Home is the Hunter
by
L. A. Graf
This book 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.
The plot and background details of Home Is the Hunter are solely the
author's interpretation of the .universe of STAR TREK and vary in some
reec from the universe as created by Gene Roddenberry.
An Original Publication of POCKET BOOKS
POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster 1230 Avenue of the
Americas, New York, NY 10020
Copyright 1990 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
' STAR TREK is a Registered Trademark of Paramount Pictures.
This book is published by Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster,
under exclusive license from Paramount Pictures.
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or
portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New
York, NY 10020
ISBN 0-671-66662-2
First Pocket Books printing December 1990
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
POCKET and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster.
Printed in the U.S.A.
Historian's Note
This adventure takes place shortly after the events chronicled in Star
Trek The Motion Picture.
Chapter One
Sulu AWOKE in the middle of a battle.
He awoke, but didn't open his eyes at first. His mind told him, quite
logically, that he could not possibly be where he thought he was. I'm
not really in a battle. I'm not awake yet, I'm still dreaming.
A clang again, steel on steel, and the kind of shout that demanded
attention. Even if this were a dream, he had to see it. Opening his
eyes, he peered through the coarse grass and spat out a mouthful of
grit.
Yes, ahead there were about a dozen men, or at least there were a lot of
waving arms and swinging weapons.
I'm dreaming all right, Sulu thought, not daring to believe his eyes.
Whatever this dream was, it was a good one. "Ballet of death" was an
over used phrase, and yet it fit these samurai in the midst of pitched
battle.
Sulu leapt to his feet and discovered he was wearing laminar armor. So
much the better. He reached for his katana, with the assurance of a
dreamer that it would be there. It was. He ran, or rather waddied,
with the ungainly speed armored men had known for the history of
warfare, slashing, cutting, screaming at whatever moved. But he was
still too far from the center of the fighting to do much more than lop
off some branches of offending trees. He called out a challenge to the
nearest soldiers--and in the finest classical Japanese. Yes, this was a
super-fine dream.
When he woke up, he promised himself to really learn the language of his
forebears.
The exertion left him giddy, his thoughts moving like thick mud. He was
also sweating and breathless as he took stock of the fight. The adage
"fight smart" had been drilled into him too well for him to go tumbling
off like this, even in a fantasy battle, although he was beginning to
notice that this fantasy was pretty gritty.
The cold suspicion that this wasn't a dream flirted with his
consciousness, but he told himself that was impossible.
A small column of samurai still held the road some yards ahead. A
palanquin sat in the road, defended by four women slashing with
naginalas. Then the noble-woman stepped from behind the curtains, a
small sword in her hands, joining her personal maids in the final
assault. The soldiers were fast giving ground to the attackers, who
seemed more like a mob of brigands than anything else.
Sulu shook his head. This couldn't be real. It had to be a dream.
Besides, a lady was in trouble, he concluded.
Sulu belted out his best kei and ran hell-bent at the attackers, his
sword slashing across a man's chest. The man cried out as he went down,
and the warmth of the splattered blood stopped Sulu.
And a warning screamed in Sulu's mind It's no dream/You just cut down a
human being as if he were kindling/
Sulu stepped back, reality versus fantasy smashing against his brain. It
was real. It couldn't be real. He had been... where? Not here.
Fleeting recollections of the Enterprise, and then there had been a
flash...
There was an empty space in his mind that he could almost feel, as if it
were a physical block.
He was alerted by the furious screams of the others attacking him. The
first man was still writhing on the ground. Sulu took a defensive
stance and knew he was in trouble. He couldn't kill. He wouldn't...
except they were clearly not hampered by such constrictions.
The movements came to him as if he'd always known them, and yet he
overrode the compulsion to take men's lives. Instead every blow was
carefully aimed at an extremity--to disable rather than kill.
He slashed to his right, cutting down a man who was blindsiding him,
while blocking a blow from the left with his sia, or scabbard. With a
fluid motion he supported the back of the razor-sharp blade of his
sword, blocking a blow from the front, then stabbed another man behind
him as he spun the sword around to dispatch still another who raced at
him. The blood sprayed from the blade in a haze of red. Too deep, he'd
cut too deep. My God, my God...
He blocked the downward slash of a naginata wielded by one of the
brigands, sliding down its long wooden haft and disengaging to cut the
legs out from his next opponent. It took on an unreal slow motion, each
cut and parry by the numbers, a mindless and deadly dance. Very soon he
stood alone, the pile of moaning bodies surrounding him.
He found his voice and cried out, "What's happening?
What am I doing here? Who are you? Tell me!
Now!"
And then, as if on cue, each of his opponents suddenly trembled and
died. Just like that.
He spun in place, confused, not understanding.
Then he saw their faces, framed in a rictus of death, and he understood.
Poison. Possibly concealed under their tongues, or secreted on their
person. Death was an acceptable, even preferred, substitute for
capture.
His mind struggled to comprehend.
Shaking, he turned back to the palanquin, his head bowed in pain and
shock. Sulu forced himself to look 'up. One man stood protecting the
lady, surrounded by his own share of defeated enemy. Two of her maids
were still alive, and perhaps a half dozen of the soldiers from the
column.
Sulu bowed to the man--although it was his body, not his mind, that
seemed to be in charge.
The man barked out, "Who are you?"
"Suru," he said, and frowned. He wondered why'he 'couldn't pronounce
his name correctly, but of course in Japanese there is no "letter l,"
and he was speaking Japanese. "Heihachiro, my lord," he replied,
smiling to himself as he gave the name of "Starfleet's Commanding
Admiral," Heihachiro Nogura.
A voice like the tinkling of bells said to him, "I am the Lady Oneko.
You have served me well." The woman stood, both fragile as a reed and
strong as a sword blade, almost disdainfully ignoring the blood that
clung to her silken outer robe. Sulu caught his breath at her beauty.
She was an ancient painting come to life, all the more glorious for the
exotic, almost jarring perfection of her white-powdered face and red
lips.
He noted that she was only a gift, a child-woman probably not yet out of
her teens. Her ivory face and almond eyes were framed in demure beauty
by a cascade of black hair, artfully draped over her shoulders, where it
flowed back to be caught up in a ribbon. She wore an outer silk kimono
of peach lined with blood red, and the layers of her other robes peeked
out at her throat like a field of brilliantly colored wildflowers. She
was carefully wrapping the now sheathed small sword in a bag of silk
brocade. When she was done, she tucked it, cocooned in its innocence,
back into the belt of her robes.
She looked up, barely brushing his eyes with hers.
Sulu felt as if he had been hit in the gut with a phaser stun. The
feeling was not rational, or logical, but it was there. She returned to
her palanquin.
A tall gray-haired man, handsome by any standard, strode to his side. "I
am Watanenabe Sadayo. 'Suru,' eh? 'The one who tries." But I think
that the word 'suru' is also a pickpocket. Hmm," he said, scanning Sulu
up and down. "You will return to the castle with me. The lord will
wish to reward you. Take a horse from these brigands and follow me."
Sulu stood there, trying to digest what was happening. Should he just
stay where he was? And do what? Wait for more brigands to show up?
Perhaps he wouldn't be as lucky the next time.
"Why are you standing there?" came the no-nonsense demand. "Is there
something wrong with the offered hospitality and reward of my lord?"
Sulu realized that if he inadvertently challenged someone's honor, there
was going to be swordplay... and someone would die.
Which--if this was a dream--was immaterial.
But it wasn't. God help him, he was becoming more and more convinced of
that.
Sulu bowed quickly. "Of course not. Your hospitality is most
gracious."
"Then let us go quickly to the castle before we're accosted again," said
Sadayo
"What castle? Who is the lord?" Sulu asked, trying to shake the image
of the woman which was still burned into his mind's eye.
"Fushimi Castle. Torii Mototada-domo," the leader said, swinging up to
the saddle.
Wow, Sulu thought, Torii Motoraria. Sulu had some favorites among the
great samurai of history. His mother had quieted his restless childhood
spirit with the stories of Benkei and Yoshitsune, and the fortunes ,of
the House of Minamoto. As a teenager he had discovered the intricate
military politics of Hideyoshi and Tokugawa. And bushi, the w arrior
code of the samurai.
He rode on for hours, his thighs cramping from the unfamiliar activity.
Nevertheless, he rode tall and proud as they traveled along the great
Tokaido Road to meet with people from history that had died centuries
ago.
What in hell am I doing here? he thought.
Chapter Two
Centuries Later...
KIRK HAD LOST MEN BEFORE, heaven knew. Losing men was nothing new for
him. He'd lost men, women, and children. He'd seen planets struck down
by invaders or forces of feast or famine. He'd seen worlds destroyed,
suns collapsing on themselves, and starships swallowed by monstrosities
huge beyond comprehension.
Death and destruction, so much death. Enough to overshadow all the good
that he had done, and hopefully, would continue to do. But no matter
how much he faced death, he would never acknowledge that death was a
better man than he. Even though death would win, and continue to win,
and--sooner or later--triumph over James T. Kirk. It was a matter of
honor. Or perhaps just bull-headed stubbornness--as Dr. McCoy had said
more than once.
He placed a hand on the unmoving, lifeless body of Lieutenant Garrovick,
which lay in a small room adjacent to sickbay. Kirk winced at the ugly
wounds studding the lieutenant's face and upper torso. His clothes were
torn, and even though his face was lifeless, his final expression was
one of chagrin and pain.
Damn, but losing a crewman was hard, even after all this time.
Especially a crewman with whom he had a history, such as Garrovick,
whose father had once been Kirk's commanding officer--another man Kirk
had watched die.
".Bastards," he murmured. "Klingon bastards."
There was a soft footfall next to him, but Kirk didn't turn. He didn't
need to.
"Never gets easier, does it, Jim?" the doctor asked.
Kirk let out a slow sigh. "The day it gets easier is the day I go
behind a desk for good, Bones."
McCoy raised a bemused eyebrow. "Why? You think you can then calmly
and coldly give orders that send other people to their potential deaths?
Not you, Jim. You always feel that you can't order someone to do
something that you wouldn't do yourself. That's why you always lead
landing parties."
Kirk looked down at Garrovick once more. "Out of some misguided feeling
of honor?"
"No. You lead landing parties because you're a damned fool who thinks
he's going to live forever."
"Oh." Kirk's lips thinned. "Thank you for clarifying that."
"No problem. Jim, total faith in one's own immortality--that's the
province of the young."
Kirk shook his head and eyed the dead man. "A lot of good it did
Garrovick."
He turned and left sickbay. McCoy hesitated a moment, trying to decide
whether his captain was in a mood to talk or to be left alone. McCoy
was still unclear about the details of what in the world had gone wrong
on the surface of Cragon V, which spun gracefully, and deceptively,
peacefully below them. He knew that five men had gone down, and now four
men had come back... except now three of the four who had returned had
vanished to somewhere in the past.
He decided that remaining in ignorance wasn't going to do him a damned
bit of good... perhaps about as much good as it was going to do Kirk,
who was eating himself up over all of this.
McCoy knew that a short distance away sat a Klingon battle cruiser,
staring at the Enterprise, as helpless and as frustrated as the
Enterprise herself.
And sitting in sickbay staring at the walls wasn't going to help. McCoy
walked out, stopping only to pick up a flask of Romulan ale.
He entered Kirk's quarters and stopped dead still as Kirk aimed a phaser
at him. He sputtered a moment and then got out, "Good lord, Jim... have
my bills been that high?"
Kirk did not so much as crack a smile. Instead he aimed the phaser just
to McCoy's left and squeezed the trigger.
Nothing happened. Not so much as a faint whine of energy.
"Out of power?" asked McCoy, trying to appear nonplussed.
"Out of frustration," replied Kirk. He tossed the phaser onto a nearby
couch. "They're all like that. Every phaser on the damned ship. And
our ship's phaser banks, and the photon torpedoes. All thanks to that
blasted Weyland. I've got a man lying dead in sickbay, the individual
responsible sitting contentedly in his ship kilometers away... and I
can't do anything except..."
"Drink?" offered McCoy.
He kept the label of the Romulan ale away from Kirk so that he wouldn't
have to tolerate the captain's half-hearted protests. He poured Kirk a
swig, which the captain promptly tossed back. It hit his system the way
Romulan ale always did, and he gagged slightly. Kirk, graciously, didn't
say anything.
"So what happened?" asked McCoy.
Kirk made a slight, dismissive wave. "You don't want to know."
"No, of course not," said McCoy reasonably. "I just came here to watch
you act cranky and frustrated." The doctor's expression turned serious.
"Besides, Jim, you think you're the only one with responsibilities? You
lost a man. Well, I lost a patient. This situation is as much my
business as it is yours."
Kirk regarded McCoy a moment, fingers steepled. "For someone who had to
be practically dragged, kicking and screaming, back into Starfleet, it's
good to know you haven't lost your ability to annoy your commanding
officer."
"It's a knack."
Kirk nodded. Then he leaned forward and said, "All right. Here's what
happened..."
In many ways, Cragon V reminded Kirk of Organia. A world where the
people were hardworking and simple. The technology was, by Earth
standards, blindingly primitive. Also, like Organia, Cragon V was of
interest both to the Federation and the Klingons. Rather than having
strategic importance like Organia, Cragon had an abundance of minerals
that were of value both to the Federation and the Empire.
There were several other significant differences. First and foremost
Organians were not what they appeared to be. But the people of Cragon
were exactly what they appeared to be simple and easily influenced.
In the case of Organia, as well as other planets subsequently contested
under the Organian Peace Treaty, the Klingons and the Federation had
shown up at roughly the same time. Not so with Cragon, unfortunately.
In this case, the Federation had been caught flatfooted. Previous
mining surveys had been improperly carried out, and the Klingons were
sharp enough to slip into the gap and show up on the planet several
months before the Federation caught wind of it.
Kirk disliked many things, and high on that list was the idea of being
one step behind the Klingons on anything of importance--especially when
the lives of an innocent people were at stake.
Kirk stopped momentarily as the landing party drew up short to wait for
him. He took a deep breath, the fresh air of Cragon tingling in his
lungs. As much as he loved the Enterprise, and as carefully as the air
inside the starship was treated to simulate a real environment, it still
was not the same as standing on a genuine planet, breathing in fresh
air.
Chekov stepped up to his silent captain, concerned. As security chief,
it was his job to be concerned. "Is there a problem, Keptin?" he asked.
"No. No problem."
Lieutenant Garrovick smiled. "The captain has his own way of doing
things, and tends to set his own schedule."
Kirk glanced slyly at the lieutenant. Most subordinate officers tended
to walk on eggshells with Kirk, but not Garrovick, who had served with
Kirk before. In fact, Garrovick had seen Kirk when the captain was
probably at his lowest point emotionally, dealing with his guilt over
his failure to respond to a threat, a bloodsucking cloud. It had been
with the help of then-ensign Garrovick that Kirk had been able to
finally destroy the creature.
Garrovick had received Kirk's highest recommendations and had been
briskly promoted. Now, when Kirk's return to the Enterprise had been
announced, Garrovick had requested transfer to the starship that had
been his first deep-space assignment. Kirk had cheerfully welcomed him
aboard, and Garrovick had been made Chekov's right-hand man.
In that position, Garrovick qualified as a member of the landing party
for the Cragon expedition. Montgomery Scott had been selected for his
engineering expertise and his ability to assess firsthand the
technological state of Cragon--and, most importantly, whether the
Klingons had seriously affected the status quo of the planet. Sulu was
there too, since he had once been assignedwearly in his careertto a
three-month observation of a planet remarkably similar to Cragon. Chekov
and Garrovick were there to provide security support. Kirk would have
liked to bring a platoon, but attention to the Prime Directive meant
trying not to come stomping through people's backyards with a veritable
army. It would give the wrong impression of the Federation, since that
type of force was not what the Federation was all about.
A pity, Kirk had thought glumly, that the Klingons felt no similar
constraint.
"Quite right, Mr. Garrovick," the captain said briskly. "A schedule
that we have to keep. Let's press on, gentlemen."
"The castle is just ahead, Keptin," Chekov informed him, stepping
carefully through the underbrush.
"Good," said Kirk, carefully picking a bramble from his uniform.
Scotty was muttering under his breath. "What the devil is the good of
transporter technology if it drops us off in the middle of nowhere?"
Kirk didn't bother to answer. Scotty knew the answer perfectly
welltwith less developed societies, the Federation felt it was best not
to openly display advanced technology.
The castle was indeed ahead, perched high atop a steep hill. Scotty's
breathing was labored and he thumped his stomach. "Glory, I'm out of
shape. Only one thing for it."
"Exercise?" suggested Sulu. "You could take up running, or perhaps
fencing..."
"Exercise, Mr. Sulu?" Scotty looked at him with exaggerated disdain.
"I'm talking shore leave. Some time away."
"This from the man who used to turn down shore leave so he could read
technical journals," Kirk said, brushing leaves out of his hair. He
stopped to kick mud off his boots against a tree.
"I know how he feels," said Sulu. "I could use some heavy duty R and R
myself."
"Maybe a week on a pleasure planet?" Chekov asked wistfully. "No, home.
I really want to go home for a while."
"San Francisco?" Scotty asked.
"No, I mean a real home. Japan, the way it was a few hundred years
ago." Sulu's eyes glistened. "Yes, someplace where a man could really
believe in living and dying for his king and country. Sometimes I
almost envy the Romulans, and the Klingons, too. Their life is simple."
Scotty was about to chide Sulu for his rather militaristic outlook at
life. But then he thought of the claymore that hung on the wall of his
cabin. As much as he pooh-poohed Sulu for his fencing and romantic
pretensions, Scott's heart swelled with pride at the long tradition of
the Scots soldiers, a simple world of right and wrong.
"Yes," Chekov said thoughtfully, "a week in my homeland, sitting in a
dacha with a glass of vodka, and a .pretty girl, and the sound of
balalaika music..." But what he saw in his mind was the last Pan-Soviet
May Day Parade he had attended. And the strains of his national anthem
hummed in his mind. How much his nation had endured, and how lroud he
was.
If they were lesser officers, Kirk would have re minded them that they
should be on their toes. But he knew that their easy familiarity and
chat was not distracting one iota from their attention to their duty and
to their surroundings. Nevertheless, as they climbed up the steep hill
that led to the castle where the ruler of Cragon was ostensibly in
residence, Kirk felt constrained to say something.
"Careful, gentlemen," he said with humor. "You should always be wary of
what you wish for. You may get it."
Chapter Three
Scotland, 1746 Scott woke up with a galactic headache, and a peculiar
chill to his hindquarters. He reached down and felt a bare hairy leg.
That woke him, and he sat up, the contents of his brain pan lurching
around like thick coolant.
"Ach," he groaned, covering his eyes protectively with one hand, his
other propping him up on the very muddy ground. The chill wind was
making his sinuses ache, and the light was bright enough to make his
eyes throb. The thing that was supposed to be his brain was trying to
figure out why the deck of a starship was wet, bumpy, and gritty, but
two thoughts were one and a half too many in his current state, and he
got back to the mystery of the hairy leg.
He opened one eye tentatively and looked around, the apparent cloud
cover doing little to mitigate the glare of a planetary sun.
"What in heaven's name!" the engineer muttered, trying to take in the
scene and analyze his position. He reached for his communicator, but
found himself groping the fabric of a coarse shirt. Well, at least I'm
not stark naked.
Exploring further, he reached a mass of even coarser wool gathered
around his middle.
"Well, I'll be damned," he muttered, struggling to his feet, making a
jaw-clenching, tooth-gritting effort to ignore the waves of coolant
sloshing in his head. The folds of the gray and muddy-brown garment fell
down to his knees, .at least relieving the chill from the most tender
part of his lower half. It was, no doubt, a great kilt, the old and
traditional version of the neat, pleated small kilt that Scott had
affected as part of his dress uniform. What he had draped over him now
was little more than a blanket held in place by a heavy leather belt and
a leather thong that tied the long loose end up around his shoulders.
All in all, it was a primitive arrangement of haberdashery, at best.
Now... what the hell was he doing wearing it? He searched his memory,
his beautiful memory that enabled him to recall, at any given moment,
any bit of detail he needed to maintain and repair the most complex
vehicle in the galaxy. It was very disconcerting to find a hole in that
selfsame memory.
He racked his brains. There had been a planet... and then a failed
mission, and a fight... and they'd returned to the ship... But how did
he get here?
He knocked on the side of his head as if to wake up memories that were
sleeping in there. Nothing stirred.
He looked around with a deliberateness meant to calm the rising panic.
He was about a hundred yards from a primitive two-story buildingwan inn,
from the look of it. The creak of the sign about the door drew Scott's
attention. A crude painting adorned the rough board, of a woman in a
mob cap, bodice, and long petticoats, hanging from a gallows. In case
the message wasn't clear, the words The Hanged Woman were crudely
lettered below.
"Now there's a cheery thought," Scotty muttered, suppressing a chill
that rippled up his spine, one not due to the cold. A wind with a hint
of snow was blowing, sending the folds of the kilt flapping around his
loins, the loose end snapping like a flag. He was alone without
communications, on a planet heaven only knew where. "Oh, Montgomery,"
Scott said aloud, trying to hold on to his voice as a stanchion of
reality, "this has got to be a dream." But his eyes were open, and he
knew he was not going to wake up on the bridge of the Enterprise.
He walked, or rather wobbled, up the road to the door of The Hanged
Woman, but his legs gave out just short of his goal and he collapsed
again onto the road, his face splashing into a rain-filled pothole. He
dragged himself forward enough to keep from drowning. Part of his brain
was telling him that he had better move before he started to shake from
shock and hypothermia, while the other part was telling him it didn't
really care.
The upstairs window creaked open. Scott ignored it until the chill,
smelly splash of a bucket of slops hit him squarely in the back. That
finally did it. Pain or no pain, he was on his feet and scrabbling for
cover against any further assault to his health and dignity.
"Argh," he growled. It could have been worse, he conjectured, as he
examined the offal that tumbled off him and identified the bits as
dinner scraps and scrub water, not the contents of a chamber pot.
"Hey, you! Move on!" Scott looked up to see a chunky woman with
weather-raw red cheeks leaning out over the window ledge. She still
held the basin in her massive muscular arms, which stuck out from
rolled-up sleeves, testifying to a life of hard work.
"Who are you?" Scott shouted back, his burr becoming thicker by the
moment. "What am I doing here?!"
"Screaming like a fool idiot," she shouted back. "I'11 not have the
likes ofye here. Be off or I'll fetch the master and he'll have a lead
ball whizzing through your thick head in no time."
Scotty drew a breath to argue the point, but it seemed useless, and,
even though the sun was getting higherBwhieh meant he had a full day
ahead of himBit was also getting colder. The sooner he got under way,
the sooner he could find shelter before he froze. The problem of where
he was, and why, would have to wait.
It was snowing hard before he was even out of sight of the inn. The
engineer's feet, which were bare, were swelling and roughly the color of
beets, except he couldn't even feel them for the numbing cold. And the
wet wool that he wore was doing more harm than good in keeping the
bitter wind from his body. It was The Hanged Woman, or death from
exposure.
He chugged back up the road, his breath vaporizing before him in little
dense puffs, his feet dragging painfully, leaving a long wavy track in
the new-fallen snow.
There was a stable across the yard from the main house, and a screen of
bushes, probably some ornamental hedgerow, which gave the grim inn some
summer beauty as it marched untidily up to the stable wall. Using the
cover, he slipped in unseen.
And not a moment too soon. Through a crack in the rough stable wall,
Scotty watched a slender boy in his mid-teens come out of the rear door
of the inn carrying a pair of empty wooden buckets. Scott half prayed,
"Please don't come here. Please. Go away."
The boy went to the well in the middle of the yard and dropped the
bucket with a splash, then turned the crank to bring the water up with a
noisy creak. He did this until the two pails were full, and then, his
chore done, returned to the house. Scotty let out his breath. The warm
manure smell of the barn swept over him with a kind of nostalgic
friendliness which belied the fact that he had spent most of his adult
years in a relatively sterile and scentless starship. A horse neighed
in the nearest stall, stomping with impatience, hoping perhaps for a run
on spring grass which was not yet grown.
A rickety ladder led up to the hay loft, but negotiating the ladder was
more than Mr. Scott had counted on with aching freezing toes, and it
was two stumbling false starts until the sheer fear of being caught gave
him the energy to make his way painfully up and into the loft. It was
deserted except for a small pigeon coop.
He crawled to the far wall, buried himself in a soft pile of straw, and
fell asleep to the gentle cooing of the birds.
It was dark but for the beams of moonlight, silver and cold stripes in
the darkness, when Scott moaned awake, trying to remember something very
important. What was it, now? The headache was back. Oh, yes, he
thought, with a clammy shudder. He was somewhere ... somewhere a lot
like northern England or the Scots Lowlands, but as they were a long
time ago.
He thought back to his ship, but there st ill was no clue to what had
brought him to this place.
Scotty crawled across the loft to the ladder. He was stiff and achy
from the cramped lumpy bed of old grass. His lips were parched and his
mouth dry. The horse was gone from the stall below. The barn was still
and empty. He slipped down the ladder, trying to be quiet, wincing when
he missed the last step and clattered to the ground. He winced even
more when he pushed the door open with a loud creak.
The well was too noisy to draw water, but luckily one of the buckets was
still outside, covered only by a thin crust of ice. Food was next.
Scotty tried the kitchen door, but it was bolted shut. The noise woke
up the dog again. He was about to give up and make do when he noticed
that the window was unlatched. Scotty's stomach growled loudly enough to
wake the dead; or the dog, at least. He decided he would risk it.
Scott found the door to the pantry by following his nose, which led him
to the overwhelming scent of hams and sausage which hung tantalizingly
overhead and out of reach, along with sweet braids of onions. A soft
footfall behind him suddenly alerted him. Scotty turned just in time to
see the barrel end of a rifle swing toward him, and then it smashed into
the side of his head.
He staggered back, his head spinning, and reached for his phaser, which
of course wasn't there.
There was a roar in the darkness, a loud curse, and then another shout
from a boy. Maybe the boy from before, he thought.
Then Scott was struck in the head again, a wave of nausea overwhelming
him. He wretched and staggered forward. He felt blood trickling down
his face, and his hands were suddenly closing on the front of somebody's
clothes.
"Let go of me!" shouted Scott's attacker, and the engineer shoved him as
hard as he could. Scotty heard a crashing of furniture and then
staggered for the window.
Everything was spinning around, and he lurched drunkenly and smashed his
poor head a third time against the edge of the window. He fell forward
and out, landing face first in the dirt, his headache nearly
overwhelming him.
He staggered back to the barn and pulled the door shut behind him. A
boy's voice cried out, "I saw him! Plain as day! Tall fellow he was,
with red hair and a beard! Ran down the road!"
Scotty was utterly confused and utterly sick. He couldn't put two words
together in his head, and it was nothing short of a miracle that he
managed to climb into the loft to hide. And there, consciousness fled.
Chapter Four
Centuries later...
IN Olrr nROUD Cgnc, oN--a planet which, in future years, would be
uttered as a curse by Klingons, along with the name of Organia and the
home planet of tribbles--the bridge and instruments of the Klingon
battle cruiser were under attack.
The attacker was Commander Kral. He was entitled, since after all it
was his ship.
Relatively young for a Klingon commander, his age did not deter Kral
from venting a rage worthy of the most experienced. At that moment he
was smashing both of his massive, armored fists into the weapons
console. "Useless!" he howled. "All the weaponry at my fingertips,
rendered useless by that thrice damned Weyland! May he die with
festering boils!"
Behind Kral, First Officer Kbrex stood with impassive calm, his hands
draped behind his back. "Festering boils, Commander," he intoned.
"May the Bloating Sickness force his entrails oozing from every bodily
orifice!"
"Every orifice, as you say, Commander."
His tone was silky, deferential, and entirely too... what? Kral glanced
at his first officer with suspicion and then suddenly turned on him and
snapped, "What could I have done to avoid this calamity, eh, Kbrex? What
step should I have taken? What plans should I have made?"
Kbrex never blinked. His face was absolutely unreadable. "No Klingon is
psychic, Commander," he said quietly. "In some situations, there is
simply no one to blame."
Kral considered that a moment, then nodded brusquely and left the
bridge, leaving the smoldering ruins of the weapons console in his wake.
Kbrex watched him go, then turned to the chief engineer. When he spoke
now, the carefully controlled deference was no longer in evidence.
Instead there was a sharp cunning and a modulated energy. "Get to work
repairing that immediately," he said. "You never know when we may need
it."
Kirk stared at the empty glass in his hand. He had been relating the
events on Cragon to McCoy, but now his voice had trailed off as he
remembered his eerily prophetic words to his men.
"Be careful what you wish for," Kirk said, shaking his head. "You may
get it. Lord, Bones... if I'd only known."
"Was there any way you could have, Jim? Was there any warning?"
Kirk tried to come up with something.
"I don't know, Bones. I just... don't know. Perhaps I should have
known when I met Weyland. But there was no way..." He looked to McCoy
for an answer the doctor could not provide. "Was there?"
Garrovick, who had taken point, suddenly put up a hand. "Hold it," he
said, and pointed just ahead of them. "There. You see it?"
At first Kirk didn't, but then he did see it, hidden by a trick of the
light. A trip wire, rigged just ahead them.
'
"Anyone care to take a guess as to what that's!
connected to?" asked Kirk dryly.
"Some nasty little piece of work," Scotty commented.
"And I think we can surmise the folks who set it.
Look there." Kirk pointed to a tree that was next to'
the wire. Carved into it, unobtrusively, was an unmistakable letter of
the Klingon alphabet. "They've been through here, all right. Watch the
trees for more warning symbols, gentlemen. If they have left them
selves guides, we can make use of them, too."
Chekov glanced around, feeling as if every shadow
was now hiding a potential enemy. "Why did they set!
it, Keptin?"
"One or both of two reasons." Kirk ticked them off on his hand. "First,
they may have wanted to demonstrate to the inhabitants of Cragon V how
one goes l about setting lethal booby traps for an enemy--whichi implies
that the Klingons have been stirring up civil unrest while they were
here. The second is that the'
Klingons anticipated unwanted visitors of their own."
"Namely us," said Garrovick.
all of his weapons were Klingon issue. It did not look promising.
"We wish to see your leader," said Kirk. "We are from far away, and we
understand that he resides here."
"We do not have a leader," replied the soldier. "We have a god."
"A god? said Kirk slowly.
Scotty closed his eyes for a moment and sighed. Lord, please let it not
be a supercomputer.
"Yes," the soldier reaffirmed. "The immortal Weyland."
"I see. And is the immortal Weyland, uhm... available?"
Slowly the guard nodded. "He had been absent for a time... shortly
before the coming of the Klingons."
Kirk tensed at the word. Though the pronunciation was rough, the
meaning was clear.
The guard continued, "But he has returned of late, and is in great rage
regarding the advent of the Klingons..."
"As well he should be," said Kirk briskly. "... as well as the coming
of the Federation." Kirk paused a moment, and the other members of
"Namely us," agreed Kirk. "Eyes all around, gentle-! the landing party
looked at him. "We... just got men. I'd prefer that we all get back
in one piece. I have'. here. How did immortal Weyland know of our
pres-a standing bet with Admiral Nogura that leading' ence?"
landing parties is going to get me killed someday, and I'd hate to have
to pay him off."
The Enterprise crew stepped gingerly over the deadly trip wire and
proceeded. Some minutes later, and without further incident, they were
in view of the!'
"Immortal Weyland knows everything," replied the guard.
"I... see."
"You do not believe."
"I'm willing to be convinced," said Kirk smoothly.
castle.
Garrovick knocked on the main door after Chekov indicated that he should
take the point. The door opened a fraction and a massive guard filled
it. The men of the Enterprise immediately noticed that sever 24
"You will be." He stepped back and the door opened wide.
The Federation party was led in through a cobblestone courtyard. There
were people everywhere, in other, eyeing the strangers from a safe
distance.
Chekov smiled at a little girl, who was peeking around her mother's
apron, her chubby little fists digging tightly onto the woman's stiffly
embroidered skirts. The hard glare of a man with a grizzled beard and a
large smithy's hammer melted Chekov's attempt at good humor.
Sulu fell into the easy cadence of the guard. He eyed the men with
unsuppressed envy. Those were real warriors! Like the samurai of his
ancient heritage. And not growling, vicious animals like the Klingons,
but just proud men who served their people bravely. He squared his
shoulders a fraction and straightened his back a bit as he strode into
the unknown.
They were led into a fair-sized building, a dingy keep with
algae-glistening walls. Dim, weak shafts of light filtered down from
the high narrow windows. Torches were stuck in holes in the masonry,
their smoke-blackened trails snaking up the walls toward the drafty
window slits. Scott noted the simple engineering solution, although he
was less than impressed by what he had seen so far.
They were led outdoors again, this time to an inner courtyard. The
sound of metal ringing on metal ceased as they marched out into the
square. A small group of young soldiers armed with heavy, short wooden
swords and round wooden shields rimmed with iron bands had stopped their
practice to gawk at the strangers. An old toothless soldier with one
eye gave the newcomers a practiced once-over and then shouted at his
charges to resume the drill.
In the center of the inner court was the round tower of the inner keep.
The doors were a full ten feet tall, and made of bronze. The surface of
the great bronze doors was covered with intricate scenes of warfare and
pageantry. It took four men to swing them open. Kirk blinked a few
times to accustom his eyes to the dim interior light. He could hardly
hold his usual poker face as the room came into view. It was primitive,
all right, but as beautiful as a great ancient cathedral. The audience
chamber, which comprised the entire ground floor of the central keep,
was huge, topped with a high-beamed ceiling. And what beams! Wood from
some huge native tree, not rough-hewn, but polished and carved in an
intricate interlace of dream beasts which were painted in wildly garish
colors.
A ring of men armed with spears parted, revealing a man whose flowing
white beard seemed out of place on his almost youthful face. His
massive jeweled ;!own had the soft glow of pure gold. Kirk's gaze was
riveted on the artistry or display, but by the king's piercing blue
eyes. He squinted to break the bond of that blinding stare.
"I am Weyland, and I rule here."
Kirk did not doubt it. Scotty bowed formally, using the kind reserved
for the ceremonial king who still sat a British throne on Earth. Sulu
bowed also, just a little short of how he imagined one would honor the
similarly democratic Emperor of Japan. Even Chekov dropped his head in
courtesy. Kirk and Garrovick remained as they were.
"Sir," Kirk began, "we are here to offer you the aid .of the United
Federation of Planets."
"I do not want you here. Why do you invade my home?"
"Sir, we did not invade," Kirk protested. "The Klingons, the other
strangers, are very dangerous people. They have enslaved many people
like yours, and we are here to offer you aid in protecting yourself..."
"I do not require your help."
"Please, sir, if I could merely explain the magnitude of the danger,"
Kirk said.
"I do not require your help," the "god" repeated. "You may leave."
"But, sir, you dunna understandt" Scott protested.
Weyland waved him to silence, an amused smile on his Yps. "I imagine
that all of this is my fault." Weyland actually seemed regretful. "My
presence was required elsewhere, and so I had to leave my people for a
time. It was an ill fortune that brought you and the Klingons to my
planet during my absence. But make no mistake..."
"Captain Kirk," Kirk quickly prompted.
"Yes, Captain Kirk. Make no mistake that this planet is mine. The
people are mine. And now that you are heretyou, too, are mine."
Kirk raised a bemused eyebrow at that. "Really."
"Yes. You see differences between yourselves and your opponents. I,
however, do not. However," and he sat back expansively, "I am a
reasonable god. The Klingons will doubtless be showing up shortly. They
can have their futile effort to convince me or threaten me, and you may
join them. Then, Captain, you will be cordially invited once more to
depart, where you may blast each other to hell and back for all that it
matters to me. But I will tolerate no further interference with my
people... and be warned--if any hardship or injury should be inflicted
on any of my subjects, from the greatest of them to the most humble,
then you shall pay dearly for it." He settled back in his throne. "You
shall all pay dearly,"
"You have my word of honor that we'll protect your people, sir," said
Kirk.
"Right there, Bones," said Kirk, staring down at the Romulan ale in his
glass. "When Weyland said that to me, I should have sensed that Weyland
was more than he appeared to be. But I was confident in my precious
superiority, and now my men have paid the price for it."
"There was no way you could have known, Jim." McCoy tried to sound
soothing.
"I could have remembered from past mistakes. I was fooled by the
Organians. Scotty has a favorite saying 'Fool me once, shame on you.
Fool me twice, shame on me." Shame on me, Bones. Shame on me for
sitting here, trying to figure out what I should have done, instead of
what I should be doing."
"There's nothing we can do right now, Jim. We've explored all our
options."
"Then we'll explore some new ones." He punched the intercom. "Kirk to
bridge."
iBridge, Spock here."
Mr. Spock, conference room. We're going to try and figure a way out of
this mess.
Kirk looked up at McCoy. Fool me twice," he said softly. "Bones... you
think Scotty is all right? Scotty, and Sulu, and Chekov?"
"I think, Jim, as insane as it may sound--that's already been decided,
don't you think?"
Kirk nodded slowly. "Good point, Doctor. Good point."
Chapter Five
Somewhere in Russia...
WI CHEKOV AWOKE, it was to the sound of someone speaking in angry
German. Then he heard someone else reply in German... except there was
a faint tinge of a Russian accent.
He rolled over onto his back to see a charcoal-gray sky. There was dirt
beneath him, rather than the solidity of the Enterprise.
Chekov sat up slowly as the angry voices from nearby became louder. He
was only partially paying attention to them. His main mental exercise,
at the moment, was trying to pull together his fractured memory.
He was... what? He had been on the planet Cragon. That much he
remembered. With Kirk and Sulu and Scotty and Garrovick. And there had
been --he rubbed his forehead--some sort of problem. Images flashed
through his mind. Klingons and a blast of heat and light, and some sort
of being seated on a throne. Then they'd returned to the Enterprise...
Dead. Someone was dead. Two someones were dead. Was he one of them?
he wondered. He didn't think so...
Something had confronted them, and he- "Pathetic!"
It was the pure German voice that was sa/ing it. Chekov looked down at
himself. His crisp Starfleet uniform was gone. Small loss.
hated the gray anyway.
But it had been replaced by...
stared at his body as if it belonged to someone else. It was some sort
of stiff uniform. It was...
"German?" said Chekov to himself in utter mystification. "I'm a German?"
But even as he spoke, his voice was still in the unmistakable Russian
accent that had led to such easily-jibed words as "Keptin."
He was a Russian. In a German uniform--the type worn during World War
II.
"Impossible," he muttered.
Slowly he staggered to his feet, and realized that he was cradling a
helmet in his hands. Reflexively he put it on his head. Across his lap
was a rifle of some sort. He examined it as if staring at an alien
artifact.
He heard a whinnying sound nearby and looked off to his right. His eyes
widened. He couldn't remember the last time he'd seen so much as a
single horse, yet now here was a large number of them inside of some
sort of pen--what was it called--a corral.
He glanced down at his arm. There was a swastika on it.
"You! Soldier!"
He felt himself going ashen as he turned slowly. Not too far away from
him there were three more men dressed in the same uniform he wore... but
two of them were being held at gunpoint by the third. The one holding
the gun said again, "Come here, soldier!" in the pure-sounding German
that identified him as the more belligerent of the speakers Chekov had
heard before.
Nazis. He was within spitting distance--appropriately-of Nazis.
And there, on the horizon line, was a war-torn city that Chekov had seen
in much happier days. It was Stalingrad. He was in World War II
Stalingrad.
"Are you deaf?." demanded the German soldier, his gaze never wavering
from the two men who were apparently now prisoners, though they both
wore German uniforms as well.
Chekov's feet were moving even though he was sure he had forgotten to
tell them to do so. He trotted over to the soldier and nodded briskly.
"Go to the commander," the soldier said sharply. "Inform him that I have
captured two Russians in a pathetic attempt to sneak onto the base by
passing themselves off as Germans."
Chekov's mouth moved but nothing came out.
He knew it wasn't a dream, because he knew for a fact he dreamt in black
and white. Back in his academy days--forward in his academy days?--he'd
participated in a dream research project and had actually seen his own
dream images. He'd done it to be near this gorgeous young technician on
search team. She'd had a figure that was- "Are you daydreaming now?!"
said apparently on the verge of apoplexy.
Well, yes, he was. His mind was wandering because it was still having
trouble coping with his situation, and somehow anything seemed better
than dwelling on the inherent insanity of where and when he was.
As if addressing an idiot, the German said, "Get .. the... commander."
Chekov looked into the eyes of the two Russians, whose hands were now in
back of their heads, fingers interlaced. They were staring at him with
smoldering intensity and a look of hopelessness that shook Chekov from
his confusion. He still didn't understand, but that wasn't going to
stop him from taking appropriate action.
The German soldier was now eyeing him with suspicion. Chekov saw that,
ever so subtly, the soldier was ready to swing his rifle around at the
slightest odd move on his part. Chekov dug into his memory to come up
with the appropriate gesture, and he snapped his heels together and
brought his hand up at an angle, palm down.
He turned briskly and walked in the direction of the corral.
"'The commander's office is the other way!" came the angry shout, and
then there was a rifle crack as a bullet winged just over Chekov's left
shoulder.
Chekov leaped forward and yanked open the door f the corral, discharging
his rifle just over the horses' heads.
The panicked animals whinnied and brayed, then charged forward.
Chekov rolled on his back to get out of the way as the horses pounded
past him.
The thought suddenly flashed through his mind that this might not be one
of his most brilliant ideas. Though he could not, of course, have simply
shot the German. First, there were Prime Directlye considerations.
Secondly, he was not a cold-blooded killer. So he had chosen, instead,
to do something that seemed --at the time--more neutral; namely, letting
the horses out and having the chips fall where they may.
The problem was, Chekov knew, he was still playing with fire. Sure,
shooting the soldier could screw up history--presuming he was really in
the past and not suffering from some sort of induced hallucination. But
having the soldier get trampled to death because of his actions was not
a much better solution.
Fortunately, he saw that the German soldier had out of the way and was
now running like mad, shouting in his native tongue for help. The two
Russians-as-Germans were on the other side of the pounding river of
horse flesh that had sprung up, Moseslike, to separate them from their
attacker.
Chekov ran toward the Russian soldiers, swinging his rifle around to get
it out of the way.
One of them turned, saw him coming, and brought his rifle up. Before
Chekov could react, the man fired.
The shot glanced off Chekov's helmet and he went down, his head ringing.
There was something definitely inappropriate about this welcome, he
thought, facedown in the dirt. His mind was scrambled and he heard
shouting and anger all around him. His thought process became muddled.
Still only barely coping with where he was, he stopped coping altogether
and decided that he was on vacation in Stalingrad, and this whole thing
was some sort of a living reenactment of a time from long ago in his
country's past.
He was hauled to his feet, and found himself looking into the smoldering
eyes of the German soldier.
Chkov smiled lopsideally. "The costumes are wery nice,''he said in
bedraggled English.
The German slugged him in the face, and Chekov, mercifully, slipped into
unconsciousness.
Chapter Six
COMMANDant KaAL SAT tn' immediately when he heard the knock at his door.
His fingers moved reflexively toward a weapon and then slowed, reasoning
that an assassin would not take the time to announce himself.
"What do you want?"
The door hissed open and in it stood Vladra, from down in the science
lab. She was regarding Kral with careful assessment, and he realized
that she herself was wondering vhether he had drawn on her. For one
fleeting moment Kral was pleased that he had not. And then he wondered
why he was pleased;
Vladra was a quite striking Klingon woman, actually a hair taller than
Kral. He found her intriguing. There seemed to be a smoldering interest
in her eyes that she was virtually daring him to ignite.
She appeared to consider her words carefully. "Commander. I want you to
know that..."
Her voice trailed off. Such hesitations were inappropriate for a
Klingon, and he was about to chide her for that but something stopped
him. "What is it?" His voice was actually surprisingly soft this time.
townspeoplerathe great god Weyland had returned and wished to see him.
Kral was getting damned sick of this planet. His first mission in
command of the Ghargh and what did he draw? A trip to some piddling
planetmmineral rich, to be sure, but piddlingmto supervise the aligning
of its people with the Klingon empire. It had its amusements, to be
certain. The natives had been quick and eager learners, and had come to
revere the Klingons almost as all-knowing gods. A number of the Cragon
natives had developed a bloodthirstiness that virtually rivaled Klingon
berserkers.
For all of this, however, the natives still insisted that before the
Klingons could be allowed to begin mining operations, they had to have
permission from the great god Weyland, and unfortunately, Weyland was
busy elsewhere. So the frustrated Klingons had been forced to cool
their heels while indulging in the simple joy of teaching eager people
how to fight.
Kral frequently, and quite vocally, longed for the days before the
Organian treaty. The days when Klingons could just storm in and take
what they wanted, when they wanted it. Now everything had to be nice
and tidy. It was humiliating. By Kahless, the next thing you knew, the
Klingons would wind up allies of those weak Federation types, as the
Organians had claimed. He hoped he would be long dead before such a
time.
Finally, finally, finally, ICral received word that this Weyland person
had returned. The so-called god had doubtless been in some other place
on the planet, practicing his god routine on other gullible savages.
Well, fine. Kral would play the game and be done with this. Still, for
all his disdain of the savage inhabitants of Cragon, he had a grudging
professional admiration for the loyalty and efficiency of the local
guard who watched Kral walk by. They smelled like warriors.
The boys in the practice yard on the inner keep stopped their ferocious
spear thrusts and sneaked wide-eyed looks at the crusty old man with a
patch over one them back to their task.
Kral studied the huge metal doors leading to the inner sanctum of this
god, which was filled with strong men who were used to discipline. To
befriend this god meant that a minimal Klingon presence could control a
rich world in an important sector. Kral knew that accomplishing that
would bring him much honor and power.
Kral hooked his thumbs onto his belt, swaggering a little as he strode
into the audience chamber, allowing the heavy open-front coat to swing
out impressively. His eyes quickly adjusted to the inside light. It was
a testament to his will and training that he didn't falter as he took in
the primitive magnificence of the huge room. He formally saluted the
old man who sat in the rich, jewel-covered throne.
Weyland looked into Kral's eyes. Kral looked down. Not since he was a
child had he felt so naked in the presence of a... a superior. He
forced himself to return the stare, but his knees felt like water. And
the most damning thing was that he knew Kbrex, his first officer, was
standing right behind him and taking in the situation, sensing his
commandefts weakness. Hell take him!
"I am Weyland, and I rule here. You have taken as your own men who are
mine. I am furious that, in my absence, you have endeavored to
supersede my authority. You must leave this place. You will leave this
place."
Kral snorted out his breath. Before he could reach his sidearm, the
guards had a dozen spears pressed into his neck. Half a hundred more
pinned the two huge Klingon security guards to the ground, while Kbrex
struggled in their grip as well. He grunted, "Commander! You must do
something, now! This is intolerable?
Like get myself killed? thought Kral. You'd like that, wouldn't you,
Kbrex?
In an endless moment, Kral relaxed his hand, and, at a nod from the
ruler, the warriors lowered their spear points. As insane as it seemed,
Kral actually felt disappointed in the guards. He himself had trained
.them, shown them how to wield spears and honed their aggressiveness to
a fighting edge. And now this Weyland came in and immediately turned
them against him, with a word. Turned the skills he'd provided them
against him.t
"Now that we understand each other," the god said with disarming
mildness, "you may speak if you feel a need to."
Kral swallowed hard. "I represent a great people, greater than you can
imagine." The words comforted him, and as he felt the surge of their
power, his uneasiness faded. "We are warriors. You are warriors. We do
understand each other, Great Lord. The others, the Federation, they are
weak. They also wish to ally themselves with you. But the Federation
will offer you little. They will treat you as children. They will hold
back the gifts of their worlds. We have already demonstrated our
willingness to make you--"
"Over into the Klingon image!"
Kral spun the moment he heard the voice, and even before he saw the
owner, he had a fairly clear idea of what he would see.
"Your timing, Federation man, is most irritating," he said to the men in
the Starfleet uniforms who had entered with one of Weyland's guards on
either side.
But Kbrex drew in a startled breath. "Kirk," he snarled. "James Kirk."
Kral did a double-take. This man, standing in the forefront of the
Starfleet men, his arms folded and eyes blazing, was the formidable
Captain Kirk? "So you are Kirk," said Kral. "You are somewhat less
impressive than I would have imagined."
There was a snickering chortle from the other Klingons, which was
quickly cut off when Kirk shot back, "Then you are as unimaginative as I
would have suspected."
They glared at each other for a long moment, and then Weyland said
briskly, "I see little difference between the Klingons and the
Federation. You both wish to use my world for your own ends, and
posture that you are motivated by concern for my people."
"Great Weyland, I assure you--" began Kirk.
But Weyland waved him off. "I am not interested in your assurances. And
I am not interested in you. Leave. Now."
Kral bellowed, "We can make your home a cinder. How dare you, you
primitive little worm..." His fists balled until his nails drove into
his palms as he fought for a modicum of control. He continued with a
bravado which he didn't feel once he looked at the old king. "I will
forgive this outrage, for I admire courage and you have great courage.
The Klingon empire still holds out its hand to you. But take heed, King
Weyland, I will not hold out this offer again."
Kral spun on his heel and ode out, his heart pounding as he waited for
the guards to fall on him, but they let him and his two men pass. The
boys had left the practice yard. The guard was gone, but Kral saw a
telltale glint of metal here and there. It was quite clear that the
only path out was the one they had been escorted in.
They went through the front gates, the forest just ahead. There really
was no reason at this point not to beam up, but something within Kral
wouldn't let him go. He hated to just retreat in the face of defeat,
and his mind was racing to try and find some sort of alternative. Some
kind of plan.
A small boy stepped in the path of the Klingons. Kral looked down at
him, bubbling with fury and humiliation. The child was scruffy-looking,
even for one of these useless inhabitants, with dirty black hair and a
vacuous look.
"Are you leaving?" he asked.
"What business is it of yours, you little fool," he snapped.
And from behind him he heard another of those blasted Starfleet men. "Ya
dinna have to be so hard on the boy."
Kral turned to see the idiots directly behind him. "Blast you! This is
all your fault, Kirk!"
Another of them, a shorter one, said, "If you think the keptin had
anything to do with--"
"Enough, Chekov," said Kirk, never taking his eyes off the Klingons.
The small boy was tugging on Kral's sash. "I thought you were going to
teach us how to kill. That's what you promised."
Kral looked down at the lad in surprise, and then up at Kirk, who was no
longer trying to hide his anger. "Look at what you've done to these
people," snapped the captain. "No wonder Weyland wants nothing to do
with us. Look what you've done to his people in the short time you've
been here."
Kbrex muttered under his breath, "He insults us with impunity. I can't
believe it."
If Kbrex had taken dead aim with a phaser to Kral's head, he could not
have scored a more direct hit. Incensed with seeing months of work go
down the drain, Kral unloaded his fury on the closest target.
He yanked out his blaster and fired it directly at Kirk.
But as fast as he was, the Starfleet security guards were even faster,
interposing themselves in front of Kirk, knocking him aside and
returning fire with their own phasers. The Klingons immediately ducked
for cover, firing their blasters as the Federation men sought cover as
well.
Within seconds the air was filled with the sounds of weapons fire. Kbrex
crouched next to Kral and said sharply, "You wisely defended our honor,
Commander."
"Shut up!" snapped Kral, firing blindly around the rock that was his
shelter.
Kbrex pulled something from his belt. Kral glanced at it and actually
smiled. A plasma grenade. "Hurry," muttered Kral. "The Starfleet men
will doubtlessly return to their ship within moments."
"They have no honor," said Kbrex, activating the grenade and hurling it.
Above his head, phaser bolts flew, and he couldn't risk a glance to see
how accurate the throw had been.
Then the Klingons heard a shout of alarm, but not of fear. Something
was wrong, and Kral risked a glance around the rock.
What he saw stunned him.
The small boy who had spoken to him was standing barely a meter away
from where the Federation men were crouched behind sheltering rocks and
trees. He was holding the plasma grenade, turning it over and staring
at it as if he'd found a new toy. His face was wide with a grin.
The grenade only had a five-second timer on it.
Kral immediately stood, and then a Federation man leaped from hiding. He
heard Kirk's alarmed shout of
"Garrovick! What are you doing?!" Clearly, Kirk hadn't seen the
grenade.
The one called Garroviek leaped at the boy and grabbed at the grenade.
His fingers brushed against it, and the boy yanked it away with
surprising stubbornness.
"Mine?" shouted the enraged boy, which would be the last word the boy
ever uttered. He clasped the grenade to his small chest.
With a shout of panicked rage, Garrovick lunged forward, his fingers
grasping at the grenade.
It went off.
A burst of light and heat surrounded the two of them, the stench of
death and burned meat permeating the air. Kral looked away from the
intensity of the light, looked into his soul and was distressed at the
blackness he saw in there. Roaring in his ears was the sound of the
grenade, the sound deafening, yet failing to drown out the brief scream
of the one called Garrovick or the hopeless, desperate shout of Kirk.
The child had apparently had no time to scream.
He looked back at the site of the destruction. Of the boy there was the
barest remains of ashes. The grenade had vented the majority of its
fury on the child who had been smothering it.
Garrovick lay on the ground, smoldering, unmoving. Kral could see even
from where he was that the Federation man was dead.
"Commander," grated Kbrex. He shook Kral's shoulder. "Commander. Let's
leave, immediately."
"Yes. Yes, you're right," said Kral, his mind still a fog. How the
devil had it all fallen apart so quickly? What could have gone so
horribly wrong in such a short period of time? Even as thoughts tumbled
through his head, he had his communicator open and was alerting his
ship.
He heard an infuriated shout from Kirk, a snarled challenge, and then
the hum of the Klingon transporter drowned it all out.
The death of a child, he thought as the planet vanished around him.
Where was the honor in that?
Chapter Seven
Japan, 1600 Sulu tried to figure out the detales of feudal Japan, or
conjured up images in his mind, somehow they had a gloss over them. A
purity of image, with no real taste of reality to it.
There was more than enough reality surrounding him now, that was for
sure.
They had passed groveling farmers, who looked up at him with a startling
pathos. Sulu tried not to be affected by the scene, for he could sense
the eyes of the gray-haired Sadayo on him. The noble samurai clearly
had suspicions about him.
Would the formidable Sadayo, and the other soldiers, have been able to
handle the brigands? Sulu kept telling himself that the answer was yes.
To believe otherwise was too chilling, because that would mean he had
already changed things.
He was smack in the middle of a Prime Directire nightmare. Did he cause
the death of those men? No. No, he was certain he hadn't. Their death
was written. They would have died in the attack. Or... what if the
woman had? What if she was supposed to have died, and Sulu had saved
her when she wasn't supposed to be saved?
Could he have caused someone, in the faun future, to vanish? Or
created someone who wasn't supposed to exist? Perhaps dozens of
someones, or thousands. His mind whirled with the possibilities. What
the devil was he supposed to do? Should he have just stood by and let
her die--presuming that he had fully realized, at the time, that he was
not caught in a dream. 'He was afraid to take a step, make any sort of
move.
No. He couldn't have let her die. He was just going to have to follow
his instincts, and trust them to guide him through.
They had entered the great, sprawling city of Kyoto. Not modern Kyoto,
to be sure, but a disconcertingly primitive city of shops and temples
and small houses, crowding each other onto crooked side streets. When
Sulu had visited Kyoto--his Kyoto--he had occasionally wondered what
it would be like to visit the city in all its feudal glory.
Somehow it had seemed a lot less grubby in his imaginings. And it had
smelled a lot better.
Soon they passed the middle-class section and were riding through a
district of elegant private homes which were the reward of lesser nobles
and loyal retainers, and houses once owned by most of the major
clans--where wives, daughters, and young sons were held in perpetual
hostage to ensure loyalty to the current ruler in the endless power
struggle that was Japanese history. But the capital had been moved to
Edo, and the hostages, and the culture which they practiced to pass the
endless days, had moved there Toward mid-afternoon they wound their way
past a network of wet and dry moats and over a number of bridges to the
gate of a huge castle. Sulu looked up with wonder. Looming up was a
smooth-walled mountain of stone. Above, in sharp contrast to the
massive fortification at the base, were the living quarters, white walls
and red-tile roofs stacked with pagodalike grace. Each roof line
displayed support beams carved with fantastic animals, rendered with
such skill they seemed to want to leap to life.
Moments later they were in the great courtyard, and Sulu and the others
had dismounted.
"Follow me," Sadayo said.
They marched to a formal reception hall. Sadayo knelt outside the
screen and announced himself and Sulu. They were admitted and both
bowed to the ground. "Lord," Sadayo said, "the Lady Oneko's party was
attacked by bandits. She is safe. This man, Suru Heihachiro, came to
our aid." Sulu's breath caught. It was Torii Mototada.
He regarded Sulu with unrestrained interest, as if trying to see what
was inside Sulu's head. Inwardly, Sulu trembled. This man was
absolutely legendary. TO be in front of him was to share in the legend.
Torii Mototada, the man who was a legend. A man who was larger than
life.
He was shorter than Sulu.
Somehow Sulu had always envisioned him being a giant among men, not half
a head shorter than himself. He stifled an impulse to laugh, and then
the impulse quickly dissipated. Mototada did not need height. He had a
staggering presence born of character and breeding.
"Would you serve me?" Lord Torii Mototada asked. This was not a question
asked lightly.
Instinct. What was his instinct telling him to say?. If he refused,
that might engender questions w uncomfortable questions that Sulu
couldn't answer. And he was still feeling disoriented enough that he
didn't want to try and lie. For that matter, to refuse might even be an
insult to honor.
Honor was a concep t that Sulu understood intellectually, and
of course it was part of his upbringing. But
it wasn't the suffocating presence that hung over him
here.
Honor.
It would indeed be an honor to serve Mototada. To
be part of a legend. There was something almost
comforting about it. Cast adrift in a sea of time, here
was a life preserver being tossed to him.
"Yes, lord," Sulu answered, bowing formally.
"I, Torii Mototada, shall give you the gift of a new
name. You shall now be Okiri Heihachiro, Big Cut
Heihachiro. You shall have a hundred koku income, and you
shall be a retainer in my service, and you
shall be in my bodyguard. Do you accept?"
"Ha, "Sulu snapped in the clipped warrior pronunciation for
the word for yes, "I am most grateful for
the great honor you bestow. I shall look to you for
guidance, that I may serve you worthfly."
It was then he decided that he was probably losing his mind.
Chapter Eight
Scotland, 1746 SCOTTY MOANED, clutching at his head.
"Hush!"
He rolled over and peered with bleary eyes at a face that took a few
moments to snap into focus. It was the young man he'd seen... He'd
seen... When?
Scotty frowned, trying to remember. trying to piece together the
events of the recent... what? Days? Years? What? .
"Don't raise such a ruckus," the boy cautioned him. "You'll alert the
soldiers. Or the master."
"Oh... I see... That's clear enough," Scotty said, even though it
wasn't.
"I'll get you some clothes," hissed the boy. "You'll need them. A
kilted highlander is not welcome in these parts. Who the devil are you,
anyway?"
Scotty touched the dried blood on his face. "I'm--" His voice caught
and he frowned, trying to pull it out.
"You're a Scotsman, obviously," the boy said with impatience.
"Scott! I'm... Montgomery Scott." He sat up and the world spun around
him. lie reached down to brace himself. "Montgomery Scott," he said
again, as if taking refuge in the one thing he was sure off
"Where did you come from? How did you get here?"
"I..." He frowned. Images that made no sense flashed before him. "I
don't know. I dinna ken how I got here.' He looked at the boy
hopefully. "Do you?" The boy looked taken aback. "You must know."
"I did. I..." He shook his head, the simple motion being enough to make
him hurt all the more. "But I don't. I..."
"Look, enough for this later. I've got to go now." Scotty lay back,
stating at the ceiling as the boy scampered down the ladder with the
agility of a monkey. Scott. Montgomery Scott. And he was a...
He sought the word. Machines. He was good with machines, he
remembered. And he could... Could what?
About an hour later the boy dragged up a bundle and held it out to
Scotty. "Here you go," he said.
The bundle consisted of a pair of knee breeches of coarse wool, a clean
white linen shirt, as well as underlinen, stockings, and a pair of
shoesBwhich fit after some addition of a little straw at the toe--a
vest, a coat, and tricorn hat.
Scott dressed, rolled up the soiled wool kilt and oversized shift called
a leine and hid them in the hay.
"Thank you, lad. Now perhaps you'll tell me why you stole from your
master to help a stranger?"
The boy's eyes narrowed. "I did not steal. They were left by a lodger.
And the innkeeper is not my master. I've only just been hired here. And
as to why, I have my reasons," he answered with an implied challenge. He
added somewhat scornfully, "I saw you last night, and that was
stealing!"
Scotty shrugged. He was not in condition to argue. He barely remembered
last night.
The boy couldn't have been more than fourteen or fifteen, but he had a
kind of adult toughness.
"Well, I'll not argue with my good luck," Scott returned evenly. "Tell
me, boy, you mentioned soldiers. What soldiers?"
"Well... they're not actually here yet," admitted he boy. "But they're
coming. Fat Billy's boys are coming to stay. They have been chasing
the prince's men all the way up from near London town, I hear.
Frankly... I think Prince Charles is going to need a miracle."
And suddenly it clicked into ScotCs mind. "That's it," he whispered.
"What?" said the boy.
"I remember," Scott said with growing excitement. "I was trying to
remember what I could do. What my skills are. And I just remembered...
my reputation."
"What reputation?"
And Scotty smiled in satisfaction. "I'm a Miracle Worker," he said
confidently.
Chapter Nine
Stalingrad, 1942 Cmsov WAS srrTmG next to Sulu, Scotty, and Kirk, and
they were all laughing over this bizarre vacation that Chekov had had.
Chekov saw himself, smiling and bleeding, and telling his friends in
avid and enthused detail about what he'd just been through.
The Battle of Stalingrad had been Russian determination at its absolute
best. Stalingrad, a sprawling but narrow band of civilization and
industry, lay hugging the west shore of the great river. Farther to the
west, the Don, the other great river, had been crossed and the German
Sixth Army now sought to control the city. Once Stalingrad fell, the
Germans hoped to cross the Volga and press their attack to the heart of
the Soviet Union.
Whatever strategic value there might have been in capturing Stalingrad
had been long forgotten, however, in the battle of egos. Hitler was
determined to level the city, and Stalin wanted it held at all costs.
And the costs to both sides were already staggering.
The Russian people had put up a resistance that Berlin still wouldn't
believe--fighting house to house, hand to hand, holding the city with a
tenuous toehold.
And every bullet, every shoe, every pound of grain, every replacement
soldier, had to be barged across the Volga under the constant and
devastating fire of German mortar and the low-level strafing by the
Stukkas and Ju-88s which bombed incessantly despite the antiaircraft
guns on both shores of the river. Many men and women didn't survive the
trip to the west shore.
Chekov had been about to tell his shipmates more. About the famous
statue of the Stone Crocodile. About Stalin, for whom the city was
named. Except here was a rat crawling across his face.
He sat up with a cry of revulsion. There was an alarmed squeal as he
batted at his face, sending the rodent tumbling off and onto the nearby
filthy floor of the cell.
The smiling images of his friends slipped away, and the true confusing
horror of his real-life situation Slammed home to him. He
backward-crabbed across the floor until he banged into a wall.
It was dark in the cell, his eyes not yet adjusted to She one dim bulb
overhead. Chekov stammered, again in English, "Vere am I? Vat is
happening? How did I get here?"
There was a low laugh from within the darkness of the cell.
"Well, now isn't that convenient."
Chekov squinted. "Am I still in Stalingrad?" He was still hoping that
somehow Sulu would suddenly come leaping out, laughing and telling his
old friend that the entire business was an elaborate gag.
"Nope," said the voice, decidedly American, and even oddly familiar.
"Chicago. Don't you realize where you are? This is Wrigley Field."
Chekov looked around. "I think you are kidding."
"And I think," said the voice, "that you krauts must think I'm a total
idiot."
Kraut. Chekov's first instinet was to think the reference was to
something put on a hot dog. Then he realized. "I'm not a kraut--a
German. I'm a Russian. My name is Chekov."
"Oh yeah? Loved Uncle Vanya. Look, what do you people take me for? Guy
comes in here, conveniently speaking English. You think that after the
beatings, the wires... everything you people have tried, that now you
can trick me into spilling everything by putting a spy in here with me.
No chance."
"No chance," said Chekov vacantly, still looking around. It was still
dark as hell. There was an unpleasant stench to the cell, and in every
shadow vermin of some sort lurked.
Out of habit he reached for his communicator. None was there, of course.
"Scotty," he said softly, "beam me the hell out of here."
"Name's not Scotty, pal," said the other prisoner. "You want the name?
You want the rank? You want the serial number? That's all you're going
to get. If you don't get tired of hearing it, I don't get tired of
saying it." The American sounded bitter and tired. He had the air of
someone who had made peace with the fact that he was going to die, and
was only awaiting the answer of"when" with a sort of disassociated
interest.
And then Chekov's eyes widened as the man in-toned, "My name is John C.
Kirk. Lieutenant. United States Army Air Corps, serial number
0-159466. And that, my friend, is all you're going to hear out of me."
Chapter Ten
it HAD BEEN only moments earlier when Kirk had been sitting in his
cabin, a drink in his hand, declaring with utter confidence and
certainty to Dr. McCoy that he was going to join Spock in the
conference room and together they were going to figure out a way out of
this mess.
And what a mess it was. Garrovick dead, weapons systems out, helpless
in orbit above Cragon V, with Weyland prepared to do who-knew-what. And
worst of all, SuM, Scotty, and Chekov were missing in action.
Kirk leaned against the railing of the turbolift, letting some of the
self-doubt that he frequently felt wash over him.
The first rule they teach in command school--when you make a decision,
stick to it. Even if it turns out to be the wrong one, see it through.
Everyone makes wrong decisions. There's no such thing as a perfect
commander. That's accepted. But a commander who reverses decisions, or
displays doubt for the crew to witness--that was not accepted. That was
intolerable.
So the crew never saw Kirk's indecision or regrets.
Instead they saw the calm, confident commander, and they drew their
strength and assurance from him. And it was left to Kirk to reflect on
his own decisions in private. The final, unchangeable decisions that he
made, that sometimes cost him lives... and crewmen. Crewmen like
Garrovick, Scotty, Chekov... Sulu...
"Captain, they're firing on us/" Sulu called out, tightening his grip on
the helm.
Moments before, Kirk and the landing party had beamed up to the
Enterprise and been met by a med team in the transporter room. McCoy
had been first to meet them, of course, and he repressed his shock upon
seeing the limp form of Garrovick that Kirk was carrying in his arms. He
didn't ask details, didn't ask what had happened. He even refrained
from uttering an oath or cursing the individuals responsible for this.
Instead he immediately called for an antigrav stretcher to be brought
forward, and without a word Kirk lay Garrovick down on the gurney. His
voice a hoarse whisper, Kirk had said, "Do what you can for him, Bones."
Even as Kirk spoke, McCoy was already running his diagnostic instruments
over Garrovick in preparation to rush him to sickbay. But his readings
told him that no rush would be necessary, and the look in McCoy's eyes
told Kirk the same thing.
"He tried to save a boy," whispered Kirk. "Where's the boy?" McCoy
asked.
"There wasna enough left of the lad to bring back up," Scotty had said
softly.
"Who did this?" McCoy said, looking at the landing party.
For answer, Kirk had crossed quickly to the comm panel and hit it. "Kirk
to bridge."
"Spock here," came the brisk reply. "Captain, your return is none too
soon. A Klingon ship has decloaked and is bearing," the most minute of
pauses, "611 mark five."
"He wants to finish this," snapped Kirk. "That's what he'll get then.
Shields up."
"Already up, sir. Phasers fully charged."
"If they're decloaked, they're about to fire. Evasive maneuvers. I'm
on my way."
They were there in record time. Kirk heard the sounds of Klingon
disruptor fire thudding against the Enterprise shields. Next to him in
the turbolift he saw Sulu's fingers twitch slightly, as if imagining
that he was returning fire. Chekov's face was set, and Scotty's was
equally expressionless. Normally Scotty would be down in the
engineering section, but it was clear from his face that he was
intending to man the engineering station on the bridge. Obviously this
was one encounter he wanted to bear witness to firsthand.
The four men virtually exploded out onto the bridge, lower ranking
officers immediately vacating the stations to let the senior officers
take charge. Spock smoothly removed himself from the command chair as
Kirk slid in. Sulu and Chekov barely had time to seat themselves when
Sulu called out the warning that the Klingon ship was firing once more.
The ship shuddered, and just as the word "Fire!" emerged from Kirk's
lips, the Klingon battle cruiser vanished from the screen. Sulu sent
out a torpedo spread in the area where the Klingons had been moments
before, but his instruments told him that it was a clean miss.
"He took pot shots at us and then mcd s vanishing act perfectly,"
muttered Kirk.
"He's good, Captain," Sulu said, his ,, Still, despite his calm, there
was nothing in his attitude to indicate that battle was a casual
experience.
"Helm, thirty degrees starboard," the captain ordered.
Sulu brought the ship around, and suddenly the engineering sections and
underside of the engine nacelles were battered by phaser fire. The
Klingon ship had rematerialized... directly under the star ship. Then
it vanished again. Hit and run. Kirk was starting to get annoyed. "Come
about. Shields, status?"
"Shields forty-two percent and dropping, sir," Chekov said crisply.
And now Sulu spoke up. "Helm is sluggish to respond, Captain."
Scotty visibly winced at that, in anticipation of his captain's next
question. "Scotty, why aren't we moving?"
"Sir, the right engine pod is down to fifteen percent, and the other is
overheating. I canna give you maneuverability. I'm not sure I can give
you warp."
"Captain," said Sulu crisply, "it's only approximate, but I believe I've
got them nailed on the motion detector."
"Then hammer them, Mr. Sulu. Fire phasers."
And that was the moment when the mission, which had seemed incapable of
getting any worse, got worse.
Sulu let out a cry, drawing his hands back. His skin was blistering and
puckering on his palms. He gasped in amazement, and Chekov, thinking
that somehow Sulu's board had overheated, tried to reroute phaser
locking controls into his own console. A worthwhile but futile effort,
for suddenly Chekov likewise found his controls unmanageable. The
temperature had gone from normal to scalding within a nanosecond.
To Chekov and Kirk, it was momentarily confusing. To Sulu, it was a
sensation that immediately brought back unpleasant memories.
"Sulu, what the devil's wrong?" demanded Kirk.
"Surface temperature of the weapons instruments has just gone nova,
Captain," said Sulu. "Just like the time on Organia!"
"Forward drive is out, Captain," Scott told him. "We're not moving."
"The Organians?" said Kirk. "That's just... marvelous."
Uhura looked up. She was somewhat surprised that her comm board was
still working, for when they had gone through this before, her station
had become as overheated as anyone else's. "Captain," she said, "I'm
getting a hailing frequency from the Klingon ship."
Kirk looked up at the viewscreen. Lo and behold, the Klingon ship had
come floating into view, visible and helpless. Except for all that the
Enterprise could do right now, they might as well still be cloaked and
maneuverable.
Controls too hot to handle? Kirk was tempted to try and operate them
using environmental gloves, but he had a feeling that wouldn't
accomplish anything. Whoever was doing this--the Organians, apparently
--might not take kindly to that, and cause the phaser banks to
self-destruct, taking the Enterprise with them.
"On screen, Uhura," said Kirk.
The snarling and furious face of the Klingon commander--what was his
name... Kral, was appeared on the screen.
"All right, Federation bastards, you have us!" he snapped. "You've
rendered us helpless! Destroy us and be done with it!"
Kirk's eyes widened momentarily and he glanced at Spock. The answer was
clear--they thought the Enterprise had employed some sort of weapon
against them and had incapacitated them. They didn't realize --at least
not yet--that the starship was in the same fix.
"No," said Kirk sharply, barely containing his fury. "We'll kill you
when we're damned good and ready."
"Rot in Dargoth's hell, Kirk," snarled the Klingon, and the transmission
was cut off.
Kirk looked at his bridge crew. "All right. Now we wait for the other
shoe to drop."
At that moment something began to shimmer into life directly in front of
them on the viewscreen. Space seemed to cloud over and the cloud
started to assume a shape.
"I believe, Captain," said Spock calmly, "that the remaining footwear
you had mentioned is about to plummet."
Kirk wasn't sure what he expected. Ayelbourne, perhaps. Or one of the
other members of the Organian council. Or maybe someone new. What he
did not expect, however, was what he saw, and in retrospect he would
wonder how he could not have' seen it coming.
The screen dimmed, blocking most of the most painful glare. A man,
ancient but still strong, full bearded, with piercing eyes, stared out
at them. "Weyland!" Kirk muttered.
Spock raised an eyebrow. "The same Weyland, I assume, as the so-called
god of the people of Cragon."
"A step above 'so-called,' I'd say," Kirk commented.
Weyland's massive face filled the screen. "What... are you?" asked
Kirk.
With a sepulchral voice, Weyland replied, "In charge."
"Vague but accurate," Spock observed.
Kirk did not have the time or enthusiasm to take pleasure in Weyland's
brevity.
"You committed a crime against my people," Weyland said. "A child has
died."
"Yes," said Kirk softly. "We know. We saw it. And we regret what
happened."
"What happened was a direct result of your savagery," said Weyland, his
fury clearly growing. "You doubtlessly think of my people as
primitive--but the actions of the Klingons in their 'training' has
destroyed my people's beauty of spirit."
"And where were you!" said Kirk sharply. "You claim to protect and love
these people, yet you abandoned them for months, allowing the Klingons
to do as they wished."
Weyland frowned, and then he said, "If it will make you understand what
is about to happen to you more, then I will tell you..."
"What do you mean, about to happen to us?" said Kirk.
Weyland ignored him. "I was a part of a continuum of beings," he said.
"Beings so evolved, so powerful, that they have taken to merely
observing life in various universes, instead of using their abilities
for helping lesser beings. I sojourned for a time in this universe, and
found, purely at random, the good, simple people of Cragon. They
touched something within me, and I knew that I would never be able to
continue being a part of an entity that exists to ignore existence. I
returned to them to tell them of my resignation from their alliance. But
time is a subjective matter, far more so than I thought. I perceived
myself as gone to my fellows for mere moments, but on Cragon months
passed. Months that the Klingons put to use, and that you Federation
men exacerbated. And your hostilities, Captain Kirk, resulted in the
death of a child."
"It was a Klingon grenade that did it!" said Kirk. "I lost a man as
well!"
"It was you who gave your word of honor to make sure no harm came to my
people."
"You're the one who said you didn't need our help!" Kirk reminded him.
"That is irrelevant," Weyland said archly, and it was at that point that
Kirk became convinced they were not dealing with a being who had any
sort of solid grip on reality. "One of my people is dead as a result of
an altercation between the Klingons and the Federation. The Federation
is by far the worse aggressor, because of your moral posturing and
high-minded ideals... when, actually, you are no better than the
Klingons."
"That's not true," Kirk protested, beginning to feel like a broken
record.
"Deny the truth of this, then--a child is dead because of the inability
of the Federation and the Klingons to cooperate and act in a manner that
betokens honor for all. Do you agree?"
Kirk paused. The bottom line was, Weyland was right. A child had been
caught in the crossfire. The Klingons had initiated, the Klingons had
caused it, but the Starfleet officers had been the target. How many
times were innocents caught in between in the past of human history,
because two groups were too thick-skinned to work out their differences?
But these were Klingons, damntit. . .
And they were the Federation. They believed in liberty and
self-determination and the right of the weak to be defended and
protected...
All of which made no difference to the charred corpse on the planet
below, or the parents who were doubtless in mourning at that moment.
"I don't deny that," Kirk said softly. "But--"
"Good," said Weyland. "Sentence is carried out. Now."
There were three sounds, all the same, all simultaneous. Kirk looked
around in confusion, trying to locate the source.
Spock was on his feet, his eyebrows arched, which was the closest he
ever came to expressing surprise. Uhura gasped in shock, and then Kirk
realized.
Sulu was gone. And Chekov. And Scotty. Gone, as if they had never
been there.
"What have you done!" shouted Kirk. "I don't understand! If you're
upset with me, punish me! I'm the commander. It's my responsibility!"
"But I am punishing you," said Weyland calmly. "Your punishment... is
not knowing what happened to the fellow members of your landing party.
The most effective way to discipline a commander of men... is to
discipline his men, and leave the commander helpless."
"Where are they!" shouted Kirk.
"They are lost in time out of mind," Weyland told him. "And you can sit
and rot waiting for them to return. This audience is ended."
And Weyland vanished.
Chapter Eleven
Scotland, 1746 MONTGOMERY SCOTT SAT in his comfortable loft, eating the
food the boy had sneaked him, and reveled in his newfound understanding
of himself. He was a Miracle Worker. He knew that. He had the ability
to do things... things that no one else could do.
At first he wasn't sure what that was. He had clung to the description
as if to a life preserver, and then facts had started to float into his
head. Facts as if they had been given him from another time, another
land. Facts about his situation.
They tumbled through his head, names setting his recollection off. Fat
Billy, the boy had said. Prince Charles, the boy had said.
Fat Billy was William Cumberland.
Prince Charles--Bonny Prince Charlie, as he was known (was known? What
sort of thinking was that?) --who was...
Was what?
Scotty pulled at his memory.
Defeated. Fat William to his enemies and Sweet William--for whom the
flower was named (will be named?)--to his friends. Either way, William
had defeated (will defeat?) Bonny Prince Charlie.
His concept of past and future rushing together, Scotty remembered
forward and backward.
Prince Charlie had landed in a remote part of Scotland, hiding out for
months, gathering a ragtag army from the independent-minded clans that
divided the Scottish highlands into a patchwork of holdings which were
half feudal fiefs and half barbarian tribal lands. Then he proceeded to
declare himself the rightful King of England and Scotland and commenced
his march south. Needless to say, London was not amused, but the
English crown had never been amused by any of the troubles caused by its
Celtic peoples, be they Scot, Irish, or Welsh. It had been warfare in
the long months that followed. The Great Rebellion, it was called...
"Will be called," he muttered. "What are you talking about?"
He looked up and saw the teenage boy again, looking at him oddly. "I'm
remembering things... that haven't happened yet."
The boy's mouth dropped open. "Are you saying you have 'The Sight'?"
Bemusedly, Scotty rubbed his eyes. "If I do, my sighted eyes are fair
tired about now. Still... I canna stay up in this loft forever." He
looked at the boy with curiosity. "Tell me, lad--what's your name?"
"Seamus Maclntyre it is, but when I hired on here I told them to call me
James. Lowlanders they .are. No better than Englishmen. Damn
Sassenachs," he spat, using the Gallic word for the English that was
more a curse than a translation.
Inwardly, Scotty grimaced. Lowlanders. Highlanders. Clans upon clans
that would cause the vision of a united Scotland, under the command of
Bonny Prince Charlie, to split apart.
Interestingly, he realized that his own name, Scott, was considered a
lowland name. Since this Seamus obviously had no love for lowlanders,
it was curious that he hadn't remarked on it. Mentally he shrugged it
off.
"Well, Mr. Maclntyre, what do you propose now?"
"Well, Mr. Scott, I think it would be best if you came in by the front
door, and perhaps applied for day work. You were the one who got the
slops the other day, were you not? But I'll wager the mistress will not
know you. She is short of sight. So if you come as a man who needs
work, what with the Duke coming, I'll wager you'll be welcomed, and make
a penny on it."
"Aye, and perhaps hear a thing or two? That is a sharp plan, boy. After
that?"
"After that I'm running off to fight with the prince. And you?"
"I think that might not be a bad plan, either," Scott said, offering his
hand. The boy hesitated a moment before he reached out to shake hands,
bowing slightly with gentlemanly courtesy.
"The prince could use someone with The Sight. Tell me, Miracle
Worker..." And his voice was eager. "When will the prince win?"
Not if. When. The boy's confidence was boundless. Who was he to tell
the boy otherwise at this early date? Facts and dates still whirled in
his head. He had suspicions, beliefs, but of nothing was he absolutely
sure.
Scotty put a hand on the boy's shoulder. "When the time is right," he
said. "When the time is right."
Scott managed to get clear of the inn, with the boy acting as lookout,
and cut his way around a field. When he was safely out of sight, he
turned back and marched up to the front door. In his new dry clothes
Scott didn't look half disreputable or feel half bad.
His second encounter with Mrs. Nesbit, which was the coarse woman's
name, was fractionally more amicable. She growled and threatened and
warned, but she did hire him. Her husband had no idea that this man was
the one with whom he had struggled a couple days earlier. Seamus's
description had been nothing like this man before him. The bandage
Scott wore about his head was not even questioned--nowadays, with all
the fighting going on, it was a rare man who was not injured in some way
or other. So Commander Montgomery Scott, late of Starfleet, began his
career as an apprentice publican at The Hanged Woman.
Chapter Twelve
Stalingrad, 1942
"Oil, MY GOD!" Chekov muttered in English, a chill running through him.
"Kirk, you say?"
The man was silent.
"Lieutenant Kirk, please, are you all right?" Chekov asked desperately,
feeling in the dark for the silent man.
"Yeah," the flyer said. "I told you, you won't get anything out of me."
This couldn't be. This was too insane. John C. Kirk. Maybe, Chekov
told himself insanely, the C stood for "Captain." It wouldn't be much
crazier than what was going through his mind.
Kirk wasn't a rare name. It couldn't be what he thought. Whatever had
happened to him, whatever fate had dropped him in another time and place
with no explanation, it couldn't be that cruel.
Could it?
Chekov thought of some of the beings he had encountered in his
life--everyone from Apollo to V'ger. Could it be?
"What does the C stand for?" he asked neutrally. "Claudius," the man
answered. He sounded charmingly defensive about it. "My grandfather
had a thing about Latin studies. It's sort of a family tradition. I
don't suppose that's giving away anything. Can't see Uncle Adolf
getting much mileage out of that."
"You don't have to be embarrassed about it," Chekov said.
"It's not embarrassment. Not anymore," he added reluctantly. "Sure, I
admit it was a real burden in school. Always hid what it meant. God,
it's good to talk to someone, anyone. Got to shut up," he went on, more
to himself than Chekov. "Got to shut up before I can't stop talking,"
he said, and then lapsed into silence. Then he added softly, "If you're
a spy the Nazis put in here, you'll probably die of boredom before you
hear anything useful out of me."
Chekov suspected he was right. He suspected a lot of things, none of
which he liked.
It was too much of a coincidence, that odd Roman middle name. Like
James Tiberius Kirk. Chekov struggled to calm himself. Where did the
Prime Directire fit into the scheme of things here? he wondered. His
captain's great-great-times-how-many grandfather? Was it possible?
"Have you any brothers, or uncles?" Chekov asked after a while. "Or a
son?" At first the man wouldn't answer.
"What business is it of yours?" he finally muttered. "None. Just trying
to pass the time," said Chekov with an indifferent shrug.
Nothing got people talking quite like acting as if you cou ldn't care
less whether they talked.
"All right," said Kirk gamely. "More important info for Uncle Adolf. My
father is dead, I have no brothers, and one sister who works in the
U.S.O. and is engaged to some guy named CapeIlL Okay? I'm not married,
and frankly, in these circumstances, the pickings are pretty slim.
Unless you're doing one hell of an impression and actually you're going
to turn out to be Betty Grable here to boost my morale."
"Afraid not," said Chekov.
Inwardly, Chekov's mind was racing. Oh, God.t The captain... If he
were right, this man was his captain's ancestor.
It was the no-win scenario all over again. He was not supposed to
interfere. Such was the Prime Direc-tlye. Except he had, automatically,
rather than let the Russians be shot down like dogs. And that action
had seemed to backfire horribly--except it led him to someone who
desperately needed his help, because otherwise the future that Chekov
knew might not exist. Except he wasn't supposed to help... except if
he didn't...
Chekov moaned softly.
"What's your problem?" asked Kirk.
"Time," replied Chekov.
"Well, we've got nothing but that," said Kirk. The door creaked open and
a man in a tattered German uniform came stumbling in. Chekov tried to
stand, but his legs were shaky, and then the door slammed before he
could do anything. Anything like what? Get shot? "Friend of yours?"
asked Kirk.
The American airman leaned forward, the faint light from the single
overhead bulb highlighting him. Now there was no doubt. Despite the
terrible swollen bruises that deformed the airman's face, a young
Captain Kirk looked back at him.
The man in the German uniform fell to the floor, looked up groggily at
Kirk, and then at Chekov. They recognized each other at the same time.
"Oh, God," moaned the soldier in Russian. "You're the one I shot."
Kirk looked up at Chekov and, in flawless Russian, said, "You're
obviously a very popular guy."
"it's a knack," replied Chekov. He remained where he was, staring at
the newcomer. "You have an odd way of expressing gratitude, comrade."
"I am so, so sorry, as I cannot begin to express," said the soldier,
sitting up. From the look of him, he wasn't in much better shape than
Kirk. "I'm Ivan. Ivan Romanoff. A sergeant," and he looked around
ruefully, "for all the good it did me."
"Romanoff. Why did you shoot me?"
"I saw you coming at us. In the confusion, it was automatic. Even as I
was squeezing the trigger, I realized that you were the one who had
created the diversion. What in the name of sanity were you doing inside
of a German camp?"
Chekov thought fast. "Trying my best to do what I can for my people."
"Nice reply," said Kirk. "Very smooth."
Chekov did not reply. He saw no reason to. "What were you doing here?"
Ivan pursed his lips for a moment, then shrugged. "Transport plane they
have on premises. Looked nice. We thought it would make a nice trophy."
Kirk looked from one man to the other. "We're quite trusting, aren't
we, Romanoff?. We know each other from before, but how do you know he
isn't a spy?"
Ivan shrugged. "I've developed a talent for telling friends from foes.
For example, I can always spot the secret police. A sixth sense. It
tells me that this man is okay."
"Secret police?" asked Chekov.
Ivan looked at him strangely, and Chekov immediately realized that his
obvious confusion about the secret police was obviously something that
would not be shared by a present-day Russian. Already he was dredging
up memories of it from who-knew-where, and he said without pause, "You
can actually tell who is with the secret police? Hard to believe. And
where do you two know each other from?"
Kirk and Ivan looked at each other. "One wild night in Moscow," Kirk
recalled with a smile that definitely evoked memories of a man not yet
born.
"Um-hm," said Chekov. "So tell me... why am I supposed to trust the
two of you? How do I know the two of you aren't spies out to trick me?"
A full grin split Kirk's face. "He's paranoid," said Kirk.
"That prover he's Russian," said Ivan.
Chekov shook his head. "Paranoia... secret police .. it's difficult
to think of these as part of what it is to be Russian."
"Welcome to the twentieth century," said Ivan.
It was a welcome the man from centuries hence could have done without.
Chapter Thirteen
VLADRA OF THE SCIENCE DEPARTMENT on the Ghargh looked up in surprise as
the door to her quarters slid open. She was even more surprised when
Kbrex stepped in quickly, his gaze moving sharply over the room as if
taking in every corner. As if looking for a trap.
"I do not recall inviting you here, Kbrex," she said with deliberate
informality.
The Ghargh had been sitting over Cragon V, helplessly, for twelve hours
now. Vladra and her team had been exploring every possible means of
breaking free from its helpless situation. So far, their efforts had
proved fruitless.
"I think you know why I am here," he said. The door hissed shut behind
him.
"Certainly. You are here to berate me for taking the first few minutes'
rest in hours. I am sorry for being so lazy." Every syllable was
dripping with sarcasm.
He stepped forward and put his hands firmly on either shoulder of the
aristocratic-looking Klingon woman. "I have had enough of this
nonsense. I have spoken to you in oblique, nondefinite terms as to my
plans. You have chosen to remain oblivious of my meaning, so I shall be
plain. I find you attractive, woman. I also find the prospect of
command even more attractive. I would like to have both, and I wish to
know of your loyalties to our present commander."
She looked away, her arms folded. "My loyalties are my own. As with
any Klingon." She turned and stared at him with an icy gaze. "You will
just have to take your chances."
Kbrex stared at her for a long moment. Then he nodded briskly, turned
and left.
She waited for a full minute after Kbrex had left, her mind racing. It
had been his murmuring and hints that had prompted her to go to Kral in
the first place. It was clear that Kbrex was planning to gain from the
debacle that was Cragon V.
None of thismnone of it wwas Kral's fault, Vladra told herself. He had
done everything that any reasonable commander could be expected to do.
But none of that was going to matter. In the Klingon empire all that
mattered was results. Results got you promotion, command, and respect.
Lack of results got you dead. That was exactly what Kral was going to
be. Dead. Her mind raced. Kbrex was aggressive, experienced. More
experienced, in fact, than Kral. That certainly had to be sticking in
his craw, and pushing him into making a move against Kral. Who knew how
many of the crewmen were on Kbrex's side? Some were always looking for
excuses, always eager to hang any failure on one individual Klingon. So
that they could tell themselves that the failure was the weakness of one
individual and not a reflection on the entire race.
She might be better served if she aligned herself with Kbrex. It was
clear from his demeanor, from words both spoken and unspoken, that he
regarded her as far more than a potential ally. He was aggressive and
powerful--all the things attractive in a Klingon male.
Kbrex was going to be the way of the future, and yet she called to mind
an image of Kral. Young, vital, muscular and alive... so alive... And
he would be dead. But not if she could help it.
Her mind made up, she reflexively reached for a corem unit. But that
was not wise, she realized. Any communications might be monitored. She
left her cabin and went down the hallway, first at a brisk walk and then
at a run. Something was sounding an alarm in her head, a warning that
time had run out much faster than she had thought.
She rounded the corner and banged on the door of Kral's quarters. The
door hissed open, activated from within.
"Commander, I can't wait anymore, I must warn you about Kbrex--"
She stopped dead.
Kbrex was seated in leisurely fashion within, his legs propped up on a
table, his blaster in his lap. He was smiling broadly.
"How kind of you to alert our beloved commander," said Kbrex in purring
bemusement. "Unfortunately for you, he has gone back up to the bridge."
He stood and walked slowly across the room to her. Vladra stared at him,
her chin tilted upward, her eyes defiant.
"So you have chosen," he said, shaking his 'head. "That is a pity. Let
me show you... what you have missed."
He grabbed her roughly and fiercely slammed his lips against hers. She
struggled in his grasp, her hands trying to reach her dagger. Kbrex
grabbed her hands by the wrists and shoved her back down on the bed,
dropping his bulk atop her. Vladra cursed and spat at him, her back
archirig in fury, a guttural cry of pure venom ripping from her throat.
"I'11 kill you!" she snarled.
"I think not," Kbrex informed her, and he chortled low and started to do
things to her...
And then a rough hand closed on the back of his neck.
That was his only warning--that, and a roar of anger, and then he was
lifted bodily off Vladra and hurled against a wall of the cabin.
Trophies and mementos fell clattering to the floor, and Kbrex looked up
to see a seething Kral standing five feet away.
"You're dead," breathed Kral.
Kbrex launched himself at him with' amazing speed, and Kral met the
charge. They hurtled backward, the door politely opening to allow them
to tumble into the hallway.
They tumbled about on the floor for a moment, and then Kbrex was on top.
He clamped his knees about Kral's throat and started to squeeze.
Klingons passing in the hallway stopped in their tracks. They knew what
was happening and what was at stake. They made no move. It was not
their place to in terfere.
Vladra felt no such compunction, and she dashed into the hallway and
tried to pull Kbrex off of Kral. "You bastard!" she screamed.
Maltz, the second officer, grabbed Vladra from behind and yanked her
away. "Don't disgrace him!" he snarled, and she knew that he was right.
If Kral lived because of her interference, it would be a life without
honor. Dying was preferable.
It was not, however, on Kral's agenda. He managed to shift his weight
just enough to send Kbrex tumbling off him. Kral scrambled to his feet
and aimed a kick at Kbrex's face It connected, sending the older
Klingon sprawling
Kral charged him, still greedily sucking in air through his aching
throat. Kbrex got to his feet and met the charge. The two Klingons
shoved against each other, grunting and swearing, struggling for
leverage.
Abruptly Kbrex stepped back, the move throwing Kral momentarily off
balance. Kbrex used the opportunity to grab Kral by the back of his
neck and the front of his armor, turning swiftly and sending Kral head
first into a bulkhead. The crash was so loud and crunching that Vladra
almost felt ill.
Kral sagged, turned and faced Kbrex, wavering from side to side. Kbrex
delivered a brutal blow to Kral's head, and that was all for the Klingon
commander. He fell to the floor, gasping, the world spinning around him.
He felt the barrel of a blaster against the back of his head and
muttered a quick prayer to his god. He looked up and Vladra was looking
back, biting her lip. There was such sadness in her eyes that Kral's
greatest regret in his imminent death was not the fact of the death
itself, but the fact that he had let Vladra down.
Kbrex looked from Vladra to Kral and back again.
His finger tightened on the blaster...
.. and then relaxed.
He stepped back and waved the blaster. "Get up," he said.
Kral wiped blood from his lip and slowly stood on wavering legs.
"You are my prisoner," said Kbrex. "You are arrested for incompetence
and failure to complete a mission. You will be held for future
disposal, as I see fit."
The other Klingons blinked in surprise but said nothing. Kral glared at
him steadily. Kbrex slowly turned and regarded Vladra. "Are you his or
mine, Viaalta?" he said.
1adra said nothing for a moment, and then without a word she went to
Kral, who was leaning against a wall. She took his arm and supported
him.
"Don't do this," he whispered.
"You are no longer my commander," she said with surprising mildness.
"You cannot order me. I do as I choose... with whom I choose," and she
fired a look at Kbrex.
Kbrex made no 'reply, but merely nodded. He turned to Second Officer
Maltz, who was now going to be the first officer. "Put them in the
brig," he said, and Maltz nodded once and took them away, blaster
leveled on them.
"You let him live," said one of the crewmen who had witnessed the
battle. It was not phrased as a question. It was never healthy to
question a commander, particularly one who had just come into power and
was doubtless feeling his oats.
"I would have the woman," replied Kbrex. "If I kill him now, she makes
a martyr of him in her mind. By imprisoning them together, I give her
the opportunity to watch him descend into the frustration of losing his
command and the humiliation of being left alive. I want her to remember
him not going out fighting, but rather spending his last hours in misery
and embarrassment. That way she will willingly come to me."
"As you say," said the crewman, and then deferentially added,
"Commander."
Kbrex most definitely liked the sound of that.
Chapter Fourteen
Japan, 1600 SULU LISTENED CAREFULLY to what Sadayo, the formidable
samurai, was telling him as they crossed the great courtyard of the
castle. Sadayo had sensed Sulu's disorientation and seemed to have
decided to singlehandedly bring Sulu up to speed.
"This is Fushimi Castle. It was the last to be built by the regent
Hideyoshi, the great Taiko," Sadayo said. "See, here is the main keep,
but there are also five fortresses in the garrison. Our strength is
eighteen hundred men. Our lord Torii was assigned this castle by his
lord, Tokugawa Ieyasu. Our lord has had the honor of being Tokugawa
Ieyasu's retainer since he was a child, as his father served the
Tokugawa clan before him and his sons shall after him."
As they passed by the gates to the inner court where the lord's wife and
family were quartered, Sulu heard the chatter of women's voices. He
found himself straining to pick out the voice of Lady Oneko.
The guards were quartered in dormitories, and it was there that Sulu was
taken next. Packed with men and sleeping mats by night, the room was
hollow and lonely by day. Sulu was issued two kimonos, appropriate
undergarments and a kami-shimo, the two-piece uniform that he would wear
on duty when he wasn't in armor. It consisted of the ankle-length
pleated trousers called a hakarna, and a stiff-shouldered vest.
When he was dismissed, he headed for the bathhouse, mumbling the complex
directions in his head lest he wander off someplace inappropriate. As
he went, Sulu tried to draw in everything, a lifetime of knowledge which
he would be expected to know, and somehow did, but somehow didn't.
His eye caught the eye of an old gardener, a man extraordinary only for
his ordinariness... and an odd scar that ran down the left side of his
face. It looked like it had been made with a sword, although it was
years old. The old man politely looked away quickly, returning to his
task of pruning away faded camellias.
The bathhouse was thankfully quiet. The water in the scrub bucket was
shockingly cold. Gingerly settling into the hot soaking tub, he watched
the steam rise in lazy spirals, as the knots in his shoulders eased. His
armor had been whisked away for repair, and removal of the considerable
number of blood stains. Blood. Blood from a fight.
He remembered how, years ago, he had run from an image of a samurai. Now
he had become that which had terrified him.
And he accepted it.
Something was wrong.
He sat and pondered. Whatever damage he might have already done to the
future was done, and whatever damage he might continue to do... He
shook his head as if he could shake out the confusion. There was little
help for it but to continue to play along... or live along. If there
was a way out, he couldn't see it.
In the half sleep induced by the heat and comfort of the bath, he
accepted that it was clearly not going to be possible to get back home
by his own efforts. After all, he couldn't just wave his katana--which
turned out to be a particularly fine signed blademand cry "Open Sesame"
or something like that, and reappear on the deck of the Enterprise.
Although, he considered wryly, that might work as well as anything else.
His gut hurt, like little twisted knives. He was never going to get
back... never, never. He breathed in deeply and forced back the panic.
It wasn't such a bad place to be, he told himself, more in black humor
than in earnest. It was what he had always wanted in his most romantic
fantasies.
But... to never fly among the stars? To do without all the
conveniences of life that he had become accustomed to... everything
from instantaneous travel to a hot shower. Separated from everyone he
knew. To be dead centuries before they would be born--before he would
be born?
He let the hot water soak away the fear which again had knotted his gut,
and let himself think about all that had happened. But he couldn't
quite remember the last moments, or was it hours, on the Enterprise.
Then he thought he could see Oneko's face like an angelic Spirit
swirling out of the steam, and he caught his breath at the memory of her
pristine beauty.
He saw that lovely face later that day, while sitting guard for
Mototada.
Sulu was stationed on the other side of a privacy screen, and had been
grateful that the screen had been pulled open to capture the slight
breeze, although it was little relief against the summer heat. But the
disciplined calm silence of his guard duty turned to self-conscious
staring when the woman and her attendants shuffled in, artfully gliding
through the yards of dragging silk that puddled like colorful sea foam
around their feet.
"Tono, lord," she said, dropping to her knees and bowing before
Mototada, her tiny hands delicately touching the ground. Two guards
accompanied the women, and they dropped to the ground, also, in the
cross-legged posture of men, bowing with choreographic precision, as
two women attendants gracefully folded to their knees and bowed with
their mistress. "Oneko, how are you?"
"Well, my lord," she said, putting her hands to her belly and smiling
warmly, her eyes flitting from the ground to her 1ord's face. "Forgive
me," she said bowing low, "for causing you trouble. I had no wish to
worry you. It was selfish of me to request the trip to the temple."
"No, it was my fault for not sending more soldiers with you. The
physician said you should go there to rest, and I only endangered you."
He smiled at her. "At sixty-two I hardly expected another child, but I
am pleased, Oneko."
"I pray for another son for you, my lord," she said sweetly.
He laughed. "I have sons enough for ten men. So long as the child is
well, and you are, too."
But the warm reunion of the daimyo and his youngest concubine was cut
short by the announcement of a party riding to the fortress.
A messenger was brought in by an attendant. The man was in armor,
sweaty and breathless from a hard ride.
"Tokugawa Ieyasu approaches," he announced. Sulu's eyes widened upon
hearing this. Mototada's lord, Tokugawa Ieyasu! Coming here! It was
as if Uhura had turned and informed Kirk that the formidable and
legendary Admiral Nogura w as going to be swinging by for a stop. Part
of him was thrilled by the honor, and the rest of him was wondering what
sort of boom was about to be lowered.
The next hour was an ordered pandemonium of efficient chaos, at the end
of which the lord of the hold sat cross-legged in the vast receiving
room, his chief councillors lining both sides of the room. Sulu was now
posted behind the closed screen, but he could dimly see through the
thin, backlit wall, and he could hear everything.
When Tokugawa entered, all pressed their backs forward toward the
ground, their knuckles on the ground to their sides, bowing with the
obeisance due the overlord of this hold. Tokugawa took a seat on the
raised platform where Mototada normally held court.
Through the stony-faced impassiveness of a guard, Sulu's eyes were
riveted on the shadowy form of the man who would unite Japan. The man
who would, for better or worse, create a postfeudal society, a society
of art and culture, and one which would retain the pristine integrity of
Japan for half a millennium.
Cool, almost cold, Tokugawa Ieyasu sat, his voice with a kind of lilt
that inspired truth, or at least honesty, from others--the kind of voice
that allowed his friends to prove their worth, and his enemies to make
mistakes. Anyone who took this man as a mild-mannered patron of the
arts addicted only to the sport of hawking and admiring famous scenery,
was too stupid to live, and often didn't.
"Mototada, my old friend, the time has eome," rumbled Ieyasu. "It comes
as no surprise to you, but Ishida Mitsunari has gathered a western army
against U.S."
Sulu cast his mind back to the stories that he had heard, of the
political climate of this time. There had been a tremendous power
struggle between Tokugawa Ieyasu--incredibly, sitting a few feet away
from him --and another man, lshida Mitsunari. The entire business had
involved control over the infant son of the previous regent, and
eventually--eventually, hell, now (he had to stop thinking about the
past in the past tense)--Mitsunari had raised an army, marching from the
west toward the old capital of Kyoto, and beyond to Edo, Tokugawa's new
capital.
"Fushimi Castle lies on the road that leads to my capital of Edo,"
Tokugawa lectured. "Would I have invested anyone less able than you to
hold Fushimi Castle?" He laughed, but his voice was somber and cold when
he continued. "I choose to meet the enemy at Sekigahara, where the
Nakasendo Road runs between the Ai River and the Makita River. But it
will take me time to assemble my troops. Not all my retainers are as
reliable as you, my old friend, and there will be some who drag their
heels, waiting to guess the outcome of the battle before they commit to
the winning side. You must hold Fushimi Castle, thus holding back
Ishida Mitsunari, as long as possible. I will send you more troops..."
"No, my lord," Torii Mototada said, his voice hoarse with emotion. "You
must not. I have what men I need for what I need to do. To send more
would only weaken your main force. We will do what we must, for as long
as we can, but I implore you, my lord, do not sacrifice more men to this
action."
"So," Tokugawa Ieyasu said, nodding in agreement. "It is settled. Thank
you," he said with the slightest nod, causing his subordinate to lean
forward in abject supplication, the honor of being thanked and so
acknowledged by his lord leaving Torii speechless. And in that moment
lay the unspoken volumes that the lord knew his retainer's worth, and
the retainer accepted his fate with dignity.
And that was when it clicked into place for Sulu. Fushimi Castle, the
home of Torii Mototada, had been laid siege to in September of 1600.
They had fought against the forces of an overwhelming army for ten days,
in order to buy time for Tokugawa Ieyasu.
And that time had been bought with the life of every man in Fushimi
Castle.
Sulu had pledged, on his honor, to be bodyguard to a dead man.
He wasn't a sixteenth-century samurai, for pity's sake. He was a
Starfleet officer. He wasn't in some wonderful, daydream fantasy. He
was committing suicide.
Devil take honor. He had to get the hell out of there.
Chapter Fifteen
GARROVlCK'S BODY was lying cold in sickbay, and the bodies of Sulu,
Chekov, and Scotty had vanished into thin air. It was time, Kirk
decided, to do something about it.
He exited the turbolift and entered the conference room. Spock was
already waiting for him, and McCoy joined them moments later.
McCoy was impressed by the fact that the morose, self-doubting Kirk he'd
seen earlier had, apparently, been left behind in the captain's cabin.
Here Kirk was all business, utterly confident that he would be presented
with options and courses to pursue, and from that would draw a course of
action. His eyes were narrowed, his fingertips gently tapping on the
top of the conference-room table.
It was the sort of conference that, normally, Scotty, Sulu, and Chekov
would be attending. Their absence only drew that much attention to the
need for the conference.
"Analysis. Where are my officers?" Kirk said without preamble.
"Difficult to be precise, Captain. Evidence is slight."
"Slight?" Kirk felt as if he were grasping at straws. On the face of it,
there didn't seem to be any evidence at all. He was virtually on a
fishing expedition.
"I would say that the only suppositions we can make are on the basis of
what Weyland himself said."
"Now there's a reliable source," said McCoy crossly. "What the devil is
that Weyland character, anyway?"
"There is no reason to believe that he is anything other than what he
claims," said Spock. "A being of immense power who acts out of a rather
singular definition of honor and obligation."
"Obviously he doesn't feel any obligation to our men," observed McCoy.
"No reason he should," said Kirk. "His concern is the people of Cragon
V. Still..." His fingers drummed a moment more. "Time out of mind."
"What?" said McCoy.
"That's what he said. He said that our men were trapped in time out of
mind."
"That could have two meanings," said Spock. "There is the figurative
definition of that statement. 'Time out of mind' is generally used as a
description of an infinity of time. Time beyond the human capacity to
comprehend."
"You mean they could just be plummeting forward, or backward, in time,
out of control, forever?" said McCoy in horror.
Kirk, in spite of himself, shuddered at the image that conjured.
"That is possible," said Spock neutrally, as if it meant nothing to him.
He could just as easily have been discussing star charts or gravity
fluxes. Or at least if he was feeling anything, he was hiding it with
his customary efficiency. "The second possibility is the literal one.
That they are in some other time, drawn from the mind. Their minds."
Kirk nodded slowly, trying to make sense of that, and then his eyes
widened. "Of course! When we were down on the planet, they were
discussing various time periods from their respective backgrounds. If
Weyland was somehow able to tap into their consciousness or
subconscious, then perhaps he sent them back in time."
"A lot of ifs, and a lot of maybes," said McCoy. "How do we know he can
do all that?"
"Thus far all we've done is underestimate him, and it's gotten us .into
nothing but trouble," replied Kirk. "It'd be better if we started giving
him the benefit of the doubt. And if they've gone back in time, then we
can get them back. I remember the time periods they were discussing. We
have ways of going back in time."
"May I point out, Captain, that the engines are still not functioning,
courtesy of the immortal Weyland," said Spook. "Furthermore, may I
point out that when you and I returned to the past, to 1938 on Earth, it
was only with luck that we were able to locate the doctor. And it was
at the cost of a personal tragedy to yourself that current history was
preserved. All lies in the balance, Captain, and we are unable to do
anything to change that. That is unfortunate, but logical. Either the
men made no significant changes in history, and they have long since
lived out their lives in another time, or they will return to us in our
future. We must wait."
"I cannot accept that. I will not." Kirk sighed deeply and dropped his
head; closing his eyes as if to shut out the clear and irrefutable
argument of Spock's analysis. He looked back up, fixing his eyes on
Spock. "And there is nothing we can do?" he asked coldly.
"We can make a computer search for clues as to their actual presence in
past history, but records in precomputer time are incomplete. As to
what we could do to reverse their trip into time, I do not think there
is anything we can do."
"Then I must try to contact Weyland, and convince him to reverse this
terrible thing."
Chapter Sixteen
Scotland, 1746 IT WAS Ac;rUALLY half a day before the command staff of
William Hanover, Duke of Cumberland, came riding in, accompanied by a
number of young sports in expensive and well-tailored coats, and an even
larger number of support personnel less regally appointed.
Scott stared, fascinated at the famous general. "Fat Billy" was an
understatement. The man, fastidious in his remarkably clean uniform and
lace-trimmed shirt, was huge both in stature and as a product of good
living. His horse was as large as a racing stallion could get and still
not qualify as a draft horse.
The Duke shouted encouraging epithets to the assembled soldiery, the
cheapest form of largesse, and was rewarded with loud but unenthusiastic
cheers and waving hats. When the Duke actually dismounted in the yard
of The Hanged Woman, Mr. and Mrs. Nesbit were all but overcome with
humble appreciation of the honor.
Despite his grandiose and foppish manners, Sco tt recognized in Duke
William a razor-sharp mind and the carriage of a soldier who, despite
his indulgences, had seen a lot of death and deprivation.
"i'm not paying you to gawk at the gentlemen," the proprietress
bellowed, breaking the reverie of the assembled servants, and Scott put
his back into unloading the wicker baskets of fine food and the chests
of clean clothes the noble Duke and his entourage had brought for the
night's stay.
The excitement of the exalted company was a blessing for Scotty, who was
quickly lost in the shuffle. He soon found that his willingness to work
and gentlemanly manners bought him a certain acceptance.
It certainly afforded him the opportunity of listening in on the
conversation of the great; unlike Seamus, who was kept busyin the
kitchen and out of the way of the gentlemen guests.
The company at table was certainly impressive. A fair bit of the Duke's
senior staff, and other key persons from the various armies under his
command, had been gathered here for some serious strategy. And although
it was clear that the secret talks would take place in more private
circumstances, there was enough table talk to make Scott almost tremble
with the excitement of it.
The excitement Scott felt, however, quickly turned into carefully
controlled, but nonetheless quite real, inward rage. The English
officers, each competing to gain the favor and attention of Fat Billy,
thought nothing of endeavoring to undercut each other's achievements
while, at the same time, aggrandizing their own. William Hanover, for
his part, seemed to gain a good deal of mental exercise playing one of
them against the other, and watching in amusement as they had at each
other.
And in each of their recountings and retellings, the withering and nasty
descriptions they gave of the Scotsmen they were battling--"bastards,"
"damned barbarians," and the like--gave rise to a fury that Scotty could
barely contain.
Finally, one of them--a Lord Bury--held up a hand to try and still the
sniping. "Should we continue this bickering, we shall come to resemble
the Celt himself, strutting and braying like so many jackasses," he said
with a self-satisfied smile.
"And how their brutish tongue is as the braying of an ass," another
young rake opined, snorting and bee-hawing to make his point. This was
greeted with hoots and hilarity from his fellows.
"Best to let the Campbells loose, or other of the lowlander, to lead the
highland Celt, as one leads the braying jackass with a carrot on a
stick," said another. "Is there a 'mack' whatever worth his fodder who
would not chase bare-legged and bare-assed across the heather for the
nip at any Campbell? And what better food for the impetuous asses than
a Scottish-held carrot?"
As furious as the words made Scotty, he knew the truth in them. The
greatest enemy of the people of Scotland was the people of Scotland. The
conflict of interest between the chiefs who adhered to the old clan ways
and those who threw in their lot with their English masters had hit an
all-time high in the rebellion of 1715, and the massacre at Glencoe. The
bad blood between the Donaids and Campbells would endure a millennium,
not just the thirty or so years that had just elapsed.
While the young dandies chortled over their puns and clever' repartee,
Scotty still felt the flush of humiliation. He found them patronizing
and shallow. And he felt ashamed for the noble clans who were being
treated with such a lack of honor.
The ranking officers retired to the privacy of the large upstairs room,
while some of the younger dandies made themselves available to the
country girls who had gathered to see and be seen, and also to earn a
coin working in the kitchen for the day--or if luck would have it,
working in the bedrooms at night. The men who had no interest in risking
a case of pox for a night's diversion went off to their bivouac to
gamble, a privilege that would have earned a common soldier a flogging
but was considered a harmless pastime for a man to the manor born.
After supper Scott addressed himself to the chore of cleaning up the
mess. He reflected that it gave new meaning to the traditional military
use of the word.
"Mr. Scott, Mr. Scott." The boy's insistent voice took a moment to
ooze through Scott's confused and dark private thoughts.
"Ah, yes, lad. And what did ye make of that?" he asked in a jovial but
careful way.
The boy looked at him with a hostile curiosity. Scotty could almost hear
the boy's thoughts, guessing about this stranger who had appeared
wild-eyed and lost in a worn kilt, but who fit in so well with these
gentlemen soldiers. If he had been seated at table with them, the boy's
eyes begged, he would have gone unnoticed and unremarkable.
"Nothing, sir," Seamus answered quietly, and he slipped off about his
chores.
Scott sighed. What could he say to the boy? Certainly he was grateful
for the clothes and the help. Without them, by now he would be jailed or
hanged as a traitor to king and country.
His thoughts wandered as he thought of what he knew.
Bonny Prince Charles would lose.
Or... might he lose?
Was there something that could be done? Was the sight that Scott saw
absolute... or could it be changed by the actions of man? And...
should he?
Did any man have the right to attempt to thwart destiny?
"Are you planning to wipe the pattern off the plate?" Mrs. Nesbit
shouted at Scott, causing him to start so suddenly he nearly dropped the
precious piece of real china.
"Ach, no, indeed, madam. I was only thinking of this evening and all
the famous men I have seen," he said, attempting to sound as much the
country bumpkin as he could.
"Well see to it that you do your dreaming in your bed, man. Candles
cost good money, and that dish is now quite dry." She fussed about the
kitchen, setting things in order with the peculiar fashion which was her
own, as is the kitchen of every housewife, and snapping little curses
whenever she found an item relocated.
"May I be off to bed then, ma'am?" Scott gallantly asked.
She shot him a disapproving look which was her all-purpose ploy to keep
from agreeing to anything, but she nodded him away, the wrinkles around
her eyes softening a bit, moved by his sweet manners.
In his bed, the questions returned and whirled in his head. But whether
by plan or despair, the best he could come up with was wait and see what
else happened. More data, Scott, he told himself. You need more data.
Then he wondered why such an odd word as "data" came to his mind.
As he dropped off into a fitful sleep, he prayed, "Please Lord, make
this go away. Let me go home."
And he was awakened by the shouting, and a shot being fired.
And then everything fell apart.
Chapter Seventeen
Stalingrad, 1942 CHEKOV BLINKED into the light that was shining into his
face. Standing just beyond the rim of the light was a man in a uniform
Chekov recognized as belonging to the SS. He stood over Chekov with the
sort of calm, confident expression that indicated he knew that Chekov
would tell him what he wanted to know, sooner or later.
There were other Nazi soldiers in the room. They were secondary to the
main problem of the SS man. "Who are you?" said the Nazi. "Chekov."
"Really. Gentlemen, we have a playwright with us."
Chekov sighed. That joke was wearing thin with him very quickly.
"How did you get here?" said the Nazi. "How did you get a German
uniform?"
"I don't know," said Chekov. "You don't know?"
"I don't know."
"Tell us your troop strength."
"I don't know."
"Tell us how many rifles you have."
"I don't know."
The Nazi's eyes narrowed. "Do you know what will happen if you refuse
to cooperate?"
Chekov thought about the men back in the cell, covered with bruises and
cuts. "That I do know," he said softly.
"I will give you one chance to cooperate."
Chekov shrugged. "You would not believe me if I told you."
The Nazi smiled. "Try me."
Chekov tried.
He was right. They didn't.
When he was brought back to the cell, it was with a swollen lip and a
cut over his eye. Those were just the visible injuries.
They hurled him into the middle of the cell, where he landed heavily, a
gasp knocked out of him. The door slammed shut behind him, plunging him
once again into the dimness of the cell.
This was insane. He had never had the opportunity --unlike other
members of the crew--of being to the past. It had always sounded, from
what he'd heard, like a grand adventure... although Captain Kirk never
wanted to discuss his experience with the object called the Guardian of
Forever.
This, though, was no grand adventure. Since the moment he'd gotten
there, Chekov had felt dirty, harassed, or 'just plain scared. This was
no grand adventure. This was something he'd just as soon get out of,
except he didn't have the faintest idea how to go about it.
Cells, interrogation, secret police. The clean, pure world of the
Enterprise seemed far away. He was beginning to understand why people
of this time considered space travel and creatures from another world to
be patently absurd. To him it was his reality, and it already seemed
unreal.
He heard the voice of John Kirk say, "Well, if your being here is a Nazi
trick, you've certainly thrown yourself into it."
Chekov looked around. "Where's Ivan?"
Kirk shrugged. "Don't know," he said with careful control that was
clearly covering his concern. "They came for him right after they took
you. I imagine they wanted to ask him some of the questions they asked
you." Then he paused and, with some of his real emotion showing through,
added, "He was in pretty bad shape when they took him. I don't know how
much more he can take."
"How much can any of us take?" said Chekov.
Again Kirk shru gged. There was no answer, and Chekov hoped he wouldn't
have to find out.
Ivan did not come back.
The next day the Soviet shelling kept the Germans busy enough that
Chekov and John Kirk were spared further interrogation. The throbbing
pain was terrible, but the thirst was worse. They didn't talk--it hurt
too much. But in the dull light the two men became friends in little
ways a smile of hope, aid in moving a broken body to a more comfortable
place on the filthy floor. Things that mattered.
Chekov awoke from a troubled sleep by the door being. burst in. He
looked up, as did Kirk. The SS man was in the doorway with several
soldiers standing behind him, looking as if they meant business.
Without a word the soldiers stepped in and grabbed both Chekov and Kirk
by the arms. They were dragged out and into the main courtyard. The
sky was as slate-gray as it had been when Chekov had first looked up at
it.
"You think they're letting us go?" said Chekov, in a tone that indicated
that he, for one, certainly doubted it.
"Oh, they've just come to realize that they'll never win, and they've
decided to be nice to us," said Kirk. "They figure that it'll do them
good later."
Then Chekov and Kirk saw where they were being directed. It was a
free-standing brick wall, with enough pockmarks in it to show that it
had been hit with lots of bullets. Chekov suspected, correctly, that it
hadn't been simply used for target practice.
There was blood on the dirt in front of the wall w blood directly at the
feet of where Chekov and Kirk were made to stand.
The Nazi SS man smiled into Chekov's face, his jaw jutting outward in a
cocky grin. "Do you have any final things to tell us?" said the SS man.
Chekov smiled, inwardly pleased at his total cool in what were
undoubtedly his last moments on earth. "Your Fhrer is going to kill
himself, and your precious Reich is going to stand as a symbol of all
that's vile," he said in Russian.
The SS man shoved them against the wall and stepped away. Chekov stood
next to Kirk, and the American muttered, also in Russian, "Don't worry."
"No?"
"No. I'm working on a plan."
Chekov looked at the firing squad before them, raising their rifles and
taking dead aim.
"I can't wait to hear it," he said.
Chapter Eighteen
KRAL SAT across the tight, unpleasant room from Vladra. She was not
looking at him, but staring straight ahead. He, however, was looking at
her and shaking his head. His lower lip was swollen, and dried blood
caked his beard.
"Why?" he asked at length.
She turned to look at him. "You have to ask?" she said softly.
"Yes. I do."
"Because I love you."
His eyes widened and his voice shook with fury. "You tried to dishonor
me because you love me?"
"Dishonor you?" She shook her head. "I don't underst--"
"Coming to my aid! Acting as if I could not take care of myself."
Now Vladra was incensed, and she stood and waved her arms. "Well, now I
wonder, Commander, why anyone would ever think such a thing? After all,
you've only been beaten, bloodied and bruised, stripped of command and
defeated in combat. Who in the galaxy could possibly think that the
great Commander Kral could not take care of himself."
He sat with his arms folded, smoldering. Vladra threw herself back down
on a seat, and then she said slowly, "Why did you come down at that
particular moment?"
"What are you talking about?"
"When I went to your cabin to warn you... and you showed up, just in
time..."
He shrugged. "I am not sure. I was on the bridge, and Kbrex was not
there, and suddenly I simply got this... feeling. I cannot explain. I
only knew that I should get back down to my quarters. That something
was definitely wrong."
"Oh," she said.
Kral leaned back, his head against the stark wall. He closed his eyes
and sighed softly.
"Love," he said. "What a truly alien concept."
"I'm sorry that you think so," she said sharply. He spoke as if he
hadn't even heard her. "I have never been in love," he said, "or had a
woman say she loved me. I have spent my life in my constant endeavors
to conquer, to rise in the ranks and conquer others. Such softer
emotions seemed a waste of time and useless. And yet perhaps," and he
turned and looked at her, "perhaps those emotions that I've considered
to be too soft are, in fact, the only ones that really matter."
She stared at him. "Such things you're saying..."
"It is amazing what one thinks of when death beckons. Once you've made
your peace with death, then thinking about love can hardly be too
frightening a prospect."
On the bridge, Kbrex sat in the command chair and stared in frustration
at the peacefully orbiting globe below.
"Sir," came the quiet report from the engineer, "our orbit is starting
to decay."
Slowly Kbrex turned and eyed him. "What?"
"With our engines inoperative, we are unable to adjust our orbit. Our
orbit is decaying. It's not immediate, but within twenty-four hours we
will begin our descent into the planet's atmosphere."
Kbrex felt all eyes on him, and he felt a slow, bubbling fury. "Summon
Weyland on the communications grid."
"I had been trying to, sir, for some hours. Those were Commander
Kr--ex-Commander Kral's orders, and I assumed you wanted me to
continue."
"That was a dangerous assumption," said Kbrex warningly. "I will excuse
it, however. Any word?"
"None, sir."
His fury mounted. He had staged a coup, unseated the young upstart
Klingon, and taken over command .. of a powerless hulk that would be a
fireball before too long.
It was all Kral's fault. The fool had left him with an impossible
situation, and Kbrex could tell from the way that eyes were on him, that
they were already blaming him for a situation that he had inherited. It
was time to refocus blame where it belonged. "Damn Kral for getting us
into this. Honor guard, attend for an execution," and he walked briskly
for the turbolift, four Klingons following him.
As they headed for the brig, Kbrex was running through his mind all the
things that he would say to Vladra to convince her of the folly of her
preferences. He would be alternatively calm, reasoning, and firm. He
imagined lines of dialogue, and polished his intended speech to a
gleaming shine.
When they arrived at the brig, Vladra and Kxal were locked in a
passionate embrace. Upon seeing it, all of Kbrex's high-born plans went
out the torpedo chute.
Klingon ships were built with airlocks. They were emergency portals
only, to be used in the unlikely- but not impossible--event that some
sort of exterior work had to be done on a ship and the transporters were
out of commission. After a major battle, for example.
Seeing them entangled in each other immediately gave Kbrex another use
for an airlock.
Suddenly aware that they had an audience, Kral and Vladra broke their
clinch and looked at Kbrex and his followers. Kbrex told himself that,
at this moment, the decision was still Vladra's. She held her own life
in her hands.
She spit at him.
It arced through the air and sizzled into nonexistence, several inches
short of Kbrex's face, thanks to the brig force shield. But the gesture
was more than enough to decide matters for him.
"Careful now," he ordered the half dozen guards who held the commander
aloft by his twisting, kicking limbs. "We don't want the damned
superbeing alerted." Kral screamed and thrashed like a spit lizard. They
threw him in, punching 1adra out of the way as she charged with crazed
fury to Kral's aid.
"Kral," she screamed with despair as the heavy door of the airlock
slammed on them.
A brusque, recorded Klingon male voice said curtly, "Thirty seconds to
vacuum. Thirty seconds to vacuum."
Kral sat stunned for a moment. Vladra knelt by his side, burying her
head into his shoulder.
"Twenty seconds to vacuum. Twenty seconds to vacuum."
The growling male voice of the computer galvanized Kral into action. He
scrambled to his feet, pushing Vladra away, and lurching toward a
storage cabinet marked "Environmental Units." He fumbled with the door.
"Damn it to Cymele's Hell," he screamed as he tugged at the door. It
sprung open. It contained environmental suits, all right; the damaged
ones destined for salvage.
"Fifteen seconds to vacuum. Fifteen seconds to vacuum."
"Shut up/" he bellowed at the wall speaker. He looked around wildly.
There were two more storage cabinets, but no time to try them.
"Here, get in this," he shouted at Viadra, thrusting a mostly intact
environmental suit at her. As she slithered into hers, he struggled
into his, a heavier model designed for extensive use and even, in an
emergency, for an escape pod.
"Ten, nine, eight..."
Before he slammed down the mittenlike paws of the suit, he fished around
for a roll of silver repair tape. "Damn it," he screamed, as the hiss of
the escaping air grew more insistent. "There," he shouted, and he drew
a great strip of the stuff and grabbed her up, strapping her to himself.
He was about to fling the tape aside when he saw a dangling flap of torn
silver fabric in her suit.
"Seven, six, five..."
"Bunch it up. There's a tear in the arm of your suit. Squeeze your arm
down. There," he said, making a futile attempt at a patch with a final
strip of the tape. "Four, three, two, one..."
As he reached around her to turn on her air, the great airlock doors
whisked open and they were sucked out in a whirlwind of debris and what
little air remained.
Chapter Nineteen
Japan, 1600
"COME ON, Great One Cut." The shrill voice had feet, and Sulu felt
himself booted out of his blankets by one of them.
He recognized the voice immediately. It was Motonaga, the youngest son
of one of Mototada's retainers. The last person Sulu needed to see
after a sleepl ess night of wishing that his comfortable bed on the
Enterprise were beneath him.
Sulu groaned, opening one eye to Motonaga's nasty grin. The sun wasn't
up yet, although the sky was already a warm slate-pink.
"Shut up," one of the pile of sleeping men grunted. "Come on, demon
slayer," the boy taunted. "Come on, Motonaga, give it a rest," Sulu
mumbled in colloquial Japanese. Motonaga was only sixteen years old,
but being the son of Naito lenaga, a garrison commander and one of Torii
Mototada's generals and trusted retainers, gave him much license. He
was hell-bent to prove himself a samurai worthy of his father, his older
brothers, and his lord. As a result, he was something of a pain in the
neck to the samurai of more years but less rank.
"That's what I like about you, Heihachiro," the boy said, grinning and
dragging Sulu up. "You have no ,manners, and that makes me look good."
Sulu made a quick lurch at the boy, grabbing a handful of kimono as
Motonaga darted back.
"You'll have to get your satisfaction later. The lord wants you."
"Why didn't you say so?" Sulu burst out, scrambling to pull out his
clothes from the chest against the wall, wading over the snoring men.
"Well, I'm saying so now," the boy taunted, striding out with such an
exaggerated gait that he almost looked like a caricature of a samurai.
Sulu dressed quickly, slicking back his hair. He stuck his small sword
in his belt, took his katana in his hand, and with a last minute tug on
the front of his kimono and uniform, strode to the mastefts quarters.
All the way there his mind was racing. He was too visible and, for that
matter, the land was too wild, to just go sneaking out. He was going to
have to figure out some graceful way of getting out of this. At least,
he knew, he had a little time.
And, although he hated to admit it, the concept of running out on his
"lord and master" was rubbing him the wrong way. He reminded himself
that he was a Starfleet officer, and tried to remain detached.
But it was not easy. To read history books, when people are reduced to
glowing letters of text, or to hear stories from one's mother--that was
one thing. This, though--walking with people of flesh and blood, who
look at you and smile and nod their head--that precious detachment was
no longer easy. The question became--was it even possible?
He knelt outside the screen and called out, "Okiri Heihachiro here,"
politely announcing himself before he opened the screen and entered. He
bowed low, and dropped cross-legged to the ground, bowing again. He
quickly assessed the men assembled and scooted on the ground to take the
place to which he was entitled. It looked as though none of them had
gotten any sleep that night.
"Heihachiro-domo," the lord called out, using the honorific which
reinforced Sulu's status as a retainer.
"Hal, tono." Sulu scooted forward again, bowing low. Mototada waved his
hand toward the ground, motioning Heihachiro to a place closer to his
presence. Again Sulu scooted forward, the kind of dignified crabwalk
which was the customary method of locomotion in formal situations. He
sat cross-legged and waited.
"Lord," he snapped efficiently.
"I want you to lead a guard and accompany my concubine, Oneko, to her
uncle's house in Edo."
He couldn't believe it. The problem was solved. He was being given a
free pass out of there--at the request of Mototada!
"Hal, ". Sulu snapped, the word yes coming out like a blast of air. "I
am honored by such a responsible duty," Sulu added, again pressing his
back forward, his fists on the ground to his sides.
"Tono! Lord!" The emotional cry came from the open doorway. It was
young Motonaga again, this time his slender form and angular face almost
quivering with restrained anger. "Why is this upstart, this unknown,
allowed the honor? When will I be able to prove my worth as a samurai
to my lord? Do we even know we can trust this one?" he screamed,
pointing his finger accusingly at Sulu.
Naito Ienaga, the boy's father, bellowed back, "Such insolence," and
turning to the daimyo, whose frown seemed to harbor some amusement,
"Forgive my son, lord. He is impetuous."
"Motonaga," the master said sternly, "you must learn when to attack and
when to wait, if you would be a great war leader. Your turn will come,
soon enough.
It is important that no one know who she is. You are known, but our new
retainer is not, and so he shall accompany her. If Tokugawa does not
win the battle to come, then my surviving kin may not be safe, and if
she carries a son, it will be her duty to hide my remaining their and
rebuild the Torii clan."
He turned again to Sulu. "There is something about you, something not
of this land. Perhaps the gods of my family have sent you for luck. But
no matter. Do you understand that this task is very important?"
"Hal, tono." The irony was staggering. Oneko, the woman he'd saved--and
endlessly second-guessed himself over--was being entrusted to him once
more. It was a bizarre situation. If they were attacked enroute, he
could then stand aside and let her die and rectify the original error...
except, what if it wasn't an error? What if he was supposed to be her
savior? What if letting her die was wrong?
Once again he told himself that he should trust his instincts. And his
instincts were telling him that drawing this assignment--and having the
opportunity to spend time with the fascinating Oneko--was luck of the
highest order.
"When she is safe," said Mototada, "you will return with what new
intelligence our allies have been able to gather. I only pray to the
gods and the buddha we will not be engaged by our enemy until we have
that information," he added, the fire of an old campaigner in his voice.
"Do you understand?"
"Yes, lord," Sulu snapped.
"Good. My administrator shall give you funds and tell what arrangements
have been made for the trip." With that Sulu was dismissed.
At breakfast he toyed with his rice, still in a daze as he reviewed
every word of the interview with Mototada.
He was expected to return. Well... he just wouldn't. As difficult as
it was to simply abandon Mototada, there was no point in just giving up
his life for no reason.
Was there?
For the first time he started to toy with the idea that he should
return. That he owed an obligation to... to whom?
To Mototada? His lord? Nonsense. He owed his allegiance to James T.
Kirk. No one else.
Besides, what did he know about this world? It was all so new, so
fragile. And what did the world know of him? Could he change something
important, something sacred to the history of his people?
Midmorning found him on an errand in the inner
"Wait. Young man. Come here." The sweet singing voice of the woman
rang out to him like a bell in the breeze.
His heart almost stopped. Oneko! "My lady," he said, turning and
bowing.
"I hear that you are to be my escort to Edo," she said gently.
"Yes, my lady," he said, suddenly remembering that Edo was the old name
for Tokyo. Sometimes it was too confusing to think about.
"They say you fight like a mountain demon. Tell me, are you a god? Or
a ghost?"
"No, my lady," he said.
"And yet, they say you are strange, different. Perhaps I will uncover
your secret on the road." With that she swept off in a gliding shuffle
of little steps, followed by her attendants.
"Pretty, isn't she?" The voice was behind him. Sulu spun around.
"Oh, it's you, Watanenabe Sadayo-domo," he stammered, still red-faced.
"Some warrior! The god Hachiman would never let himself be Shuck up on
while he was gawking at a lady."
"Er, I, er, that is..." Sulu stammered.
"Don't worry," the man said, clapping him on the shoulder, laughing.
"She does that to all of us. Come along to the sword dojo. I've been
watching you practice the past few days. You are one of those fellows
who is inspired in battle, but not so in practice. I think I have a few
tricks to teach you. I am the lord's sword master, in ease you didn't
know."
"No, I didn't," Sulu said, bowing politely. "I would be pleased to
learn from you."
"Besides, working up a good sweat is the best way to forget women,"
Sadayo added, grinning as they marched along the paths and verandas of
the great estate to the practice hall.
Already they could hear the echoing shouts, the dull thud of bare feet
on the wooden floor, and sharp snapping clacks of wooden swords on
wooden swords, as the young samurai practiced katas, the formal exercise
sets, and tried out their cuts in free-style duels with wooden practice
weapons.
Sulu had already worked up a sweat, and had almost forgotten about
Oneko, when the young hot-head, Motonaga, swaggered in.
"Well, let's see how good you are," he challenged Sulu.
Sulu shrugged. He didn't want to make an enemy of this boy, but on the
other hand, if he didn't hold his own with a sword, he would never get
the kid's attention long enough to explain that. Motonaga was galloping
across the floor before Sulu was even in position. He sidestepped the
charge but was unable to bring down his own cut before the boy was out
of range and had turned again to face him.
Motonaga struck downward with a strong cut to the head. Sulu blocked,
the shock burning through his tired arms. He disengaged his sword,
using the boy's own strength against him as Motonaga's sword swept
uselessly down, unable to stop Sulu's cut to the boy's head. Sulu
stopped it short of contact. It was, after all, practice, not war. The
boy bowed stiffly, turned and left.
"There! That's better. More like battle fighting," the sword master
said, coming up to Sulu, reaching out to correct his grip on the wooden
weapon. "Practice that cut," he ordered.
And then his voice went low and he said, "Are y ou familiar with the
story of the samurai who was sent by his lord to deliver a treaty, but
an enemy changed letters and the man carried his own death warrant?"
Sulu stared at him, uncomprehending.
"On the road," continued the gray-haired samurai, "he meets a samurai in
a lion-face helmet and fights him, only to find it is his own brother,
who in dying confesses that he was the treacherous enemy, and bids him
destroy the letter. Now... to whom do your sympathies go?"
Sulu frowned, still not getting what he was driving at. "The dead
brother, I suppose. He tried to make up for a misdeed and wound up
dead."
"He was a traitor," said Sadayo through thinned lips. "Remember that,
when you are on the road with the lady."
And he walked away from Sulu like a ghost on glass.
Chapter Twenty
"UHURA, KEEP TRYING to raise Weyland."
Uhura sat at her station and shook her head slowly. "You realize,
Captain, that I'm broadcasting blindly here. The tech readings on
Cragon V say that they don't have the facilities for receiving starship
communications. Or any communications, for that matter."
Kirk sat in his command chair and nodded, staring at the image of Cragon
on the screen. He was stroking his chin thoughtfully as he said, "Yes,
Uhura, I'm quite aware of that. But if the immortal Weyland is as
powerful as he seems to be, then I'm sure he can read our signal if he
chooses. Keep trying. Likewise, keep trying to raise Starfleet."
"Negative response, Captain. Would you like me to try and raise the
Klingon ship?"
Kirk thought about the Klingon grenade detonating, blowing up a good
young officer and a boy who hadn't even had the opportunity to live yet.
"I have nothing to say to them," said Kirk tightly. At the helm,
Lieutenant Ryan was filling in for Sulu, and she turned in her seat and
said softly, "Captain. I hate to bring this up..."
Ryan was new, and cautious. Kirk could understandreno one wanted to be
the bearer of bad tidings, least of all someone who had just arrived on
board. Nevertheless, Kirk was not in the mood for prevarication. "Go
ahead, Lieutenant."
"Instruments indicate that our orbit is beginning to decay. In
approximately," she glanced at her controls, "25.3 hours, we're going to
descend into the planet's atmosphere and..."
She didn't have to complete the prediction. Everyone on the bridge knew
what it was.
"Thank you, Lieutenant," was all Kirk said. What he thought in addition
was, My day is complete. "Bad news?"
The question came so abruptly, and from such an unexpected spot, that
everyone on the bridge jumped involuntarily. There on the screen,
replacing the image of the planet, was Weyland's face, much as it had
been the last time they saw it.
Kirk's mouth moved a moment, and then he found words. "We wish to speak
with you."
"Speak," said Weyland noncommittally.
"I wish to know how long you intend to keep us here."
"I have already told you that," said Weyland.
"Telling us we will stay here until we rot is not what I would call a
useful answer."
"If that is what you heard, then that is your answer."
Kirk shook his head. "I don't understand."
"Then that, too, is your answer."
"I'm getting tired of your riddles," said Kirk, trying to keep a rein on
his anger and only partly succeeding. "You can't simply keep us trapped
here indefinitely. Sooner or later the Federation, and the Klingon
empire, will send ships to investigate our absence."
"That would be most unfortunate for them," Weyland said mildly.
"Are you saying you're powerful enough to stand up against the might of
the Federation and the Klingons?" demanded Kirk. "Because that's
exactly what you're going to have to do."
Weyland actually seemed to consider that a moment. "What would you
suggest?"
"Return my men to me and restore our power. We will leave you as we
found you."
"Why should I believe that?" demanded Weyland. "You've not been
trustworthy thus far. Why should I believe you to be beings of honor?"
"I'm trying to convince you, dammit. Restore our transporter, and let
me come down there and speak to you directly."
Again Weyland gave it some thought. "Very well," he said. "The time is
right. I shall give you the opportunity to use your transporter one
time... one time only. Do as you see fit."
He vanished from the screen.
Kirk blinked in surprise. "I didn't think he'd agree to it."
"Nor I."
"Perhaps he hasn't. Kirk to engineering."
"Engineering," came the brisk reply.
"Mr. Sco--" He corrected himself immediately. "Mr. Two Feathers,
kindly run a check on transporter circuits."
There was a brief pause, and then the surprised response came back.
"Sir, transporter circuits are clear for Transporter Room A."
"No glitches or energy disruptions." Kirk was wary of a trap, although
he wasn't sure why. A being like Weyland didn't need to resort to
trickery if he decided to dispatch someone. That much had been proven.
"None, sir. It's clear."
"Thank you, Mr. Two Feathers. Kirk to transporter room. Two to beam
down. Come along, Mr. Spock. Perhaps the logical approach will work."
"It frequently does," Spock told him serenely. Moments later they were
in the transporter room, Kirk issuing last minute instructions to
transporter chief Kyle. Spock was already on the transporter pad. And
that was when the alert came down from the bridge.
Kirk immediately tapped the comm panel. "Kirk here."
"Captain, this is Ryan. Sensors have detected two figures outside of
the Klingon ship."
"Outside?" Kirk couldn't believe it. "Are they performing some sort of
repair work.o"
"Negative, Captain. We have them on screen. They appear to simply be
flailing around. Whatever they're doing out there, I don't think they
are there voluntarily, sir."
"Ryan--" and then he stopped.
One shot with the transporter. That was what Weyland had said. And
Kirk had promised to come down. Weyland had been contending that they
couldn't be trusted, then he gives them a chance to show they can, and
Kirk doesn't even show up? Uses the transporter for something else...
perhaps even a move that could be perceived as an attempt to take a
prisoner or two. After all, the Klingons might still be performing some
sort of necessary maintenance.
Even if they were in trouble, so what7 They were just two Klingons,
after all. Two murderers. Just two lives... and even if they were in
space involuntarily, so what7 Who would care if they were dead? Just
two lives...
'"Damn," muttered Kirk, after a hesitation that had actually been less
than a second. "Ryan, feed the coordinates to the transporter room.
Kyle, lock on and beam them here immediately."
"Captain," Spock said, stepping down off the transporter.
Kirk looked at his first officer and said, "What else can I do? Are
there any logical alternatives?"
Spock nodded. "Yes. But only one correct alternative."
"That's good to hear." He hit the corem panel once more. "Transporter
room to sickbay. Bones, get up here. We're about to have company."
The transporter beams hummed, their familiar lights cascading across the
pads. Kirk and Spock waited, and moments later two silver-clad forms
appeared. Their hands were outstretched toward each other, as if they
had been trying to reach out to one another in one last, desperate act.
The moment their molecules were fully integrated, the two of them
collapsed to the floor of the transporter. Kirk noted incredulously
that there seemed to be some sort of patching here and there to hold the
suits together.
"Sir," said Kyle in confusion, "the transporter circuits just went dead
again."
Kirk nodded. He'd expected that. Weyland was a man of his word, if
nothing else.
McCoy entered quickly with his medical gear, and his eyes widened.
"Where the devil did they come from?"
"From the Klingon ship, apparently. So adjust medications
appropriately."
"I'm not sure what's appropriate for a Klingon," said McCoy, approaching
the individuals on the platform cautiously. One always had to be
careful when dealing with Klingons, but these two hardly seemed to be in
shape to give McCoy any grief.
The larger of the two figures removed his head covering. Kirk's eyes
went wide with surprise, and then he shook his head. The Klingon rites
of succession in action once again. All things considered, it was
amazing the individual was alive.
He looked up at Kirk with amazement. "Gods. I'm dead."
"No," said Kirk. "You're on the Enterprise."
"I assumed I was dead, since my personal picture of hell is being
trapped forever with you."
"Good to see you too, Commander Kral."
Chapter Twenty-one
Scotland, 1746 MONTGOMERY SCOTT ROLLED OFF his straw pallet, ig-noting
the protesting creak of his back. What had just happened? There had
been a shot, and some shouting, and now the sound of running feet and
the sound of angry voices raised. He thought he heard the Nesbits,
begging and pleading about something. The inn was ablaze with light,
and Scotty burst out, almost tumbling down the stairs to the main room.
There was William Hanover, Duke of Cumberland, in his night clothes. He
was holding, by the scruff of his neck, a furious and kicking Seamus.
"What the blazes... ?!" Scotty gasped.
Hanover was paying no attention to Scotty. Instead he was addressing
the Nesbits, shaking Seamus for emphasis. "So are you claiming that you
were unaware that this little rebel was under your own roof?."
"I am no rebel," shouted Seamus, red-faced, "but a patriot, who will
gladly die for the prince who, by God, is your king!"
"Oh, shut up," said Hanover in annoyance. "And next time you attempt to
shoot someone in their sleep, be certain that your hand is not shaking
with fear."
"If my hand was shaking," snapped Seamus, "it was with excitement at
having the chance to rid the world of you! And strike a blow for the
prince!"
"You had your opportunity," said Hanover, "and you missed it."
Seamus kicked him in the shin.
William Hanover, the Duke of Cumberland, let out a yelp and lost his
grip on the boy. Seamus made a break for it, leaping toward a window.
He almost made it, but one of the soldiers lunged forward and snagged
him by the ankles. Seamus went down with a crash, amidst a tumble of
chairs. It took three soldiers to haul the struggling teenager to his
feet, and Seamus promptly sank his teeth into the forearm of the nearest
one. The soldier yelled and, drawing back his hand, cuffed Seamus once
hard across the face. The boy moaned and sagged in the grip of the
other men.
"What shall we do with him, sir?" said the officer who was holding
Seamus from behind.
"Shoot him," said Hanover, sitting and nursing his throbbing shin.
"In here, sir?"
Hanover stared at him in disbelief. "Of course not in here! Do you
think we're as barbaric as the enemy? Sink me, man! If you shot him in
here, you'd get blood all over the floor."
"Sorry, sir," said the officer, properly chastened. "Decorum at all
times," said Hanover. "We are English, you know. We stand for
something. Take him outside and shoot him."
"Right away, sir."
Seamus was dragged out into the street. It was dark, the small amount
of light being provided by torches held by some of the soldiers.
No fancy firing squad here. Seamus was simply hurled into the middle of
the dirt road like so much baggage. He tumbled and fell onto his back.
He started to scramble to his feet, and one of the officers, swinging up
his musket, called out, "I wouldn't try to run, boy. If you do, then
you'll be wounded and we'll have to finish you slowly. If you stand
still, then we can make it quick. You won't feel anything."
"I already feel revulsion! Whenever I look at you!" said Seamus
defiantly. He stood, arms drawn back, facing them. "Go ahead! I'm not
afraid!"
"You've got spunk, lad. Too bad you're on the wrong side," said the
soldier. The others brought up their muskets as well.
And then there was a pounding of hooves and the loud whinny of a horse.
The soldiers spun around, unable to make out who was galloping down on
them in the dark. Suddenly a horse burst into the circle of light,
plowing right through the soldiers before they could do anything other
than scatter to get out of the way.
The boy's eyes widened in amazement. "Mr. Scott!" he cried out.
Scotty bore down toward the boy and extended an arm. "Hurry! Now!"
Seamus leaped upward and Scotty hauled him onto the back of the horse as
if he were completely weightless. He snapped the reins and the horse
charged forward. There was the crack of musket shot just past his head,
but Scotty wasn't concerned. Even under the best of circumstances,
muskets weren't (Aren't! Aren'to very accurate.
And within moments Seamus and Scotty had pounded off into the darkness.
Hanover looked up as his men, looking somewhat shocked, slowly reentered
the inn.
"Is he dead?" asked Hanover.
"Uhm... no, sir," said an officer. "He, uhm... he got away, sir."
Hanover's stare was acid. "Got... away?"
"He had help, sir."
"Really?" He regarded them carefully. "Not a mark on you. You must
have put up a fearsome fight."
"He surprised us, sir. A man on horsebackg" Hanover slammed a fist down
on the table, causing dishes to rattle. "I don't care if a hoard of
rampaging Huns helped him] Get him back here!"
"Yes sir!" said the officers, and hurriedly they ran out to mount a
pursuit.
Hanover shook his head. "Damned disappointing performance, I must say.
Impossible to find good officers nowadays."
Chapter Twenty-two
KBREX BELLOWED in utter fury, "They were what?"
"Transported away," said Kevlar at the sensor station. "They were on
our screen and then they vanished."
"Raise the Enterprise, "snarled Kbrex. "Raise those bastards
immediately. Enterprise/Answer us, damn you!"
"Enterprise here," came the unflappable voice of a human female.
"I want to speak to your slime bastard of a dung-brained commander,
now!"
There was a pause. Then, when the woman came back on, she sounded
amused. "I'm sorry, but there's no one here by that name." Dead
silence. "They've cut off, sir."
"Get them back!" Moments later... "Enterprise here."
"You stupid targ!" bellowed Kbrex, waiting for her to sound intimidated,
as he added, "Do you know who you're dealing with?"
"You called earlier, didn't you?" said the woman calmly.
"Put your brainless captain on immediately, or so help me Kahless, I
will rip out your living heart and strangle you with your own entrails!"
There was a pause.
"Who did you want to speak to again?"
His face was turning purple. "Your flea-bitten, cowardly,
son-of-a-whore captain!"
"He's out walking the dog," the woman informed him. "But I'm sure he'll
be back when you're ready to be polite."
Dead silence.
"They disconnected again."
"Get them back//"
"Enterprise here," came that same maddening voice.
"You weak vomitusm" began Kbrex.
But he was cut off as the voice continued smoothly, "We're not home
right now, but please leave a message and we'll return your
communication as soon as possible."
Kbrex sputtered for a moment, and then the communications officer,
fearing for his life, informed Kbrex that the Enterprise had severed
communications once more.
On the bridge of the Enterprise the crew was as close to full-fledged
hysterics as Kirk had ever seen them.
After hours of sitting helpless, in the hands of some superbeing with
his own motives and unknowable thought process, having the opportunity
to let off some steam was proving a blessing for the crew.
"We're being hailed again, Captain," said Uhura. As opposed to the
barely controlled giggling from the rest of the bridge crew, Uhura
maintained the absolute deadpan that she used with the Klingon. "How
long shall I keep this going?"
"Until he's ready to behave in a respectful fashion," said Kirk,
casually studying his fingernails. "In my younger days I might have
taken his abuse. But I'm getting too old to put up with this sort of
treatment."
"Yes sir," she said, ready for another round. Adding a honey-dripped
drawl to her voice, Uhura picked up the communications band and said,
"Enterprise here." As before, she immediately had it on audio for the
crew to hear.
There was silence for a moment, and then a gruff Klingon voice, sounding
as if he were strangling on every syllable, said, "Is... Captain...
Kirk... there... please?"
Kirk and Uhura looked at each other, and Kirk smiled, inclining his head
slightly. "On the screen, Uhura."
The infuriated face of the Klingon appeared, and he snapped, "Have I
provided you with sufficient amusement?"
"Is there some way I can help you?" asked Kirk. "You know damned well
what you can do," he snapped. "I am Commander Kbrex, and you have our
former commander and his companion over there."
"You seemed to be finished with them," said Kirk neutrally.
"They have been sentenced to die," came the angry reply.
"Well, then you will doubtlessly get your wish. I can assure you that
they will die."
Kbrex actually seemed surprised at that. "You mean you will interrogate
them and then kill them yourselves?"
"No. I'm just assuring you that they will die. Sooner or later. We
all will."
Kbrex's face darkened. "And some of us, Captain Kirk, sooner than
others." The image blinked out. "I don't think he likes us," observed
Kirk.
S.pock stepped to the side of Kirk's command chair, staring straight
forward as he said, "The question remains as to your intentions toward
our guests."
"I have no intentions toward them," said Kirk tightly, the faint
amusement he'd derived from Kbrex's discomfiture quickly fading. "I
have nothing to say to them."
"You are irritated over the recent events on Cragon."
Kirk looked up at him sharply. "They were responsible for the death of
one of my men."
Spock inclined his head slightly in deference to the captain's
statement, but with Spock what was unsaid was frequently as important as
what was spoken.
Kirk thought for a moment, and then stood. "You have the conn," he
said.
It was fairly clear where the commander was quartered. It was the only
cabin with a pair of heavily armed security guards posted at the door.
The captain knocked, and waited for a moment before he let himself in.
The two Klingons rose when he entered.
There was dead silence as the two men sized each other up. The captain
studied the steady poker face of the young Klingon commander. If he
could read those inscrutable Klingon features, there was something
beyond the usual warrior stiff-necked snarl. Kirk's eyes flicked to the
woman, just barely. That could be a sore point with a Klingon male. But
even in his brief scan of her face, he saw not only her noble beauty,
which was breathtaking to any humanoid, and a haughty braveness, but a
hint of fear. And fear in a noble Klingon wasn't a casual thing.
"I want to know the status of your ship, Commander," said Kirk briskly.
"Rot in hell," said the male. There was a sharp intake of breath from
the female, but otherwise she said nothing.
"That is not the best attitude to have with your savior," Kirk said.
"A savior? That would imply that you had some sort of altruistic
motives behind your action," replied Kral. "Your reason for rescuing us
is governed entirely by your desire to torture us to derive
information."
Kirk shook his head. "They certainly have you brainwashed about us,
don't they?"
"We know the goals of the Federation," said Kral. "We've never made a
secret of our goals," Kirk told him, getting angrier by the moment.
There was something about the arrogant and defiant stance of the
Klingons that was absolutely infuriating. "To promote well-being and
understanding throughout the galaxy. Just as the Klingons have made no
secret of theirs
conquest and obliteration of all races but theirs."
"We are the stronger!" declared Kral.
"I've heard those claims before, Kral. Years ago, spouted by Klingons
who looked different from you but had the same obnoxious and arrogant
attitudes."
Kral turned his back on Kirk. "I see no point in continuing this
discussion. Bring us to the nearest starbase, where we will assume our
status as prisoners of war."
"There is no war!" said Kirk in exasperation. "As for the nearest
starbase, what do you suggest we do? Get out and push? We have no
power!"
Vladra seemed surprised by this. "You don't, either?"
Kral turned and made a sharp hissing sound, indicating that she should
keep quiet. But defiantly, Vladra said, "Commander, what does it matter
any more? We're not welcome aboard the Ghargh--"
"Be silent!" he snarled, his fists clenched.
"Do you think I'm stupid, Commander?" demanded Kirk, trying to distract
the Klingon's growing fury away from the woman. "Dropping a commander
into space isn't exactly a sign of respect. Obviously your crew has
decided they have no further use for you. And frankly, if you were as
cooperative with them as you are with us--"
Kral launched himself at Kirk.
Vladra cried out a warning, but it was, of course, a bit late. Kirk
sidestepped quickly and Kral slammed into the wall. Kirk backpedaled as
Kral spun and faced him, fists clenched and teeth gritted.
The doors to the quarters hissed open and the two security guards
entered. They interposed themselves between the Klingon and the
captain; each of them trained a phaser on one of the Klingons.
Kral, blinded by fury, charged at the security guards. The closest of
the guards immediately took aim and, just at the moment Kirk shouted
"No!" the phaser whined. Kral went down, enveloped in a burst of stun
energy. He hit the ground, cracking his head against the edge of the
bed.
"Sorry, Captain," said the guard apologetically. "It's all right," said
Kirk reluctantly, going straight to the corem panel and, once again,
summoning McCoy from the sickbay. Vladra was rolling the unconscious
Klingon commander onto his back. It was a nasty gash, but nothing McCoy
couldn't deal with.
"He's upset," Vladra said, sounding almost apologetic.
"It's a common mental state among Klingons," said Kirk as he turned to
leave. He saw little point to remaining.
"He appeared," Vladra said abruptly.
Kirk turned. "He?"
"The thing called Weyland," she said, repressing a shudder. "He made
our weapons useless. We're trapped there. That's why Kral was thrown
out of command. The crew wanted someone to blame our situation on."
"Any men?" demanded Kirk. "Did he take any of your men away?"
She frowned. "No. Why? Did he take some of yours?"
For a moment Kirk didn't want to reply. But then, he reasoned, that was
the same sort of paranoia that motivated the Klingons. The last thing
he wanted to do was emulate Klingons. "Yes," he said tightly. "Three of
my men vanished."
"I can understand your anguish," she said softly. Then she glanced at
Kral. "Perhaps you can understand his."
Kirk looked at the unconscious Kral, the Klingon's chest rising and
lowering irregularly.
He thought about Garrovick dying at the hands of Klingon weaponry.
"I wish I cared," said Kirk, and he turned and left the room as McCoy
stepped past.
He looked neither left nor right as he strode down the hallway, fists
clenched. Replaying in his mind was scene upon scene of a history of
Klingon violence and maliciousness, up to the most recent--Garrovick's
death.
"We can all rot together," said Kirk.
Chapter Twenty-three
Stalingrad, 1942 THE SS OFFICER stood to the side and called briskly,
"Ready! Aim!"
Chekov muttered to John Kirk, "This had better be a damned good plan
you're working on."
"You'll love it," said Kirk. "Fire!" shouted the SS man.
Chekov braced himself, his eyes closed, and the guns went off.
He waited for pain, for excruciating agony, for his blood to gush from
perforations and his legs to collapse under him. For something!
Nothing.
Almost afraid to believe it, he opened one eye and then the other. Kirk
was next to him, and they were looking at each other with equal
befuddlement.
They turned then, upon hearing the raucous laughter of the German
soldiers.
"Blanks," muttered Kirk. "They used blanks. The idea is to bring us
out here and convince us we're going to die. They can do this any
number of times, trying to soften us up."
"Effective," said Chekov, trying to stop his voice from quavering.
"Now," said the SS officer, approaching them briskly, "we'll bring you
back to your cell. And then we'll talk. And tomorrow, well... one
never knows when the real bullet will be lodged in one's chest, does
one?"
Then there was a rifle crack, and the SS officer pitched forward with a
bullet lodged in his chest.
Chekov and Kirk looked around in confusion as, all of a sudden, there
was pandemonium throughout the camp.
The firing squad swung their rifles around and automatically started
firing about them, forgetting that they only had blanks in their rifles.
They toppled back, twisting and writhing, crying out and shouting
profanities.
Chekov suddenly felt hands at his back, undoing the bonds. To his left
he saw that Kirk was likewise being freed, and Chekov's eyes went wide
when he saw who was responsible.
"Ivan!" he said joyously.
Ivan said briskly, as he finished undoing Chekov's bonds, "They thought
I was dead, after my most recent questioning session. They dragged me
out and dropped my body with a pile of unburied corpses. Then the
shelling started. I came to and crawled to a farmhouse and told the
farmers what happened. We ran out and pleaded with a group of Russian
laborers. A few, mostly the anti-Soviet Mongols, refused to help, but
the others were patriotic. Some were even partisans spying on the
Germans."
Farmers, thought Chekov. He owed his life to determined farmers,
sniping from nearby. "And the Russian army?" he gasped.
"Responsible for mortars and sharpshooting."
And suddenly they looked up as they heard an incoming whistle.
Ivan's eyes widened. "Scatter!" he shouted. The mortar did not know,
apparently, who was friend and who was foe.
Chekov dashed madly, and seconds later was hurled forward by an
explosion from behind him. He glanced back, but the rising smoke didn't
permit him to see anything, and he didn't have the time to go back and
check things further.
He was barreling forward when a German soldier blocked his way. Chekov
drove forward, smashing his shoulder into the soldier's stomach. The
soldier went down, gasping, and Chekov slammed a knee on the man's
chest, fist drawn back to knock him out.
The skinny, acne-scarred kid stared up at Chekov, terror in his eyes.
Fringes of red hair were visible from under his helmet. Was this the
Nazi threat, the fanatical product of the Hitler Youth? Or a scared kid
who would rather be worrying about his school exams or his future with
the girl down the block than fighting in an ideological war about which
he neither understood nor cared?
"Get out of here," Chekov yelled at him in Russian, but his meaning was
clear. The kid stumbled to his feet and ran.
Chekov ran into the darkness, the sounds of gunfire and screams and
death all around him.
He heard his name shouted and turned in time to see Kirk, twenty yards
to his left. Kirk was gesturing to him, and Chekov dashed in his
direction.
He was supposed to be saving Captain Kirk's ancestor? Somehow it seemed
that John Kirk had matters firmly in hand.
Chekov stumbled over a still warm body of a dead German soldier. The
back of the helmet was cracked open, and he saw red hair, now soaked in
redder blood. He didn't turn over the body to look at the face. Kirk
led Chekov with single-minded purpose, muttering, "It's over in this
direction. I know it. I--There!"
And he pointed.
There was a runaway, and on it stood a Ju-52 transport plane.
"It's what Ivan said he was after," said Kirk, grinning. "Let's give
him an early birthday present."
"Can you fly one of these things?" said Chekov. "We'll find out," the
American said.
Now that, thought Chekov, definitely sounds suspiciously like James T.
Kirk.
Chapter Twenty-four
WHEN KRAL OPENED HIS EYES, he saw that same medical officer, in the
loose blue tunic, waving some damned Federation device over his head.
With a low snarl he brushed the hand away and started to sit up with a
curse.
To his amazement the apparently soft and lily-livered medical officer
shoved him back down onto the bed. The Klingon looked up at him,
shocked.
"How... how dare you?" said Kral, but he was surprised at how shaky his
voice sounded.
"You injured one of your frontal vertebrae," said the doctor briskly.
"I've patched up the abrasions, but you're still going to be dizzy for
at least an hour."
"I should have known," muttered Kral. "No weak, thin-blooded Federation
man would be able to handle me in such an ignominious fashion if I
weren't injured."
The doctor harrumphed loudly. "You may consider us a bunch of
soft-skinned cowards, but I'll have you know that my bloodlines are as
good as yours. And my great-granddaddy, ten times removed, was as tough
a general as ever sat a horse. And furthermore he, unlike yourself, was
able to listen to reason. Which puts him a damned sight ahead of the
more 'advanced' Klingons."
Kral's eyes narrowed. Nearby sat Vla dra, her hands interlaced and on
her lap. "If you were on my ship, you would be disciplined for that."
"Really." The doctor raised an eyebrow. "My understanding is that you
were found doing the back-stroke in a vacuum. So what was it you said
that prompted that treatment, eh?"
Kral said nothing.
"No answer. I wasn't expecting any." The doctor stood and addressed
Vladra. "Tell your commander that he'll be fine in an hour or so. And
tell him that, if it's of any consolation, he's as boneheaded as my
commander."
Kral half turned, and ignored the brief dizziness that provoked. "How
dare you compare me to your weak captain!"
"Well, this is my ship, so I get to dare a lot," said the doctor tartly.
"You have your opinions about Captain Kirk. He has his opinions about
you. And while the both of you are making noises at each other, we're
stuck up here and might be here forever."
"If we're that lucky," said Vladra.
McCoy glanced at her. "What are you talking about?"
Vladra opened her mouth, then closed it again. To McCoy's surprise--and
to some degree, Vladra'smKral said, "If your ship is being affected the
same as ours, then the orbit is decaying. We have less than twenty-four
hours to rectify that situation."
"And how would you suggest we do that?" asked McCoy.
Kral's head sagged back on the pillow. "I haven't the faintest idea."
Chapter Twenty-five
Scotland, 1764
"MR. Scoa-r, you saved me," Seamus screamed jubilantly, his voice
coming in jerky spurts as the wind was knocked out of him by every
pounding of the animal's hooves. By now the chaos had given way to
pursuit.
"You ride like a lord," the boy said.
"I did'ha know I had the skill, myself, but having the hounds of hell on
your heels is a good incentive. Which way, boy?"
"At the crossroad, left. There is heather and hills beyond, all the way
to the highlands, sir, all the way. They'll not follow us there."
Well and good, Scott thought, but he would need to put a few more miles
between him and the pursuers before he would breathe safely.
As the wild ride sped on, the boy muttered a prayer whose origins were
as rooted 'in pagan antiquity as in Christian doctrine.
"Briget and Bran, protect us, Wild Queen Meave, protect us, Mary, Virgin
Mild, protect us, Michael, protect us, And Brian, steed of Michael, Put
fire to this stallion's hooves, Oh, Christ, and all the saints, Protect
us."
The guttural rhythm of the magical poem, which the boy repeated over and
over again, matched the rhythm of the horse as it galloped down the road
turning north to the highlands almost by its own will.
"By God, we've lost them," Scott pronounced with relief, daring a quick
glance back. He reined in the frothing animal. "Lad, lad are ye well?"
"I'd be more well if I'd done what I'd set out to do. A world rid of
that fat oaf---"
"You wouldn't have succeeded. Hanover--" Seamus looked up at him.
"What? Hanover what?"
"Hanover... was too much a veteran to have been caught like that."
"No." Seamus's eyes narrowed. "That's not what you were going to say.
You know something. Something in The Sight..."
Scotty sighed, and then said softly, "Lad... perhaps ye should
reconsider joining the prince."
"What're ye saying? That Hanover is destined to defeat him? That the
prince canna win? Is that what your sight tells you?"
Scotty made a rude noise. "My sight. My sight can't even see where
I've been. Yet somehow .I know, lad... yes. The prince canna win.
There are greater forces than your trembling aim in your first murder
attempt working against ye. You have the weight of history on your
shoulders. History that has yet to happen."
Seamus's face was set. "If it hasn't happened, then I can make it
happen the way I want."
"I wouldn't have it any other way, lad," Scotty said. The boy dismounted
and walked around, shaking out his legs. Scotty stayed atop the horse
and looked at him with open curiosity.
"So you are a spy, then?" he said to the lad, shaking his head in
disbelief.
"Aye, sir," Seamus said, shivering. "I was a shipwright's apprentice in
Skye. But the call came, and I was sent to the lowlands to spy. I was
the king's own drummer boy for a year, and I've the scars on my back to
prove it. Then I deserted, following the army, taking work as I could.
I sent reports to General Murray, of Prince Charles's army, by pigeon."
They rode and walked for a time. The lemon-yellow sunlight, which had
cast lovely lavender shadows on the rolling gray land, dotted with
mounds of snow, was all too soon overshadowed by rolling clouds more
gray than even this vast and lonely land.
"It's warming up a bit," Scott said, sniffing the air.
"That means more snow, Mr. Scott," Seamus said with certainty.
True to his prediction, the big wet snowflakes began to drop gently,
plopping themselves on the two men, only to melt at the first touch. But
soon the snowflakes were small and hard and stuck tight to the men as
they rode slowly into the wind toward safety.
"Hungry?" the lad shouted to Scott through the windblown snow. They
were riding double, huddling close for warmth.
"Aye, Seamus, I am that."
"I spy a cottage ahead. See, the smoke there?" Scott kicked the horse
to a trot.
"Hello," Scott shouted, dismounting and banging on the door. "Open up
for two freezing travelers, will ye?"
There was no answer. Scott thumped the door again, hoping to rouse the
householder from his slumber. In response to Scotty's insistent
banging, the door creaked open, but there was no one in evidence inside.
The two men cautiously stepped over the threshold. Still they saw no
one, although the evidence of recent habitation was clear. There was a
pitiful peat fire in the hearth, sending up more smoke than heat, and a
near empty pot of thin porridge hanging over it. There were also several
long, thin pieces of wood in the corner that had been part of a lead
used in constructing a simple lean-to that Scott noticed out back. Even
though it was left over, it still remained, for poor people wasted
nothing.
"Damn it all, Seamus," Scott said, ready to turn and leave, "I cannot
take the last food from this poor soul, wherever they have got to. Come,
let's go."
"Mr. Scott, I beg of you. We cannot take a night out on the heath. I
tell you, man, we'll find our death out there tonight. I say we stay
the night and take what we need."
"Do as you will, lad. I'll stay indoors, but I will not eat of this
poor man's food."
Seamus grumbled, eyeing the unappetizing gruel as if it were a savory
stew, but he contented himself to drink some water from a pitcher and
settle down to sleep by the hearth, after stabling the horse in the
crude lean-to out back.
Scotty sat down on the packed dirt floor, leaning against the stonework
of the hearth. He would try to stay awake, at least until the boy had
caught some sleep. Someone had to keep watch for the return of the
homeowner.
A rustling sound caught his attention. He strained to listen. He was
ready to dismiss it as mice nested in the meager stores which were
stacked in a shadowy corner, but it was too... well, too purposeful,
too large. Then he noticed that one particular lump among the stores
moved.
Stealthily he got up. Seamus awoke again, but Scott hushed his question
with a warning gesture, first placing his finger to his lips, then
pointing to the corner. Seamus nodded and rolled quietly to his knees,
pretending to snore even as he moved silently to his feet. Scott
circled to flank the hidden person, and then at his signal the two men
swooped down, pinning the squealing prisoner.
"Don't move or I'll be forced to kill you," Seamus said grandly. He
pulled aside the sacks and clothes that hid the person.
"Do what you will with me," the prisoner shouted defiantly.
"A lassie!" Seamus choked, his face now only inches from her. One of
his hands was clutching something rather soft. He turned beet-red, let
go and leapt up. "Oh, I'm so sorry!" he stammered.
Scotty also released her, and gallantly offered her a hand up. But she
lay huddled, her eyes wide and frightened, her face smudged and her long
dark hair wild and matted. Scott left his hand out reassuringly for a
long time before she shyly reached for it and allowed herself to be
lifted up. She was scrawny with starvation, but for it all, she was
still a handsome lass, perhaps no older than Seamus. Yet she had the
old eyes of someone who had been very badly hurt.
"Forgive us if we frightened you," Scott said with stiff formality. He
wasn't sure what to say to her. After all, he had trespassed on her
home, and terrified her to boot. "We only came in because of the snow.
Please, don't cry," he begged. But she was shaking and sobbing
uncontrollably.
"What-are you going to do to me?" she wailed.
"Nothing. Please. We'll leave, won't we, Seamus?" Scott said
sincerely.
"Please. Please," Seamus begged, totally unnerved by her tears. "We
are being pursued by the English, and we are only trying to reach the
prince in Inverness. They say the clans are gathering there. Please.
Don't cry!" Seamus moved as if to catch her up in his arms to comfort
her, but the shyness of any lad, coupled with the emotion of the moment,
made him stop in his tracks, his mouth gaping and his hand hanging
uselessly by his side.
"There, there, lassie," Scott said, coming to the rescue and reaching
out to her. He enfolded her in his arms and held her as she sobbed out
the terrible story.
"My father and brother are both dead by hanging. Fat Billy's men came
through here. They..." She looked down, the pain in her face beyond
endurance. "They did unspeakable things to me, and left me for dead. But
the men, they hung them for being Scots. For naught else."
Scot t held her for a long time, unt'd she finally pulled away, mopping
at her face with her apron. Scott looked down at the poorly repaired
rips in her shift and petticoats, but quickly looked away, ashamed of
the brutality she had been forced to endure.
"Come, please share my food," she offered, still shaking, but making a
brave attempt to be the good housewife. She got bowls, Seamus scurrying
to her side to help her set them out. The gruel was as tasteless as it
looked, but in the cold cottage filled with sorrow, it was a feast of
love and comfort, .the two men offering their best cheer for what little
it was worth to the girl.
After dinner the girl, whose name was Megan, rummaged through the
baskets that held her worldly goods. She pulled out two large woolen
kilts, hand woven by herself, no doubt, and presented them to Scott and
Seamus.
"Here, take these, and burn those Sassenach rags," she said, with a cold
rage. "And there is more," she continued. She dropped to her knees,
scrabbling at the dirt floor. Scotty was the first to see what she was
doing, and he took down the iron pot hook to use as a tool in the
excavation.
Before long Scott and Seamus had uncovered an old box covered with the
dust of a generation of men and the cobwebs of dozens of generations of
spiders. Scott hauled it up, squinting and coughing as he brushed off
the top.
Megan caressed the lid, then got to work prying it open. Inside the
chest, reverently wrapped in an ancient plaid and tied with sturdy
twine, were two fine Claidhearnh beag, the basket-hilted broadsword of
the highlands.
"These were my father's and his brother's. They were hidden after the
rebellion in 'fifteen. I would to God that they had not been under the
ground, for if they had been in my father and brother's hands, they
might not be now under the ground. Take them," she said passionately,
forcing them on the two men. "Take them and fight for the clans in my
family's stead."
"I'll not dishonor his blade. I'll fight the enemy with heart and soul
and flesh, before Mary and all the saints I will," Seamus swore.
Scott looked at the girl. "I'll fight as I have to," he said. "But I'm
not a young firebrand like Seamus here. I must admit to you, lassmI hope
I don't have to raise my arm in combat any too soon."
And from outside came the shout of a voice with a clipped, annoyed
British accent.
"Come out here! We know you're in there! You left a trail a blind man
could follow. Come out here and, instead of savages, die like the men
you would pretend to be!"
Chapter Twenty-six
Stalingrad, 1942
"I'll FLY LF'T SEAT if yOU want," Chekov said, offering to pilot the
craft and dredging up a term he remembered from historical novels about
the ancient war. John Kirk turned to look at him with a raised eyebrow
and a smile.
"Should have known you were a fly boy. Too crazy to be anything else.
Let's go. I'll fly left. You copilot. Where are we flying?" he asked
as they scrambled onto the flight deck. Russian soldiers were. already
there. Ivan hadn't been kidding when he said they wanted to get the
transport. It had been made one of their priorities, obviously. The
ground crew was doing its best to prepare for takeoff, as the partisans
who chose to leave piled on board. The rest ran off to provide ground
cover from any German forces, although the most serious danger was from
friendly fire.
"Over the Volga, east of Stalingrad. There's an airstrip," said Kirk.
"Trust me on that. I was ferrying lend-lease P-39s when I was shot
down, so I know what I'm talking about. We can fly visual. I'll point
it out. You gonna make it, Chekov."
"Easily," replied Chekov. Yet for all his apparent cockiness, Chekov
was in a cold sweat at the prospect of copiloting the strange aircraft
and of risking not only his life, but that of the young Kirk, over the
war zone.
"You'd also better get on the radio and start talking in Russian. I
don't think that your people are going to take kindly to this thing in
their airspace. Flaps," he snapped, beginning a very quick checklist.
"Flaps," Chekov echoed.
Soon the ground crew was aboard, the propellers an invisible blur. The
great plane started to roll forward, and suddenly Chekov heard from the
back, "Look!"
There was a furious burst of arguing from the rear. Kirk said briskly to
Chekov, "Settle them down. I'm not going to need distractions." Chekov
immediately unbelted and dashed to the back, where men were grouped
around the rear hatch. It was hanging half open.
"Close the hatch!" Chekov ordered. "Are you crazy?"
But one of the ground crew was pointing and saying, "Look! Look!"
Chekov leaned out and his eyes widened.
Ivan was madly running down the runway after them, his arms pumping, his
mouth open and gasping.
"Kirk!" shouted Chekov, finding it odd to be barking orders to someone
with that name. "Slow down! Ivan's out there!"
"If I slow down I might not make speed to clear the end of the runway,"
shouted back Kirk, but nevertheless he slowed down just a bit.
Ivan was running like mad, and Chekov hung out of the hatch, extending
his arm as far as he could. Ivan's legs were churning, his arms
pumping. In his eyes, Chekov could see desperation.
"Hurry!" shouted Chekov. "Hurry!"
Suddenly Chekov heard machine-gun fire. Swinging in hard from the left
came a jeep with a mounted machine gun. The bullets chewed up the
runway behind Ivan, nipping at his heels.
It was all the additional spur Ivan needed, and with an extra burst of
speed, the Russian hurtled forward and leaped, desperately, almost with
an air of resignation.
Chekov's hand snared Ivan's wrist. "I've got him!" shouted Chekov.
"I've--"
The machine gun spat out death, and Chekov felt, in a rather distant
way, some sort of pain. He saw Ivan's eyes widen in despair.
He sensed, rather than saw, warmth on his right arm, and he refused to
acknowledge it. Additional hands were grabbing him now, pulling him
into the plane, and still he held onto Ivan's arm. His hand had closed
around Ivan's wrist with a single-minded determination that would defy
death itself.
He tumbled back into the plane and felt a heavy weight on himself. Then
he realized that it was Ivan. "Move!" shouted Chekov. "Move!"
The hatch was slammed shut, and Chekov staggered forward as he heard the
roar of the engines increase.
Kirk glanced at him as he dropped into his seat, then did a double-take.
"My God, you're hit!"
Chekov glanced at his right shoulder. There was a huge ugly red blotch
on his shoulder, spreading rapidly.
"It's nothing," said Chekov briskly, ripping the sleeve off his left
arm. "Do your job."
The plane picked up speed, the chattering of the machine gun fading as
the plane left them behind. Then Chekov saw, even as he made a makeshift
tourniquet, that they were coming up fast, too fast, on a grove of trees
at the end of the runway.
"We going to make it?" he grunted, ignoring the dizziness.
"Oh, we'll make it," said Kirk. "Don't you worry about a thing."
He drew back on the stick, and the airplane started to rise into the
air. Chekov gritted his teeth against the pain in his arm and the
pounding in his head.
The plane rumbled, rising higher and higher, vibrating with urgency. The
trees were coming up fast, too fast.
Chekov gripped the sides of his seat and risked a glance at Kirk. The
American was grinning broadly and was whistling a tune of some kind...
"What is that song7"
"What, you've never heard 'Off We Go into the Wild Blue Yonder'?"
The plane leaped with an additional burst of energy, the landing gear
just clipping the top of the trees.
John Kirk turned and looked at Chekov cheerfully. "So... how do you
like my plan so far?"
Chekov made no reply, but instead put all his concentration into not
passing out.
They climbed higher and higher. Chekov looked down at Stalingrad laid
out below them, and felt more remote from it than ever before.
Then he heard Kirk give a low oath. "Vat?" said Chekov in English, not
really in the mood for surprises.
"They clipped our fuel line," Kirk informed him. "We're losing fuel
fast."
" going to make it to the airport?"
"Either that or crash," Kirk told him. "Maybe both."
"Oh good," said Chekov. "For a moment I thought ve vere in trouble."
"Naaah," Kirk assured him, even as he watched the gauge drop
precipitously. "You'd better get on the radio and start talking in
Russian, or we will be in trouble."
Chekov reached for the microphone and pain stabbed through his right
arm. He bit his lower lip to prevent himself from crying out, and then
reached around and picked up the mike with his left arm. He risked a
glance over at his tourniquet and saw that it didn't seem to be slowing
the flow of blood very much.
"Wonder how much fuel we'll have left when we get to the strip?" Kirk
mused.
Chekov was wondering the same thing about himself.
Chapter Twenty-seven
McCohrrED Kirk's quarters to find his captain staring at the computer
screen.
"It seems we have a deadline," said McCoy briskly. "You're referring to
the decaying orbit."
"I'm not referring to an overdue library book," he replied, surprised at
Kirk's calm. "Dammit, Jim, you have to do something."
"I know," said Kirk slowly. "I know. And I know what. But that
doesn't make it any easier."
"You know what to do?!" said McCoy with amazement. "Then why don't you
do it? What are you supposed to do, anyway?"
"I've been reviewing the ship's automatic log of when the immortal
Weyland took the wind from our sails." He turned the screen of the
computer around to face McCoy. There was an image of the Enterprise
bridge crew facing a screen on which the massive head of Weyland
appeared. "The key to this is ho w he faced things. He said that we can
stay here and rot. Not that we will. But that we can."
McCoy frowned. "You're saying that he suggested that it's up to us."
"That's right."
"Even though he's the one who disabled us and left us floating around
like a prize turkey."
"To him," Kirk said slowly, "his reactions are being dictated by our
own. He reacts to what we do. And there're things that we can do to
make him react the way we want him to react. Every single thing he's
said to us is in that same, cloaked manner. If we wish it. If we allow
it. And I'm damned annoyed with myself that it took me this long to
realize it."
"Why do you think that is?"
Kirk glanced at him. "Why do you think?"
"Garrovick?"
Kirk nodded. "There was something special about him, Bones. You said
once he reminded me of myself. When he came aboard ship this time, I saw
it more than ever. I saw myself." He paused and said softly, "I've told
you about David."
McCoy was surprised. Kirk had mentioned David to him only once, and
that was when they were deep in their cups. Come the dawn, there had
been an unspoken agreement between them not to mention it again.
But now Kirk was bringing him up.
"Yes," McCoy said cautiously.
"He's nothing like me. He's.. 2' Kirk made a vague gesture, "cerebral.
A scientist, like his mother. The only thing that makes me certain I'm
his father is Carol's word, and we agreed that I would stay away ... or
at least she agreed." Kirk shook his head. "Years of gallivanting around
the galaxy, Bones, and then you start to realize that when you're gone,
you've left nothing of yourself behind you. Some impact on an
individual, something... that you can help shape. David is his mother's
son. I had thought of myself as mentor of sorts to Garrovick--bringing
him along, and then being able to take personal pride in his
achievements in a way that I never will be able to with my own son."
Kirk flexed his back muscles and winced. "i'm getting old, Bones. Maybe
too old for this."
"And Garrovick was your way of continuing your 'adventures' vicariously
through the galaxy."
Kirk actually permitted a small smile. "You make it sound ridiculous. I
suppose it is."
"No such things as ridiculous dreams," said McCoy. "Just dreams we
realize, and those we don't."
"He was a good officer," said Kirk. "One of the best I've seen. And it
makes me realize how lucky I've been, to survive as long as I have. What
makes me any more worthy to survive than Garrovick?"
"Jim.. 2' McCoy put a hand on Kirk's shoulder. "You can sit here until
doomsday, trying to make sense 'out of the incomprehensibility we call
the universe. Deeper and more learned men have been trying for as long
as man was able to think. And when all the shouting dies down and is
just so much hot air, it leaves us with this Nobody knows a damned
thing."
Kirk glanced up at him. "I do. I know that my ship and my crew need
me. And I'm damned well going to do something about it."
He got up and then turned to McCoy and said, "I suppose I should be
grateful that David is with his mother. When all is said and done,
Garrovick wasn't my son. He was a crewman. A valued crewman, whose
loss was tragic, but a crewman. Not my son. My son is a scientist and,
thank God, has no interest in Starfleet, and he'll probably outlive all
of us."
Chapter Twenty-eight
Japan, 1600 ONEKO AND HER ESCORT left when the sky was still silver with
fading night. There was no helping it if a spy were watching from the
surrounding plain. Once on the road there would be no fluttering
banners bearing Mototada's crest to betray their identity. Oneko was
secured in a curtalned palanquin, bumping along on the sturdy shoulders
of her 1ord's soldiers. Sulu rode behind her, his bridle led by a
soldier who set the slow pace along the road. What would have been a
short trip without a pregnant woman, even by contemporary standards, was
going to take the better part of a week.
Sulu went over the map of the route once again, as if he doubted his
memory or feared he might somehow lose track of the clearly marked road.
He thought back to his first cadet command, but somehow the thought was
now as fragile and fleeting as the world around him had been at first,
while his current surroundings were taking on a solidity that at once
thrilled him and terrified him. A stab of guilt struck him as he
thought that he should be doing something to get back to his ship, but
he didn't have the faintest inkling as to what that might be.
'
If there was a simple solution to his situation, it had so far eluded
him. And there was still that nagging hole in his memory. He knew
something had happened, or someone... but, he shrugged to himself, it
all really didn't matter now. All that mattered was escorting Oneko
and, he told himself firmly, getting the hell out of there.
He tried to put Sadayo's comments from his mind. It was as if the old
samurai knew what he was thinking. Yes, he had said he would be loyal
to Mototada, but that was before he knew... what? That it was suicide?
Would he abandon James Kirk if he knew the mission was certain death? Of
course not. But this was entirely different in many ways--none of which
were coming to Sulu at the moment.
At least he had managed to keep from acting like a complete fool around
Lady Oneko, and he congratulated himself for that blessing, although he
suspected it was merely the earliness of the hour and the rush to get
started. And the tearful departure of the lady from her husband. Sulu
had managed to repress a stab of guilt over his feelings for her when he
bowed to Mototada before he left. After all, I haven't misbehaved in
the slightest, he rationalized as he moved the party out onto the road.
For most of the first day he kept his distance from her anyhow, not
trusting himself, and hearing the warning of the sword master mocking
him in his head.
The lady had taken a kitten with her to amuse and comfort her in the
swaying silken prison of her palanquin. At first when Sulu heard the
soft crying, he had taken it for the complaints of the confined pet, but
with a shock he realized it was the lady.
"Halt," he ordered, and the jogging party of armed men and litter
bearers came to a ragged stop. They lowered the palanquin, and Sulu
drew back the curtain. Oneko's lady companion ran up to the litter.
"Lady, lady, are you ill?" the woman cried out. Sulu had been told the
woman had been the lady's old nurse and now was her lady-in-waiting,
probably a poor relative of her noble clan.
"Oh, Kiku, please," Oneko moaned, turning that peculiar shade of green
that heralds seasickness.
Sulu discreetly got clear as the lovely woman, the wife of his lord, got
sick all over the road.
"I cannot ride in that thing all the way to Edo," she said, gasping for
breath.
"Well, you cannot walk all the way," the woman, who was some years her
senior, said with prim authority.
"Kiku, I will loose the child if I sway all the way to Edo."
"Lady, ride awhile," Sulu offered, dismounting and lifting her to the
saddle. Slowly they proceeded, but soon she became tired, and he lifted
her back into the palanquin, where she blissfully fell asleep.
By evening they came to a large farmhouse. A worn, wrinkled man greeted
the armed party, on his knees, with his family, their heads respectfully
in the dirt.
"Please, accept the humble hospitality of my house," he pleaded
hopefully. This current civil war was only the most recent of many
which had erupted in the instability of the past century. If the man
were lucky, he would only be eaten out of house and home, not burned out
or killed.
Sulu dismounted and ordered his men to bivouac around the property, with
what he considered a nice mixture of armed protection for the lady and a
low enough profile to avoid attracting trouble. The farmer and his wife
were busy moving personal articles into the kitchen while they abandoned
the sleeping rooms to the lady and her samurai protector.
"We've brought rice enough for our men," Sulu offered graciously. "Some
early pumpkins and radishes would be welcome."
The farmer groveled in the dusty courtyard. He was lucky indeed. He
called out orders as he scrambled to his feet, his sons and assorted
relations hustling to drag baskets of vegetables to the troops. If
there were daughters, they were not in evidence. There was, after all,
no purpose in tempting fate.
The farm wife had busied herself with a country meal for her
distinguished guests, her fear giving way to a kind of pride. She would
have good things to tell her neighbors. Soon the salty aroma of a
simple stew, rich with fish and soy and thick with root vegetables,
wafted out of the kitchen and throughout the house and courtyard. Kiku
stood watching the proceedings with distaste. Clearly, in her opinion,
such country manners were not worthy of her mistress.
The farm wife scooped out rice and a bowl of the stew for Kiku to take
to the lady, who was resting in her room. But as Kiku appropriated the
tray from the peasant, Oneko appeared at the doorway, dressed in a peach
kimono with an over robe of pale green, although of a much more
practical cut than the flowing garments she wore at home, but so fine in
these rude surroundings that she could have been the goddess Amateratsu
come to earth.
"It is not necessary. I would rather eat with the family," the lady
said, with a gracious smile at the farm wife.
The woman bowed low, but Oneko gestured her to sit with her.
"I am the Lady Oneko. Thank you for your hospitality."
"I am Yoshikete Hana," the woman stammered. "I am honored to be of
service." Oneko's politeness and courtesy put the woman and her
household at ease, and before long a large pair of wi de eyes peered out
from behind a barrel.
"Come out," Oneko urged, reaching out her hand.
"Oh, that is only my small, ugly daughter," the woman said with humble
deprecation.
The child, beautiful and fine-featured, shyly came out. She was about
seven. "Show some politeness to the lady," the mother chided harshly.
"Come, girl, sit by me," the lady said, and the child haltingly came
forth, bowing with the help of her mother's firm shove.
"She is lovely," Oneko said, smiling at the appreciative mother, whose
harshness did nothing to hide her real pride in the child. "I remember
being so young," Oneko said wistfully. "How easy life was for me then."
Sulu entered, bowing to Lady Oneko.
"Come, sit and eat with me," Oneko said to Sulu. Kiku glowered but said
nothing. "Let us pretend we are simple farmers, and all a family. Come,
Hana-sama," she said, using the polite' honorific which made the peasant
feel more like a lady of the court than she ever thought possible, "tell
your husband to sit with me, and we shall eat your good food, and
gossip, and tell tales. For this evening, we shall pretend we are in
celestial heaven and there is no trouble in the world."
Sulu watched Oneko shyly as she charmed the simple family into easy
conversation. But the charm worked on him as well, and as the evening
drew to a close, the web of warmth and trust that Oneko wove only served
to strengthen the respect he felt for her. Suddenly Oneko doubled up,
crying out in pain. Kiku was at her side. "This is no good for the
lady. She shouldn't be on the road at all," she chided. "This is her
first pregnancy, and she will miscarry if she is not allowed to rest."
She hustled the lady off, reluctantly accepting the herbal teas which
the farm wife offered.
"If I had known she was in that condition..." the woman stammered.
Oneko was still pale the next day. Sulu knelt protectively by her
huddled form.
"Lady, I don't think you should travel for the next few days. You are
safe here."
"No. It is my duty to go where I have been sent, and for you to bring
back information about the western army's attack plans. I am well
enough to travel," she insisted, rising up to her elbow, but the effort
brought on more nausea, and she lay down again.
"Look at you!" Sulu exclaimed. "You risk your life and the child's."
"You don't understand." Her face was tortured, and tears began to run
down her cheeks, ravaging the remnants of her makeup.
"Understand what?" Sulu said with exasperation. "I understand that you
are to be hidden to protect Torii's blood line if all is lost in
Tokugawa's campaign. And I understand that if you travel too hard, you
are going to lose the child. And I understand that you are safe here,
for now, and that staying here until you are well again is the best
choice we have."
"You are right," she said with demure submission that made Sulu's heart
melt. "Very well. For today only, then. But at least stay with me. I
am very lonely. You never told me about yourself. What is your home?
You come from the mountains, he?"
"No, lady. I come from the land beyond the horizon," he said. Even if
it was a half truth, it felt good to say it. "I didn't realize how..."
he struggled for the word, "how hard it has been for me to pretend I
belong here. I don't know how I got here, but when I woke up, I was far
from home and from my world. I don't belong here, but yet I do. I
think I wanted to be here. And now I can't go home."
He got up and paced, the rolling samurai gait becoming more familiar
with each passing day. "I am forgetting, already, who I am, was." He
dropped down cross-legged on the ground with the attitude of any other
angry samurai.
"Tell me what you do remember," she urged quietly.
"Let's speak no more of it," he replied quietly, afraid of giving away
too much. She inclined her head slightly, honoring his request. "My Lord
Torii thinks very highly of you," she said. "I think highly of him,"
replied Sulu neutrally.
To his astonishment, she placed a hand on his. He felt his throat go
dry. "And you honor him."
He looked into her eyes, and there was something there, something
unspoken.
It was one of the most dit]icult things that he had ever done, but he
removed her hand from his and said softly, "Yes. In all matters."
,,ill things except being counted on to return and help him in his final
battle. Can't forget that. Honor your promises, but only when
convenient. It was a very sour thought that went through his mind.
Oneko smiled, and he wasn't sure whether it was approving or
regretful... or some of both.
The next morning, they moved out, to the tearful farewells and repeated
bows of the farm.family. Oneko gifted the daughter with the kitten. Sulu
rode next to Oneko's litter. She had left the curtain on his side open.
She smiled at him in that same maddening way that expressed both
interest and lack of interest. He began to think that perhaps the word
"inscrutable" had been coined expressly for her.
Sulu didn't remember much of the rest of the day. He rode near her,
making polite small talk, pointing out a flower here, a cloud there.
Yet, when they weren't talking, he found himself sneaking glances at her
from time to time, feeling almost like an adolescent schoolboy. It was
extremely annoying.
That afternoon a scout reported a rockslide blocking the road, which had
turned into a narrow ribbon hugging the cliffs overlooking the pounding
waves and jagged rocks. A deer trail, narrow but passable, was nearby.
Oneko, who had been pressing to go on, now pleaded that they turn back,
her eyes never still as she nervously searched the woods for brigands or
goblins or some other terror.
They finally rejoined the road where it turned inland, and followed a
narrow mountain pass. Sulu pointed to the dark spots of habitation that
nestled in the seaside valley at the foot of the mountain road. "That's
the home of Mochizuki, the inn Minaguchi-ya. That is where we will
stop."
Before they moved on, they took a moment to treasure the breathtaking
view, the purity of Mount Fuji rising majestically from the blue of
Suruga Bay. The dark violet ribbon of the Okitsu River wound down to the
sea. The mounted party rode down the mountain road, until they came to
what was left of a bridge. The swollen river bubbled between them and
the inn.
"It seems fordable," Sulu said, riding carefully out into the swirling
water. "Whooaaa," he shouted suddenly as the horse slipped slightly,
sending him faltering in the saddle as a fan of water splashed up his
side.
Oneko giggled, and shouted, "Let me show you how." She stepped gingerly
into the swirling foam.
"No/" Sulu shouted back. "Stay on shore. It is deep. We'll carry you
in the litter. Or mount a horse and let me lead you."
"No, Heihachiro-domo. It would be even safer if you carried me," she
said fetchingly. He leapt from his horse and ran up to her side, but
she only giggled, saying, "Come here, my noble pony," and she ordered
him to crouch down as she scrambled up on his back piggyback fashion.
"I don't know why," he said, sweating but straightening out under the
fragile load, "you didn't let me lead you on the pony."
But she only giggled. He dutifully carried her across the river,
keeping his precarious footing with each step, slick or squashy as he
picked his way by feel over the rocks and mud of the shallow river bed.
"There, we are almost safe," she said triumphantly, tapping his shoulder
in a mock imitation of a rider driving a horse.
She twisted around on his back, treating the entire business as a game.
And then the sudden shift in her weight overbalanced Sulu. He shouted
out a warning, cried out her name and then toppled over. There were
shouts of alarm from shore as Sulu and Lady Oneko were swept away by the
power of the river.
Chapter Twenty-nine
Scotland, 1746
"COM otrr! In the name of the Duke of Cumberland, surrender!"
Scotty looked around the cabin desperately. "Is there another way out
of here?"
Megan shook her head numbly. She looked as if she'd just been given a
death sentence, which indeed she had.
Seamus reflexively put his arm around her shoulders. It was a charming
gesture, and in a more cheerful time, it might actually have indicated
the possibility of something more.
"Don't worry, lass. We'll be fine."
"We will?"
"Absolutely. You see, Mr. Scott here--he's a miracle worker."
Scotty glared at him, but Seamus seemed absolutely sincere. "Usually,"
he said dryly, "I have a bit more to work with."
But he was looking out desperately, trying to figure out something. At
least the windows were firmly shuttered. They couldn't fire in through
there... Fire.
He looked at the fire in the hearth. He looked at the twine that had
wrapped the swords, and the rags scattered around.
He went to the wood that was standing over in the corner, and gripping
the twine firmly, flexed it. He looked up at Seamus. "Get some rags.
And take that longer piece of wood--the one that's a rod... and start
breaking it into sections about a foot and a half long."
"Why'?." said Seamus in confusion.
"Do it.t" ordered Scotty.
The officers looked at each other, the snow coming down around them not
leaving them in the best of moods. The sun was already coming up on the
far horizon, and it wasn't too soon for them.
"This is ridiculous," said one of them, who was named Halsey. "There
are nine of us. There're two of them..."
"Plus whoever's in the cabin," said another officer. "There's no one
else in there," said Halsey with confidence, and then grinned, "except
for perhaps the body of that slip of a girl we had fun with. Remember?"
"Was this the cabin? God, you're fight."
"I've had quite enough of this," said Ha lsey firmly. He leaped atop his
horse and, with a yell, charged forward. As he pounded toward the
cabin, he pulled out his saber, holding it above his head. "Surrender!"
he shouted.
The door of the cabin was thrown open.
Seamus was standing there, holding firmly in one hand the long piece of
wood. Twine had been affixed to either end, and he was pulling it
firmly back with the other hand. Nocked in it was a makeshift arrow,
and on the end of it, a rag that was furiously burning. Seamus let fly
with a twang.
The arrow shot through the air, its path uneven but true, and slammed
into Halsey. It knocked him clean off his horse, and his splendid coat
and shirt immediately went up in flames. He writhed on the ground,
screaming and rolling.
Other British soldiers were charging forward now, to the aid of their
fallen fellow. By this time Seamus had hocked another arrow, and again
he fired. This time he missed, the arrow just grazing the flank of the
horse. It was enough, though, to cause the horse to rear back in pain
and shock, and it threw its rider.
"Those bastards!" shouted Halsey, the only comprehensible words in his
continued scream as he tried to extinguish himself.
Seamus slammed the door shut and shoved his back against it. "It
worked!" he said gleefully.
There was the sound of a musket report, and a huge piece of the door
disappeared just over Seamus's head. He hurled himself to the ground
and rolled toward Scotty, who was standing next to a far wall.
"Looks like we'll need another miracle," Scotty sighed.
For some reason the words "Beam me up" floated into his head. They had
some sort of meaning, but damn if he knew what it was.
Then, from outside, there was the sound of more gunfire, a virtual
volley, and the three trapped people hit the dirt floor.
Several more musket shots hit the door. Megan screamed, and Scotty
gritted his teeth as wood splintered over his head. He heard more
shouting, and the sounds of panicked horses, of thundering hooves and
pounding feet.
And then... after an eternity...
Nothing.
Seamus and Scotty, lying on the floor, looked at each other. Megan's
face was still buried in the dirt. Slowly, she raised her face--covered
with filth.
The door of the cabin slowly creaked open.
A man was standing there, backlit by the rising sun. He was
well-dressed, his kilt of brightly dyed wool and his jacket of a
continental cut. The heather on his bonnet, along with a brace of
feathers, was fresh and crisp. On his arm he wore a round shield,
covered with leather but bossed in brass. He was holding a fine sword
that was, at the moment, covered with blood.
"Problem here?" he asked, sounding somewhat amused.
Seamus, amazed, jumped to his feet. "Duncan.t" he cried out, and
running forward, threw his arms around the older man. Scotty could now
see just beyond the door, the unmoving bodies of the British soldiers.
Followers of the duke who would follow him no further.
"Duncan, Duncan," Seamus kept saying over and over.
Others, dressed similarly to the one called Duncan, were now visible
behind him. "I wondered," said Duncan, "if you hadn't of got yourself
hanged or shot."
"Ach, it was a close thing, but this fine man here saved me." He waved
toward Scott. Then his eyes went wide. "He knew you'd save us, Duncan.
He knew! He has The Sight!"
Scotty shrugged modestly.
Duncan looked at him appraisingly. "The Sight. Excellent. We're on our
way to Inverness, and I have a strong feeling that the prince would be
quite. pleased to spend some time with a man who knows what is to
come."
Not when he finds out just what that is, thought Scotty.
Chapter Thirty
KRAL HAD NOT SAID ANYTHING to Vladra for some time. She sat across the
room from him, and finally, exasperated by the silence, he said, "You
have cooperated with the Starfleet men."
She looked straight ahead. "To where are my loyalties supposed to be,
my lord? To the Klingon empire which thought nothing of dispatching me
into space? To the former commander who berates me and hushes me? Or to
the Federation men who rescued me and asked nothing in return? Whom do
I owe my loyalty to, Kral? Whom do you owe yours to?"
His lips thinned. "We are Klingons. Nothing can change that."
"Nothing will change that. But what does that mean, to be a Klingon?"
He stared at her in confusion. "It means to be strong. To be one with
one purpose. To disdain weakness, and know that the greatest death is
death in combat, with honor."
"And what honor is there in the way we were treated? What honor is
there in backstabbing, Commander?" she said with desperate urgency.
"What honor, what sense is there, in adhering to principles and beliefs
when all it will result in is dishonorable death and pointless hatred."
"No hatred is pointless," said Kral.
"This one is. For God's sake, open your eyes, Kral. Earlier you spoke
words of love, when you thought you were to die. Speak words of
cooperation now, and think of living."
He stared at her for a long moment. "What would you have me do?"
"Whatever it takes, my lord. Whatever it takes." The doors hissed open
and two security guards stood outside. "The captain wants to see you,"
one of them said.
Minutes later Kral and Vladra were ushered into a conference room. Their
eyes opened wide as they saw the array of Klingon food put out for them.
Kirk and Spock were standing there waiting for them, their hands folded
behind their backs in unison, like bookends. Kirk slightly inclined his
head, and the security guards who had accompanied Kral stepped back out
of the room.
"You trust me in a room with you?" said Kral.
"Mr. Spock, this is Commander Kral and... I'm sorry, I don't know your
rank," he said to Vladra.
"Your equivalent would be 'lieutenant,'" she said simply.
"Commander, Lieutenant... my first officer, Mr. Spock."
"A Vulcan," said Kral with curiosity. "I have never actually seen a
Vulcan before."
Kirk was inwardly amused at the mild sense of wonder Kral exhibited, a
sign of his relative youth. "Shall we be seated?"
They sat opposite each other, and an ensign seemed to materialize from
nowhere to serve the steaming food. Kirk studied Spock's impassiveness
and did his best to emulate it. It wasn't easy. The food looked
absolutely stomach churning.
When the food was served out, Kral eyed it suspiciously.
Kirk knew immediately what the problem was. "I assure you, I would do
nothing so crude as to poison you," Kirk said with an amused tone. He
ate first. "Delicious, truly delicious," he lied graciously.
The Klingon shoveled some food onto his plate, eating it greedily. And
then he repeated the operation until he had demolished most of what was
on the table. Vladra followed suit.
The moment the food was gone, Kirk said, "We're running out of time,
Kral. My ship, your ship, and my missing crewmen are all running out of
time. There's only one thing that's going to get us out of this. A
treaty between the two of us."
Kral sent his plate spinning across the cabin, whiz-zing past Kirk's
ear, slamming off a wall and clattering to the deck. "Damn you all to
Durgath's Hell. You're at me, and my woman's at me, and what I want
most is to have my hands around Kbrex's neck and squeeze and squeeze
until his eyes pop out." His fist pounded down onto the table, sending
the remaining dishes dancing. Then he looked up at Kirk. "Am I
supposed to like this situation? Am I supposed to embrace you and call
you brother?"
"Likes and dislikes are irrelevant, sir," said Spock. "What matters are
questions of honor."
"There is no honor among Federation men," said Kral.
"And none among Klingons, is that it?" said Kirk tightly. "Is that
what's supposed to happen? We sit here and shout at each other while
our ships spiral into the atmosphere and three of my men face
God-knows-what? I refuse to accept it. You have no idea how diflicuR
this is for me. You were responsible for the death of one of my men."
"Kbrex was," said Kral. "He threw that grenade."
"Kbrex," Kirk said slowly. "The one who ousted you."
"Yes. So tell me this, Captain," said Kral. "If it meant having to
ally yourself with Kbrex in order to save your crew, would you do it?"
"To save my men, I'd ally myself with your Emperor."
Kral regarded him thoughtfully. "Kbrex would never ally with you."
"That," said Vladra, "is because he lacks your insight and wisdom, my
lord."
"Yes, he lacks that, but he has my ship." He turned to look at Kirk. "If
I do this thing--if I agree to help you, for what that is worth--will
you help me regain my ship?"
"I could easily promise you that, Commander," said Kirk. "I could
promise you many things. But that would be lying, and I don't want to
do that. The bottom line is, I don't know if I can help you. I don't
even know if I'm going to be able to get us down to the planet surface
to face our captor. I believe ths Weyland has his own game plan, and
all we can do 3 guess at what the rules are. I don't like this busine
any better than you, Kral. But I have a gut feeling that if we don't
agree to this... we go down in flames. It's up to you. I suggest you
decide now."
Chapter Thirty-one
Stalingrad, 1942
"GERMAN AIRCRAFT Ju-52 to ground," Chekov repeated over and over again,
through gritted teeth. "Don't shoot. We are Russians. We are coming in
to land at the People's Hero airstrip. German aircraft Ju-52 to
ground..."
Ivan was now standing next to Chekov, and his eyes widened. "You're
hit," he told Chekov.
Chekov glanced down at the ugly splotch on his arm. He was feeling a
bit giddy. "My mother told me... never to scratch insect bites. See
what happens?"
"Hey, Ivan," Kirk said. "What's so all-fired interesting about this
transport, that you risked your fool neck to get it?"
"Bigwig who needs a lift to Moscow," Ivan said. "We got it for him."
"How big is his wig?" asked Kirk.
Ivan grimaced. "We're talking Khrushchev big," he said.
Chekov's eyes opened wide. "Premier Khrushchev?"
Ivan laughed. "You think as big as he does. Comrade Commissar
Khrushchev is more than enough for him."
Chekov nodded and winced, and scolded himself once more. Of course, of
course. Khrushchev would not reach that level of power for years yet.
He shook his head. Every minute that he spent in this placerain the
motherlandmwas another minute he risked screwing things up. He had
blurted out his foreknowledge about Khrushchev totally by accident. What
else might he accidentally say or do? He was a walking bomb,
threatening to go off at any moment and disturb time. A time bomb, he
thought, smiling weakly.
Ivan rested a hand on Chekov's left shoulder. "I just want you to know,
I appreciate what you did for me back there. You saved my life."
Chekov glanced up and gave a brief smile. But inwardly he was in
turmoil. Here was another thing, Ivan was right. He had indeed saved
the man's life. And what did that mean? Was Ivan supposed to have died?
What if Ivan, now unexpectedly alive, sired someone who turned out to be
a mass murderer, a killer of dozens, hundreds, thousands? Or what if
Ivan now, in the course of war, killed someone who was not supposed to
have died?
Considering all the possibilities was giving Chekov a headache.
He looked back at the instruments and tried not to pass out. He kept
repeating his message, hoping that the right people would hear and react
in the right way.
Kirk was continuing to whistle that maddening tune, and Chekov was
momentarily tempted to belt him.
"All right," said Kirk. "I see the strip below. Ivan, get to the back
and get ready." Ivan nodded briefly and did as he was instructed.
Kirk leaned forward and tapped on the fuel gauge.
The needle was perilously close to the empty mark, yet Kirk simply
shrugged as if it were a minor inconvenience. "Could be a little
rough," he said. "How little?" asked Chekov.
He shrugged again. "Any landing you walk away from is a good one."
"Here's hoping for a good landing," said Chekov. The plane came in at
dizzying speed, the strip stretched out before them. Chekov squinted in
the darkness of the night, manning the controls that were simplistic
next to the far more complex workings of a starship. He could barely
make out their target, but Kirk operated with a smoothness and sureness
that indicated either he knew exactly what he was doing or he was one of
the world's greatest bluffers.
The transport came down, faster and faster, and Chekov could see
soldiers scattered about the field, as small as ants and scurrying
around. For a moment he entertained the notion that Germans had taken
over the strip and, as soon as the plane landed, everyone on board would
be shot. Well, that would certainly solve all of his problems, wouldn't
it? Chekov mused.
"By the way, Chekov," Kirk said, "what was that all about, that thing
about my having brothers?"
"Er, well," Chekov stalled, thinking furiously for another lie. "I was
thinking of, er, your mother, and if you were the only son how sad it
would be..." he rattled on lamely.
"A man has to take risks for what he believes in," John Kirk said. "What
are you going to do after the war, Chekov?"
"I don't know. I guess I'd better survive the war first. You?" He
fought to keep his mind on the topic.
"Stay in the Army Air Corps, if they'll have me. Go back to school and
be an engineer if not. Get married, have kids."
"That sounds nice." Even the small talk was making Chekov's stomach
knot. He almost felt guilty about getting to know his captain's
ancestor, sort of like peeking in a private window. And the prospect
that this Kirk was all the link he would ever have with his captain was
making him feel shaky.
The world began to slip out of focus around him, Kirk's brisk chatter
blending together into a constant, faint buzzing. Oddly, he started
thinking about his childhood, and enrolling in the Academy, and the
first girl he had kissed, under the shadow of the great statue
commemorating glasnost that was located in Red Square.
He heard his name shouted once, twice, and a pleasant warmth that had
been building within him finally became overwhelming. And it was
calling to him. He nodded and smiled and surrendered himself to it.
He felt a screaming of air, and suddenly the world was jolted around
him. He noticed the jolt as if from a distance, a shaking and pounding
and trembling, the screeching of metal and the stench of burned rubber
and fear. Everyone was shouting, and the world was nothing but roaring
and burning.
And then there was nothing. Nothing at all.
Chapter Thirty-two
"SIR, WE STILL CAN'T get the shuttle bay doors to open."
Kirk was seated at the controls of the shuttlecraft Columbus, receiving
word over the craft's communicator that was less than heartening. "Keep
working on it, Mr. Two Feathers," he said briskly.
At the controls next to him was his copilot, Commander Kral, formerly of
the Ghargh. It was an odd sensation for Kirk. He couldn't recall
having been next to a Klingon for such an extended period of time in
such close quarters.
"Now what?" said Kral brusquely. "We stood on the transporter waiting
for it to be activated, because you believed that this alliance is what
that cretinous Weyland wanted. We stood there and nothing happened.
Your communications to him went unanswered. So if you are so good at
second guessing him, what does he expect now?"
Kirk stared at the great closed doors of the bay. "Maybe he wants to see
just how much we want this alliance."
"Meaning what?"
Kirk looked at him. "Meaning, just how far do you trust me?"
Kral stared back. "I have no choice. I gave my word of honor. I will
not renege on that. Whatever happens, happens. We see this business
through together."
"Fine. Hold on."
The Klingon blinked in surprise as the shuttlecraft lifted off abruptly.
Over the comm unit came the alarmed voice of Two Feathers, saying,
"Captain! We still haven't got the doors functioning!"
Kirk ignored it, guiding the shuttle through the air toward the farthest
end of the bay. He brought it around and hovered there for a moment. He
glanced at Kral. "Still trust me?"
"Have I a choice?"
"None."
Kxal shrugged. "Today is a good day to die."
Kirk gunned the shuttlecraft toward the closed bay door.
"Captain.t" came Two Feathers's alarmed shout.
Kirk ignored it, speeding up. The doors remained serenely shut.
"Let's see how much honor you've got, Weyland," muttered Kirk, passing
the point of no return. Kral closed his eyes and muttered the name of
one of his gods.
The bay doors leaped open, as if jet propelled, and the shuttlecraft
sprang into space.
Kral turned and looked behind them in surprise at the starship. "Those
doors are massive," said Kral.
"I'd never have thought they could open so quickly."
"They can't," replied Kirk.
Kral nodded slowly. "It seems the game has rules after all."
"Yes. But there's nothing to say they can't change at any time."
172
!
Chapter Thirty-three
Japan, 1600 SULU BROKE SURFACE, coughing up water through his nose and
mouth. The water roared around him, and at first he wasn't certain why
he wasn't being carried along. Then he realized that he was clutching
onto a boulder jutting up out of the river. He looked around madly,
trying to catch sight of Oneko.
He saw her just off to the left, a few yards away, the weight of her
robes dragging her down. She was fighting furiously against the
current, not crying out, but instead swimming with all her strength. It
simply wasn't enough.
He launched toward her, shoving forward with the full strength of his
powerful legs. He fiailed outward with one hand blindly, praying, and
snagged her by the wrist.
His legs churned, trying to fight against the water. But the current was
too strong.
He heard voices crying out from the shore, receding quickly. He had no
idea what was ahead of them, but he didn't want to stay in the water to
find out.
She tried to cry out his name but swallowed water instead. Her robes
billowed around her, her hair sopping.
Off to their right, several small trees clung to the shore. Sulu
searched desperately to spot a branch or root protruding into the water,
but none was evident.
They were approaching rapidly, and Sulu felt his strength waning.
He had one chance, an incredible long shot that was worth taking because
it seemed to beat the hell out of drowning.
He grasped at the hilt of his shortsword and withdrew it, holding it
with one hand while grasping Oneko with the other. The trees were
coming up fast, and for one brief moment Sulu's feet hit an uprise on
the river bed. He knew that the current would pull him forward in an
instant, but for the seconds that he had purchase, he acted.
He drew his arm above water and let fly, desperately, praying to
whatever gods would hear him.
The blade flashed through the air like a propeller and whirled into the
lowest hanging branches. It hacked partway through one and then fell to
the ground, useless.
And then the branch sagged forward, partially severed from the tree, and
began drooping toward the river.
Sulu reached upward, grasping, approaching at full speed while the
branch moved with maddening flow-ness, drooping lower.
As they passed under it, the branch dropped low enough for Sulu to
ensnare it with his fingers.
"Hold on? he gasped, and shifted Oneko around so that both her arms
were encircling his chest. He pulled himself f orward, slowly and
agonizingly, and just as they reached the shore, the branch snapped off
with a loud crack. Sulu lunged forward and pulled them to safety as the
branch quickly floated down river.
He turned himself around to look at Oneko, gasping.
She tried to get words out, and then crawled forward and kissed him
firmly on the mouth. He felt the heat of her breath in him and it blew
the chill out of him.
They separated and she gasped out, "Thank you." He tried to find the
words to express everything that was tumbling through his mind--the
confusion, his word of honor, his feelings for her. All of it.
"Don't mention it," he said. And he added silently, To anyone.
They reached the inn with no further mishaps. Sulu was relieved about
this--any more incidents like the scene at the river and he would have
been a basket case.
A small gaggle of bowing servants had already descended upon them from
the inn, wrapping the gentlefolk in dry quilts and leading them up the
path to the large house. A gentleman sat sunning himself in the
courtyard.
Mochizuki had been a samurai until his master had lost his lands and
life in one of the endless wars. Although the old man had been forced to
put aside his swords and turn his house into an inn, he was not without
honor in the little fishing village.
"Mochizuki-sama," Sulu began with careful courtesy, "if it would not be
too much trouble, if out of your generosity you could lodge this noble
lady for this night, and perhaps a few days..."
The old man nodded, touched by the deference the young samurai showed
him, despite his fallen estate. "It would be my honor to offer my
unworthy house to so fine a lady and her escort," he said, his voice
slurred slightly by age and missing teeth. "If you would take the rooms
of myself and my wife, and my worthless son," he offered, although the
family had long given up their own rooms to the endless number of
lodgers who had made this place a stop on the way down the mountain.
"And you must take the time to go down to the ocean shore to Miho beach.
There lies the finest view of the sacred Mount Fuji to be seen in all
the land," the man said proudly.
Again the senior travelers were lodged indoors while the soldiers and
carriers were bivouacked on the surrounding land. But unlike the
intimacy of the farmhouse, this place was as formal and public as any
daimyo's court, and the ladies took their carefully prepared meals in
their rooms.
But Sulu took the opportunity to take his meal in the common room at the
invitation of the ancient innkeeper.
It gave him time to ponder what had happened, and reflect on his
situation.
The thoughts that he was having about Oneko--he could never act on them.
Would never act on them, because they were dishonorable.
Yet he was not intending to return to the castle and fight beside
Mototada. That too was dishonorable.
How was one more acceptable than the other? In this land that was
governed by honor, how could a hypocrite be abided?
How could he?
The next day Oneko pleaded illness until midmorn-ing, and then called
for Sulu.
"Lady," he said, bowing as he entered her rooms. "I would feel so much
better if I could make a pilgrimage to the Seikenji monastery nearby. My
1ord's daimyo, the great Tokugawa, studied there as a boy with Abbot
Sessai. It is very famous."
Her tone was about one part request and nine parts demand. Sulu gave a
brief thought to protesting, on the grounds that, first of all, this was
not a sightseeing tour, and secondly, she had been complaining of pains,
and any extra effort was putting more danger on her pregnancy. But he
merely bowed in acquiescence and set out to make arrangements to suit
her will.
She presented herself for the trip dressed elegantly but simply, with a
string of prayer beads wound around her hands, the very image of piety.
Sulu followed her, a second shadow, as she made the slow walk up the
mountain to the main temple building. While she prayed, he made his own
private devotions, facing for a quiet moment his torturous longing to
understand why he was here at all, and how he could make this displaced
life meaningful.
The surrounding gardens were complex in their simpYcity, seemingly
natural but actually the result of art and artifice.
Upon her return, she seemed to have come to a decision.
"Heihachiro-domo, I would speak with you plainly," she finally said.
"I--" She faltered. "You are in great danger. I do not wish to see you
die."
Sulu reached out to her, taking her hands in his. She pulled them back
to her side, but he insisted, and when he took her tiny, soft hands in
his this time, she did not protest.
I'm going to be safe. I'm going to run away, he told himself. Say to
her what will sound noble. But only you will know the truth.
"I am samurai. I do not fear honorable death," he said with quiet
strength, but as much to assure her as himself. "I know that when I
return to Fushimi, the chances that any of us will survive the battle
are small. But that is my duty. Oneko-sama, I... feel strongly for
you," he said carefully. "But I have a duty to our lord. I would give
anything to live with you in peace like that farm family back there. But
I can't. It is my duty to deliver you to the 1ord's family in Edo, and
then I must return to Fushimi Castle. If I am to die there, as I most
surely am, then I must accept that as the will of the gods. Let us
enjoy each moment of this journey."
Her eyes misted over, and she pulled her hand free, dabbing at her tears
with her silken sleeve.
He realized and understood the truth of what he was saying, and heard
the conviction in his own voice. My God, I'm really starting to
believe, he thought.
"Perhaps the Buddhist monks are right," she sighed, looking deeply into
his eyes. "Perhaps it is all illusion, and the only peace for man is to
withdraw from the world and seek Nirvana. If I live long enough,
perhaps I will seek the serene life of a nun in such a place as this,
and pray for the pain in the world; for mine and for yours."
He drew her to him, holding her tightly, but they both pulled back in
embarrassment. Sulu was almost shaking with repressed emotion. He
stared at the gravel path that strayed through the carefully planted
mossy garden. An ornamental stone caught his eye. It was about knee
high, fiat on one side, with a natural knob on the top. It looked like
a memorial stone in a graveyard. He rolled it over, exposing the damp
earth, sending a family of bugs scurrying for the dark damp earth. He
drew his short sword, the wakizashi. With swift sure strokes he
scratched the character for her name, and next to it his. Then he
rolled it back over to hide their secret.
"There is our ancestor stone," he said solemnly.
She lowered her eyes. "But the monks will find it and remove it."
"Perhaps not," he said hopefully, smoothing the moss blanket around the
base.
She pressed her hands together in prayer before the silent sentinel of
their secret. He took her hands and pressed them to his lips. But they
lapsed into the distant courtesy expected of them long before they
risked being seen by curious eyes.
Chapter Thirty-four
Kx HOWLre in fury at what he saw.
A shuttlecraft had emerged from the back of the cursed starship and was
plummeting toward the planet below with the speed of a plunging falcon.
Kbrex pounded on the arm of the command chair and shouted, "Where are
they going? Who's on that cursed shuttle?"
One of the few things that was functioning on the Ghargh was the
sensors, and Kevlar ran a quick sweep. He was extremely unhappy with
what he discovered, and suspected he was taking his life in his hands in
informing the new commander of his discovery. "Picking up two life
readings, sir. One human, one... Klingon."
"Klingon.t" howled Kbrex.
"I believe it's Kral," Kevlar added.
"How dare he," whispered Kbrex, and then louder, "How dare he? Has he
totally forgotten who he is?"
"A deposed and dead commander?" suggested Kevlar.
Kbrex turned, leveled his blaster at Kevlar and fired. Kevlar threw up
his arms and screamed, except the scream wasn't heard. He vanished
before it took form.
Kbrex turned a slow and furious gaze on the remaining members of the
bridge crew. "Does anyone else wish to make an insulting remark?"
The bridge crew sensed, correctly, that it was a rhetorical question.
"Raise that bitch on the Enterprise."
The communications officer dutifully followed the order, but he prayed
that anyone would respond on the Enterprise other than that infuriating
woman.
"Enterprise here," came the silky, all-too-familiar voice.
Kbrex sighed loudly. There was no point in venting his frustration and
anger at this woman. He already had a mental image of her--about four
feet tall, weighing 400 pounds, with a skin full of boils and pustules,
and hair like dead wheat. A woman totally unappetizing to any man, and
who delighted only in torturing dedicated Klingon soldiers who were
trying to go about their business. "I wish to speak to Captain Kirk."
"That's not possible right now."
"It's quite possible. Raise the shuttlecraft that he and Commander Kral
are on."
She was dead silent. A hesitation.
It was all he needed. "They are on that shuttle, aren't they."
"What shuttle?" she asked.
"You need say nothing else," said Kbrex. "By not speaking, you've told
me all I need to know. Ghargh out."
Uhura removed the comm piece from her ear and stared at the
communications panel in irritation.
"Damn," she said softly. "I hate him."
Spock stepped dose to her and said calmly, "It is not relevant,
Commander Uhura. The Klingon ship is helpless to impede the shuttle's
progress."
"Yes, but I hate to have tipped him off to anything." She sighed. "I'm
afraid we can't all be as perfect in our conduct as Vulcans, Mr. Spock."
He nodded slowly. "True."
"They've disappeared from our sensors, Commander," said Maltz, who had
taken over the sensor station. He was not thrilled that his first
report had to one of failure. "I do not understand why."
be"I think I have a clue. Communications--beam the following message to
the planet, broad band 'Attention great and immortal Weyland. We have
reason to believe that our former commander--who had been disciplined
for his poor handling of your concerns--is mounting an attempt against
your people. We would be pleased to thwart his heinous plan as a way of
showing respect for you. Please reply.""
The communications officer said, "Should I repeat that message if we get
no response?"
"Yes. Continuous repeat. But I think," and his eyes narrowed, "that we
may indeed get some response. Perhaps more than our late commander--and
the soon-to-be-late Captain Kirk--bargained for."
Chapter Thirty-five
lapan, 1600 NIGHT.
Sulu woke up, struggling with sleep and a hangover, trying to make out
the source of the muffled sounds around him. A shadow of black in the
black room dropped with noiseless efficiency on the floor, its presence
revealed only by a slight humph of breath as it landed with a soft thud.
Sulu rolled off the pile of quilts on the floor which comprised his bed,
feeling for his swords on the floor.
He felt the cool whoosh of a blade slash by his hand, and he pulled it
back quickly. By sheer luck--certainly no skill--his fingers brushed
the lacquered sheath of one of the two swords. His hand closed on it.
It was the short sword, the wakizashi. He drew the blade, still holding
the scabbard in his other hand.
He felt more than saw the other man close in. A stray beam of light
from the passageway sparked a muted glint on the steel in the
assailant's hand. Sulu ducked as the deadly shuriken, the star of
death, spun by, ripping into the wooden post in the corner. Sulu closed
fast, tucking and rolling half the way, blocking the man's dagger with
his sword sheath and slamming the hilt of his sword into the man's head.
The assassin fell without a sound.
Sulu was panting hard. He groped through the tangle of bedding for his
long sword, the katana. In the tight confines of the room the shorter
weapon had given him an advantage, but he knew this assassin was not
alone, and to fight more than one, he needed the range and power of the
long sword. He ran down the corridor to Oneko's room, shouting for help
as he went. But the house was empty.
He skidded to a halt at the ripped paper screen door that led into the
lady's room. He winced and drew back, guarding against the cut that did
not come from a ghostly opponent who was not there. Drawing and cutting
the air in a whirlwind of steel, he leapt in, tripping on a still warm
body. The faithful Kiku. Dead.
Sulu's back crawled as he felt the stirring of a man padding with
catlike speed and silence.
"No," the soft whisper of a woman's voice, "not him."
Then fingers came, as hard as bone, and unconsciousness which tasted of
death.
When he came to, it was golden morning. Sulu lay helpless, the sword
heavy in his hand. But the sound of a man running down the hall roused
him, and he pulled himself to his knees, crouching like a tiger to
spring at whoever came.
"No, no, lord," the old proprietor shrieked, leaping back.
"What happened?" Sulu barked at him. "Where were you?"
"I am so sorry," the old warrior sobbed as he kneeled over the now stiff
body of the dead guard.
His daughter-in-law ran up and knelt by him cradling the old man in her
arms. She too was crying as she apologized.
"The ninja came and attacked, sir." She gasped out the story to Sulu.
"Most of the servants ran away. Some died. The master and our family
were huddled in the kitchen. They did not attack us. We could do
nothing. Nothing."
Sulu strode out into the garden, the dew of the summer night still
heading the leaves. He watched the servants carrying off the body of
Kiku.
Was that all? Could he wash his hands of her now? Where did honor end?
If it ended... was it honor?
What are you prepared to do now, Sulu? he asked himself. He returned to
his rooms only long enough to don his armor and to pack, and he mounted
a small gray pony and rode out. Just outside the compound he saw
farmers cultivating a small field, the men chopping at the soil with
hoes in the mindless rhythm that brings tranquility. As he passed, one
of the men turned his head slightly, watching him out of the corner of
his eye.
A man with a scar down the side of his face. He looked maddeningly
familiar.
Sulu went cold as he realized that he had seen the simple farmer before,
somewhere. He rode on nonchalantly, but he shook with urgency as he
remembered who the man was.
Then it hit him. That scar--he'd seen it on the gardener. It was the
gardener, the old gardener from Torii's castle. What was the old man
doing here?
He rode out of sight, then reigned the pony off the road and slipped off
its back. As quickly and quietly as he could, he stripped down to a
simple loincloth. What he had in mind would require speed and stealth.
He shinnied up a small tree and waited. If the old man were following
him, sooner or later he would pass beneath Sulu's ambush.
Shortly, the man almost slipped past him, moving with such unassuming
and ordinary casualness that Sulu didn't pay attention at first. So
this was a ninja secret--not stealth, but ordinariness. Sulu relaxed
his grip on the tree, falling like a stone and collapsing the man into a
grunting heap.
"No, lord, don't rob me. I have nothing," the old gardener/farmer
simpered.
"Don't give me that," Sulu shouted at him, pinning his arms back to a
point where he expected some serious protest.
But the man's arms just seemed to disjoint, and he was suddenly slipping
from Sulu's grip like a ferret.
"No you don't," Sulu muttered, grabbing at him, but the man was loose
and running with a speed Sulu didn't expect from someone so old. Sulu
was after him like a shot.
"Got you," he shouted triumphantly, tackling the man to the ground.
"What the hell?" he said as the man's eyes bulged and his color faded.
Somehow he was choking himself to death. "No you don't," Sulu shouted,
forcing open the man's mouth and pulling his tongue free from his
throat. "You are involved in this up to your ears. Where is the woman,
damn you?"
"I will never say," the old man said simply, suddenly calm.
This was getting Sulu nowhere. "Listen to me. If you know where she is
and are her friend, tell her the Great One Cut Heihachiro pines for her.
If she is held captive, help her to escape and she can find me here--no,
let's say in the pine grove near the beach, the one that frames Mount
Fuji. If you are her enemy, then come there with all your friends, and
we will fight to your death or mine."
With that he released the old man and sank to the ground in total
exhaustion, not even watching the man, who quickly disappeared into the
thin woods. Methodically he armed himself and rode the animal down to
the beach. And he sat down to wait.
The irony of the situation was not lost on him. He was counting on the
honor of others--kidnappers, perhaps murderers--while he, one of the
"good guys," was questioning his own honor. Or lack of it.
The moonlight sparkled on the beach where the tide rushed up to pattern
the sand and rolled back out to swell again. Even the shadows who
approached Sulu shadows, shadows cast by the ripe moon. He stood ready
to draw.
The party stopped just out of range of the cutting death of his sword.
The leader called out to him.
"You are the Great One Cut Heihachiro-sama?"
"Just simple Heihachiro, yes, I am he."
"Simple? You are modest as always." A voice shimmered like tinkling
bells. Sulu started. At first he took it for the figure of a young
man, not a woman. Not that woman. The slender body strode boldly with
the other swordsmen, dressed in a hakarna like any other soldier.
"Oneko?"
She stepped past the leader, approaching him alone. In the moonlight he
could see her face, the moon making her skin as white as the rice-powder
makeup had at Fushimi Castle.
"So it was your voice in the dark," he said with calm conviction.
"Are you so surprised? I, too, am a warrior," she explained with
ultimate simplicity.
"Yes. I had forgotten... I saw you fight that first day, but... you
look different."
"It is the woman who is the fighting demon who cuts down the mounted
enemy at the castle gate. Sometimes you are such a country bumpkin," she
chided. "From the beginning of time women have ridden to war in this
land. And it is the task of a noblewoman to train her son in courage,
and even skill at arms, before he is old enough to train with the men.
You are troubled, Heihachiro-sama," she said finally, in a half
question, half statement.
"I don't understand. You are riding with a band of, what, bandits? Or
ninja?"
She laughed in the familiar coquettish way that left the sound of bells
chiming in the air.
"I am of an ancient ninja family. I have been rescued." Sulu thought he
heard a hint of irony in her voice. He stared at her, seeing the steel
under the porcelain.
Again she spoke with the gentle coquetry that entrapped him in a web of
magical glamour. "You wished to find me. You have. Come, we must
leave this place." At a low whistle from the leader of the group, a
small man appeared out of the shadows leading horses. It was the old
gardener.
Sulu and Oneko rode side by side, but Sulu did nothing to encourage
conversation, although the lady made a few desultory attempts. But
Sulu's head ached. Rescued! Yes, he had been so worried he had changed
history. Well, he had, twicettwo incidents that canceled each other
out. They had been trying to rescue her the first time he saw her, and
they had' finally succeeded.
By the time they arrived at a secluded farm, morning was just breaking.
Oneko slipped easily. from the saddle, striding into the courtyard with
the leader of the group, who Sulu could now see was a wiry middle-aged
man. Oneko had called him uncle on the road, and now, in the light of
day, Sulu was pretty sure that was not just a country courtesy, but a
kinship statement. But whereas her delicacy was beautiful, his made him
look like a hawk hunting for lunch.
The uncle kneeled at the door to the house, calling out to his father,
the family head, telling him that he had returned with a hostage.
Uncle and Oneko entered, but Sulu was bid to stay outdoors, under close
guard. The walls were thin, and he couldn't help but hear the loud,
angry argument concerning him. And the order for his execution. And
Oneko's pleading for his life. And then he heard nothing that he could
make out. A servant summoned him to enter.
"Come closer," the scrawny ancient patriarch ordered from his dais. The
old man asked no questions. He just stared at Sulu for a while. Finally,
he seemed satisfied and grunted his approval. That was all.
Sulu was led out, cleaned up and fed. He had just finished putting on
the clean clothes provided when Oneko entered the room.
He was all business. The no-nonsense, Starfleet officer, determined to
get to the bottom of a confusing situation.
"These people, they are your relatives?" he asked without preamble. "Why
did they attack my party? Kill Kiku?"
"Kiku's death was an accident. It is regrettable. I will tell you our
secret, but you must tell me yours. Please," she urged, leaning toward
him and pleading with her eyes.
"No promises. Tell me." It was not a request.
"I am the granddaughter of the head of a clan of ninja warriors
originally from the Koga province. Our clan opposes Tokugawa. He is so
clever, he would have been a great ninja himself," she said bitterly.
"His tricks to destroy his opponents are famous. It is an endless game
of spy and counterspy. Kiku was my aunt. She had been placed in a
noble house to spy. She was assigned to accompany a new concubine who
was being sent to Mototada three years ago. The plan was for Kiku to
spy in Mototada's house. The girl caught a chill on the road. That was
the real Oneko. Kiku forced the soldiers to bring the sick girl to a
farm which was nearby and which she knew was allied with a friendly clan
of ninja. The farmer sent a messenger to grandfather, who hatched a
plot. The soldiers and retainers who accompanied the young concubine
were killed. The girl had already died of the lung illness. The
soldiers were replaced by our men, and I took the girl's place.
"My perfumes, my gestures and voice... all carefully designed to
bewitch any man. I'm well-trained. I was to observe Motoraria, learn
his weaknesses, find out what I could about the deployment of his troops
.. anything that would prove useful. I am surprised I was not ordered
to kill him. I was being rescued when you arrived on the road. I had
no choice but to be the faithful concubine and fight my attackers. You
are a very fine swordsman. Grandfather had sent men to bring me home
with what I had learned before the western army attacked. But I also
think that grandfather could not bear to see me die."
"How can you?" Sulu blurted in shock. "You are carrying Torii's
child--"
"Shhh..." She reached over before he had finished, placing her hand on
his mouth and gesturing toward the thin wall. She shook her head, her
eyes filled with such sadness that Sulu reached out and cradled her in
his arms.
Nothing had gone right. Oneko was not what she was supposed to be, the
lord of the land was untrustworthy, his own "lord" was duped by a slip
of a ninja woman .. and who was he to say that he was any better? How
could he expect better of a land when he himself thought of honor as
eminently disposable?
"Now you must tell me your secret. It is very important. I've
convinced grandfather that you are a god, or at least a mountain goblin,
a tengu, one of the magical warriors who are worshiped by our clan for
their martial skill. I can see it in your eyes, in your soul. You are
not of this place, of this world. Is it true?"
Sulu laughed hysterically "No, no! I'm no god. I'm just a perfectly
ordinary man." A perfectly ordinary twenty-third century Starfleet
helmsman, he thought bitterly Sulu felt the romance shatter So much
for his childhood dreams. He was stuck in a confused and complex world.
He didn't belong and he couldn't leave.
"Please, say it is so," she begged with quiet fear, but Sulu was too
caught up in his own disillusionment to norIce.
"I am nothing special. In fact... I'm starting to realize just how
common I am... "You have no skills, no magic? Please, say you do."
"Yes, say you do." The tall hawk-faced uncle strode into the room.
"Oneko, out," he ordered.
"Please, please," the girl sobbed, throwing herself at her uncle's feet,
clutching hopelessly at his legs. He kicked her away.
"I don't know what this foolishness is, but I am tired of it. You are
Torii's man. That is all. Not a tengu or a god. Just an enemy. And
you will confess it," the hawk-faced man shouted, calling in four armed
men. And tell us of the fortifications and troop strength in castle.
Tell us what Oneko can't, about the battle grabbed for Sulu, but he
sprang forward, kicking and punching, sending them sprawling. There was
no handy weapon this time. He yanked up the quilt, throwing it at the
two men who were up again and charging at him. Then he dove through the
paper screen that separated him from the next room, only to be grabbed
by two more men who were posted there.
He kicked one of his assailants in the stomach but was punched and
beaten for his trouble.
"Talk or die!" was the scream. A knife was at his throat.
He could talk. He should talk. What was it to him? The castle was
doomed anyway, whether he spoke or not. What was the point in keeping
the knowledge to himself?.
"Talk, or on my honor, I will gut you, now," came the warning.
Honor.
Sulu looked up at him and smiled wanly.
"You are cordially invited to disembowel yourself," Sulu informed him.
A sword was drawn back, and he started to struggle, knowing he wouldn't
make it. He heard a voice cry out.
And then all hell broke loose.
Chapter Thirty-six
Scotland, 1746
"So... I am to be defeated, eh?"
Scotty stared at the young, cloaked and hooded man who stood across from
him with a rakish grin and a confident air.
Scotty didn't know what he was feeling, but he was certain that, to a
large degree, it was awe. He was standing face to face with Bonny
Prince Charles, Charles Edward Stuart. The young man who was the
would-be their to the throne of England, Scotland, and Wales.
I'm not supposed to be here, thought Scotty. He was sure of it. This
was wrong, all of it wrong. It was more than that he was standing
there, in Inverness, in the tent of Charles himself. It was a sense
that not only could this not be, but this should not be. It should be
impossible.
Why impossible? Because...
Stuart was dead. Generations dead. Centuries dead. (Will be. Is. Will
be.)
"Are you quite all right?" asked Charles with genuine concern.
Charles's inner circle of command stood nearby. One of them was notable
for a bedraggled wig, which he removed, displaying a shaved head. He
beckoned to an aide, who produced a wool stocking cap that gave him the
comical appearance of a disreputable Father Christmas.
"Yes, that's better," the man said. "I am General John Murray, sir, son
of the Duke of Atholl, and I'll tell you frankly that I have not much
use for soothsayers on the prince's war council."
"Yes, but perhaps I have," Charles said sternly. Murray fell immediately
silent. Charles turned back to Scotty and said, "Well... if I am to be
defeated, then am I to be executed?"
"No," sighed Scotty. "You will live in exile all your days. For what
it's worth, in the future your portrait will grace a million Scots'
homes, and many more millions of Scottish whiskey bottles, biscuit tins,
and china plates."
Charles stared at him for a long moment, and then tilted back his head
and laughed delightedly. "So I'll not be a ruler, but an icon, is it?
Sir," he said, "you may have The Sight. You may not. But I'll warrant
you have a splendid sense of humor. Come, sup with us."
The table was a glitter of candlelight, dancing in merry reflection from
the generous quantity of silverplate. Scotty's mouth was watering at
the rich gravy smell of a lamb roast which wafted in from the kitchen.
The simple country dinner consisted of a thick creamed leek soup,
roasted capons, the lamb, a variety of breads and condiments, and a good
supply of French wine. The prince was quite right. Scotty had not
eaten this well for a long time, and he was positively groaning after
the pudding, a rich mold of candied fruits and suet steamed to savory
perfection, then laced with brandy and ignited at the table. A
spectacular end to an excellent meal.
But after the pangs of hunger had been satisfied, Scott took to looking
at his dinner companions, especially the prince. He was a handsome young
man, with excellent manners and a far less haughty disposition than his
counterpart and cousin, the Duke of Cumberland. He certainly seemed
sincere enough, exchanging bits of information and advice with his
nearest councillors, a pair of doughty old Irishmen and a French
cavalier, who seemed his favorites. But the eyes of another man,
Alexander Keppoch, kept straying toward the prince as well. Whatever
was going on, Scotty could smell the rancor of political unrest a mile
off.
"Well, then, Mr. Scott," Murray broke in, "what does your second sight
say of our campaign? Is there anything that we can do to forestall the
doom you preach?"
"Well..." He thought about what he knew (would know, did know) of the
British armament. "What I do know is that the British Train of
Artillery is going to shoot your private parts off if you don't have
some cannon of your own."
"Alas, we captured the magazine at Falkirk, but some fool blew it up.
But no matter," one of the Irish contingent offered, adding, "for I feel
that the highland man is fiercer with his trusty sword than a musket,
and more reliable it is, too."
The prince nodded in agreement, Keppoch and Murray scowled, and the
three favorites grinned. So that is how it was. The prince was a
romantic, and the battlefield was certainly no place for airy-fairy
notions. That at least ended the talk, much to Scott's relief, and after
supper they retired to a sitting room, where the prince himself took his
place at the delicate harpsichord and played a few short pieces in the
crisp, almost mathematical style of the period.
Discussion turned eventually to domestic matters and the difficulty in
keeping the men united. Scotty was appalled to hear of how internecine
squabbling had already prompted the Glengarry men and the Clanranald men
to desert in protest.
"My God," Scott said. "How can we hope to win this thing when cadet
branches of the same clan can't make peace among themselves?" No one
contested the comment.
Later in the evening Scott thanked his hosts and prepared to leave.
Murray caught up with him at the door.
"I would speak with you concerning the artillery train. If you would
allow my man to take you to my quarters and wait for me there, perhaps
we might discuss this matter."
"Aye, sir. If I can be of any help, it would be my honor, sir."
The general's quarters were in a home on the same street, and Scott was
soon settled in a well-appointed sitting room. He napped awhile in a
great wing chair, his feet propped warmly on the grate, waiting for
Murray to get loose of the party with the prince.
When Murray arrived, he had Keppoch with him. The clan chief made
himself at home with Murray's supply of port, pouring three glasses of
the rich red cordial. It was Murray who got down to business. "Tell me
of the artillery train," he ordered.
"I think it would be more useful to tell you some past history," Scott
began in his best lecture tone. "Queen Boadecia of the ancient Celts,
with her clans, numbering some 200,000 warriors, attacked a legion of
the Roman army, perhaps five hundred or a thousand men in all. Do you
know what happened? The Romans, vastly outnumbered, slaughtered the
Celts. The Celtic strategy was to run into battle, screaming, their
swords swinging wildly. The Roman strategy was to hold their line. The
Romans hacked the Celtic clans to death, one man at a time. To quote,
'Those who do not learn from history are condemned to repeat it." What I
see here is a disaster in the making. From what I see, those two Irish
captains, whom the prince holds so dear, are saying that loyalty and
courage are enough. But you, my lords, although great traditional
chieftains, seem to be wise enough to understand the value of the modern
cannon. I think perhaps I have spoken too boldly, gentlemen," he ended.
Murray interrupted, "I would pray to convince the young Stuart to
modernize his army, and quickly. Alas, though, what you heard of the
problem between the Clanranald and Glengarry, both of Clan Donald, is
but the twig of a problem whose roots lie buried in time. Between the
lack of support among the small householders, and the endless feuding
amongst the clans, it will be a miracle if we can field an army"
"But where can we get cannon? It is a dream, sr, a dream," Keppoch said
with passion.
"What about Fort Augustus?" Murray suggested. "We've taken the forts on
the Great Glen before, but not held them. Perhaps what we needs must do
is take them, strip them and burn them. Thus we shall have our guns,
and the English will not be able to recapture them. They lie on your
lands, my lord, do they not?"
"That they do, and a blight I would be glad rid of. Fort William and
Fort Augustus are indeed the two best prizes. Mr. Scott, if we can
capture cannon, can you engineer a way to mount them on wagons and port
them to Inverness, and if so, can you also train gunners to prime and
fire them?"
"Aye," Scott said, standing up again, his chest swelling with pride.
"That I can do!"
The suggestion of an attack down the Great Glen was soon presented to
the Council of Chiefs, where it was hailed as a brilliant stroke of
military tactics.
"By God, gentlemen," the prince enthusiastically proclaimed, slapping
his hand sonorously on the table, "it will indeed serve to secure our
western flank. Keppoch and Lochiel, you shall bring your forces to
bear."
And so the next morning, Scotty marched out to war under the banner of
Alexander, Seventeenth of Keppoch, laird of the Clanranald branch of the
Donaids. The pipes screamed defiance to any and all who would oppose
these proud men.
There was something in the back of his mind that told him he shouldn't
be doing this. But it was now but a dim, fluttering memory, and he
brushed it away as he would a gnat.
Chapter Thirty-seven
Moscow, 1942 Ccov Lx a soft hand touching his face. Slowly his eyes
fluttered open.
He had that brief disorientation that always hits when one awakens in an
unfamiliar place. How much stronger was that disorientation when one
awakens in an unfamiliar time.
The woman who stared down at him wore an odd costume, and he wondered
why in the world she was dressed like a twentieth-century nurse in a
Soviet army hospital. Blond hair framed her face.
He frowned.
"Nurse... Chapel?" he asked.
Her eyes widened and she dropped her voice. "If you wish to pray,
comrade, you have picked the wrong place to do it. There are no chapels
here."
He tried to shake off the confusion, and then the reality of where he
was started to come back to him. His vision cleared up and he could now
clearly make out the woman standing over him.
The error had been entirely his. The woman was obviously not Christine
Chapel... didn't even look like her, really, except that she was a
nurse with blond hair. What disturbed him was the fear in her eyes when
his incomprehensible (to her) first words seemed a plea for a place of
worship.
Of course. One didn't do that in the Soviet Union of 1942. He had
always known that intellectually. Yet now, seeing her reaction, the
full meaning of that concept was brought home to him for the first time.
What a hideous situation to be in. What a way to live.
How to tell the people of this time that better times were to come?
There was no way, really. It was not his place to do so, and besides,
even if he tried, they wouldn't believe him.
He felt a bleak depression over their situation, and then came to the
even bleaker realization that their situation was his own.
"Of... course, comrade," he said. "I was delirious."
"Of course," she replied neutrally. Able to so easily dismiss his first
words, she now smiled. "It is good to see you have come around, Mr.
Chekov. You've floated in and out of consciousness for close to a week
now."
He glanced around and saw the beds nearby, packed much too close
together, filled with wounded men. "Stalingrad is still standing, it
seems."
"Standing it may be," she said, smoothing her skirt as she rose, "but
you couldn't tell from here." He looked at her in confusion. "What?"
"This is Moscow."
"Oohhhhh," he said slowly. "Might I ask how I got here, or would that
be treading on state secrets?"
The coldness in her eyes informed him that she clearly did not approve
of jokes at the expense of the state. For a moment Chekov wondered if
perhaps she wasn't a part of the secret police. Now I'm getting
paranoid, he realized bleakly.
"You were brought here on a transport... the one that brought the
commissar here."
Chekov nodded. Obviously John Kirk had executed the landing safely.
Well, what else did one expect of a Kirk, after all. And they had also
obviously managed to fix the fuel line.
Chekov tried to sit up and felt a sharp pain shoot through his arm. He
winced and sagged back on the bed.
"Be careful," she said.
"A little late," he muttered.
"You lost a lot of blood. Also you should be careful or otherwise you
might open up the stitches."
'TII be careful," he assured her.
She stood. "There's someone who demanded to be informed the moment you
awoke."
She walked away briskly, leaving Chekov alone with his thoughts. Who
might the someone be? John Kirk? Probably. Hanging around, making sure
that he was going to be okay before he went on with his life. The life
that Chekov had managed to save.
Hadn't he? Actually, Kirk seemed to be pretty much in control of most
of the situations they had gotten themselves into. It was quite
possible that the streams of time were more than capable of flowing in
their proper channels without the aid of... "Chuikov?"
He looked up in confusion. The man standing there was clearly a general
in the Russian army. Next to that man was another man, dressed in
civilian clothes and wearing a long coat that seemed to swallow him. He
had his hat pulled low, which was curious considering they were indoors.
The general was an avuncular-looking man, and yet there was a clear
canniness and thought going on behind those narrowed eyes. It had been
the general who, in that gruff voice, had spoken a name t hat was only a
slight mispronunciation of Chekov's own.
"Yes?" said Chekov slowly, carefully.
"Full name?"
"Pave! Andreievich Chekov," he told him.
The general's eyes widened. "Do you know who I am?" he asked.
"A general?" was Chekov's cautious reply.
"I am General Vassili Chuikov. You are the son of my late brother
Andrew?"
Chekov's mouth moved for a moment. His mind raced and he said, "I... am
not sure. Forgive me, General, but... after the revolution... the
streets..."
"You lived on the streets," said Chuikov. "You are not the only one, my
boy."
And the man in the coat said silkily, "Where did a boy on the streets
learn how to fly a plane? And how to infiltrate behind German lines?"
Chuikov turned and looked piercingly at the other man. "You live for
your suspicions, Paulyitch. You know that?" He turned back to Chekov
and inclined his head slightly in the man's direction. "You have to
ignore Paulvitch. It is his job to be suspicious of everything."
Chekov felt a chill through him. This man was KGB. There was no
question in his mind.
"I learn very quickly," said Chekov. "I always have. And I became
friends with a pilot. He showed me a great deal. Everything, in fact."
He was talking quickly, because he was not the world's greatest liar and
had a tendency to speak fast, as if trying to get past the lie with all
due speed.
"I have no doubt," said Chuikov. He sat next to Chekov on the bed and
studied his face carefully. "You certainly have a lot of Alexander in
you. Especially around the eyes."
Chekov nodded and forced a smile. He wondered if this man was an
ancestor. If so, it would explain the resemblance that Chuikov saw. On
the other hand, he might also simply be a lonely man who was hoping. to
find some hint of his family still in existence, to give. him comfort in
his old age. Whatever the reason, Chekov was hardly in a position to
disenchant him.
Chuikov stood. "I am convinced. So tell me, my nephew... how would
you--who acted in so daring and brave a manner while on his own--like to
be in the army, eh?"
Chekov looked from Chuikov to Paulvitch. Paulvitch looked as if he would
like nothing better than to blow Chekov's brains out.
The army! He wasn't a soldier, for pity's sake. He was an otcer in
Starfleet. He was...
He saw the way Paulvitch was looking at him. Paulvitch's coat was
hanging open, and he saw the butt of a gun protruding slightly from
under the KGB man's jacket.
He was in trouble, is what he was.
"Sounds great," said Chekov with forced enthusiasm. "Excuse me, but the
American.. Kirk.. 2'
"He is on his way to London," said Chuikov. "Everyone from that brave
mission is safe and sound. And now, you get your rest... Lieutenant."
Fear of religion and KGB men... and now he had been conscripted into
the army. Somehow the future seemed a lot further away than ever.
Chapter Thirty-eight
THE HOURS it was taking to traverse the distance from the shuttle's
landing point to the castle was maddeningly long. Kirk imagined the
Enterprise up there, her orbit decaying, and inwardly he cursed the
amount of time everything was taking. There was not going to be much
margin for error to...
To what? He wasn't even sure what he was going to do once he got there.
Neither was Kral, although he wouldn't admit it. He walked with a
swagger and certainty that only youth could bring.
Kirk slowed for a moment, leaning against a large boulder.
Kral regarded him with ill-concealed amusement. "Getting tired?"
Why deny the obvious? "Yes," Kirk admitted. "And when you get older,
you'll get tired, too, doing the same things that never fazed you when
you were younger."
"There are no such things as old Klingons," said Kral with a touch of
pride.
Kirk studied him with curiosity. "You consider that a good thing?"
"The old must contribute to society, or they have no use."
"Everything is so black and white with you, Kral." He shook his head.
"The universe isn't like that. It's not you versus them. There's just
'us." Not realizing that is limiting and shortsighted... I'm saying
open your eyes," continued Kirk. And he pointed. "And look up there.
It's the castle."
Kral turned to see where Kirk was indicating. There, several hundred
yards away, its spires visible above the tops of trees, was indeed the
castle. "You're right." He paused. "So... how do you propose we do
it?"
"Do it?" said Kirk.
"Which one of us will attempt to kill him?"
Kirk's eyes widened in amusement. "How do you suggest we do that?"
"You have your phaser. And I must reiterate my anger over not being
allowed to carry a phaser or blaster of my own."
"What, this?" Kirk held up his phaser. "Just out of curiosity," and he
pointed and aimed the weapon. He squeezed the trigger.
Nothing happened.
"Oh, splendid," said Kral.
"He didn't interfere with our weapons capabilities last time we were
here, and one of his people died," observed Kirk. "Obviously he wasn't
going to allow the same thing to occur."
"Which means he knows we're here," said Kral with surprising softness.
"Yes," said Kirk. "And the question is, what's he going to do about
it?"
There was a soft thwop sound at their feet.
They looked down.
A grenade was lying less than three feet from Kirk.
"Move!" shouted Kirk, even as he leaped backward to get away.
Kral hurtled through the air and slammed into him and the two of them
tumbled backward into the shelter of the brush just as the grenade went
off.
They broke out of the other side and started to roll down a short
embankment. Around them flares of plasma fell and set small fires that
quickly extinguished themselves.
Kirk and Kral tumbled, arms and legs flailing, and when they reached the
bottom they scrambled to their feet as quickly as they could. Kral was
limping slightly, clutching his leg, and Kirk refrained from tossing off
a remark about the weaker of the species.
Just ahead of them was a run-down hut, and Kirk hesitated to make for
it, not wanting to endanger the occupants. But then the ground to his
left exploded in a hail of blaster fire, and the decision was made for
him. Besides, Kral was already ahead of him, leaping forward and
smashing in the door with his shoulder. Kirk saw no choice but to follow
him.
He leaped into the darkness after Kral.
Chapter Thirty-nine
Scotland, 1746 EVEN SCOTTY, used to the stark expanses of space, was
moved to sighs by the pristine beauty of the rolling fields, still white
with snow, and here and there by the thunder of a waterfall, its
sparkling cascade dancing with a raw power that this simple world could
not create nor control.
Marching next to Scotty was Seamus, grinning broadly, thrilled to be a
part of it all. Truth to tell, so was Scott.
They marched southwest, down past Loch Ness, her black, still water
shadowed by even starker ragged mountains which cheered the highlanders
twice over, once for the reflection of their hardy souls, and once for
the knowledge that Cumberland's men would find no succor here, so harsh
a land it was.
And so down the Great Glen they marched and through the narrow Glen of
Birds, its air chill in the perpetual shadow of the gorge. The blare of
the pipes uplifted their spirits.
Fort Augustus stood gray, her stony foundation arising from a stony
field, hard by the stony shore of the loch. Above the walls stood
wooden pickets, adding both height and invulnerability to the structure.
The army camped silently, not lighting fires which would give the enemy
their position and number.
The command staff stood on a hill overlooking their goal.
"Well, Lochiel, any suggestions?" Keppoch asked.
"We'll rush at it, and they will quiver with fear, and let us in," he
proclaimed.
"It is suicide, sir," Scott burst in, shaking his head, "and I would
advise against it."
Keppoch shook his head. "We cannot afford a long siege. If we were
pinned here, sooner or later a messenger would escape and reinforcements
from Fort William to the south would crush us as a smith flattens a
piece of iron between his hammer and his anvil. But have you a plan,
sir?"
"We could mine the wall with a few barrels of gunpowder," Scott
suggested. "At least we'd have a breach to rush."
"There is little cover," a captain pointed out. "We'd lose anybody who
tried to plant it."
"You know," Keppoch said thoughtfully, "in the old days we would be
building a siege tower."
"In the old days there were old trees," Lochiel pointed out. "Can't
build one out of saplings."
"Could we get someone in? Then he could sap the wall from the inside,
or open the gate for us," another captain suggested.
This brought jeers of derision until Scotty said, "Wait now. That just
might do the trick. There is gunpowder aplenty inside, and if one or
two men were to get in, they could set a charge from there. But it
would be a suicide mission."
"Do you think you could do it, Mr. Scott?" Keppoch asked.
Scotty groaned. Rule number one in anybody's army is Never Volunteer.
"I think so, my lord," he said with resignation.
Just after sunup Scott and Seamus snaked their way across the field,
seeking what little cover there was behind rocks and shrubs and pitiful
little clumps of dried grass.
"How are we going to get through the gate?" Seamus asked.
"I'm not sure yet, lad. But something is bound to turn up," Scotty
said, adding to himself, "My lips to God's ear."
The sound of marching men and creaking wagons drifted on the breeze.
Soon the two men could see the patrol and a couple of wagons shambling
up the road.
"There, lad, I told you," Scott said, adding a thanks to whatever deity
had provided their good luck. They scrambled close to the road, and as
the first wagon rolled by, they rolled out into the road, missing the
great wheels by inches. The shaggy hooves of the horses drawing the
next wagon were kicking dust into the men's faces as they scrambled to
their feet, crouching. Scuttling clear of the horses, they rolled under
the hitching tongue. Scotty grabbed onto it, and Seamus grabbed onto
Scotty. They dragged along, Scott grateful that the wagon was moving at
a slow walk. Finally Scott hauled himself up into the understructure of
the wagon. Seamus did the same as they halted at the great gate.
They both hung on, straining every muscle as the wagon launched ahead
and into the fort. Seamus hit the ground with a thud. "Something fall?"
a man asked in English. "Not here, Henry," another answered.
Seamus rolled into a pile of hay. Scotty let himself down from the
belly of the cart rather gingerly. When he joined Seamus, he allowed
himself a painful groan as he rubbed his stiff joints.
"Now what?" Seamus whispered.
"We wait."
While they sat huddled and silent, Scott tried to keep track of the
passage of the occasional soldier on guard duty. The day dragged by
endlessly. By night, when the yard was deserted, Scotty had the guard
drill figured out.
Clump/Clump/Clump/Scotty waited for the guard to march by, then hissed
"Now!" and he and Seamus broke loose of the straw bed and ran for the
big building in the center of the compound. It had to be the magazine.
"It's locked," Seamus whispered.
"Here, let me," Scott said, pulling a slender blade from his boot,
working the lock with a skill that clearly impressed his young
companion. The big lock dropped open. "In. Quick," he said, pushing
Seamus ahead of him.
Clump/Clump/Clump/
"That was close," Scott muttered, wiping his brow and trying to still
his thumping chest. What he would give right about now for a light. It
took a while for his eyes to adjust to the tiny glow of moonlight that
filtered in through the few windows. There were crates and barrels...
and the smell of gunpowder.
They rolled one of the powder barrels to the door, and Scott wrestled it
over the doorsill as Seamus went back for another.
"Halt!" A musket was thrust up to Scotty's face. He slowly, very
slowly, stood up with his hands in the air.
Chapter Forty
Moscow, 1942 SHORTLY ^rmR being "recruited," even though there was still
an occasional twinge in his arm, Chekov was hustled off to a secret
training school about five miles from the main airport. He found a
small airstrip and a few low buildings that housed the primitive
facilities of the Red Guard squadron. Chekov felt resplendent in his
new uniform. He also felt nervous as hell. Although Chuikov, who had
since returned to Stalingrad, had accepted his flimsy background story
almost without questionNmotivated by his own desires, Chekov suspected,
both for family and for more soldiers--Paulvitch had kept looking at him
with great suspicion. Paulvitch had been even less enthusiastic when
the general had rather forcefully insisted that Chekov be placed in the
elite Red Guard flying squadron. He had also ordered that identity
papers be cut for Chekov immediately.
Chekov was somewhat old for a cadet and was looked on with some
amusement... at first. But he made quite a splash among his fellow
cadets on his first flight. He had been taken up in a lend-lease P-39.
Chekov quickly mastered the feel of the vehicle, impressed his flight
instructor with his skill and astonished the other cadets with his
aerial acrobatics, pushing the propeller-driven pursuit vehicle to its
limit. They were finally convinced he was some sort of saint when he
was ordered to report to the Kremlin.
The order did not thrill Chekov, however, for he had his own game plan.
He was determined to get out of Russia.
At first he had felt a patriotic devotion to the people and place that
he had grown up in. But he was rapidly beginning to realize that his
vision of the past was heavily romanticized. The Russia of this time
was completely alien to him. The general air of fear and oppression
that hung over the country like a gray sheet was suffocating.
The problem was, he wasn't sure how to get out. Borders were carefully
watched, and for that matter, so was he.
The usually silent, almost spectral Paulvitch had, it seemed, made
Chekov his special case. He had hand delivered Chekov's new papers to
him and said nothing, but merely regarded him with those ghostly,
glowing eyes. He didn't have to say anything to Chekov, really. His
thoughts were clear. Paulyitch did not trust him, not for a moment.
It seemed to Chekov that, whenever he turned around, Paulvitch was
somewhere in the background. Paulyitch, or one of his cronies.
It wasn't paranoia, Chekov told himself, if they really were out to get
you. And what he had was a serious situation on his hands.
As the old saying went, he knew too much. Too much about Russia, about
what would happen. Nowhere in the world was more dangerous for Chekov
than the Soviet Union, and yet here was the place he was stuck.
He had to get out, and the only way to do that was in the air.
So his intentions were hardly honorable, and the constant paranoia from
the oppressive KGB made his people seem more like the Klingons than the
enlightened society he remembered.
Informed by his commanding officer that his presence was required at the
Kremlin, Chekov blanched inwardly. Insane as it sounded, he was sure
that somehow the KGB knew that he was from the future. He envisioned
another small room with shining lights, Paulvitch leering down at him.
"Why me?" he asked, a question directed both to his C.O. and to the
heavens above.
"Why, to meet Stalin, of course!" said the C.O. incredulously. "It will
be a great honor to meet Stalin, no?" Chekov's commander said, shaking
his new cadet's hand and sending him off to the waiting car.
The sound of the tires bouncing over the cobblestones of Red Square was
a drumroll of fear and thrill to Chekov as he sat stiffly in the
backseat of the car, his stomach doing flip-flops. The splendor of old
Saint Basil's, with its fairy-tale onion domes, soared toward the gray
sky, a surrealistic blend of color and fantasy set in a wasteland of
somber government buildings.
And then he was in the Kremlin. After miles of corridors, and dozens of
identity checks, Chekov was finally deposited outside the doors of an
office, on a graceful chair whose tattered brocade seat and carved
woodwork bespoke a more gentle time. He was fetched by a staff aide who
outranked him by a decade or two of well-earned promotions.
One figure loomed in the center of a group of officers who were
discussing some papers spread on a large map table. Even with his back
turned, Chekov knew who it was. It was almost as if an electric field
emanated from the man. If he ever doubted what charisma really was, now
he knew.
The man turned, the Georgian peasant who had risen to be the new czar of
the People's Republic. Chekov snapped to attention. Stalin was younger
than Chekov had remembered. Remembered from what? The pictures in
school? He pushed away the dangerous thoughts the excitement of the
moment had unleashed. He saluted, drinking in every feature of the man,
his hard paternalistic manner, made more so by the old-fashioned
mustache, the sheer physical strength, and the eyes. Those piercing
eyes, which were both kind and cold. But Chekov's stomach remembered
that this man had "purged" countless millions of peasants during the
terrible years of collec-tivization, and things more terrible than that
to come.
And then he saw, lurking in the corner, Paulvitch. He was glowering at
Chekov in that unmistakable way, as if waiting for Chekov to suddenly
lunge forward at his leader.
"So you are the candidate for the medal, are you? Do you think you
deserve to be a Hero of the Soviet Union?"
"Comrade Premier," Chekov said shakily, "no more nor less than every man
and woman who fought in Stalingrad with me." Stalin's eyes softened a
bit, and Chekov stumbled on, "There are thousands, and all are heros."
Then he stilled himself, before the skilled strategist drew any more
from him.
Stalin reached out a hand, and an officer obediently handed him a small
box, his face impassive in the presence of this powerful dictator. Then
Joseph Stalin pinned a gold star hanging from a red ribbon on Chekov's
chest. Chekov stood at attention. He saluted, his mind a torrent of
mixed emotions, and waited for the signal to withdraw.
But Stalin looked him in the eye, this time with the frost of winter.
"And who do you admire the most among my staff?." he asked.
Chekov's eyes flicked uncontrollably to the men in the room. There was
Marshal Zhukov. That was the man, without any doubt! But Zhukov's eyes
held a warning. To acknowledge the fact that he was a brilliant and
beloved war leader could be his death warrant at the hands of this
dictator.
Chekov looked back into Stalin's eyes, allowing himself to be drawn into
the charismatic power of the man. Then, with what he hoped would pass
for perfect sincerity, he said, "If Lenin was our grandfather, then you
are our father. All the other officers are our uncles and brothers. We
each do our best for the state, and some do better than others, as is
their talent, but it is you, sir, who is the greatest People's Hero."
Stalin looked at him and raised his eyebrows. "You have political
sense, lad, but I want a name. Someone I can reward, perhaps."
"Then I name General Chuikov." Chekov could feel the relief in the room.
That certainly was the only answer that would have no political
repercussions. Stalin seemed satisfied and dismissed Chekov, who managed
to march out without tripping on the rug, walking into the doorway, or
otherwise making a fool of h imself, despite the fact that he was shaking
like a leaf.
The driver was long gone, and with the shiny new medal on his chest, and
feeling obvious and embarrassed, he set out to hitchhike back to the
base. This time he got to experience the enormity of Red Square, stone
by stone. A troop carrier going in his general direction rumbled by,
and he waved it down, running and shouting until the bored driver rolled
to a stop.
"Where you headed?" the driver asked, eyeing the medal.
"Er," Chekov began, knowing that his destination was classified, "sort
of northeast a few miles."
"Oh, the secret Red Guard training base. Sure," the man said
cheerfully.
They both grinned. And then a hand fell upon, Chekov's shoulder.
He turned to see Paulvitch glaring at him.
"I know you are not what you seem," said Paulvitch. "And somehow,
soon... I will find a way to prove that."
He turned and stalked away, and Chekov felt a chill come over him.
He had a distinct feeling that the sooner he got out of there, the
better.
Chapter Forty-one
Japan, 1600 TI4 SOUSDS OV metal on metal told Sulu that the camp was
under attack.
His captors momentarily distracted, Sulu moved quickly. His left foot
lashed back, slipping around and behind the man who was holding him. He
yanked fast and the two of them went down in a tangle of arms and legs.
Sulu rolled away quickly and kicked the man in the face. Then he leaped
to his feet, ready to take on another opponent.
The hall was empty.
Sulu blinked in surprise. Maybe there was something to that ninja magic
after all.
Suddenly he was smashed on the back of the head, and cursed himself for
forgetting about the man he'd just flattened. He rolled forward, coming
to his feet, and the ninja leaped at him, a sword already drawn. There
was a knife on the floor, just out of Sulu's reach. He tried to get to
it, and the ninja blocked his path. Sulu braced himself, arms up, ready
to try and ward off an attack even though he knew he didn't have a
prayer.
And suddenly a man on horseback smashed through the paper-thin walls.
Sulu looked up in amazement. So did the ninja, which was the last thing
he had the chance to do, for he went down under the pounding of the
horse's hooves.
The horseman had cloth wrapped around his face
for protection. He gestured briskly, and Sulu, not one to pass up an
offer, leaped onto the back of the mount. They turned and hightailed it
out of the compound.
There were other men in the compound, also in simple peasant clothes of
dark blue indigo, their faces covered with cloths. But the swords they
were using with deadly efficiency were not simple peasant farm tools.
Sulu's savior threw a supporting arm under Sulu's armpit, and tossed
what turned out to be a smoke bomb.
The other men also threw out smoke devices, some also tossing out small
dark objects, handfuls of hard, sharp plant seeds which bit into the
feet of the pursuers as viciously as any metal caltrop.
Sulu and his rescuer sped away into the dusk. Each galloping stride
jolted Sulu on his precarious perch, his ribs screaming with bruised
pain. He set his jaw, enduring the pain, and wondered obliquely if
perhaps this was some other trick, some attempt to make him grateful to
another group of devious strangers, some other way to obtain his
nonexistent magical secrets.
When the man finally reined in the frothing, exhausted horse, Sulu
slipped off the saddle and landed on the ground in a pained and
unceremonious heap.
His rescuer leaped smartly off the saddle, giving orders to his men to
cover their tracks. He had to help Sulu to his feet.
"Well, so you are not a Koga spy?" The man unwound the dark cloth that
had masked his face.
"Watanenabe Sadayo?" Sulu shouted upon seeing Mototada's gray-haired,
samurai sword master. "How did you find me?"-'
"I have ways," he said, a reassuring smile spreading over his face. "We
knew there was a spy, but we didn't know who. When you showed up, we
were sure you were a plant. Seeing you about to have your head at your
feet disabused me of that."
"I saw an old gardener from the castle. He must be the one," Sulu
blurted. But he couldn't tell about Oneko. Something in him was
screaming to expose her part in this, but something else remembered her
sad eyes. And he couldn't betray her.
The sword master shouted to his men. "Come, we can camp here. You
there," he shouted at an underling. "Bring the samurai water. Now come,
sit. The men will boil rice for us. Tell me. What happened? Do they
hold Oneko-domo for ransom? We followed you to the inn, but we were too
far behind to help when the Koga bandits attacked. Why were you not
killed if you are not one of theirs? I can understand why they wanted
the girl alive."
"Why did they let me live?" Because the woman you would rescue saved me,
he thought. But he answered in truth, "Luck, I guess. They wanted my
secrets. Military secrets. I really don't have any. I told them
nothing. They didn't have me that long."
"Will they ask ransom for the girl?"
"I don't think so," Sulu answered neutrally;
"We must rescue her. She cannot be left in their hands. Is she still
with child?"
Sulu choked. "Yes, I guess so."
Sadayo saw the brief tremor and said brusquely, and incorrectly, "You
tremble in self-mortification. Do not. You have not dishonored
yourself. Indeed, I see my first instinct was incorrect. You are indeed
a man of highest honor."
No, your first instinct was dead on, thought Sulu glumly.
The next day, after an impromptu bath in a cold stream, Sulu was again
dressed as befit the station of a hundred koku man in the service of
Torii Mototada. He mounted, and gave the two swords at his belt a sharp
tug, adjusting them more firmly.
When he arrived at the clearing, Sadayo was grimly outlining strategy.
"The Koga clan would not expect another attack so soon, and so it is our
chance to eliminate them once and for all, and find Lady Oneko," the
samurai sword master ordered, "when we get close to the Koga stronghold,
you will go directly to rescue the Lady Oneko. We will attack the
ninjas."
"Hal, "Sulu acknowledged. He was going to have to get to her fast.
Sadayo was no fool, and Oneko wasn't going to last long if she was
wandering around the compound like the family member she really was.
The trip back seemed a lot shorter than the trip out, bouncing over
Sadayo's saddle. They assembled in a thin woods some few yards from the
gate. A servant opened the gate, and two women left carrying vegetables
for sale at the nearest town. "Now," Sadayo shouted, and kicked his
home into a charge. The servant tried to slam the gate, but Sadayo's
horse ran him down. Mototada's men slashed down the ninjas as they ran
into the yard. Soon the air was thick from the ninja smoke bombs, their
tactical effectiveness lost as both sides choked and wept from their
noxious fumes. This time the foot soldiers threw the caltrops, avoiding
them by gliding along the ground, while the horses were getting the
worst of it as the hard nutlike kernels of the seeds bruised their
hooves. Sulu saw Sadayo pitched from the saddle into the cloud of dust
and smoke.
Sulu searched the chaos for Oneko, wheeling his snorting, screaming
mount back and forth across the bloody, screaming battle. A lanky
figure emerged from the blinding dust, a long naginata slashing at
Sulu's horse. Sulu countercharged, drawing his sword and striking the
weapon aside. He rode past, leaving the frustrated man known as uncle
screaming invective, until he 'was lanced by another samurai. So much
for uncle.
In the shouts and chaos Sulu heard her voice. Turning the horse this way
and that, squinting through the dusty cloud of weapons and limbs, he saw
her running toward him. He spurred the horse and rode to meet her,
reaching down and scooping her up to the saddle. And he rode, rode for
both their lives, while the battle raged on behind him.
Chapter Forty-two
Scotland, 1746 SCOTTY RA HiS ILs. NOS OVER the walls of his cell,
feeling the bars on the windows, praying for a loose one, but the cell
was as tight as a drum. And that made him think of drums and hangings,
so he felt the walls again, desperately seeking hope.
He sagged to the ground, determined not to let depression overwhelm him.
"I'm a Miracle Worker," he whispered.
"Mr. Scott," a familiar voice hissed. "Stay clear of the door."
Scotty's eyes widened. He was starting to believe it himself.
He had just about enough time to tuck and roll across the small room
before the shock of the powder charge hit him. He ignored the rear end
full of splinters from the shattered door.
"Quick, run," the boy ordered. It seemed like a good idea.
They scurried like rabbits, darting around the dozens of men who spilled
out into the yard. Seamus had the lead. He was headed for what seemed
like a dead-end against a back wall behind a barracks.
Then all hell broke loose. The fort went up like a bomb of the sort
that would not see the light of day for two hundred years..
Scotty was thrown a dozen feet, landing painfully on a pile of rocks and
a heap of Seamus.
"I set a fuse in the magazine. All the ammunition went up. Isn't it
glorious?" he panted, grinning in the. glow of the terrible fire that
consumed the fort. "Now," he said gleefully, staggering up, and the two
men ran for what was left of a wall. By then the Keppoch and Lochiel
forces were in the fort, screaming their various clan battle cries and
cutting down anything that moved.
The rest was easy. The English broke ranks, looking like bobbing
lobsters in their red coats as they ran, seeking refuge in the dawn of
the cold foreign hills.
"It's a shame about your cannon, Mr. Scott," Seamus said sadly, kicking
aside a piece of slag that had once been the pride of the English army.
Scotty had been melancholy since he first inspected the carnage. "Well,
it couldn'a been helped," he said wistfully. "I do thank you for saving
me."
"Now I suppose we are even, sir," the boy said awkwardly.
"Aye, ye might say that, lads"
"I owe you that, er, and more, sir." He was silent, looking down at his
feet for a bit, then he blurted, "Oh, Mr. Scott, I must confess. You
have been a father to me and Meg, and I have this terrible burden on my
soul. When I brought you the clothes at The Hanged Woman, and you asked
why... ?"
"Aye, an' ye said ye had your reasons..."
"Well, my reasons were... oh, Mr. Scott, the English knew there was a
spy, and I had hoped to shoot the duke and then leave the weapon with
you, so that they'd arrest you and I could continue as a spy
uninterrupted. And I..." His face went red with mortification and
shame. "I... I wouldn't blame you if you'd never forgive me. I
thought you were just someone I could use. I never... I dinna..." He
hung his head, barely able to blink back the tears.
"Son," Scott said, taking the lad in his arms. "Of course I forgive
you. Such things happen in war. They always do."
The two men pulled away from each other with the embarrassment this.
society put on that sort of display. "What will you do now?" Seamus
asked.
"I will go back to Inverness and report my failure to General Murray.
And you?"
"I must go with the Keppoch. I still have my duty. I am to send
reports back to the prince's staff. Mr. Scott, when you get back to
Inverness... take care of my Megan for me until I return," he begged
shyly.
"Of course I will, son, and I'll dance at your wedding."
Before Scott left for the lonely journey back to Inverness, Alexander
Keppoch sent for him. "Mr. Scott, what can you tell me of Fort
William?" Scotty deliberated for a moment. "Sir, I fear that you will
not find Fort William the plum for the picking that Fort Augustus was.
Without cannon, you may find yourself mounting a long siege."
"Aye, and the army is not up to strength. The Campbells, those damn
traitors to the prince's cause, have been sent to ravage our farms, and
many men have deserted the cause to protect their family, and who can
blame them for that?"
"God give you the victory, my lord," Scott offered. "And give you
peace," Keppoch said, looking into Scotty's haunted eyes.
Shouldering his small pack, Scott strode back up the road to Inverness,
his kilt swinging with a jaunty rhythm that Scotty certainly didn't
feel.
Chapter Forty-three
Moscow, 1942 OmKov's xt to his new squadron again brought the blessed
oblivion of hard work. He was soon assigned to train some of his
comrades on the problems of the P-39. He had picked up the new material
easily. After all, he had been a trained officer, and most of these new
friends were farm boys who had never seen anything more complicated than
a tractor or a vacuum tube radio.
And so the days were filled with droning lectures which began, "This is
the AirCobra. You will note that the engine is amidships, behind the
pilot. The drive shaft runs forward below the cockpit. A
thirty-millimeter cannon is mounted on the front propeller hub.. 2' And
then on the deadly business of the plane's tendency to go into a flat
spin during a dive. Except for the jargon, which he had once thought so
romantic and was now so routine, it was just like any other flight
training, except that at the Academy they trained for science and
exploration first, and then battle as a final contingency. Here the
deadly business was the only business.
The afternoons were filled with flying, and that was good, and the
evenings with new friends, brave young pilots filled with that ineffable
Russian exuberance, and that was even better.
But the frequent and oppressive mandatory meeting with the Political
Officer, receiving the catechism of Marx, was not just boring, but
terrifying to someone brought up in a free society. Again the doubts
clamored to be heard. And what made it all the more terrible was that
there was no one Chekov could talk to. It was a society built on
mistrust.
He was relieved when Paulvitch seemed to vanish into thin air. If
Chekov never saw the KGB man again, it would be far, far too soon.
Soon the time came for Chekov to earn his keep, and his wing was
assigned to a mission. A bunch of the new YAKs had been shipped in.
They were trim little planes, and the best Soviet-made vehicle in the
air force. The men had a scant four days to qualify on the new planes
before they were shipped out. Chekov was assigned as wing commander. He
didn't feel ready for command, but then again, he hadn't been asked.
With a fleeting thought, he remembered Starfleet and the years it took
in peacetime to grow into command. In war there was no such luxury.
Survival was the test of promotion.
Chekov was a nervous wreck. Flying into a combat situation was
unthinkable. The Prime Directive was clear. The time paradox
possibilities were catastrophic. His could not be the hand that ended
other human lives of the twentieth century. It was impossible. Officers
of Starfleet had pledged that their lives would be forfeit before doing
something like that.
And then salvation came to him in one word. Sweden.
It was brought up during an evening's discussion. Sweden was neutral.
Since they did not participate in the war, nothing Chekov could do there
would possibly affect the war.
The thought of leaving Russia forever saddened him, but then again, it
was not really his Russia. And it would not be the Russia he remembered
for generations yet. Not only that, but the longer he remained in
Russia, the greater the possibility that he might do something to
prevent that future from ever happening.
And 'he had to get there quickly. Paulvitch had decided to leave him
alone, but who knew how long that would last? And if he were sent into
a combat situation, well...
Of course, getting shot down would certainly solve all his problems. And
Chekov hadn't ruled that out. But all things being equal, he would
prefermnot unreasonably--if matters didn't come to that.
That night, he lay in the barracks and waited until he heard only the
sleeping sounds of the others. Then, slowly, he slid out of bed. He
dressed quickly and pulled out his gear, which he had already packed up
during the day. He glanced around right and left, making sure he wasn't
observed, and then slid out the back door, a specter.
Watching carefully, and masterfully avoiding the sentries, Chekov made
his way across the camp to the hangared planes. He pulled open the
hangar door, and there, gleaming before him, was his plane.
He wasn't sure if there was enough fuel in it to get him all the way to
Sweden, but it didn't matter. He knew of several refueling stops from
his classes. And even if he decided not to risk stopping, in the event
that word was out about him, he would come down somewhere and make it
from there. Anyplace was better than this darkened, paranoid version of
what his beloved Russia was like.
There was the soft click of a hammer being drawn behind his back. Chekov
froze, clutching his duffel bag.
"You won't get away. Don't move please. Turn around."
"Which is it?" asked Chekov reasonably. "Don't move or turn around?"
"Turn around. Very slowly."
Chekov did so, knowing what he would see.
There, in the dim light of the hangar, was Paulvitch, whose gun was
pointed unwaveringly at him.
"I have run a complete history on you," said Paulvitch. "It has taken a
great deal of time. As you' say, records can be hazy, and I wished to
be thorough. Do you know what I have found?"
"That I'm an exemplary citizen and role model for children everywhere?"
Paulvitch smiled thinly. The smile didn't make his face look any
better.
"You have no history. No one knows you... not in the streets, not in
the neighborhoods. No one. Nowhere. Your fingerprints have no trace.
You are a nonperson."
"Then I suppose I couldn't have done anything," said Chekov, trying to
sound casual.
Paulvitch took a step closer. "You, Pave! Chekov, will be taken
for,interrogation. We of the KGB have perfected methods that the Nazis
are only just beginning to test. Their methods stress torture and
cruelty. We stress efficiency. We have drugs that will make you tell us
everything you are, everything you know. Within seventy-two hours not a
single thing in your mind will be secret from us."
Chekov's face was set, "You see," said Paulyitch, "I knew that ill gave
you' enough rope, you would hang. You are sloppy, Chekov. And you
should have watched your back."
"So should you," said Chekov, and eyes wide, he shouted, "Get him/"
Paulvitch half turned, reflexively.
Chekov moved like lightning, swinging the duffel around. It slammed
into Paulvitch, sending the gun clattering into the darkness.
Paulvitch scrambled to his feet just as Chekov charged forward and
smashed a booted foot into his face. Paulvitch fell back, blood pouring
from his nose.
He didn't go down easily. He staggered forward and swung a roundhouse
punch. Chekov blocked it easily with an upswept arm and kneed Paulvitch
fiercely. Now there was no longer paranoia and fear. Here was the enemy
incarnate, the symbol of all that was wrong with Russia made solid.
Chekov took out his anger on him, hurling Paulvitch against the side of
the hangar. Paulvitch slammed up against it with a crunch and then slid
down, consciousness fleeing him.
Chekov grabbed Paulvitch under the arms and dragged him to a far corner
of the hangar. There he used some rope to tie the KGB man thoroughly,
and stuffed cloth into his mouth to muffle him. With any luck,
Paulvitch wouldn't a wake for hourswhours Chekov was certain he would
need.
He threw newspapers and rags over the KGB man to thoroughly obscure him
from view. Then he walked out of the shadows of the far end of the
hangar.
Standing at the opening was General Chuikov.
"I am amazed," said the general, his fingers straying near his holstered
gun.
Chapter Forty-four
KIRK LOOKED AROUND slowly and saw the family huddled against the far
wallma man and woman, and a small girl clinging to the woman's leg. Some
farm implements sat next to them, leaning against the thir wall.
"We're sorry," said Kirk immediately. "We didn't mean to involve you."
He turned quickly to Krat. "We've got to get out of here. If any more
of Weyland's people are injured..."
Kral made a disdainful noise. "If they die in combat, what of it? They
die with honor. Honor is everything."
And to Kirk's astonishment, the woman kicked Kral, who had been
crouching, in the face.
The astonished Klingon fell onto his back, clutching at the bruise on
his cheek, "My son is dead!" shrieked the woman. "He didn't die with
honor! He died with the skin burned from his bones!"
"That little boy... your son?" said Kirk slowly..
The woman said nothing, but instead turned to her husband and began to
sob against his chest. Piteous, wracking sobs, and Kirk watched the
Klingon carefully for some reaction.
"It was an accident," Kral said.
"That doesn't make much difference now, does it?" Kirk pointed out.
"Oh, that's right, Kirk," said Kral, bristling. "Lay the blame entirely
at the door of the Klingons. It takes two to'make a war, you know."
"Yes. And two to end it." Kral stared at him.
Then, from outside, came a shouted voice that both Kirk and Kral
recognized. "Kirk! Give Kral up! This is not your affair. It's
between him and me. If you give him up, I will allow you to live."
They looked at each other. "What are the chances of that?" said Kirk
dryly.
"Good, I think. This is between Kbrex and me, just as it always has
been. Since we were young."
"You're old friends?" said Kirk in surprise. "An old friend would still
oust you violently from your command?"
"No. We're not old friends." Kral paused and said ruefully, "Kbrex is
my brother."
Kbrex crouched outside the cabin, hiding among the bushes, and shook his
head. He couldn't believe the situation he'd gotten himself into.
He had been ecstatic when Weyland had responded to his message. The
formidable being had kept a carefully neutral expression when Kbrex
informed him of the unquestionable attack by Kirk and Kral. Kbrex was
certain this indicated that the immortal Weyland was not quite as
all-powerful as he claimed.
Weyland had agreed to permit Kbrex to transport down to the planet's
surface. He had even agreed to allow Kbrex's weapons to function, a
courtesy he said he would not allow Kirk and Kral.
But Kbrex initially balked when Weyland informed him that he could only
beam down alone.
"You, with weapons, against a Klingon you defeated and a weak Federation
man," observed Weyland. "Do not tell me you're afraid."
"I'm afraid of nothing," replied Kbrex.
"Be afraid of this be afraid of what will happen if, in your pursuit of
the invaders, you should happen to injure any of my people."
Kbrex opened his mouth a moment, and then. closed it. Something warned
him not to challenge Weyland on this matter., So Kbrex now found himself
on the surface of Cragon, with those he was pursuing pinned down in a
hovel. He couldn't just open fire on them, since he was nervous about
what Weyiand would do if the peasants were harmed. But Kral and Kirk
didn't know about that.
"This is your last chance! Kirk... this isn't your fight! This is
between Kral and me. Give him up. Yot don't owe him anything. He'd
kill you as soon as look at you,"
Kbrex was silent for a moment. Certainly Kirk had to realize the wisdom
of his words. Of course, he was lying. He intended to obliterate Kirk
at the first opportunity. But he wanted to make absolutely sure of
Kral's demise first, He heard a chopping noise and frowned. He didn't
know what the source was, but he wasn't sure he liked it.
"Kirk!" he shouted. "Last chance! I mean it!"
Again that chopping. Where the devil was it coming from?
Then a crunching sound, like...
A wall collapsing., He craned his bull neck and bellowed his fury. There
were Kirk and Kral, on the far side of the house, dashing into the
woods. He didn't have a clear shot at them, and then they were gone.
But he knew where they were going, and all he had to do was circle
around and cut them off. Then he would have them.
Kirk and Kral bolted through the woods, tossing all but the barest of
caution to the wind.
Every crack of branch sounded like a rifle shot, and every dancing
shadow contained a hundred enemies. Kirk wasn't even sure if there was
any point to their rushing, for he had no idea what sort of reception
awaited them.
There was the whine of a blaster, and it chewed off a branch to Kirk's
right. He veered off and suddenly realized he'd become separated from
Kral.
Kral glanced over his shoulder and saw that Kirk was no longer around.
Well, that was to be expected. At last the cowardly Federation man had
shown his true colors.
Oh sure, Kirk had not come out at Kbrex's behest, but that was
undoubtedly because Kirk knew that Kbrex's offer was merely nonsense.
There was a flicker of disappointment in Kral's mind. For all of Kirk's
posturing, it would almost have been refreshing if Kirk had actually
been sincere. Ally. Treaty. Cooperation and talk of honor and loyalty.
What rubbish.
That was the moment that Kral's foot hit a hole. He tripped, cursing
himself for his clumsiness, and went down at a bad angle. He felt and
heard a snap, and realized with sinking horror that it was his ankle.
He grunted, blocking out the pain, and started to crawl forward, seeking
the welcoming cover of the brush. And that was when he heard a low,
mocking laugh behind him.
He turned, propping himself up on one elbow.
There was Kbrex, shaking his head slowly, his
blaster aimed at Kral's head.
"Finally," he said.
"Finally," agreed Kral. "Finally, brother, you will
have the opportunity to indulge your pathological
hatred of me."
"There was nothing pathological about it," replied
Kbrex. "It is a good, clean hatred."
"It's wrong."
'
"There's no such thing as a bad hatred," Kbrex told him.
"Yes... so I've said myself," Kral admitted. Kbrex's blaster did not
waver. "You have no idea of the humiliation and lack of honor I felt
when my younger brother was promoted over me. The honor of command was
given to you. To me was given the ignominy of serving under him who is
as a child to me."
"I asked for you to serve on my ship because I could think of no one I'd
rather have at my side," said Kral. "To make me face your superiority
every day"
"No," said Kral, shaking his head sadly. "I realized that was what you
thought... but by then it was too late. By then you were already
plotting my overthrow. My one oversight, Kbrex2'
"Don't ascribe to yourself such noble motives, Kral. Realize instead the
baseness of your intentions..." His finger started to tighten on the
trigger. "And the ignominy of your defeat..."
Kral braced himself for the impact and wondered if he would feel it.
That was when the rock smashed the blaster from Kbrex's hand.
The Klingon howled, clutching at the injured hand as the blaster sailed
away into the bush. He spun and looked for where the crude missile had
originated.
Twenty feet away stood Kirk, another rock at the ready.
"You have superb aim," said Kbrex, "Not really. I was aiming for your
head."
Kbrex reached down and pulled a knife from his boot. "I use this only,
Kirk, because merely snapping your neck would take too long."
He' charged toward Kirk, who stood there, eyes blazing, arm drawn back
and ready to huff the other rock. Inwardly Kbrex was laughing. As if
such a pathetic attempt would even slow him down. He never took his
eyes off Kirk, waiting for the pathetic human to make some sort of
motion.
Kirk didn't. He stood there, poised, gaze locked with the Klingon's, as
if trying to bore his way into the Klingon's soul, or perhaps scare him
off with the evil eye.
Feel.
Kbrex drew back his arm, ready to hurl the knife, and still Kirk had
made no move.
"See you in hell, Kirk!" he snarled.
His ankle hit something.
What had he hit? His mind digested it. Something thin and taut.
A wire.
A trip wire.
His mind screamed a warning as a board with three carefully arranged
knives sprang up from its hiding place in the bush. It slammed into
Kbrex with a sickening, triple spluch sound that mingled with the
high-pitched cry ripped from the throat of the Kilngert.
Kbrex fell back, arms vaguely trying to pull at the board, and his eyes
caught the Klingon alphabet letters carved on the tree... letters that
had been carved there by his own hand. Letters that served as a warning
to those paying attention, a warning of a trap he himself had set.
He thudded to the ground, arms outstretched, life flowing out with his
blood. The world was hazing around him, and then he caught a glimpse of
Kirk.
And again, except this time in a voice thick with death, he said,
"Kirk... I'll see you... in hell."
Kirk looked down at the dead Klingon. "Feel free to start without me,"
he said.
He went quickly to Kral, who said, "Is he dead?" Slowly Kirk nodded. "I
want to see him."
Kirk helped him up, and with Kral leaning on him, brought him over to
stand next to the body of Kbrex. Kral prodded the fallen Klingon with
his toe.
"You think he was the only one down here?" asked Kral.
Kirk no dded. "Otherwise we'd be dead by now. Kral..." His voice trailed
off. He wasn't sure whether to offer congratulations or condolences.
Kral tilted his head back and screamed.
It was deafening, and Kirk winced against the power of it. When Kral
had exhausted the shout, Kirk said, "What the devil was that about?"
"The Klingon death scream. He died with honor."
Kirk looked at him in amazement. "He died trying to kill you."
"Of course," said Kral reasonably. "A Klingon could do no less."
Chapter Forty-five
Japan, 1600;
SULU LAY in the warm sand, listening to the rush of the waves. Oneko
stirred slightly as he shifted to a more comfortable position. His arm
had gone numb hours ago, but he hadn't the heart to disturb her, curled
in his arms with the trust of a child. He tried to let the endless
rhythm of the waves crashing on the rocks below remind him of things
more universal and timeless than the fate of a man.
"Heihachiro-sama," she muttered, waking. "Shhh, sleep. It's still
night," he comforted her.
They both slept, lulled by the sea, until morning light.
"Where to?" he asked her.
"Perhaps it would be better to leap off the cliff to our deaths," she
said wearily. "Where is there to go?"
He looked at her in amazement. "No, you carry Torii's child. You
cannot even think about it."
She burst out sobbing, mopping away at her tears with her sleeve.
Finally she became calm. "We could go into the mountains and hide. We
could become farmers," she said hopefully. "Heihachiro-sama, come with
me. Let us live together." She held him yearningly. He hugged her
savagely. Wasn't that what he had wanted since he had first seen her?
What did he owe Torii? A hundred koku stipend couldn't be spent by a
dead man, and death was all that awaited him at Fushimi Castle.
And what .of Oneko? He would gladly raise her child, together with ones
of theirs that would surely follow.
Even if it meant breaking his word, depriving the child of his
birthright? Had the ethics of his own era made him unwilling to accept
this? Or the ethics of this proud clan-oriented culture, which was
beginning to rule his heart and mind? Or was it the old Sulu himself,
who never could make a commitment to love?
"Please," she pleaded, again using that silver voice. "Stop it," he
shouted, his usual reserve and courtesy shattered by his own internal
struggle to keep his will and soul, not to mention common sense, from
being seduced by her again. "I don't understand my feelings for you,
Oneko. I think I love you," he explained. "But I can't trust my
feelings. After all, am I only another stone in an endless game of go,
a game piece to be used up, or thrown away?"
"That is the way life is," she said, her voice steady, her eyes lowered.
"I believe you when you say you have no magic. But for me you do. There
is something .. Your love for me, it was so... young, fresh. You are
the opposite of me," she said, looking in his eyes. "I am all artifice.
You are all honesty. My only regret is that Torii is also all honesty.
I was raised to believe that it was a weakness to be exploited by the
crafty and sly. But I watched Torii, and he is greater than his master.
Perhaps his master will be remembered, perhaps his trickery will unite
Japan under one rule. Perhaps that peace will benefit rather than
suffocate. I do not know. But in the eyes of heaven, the gods and the
buddha, Torii is the righteous one. I wish I had been what he believed
me to be."
The nagging voice inside Sulu whispered--history must be fulfilled. You
have a duty to this honest Torii, because you gave your word and what
kind of man will you be if you base a life on a broken oath and a stolen
wife? And for good or ill, the Tokugawa shogun-ate is the history of
Japan.
"I will take you to Edo as planned. Your part in this was not known.
Believe me. And I doubt that any of your family survived back there to
reveal otherwise,"
She settled into his arms, a trusting child with an older brother. He
felt her tears soak into his sleeve. The night sang with the chirping of
crickets, the rustic of leaves, as though the brief time left to him
made every second alive and precious.
They didn't talk much on the road that next day, each cherishing the
moments together, neither daring to face the time of their parting. They
held each other with chaste loving the following night, taking the joy
of a lifetime of companionship in their few hours-remaining.
They went directly to Torii Mototada's house in Edo. They both thanked
a lot of gods when they were told that the uncle who was supposed to
lodge her had already been sent to Sekigahara, and Oneko was admitted to
the Mototada mansion without problem. or question. And in this world,
it was likely that she would never be allowed out to visit her
"relative" for the rest of her life. She was safe. He was sure of
that.
But the gates of the Mototada mansion loomed dark as the gates to hell
for the young couple. Oneko had assumed the trained, unreadable and
restrained face of a noble lady. Sulu straightened his back and strode
with the pride of a samurai in the employ of so noble a lord as Torii
Mototada. Oneko was whisked away, but Sulu was announced and shown to
the audience hall'
even before he had a chance to bathe away the dust of the road. Sulu
bowed low and sat as indicated.
"I see you survived. Well done," a familiar voice said to his left.
"Watanenabe Sadayo, you too survived," Sulu shouted in delight, bowing
to the handsome gray-haired sword master.
"Yes, well done, Heihachiro-domo," the eldest son of his daimyo, Torii
Mototada, praised him. Sulu saw the father in the son. For this
generation at least the Torii family would be safe. "The escape with
the concubine Oneko was brave, and well-executed. Sadayo-domo killed all
the ninja responsible."
"Thank you for your kind words, lord," Sulu said briskly, bowing. Kinder
than you know, he thought. With all the ninja dead, Oneko's identity as
a Koga kunoichi, a female agent, was safe.
"You must take letters showing the deployment of Ishida's forces around
Fushimi. You must ride like the demons of hell to bring these letters
to Mototada-tono, my father."
"Hal," was the simple reply.
While Oneko was brought in, distant and lovely in her silk cocoon, Sulu
was again thanked, and he acknowledged the honor, but he could hardly
answer when Oneko herself thanked him, her bell-like voice. controlled
and distant. The older men chuckled at the young samurai's
embarrassment, thinking it only his modesty and the natural confusion
young men had around women. The couple's eyes barely met as he bowed
his way out, the important documents tucked securely in his kimono.
There would be time for sorrow on the road.
Sulu was dismissed and left the audience chamber to take up the offer of
a hot meal while his horse was packed for the trip. He was on his way
back to Fushimi Castle within the hour.
Sulu tried not to think about the battle he was' riding toward. It was
all he could do to keep his resolve. Part of him was bone-tired of this
rigid world; so full of death. Why couldn't he just ride off as a
masterless samurai? What good were the letters in his pouch to the
upcoming battle? The outcome was pretty clear.
He came to a crossroad and reined in his mount.
He thought about the world that he was in. He thought about the world
he had left behind.
He thought of what James T. Kirk expected of him. He thought of what
Mototada expected of him. In. every respect, the expectations were
identical.
So the question became What did he expect of him?
One road led to the castle. To death. To honor, The other led to far
lands. To life. To no honor. Life without honor. Death with honor.
Simple enough.
He suddenly felt very tired.
Chapter Forty-six
Scotland, 1746 Tin5 MINDLESS MARCH and the bracing cold were the only
things keeping Scotty sane. He felt almost light-headed as he shut out
the crushing depression of his failure. "The guns, the guns," he moaned
once or twice. His only chance to make a difference in this war had
gone up in smoke back at the rubble that had been Fort Augustus. And
now? What was left but to play out the tragedy? The clammy sweat of a
fever broke out on his brow. He wished for the presence of a doctor,
and a strange device that pressed against his shoulder and made an odd
hissing sound. Mac... Mac something. A Scotsman he knew in a past life?
Or a future life?
He almost passed by the small cottage unheeding. He certainly no longer
noticed the breathtaking beauty of the harsh, pristine land. But the
sound of the quiet chanting managed to penetrate the fever. He
staggered up a mound by the side of the road to better see the source of
the repetitive song. The cottage itself was a broken-down thing of
wattle and daub walls and thatch roof. A small wattle fence, its woven
branches more tangled than neatly twisted around posts, enclosed a small
yard. In it a man sat on his haunches, presiding over a firepit of
glowing and smoking peat. He was toasting some sort of grain, carefully
stirring and shaking it from time to time, and all the while chanting at
it in a nasal singsong.
"Come down," the man ordered without looking up.
"I didn't mean to disturb you," Scott managed to get out, and he turned
to leave. The world was spinning.
"I said come down," the man ordered, his creaky old voice cutting into
Scott. Obediently, he turned and slid down the slope to the house,
sending gravel and dirt cascading down in his footsteps.
Scott stood waiting, but the little man went back to his humming and
stirring.
"Well, now, what are you standing about for?" the strange old fellow
said suddenly, looking up at Scott. One of his ey es was bright as sun on
a lake, while the other, although he had sight in it, was squinted down.
"In the house with you."
Scotty did as he was bid. The house was a wonder of odd bits and
pieces. A stuffed owl decorated a niche above the hearth, or at least
Scott thought it was stuffed until it hooted and moved its head. But
there were also bones, skulls of deer and cattle, and little bundles of
herbs and feathers.
A large iron kettle hung from a hook by an open fire, and a savory smell
wafted from it, but it was almost overpowered by the smoky smell of the
warm, sprouted barley and the smell of fermenting mash. And through an
open door Scott could see a vat on a tripod, and a tangle of odd
equipment. The whole cottage reeked of a distillery--but what a smell!
The heady bouquet bore as much resemblance to the common brew as a
venison stew did to thin porridge.
"Sit down, Montgomery Scott," the old man ordered.
"How did you know my name?" Scott said in confusion.
The old man said nothing, but instead ladled a bowl of the stew out and
handed it to Scotty along with a hunk of bread.
"Dare I eat of your food?" Scott asked warily. The almost forgotten
memories of the tattered book of' folklore his grandmother had read him
suddenly felt very real and important. They all said that the fairy
folk would offer food and drink, and if you ate, you'd never go back to
the world of men.
The old man laughed and slapped his knee. "I didn'a think you knew such
things. Good, good. Eat or not, as you will. It makes no matter." He
turned away to ladle a bowl for himself.
Scott shrugged and took up the spoon and ate. It didn't matter. What
more could happen to him? He was lost, and alone, and he had failed in
his duty. What matter if he was snatched by the fairies?
He was polishing off his second bowl and feeling much better when the
old man pulled out a bottle of whiskey.
"Now this is the nectar of the gods," he said proudly, holding the
bottle aloft. "This batch was brewed almost a century ago. There are
casks in these hills that are older than that. Here, drink. lainte
mhor," he toasted, "To your health!"
The bouquet was only a faint promise of the liquid wonder. Scott rolled
it around his mouth, luxuriating in its smoothness, and even more with
the almost orgasmic shock of its burning force.
The old one poured Scott another, and another. Scotty's head was
spinning and his ears burning, and he didn't care.
"So," said the old man. "You think you have The Sight."
Scotty stared at him through glazed eyes. "The future... is open to
me. I'm a Miracle Worker."
The old man laughed coarsely. "Ran out of miracles in the war, I see."
"Ach, yes. I failed. I failed. I've never failed before." Something
twinged in Scotty's conscience. But he went on. "I always managed to
do it. No matter how dangerous the situation, no matter how tight the
deadline, I always managed for..." His mind hazed out. "For..."
"Haaahaha," chortled the old man. "A little shortsighted when it comes
to yourself, eh? And what makes you think you failed, eh?"
"I failed because I didn't succeed!"
"You succeeded, because you could only fail!" Scotty glared at the old
man, and then, with a furious lunge, leaped at him. Somehow the old man
was out of his way and Scotty hit the floor, in a dead sleep.
He woke to the light of a full moon. The air was uncommonly warm. The
strange old man was nowhere to be seen.
Then the moon was blotted out by a dark form that seemed to float across
the horizon. He blinked as it passed, the renewed moonlight suddenly
blindingly bright. He threw his hands to his face and rubbed his eyes.
When he took them away, there stood before him the figure of a woman in
a long, loose robe. "Monty," she cooed.
"Mother?" He had not heard that voice for a long time.
"Monty, you did not fail. It was just not your task. You always were
one to take on the world."
"But Mum!" he called out in frustrated anguish.
"It wasn't your task. The die is cast, my son. You cannot change it."
She loomed up, filling the sky.
"You are not my mother. Who are you?" he asked in wonder.
"I am the land," she said, shimmering. "I am the land. You are all my
children. What is to be is to be. I suffer with you, but it is the way
it must be."
"I do not understand..." he groaned, reaching out for her with
outstretched arms.
"Didn't he tell you... the brewer? My children are not spiritless
slaves of the big gun. They are dreamers and warriors. For the land to
live, they must be true to their spirit, whatever the cost. In the
Dance of Time, their ways will change, but what happens here will
strengthen their spirit to face their destiny. You have a great heart,
Montgomery Scott. Listen to it!"
As she spoke she became more and more transparent, until she was but a
thin film across the sky.
"Be at peace," she whispered, and faded from sight;
"Wake up, man, wake up2'.
Scott woke up. Someone was shaking him. He managed to open his eyes. A
scrawny middle-aged man with thin gray hair sticking out from under a
large black hat, and thick-lensed spectacles over his watery eyes, was
vigorously shaking him back to consciousness.
"ThanI you, dear Lord," the man prayed, addressing the blue sky above.
"I am William Smythe, vicar of the parish over that hill." He gestured.
"I was or my rounds when I espied you, lying for all the world a corpse.
Ah, my good man, you are soaked with sweat." He pressed his hand to
Scott's brow. "A fever, no doubt. But, thank God, it has passed. Have
you been out here all night?"
Scott nodded. The minister shook his head. "Terrible things happen out
here at night. They say the ancient ones and the fairy folk walk the
moors at night."
"Now isn't that the silliest thing I've ever heard," said Scott.
Chapter Forty-seven
Moscow 192 C-Kov WAS OZL as the general stood there in the doorway of
the hangar, "I am amazed," the general said again.
Chekov tried to think of something to say. Nothing came to mind.
"General, what are you doing here?"
He scratched his hips just to the right of his holster.
"Do I not have the right to go where I wish, nephew?"
"Yes. Yes, of course. General, I--"
Chuikov put up a hand. "I should not be surprised, of course. How did
you know?"
Chekov frowned, uncertain. "How?"
"Yes. How?"
He didn't have the faintest idea what the general was talking about, but
he realized that there was no need to make that obvious. Chekov drew
himself up and, with a slight swagger, said confidently, "How could I
not?"
Chuikov winced. "I suppose you are right. Our knack for
secrets-keeping... it's a joke, is it not?"
Chekov laughed and blew air disdainfully through his lips. He was in a
complete fog.
"Does everyone know?" asked the general.
"If they do, they haven't told me."
"At least someone can keep a secret. Well, they'll all know of the
mission within the hour. I must admit, when I was coming across the
base and I saw the lights glowing from here in the hangar, somehow"mhe
waved a scolding finger like an annoyed parent, although there was no
annoyance m his eyes--"somehow I knew it would be you. I had to see for
myself though. So eager to get into the air that you had to start
checking over your plane immediately, eh?"
Chekov laughed and patted the nose of the plane fondly. "Oh yes. You
know me so well, General."
Chuikov shrugged. "It's a knack. I can tell things about people. So...
come with me, nephew. By now the rest of your squadron has been roused.
I regret the short notice, but you know how there can be
miscommunications."
He didn't spot Chekov's duffel, which the Starfleet officer had
fortunately tossed over to the side. Chekov walked toward him, and
Chuikov put a firm and friendly arm around Chekov's shoulders. Together
they walked toward the now-active barracks, leaving behind Chekov's
duffel and an unconscious KGB man.
Chekov sat in the squad room, surrounded by the rest of the men, some of
whom were still rubbing sleep from their eyes. The C.O. briskly laid
out their mission.
It was a diplomatic one, but no less dangerous for it. The American
statesman Averell Harriman had been in Moscow as President Roosevelt's
personal representative, with the latest package of lend-lease aid from
the Allies. He was flying back to London on a tight schedule, and that
meant flying through a lot of enemy-held territory. The Red Guard
squadron was to fly cover for the transport. With any luck, they
wouldn't see action, but if luck didn't hold, it was their mission to
protect the diplomat by whatever means necessary.
"The transport has a twelve hundred mile range, so he can fly to London
without problem," said the C.O. "We fly west as far as Riga on the
Latvian coast, where there is a secret refueling station. Then we turn
back," the base commander droned on, "and the transport with Uncle
Vanya--the code name for our diplomat --will pick up RAF squadrons
flying from Sweden, to escort him the rest of the way."
Chekov's eyes went wide. This was perfect! Within the hour they would
be airborne, and then he could break off at the earliest opportunity and
hightail it for Sweden. He could report that he was having engine
trouble and needed to set down. No one would doubt him.
Then he looked at General Chuikov, who was beaming at him from across
the room. Regret flashed across his mind. How could a decorated Hero
of the Soviet Union run away during the most terrible war in their
history? And what about General Chuikov? Would not Chekov's defection
certainly reflecton him and his own survival? But could Chekov live and
survive the postwar Stalin era? Of course, it was all moot. The
unconscious KGB man had settled it. There was no turning back.
It ached inside him to think that he would have to keep still for the
rest of his life, ignoring the terrible injustices to human rights that
would haunt this society for decades to come. It certainly was the
darkest period of his people's history, or so it now seemed. And how
well could he hide his knowledge and skill in engineering? Would he be
the cause of World War IIl in a world where the delicate balance of
power was suddenly upset by a future technology? At least in a place
like Sweden he could be relatively safe.
But despite his clear knowledge that this was the only ethical course
for him, the idea that he was going to leave his motherland forever, a
traitor in the eyes of these new friends and companions, made him hurt
in places he didn't know he had, and he cursed the unknown demon that
had brought him here.
Chapter Forty-eight
Japan, 1600 IT WAS the eighteenth day of the seventh lunar month, the
warm days of late summer, when the first wave of the enemy attacked
Fushimi Castle and its fortified towers.
They rushed against the walls, shooting with the guns that both the
Portuguese Catholics and the English and Dutch Protestants had supplied
the Japanese to lure them into their religion and politics. But the
Japanese had taken the guns from both and made promises to neither.
"Keep your heads down," Sulu shouted, running up and down the line,
forcing the men on the wall to take cover against the wads and balls of
the primitive muskets. Far in the distance he thought he could make out
the split in the road where he had hesitated for so long. He could even
see the curve of the road that went off in the other direction, to
safety--the road not traveled.
No one noticed, of course, that Sulu wasn't hitting anyone. He still
couldn't take the chance of killing someone and possibly wiping out not
just one life, but the innocent lives that would be affected if he
changed history. When he fired, it was always away from any' target..
It was better this way. No more concerns with possibly violating the
Prime Directive. No inner wrestling with honor. He could be accused of
many things, ranging from being a fatalist to outright stupidity--but
not being a man of honor would never be one Of those things.
And it wasn't so bad a thing to be part of a legend. Even a small part.
Fiery arrows volleyed into the compound, their flaming heads seeking
random death and mayhem.
"Damn, put those fires out," Motonaga shouted. Firemen in heavy woven
garments soaked with what water could be spared rushed to beat out the
flames in a world where paper was a principal building material.
"Look, look," a terrified man shouted, standing up and pointing. "The
tower is on fire." It was his last service to his lord. He fell with an
arrow in his back. But his warning sent men up the ladder toward the
flames. One bold man plunged directly into the billows of black smoke
that puffed out from the observer's platform, his hollow coughs audible
above the shouts and screams of the wounded. Tongues of yellow flame
shot out around him. Then there was more black smoke, but the fire was
out. The body of the hero dropped back over the edge and down to the
ground below--he hadn't survived the smoke and heat.
Two days later they were still on the wall, sending out volleys of
arrows, putting out fires, and counting the dead. It was almost dark
before any food arrived. Servants groaned under the weight of the
barrels of cooked rice., "Here, Great One Cut," Motonaga said, handing
Sulu a bowl of rice which sported some fish and vegetables. Sulu
settled himself on the paved ground, his back against a box of arrows.
"Thanks," he grunted, and waited for the young man to collect his
portion and settle down beside him.
"I really didn't expect to see you back, you know," the boy said
thoughtlessly.
"I was ordered back," Sulu answered.
"So you were stuck. They ordered you back. But you did follow orders.
Good for you," he said with a pompous and somewhat patronizing flourish
of his eating sticks.
Sulu groaned quietly, but let the implied insult go. There was no point
in flexing the muscles of his ego when he knew, as by now they must all
know, that this was their burying place.
"Tell me, Heihachiro-domo," the boy continued, somewhat subdued. "Are
you ever afraid?"
"Of course I am. I have no desire to die," he said simply.
"You don't ever seem afraid. You are a brave samurai. I am afraid, not
of death, but of not being brave when I die."
Sulu's face softened into a gentle smile as he watched the boy
straighten with pride at this. "There is no good way to die," he said.
"Death is the enemy. The warrior doesn't seek death, by the hand of his
adversary or by his own hand. When death is inevitable, he cheats
death, his great enemy, by embracing death with the love of a man for
his wife. He doesn't feed death with fear. And that is the bravest
thing any man or woman can do. However it comes to us, if we face it
with a pure heart, we have already paid death's dues. You will serve
bravely to the end. I do not doubt it."
"Thank you, Heihachiro-domo," Naito Motonaga replied, bowing humbly. The
two men sat together quietly for a while, savoring the simple fare,
watching the small contained fire where men were heating sake or boiling
tea.
After ten days of hell the forces in the cluster of fortresses that
Mototada commanded were depleted by the random arrow or shot over the
wall, the fires, and the desperate sallies from the gate. They could
see the banners of General Ishida, who had come to encourage his troops,
but that only encouraged Mototada's men. A ration of sake was issued to
congratulate the defenders because they had forced the great general
from his plans for the main attack at Sekigahara to try to break the
bottleneck at Fushimi Castle. For a brief moment there was even hope
that they might survive the siege..
But on the morning of the tenth day, the final assaults began and Sulu
knew, witnessing the ferocit3 and desperation, that this was it. The
castle had been held for as long as possible, and now the reaper of
history was screaming for his final due. Sulu fancied he could hear the
screeching of fate in his head, like nails on chalkboard..
Yet he heard it with only vague interest.
Again and again they rushed into the face of death; each time fewer and
fewer coming back. And each time more of the enemy found a way to
breach the sanctity of the castle, so that by the final charge there was
no safety to retreat to. It was over, and Sulu knew it.
The last meeting Sulu had with Torii Mototada, his lord had looked wan
but content. He had made Sulu his standard bearer and cheerfully added,
with gallows humor, that the post carried a one thousand koku stipend.
Sulu knew he wouldn't have to worry about where to spend it.
Death and hopeless combat faced him. So did honor.
And hell... anyone could fight a battle that could be won. The
hopeless causes were the truly worthy ones.
He wondered where he had heard that before. Either from Mototada or from
Kirk.
It occurred to Sulu, as the enemy faced him, that the two liege lords
would probably have gotten on quite well.
Wheeling his mount around, he charged into the enemy. It was right and
proper for Sulu to take his own life. That was the honorable way, a
gift of dignity which a noble enemy offered a defeated foe. But the two
worlds of Mister Sulu, lieutenant commander, Starfleet, and Okiri
Heihachiro, banner man to Torii Mototada, crashed in on one another, and
seppeku was not an option for this warrior. With serene calm he faced
his fate.
"Captain, I apologize for not returning to duty," he shouted into the
air, addressing both Kirk and Torii with a peculiar mixture of the two
times and two commanders. "Farewell, Oneko; hello, honor!" he shouted
as the enemy closed in on him.
Chapter Forty-nine
Scotland, 1746 Inwc. m WAS FROTHING with news of war. Murray paced
back and forth, his shaved head glistening as he passed through a shaft
of light from the leaded window in his study. He listened grimly as
Scott detailed the action at the fort
"You have done as much as any man could have under the circumstances,"
the general consoled him. "What galls me," he went on as he resumed his
caged pacing, "is that now we have word that Cumberland did not split
his men, but marches upon us in mass, so that we must recall Keppoch and
Lochiel, with whatever of their men still remain. And it grows worse.
The prince listens more and more to Mr. O'Sullivan and his ilk, and
they council foolhardy ventures. I'm afeared that our Charlie was
brought up on tales of glory but little practical training."
Scotty stayed with Murray, serving him as an aide and tactical advisor,
but mostly as a bulwark of emotional support which the general badly
needed in the endless war councils, which were battlefields in
themselves. Several times he tried to fulfill his word to Seamus and
find Megan, but the city was a madhouse and finding one girl was well
nigh impossible.
April 15 dawned, and the pipes screamed out their chant to arms, the men
of the clans gathering.
"Mr. Scott," Murray shouted up the staircase. "To arms, man."
Scotty rushed to finish dressing and dashed down the stairs, his
claymore and dirk already hanging from his belt. He ran out and,
passing a small lake, suddenly stopped.
He saw his reflection. But he was wearing some other sort of uniform in
it... with an odd gold symbol above the chest.
And then the reflection was gone and he saw only himself. He moved
onward to the site of the battle.
Scott scanned the horizon. The clansmen, those who were even there,
were drawn up in a thin ragged line along the field. It was indeed a
splendid field--splendid for Cumberland, the duke, unfortunately.
Scotty shook his head in disbelief. The fiat, even ground was ideal for
moving artillery, and for marching tight ranks of ordered soldiers. For
the wild, untamed clansmen, whose only superiority was spirit and
daring, it was a disaster.
"Oh, my God," Scotty groaned.
"Yes, Mr. Scott, may God have mercy, for surely Cumberland shall not."
Murray wheeled his horse around and set out to seek the prince.
But all he found was O'Sullivan. His jaw set with rage, Murray put his
pride aside and begged that the army be moved beyond the Nairn Waters,
just a few hundred yards beyond to the soft, boggy, uneven ground that
would give them a fighting chance. But his appeal fell on deaf ears.
Slowly Murray trotted back to his men, Scott at his side. And they
waited.
About ten A.M. Scott, whose nerves were raw, asked, "Where are they?"
Murray shook his head. "We have a scouting report that the Duke is
celebrating his birthday and his men are probably falling down drunk
with toasting him. Meanwhile we wait, and wait."
"Why? Surely we could hit them when they are in their cups better than
here," Scotty insisted.
"Man, you are right. That may be our salvation."
But again the chain of command was immovable, and the general of the
army could not get a fair hearing from his royal commander. And so the
men stood around, becoming dispirited and hungry.
Scott watched as the ranks of tired men thinned, many taking the hike
back to the town for food and rest. And he wondered where Keppoch was.
Were the scattered clans still raiding wild and free in the hills while
Cumberland pursued his relentless and disciplined campaign to crush the
Scottish prince and his ragtag army?
By midafternoon the prince rode to where Murray waited, his Irish
favorites surrounding him like so many courtly sycophants.
"I think it is indeed a fine idea to attack the enemy in his camp. Would
you be willing, sir, to undertake such an adventure?"
Murray bowed in acquiescence, not daring himself speech lest he call the
prince a fool. Certainly, the time to begin that march had been hours
ago. "At least," Murray whispered to Scotty as they rode behind the
prince to make final plans, "it will force a retreat from this abysmal
spot."
But the night march was more terrible than could be imagined, the few
horses they had with them slipping and squealing in the more and more
frequent patches of bog. The men did no better, slipping and tearing
skin from knees and legs, cursing the dark and each other.
At dawn they heard the drums of the general call in the English camp,
and they were too far to strike the enemy a blow before the redcoats
were up and assembled. And so they turned and 'ran away, having
accomplished nothing. And still more men left the ranks, seeking a meal
here, a rest there, many more discarding their muskets and even their
round shields to lighten the burden of the march, heedless of the
terrible consequences of this foolishness.
By this time Montgomery Scott knew it was doomed. He knew it was
madness. He knew that they were all going to die...
And he looked out upon the tired, frustrated Scotsmen. He looked at
their eyes, their weary faces, their haggard expressions.
He had The Sight. They didn't. And still... They knew. They knew they
were doomed as well. And still they stayed.
Sometimes, he realized, having The Sight didn't make a damned bit of
difference. It didn't change what you had to do.
The morning of April 16 found Montgomery Scott still there with his
kinsmen. It also found the army of Charles Stuart on the same field as
they had been the day before. But there were now fewer men, and those
who were assembled were tired and hungry from the fruitless venture of
yesterday. And the English army rolled into view, almost seven thousand
strong, each battalion marching to the roll of drums and with the
briskness of men sure of victory.
And still the Scots were not assembled. Insanely, the clansmen were
still arguing over position. Scotty wanted to strangle them.
The rolling thunder of the artillery barrage started, and men fell to
their screaming death, their fellows plowing the ground in impatience
like tethered horses waiting for the command to charge.
"Please, my prince," someone begged, screaming at Charles as he rode by,
"give the command to charge."
Murray echoed the plea, but in the confusion all that was clear was that
the Scots were being shot to pieces as they stood.
From' somewhere the cry of "Claymore" came, the pipes blaring in a
cacophony as each clan filled the sky with their own battle hymn. But
the command was slow to make its way down the field, and the clans broke
into the charge piecemeal, presenting no front to the enemy, but rather
rushing to certain death by little bits.
Scott was thrown in the air as a ball struck the horse on which he sat,
killing the beast. Stunned, Scotty crawled to his feet. The men around
him were charging into the enemy rank. He drew his claymore and ran
seeking the enemy line, but in the press there was no room to swing a
broadsword, and at the front the English, in tight ranks, bayonets
fixed, were stabbing their way through the crazed clansmen, incurring
few losses themselves.
Spun around and around by half-crazed clansmen who rushed past him with
passion but no plan, Scott grabbed vainly at men's shoulders, trying to
stop the hopeless charge, to organize even a small unit. And a voice
within him screamed, It's hopeless! You'll fail! And a voice responded,
I don't care! I do what I must, and I don't care!
He put his back into his work with renewed zeal, trying to stem the
aimless charge. Maybe even a few men could take the cannon, to stop the
slaughter. But no one would stop, no one would hear him. Finally he
was thrown to the ground, where he groveled in the mud, trying to avoid
the trampling tide of men who threatened to crush the life from him.
And as certainly as the line had broken and surged toward the enemy, it
turned to flee the relentless army of death.
When he was finally free of the sweating mass of men, he ran with all
the rest of them, ran from the battlefield, for it was clear there was
nothing left to do. He didn't notice the warm sticky wetness that soaked
down his side.
He finally fell, his breath screaming from his lungs like sulfur.
"Mr. Scott! Mr. Scott!"
"Megan, oh, Megan. What are you doing' here, lass?" he gasped as her
face focused through the red haze. He looked about. He had run from
the battlefield to well past Culloden House before he fell. The firing
was over but for random shots. Men and women from the town had come to
seek their dead and aid their living. Or strip the bodies of their
little wealth.
"Oh, Mr. Scott, ye are hurt. Ye must move. Come, man. Quickly. The
Sassenach dogs have already begun the slaughter of the survivors." She
dragged him to his feet, and they staggered off together.
"Here," she said, dragging him to a small cave, more a crevice in the
rocks. There was already a body huddling in the dank mud.
"Seamus, you survived!" Scotty cried out, reaching for the lad, until
his own wound drove him to the ground.
The boy had a bloody bandage on his head, torn from his lady's shift.
And his eyes were not focused.
"Ah, he has a concussion," Scott said, his voice milky and thick with
pain. "Don't let him fall asleep. Keep him up, lass. Do you hear me?"
"Aye, Mr. Scott. I shall. Come, let me bind your wound as well."
They lay huddled and still for two days, praying in fear each time they
heard the sound of men, Englishmen bent on murder of the remaining
rebels.
"Dare we go back to Inverness?" Megan had whispered at one point.
"Perhaps there is a general pardon," Seamus had offered hopefully, his
recovery the miracle of youth.
"I dunna know," Scott groaned. "But I do know that we need food and
water or we will die here."
At nightfall Megan sneaked out for water. Scott felt the hand of death
on him as he lay in the dark, waiting for her to return.
"Seamus, are you there?"
"Aye, Mr. Scott. That I am," he answered. He was speaking clearly
now, and Scotty was filled with hope that he would mend.
"You must return to your apprenticeship. Make a life for yourself, lad,
and for Megan, too. Promise me."
"I promise, but do not take on so, man. You'll come, too, and be there
to stand godfather to our children." The boy crawled over to him.
"Ah, lad," he said, holding Seamus's hand, "I doubt it. Remember that
the spirit of the rebellion is more precious than its success or
failure. The Scots may lack the English wealth and ambition, but the
spirit of this land will be evermore the heart and courage of a Britain
united." A fit of coughing silenced the engineer. Neither man
acknowledged that Scotty was coughing blood.
Megan returned with water, and after a while they all slept. Late in
the night Scotty awoke in pain. He had no doubts about his condition.
In the cold of the night he felt a shimmering, and he knew it was over.
He rose and dragged himself out of the cave and onto the moors. To see
the stars one last time.
The stars...
And a voice, a gentle voice, said, "The stars. You know them, don't
you?"
"Home. My... home," he whispered. "Blessed lady... my home.. ,"
She floated before him, as ethereal as before. "You remember."
"Yes." It was an exhausted sigh. "Yes. I remember."
"Why didn't you remember before?"
"Because..." He sighed. "Because if I'd remembered... I couldn't have
helped. I didn't want to remember, because I wanted to... to do
something.. 2'
She smiled. "You did."
"It was hopeless. I accomplished nothing. I fought in a hopeless
ca use."
"That was your accomplishment," she said, and reached down to cool his
brow.
And the stars shone through her...
Chapter Fifty
The Sky', 1942 THE C-FORCES PUSHED AGAINST Chekov as his plane hurtled
higher and higher into the air. It was an exhilarating feeling, even
though it was an infinitesimal fraction of the power that was possessed
by the Enterprise. This was truly flying.
He glanced at his wingmen, taking pride in the way they kept in
formation. Then Chekov sighed inwardly. He could not recall a time when
he had such regrets.
His squad made its rendezvous with the transport, a Consolidated B-24.
They were maintaining a sort of radio silence, breaking it for orders
and instructions, but keeping the sky free of the kind of chatter that
was typical of bombing runs. There was no point tempting fate.
Chekov was praying there would be no combat. Please. It was all he
asked. Because if there were combat, he could not possibly try to shoot
others out of the sky. It meant that he could not participate in
defending the B-24. It meant... he did not want to think about what it
meant.
And then he heard a voice that chilled him, crackling over his radio.
"Uncle Vanya to Cherry Orchard," the transmission from the transport
crackled in badly accented Russian, "we have contact."
"Oh my God," said Chekov.
"PaveIT' another voice broke in.
"Kirk?" Chekov answered. His heart sank. Of all people. Of all times.
When the time came to break off from the squadron... well, Chekov was
just going to have to hope that the others would protect Kirk in the
event of problems.
"Good to hear from you, Pavel! So this is where they scurried you off
to!" John Kirk sounded nauseatingly jovial.
"Don't worry, John. We'll take good care of you," said Chekov weakly.
His heart pounded. Again his path crossed with John C. Kirk's.
Soon they had crossed the front and were droning over enemy territory.
The air had been getting more turbulent all the time, and now they flew
blind in thick clouds.
Chekov looked at his instruments. This was it. This was the perfect
time to break off. Sweden was accessible. The RAF would be there within
minutes. If he peeled off now, the rest of the squad would be compelled
to continue without him. If he waited until the rendezvous, the others
would very likely want to follow him down.
He bid a silent farewell to all that he was leaving behind. "Uncle
Vanya--" he started to say, in preparation for telling them about his
nonexistent engine problems.
But Kirk's voice came back quickly, "Yeah, I see them."
Chekov blinked and then his eyes widened in alarm. German. Fockewulfe
Fu-190s. The swift, maneuverable fighter was the finest in the air. But
it hadn't been tested against the YAK. Chekov watched the compact
little German birds swoop in, and he wasn't sure at all that his wing
was their match.
"Enemy at three o'clock," Chekov'swingman yelled, his voice high and
tinny through the tiny speaker. But already Chekov had his hand pressed
to his throat mike...
And he froze.
His mind screamed at him to peel off. To get the hell out of there. It
wasn't his fight. It couldn't be his fight.
And if he peeled off, he might even escape alive... And John Kirk might
not. Probably would not. Two potentially divergent timelines. The
no-win situation that he'd been dreading had finally caught up with him.
One choice was no choice.
"Cherry One and Three, peel off high and right. Lead them away from
Uncle. The rest, follow me," he said, rolling left and diving low,
coming up behind a pair of German planes.
He fired short precise bursts, aiming purely for the wings.
The skies were alive with planes, intensive firing from all over. His
squad was outnumbered, and Chekov fought down mounting panic.
The sky flipped around him, and he kept looking at the transport plane.
So far it was flying unscathed...
And then a German plane swooped down from nowhere and opened fire on
Chekov cried out in alarm as he saw the bullets strafe the sides of
Kirk's ship. He broke formation and power-dived toward the German
plane, firing from the rear. He blew the German's tail off and the
plane spiraled downward. Chekov prayed that the pilot was able to
eject.
"John," Chekov shouted, "get out of here. Go high. You have the
ceiling," he yelled in English.
"I've got the guns, too," Kirk answered with a determination so familiar
that Chekov's heart hurt.
"No, Keptin," he yelled back, "get out of here. You have to save
yourself."
"No, Pavel!"
"You have your mission, damn it," Chekov argued again. "Harriman must
get to London," he reasoned. "Please."
"Damn you, Pavel," Kirk answered with frustration. "You're right! And
I'm not a captain yet!"
"Go.t" Chekov shouted as he banked upward to intercept another German
plane.
He rolled to the right, pirouetting gracefully out of the way of a
German plane, and one of Chekov's men blew the plane out of the sky.
What a waste, thought Chekov, what a waste. Using technology for war
and destruction instead of the good of humanity. What a goddamned
waste.
There were more coming in. He allowed himself a second to watch John
Kirk's big transport bank up, putting on the "juice" for a run across
the border to Sweden.
His men were taking out the Fockewulfes like flies, the new YAK-1
showing its stuff and the Red Guard proving itself equal to any unit in
the air.
Then the big long-range bomber was diving out of the sky, her guns
blazing, and the Fu-190s were scattering like hens in a farmyard with a
fox after them. But one pass was all Kirk could afford with so high
level an ambassador on board, and with a dip of his wings to Chekov, he
soared off to freedom. "We did it!" Chekov cried out.
And then his left wing was blown off.
Chekov turned in alarm to see the smoking stub that was all that was
left of his wing.
The plane spiraled downward. Chekov fought furiously, but he was
utterly helpless. Every warning signal on his control board was going
berserk.
"Oh hell," he muttered. This was in no way going to. get him to Sweden.
The clouds around him had turned fierce, buffeting him. Thunder rumbled
around him, and he heard Kirk's voice over the radio shout, "Chekov!
Your men say you were hit! I'll come get you!"
"Nonsense!" replied Chekov. "Just a little turbulence. You come back
here, Kirk, I'll flatten you."
"If you're sure..."
"I'm sure."
He waited for five seconds, then opened the cockpit and ejected.
He was barely clear of the damaged plane and pulled the cord. He felt
the jerk as the parachute shroud deployed. He wondered how long he
would survive in the freezing water. The blood was still oozing and he
felt weak. He looked up at the black blot of the silk canopy above him.
The rain had stopped, and through a break in the clouds Chekov could see
the stars.
Then he saw nothing.
Chapter Fifty-one
WEYLAND SAT on his throne and studied the two men who stood before him.
The Klingon was being supported by Kirk, and they both looked as if
they'd been through hell. Their clothes were somewhat tattered, their
skin dirty and abraded. Throughout the great hall natives of Cragon
were peering at the two outworlders with unconcealed interest.
"You've been through a bit, haven't you?"
Kral stabbed a finger at him. "Because of you! Anything we've been
through, it's because of you."
"Really," said Weyland calmly. "I didn't force you to come to my
planet. I didn't create the Klingon and Federation enmity. I didn't
cause people to die."
"You will shortly," said Kirk. "My ship can't stay in orbit much
longer."
"Is that a fact?" said Weyland.
He said it in such a way that Kirk, never taking his eye off him,
removed his communicator. "Kirk to Enterprise."
"Enterprise, Spock here."
"Status, Mr. Spock?"
"Navigation and helm have just come back on line, Captain. Standard
orbit is reestablished. And..."
"Yes?"
He heard a burst of confused exclamation, as if everyone in the
background had started talking at once. Only the unfiappable Spock
sounded routine as he said, "Mr. Scott, Mr. Sulu and Mr. Chekov have
just appeared on the bridge."
"Their condition?"
"Bedraggled would adequately describe it,. I think. Specifics will be
forthcoming."
"What about the Klingon ship?"
Kral seemed to be holding his breath until Spock came back on and said,
"Their orbit is continuing to decay."
Kral looked up angrily at Weyland. "What about my ship?" he demanded.
"Their orbit will continue to decay..."
Kral started to bristle. "You--''
"... until such time that their rightful commander --yourself--returns
to the bridge, whereupon all will-be rectified."
.Oh," said Kral softly.
"Enterprise, stand by." Kirk flipped the communicator closed and eyed
Weyland. "So that's it?" he said. "You put us through all this, and
then we're supposed to go on our way, as if nothing happened?"
Weyland raised an eyebrow in a manner that seemed reminiscent of Spock.
"Hopefully not as if nothing happened. Hopefully you will remember. And
your men will remember, for they likewise acted most honorably. I
admit, Captain... I did not credit you or your men with the ability to
act as well as you did."
"So all this was a test," said Kirk. "You expected us to learn honor?"
"Oh, no. I expected you all to die. Don't make more of it than it was,
Captain. This was not a test. This was an elaborate execution.
Somehow, crushing you now after you've survived all this--and after
you've swallowed your pride and created this charming, if only temporary
alliance--it wouldn't seem fair somehow. It would not seem honorable.
And I am, above all, a being of honor."
Kral opened his mouth.
"Shut up," said Kirk to the Klingon.
Kral shut his mouth.
Kirk had prepared an entire lengthy speech he had intended to give
Weyland, about nobility and honor and courage of the human heart. He
discarded it for the better part of valor.
He flipped open his communicator and said, "Enterprise, two to beam up.
Quickly."
The air crackled around him, and the last thing he heard before the
comforting walls of the Enterprise surrounded him once more was the low,
mocking laugh of Weyland.
Chapter Fifty-two
As THENTERPRISE shot through space, enroute to Starbase 42, Kirk
studied the medical report on his three returned officers. Sulu was
suffering from a sword cut to his neck and another to his belly. Mr.
Scott had a wound from a musket ball on his right side. He also was
suffering from lead poisoning as a result of his wound and various
bacterial infections from a lack of septic dressing. And Mr. Chekov had
water in his lungs, indicating imminent drowning.
And even though McCoy had healed the physical wounds, emotionally they
were still at loose ends. Well, they were solid, experienced officers.
Certainly the leaves of absence that he had granted them to return home
to Earth--an odd enough request, but all things considered, not
outrageous--would help them reestablish their equilibrium. Hell, Scotty
was on his way to recovery already--he had declined the prospect of
returning to Earth, instead electing to remain with his beloved
Enterprise. And when Chekov and Sulu returned, and they and Scotty had
been given enough time, then they would be back to their old form.
He hoped.
He went to his computer and began a lengthy report that would explain
why Starfleet should be sure, henceforth, to give a wide berth to Cragon
V. He suspected the Klingons would do the same.
He hoped.
On the Ghargh, Kral sat staring at a holograph of two young Klingons.
One of them was now dead. "Damn," he said softly.
The door hissed open and Vladra was standing there. She saw what he was
holding, knowing that once upon a time he would have hurriedly stashed
it away rather than give the slightest hint of displaying any sort of
regret or weaker emotions.
"We are on route to Outpost 27, where the Klingon high command awaits
your report," she said. She paused. "What are you going to say?"
"That we should stay the hell away from Cragon V." She nodded.
He sat back and eyed her speculatively. Then he reached down under his
desk and pulled out something that had belonged to his father, and his
father's father. A book.
"I thought," he said with significance, "you might like to hear some...
poetry."
Her breath caught and she nodded slowly. As he started to read, his
voice husky, her hands strayed toward a heavy medal of honor that rested
on a shelf. She knew right where she was going to throw it.
Scott sat in his room. Open journals lay scattered around, but he
hadn't been able to finish a single article.
"Damn it, man," he chided himself, "you've got to face it." He stalked
over to the computer console. "Computer, I want some genealogical
information, if there is any. For a Seamus Maclntyre, shipbuilder,
Scotland, Earth, circa 1750."
"Working. There is a death certificate for a Seamus Maclntyre, and a
corresponding newspaper article in 1803. Working. He left two sons and
three daughters by his wife, Megan."
Scott didn't hear anything else. He was fighting back tears, mourning a
man centuries gone. The account droned on, becoming more detailed as
record keeping had gotten better. "... a daughter, Jennifer Anne
Maclntyre married George William Jeffries in 2137. Their only child,
Benjamin McDonald-Jeffries was an engineer with New Bell Laboratories in
the Centauri system. He married Isobelle Krautman, and they had one
son, Frederick William Jeffries, designer of the Jeffries tube..."
That caught Scotty's attention, and he looked up at the screen. So the
boy whose life he had touched all those centuries ago had reached across
time and space to touch his. The image of the dream woman on the heath
filled his mind. He heard the sound of pipes, and thrilled in the
freedom by which those hopelessly romantic and impractical people had
lived and died.
Pavel sat in an outdoor car6, watching the daily traffic in the main
square of New Stalingrad. But for a few plaques, and a monument or two,
nothing remained of that terrible time. Chekov closed his eyes,
listening, but all he could hear were birds, or the lazy footsteps of
folks enjoying the spring warmth. He had begun to wonder if he had
dreamed it.
"Would you care for another coffee, or perhaps a pastry?" the waitress
dressed in a silly version of a regional costume asked. It was a
tourist stop, and they used real people to serve, and even real chefs to
cook.
"No, thank you. But I would like to visit the Data Library. I'm doing
some research."
"It's two blocks that way," she gestured, "and turn right. You can't
miss it.,'
He meticulously drained his cup, and walked the short distance, noting
trees, buildings, and people with painstaking detail. Twice he stopped,
and once turned away from his goal. If I am not listed, it doesn't.
mean anything, he argued with himself. After all, a lot of records were
destroyed in the war and in the political upheavals that followed. It
doesn't mean anything. But his palms were still wet when he logged in
on a small terminal in the huge marble neorevolutionary-heroic hall.
"Pavel Alexandrovitch Chekov, or Chuikov. Lieutenant." He answered the
few questions that followed and waited. It seemed like an insufferably
long turnaround time.
"Pavel Alexandrovitch Chuikov, lieutenant. Lost over the Baltic Sea in
battle, November 15, 1942. Awarded Hero of the Soviet Union, third
class, October 1942. Awarded Hero of the Soviet Union, first class,
posthumously, December 1942."
Chekov sat a long time staring at the screen. Then he requested a
history for an American family named Kirk
Sulu had spent weeks following the path of his memory. He had crammed a
course in Japanese which he had learned with amazing ease. And to the
delight of the scholars whom he had visited, and with whom he had pored
over documents, his knowledge of classical speech and writing was top
notch and way beyond the scope of his cram course. But, to his sorrow,
in this land where literacy had been a legacy for millennia, there was
not a word about Oneko.
The inn was still there, still as pristine as he had remembered it.
Despite the ravages on the natural beauty of this land which economic
wealth and roodernization had brought, there were still pockets of
traditional Japan. Above the inn the temple still clung to the
mountain, and the bell was still rung each morning and night. He
managed to persuade the current innkeeper to find him a place, although
he had not reserved a room the requisite six months in advance.
The next morning he walked up the hill to the abbey. There was still a
community of Zen monks in residence, but most of the grounds had been
turned over to the curiosity of visitors. The day he arrived, the gates
were closed, and a small sign announced that a group of archeologists
were doing a dig on some older portions of the grounds.
Sulu turned to leave when he ran into a young woman, literally, sending
her armful of tools and bags scattering down the hill.
"Oh, I'm so sorry," he said, helping her gather the load.
"Oh, no, it was my fault. I wasn't looking," she politely protested,
the objects falling again out of her arms as quickly as he piled them
on.
"Please, let me help," he insisted. He took most of the materials and
followed her through the gate.
"I am Dr. Yae Takenada. I am assistant to Dr. Abe, director of the
project," she said formally, although she was still panting and dropping
things, "and I am late..."
"I am Lieutenant Commander Sulu, of the USS Enterprise."
"Oh," she said, stopping and staring at him with awe. "What an exciting
life! A starship. Good lord, Sulu, why root around on dusty old Earth
if you can be dancing in the stars?"
"Oh... the ground has its allure," he said.
And before much longer he had ditched his jacket, rolled up his sleeves,
and was in tow as Yae's aide. Not that he was protesting a lot.
He spent the next few days digging, and the evenings with his newfound
friends, especially Yae. A couple of times he wanted to tell her about
his strange trip, but even though he felt that she was as close as a
sister, he couldn't do it, yet
Too soon he was notified that he was to report to his ship. It was the
last afternoon he could spend at the satisfying work of digging trenches
in the old garden.
Yae had trenched about two feet deep and uncovered a group of stones
that had been used to support a wall. "Look at these. I'll bet they
were once part of the garden arrangement. Look at the shapes.""
Sulu shook his head noncommittally. He knew she was right, but how
could he explain how he knew? He crouched down by her find, brushing
away the dirt with the archeologist's friend, a small brush. Yes, the
scratches were there. He wanted to put it back, to hide it, but she
leaned over his shoulder.
"Oh, good. Look at that. Someone scratched something.
Let me see." She appropriated the stone, and brushed, and spat until she
had uncovered the characters.
"Well, let's see. It could mean..." she muttered, trying out the
variants that each symbol could sound like. "Well, I'll be damned," she
said staring at Sulu.
"It could mean Sulu! How strange. And the other. It is a cat, neko,
no... 'honorable cat' Oneko. It might be names. Two names. How
touching," she said softly.
"Two lovers, perhaps destined to part, who left their mark in the temple
garden. Sulu, are you all right?"
"O h... fine." Sulu smiled. "I just had the strangest feeling of d6j
vu."
THE PHENOMENON
ABODE OF LIFE 70596/4.50 BATTLESTATIONS!
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X//G 11G, r rG/IGR.1FIO/I 15/FORTUNE'S LIGHT by Mike Friedman
Fortune's Light-A priceless jeweled seal that is desperately needed to
cernant the onion hatween two powerful trading families on the planet
Imptiaa. When the seal disappears, Commander Riker is sent to
investigate But on Imprima, treachery and intrigue am commonplace and
Riker soon learns that soma factions will stop at nothing to see that
the Fortune's Light remains hidden forever...
And in February...
53/A FLAG FULL OF STARS by Brad Ferguson The second book in THE LOST
YEARS saga!
It has been eighteen months since the Starship Enterprise completed her
historic five.year mission and her legendary crew has separated. On
Earth, Admiral James T. Kirk has married and started a new life as the
Chief of Starfleet Opemtiens. But his quiet life changes when dangerous
new technology falls into Klingon hands.
Now, Admiral Kirk and a young Lieutenant Commander named Kevin Riley are
all that stand between peace and devastatian for countless worlds.