Chapter One – Track Change
Stardate 8452.2
10th February 2287
0936 hoursThe door to his quarters slid open and his best friend’s head popped in. “You ready?” Sulu asked expectantly.
Why he didn’t just walk in was anyone’s guess, but Chekov favoured him with a suppressed smirk. “I am just gathering some—“
“Forget that, Pavel, let’s go already!” the helmsman urged excitedly. “This was your idea, remember?”’
“Yes, I know, but I don’t want us getting lost while we’re—“
“Pavel,” Sulu interrupted again, mock hurt. “You’re one of the best navigators in the Fleet. I’m
the best helmsman in the Fleet. I’m sure between us we can both find our way around the forests of Germany without any technology to help us!”
“Famous last vords, old friend,” Chekov glowered at him. “The reason ve are who ve are is
because ve take dees precautions!” Countless similar good-natured accusations from both Sulu and Uhura came back to him from over his years as Security Chief about being over-prepared and it had become something of a running joke between them. Chekov knew that in each case his instincts had been borne out by circumstances, and after the first few times so had his friends, but the habit remained. It was the losses his Security teams had taken despite all his preparedness that still stuck his enjoyment of the joke in his throat.
Sulu’s excited grin dropped to a warm smile of deeper understanding instead. He nodded, acknowledging the thoughts he knew his friend was having, then moved on.
“We only came back up to the
Enterprise to grab a change of clothes and give some notification as to our next destination for our shore leave. We’ve told Uhura, and I see we’ve both changed. Now,
let’s get going.”
“Wery vell,” Pavel sighed. “Our travel pod is still docked to the bridge? It hasn’t been claimed by Scotty’s engineering teams?”
“Last I heard. We’d better hurry though,” Sulu encouraged him again. “If we lose that pod, we can’t get over to the dock for hours and we can’t ‘borrow’ a shuttle to take us to Germany.”
Throwing on his jacket Chekov followed Sulu out into the deserted corridors of the
Enterprise, her crew all on shore leave and the ship herself currently in her Post-Shakedown Availability, fixing the bugs that had shown up during their shakedown cruise. As with all progress, things got worse before they could get better, and the new
Enterprise was currently a shambles as Chief Engineer Scott and his teams struggled to strip systems down and piece them back together in the right order.
A short argument with the turbolift later—“
Cossack,” Chekov was heard to grumble as they finally got moving—and they were on the bridge, confirming that their pod was indeed still there.
“Well Uhura, off we go again,” Sulu told her jovially, winking at her and tilting his head at his perpetually-dour companion.
“Well, you boys take care now, “ Acting Captain Uhura told her long-time friends. “We wouldn’t want you getting…”
Uhura trailed off as the deck below them all shuddered slightly, her eyes quickly sweeping over the all the bridge status displays. With no one else on duty what with the ship powered down and in dry-dock, there was no one to get a report from.
However, years of training and honed instincts took over. Uhura leapt for the comm. boards while Chekov manned the Science station and Sulu took over Tactical.
Sulu could detect nothing threatening on the scanners, but the longer he looked the more starships and orbital stations he saw go to full shields and begin arming weapons. At a bit of a loss, he exchanged a quick, troubled look with Uhura who was wading through a massive increase in comm. chatter, but neither had the time to do more than meet eyes before Chekov’s horrified, anguished cry sent fear chasing up and down their spines.
“Nyet… Oh for the love of God Almighty,
NO!!!!”
“Pavel!” Sulu shouted.
Chekov worked Spock’s station for a frantic few seconds, but he couldn’t speak to them. Instead he activated the main viewer, and before he turned to look, Sulu could see tears streaming down his face.
The main screen came on with the view of a ravaged planet. Sulu’s question of where this had happened died unspoken as he recognized the angle of the view – aft, through the nacelles of the
Enterprise herself. Uhura choked off a sob, but then couldn’t hold back the tears as the horrifying, sanity-defying truth became evident.
Sulu’s mind windmilled, refusing to accept what he saw. But it was unmistakeable. All the orbital stations and repair docks, the giant TerraMain spacedock, all in clear view framed what was indisputably his home planet.
And Earth was burning.
Across the entire surface of the world, a ravening fire worse than any ten nuclear holocausts had scoured the delicate whites, blues, greens, and browns and replaced them almost instantly with a brutal, carbon-scored black broken by jagged cracks of vivid yellow orange.
Chekov had dropped into Spock’s chair, his legs no longer able to hold him up. Sulu braced himself as well he could at the Nav/Weapons console, but he too finally had to sit down.
Spock! The Captain! Dr. McCoy! Janice! Christine! Sulu spun around to face the centre seat, then Chekov in the science officer’s chair. He met the eyes of his closest friends and saw the knowledge in there too.
Practically the entire crew was on Earth for shore leave… he thought in empty despair. Chekov looked bleakly back at him and pulled himself up out of Spock’s chair.
“Ve…” he said, his voice breaking. He stopped and tried again. “Ve haf to find out vhat happened. To the Keptin. To our shipmates. And to our vorld.” He looked meaningfully at his friends. “Ve haf to find out who is still alive.”
Uhura had stilled her crying. Tears ran freely down her face still, but with a ferociousness that belied those tears, she meticulously tore apart the overlapping comm. channels with her twenty-plus years of experience. After several minutes, she collected herself and summarized what she had discovered.
“No one knows what happened. One moment all was fine, the next, a massive explosion was observed in France, centered on Paris, and within three minutes had swept over the entire surface of Earth. I’ve copied sensor images of the event. Onscreen now.”
As one, they turned to the main viewer again.
Obviously from a starship on low orbit in the Italian shipyards, the sensor record showed a good thirty seconds of nothing, then—
“
A Genesis torpedo!?!” Chekov shouted.
The effect spread over mainland Europe to engulf the European Union, the British Isles vanishing in a flash as the much vaunted Genesis process reorganized the eons-old features of the Old World in favour of its new matrix. Unstoppable, the effect washed over the rest of the planet until nothing was recognisable and the birthworld of their species, the home and hub of the most benevolent union yet encountered in known space, was rendered as hideous to behold as the Genesis planet itself, mere minutes before that world blew itself apart.
“Uhura, Lass, can ye hear me?”Scotty’s voice came over the intercom and shattered the horrified silence that blanketed the bridge.
”Yes, Scotty, I’m here,” she responded. “Pavel and Hikaru are with me.”
Apparently missing her tear-clogged voice, the burly Scot said,
“Ah’ve just run an exhaustive check on that vibration we felt. It wiznae th’ ship or onythin’ we did, so Ah’ wiz wonderin’ if those clods over at dock control had a wobble in their tractor beams?”“Scotty…” Nyota began, then fell silent. How do you tell someone their homeworld has been destroyed in the time it takes to run a diagnostic?
“Aye, Lass?” the engineer responded patiently.
“Scotty, you’d better get up here.”
******
“Okay Uhura, what’s all this about?” he asked as soon as he stepped off the bridge turbolift.
As designed, he was immediately distracted by the glowing ember of a planet on the viewscreen and the gut-punched look on all his crewmates’ faces.
Montgomery Scott took in the view, eyes narrowing at first in concentration, then widening again in disbelieving shock. There was no mistaking the view past the nacelles of his own ship.
He swung on Uhura. “No,” he stated, his low-voiced denial a question the begged a confirmation.
Maintaining a tenuous control, Acting Captain Nyota Uhura nodded and pushed out, “Yes. Earth. Now.” She hit a button and played the realtime recording again.
Scotty swung back to the screen, then blindly reached for the rail that surrounded the command deck after he recognised the Genesis effect. “Not bloody possible…” he whispered, staring at the back of the command chair. His mind refused to process the enormity of the calamity, but, as with his friends before him, the smaller scale of his own close-knit shipboard community forced it through his denial. “Th’ captain and the others?”
“We have no information, Scotty,” Uhura told him softly. “If they were on the planet ten minutes ago, then…”
“Ten minutes?” Scotty processed that. “You mean
this was the cause of the deck tremor?”
“The Genesis effect...” Chekov put in hollowly, then broke off. He looked as if he was trying to go further but couldn't. The science may not be in dispute, but it certainly felt that reason had fled the universe in these moments. Not even decades of training and experience – and even seeing this happen to other worlds – could prepare you for it happening to your own.
“Mah
home…” the engineer whispered. “Mah
family…”
Uhura spun away and squeezed her eyes shut, unable to block out the images of cousins, aunts, uncles, students, friends, colleagues… literally, billions of people, gone in a virtual instant.
“Who…?” Scotty murmured next, his practical, unsentimental side pushing at him already. There was a problem. An engineer’s job… a Scot’s upbringing… A man’s very
nature cried out to fix it! Find the cause. How it was done. How it could be fixed… or reversed.
Or prevented.
* Edited for Larry's suggestion.