what you call it, when someone's mind
is always there, in the back of yours? Araen was not esper, so my ...
contact ... with her was different."

His father nodded. "Yes. On Vulcan when one partner in a bonding dies,
the family links mentally to offer support until the remaining partner
can adjust to the loss."

Zar shook his head, trying to clear it, then his eyes widened with
alarm. "Wynn!" he said. "Did the same thing happen to her? There's
nobody to link with her!"

"I do not know," Spock said. "But the solution is for you to return
only a heartbeat after you left. In that case, she would barely have
time to realize your absence."

"If the Guardian will cooperate," Zar muttered, turning to look over at
the time portal. "Let me up."

Still shaky, he climbed to his feet and brushed himself off.

Slowly he limped back and forth, feeling his legs gradually steady. His
mind cleared, grew calm. The lack of Wynn was still an aching void
within him, but now he was able to shut the pain away, ignore it, so he
could concentrate on the task at hand.

Finally, he stopped before the portal and stood braced against the
desolate wind, his scarlet cloak whipping behind him, staring up at the
stars through its central opening.

Memories of his last time on Gateway ran through his mind.

Off to his right he could see the outcropping of rock where he and Spock
had hidden from the Romulans, cramped into a tiny space for hours. Over
there was the place where he had struggled with Tal, the Romulan leader.
And where he stood now was the place where Spock had joined minds with
him, to tell his son the truth about the Vulcan's encounter with
Zarabeth ... that they had shared something very special. That Spock
had, in that time, in his own way, loved her.

That was when he told me he was proud of me Zar turned at the sound of a
familiar wheep. "Kirk to Enterprise, " the admiral was saying. The
younger man wondered where he'd gotten the communicator, then decided
Kirk must have cached it against their return.

"Enterprise. Scott here."

"How long were we gone, Scotty?"

"About fifteen minutes, Admiral. Did ye find the laddie?"

Kirk looked over at Zar with a wry grin. "You couldn't call him a
'laddie' anymore, but yes, we found him."

"Good. Shall I order you beamed up, sir?"

"No, as long as we're here, we'll make the attempt now. If I don't
check back in an hour, or if the time waves reappear, get the Enterprise
out of this system and contact Admiral Morrow for further instructions,
Scotty. Understand?"

"Aye, Admiral. Good luck, sir."

"Thanks, Scotty. Out."

Zar moved closer to the monolithic stone structure; he was now within
touching distance of the Guardian. He heard the soft slither of rock
beneath bootheels and turned to find Spock at his side. He tried to
smile at his father, but his mouth was so dry it felt more like a
rictus. "It's embarrassing to admit, but I'm scared," he muttered.

"Logical, under the circumstances. So was I," Spock said.

Quickly, before he could change his mind, Zar placed both hands on the
stone.

It was like handling his tricorder-nothing sentient responded to his
cautious mental probe. Nothing at all.

This isn't right. Zar thought, probing harder. When I touched it
before, it was alive-even if artificially constructed, it was
self-aware.

He leaned his forehead against the portal, between his spread
fingertips, and tried again, putting all his effort into breaking
through. The external world faded, grew dim and remote, then was gone
altogether.

It was as though he stood (but he had no physical body) within a
near-infinite black cavern, where occasional streaks of light
brightened, then dimmed, with no pattern that he could see. His mind
was only a tiny dart of white light, trying to find its way through an
immense invisible maze.

The real Guardian must be here somewhere, he thought.

After all, it is tied to its physical being, even as I am. Or is it?

Flashes of light exploded beside him, or through him, but the "thoughts"
they represented were sterile and artificial -machine-generated,
reminding Zar of Spock's description of Vejur.

Where is it? he wondered, sending his little dart of light faster,
moving deeper into the illimitable labyrinth. Where?

Zar bounced off barriers, careened into dead ends, hurtled down blind
alleys, searching ...

He was now so deep into the machine-generated portion of the entity that
he was in danger of being lost-the link between his physical body and
his mental self stretched perilously thin. Can't go much farther ...
have to find it soon. Where?

He wished he had asked Spock to link with him. The Vulcan could have
amplified the connection between his mind and his body ... too late
now.

Can't ... go ... muchfarther - What's that?

In the distance, he "saw" something different-rapid-fire pulses of
golden light stretching into infinity. They dimmed even as Zar watched.
He threw himself toward them, praying his own mind-body link would hold.

Made it!

The moment he "touched" the gold light, Zar knew he had reached his
goal. The warmth, the sentience, even the humor belonged to a living,
self-aware being-he had located the Guardian.

Chaotic images danced in his mind, assaulting him with their
alienness-he had to pull back, shielding his consciousness, lest he be
pulled under, his own identity submerged by the vast, ancient mentality
he now touched.

Guardian? he projected the thought. There is a problem.

Time is not running correctly. Come back with me. You must resume your
duties.

No response.

The flashes of aurulent light stretched thinner...

thinner ...

Alarmed, Zar realized that even the Guardian itself was in grave danger
of being lost in this ... dimension? Plane?

There were no words to describe this immensity-and he knew he could not
follow the time entity any farther. His own mind-body link was too
fragile ...

Guardian! he demanded, thrusting the thought as he would have aimed a
sword-stroke. Link with me! I know the way back!

A slight flicker of awareness ...

Yes! he insisted. I know the way back. I have been seeking you. Come
with me, before you are lost!

IMPLEMENTING PRIMARY PROGRAMMING SUBROUTINE UNIVERSE/DIMENSION/CONTINUUM
OF ORIGIN-RETURN'TO FACILITATE RETURN OF SELF AND ORIGINATORS TO
TEMPORAL DISPLACEMENT LOCATION. GUIDE IS NOW AVAILABLE.

Zar caught only fragments of the Guardian's thought processes, but he
understood enough to know that it was accepting his offer. As swiftly
as he could, he reversed "direction" and headed back.

Almost immediately, he knew he was in trouble. The energy he had
expended to reach the Guardian had left him with little in reserve. It
was like trying to swim against a violent current ... he kept going,
but his mind-body link was now so weak that tracing it back was
difficult. Zar struggled, trying not to panic, using the Vulcan mental
disciplines Spock had taught him long ago to help him focus his energy
and calm his mind.

Serenity ... peace ...

Starlight, cool water, shadows on sand ...

Strive without anxiety, focus effort, harness energy ... the mind rules
... the mind rules ...

He was making progress, but so slowly! And the link was fading, even as
he tried to summon the power to renew it ... fading ...

Suddenly the strength was there, his for the using-not his own energy,
but another's. For a wild moment Zar thought that the Guardian had
recognized his danger and was aiding him, but as he drew on that other
power, he recognized it for Spock's.

Of course he'd monitor ... I should have realized ...

He was moving again, faster and faster, as his mind-body link was
renewed. Moving-and the Guardian was still following him.

The surrounding darkness grew lighter ...

He was-back!

Gradually, Zar grew aware of the roughness of stone against his hands
and cheek, and the pressure of Vulcan fingers against his temple. He
could hear the wind, feel its cold touch. Opening his eyes, he saw the
bluish-gray rock, and the ruins through the central opening.

The Sovren caught his breath with relief, even as his legs threatened to
buckle under him. Bracing himself against the Guardian, he levered
himself up off the stone monolith. As he did so, Spock dropped his
hands. Zar turned his head, met his father's eyes, dark and exhausted
in a haggard, drawn countenance. He looks like I feel.

Zar swallowed some of the dryness in his mouth, then opened it to thank
the Vulcan for rescuing him -just as the fabric of the universe around
them exploded into a million insane pieces.

I'm going mad, was his first thought as he lurched back, closing his
eyes, flinging his arms over his face, trying to hide from the searing
barrage of color now erupting from the time portal. Color and
sound-taste and smell-they all jumbled together, mixed and ran like
water-soluble pigments on a palette held beneath a waterfall.

Several times Zar had been wounded so badly that he'd become delirious
before he had regained consciousness ...

this was a little like that, but infinitely worse. He grunted with
pain, heard Spock's agonized gasp, then stole a glance and saw the
Vulcan reel and go to his knees, evidently blinded by the shrieking
flashes of color.

Still shielding his eyes, Zar staggered forward, made a wild grab for
his father's arm, and dragged him up. Ten weaving, stumbling steps, all
the while praying his leg would hold out, then he thrust Spock into the
shelter of a crumbling wall and followed him.

Once out of sight of the Guardian, the assault changed, invading Zar's
mind with callous disregard for his individuality, his sanity-not to
mention his privacy. He struggled to remain conscious, but couldn't
tell whether or not he succeeded ... it was like being thrust, awake,
into an unending nightmare

Thunder boomed and insect wings whispered, dissolving into splashes of
acid vermilion and icy aquamarine ...

leaving the bitter coppery taste of blood in his mouth to send mocking
kisses trailing down his skin ...

... even as the cosmos formed around him, ballooning outwardfrom a
single mathematical point containing nearinfinite mass to spawn a
seething vortex of embryonic galaxies, fleeing each other at terrible
velocities ...

... and he was born and died in a single instant, his mind
simultaneously crushed and expanded, sifted and tossed aside, all that
he was, that he had striven for, recognized and rejected by intellects
asfar above his own as his was above an insect's-leaving him hollow,
drained and shamed ...

to stare, helplessly mesmerized, at an orange one dimensional
universefilled with jade green dots, which began to shimmer and waver,
looming and receding-then he was rushing at warp-speed down a black,
contracting hole in space, toward a radiant, welcoming Light. I'm dead,
he thought, with unshakable certainly. The twentieth century
melaphysicists were right ...

... but just as he reached the Light, and realized that it was actually
a portal to Somewhere Else, it slammed shut with a bang that made him
wince, leaving him in the dark, eternally alone and abandoned, lost now
beyond anyfinding, lost, lost ...

Zar returned to awareness slowly. He realized he was sprawled
face-down, his head and upper chest resting across something warm and
living, his belly and legs on something cold and unyielding. Harsh
breathing and low, moaning gasps mixed with the sound of the wind. Zar's
teeth fastened in his lower lip as he tried to move his arms, and the
moans stopped. Only then did he realize he had been making them.

The harsh, pain-fifled breaths were coming from Spock, who was crumpled
beneath him. Zar quickly pushed himself up, realizing he must have
shoved the Vulcan down and then fallen on him when the worst of the-the
whatever it was-hit.

Kneeling, he carefully turned the other over, gently brushed some of the
ashy dirt from the austere features.

"Father?" he whispered hoarsely. "Are you all fight?"

It was nearly a minute before Spock slowly opened his eyes, and it was
another before they became rational. He coughed, trying to stifle the
sound, and Zar supported him.

"Jim? McCoy?" he asked finally, his voice low and rough.

"I don't know," Zar replied. "They were farther away than we were . .
." For a moment he was tempted to shout for the admiral and the doctor,
but he reconsidered. It might not be a good idea to advertise their
position, and the fact that they were still alive. "I don't like the
sound of that cough," he continued, keeping his voice low. "Is your
chest all right?"

The Vulcan nodded, wiping his mouth. "Only dust." His voice was a husky
wheeze. "I ... inhaled it when you fell on me. Knocked my wind out."

"I'm sorry. Can you move your arms and legs?"

Spock tried, stiffly. "Yes," he said, his voice growing stronger. "I
am essentially undamaged. And don't apologize. I suspect you may have
saved my life. Although," he repressed a groan as he struggled to sit
up, and only succeeded with Zar's help, "I would not care to repeat the
experience. What happened?"

"I don't know. I was just getting ready to thank you for bringing me
back-thus saving my life-when something erupted out of the portal. I
remember stumbling back, and yanking you out of range, and-that's all.
Except for a lot of ... hallucinations. Rather ... unsettling ...
ones."

Spock nodded. "You, too?"

Zar frowned. "The question is, what do we do now?"

"Locate Jim and McCoy. Have you seen my tricorder?"

"No." The younger man crawled over to peer out at the time portal. "Yes.
It's lying beside the Guardian."

"Do you see any sign of our attackers?"

"Nothing visible out there. But that may not mean anything. I don't
believe those ... things ... had physical bodies."

"Can you reach the tricorder?"

"I ... think ... so . . ." As he spoke, Zar dropped to his belly and
wriggled closer to the time portal. Finally, when he had run out of
cover, he made a long arm, a quick rush, and then beat a hasty retreat
to their hideout. "Got it."

The Vulcan took the instrument and studied its readouts for a moment,
then nodded, obviously relieved. "I pick up two live humans. Jim and
McCoy."

"What about the others? The ones from inside the Guardian?"

"Readings are fluctuating ... at times it seems as though there are
energy surges near the portal ... but it is not a type of energy I have
encountered before. At other times, the readings are closer to that of
matter ... but there are differences." His eyebrow climbed.
"Fascinating. Now I am getting readings that show a strange ambiguity
somewhere between the two states."

"Where are Jim and Leonard?"

"That way," the Vulcan nodded over at a heaped pile of ruins. "We
should-- He broke off, listening.

Zara warm, feminine voice was calling. "Spock? I'm sorry that
happened, it wasn't intentional. Come out, please."

I am dead, Zar thought, feeling the blood drain out of his face. Or
mad.

He bit his lip fiercely, telling himself that he couldn't be hearing
that particular voice. Then he saw Spock's expression, and realized
that the Vulcan heard it, too. Collective hallucination? Or are we
both dead?

"That sounds like . . ." Spock began, then shook his head, frowning.
"I must be mistaken."

"You're not," Zar assured him. "I don't know how this could happen, or
why, but that voice was the only other one I ever heard for the first
nineteen years of my life. I couldn't mistake it."

Heart pounding with a wild mixture of hope and apprehension, he edged
over to peer out again.

Zarabeth.

She was standing about twenty paces from the Guardian of Forever, her
pale hair brushing the shoulders of her fur jacket, her blue eyes
eagerly scanning the area around her.

With a gesture so familiar that it hurt Zar to watch, she raised a hand
to push back a strand of wind-tossed hair. -Zar?" she called, anxiously.
"Son?"

The Sovren sagged back against the stone, his palms pressed against his
eyes. "Oh, Goddess," his voice emerged as an agonized whisper. "it is.
It's Mother. Zarabeth is standing right in front of the portal."

In a moment Spock moved past him, stared for a long moment, then turned
back, propping himself up against the wall as though he, too, needed its
support. The Vulcan rubbed his temples wearily. It was nearly a minute
before he spoke, and when he did, there was a trace of old pain in his
voice. -Zar, you know as well as I do that cannot be Zarabeth out
there."

Anger flared. "Why not?" Zar demanded. "She came out of the Guardian,
didn't she? Maybe it went back and got her before she ... before." The
Sovren glared at his father, stubbornly refusing to acknowledge what he
already subconsciously knew was the truth.

Spock just stared back at him, wordlessly.

Finally Zar broke their locked gaze and sighed. "You're right, damn
you. But she looks so real. Just as I remember her, on her last dawn,
when she stood in the cave mouth waving-I had left her asleep, and my
mind was on the hunt, so I didn't go back to say a proper good-bye ...
you can imagine how much I regretted that later . . ."

The Vulcan's gaze sharpened. "More proof that we are presented with an
illusion. I saw her as she was when I said farewell to her-when she was
some twenty years younger than the Zarabeth you just saw."

"Spock? Zar? Please, we need to talk."

The Sovren winced and resisted the urge to clamp his hands over his
ears. "You're saying that the image we both saw was extracted from our
minds. That the ... beings ...

who came out of the time portal gave us an illusion we would both
recognize."

"Yes."

"To lure us out so they can finish us?"

The Vulcan shook his head. "I think not. If they had wanted us dead,
we would indeed be dead. Their mental power was ... beyond anything I
have ever encountered. I believe instead that we may have fallen prey
to some kind of unintentional backlash caused by their arrival through
th e Guardian, and that one of them has taken Zarabeth's form to reassure
us."

"So, what are you suggesting?" Zar asked, raising an eyebrow. "That we
just walk right out there?"

"Yes, I believe that would be our wisest course," Spock said, unruffled.
-Zar? Spock? Please . .

"And I worried that I was crazy," Zar muttered.

"They can find us, even if we attempt to hide," his father pointed out.
"Whereas a demonstration of trust and goodwill may improve our
situation." Spock stood up and began brushing himself off. "I only hope
that Jim still has his communicator and has checked in with Mr. Scott.
His hour time-limit passed nine minutes and thirty-five seconds ago, and
I have no desire to be marooned here on Gateway."

"We could go back to Sarpeidon through the Guardian," Zar remarked,
shaking the dust out of his cloak. He looked over at the Vulcan,
deadpan. "I'm always in need of good officers. Want a job? Can you
handle a sword?"

Spock's mouth quirked. "I have, although I am better with other ancient
Vulcan weapons. Let's go."

Together, they stepped out from behind the wall, and headed toward the
woman standing before the time entity.

"Zar! Darling, oh, I've missed you so!" She ran toward them. "Spock,
I've found you again!"

Despite his resolution to hang back, Zar found himself a step or so in
the forefront. A. "Zarabeth' reached him, he moved forward, determined
to grab her, thus brutally shattering the illusion-and then berate the
creatures that had given him that one moment of cruel hope.

His hands encountered living flesh, and a moment later she was in his
arms, hugging him frantically. "Oh, Zar!

Son!"

Zar's mouth dropped open with blank astonishment-he had convinced
himself that he would embrace only air.

Over her shoulder he saw Jim Kirk and Leonard McCoy step out of the
ruins and walk over to stand beside the Vulcan. All of them-even
Spock-wore expressions similar to his own.

She was so perfect-the color of her hair (white strands liberally mixed
with the gold, a pale, silken helmet); the feel of her fur parka (white
fur from a bardok, he had made it for her himself, as a present); even
her scent (oilsmoke and sweet herbs).

Zar permitted himself a last hug, then he kissed the smooth cheek
gently, and stepped back. "Thank you," he said, holding his voice
steady with an effort. "I never got to say a proper farewell to her,
but now I feel that somehow I have. Now, please . . . who are you?"

"Zarabeth' looked up at him, then over at the others.

"I-well, I am not a. "I," strictly speaking ... but sometimes, yes, I
can be . . ." she seemed to be arguing with herself, "but suppose I
just sa. "I," all right?"

Zar cast a sidelong glance at Kirk and Spock, then shrugged.
"Certainly."

"I created this world . . ." the being said, looking around, as if
noticing for the first time the heaped ruins, the desolation, and the
perpetual night. "My, it's gotten rundown, hasn't it? Where was I-we?
Oh, yes ...

my-our-creation, all of it. Including the . . ." It frowned, looking
over at the time portal. "What do you call yourseir"

"The Guardian of Forever," the time entity responded, its voice deep,
reverberating, and somehow ... content.

"You built the Guardian?" Kirk asked, trying to keep the skepticism out
of his voice.

"Oh, yes ... that is, well ... it built itself, really. We just
defined the parameters and provided the initial . there are no words
in your language ... I programming comes closest, I suppose."

As the alien spoke, Zar had stepped back to stand with the others. "Are
you all right?" he whispered to McCoy.

"Fine," the doctor answered, sotio voce. "We weren't as close to it as
you two. The minute those crazy colors burst out, we took cover. And
apparently, from what Spock just told us, that mental contact was much
more devastating to anyone with esper abilities than it was to us."

"Didn't it knock you out?"

"Nope. Just shook us up a little. Jim called Scotty and asked him to
stand by. We were just coming to find you when you two stepped out of
the ruins."

"Why did you create the Guardian?" Kirk was asking.

"And when did you create it?"

"When?. "Zarabeth' looked around vaguely. "When did we? I can't say
... but I can ... yes, tell them ... why should we bother telling
them anything!" The creature frowned. "Don't confuse me, please. You're
always confused!"

Zar listened to the alien bickering with itself, and realized that it
had meant the "we" quite literally. They were conversing with a number
of vastly different personalities.

"Now, what did they want?" the creature asked, helplessly.

It seemed to listen. "Oh, yes. Well, we made the-what was 0-the
Guardian-because this universe had just gotten so small, you know. No
challenges left at all, nothing to see or do. There were a lot more of
us in those days ...

back when there weren't nearly so many stars and galaxies as there are
now, Admiral, but I'm afraid I can't tell you when more precisely than
that ... it's been too long."

The entity began to blur slightly around the edges, as though it were
dissolving. "So we needed something to do, somewhere new to go. First
we used it to journey in Time, but we ran out of that pretty quickly,
because there wasn't a whole lot of it yet ... only a couple of ...
billion, what's your word . . . 'years'? Yes. But then we decided
to sample other dimensions, each of which was its own complete universe
... layered and overlapping, like the pages in one of those
old-fashioned books you're so fond of, Admiral."

The alien was just a soft glob of shimmering white light, now, but
"Zarabeth's' voice continued unchanged. Zar wondered for a moment
whether he were actually hearing it with his ears at all, but there was
no way to judge. Whatever form of communication these creatures were
using, his mind was perceiving it as speech.

"And the Guardian transported you there?" Spock asked.

"Yes ... but we kept getting farther away. Finally we found a
continuum we rather liked ... such lovely bridges between the stars,
all of it laced together with tachyons, and so compact ... and we
stayed there for awhile ... I guess perhaps a long time? Yes, a long
time. Long, long, it was long."

"And you just now returned to this universe?" Kirk gave Spock an uneasy
glance. Zar could sympathize with the admiral's concern. These
creatures were so powerful

... but so confused. There was no way to predict what their next whim
might be.

"Yes, and it's wonderful to be back," the alien creature was saying. "We
wanted-It was my idea first!-Some of us who were left, that is, wanted
to come home. Sentimental, yes, but isn't that one of the traits of old
folks in your species, too, Admiral Kirk?"

"Uh, yes," Kirk said, glancing at the light-glob, then quickly away
again, blinking. The creature was now an eye-searing violet patch.
Gazing at it, Zar had the uncanny feeling that if he were to step into
it, he'd fall through it to . . . somewhere else.

"Look," the alien voice chided itself, "you've let your form slip. It's
painful for them to look at you. That's very rude." The light began
drawing in on itself, coalescing. "My apologies," it said. "It's been
so long since we were here, I'm a little rusty on the physics in
your-our-universe. Perhaps something larger? Yes, a bit larger might
be easier to maintain ... that's better."

Suddenly, a pale yellow house stood before them.

Kirk gasped, visibly paling. "That's-that's my home!

The farmhouse in Iowa. But it burned down . . ." Dazedly, the admiral
walked forward, laid a hand on the neatly painted porch railing, shook
it. "Solid-I can't believe it!"

He bounded up the steps, raced inside. Faintly, they heard his voice.
"Spock, Bones! It's all here! The old piano, the rugs Winona's
great-great-grandmother wove! The dent in the stair railing from that
time Sam and I tacked up the carpet runner and tried to ski down the
steps!"

A moment later he was back outside, flushed and wideeyed. "How did you
do that? It's perfect!"

"Thank you, but the credit is yours, Admiral," Zarabeth's voice answered
him. "Your mind is most detailed."

"With all due respect," Spock addressed the alien, "I venture to remind
you that we have been exposed to many different shapes and varieties of
sentient life over the years.

I see no reason why you cannot assume and remain in your natural form to
speak with us. I seriously doubt we would find it shocking or
repugnant."

"That's a good idea!" the creature said, enthusiastically, but then its
voice became filled with regret. "We-I -forgot. If only we could
appear as ourselves again, Mr. Spock ... but it's been so long, I'm
afraid we've forgotten what our natural forms are."

"I remember!" came a different voice, a hostile, slightly mad voice from
behind them, and, turning, they saw a flame-colored shadow wavering atop
a fallen column. "But nobody ever listens to me, so I'm not going to
tell you!"

"That's where you've been," said the voice from the house. "We-l-thought
you had been lost during the transition."

"No, you didn't," objected the flame-shadow. "You just don't want to
admit that you forgot me!"

"My programming would not permit that," the Guardian of Forever
interjected, sounding a bit miffed. "I returned all of you safely."

"At an - v rate," the house-alien continued loudly, in the tone of one
who has been interrupted one time too many, "it's much easier for us to
borrow shapes from your minds."

"How many of you are there?" Kirk asked. "Do you have names?"

"There are-eight-is that all?-of us," the creature said. "And our names
for ourselves are ... not translatable into verbal speech."

"I call them the Or iginators," rumbled the Guardian. "If I may
interject a comment?"

"Very well," said the house-alien in the careless tone of one speaking
to a moderately valuable servant.

"Admiral Kirk," the time portal said, "I very much regret having
neglected my duties in this continuum. I am functioning normally
again."

"I am glad to hear that," Kirk said.

"However," the time entity continued, "I had no choice in the matter. I
had to respond to my primary programming when my Originators contacted
me with instructions to locate them and transport them home. Searching
a nearly infinite number of dimensions was not an easy task, and
required almost all of my capabilities."

"I see," Kirk said, his tone carefully neutral. Zar knew the admiral
was thinking about all the deaths the Guardian's absence had caused. "Of
course. But, uh, Originator, with so many possible dimensions to choose
from, why did you wish to return to this one?"

The house began to waver, lose solidity. The alien did not answer
immediately. Finally it said, "To everything there is a season, James,
as it says in a book sacred to one of your human religions. It was a
sentimental whim for the eight of us to wish to end our existence in the
same universe we began it."

The house vanished into a pillar of rainbow light. "In other words,
Admiral, we have come home to die."

Chapter Twelve

JAMES MRK WATCHED the farmhouse where he had spent his childhood vanish,
and fell fear growing inside him like something with a life of its own.
His sixth sense (which he'd come to trust as fully as the conscious,
rational part of his mind) told him that these creatures posed a
considerable danger. Calm down, Jim, he ordered himself silently.

Thev've done nothing threatening, unless you count the backlash of their
arrival, but I believe them when they say that was not intentional.

But all his instincts still whispered a warning. "I see," he said,
finally, to the rainbow shimmer. "Are you speaking of something
imminent? You, uh ... don't seem ill to me ... but . . ." He spread
his hands.

"He's insulting us!" flame-shadow said, indignantly. "Illness, indeed!
Speaking as if we were mere matter!"

"As we may indeed have been." The voice emanating from the farmhouse
sounded stern. "Does any of you truly remember?"

Apparently none of them did, for there was silence except for the wind.

"No, Admiral," the stern, distant voice (the one Kirk was coming to
think of as "the rational one") continued finally, "we are not sick, but
even for creatures such as ourselves, entropy catches up eventually. We
are ... tired. Winding down . .

"Your form's lapsed again," flame-shadow pointed out rudely.

"So it has. . ." The shimmer elongated, shifted, and then a man stood
there before the admiral, a slightly taller, broad-shouldered man with
dark blond hair and hazel eyes the same shade as Kirk's own. He was
grinning-that same "give 'em hell" impish grin Jim recalled from the
stairskiing attempt.

"Sam . . ." Kirk whispered, his throat tight as he remembered those
even white teeth bared in the grimace of agony etched on his brother's
features the last time he'd seen them. George Samuel Kirk, Jr., had
died years ago on Deneva, one of the victims of an infestation of
insanityproducing parasites.

A moment later Kirk felt Spock's hand grip his shoulder, steadying him.
"Are you all right, Jim?" The Vulcan glanced over at the Originator.
"The image you are projecting is causing him pain," he protested.

"But it is a true image," flame-shadow protested mockingly. "How can
the truth be harmful?"

Kirk straightened his shoulders. "It's all right, Spock.

Thanks." He forced himself to look directly a. "Sam." "I gather you
intend to make this world your final resting place?"

"Well, no, Admiral," the creature said. It shifted, its horizontal
outline wavering, and then another handsome, broad-shouldered young man
stood beside the image of Kirk's brother. Gary! Kirk recognized the
image of his best friend from his Academy days.

Commander Gary Mitchell had met his death soon after Kirk had assumed
command of the Enterprise. He had been the victim of a dangerous
"god-complex" Mitchell had developed shortly after they had tried to
take the ship through the energy "barrier" at the edge of the galaxy. As
the strange syndrome developed, Gary grew more and more powerful, even
as his humanity diminished; finally, he had become such a threat that
his best friend had been forced to hunt him down.

TIME rOR YESTERDAY

Oddly, seeing Gary's image steadied Kirk. These are alien beings, he
reminded himself This is not Sam, this is not Gary! No matter how
perfect these images seem, this is no different than looking at a holo
of my brother or Gary.

Now'Mitchell'spoke with the querulous, uncertain manner they had heard
before from one of the Originators. "We want-at least I want-to find
our planet of origin again. A beautiful place ... at least, I think it
was . . ."

"You mean this isn't your home world?" McCoy gestured at the ruins
around them.

"Fools! Why are we bothering with them?" snapped flame-shadow.

"You maundering ancient," said a different voice from any they had yet
heard, a cold, contemptuous voice that made the hairs at the back of
Kirk's neck stir. Before their eyes another form coalesced. An ancient
Vulcan woman, with an ascetic, implacable face, and two broad streaks of
white running through her black hair. TFau! Kirk identified the image
of the Vulcan head-of-state. "You no more remember our world of origin
than I do," she said t. "Gary." "But we will recognize it when we find
it, if we must search for a millennium."

"No, r. M oy," came the measured, distant tones of the rational one,
"this is not our home world. We only created this one as a base of
operations for our servant, the Guardian."

"And it's gotten so rundown, " complained a new voice, and suddenly a
slender woman was there, wearing modern clothing, with salt-and-peppcr
hair and an intelligent, disdainful face. Jocelvn, Kirk identified the
image, even though he hadn't seen Leonard McCoy's ex-wife in nearly
twenty years. "Of course we can't stay here, " she said, scornfully.

McCoy had gone pale, his lips thinned, his eyes narrowed.

The doctor's divorce had not been an amicable one.

"Bones," Kirk said, in a warning undertone. "That's not Jocelyn,
remember."

McCoy nodded, slowly relaxing. "Would you really search for a thousand
years?" he asked the rational one.

The image of Sam Kirk smiled faintly. "If necessary."

"But you said you were dying. Doesn't seem like it to me ."

"Time," said the rational one, "is one of the most relative things in
this universe, or hadn't you realized that yet, Doctor? Death does
indeed seem imminent when you compare a possible thousand years with
billions, wouldn't you agree?"

"Why bother to explain to them?" snarled flame-shadow.

"I can't believe how much time you are wasting talking to them!"

"But ... that is, perhaps ... talking to them is ... is ... not a
waste," the Gary Mitchell image stammered. "It would be easier, you
know ... more ethical ... that is, more comfortable, if they want to
help ... if they agree to assist us . . ."

"Assist you with what?" Kirk demanded.

"Yes, with what?" Zarabeth said, reappearing. That's six of the eight,
Kirk thought. "Are the non-sentients still here?" She turned to regard
the four of them. "Oh. I thought they were gone. Or did I forget
again?"

"We don't need them," T'Pau stated. "Or, considering the physical laws
of this continuum . . ." she trailed off, uncertainly.

"Yes, we do," said the rational one wearing Sam I S image.

"Expending the energy necessary for travel would greatly shorten our
remaining time."

"But the indignity!" protested Jocelyn. "Depending on non-sentients? I
won't do it."

"Perhaps the, uh . . ." Mitchell waved tentatively at the Guardian.
"You know ... maybe it could

"The distances between stars have altered too much for us to provide
coordinates," said the rational one.

"But travel in that orbiting vehicle?" T'Pau asked, doubtfully. "How
primitive. Suppose the non-sentients don't agree to transport us?"

"Then we take it," flame-shadow said. "They can't stop US.

The Enterprise they're talking about commandeering my shipjbr their
insane search for a world that may not even exist anymore! Kirk
realized, feeling the cold lump of fear congeal in his stomach. "Now,
just a minute," he said. "I can sympathize with your desire to reach
your ancient home, and it may be that the Federation will choose to
assist you in your search. But my ship is on a mission-"

"You may have no choice, Admiral," the Sam image quietly warned him. "My
... comrades ... can be a trifle ... capricious."

I'll bet, Kirk thought, bitterly. What the hell am I going to do?

Something nudged his elbow. The admiral glanced sideways at Zar, only
to see him raise an eyebrow and jerk his head at the other side of the
clearing, "Will you excuse us for a moment?" Kirk said.

"We ... uh, we need to discuss the best way of handling your request."

"Why are we bothering with them at all?" flame-shadow whirled on Sam.
"Let's go!"

Kirk felt something brush the edges of his mind. Whatever it was, it
made flame-shadow shrink into itself, silent.

"Certainly, Admiral," the rational one said. "By all means."

When they reached the other side of the clearing, Zar sat down., rubbing
his left thigh with a grimace. "We've got to talk," he said.

"But they'll 'hear' us," McCoy said, tapping the side of his head. He
sank down beside the younger man with a sigh.

"That cannot be helped," Zar said. "Besides, I doubt they will bother
listening in. They're very sure of themselves."

"Yes, they are," Kirk agreed, grimly. "What's up?"

"I've been picking up the mental and emotional emanations from the two
non-physical Originators-the ones we haven't yet seen." Zar's voice was
a strained whisper. "If several of the ones we've been speaking with
appear irrational or senile, by humanoid standards, then these two are
completely deranged. They're mad, viciously so, and far more dangerous
than the other six put together. They can't be allowed to stay here."

"Well, what do you suggest we do, Zar?" McCoy asked sarcastically.
"Politely ask the entire lot to leave this continuum? Damn it, they
could erase us all with a single impulse!

Those things can generate matter and wipe it out as easily as I could
trigger a phaser!"

"Zar's right," Kirk said. "I'm certainly not going to tamely hand the
Enterprise over to them so they can warp off through an unsuspecting
galaxy!"

"Maybe we can convince I em that the world they're looking for is
Klinzhai and dump them off there," McCoy suggested, cynically. "Give
the Klingons something to worry about besides making trouble for us."

Kirk ignored the doctor. "We can't threaten, bribe, or coerce them," he
said, slowly. "Could we influence them?

Appeal to their better natures?"

"What makes you think they have any?" McCoy growled.

"Because if they didn't, they wouldn't have bothered to speak to us at
all. They'd have just forced us to do as they wished."

"Well-reasoned, Jim," Spock said. "It is clear that some of them, at
least, wish us to help them willingly. They do not want to mentally
compel us."

"I agree," Zar said. "By the way, it would help in discussing them if I
knew whose images they've assumed."

Kirk briefly identified the four Originators.

"Sam is the most rational of them, and seems to have considerable
influence over the others," Spock pointed out.

"Gary, also," Zar said.

"You should begin your appeal with those two, Jim," Spock said.

"So I'm elected to do the talking?" Kirk smiled humorlessly. "I don't
recall volunteering."

"R.H.I.P.," McCoy pointed out. "Besides, you're the best Starfleet's
got at this kind of thing."

"All right." Kirk got to his feet and shivered, pulling his cloak around
him. "I only hope my best is good enough, this time."

As they walked back toward the waiting Originators, a rock shifted under
Zar's boot, throwing his weight onto his bad leg. He grunted with the
pain, then cursed under his breath. McCoy caught his arm as he
staggered. "You okay?"

"That meld took a lot out of me," the Sovren admitted.

"And even the peripheral contact with those two Originators . . ." He
shuddered at the memory.

"You look terrible."

"I don't doubt it. I've ridden home from a day on the battlefield in
better shape than I am now."

As Kirk, Spock, and McCoy moved to stand shoulder to shoulder before the
rational one, Zar limped around to the side, stopping next to the time
portal. He felt drained, both physically and mentally. He was near
exhaustion, and his leg ached savagely.

Feels as though I've been awake.for two days ... notfive or six hours,
he thought. He remembered waking that morning, to find Wynn lying
beside him, watching him as he slept. Will I ever see her again?

If only I could get back, he thought wearily, and make it through alive,
things would be different. Damn it, I want to live, now. Talk about
irony ...

To take some of the strain off his leg, he dared to lean his shoulder
against the time portal.

"Have you decided whether you will help us, Admiral?"

the Sam Kirk image said, finally.

Kirk's eyes narrowed. "I don't think you realize what you're asking,"
he said, evenly. "Or that you comprehend the ramifications of your
return."

Sam's image frowned uncertainly. "Ramifications?"

"The effects of your return on this universe. More than a thousand
beings have already died because the Guardian was searching for you.
Your people are so powerful, and so easily angered, that they pose a
grave threat to this continuum. If you take my ship and begin searching
for your home planet, things will only get worse. More will die. Is
that what you want?"

"A thousand are dead?" The rational one was obviously disturbed.
"Because of us? How can that be?"

"Four hundred and thirty beings on the Constellation, swallowed forever
by a black hole. Four hundred and thirty more on the El Nath, vanished
to dust in far less than the blink of an eye. A hundred and eighty-four
people-and an entire world of plant and wildlife-on a planet called
Kent, incinerated, vaporized, when their sun became a red giant.

Twelve scientists who used to live right over there"-Kirk spun on his
heel and pointed--are no more, because you forced the Guardian to
concentrate its energies on you, instead of on its responsibilities to
this universe."

Sam and Gary glanced quickly at each other, obviously taken aback. "We
... did not know that our summons ...

would produce such havoc," Mitchell's image stammered.

"Oh, I'm not finished, yet," Kirk said, inexorably. "What about the
people of Kent? You say you want to find your home? What about 1heir
homes? Obliterated! They'll spend the next months or years crowded
into refugee camps -damn it, they've lost everything they had in the
world, plus the world itself' The morning we left on this mission, there
had already been over forty suicides among the survivors."

"There's another death to add to your total, Jim," McCoy put in. "Did
you hear that woman screaming that night we spent aboard Cochise? She
was pregnant, but stayed on the job during the evacuation-went into
early labor, and delivered a stillborn boy, right in the corridor,
because the infirmary was overflowing with patients in even worse
shape-strokes, catatonia, coronaries, and such. The medical staff did
all they could, but . . ." The doctor shrugged.

"Add that baby's death to your total, Originators."

Zar, picturing the scene, swallowed.

"There is also," Spock said, "D'berahan to consider. She risked her
life to contact the Guardian, and now she lies in a coma, with three
newborn infants. She may well die, and her children with her."

Zar felt the Guardian of Forever's reaction to Kirk's, Spock's, and
McCoy's words through the physical contact between them. Sorrow flowed
through the stone, and a question formed in his mind Is all this true?

Yes, he answered, sadly.

I am sorry. The time portal's regret was profound and genuine. I never
wished harm to anyone.

Zar projected understanding. You had no choice but to obey them when
they summoned you. We know that vou could not supersede your
programming.

The image of Sam Kirk considered silently for several minutes before it
spoke again. "We did not return to cause death. And we are sorry. But
what has happened, has happened. Why do you say that our continued
presence will be harmful?"

"Because of your power," Kirk said, his hazel eyes never leaving the
ones so like his own. "There is a saying among my people that 'absolute
power corrupts absolutely." You two, who wear the bodies of two men who
were honest and decent-tell me the truth. Can you control the others so
well that their whims will not cause tragedy before you can stop them?
Be honest-can you?"

"Why are you listening to this one?" flame-shadow spat.

"We are beyond his dim level of understanding! You cannot allow a
non-sentient creature to dictate to you!"

The image of Kirk's brother swung to regard the others.

"Just because they cannot match our mentality, does not mean thcy-and
others like them-have no right to live out their brief lives in such
peace as their squabbling allows them to enjoy."

"Rights?" T'Pau's image was openly scornful. "They may well owe us
their very lives! Didn't we seed thousands of those barren, steaming
worlds with life-generating molecules? Don't they owe us help now?"

Zarabeth roused herself for a moment. "I think I remember doing that,
long ago," she said. "it was like a game, watching to see what
life-forms might evolve , . ."

"What are you saying?" Jocelyn was horrified. "That we may be
responsible for them? What an odious thought!" She glared at McCoy.
"They aren't even civilized. You should hear what this one said to his
wife the last time they encountered one another!"

"Why, you-" The doctor started forward, blood in his eye, but halted
with a jerk when Spock grabbed his arm.

"Doctor-"

"Bones McCoy subsided, rubbing his arm and casting a resentful glance at
the Vulcan. "Okay, okay ... but if you Originators think we're so
uncivilized, you ought to try listening to yourselves for a while. You
sound like a pack of five-yearolds."

"We don't have to stand for this," flame-shadow hissed.

"Let's abandon these four here and re-form aboard their ship. We don't
need the crew to run the vessel."

"So what would you do with them?" Sam Kirk asked, heavily. "Toss the
crew outside to perish? Leave these four on this decaying worldlet
without sustenance? Add another 435 lives to our grim total? I am
beginning to believe that the admiral is right. We would endanger this
continuum and the beings inhabiting it."

"No! You cannot say that!" Jocelyn's image began to blur with her rage.
"Think of how long we have waited to come back!"

"Admiral Kirk is lying about those 'thousands of deaths," flame-shadow
said.

"No, he is not," Gary said, suddenly. "I have touched his mind, and he
speaks the truth. He is right. Our presence has proved harmful."

"At any rate," T'Pau said, "any casualties were not our fault. Our
servant is responsible."

Zar experienced the ripple of sadness that passed through the Guardian
at the Originator's words. You didnt know, he comforted the
time-entity . All of us have unknowingly done things that we have later
regretted ...

"And it is now clear to me that our presence may continue to harm this
continuum," the rational one said, regretfully. "James Kirk speaks the
truth. Search his mind for yourselves," the alien entity invited the
others. "You will see that I am right."

"Yes," agreed Gary, speaking in its new tone of certainty, "you know
that his mind cannot hide the truth from us.

Search it, and see. Search all of them, as I did, and you will find the
same thing."

All the Originators were silent, then, for several minutes.

Zar felt several minds brush his, sensed unspoken communication passing
between the aliens, but it was not on a mental level that he could tap.
He received an impression of bitter conflict.

At last the rational one turned to regard Kirk. "We are attempting to
convince our comrades to depart."

"Never!" Jocelyn stamped a foot. "I want to go home!"

"If we go home, we will destroy the inhabitants of this universe," Gary
said. "Is that what you want? They are, in a way, our children."

"I am beginning to think we should leave, also," T'Pau said, haughtily.
"if only to put an end to this tedious bickering."

"Why are we still here?" Zarabeth asked, vaguely. "if we aren't wanted,
let's go somewhere else. This place is so dull ... so drab . .

"How can you side with these ... vermin?" flameshadow raged. It began
to swell threateningly toward the humans, but Gary quickly stepped
between them. Mitchell's shape began to waver, lose form, and then
there were two insubstantial shapes, flickering at each other.

Suddenly, as Zar watched, all of the Originators winked out. The air
was again filled with a mixed barrage of color, sound, taste, and
feeling-hastily, he squeezed his eyes shut.

Moments later, he opened them again, to see three of the amorphous
shadows-Garv, Sam, and which of the others? -surrounding, enclosing, the
remaining Originators. Then the shapes coalesced, merging into one
entity.

The single alien form pulsed wildly, and the Sovren caught the fringes
of the mental communication passing between the rational one and the
Guardian, and an impression of the time-entity's search to obey the
Originator's command. The portal came to life, glowing blue-white.

As he watched, the central portion filled with an image -Zar turned away
after a single, stomach-wrenching glance. It was not that the new
universe the Guardian displayed was in any way ugly-it was just that its
shapes, colors, and angles were so mind-blastingly alien to everything
he'd learned to accept as normal and sane ...

Even the physical laws of that universe, he thought, would be different.
Zar tried to picture a continuum where dropped objects never fell,
parallel lines quickly crossed, and the inhabitants could perceive and
build in four dimensions. He shook his head with a grimace. It's hard
enough managing in this universe.

"We leave you to your own destiny," the voice of the rational one echoed
in his mind. "Farewell, children."

Then, with a final whirl of swirling, prismatic color, the Originators
dissolved and flowed through the Guardian's opening like fractured
rainbows.

Kirk stood staring after them as the Guardian's central opening
flickered back into its normal view of fallen columns and tumbled
buildings. "They're gone," he said, as if trying to convince himself.
"Damn ... that was a close one." He fumbled at his belt-pouch and
withdrew his communicator. "Kirk to Enterprise.

"Enterprise ... Uhura here."

The admiral grinned affectionately at the little instrument. "Commander,
have I ever told you what a lovely voice you have?"

"Sir?" The soft contralto sounded understandably confused. "Uh, no,
sir."

"Well, you do. There were times during this past hour when I seriously
doubted that I'd ever hear it again."

"Are you all right, Admiral?"

"We're fine, Uhura. Four to beam-"

"No, Jim!" Zar cried suddenly. "Don't. " He glanced quickly around
him, trying to see what he had dimly sensed a moment before. Maybe I am
crazy- was it really there?

"Huh?" Kirk hesitated, then "Stand by, Commander."

He shut the communicator. -Zar, what the hell is it?"

"I don'tZar frowned. "Just a moment-" He closed his eyes, sending his
awareness spinning out, searching-and felt again that brush of
non-rationality, of skewed, warped thinking ... of intense, psychotic
paranoia.

Zar swore a barracks oath in Danrei, and saw Spock raise an eyebrow as
his universal translator rendered the obscenity. "They're not all
gone," he told the others. "I felt them, just now. Two of them stayed
behind. I don't think I have to tell you which two."

Kirk glanced around, uneasily. "Are you sure?"

"Yes."

"From the frying pan to the fire," McCoy, shivering, whispered. "What
the hell are we going to do?"

"Ask them to appear, and find out what they want," Spock replied. He
raised his voice. "Originators, we sense your presence. Please
materialize, so we may speak with you. What do you want?"

Silence.

Kirk cleared his throat. -Zar ... are you sure?"

The Sovren nodded. "I don't feel anything now, but a minute ago, I am
positive I did. Do you think they're still here? Or could they already
be aboard the ship?"

The admiral's mouth tightened. "And in what form?

Standard procedure dictates I should order red alert, but what good
would it do?"

A shape swirled and materialized in front of Kirk. "Absolutely none,
Admiral."

As he surveyed the new arrival, James Kirk made an inarticulate sound of
pain and closed his eyes. This Ofiginator had appeared as a young woman
with black hair, dark, vital eyes, high cheekbones-no classical beauty,
but possessed of a vibrant, discerning loveliness. Zar heard the
unspoken word "Mom!" echo in the admiral's mind, and realized the alien
had taken the form of Winona Kirk.

Even as he watched, the image altered, shrinking into that of a
withered, sad shadow of the same woman. She stretched out a blue-veined
claw toward Kirk, and spoke in a halting whisper. "Please, Jim ... let
me go home, son.

Take me home..

Kirk paled.

"Stop it!" Spock stepped protectively between the alien and his
commanding officer, his dark eyes flashing with anger. "I insist that
you assume another form. This is cruel.

Why should you wish to cause pain? He has done you no harm."

"Oh, but he has," the alien said, its image altering into that of the
young Winona Kirk again. "He drove our people away with his lies. He
refused to help us reach our home, just as he refused his own mother."

The image crumpled inward, until the aged woman stood there. "Jim?
You'll take me home today, won't you?" The alien laughed suddenly,
horribly. "You know, Admiral, if you'd had the house rebuilt, and taken
her home, she'd still be alive today . . ."

"Shut up!" Leonard McCoy surged forward. "This is monstrous!"

Kirk took a deep, shaky breath. "Easy, Bones. Thanks.

But I'm ... all right. I did everything I could for my mother, and,
wherever she is now, she understands that.

This ... thing ... doesn't know anything about it." He looked straight
at the image of his mother. "Why are you trying to hurt us?"

"Because . . ." The alien shrugged. "Why not?"

"Tell us what we can do to help you," Kirk said. "Do you want us to try
and find the planet you originally came from?"

"I don't know . . ." Winona's image said indifferently.

"Perhaps ... or, perhaps not." The creature paused, and the malicious,
mocking tone crept back into its voice. "You caused her death, you
know."

"No, I did not," Kirk said, his voice filled with conviction, though
still harsh with pain.

"Leave him alone!" Zar demanded. "He offered to help you-what more do
you want?"

Slowly, the image of Winona Kirk turned to look at him, and Zar flinched
from the soulless depths reflected in its eyes.

"Perhaps we shouldn't talk to the brave admiral, but to you ... you
can't argue about whom you've killed, can you, Sovren?"

The air in front of Zar swirled, and suddenly Araen stood there before
him.

It's only the second Originator-just an image, just an i .mage-not real!
he told himself, biting his lip against the pain of seeing her there, so
much the way he remembered her. The brunette, wavy hair ruffled by the
wind, her eyes, lovely, dark, a little wistful ... she wore only a pale
blue shift that left her slender arms bare to the shoulder. Beneath it
he could see the tiny points of her breasts ...

"Stop it," he said, stonily. "I know you're not real."

"Would you like to see the reality?" the alien asked. "Do you want to
see her as she was the moment ' vou killed her?

Swollen and agonized and bloody ... gasping because she had no strength
left to scream?"

Zar shook his head, closing his eyes. "No!"

The being's mind brushed him then, and the picture it described formed
behind his closed eyelids. He flinched away from it, instinctively
tightening his mental shield against any deeper contact with the
Originator. These creatures were decayed and demented beyond the
ability of anyone or anything to reason with them. The irrationality of
the alien's mind shocked and sickened him, as though he had plunged a
hand into something Totting and putrid.

The wave of vertigo came again, gagging him, and he had to clench his
teeth to keep from vomiting. Theyre going to kill us, he realized,
suddenly comprehending what was happening to him. This is the way I
feel when people I care about are in danger of moving. Spock, Jim . .
Leonard ...

there's no wa ' v they'll let an - v of us go. They It take the
Enterprise and do as the ' y please ...

He glanced over at the others, saw that they had reached the same
conclusion. If oniv we couldfighi ihem!

But how could you fight an opponent that had no more physical reality
than a soap bubble-that could exist as matter or energy, as it chose?

"Let's talk about this," Kirk suggested, keeping his voice soothing,
conciliatory.

"There is nothing to talk about," the Originator's voices echoed, though
neither Winona's nor Araen's lips moved.

"You have all betrayed us."

"Why do you say that?" McCoy said.

"We say it because it is true. You envy our powers, you have tried to
thwart us. But all of that will be over soon. We have been patient
long enough."

Zar shuddered, struggling against the nausea and the growing pain in his
head. His vision was blurring, and he had to fight to remain conscious.
Dizzily, he braced one hand against the Guardian's stone bulk, knowing
that the end could not be far off because his sickness was so intense.

Fear warred with the nausea, and he began shuddering.

Fear.

As he looked out across the desolate waste that was Gateway, Zar had a
sudden memory of crouching beside Spock while they watched two Romulan
guards pace slowly back and forth. He had empathically projected his
own fear of death at the pair, with such force that it had killed both
soldiers. The effort had nearly killed him, too ...

Would it work with these aliens? he wondered, glancing at the silent,
motionless forms of the Originators. Theyre already crazy with
paranoia-projectingfear at them might be enough to drive them into the
equivalent of catatonia, or even death ...

But he also knew that the backlash from the aliens' fear would almost
certainly kill him-and Spock, Kirk, and McCoy, too.

The bodies of the Originators began to glow.

This is it, Zar knew, instinctively. What should I do? Have to decide.
. .

He wished that he had time to consult Kirk and the others, but there was
no more time. If I can stop them, I must. I can't let them kill
everyone aboard the Enterpriseand who knows where else.

Silently, Zar apologized to the others, then he started breathing
faster, deliberately triggering the fight-or-flight reflex in his body.
Seconds later, the blood was rushing through his veins and he was
shaking, no longer from sickness, but from adrenaline rush.

The Originators began to lose their human shapes, as they shone brighter
and brighter-pulsing red, pulsing yellow, pulsing blue-white ...

Zar shut his eyes, summoning images of death.

Don't, said a voice in his mind. I will kelp you against them.

Startled, Zar focused his attention on the stone beneath his hand. Even
through the growing heat from the nowformless aliens, he felt its
warmth. Guardian? he thought, incredulously.

Yes, the time-entity replied. They are my creators, but I cannot allow
them to become aforce of wanton destruction in the universe I have
protected for so long. Lend me all your mental strength-this will not
be easy.

You have it, Zar replied, soundlessly. Aloud he yelled, "Spock!" as he
reached out toward his father.

By now the two aliens had merged into one livid mass of light and
heat-it was like standing near the raw heart of a nova.

He'll never make it, Zar thought desperately, as he gathered his energy,
preparing to mind-link with the time portal.

Nobody could get past that inferno now. nobody couldA hand clamped onto
his own, held hard.

Father and son had become one consciousness even as the Originators
began to expand, reaching out to obliterate them. In another heartbeat,
Zar launched his mind into a link with the time portal, and began
channeling all of their combined mental energy into the ancient entity.

They were one with the Guardian as it gathered their combined power to
create a physical and mental vortex that lashed out from the time
portal's central opening, catching the two aliens off-guard. For a
moment both were drawn helplessly toward that churning void-then they
began to resist.

As the Originators fought back, the Guardian used more and more power,
widening the path of the maelstrom it had created. Zar found himself
"pulling" mentally, using all his and Spock's united strength; it was as
though the two of them were mentally digging their heels into the ground
and trying by main force to haul a mountain toward them.

There was room for neither thought nor fear-only for the effort they
were expending. Everything was channeled into the struggle to drag the
aliens into the heart of the vortex.

Zar was dimly aware through the mind-link of the sheer magnitude and
power of the Guardian-and the ancient time portal was using every scrap
of that power.

But it was not ... going ... to ... be ... enough ...

Without warning, a tiny measure of additional strength entered the
meld-only a thread, but it was enough to tip the balance. Zar felt,
rather than saw, the Originators drawn into the very heart of that
whirling, writhing nothingness-and then they were gone.

The Guardian released his mind, and he withdrew, dissolving the meld. He
could hear the time-entity speaking aloud

"They have joined the others now, so many continua away that they will
never find their way back. Please accept my gratitude, Admiral Kirk,
Dr. McCoy, Mr. Spock ...

and especially Zar, who helped me realize where my duty lay. I assure
you that from now on I will fulfill my responsibilities to this universe
to the best of my ability. Again, I thank you."

Chapter Thirteen

AS THE ECHOES of the Guardian's voice died away, Zar opened his eyes to
find himself slumped against the time portal. Spock, Kirk, and McCoy
crouched beside him, their faces filthy and scraped from wind-blown
pebbles and grit.

The fabric of Kirk's cloak and jerkin was ripped, baring his arm and
shoulder. Spock's sleeve was charred and torn, and there was a slash
along his right cheekbone; a green trickle slowly welled and dripped.
McCoy had torn both knees out of his breeches.

"You all right?" McCoy asked, his question for all of them.

They all nodded.

"You joined the meld," Zar said to McCoy. He shook his head, still
dazed. "You and Jim. You were the ones who supplied that last bit of
mental energy, weren't you?"

"Don't pin any medals on me," McCoy growled. "I was frozen with terror.
If it hadn't been for Jim hauling me over to join you, I'd still be
standing there."

"Bull," Kirk said. "I was the one who was immobile, when Bones shook me
so hard my teeth rattled, and yelled. "Don't just stand there, we've got
to help! Grab Spock's hand!"

Kirk, Spock, and McCoy climbed slowly to their feet. All three were
stumbling with exhaustion.

Zar hesitated, wondering if he could stand. His left leg was doubled
beneath him, and felt like one massive cramp.

Spock reached down a hand without comment, and his son grasped it, then
painfully pulled himself up, swaying slightly as he waited for the
pins-and-needies of returning circulation to cease.

Kirk was speaking with the Enterprise, reassuring a worried Commander
Scott. "It's really over this time, Scotty," he concluded. "And the
Guardian is back to normal."

"Thank heaven, Sir! Will that be four t' beam up?"

"Yes. Ener-- Kirk broke off at Zar's emphatic headshake. "Stand by,
Scotty." He flipped the communicator shut. "You're coming back with us,
Zar."

"No, I have to return to New Araen," the Sovren said, then glanced
sideways at McCoy. "All I need is that hypo, Doc."

"You'll have to come to sickbay," McCoy said. At Zar's wary expression,
he snarled, "Okay! I've accepted the fact that you won't stay, damn
your stubborn hide! I just want to take a look at that leg and see if I
can't help you. The Guardian is working normally again, it'll send you
back a moment after you left, whether you leave now or a year from now!"

Zar shook his head, wondering why he fielt so lighthearted.

"I appreciate it, Leonard, but-"

McCoy's temper snapped. "Shut up! You can't go back like this, you
idiot, you can barely stay on your feet! You're in no shape to march
off to a battle!" His hand darted up to the younger man's temple,
carefully pushing back the hair.

"Superficial," he grunted, after a glance, "but it still needs closing."
His fingers came away slick with greenish blood.

Zar stared at them in surprise, then realized the side of his jaw did
feel cold and sticky. Perhaps that was why he was so dizzy ...

"Didn't even feel it, did you?" the doctor asked. "You're out on your
feet, Zar. Now, you're coming back to the Enterprise and let me patch
you up-even if Spock has to nerve-pinch you and carry you. Right,
Spock?"

The Vulcan nodded. "Extraordinary as it may sound, the good doctor and
I are in full agreement." A faint curve touched the stern mouth.
"However, I would prefer not to have to carry you, son. I am not in the
best of shape myself."

Zar managed a weak smile. "All right, you win. Who am I to ruin an
historic occasion?"

Kirk, grinning, reactivated the communicator. "Mr. Scott?" he said,
then paused as Zar extended a hand.

"May I?"

Puzzled, the admiral handed the little instrument over.

"I've always wanted to do this," Zar confided, sollo voce.

Then he spoke into the communicator. "Mr. Scott, this is Zar."

"Well, hello, laddie. It's good to hear your voice! Are you coming up
t' see us?"

"They twisted my arm," Zar said, and grinned. "So please beam us up,
Scotty."

When the soft chime of the intercom roused Zar the following morning,
all he wanted to do was burrow back under the covers (I'dforgootten how
comfortable these lowgee mattresses are ... ) and drift back to sleep.
I'm so tired ... Instead he sat up and rubbed his eyes gingerly.

They ached.

The ache flowed, spreading over him like sweat under armor, dull and
unfocused. Goddess, so tired ...

The intercom sounded again. Za r swore and swung his legs out of the
bed.

It took him a moment to recall how to activate the intercom. "Yes?" he
grunted, not using the visual circuit.

"Sorry to wake you, Zar," came McCoy's voice, "but we ought to get
started on those tests. When can you get down here?"

"Uh . . ." he said, trying to consider, his mind fogged like the
cloud-shrouded summit of Big Snowy. "Can I have breakfast? And coffee?
I haven't had coffee in twenty years."

"I'll put in the order. Cream and sugar?"

"Black."

Zar sank down on the edge of the bunk, glancing around the luxurious
senior officer's cabin. His leather breeches and woven shirt were still
piled on the chair, but on the bureau was a plain black jumpsuit that
had not been there. Spock, Zar realized. Nobody else could have come
in without waking me. He dimly remembered Kirk telling him last night
that he'd been assigned quarters next door to the Vulcan.

He stretched, every muscle in his body protesting, then padded naked
into the head. He spent a few minutes renewing his acquaintance with
the controls. Sonic or water?

he wondered, and, in the end, took both.

Back in paradise . . . he thought, leaning against the softly
gleaming wall, while the hot water pelted him. Id forgotten how clean
it is ... everything smells so good.

Memories of standing barefoot on a stone floor, breaking the ice skim on
a basin of water so he could bathe, and of outdoor privies in midsummer,
assailed him. He glanced longingly over at the Jacuzzi and promised
himself a long soak.

But Id trade it all to see Wynn ... Zar probed the void in his mind,
delicately, the way a tongue is irresistibly drawn to a missing tooth.
In this time and place she was dead, and while he was here, part of him
was dead, too.

In sickbay, he grimly endured McCoy's seemingly endless tests. When the
doctor finally released him, Kirk announced that he was ready to take
their visitor on a tour of the Enterprise.

Their first stop was, of course, the bridge. Zar glanced around in
wonderment. "You weren't kidding when you warned me that things have
changed, Jim," he said.

"The entire ship was overhauled and rebuilt several years ago," Kirk
said. "it does look a lot different."

"New viewscreens, new uniforms, different control stations . . ." Zar
turned around to look at the twin sets of turbo-lift doors. "Even the
doors are different."

"The new design is much more efficient," Spock said, glancing up from
the science station, where he was conferring with Lieutenant-Commanders
Maybri and Naraht.

(Zar still couldn't get over the presence of a living, thinking
rock-especially one with a sense of humor!)

"Aye, that it is," Scotty said. "Wait'll you see m'engine room, lad.
Two stories high, with an elevator in the middle of it."

"It all looks incredibly streamlined," Zar said, "but you know, I miss
those red doors."

Kirk grinned wryly. "So do I, now that you mention it.

But progress is a necessary evil, I suppose." He gestured at Scotty.
"I'll see you later tonight, at dinner. I'm hosting a party for you and
the senior officers, Zar. But right now, Mr. Scott is dying to show you
his engine room."

"I propose a toast," Dr. McCoy announced, raising his glass. "To the
Guardian of Forever. If it hadn't been for it siding with us against
its creators, we wouldn't be here tonight."

The rest of the assembled company nodded gravely and drank. Zar sipped
the fruit juice Spock had suggested he try-though its orange color had
given him pause. It was good, just tart enough to be pleasing.

Thank YOU for the acknowledgment, a familiar voice echoed inside his
mind. I appreciate it very much.

Zar hastily swallowed the mouthful of orange juice before he choked on
it. Guardian? he asked silently. But we are in orbit, hundreds of
kilometers away. . . how can you reach me?

I have many abilities, the time-entity told him, ambiguously. But I can
cease contact, if you would prefer.

That's all right. I enjoy conversing with you.

You do? A wash of genuine pleasure colored the ancient creation's
thought-pattern. Then I wonder ...

Yes?

Would you consent to 'talk' with me sometimes? There are innumerable
worlds and times that I can scan for diversion and learning, but I
discovered yesterday that communication with another sentient being is
also valuable. My search for my creators made me reafte-or, perhaps,
remember-that I have been lonely for a very long time.

Zar thought about what it might be like to exist in isolation for
millennia and felt a rush of empathy for the time portal. I would be
pleased to 'talk'with you, he told the Guardian, but I don't believe you
will be able to reach mefor long. Soon I will be returning to my home
in the past.

I will be able to reach you, came the confident reply. And I am
grateful for your compassion.

As suddenly as it had come, the contact was withdrawn.

Zar came back to himself to realize that Uhura ' who was sitting beside
him, had just repeated his name. He blinked.

"I beg your pardon, but I didn't catch what you were saying."

She smiled. "I'm not surprised. You were parsecs away."

"No, only about 400 kilometers."

She looked startled. "Beg pardon?"

Zar shook his head and smiled ruefully at her. "I am sorry, Nyota. I
had a lot on my mind, but that is no excuse for boorish behavior.
Forgive me, please."

She chuckled, a rich, throaty sound. "I was saying that you've
changed," she said. "I remember when we first met ... you were such a
quiet, sweet boy. So earnest ...

and so naive."

"Don't remind me." Zar shook his head reminiscently. "I got tongue-tied
every time I looked at you. It took me a whole week to even manage an
intelligible response when you said hello to me."

"Will you he staying, this time?"

He shook his head, half-regretfully. "I can't, I'm afraid."

She gave him a quick, knowing glance. "Someone's waiting for you."

He nodded. "My wife, Wynn."

"And you miss her."

The remark was a statement, not a question, but Zar answered it anyway.
"More than I thought possible."

Later, they adjourned to the chairs and couches on the other side of the
officers' lounge, and talked. Zar was deep in a conversation with Sulu
about fencing lunges and parries, when he noticed Uhura's expression as
she spoke with his father beside the doorway. He concentrated, and
picked up her anxiety, her distress ... she was terribly concerned
about something.

As he watched, she turned away from the departing Spock, then, picking
up the skirt of the flowing white gown she wore, hurried toward the
door.

"Will you please excuse me, Hikaru?" Zar said, hastily. "I must see
Nyota before she goes."

The helmsman nodded. "Sure. Meet me in the gym tomorrow about 0900,
and I'll demonstrate that lunge I was speaking of."

"I'll be there,"

Uhura moved quickly down the hall, wondering whether she ought to change
out of her long dress and evening slippers before going down to sickbay.
"Dam shoes," she muttered, and stopped to pull off the opalescent
sandals.

"Nyota!"

She turned to see Zar limping after her, concern in his gray eyes.
"What's wrong? I sense that you're very upset."

"It's D'berahan," Uhura admitted. "I was just talking with Spock, and
he told me that the three babies' telepathic capabilities are becoming
arrested. He thinks it's because their mother is not communicating with
them. This could end up making them outcasts among their own people."

"What are you going to do?"

"The only thing I can . . . spend more time with them, letting them
pick up my thoughts. I'm just afraid that won't be enough." She
signaled the I i ft. "Want to come with me to see them?"

"All right."

"It's so tragic," she said, as they stepped into the turbolift. "I've
been trying to provide a sort of mental 'anchor' for the children, but
they really need their mother."

They entered sickbay, moving quietly through the hushed quiet and the
shadows cast by the nighttime fighting.

D'berahan lay curled in a different position than Uhura had last seen
her, but she knew by now that the nurses regularly shifted her limbs and
turned the little alien, so this was not unusual. The communications
officer smiled as the three infants wriggled out of their mother's pouch
in response to her presence. "Hi, kids," she whispered.

The small faces, with their enormous eyes, blinked solemnly up at her.
"Can you sense their thoughts?" she asked Zar.

"At this stage, they're really too young to have coherent thoughts, but
I can pick up their emotions ... their appreciation of warmth, and full
stomachs, and companionship."

Uhura bent over the enclosure and gently stroked the tiny domed heads,
humming softly. "What about D'berahan?"

"She's a complete blank."

"If only someone could help her," she said, smoothing the unconscious
alien's fur. She glanced up at her companion as a sudden thought struck
her. "Could you help her, Zar? Spock told me your esper abilities are
much stronger than his."

He hesitated, and Uhura immediately regretted her impulsive question. He
looks so exhausted, she thought, studying the lines of fatigue in his
face, the tightly held mouth and dark-shadowed eyes. "I'm sorry," she
said. "I shouldn't have asked that. I know mind-melding is supposed to
be very difficult ... an intensely personal invasion. Especially with
a complete stranger."

Zar glanced over at the little alien and her babies, and his eyes
softened. "I'd like to help her . . ." he said, slowly.

"Do you think you could?"

"I don't know. Probing a non-humanoid stranger's mind could prove risky
... for both of us."

Nyota watched D'berahan's chest rise almost imperceptibly as she
breathed. "What if you had a gu ide? Somebody who had been in mental
contact with her before?"

"That would help considerably. I could let the other handle the
deepest, most personal part of the meld. Is there another Marishal on
board?"

"No . . ." Uhura said, straightening up and going over to the
intercom. "But if you're sure You'd be willing to try, I think I know
the next best thing.";

He nodded. "Go ahead."

As Uhura punched codes from memory, Zar moved over to stand beside her.
"Who are you calling?"

"Your father," she told him, as she completed the connection. "I hope
he's in his quarters. He could be up on the bridge." She gave him an
impish grin. "I owe him a late-night call."

Zar's eyes widened with surprise, but before he could say anything, a
familiar voice emerged "Spock here."

"Sir, this is Uhura. Would it be possible for you to meet me in
sickbay? I have a personal request for you."

"On my way."

Uhura switched off the intercom. Zar was watching her intently. "How
did you know he's my father?"

"Guessed," she replied matter-of-factly. "Then, when I asked him, he
confirmed it."

"Oh." He was about to say more, when they heard the outer door whoosh
open.

That can't be Spock, Uhura realized. He hasn't even had time to reach
the turbo-li Leonard McCoy entered and stood blinking at them. He was
still wearing his dress uniform trousers, but had changed his jacket for
a medical tunic. "Hello," he said, finally. "What are you two doing
here? The party isn't over yet."

"We came down to see D'berahan," Nyota answered, feeling absurdly like a
kid who has been caught raiding the cookie jar.

"What are you doing here?" Zar asked. "Weren't you enjoying yourself?"

"Yeah, but I'm the only doctor aboard this trip. I came down to check
on Ensign Weinberger-boy broke his shoulder when a gravity flux down in
Engineering tossed him against a bulkhead this afternoon." He peered at
them suspiciously. "Nyota, you look guilty as hell. Zar, don't pull
that Vulcan poker-face on me ... I can tell something's going on. What
are you up to?"

Uhura looked over at Zar, who raised an eyebrow at her. She shrugged.
"I asked Zar to try and reach Uberahan.

He thinks if Spock directs the probe, it may be possible."

"I see." McCoy took a deep breath, puffing out his cheeks a little, then
slowly released it. "When Spock tried it, both he and the Marishal
almost died."

"I know it is potentially dangerous," Zar said.

"Do you think it's worth the risk?"

Zar hesitated, then said, slowly, "Yes, I do. Life is full of risks ...
you can't shut yourself away from them, just because you're afraid
you'll be hurt."

McCoy eyed him narrowly. "You must've been talking to Jim. That sounds
like something he'd say."

"It wasn't Jim," Zar said, dryly.

"Who, then?"

"You wouldn't believe me if I told you."

The doctor frowned. "Would you be able to monitor the effects of the
link on Uberahan, so you could get out if it was causing her any harm?"

"I think so."

"All right," McCoy said. "But you'd better get the hell out of there if
you get into trouble, hear? It's not as though there are no other
telepaths ... we even have to bypass Vulcan on our way home. Maybe it
would be better to wait for- He broke off as Zar turned toward the door.
"Spock's here."

A moment later, Uhura heard the outer door to sickbay slide open. As
Nyota explained why she had called him, Spock stood looking down at the
motionless form of the little alien.

Finally, when she was finished, the Vulcan nodded.

"Despite her fear, she risked everything to help us complete our
mission. If there is a chance to help her, it is my duty to do so." He
glanced over at Zar. "But you ... she is a stranger to you . . ."

"I'll just be supporting you and monitoring," Zar pointed out. "If
you're willing, I am, too."

Spock hesitated. "Do not underestimate the danger," he warned his son.
"She may have withdrawn so far that she cannot be reached. And I know
from experience that you will be supplying most of the energy for the
search."

Zar regarded him levelly. "If our positions were reversed, would
Uberahan try to reach me?"

"Yes, I believe she would," Spock said.

Zar shrugged, a "there you have it" gesture. "Let's begin."

Uhura watched as McCoy lowered one side of the enclosure. At the sight
of the newcomers, D'berahan's babies tried to make a crawling beeline
back inside their mother's pouch, but the communications officer, at a
nod from McCoy, gently prevented them. "What are we going to do with
the children, Mr. Spock?"

The Vulcan considered. "They cannot be in physical contact with
Uberahan while we do this. Doctor, can you rig a temporary partition to
separate them from her?"

McCoy hastily complied. "Now what?" he asked.

Zar studied the three infants. "There is no way to discover whether
they are in mental contact with their mother, since their minds are so
alien. Nyota, would you be willing to link with me, then remain on the
outskirts of the meld so you could warn us if they experience any
distress?"

Uhura hesitated, trying to hide her initial reaction to the suggestion.
She had never been part of a mind-meld before, and the idea of letting
anyone else touch her thoughts made her mouth dry and her palms grow
wet. But I have no choice, she realized. Dberahan's children need her.

"All right," she said, steadily.

"Good. You'll sense things, probably, but you'll still be conscious,
able to see. And," Zar slanted a look at her, "I'll do all I can to
stay out of the deeper levels of your mind."

She flashed him a shaky smile. "I trust you."

"Ready," Spock said, and, leaning forward, touched his fingers to the
domed forehead with its now-ragged topknot of fur. He extended his
right hand to Zar, who took it in his left. Uhura looked at their
hands. How alike they wereeven though Zar's were weathered and scarred.

Both closed their eyes, their faces becoming expressionless masks. Uhura
could almost feel them withdraw from the here-and-now. Then Zar reached
out with his right hand.

Taking a deep breath, she touched the outstretched fingers, feeling them
grasp hers gently. Even so, she was fully aware of a potential strength
that could have crushed bone.

Stronger still was the mental link that sprang up between them.

Suddenly it was as though she were part of Zar's body, inside his
skin-seeing with his eyes, breathing with his lungs. Her heart lurched,
trying to beat at an impossibly high rate, and for a second she felt its
throbbing, not beneath her left breast, but lower down, on her right
side.

There was nothing overtly sexual about the experience, but for a moment,
Uhura felt more intimately aware of a man's body than she had ever been
before. Then the contact between them changed, settling into her mind.
She could still see, but was conscious of a strange double vision-with
one set of eyes (her own) she watched the three Marishal babies, with
the other she experienced only darkness ... a darkness shot with alien
images.

Are you all right? The words entered her mind as though they had been
sketched in fire.

Yes, she thought back, marshaling her strength to form the words
mentally. Tell Spock to proceed.

Zar's consciousness withdrew, but she was still aware of the link
between them, alive and pulsing, bringing her snatched bits and pieces
of the search he and Spock were making. Too quickly to grasp, scattered
memories and images that were not her own flashed by-of Sarpeidon (so
that's where Zar is from! Id give a lot to know how that happened!), of
Vulcan, and of Marish.

Uhura kept the physical part of her vision on the Marishal infants,
watching them for any sign of distress, snatching an occasional glance
at her partners in the meld.

Their faces remained blank, but she knew the strain they were under by
their bone-white knuckles, the faint sheen of moisture on their
foreheads.

I've never seen Spock perspire, she thought. I didn't know he could.

Finally, the trickle of transmitted memories were mostly of Marish, and
Nyota realized they must be reaching their goal.

A sudden brush of terror, then a wild torrent of denial -[No! Must
escape! Hide!]

Uhura realized, with a surge of excitement, that Spock had located the
Marishal's identity.

Dberahan, this is Spock. You are safe, now. Come back with us. The
wordless reassurance was strong, bringing images of comfort, of friends,
of safety.

[Denial, fear]

You are sa , Dberahan, safe. Come with us. We are your fie ftiends ...

[No, no-Hide!]

Without any conscious decision on her part, Uhura suddenly found herself
forming words, projecting an image D'berahan, see your children? I am
looking at them ... see them, through my eyes. The ' y need you. They
might die without you! You must come back, fr their sake. Look at your
babies!

After a moment she felt her words, her projected vision, picked up,
amplified, and thrust at the Marishal with all the force of two expertly
honed minds.

tMy children?]

Yes!

[My children!]

Suddenly, Uhura "heard" a fourth "voice" in the meld, and she was aware
of a telepathic presence so strong that it eclipsed the others. The
presence "spoke"

[Friends ... you have risked much for this one. This one expresses
utmost thanks to all ... but especially to you, new-friend Nyota Uhura,
who loved this one's children when this one could not ... I The little
Marishal concluded her speech by broadcasting such a wave of gratitude
and affection that Uhura came out of the dissolving meld with tears on
her cheeks. She gulped back a sob as she saw D'berahan stir. McCoy
released the partition, and the Marishal babies crawled over to their
mother, who raised her head to look at them, her hands to touch them.

"We did it!" Nyota whispered, on a ragged breath. She stepped back, her
legs trembling with reaction, then turned to Zar, knowing she was
grinning like a fool. "We did it!"

She flung her arms around him in a fierce hug, feeling both ecstatic and
shaken.

"No, you did it, Nyota," Zar said, giving her a return squeeze that
lifted her clear off the deck. "If you hadn't projected the image of
the children . . ." -Zar is right," Spock said, and for a second Uhura
was sure she felt the Vulcan's hand brush her shoulder.

"You all did it," McCoy said gruffly. He cleared his throat. "Thanks
from me, too."

"But-"

Leonard McCoy leaned over his desk and shook an admonishing finger at
his patient. "Quiet! You promised to hear me out."

"Butfive weeks is out of the question! I can't afford that much time!"
Zar protested.

"You ungrateful-" McCoy began, then took a deep breath, obviously
struggling to keep his temper. "Listen, Zar. You're damned lucky that
I can do anything at all about that injury, it's so old. I'm a doctor,
not a wizard. I'm telling you that after a week in suspension therapy,
then three to four more of rehabilitation, you'll walk almost normally
again. No more pain. For the love of Mike, isn't that worth a little
time?"

Zar slouched back in his seat, arms crossed over his chest.

"You're right, I am an ungrateful bastard . . . no pun intended. I
do appreciate your attempt to help, I really do."

He rubbed a hand across his forehead, sighing. "It's just that ...
every minute I'm gone, I can't help thinking that things are happening
without me. Intellectually, I know that isn't so, but the sense of
urgency ... it gnaws at me."

His voice dropped to a whisper. "And there's this ...

this empty place, inside me, where Wynn was. It's as though I have lost
an arm, or am going blind ... I'm able to shut it away, so I can
function, but I can't forget it, not for a second."

"I understand how you must feel, and it's completely natural, under the
circumstances," the doctor admitted.

"However, you'd be crazy to pass up this chance-and you know it."

"So I'm supposed to just lie around and take it easy for over a month?"

"Why the hell not?" McCoy glared at the younger man.

"Listen, my stubborn friend, do you know what those tests showed me?
Besides the condition of your leg, I mean?"

"What?"

"A man on the brink of a physical and emotional breakdown. A man who
has been under too much stress for way too long. If Jim showed readings
like that, I'd declare him unfit for command. Your muscle tone is
slipping, your reaction time is off, your stamina is shot-you're in no
shape for a strenuous hike, let alone the fight of your life!"

McCoy drummed his fingers on the top of his desk. "You know I'm right,
and if you're honest, you'll admit it. You're tired, Zar. Bone-tired.
Extreme stress and fatigue can cause metabolic imbalances that
impairjudgment, did you know that?"

Zar sighed. "I know that tired people make mistakes, which is something
any commander learns very quickly."

"How long have you been having stomach pains?"

The gray eyes widened. "How did you-" He broke off, shrugging. "I've
always had a sensitive stomach, you know that."

"I know that if you don't quit driving yourself so hard, and don't quit
skipping meals, you're going to develop the Vulcan version of a
full-blown ulcer. And you won't like that, at all."

"Can't you repair the damage?"

"Sure. But if you go back and subject yourself to the same stresses in
the same way, it'll come back. You need to take better care of
yourself. Start meditating again, every day.

How long has it been since you painted?"

"Probably ten years."

"Paint, too. Or, if you don't want to do that, go for a quiet ride in
the woods-anything to let your body and mind take some time off,
understand?"

"Yes. But I can't stay here for five-"

"How long has it been since you had a vacation? Be honest."

Zar looked down. "Two years ago, when I got this." He tapped his
midsection. "I was confined to quarters for a week from a spear thrust.
My mail kept it from penetrating, but the impact broke a rib."

"it broke two," said McCoy, shortly. "And cracked another. It's a
miracle you didn't get a punctured lung from getting up too soon, you
fool. That's no vacation. You need a month off, son. You need to eat
nutritious meals, catch up on your sleep, and exercise sensibly."

"I suppose I do. But Wynn- "Listen to me, Zar. You told me that Wynn
wanted you to accompany us, right? That she was very insistent about
it?"

"Yes, she was."

"And that she told you the reason she wanted you to come back with us
was that she had received a ... whatever she called it-a Sending-that
it was vital for you-for your life-to do so, right?"

"Yes."

"Well," McCoy sat back confidently, "hasn't it occurred to you that
perhaps the reason she was so set on your coming back to help us was
that your getting back into shape and my fixing your leg would turn out
to be essential to your survival?"

Zar glanced up at the doctor, startled. In top condition, with two good
legs, I might be able to dodge or parry a blow that otherwise would
land, he thought. Slowly, reluctantly, he nodded. "That does make
sense."

"You bet it does."

"But what about the Enterprise? What will Jim do, just keep orbiting
Gateway while I undergo this therapy and recover? Won't Starfleet
Command notice that the Enterprise hasn't come home?"

McCoy grinned. "Admiral Morrow was so relieved to hear that we
succeeded that he assigned us a little mission in the next quadrant to
update the course of an ion storm discovered last year. It'll take just
about four weeks, travel time included."

"You mean this Admiral Morrow knows about me?"

"Sure. Spock told him. You should've been there."

Zar raised an eyebrow as he envisioned the moment.

"And Morrow agreed to let you ferry a civilian around for a month?"

McCoy grinned. "Bite your tongue. You're not a mere civilian, you're a
visiting head-of-state."

"Oh, Goddess . . ." The gray eyes danced with laughter, then sobered.
"You seem to have thought of everything."

"It's the least we can do. What about it, what do you say?"

Zar turned his palms up in a gesture of resignation.

"Looks like I'm going to take a vacation."

"Okay, easy now ... take it slow, Zar ... that's it, just lie there
for a second. How do you feel?"

Zar shook his head, trying to make the scene around him stop wavering.
"Dizzy." He blinked, and his surroundings gradually steadied. He
recognized the recovery room in sickbay, and McCoy's face bent over him.
On the other side of the couch was the enormous Coridian nurse, and
beside him, Spock. "Did it Work? Have I really been unconscious for a
week?"

"Yes, to both questions. How many fingers am I holding up?"

Zar squinted against the light. "Just one ... and in a barracks, that
gesture would earn you a sore jaw."

McCoy chuckled. "You'll do. Want to sit up?"

"Ves." With eight hands helping (two sets belonged to the e47 nurse),
Zar sat up. The room spun around him for a second, then steadied. "Why
do I feel so weak?"

"Because you haven't moved a muscle for seven days.

You'll feel better the longer you're up. Hungry?"

"Ravenous."

After he had eaten, Zar demanded to try walking. "All fight," McCoy
said. "I guess that's the best way to convince you to take it easy.
Urgh'kesht, don't let go of him."

"Yes, Doctor," the nurse said, obediently gripping Zar's left arm in
three meaty red hands.

Zar inched his way to the side of the couch, felt the deck against the
soles of his bare feet, then cautiously swung his weight forward and
stood up. He couldn't repress a delighted grin. "The pain is gone!"

"Told you so," McCoy said, calmly. "Now take a step."

Zar lifted his left leg and strode forward-and was only saved from
crashing down in an ignominious heap by Urgh'kesht's grip. The nurse
held him upright as he swayed drunkenly.

"I can't walk!" Zar fought back panic. "Why not?"

The doctor folded his arms across his chest and regarded his patient
imperturbably. "What's wrong is that for fifteen years you've been
favoring that leg by walking incorrectly.

You're going to have to relearn how to walk normally."

Zar thought about how long it had taken him to get around again after
the initial injury. "But that'll take months!"

McCoy shook his head. "Not if you obey your kindly old doctor's orders.
You'll spend part of each day with a regen unit on the leg, then do
exercises on the physical therapy equipment, with Urgh'kesht, here.
After that, you can exercise on your own-swimming would be good. Every
day you'll be able to use it a little more ... until you're back to
normal." He frowned. "I'll warn you, it's always going to be a bit
short. But it'll be so slight you may be the only one to notice."

Gritting his teeth, Zar tried another step, and this time managed to
keep his balance, though all the muscles in his left thigh felt as
though they were going into spasms, He took a deep breath, and a third
step. Then a fourth ...

As each day passed, he improved. On the third day, he walked unassisted
to the gym and worked out on the equipment there, careful not to strain
the leg. Then he cautiously lowered himself into the shallow end of the
pool, and, teeth fastened in his lower lip, began the stretching and
kicking movements Urgh'kesht had shown him.

After two days in the shallow end, he asked Spock to teach him to swim
(a skill he had never acquired, due to Sarpeidon's ice-age climate).
Within another week he was growing pro clent enough to manage laps, and,
as McCoy had predicted, this exercise proved to be one of the most
beneficial.

Zar took his enforced "vacation" as seriously as any work he'd ever
done. He drove himself to the limit in his workouts, but was careful
never to exceed it ... never to tax himself too hard. His daytime
world narrowed to his leg and his general physical condition. He
tempered and honed his body as he had the blade of his sword, knowing
that his strength, agility, and reaction time might make all the
difference.

His evening hours were spent going over the battle plans and maps he'd
redrawn from memory, analyzing strategy, ground configuration, troop
deployment, trying to plan for every contingency. When Spock and Kirk
discovered what he was doing, the three spent hours discussing and
refining possible tactics ...

"This catapult here," Kirk said, pointing to a poker chip representing
the assault engine. "If your map is accurate, you've got a small rise
here, fifty meters further on. Right?"

Zar nodded. "All of Moorgate Plain slopes gradually downhill to the
Redbank, but I see what you mean. If I change the catapult's position
to the top of that rise, its range would be considerably extended . -
." He put out a finger and pushed the chip closer to the blue swath
marking the Redbank. "But that little rise is steep ... I'd need extra
vykar and troops to pull it uphill-would it be worth it?"

Spock studied the pattern of troop deployment. "A good question. What
type of ground is it?"

"Broken and rather rocky."

"Then I would estimate that the effort expended in getting the catapult
up there would be too great to be offset by the greater range you would
achieve."

Zar sighed. "You're right." He cocked an eyebrow at Kirk. "You know,
Jim, I just thought of something. Since the Guardian is working again,
we could always hop through and bring back a couple of consultants."

The admiral looked up, his hazel eyes brightening. "Good idea! Uh,
let's see ... what about Alexander? And Artos of Britain? Don't
forget old Julius!"

Zar nodded. "Geronimo, of course. And Genghis. Patton?"

"Too recent for this kind of warfare. Though he used to brag that he'd
fought at Marathon in a previous life ...

Don't you have anyone to contribute, Spock? What was the name of that
famous pre-reformation Vulcan general?

Voltan?"

'4Voltag," Spock said, automatically, staring at both of them as though
trying to reassure himself that they were pulling his leg. Zar and Kirk
gazed earnestly back at him, the embodiment of innocence. Spock's
eyebrow went up in dismay. "But ... such an action would be disastrous
to the integrity of the time-stream . . ." The Vulcan broke off, his
eyes sharpening as Kirk's mouth began a telltale quiver. "I see," he
said, distantly. "I hope both of you enjoyed your little joke."

The admiral began to chuckle. "You should have seen your expression."
He gave Zara sidelong glance. "Been a long time since I had him going
like that. When I first knew him, Bones and I used to kid him-though I
must admit, as time went on he learned to give as good as he got."

"Better," said Spock, flatly.

"Ouch," Kirk winced exaggeratedly. "Zar, I think we'd better get back
to that battle plan - - ."

As the Enlerprise performed her assigned mission, the Guardian continued
to contact Zar every few days; distance seemed no hindrance to the time
entity. Their "conversations" were fairly one-sided ... Zar encouraged
the ancient creation to tell him of the wonders it had witnessed and
recorded, and it seemed pleased to comply. He "listened," and wondered.

"Jim tells me we're beading back to Gateway tomorrow," Dr. McCoy said,
checking the settings on the regen unit strapped to his patient's leg.

Zar nodded. "That's what Spock told me. How did I do in those tests I
took this morning?"

"The leg's coming along excellently. You've worked hard to condition
it, and it shows. Now just don't mess up my handiwork by straining any
muscles or getting a hunk chopped out of you, and I'll be very pleased."

McCoy crossed the physical therapy room, disappeared into his office,
and returned with a cup of coffee. "Want some?"

Zar shook his head. "I've had my one cup. I can't afford to get too
dependent on caffeine, since there's none where I'm going." He flexed
his hands, noticing that the callouses on his palms were beginning to
soften and peel. "What about my overall reaction time and muscle tone?
My stamina?"

McCoy grinned. "Let me put it this way. If a rogue vitha was raiding
my herds, I'd hire you to get rid of it."

Smiling, Zar relaxed. "Then you certify me fit for command?"

"Absolutely." McCoy hesitated. "I probably shouldn't bring this up, in
case you've forgotten, but have you made a decision about that other
matter we discussed? You've seen the results of those genetic tests I
ran. You're fine."

"I hadn't forgotten." Zar stared fixedly at the diagnostic readings on
the regen unit, as though he had never seen them before. "Last night I
dreamed, Leonard. I dreamed about Araen's death, the way I have dozens
of times before . . ."

McCoy settled back and took a sip of coffee. "Not surprising, after
what the Originators did. Jim told me he's dreamed about his mother's
death several times since he saw her image on Gateway." His face
darkened. "Hell, I dreamed about Jocelyn-and that's something I haven't
done in a long time. I can imagine how you felt, though."

Zar frowned miserably at his leg. "I don't know what to do, Len. I'm
still afraid, the dream proves that, but lately I've been thinking that
asking you to give me that hypo now would be like ... like breaking
faith with Wynn. As though I'd repaid her honesty with a lie. Not to
mention that I'd be mocking her religious beliefs. I'm torn."

"You said Wynn wants children. How do you feel about it?"

Confused, Zar glanced up. "I explained why I was afraid-"

McCoy was already shaking his head. "No, that's not what I meant. Let
me put it another way. Suppose your wife had a normal pregnancy and a
healthy baby. Would you want the child?"

"Of course I would! Didn't I make that clear?"

"No." McCoy stared at him, unblinking.

Zar settled back against the padded couch and considered silently.
"Hmmmm," he said, finally. "You're telling me, in your own inimitable
fashion, that I'm being paranoid."

"Yes." After a second to allow his response to sink in, the doctor
raised an eyebrow. "Now, obviously, there's a risk, I'd be a liar to
tell you there isn't. But the danger to Wynn is no greater than for any
other woman in your time period.

And there is nothing wrong with your genes." He finished the last of his
coffee. "Sometimes, it's not just a matter of taking risks yourself.
Sometimes, you've got to be willing to let the people you love take
them. You can't keep them in a steri-field."

"I see."

"Do you? Do you really?"

"I... I'm trying, Doc. I've lived with this guilt for so long... it's
hard to let it go. At least when I was blaming myself, I felt as though
I had some ... control ... over what happened." Zar shook his head,
scowling. "That sounds crazy."

"No, it sounds human. Which is not an insult, no matter what your pop
says."

Zar smiled faintly. "You two ... still sparring, after all these
years. I'm going to miss that."

He straightened his leg gingerly within the confines of the regen unit.
"And I'll miss the stars. It's been wonderful to see them again, in all
their myriad colors ... every night before bed I've gone up to the
observation deck and just sat there watching them. I never get tired of
seeing the stars."

"Why don't you stay, then?" McCoy raised a hand to forestall Zar's
protest. "Wait, I know what you're going to say. But you could go back
and get Wynn, then bring her through the Guardian, too. You'd be doing
her a favor."

"Would P- Zar shook his head. "No, Leonard. Wynn would be a hopeless
anachronism in this time ... a priestess who'd devoted her life to
serving a Goddess whose name has been forgotten for thousands of years.
She'd never fit in.

She's been brought up to believe in demons, just as sincerely as your
society believes in science."

"You could help her adjust. She's an intelligent woman, she could
learn."

"But would she ever be happy? I doubt it. Wynn is like Jim, she's a
natural leader. In this society, she'd feel useless ... powerless."

"Sounds like what you said about yourself back on Sarpeidon when we
first tried to convince you to stay."Yes ... but it's worse for her.
Unlike me, Wynn enjoys being in command. Hell, if I could figure out a
way to abdicate and devote myself just to teaching my people, I'd
probably do it, because that's what I enjoy. My mother was a teacher,
you know. And my grandmother, Amanda."

McCoy smiled. "So's your father, come to think of it ... one of the
most highly regarded instructors at Starfleet Academy."

An answering smile tugged at the comer of Zar's mouth.

"Runs in the family. Maybe, if I make it through, I can gradually hand
over the reins to Wynn."

They sat in companionable silence for several minutes, then Zar said,
"I'm especially going to miss you, Leonard.

You know, we haven't had time for a poker game, yet. How am I going to
pay my doctor's bill?"

McCoy grinned. "We've still got six days. I'll try and set something
up."

"No, Len. I'm going back as soon as we make orbit around Gateway. Day
after tomorrow."

"It's too early!" McCoy protested. "The leg's not quite ready. I was
going to try and talk you into making it ten days or two weeks, rather
than just another week!'

"The leg's fine. You said yourself that I've made excellent progress."

"But if you wait another ten days, I could be certain there's no
residual weakness! As it is... it might go out on you if you strain
it."

"I'll have to risk that. Leonard... I lie awake at night, thinking
about the battle, imagining... you know. If I wait any longer, I'll go
crazy. I've got to get this over with ...

one way or another."

Spock stepped onto the turbo-lift at the end of his duty shift. "Deck
E, level 5," he said absently, mentally reviewing Naraht's report on the
trajectory of the ion storm. The Horta officer ran his Science
Department with admirable efficiency and logic. A formal commendation
is in order. the Vulcan decided. I will speak to Starfleet Command
about it when we reach Earth ...

When Spock entered his quarters a few minutes later, he found Zar
sitting at the desk before the terminal, staring at a blank screen.

The Vulcan was not surprised to find him there, since his son had been a
frequent visitor during his father's off-duty hours, but now he knew
immediately that something was wrong. Silent-footed, he stepped over to
glance down at the label of the data cassette lying on the desktop.

In his own neat Vulcan script, it read

SARPEIDON-HISTORY (GF)

Spock's breath caught in his throat, then he said, very quietly, "Did
you watch it?"

Zar did not start when he heard the voice, and Spock realized that he
had known his father was there all along.

"No," he said, finally. "I couldn't get up the nerve."

The Vulcan reached over the other's shoulder to pick up the cassette.
"There is no logic in subjecting yourself to a viewing. I intended from
the first to tell you whatever I could that might enable you to avoid
... this."

Zar nodded, still half-turned away. "I'd appreciate that."

Spock seated himself on the edge of his meditation stone, a long,
polished slab of Vulcan granite-one of the few luxuries he permitted
himself. He stared unseeing at the large IDIC wall-mosaic. "The
details were difficult to discern, but it ... happens ... on a small
hill," he said, at last. "There is ... a blow to the head. I could
not see the man's face, but he did not appear to be wearing much in the
way of armor. His arms, for example, were bare."

"Asyri," Zar identified. "Many of them go into battle wearing only a
bronze helmet, sleeveless bronze cuirass, a battle kilt, and bronze
greaves from their knees to their sandals. Lots of vulnerable spots,
but the light weight leaves them very quick." He rubbed his jaw
thoughtfully as he turned to face Spock, and the Vulcan saw that he was
clean-shaven, and that his hair had been trimmed.

"Could you see the weapon?"

Spock shook his head. "Some type of impact weapon. It resembled a
short axe, but I could not be positive. Definitely not a sword."

Zar nodded impassively, then glanced up and met the Vulcan's eyes. "One
more question, and forgive me in advance for being gruesome, but . . ."
he shrugged, "there are worse things than death. Living with a crippled
mind, for example. Was it a killing blow? Immediately fatal?"

"From the force of the blow and the resulting amount of blood, I am
positive," Spock said levelly, "that no one could have survived it."

"That's reassurance of a sort, anyway," Zar said. "I recognize that it
was . . . difficult ... for you to speak of this, and I am sorry I
had to ask. Thank you for telling me."

Spock nodded silently, avoiding his son's eyes. He relived the
desolation that he had felt while watching the battle sequence. Stay
here, he wanted to say. Don't let this thing happen. But he could not
speak; Zar had made his decision, and there was nothing ... nothing ...
that he, Spock, could do.

The Vulcan had never felt so helpless.

When he looked up again, Zar was watching him, concerned. "Are you all
right?"

"Yes," To change the subject, he said the first thing that came into his
head. "Your beard is gone."

Zar felt his jaw again. "It feels strange, after all these years. I
intended to clip it extra short, the way I always do before a battle-a
beard long enough to grab can be dangerous-but I couldn't find any
scissors. So I used your beard repressor. Doc gave me a haircut, too,
for old time's sake."

"When are you going back?"

"Tomorrow morning, right after breakfast."

"I see." Spock kept his voice level with an effort. So soon?

he thought, blankly. But ... I thought we would have another week, at
least "McCoy says your leg is completely healed?"

"No, Leonard wants me to stay another ten days. He lectured me the
whole time I was on the regen unit this morning about waiting ... but I
can't. The leg feels fine.

I've even been fencing with Sulu."

Spock raised an eyebrow. "I heard about that. Those bouts are becoming
one of the ship's major spectator attractions. Apparently you are
considered well-matched opponents."

Zar shook his head ruefully. "Hardly. Hikaru-he's fast-fences circles
around me with the foil and the dp6e."

He rose and walked smoothly over to stand in front of the ancient Vulcan
S'harien sword hanging on the wall with the other antique weapons. "I
do better with the saber, because it has an edge, but the saber is
Sulu's partinlar forte-no pun intended-so he wins there, too.

"But . a wicked smile touched his mouth, "today TwE FOR YESTERDAY
Scotty, who watched yesterday's saber match, produced two
clavmores-Scottish broadswords-and two bucklers, and dared us to go the
best two out of three with them.

"What happened?"

"You should have seen Hikaru's face when he picked his up. The things
were even longer and heavier than my bastard sword." (Spock raised an
eyebrow at the nomenclature.) "The stance is different, too-more
face-on, so you can swing two-handed, instead of sideways. Not
surprisingly, I won every encounter. Scotty, who'd bet on the matches,
cleaned up. He said he wanted to nominate me for honorary membership in
the Scott clan."

Spock's eyebrow went up. "What was Commander Sulu's reaction to his
defeat?"

"He told me he hadn't had so much fun in years. He wanted me to coach
him in using a broadsword, but of course I'm leaving tomorrow. So
Scotty volunteered to give him some pointers."

The Vulcan nodded absently. Tomorrow ... he thought.

And after you go, I will almost certainly never see you again.

There are so many things I want to say to you, but cannot ...

With an abrupt, angry movement, Spock got up and began pacing
restlessly, hands behind his back. "You seem remarkably untroubled
about what you may face when you return tomorrow."

"I think our encounter with those two disturbed superbeings overloaded
all my scare circuits," Zar replied.

His eyes met the Vulcan's, clear and candid. "And, it's odd, but I
suppose people condemned to hang have the same reaction-there's a
curious serenity that comes from knowing how, when, and where you're
going to die. You know that, until then, nothing can touch you."

But something will touch you. Something ... someone ... is going to
kill you. If only ... if only ' v there were something I could do. If
only I could convince you to stay here, where it is safe ... Spock
realized that his reasoning abilities were compromised, due to personal
involvement, but he could not help it. If only I could ...

"Father." Spock looked up. "There's something I want you to know. Wynn
told me that she thinks there is a way that I may avoid ... what you
saw. That was why she insisted that I come here to help you. It's
possible that, with your warning and with my leg healed, I might be
quick enough to dodge that blow."

Spock felt a spark of hope kindle within him.

Zar looked down at his hands. "I want to be quick enough, now. The
lecture you gave me that night after the handfasting made me think, and
I began to realize that what I'd been calling fatalism was mostly a bad
dose of self-pity.

Thank you for helping me see that."

The Vulcan smiled faintly. "I suspect that what happened afterwards
with Wynn had more to do with your renewed enthusiasm for life than any
words of mine," he said, dryly.

Startled, Zar glanced up, then, as Spock's words sank in, his eyes
widened and he flushed hotly. "Damn," he muttered, chagrined. "Look
what you've made me do. I haven't blushed in years."

"It is especially noticeable now that the beard is gone," his father
observed, amiably.

Zar raised an eyebrow at him, then his teeth flashed in a reluctant
grin. "I'll pay you back for that."

"I hope you get the chance," Spock said, seriouslyThey exchanged a long,
searching glance, then Zar handed him another cassette. "Before I
forget, I want you to have this. I made it for you to show Amanda and
Sarek ...

if you think they'd like to see it. You decide."

The Vulcan took the little square. "Thank you. I'm sure it will mean a
great deal to them." He drew a deep breath, then struggled for words.
"It is difficult for me to express ... what seeing you again has meant
. . ." He hesitated, then made a small gesture of frustration. "More
than friendship, you know that . . ."

"Father . . ." Zar interrupted, softly. "I do know. I understand."

Ifonly I could stop youfrom going but I cannot. Ifonly I could help you
... but that is impossible. Impossible?

Spock's eyes narrowed in thought as the words he'd said so often to his
students came back to him. There are always possibilities... if only
one can find them ... always possibilities...

"Have you had dinner?" he said suddenly, his mind working busily,
analyzing the problem from all angles.

Possibilities ...

Zar was taken aback at the complete change of subject, but shook his
head and answered, "Not yet."

"Shall we?" Spock asked. "I find I am suddenly hungry."

"Got everything?" Kirk called as he approached Zar, who was standing
with McCoy in the corridor outside the transporter room.

Zar hefted the bag he carried . "New music and literature cassettes,
plus the medical kit Leonard put together. All here."

"Not quite all," Kirk said, and produced a package from behind his back.
"Bones told me you missed this. It's coffee."

"Thank you!" Zar took the large parcel, then sniffed it appreciatively.
"This is wonderful."

Kirk grinned. "It's the least I can do for the man who got Scotty to
paint my bridge doors red again."

The Sovrcn smiled back. "They look like old times, don't they?"

The admiral nodded, lowering his voice. "Of course, he says he'll have
to repaint them to regulation Spec before we dock, but I've certainly
enjoyed them. Even considering the circumstances that brought us here,
it's been great to be out from behind that desk."

"This is where you belong, Jim," Zar said, quietly. "You know that."

Kirk hesitated, then looked away. Qfcourse I know, damn it. But what
can I do about it? "Where's Spock? He should have been here by now.
When he wasn't at breakfast, I figured he was going to meet us here.
Maybe I'd better page him."

"No." Kirk could see hurt disappointment in the gray eyes, but Zar
sounded adamant. "No, don't. We ... said good-bye yesterday evening."

"Well ... all right." Reluctantly, Kirk led the way into the
transporter room, then set the controls, deliberately delaying in case
the Vulcan changed his mind and decided to join them. I can't believe
Spock isn't going to say good-bye ...

"You take care of yourself, now," McCoy was saying, his voice harsh with
emotion. "Don't strain that leg. Remember to keep up those exercises
... don't forget to meditate ... and remember to He broke off. "Oh,
damn' I can ' t stand this." The doctor seized Zar in a brief, fierce
hug, then was gone, out the door.

Kirk turned away from the console, holding out his hand.

"I'll miss you, ZarA lot. Take care of yourself, all right?"

Zar gripped his hand tightly. "You do the same, Jim. I'll miss all of
you, too. And her-" He made an all-inclusive gesture at the bulkheads
and console. "Take care of her."

"You know I will."

Kirk watched him step up on the pad, clutching his bag and package of
coffee, then managed a final smile and wave.

"Good-bye, Jim."

The transporter whined, then Kirk was alone in the chamber.

When the admiral stepped out of the room, he found McCoy waiting for him
in the corridor. The doctor's eyes were reddened, but he was outwardly
composed. "You okay, Bones?"

"Yeah," McCoy grunted, in a "let's change the subject" tone.

"Have you seen Spock this morning?"

"No, but when I do, I'm going to give that coldblooded Vulcan
sonofabitch a piece of my mind. Imagine him not showing up to say
good-bye!" McCoy's sorrow vanished in a surge of righteous indignation.
"Where the hell is he?"

"I don't know. He's not on duty. Maybe he's in his quarters." The
admiral frowned, conscious of a growing unease. "Maybe we ought to see
if he's all right."

When they reached the entrance to the Vulcan's cabin, Kirk identified
himself, but there was no answer. "He's not here."

"Get Uhura to page him," McCoy suggested.

Instead, Kirk pressed the "open" button, and the portal slid silently
aside. Vulcans never locked doors.

He walked into the room, feeling the higher temperature flow over his
body, partially combating the sudden chill that struck him. "Something's
not right, Bones," he said, looking around. "Something's different ...
missing . . ."

McCoy frowned. "Everything looks okay to me ...

course you spend more time here than I do, so you'd be the one to
notice." He moved toward the intercom. "Want me to request a page?"

"Hold on a second," the admiral said absently, his gaze sweeping the
room . bunk, neatly made with military precision; meditation stone-,
firepot in the alcove; IDIC mosaic; desk with the computer tie-in; all
normal, all as they should be ...

Kirk 11 suddenly stiffened. "Oh, no. God in Heaven, no ...

McCoy grabbed his friend's arm, his grasp hard and frightened. "What's
wrong, Jim?"

Wordlessly, Kirk pointed to the wall, at Spock's collection of ancient
Vulcan weapons. Two of them that Jim had particular cause to remember
were missing.

"It looks the same to me! What is it?" McCoy demanded.

"The lirpa and the ahn-woon, " Kirk said, his voice tight with fear.
"They're gone. He's taken them with him, Bones."

"Taken them where?"

"Sarpeidon, of course." The admiral's voice was hollow.

"Spock's gone back to that battle, to try and save Zar,"

Chapter Fourteen

ZAR PACED sLowLy back and forth, the chill breeze stirring his hair. He
was warm enough within the muffling folds of his cloak, but he shivered
nevertheless. His stomach lurched, then tightened with nausea. You'd
think you'd be used to this by now, he thought, gritting his teeth.

But it was always the same; before every battle he fought a silent
conflict with his own insides, one that had nothing to do with the
death-warnings he had received about those who were close to him. These
other bouts were caused by nothing but pre-battle nerves. When the
fighting began, they would vanish.

You'd think you were a raw recruit, he told himself disgustedly, instead
ofthe First-in- War. You'll be lucky to get through your "do or die
speech " without disgracing yourself today.

On the other hand, he reminded himself dourly, this is probably your
last battle, so ifyou can just make it through this time, it's likely
you won't have to worry about making any more speeches ...

To distract himself from such thoughts, he mentally stripped away the
darkness, reviewing in his mind the terrain where he and those under his
command would soon be fighting.

He was standing on Moorgate Plain, a large, rolling expanse of
still-damp turf that sloped gradually downward toward the Redbank, which
lay nearly half a kilometer before him. On either side, the plain
heaved itself into larger and larger swells as it met the foothills of
the mountains to the north and south. At his back, about two kilometers
away, lay New Araen.

The Lakreo Valley narrowed as it approached the city, and Zar was
counting on the noncombatants having ample time to reach the foothills
and the mountain passes if the day went against them; his troops could
hold the valley entrance for a long time.

But his strategy demanded room to maneuver, so their first encounter
with the invaders would be here, on Moorgate Plain.

"Sire?" Cletas's voice reached him out of the darkness.

Zar could barely make out the outline of his Second-inWar; the night was
overcast, black as the bottom of a well, and the camp torches were far
behind them.

"Here, Cletas. Are we ready?"

"All troops in position, sire. We've made the changes in the catapult
positions you ordered and redistributed the archers as you instructed.
Yarlev and the cavalry are concealed in the hills, waiting for our
signal."

"Good." Zar was about to say more, but another spasm of nausea knotted
his stomach. He fought it down and began walking again, the Second
beside him. Both of them stepped cautiously, careful to avoid the
thinly camouflaged pits the troops had dug during the night to trap the
enemy chariots as they raced up out of the river.

"It's hard, waiting, isn't it?" Cletas said.

"Yes." Zar looked across the Redbank, seeing the torches in the enemy
camp. There are so many of them ... we're still so outnumbered ... He
shuddered, and lowered his voice to ask, "Do you ever get the shakes
before a battle, Cletas?"

"Every time," his Second said, cheerfully. "And it's equal odds whether
I lose my breakfast or not. Remember our first fight together? That
big troop of bandits, with the leader who was missing an eye and wore
the necklace made of scalps?"

"I remember. "When we rode into that one, I not only puked, I rode home
on a wet saddle." The Sovren heard the grin in the Second's voice.
"Never told anyone about it ... until now."

Zar put a hand on Cletas's shoulder, feeling the flexible hardness of
the Second's mail byrnie beneath his cloak.

"Thanks, my friend. It helps to talk, doesn't it? I recognize your
strategy ... and believe me, I appreciate it. May Ashmara keep you
safe today."

"Will She? Will I be safe?"

Zar drew in a breath. "So you know about that?"

"I've known for years. Ever since the Lady Araen died."

"I see. I've had no warning yet today, Cletas. So perhaps you'll make
it through."

"Does that mean that you'll be safe, too, my liege?"

"I don't know. I can only tell about others, never myself."

They stood in silence for a while, hearing the faint but unmistakable
sounds of the army massed behind them (soft curses, hiss of whetstone
against steel, the restless blowing and pawing of a vykar, a few
plaintive bars of music) and, before them, the even fainter blup-blup of
the Redbank as it lapped its banks.

Zar was careful to keep his mental shield up, to listen only with his
ears, never with his mind-he knew that letting his guard down for even a
moment could prove disastrous.

There was too much apprehension before a battle, and too much pain and
fear during it. He had learned, of necessity, to keep his mind-shield
raised automatically, but it represented another drain on his physical
and mental energies.

Cletas sniffed the breeze coming down off the mountains.

"I'll wager it'll storm by midday."

"Those clouds are thickening," Zar said, nodding. "it will be a late
dawn, and a dark one. Still, there'll be light in another hour. I'd
better go and get ready."

Slowly, the Sovren picked his way through the darkness, back to the
command tent. It shone pale gold, lit from within by lamplight. He
nodded to the saluting guard, ducked through the open flap, and went in.

Wynn stood in the middle of the tent , double-checking the fastenings on
her armor. Voba knelt beside her, lacing her new chain-mail byrnie. She
wore no helm yet, but was otherwise fully armed. Her leg, thigh, knee,
and arm guards were her old ones, made of the bronze-plated boiled
leather-there had been no time to make plate steel ones to fit her.

"How do you like your wedding present?" Zar asked.

Wynn drew the new sword hanging on her left hip, and the lamplight sent
amber runners shimmering down the blued steel. "I love it-. The length
is just right, and the balance is superb. Although," she grinned at him
as Voba stepped back and she swung the weapon in a constrained drill,
mindful of the limited space, forehand, backhand, and chop, "I had
trouble keeping a straight face when you presented the swords to Father
and me in front of all the officers. You have to admit, a sword is a
somewhat . . .

symbolic ... gift for a husband to give his wife." She raised her
eyebrows at him suggestively.

Zar shook his head. "That significance never occurred to me," a slow
smile tugged at his mouth, "at least not until I happened to notice
Cletas's face. He looked as if he were strangling, trying not to
laugh."

"That's because you don't have a dirty mind, my dear lord. Cletas and I
do." She sheathed the sword without looking down at the scabbard. "It's
a good thing you were wearing your helmet. I don't think anyone else
saw you blush."

"That's twice in two days," Zar said, ruefully. Their eyes met, and he
took an involuntary step toward her, wishing they could be alone-just
for a few minutes. Since that first ecstatic embrace when he'd first
come back, they'd been surrounded by others and too swamped by duties to
exchange more than a quick smile and a few whispered words ...

Voba cleared his throat, and Zar turned to see his aide-decamp standing
there, his arms full of mail and plate. He sighed. "You're right, it's
time."

The Sovren glanced over the assorted pieces Voba was holding and made
his selection. In recent years he had spent much of his time during
battle mounted, directing troop movements rather than fighting, and had
worn the armor of a light cavalry trooper so he could move fast. But he
had no illusions about today today they would all be involved in
close-quarters, hand-to-hand fighting, before it was over.

The problem was to balance the weight of the armor against the
protection factor. Knights during Terra's medieval period had worn
suits of plate armor (often with chain mail beneath) that had afforded
them excellent protection from blows and thrusts, but were so heavy that
the warrior would only be capable of strenuous fighting for fifteen or
twenty minutes at a stretch.

Now Zar chose a pair of chain-mail leggings-chausses -that were held up
by a belt at the waist, then added his much-mended mail byrnic.
Short-sleeved, it covered his torso to mid-thigh, extending over the
tops of the chausses.

Then, frowning, he picked up a mail hood with an attached coif that hung
down to protect the throat and neck.

Ordinarily, the Sovren wore only his plate steel helmet with its
distinctive scarlet plume, so his troops could recognize him easily,
but, in view of Spock's warning, additional head protection seemed in
order. I'm going to roast in all this.

Damn.

Zar placed the hood and coif on the pile.

"Very good, sire," Voba said, nodding approval. The red-haired aide was
always hinting that his commander needed more and heavier armor. "But
what about rerebraces and vambraces?"

The Sovren nodded reluctantly, and selected the upper and lower arm
guards made from plate steel. "Happy now, Voba?"

"That's much better, sire."

Zar pulled on the snug-fitting hose that protected the skin from
chafing, then slid the chausses up like long stockings.

The only way to put on armor was from the ground up; he'd discovered
that the first time he'd tried it the other way.

Voba hopefully produced a pair of demi-greviere-plate steel shields to
cover the front of the leg from ankle to knee, and Zar, grumbling under
Ns breath, let his aide buckle them on. Then he shrugged on the quilted
leather shirt and Voba faced his byrnie. Finally, he slid on a tight
cap and drew the mail hood over it. He'd fasten the coif up around his
neck at the last moment before engaging.

Finally he inspected, then belted on, his sword. Together, Wynn and
Voba fastened on his arm guards.

Zar picked up his helmet, then slid his shield onto his arm. It was
actually a combination of buckler and shield, in that it could be either
slung on his arm by straps, or gripped in his left fist. As he'd
explained to Kirk, it was essential for parrying blows.

He glanced at Wynn. "Ready, my lady?"

"Ready, my lord."

Together, they went out. Zar studied the sky, seeing a faint lightening
in the east. The air was filled with the soft ching of armor and
weapons being fastened on, and the nervous snortings of the
battle-trained vykar. On the far side of the camp, he could hear faint
clangs as two soldiers warmed up. His stomach tightened.

"I hate the waiting," he muttered, hardly aware that he'd spoken aloud.

"The best thing to do is to stay busy," Wynn told him, and drew her
sword. "Shall we warm up?"

Zar nodded, pulled off his cloak, then set his helmet on it.

His sword slipped into his leather and steel-gauntleted hand as
naturally as breathing.

They touched blades in salute, then began slowly, gradually picking up
the tempo, not hurrying, just loosening muscles, sharpening reaction
time.

Forehand, backhand, parry, chop, thrust-Wynn, like the rest of her
people, had little experience with using the point, so when Zar's blade
touched her left breast even as he parried her swing, she halted.
"You'll have to teach me to do that."

"Gladly." He spent a few minutes demonstrating, then they returned to
the drill.

"Now you try one," he said, then deliberately left her an opening,
prepared to leap back and parry if she tried too forcefully.

Wynn thrust at him, but missed a vital spot. "You've got the idea," he
said. "Now it just takes practice."

She nodded, her face grim with concentration, then a second later her
steel touched his shoulder. "Much better!"

She stepped back. "I'd better stop while I'm ahead."

He sheathed his blade, then bowed slightly. "I enjoyed that," he said.
"You're good with a sword."

"No, you're good," Wynn corrected him, movingclose. "I can handle
myself, but I'm not in your league. Especially now, with your leg
healed."

Zar flexed his left thigh muscles cautiously, then nodded.

"I'm trying not to put too many demands on it, but it feels wonderful to
move freely again."

They had collected a ring of watchers. Wynn nodded at the soldiers
gathered around. "Even better is the effect on the troops," she
whispered. "Their spirits are high, now that half of the prophecy has
already been fulfilled."

Zar had nearly forgotten the exact wording of Wynn's vision until she
reminded him. Seeing Voba emerge from the command tent, he said, "The
tent is empty, now. I don't want to say our good-byes out here."

Once inside, he dropped the flap, extinguished the lamp in the predawn
grayness, and drew Wynn to him. He stood looking down at her, barely
able to make out the pale blur that was her face. "We have only a few
minutes," he whispered.

She touched his cheek. "So smooth," she murmured.

"How did you get it so smooth?"

"Not with a blade," he told her. "More 'magic' from my time aboard the
Enterprise. Do you like it?"

"I don't know. I'll need time to get used to it."

"Time . . ." He kissed her lightly. "If only we had more time ... if
only I don't-"

"Hush!" she cried, fiercely, her arms going up behind his neck. "Don't
even say it. It's not going to happen."

"All right," he whispered, and kissed her with slow, passionate
deliberation. She responded, holding him tightly, making a tiny noise
in the back of her throat.

When he finally pulled away, she frowned up at him.

"Kissing while wearing armor is stupid," she complained.

"No fun at all."

"Then why are you breathing hard?"

She laughed softly. "Already you know me too well."

Zar touched her cheek. "It's time."

"Yes, I know."

Nursing a slashed arm against his side, the runner halted his heaving
vykar, then saluted awkwardly, left-handed.

"Sire! Commander Zaylenz requests reinforcements.

Rorgan's archers have forced him to drop back, and his line is
weakening."

Zar nodded. "Can you ride?"

"Yes, sire."

"Then tell him we are right behind you."

The vykar leaped away.

Zar beckoned to the next of the mounted runners who waited with him on
the slope. "Instruct Second Cletas to lead three companies of reserve
infantry to support Commander Zaylenz's line. Then find Commander
Yarlev and tell him to dispatch a troop of cavalry through the foothills
for a rear attack on the Asyri flank. Tell both of them I am going
ahead immediately with a squad."

"Yes, sire!" His vykar, fresh and skittish, went racing upslope to the
reserve units as though it might take flight.

Zar turned to find Voba at his elbow, holding out the reins of his
commander's vykar. "Summon the guard. We can't let them break
through."

He took the reins and vaulted up, momentarily relishing the fact that he
hadn't needed to order his mount to kneel.

Moments later he was trotting downslope, shield slung and sword drawn,
at the head of twenty infantry soldiers.

Rorgan and Laol's forces had begun their attack about an hour after
dawn. Their chariots had splashed across the Redbank in seemingly
unending waves, but the catapults and the pits had diminished their
numbers dramatically.

Still, there had been enough of them remaining to guard the enemy
i nfantry as they, in turn, made their crossing.

As Zar rode downhill, he studied the field. Laol's forces were fighting
furiously on the left, but his people were holding them, even driving
them back a little. But before him, he could see that the Asyri archers
were punishing the right flank of the Lakreo forces, which were slowly
retreating upslope. Half a kilometer of ground between the Redbank and
the clashing armies was bare except for the bodies of the dead and
wounded. Zaylenz's troops were fighting bravely in ranks, in contrast
to the savage but disorganized clumps of the invaders-but they were
clearly weakening.

Zar signaled his mount to go faster as he saw the line grow thinner,
waver, then a man fell with a shriek, and the Asyri were pouring
through.

A second later Zar was in the middle of them, chopping hard at shoulders
and throats, as his vykar leaped and charged, swinging its homed head
viciously. A lance struck him in the side, but was deflected by his
mail, then he caught another on his shield. A second later he felt
something strike his left leg, and whirled in the saddlejust in time to
stab the man in his open mouth before the Asyri could swing again. Teeth
rattled against the blade as he jerked it free.

His leg seemed to be all right, Zar realized, relieved, even as he
automatically parried another Asyri's swing, then kicked the man in the
throat with his mailed foot. The Asyri warrior staggered back and went
down with a scream beneath the vykar's stamping hooves.

By this time the squad of Lakreo soldiers had joined the melee, and for
several minutes the Sovren was too busy to think consciously. Despite
their best efforts, they were still being driven back.

Suddenly Zar's mount stumbled on the rocky ground and fell, pinning an
Asyri beneath it. Zar freed his right leg and leapt clear as his vykar
rolled over, crushing the man beneath it, then struggled back to its
feet. The Sovren saw that the creature was lame, and whacked it across
the rump with the flat of his sword to get it out of the way. Startled,
it leaped upslope, and he lost sight of it immediately as he parried a
low slash intended to hamstring him. A moment later his sword found the
soldier's armpit, and there was another one he needn't worry about again
...

Cut, thrust, parry, forehand, parry, backhand, parry, thrust again, then
step back, don't skid in the muck or the blood ...

Back-they were being forced back, up a steep slope on the far right side
of the battlefield ...

Thrust, parry ... step back ... and back again ...

Zar was panting hard, but his arms still moved with sure precision, and
he was vaguely grateful for those weeks aboard the Enterprise, those
hours in the gym. But for them, and McCoy's healing his leg, he'd
probably have been down long before now.

"Stand back! Remember my orders! The demon-spawn's mine!"

The roar in Asyri reached Zar as if from a great distance, faint
compared to the din of the battle, the blood pounding in his ears, his
heaving gasps for breath. The Sovren glanced around, puzzled, seeing
that the Asyri warriors had drawn back into a rough circle, leaving him
alone in the middle of it.

As he fought for air, he saw a big man, as tall as he was and built like
a draft vykar, step out of the circle. Who is that? he wondered,
without much curiosity, mostly concerried with trying to slow his
breathing. Then he saw that the man carried his sword in his left hand;
where his right hand should have been was a round ball studded with
vicious spikes.

Rorgan Death-Hand, Zar realized. The man responsible for the deaths of
Wynn's husband and child.

Out of the comer of his eye he saw Voba and the remaining members of the
squad he'd led starting uphill toward him, and emphatically shook his
head at his aide.

No. Whatever he wants, this may buy us sufficient timefor Cletas and
Yarlev's reinforcements to reach us.

As Voba and the rest stopped obediently, Zar wondered how the rest of
the battle was going. The only thing he was sure of was that Wynn was
all right, since she was still there in the back of his mind, tucked
away like a secret talisman against fear and loneliness.

"Do you know me, demon-spawn?" the Asyri leader bellowed hoarsely. "Even
a demon has the right to know who it is that kills him."

Zar nodded silently, saving his breath, studying the way the other man
stood, checking his bronze armor for vulnerable points. The Asyri
chieftain wore a helmet, cuirass, scaled kilt, greaves, and a bronze
arm-guard on his sword arm.

Rorgan addressed his troops. "I want the pleasure of killing him
myself. This is an honor duel, so anyone who interferes with either
loser or winner dies! Understood?"

The assembled Asyri warriors saluted. Idiot, Zar thought, dropping into
guard position, watching Rorgan as the Asyri leader moved toward him. In
his place Id have me dispatched from behind in two seconds and be on my
way to New Araen. This single-combat, "he's all mine" notion is a load
of vykar The Asyri leader's bronze sword hissed through the air.

The Sovren leaped back, parrying the blow on his shield, then slashed
forehanded at Rorgan's arm. The man twisted, avoiding the blade by a
handspan, and the mace swung down. Zar ducked, feeling those wicked
spikes comb the plume on his helmet.

He may be a fool, but he's fast, despite his size.

They grappled for a moment, mace trapped against shield, blade against
blade, and for the first time Zar was close enough to get a glimpse of
the blue eyes and unlined features beneath the shadow of the Asyri
leader's helmet.

His heart sank. And young, too. Damn. I've got twenty-five years on
kim, probably.

The Asyri leader's huge-muscled arms bulged even more as he forced Zar's
shield arm down ... down ...

Goddess, but he's strong ...

With a deafening, wordless shout, the Sovren brought his mailed foot
down hard on the other's booted toe, then, as ROTgan yelped, leaped back
and away.

"You have no honor, demon-spawn' Stand and fight, coward!"

Zar backed away, circling, his eyes never leaving his opponent's. It
had been years since he'd fought a lefthanded opponent, and he had to
adjust his stance accordingly. He couldn't afford to forget the mace,
either. It was not only a formidable weapon, Rorgan could parry with
it, too.

"I heard you married that slut of a priestess," the big man said, teeth
showing in the stubble of his beard as he grinned, "But then, your
mother was a slut who bedded demons, so I guess you're used to sluts,
aren't you?"

Zar said nothing. Rorgan was trying to make him furious enough to
attack mindlessly, but the Sovren had no trouble ignoring the insults.
I'm too old to fiall for that trick, he thought. And you'd realize
that, if you were smarter, and save your breath for fighting.

With a wild howl, the man charged, his mace impacting on Zar's shield
with staggering force. Zar had no choice but to use his sword to parry
the other's cut. Their weapons whanged together, steel against bronze,
then slid down each other until they were hilt to hilt. The Sovren had
to shift his forefinger quickly to avoid losing it as Rorgan's blade
ground against his. And as he did so, he hooked his heel behind
Rorgan's and jerked upward with all his strength.

The Asyri went over on his back, but before the Sovren could reach him
with a thrust, he rolled, coming up fast, his blade swinging in a deadly
cut at Zar's neck. The Sovren ducked, taking the blow on his right
shoulder, but the impact staggered him, and he nearly fell.

As he struggled to keep his feet, the mace punched into his side,
sending him to his knees. Agony lanced through him, and, for a blinding
second, he couldn't catch his breath. He saw motion out of the corner
of his eye and ducked, automatically backhanding with his sword '

Luck was with him; the edge of the blade caught the Asyri leader on the
thigh, biting deeply enough to wring an involuntary cry from Rorgan.

Zar gasped again, managing this time to catch his breath, though the air
stabbed his left side like a dagger. He lurched to his feet and
scuttled backward, trying to flex his sword arm.

"You're going to die here," Rorgan growled, advancing again, though he
was clearly limping now. "I'm going to rip your guts out with my bare
hands and use them to hang you off your own walls!"

Zar licked dry lips, stealing a glance at his surroundings.

Where the hell is Cletas? For the first time, he realized that the
ground beneath his feet sloped downward on all sides to Moorgate Plain,
where the battle still raged.

I'm on a little hill ... a hillock ... just as Spock described it ...
this is it, then, the moment that he saw ... He eyed Rorgan's mace. And
that must be the impact weapon that kills me ...

The Asyri leader came in again, swinging the mace hard, even as he
slashed at his opponent's legs with his sword. Zar ducked and leaped
forward, parrying with his shield, then slammed it into the man's
midsection. Rorgan's breath went out with a grunt and he folded up at
the waist so completely that they both went over onto the ground, with
Zar on top. They rolled from side to side, gasping, kicking, pounding
at each other's head and shoulders with the hilts of their swords.

Suddenly Rorgan dropped his weapon and slammed his gauntleted palm
upward into Zar's face. White-hot pain exploded in the Sovren's eye and
nose, and he dropped his sword, but he retained just enough presence of
mind not to take his weight off the mace that he had managed to pin
beneath his shield.

Gritting his teeth, the Sovren turned his head to the side and
repeatedly slammed his helmet into Rorgan's face. The nose-guard of his
helm protected the Asyri, but he jerked back involuntarily, shifting
positi on, and suddenly Zar was able to bring his knee up viciously into
his enemy's groin.

The chieftain yowled in agony.

The Sovren tried to follow up his advantage, but before he could draw
his dagger, Rorgan heaved beneath him and sent him tumbling over onto
his back. Zar lurched to his I hands and knees, the air rasping his
lungs, his side stabbing fire, and scrabbled sideways for his sword,
lying a meter away in the mud.

Even as he touched it, the mace impacted with his left shoulder hard
enough to knock the buckler spinning from his grasp. Zar snatched up
his sword and rolled away, but the Asyri had sagged back onto the
ground, groaning. Zar staggered to his feet, blinking, trying to see
where his shield had fallen.

Somethings wrong with my eye, he realized dazedly, and touched his face
with his free hand, noting detachedly that the fingers of his gauntlet
came away bloody. He peered around him again, but could not find the
shield.

I can't parr ' y without it, he thought desperately. One blow from that
damned mace will break my sword, The Asyri leader was also back on his
feet again, but now he was hobbling, his face drawn with pain and rage.
"While you're hung from your own walls, dying, demon-spawn," he wheezed,
"you can watch me with your slut. If you beg hard enough, I may be
merciful enough to kill her after I'm done."

Rorgan came toward him, sword in hand, the mace held ready.

Zar had been thinking fast. Only - v one chance, he decided.

And it 71 leave me completely open to a head attack. 41fail, that mace
is going to do exactly what Spock described ...

As Rorgan moved in, Zar backed quickly away, altering his grip on the
hilt of his sword, shifting to present his right side to the Asyri
leader. He moved his left foot, turning it outward at a ninety-degree
angle so he could use it to push off-couldn't have done this
before-then, praying his aching shoulder would hold out, he leaped
forward onto his right foot, his body uncoiling in a full-extension
lunge, just as Sulu had coached him.

The sword-point plunged through the leather kilt, sinking deep into the
Asyri leader's body. Rorgan dropped his weapon, staring down in shocked
horror at himself as Zar pulled his blade free, then the chieftain's
knees buckled, and he fell. Zar looked up, seeing the stunned
expressions of the Asyri warriors, and, beyond them, Cletas and his
troops coming downslope.

"Coward ... afraid to kill me, demon-spawn ... came a choked whisper
from his feet. The Sovren looked down to see Rorgan lying on his side,
hands clamped to his belly, knees drawn up, writhing uncontrollably. Gut
wounds usually meant a particularly slow and agonizing death.

For a moment Zar relaxed his mind-shield slightly, and the agony the
Asyri was feeling flooded into him, making his knees buckle. Hastily,
he shut out the other's pain, positive now that Rorgan had indeed
received his death wound. But it would take him the rest of the day to
die, probably.

"Do you want me to?" the Sovren asked in Asyri, thinking that Wynn would
have something to say to him if he showed this man mercy. But he
couldn't condemn anyone to the suffering he'd experienced in his moment
of empathy with the chieftain.

Mad blue eyes glared up at him from a sweating, muddy face. "You... not
enough courage ... to give me honorable death... demon . . ."

Zar sighed as he drew Zarabeth's knife. "Don't thank me, then," he
muttered in his own language. "But I'm doing you a favor, and it's
going to get me into trouble with my wife."

Quickly, he pulled back the Asyri leader's chin and drew the knife
across the top of the throat, making sure he slashed both the internal
and external carotid arteries.

Rorgan was dead by the time he'd retrieved his shield, halfway across
the circle. Zar brought his sword up into guard position, struggling to
catch his breath, feeling the grandfather of all stitches in his side,
as he eyed the ring of warriors surrounding him. He began turning
wearily in a slow circle. "Who's next?" he called, in Asyri.

Nobody seemed anxious to step forward. He let out a long sigh of relief
(which hurt). I can't believe it, he thought. I'm still here. I've
won. Now, if we can only Zar never fell the blow that struck the side
of his head, and sent him hurtling down into immediate and unending
darkness.

Chapter Fifteen

SPOCK MATERIALIZED out of nothingness on a rocky, brushcovered slope
between two gigantic gray boulders. The Vulcan glanced around him, then
gave a short, satisfied nod-the Guardian had, as requested, deposited
him in the foothills bordering Moorgate Plain. He wanted to survey the
battlefield from a higher elevation, in an attempt to locate Zar's
position. He knew where his son ought to be-but that was no guarantee
that he was there. The Sovren had planned to personally lead the first
wave of reinforcement troops, so he could be anywhere along the front
lines.

Spock had no difficulty locating the battle itself, even though he could
not see it.

In the first place, he could hear it-the clang of weapons, the shrieks
of wounded people and animals, war-cries filled with terror or
triumph-even from some distance away, it was an appalling din, and the
closer he drew, the more ear-shattering it became.

But the sound, horrible as it was, was as nothing compared to the
smell-the mingled stench of blood, excrement, vomit, and death. The
Vulcan nearly gagged the first time he rounded a boulder and almost
stumbled over the sprawled body of a soldier, guts trailing behind him
for meters, who was covered in a living curtain of insects that rose,
buzzing angrily, from their feast.

He swallowed hard, clenching his teeth. Clamping down iron control,
Spock stepped around the body and moved on, holding his lirpa at the
ready.

He emerged from the foothills at the lower edge of the plain, not far
from the Redbank, and for a moment stood staring in horror at the
battleground before him. Moorgate Plain was a roiled sea of mud,
smashed chariots, and bodies-animal and human, living and dead.

Spock had seen war and its results; had picked his way through colonies
devastated by Klingon or Romulan attack, had ministered to dull-eyed
refugees who were literally more dead than alive. But war in his time
was usually cleaner. Phasers and disruptors killed instantly, neatly
vaporizing the bodies.

The main fighting was still some distance ahead of him, near the
mountain pass leading to New Araen. Storm clouds shouldered their way
over the peak of Big Snowy as Spock began trotting toward the conflict,
constantly scanning the horizon for a certain hillock, one forever fixed
in his memory.

Often, he had to slow to a walk, trying to pick a way through the maze
of caved-in pits, spilled entrails, gutted bodies, and weapons, some
still clutched in severed hands or arms.

Whenever possible, he detoured around the bodies, but in places they
were piled waist- and even shoulder-high, and he was forced to use the
buffeting end of the lirpa to roll enough of them out of the way so he
could step over them.

And the worst of it was, not all of them were dead.

"I'm sorry," he murmured, the first time an armored figure clawed at his
boot, begging for water. Her shoulder was a hacked ruin. "I'm sorry,
but I don't have any."

He moved on, trying not to hear them. But it was impossible. "Water,"
they pleaded or demanded, mostly, and sometimes, "help me," or "kill
me." Some spoke in languages he did not know, but he understood their
meaning anyway.

One wounded man, maddened by pain, lunged at the Vulcan with a halberd,
and Spock had to use the lirpa to knock him aside.

He was getting closer to the battle; the clang of weapons was louder,
mixed now with the gathering rumble of thunder. And still he had not
identified the little rise where Zar would fall.

Or had fallen.

Or was even now falling.

The Vulcan tried to go faster, slipping and skidding in the greasy muck
that seemed to be composed of equal parts mud and spilled blood. It
didn't help that the blood was almost the color of his own.

He found that he had to check some of the little hills from several
different angles, which slowed him down further. I may be too late ...
even now, I may be loo late. - .

He was on the fringes of the fighting now, and several times had to
defend himself for a moment before he could run. But he was not wearing
armor, and offered no challenge, so most of the combatants simply
ignored him.

Which hill? There are so many. I'm on the side o thefield If where Zar
was supposed to be directing the Lakreoforces, but suppose he crossed
over to the other side? Am I too late?

Spock could tell that Zar's forces were being driven back, but the
retreat was controlled, orderly. The Lakreo, and Danregforces are
inflicting heavy damage. If they can hold out long enough, they stand a
chance of winning.

He staggered and slid in the muck, catching himself with the lirpa.
Which hill? They all look the same!

As he stared, a voice echoed in his mind Straight ahead.

Hurry. Such was the ring of authority in those warm, ringing tones that
the Vulcan began to obey, even before he recognized the identity of the
mind-touch.

The Guardian! But how can it know?

Still, he had no other guide, so he forged straight ahead, running hard
now.

Which way, Guardian? he thought, as he passed another hillock, his
breath catching fire in his chest.

To your kft. Harry. Hurry.

Spock bore left, trying to pick up his pace despite the rocks underfoot.
He was in the midst of the front lines, but, strangely, many of the
troops in this portion of the field were not fighting. Instead, knots
of soldiers from both sides huddled in small groups with their comrades,
staring up a t one of the little hills. Spock zigzagged around them,
anxiously scanning the ground to his left-nothing ...

nothing, am I too late?

There! The one they're all staring at! That's the one!

Unwrapping the ahn-woon from around his waist, Spock dropped the lirpa
and raced toward the hillock he'd recognized, putting on a burst of
speed that made his heart feel as if it were about to explode. He could
hear shouts of encouragement and the sounds of a struggle as he reached
its foot, then, as he began to climb, all sounds abruptly ceased.

Gasping, the Vulcan scrambled the last few meters, finding himself on
the edge of a circle of warriors. An armed figure stood in the middle
of that circle, dripping sword up and ready, clutching a small, battered
shield. Spock could not see the man's face, but from his stance and his
chain mail, the Vulcan recognized ZarA blood-drenched body lay sprawled
at his feet. Spock heard his son call out a phrase in a language he did
not recognize, then the Sovren pivoted slowly around.

As Zar's back appeared, Spock glimpsed a flash of movement to his own
left-one of the Asyri warriors leaped forward, axe raised high, his
movement the same as the one the Vulcan had witnessed on the screen of
his tricorder.

"No!" The Vulcan knocked startled enemy soldiers aside as though they
were straw men, and lunged after the Asyri.

With every bit of skill he had in him, Spock lashed out with the
ahn-woon, his target the warrior's raised weapon-and missed.

The ahn-woon whipped around the man's neck, instead, and even as the
Vulcan jerked back on it, the flat of the axehead impacted with the
Sovren's red-plumed helmet.

The blow echoed in Spock's mind, as he saw Zar half whirled around with
its force, glimpsed his son's bloody face, heard him grunt as the breath
went out of him.

Zar's knees buckled ... he fell forward ... to lie, unmoving.

A dreadful calm settled over Spock. I've failed. To come this close
andfail ...

Absently, he looked down at the man he had pulled down, seeing that he
was dead. The body was still twitching, but the Asyri's neck was
obviously broken.

I did not intend to kill him ... Spock thought, dully, but he could not
summon any remorse for his action.

The handle of the ahn-woon slid out of his numb fingers, and he left it
where it fell. Blindly, the Vulcan pushed his way through the Lakreo
troops that were suddenly milling about, crowding the top of the little
hillock.

As he reached the sprawled figure, Spock saw the dent in the right side
of the battered steel helmet. He dropped to his knees beside his son's
still body, and, gently but hopelessly, rolled him over onto his back.
The face that came into view was a gory greenish mask, the right eye
puffed nearly shut, the mouth split, the nose swollen and canted. Blood
trickled from one nostril in a thin, steady stream ...

Blood trickled ...

Blood trickled. . .

Spock stared unbelievingly at the blood, watching it well, then drip If
he's bleeding, he's still alive!

Hastily, he slipped a finger beneath the edge of Zar's helmet and
touched his temple. He sensed the low-level mental activity even as he
felt the pulse-weak and thready, but there! He put a hand over his
son's mouth and nose, and after a moment, warm breath brushed his palm.

A gauntleted hand seized his wrist and yanked it away, even as a voice
snapped, "What the hell do you think you're-"

Spock looked up, seeing that it was Cletas who had grabbed him. The
Second stared at him, then let go. "I'm sorry, sir. I didn't realize
who you were."

"He's alive," Spock said, reaching for his tricorder.

"Yes, I see," Cletas agreed, crouching on his heels beside the Vulcan.
"Dead men don't bleed."

"We have to take him to safety." Spock glanced up, to find Voba kneeling
across from them. He studied the tricorder's readings. "Concussion ...
possibly serious. He could go into shock, especially with the ground
this cold and damp.

We'll need a stretcher."

Voba snapped out an order to one of the Lakreo guards, and the woman
saluted, then raced off.

I had better get that armor off, so he can breathe, the Vulcan thought.
He began fumblingly to unfasten Zar's helmet, but the red-haired
aide-de-camp gently pushed his hand away. "I'll do that, Sir. I'm used
to it. "So much for the prophecy," Cletas muttered, glancing at the
troops milling around them. "Damn it all, we were holding them . . ."
he began swearing, a profane litany in a language Spock didn't
understand.

"What prophecy?" the Vulcan asked.

Cletas busied himself helping Voba unlace the sides of the Sovren's
byrnie. "Wynn's oracle," he said, distractedly.

"She pronounced it to the enemy troops the afternoon before we captured
her-'if he who is halt walks healed, if he who is death-struck in battle
rises whole, then Ashmara will turn her face from us'-meaning that,
unless he wakes up and walks out there, we've had it. If our troops
think he's dead-and the word that he's fallen will be spreading like
wildfire, it always does-that's going to take the spirit right out of
them. The invaders will run over us like the Redbank in flood."

"If he who is halt . . ." Spock repeated, slowly. "But half the
prophecy has already been fulfilled. Zar is no longer lame."

"Right enough," Voba said, "but now he's got to stand up and walk out
there, where they can all see him ... and there's no way that's going
to happen-even if he lives, he'll not be on his feet for days."

Spock, his mind racing, thought of the silently staring faces, defender
and invader alike, and an idea came to him.

The Vulcan met Cletas's gaze squarely. "Suppose he does stand up and
walk out there?"

"But he-" The Second's eyes widened as sudden understanding flowed
between them like a current. "Yes! By Ashmara, it could work!" He
turned his head and shouted, "Guards! Guards! Stand close, here,
shoulder to shoulder.

On the double! I want a complete circle."

Quickly, they were surrounded, walled in, by soldiers.

Cletas snatched up the blood-smeared helm. "Here, put this on. No-wait,
you'll need mail first. Nobody will notice the breeches, but the mail-"

With frantic haste, he began ripping at the lacings of his own byrnie.
"Voba, where's his red cloak?"

"I have it," the little aide said, calmly.

The Second dragged his byrnie, then his padded undergarment, over his
head. Cletas shivered as fat raindrops spattered onto his bare
shoulders. "Put this on. Don't bother lacing, you'll have the cloak to
cover it. Here." He thrust the mail shirt and the quilted leather at
the Vulcan.

Spock pulled the shirt, followed by the byrnie, over his head. He rose
to his feet, feeling the unaccustomed weight of the armor settle onto
his shoulders. "How should I do this?"

"Just stand there on the hillside and let them notice you," Cletas said,
pointing, holding out the battered helmet.

"Then take off the helm and let them see your face. The cloak, Voba."

The aide swung the red folds around Spock's shoulders.

"You're thinner," Cletas fussed, pulling the mail into place.

"From a distance, nobody will notice that," Voba said, sounding
positive. "Here's the sword, sir."

As Spock eased the scarlet-plumed helmet over his head, the aide hastily
buckled Zar's swordbelt around him.

Cletas growled a soft order at the surrounding guards, and they all
snapped to attention, saluting, as Spock stepped between two of them,
out from behind the screen of armored bodies.

Several of the Asyri captives gasped when they saw him.

Trying to imitate Zar's walk, Spock strode boldly over to the side of
the hill and stood there, silhouetted against the livid, dark-clouded
sky, the scarlet cloak whipping behind him in the gusty wind. Thunder
rumbled ominously.

He had been there only a few seconds when somebody noticed him and
pointed, then an uncertain cheer began rising from the Lakreo forces.
Spock waited another beat, then pulled off the helmet, tucking it under
his left arm.

The cheer strengthened as more and more of the troops turned to look up,
until it flowed up to him in waves of deafening jubilation. The Vulcan
could see the Asyri and Kerren forces hesitate, then begin pointing up
at him, obviously frightened. They're almost ready to flee, he thought.
ButIneedsomethingelse. Jimhasaflairfiyrthe dramatic. What would he
do?

The answer came to him immediately, and he grasped the sticky hilt of
the sword at his left hip, then drew it, holding the stained blade high
in salute.

"Victory!" Spock shouted, so loudly his throat hurt.

A white crack of jagged lightning split the sky above him, followed a
moment later by a deafening clap of thunder.

The enemy troops broke and ran.

"Easy, now," Voba cautioned. "Just slide him off, don't lift him."

Gently, Spock and the guards moved Zar's unconscious body onto the bed,
then the aide dismissed the two soldiers.

"Now let's see the rest of the damage," the little man muttered,
expertly slitting the quilted leather padding with his knife and peeling
it off gently.

"You've done this before, I take it," Spock observed.

"I can assign a battle to most of these scars," Voba told the Vulcan
grimly. "Hmm ... no cuts ... will you look at both shoulders ... and
the ribs ... ouch, he won't be able to do much with that new wife of
his for awhile, will he?"

the little man mumbled, mostly to himself.

"He took quite a beating," Spock said, eyeing the huge, emerald bruises
and wondering where Zar had put the medical kit McCoy had spoken of
giving him.

Voba snorted indignantly. "He gave every bit as good as he got. If
Rorgan weren't lying there dead, he'd look worse ... and his wives
would be lucky if he was ever any good to them again."

Spock's mouth t witched, and he hastily cleared his throat.

"You watched the fight?"

"We could see most of it, from where we stood upslope."

Voba smiled reminiscently. "That was a fight, that was."

The door opened, and Wynn limped in, still wearing her armor. Blood had
sprayed onto her face like darker greenish freckles, and the front of
her mail was dull with it, but she seemed relatively unhurt, except for
a stained rag knotted around her knee.

"How is he?" she asked, moving to Zar's side.

"I was just taking a good look at him," Voba said. "He's been out like
a pinched candlewick ever since he was hit, over an hour ago, now."

Wynn gently parted Zar's hair and examined the swollen lump on the right
side of his head, careful not to touch it.

"Hmm." She rested her fingers on the pulse at his throat, then peeled
back each eyelid to watch the pupil dilate, and finally lifted his upper
lip to check the color of his gums.

"Hmmm." Her brisk, unemotional manner reminded Spock vividly of Leonard
McCoy.

"For the moment, his lifelink is steady," she pronounced, glancing up at
them. "I wish McCoy were here. Or can you use the box-that-whirrs,
Spock? The one that sees inside a body?"

"I already did," Spock answered. "And it agreed with you. He is in no
immediate danger."

She looked pleased. "But we need to get this swelling down. Voba, send
someone up to the high pastures on Big Snowy to bring back a big bag of
ice and snow. Until then, we'll use cold-water compresses."

The aide scowled conspiratorially at the Vulcan. "Are healers where you
come from as bossy, Sir?" he whispered.

Spock nodded. "It appears to be a universal trait."

Voba left, muttering under his breath.

Wynn was pulling off her armor, wincing as she bent over to take off her
greaves. "Are you all right?" Spock said.

"Not bad," she grunted, struggling to pull her bymie over her head
without unlacing it. "Shallow cut, but it bled a lot ... lucky ... any
deeper, and I'd have been hamstrung . . ."

Wynn dropped the mail with the rest of her armor and disappeared next
door, where he heard her snapping orders at someone, then she returned,
minus her kilt, wearing a clean gray homespun skirt and a thin white
linen shirt. She rolled the sleeves up briskly, poured water from the
ewer into the basin, then began scrubbing her face, hands, and arms.

Spock watched her, surprised, and she must have picked up his reaction
because she explained, "My teacher, Clarys, was the greatest healer my
people ever had. One of the first things she taught me was that disease
demons are attracted by dirt."

Spock raised an eyebrow. "That is one way of putting it," he conceded.
"Was it she who discovered that cold brings down swelling?"

"No, that remedy has been around for generations," Wynn said, drying her
hands, then returning to the bed. "I'd better wash his face before he
wakes. It's going to hurt him."

She stood looking down at her husband for a moment, and for an instant
Spock glimpsed a break in her cool, professional demeanor. "Thank
Ashmara he's alive," she whispered, gently brushing his hair off his
forehead. Then she straightened, all business once more. "Would you
hand me that soap, please?"

"I know of something that would be even better than soap for driving
away disease demons," Spock said. "It was in a bag," he measured off a
space with his hands, "black in color, and Zar would have brought it
back from the Enterprime. " He raised an eyebrow. "Did he tell you
about the ship?"

"The space-wagon that flies between stars," Wynn said, nodding. "And I
remember the bag you speak of. It's in the weapons cabinet." She
pointed.

Spock located the medical bag, took out the medical tricorder and
antiseptic solution. He opened the latter, then handed it to Wynn. "Use
this."

She sniffed the container skeptically, wrinkling her nose.

"Strong stuff."

"Disease demons cannot abide it," Spock said, perfectly straight-faced.

"I believe it." She poured some of the solution onto the bleached cloth
she'd produced. "Stand ready, please. This may bring him around, and
he must not be allowed to get up. He'd only faint, and perhaps injure
himself worse, falling."

"I understand." Spock watched as she began cleaning the blood and filth
off Zar's face, her touch sure and delicate.

"What makes you think he will try to get up?"

She gave him a sideways glance. "Male patients usually behave in either
of two ways One, they're such babies that you want to shove them out
ofbed after hearing them whine and complain for ages; or, two, you have
to sit on them to prevent them from trying to get up, so they can take
care of everything they think is going wrong during their absence.

I'll wager this one is the 'let me up' kind, but, of course, I could be
wrong."

Spock raised an eyebrow. "Surely female patients are not always
reasonable."

"They're not as apt to make fools of themselves by trying to get up
immediately, but it's hard to make most of them rest long enough," she
said. "The minute they begin to feel better, they get up, do too much,
then end up relapsing."

By now Zar's face was clean enough so that Spock could see the cut above
his eye that had caused much of the bleeding. He'll have a scar beneath
that eyebrow. The skin around both of Zar's eyes was already turning
greenishblack, and both lips were split.

The Vulcan examined the revealed features closely. "His nose is
broken."

Wynn nodded. "When the swelling goes down, I'll try to straighten it
out. It's going to leave a bump, though." Her patient stirred, then
groaned. "He's coming around. Watch him." She hurried across the room
to the washstand to empty the bloody antiseptic solution out of the
basin and bring it back to the opposite side of the bed from Spock.

Zar's head turned restlessly on the pillow, then the less swollen of his
eyelids lifted, and he squinted up at his father. When he finally
spoke, his voice was a thready, stuffy-nosed wheeze. "I dew it ... I'm
dead 'n gone to Hell, right?"

The Vulcan hid his profound relief with an exaggerated sigh. "Very
funny. How do you feel?"

"Terrible ... can't see bery well ... can't breathe bery well ...
hurts all over . . ."

"That is because you have two black eyes and a broken nose, a broken
rib, plus numerous bruises, contusions, and a moderately severe
concussion. But it seems as though you will recover."

The gray eye blinked, then sharpened suddenly. "The battle! By . . .
my troops! Got ... got to go see-" Panting, Zar began pushing himself
up, trying to swing his legs to the side.

"No, " Spock commanded, hastily locating two relatively unbruised areas
and holding the patient down. "The battle is over. Your people won.
And you are not going anywhere."

"But- "Lie still, or you'll get sick," Wynn admonished. She gave the
Vulcan an "I-told-you-so" look.

"Wynn?" Zar whispered, putting out a hand. She gripped it. "Is there
anything I can get you, my dear?"

He tried to swallow. "Water ... so thirsty. We really won?" His good
eye peered incredulously at first one, then the other of them as they
nodded. "Casualties?"

"Remarkably light," Spock said. "Cletas is handling things in your
absence. He said to tell you not to worry."

"Remember ... fighting ... trying to hold Zaylenz's line." Zar
frowned. "My vykar was lame ... is he all right?"

His wife shook her head. "I don't know. But I promise I'll ask Cletas
to check," she assured him. "Here ... just a few sips."

Zar gulped the water thirstily, then made a face when Wynn took the
goblet away. "Rorgan and Laol?"

"Heideon captured Laol," Wynn said. "And you killed Rorgan yourself, in
an honor-duel, so they tell me."

"I did? Was that when I broke my dose . . . nose?"

Gingerly, he reached up to touch his face, but Wynn prevented him.

Spock nodded.

"Too bad . . ." Zar mumbled. "Always was proud of this nose." His
battered mouth twisted into a lopsided smile.

"Inherited it from m' old man y'see . .

He passed out again.

Spock hunted through the medical kit and found an ampule of tri-ox.
"This will help him breathe," he told Wynn, as he pressed the hypo to
Zar's shoulder.

The patient recovered consciousness almost immediately.

"Th' battle . . ." he said, seeming more alert than before.

"Who won?"

"We did." Wynn smiled at him. "A complete victory."

Zar relaxed slightly. "Good . . ."

"Do you remember fighting with Rorgan?" she asked.

"I did?" The gray eye was puzzled. "Oh, yes ... He started to nod,
but quickly stopped himself. "Remember bits 'n' pieces . . ." He
looked sideways at Wynn, suddenly contrite. "I gave him a merciful
death."

She shrugged. "We all make mistakes." Spock could not tell whether she
was being sarcastic.

Zar grimaced. ". . . starting to come back. Tell Hikaru the fencing
practice ... came in handy. Used that lunge . . ."

He sighed. "And tell McCoy ... I kept his leg safe . . ." The gray
eye began to close. "My sword?"

"I brought it back," Spock said. "Voba put it away."

"Good . . ." Zar lapsed into quiet for such a long time that the
Vulcan thought he had passed out again, or fallen asleep, but then he
stirred and muttered, "The battle ...

who won?"

"You did," Spock said, but Zar did not respond. The Vulcan cast a
concerned glance over at Wynn.

She answered his unspoken question softly. "Happens all the time with
blows to the head. They're confused at first, and their memories are
patchy."

The Vulcan took out the medical tricorder and scanned its readings
again. They reassured him slightly. There was no internal bleeding, no
skull fracture ... but his son's disorientation worried Spock.

Wynn leaned over to place a cold compress on the side of Zar's head, and
the little instrument's readings altered abruptly as they registered her
metabolism. Spock's eyes widened, then he deliberately scanned her
again, his eyebrow rising. A faint smile touched his mouth.

The cold cloth roused the patient again. "Ouch . . ." Zar looked over
at Spock. "What're you smirking about?"

"Vulcans," Spock said placidly, with utmost dignity, never smirk.
Incidentally, congratulations. To both of YOU."

Wynn gave him a puzzled glance. "On our victory?"

"Among other things," Spock said enigmatically, shutting off the
tricorder and putting it back in the medical kit.

Zar seemed about to pursue the matter, but a sudden thought occurred to
him and he struggled to get up again.

"The wounded! Got to check whether they're-"

"No, " Spock and Wynn said together, holding him down until he finally
surrendered, gasping.

"Are you going to lie still now, you fool?" Wynn scolded.

Sweat beaded her husband's face as he nodded meekly, then he paled,
gulped ominously, put a hand to his mouth and mumbled, "Feel as if I'm
going to-"

"I warned you," Wynn told him, with a grim smile, and held his head over
the basin.

Spock awoke the next morning to find Voba putting another log on the
fire. He straightened up stiffly, realizing that he'd fallen asleep in
the chair beside the fireplace. His time sense assured him that it was
still early.

Across the room Zar was asleep, breathing much more normally. Wynn sat
cross-legged at the foot of the bed, her back braced against the
bedpost, her chin drooping as she dozed. They'd taken turns rousing
their patient at intervals throughout the night, to make sure he could
be awakened, but at some point weariness had obviously overcome both of
them.

His back protested as Spock stood up. Voba was watching him. "How
about some breakfast, sir?"

The Vulcan realized that he was extremely hungry; he'd forgotten to eat
yesterday. "Yes, thank you, I would appreciate that. No meat, please.
Cereal, or bread and cheese ...

fruit-any of those would be welcome. Actually," Spock admitted, "they
would all be welcome. I am very hungry."

"Right away, sir."

As Voba left, Wynn stirred, rubbed her eyes, mumbled something Spock
took to be a greeting, then went into her adjoining room. The Vulcan
took the opportunity to stretch the kinks out of his back, then used one
of the jugs of melted ice-water to wash up.

He felt better for being clean, and the cold water cleared the last of
the sleep from his mind. Spock walked over to look down at Zar. The
snow and ice compresses had helped; though still pale and bruised, his
son looked much more like himself. He was obviously in a normal sleep.

The Vulcan touched his arm gently. "Zar?"

Both eyelids rose, then the gray eyes widened. -FatheO What are you
doing here?"

"Good morning," Spock said. "Are you hungry?"

Zar nodded absently, as if surprised to discover that he was. "You were
here yesterday, weren't you? I remember you telling me we won." He
blinked. "And you held me down."

"Yes, I did. You appear better this morning."

"I am. Will you tackle me again if I try to sit up ?"

The Vulcan hesitated. "I think that would be all right. If you take it
slowly."

Stiffly, his son pushed himself up, stifling a groan as he moved his
ribcage. Spock hastily placed another pillow behind his back to support
him. "Things were so strange, yesterday . . ." Zar frowned. "I
couldn't think rationally most of the time. I remember asking you
questions and not understanding the answers."

"Do you remember the battle, now? The fight with Rorgan?"

"Dimly. But," he looked over at the Vulcan, bewildered, you're not
supposed to be here! Why did you come back?"

"To save your life, my dear," Wynn said, emerging from the connecting
door and crossing the room with her long, decisive stride. This morning
she wore boots, breeches, and a sleeveless jerkin of tan leather. "If
it hadn't been for him, my unfortunate prophecy would have come true."

Zar stared at her, then turned to look at Spock while Wynn leaned over
to feel her patient's forehead, peer into his eyes, and check his pulse.
As she straightened up, her husband caught her hand and pulled her down
to sit on the bed beside him. "Don't go. I want you right here," he
ordered, his fingers tight around hers. "Now, tell me what happened."

Wynn launched into an account of the battle and the events following the
fight with Rorgan Death-Hand.

When she finished, Zar sat staring at the Vulcan in silence for a long
time. Finally he said, "If there's a logical reason for your actions
yesterday, I'd like to know what it is."

Spock looked down. "I told you before that I've discovered that some
things transcend logic. This was one of them."

"But the time-stream! If I was meant to die yesterday, didn't your
action compromise its integrity?"

The Vulcan shook his head. "I do not believe so. Changes made in the
distant past-and 5,000 years is fairly distant -tend to be smoothed out
over the years. The Mordreaux equations show that one's ability to
alter events in the past is inversely proportional to the square of the
distance in time one travels."

Zar shut his eyes for a moment, obviously visualizing the equation.
Finally, he nodded. "I see that, yes . . ."

"Besides," Spock continued, "my examination of the time-stream, as I
told you, showed peace coming to the Lakreo Valley, and I doubt that
your continued presence will change that destiny." The Vulcan raised an
ironic eyebrow. "Or will you take advantage of your new, 'supernatural'
ability to return from the dead, and wage wars of aggression against
your neighbors?"

His son shook his head, ruefully. "You know better than that."

Spock nodded. "Yes, I do. But the main reason for my action was that I
found that I could not stand by, that I had to try and help. Actually,"
he shrugged again, selfdeprecatingly, "I missed with the ahn-woon. So,
while I may have deflected that axe slightly, I suspect it was the mail
hood that saved your life, not any action of mine."

"But if you and Wynn hadn't warned me, I wouldn't have put on that extra
armor," Zar pointed out.

Voba chose that moment to arrive with the food, and they ate in silence.
After his aide-de-camp had removed the dishes, Zar questioned him as to
the status of the Lakreo wounded, was assured that Cletas and Heldeon
had everything well in hand, then thanked the little man for his report.
"I don't know what I'd do without you, Voba, I really don't."

The aide colored, mumbled something inaudible, then beat a hasty
retreat. "He's always been like that," Zar observed, with a faint
smile. "I wanted to make him Third-in-War a couple of years ago, but he
refused. Said if I didn't have someone to took after me, I wouldn't
last through the next winter. But he'd rather I just took him for
granted, rather than thank him."

He turned his head to took squarely at Spock. "Are you going to let me
thank you? I owe you . . ." his hand squeezed Wynn's, "more than my
life. More than anything you did for me personally, when you
impersonated me, you saved my people."

Spock allowed himself a faint smile. "Some of the credit for that
belongs to Cletas. Without his help-and his armor-I could not have done
it. I merely provided the ...

image. The doppelganger."

Zar chuckled a little. "I wish I could've seen that. I'll bet some of
those Asyri are still running. My reputation as the undying son of a
demon is now so entrenched that I doubt I'll have any trouble with the
neighboring tribes or clans for a long time."

The Vulcan nodded. "So now you can do more of what you wanted to
do-teach, develop that printing press, and the paper to use in it-those
things, instead of fighting continually."

"I'll probably always have to do more fighting than I care to, but
you're right. Besides," he gave Wynn a sidelong glance, "I'm thinking
about abdicating in favor of my consort, here. I'll let her give the
orders, since she's so good at it."

She laughed, shaking her head. "I refuse to do all the work, my lord.
Besides, in two days you'd be itching to take back the reins."

Spock rose to his feet. "I would like to stay longer, but I must return
to my ship. It will not take the admiral long to realize that I have
gone, and where. The last time I left without orders he threatened to
push me out the airlock without a vacuum suit if I ever did it again."

Wynn slid off the bed and walked around it to face the Vulcan.
"Farewell, Father-kin," she said, softly, her green eyes shining. "I
will miss you. May Ashmara hold you in Her hand, always. And thank
you."

Spock gave her a formal salute. "Peace and long life, Lady Wynn."

She nodded, then addressed Zar without turning her head. "And you, my
dear lord ... don't you dare get up, understand?" Then she was gone,
the connecting door shutting behind her.

The Vulcan watched her leave, his mouth twitching slightly. "At times,
she reminds me of a cross between Leonard McCoy and James T. Kirk."

His son smiled ruefully. "Frightening, isn't it? I'll tell you one
thing ... wild vykar couldn't drag me out of this bed until she gives
me permission. I shudder to think what she'd do."

"Were you serious about abdicating?"

The Sovren shrugged. "I don't know. If I thought I could do so
successfully, I'd abdicate in a minute. But that wouldn't be fair to
Wynn. I suspect I'll be trapped here, doing a job I don't like, for the
rest of my days.

"But I decided before I left the Enterprise that if I made it through
that battle, things were going to be different, and they will be. I can
gradually shift some of the load onto Wynn's shoulders-and I'm going to
insist t hat the Council take a bigger part in the day-to-day business of
governing."

He glanced up at Spock. "Listen to me-I'm talking just to keep you
here, which isn't fair."

"I asked," the Vulcan said, simply. He took a deep breath.

"I wish I could stay, but you know that I cannot."

Zar sighed, nodding. "I'm already missing you . I'll . . .

we'll ... never see each other again, will we?"

"No," Spock said, hearing the roughness in his own voice.

"No, knowing the restrictions placed on the use of the Guardian, I
cannot imagine that we will. I ... regret ...

that."

"So do U' Zar drew a long, shaky breath. "I ... oh, damn, this is
hard, isn't it?"

Yes."

Spock swallowed, then silently held out his hand. Zar gripped it, and
for a second, the words they could not speak aloud surged between them.

Then the Vulcan gave a slight backward pull, and the hard, calloused
fingers clenched around his immediately let go. He glanced up, met the
gray eyes one final time, then nodded. "Farewell, son. Peace and long
life."

"Farewell, Father." Zar had to pause for a second. "Live long and
prosper."

Spock did not trust himself to look back as he strode forward, feeling
the Guardian's time-displacement seize him. A heartbeat later he was
standing on Gateway's chill, sterile soil, hearing that eternal, moaning
wind.

The Vulcan stood in silence for several minutes, then he took his
tricorder out, aiming it at the time portal's central opening.
"Guardian," he said, "thank you for helping me save him."

"He is my friend," the time-entity said, its inner glow awakening. "Have
you a request, Spock of Vulcan?"

"Yes. Please show me the history of the planet Sarpeidon."

As the scenes began flashing before him, this last time, Spock stood
with his head bowed, not trying to watch, letting the tricorder run
until the final nova-burst of energy.

"Thank you, Guardian."

"You are welcome."

Then, mechanically, he turned off the instrument, took his communicator
out of his pocket, flipped it open. "Spock to Enterprise. I am
requesting beam-up."

Kirk's voice emanated from the little speaker, surprisingly gentle.
"Spock? You sound ... are you all right?"

The Vulcan swallowed. "I will be, Jim." He turned to look back through
the Guardian, seeing in his mind's eye Zar's face, envisioning Wynn
beside him ... knowing he was no longer so desperately alone.

Good-bye, my son. . .

The transporter beam caught him, wrenching him into his component
sub-atomic particles and waves, then he was gone.

Epilogue JAMEs T. KIRK raised his snifter of Saurian brandy. "A
toast," he said. "To absent friends." And sons, he added silently, as
the liquor slid over his tongue, warm and heady.

Spock and McCoy gravely raised their glasses and drank.

The three officers were sitting in the small lounge area in Kirk's
cabin, the "night" folio-wing the Vulcan's return from Sarpeidon. The
admiral could feel the faint, unhurried vibration of the Enterprise's
engines carrying him back to Earth, back to his duties there.

Kirk sighed and sat back in his chair, idly glancing around his cabin.
He had come aboard too quickly to ha e brought much in the way of
personal possessions; unlike Spock, he was not aboard the Enterprise
enough to cause this cabin to be reserved for his exclusive use. But,
despite its bareness, it was home, as no other place ever had been, or
would be.

Soon, the admiral thought, I'll be back in that bureaucratIC tangle
again. I hate the thought ofil. Still, it was his duty, and he'd spent
his entire adult existence doing his duty. He could not envision a life
outside Starfleet.

But if it hadn't been for Starfleet, and the Enterprise, he found
himself musing, Carol and I might still be together.

David might be a part of my life.

He finished the brandy, and then, with a slight air of defiance, poured
himself another and sipped. The warmth in his stomach was already
spreading to the rest of his body.

Kirk remembered the boy's face as it had been when he'd last seen him as
an adolescent. Not much ofme there. He definitely takes after Carol
... coloring and everything.

Don't think he liked me much-but that's not surprising.

Kids are sensitive, and I felt so awkward that I'm sure he picked up on
it.

That had been what-ten years ago? At least. How old would David be
now? To his shame, he could not remember.

Years ago, I was wrong when I agreed to let Carol raise David without
telling him about me. I know that, now.

Probably the biggest mistake ofmy life. But now ... would it be fair
to David for me to come barging into his life? Just because I need some
sort ofabsolution? Would my contacting him benefit David-or would it
just make me feel better?

Kirk sighed. I used to know what was right,- at least most of the time
I did. . . or I thought I did But the older I get, the more I
question. And ... regret ...

He frowned down at his drink. Be honest with yourset( Jim. Contacting
David now would probably cause him more harm than good. His hand
tightened on the stem of the brandy snifter. He frowned down at his
glass, then took another sip. Damn.

Kirk looked up, met Spock's concerned gaze, and straightened, trying to
adjust his expression into some semblance of normality. He's been
through a lot. . . he doesn't need to be worrying about you, too.
Pull yourself together, Jim.

"More brandy?" he offered.

"No, thank you," Spock said. "I have to go up to the bridge before
retifing."

"I just wish I'd been there to see you wearing armor and waving a
sword," Kirk told the Vulcan, for the fourth time, shaking his head over
the picture his imagination conjured up. "The whole adventure is like
something out of Tennyson, or Scott. Incredibly romantic and
swashbuckling. .

"You sound like Miniver Cheevy, Jim," McCoy said, raising an eyebrow.
"You forgetting the cold, the dirt, and the smells?"

Spock also raised an eyebrow. "Miniver Cheevy?"

The doctor gave the Vulcan a startled glance. "I don't believe it. You
mean I've actually read something you haven't?"

"Apparently," Spock said, imperturbably. "What is the reference?"

"It's a poem by Edwin Arlington Robinson," McCoy said, "about a man who
spent his entire life yearning after the age of chivalry in days of
yore."

"I remember the last verse," Kirk said, and quoted

Miniver Cheevy, born too late, Scratched his head and kept on thinking;

Miniver coughed, and called it fate, And kept on drinking.

"So, here's to the so-called 'good old days." Deliberately, the admiral
raised his glass to the Vulcan, then took a sip.

"I ... see," Spock said, and the worried shadow was back in the dark
eyes.

Kirk shook his head. "Cut that out, Spock. You know me better than
that."

"I suppose I do," his friend said, "but this mission has been a
difficult one ... for all of us."

"I'll say," McCoy agreed. "By the time we get back, the semester will
be nearly over. They'll have found someone to replace me, by now. I'm
probably out of a job."

The admiral smiled at the idea. "Why not hang around Earth for awhile,
then? You could teach at the Academy, with Spock."

McCoy snorted. "Teach what? First-aid for young officers?"

"Actually," Spock said, meditatively, "you could be of use, Doctor. I
sometimes find myselfat a loss when it comes to evaluating the emotional
reactions of my human cadets especially in stressful situations. I
would value your advice."

The doctor's eyes widened. He turned to Kirk. "Did I hear him right?
Did he really say what I thought I heard him say?"

The admiral chuckled. "C'mon, Bones. You know Spock has a lot of
respect for your opinion."

"He's managed to hide it well," McCoy grumbled. "Well ... I'll
consider it."

"I'll be around more, too," Kirk said. "I'm going to tell Morrow as
soon as we get home that I want to spend at least half my time
teaching." He pounded his fist softly against the arm of his seat, for
emphasis. "And this time, I'm making it stick."

McCoy suddenly leaned forward, his eyes intent on the Vulcan's hands.
"What've you got there, Spock?"

The Vulcan held up the data cassette he'd been fingering.

"Before I left Gateway, I took one more reading of Sarpeldon's history-I
had it in mind to attempt an additional analysis of the effects of our
mission on the timestream. To see whether Zar's history had really
changed."

"Why should you question that?" McCoy asked, quickly.

"You said he was all right. That he wasn't that badly hurt."

Spock nodded. "But I do not know how malleable the past can be. It is
always possible that I ... we ... changed very little. That the
integrity of the time-stream repairs itself ... or, as you might put
it, Doctor, that fate refuses to be mocked."

McCoy snorted. "Bull. I believe that whatever happened, happened. And
that, ifwe were part of it, then that's the way it was supposed to be.
Like that incident with Gary Seven.

When we checked the history files, we found out that that was what had
happened all along."

The Vulcan's somber expression Lightened a bit. "I had forgotten about
that. Perhaps you are right, Doctor," he murmured. As they watched, he
picked up the tricorder that lay on the table beside him and inserted
the data cassette.

Then, with studied deliberation, he pushed the "erase" button.

Kirk gave McCoy a startled, sidelong glance, and both of them looked
back at their friend. "And, if the doctor is not correct," Spock
finished, so softly his friends had to strain to hear him, "I find
myself preferring not to know about it."

"He'll be fine, Spock," McCoy said. "He and Wynn'll probably have six
kids and live to ripe old ages."

A reminiscent half-smile relaxed the Vulcan's stern mouth for a fleeting
second, and he glanced down at the tricorder in his hand again. "You
may well be right, Doctor . . ."

"Speaking of ripe old ages, Jim," McCoy said, a moment later, his blue
eyes sparkling mischievously, "you've got a birthday coming up next
month."

The admiral grimaced. "Don't remind me. I'm trying to ignore this
particular one."

"What would you like for a present?" the doctor persisted. "Another
antique for your wall collection?" He chuckled. "Spock, you should've
filched that sword of Zar's while you had the chance."

Kirk grinned. "It was a beauty, all right. But he needs it more than I
do." He considered. "I don't know ... yes, I do." He sat up with an
air of decision. "I'd like to spend my birthday out in space. Not a
real mission, nothing desperate like that. Just a chance to be aboard
the Enterprise again."

"There is a training and inspection cruise scheduled for next month,"
Spock said. "Perhaps you can arrange to handle the inspection yourself,
Jim."

"I'll twist Morrow's arm," Kirk promised, cheerfully. A sudden thought
struck him. "Spock, we've served together for all these years, and I
don't even know when your birthday is."

"Vulcans celebrate name-days, rather than the anniversary of birth,"
Spock said. "But the actual date was . . ." he calculated for a bare
second, "last week, actually."

"Then I owe you a dinner out," the admiral said, raising his glass in
salute. "You pick the place. And a belate. "Happy Birthday' to you.
Many happy returns of the day."

The Vulcan raised an eyebrow. "Many happy returns of the day'?" he
repeated, obviously puzzled.

"He means, 'may you enjoy many more birthdays to come," Spock," McCoy
translated. "Same as saying 'may you live long."

"Oh. Thank you, then," Spock said, rising to his feet. "I will
consider where to go for dinner. But at the moment, I must check in on
the bridge." The Vulcan picked up his maroon uniform jacket from where
it hung over the back of his chair. After slipping it on, he fastened
it, then squared his shoulders, tugging it down around his lean hips so
it fit perfectly.

Kirk grinned, stretching his legs out in front of him, settling deeper
into his seat. "Better you than me. I intend to be lazy the rest of
the way home, and let you mind the store, Captain. R.H.1,P., you know."

The Vulcan nodded. "Enjoy it while it lasts, Jim," he said, a faint
gleam of amused affection in his dark eyes.

"Remember that before we can embark on the training cruise itself, all
the command cadets must first take th. "Kobayashi Maru' test."

The door slid open before the Vulcan, and he left, leaving Kirk and
McCoy alone. The admiral groaned quietly. "I'd forgotten about that.
And I hate inspections."

McCoy raised an eyebrow. "Would you rather do paperwork?"

The Chief of Starfleet Operations grinned. "Hell, no.

Paperwork gives me a headache, Bones. Literally."

"Really? I'd better check your eyes, Jim."

James T. Kirk yawned. "Tomorrow, Bones. We've got lots of time for
that. Lots of time . . ."

The two old friends sat sipping their drinks and talking, while around
them, enclosing and protecting them, her gleaming hull shrouded in
rainbow shimmer and endless night, the Enterprise glided serenely toward
Earth, and home.