Chapter Seven
Date: 10th August 2272
Time: 1400 hours.
Stardate: 7430.7
Location: Rec. Deck Lower Level, USS Illustrious. "That’s check and mate, Andie," Indra Gunawan said from across the Tri-D chessboard, waggling his thick eyebrows at her.
Andrea blew out of her mouth in exasperation, then grinned at the engineer. "Good game, Indra. Well played."
"Gave me a run for my credits that time," he offered in consolation.
"You’re just feeling smug about finally having beaten me at something," she commented with a smile. "I used to think I was quite good at this, too."
This time Indra smiled. "You are quite good at this. I’m just better, that’s all."
"Oh really?" Andrea asked, a dangerous look on her face. "Care for an arm-wrestling match?"
"Oh, no, no, no!" the skinny Malaysian said, waving his hands in front of him and laughing. "You don’t get me back that easily. You either beat me at chess or no deal!"
The Scot grinned at him and backed down. "Fair enough, then. I hereby challenge you to a daily game so that you can enhance that feeling of smug superiority every day until I beat you."
"Challenge accepted, you big bully!" Indra smirked at her.
Andrea affected an air of great innocence and exclaimed, "
Moi? A bully? You must be mistaken! I don’t bully, I... cajole, encourage, nudge along, and talk people ‘round."
Indra sat back and crossed his arms, looking at her askance. "Uh huh. Sure you do. And when these unspecified people aren’t cajoled, encouraged, nudged along, or talked ‘round?" he asked archly.
Andrea grinned. "I persuade them."
"Ah yes. Persuasion," the engineer commented. "The same kind of persuasion Cristina’s been telling me her illustrious Italian ancestors used?"
"The very same," she agreed with another smile. Remembering that she had a small errand to run, she told Indra, "Sorry to dash off and all, but I need to see Ted Johnson for something. He said to come by around now, so I’d better go."
"Okay then," Indra agreed, "but I’m holding you to that challenge! I want to feel smugly superior at this time tomorrow, so don’t forget."
"I won’t," she said, getting up and making for the spiral staircase. "I see it as being in training to beat you at something else," Andrea added with a grin a she left their games cube.
"In your dreams, Brown!" he called over to her with a wicked grin as she ascended to the upper level.
Andrea shot him a startled look and blushed slightly at some of the looks she got from the other occupants of the room.
Ah’ll get ye fur that, ya wee runt! she promised him within the confines of her own mind.
She smiled and nodded to her other friends as she passed them on her way across the upper level to the turbolift. Once inside, she instructed, "G Deck, Environmental Engineering," and leaned back against the wall as it took her there.
Minutes later and she was striding into the Environmental Engineering control room on the underside of
Illustrious’ saucer. A glance around the open-plan room and its wall-mounted control panels revealed no one present, but out of the corner of her eye she caught Ted waving at her through the window of the environmental engineer’s office on her left.
"Hey Ted," she greeted the crewman as she stepped through the office door.
"Afternoon Lieutenant," replied Life Support Technician Second-class Edward Johnson with a smile for his officer friend. "So, what is it that is so important it had to wait until the engineering department’s Division Heads meeting to talk to me about?"
"I needed to get Ensign Nakamura out of the way," Andrea explained. "I’ve noticed he’s been down recently and I was wondering if you knew why. I want to cheer him up."
Ted’s eyes lit up with mischief. "Ah, you want to give him a surprise that’ll make him feel better, right?" he asked with a smile. When she nodded, he shook his head and said, "What, are you the self-appointed morale officer for this tub? Far from resting on your laurels after that Rec. Room stunt for Ensign Garn, you’re out to put a smile on the face of every sourpuss you see?"
"C’mon, Ted, what’s wrong with that?" Andrea asked, putting her fists on her hips and leaning forward slightly over his desk. "You may need cheered up at some point. Do you really want to be left in your funk?"
Ted suddenly felt that there was a very selective problem with the gravity generators for his office, as he kept having to drag his eyes back up to meet his superior officer’s. Trying to push aside thoughts of how exactly he’d like Lieutenant Brown to cheer him up right now, he struggled to focus on her question.
"Ah, yes. I mean, no, I’d want someone to notice and..." He trailed off and shook his head, trying to clear it. He was helped immeasurably when Andrea turned away from him and paced to the other side of the office, oblivious to his thoughts.
"Good, I’m glad you see what I mean," she was saying as he got back to her original question.
"Yeah, so, Ensign Nakamura. Well, he’s been feeling kinda homesick, Lieutenant, that’s why he’s been down. Says he’s been missing his family and the familiar surroundings of his home in Osaka," Ted told her as she half-turned to him again. "Apparently he’s from a very traditional, old-value Japanese household with all the trappings. Why anyone’d miss that I dunno, but everyone has to grow up somewhere, I guess."
At that last Andrea’s eyebrows went up. "How very philosophical of you, Ted," she murmured in surprise. "I didn’t know you had it in you."
"What?" Ted asked with a grin. "You think only officers get to be philosophical?"
She shrugged her shoulders. "I suppose not," she admitted.
"That’s a very elitist attitude to hold, Lieutenant," he warned, half-joking. "If you’re not careful they’ll start calling you a snob!"
Ouch! she winced, feeling the shot hit home. "You’re right, Ted. What can I say? Life’s a learning experience. I suppose I’ve learned my lesson for today."
Johnson smiled at her. "Just twistin’ yer tail, Lieutenant. So, got any ideas for the Ensign, sir?"
"Actually, yes," she started, her eyes wandering over the office equipment, finally coming to rest on the master status display in the middle of the room outside. "It’ll require a favour from the fabricator techs, plus a little research into Japanese culture, but..."
"Something wrong, Lieutenant?" Ted asked, seeing her squinting out of the office window.
"Yeah, there seems to be some amber warnings on the ARS’s for G Deck."
"What!?" Ted almost yelped, then looked down at the screen built into the console he sat behind.
From where Andrea was standing she couldn’t clearly see what was being displayed on it, but she could tell that it wasn’t the miniature status board it was supposed to be. Ted quickly brought up the proper screen and his face paled. He looked back up at Andrea, mouth flapping but no sound emerging, before his training suddenly clicked back into place.
"Confirmed, sir," he said, all business now. "Atmosphere Recycling System 28 in compartment 7C01 is showing a malfunction." He got out from behind his desk and raced through to the master display to get the specifics. The console in the office was just a monitoring program designed to alert the duty tech or officer of a problem so that they didn’t have to keep walking around the main room’s control panels.
Andrea followed Johnson out and watched as he feverishly worked to track down the actual problem and rectify it, moving from control panel to control panel and reporting from each. Andrea stayed at the status board and called out any changes in readings.
"Control routines are operating normally and nothing’s changing through computer commands. Must be a hardware fault, a broken scrubber or something. The CO
2 levels are 10% above normal on F Deck forward!" Ted updated her, sounding worried. "I’m sharing the defective recycler’s load among the others for that area and shutting it down. That’ll clear out the excess CO
2 and allow us to fix 28."
"Very good, Johnson," Andrea said, glad to see this potential crisis so easily corrected. She held silent while Johnson contacted Main Engineering to have a repair team dispatched, but inside she was getting angry.
This idiot could have incapacitated scores of our crew! Most of the Gamma-shift is asleep on that deck! Just how long wasn’t
he looking at his monitor screen for it to get this bad? The life support technician had finally completed his tasks and came back over to talk to Andrea. "Got is sorted. The ChEng is sending a team right now to check out the defective unit." He couldn’t quite look her in the eye and kept bobbing his head as he spoke, his voice quavering slightly at the close call and its possible consequences.
"Ted, let’s step back into the office, okay?" Andrea said in a neutral tone and lead the way back inside. She waited until they were safely ensconced before speaking further.
Feeling hopeful after being address informally, Johnson spoke first. "I’m glad you were here to help me for this, Andrea--"
She cut him off with a sharp question. "How much longer until that malfunction could have started dropping people in their tracks?"
Johnson swallowed hard. "Another thirty minutes, maybe forty-five, before they’d have noticed being short of breath," he answered carefully. "It would have taken about three hours before people would have started passing out."
Andrea nodded thoughtfully before spearing him with an angry glare. "And how long were you ignoring your duties for it to get this bad?" she demanded.
Johnson looked as if he’d protest that, but he closed his mouth without saying anything. Taking a couple of breaths to steady himself, he answered, "For the levels of CO
2 to get that high would take about..." He hesitated again, but finally pushed an answer out. "About another thirty minutes."
"The same ‘thirty minutes’ as before?" Andrea demanded acidly. "As in, thirty
to forty-five? "
"Yes," he whispered. He did not look at her eyes.
"Gods-damnit, Ted!" she yelled. "What the hell were you doing for all that time that didn’t let you check the monitor for forty-five minutes?"
"I honestly didn’t realise how much time had passed!" he told her. "Look, this is a really boring detail, just tending the damn machines, waiting on something--anything--happening!"
That phrase seemed familiar to Andrea somehow, but she dismissed the thought to concentrate on what Ted was saying.
"That’s why there’s normally two of us here, so that we can be kept occupied or alert by each other. Either through make-work or conversation, depending on the other person, we run checks, service equipment--"
"Ted, enough of this!" Andrea demanded. "What were you doing that soaked up all your attention for nearly an hour?"
"I was... doing some research for our first mission," he stated evasively.
"Ted..." Andrea said, the warning evident in her tone.
"We’re going to the Klingon border! I was reading up on the accounts of battles fought against then Klingons in the last war!" he finally blurted out. "There was this frigate squadron up against two Klingon escort squadrons--"
"That’s enough, I’ve heard all I want to," she declared, but Ted kept talking.
"Even if I was working under a console doing checks or maintenance, I still wouldn’t have seen this!" he explained desperately. "Andrea--"
"Gods-damnit Johnson, call me ‘Sir’! This is official now!" Lieutenant Brown proclaimed.
Johnson snapped to attention and barked, "Sir! Yes sir! Sorry, sir." He ventured, "Am I on report, Lieutenant?"
"I..." Andrea’s first instinct was to give a resounding "Hell yes!" but something made her reconsider.
He really screwed up here! one part of her mind pointed out.
Lives were put at risk because this moron was goofing off! His supervisor is away at a meeting and trusts him to stay sharp on his own, and he betrayed that trust! If the ensign hadn’t returned for an hour, what could have happened? This was very true, but another part of her mind argued for him.
The guy was bored, yes, but you came down and distracted him further--looking for a favour at that! And remember what Markus said about Donally? If she hears about this our friend Ted will be booted off the ship, if not out the Fleet! Remember what you were doing a few weeks back? Goofing off, wasn’t it? Doing something against the rules? How is that any better than Ted here? The argument continued inside her head, this time from the other side.
It’s very different! I was doing that to be nice to a friend. Johnson was being negligent and could have gotten people hurt! He deserves to be punished! And you don’t? Didn’t you feel just like Ted on the bridge before we got to Starbase Twelve? "This is sooo boring" you always moaned. That’s no better than him and you likely would have done the same thing if no one was watching you! That struck a guilty nerve, and with it the battle was over. After what seemed like endless seconds for Johnson, Andrea finally answered, "No, you’re not on report."
The technician sagged in relief at that, but Andrea was by no means finished with him. "This is not a matter to be relieved about, Johnson! Stand at attention."
Ted’s eyes widened at her tone and words but quickly did as he was bid, watching Lieutenant Brown pace about in front of him as she started to dress him down.
"You do realise what could have happened here, don’t you Johnson?
Life Support Technician Johnson?" she demanded of him.
"Sir! Yes sir!" he shot out.
"Oh do you? Do you really?" she inquired softly. "Then tell me, Life Support Technician Johnson, what could have happened had your grossly negligent behaviour been allowed to continue unsupervised?"
"Sir, it wouldn’t have come to that--" he tried to defend himself, but Brown was having none of it.
"I don’t want your excuses, Johnson!" she yelled at him. "I want you to realise the magnitude of your mistake!"
"Yes sir! I mean, I do sir! I realise that had I not checked the master systems display again for the same amount of time that I had already... ignored it," he began, the hesitation evident in his voice as he tried to find another, less condemning word and failed, "that the safety of my crewmates would have been placed in jeopardy by my actions, Sir!"
"Or lack thereof, crewman!" Andrea added hotly. "Yours is a vitally important role, Johnson, a safeguard against malfunction in the computers and machines we all depend on for our very lives with the light, air, gravity, and food they provide.
"And you failed in that role!" Andrea condemned him passionately. "Your moment came and
you were found wanting, Life Support Technician Johnson! You failed at the very time your attention was most needed, and yes, you placed the lives of your shipmates in danger!"
That did it for the crewman. Despite standing at attention his whole body seemed to droop.
Actually, Andrea hated to do it to him. As she’d previously realised, Ted’s situation wasn’t a million miles away from her own on the bridge during a quiet shift--and until reaching the starbase, they had
all been quiet--and she mentally resolved to make sure that her own attention to her duties never flagged this much.
However, even though she didn’t want his career more-or-less ended by what he’d failed to do here, as would likely happen if she put him on report, neither could she let it go uncommented on. The traditional solution was an informal--but very personal--chewing out, and here was Andie giving her first at the tender age of 22.
"I trust that I have made myself sufficiently clear, Crewman Johnson?" she inquired, maintaining her hard tone.
"Yes sir. I now fully realise what happened here today," he replied in a humbled tone.
"Then I can trust that this kind of thing will
never happen again where there is any way in which you can prevent it?"
"Yes sir!" he exclaimed almost eagerly, perhaps realising that this screaming session was coming to a close and that nothing official had resulted from it. "I can personally assure you that this will never happen on my watch again."
"Very well then, Crewman Johnson. You may carry on."
"Aye sir," he replied softly.
Andrea nodded, satisfied, then left Johnson in his office as she strode out to return to her quarters.
There was a log entry she needed to make.