Since people seem to be returning to the forum and it is enlivening again, I thought I'd make my own contribution. So without further ado, here is the final chapter.
Chapter Eight
Faris Khaleel had been enjoying a quiet shift on the bridge, catching up on his paperwork while his captain and their science team was on the surface, but all that came to a crashing halt when Lieutenant Paochinda suddenly leaned in and started working his board with intense concentration.
“Commander Faris, we’re receiving a distress call!” the Thai man announced urgently.
“Put it up, Lieutenant,” the XO ordered.
“Audio only, sir. Playing now.”
“This is Master Shalloch of the Tellarite freighter Griwald
hailing any Federation starships in range! Two D-7-type warships have decloaked in front of us and are demanding we stop and let them board us! Our location is in the Nirophia Sector, section eighteen. We’re in the Corridor and nowhere near Romulan or Klingon space. They have no right to stop us so we’re not stopping!”“Mr. Paochinda, is the
Griwald a legitimate ship in these sectors?” Faris asked evenly.
“Yes, Commander,” the comm officer responded a second later. “This ship is a regular visitor to Aljetarius. Data up on screen two.”
A quick look was all it took to confirm his words. “Yellow Alert. Hail the Captain,” he told the comm officer. Turning to their ship operations officer, he ordered, “Mark, have the shuttle bays warm up both a warp and an impulse shuttle for immediate launch; we may be leaving our team on-planet. Also, warn Transporter Room One to expect the captain and possibly the whole landing party, in case we are not leaving them behind.”
“Aye Sir,” the Englishman replied and began purposefully working his console.
“Plasma torpedo launch! They’re firing on us!” Shalloch’s outraged and frightened voice broke in again.
“Mayday, mayday, ship in distress! This is the Tellarite freighter Griwald,
under fire from two Romulan battlecruisers! Any ship in the region, please respond! We need help RIGHT NOW!”“I have the captain, Sir,” Paochinda reported.
“Commander Faris here, Captain,” he told her in a tense voice. “We’ve got an emergency situation. A Federation freighter is being attacked by Romulan battlecruisers.”
“The ship checks out?” she asked.
“Aye Sir. She’s a sector regular with a crew of twenty-three.”
“Give me twenty seconds then beam me up with Mr. Daquillon. Captain out.”“Get me L’Trell,” Faris ordered next. No maintenance had been scheduled and he’d not been informed of any sudden need for it, but it never hurt to check.
Paochinda nodded and moments later the chief engineer was online.
“Korta, make sure the engines and reactor are ready to go instantly if not sooner. We’ve got an emergency,” Faris told him.
“We’re ready now XO. We’ve not been diddling behind your back,” the Caitian told him good-naturedly.
“Glad to hear it, Commander. Prepare to go to high warp once the Captain is back aboard.”
“Understood. Engineering out.”Less than ten seconds later their captain stepped out of the port turbolift, just forward of the bridge communications station. “Let’s hear that distress call, Lieutenant,” Sheltarah ordered, her voice hard.
“They’re still transmitting, Captain. On audio now,” Paochinda replied.
A wash of static issued forth as stray radiation – probably from the weapons fire – disrupted the signal, but then a gruff voice broke through the aural hash.
“…repeating, this is the Tellarite freighter Griwald,
under attack by Romulan warships! Location is Nirophia Sector, section eighteen. We are clearly in the Corridor and outside of both Romulan and Klingon space, but are being fired upon by D-7-type warships with plasma weapons! We’re making a run for it at warp six, but we require aid from any vessel in range!”Khaleel looked at his captain, face grim as a series of explosions tore through the audio, only subsiding several seconds later. The Tellarite’s voice came back, his fury and fear evident.
“They’re playing with us for sport! There’s two of them and we’re a lone merchant ship! If they wanted us dead one shot could do it. That last hit took out our warp nacelles. We’re stranded! To any Federation or allied ships in range, we need urgent assistance!”Sheltarah snapped out orders left and right. “Ops, drop a warp shuttle out of the bay for our team on the planet and brief its commander on our situation so they can answer questions.”
“Aye Sir,” Mark responded and began talking through his own intercom.
Hitting open a ‘com channel to Engineering, Sheltarah stated, “Engineer!”
“Here, Captain,” Korta L’Trell’s throaty rumble came back instantly.
“We’ve received a distress call. Prepare for emergency warp on my order.”
“Standing by, Sir.”“Mr. T’Serris, lay in a course for section eighteen and give me an ETA at emergency warp speed,” she ordered next.
“Course laid in, Captain. Arrival at closest border in two-point-three-seven hours,” the soft-spoken Vulcan replied immediately, having anticipated her orders.
“Very good. Prepare to go to warp.” Hitting the all-call button on her chair’s control panel, she announced, “This is the Captain. Secure the ship for emergency warp speed. Two Romulan warships are attacking a Federation-registered merchant ship. Captain out.”
“Hail them?” Faris asked.
“No. If the Romulans are monitoring
Griwald’s transmissions I don’t want to let them know we’re coming so they can prepare a surprise for us,” Sheltarah told him briefly. “If they think no one is coming they may continue ‘playing’ and give us the time we need to get there.” Returning her attention to her Chief of Ship Operations, she asked, “Well, Mr. Stanhope?”
Lieutenant Commander Mark Stanhope’s usually chipper English accent was somewhat strained as he replied, “Shuttle
To’dai lifting off now, Sir, under the command of Lieutenant Popejoy,” he stated, watching a visual of the shuttle bay on his console. Five seconds of silence later he reported, “Shuttle is clear of our warp field limit, Captain. We are free to depart.”
Addressing her helm officer, she ordered, “T’Serris, warp speed now.”
The Vulcan tapped the control on her board and less than two minutes from receiving the distress call the massive Excelsior-class starship was hurtling through space towards the besieged freighter.
*****
Two hours later, Commander kar-Tachek announced, “Captain, I have the
Griwald on sensors.”
Khaleel’s eyes widened. “It’s still there? Are they in one piece?”
Narumba replied, “Yes Commander. Its warp nacelles have been wrecked but life support is still fully functional and I’m reading the ship’s full complement of twenty-three life-forms alive and strong.”
“No immediate danger to the ship’s crew then.” Khaleel breathed a sigh of relief.
“Alter course to rendezvous. Indications of Romulan presence?” Sheltarah asked sharply.
“No Sir,” Narumba responded. “If they are still there, they are cloaked.”
“Mr. Paochinda, hail the
Griwald. Find out what happened to them.”
“Aye Sir.”
Faris moved in close to his captain and spoke in low tones. “So what happened here? Two D’Vorix-class ships out for a little target practice but not wanting to provoke a response from the Federation? Yet another ‘isolated incident’?”
Sheltarah clenched her teeth. “Unless the crew of the
Griwald can let in some light, this might remain shrouded in darkness forever,” she muttered angrily.
“I have Master Shalloch of the
Griwald, Captain,” Paochinda spoke up.
“On screen,” Sheltarah ordered, and both she and her XO directed their attention to the screen. “Master Shalloch, I am Captain Sheltarah of the Federation starship
Fearless. We received your distress call and will be there in twenty minutes. Can you tell us what happened to you and where the Romulans are?’
“Sheltarah, we are so glad to hear from you! Our sensors are down, we didn’t see your approach. Quickly, lock a tractor beam on us and tow us out of here!”“Shalloch, we’re still twenty minutes distant from you, but be assured we will do exactly that once we arrive. Can you tell us more about what happened to your ship? Do you have sensor logs you can send us?” she repeated, unsurprised at him not really paying attention to the words of her greeting.
“I’ll have my sensor chief assess our memory banks, Captain. We’ve been badly mauled over here. I’m just very glad to see you. There’s been no trouble on this route for months and we didn’t think Starfleet had any other ships in the region. We thought – after the Romulans left – that we’d be stranded out here for days or weeks,” the unusually amiable Tellarite told her in gruff but obviously relieved tones.
“The Romulans just shot you up and left?” she asked in return.
“It doesn’t seem like them, and yet it does. It’s very odd,” he agreed.
“Transmitting what sensor logs we have now, Captain.”“Thank you. If you could also forward your needs in other areas we can begin preparations for our arrival,” Sheltarah requested. “We’ll go over what you send us and get back to you.”
“Understood. Griwald
out.”The
Fearless dropped from warp at yellow alert and, adopting a cautious, defensive posture, approached to tractor beam range of the crippled freighter.
“Full sensor scan of the region please, Commander kar-Tachek,” Sheltarah commanded. “If there are still Romulans close by I want to know it, preferably before they decloak around us.”
“Underway, Captain,” the Arkenite scientist replied in her oddly-echoing electronic voice.
“Mr. Frunzeti, use the tactical array to scan the Griwald and give me a structural analysis. Can we tow her at both impulse and warp speeds without having to reinforce anything?” she ordered next.
“Understood Captain,” Teodor’s monotonously deep voice rumbled back.
“Anupong, get me Shalloch again please.”
Moments later the stout Tellarite’s features graced the main viewer.
“An Excelsior-class, huh?” he stated appreciatively.
“I wasn’t aware of any in this area, but I guess this explains why you got here so quickly.”Sheltarah hid a grimace.
I’m glad he regards nearly three hours as “quickly”, she thought with some chagrin,
but he’s right in that respect. If we hadn’t been here he’d have been left stranded for days – assuming the Romulans didn’t return to finish the job. Aloud, she replied, “We’re assessing your ship’s status now, Master Shalloch. I agree with wanting to get you out of this area as quickly—”
Sheltarah was cut off by the sudden blaring of the Red Alert klaxon and she swung around to her science officer.
“Cloaking effect! Ships decloaking at 045 mark 274 and 240 mark 5!”
“Full impulse! Evasive pattern Kirk-Gamma Seven! Arm all weapons and prepare to repel boarders!” Sheltarah immediately barked out, cursing herself for not being paranoid enough to maintain a Red Alert as the bridge crew jumped to obey her orders.
Teodor spoke next, voice hard but still employing his trademark monotony. “Two Romulan D’Vorix-class battlecruisers, Sir, both positioned outside of our torpedo arcs. Both are fully armed and shielded.”
“A trap,” Khaleel stated flatly. A Romulan-built version of the ubiquitous Klingon K’t’inga-class battlecruiser, he knew that
Fearless could defeat two of them in a fair fight, but as had just been proven again the Romulans never fought fair. It would take time to arm all their weapons and get moving, and in that time the two Romulan warships could badly weaken or even collapse their shields.
However, even as the
Fearless strained to overcome her million and three-quarter metric tons of mass and accelerate out of the kill zone, an unexpected announcement came from one of the bridge crew.
“Captain, the Romulans are hailing us,” Lieutenant Paochinda stated, surprise colouring his words.
Not wasting a second Sheltarah snapped, “On screen.”
The image of a short, squat, beady-eyed Romulan male in typical military garb appeared on the main viewer. Perhaps surprisingly, there was no look of smug superiority on his face and when he spoke he seemed somewhat tense.
“Federation battleship Fearless,
there is no need for such strenuous moves,” he began, holding very still in his command chair.
“Having our weapons fully armed was but a precaution on our part; perhaps, in light of your reaction, an overzealous one,” he admitted carefully.
“We are not here to offer battle.”Still not countermanding her last orders, Sheltarah’s violet eyes narrowed at her opposite number as her ship creaked around her under the strain of the corkscrewing climb out of danger. “Decloaking fully armed after attacking a civilian ship is not the accepted interstellar manner of offering a friendly greeting, either,” she shot back, the ruthlessly controlled tone of her words an indication of the height of her fury.
“True, true. A miscalculation on my part, Captain; an overzealous precaution, as I stated. If you will cease your manoeuvres and disarm your weapons we can converse in a less tense atmosphere,” he offered.
“So you can bracket my ship between your weapons again?” Sheltarah shot out accusingly. “I think not.”
Perhaps feeling as if he was gaining the upper hand since the Federation ship hadn’t actually opened fire on his ships yet, the Romulan answered in a more relaxed manner.
“Captain, if we had wished to fire upon your vessel we would have done so already. If you… settle down… we can move on.”“You’ve already fired on and stranded a Federation-registered civilian ship full of Federation citizens. You’ll forgive me if I do not accept your assurances,” the Andorian replied flatly. “If you are not here to offer battle it is
you who will disarm your weapons and fall back from the freighter, or I
will open fire on you.”
The Romulan actually looked as if he blanched at the cast rhodinium certainty in her voice. He recovered quickly and his
“Oh, very well, if that will satisfy you,” was convincingly annoyed and condescending, but Sheltarah knew she had the upper hand now.
Nodding to Anupong to mute the audio, she turned to Khaleel and said, “If he actually backs off it looks like he may be under specific orders.”
“And engaging a Federation starship and escalating this into a full-blown interstellar incident apparently exceeds these orders,” Khaleel agreed.
“Captain, the Romulan ships are pulling back from the
Griwald and are disarming their heavy weapons. Their disruptors are still armed and excess energy is being channelled into forward shield reinforcement,” Teodor reported.
Sheltarah almost smiled at the profound surprise in her taciturn tactical officer’s voice, but suppressed it and instead ordered, “Mr. Faris, ensure the safety of the
Griwald and its crew. Place us between the Romulans and the
Griwald. Prepare to drop the aft shield, pull the merchant ship in under our fantail and secure it there with tractor beams, and have the transporter rooms beam the merchant crew aboard once their ship is secure within our shield envelope.”
“Understood, Captain,” her XO acknowledged her and began relaying these orders to the appropriate people as Sheltarah once again turned her mind to the Romulan problem. “Now then, let us find out what is staying their hand. Restore audio to the Romulans, Mr. Paochinda,” she instructed. Once the channel was re-opened, she told the so-far anonymous Romulan, “You will now identify yourself and your reason for attacking Federation shipping.”
Having crossed swords with the Romulans several times in the past Sheltarah was quite certain she could see embarrassment warring with fury on his face.
Okay, this is going to be good, but I’d better not push him too hard or he might just attack to save face – and there are
two of them.Commander Tafv tr’Amalek stared at the auburn-haired Andorian captain from behind coal-clack eyes that he hoped were concealing his acute embarrassment at having overplayed his hand. The appearance of the advanced Federation battleship had rattled him and in attempting to secure the upper hand against it he’d instead apparently convinced her captain she had to make a fight of it.
Fleet Intelligence had most assuredly mated with a Klingon on this mission. Unless Starfleet had been foolish enough to send in one of their bumbling science vessels/spy ships, the only ships supposed to be in this region were Miranda or Constellation class.
So now here he was, supposed to be “delivering a message” to the Federation from the Senate without causing an incident that resulted in a formal protest or a more aggressive stance from Starfleet. The threat implicit in the firepower of his two battlecruisers would have been enough against their expected opposition but was just barely enough on two mobile platforms to overcome the single behemoth before them now, if their individual ships could survive long enough to deliver a co-ordinated attack.
But I am not here to fight, he reminded himself, trying to set aside his tactical mindset for a more strategic one. Addressing his opposition, he refused to identify himself and focused on his own directives.
“Captain, once again the Star Empire notes that the Federation extends the tentacles of its territory and its insidious influence all around the periphery of our borders. The Star Empire can rarely pick a direction to look outward without seeing the flag of the Federation or the warp signature of one of its starships spoiling the view,” Tafv stated pointedly, pinning her with a look as he warmed to his speech.
It helped that he personally believed it to be 100% true.
“This so-called ‘Nirophian Corridor’ of yours is a perfect example. Soon, through this contrivance, you will expand your influence to the space beyond our frontiers to anti-spinward – what you call the ‘Beta Quadrant’ – and close off our own avenues of expansion. If we as a people are to remain the masters of our own destiny, the Star Empire cannot allow this to go unchallenged.
“So we are serving notice to your Federation, Captain. The Rihannsu Star Empire will no longer stand by and allow the gradual but inexorable encroachment of your territory against ours, pinning us in place and hemming us in on all sides.
“You would do well to respect our wishes in his matter.”
Regally turning to his own comm officer, he nodded at her to close the channel and the screen returned to his view of the Federation battleship. “Plot a course to Starbase Fourteen at warp five and supply it to our compatriot. Execute when ready.”
“Ie, Riov,” the helm officer acknowledged and began operating his console.
Tafv took a long, hard look at the
Fearless – a look tinged with envy.
An apt name for such a ship, he considered.
The Empire has ships to match her now, but too few and I will not command any of them, he lamented, thinking wistfully of the older Moon Hawk-class heavy battlecruiser and Melak-class Warbird, and the new Ivarix-class prototype being constructed at this very moment. In this previously unimportant sector of the border there had been no need of such vessels, but Tafv knew Starbase Fourteen’s fleet would see significant changes in the near future.
*****
After the still-nameless Romulan closed the channel, his two ships leisurely came to a new heading and flashed into warp speed without even bothering to cloak.
Face hard, Sheltarah ordered, “Stand down from Red Alert but maintain Security Alert. Divert weapons power to the sensors and keep our shields up until we need to lower them. Helm, lay in a course for Aljetarius.”
“Aye-aye, Captain,” her crew acknowledged as they set about their tasks.
“Commander Faris, is the
Griwald secure?”
Khaleel nodded. “The ship has been locked in place within our standard shield envelope and her crew has been brought aboard and assigned guest quarters on Deck Six. I’ve arranged for a debriefing with them after they’ve settled in.”
“Excellent. Thank you, Commander,” Sheltarah told him, pleased again by her XO’s initiative. “I also want you to call a staff meeting after their debriefing. I want opinions and options.”
“Understood, Captain. Anyone outside the usual suspects you want in attendance?”
“Any Romulan cultural specialists we have on board – make sure Lieutenant Tkeshelashvili is among them – and anyone with a background in astropolitics.”
Faris’ eyes widened. “You’re serious about this.”
The Andorian gestured sharply at the viewscreen, which showed the disabled Tellarite freighter held in place under their fantail. “Our home-breakers seemed quite serious to me, Commander. Master Shalloch was correct; this was nothing like their usual posturing but it was quintessentially Romulan. See to it, Commander. I want to have a complete report and debriefing for Admiral Barragán before we get to Aljetarius.
“Aye Sir. I’m on it.”
*****
An hour later and the
Griwald crew were as happy as… well, Tellarites in a mud bath. With their ship being repaired and slightly refurbished by Starfleet engineers and the luxurious guest quarters they occupied on the
Fearless, as well as making better time back to Aljetarius than they normally would be under their own power, Shalloch and his crew had practically fallen over each other in their attempts to be helpful during their debriefing. Unfortunately, there was literally nothing else to learn from their assault. The Romulans had apparently waited for the confluence of an easy target and the farthest separation of the local patrol ships before jumping the unlucky
Griwald.
Now
en route to the so-called ‘Starbase 77’ at a steady warp six and with the requested staff assembled before her in the large conference room, Sheltarah now set the agenda.
“We are here to discuss the message that the Romulans just gave to us and the implications it has for the Federation and the astropolitical landscape as it stands in the present and future, for the purpose of a detailed analysis and options for our superiors,” the Andorian
zhen began, sweeping her violet gaze across her crew. “All opinions and comments of a constructive nature are welcomed and will be entertained. Now, for those who have not yet seen it, please give your attention to the wall screen.” She nodded to Khaleel, who tapped a control and started the playback. Once it was over, she gave everyone a minute of silent contemplation to order their thoughts before beginning the brainstorming.
“Impressions?” she asked.
“How sure are we that this can be considered a genuine message from the Romulan government?” Mark Stanhope asked immediately. “This is not the way most governments maintain communications with one another.”
“Very true, Commander, but this is consistent with observed Romulan behaviour,” said Ensign Åke Svensson, his slight Swedish accent elongating his vowels. The ship’s junior contact specialist had been included on the guest list as his superior had been left on Nirophia. “The Romulan government seems quite content to let their ship captains speak for them in diplomatic matters and those of interstellar relationships. Their diplomats only seem to be on station for intelligence gathering purposes or for other governments to make requests of or statements to them. This is entirely like the isolationist and very private Romulan nature,” Åke rounded off his exposition. “I would recommend taking it at face value, and indeed I’ll not be surprised if the Romulan Ambassador to the Federation Council confirms this message when approached. He likely will not volunteer it.”
Those present looked thoughtful at that.
Teodor’s sonorous voice spoke up. “Tactically speaking, the Romulans had complete advantage over us when the revealed themselves. Had they wanted to destroy or capture this ship, or merely test our capabilities in a real battle, they could have done so on no more favourable terms.”
“Would they have succeeded in destroying us?” asked CMO Cao. At the looks she was getting, the slight Chinese woman elaborated, “I only ask to rate their chances for success. If they felt they could not defeat us in battle – having expected a smaller opponent – they might have made all this up as a face-saving matter.”
“A very good point, Doctor,” Sheltarah commented. “Even with that advantage, their victory over us was by no means assured. They might have badly damaged us on the attempt but we could certainly have defeated them, unless they got really lucky with a critical hit through weakened shields.” Turning to her XO, she asked, “Commander, how likely do consider it that the Romulan was just blowing snow at us because he caught a shark instead of a seal in the trap he set?”
Khaleel frowned. “Not very highly, Sir. Consider the elaborate set up, the fact that no one on the Tellarite freighter was even injured in the attack that wrecked their warp drive and trashed their sensors, and then the timescale involved in a Starfleet ship responding to a distress call. They obviously knew some ships were in the region but it seemed to be that he was shaken by us and by how soon we showed up.” Faris shook his head. “No, they were prepared to wait and were concerned for lives lost. This Romulan was definitely under orders.”
“And if he had his own agenda, Sir?” Teodor asked levelly.
“I cannot evaluate that possibility, Lieutenant. We have no way of knowing if this was yet another renegade ship commander until we query one of their diplomats or naval liaisons, or Starfleet Intelligence.”
“And that will be the purview of Starfleet Command or the Federation Council,” Sheltarah stated decisively. “We will proceed on the assumption that he was a genuine representative of the Romulan government. Now, what of his claims?”
“Pure hyperbole,” Stanhope stated dismissively. “The borders observed today were set up in response to their aggression and it sticks in their craw that we beat them back a hundred and fifty years ago and have continued to beat them back every time they cross those borders, either overtly or covertly. We respect Gorn and Klingon territory. We don’t sneak over their borders or travel through their space to stare at the Romulans from the Beta Quadrant, and this new Nirophian Corridor’s emphasis is on trade with the Hydrans and to explore in directions away from the Romulan Empire. Their claims are baseless and self-serving, giving them a pretext to actively interfere with our operations.”
“I don’t know about that, Sir,” Lieutenant Sofiko Tkeshelashvili countered respectfully in her faint Russian accent. The Georgian Anthropology and Archaeology Officer continued, “I can see their point. While the Hydrans are in the opposite direction to the Romulans from Sector 16447, we’re not going to be satisfied with just that, are we? We’re going to explore in all directions, maybe try to forge closer ties with the Lyrans, attempt first contact with the Sha’Kurians and these ‘Nameless Ones’ the Klingons are constantly fighting, and make new friends in the area with the minor species and independent planets. So while the Romulans were exaggerating for obvious effect, they are proceeding from what they see as fact.” At Stanhope’s dismissive snort, Sofiko added, “Let me put it this way: how would we – the Federation – feel if the Romulans were setting up colonies, outposts, Fleet bases, and forging ties with inhabited worlds all around our borders?”
“The situation is not the same,” Stanhope objected firmly. “We have no hostile intentions towards them!”
“Intentions, no. But perception is everything here. Our expansion into an area leads to greater stability and in establishing a presence we prevent or at least give pause to the usual Romulan means of expansion: by conquest.” Tkeshelashvili looked meaningfully around the table. “I’d call that ‘hemming in’.”
“Then they should resort to diplomatic overtures and get over their own innate smug sense of superiority and realise they’re just like the rest of us,” Mark shot back. “We’ve proven it to them time and again that we can outsmart and outfight them so how they still believe they’re destined to rule the galaxy because of an inherent natural superiority is beyond me.”
That caused a few restrained, mirthless chuckles but Tkeshelashvili looked annoyed. “The Romulans have never trusted us – or anyone else for that matter – and probably never will. They also think that everyone else, while inferior, think like
them, seeing enemies everywhere and always looking for the advantage. A view that is partially supported by the likes of the Klingons, Mira’Kzinti, Sha’Kurians, etc. We – the Federation – expand more quickly than they do, curbing their natural expansionist ways, and yet have all these peaceful platitudes. So, they think we do nothing but lie and entice and bewitch to gain all these smaller nations which proves their point that we’re untrustworthy.”
“It’s a self-fulfilling prophecy,” Faris spoke up, mainly to break up the back and forth between the second and A&A officers.
“Indeed,” Rodrigo Luis da Costa stepped into the discussion. The Brazilian stellar cartographer brought up a 3D holograph of local space over the conference table before continuing. “Looking at it from a purely cartographical perspective, we
are hemming the Romulans in. Us, and everyone else, that is. They have the Gorn to coreward, the Klingons to rimward, and the Federation to spinward, which only leaves them the resource poor systems and stellar deserts of the galactic zenith and nadir, and anti-spinward into the Beta Quadrant.” The holo had rotated and zoomed in on the respective areas as da Costa mentioned them. Now focusing on the Beta Quadrant as his explanation continued, Rodrigo stated, “Even in the Beta Quadrant the Romulans are directly competing with the Klingons for territory and resources, fighting skirmishes with the Gorn and Sha’Kurians, and encountering dead worlds and entrenched holdouts from the ISC war a decade ago. Now, with the opening of this corridor to Sector 16447, the Romulans are going to once again start encountering their ancient enemy: us.
“Combined with everything else we’ve gone over here today, if I were the Romulans, I’d be worried too.”
There was a collective pause for breath around the table at those sobering words.
“This is real then,” Faris commented seriously. “If this is how the Romulans are truly viewing the situation, we can expect to run into them a lot more in the future.”
“Yes,” Sheltarah agreed. “And they’re going to be hindering our own exploratory and first contact missions into this region – which they consider to be their own clan gardens – and they’ll start making outright grabs for any planets they can get their hands on, inhabited or otherwise.”
A pall seemed to settle over the officers present as they absorbed this information; it did not make for a shining future of peace and goodwill between the Federation and Star Empire.
“I will need to confirm the veracity of the Romulan commander’s words through Starfleet Command and their own diplomats. Hopefully, this will just be a Romulan with a personal agenda and this is not the direction their government intends to go in.” She swept her gaze across her assembled crew. “Thank you everyone. Your input was most valuable. Dismissed.”
Her new nodded as one and started leaving the conference room. Faris hung back to exchange a few final thoughts with his captain.
“If the Romulans are going to start seriously gunning for us, what is the Federation going to do? Stop all exploratory efforts into the Beta Quadrant?”
“That is an option the Council may have to consider, Commander,” Sheltarah commented sourly. “After all, Starfleet did decommission all the guard stations along the Klingon border after Khitomer, leaving only the main sector starbases and trading base-stations in place.” She sighed, still unable to believe that had actually happened – and still offering prayers to Uzaveh in gratitude that the peace still held with the Klingons. Bringing herself back the present, she added, “There is still the matter, however, of how seriously to take this declaration. It could be mere posturing, designed to intimidate us into backing off.”
“But you don’t believe that.”
Sheltarah met her XO’s blue eyes unflinchingly. “No.”
“And the independent and Prime Directive-protected peoples of the Beta Quadrant?” Faris demanded. “What of their fates? Will we abandon them to the depredations of the Romulans as they pursue their ‘natural expansionist practices’? How many species would we be complicit in the enslavement or extermination of?”
Her XO’s strident questions provoked an equally intense reaction from her own emotions. “Believe me, Commander,” she stated with deadly sincerity, “I’m going to make sure we, Starfleet, and the Federation do everything in our power to head off that precise eventuality.”
Faris relaxed slightly. “I’m glad to hear that, Captain. It does seem we have our work cut out for us though.”
“Agreed, Commander,” Sheltarah responded soberly. “But if there’s anywhere it can be done from, it will be from here. Out on the front line, starting with what is decided on the bridge of this ship.
“And I don’t intend to fail in that responsibility.”
A hard smile graced her XO’s face, backed by a resolution she could see blazing from his eyes. “Then we’d best be about it, Captain,” he stated firmly.
She nodded, an answering smile on her own powder-blue features.
“Let’s get back to the bridge. We’ve got work to do.”
The End