
PROLOGUE

Kirk knew it was over...
    ... in Yosemite. The rocky face of El Capitan blurring past
him...
   ... on the Enterprise-B. The bulkhead of the deflector room
ripped away by the unfathomable power of the Nexus, pulling
him into space...
    ... on Veridian III. Plunging downward, twisting, in a
tangle of torn metal as Picard defeated Tolian Soran . . .
    .. and on the Borg homeworld. The two captains of the
Enterprise, Kirk and Picard, each ready to throw the switch
that would shut off all power to the collective's Central Node.
The power feedback wouM be immediate. Whoever threw that
switch wouM die.
"It's my job to do it, "Picard insisted "You ?e done enough."
But Kirk's course was chosen. His body was being inexora-
bly damaged from within by the Borg nanites that had
reconstructed him and brought him back from that undiscov-
ered country that lies beyond life
    "Jean-Luc," he said, "I'm dying." The nanires would see to
that in less than a day.




  But Picard would not be swayed. "Who isn't?"
     Spock's voice crackled out of Kirk's comm badge. "Enter-
 prise to away team. We are at thirty seconds to emergem'y
 beam-out. What is your status?"
     Picard locked eyes with Kirk. Touched his own corem
 badge. "This is Picard, Enterprise. Break off your approach.
 Repeat--"
     Kirk pushed Picard~ hand away from his comm badge, hit
 his own.
  "Ignore that last order, Spock. Bring that ship in."
  '7 am not leaving/" Picard said.
  Kirk was about to shout back. when he suddenly stood down.
     "Did you ever try to save the Kobayashi Maru at the
 Academy?"
     Picard regarded Kirk with deep suspicion. "Yesss . . . But it
 can't be done. It's a no-win scenario designed for cadets."
     Kirk smiled. "That's what they'd like you to believe. But
 there is a strategy' that can win it. It's just that nobody, in your
 time seems to do it anymore. Spock tells me it's a lost art now."
   "Are you suggesting a compromise?"
  Kirk thought it over. "You could call it that."
    "I~,ll, "Picard said. "Go ahead. I'm always open to sugges-
tions."
  Kirk nodded. "Good."
  Then he slugged Picard in the jan. as hard as he could.
  Picard dropped like deadweight.
    Kirk dragged Picard by' his collar. until he was well away
fi'om the power conduit.
    He pulled off his own corem badge. touched the .front to
activate it.
 "Kirk to Enterprise," he said.
 "Spock here."
 Kirk smiled.
 He felt better already.
  "Keep the ship out of danger. Mr. Spock." He studied the

Starfleet delta in his hand. Remembered when it had belonged
only' to the Enterprise. But some things had to change. It was
the way of the world. Of the universe.
 He was glad to have been part of it.
    "Lock on to my signal," Kirk said. "One to beam up." Then
he tossed his corem badge onto Picard's chest and stepped
back.
    Picard reacted to the impact of the badge. His eyes opened.
He looked up. Started to speak.
    Then dissolved in the transporter as the Enterprise once
more claimed her own.
    Kirk turned back to the power conduit. Grabbed the lever in
both hands. Tested it once to see how much force he might
need. Felt it move easily.
 ",4 second chance," he said aloud
 Then he closed his eyes.
 Squeezed his hands tight.
 Pulled.
    Heard a sudden, deafening roar of thunder coming from the
dome.
  Then a scrape as quiet as a footstep behind him.
  Kirk turned.
  Opened his eyes.
    San' the shimmer of an energy beam sweep across the floor
like a searchlight. Whatever that beam touched glowed as if lit
.from within, then disappeared.
 As if the shimmer were a transporter beam.
  Or a phaser set to disintegrate.
    The dome above him cracked open with an explosive blos-
som of energy.
  Kirk felt the floor rise up beneath him.
    Less than a heartbeat remained before the energy feedback
that he had set in motion wouM destroy the Central Node.
    There was no time for Spock's logic. No time for McCoy g
emotion. There was only time for action.




    And Kirk responded, even in what might be his last moment
of existence.
    He threw himself forward, dissolving in the beam as all
around him was vaporized.
    Whatever the beam's origins, whatever it was, Kirk was still
alive. Within it.
 Once more he fell.
 From El Capitan. . .
 From the Enterprise-B...
 From the FetidJan precipice...
 Alone to his death.
 As he had always known he must.
 But without knowing why he knew.
 Or how he knew.
 Until now...

ONE

This was the first time. When it had all begun.
When it hurt even to breathe the icy air of Tarsus IV.
Blinding snow swirled around him, glistening in the light of
the planet's twin moons, covering his tracks as quickly as he
made them. He was weak with hunger, shaking with fear and
bitter cold as he fled into the darkness, knowing that he could
not run forever.
    This first time, he was thirteen years old. He was alone and
the shadow was behind him. Running even faster.
    There could be no doubt. Death pursued him. Relentless.
Inescapable.
    The boy lost his footing in the snow, slammed into the ice-
prickled bark of a daggertree, thudded backward to the
ground with a gasp of pain.
    He lost his breath. Tasted blood from a sudden cut on his
cheek.
 Tears ran from his eyes.
    His whole body ached with the cold, with frustration, with
fear, more than any child, any man, anyone should bear.
 Sprawled in the snow, the boy gave up, closed his eyes.




     Saw the face of Kodos staring back at him. A face he would
 never forget.
  ... boy... keep running...
    Jimmy Kirk's eyes flew open. He looked up, startled,
expecting to stare into the glowing barrel of a laser rifle.
Whoever had just whispered in his ear could only have been
centimeters away.
  But there was no one near him.
    The boy struggled to his feet, convinced he was not alone.
But all he saw was the stabbing shaft of light dancing through
the clark silhouettes of the trees, coming from the handtorch
of his pursuer.

   .. keep running...
      The boy stumbled forward, sobbing. His toes burned with
the cold in his frozen boots.  But he ran.
    Eight thousand people had lived on this planet when he had
arrived here.
    It was a colony world. His parents had friends here. He was
to spend a semester with them, then meet his father to travel
back home. To Earth.
    But the Romulans had done something in the Neutral
Zone. His father's leave from Starfleet had been canceled.
The shipping lanes closed.
 And then the fungus struck.
 It destroyed the grain. Poisoned the animals.
 Four thousand people survived on Tarsus IV now.
    Governor Kodos had killed the other four thousand to
extend the food supply.
    It was a "necessity," the governor had told those gathered
by the open pits that would be their graves.
 The boy still heard the lasers. The screams.
 And still there was not enough food.
 So thirteen-year-old Jimmy Kirk, with no parents to pro-

tect him, no ration book to feed him, no one to speak up for
him, was selected for the second list.
 Out of necessity, said the governor.
 A beam of light flashed over him.
 The boy almost fell, knowing he had been found.
    But the near yet distant voice whispered once more...
keep running ....
    The boy wavered, confused. It was almost as if he were
hearing someone else's thoughts.
 A shaft of light locked on to him.
 He tried to twist away, but it followed him.
    He tensed, waiting for the searing pain of a laser, lost his
footing, slipped in the ice and the snow, tumbling wildly,
arms waving, screaming out for his father as he fell...
alone--
 --into two strong arms that caught him.
 Saved him.
    Then a caring voice spoke, calm, reassuring, soothing
beyond any rational explanation. The same voice that had
whispered to his mind now spoke to him in person.
    "Let me help," that voice said, three words which would
resonate in the boy's life forever.
    The boy stopped struggling. He knew it wasn't Kodos who
held him, nor one of the governor's men.
    He looked around, suddenly realizing that his run through
the woods had led him to the field where the landing pads
were.
    There was a new ship there, its outline barely visible
through the blowing snow. But its viewports and loading bay
were clearly defined by the blinding shafts of brilliant light
that streamed from them, swirling snowflakes into streaks like
stars seen from warp.
    Silhouetted against that light, dark figures unloaded crates
with antigrays.




 Supplies. The colony was saved.
    With relief greater than he could express, the boy looked up
at the tall stranger who had caught him, half-expecting to see
his own father.
    "Are you from Starfleet?" the boy asked, his teeth chatter-
ing with the cold.
 The stranger tugged back the hood of his parka.
 The boy's gaze fixed on the points of the man's ears.
 "You're a Vulcanian?" the boy stammered.
 "I am Sarek," the Vulcan said. "And you are safe now."
 For a moment, Jimmy Kirk almost believed him.
    But then from behind, Kodos spoke: "The boy was a
witness. He must die."
    Jimmy Kirk twisted in Sarek's grip to see Kodos three
meters away, laser rifle unslung, barrel glowing. There was a
handtorch clipped to the rifle's sight. The boy squinted at its
brightness.
    But Sarek didn't turn away from the light. "No more will
die," he said. "We were wrong."
    Kodos raised his rifle. "What is it you are so fond of say-
ing... ? About the needs of the many outweighing the needs
of the few?"
    Sarek kept his hand locked around the boy's wrist, to keep
him close. At the same time. he stepped forward, placing his
body as a shield between the boy and Kodos.
    "The experiment must end," Sarek said. "The Romulan
action was not anticipated."
    "Not anticipated? That was the point of the lesson. Safe-
guards must be taken. They have to learn. The boy must die,
like the others."
    Kirk's eyes widened as Sarek drew a compact laser pistol
and aimed it directly at Kodos. From the governor's reaction,
the sight of a Vulcanian brandishing a weapon was as
remarkable to Kodos as it was to the boy.
 But Kodos did not lower his rifle.

 "We will permit you to leave on our vessel," Sarek said.
    "There are four thousand who know me back in the
colony."
    "We will provide you with a new identity, passage to a
different sector."
 "And what of the cause?" Kodos demanded.
 The boy heard hesitation in Sarek's reply.
 "It must be... reexamined."
    "Vulcanians." Kodos frowned. "Your logic is a mask for
your cowardice."
 Sarek's arm was like duranium, his aim unmoved.
    The boy leaned out from behind Sarek to stare at Kodos.
The governor looked directly at him. "Even if I never see any
of the colonists again, this boy's heard every word we've said
about my leaving."
 "He will not remember them."
 The boy didn't like the sound of that. Neither did Kodos.
 "And if he does?"
"Then I shall be at equal risk with you. Just as I am now."
For long moments, the boy shivered. Then Kodos turned
off his rifle, removed the attached handtorch, and slung the
rifle over his back. He directed the handtorch downward, at
the ground. The shadows cast upward were unsettling to the
boy. He did his best to ignore them.
 Sarek returned his laser pistol to the folds of his parka.
    Kodos moved threateningly close to Sarek, held up his
hand in the Vulcanian salute.
    "Live long and prosper." The governor's voice was heavy
with sarcasm. He stared down at Jimmy Kirk. "If you ever
speak about what you've seen here, boy, I'll know. And the
Vulcanians can't protect you forever. Someday you'll be
alone, and I promise you, that will be the day you will die."
    Sarek pulled the boy closer. Somehow, at the Vulcanian's
touch, Jimmy Kirk felt his unreasoning urge to run back into
the woods begin to fade.




 "Leave. Governor. We shall not meet again."
    "For the sake of the cause, you had better hope you're
right."
    Then Kodos pushed past them, striding off toward the
Vulcaman ship on the landing pad.
    Jimmy Kirk stared after him, his shivering almost gone.
But not hts fear or his anger. "Why are you letting him go?"
    Sarek looked down with eyes that seemed far older than the
rest of him. "l have a son, only a few years older than you."
    The boy never understood the way adults talked about
children. What did the VulcanJan's answer have to do with his
question? He struggled in Sarek's grip. "He's getting away!
You're letting him get away!"
    But Sarek's hold was unbreakable. "No one escapes his
fate. young human. Neither Kodos. Nor I." Even to a
thirteen-year--old whose knowledge of Vulcanians came pri-
marily from schoolboy jokes, the sadness in Sarek's words
was unmistakable.
    "What about me?" the boy asked with all the bitterness of
youth unjustly ignored.
    Sarek bit the edge of a glove and tugged it off, baring his
hand to the ~cy wind of Tarsus IV. "No one can know the
future." he said.
    Then, to the boy, it suddenly seemed as if the two of them
were somewhere else, on a blistering desert, or in a quiet
forest, or... The middle-aged Vulcanian seemed centuries
old, sallow and shrunken.
    Jimmy Kirk shook his head, clearing his mind of the
strange images that had filled it. "I know my future," he said
malignantly.
    "Then let us share it," Sarek replied. He reached out to
touch h~s fingers to precise points on the boy's face.
    "What are you doing?" The boy was nervous. He had heard
storzes about Vulcanians and their strange mental powers.
They could change shape, fly, even--

"Shh," Sarek whispered. "Your mind to my mind..."
The touch of the Vulcanian's fingertips was electric. The
boy felt his body relax instantly, as if the VulcanJan had
drained him of emotions.
    For a few moments, he seemed to be observing images
through someone else's eyes. He saw... the Plains ofGol? A
red desert? Words came to him from another language, as if
his thoughts were mixing with another's. "Our minds are one," Sarek intoned.
 The boy heard a whispered voice ask his name.
 "We are one, James Kirk," Sarek said aloud.
    Just then, the boy experienced, felt, saw an image of a
Vulcanian boy, a teenager, sharp-featured, with a human
woman at his side.
    The teenager's unpronounceable VulcanJan name flashed
into Jimmy Kirk's consciousness as he suddenly understood
that Sarek and he had somehow merged their minds. That
desert was on Vulcan! The teenager was Sarek's son! He was
seeing through Sarekg eyes.
    The boy was astounded, amazed, excited. Overwhelmed
with alien thoughts and concepts. He wanted more. To see
more. To know more.
 But something held him back.
    No, James Kirk, Sarek's thoughts whispered. This meld is
nol for knowledge. This meld is to help you forget thai which
you should never have known.
  No, the boy thought.
  Forget, Sarek commanded.
  "Never," the boy said aloud.
    But the struggle was unequal and the boy's last conscious
memory of that night was Sarek reflecting on an unexpected
discovery: How like my son ....
    In his mind, in his memory, Kirk continued to fall from the
Borg homeworld.
 He wondered whose arms would save him this time.

I1




Two

It was not supposed to be this way.  Picard knew it.
    He could sense the same frustration in each member of his
bridge crew as the Enterprise~E screamed through space, all
weapons systems locked on to a sister ship of the Federation.
Of Starfleet.
    The captain of the Enterprise gripped the arms of his
command chair, willing himself to stay focused on his mis-
sion.
    But he felt poised on the brink of a precipice, and at any
moment he knew he would slip and fall and there would be no
way back.
 Not for anyone.
    The Enterprise shuddered as Data banked the mighty
Sovereign-class vessel to slip past an asteroid at better than
five hundred kilometers per second--a fraction of the speed
the ship was capable of achieving, but as fast as the asteroid
belt of the Alta Vista system made practical.
    The ship's deflectors nudged the asteroid aside, but the
imperfect momentum exchange between starship and space
rock made the internal dampeners lag, jarring the bridge crew

to the side. Ever since the deflector array had been replaced,
after Picard's last encounter with the Borg in Earth's twenty-
first century, the navigational deflectors remained slightly,
though maddeningly, out of phase.
    The unsettling vibration that imbalance brought to the ship
was a constant reminder to Picard of what all of Starfleet
faced: the lack of resources to correct what should have been a
simple problem.
    The fleet was stretched too thin, and not even the genius of
Chief Engineer La Forge could work miracles when he was
denied the most basic supplies and replacement parts.
    "Coming up on Alta Vista two five seven," Data an-
nounced.
    Picard gave his order, knowing how useless it was. "Stand
by on tractor beams." From the corner of his eye, he saw Will
Riker turn in his first officer's chair.
 "Using the tractor beams won't work," Riker said.
    Picard felt his anger escape, unwanted, so close to being
uncontrollable. "I am not prepared to fire on a Starfleet
vessel."
    Riker did not turn away from his commanding of~cer.
"Captain Picard, we do not have a choice. The blockade must
be held or..."
 There was no need for Riker to finish.
 Everyone knew what he meant. Picard's orders were clear.
 "Or this will spread," Picard said.
    On the viewscreen, the asteroid field dead ahead spun
dizzyingly as Data rolled the Enterprise through a narrow gap
between two irregular carbonaceous chunks of stone, each ten
times the size of the ship.
    Directly beyond them was the nickel-iron crescent of Alta
Vista 257--the fifteen-kilometer-long asteroid behind which
their quarry hid, her master no doubt hoping to be shielded
from the Enterprise~ sensors.
 Picard set the approach. "One-eighth impulse, Mr. Data.

12                                                              13




 Course change: bearing mark eight seven. I want to come in
 from the side."
    Data's android fingers moved easily over the smooth con-
trol panels of the navigation console. "That is the longest way
around, sir. There is a chance the Bennett will run again
before we lock our tractor beam on her."
    Picard felt an inexplicable wave of sadness come over him.
At his left, Deanna Troi looked away from him, clearly
sensing his emotions but not wishing to intrude upon them.
As if there were anything she, or any of the others, could do.
    "The Bennett will not run," Picard said. They were at the
edge of the asteroid belt. There were no more hiding places
left in the Alta Vista system. "She has nowhere else to go."
    "Coming about on course change," Data said. His tone
betrayed that he still had far to go in integrating his emotion
chip with the rest of his personality programming, in order to
keep some of his feelings to himself. It was obvious that the
android did not believe his captain's assessment of the
situation any more than Picard did.
      For in truth, the commander of the Bennett did have one
last option open, other than that of surrendering.  "Ready on tractor beam," Riker said.
    Lieutenant Rolk acknowledged Riker's orders from her
tactical station behind the command chairs. The blue-
skinned Bolian security officer was a promising replacement
for Woff: brusque, confident, inhumanly competent.
 Data swung the ship about. "Coming up on target."
    The pockmarked surface of the asteroid flew by the view-
screen.
    "Asteroid horizon at eight hundred meters and... target
acquired!"
    The viewscreen flared as the blue glow of the Enterprise's
tractor beam shot out through space and locked on the
Bennett--a Fernandes-class cruiser escort, named for one of
the great admirals of the twenty-third century.

    The viewscreen image instantly expanded to show the
smaller vessel, an elongated disk half the size of the
Enterprise-E's saucer section, with twin warp nacelles trailing
from short, tapered pylons.
    "We have her, sir," Rolk stated, but with so little convic-
tion that Picard knew they would not have their quarry for
long.
 "Hailing frequencies," Picard ordered.
 "She is releasing additional mines," Data said.
    That was what the cruiser escort had done the last time the
Enterprise had snared her, three hours earlier on the other
side of the asteroid belt.
    The spherical mines, each a meter across, had been jetti-
sorted into the tractor beam, where they had been swiftly
drawn toward the Enterprise. As Rolk had taken each out
with a precision phaser hit, the resulting explosions had
disrupted the beam enough for the Bennett to escape.
 "Targeting mines," Rolk announced.
 "Do not fire," Picard said. "Full power to forward shields."
 "Sir," Data warned, "they are antimatter mines."
    "And our shields are at one hundred percent," Picard said.
Under these conditions, his new Enterprise could withstand
multiple impacts with minimal damage. The Bennett would
not escape him again.
 Picard stood to address his unseen captive.
 "This is Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Enterprise--"
 "First impact in two seconds," Data interrupted.
    "--requesting contact with the commander of the Ben-
nell."
    The viewscreen flashed white and the bridge shook as the
first mine detonated against the forward shields.
    "The Bennett's impulse engines are going to full power,"
Data said.
 "Add auxiliary tractor beams," Picard ordered. "But watch

14                                                                              15





the Bennett's structural integrity. We don't want to crack her
hull."
  "Two more detonations--"
    The jarring thunder of a double explosion echoed through
the bridge, replaced by the rising whine of the straining
tractor generators.
  "--imminent," Data completed.
    "Commander of the Bennett," Picard said. "You cannot
escape. Please, power down your engines and drop your
shields for boarding."
    Data turned in his chair to face Picard. "Captain, the
Bennett3 warp engines are powering up."
Riker stood up beside Picard. "He's in a tractor beam."
"Bennett acknowledge!" Picard urged. Other ships might
attempt such a maneuver against a Sovereign-class vessel and
survive, but not a cruiser escort. "If you attempt to go to warp
while in our tractor beam, you will destroy yourself."
    "Receiving a transmission from the Bennett," Rolk an-
nounced.
    "Onscreen," Picard said even as the bridge shook with the
final cluster of mine impacts and the tractor beam's whine
soared in response to the Bennett's continued impulse thrust.
    When the viewscreen flickered to display the image from
the Bennett's bridge, Picard's concern and frustration became
shock and bewilderment.
 How was this possible?
    The master of the -Bennett, the commander who had led the
Enterprise on a near-suicidal chase and who now held his ship
a hairsbreadth from destruction, was a Vulcanmyoung, male,
and in a Starfleet uniform.
    "Captain Picard, I request that you disengage your tractor
beam and release my vessel."
    The Vulcan's words were calm, unhurried, though every
action he had taken this day had been tinged with reckless
desperation.

    "May I know who I am addressing?" Picard asked. At the
very least, a Vulcan could be counted upon to negotiate, if not
explain. And, even more important, to listen to logic. "I am Stron," the Vulcan replied.
    Picard read the pips on the Vulcan's collar. "Lieutenant
Commander Stron," he began.
 But the Vulcan would not let him finish.
    "I have resigned my commission. I am no longer part of
Starfleet."
    "Perhaps you would care to reconsider," Picard said,
feeling his way through this inexplicable situation. "Other-
wise, you will be charged with the theft of a Starfleet vessel,
instead of simply misusing it."
 "I will not be charged with anything."
    With the briefest of glances, Picard looked past Data's
shoulders to check the status of the Bennett. Her impulse
engines still warred against the Enterprise's tractor beams.
Her warp engines were online in standby mode. Picard again
spoke. "I must warn you, sir, that as yet I fail to understand
the logic of your actions."
    The Vulcan's gaze was unwavering as he held up two
fingers. "Attend me," he said.
    A young human female, also in a Starfleet uniform with
lieutenant-commander pips, stepped into the image area. She
touched her two fingers to Stron's in a ritual Vulcan embrace
between husband and wife. Picard estimated the young
woman was six months pregnant.
    "There are no prospects for the future in this system,"
Stron said, as if that explained everything.
    "That can be corrected," Picard answered, hoping that
what he said might someday be true. "But in the meantime, I
must insist you and your family return to quarantine. We will
escort you back to Gamow Station."
    The Vulcan's mouth tensed in what Picard recognized from
experience as a powerful display of emotion.

16                                                                                   17




    "The replicators are failing, Captain Picard. Gamow Sta-
tion was designed to support fifty scientists for the study of
solar inversions. It cannot support fourteen hundred refu-
gees."
"We will provide additional supplies," Picard promised.
"How?" There was almost bitterness in Stron's tone. "You
already off-loaded all your emergency supplies when you
joined the blockade. You have not been resupplied since. No
Starfleet vessel in this sector has."
    Picard sighed. He hated arguing with Vulcans. "Stron,
return to the outpost, submit to quarantine. It is the only way
to survive."
  "To return is to face certain death."
    Picard spoke sharply. "If I let you go, you will spread death
to whichever world you visit next."
    "NOW Stron's eyes flashed with most un-Vulcanlike anger.
"My mate and I have been through the transporter six
times--each time with the biofilters set to finer resolution."
    "The biofilters are ineffective," Picard said. "The virogen
cannot be screened out by the transporter."
    Onscreen, Stron and his mate appeared to exchange a
worried look.
    "listen to reason, Stron. The finest minds in the Federa-
tion are working on this. There will be a solution soon. But we
cannot risk spreading the contagion any further."
    Stron's mate took. Stron's hand in hers, squeezed tightly. It
seemed to Picard that some unspoken signal had passed
between them.
    "I was a communications officer," Stron said, with full
Vulcan reserve now returned to him. "I have intercepted and
decoded every message Starfleet has sent to you in the past
month."
  "No ...."Picard knew the terrible projections the Vulcan
had seen. Knew why they must still be kept classified.

    "If we return to quarantine, we will die, Captain. Along
with the rest of this sector."
 "Stron! There will be a solution!"
    Stron's mate placed her hand on her swollen stomach,
closed her eyes.
    "To return to quarantine is to give ourselves over to a
painful death," Stron said evenly. "You will release us from
your tractor beam, or we will die quickly. Either way, we will
be free."
    Picard knew conviction when he heard it. He turned to
Deanna Troi. Eyes wide with concern, she nodded once,
confirming his unspoken question. She could sense the
Vulcan's emotional mood, and it was what Picard feared.
    "I cannot release you," Picard said slowly, surprised by the
strain betrayed in his voice.
 "I am now preparing to go to warp," Stron replied.
    "No," Picard said. "For the sake of your child, you must
have hope for the future!"
 Stron's eyes burned from the viewscreen.
    "I have seen the future in your Starfleet communiques. The
Federation cannot hold. Hope is not logical."
    Picard raised his hand as if he could reach through the
viewscreen and save them
    Picard's bridge was caught in blinding light as the image on
the screen instantly flicked to an exterior view of the
Bennett's destruction.
    The Enterprise lurched violently forward as the mass she
had been holding suddenly vanished, transformed into pure
energy.
    Red-alert sirens roared and sparks flew from an environ-
mental station as a subspace concussion wave from the
Bennett's imploding warp drive slammed against the Enter-
prise's shields along with the escort's debris.
 Riker braced Picard as both stumbled.




    "Stron attempted to go to warp," Data stated, quite unnec-
essarily.
     Picard felt himself slip from the precipice as he heard
Stron's calm voice whisper in his ear.
  The Federation cannot hold.
  Hope is not logical
 Picard knew it was not supposed to be this way.
But Stroll had spoken the truth. The Federation was dying.
After more than two hundred years, that unprecedented
assemblage of united worlds had finally met an enemy it
could not overcome.
 The Federation itself.

THREE

Eden was dying.
    The stranger's boots trod through its ashes, following a
path through the destruction and decay that had once been a
city, when this world had been alive and the Federation had
been secure.
    The planet's name was Chal, a Klingon term for Heaven.
Once, long ago, that was what this world had been.
    It was a water world, on the farthest reaches of the long-
disputed border between the Klingon and Romulan Empires.
The children of those empires had settled this world. The
chalchaj 'qmey. the Klingons had called them, the sky's
offspring, the Children of Heaven. For that is what they had been.
    Descendants of the Klingons and the Romulans, genetically
engineered for youth, and strength, and vigor, possessing the
best attributes of both species, then enhanced further with
transplanted tissue barbarically removed from living human
captives.
    They had been created at a time when interstellar war was
thought to be inevitable. When the Klingon and Romulan




leaders had feared the warmongering barbarians of the Fed-
eration would lay waste the worlds of the empires.
    The Children of Heaven had been created to live on those
war-ravaged planets, so that even if the empires should fall,
their offspring could rise up against the Federation monsters
and restore peace to the galaxy.
    But as diplomatic relations improved between the Federa-
tion and the empires, the old stereotypes faded. Surprisingly,
the soldiers of Starfleet turned out to be explorers, not
babykillers. The warriors of Qo'noS placed honor above
treachery. The Romulan senate did engage in public debate
and comprehended-the principles of compromise and cooper-
ation.
    Peace flourished--unsteady, uncertain, not always under-
stood. But the arms-race mentality that had created the
Children of Heaven faded from history. And left behind a
paradise.
    Eighty years ago, the stranger knew, the inhabitants of Chal
had applied for membership in the Federation. Their world
had been forgotten by the empires. They wished to chart their
own future.
    Though the Federation had responded favorably, certain
rumors had to be dispelled. Chal was not a fountain of youth.
The genetic vigor of her engineered inhabitants was solely
theirs. It could not be shared by breathing the atmosphere or
drinking the water.
 Still, Chal prospered in the Federation's embrace.
    Her legendary isles became a sought-after destination for
those desiring respite from the pressures of interplanetary
commerce. Cerulean blue waves lapped peacefully at sandy
beaches. Soft breezes stirred tropical plants that blossomed
with explosions of colors unknown on other worlds. The
warmth of twin suns enriched its life. Her children thrived.
 But that had been eighty years ago.
 Now putrescent waves were choked with massive blooms of

algae. Dying sea creatures littered sand dunes stained by
sludge and rotting alien kelp.
    The verdant jungles of Chal had withered. Surviving leaves
were stunted, obscured by the yellow and brown of decaying
vegetation.
It had been more than a year since a flower had blossomed.
And what the collapse of nature had begun, human fear had
accelerated.
    Hundreds of light-years away, in the security of the Federa-
tion's Bureau of Disaster Relief, what had happened on Chal
was now called the "evacuation difficulties."
    The stranger walked through the aftermath of those diffi-
culties.
    Destroyed buildings. Torched hovercraft. The central trans-
porter station little more than a blackened pit.
    The only structures that appeared untouched in Chal's
main city were those most recently erected by Starfleet's relief
mission.
    So it was to those structures the stranger went. To find the
records of the past. To sift through the ashes of what once had
been Eden.

    Commander Christine MacDonald swore as the replicator
control pad shorted out for the fifth time. The emitter of her
molecular welding probe sparked an instant later, its nanotip
exploding with a miniature sonic boom that echoed crisply
against the stone walls of the supply depot.
    "And that was the last isolinear on the planet," Engineer
Barc grunted beside her. He snapped his tricorder shut and
sat back on the floor, frowning at the smoke that curled up
from the replicator's inner workings. His snout twitched in
obvious displeasure at the acrid odor of burning insulation.
    Christine pushed a lock of curly blond hair off her fore-
head, unaware of the soot streak her blackened fingers left
behind. "That was probably the last isolinear in the sector,"





she sighed. Chal hadn't had a supply ship visit for almost two
months. Overall, Starfleet was six months behind in her relief
team's requisition requests.
    "So what now?" Barc asked. He was a Tellarite, and
Christine could tell from the way his fur was plastered to his
snout that the oppressive heat of the main city was gaining on
him.
  "Why don't you go take a mud bath," she suggested.
    Barc's beady black eyes widened for a moment; then he
ShUffled disconsolately. "Not enough water rations."
    Christine pulled back and forth on her uniform tunic,
trying to generate some sort of local breeze. Like most of the
other Starfleet personnel on this mission, she had long ago
given away almost all of her standard-issue clothing to the
stricken cztizens of Chal, including her sleeveless vests. To
face the unrelenting heat of Chal's summer, she had then cut
the arms off her uniform tunic. It wasn't regulation, but it
helped. "Can't use seawater?" she asked.
    Barc tapped a stubby hand against the side of his snout.
"As bad as it smells to you humans, it's a hundred times
worse to me."
    Christine held out her hand and helped Barc to his feet. "If
we can get this replicator working, we'll be able to turn out a
hundred liters of fresh water a day."
    "Rrr," Barc snarled. "And if my grandmother had snargs
she'd be a trasnik. There're just no more parts."
    "There're no more isolinear control chips," Christine cor-
rected. She gazed up at the wooden beams of the tall ceiling,
trying to reformulate the problem, to see it from a different
point of view. "But what if we take two engineering tricorders
and set them up to simulate a replicator control chip, as if we
were running a diagnostic?"
    Barc's snout twitched questioningly. "Tricorders aren't
made to do that."
 "What's that got to do with anything?"

    The engineer sniffed the stale air thoughtfully. "I suppose if
I increased the power supply... ran it through a type-two
inverter..."
    Christine smiled at the engineer. "You're a miracle worker,
Barcs."
    The Tellsrite snorted in derision. "That's what you keep
telling me." He waddied for the depot doorreno more than a
curtain of cloth to block the sun. "I'll be over at the shuttle
pads, trying to talk someone out of a tricorder."
    Christine smiled to herself. It was amazing what a little
inspiration could do for her engineer. And without supplies,
inspiration was just about all she had left to offer as com-
mander of Starfleet's relief mission to Chal.
    She turned back to the replicator, took a deep breath, then
exhaled sharply, straight up, to keep her unruly hair off her
forehead. There had to be something more she hadn't thought
of. Some way to get the recalcitrant machine to work. She
refused to accept defeat. She... realized the shuffle of Barc's
boots had been replaced by a different set of footsteps.
    Christine turned to see the stranger, surprised that he was
so close. She decided he must have entered the depot just as
Barc left. Either that, or he had walked in as silently as a
ghost.
    "This isn't a distribution center," she said, adopting a more
formal, Starfleet manner. But even as she spoke she realized
the stranger hadn't come for food or water. He didn't walk
with the round-shouldered stoop of the people of Chal--
people who had lived for a year in demoralizing despair. And
he didn't wear local clothes. Instead, he was gatbed in the
simple tunic and cloak of a Vulcan trader--austere, unassum-
ing, the garb of a pilgrim.
 "I only want information," the stranger said.
    Christine stopped thinking about the replicator and paid
closer attention to the stranger. Everyone on Chal was
exhausted. It was odd to hear such a measured, forceful voice




 again, especially coming from a human. If this had been the
 Academy and she had been an ensign, she would have been
 inspired to salute such a voice.
  "What kind of information, Mister... ?"
     Other than his beard, she couldn't discern his features,
 hidden as they were in his cloak's hood. Christine decided
 that under all those clothes, in this heat, he must be sweating
 like a... a Tellarite.
     "There is a graveyard at the outskirts of town. At least,
 there used to be."
    Christine folded her arms, fully aware that the stranger had
sidestepped her question about his name. She was intrigued,
and on guard. The last thing the people of Chal needed was
some smooth-talking swindler offering a way off the planet.
 "What about it?" she asked.
  "At city hall, they said the maps were kept here."
  "Maps? Of the graveyard?"
    "A... friend lived here," the stranger said, and his voice,
for a moment, lost its strength. "A long time ago."
    Now Christine understood. Another victim of Chal's mis-
fortunes, in search of his past. She nodded to a wide doorway
in the stone wall behind her. "We've got a central library
terminal still running in there. That should have what you
need. Follow me."
    She started toward the doorway, then paused as she saw the
stranger apparently transfixed by the open access panel on the
replicator. He was staring into its intricate jumble of wires,
conduits, and circuitry.
    It was such an unusual reaction that she suddenly had an
idea.
    "You wouldn't know anything about replicators, would
you?" she asked.
    The stranger snapped his head up, as if taken unawares.
"No. Machines and I..." He started forward. "No. Nothing
about replicatots, I'm afraid."

    Christine filed his reaction. She never wasted anything. But
she decided the replicator's innards must have reminded him
of something else. Something important, judging from his
reaction.
    The room in which the library terminal had been installed
was windowless. It was one of the coolest locations in the
depot. Christine enjoyed the sensation of the chilled air on
her bare arms. She gestured to the chair in front of the
terminal.
    But the stranger held back. "Please," he said, motioning to
the chair. "If you could."
    Christine frowned at the stranger. A grown human uncer-
tain about how to operate a computer? What planet had he
come from? Literally.
    But sensing his extreme reluctance, she set aside her
curiosity and took her place in front of the terminal. "You can
do most everything by talking to it."
    "Thank you," the stranger said, leaving no doubt that he
still wanted Christine to do the talking.
    She cleared her throat. "Computer: Access burial records
for Chal, main city... time period..." She looked back at
the stranger. "When did your friend... you know?"
    "I don't," the stranger said. "Sometime in the past...
eighty years."
    Christine passed the information on to the terminal. A
stream of names flew by. She glanced over her shoulder. "The
records are online. What was your friend's name?"
    "Teilani," the stranger said, and instantly Christine knew
his story.
    Whoever the stranger was, whoever Teilani had been, they
had been in love. Deeply. And then they had been separated
by some tragedy that had kept him from her for almost a
century. It was all there, all in the way he had said her name.
    Christine turned back to the computer, overwhelmed by
the emotions this traveler had nurtured for so long.




     She called up a keyboard on a control surface and entered
 the name in multiple listings, spelling it phonetically in
 Romulan and Klingon script.
  "Teilani," the computer said. "Searching."
    Christine thought it odd that the computer even had time
to add that statement. Fewer than a million people had lived
on Chal in the past century. The search should have been
instantaneous.
  "Record not found," the computer announced.
  "Are you sure she was from Chal?" Christine asked.
  The stranger nodded.
    "Search all population records for designated name,"
Christine said. Some Chal would have migrated. Perhaps the
grave the stranger sought was on another world.
    "Teilani: Speaker to the second Chal assembly. Federation
delegate, 2293 to 2314."
    The stranger stepped forward. Christine could sense his
grief. "Yes," he said.
  "Display location of grave."
    "Speaker Teilani is not listed as deceased," the computer
replied.
    "Present location?" the stranger asked, his voice hesitant,
as if not quite believing what he had just heard.
    "Speaker Teilani is in Starfleet medical facility three, Chal,
main city."
 Christine caught her breath.
 "She's alive...". the stranger whispered.
    Christine reached out to take the stranger's hand, not
knowing how to say what she knew she must.
 Medical facility three was a hospice for the terminally ill.
    If this Teilani, the love of this man's life, still lived, she was
not expected to live for long.

FOUR

-A-

Babel had changed in the century since Spock had first come
to it.
    The neutral planetold was now almost completely terra-
formed. Where once beneath oppressive metal domes the
warmongers and peacemakers of an earlier age had met to
shape the history of this small quadrant of the galaxy, now the
diplomats and ambassadors who were their heirs could walk
beneath open skies.
    Spock wondered if the less fettered environment had an
accompanying liberating effect on the treaties and the issues
decided here. There was no logic to that concept. But then, in
his 143 years of life, he had learned that logic seldom applied
in politics.
    It seldom applied to anything in which humans were
concerned.
    But as a long-lost friend had eventually taught him, that
wasn't necessarily wrong.
    Thus Spock turned his mind away from logic, and concen-
trated on the songs of the birds in the park before him. He
stood on a sweeping, white stone balcony of the assembly




hall, framed by fluted pillars, looking over the green, wind-
riffled leaves of the arcadia trees. Some had been planted long
ago, before artificial-gravity generators had been installed
throughout the planetold, and now towered tens of meters
into the air. But their younger seedlings barely topped five
meters, though their trunks were nearly twice as thick.
 That adaptation pleased Spock's sense of aesthetics.
    Both the younger and the older trees were of the same
species, yet each had altered itself according to the conditions
of its germination. The two generations were different, but
apart from their exteriors, they were the same within.
    Spock fingered the IDIC medallion he wore, meditating on
Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations and on the same-
ness of things. The trees of Babel were a worthy lesson.
 In time, he heard Srell's footsteps approach.
    A century ago, awaiting someone who might be bringing
news of such importance, Spock might have tried to judge
that person's mood by the length and strength of his stride,
and thereby deduce the information he brought.
    But even at the age of thirty, Srell was an adept of the
Kolinahr. Though it would be years before the young Vulcan
would be permitted to undergo the final rituals of that
discipline, in which his emotions would be purged in the
pursuit of pure logic, Spock had no doubt of SrelFs success.
Whatever Surak, the father of Vulcan logic, had envisioned as
the end result of his dream for his people, young Sreil had
surely achieved it. It was why Sarek, Spock's father, had
chosen the promising student as his aide seven years ago, and
why Srell continued in that role for Sarek's son. Spock knew
of no finer mind on Vulcan. Therefore he made no attempt to
interpret Srell's mood.
    As the elder ambassador finished his meditation, Srell
waited patiently at his side. Only when Spock had slipped his
IDIC back into his robes did he address his young aide, still

keeping his gaze on the colonnade of trees stretching out
before him.
 "I once stood on this balcony with my father."
    "Indeed," Srell replied. Admirably, the young Vulcan did
not seek to question Spock further.
    "A Babel Conference had been held to consider the matter
of Coridan's admission into the Federation."
    "One hundred and six standard years ago," Srell said
instantly. He was an excellent student of history. "I have
studied Ambassador Sarek's speech from that session. It was
most... unexpected."
    Spock nodded. He had observed that session himself, heard
his father hold forth on the fundamental nature of the
Federation, the quest for peace in the face of war, the pursuit
of perfection in the knowledge that perfection was never
possible.
    To hear a Vulcan speak in such illogical terms, soar so close
to poetry in his oration, had electrified the assembled diplo-
mats of that conference.
 Tellarites had pounded their hairy fists on their tables.
    Andorians had hissed with excitement, blue antennae
quivering.
 Sarek's speech indeed had been most unexpected.
    Spock knew that his father had held each of his listeners
captive by the power of his words, not emotions, raising his
voice only to remind them all of the power of the universal
ideals each representative held dear.
    That day, Sarek had made Coridan the most important
world in the galaxy, because it came to represent the Federa-
tion itself.
    "This is the moment we have come to," Sarek had con-
cluded that day. "Not to vote on the admission of one small
world, worth nothing in the vastness of the space and the stars
that surround us. But to say we do this thing not because it




will make us stronger, not because it will diminish our foes,
but because there is nothing else we can do if we are to be true
to those great beings whose words have brought us here
today."
    Then Sarek had recited the preamble to the great charter of
the Federation, and to all in that chamber on that day, it was
as though they heard those stirring words for the first time.
    Srell politely turned his gaze away from Spock as he said, "I
have always been curious about Sarek's strategy in construct-
ing that speech."
 "In what way?"
    Srell dipped his head a fraction of a millimeter in a
perfectly crafted show of Vulcan emotion, letting Spock know
that he apologized in advance for any unintentional offense
he might cause with his next words. "It seemed so ....
emotional."
    Spock straightened his robes. "Some of those who attended
that session believed my father to be a passionate man."
    Srell nodded thoughtfully. "Then his speech was not born
of cynicism."
    "I believe not," Spock said. "Though since his passing, we
shall never know."
    Srell regarded Spock with almost imperceptible puzzle-
ment. "I would have thought that on this matter, he would
have shared his mind with you."
    Spock sighed, a human affectation that in his latter years he
no longer strove to hide. The battle between his Vulcan and
his human heritage had ended long ago. "I never melded with
my father."
    Though the young Vulcan's expression did not change,
Spock could see that Srell was shocked speechless. For a
father and son not to share a mindmetd was almost unheard
of in Vulcan society. Though there was no logic to it, Spock
did regret those missed opportunities to know his father's
heart and mind.

    True, he had shared fleeting glimpses into Sarek's thoughts.
The legendary starship captain Jean-Luc Picard had once
melded with Sarek when the Enterprise had conveyed the
ambassador to Legara IV. Two years later, shortly after
Sarek's death, Picard had invited Spock to meld with him
and experience what Sarek had shared.
    Spock had accepted the invitation. The encounter had been
appreciated, but frustratingly incomplete. He had felt en-
meshed in shadows, seeing only brief glimpses of his father's
life. At the time, he had almost felt that Sarek had deliber-
ately masked his thoughts from him, though that was, of
course, completely illogical.
    Still, the lingering doubts about Sarek's neglect to meld
with his own son continued to gnaw at Spock, even to this
day, five years after his father's death.
    Srell seemed to sense Spock's discomfort in thinking about
the past.
    "Whatever the ambassador's motives, the speech was a
success," the younger Vulcan said politely. "Coridan was
admitted."
    Spock allowed an edge of irony to color his tone. "To
protect the planet's extensive dilithium reserves."
    "It was a different time," Srell allowed. Dilithium crystals,
so necessary for warp propulsion, had once been the fragile
lifeblood of the interstellar community. But now they were
easily recrystallized and thus abundant. Today, to start a war
over dilithium would make no more sense than to fight over
cometary ice. "Coridan's admission set a course for peace in
its sector that still continues. The ambassador's accomplish-
ment was most satisfactory."
    In Vulcan terms, Srell's comments were gushing, almost
fawning praise. But Spock allowed his aide the enthusiasm of
youth. He almost found it refreshing.
    "I regret I was not able to extend my father's legacy of
reconciliation," Spock said.




    Srell clearly understood Spock's comment, and that
Spock's attention had returned to what had brought them
both to Babel. "I suspected you would not need me to deliver
the news."
    "No," Spock agreed. "The result of the vote was that
obvious." That was the curse of logic. Spock had always
known that the first attempt to initiate official contact be-
tween Vulcans and Romulans would end in defeat. But at
least the groundwork had been laid for further attempts. One
of them would inevitably be successful. Eventually, Spock
knew, even he would be permitted to take his place in the
official negotiations, instead of having to rely on the presence
of his aide, in order to spare the Federation official embar-
rassment caused by Spock's unsanctioned attempts to broker
peace.
    But Srell's next comment exploded Spock's line of reason-
ing. "Actually, Ambassador, there was no vote."
    Spock put a steadying hand on the cool white stone of the
balcony railing. "Is the advisory group aware of the danger
the Romulan delegation has risked to come to Babel?" The
Romulan Star Empire had few official contacts with the
Federation. Even fewer with Vulcan. But for more than eighty
years, Spock had been working unceasingly to bring the
Romulans and the Vulcans togethermback together. For the
Romulans were an offshoot from the Vulcan race. The unifi-
cation of Romulans and Vulcans had become Spock's greatest
dream, and, he was convinced, a political necessity, if lasting
peace was to be possible in this quadrant.
    "Ambassador, the advisory group is well aware of the
extraordinary efforts you have made to bring an unofficial
Romulan delegation to Babel. On the surface, it is a historic
accomplishment."
  Spook heard the qualification. "On the surface?"
  Srell adopted an even more formal posture to indicate he

 was merely passing on information he had been given,
 without necessarily believing it himself.
     "I have been informed that there are those on the Council
 who believe the stated reason for the Romulans' presence
 here is misdirection. They do not believe Romulus wishes to
 pursue either unification with Vulcan or membership in the
 Federation."
    Spock tightened his grip on the balcony railing. What did
the Federation Council believe he had been doing on Romu-
lus for the past eight decades? Everything he had worked for
had been aimed at this moment--to finally have representa-
tives of Vulcan, Romulus, and the Federation sit down at the
same table, however unofficially, to openly discuss their joint
future.
  "What other reason could there be?" Spock asked.
  "The virogen."
    Spock turned away. He placed both hands on the balcony
railing. "That is"--a dozen Earth terms sprang to mind, but
Spock restrained himself in order to be a proper role model
for Srell--"most illogical."
    "Though the news is being withheld from the public
updates, I have been reliably informed that the virogen has
now spread to a seventh system," Srell said. "Fully one-third
of the most densely populated sectors of the Federation have
been cut off from regular food shipments. Starfleet relief
efforts are undeniably strained."
 "One-third," Spock said, almost in disbelief.
    "The advisory group believes that the Romulan delega-
tion's sole purpose in being here is to obtain aid guarantees in
the event the Empire's own food-production centers become
infected. Indeed, Starfleet intelligence suggests that the viro-
gen has already established itself in the Core sectors, and even
in the Klingon Empire."
 "How is that possible?"




    Srell ignored the question. The details of the virogen's
spread from system to system were the target of the greatest
scientific research effort in the Federation's history. "For
whatever reason, I have been informed that the Federation is
unwilling to support Vulcan trade and development guaran-
tees for the Romulan Star Empire at a time when its own
resources are so taxed."
    Spock turned back to Srell, using all his discipline to keep
an appropriate Vulcan demeanor. "Can they not see that it is
precisely because of the threat of the virogen to the food
supply that we must enlarge the scope of the Federation? That
we are all threatened and must share resources and knowl-
edge to survive?"
    "Ambassador, you ask that question as if you expect the
Federation Council to be guided by logic. They are not. At
this time, their guiding principle is fear."
    Spock felt unjustly chastised by his young assistant. Had he
not just been contemplating the fact that politics and logic
seldom agreed? Had he not achieved a balance between his
human and his Vulcan halves, so that he was uniquely placed
to understand the motivations of both Vulcans and humans?
And yet, he had been completely unprepared for this turn of
events.
    "Fear," was all Spock could say. More than three centuries
had passed since Vulcans had first joined with humans in an
unprecedented partnership to explore strange new worlds, to
seek out new life and new civilizations. But that insidious
monster of the past--fear of the unknown--still threatened
to push all that they had accomplished back into the plane-
tary mud.
    Then Srell added to Spock's sense of disorientation. "For
humans, it is a logical reaction."
 "Fear... is logical?" Spock asked.
    "If quarantine fails, if one more system becomes exposed
to the virogen, Starfleet will not be able to respond. History

suggests that ifStarfleet fails in its mission to protect our food
supply from contamination, some beleaguered worlds will
secede from the Federation. In some systems, local resource
wars will inevitably result. Any one of a dozen local conflicts
could escalate dangerously."
    The human half of Spock could not comprehend Sreil's
equanimity as the young Vulcan blandly recited the events
that would lead to galactic anarchy. Even a Vulcan should
have been appalled at some level by this terrible scenario.
    "Multisector civil war is not out of the question," Srell
continued. "Especially if any of the Federation's rivals, such
as the Romulans, decide to encourage dissent through covert
means."
    Spock turned his mind back to the calming practices he had
learned during his own study of the Kolinahr. "You realize
you are describing the collapse of the Federation," Spock
said.
    Completely without emotion, Srell replied, "Unless a cure
for the virogen is found and the food supply protected, the
collapse of the Federation is a certainty."
    Spock reached into his robes for his medallion. But it
brought no comfort to him.
     Here where he had once shared his father's greatest success,
he was poised on the brink of his own greatest failure.
 Logic was no guide. Emotion only paralyzed him.
 He needed to take action.
    But he missed the long-lost friend who could tell him what
that action should be.




FIVE

Christine MacDonald stood in the doorway of the hospice,
watching the reaction of the stranger beside her. He had seen
death before, Christine concluded. Too much of it. Or else he
was like Christine, and even one death was too much.
    Christine led the stranger along the narrow pathway that
ran between the cots on which the dying patients lay. The
smell of disinfectant was strong, because there were not
enough medical exclusion field generators to go around. The
few the mission had that still worked were being used in the
nursery. If a child of Chal could survive the first round of
virogen poisoning, there was a chance he or she could
recover. But once the poisoning had progressed to the sec-
ondary stage, as it had in the patients in the hospice, little
could be done.
    Christine looked to both sides of the pathway as she headed
for the doctor's oflice--a curtalned corner in the large room.
Before the evacuation, this building had been an art gallery--
a large open space with spectacular skylights with holographic
windows that kept the sunslight always focused in the center
of the gallery. But the skylights had been shuttered to spare
the sensitive eyes of the dying. Glow strips hung on the walls

now, leaving the gallery's interior in a perpetual twilight, like
the fading lives it contained.
    Christine rapped her knuckles against the wooden beam
that formed a corner of the doctor's office. "Hey, Bones--you
in there?"
    Christine caught the stranger's reaction of surprise--
something to do with her affectionate nickname for the
doctor, she decided.
 "Keep your shirt on," M'Benga testily replied.
    The curtain tugged back and Dr. Andrea M'Benga stepped
out, medical tricorder in hand. The sleeves were cut from her
blue-shouldered jumpsuit as well, and she wore a bandana of
fragile white Chal fabric tied firmly around her broad fore-
head. The pale cloth contrasted strikingly with her dark skin
and close-cropped black hair. She looked sharply at the
stranger, then seemed to relax. "Well, you're not a patient, at
least." Christine was unable to interpret the expression on the
stranger's face as he scrutinized the doctor in turn.
    Christine smiled encouragingly at the stranger. "Dr.
Andrea M'Benga, this is..."
    "Dr .... M'Benga." A quizzical smile flickered on the
stranger's lips. "I'm looking for a patient. Her name is
Teilani."
    Christine's eyes narrowed. The stranger seemed deter-
mined not to give his name.
    "Teilani," M'Benga said as she wearily scratched her head.
"Yeah. Over in the far corner. You a relative?"
  "A friend," the stranger said. "I'd like to see her."
    "You understand what's happening here, do you?" the
doctor asked.
     The stranger gazed into the darkened corner M'Benga had
 pointed to. "Something's gone wrong."
     Christine didn't know if the stranger was being profound or
 was simple.
  M'Benga exchanged a look with Christine. Christine


 shrugged. "I'll say something's gone wrong," the doctor
 muttered. "That damned virogen hit. Went clear through the
 food chain in less than a month. Humans, Tellarites, most
 carbon-based life-forms, they get a taste of it and they double
 over for a week. Intestinal flora shot to hell. But recovery's
 just a matter of plenty of liquids, salt and sugar to restore
 electrolyte balance, and--"
     "I'd like to see her," the stranger said again, obviously not
 interested in the doctor's lecture.
     "Look, the point is, the Chal aren't like most people. Their
 genetic structure is artificial in places. Most common medical
 therapies don't work on them. Protoplasers can't rearrange
 their tissue, they metabolize drugs before the drugs can help
 them..." Christine could see that M'Benga realized she
 wasn't getting through to the stranger. "The thing is, your
 friend's dying, and there's nothing I can do to save her.
 Understand?"
  "Which bed?" the stranger asked.
     M'Benga gave up. "This way." She led Christine and the
 stranger away from her office, along the back wall.
    Teilani was in the far corner. Christine had seen enough
Chal succumb to the virogen that she could tell the woman
had less than a day to live. Once, she had undoubtedly had
great beauty, with elegant, pointed Romulan ears and aristo-
cratic Klingon ridges furrowing her brow, but now disease
and age had blurred and diminished her.
    In human terms, judging strictly by appearance, Christine
would place her age at fifty, which for a Chal could make her
almost one hundred and twenty-five. But the wasting of the
virogen had reduced her honey-golden skin to a patchwork of
broken capillaries and purple bruises, shrunken tight to her
fine-boned skull. A sterile pad was taped to her sunken cheek,
no doubt to cover an open sore, common in the final stages of
the virogen reaction. It extended over one eye and Christine
guessed she had probably lost some of her sight already.

    She knew that she was looking at what had once been a
vibrant being, and at the future of every human who would
someday succumb to the inevitable destruction of time and
fortune. But in the stranger's eyes, there was no revulsion, no
pity, and no fear.
    Christine watched as the stranger knelt by Teilani's cot and
softly stroked her brow, as if this place were still an art gallery
and Teilani was the most precious and most beautiful work
in it.
    The woman's eyes fluttered at the touch, but she did not
awaken.
    Beside Christine, M'Benga surreptitiously checked her
trioorder. Christihe's eyes met hers. The doctor shook her
head. Time was running out.
    "I need hot water," the stranger said, never taking his eyes
off Teilani.
    "Her liquid balance is fine," M'Benga said gruffly. "We're
on strict rations."
    The stranger turned to look up at the doctor. "Hot water.
Boiling. A single cup."
 Christine blinked at the intensity of the stranger's tone.
 M'Benga started to protest.
    But Christine put a hand on the doctor's shoulder. "It's all
right, Bones. Take it from my allotment."
    M'Benga's eyes flashed at Christine. The doctor's temper
did not welcome opposition. "I hope you know what you're
doing."
Christine nodded. M'Benga went to the supply room.
The stranger smoothed out the woman's blanket, adjusted
her pillow. Then carefully and deliberately touched several
points on her neck, forehead. and exposed cheek.
    Christihe's attention sharpened. Some of the locations
corresponded to Vulcan katra points. If she hadn't heard the
emotion in his voice, she'd suspect the stranger had pointed
ears hidden beneath the hood of his cloak.




  "Are you a healer?" she asked.
     But the stranger shook his head, as if to dismiss her
 continued presence as well as her question. He was intent
 only on the woman who lay dying on the cot.  "Is there anything else I can do?"
     The stranger spoke without looking at Christine. "You've
 done enough."
"No," she said, and she knelt beside him. "Let me help."
The stranger paused, as if she had said something remark-
able. Then he looked around, spotted something under the
cot, and pulled it out.
    Whatever it was, it was heavy, wrapped in Chal fabric. The
stranger handed it to Christine, having her hold it as if it were
a tray.
    Beneath the fabric, Christine could feel a metal plaque of
some sort, thirty-five centimeters by twenty-five, a centimeter
thick. It was most likely a decorative plate or something
similar that had held special meaning for the woman.
    The stranger produced a small earthen cup from within his
cloak, then a small packet made of some type of... paper,
Christine reasoned. It crackled like paper, at least.
    The stranger unfolded it. Within was a small pile of
crumbled brown leaves.
 "Is that tea?" Christine asked.
 "Of a sort." the stranger replied.
    M'Benga returned with a flask of water. The stranger held
out the cup to her. The doctor twisted the heater collar on the
flask and poured out a stream of boiling water.
    The stranger powdered the leaves between his fingers as he
dropped them into the water, rocking the cup gently to stir its
contents.
    Instantly the air filled with a rich green scent. Christine was
almost overwhelmed by its fragrance. She had smelled the
decay of Chal for so long, she had almost forgotten there were
any other scents in the universe.

     "Could you at least tell me what that is before you give it to
my patient?" M'Benga asked in exasperation.
 "What's your prognosis for her?"
 M'Benga spoke plainly. "Terminal."
 "Then what does it matter?"
    He turned to the woman on the cot, gently lifted her head,
and carefully let the tea he had brewed trickle onto her lips.
    M'Benga sighed heavily and brought out her tricorder
again. She waved it over the remnants of the paper packet on
the tray Christine held. Then blinked at the readings on the
device as if she couldn't interpret them.
 "What is it, Bones?" Christine whispered.
 "Damned if I know."
    M'Benga aimed her tricorder at Teilani. Shook her head
again at Christine.
 "I'd like to take her from this place," the stranger said.
    But M'Benga would have no part of it. "No. I will not have
you disturbing my patient."
    Teilani moaned. The first sound she had made. Her eyes
fluttered again.
    The stranger leaned closer to her, touched her katra points
again.
    M'Benga activated her tricorder. Christine saw the doctor's
eyes widen. "I don't believe it .... "
    The stranger stood up by the cot, nodded at the doctor. "I
believe she's my patient now." Then he gathered Teilani in
his arms, and lifted her from the cot as if she were sweeter to
him than life itself.
    Christine got to her feet in time to see Teilani's eyes open
and turn to focus on the stranger.
    Then Teilani smiled, in wonder and in disbelief. Her voice
was faint. "James... you came back .... "
    The stranger walked from the hospice, carrying Teilani in
his arms. Christine and M'Benga watched him go. The doctor
tapped the side of her tricotder to be sure it was working




properly. "Her pulse rate is strengthening. Her fever is
dropping." She lifted the packet from the fabric-wrapped tray
Christine carried and sniffed at it suspiciously.
    "James," Christine repeated thoughtfully. At least the
stranger had a name now. A human one at that.
    She looked down at the makeshift, shrouded tray, then
began to unwrap the fabric from it. As she got to the last layer,
she could feel that there were letters on the metal object
inside. It was some type of plaque.
    "Well," M'Benga complained beside her. "What the devil
is that thing?"
     The fabric slipped to the floor as Christine turned the
plaque over to read what was written on it. She gasped.
    In raised and polished letters of bronze, almost glowing in
the pale light, were the words

USS ENTERPRISE

  STARFLEET REGISTRY NCC-1701-A
SAN FRANCISCO FLEET YARDS, EARTH
COMMISSIONED: STARDATE 8442.5
SECOND STARSHIP TO BEAR THE NAME

".. to boldly go where no man has gone before."

    Christine and M'Benga both turned to stare at the distant
entrance to the hospice, just as the stranger disappeared
through it, with Teilani in his arms.
    "James..." Christine said again. For the second time that
day, she felt goose bumps rise up on the skin of her bare arms.
And not because the air was cool. It was impossible.
 But then, that's just what he was known for.

SIX

Picard stared at the empty corner of his ready room.
    The original plans for the Enterprise-E had called for an
environmental unit to be placed there. Some captains chose
to install a sleeping perch for a cat, some a terrarium for more
exotic life-forms. The designers responsible for the life-
support sections of the starship had checked Picard's service
records and had specified a cylindrical aquarium, with an
Earth-normal saltwater environment that would support an
Australian lionfish.
    But when Picard had first stepped into the ready room,
after the bridge module had been installed, he had immedi-
ately asked for the aquarium's removal.
    He had come to the realization that space was too unforgiv-
ing an environment for innocent life-forms.
    Picard had reviewed the sensor logs of the evacuation of the
Enterprise-D over Veridian III. He had heard the children cry
out as they had been herded along, separated from their
parents, only minutes away from being engulfed by the
explosive fury of a warp-core breach, and still to face the
harrowing descent of the saucer through the atmosphere.
 Those cries of terror were not what Starfleet's mission




 planners had had in mind when the Galaxy-class ship had
 been commissioned.
    Picard had no complaint about families being assigned to
deep space together. But children and nonprofessionals must
always remain out of harm's way.
    So he felt reassured that this Enterprise had no children
aboard her. And though he missed the relaxing comfort of
watching the fins of a lionfish undulate in an aquarium's slow
current, he was glad that on this ship there was one life-form
fewer for which he was responsible.
    When he had first gone into space, it seemed to him he had
seen only the brilliance of the stars. But now, more than ever,
he saw the dark and endless void between them.
  The door announcer chimed. "Come," Picard said.
  His first officer entered, frowning, a padd in his hand.
  "Yes, Number One?"
    Riker didn't waste any time. He didn't like the Enterprise%
current assignment any more than Picard did. That tension
was becoming more apparent in all the crew.
    "There was no Lieutenant Commander Stron assigned to
Gamow Station."
    It took a moment for the importance of that statement to
register with Picard.
    "Was he from one of the other blockade ships?" Picard
asked.
    Riker shook his head. "I checked every personnel log
remotely connected to Alta Vista. There was no Stron as-
signed to any of the earlier relief missions. No Stron assigned
to communications since the station was brought online three
years ago." Riker passed the padd across the table to Picard.
"In all of Starfleet, there are nine Vulcans with Stron as a
given name. The only one within three hundred light-years of
this sector is a Captain Stron of the survey ship Sloane. And
he's one hundred and sixty years old."
 "Are the remaining eight Strons accounted for?"

Riker nodded at the padd. Picard scanned it. The duty
rosters for all nine Vulcans were complete.
    "I confess I'm not certain which surprises me more. The
fact that a Vulcan chose to commit suicide, or the fact that a
Vulcan lied."
    "Given either possibility, sir, we really can't be sure if he
was a Vulcan in the first place."
"Is there any record of a pregnant lieutenant commander?"
"Several. But again, none near this sector. None missing.
And none matching our sensor-log recording."
    Picard stood up and walked to an observation window,
staring past his reflection. Almost half a million kilometers
away, Alta Vista III was a small, faded yellow sphere, streaked
by indigo clouds. A year ago, the clouds had been spectacu-
larly green--fine, airborne colonies of alta mist, a unique
epiphytic single-cell plant. But the deadly virogen had taken
hold here, as it had in six other systems.
    Wherever it had evolved, however it had come to the
worlds of the Federation, seen in microscan images the
virogen was deceptively simple, even beautiful. Physically, it
was a strand of ribonucleic acids, coiled into a single-helix
structure, only a few thousand amino-acid base pairs long. By
most traditional definitions, it was rightly considered a mere
molecule, with far too little material to qualify as living
matter. On its own, it was inert, its fragile RNA chain
protected by a unique and rigid matching strand of silicon.
Though the genetic structure of the virogen was technically
exposed in this configuration, without the benefit of a protec-
tive wall or capsule, the rigid silicon served as a molecular
spine to maintain the virogen's shape and lethality.
    In an animal, the virogen's genetic material curiously
bonded only to the membranes of reproducing cells, and
multiplied as affected cells multiplied, without ever interfer-
ing with the cells' own interior genetic structure. Thus,
animals served only as factories for the virogen's production,




shedding it through exhalations and secretions, all without
long-lasting physical impairment in most species.
    But in chlorophyll-producing plants, the virogen bonded
with the chloroplasts themselves, taking over the plants' own
energy-producing mechanisms to fuel its reproduction. Un-
like its effects on animals, the virogen's reproduction strategy
led to a slow death for each affected plant, as it gradually lost
the ability to convert sunlight into energy.
    Thus the virogen's effect on Alta Vista III had been no
different than it had been in all the other systems it had
pervaded. Every form of plant life had been poisoned--
become useless as a source of food. Every form of animal life,
though largely unaffected by disease, was a carrier. The
repercussions for the centers of food production were stag-
gering.
    "Why would a Vulcan--or someone altered to appear
Vulcan--take on the identity of a Starfleet officer to escape
from a quarantined system?"
    "And then kill himself and his mate when we cornered
him?" Riker added.
    Picard turned to face Riker. Riker looked puzzled by the
slight smile his captain wore. "Number One, this almost feels
like a Dixon Hill mystery."
 "Except this isn't the holodeck. Two people are dead."
    "Dix would be the first to say appearances can be de-
ceiving."
 Riker waited expectantly, if doubtfully.
    "If everything Stron told us was a lie, then logically we
should not assume that any of his actions were what they
appeared to be, either."
    "Sir, the Bennett took off from Gamow Station without
authorization. Stron and his mate were down there. They
were clearly attempting to leave the system."
 "No. They were attempting to leave the planet and evade

us. That's all we can know for fact. What their ultimate
destination was, we cannot say."
  "Except we know they didn't achieve it."
    But Picard shook his head. "Stron and his mate somehow
arrived at Gamow Station without anyone discovering they
weren't what they claimed to be. In the confusion of the
overcrowding down there, that is an understandable, even
unavoidable breach of security. But however they managed it,
I think we can presume our two fugitives had an equally
effective escape route planned."
    "Sir, we saw them blow up. That is not what I would call
effective."
    "What we saw was a warp-core explosion at the same
apparent coordinates as the Bennett. Then we left the asteroid
and returned to our blockade position."
    Picard could see that Riker understood where his chain of
reasoning was leading.
    "Shall I lay in a course back to Alta Vista two five seven?"
Riker asked.
Picard nodded. "And prepare an away team," he added.
Riker returned to the bridge. Picard looked back through
the observation port again. Less than a minute later, Alta
Vista III shrank to a pinpoint as the Enterprise-E returned to
the system's asteroid belt at warp.
    Unfounded suspicions aside, Picard had no idea what they
would find there. But the act of looking was far preferable to
standing guard over a dying colony.
    If the Federation were going to fall, then the captain of the
Enterprise was determined to go down doing something more
than just watching.

    Riker felt a wash of vertigo sweep through him as he
materialized on the surface of Alta Vista 257. Transporting
from the Enterprise's artificial gravity to the almost rionexis-




tent pull of the asteroid was more disorienting than simply
steppingthrough an airlock.
    The clear visor of his environment suit sparkled with
reflected energy as La Forge and Data took form beside him.
Simply turning his head to check on their status was enough
to set Riker drifting up from the asteroid's space-black
surface.
    Riker canceled his momentum by giving a momentary tap
to the joystick on the control arm of the maneuvering unit he
wore. He saw La Forge do the same, with small, precisely
controlled puffs of stabiline gas venting from the tiny thrust-
ers on the engineer's own maneuvering unit backpack.
    Data, though deceptively slight in appearance, was much
more massive than a human, and capable of controlling his
movements more exactly. Thus, he alone remained fixed in
position on the asteroid's surface. At least, at first. The
android reached down to the leg controls for his magnetic
boots, and though Riker saw the activation lights switch on,
even Data began to float away from the surface.
Data's boot soles, however, bristled with nickel-iron dust.
"There are too many impurities for our boots to function
properly," Data said over his suit's communicator as he
repositioned himself with his own maneuvering unit. Techni-
cally, the android did not need an environmental suit to
function in the vacuum of space. But he did have a number of
organic components in his system whose chemistry could be
temporarily disrupted by prolonged outgassing, and it was
more convenient for his coworkers if he could communicate
by voice.
    "Well, it's not as if we can drift too far off target," Riker
said. He glanced through the upper plane of his visor and saw
a magnificent view of the Enterprise stationkeeping only a few
kilometers above him, relatively speaking. "Riker to Enter-
prise. We've arrived at the center of the blast zone."

Picard's voice answered from Riker's helmet speakers. "Do
the blast marks appear legitimate?"
    Riker glanced around. The Bennett had exploded directly
overhead, approximately one kilometer above the asteroid's
surface. The surface around the away team was striated w~th
raised silvery streaks, all radiating out from a central point.
Riker knew the markings were the result of microscopic
pieces of wreckage from the Bennett hitting the nickel-iron
asteroid at close to lightspeed. The kinetic energy of the tiny
particles had been sufficient to gouge molten tracks in the raw
metal of which the asteroid was formed.
    To Riker's trained eye, just as the Enterprise's sensors and
viewscreen had initially confirmed, the blast marks did
appear to be recent, and consistent with the Bennett's de-
struction. But despite all the Enterprise 's sophisticated equip-
ment, in some cases there was still no replacement for the
human presence in space as skilled observer. Or, in the case
of Geordi La Forge, a more than human presence.
    La Forge manipulated his maneuvering unit controls so
that he floated horizontally, only centimeters above the
asteroid's surface. Riker knew the engineer's new ocular
implants were scanning the blast damage with much finer
resolution than the Enterprise's more powerful sensors could
be tuned to at a distance.
    "Commander," La Forge said. "I'm detecting no trace of
space-dust precipitate on the melted impact streaks. These
scorches are less than a day old. I'm certain of it."
    Riker refrained from shrugging. In his suit, it would only
disturb his orientation again. "Captain Picard," he reported.
being careful to keep his tone neutral. "The Bennett does
appear to have exploded as we witnessed."
    Picard had proposed that the Bennett might have used a
phase inhibitor to escape the tractor beam, then gone to warp,
leaving a second, separate warp core behind, rigged to ex-




plode. There was an unexplained subspace burst in the sensor
log, followed by a recording gap as the Enterprise's sensors
had been overloaded by the warp explosion. It was possible
that the deception might have been completed before the
sensors had automatically realigned themselves. But being
possible and being likely were two different things.
    Privately, Riker suspected that Picard was looking for any
excuse to relieve the monotony of and his distaste for
maintaining a blockade on a Starfleet facility. In fact, he was
almost sorry his captain's theory had been proven false. Riker
agreed with Picard that the Enterprise and her crew were
meant for more challenging missions.
    "What about organic residue?" Picard asked. If the Bennett
had exploded, Stroh and his mate would have been vapor-
ized, and traces of the carbon isotopes from their bodies
should be spread evenly throughout the blast site. Detecting
that grisly residue was Data's task.
    Like La Forge, Data floated near the asteroid's surface,
lightly tapping a molecular probe to likely areas and reading
the results from the tricorder display screen built into the
bottom of his helmet. "The isotope traces I'm detecting are
consistent with machinery only," the android said. "I see no
sign of organic remains."
    That surprised Riker. "Are you certain?" he asked, forget-
ting for the moment to whom he was speaking.
    "To four decimal places, sir. Which leaves room for some
doubt, though not an appreciable amount. In fact, it might be
said that--"
    "Data," Riker interrupted, as he suddenly recollected
another of Picard's speculations. "What if Stron wasn't
Vulcan and his mate wasn't human? What if they were altered
Klingons or Romulans?"
    Data slowly rotated into a perpendicular orientation. "In
that case," the android said, "the carbon isotopes of their
bodies would indeed yield different fractions, according to

the signature chemistries of the worlds each species evolved
on. But almost any carbon-based life-form would leave a
detectable trace as the captain has theorized."
 Over the comm link, Picard joined the conversation again.
     "In other words, Mr. Data, though the Bennett might have
exploded as we saw, Stron and his mate were not on it.'~
 "Yes, sir. That is the most likely explanation."
    More than anything, Riker wanted to scratch at his beard.
But he had to content himself with gazing over the irregular
horizon of the asteroid. On the axis length, the horizon was
about eight kilometers distant. On the equatorial length, only
about three. But aside from the gentle rise and fall of a surface
pitted with millennia of deeply shadowed impact craters,
there was no sign of a pressure dome or launch facility.
Besides, if there had been, the Enterprise could have detected
either from thousands of kilometers away, along with the
machines associated with any underground base.
 "Comments, Number One?" Picard asked.
    Riker knew he had no choice but to support his captain.
Picard had put his suppositions to the test and they had been
confirmed. "No doubt about it. We definitely have a mystery
here, sir."
"Actually, Commander," Picard replied, "we have two."
For a moment, the implications of Picard's words were like
the chill of space moving through the insulating layers of
Riker's suit. Could Picard be serious? "Are you suggesting
that what happened here is connected to the spread of the
virogen?"
    In his mind's eye. Riker could almost see Picard settle back
into the command chair on the Enterprise's bridge as he
contemplated the challenge of a new mission. "Two mysteries
in one area of space, Number One? Every instinct I have tells
me that the relationship between them is not coincidental."
    Riker was aware of La Forge and Data adjusting their
positions so they could make eye contact with him. Even m




Data's android features, the emotion of surprise was easy to
read.
    Picard was not the only one in Starfleet who had theorized
that the sudden appearance and spread of the virogen might
be deliberate.
    But it appeared he might be the first to uncover evidence to
prove it.
    And if Picard was right again, then the greatest natural
disaster facing the Federation might not be natural at all.

SEVEN

Dawn came to Chal. A lone bird sang in the dying jungle.
Faintly, plaintively. Alone.
    It was the last of its species. The generation to come lost to
weakened eggshells that exposed the nestlings to the air
before their lungs had fully formed.
    The pitiful chicks had perished in their nests, suffocating
within an hour of birth, watched passively by their parents,
who had never evolved behaviors necessary to cope with the
interference of so-called intelligent beings.
    When the virogen had first appeared on this world, the first
response by the guardians of the environment had been to
clear-cut the affected foliage and spray broad-spectrum anti-
viral agents on the surrounding areas. The results were
catastrophic.
    The antiviral agents had unpredictably inserted five engi-
neered genes into an amino-acid sequence peculiar to a
common flowering bush indigenous to Chal. The combina-
tion accelerated the flowering cycle, making whole fields of
the plant bloom months before the insect responsible for its
pollination had awakened from its dormant cycle.
 Three months later, the berry yield on Chal's primary




islands was less than twenty-two percent of normal. Entire
populations of birds and insects starved to death. With their
passing, the absence of food rippled exponentially through
the food chain, becoming more pronounced at every level.
    One species of bird resorted to cannibalism of its young.
Another was driven to forage among mountain plants far out
of its local habitat. That change in behavior exposed the
species to a high-altitude, parasitic mite that infested its
plumage. Mating levels plummeted. Federation ecologists saw
the multiple disasters propagating through Chal's ecosystems
and reacted again with well-intentioned alarm to restore the
natural order. In order to keep the mountain mite from
spreading, terraforming runabouts were seconded on a priori-
ty basis to spray insecticides in the traditional habitats of the
displaced birds.
    The mites died as planned, but the insecticides, developed
for conditions on another world, were anything but natural
on Chal. They also entered the food chain, where they
unexpectedly interfered with calcium absorption by Chal's
indigenous animal species.
    Within another three months, almost all Chal mammals
were delivered stillborn, their fragile, incompletely formed
bones crushed by the contractions of birth. Like the shells of
birds' eggs, now mammal skulls were paper thin. This was how a world died.
    Doomed by humanity's simple intention to do good,
against the realities of an ecosystem more complex than any
human mind could comprehend, more dynamic than any
computer simulation could model.
 One bird singing. Faintly, plaintively. Alone.
    Eighty years after history reported him dead for the first
time, James T. Kirk heard that last bird sing as the twin suns
of Chal broke through the dull gray haze of morning.
 He understood the plaintiveness of its cry.

    Just as he understood the unquenchable drive that made it
sing, even in the face of sure and certain destruction.
    Kirk had seen destruction. He had walked the ruins of
civilizations that had been old before Earth's sun was born.
Seen friends sacrifice themselves for love and duty. Lost
loved ones to capriciousness and hate. Watched strangers die
for no reason other than ignorance and greed. Once he had thought he might change that.
    In time, he had become bitter as he had learned how little
one man could actually do.
    Then he had faced death himself. And against all odds, for
reasons which he still did not fully grasp, the end had not
come.
    Sometimes it seemed to him as if all his life was one endless
series of second chances. But this time, he knew he had been
given more than just another opportunity.
 Kirk had come to Chal renewed, reborn.
    He had finally learned the one secret that must be treasured
above all else in a universe that had never cared about him
and his kind, and never would.
    He sat by Teilani's side, warmed by the fire he had built
near the bare stone foundations and fire-blackened timbers of
the building that had once been her home.
    She stirred there, on her bed of blankets, smiling as she
woke to feel the warmth of the sunslight on her face for the
first time in weeks.
 Kirk gently stroked her uninjured cheek.
    She looked up at him, her one uncovered eye alight with
awe. She reached for his hand.
 "It wasn't a dream... ?" she asked.
    "I love you," Kirk said, and it was as if he truly said those
words for the first time, at last understanding their meaning.
Knowing they were the only words in the universe that meant
anything at all.




     Tears formed in Teilani's eyes, gleaming as they slowly
rolled down to her gray-flecked hair. "You came back," she said.
    Kirk smiled, and it was as if he smiled for the first time as
well.
 "For you," he said. "For us."

  "James T. Kirk?" Barc grunted.
    Christine MacDonald showed the Tellarite the padd to
which she had downloaded the historical files from her ship's
main computer. The display screen showed an image of Kirk
recorded eighty years ago, on the occasion of the ill-fated
launch of the Enterprise-B. "Look at this," the young com-
mander said. "It's him."
    Dr. M'Benga peered over Barc's shoulder. The morning
sunslight streaming through the window of the Starfleet
general-issue emergency shelter tent was bright enough to
make the display look washed out. M'Benga held up a hand to
cast a shadow on the padd and scowled in disagreement.
"He's dead, Chris."
    "That's what they said eighty years ago," Christine said
triumphantly. "And then guess who showed up on Veridian
Three?"
    "They didn't have a body eighty years ago," Barc com-
plained. "But two years ago at Veridian, with Picard, defi-
nitely a body. Picard buried him. End of story."
    Christine flashed a triumphant smile at the taciturn engi-
neer, pulled back the padd, called up another screen, this
time of text. She held it for Barc and M'Benga to read.
    The Tellarite's snout twitched in curiosity. M'Benga's
scowl became a puzzled grimace.
 "They left him there?" Barc said.
 "With the Enterprise?" M'Benga added.
    "Do you honestly believe Starfleet would just forget James
T. Kirk?" Christine asked.

    "Rrr, nothing the admiralty did would surprise me," Barc
huffed. "But they couldn't leave the D on Veridian Three. Too
many Prime Directive problems if the inhabitants of Veridian
Four ever found the wreckage."
    M'Benga looked thoughtful. "Or the body of an alien.
Kirk's remains would have to be removed from the planet.
I'm surprised they didn't bring him back to Earth for burial."
    Christine gestured with the padd. "But Starfleet general
records hold no information on the disposition of the Enter-
prise's wreckage, or of Kirk's body. As far as I'm concerned,
that means they didn't have a body after Veridian Three,
either. And the story of whatever happened there after the
crash is being covered up."
    Barc grunted, unconvinced. "If it's not in the general
records, then it didn't happen."
    Christine knew better than to argue with the obstinate
Tellarite. But M'Benga could be counted upon to see past the
facts of a situation, into its heart.
    "Your grandfather served with Kirk, didn't he?" Christine
asked the doctor.
    "Great-grandfather," M'Benga corrected. "And not for
long."
 "But you know the stories about Kirk."
    M'Benga rolled her eyes. "Everyone knows the stories. And
if even a tenth of them were true, Kirk's first five-year mission
would have lasted fifty years."
    Christine was becoming annoyed. How could she make her
friends see how obvious the situation was? "All I'm suggest-
ing is that given what we know of the man, we shouldn't be
surprised that he of all people is someone who managed to
cheat death yet again. I mean, come on, Bones--you ana-
lyzed the dried leaves he used for that Teilani woman. You've
got your lab up on the Tobias churning out clone cultures, and
the computer says that that tea, or whatever it is, will inhibit
the virogen's reproduction in the people of Chal. Even you




have to admit that's a medical miracle. So why can't Kirk be
using some other miracle compound to keep himself alive?"
    M'Benga shook her head. "Chris, all I'm hearing is hero
worship. If James T. Kirk had survived Veridian Three, don't
you think Starfleet would have hauled him back to Earth for a
hero's welcome? Don't you think he'd be on every update,
writing his memoirs, teaching history at the Academy?"
    "Except," Christine said, pointing to the padd, "we don't
know what happened on Veridian Three after the Enterprise
crashed. The gaps in the general records tell me that Star-
fleet's covering up something."
 "What?" Bare asked with exasperation.
    Christine sighed. "Bares, if I knew, then it wouldn't be a
cover-up, would it?"
    The engineer paused a moment to consider that insight. In
her usual blunt fashion, the doctor went for the bottom line.
"Why don't you just ask him if he's Kirk?" "He doesn't want to tell me his name."
    "Chris, you're the commander of Starfieet's relief mission
to this world. It's under martial law. You have the authority to
ask anyone anything." M'Benga allowed herself a small, dry
smile. "Then again, maybe he's tired of people telling him he
looks like Kirk."
"Or maybe he's got a good reason to want to hide."
M'Benga glanced sharply at Christine. No longer a ship's
doctor, but a friend who had shared enough Academy courses
io know her commander well. "Oh, no, I've seen that look
before."
 Christine drew herself up defensively. "What look?"
 "You're falling in love with him."
 "After five minutes with him? Don't be ridiculous."
    Bare threw up his hands as his ear fur bristled in embar-
rassment. "That's it. I'm leaving. Feel free to keep all the
sordid details of human mating habits to yourselves."
 But Christine placed a restraining hand on the engineer's

broad shoulder. "Barc, wait. If you see Kirkrathe stranger,
whatever you want to call him--don't tell him about... any
of this."
    "Don't worry. I wouldn't want him to think I'm crazy,
too." The Tellarite pulled back the flap of fabric that was the
tent's makeshift door. "I'll be back at the replicators. For all
the good it will do." He snorted in disgust as he ducked
outside.
    M'Benga took a long look at Christine. "Your problem is,
you're bored with the mission."
     Christine frowned. "How could I be? We're saving a world
here. That's why we signed on." "We're not saving anything."
 M'Benga's glum words hung in the silence of the tent.
     "1 received an alert from Starfleet Medical an hour ago.
Two more systems are affected. It's confirmed." "Dear God, Bones, why didn't you tell me?"
    M'Benga shrugged. "Barc's ready to quit as it is. In case
you haven't noticed, morale among the other personnel is the
lowest I've ever seen in any Starfleet operation. And whatever
hope we were holding out for supplies, well, that's pretty well
out the airlock. All we've got is whatever's down here now,
and whatever's left to cannibalize from the Tobias. That's it.
We're on our own."
    Christine felt as if M'Benga had punched her. The promise
of resupply, of new personnel for the relief mission, was all
that was keeping her people going. "Does anyone else know?"
    M'Benga shook her head. "It was medical eyes only.
Starfleet knows how precarious the situation is. The last thing
we need is more panic."
 "But Kirk's leaves will work, won't they?"
    "For the original inhabitants of Chal with their peculiar
Klingon-Romulan metabolism, yes. I'm about as certain as I
can be."
  "That'll be good for morale, then. No more deaths."




    M'Benga gazed down at the padd, as if she didn't have the
strength to look her commander in the eyes. Christine had
never seen her friend so serious. "Chris, a higher survival rate
also means more mouths to feed. We're down to less than
thirty days' supply of food as it is."  "The replicaton... ?"
    "Barc says your idea about using the tricorders is brilliant,
and should last about ten operational hours. That'll give us
what? A few hundred liters of fresh water for the children?
Maybe buy us a day or two overall?"
    Christine yanked the padd back from M'Benga. "I will not
accept defeat."
    "This isn't personal, Chris. You're the commander of a
science vessel, not captain of a starship. The only reason we
got this assignment is because the Fleet is stretched too thin
to begin with. We weren't expected to win here. Only to hold
the line."
  "But you're telling me there is no line to hold."
    M'Benga seemed to age before Christine's eyes. She pulled
a small chair out from a folding table. Sat down, slumping
wearily against the table. "I'm a doctor, not a soldier. I will
care for these people as long as I am able. But the enemy we're
facing here isn't personal, and isn't out to get you or me."
    Christine leaned forward, trying to energize her friend.
"But it is personal. It has to be. Otherwise, what's the point of
trying to fight this damned virogen?"
    M'Benga pressed a control on the padd and slid it across
the table to Chris. Its display showed that old image of Kirk
again, on the brink of another great adventure.
     "You sound like you've been spending too much time
reading those books about Kirk." "He never gave up."
    "He lived a hundred years ago. Life was simpler in the
twenty-third century. Things were easier."
 Christine picked up the pard and brandished it as if it were

a talisman to ward off the evil that surrounded her and
infused this world. "Don't you think Kirk said the same thing
about life in the twenty-second century? Don't you think the
people then said the same about Cochrane's era? Don't you
think Cochrane was envious of the twentieth century?"
Christine felt the surface of the padd deform under the
pressure of her grip. "We all say things were different in the
past, but they weren't. Every time's the same. And what
worked a century ago can work today."
    M'Benga repeated Christine's words almost with pity.
"Honestly, Chris. just listen to yourself--'What worked a
century ago'?"
    Christine thumped the padd against the table for emphasis.
"He never gave up. Never."
 From behind her, the stranger said, "Who never gave up.*"
    M'Benga started in her chair, staring toward the tent's
entrance. Christine whirled around.
    Kirk stood there, still in his Vulcan trader's garb, though
with his hood pushed back to lie around his shoulders.
    His face held an inquiring expression, as if to tell them that
he knew he had interrupted their conversation and wished it
to continue.
    Christine glanced down at the image on the padd, then
looked again at the man before her. He had longer hair than
in the image, tied back. There was no trace of pointed
Academy sidebums. Instead he wore a neat beard, flecked
with white. But the eyes were the same, Christine swore to
herself. However he had managed it, she was certain James T.
Kirk stood before her.
 But why wouldn't he admit it?
 "You were saying?" Kirk prompted again.
    Christine flicked off the padd and the image of Kirk faded.
"Nothing," she said, placing the padd on the table. "How is
your friend? Teilani?"
 "Much better."




    "The leaves," M'Benga began as she rose, "can you tell me
where they're from?"
    "No, I can't," Kirk said, then paused, correcting himself.
"They were given to me by... a teacher. I don't know what
planet they're from."
    "Do you know what they're called? They're working mira-
cles on the Chal."
    "I'm glad," Kirk said simply. "It's what I hoped. I can tell
you they're called trannin leaves, if that helps." He pro-
nounced the word with a guttural harshness.
 Christine glanced at M'Benga. "Klingon?"
    M'Benga pursed her lips. 'TI! have the computer search for
references." Then the doctor fixed Kirk with one of her
brightest smiles. "Say, has anyone ever told you how much
you resemblem"
    "Dr. M'Benga," Christine interrupted with the full authori-
ty of her rank. "I believe you have morning rounds to make."
    M'Benga locked eyes with Christine. Christine did not have
to add the words "That's an order" for her intent to be
known.
    "Whatever you say, Commander." M'Benga picked up her
medical kit from a cot, started out, then turned to Kirk.
"Good-bye, Mr .... ?"
    "Good-bye, Doctor," Kirk said, deflecting the unstated
request.
 Then Christine was alone with James Tiberius Kirk.
    A pioneer whose exploits would live as long as there was a
Starfleet and a Federation to guide it.
 An improbable sm'vlvor from another age.
 Her personal hero. Perhaps more.
 "What can I do for you?" she asked.
    Kirk hesitated, as if he had just thought of a topic to discuss
at Christine's suggestion. "Teilani..." he began.
    "Your 'friend'?" Christine interrupted, before she could
stop herself.

    "Yes, Teilani." Kirk offered no other explanation for his
relationship to the Chal woman, though the way he spoke her
name revealed his intimate connection to her. "She tells me
that what has happened here, to Chal, is happening on other
worlds."
 "You didn't know?." Christine asked.
 "I've been... away. On the frontier."
 I'll bet you have, Christine thought.
    "Officially," she said, "six other systems have been in-
fected."
 "Which means that unofficially, the count is higher."
 "I'm afraid so."
    Kirk glanced around the tent. Christine got the impression
he was recording everything he saw, wasting nothing. "It was
bound to happen sooner or later, don't you think?" he asked.
 "WhatT'
 "Do you have records of how it began?"
    Christine felt she was missing something. As if Kirk were
making leaps in the conversation she couldn't follow. "You
mean the virogen plague?"
 "I want to know how it came to Chal."
 "You and half of Starfleet."
 "Do you have records?"
    Christine tugged down on her tunic to smooth it. If Kirk
had some agenda he preferred to keep from her, then at least
she could choose the arena.
    "To thank you for the leaves you've brought, I'd be honored
to have you visit my ship," she said. "We receive constant
updates from Starfleet on the state of our efforts to track and
contain the virogen, and I'd be happy to share them with
you."
 "You have a ship?" Kirk asked.
    "The U.S.S. Tobias. A science vessel." Christine didn't
understand the blank look in Kirk's eyes. "In orbit," she
explained. Maybe the stranger wasn't Kirk after all.




 "I'm familiar with the concept," Kirk said gently.
    Christine tapped her comm badge, heard it chirp. "Mac-
Donald to Tobias. Two to beam up."
    The disembodied voice of the transporter chief replied
from the comm badge. "Locking on..."
    Christine glanced hopefully at Kirk. "You know, it would
be a lot easier to give you a tour if I knew your name."
    Kirk shrugged, as if his name were no longer of impor-
tance. "Call me Jim." he said.
    Christine allowed herself a brief smile, and was sorry
M'Benga hadn't been there to hear that name.
 And then the transporter took them.

EIGHT

Throughout his life, Spock had been accepting of defeat. In
most cases, it could provide a valuable lesson. Properly
understood, defeat in one instance could enhance the pros-
pects for prevailing in a new encounter. Thus, logic dictated
that defeat should be experienced without emotion. It was
merely a tool that ultimately, if used correctly, would bring
victory.
    Yet knowing all that, believing all that, Spock still felt angry
at what had happened on Babel. Sifting through the reasons
for his feelings in his subsequent meditations, he was in-
trigued, though not surprised, to discover the cause of his
anger.
 He did not feel betrayed by the Federation advisors.
     He did not feel embarrassed by the Romulan delegation's
reaction to the cancellation of the vote. He was just growing older.
 The cause of his discomfort was that simple.
    For almost a century and a half, he had fought the good
fight, and now he was becoming impatient with the struggle.
His tolerance for diplomatic niceties was fading. He under-
stood problems more rapidly than he had in the past. He saw




solutions clearly ahead of him. There was no logic in waiting
to achieve them.
    But the absolute key to his emotional state on this day was
that he knew beyond any doubt that one day the Romulan
and Vulcan people would be united, and that he now doubted
he would be alive to see that day.
    To anyone who watched the ambassador pack his few
personal items into a carryall in his austere diplomatic
quarters on the Babel planetoid, no trace of his emotional
distress would be noticeable.
    Displaying all the calm deliberation of a lifetime of disci-
pline, Spook went about his inconsequential tasks without
betraying the turmoil that raged within. Though it was his
way, recently he had begun to question why it must remain
SO.
    For a moment, Spock paused before pressing the closure
tab on the small fabric ease on the writing table before him.
Any witness might have suspected he was merely reviewing
the contents--a personal terminal padd, trioorder, formal
robes, toiletties, and two physical books: Surak's The Art of
Peace, and, for diversion, the timeless Earth classic, Harold
Robbins's The Carpetbaggers. But the ambassador was in fact
caught up in an ancient memory.
    Once, more than a century ago on the Enterprise, when he
had entered the Pon fart, he had allowed his discipline to
break down to the extent that he had thrown--actually
thrown in rage--a bowl of soup across his quarters to smash
against a corridor wall.
    Spock thought about that irrational act now, and reflected
on how unusually satisfying it had been. He wondered if
perhaps he should try such an act again. He certainly felt as if
he should.
    His door announcer chimed. Srell was early, but that was
typical of his young aide.

 "Come," Spock said.
 The door slid open.
 But it was not Srell who called upon him.
 It was a young Klingon officer in full battle garb.
    Spook raised an eyebrow. There were several Klingon
delegations currently on Babel, he knew. Though relations
between the Empire and the Federation were improving since
the Cardassian incident, full diplomatic contact was still to be
completely restored. But Spock could think of no reason why
a Klingon would wish to seek him out privately.
    "What do you wantT' Spock demanded. It was the polite
thing to say under the circumstances.
    The Klingon bowed his head for a moment, then entered
Spock's quarters without waiting for Spock's permission to
do so. Spock noted that he cartied a small diplomatic
courier's pouch on his belt.
    "Ambassador," the Klingon began. "I have been asked to
deliver this to you."
    The Klingon took a small holoprojector from the pouch
and handed it to Spock. Spock recognized it as a civilian unit
which could be used to record a personal message. Its most
common function was to serve as a memento of the dead.
 "To whom should 1 offer my thanks?" Spock asked.
 "l have fulfilled my duty," the Klingon stated.
 "Am I to receive no information about its source?"
    The Klingon looked as annoyed as Spock felt. This duty
had undoubtedly been forced upon him and he resented
being a mere messenger.
 "I cannot tell you what I do not know. I will leave now."
    In a most Klingon fashion, the Klingon stalked out. The
door slid shut behind him.
    Spock examined the holoprojector visually. It was little
more than a small black base with an activation stud. He
placed the unit on the writing desk, then checked it with the
small tricorder he removed from his carryall.




    There were no traces of explosives. The holoprojector was
exactly what it appeared to be.
    Spock constructed a mental web of logic to predict the
information the projector might contain. Because it was being
given to him under covert conditions on the Babel planetold,
he concluded it most likely had something to do with his
father. Perhaps an unofficial recording Sarek had once made,
which a fellow ambassador had decided should be given to
Sarek's son. He activated the projector and a pillar of light
formed over the base, resolving into a humanoid form about
twenty centimeters tall.
    Spock cocked his head, intrigued, as he recognized the
figure. Ki Mendrossen. The diplomat who had served as his
father's chief of staff in the final years of Sarek's career. He
was an officious human, totally devoted to Sarek's well-being,
and possessed of an almost Vulcanlike capacity to focus on
details. Though Sarek had never commented upon Mendros-
sen's abilities, the fact that the man had served so long was
testament enough to his competence.
    Mendrossen's appearance on this projector was unex-
pected, but Spock felt satisfaction that the message he was
about to hear did in some way connect to his father. In some
matters, it seemed, his logic remained robust.
    As the holographic figure began to speak, Mendrossen
seemed much older than Spock remembered him. His shoul-
ders were stooped, as if he had recorded this message while
fatigued. Visual static disrupted the projected image as well,
as if the recording sensors had not been properly alignedma
sign of haste or ill-preparation, both qualities quite unlike
Mendrossen.
    "My name is Ki Aloysius Mendrossen, former chief of staff
to the office of Ambassador Sarek of Vulcan. I make this
confession of my own free will."
 The word "confession" startled Spock.
 "During my tenure with the ambassador, I reported on a

regular basis to the prefect of Gonthar District. The nature of
my reports was to keep Gonthar apprised of the ambassador's
work on the following matters: the Amtara reparations, the
redrafting of Starfleet's First Contact protocols, the repatria-
tion of the Andorian drallstone, and all discussions relating to
the Romulan unification."
    Spock absently touched his IDIC medallion. He was
stunned. Mendrossen was confessing to having been a spy in
an organization that routinely relied on mindmelds to main-
tain security and unanimity. How could such actions be
possible.'?
    "I offer no excuse for this betrayal," Mendrossen's projec-
tion continued. "For the good of the cause, of the revolution,
l believed it was, at the time, a necessity. It is only now, as I
see the purposes for which my information was used, that l
realize the error in judgment I have made."
    Mendrossen bowed his head in a human expression of
shame. He did it awkwardly, as if his years on Vulcan had
made him lose touch with his own human heritage.
    "For all that I believed l followed in the path of Surak, my
logic was uncertain and I do regret my actions."
    His image shimmering erratically over the display base,
Mendrossen squared his shoulders. Now his voice took on a
more measured tone, as if he were reciting memorized lines.
"Some remnant of the Federation will survive these dark
days, and it is my wish that what rises from the ashes will be a
more evolved association, devoted to the preservation of each
world's distinctive nature.
    "That the Federation must end, I have no doubt. That it
will end in this particular way, is, I believe, more humane
than if matters were left to the inevitable currents of history."
    Here, the formality of Mendrossen's words seemed to fade,
as if he had abandoned his script and now spoke from his
heart. "But I do bitterly regret my role in the death of
Ambassador Sarek. Of all the actions of which history might




judge me guilty. his murder is the one for which I truly beg
forgiveness." The small figure held up his hand in the
traditional salute. "Peace and long life."
    Spock stared with incomprehension as the holographic
image of Sarek's chief of staff reached within the loose gray
jacket he wore and withdrew a small, green-finished phaser of
Vulcan design. Mendrossen twisted the setting ring, then
clutched it to his chest, lowered his head a final time, and
transformed himself into a quantum mist.
    For twenty silent seconds, all the holoprojector displayed
was a flickering patch of stone flooring. Then the recording
ended and the shaft of projection winked out.
    Spock stepped back from the projector until he bumped
into the simple bed and sat down upon it, almost falling as he
did so.
    His mind struggled to find some logical way of dealing with
what he had just witnessed. It was absurd. His father had died
of Bendii Syndrome. It was a rare illness, to be sure, most
often afflicting Vulcans over the age of two hundred. But the
way it had ravaged his father's intellect was well documented.
There could be no question that Sarek had died a natural
death.
    But then, there could be no question that the Vulcan
diplomatic corps had never harbored a spy. Such a deception
was not only unthinkable, it was impossible.
    As impossible as Ki Mendrossen's confession to--Spock
could barely bring himself to even think the wordsmSarek's
murder.
Two impossibilities. Reducing the chance of coincidence.
Spoek felt his heart race. He knew he was on emotional
edge, but this unexpected message from the past was having
more of an effect on him than his control could suppress.
    It was one thing to have lost a chance to bring Romulans
and Vulcans together.

    It was one thing to have lost his father to the inescapable
ravages of age and time.
    But if his father had been murdered. If Spock had know-
ingly abandoned Sarek to the machinations of a criminal who
had worked on his staff, without recognizing the danger his
father faced. The failure of son to father was more profound
than any mere disturbance in diplomacy.
 How could such a thing have happened?
How could he have left his father to such a fate?
Without even realizing what he was doing, Spock squeezed
on his IDIC medallion until the heavy chain dug into the flesh
of his neck, then snapped.
    In one quick motion, Spock hurled the metal disk across
the room to smash against the far wall.
 His cry of outrage, of shame, echoed in the room.
 There was no more room in his life for failure.
 Or for logic.
 It was time things changed.




NINE

The Tobias was an Oberth-class science vessel with a total
volume, including warp nacelles, less than two-thirds of the
saucer section of a Galaxy-class starship. It was one of the
workhorses of Starfleet, with a small engineering hull that sat
directly beneath its command saucer. The command saucer
itself was attached at both sides to the warp nacelles, with the
total effect being as if a more standard starship design had
been squashed together, fore and aft. The ungainly though
sturdy configuration of the Oberth class had changed little in
almost a century.
    Yet Christine MacDonald was proud to be her commander.
Many of the officers whose careers she studied, including
Kathryn Janeway, had begun as science specialists, then risen
to starship command. Christine viewed the Tobias as a way
station on her path to taking the center chair of one of the
new Sovereign ships herself.
    Presuming, of course, that Starfleet and the Federation
survived.
 But Christine was willing to make that presumption.
 Like the man who materialized beside her on the ship's

transporter pad, she would never give up, and neither would
the Federation.
    Christine stepped down from the elevated platform, nod-
ded to the transporter tech behind his console, and started for
the door. Only when the doors puffed open did she realize
that Kirk was no longer at her side. She turned back to find
him still standing on the pad.
 "Jim?" she asked. "Are you all right?"
    Kirk hesitated before answering, as if clearing his head. "It
was... an unusual experience," he said. "Transportation."
    Christine was mystified by his reaction. Even if Jim weren't
the legendary starship captain James T. Kirk, though she was
still sure he was, who went into space these days who had not,
at least once, been transported?
    "Have you never been beamed before?" she asked incredu-
lously.
    Kirk stepped lightly from the pad. "It's just been a long
time since I concentrated on what the sensations of the
process actually are." He smiled reflectively. "Quite remark-
able when you think about it."
    Christine almost said, "It's just simple matter dematerial-
ization," but didn't, afraid she'd sound rude. However, her
desire to confront Kirk about how he had managed to survive
the events of Veridian III grew even stronger and harder to
suppress.
     "Let's go to the bridge," she said. "That's where the most
efficient library consoles are." This time, Kirk followed.
    The corridors of the Tobias were almost deserted. The ship
had been in standard orbit of Chal for almost eight months,
with stationkeeping procedures fully automated, and most of
her crew of ninety-eight aiding the relief effort on the surface.
    The only other time her ship had felt so empty to Christine
was when she had toured it in spacedock at Vulcan, during its
last refit. Then, it slept like a bulky dragon, full of brute power




and potential, waiting to be awakened. But now, it felt infirm
to her. Passive, waiting, on hold.
    If the Federation fell, she wondered, what would be the fate
of the thousands of other ships that served it? Would they end
their days in lonely orbits, slowly decaying until inevitable
reentry, leaving fiery trails to be incorporated into the myths
of the primitives living among the ruins of once great civiliza-
tions? Or, would they, centuries hence, be rediscovered in
abandoned spaceports, restored, and given a second chance
to become the driving force behind a second Federation?
    Christine stopped for a moment by the turbolift doors.
Unconsciously, she reached out to touch the corridor wall,
searching for the vibration of the generators that kept her ship
in standby mode.
 She became aware of Kirk watching her.
 "The ship is quiet," he said.
     "She's old," Christine answered, though she knew that
wasn't what Kirk had meant. "Refit at least five times."
 "You wonder how she'll end."
    Unnerved, Christine nodded as the lift doors slipped open.
It was like having a conversation with a Betazoid, as if he
could read her thoughts.
    She stepped into the lift with Kirk. "Bridge," she said. The
car hummed to life.
 "The ships aren't important," Kirk said.
    Christine turned to Kirk, surprised. That's not what a
starship captain was supposed to believe. "The ships have to
be important," she protested. "They're what keep the Federa-
tion alive and growing. They're the lifeblood of our civiliza-
tion, our growth as a species, our acquisition of knowledge."
She flushed, embarrassed at her outburst. She had spoken
without thought, only with passion.
    Kirk looked at her as if he were a parent humoring a child.
Christine was annoyed to feel so foolish, so exposed.
 "It's just machinery," Kirk said mildly. "And sometimes, it

can blind us to the minds that conceived it, and the souls who
serve it."
    Now Christine was sure that that was not anything the
James T. Kirk she had worshipped might have said. Perhaps
it was time to confront Kirk directly as M'Benga had urged
her to do. She had to know what could have changed her
childhood idol so dramatically from the way history had
recorded him.
 But he continued before she could begin.
    "It's your crew, Commander. That's what's important. The
Tobias is only a shell that can take you from world to world.
In time, it will wear out, or be destroyed .... "Kirk paused,
looking away, as if caught up in a memory. "There always will
be another machine to replace it. Faster, sleeker, more
powerful. But even the newest ship in the fleet means nothing
without her crew."
 "And her captain," Christine said pointedly.
    The lift doors opened on the bridge. Half the stations were
dark. Kirk put his hand on Christine's shoulder, to stop her
from stepping forward.
    She felt the heat of him where he touched the bare skin of
her shoulder. exposed by the cut-out sleeves of her tunic. She
turned to him, drawn by his close presence.
    "I once knew someone who thought being captain of a
starship was the highest goal anyone could achieve. But the
position is a sentence, not a job."
    "I don't understand." Christine said. The air in the turbo-
lift car felt charged. His gaze still held her. His hand was still
on her shoulder.
    "The captain is the one trapped in the middle, caught
between the machine and the crew, unable to be one or the
other. It's... very lonely."
    "Everything demands a price," Christine said, and be-
lieved every word. "If I'm willing to pay it, then nothing else
should matter."




    Kirk slowly took his hand away, as if understanding that he
could not change her mind.
    "The person t knew, he thought just like that. Believed
what you believe."
    "What happened to him?" Christine asked, no doubt in her
mind as to the identity of the person they discussed. "Did he
get what he wanted?"
 "He became a starship captain."
 "And what price did he pay?"
    Kirk studied her, seeming to search through all the words
he knew, unable to find any that could answer her question,
until: "He couldn't be anything else."
    It was the one answer Christine hadn't expected. She stood
in awkward silence; then Kirk gestured to the bridge, as if this
were his ship and she were the guest.
 "This way." she said, and they left the turbolift together.

 An hour later. Kirk's briefing had ended.
    Christine had placed herself at the computer terminal as
before. but this time Kirk asked the questions and read the
screens above the science stationtthe largest bridge position
on the science vessel. He assimilated the data in a way that
required Christine to struggle to keep up.
    When he had exhausted the information available, Kirk sat
down in the operator's chair beside Christine. Deep in
thought. he leaned back, steepling his fingers.
    Christine ignored the questioning glances from the only
other crew on the bridge of her shiptPini at communica-
tions. and Changdrapnor at operations. She was intent on
hearing what Kirk*s pronouncement would be.
"You look like someone who's seen this before," she said.
An expression of anger darkened Kirk's eyes. "Ecological
disaster? Breakdown in the food supply? What else is history
made from?"
 "l meant, personally." Christine explained.

    Kirk seemed to think about his answer for a moment.
"Yes," he said. "I have." It was the first piece of real
information he had given her about his background.
    "Where?" Christine pressed him. When Kirk didn't answer
at once, she persisted, "Your homeworld? A colony planet?"
    "A colony world," Kirk finally acknowledged. "A long time
ago." He looked back at the science-station screen, where the
sector's main trade routes were displayed. "This shouldn't
have happened," he said.
    Christine straightened up in her chair. "Hold on, weren't
you the one who just told me something like the virogen
plague was bound to happen? That it was only a question of
when?"
    Kirk tapped the display screen. "On those key trading
worlds, yes. We've introduced too many different life-forms
into too many different environments. We've tried to create
uniform ecologies on worlds with different suns, different
biological histories. Half the grain-producing planets in the
Federation now use the same strain of wheat. That means one
disease could wipe out half the agricultural base of the
quadrant. The diversity of a thousand worlds is being eradi-
cated more and more every day. We call it efficiency. But it's
an act of strangulation. Of suicide."
    It was the first time Kirk had spoken with something other
than quiet deliberation and careful choice of words. She
heard a passion in his tone that was as surprising to her as ifa
Vulcan had suddenly shouted in anger.
    She probed his reasoning. "But hasn't the virogen done
more than a single grain disease would ever be capable of?. it
affects all chlorophyll-producing plants, not just grains."
    "That's my point," Kirk said, frustration evident in his
voice. "Chlorophyll is only one of nature's solutions to
transforming solar energy into plant growth. But the Federa-
tion has systematically spread chlorophyll-producing plants
to every planet in its boundaries. If native ecosystems had




been left intact, this virogen would have affected Earth, Mars,
a handful of other worlds with similar plant stocks. Any
disruption on those planets could have easily been dealt with,
by relief efforts from non-chlorophyll-based worlds. But look
what's happened because we wiped out diversity. All we cared
about was growth, not stability. And now we're paying the
price."
    Christine had heard these arguments before, though she
was surprised to hear them coming from a man of action like
Kirk. And she knew the Federation's terraforming bureaus
were quick with counterarguments.
    Uncontrolled ecosystems were precisely those in which
unexpected mutations and disease organisms arose. By estab-
lishing an artificial interplanetary ecology, one that was
uniform and understood in near-molecular detail from dec-
ades of study and refinement, the Federation's experts main-
tained that change could be averted and biological security
guaranteed. But somehow Christine was certain that even this
Kirk would not be swayed by the opinions of the Federation's
experts. He would never change that much.
    There was another question she did want answered,
though.
    "If all that you say is true, then why is what happened on
Chal different?"
    Kirk's eyes flashed with an intensity that Christine could
not identify--pain,'outrage, despair... whatever its source,
it had reached the point at which Kirk had lost all patience.
    "Chal was a paradise," he said. "Its biosphere was engi-
neered by Romulan and Klingon ecologists."
    "Engineered?" Christine said in surprise. "I never read that
in the briefings. The background logs say this was just a
colony world."
    "Then the background logs have been sanitized. Chal was
established as a military outpost. Very few of the land-based

plants and animals are native." Kirk's tone became scathing.
"It is ridiculous to believe that a virogen that affects an
artificial ecosystem created with native Earth life-forms could
also affect a Klingon/Romulan ecosystem at the same time.
One way or another, there has to be time for adaptation and
evolution."
    Christine's training came to the fore and without thought
she pushed away all consideration of her hero's personal
mystery. Kirk had just brought a new piece of the puzzle to
the equation that affected her job, new information which she
was certain even Starfleet didn't know.
    "But you saw the latest report from Starfleet," she re-
minded Kirk. "No one believes that the virogen arose over-
night. They believe it existed in a benign or dormant form for
years, spread along the trade routes, and only then became
active. That accounts for it striking so many different worlds
in so short a time."
    "They're wrong," Kirk said. "Chal is not on any major
trade routes. It is not a net importer of food products. Its
ecosystem is artificial. The virogen could never have arisen
here by natural contamination processes."
    Christine opened her mouth but nothing came out. From
the corner of her eyes, she saw Pini and Changdrapnor turn to
look at Kirk.
    Christine kept her eyes locked on Kirk as well. The conclu-
sion he was advancing was terrifying. She had to be sure he
knew what he was talking about.
    "Why do you know things about Chal's ecosystem that
Starfleet doesn't?"
    "Ask the Chal who live in the main city," Kirk answered.
"There used to be a... museum in the center of town,
disguised as a power-generating station. It told the history of
the colony in great detail."
    Christine turned to the science terminal, called up a map of
the main city, and cycled back through the years until she saw




a major structure in the town's center. She called up the data
on it.
    "Power station. Says here the Starfleet Corps of Engineers
tore it down about seventy-five years ago, just before Chal
joined the Federation."
 "It was a military museum," Kirk said. "I was in it."
 Christine turned back to him. "Seventy-five years ago?"
 "Eighty years ago."
    Christine let the improbability of that statement pass.
Eventually Kirk would have to confirm his identity and
explain how he had survived. Right now, his theory about the
virogen was more important to establish.
    "You're actually suggesting that the military branches of
Starfleet have information which could help the science
sections understand the virogen, but which they aren't shar-
ing? I find that difficult to believe."
    "Whatever else Starfleet is," Kirk said, "it's a bureaucracy.
You work for it. You know how information can become
compartmentalized and lost."
    "Maybe that's how they did things in the past," Christine
said. "But I have more faith in Starfleet than you apparently
do."
    "It was a long time ago," Kirk allowed. "But it's still
Starfleet."
    Christine turned back to the terminal, rapidly typed in
more commands, then read the resulting text with a shock of
understanding.
    "Eighty years ago," she read out to Kirk in a low voice that
would not be heard by her curious bridge staff, "Chal applied
to the Federation for membership. It says here there was an
incident of sorts. Klingon vessels were destroyed. The result
of the last gasp of the Cartwright conspiracy in Starfleet
Command." She narrowed her eyes, looking for any hint of
reaction. "Starfleet's C-in-C, Androvar Drake, died in a space
battle here."

  Kirk gave away nothing.
    "The logs say that the person responsible was James T.
Kirk."
    Kirk's expression was so impassive that Christine was
certain he had studied on Vulcan.
    "Did you ever meet hiTM back then? Eighty years ago?
Jim?"
    Kirk stood up, completely unreadable. "James T. Kirk died
a long time ago. I don't believe in dwelling on the past."
    "I'm going to have to tell Starfleet what you've told me,"
Christine warned him.
    "It's too late to do any good. But when you do, tell them to
activate all sealed files on the chaichaj 'qmey. The Children of
Heaven. That'll bring up the data they need on Chal's
ecosystem." Kirk started for the turbolift. "I have to get back
to Teilani."
    "Jim, wait," Christine said. "I'm going to have to tell
Starfleet how I got this information. Why won't you tell me
who you are? For the record."
    For a moment, Kirk hesitated, as if caught in an inner
struggle. "I'm no one," he said at last. "Let it go at that."
    Christine wanted to protest that he was wrong, that it was
time he step out of the shadows of the past. But something in
his face stopped her.
  "Please," Kirk said.
    Christine nodded, wondering what it would be like to find
herself in a new century, with all the old familiar touchstones
gone. "But if you remember anything else that might help
US ....  "
     "I'm not going anywhere," Kirk said, and this time found
an almost wistful smile. "Chal is my home, now. I'd like to
keep it that way."
    Christine nodded. However Kirk had come to this place
and this time, he had clearly decided his days of adventure




were over. She could respect that decision, even if she
couldn't understand it.
    She watched him walk to the turbolift. Once inside, he
paused, keeping the doors from closing as he glanced around
the bridge.
    'lt's a fine ship," he told Christine. He met her eyes. "But
just a ship."
  He stepped back. The doors closed. And he was gone.
    Instantly Pini and Changdrapnor got to their feet and
joined their commander.
    "Who was that?" the diminutive communications officer
asked.
  "No one," Christine said.
    Changdrapnor scratched at the iridescent scales that grew
at the edge of his beak. "He looked familiar. Almost like--"
    "No speculation," Christine said firmly. "We owe him that
much."
    Both Pini and Changdrapnor reacted with unquestioning
acceptance.
    Christine regarded her crew with pride. Kirk had been
partially right. A ship was nothing but a shell without a good
crew to go with her. And her crew was one of the best.
    "Lieutenant Pini," she said crisply, "get me Starfleet Com-
mand emergency relief headquarters, priority channel. I want
to speak with Admiral Goddard personally."
    The communications officer looked wide-eyed in concern.
"Commander... I'm not sure I can do that. We're just a
science vessel."
    "Tell his office that we have uncovered evidence that may
indicate the virogen plague is artificial."
  "We have?" Changdrapnor hissed in surprise.
    "Maybe, maybe not," Christine said as she looked over at
the closed turbolift doors. "But at least we'll get someone's
attention."

TEN

Will Riker's protestations were still ringing in Picard's ears as
he materialized in the cramped manager's office of Gamow
Station on Alta Vista Ill. As first officer, it was Riker's duty to
take on all hazardous away missions. The captain was too
valuable a resource to risk.
    But Picard had argued that he was merely beaming into a
Federation science station. How hazardous could that be?
    Riker had muttered that he hoped they wouldn't find out,
and then Picard had dissolved in the transporter's beam, and
reappeared here.
    The manager, Chiton Kineaid, was an extraordinarily tall
and slender woman, almost two and a half meters in height,
from a low-gravity Earth colony world. As she rose to greet
her visitor, Picard had to look up through his helmet visor to
meet her eyes. He hoped he was able to control his expression
of surprise at her size as easily as she controlled her reaction
to his wearing a hard-vacuum environmental suit. His com-
munications with her by viewscreen had not prepared him for
the total impact of her height.
    Chiton lightly shook Picard's gloved hand. "I take it
Starfleet still hasn't been able to isolate the virogen?"




    Picard adjusted his interior comm-link control so he could
speak to the station manager through the comm badge she
wore on her Starfleet uniform. "Not yet," he said. "Though
Dr. Crusher remains hopeful."
    Chiton appeared to believe Picard's assessment of the
situation as much as he did--not at all. She gestured to a
chair by her piled-high desk. "Sit, if you can."
    Picard declined. Chiton pushed a stack of diagnostic kits to
the side and sat back on the corner of her desk, her thin arms
folded against her chest. The movement made Picard think of
insect limbs. He suppressed the unsettling thought quickly.
    "Forgive me if I don't offer you something to drink,"
Chiton said.
    Picard admired the station manager's ability to find humor
under present conditions. The only way her science outpost
could support the fourteen hundred refugees who had been
brought to it was by abandoning all pretense as to her original
mission. The domes in which solar sensors had been deployed
to study the inversions of the Alta Vista sun had been
emptied of all scientific apparatus. The rocky scrubland that
surrounded Gamow Station's pressure domes was littered
with hurriedly disassembled machinery and unnecessary
equipment. Even so, there was barely room inside the domes
for the cots and replicatots the Enterprise and other relief
vessels had beamed down.
    But in no way could any of Gamow Station's refugees or
science staff be beamed up. Everyone on the station had been
exposed to the virogen, and only the strictest quarantine
measures could keep it contained. If it can be contained,
Picard thought.
    Chiton seemed sensitive to Picard's reluctance to begin.
"I'm assuming you beamed down to tell me something in
person you can't risk transmitting so that others might hear,"
she prompted.
 Picard appreciated the station manager's effort to make

this easier for him. "Two people from this station may have
escaped the blockade."
    Chiton frowned. "My staff tracked the chase with our deep-
space sensors. The Enterprise was the only ship to come
back."
 "Our sensors might have been fooled as well," Picard said.
 "Fooled?"
    Picard told Chiton how the Enterprise% chase of the
Bennett had ended.
    "A Vulcan and his pregnant, human mate?" she asked
incredulously. "And they killed themselves?"
    "Perhaps not. We checked the blast zone and there were no
traces of organic residue. I believe Stron and his wife beamed
to another location. A second ship, perhaps."
    Chiton put a hand on her jaw and sharply twisted her head
to one side as she thought over the implications. "Then it was
a very well organized escape."
    Picard winced as he heard a ripple of cracks come from her
elongated neck. His helmet's speakers amplified the sound
alarmingly.
    "What I am trying to determine," Picard said, "is who
among your staff would have had clearance and opportunity,
first to keep Stron's presence at the station hidden, and then
to allow him access to the Bennett."
    "Me," the station manager said at once, clearly untroubled
that she might be drawing suspicion to herself. "A couple of
others in operations."
 "Who, specifically?"
    Chiton rose to her full height and walked around her desk
to the computer terminal half-hidden in the clutter on the
surface of the desk. She began typing in commands. "Anyone
who maintained individual quarters. In the dormitories,
someone definitely would have noticed a Vulcan and his
pregnant human mate." Chiton turned the display screen
around so that Picard could read it. "These are current




medical logs for the station, including all refugees. No preg-
nancies. Twenty-two Vulcans. No one missing."
    "You're certain that all the refugees would have been
included in this list?"
    "S.O.P., Captain. When the refugees arrived, we still
weren't sure what we were dealing with. So everyone was
inoculated with broad-spectrum antiviral serum at the trans-
porter pads as they beamed in, or at the airlocks as they
transferred from shuttles."
    Picard reached for the terminal control surface, then real-
ized he wouldn't be able to input properly with his gloves.
"Are all the shuttles accounted for?" he asked.
 Chiton typed in the query. "Yes," she said.
 "When did the Bennett arrive?"
    This time, the station manager didn't enter Picard's ques-
tion. "The Bennett's been here from the beginning. It was
part of the original equipment allotment for the station."
    Picard stared at Chiton Kincaid, his surprise obvious. "The
Bennett was a cruiser escort. Why was it assigned to a planet-
based solar observatory like Gamow Station?"
    Chiton appeared to be equally surprised by his lack of
knowledge. "The ship wasn't part of our solar mission. She
was part of a terraforming study group."
    Picard's puzzlement deepened. "I wasn't aware that Alta
Vista Three was a candidate for terraforming. It already has a
native ecosystem." Picard was aware that the planet's plant
and animal species thrived in an atmosphere with more
sulphur and less oxygen than humans could survive in, but he
also knew that Federation regulations strictly prohibited the
alteration of an existing alien biosphere unless it closely
matched Earth norms.
 "Most assuredly," Chiton agreed.
 "Then what exactly was the Bennett's mission?"
    The station manager gestured up past the ceiling of her
o~ce. "The alta mist, Captain. Those colored clouds are giant

colonies of what's virtually an airborne algae. They're
epiphytic--absorb all their nutrients from the air. The Feder-
ation's terraforming bureaus were interested in engineering
the epiphytes to help in seeding other planets with oxygen.
The Bennett was modified to scoop samples from the atmo-
sphere and transfer them to terraforming pilot projects."
    Picard felt as if he had been struck by a phaser. "Could that
be how the virogen was spread?" he asked. Could the answer
to the greatest disaster that had ever threatened the Federa-
tion be so easily found?
    Chiton shook her head. "We thought of that, too. But the
Bennett never left the system. Once the virogen established
itself in the alta mist, that's when the quarantine began."
    Picard sighed, briefly fogging his visor. It would have been
too simple a solution to connect the Bennett and the alta mist
with the virogen. But still... there was one detail that
nagged at him.
    "What precisely was the nature of the Bennett's modifica-
tions?"
    Chiton called up a schematic of the ship. It was a simple
warp design, sleek enough for impulse-powered atmospheric
flight. The outlines of two large pods mounted on its under-
carriage began to flash. "Sampling tanks," Chiton explained.
"Pressurized nozzles, venting chambers, built-in transporter
links for transfer to holding tanks at the pilot projects. It's a
standard modification for biological assay missions."
    The pods were like a red-alert beacon to Picard. "Did the
Bennett fulfill any of its mission objectives?"
    Chiton looked annoyed. "As I said, it never left the
system."
 "But did it ever undertake sampling runs?"
    Chiton checked her computer. "Several," she said. "We
were using it to track the spread of the virogen around
the planet. All the data have been forwarded to Starfleet
Medical."




    "Then those sampling tanks must have been full," Picard
said.
  "What's your point, Captain?"
    "There was no organic residue at thee blast site. Even if
Stron and his wife had beamed off the ship, the blast site
should have been covered with the residue of the alta mist
from the sampling tanks. Thus, it must have been beamed off,
as well."
  "You're saying someone stole the alta mist?"
    "Under our noses." Picard wanted to contact his ship at
once, assemble his team, get Data and Geordi and Will at
work on this right away. But he still didn't dare transmit his
suspicions over subspace. Who knew who might be listening
in?
    "But why would anyone do that?" the station manager
asked.
    "! can't be certain," Picard admitted. "But it must have
something to do with the atmospheric spread of the virogen."
    Chiton straightened up and put her hands on her hips.
Picard could see the skepticism in her eyes and her posture.
    "Unfortunately, the virogen arose on several other systems
before it appeared here," she said. "That would seem to leave
a rather large hole in your theory."
    But Picard was certain he was on to something that no one
had yet suspected. His voice rose with his urgency. "Starfleet
believes the virogen might have been spreading through the
sector in a dormant phase, and only last year did it become
virulent. But what if it were engineered here in the first place?
Spread by colonies of alta mist which were released into the
atmosphere of a dozen worlds'?"
    Chiton's angular face tightened. "Captain Picard, ! told
you: The Bennet! never left the systems"
    "But surely other ships might have come and gone before
it. And the Bennell'S cargo and crew did break quarantine
when we chased it. it could be part of an ongoing operation."

    The station manager moved around her desk to face Picard
directly, towering over him. "You do realize what you're
suggesting?"
    Picard almost trembled at the thought that this might be
the breakthrough all of Starfleet had been waiting for. "Yes.
That the virogen is artificial and deliberately spread. A
hideous act of biological warfare against the Federation!"
    Picard looked up at the manager in excitement and was
surprised to see she didn't share his outrage.
    "Captain," she said quietly, "I think you're very wise to
keep this off the subspace channels."
    "But not for long," Picard replied. He felt invigorated,
charged with energy. After months of doing nothing, he had
an enemy to focus on, a goal to achieve. His findings here
could rally Starfleet in its darkest hour. Give the Federation
hope.
    Then Chiton grabbed his arm so suddenly, he didn't even
think to pull away. For a moment, he wondered if he
appeared too agitated, if she were going to suggest he com-
pose himself.
    He reached for the corem-link control on his forearm.
"Manager Kineaid, please... I must beam back to the
Enterprise."
    But from behind her back, Chiton produced a medical
protoplaser.
    "My regrets, Captain," she said. Then she slashed the
protoplaser's cutting beam across Picard's helmet, fusing the
built-in communicator circuits in a spray of sparks, and
slicing open Picard's clear visor. He felt the rush of Alta Vista
air strike his skin an instant before the sizzling heat of a spray
of molten transparent aluminum.
    Picard collapsed to his knees, gasping in agony, clawing at
his helmet, futilely trying to wipe the burning metal from his
face.
 Then the pain seemed to disappear as he felt the manager's




boot kick him sharply beneath the ribs, driving the air from
his lungs, making his vision sparkle with black stars.
    He fell back on the floor of the office, his vision swimming
as Chiton knelt beside him, still a giant, like a storm cloud
above him as he kept falling back into a dark place where all
pain would end.
    The last image he remembered was the tip of the proto-
plaser moving closer, glowing, whiting out the manager's
face. Her voice echoed in his helmet. "You're not going
anywhere."
 Then the pain vanished, along with everything else.

ELEVEN

Kirk's hands were raw where blisters had burst. His muscles
protested. His knee twinged where he had twisted the wrong
way while hefting one of the collapsed beams from the ruins
of Teilani's home.
 But he had never felt better.
    And looking at the small cabin he had constructed and
braced between two existing stone walls, he had never felt
more satisfied.
    He did not know how these feelings had come to be. Over
his career, he had never stopped learning. There had always
been more capable teachers to follow, more experienced
specialists whose examples he could profit by. As the years
had progressed, so had his store of knowledge and skills,
sometimes in spite of himself.
    If anything, he reflected, at his age he should be capable of
great and complex accomplishments, using the sum total of
his knowledge and experience.
    Yet more than ever, it was the simple things that drew him
now. Building a cabin instead of exploring a galaxy.
 Youth had been for him an explosion of opportunity and




possibilitiesma thousand worlds to experience, an infinite
number of directions to pursue.
    Each direction he had chosen, each challenge he had
accepted, had narrowed the focus of his life, until he had
come to this time and this place--the crossroads of his
existence.
  He would not have it any other way.
 One home. One dream. One love.
    He felt Teilani's arms slip around him as she stood to
admire his work.
 "It's beautiful," she said.
    Kirk tilted his head at his creation. "The door's crooked,"
he said.
    "I understand it's a very popular architectural feature on
Oo' noS. "
 "There're only two rooms."
    Teilani leaned her head against his shoulder. He ignored
the flash of pain her movement caused his strained muscles.
He wanted to feel her head resting against him. "Who needs more than two?" she asked.
    "And without plumbing, I had to dig a ditch out behind the
far wall."
    Teilani smiled up at him. "That's different. Tomorrow i'll
help you find some pipes."
    But whatever she said made no impression on him. He saw
only her eyes, her lips, the passion they had shared once and
which he knew they would share again.
    There was nothing he could do but kiss her. Nothing she
could do but return that kiss, as if no time had passed in all
the years they had been apart.
    Kirk lifted her and felt only the fire of youth in his arms. !f
his knee twinged, it had the good sense to keep its complaints
to itself.
    He carried her across the threshold he had built, leaving the
nightmare of Chal behind.

    The second, smaller room held their bed--a mattress made
of scavenged blankets, pillows of rolled-up food sacks, a
shuttered window casting bars of light and shadow as if it
were summer outside and the world and the Federation
weren't dying all around them.
    He placed her gently on that bed and she did not take her
arms from around him.
    For a moment, he felt a sense of nervousness. He had been
gone so long.
    But she whispered in his ear to tell him that no time had
passed at all. That in this bed he had made, in this home he
had built, the years held no dominion.
     He kissed the scar that ravaged her face, touched her hair
embroidered with gray, and knew she was right. Time meant nothing.
 All his life meant nothing.
    Except for this one perfect moment in the arms of this one
woman.
 They made love then.
For the first time, for the hundredth. It didn't matter.
After all the years and the light-ycars he had traveled, all
the worlds he had seen, James T. Kirk had finally found what
he had sought.
 In Teilani's embrace, he was home.

    They lay together, letting the breeze cool the sweat from
their bodies, watching dust motes spiral in the thin shafts of
light that pierced the wooden wall.
    Teilani stretched against him. Kirk held her hand, kissed
her fingers, felt the tension inside her.
    He rolled onto his side, traced the frown she wore.
"What?" he asked.
 "Spock told me you were gone."
 "Shhh," Kirk whispered. He kissed her eye, kissed the




Klingon furrows of her brow. the Romulan tips of her ears. "1
didn't die. I was only lost."
    "Spook came to Chal to tell me in person. Less than a year
after... after you left. He didn't say you were dead. I don't
think he believed it. But he said you were gone. And I could
tell he meant forever."
    She turned to touch his chest, stare into his eyes. '~I read
about what happened on Veridian Three." She gazed at him
questioningly, waiting for him to answer next what he must.
 "! didn't die." Kirk said, smiling.
 "But how... '? Tellant asked.
    He held a finger to her lips. Saw her react to the shadows in
his eyes. He had wondered how much Starfleet would make
public about his rescue by the Borg. About the Borg and
renegade Romulan alliance to invade the Federation. Some
secrets were best left to history.
 "1 came back," Kirk said. "Isn't that enough?"
    Tellant pressed her head against his chest, held him tight.
He was flooded with the memory of where he had gone after
the near-destruction of the Borg homeworld. The teachers he
had found. The mysteries revealed.
 'Tin so afraid you'll leave again."
 "Not today," Kirk said.
    They made love again. For the first time. For the hun-
dredill . . .
     .. and awoke to the screams of the dying, as Orion fighters
blazed through the night sky. raining death and destruction
on the last of K:irk's Eden.

TWELVE

For the fifth time that day, Sarek's chief of staff transformed
himself into the mist of quantum dissolution.
    In the privacy of a Babel conference room, Spock studied
his young aide, Srell, for his reaction to the holoprojector's
recording.
 Predictably, Srell betrayed no emotional response at all.
 "It is an obvious forgery," the young Vulcan said.
 "Explain."
 "Ki Mendrossen is not dead."
 "How do you know?."
    In the clipped, efficient exchange that passed for conversa-
tion among Vulcans, Srell did not hesitate. "Before our
arrival at Babel, I reviewed personnel files at the diplomatic
corps. Mendrossen's was current."
    Intrigued by Srelrs comment, Spock reached out and shut
off the holoprojector before the recording of the empty floor
ended on its own. "Why did you review KJ Mendrossen's
personnel file?"
    "I anticipated a positive result to the vote on expanding
negotiations with Romulus. To fully exploit the opportunity
would have required additional workers with expertise in




delicate diplomatic matters. Mendrossen's work for your
father was most satisfactory. I wished to see if he were
available for reassignment." "Was he?"
    "Ki Mendrossen is on leave. I presume he will be available
for reassignment upon his return."
    Spock nodded, placed his hands behind his back, and
began to walk the length of the conference room. The walls of
the simple chamber were adorned with the banners of Federa-
tion members. Many of them were battle flags--the lesson
being that even onetime enemies could eventually sit at the
same table in peaceful negotiation.
    "What is the current status of Sakkath?" Spock asked as he
paced. At the same time Mendrossen had been Spock's
father's chief of staff, Sakkath had been Sarek's personal
assistant. The Vulcan aide had used his telepathic skills to
help stabilize Sarek's emotional control during the final
negotiations to complete the Legaran treaty.
    This time, Srell did hesitate before answering. "I do not
know."
    Spock found that a curious response. "Would it not have
been logical to ascertain Sakkath's status at the same time
you reviewed Mendrossen's?"
    Srell remained seated at the table, hands folded before him.
Spock now stood behind his assistant's chair. Their different
positions and attitudes properly reflected their relation as
teacher and student.
    "Sakkath is Vulcan," Srell explained. "I did not believe the
Romulans would deem him a suitable neutral observer.
Mendrossen is human. The Romulans would complain about
his connection to the Vulcan diplomatic corps, but in the end,
he would be suitable."
  "Sakkath is also on leave," Spock said.
    Srell turned in his chair to face the elder ambassador.
"Then you have checked the personnel files as well."

    "No," Spock said. "I contacted a colleague at the corps. My
inquiries were unofficial. No data trail exists which possibly
might alert remaining spies."
    "A spy in the Vulcan diplomatic corps is a logical impossi-
bility."
 "Yet Ki Mendrossen has disappeared."
    A human might have questioned Spock's assertion. Srell
knew better. He simply asked for more information. "Are
there indications of suicide?"
    Spock leaned past Srell to pick up the holoprojector which
still sat on the conference table before the young Vulcan.
"This unit contains power cells manufactured on New Malta.
Mendrossen's last known eommuniqu6 with the corps was
from New Malta. He arrived at New Malta on the passenger
liner Olaf Stapledon. He had further booked diplomatic
courtesy passage on the Starfleet survey vessel Sioane, to
depart ten standard days later. Yet he was not aboard the
Sloane when it departed New Malta. He is no longer known
to be on New Malta. Logic, and this recording, suggest he
died on New Malta."
    "There are many arguments I could construct," Srell said
calmly. "Perhaps Mendrossen went into hiding after creating
this fraudulent recording. Perhaps Mendrossen was kid-
napped or murdered by an unknown assailant who subse-
quently manufactured this recording." "For what purpose?" Spook asked.
    "There are insufficient data." The young Vulcan stood up
beside Spook. "The most important fact is that Sarek was not
murdered. He died of Bendii Syndrome. Thus, however it
was made, Mendrossen's confession to participating in your
father's murder is also a fabrication."
    Spock took a moment to prepare himself before he stated
his most shocking discovery of the day. "Srell, I have ascer-
tained that my father was never clinically diagnosed."




    For a moment, Srell's emotional control faltered. "Am-
bassador... I assure you I was at his side day and night.
His wife attended him. The best healers from Vulcan at-
tended him. You yourself have read the reports of the events
at Legara Four when Sarek's emotional turmoil bled through
to the crew of the starship he traveled on. Everything un-
equivocally pointed to Bendii."
    But Spock was unswayed. "Observation of symptoms
aside, the only definitive diagnosis of Bendii Syndrome is
obtained by eulturing tissue from the metathalamus. I have
determined that procedure was never undertaken."
    Spock's young assistant looked stricken. "But... that is
illogical. How could healers treat a patient without confirm-
ing their diagnosis?"
    Spock sighed for the many lessons of age that the years still
held for Srell. "Even on Vulcan, logic does not always obtain.
My father was old, revered, dying. I find it most logical that
given the apparent definitive nature of his symptoms, no
healer felt it necessary to subject him to the discomfort of a
biopsy of his metathalamus."
    Srell sat down abruptly, rigidly staring across the chamber
at the flag of the Martian Colonies that hung directly opposite
him. The flag was stitched with laser holes from the War of
Declaration. "I was on your father's staff. I should have
known. I might have done something."
    "Regrets are illogical," Spook said, though he knew he was
not convincing.
    In any event, Srell did not appear interested in any wisdom
Spock might dispense. "Why would anyone want to kill
Sarek?"
    Spock sat down beside Srell, no longer a teacher instructing
his student. Instead, they were two colleagues mourning a
revered mentor. "My father's career spanned more than a
century and a half. That is ample time to make enemies.

 Perhaps members of the cause or revolution to which Ki
 Mendrossen referred."
  "But to kill him in such a manner," Srell said.
  "In what manner?"
     Srell glanced at Spock. "To make it appear as if he had
 Bendii Syndrome, of course."
    "Of course. But how could his murderer accomplish that?"
Spock asked.
    Srell looked around the room at the flags, then down at the
table. He found no answer. "I... do not know."
  "There are three possible techniques," Spock said.
  "You conferred with yet another colleague?"
    "With a holographic representation of an expert in Vulcan
criminal investigations. I availed myself of the holodeck in
the health center."
    Srell made no pretense of hiding his bewilderment. "How
can there be an expert in Vulcan criminal investigations?
There is no crime on Vulcan."
    "Other than the murder of my father," Spock agreed dryly,
"there is very little. Nonetheless, I reconfigured several Vul-
can expert systems in sociology and medicine to interface
with a fictional human detective. He was quite illuminating in
his understanding of motive, opportunity, and technique.
Though his violin skills are rudimentary, at best."
    "You conferred with a fictional human detective on a
hoiodeck?" Srell said in the Vulcan equivalent of shock.
"That is not a technique they teach at the Academy." "I have learned to be adaptable."
    "Indeed." Srell visibly struggled to compose himself, then
sat forward in his chair, holding his hands together on the
tabletop again, preparing to be enlightened. "What are the
three techniques by which Benalii Syndrome might be dupli-
cated?"
 "First, telepathic induction," Spook said. "It would require


a series of progressively intrusive mindmelds between mur-
derer and victim, with the memories of those mindmelds
continually erased. Second, gradual exposure to deuterium,
in food and drink, which would build up in Vulcan neural
tissue and degrade its function, and which could be detected
at autopsy. And third, deliberate exposure to the Bendii
Syndrome pathogen."
 Srell blinked. "Bendii is not communicable."
    "Almost any disease is communicable if extraordinary
measures are taken to introduce the pathogen into the body of
the victim."
    Srell sat in silent contemplation for long moments. "Why
was your father simply not shot? Lost in a transporter
malfunction? Poisoned in one dose?" Srell looked beseech-
ingly at Spook. "He died almost three years after he was
thought to exhibit Bendii symptoms. Why so long?"
    "Clearly, it was important to the murderer that no one
suspect Sarek was murdered. Perhaps it was enough that his
abilities were impaired."
    "His stamina grew steadily worse," Srell admitted. "But
his abilities, when he commanded them, were as formidable
as ever."
    "However, as my father's stamina declined, he undoubt-
edly had to relinquish involvement in many ongoing mis-
sions."
 "That is true," St'ell conceded.
    "But not," Spock said, quoting the subjects on which Ki
Mendrossen, Sarek's chief of staff, had reported to the
mysterious prefect of Gonthar District, "his involvement in
the Aretara reparations, the redrafting of Starfleet's First
Contact protocols, the repatriation of the Andorian drall-
stone, and all discussions relating to the Romulan unifica-
tion."
 Srell nodded slowly. "That is also true."

    "Thus, logic dictates that the reason for my father's murder
is connected to one or more of those ongoing negotiations."
     "Sarek was not involved in Romulan unification. He fol-
lowed that topic only because of your involvement in it."
 "Indeed."
    "He was... pleased with your progress, if not your tac-
tics."
    Spock lifted an eyebrow. It was most inappropriate for
young Srell to discuss Sarek's feelings with Sarek's son. "My
fictional expert pointed out a common element to all three
methods of murder," Spock said, changing the subject.
 "Ongoing personal contact," Srell said.
    Spock noted with approval his assistant's quick and logical
response. He decided the youth's earlier, inappropriate com-
ments had merely been the natural result of shock.
 "Thus, there are many suspects," Spock suggested.
    "His wife, Perrim Sakkath. Ki Mendrossen, who has
confessed--"
    "Who might have assisted in the murder," Spock amended,
"implying there may have been other conspirators--from the
so-called cause or revolution."
    "Myself," Srell continued matter-of-factly. "The staff of
healers who attended him." The young Vulcan paused. "It
will be necessary to obtain a list of his visitors and appoint-
ments for the years preceding his death."
    "They are being prepared for me on Vulcan," Spock said.
Again, he had made the request of the Vulcan archives
~rough a third party--a scholar claiming to be researching
Sarek's life for a thesis.
 "When will the lists be available to us?" Srell asked.
 "When we arrive on Vulcan."
    Srell blinked. "I had assumed we would be returning to the
Romulan border."
 "The Empire will wait. There is no trace of the Klingon




who delivered the holoprojeetor to me. There is no library
correlation to a prefect of the Gonthar District. There is
nothing more we can do by subspace. Therefore, whatever
answers are to be found are waiting on Vulcan. The scene of
the crime, as it were." He stood up, signaling to Srell that
their meeting had ended.
     Srell immediately stood and smoothed the long, black tunic
he wore. "I will make new travel arrangements." Spoek nodded.
    Srell went to the door, turned back with a sudden thought.
"Ambassador, given the unusual circumstances by which you
obtained Ki Mendrossen's confession, have you considered
that you yourself are being manipulated into returning to
Vulcan to investigate your father's murder?"
    "Of course I am being manipulated," Spock said. "It is
merely a question of discovering who the manipulator is: Ki
Mendrossen, seeking absolution after his death, or a person
or persons unknown, for reasons which for now still remain
unclear to me."
    Srell spoke cautiously. "In regard to those reasons, Ambas-
sador. it could well be that having killed your father, the
person or persons responsible might not hesitate to kill again
if they fear their crime will be uncovered."
 "They are right to be afraid," Spock said.
 Srell didn't understand.
    "I am only half Vulcan," Spock explained. "Whoever killed
my father will have to answer to my human side."
    Spock noted with interest the manner in which Srell raised
both his eyebrows.
    In Vulcan terms, Spock's vow of revenge was obscenely
emotional.
    But it felt right. And at this moment in his life, that was all
that Spock cared about.
 Logic and Surak be damned.

THIRTEEN

Kirk leapt from his bed, propelled by instinct, not conscious
thought. The whine of phaser hits was that ingrained in his
mind.
    He ran from the bedroom, pulling his Vulcan cloak around
his shoulders. Outside, the low clouds of Chal's night sky
flickered and flared with lances of phaser energy from the air,
and explosions and fire from the ground.
    Teilani was suddenly at Kirk's side, holding his arm,
standing unafraid as the scream of impulse engines echoed
around them.
    "Atmospheric fighters," she said. She pointed up to a
sudden streak of blue light high above them. "They're coming
in from high orbit."
    Kirk calculated the flight path of the attacking ships.
"They're headed for the relief headquarters." He turned and
ran back inside the cabin, emerged a minute later, fully
clothed.
 He paused to see that Teilani was already dressed.
    "You have to stay here," he said automatically as the
ground rocked with distant explosions.
 Teilani merely smiled at him. "This is my world, James.




We'll fight for it today the way we fought for it before.
Together."
    Kirk caught her up in a fierce embrace. Then they ran for
the center of the city, the sky on fire around them.

     Christine MacDonald dug her way out from beneath her
 cot and crawled across the floor of the tent, blindly fumbling
 for her tunic and the comm badge pinned to it.
    Her ears rang with the explosion that had thrown her from
her sleep. She squinted as blinding phaser flashes struck a
nearby building. The midrange orange hue told her she was
seeing phaser bursts originating in the atmosphere, not from
orbit. If the Tobias had not already been taken out by a
mothership, then her crew should be able to handle a few
fighters.
    Another blast slammed into her, flattening the Starfleet tent
all around her. She fought against the constricting folds of
heavy fabric that pinned her arms to her sides. She gasped for
air as the collapsing tent pressed ever more tightly against her
face.
    Then she smelled smoke. Recognized the acrid odor of the
tent's insulation.
 I refuse to die out of uniform, she told herself.
 She stopped struggling. Forced her arms to relax at her side.
 She refused to die at all.
 She turned her head in the suffocating fabric.
    In one direction, she could feel a breeze along her right
cheek. That meant she wasn't completely entangled. There
was an opening somewhere.
    She rotated her right shoulder, felt the heavy fabric ease up
a few centimeters up on her right side.
    She ignored the roar of fighters streaking overhead. Did not
react to the thunder of the shock waves they left behind, or
the growing heat she felt on her left side.

     First solve the problem of being trapped, she told herself
 firmly. Then she could worry about fighting back.
  Her bare foot made contact with a blast of hot air.
    She bent her leg, kicked, twisted sideways until her right
hand was free at her waist She wriggled down, bracing her-
self against the ground, straining her neck, her shoulders,
until...
    .. she broke free of the tent and found herself surrounded
by flames.
    The relief camp was a war zone. The hospice across the
town square was an inferno.
    Christine stood in the middle of the destruction, in nothing
more than Starfleet-issue T-shirt and shorts, and instantly
assessed the situation.
    Whoever was flying those fighters, no one on the ground
was getting out alive
    She pushed her hair out of her face and looked around.
About five meters away, there was a gap in the flames from the
ruined tent. If she ran for it, didn't mind stepping on coals
with her bare feet, she could make it. Might make it. But then what?
    She directed her attention to the tented landscape that
surrounded her. Peered through the billowing smoke and
flickers of flame until she made out what had to be the
enshrouded outline of a folding chair on its side. It was where
she had thrown her uniform when she had gone to bed only
an hour ago.
    Ignoring the flames rushing closer, she stumbled over the
mounds of tent fabric until she stood beside the chair's
outline. She felt around for the leg of the chair and rubbed it
back and forth against the fabric until the chair leg gashed a
hole in the tent. She ripped the gash wider. Reached through
the opening. Felt her uniform tunic Yanked it out. Hit the
comm badge.
 "MacDonald to Tobiasmone to beam up now.t"




    And just as an explosion lifted a wall of blazing tentcloth
toward her, Christine dissolved in a different fire...
    ... and found herself kneeling on the transporter pad of
her ship.
    She leapt to her feet, tunic still clutched in one hand. Battle
stations sounded Alert lamps flashed.
  "How bad?" she shouted at the transporter tech.
    Two more transporter columns blossomed beside her. One
was M'Benga, brushing out sparks on her pant leg. The other
was a young Chal male, still half asleep.
    "They're jamming our sensors," the transporter tech
shouted back. "But we're punching through to beam up
everyone we can lock on to."
    Christine grabbed M'Benga and the young Chal by their
arms and hauled them off the pad. Another column of energy
appearedwanother crew member rescued from the carnage
below.
  "Is the ship under attack?" Christine asked.
The deck lurched with the shudder of buckling shields.
"They're hammering us," the tech said as his hands flew
over the controls. "Bare has the conn. He wants to hold orbit
as long as we can beam between shield cycles."
    Christine ran for the transporter controls. "Set your sen-
sors for human-only readings--no Chal, exclude anyone with
a comm badge."
    The transporter tech looked at his half-dressed commander
in horror. "Commander--we've got to take 'em as we find
'cm. They're being slaughtered down there!"
    Christine slammed down on the controls and wiped every
comm-badge trace off the board. "You're scanning for a
human male. He'll be running for the center of the attack."
    The tech screwed up his face in incomprehension. "What?
Everyone else is running away"
 "Then it should be easy to find him"--the deck lurched

again, the lights flickered as auxiliary life-support kicked in--
"right, Ensign?"
    "Yes, ma'am," the tech said. Sweat dripped from his brow
to the console. "Got someone on the move, heading into
town.. "
 "Lock on, mister," Christine said.
    "Have to wait for the shields to cycle." The ship seemed to
fall a foot beneath them as the artificial-gravity field stuttered.
"Barc's not dropping the shields. He's not cycling .... "
    Christine hit the corem control on the console. "MacDon-
ald to bridge! Lieutenant Bare--drop shields over the trans-
porter waveguides! Now!"
    Barc growled back over the speakers. "Commander, we
won't last a Klingon second!"
 "Now, Barcs! That's an order!"
    The engineer's only reply was a Tellarite snarl, but the
transporter tech announced that he had an opening.
    "Energize!" Christine shouted, and a moment later James
T. Kirk charged off the pad, transported in midstride.
    He looked at Christine without an instant of disorientation,
as if he were transported on the run every day. It was a
startling change from his last transport--now he was the
Kirk of her history books, and dreams. "There're people
down there who need my help!"
    Christine ran to him. "I need you on this ship!" Another hit
echoed through the transporter room. "We're under attack
and my only combat experience is in the Academy simu-
lator!"
    Kirk was enraged. "What makes you think I could do any
better?!"
    She grabbed his shirtfront, refusing to accept any outcome
but the one she wanted.
    "Because I know who you are, Captain. And right now,
you're our only way out of whatever the hell is happening




here!" She released his shirt. "Report to the bridge! That's an
order!"
    Kirk's jaw clenched. His eyes blazed into hers. But neither
one would give.
    Then Kirk looked at the tech. "There was a woman beside
me, running in the same direction." He looked back at
Christine. "And if she's not on this ship by the time I get to
the bridge, so help me I'll fly us all into the suns."
    Christine snapped her fingers at the tech. "You heard him!
Lock on and energize!"
 She stared at Kirk. "Anything else?"
    "No. But when this is over, we're going to have a long talk."
Then he ran for the doors and they parted before him.

    Kirk was awake in a nightmare. He knew it was the Tobias
that lurched and trembled around him. But he kept seeing the
corridors of the Enterprise-B as he ran for the deflector relay
room. Captain Harriman on the bridge. Scotty at ops, holding
her together. And the Nexus a wild beast, tearing at the ship
and her shields, clawing through the bulkheads to tip Kirk
from his time and--
    The lift doors opened and Kirk erupted onto the bridge. A
Tellarite jumped up from the center chair. "Chief Engineer
Bare, sir. The commander said you have the eonn, sir!"
    Kirk made his way to the chair, eyes fixed on the main
screen. A shaft of phaser energy flashed from an invisible
point among the stars and the ship trembled. "Shield strength?" Kirk called out.
    "Forty percent forward. Eighty percent aft." Kirk took a
look at the helmsman. He, or she, or it was humanoid, but
covered in iridescent blue and purple scales, with a mane of
what appeared to be bristling, prehensile tendrils cascading
from his shoulders. But one look was all Kirk had time for.
 "How many attackers?" he asked the helmsman.
 "Just one in orbit."

 "Then turn the ship around!" Kirk ordered.
    Instantly, the starfield on the screen twirled and the dark
disk of Chal's nightside flashed by. Another impact slammed
the ship, but the shields' response was stronger. "Keep giving me readings," Kirk said.
    "Aft shields seventy-seven percent, holding strong," the
helmsman said.
 "Who's weapons officer?" Kirk demanded.
    Beside Kirk, the Tellarite nervously grunted. "Uh, this is a
science vessel, sir."
    The scaled helmsman didn't take his eyes off his controls,
but raised a wickedly clawed hand with three jointless fingers.
"I have weapons, sir."
    "Then give me aft sensors on the screen," Kirk com-
manded. "I want range, class... How many fighters below
US?"
 "Seven, sir."
    Kirk leaned back in his chair, tapped a finger against the
arm, then suddenly looked down to make certain he hadn't
hit any control he hadn't expected. "That's a standard Orion
attack wing," Kirk said. "Any idea who our attackers are?"
    A short blond officer looked over from communications.
"There was no warning, sir. They refuse to respond to our
hailing frequencies."
 "Maximum magnification on the attacker."
    The viewscreen wavered. A small point of light became a
larger point of light.
    "They're bleeding energy through their shields," Kirk said
as he recognized the visual signature. "Keeps us from identi-
fying their class and targeting vital areas."
 Bare glanced at Kirk. "You've seen this before?"
"An old Orion trick. We're being attacked by pirates."
"There haven't been pirates in this sector for at least a
century." Kirk noted the skeptical grunt that accompanied
the Tellarite's observation.




    The bridge rocked and a sensor-control station threw off an
arc of sparks.
 "You want the chair back?" Kirk challenged Barc.
 "No. Sir."
    Kirk turned back to the screen. In some small part of his
mind, he was troubled that he did not have to think about the
possible strategies he could follow. They were as neatly
arranged in his thoughts as if they had been programmed. Is
this what Starfleet had made him? Would this be the destiny
he could never escape?
    "That orbiting ship will have to stay in space," Kirk said,
an analysis of Orion tactics coming effortlessly to him. "We
have to take out those fighters. Helmsman: Weapons status
for atmospheric combat?"
 "None, sir."
 "No torpedoes?"
 "None, sir."
 "Phasers?"
    "Designed for clearing navigational obstructions. We could
never cycle them fast enough to take on a fighter."
    Kirk leaned forward in his chair. "We can go into the
atmosphere, can't we?"
    The scaled helmsman glanced over his shoulder, and his
bristling mane parted so his solid green eyes could make
contact with Kirk's. "We can, sir. But we'll have the maneu-
verability of a brick.'~
    None of that was what Kirk wanted to hear. But there was
no time to waste. "Plot a course to the main city. Take us
down."
    At least the crew of Christine MacDonald's Tobias was
better than the ship's capabilities would suggest. Almost at
once, the stars slipped up the viewscreen as the dark disk of
Chal rushed toward them.
    Kirk held on to the arms of the command chair as the
Tobias began to vibrate with atmospheric drag.

    "Structural integrity field is holding," the helmsman an-
nounced. "Two minutes to target."
    Kirk was aware of everyone's eyes upon him. Two minutes
to target and then what? Without useful weapons and maneu-
verability, the Tobias would be an easy target for the seven
fighters laying waste to the main city. The Orions would not
be able to resist attacking her. Then Kirk saw the way out.
    "Track those fighters, helmsman," Kirk ordered. He heard
the turbolift doors open behind him. Teilani was now on his
right. Christine on his left, back in uniform. "Situation?" Christine asked.
    "We'll know in ninety seconds," Kirk said. "Helmsman,
maintain speed at Mach three. Configure shields for maxi-
mum displacement of air during sonic boom, but don't
enlarge them until those fighters are coming at us."
    Kirk knew the alien at the helm wouldn't understand what
he was planning, but he was pleased to see the helmsman's
claws race over the board, following Kirk's orders to the
letter. Christine had trained her crew well.
    "Fighters are banking," the helmsman said. "Coming up
on intercept course."
    "Do not break heading," Kirk told him. "Continue straight
for them, drop at the last second, then deploy tractor beams."
    The Tellarite stepped closer to Kirk and lowered his voice
to a growl. "Sir, at this speed, we'll never be able to hold on to
all seven of them."
    "We don't have to," Kirk said. "They're atmospheric
fighters, dependent on lift. Between the sonic-boom displace-
ment and even a second or two of contact with our tractor
beams, the pilots won't be able to maintain control."
 "What if they have antigray backups?"
    "Then they'll be as slow as we are, and the first thing they'll
want to do is get back into space."




    "Fighters are converging," the helmsman reported. "Twen-
ty seconds to intercept."
  "Ready on those shields .... "
    On the viewscreen, Kirk could see seven thin traces of fiery
exhaust merging over the black silhouette of the main island.
The fighters were rising to meet the Tobias.
    Then phasers lanced out from the exhaust trails. The
viewscreen flared as the forward shields, already strained by
atmospheric friction, shimmered on the brink of overload.
    "Forward shields at twenty-three percent," the helmsman
reported. "Intercept in eight seconds... seventeen per-
cent... five seconds... twelve percent..."
    Kirk felt Teilani's hand on his. He glanced at Christine. She
was grinning as she stared at the viewscreen and he knew she
shared his absolute conviction that this would work.
     Then the Tobias's bridge angled down as the impulse
engines roared and the viewscreen flared and-- rathe scaled helmsman cheered!
    "Four fighters down! Multiple collisions! We have midair
explosions!"
    Kirk leaned forward, ignoring the cheers. "Status of the
other three?"
    The viewscreen image shifted to show flaming debris
falling from the sky. An exhaust trail traced a twisting spiral
as an intact fighter spun toward the ocean.
    "One fighter out of control... two others climbing into
orbit on antigray propulsion."
 "Take them out, helmsman."
    "Aye, sir," the helmsman said uncertainly, and the Tobias
banked to follow her prey.
    For the first time, Christine spoke to Kirk. "They're de-
fenseless. Let them go."
    Kirk flashed her a sharp look. She seemed so young to be in
command of a ship. There was still so much she had to learn.
 "If they make it back to their mothership, they can be

repaired. And I guarantee you they will not fall for this tactic
again."
 "We are in range," the helmsman said. "Phasers locked."
    Before Kirk could give the order to fire, Christine inter-
rupted. "Transporter room, beam the pilots to the brig."
    The tech replied over the bridge speakers. "Commander,
their shields are up."
    Christine hesitated. Kirk turned to her. "You saw what they
did to the city," he said.
    Christine set her jaw. "Is this how you did things in your
century? By butchery and barbarism?"
    Kirk had no patience for what it would take to explain the
realities of the universe to this novice. He looked back at the
screen.
 "Fire phasers."
    The phasers whined before Christine could countermand
him.
    On the viewscreen, the small dots of the escaping fighters
flared into miniature suns, then trailed in falling fire to the
planet far below.
    "Sir," the helmsman said, "the mothership is breaking
orbit. Going to warp."
    Christine spoke very clearly to Kirk. "We are not chasing
her."
    But Kirk agreed without protest. "Chat needs us." He stood
up from the chair, went to Teilani as Christine reclaimed
command of her ship and gave her crew the orders to return
to orbit.
    "Are you all right?" Teilani asked Kirk. Her gaze com-
manded the truth from him.
    Kirk couldn't shake the feeling that he had done something
wrong. The adrenaline surge of sitting in that chair, fighting
that battle, left him shaken.
    "I never wanted to do that again," he said to her. "I'm...
tired."




    Teilani slipped her arm around him. "I'11 take you home,"
she said. They started toward the turbolift.
 "Jim, wait," Christine called out behind him.
 He paused on the upper deck.
 "Barcs said you identified the attackers as Orion pirates."
 Kirk nodded.
    "Anything else?" Christine asked. "Any idea why they'd
attack us?"
    Inwardly, Kirk sighed. Sometimes he wished he could
forget so many things in his past, but no one would let him.
    "Put an aerial view of the main city on the screen," he said.
Beside him, Teilani stiflened as the image appeared--the city
scribed by precise lines of fire and destruction. "Now overlay
a map schematic," Kirk said.
    The schematic appeared, making it easy to identify the
structures that had been hit.
 Christihe's chief engineer swore in Tellarite.
    "They went after all the communications systems,"
Christine said. "Every subspace transmitter, every long-range
sensor array." She turned to look back at Kirk. "They were
trying to silence us. Why?"
    "Did you send your inquiry to Starfleet?" Kirk asked.
"About the chalchaj 'qmey and the chance that the virogen
was deliberate?"
 Christine's face went white. "Yes," she said.
    "Then offhand," Kirk said as he turned back to the
turbolift. "I'd say someone got the message."

FOURTEEN

"We've had a bit of a revolt, Commander."
    On the main screen of the Enterprise-E, Manager Chiton
Kineaid of Gamow Station had the decency to appear embar-
rassed and concerned.
    "Protesters broke into the office complex as I was meeting
with Captain Picard," she continued. "They opened his suit
with a medical protoplaser, and took him hostage."
    Riker contained his anger. He had advised Picard not to
beam down to meet with Chiton, precisely because the
unexpected had a way of springing to life around starship
captains.
    "If you can drop your shields," Riker said icily, "we will be
able to locate the captain and beam him up."
    "You didn't hear me," the station manager replied. "Your
captain's been exposed to the virogen. He's in no medical
danger, but he can spread the disease to plant life-forms, just
like everyone else who's infected."
    Riker wanted to bellow with frustration. He didn't care if
everyone on the Enterprise were exposed to the virogen. He
wanted his captain back, and he wouM get him, despite




Manager Kincaid's obstructions. It was up to him to figure
out how.
    But his anger still disrupted his thinking. Behind the
command chair, he could hear Deanna talking to Lieutenant
Rolk. He turned to tell them to be quiet. He had to concen-
trate. He had to--
    The ship's counselor made a warning gesture, the Bolian
security officer hit a control, and Riker saw the viewscreen
flicker out from the corner of his eye. The plain, padded wall
of the bridge replaced it.
     "Deanna?" Riker said, unsure why she had just cut com-
munications with Gamow Station.
 "She's lying, Will."
 "About what?"
    Deanna shrugged. "Almost everything. But I sense the
most deception when she talks about the protesters."
 Riker went to the heart of the matter. "Is the captain still
 're?"
 "I believe so. She is concerned about him in some way."
    "Then chances are, Manager Kincaid is the one who's
holding him captive."
 "She is involved," Deanna said. "Absolutely."
    Now Riker felt sure and composed. His voice rang out
crisply. "Counselor, stand out of scanner range where I can
see you. Lieutenant Rolk: screen on."
    The virtual viewscreen re-formed and Chiton reappeared.
"Is there a problem, Commander?"
    "It's the new viewer," Riker lied smoothly. "We're still
working out the bugs." He settled back in his chair. "Manager
Kincaid, I am going to beam down an assault team to blow
your forcefield generators from the ground." He glanced over
at Deanna. She gestured imperceptibly that Chiton Kincaid
was perturbed by Riker's decision.
 But on the screen, the station manager conveyed only

compassionate concern. "Commander Riker, that's a valiant
idea. But destroying our forcefield generators will put the
whole station at risk from meteorological disturbances. And
the protesters have said they will kill your captain, and their
other hostages, if any rescue is attempted."
    "Don't they want to be rescued?" Riker asked, frowning.
His mind rapidly considered the possible motives of Picard's
abductors. Why else would they have captured him?
    "They apparently realize there is nowhere they can go.
Their demands are merely for more supplies."
At the side of the bridge, Deanna mouthed the word "lie."
Riker leaned forward in the command chair. "Tell the
protesters that we are willing to meet their demands for
additional replicators, and whatever other mat6riel we can
provide, on the condition that we speak with Captain Picard
to ascertain he is still alive."
    "I will do my best, Commander. But... conditions down
here are... somewhat unstable."
    "Inform the protesters that however 'unstable' conditions
are now, when this ship blows holes in your pressure domes
and exposes everyone inside to a poisonous sulphur atmo-
sphere, they will discover the true meaning of the word."
    Riker did not need Deanna's Betazoid abilities to register
the alarm in the station manager.
    "You would risk the lives of fourteen hundred innocent
civilians?"
    "I want my captain back, Manager. To rescue him, I am
prepared to take any means necessary. Enterprise out."
 Deanna approached Riker. "She believed your threat."
 "Good," Riker said. "Only it wasn't a threat."
    He could see Deanna sense the truth of what he said. "Will,
what do you think is really going on down there?"
    Riker stood. "The captain went down to uncover any
reason which could explain how Stron managed to hijack the




Bennett. and who might have helped him orchestrate his
escape. I believe the captain found the answers to those
questions."
 "You suspect Manager Kincaid was involved?"
    "I'll know that when I have a chance to speak with her,
face-to-face." Before Deanna could question his decision,
Riker added, "Counselor: You have the conn." He strode
toward the turbolift. "Data, Rolk, you're with me." He
touched his comm badge. "Dr. Crusher: Report to transport-
er room two, combat field kit."
Deanna gave him a concerned smile. "Good luck, Will."
But Riker returned the smile with a grin as Rolk and Data
joined him. "I don't need luck," he said. "I've got the
Enterprise."

    Picard awoke in darkness. His face felt numb. He tried to
touch his eyes to see if they were covered or if he were blind,
but his hands were tied, as were his legs. He strained every muscle at once.
 He was in a chair. Completely immobilized.
    "He's awake," a female voice said. Another deeper one,
male, responded, "We'll begin."
     Picard felt his head pushed from side to side. Something
was being removed. Then light exploded into his eyes.
 His eye.
 He realized he had sight in only one.
 The other half of his face was tight with bandages.
 He felt groggy, couldn't focus.
     "I'll hit him again," the first voice said. Though female,
Picard could tell, it wasn't Chiton Kincaid's. He braced himself for the blow.
    But instead, the cool tip of a hypospray touched his neck.
He heard it hiss. Felt his lungs respond reflexively as he drew
in a huge gasp of air, as if they had suddenly doubled in

capacity. Then everything snapped into focus and he was
fully alert.
 Staring directly into a face he recognized.
 Stroh.
 The Vulcan who had lied.
 But who had not, after all, killed himself.
    "I am impressed," Picard said. He heard himself slur his
words. Half his face was frozen, under some type of neural
block, he assumed. The molten aluminum from his visor. It
must have inflicted considerable damage, requiring the ban-
dages.
    "So am I," Stron said. The Vulcan no longer wore a
Starfleet uniform, only a civilian jumpsuit such as a shuttle
worker might wear. His was the deeper voice Picard had
heard.
    With some difficulty, Picard looked to one side, then the
other, to find the source of the female voice he had heard.
    Stron's human wife, still pregnant, though now in drab
civilian clothes. She was the one who had given him the
hypospray.
 "So not everything you told me was a lie," Picard said.
 "Vulcans never lie," Stron replied stiffly.
 "Except when there is a logical reason to do so."
    Stroh made a show of ignoring Picard's comment. Picard's
unobstructed eye scanned the room. Some type of supply
storage area, he guessed. The light panels on the ceiling were
too dim for a regular working area, there were no windows,
and from where Picard sat, he could see no door. The
unfinished walls were lined with shelves, stocked with small-
part trays. From the standard Starfleet inventory stickers on
the trays, and the milky smell of tetralubisol, Picard con-
cluded they were in a storage bay attached to Gamow
Station's shuttle launchpad.
 Stroh positioned himself on a chair in front of Picard. "I




must ask you some questions," he said. His manner was
formal, as if their meeting were not that of abductor and
hostage. "As a Starfleet officer, your first duty will, of course,
be to refuse. However, as a reasonable being, you know that
no one can resist a Vulcan interrogation."
    Picard couldn't quite believe what Stron was implying.
"You would mindmeld with an unwilling subject?"
    "Did you discuss the Bennett's modifications for gathering
alta mist with any of your crew?"
    Picard's pulse quickened. He felt vindicated by Stron's
question. It meant there was a connection between the alta
mist and the virogen. But he also realized the Vulcan's
question was a ruse. Under other circumstances, Picard
would have been tempted to say that his whole crew knew
about the modifications, so that Stron would believe there
would be nothing to gain by silencing Picard. But these were
not other circumstances.
    "Manager Kincaid was the one who informed me of the
modifications," Picard began. "As you know, I have not been
in contact with any of my crew since I beamed into her
office."
    Stron tried another trick question. "Who else among your
crew are aware of your suspicions that the Bennett did not
explode over asteroid Alta Vista two five seven?"
    "But the Bennett did explode," Picard said calmly, match-
ing the Vulcan's air of detachment. "The only suspicions I
shared with my senior staff were that you and your mate were
not aboard."
 "Are you aware of how that was accomplished?"
    "There are anomalous readings in our sensor logs of the
explosion," Picard said. "My science department heads are
analyzing them in detail."
    Stron reached out and pressed two fingers into the side of
Picard's neck, somehow creating a lance of pain that burned
through Picard's body.

 "That was a lie."
    Picard's eye watered. He blinked to clear it. "If you already
know the answers, you are being illogical to waste time and
effort in questioning me."
    "The alta mist is already en route, Captain. We have an
abundance of time."
    Picard strove not to react to that information. "My officers
will not rest until they have found me. You have far less time
than you imagine."
    Stron glanced at his wife, then pulled his chair even closer
to Picard. "Then we shall accelerate the process at the cost of
your intellect. I have yet to meet a human with the discipline
necessary to survive a forced meld unimpaired."
    The Vulcan reached out to Picard's face, aligning each
fingertip with a katra point.
 Picard spit in Stron's face.
    Without a hint of emotion, Stron again touched a nerve
point on Picard's neck, in what was obviously not a Vulcan
technique.
    Picard made no effort to ignore the pain that touch created.
He let it fuel his rage. Let the Vulcan deal with that if he
could.
    Stron's wife came to Stron's side. She had a medical kit.
"Let me try the drugs first," she said.
    Stron sat back in his chair. "He is a Starfleet officer. They
are trained and conditioned to resist most forms of interroga-
tion." He glanced at Picard with apparent disinterest. "Is that
not correct?"
    "You want answers," Picard growled, relishing the way in
which Stron's wife started in surprise. "You come in and try
to take them!"
    Then he rocked back and forth in the chair, shouting,
snarling, doing anything to keep his emotions at fever pitch.
He would pit his emotions against Vulcan impassivity any
day.




    Stron leaned forward and locked his arm around Picard's
neck, immobilizing his head. Picard struggled to bite the
Vulcan's fingers.
 "Hold him," Stron commanded his wife.
    Picard felt inordinately pleased at the hint of exasperation
he detected in Stron's voice.
    Stron's wife now wrapped her arms around Picard as well,
pressing on his neck, keeping his head bent forward and
down, making breathing difficult.
    Picard felt Stron's fingers again stab into his face, forcing
the contact.
    The Vulcan spoke the incantation with implacable determi-
nation. "My mind to yours, Jean-Luc Picard."
    Picard thought of his brother and nephew burned alive in
the fire that had swept the chfiteau. He thought of the Borg,
strapping him down, drilling into his flesh, violating his
identity.
    He saw his ship, the Enterprise-D, consumed by flames as it
plunged through the atmosphere of Veridian. Saw James T.
Kirk die before his eyes.
    Picard fought to fill his heart and his mind with hate and
rage and sorrow and channeled it all at the Vulcan who dared
invade his mind.
    Stron's howl echoed with Picard's as those emotions shot
back into the Vulcan's own mind.
    Picard felt the woman's arm tighten around his neck. His
breathing stopped. Blood hammered in his ears, each pulse a
phaser burst of unbridled emotion.
    And then, as if he had been plunged into a sea of cooling
water, the hate and pain were gone.
     My mind to yours, the Vulcan whispered in his mind, as he
overcame Picard's defenses. "Never," Picard croaked.
 Then a sudden stream of alien words and oddly familiar

images flashed through his thoughts and he felt the assault
abruptly cease as Stron pulled himself away in amazement.
 Pieard twisted away from the woman's grip, gasping for air.
 She knelt by her husband where he had fallen to the floor.
 "What's wrong?" she asked urgently. "What happened?"
    Stron gazed up at Picard in awe, frighteningly stripped of
any attempt to maintain Vulcan composure.
 "He has melded before," Stron said. "With the leader."
 Stron's wife stared at Picard with equal shock.
    Picard trembled, still bound in the chair. He did not
understand their reaction, but knew what Stron had found
within him.
 The echo of a long-ago mindmeld with a different Vulcan.
 Ambassador Sarek.
 Their leader.




FIFTEEN

Smoke curled up from the fuselage of the Orion fighter, each
thin tendril incandescent in the dawn's first light, dissipating
only slowly into the dying yellow leaves of the jungle canopy
above.
    Kirk walked around the wreckage, surefootedly finding a
path among the twisted roots and scattered branches outside
the acrid burn zone of charred vegetation. What had crashed
here was little more than the life-support and control capsule
of the fighter--a battered, tapered cylinder no longer than a
small shuttlecraft, and only about half its thickness.
    The stubs of the fighter's forward-sloping wings trailed
control linkages and ODN wires, indicating the wings had
been torn off on landing, and not by phaser bursts. Judging
from the orientation of the fighter, Kirk guessed the pilot had
retained some sort of control until the end, struggling to bring
what was left of his craft in for a landing.
    Kirk checked the line of broken tree limbs and shredded
foliage to the east. On other terrain, the pilot might have
walked away from this one.
 Christine MacDonald stumbled a few meters behind Kirk,

showing little interest in the wreckage, keeping her attention
on her tricorder.
    "This is only about half of it," she said as she caught up
with Kirk.
    But Kirk already knew that. "The main drive units are
usually designed to explode away from the pilot's cabin. It's a
safety feature."
    Christine aimed her tricorder at the knot of crumpled,
blackened metal ten meters distant. "Not that it did him a lot
of good. We've got a body in there."
    Kirk sighed. Of course there was a body in the wreckage.
The Tobias had not detected anyone ejecting, or drifting to
safety on an antigrav chute, from any of the fighters they had
downed. He wondered if he had ever been as struck by death
as Christine was. Or had he simply encountered it too often in
his life?
    For a moment, Kirk and Christine stood in silence, watch-
ing as Barc lumbered toward the wreckage in an isolation
suit. Volatile lubricants and hydraulic fluids had been sprayed
around the impact area. Anyone not in protective gear had to
remain well back. The vapors could be corrosive, and inter-
fered with most tricorder readings taken at a distance.
    Finally, Kirk's curiosity got the better of him. "When did
you know?" he asked.
 "About who you were? I mean. are?"
    Kirk gave her a look of skeptical forbearance. What else
would he mean?
    "Back at the hospice. The plaque. You gave it to Teilani,
didn't you?"
    Kirk nodded~ remembering. He had taken the plaque from
the Enterprise-A before he had left his ship to her fate in the
fires of Chal's twin suns. Then he had given it to Teilani at a
time when he had not been able to give anything of himself.
When he had had to return to Earth, and the launch of the
Enterprise-B.




    "That's when I looked up the records," Christine ex-
plained. "Saw the resemblance between you and... you."
    "And you didn't tell anyone?" Kirk asked. He felt touched
that she had respected his unspoken wishes to remain anony-
mous in this new age.
  "I tried to. But no one believed me."
  Kirk nodded again. So much for respect.
 "You know," Christine began, "I studied you in--"
    Kirk held up a warning hand. "I do not ever want to hear
those words again. Understand?"
    Christine bit her lip. Looked uncomfortable. "1 only meant
to say you've been--"
 "An inspiration," Kirk completed.
 This time, Christine nodded.
    Kirk had heard it all before. He sometimes wondered, with
all the attention that had been paid to the Enterprise. if
Starfleet had ever had any other starships on missions in his
day. "I know," he said. "I'm what made you decide to join
Starfleet."
    Christine wrinkled her nose as she thought that over.
"Well, joining Starfleet, that was mostly because of Captain
Sulu and the E.?celstor.-
    Kirk opened his mouth to say something, then thought
better of ~t.
    "M) dad used to read me stories about Sulu at bedtime."
She looked at Kirk and didn't appear to know how to
interpret his expression. "But once I got into the Academy,
and started reading the old history tapes..." "'Old' history tapes," Kirk repeated.
    Christine began to falter, as if sensing how deep a hole she
was digging for herself. "That's when I started reading about
you... and the... old... days .... How dM you manage
to survive what happened on Veridian Three anyway?" she
suddenl~ asked.

    Kirk didn't know whether or not to be thankful for the
change in subject.
    "I mean, it was all over Starfleet. Captain Picard finding
you, bringing you out of that temporal anomaly..."
    "I've had quite enough of temporal anomalies, thank you,"
Kirk said.
 "But then... his log did say he buried you."
 "He did."
    Christine stared at Kirk for a few moments. "And... ?"
she said.
    Kirk gave her a tight-lipped smile to let her know this
particular topic of conversation was at an end. "He obviously
didn't do a very good job of it."
    "Right." Christine patted her hand against her tricorder as
she studied the wreckage. By the flush on her cheeks, Kirk
knew she knew she had been rebuffed. "I take it you fought
Orions before. Back in the old days," she added pointedly.
    "They've been mercenaries for as long as they've had
spaceflight," Kirk said, trying to ease the sudden awkward-
ness that had sprung up between them. "I've had my run-ins
with them."
    Christine kept her eyes on the wreckage. Barc was scanning
it at close range, using a tricorder modified for his bulky
fingers. He seemed to keep resetting the device, as if he were
getting a reading that made no sense. "Any idea why they'd
respond this way to an inquiry about the virogen?" She asked
the question with no hint of tension or embarrassment. Kirk
approved of the professionalism it indicated. Knew it meant
she'd go far.
    "They were paid to respond," Kirk said. "So we wouldn't
be able to connect the attack to the people who intercepted
your communications with Command."
    "By attacking, though, aren't they confirming what we
thought? That the virogen is artificial and deliberately
spread?"




    "There weren't supposed to be any survivors, Commander.
Whoever sent the Orions to attack Chal were expecting their
only opposition to be the overworked crew of a science
vessel."
  "And not the legendary Captain Kirk."
  "Jim," Kirk said. "The name is Jim."
    Christine threw professionalism aside. "Look. Get it
through your head--you're a legend, all right? You can't
pretend your career never happened. So... move on." She
slammed her tricorder shut and stared at him as if she were
ready to wrestle him to the ground.  Or embrace him.
    Completely unexpectedly, Kirk's first instinct was to kiss
her. Fast. He knew that passion he sensed in her didn't come
just from her devotion to Starfleet. He had felt the attraction
spark between them from the moment he had stepped into
her tent at the main city. He had seen the way she watched
him when she thought he wasn't paying attention. Her
response to him, physically.
    He admitted to himself he had watched her the same way.
Felt the same pull.
    There was such energy in her. All the promise of youth, the
excitement, the adventure, the universe waiting for her to
reveal it. The way he had once felt.
    Kirk knew that same drive and force still existed within
him. He knew it would roar into renewed life with just a kiss
of her soft lips, a caress of her smooth, unmarked skin. There
was a part of him that knew he could be reinvigorated just
being at her side, accompanying her on her grand adventure.
 But it would be her adventure.
 And his own still continued.
    Teilani waited for him at the main city. She was working
with M'Benga, to restore hope and order to her world. His
world.

    That was Kirk's adventure now. One world. One dream.
One love.
 He had chosen his path and he knew it was the right one.
 But his eyes remained fixed on Christine's.
 She moved closer to him.
 "Jim . . ." she said.
 Kirk knew what was coming.
    How wrong would it be to feel her in his arms, knowing
that nothing more could come of it?
 How wrong would it be to kiss her?
    He knew what he should do. He also knew what he felt.
Would the two ever be reconciled?
     He felt her hand on his shoulder. Knew in the same instant
how she would feel pressed against him. He turned to her, tom
 Bare squealed in alarm from the wreckage.
    Whatever else Christine and Kirk were, they were both
products of Starfleet. Without a moment's hesitation, they
ran toward the Tellarite, giving no thought to their lack of
protective gear. Because they were needed.
    Barc was caught on something by the fighter's shattered
canopy, struggling to get free.
    Kirk reached him first, half-expecting to see the engineer's
isolation suit snagged on a shard of metal.
 But something held the Tellarite. Gripped his forearm.
 A blackened claw of a hand.
    Barc's oversized helmet visor was misted from his rapid
exhalations. Even without a comm badge, Kirk could hear
his husky voice.
 "It's alive," the Tellarite snarled.
    Kirk grabbed the engineer's shoulder for purchase, grabbed
the wrist of whatever it was that held him, and pulled the two
apart.
 Two screams cut through the morning mist--Barc's as he




fell back from the fuselage, and the fighter pilot's as he rose
from the mangled cockpit.
    For an instant, Kirk was frozen by the apparition. Half the
pilot's flight suit had been fused by flames to his body. Half
his helmet had also melted, making his head appear misshap-
en, half-missing.
    The visor was clouded by soot and multiple fracture lines.
Kirk could see no trace of the pilot within. But he knew from
the condition of the flight suit and the wreckage that the pain
the pilot endured would be unbearable.
    The pilot, still shrieking, jerked his charred and blackened
arm away from Kirk. Kirk let it go, feeling the flakes of plastic
and flesh still clinging to his hand.
    The pilot's other arm emerged from the cockpit. It held a
small green weapon. Too late Kirk realized what was going to
happen. He had miscalculated, allowed shock to extend his
reaction time.
 He wasn't going to make it.
    And then he felt Christine roughly shove him aside as she
leapt up to plant both feet on the pilot's chest, sending the
pilot flying backward from the cockpit.
    As Kirk fell sideways, he saw the green weapon spiral
through the air above him, its metal finish gleaming in the
morning light.
    He rolled once and sprang to his feet, ready at least to make
the second charge if it. was necessary.
    But Christine stood poised on the wreckage, looking down
on the other side where the pilot had fallen. She was prepared
to attack again, though there was no need. She checked over
her shoulder to be sure Kirk was safe, then nimbly jumped
down on the far side.
    Barc got to his feet beside Kirk. Together they circled the
wreckage, to join Christine, who kneeled by the unmoving
pilot, her fingers working the helmet locking-ring release.
 Something new caught Kirk's eye. A more subtle detail

hidden in the charred pressure suit and flesh of the pilot's
burned arm.
 Each crack was marked by a glistening line of green.
 Not the green of Orion skin.
 The green of copper-based blood.
    Christine grunted as she tugged the pilot's helmet free and
let it roll onto the burned vegetation. It carried with it a flap
of skin, fused to the melted frame of the visor. But despite the
damage to the pilot's face, the missing skin, the exposed
muscles and raw cheekbone, enough remained intact to reveal
a pointed ear, an arching brow.
 "A Romulan?" Christine asked.
    But Barc answered with a growl as he played his tricorder
over the pilot's body. "No. I can't detect the genetic drift.
That's no Romulan," he said. Kirk understood.
    The pilot who had tried to wipe out Chal and keep the
secret of the virogen from spreading was not the enemy
anyone had expected.
 Barc looked up from his tricorder. "He's Vulcan."
 To Kirk, that meant only one thing.
 This time, the Federation was under attack from within.




SIXTEEN

"Any questions?" Riker asked.
    On the transporter platform, Data, Crusher, and Rolk
stared through their blast shield visors and shook their heads.
All seemed tense in their bulky, black phaser armor. Then
Data took a second look at the four hexagonal cargo contain-
ers on the opposite side of the pad and apparently reconsid-
ered. He raised his hand. "Actually, I do have one."
    Riker stepped up beside his crew and tightened the straps
holding his equipment harness to his phaser armor. "Go
ahead."
 "Has this ever been tried before?"
    "You're the one with direct access to the ship's computer,"
Riker said. He snapped clown his blast shield and adjusted
the sound level on his helmet speakers.
    "That is what concerns me," Data replied. "I am unable to
find any reference to this type of maneuver at all."
    Riker clapped his hand against Data's shoulder. His ar-
mored glove clanged dully against Data's armored chest
plate. "Then I'd say we're about to make history." He winked
at the android. "Again."

Riker gave a thumbs-up signal to the transporter chief.
"You know what you have to do."
    The transporter chief nodded, trying to match Riker's
hearty enthusiasm, though few on the ship could come close.
"Stage one," the chief said. "Energizing."
    Riker looked to the side and saw the cargo containers begin
to dematerialize. When they had almost completely vanished,
stage two began and the transporter room seemed to evapo-
rate all around him.
    A moment later,'Riker's boots made contact with the solid
metal dome of Gamow Station's generating complex, one
hundred meters above the ground. He instantly dropped to
his knees, braced his helmet with his arms, and before he
could close his eyes, the dome metal flared with overhead
light and an explosive concussion threw him flat against the
metal.
    As he rolled to his feet again, Riker saw that Data was the
first one standing. The android was helping both Crusher and
Rolk to their feet, as well.
    Riker glanced up. About thirty meters above him, against
the streaky, pale yellow sky of Alta Vista III, he could just
make out the rippling blue distortions in the forcefield that
protected the dome. The ripples were what was left of the
explosive interference caused by his ship's attempt to beam
the four cargo containers into the airspace bisected by the
energy screen. For approximately three seconds, exactly as
Riker had calculated, the energy of the quasi-solid containers
and the dome's forcefield had been the same. The result had
been four zones of zero-energy through which Riker, Rolk,
Data, and Crusher had been successfully beamed.
    As soon as Riker and the others had solidified, the Enter-
prise had reversed the transportation of the cargo containers.
The forcefield had snapped back to full strength, simultane-
ously obliterating a handful of container atoms that had not




been beamed out in time. Riker trusted that the explosions
that had erupted on the surface of the field would be
interpreted by the dome's personnel as an impact by a flock of
birds, or whatever passed for birds on this planet.
    Data appeared to be the most impressed by Riker's tactic.
"It is unfortunate that this method of penetrating a forcefield
with a transporter beam can only work on relatively low-
powered meteorological screens."
    "For now," Riker said. "I'm sure you and Geordi will come
up with improvements."
    Data's facial expression blanked as he rapidly began work-
ing on the problem.
    "I meant later, Data," Riker cautioned. He unhooked a
projectile gun from his harness and fired a fusion piton into
the dome. The piton flared as it melted into the metal plating.
Riker pulled on the carbon-fiber cable that trailed from it.
The line was secure.
    Riker snapped the line to the induction clip on his belt as
the others did the same. He pointed to the north. "That
direction to the generator conduits. Dr. Crusher, start scan-
ning for the captain as soon as we hit ground."
    Riker began running down the gently sloping curve of the
immense dome, playing out the line through his induction
clip until he was almost horizontal. Then he gave a push and
rappelled down the rest of the dome's nearly vertical wall,
pushing off every five meters until he touched down on the
gravel around the dome's foundation.
    As he disconnected the line, he watched with approval as
Crusher and Rolk expertly rappelled behind him. Data, on
the other hand, simply kept running straight down at full
speed, obviously capable of maintaining a perfect balance
between his own forward momentum and the rate at which
his line played out.
 Two meters from the gravel, Data abruptly swung upright

as if he were doing spacewalk maneuvers, and stepped onto
the gravel as lightly as if he had merely stepped around the
corner.
 "Very smoothly done, Mr. Data," Riker said.
    "Thank you, sir. According to terminology associated with
the new experiences afforded by my emotion chip, I could say
it was quite a rush."
    Riker had no idea what Data meant. The term sounded like
yet another one of the archaic slang expressions Zefram
Cochrane had been so fond of using back in the twenty-first
century.
"Whatever." Riker held out his hand. "Antimatter charges."
Data slapped two finger-sized tubes into Riker's glove.
Riker headed for a thick conduit that snaked from the wall of
the dome and disappeared beneath the gravel. It carried
power to the buried forcefield generators that protected
Gamow Station's exposed sensors and dome plating from
Alta Vista III's sulphurous rain and acid hail. Two antimatter
blasts and the forcefields would be down. Less than thirty
seconds later, Captain Picard would be located and beamed
to safety. This is going to be simple, Riker thought.
    That was when the first sniper blast hit him and the ambush
began.

    In the storeroom, Stron's wife held the phaser on Picard.
Stron seemed too upset to do much of anything. Whatever
trace of Sarek's mind he had discovered in his attempt to
meld with Picard, it had clearly unnerved him.
    "When did you meld with Sarek?" Stron's wife demanded.
Her accusing tone revealed her disbelief that the leader could
ever have chosen to meld with Picard.
 "Release me," Picard said. "Then we can talk."
 Stron and his wife exchanged a questioning glance.
 "We can't," she said.




    "But he only melded with those who were part of the
cause," Stron argued. He stared at Picard with an expression
of near fear. "Have you been to Gonthar District?"
    Picard had no idea to what the Vulcan referred, but he
recognized a weakness to exploit when he saw one.
    "You can ask me that when you have the temerity to tie me
up like a common outsider?"
    Stroh looked at his wife. "He must be one of us." He
started toward Picard.
    "Stay back," the woman warned Stron. She raised the
phaser until it was trained at Picard's head. Her death-
dealing gesture seemed in cruel juxtaposition to her life-
swollen belly. "These are dangerous times for the cause," she
reminded her husband. "You know each cell must remain
unknown to the others to avoid betrayal. We must do nothing
to risk our mission."
    "You risk betrayal by keeping me from my ship." Picard
hoped he was playing his part correctly. "If Starfleet investi-
gates my disappearance, I will not be able to protect any of
US."
    Picard could see that Stron wanted to untie him at once.
But Stron's wife was not convinced.
    "Give us the proper countersign," she challenged Picard.
"Have you been to Gonthar District?"
    Picard had no choice but to brazen it out. "That code is
obsolete. My cell has not used it for years."
    The woman studied him for a moment, then lifted the
phaser in salute. "I acknowledge your courage. Farewell,
Captain."
 Her intent was clear. Picard did not flinch.
 But Stron pushed his wife aside. The phaser beam missed.
    The struggle was over in seconds. Now Stroh held the
weapon.
 "My mate is correct," the Vulcan said. "It is illogical to

believe you are part of the revolution." He spoke to his wife.
"But he has melded with Sarek. And that we cannot ignore."
    The woman wrapped her arms around her stomach, cra-
dling their unborn child. "We have to kill him, Stron. For the
sake of the future."
    Stroh gestured to the medical kit on a nearby shelf. "We'll
use the drugs first. Then I'll meld with him again. Whatever
reason Sarek had for linking with him will be easier to find."
    Stron's wife pulled a hypospray from the kit. "And then
we'll kill him," she said firmly.
    Picard watched her approach. He was out of options. He
knew that whatever dose of whatever drug she was about to
give him would be too high.
 "Think of your child," he said. "Don't do this."
 "It is for our child that we do," she said.
 She raised the hypospray.
 Then the supply room was plunged into darkness.

    Riker flattened himself behind one of the exterior support
ribs of the dome as phaser beams whined only centimeters
away from him. Fortunately, their attackers' weapons were
not set high enough to risk puncturing the dome itself, so the
ribs provided adequate protection.
    Crusher and Rolk were five meters farther back, flattened
behind another support rib. Data was beside Riker, setting
his hand phaser to filll stun.
    "Where did they come from?" Riker muttered. He had his
own phaser in one hand, the two antimatter charges in the
other.
    "The odds favor them not believing the power fluctuations
were the result of birds flying into the forcefield," Data said
pleasantly. He leaned forward and fired three precise bursts.
    Riker winced as an orange beam hit Data and threw him
back against the dome with a solid thud. "Are you all right?"
he asked.




    Data shook his head as if to clear it. "My phaser armor is
operational," the android said. "However, I must warn you
that our attackers' weapons are set to kill." "How many are there?"
    "There were eight. But now there are five," Data said
proudly. He pantomimed blowing smoke from the barrel of
his phaser. "I am a purty good shot, pardner," he drawled.
    Riker rolled his eyes. Data's emotion chip could still be
unsettling at times. Though the android now generally under-
stood humor, he was still struggling with the concept of when
it was appropriate.
    "If I set a short timer on the antimatter," Riker asked,
bringing the android back to the dangerous situation that
faced them, "can you throw one at the conduit?"
    "They are precision charges," Data said. "They are meant
to be in contact with whatever they are to destroy. Otherwise,
we might rupture the dome."
    Riker fired at a figure that darted behind a small rise about
twenty meters away. A puffof smoke went up from a rock, but
Riker couldn't tell if he had hit the runner or not. "We've got
to try, Data. Otherwise they're going to surround us and pick
us off."
    Data slapped his phaser against his harness. "I must
estimate the distance to the conduit," he said, then leaned out
for an instant and withdrew as another beam missed.
 "Set the timer for one point three five seconds."
    Riker twisted 'the dial on the charge. "I can only set it for
complete seconds. Take your choice: one or two."
 "Two then. I will alter the trajectory accordingly."
 Riker handed Data the first charge. "Please do."
    Data pressed the activation switch, leaned out again, and
threw the charge like a knife.
    An orange beam caught his shoulder and spun him around
into Riker just as a massive concussion thundered through
the air.

    Riker hit the gravel beside Data. He heard running foot-
steps behind him, rolled to see five figures in protective gear
charging at him, phaser rifles lowered.
    Riker tore his own phaser from his harness, aimed it
without checking its setting.
 Two figures flew back as the wide beam hit them.
 The three others returned fire.
    Riker felt himself slammed back into Data and the dome.
His armor crackled with dispersed energy, but the concentra-
tion of firepower was too intense.
    A temperature alarm beeped in his helmet. "Suit destruc-
tion in three seconds," the familiar, standard Starfleet comm
voice said.
    In those last few seconds, Riker tried to fire again, but his
phaser was blasted from his hand. He couldn't breathe. He
only hoped the captain had been found alive.
    Then a glittering curtain of energy filled his dimming field
of vision.
 He had been right about not needing luck.
 Not when he had the Enterprise.




SEVENTEEN

Picard jerked his body to one side so the hypospray COuldn't
reach his neck. But the move had been too violent and he felt
his chair topple sideways.
    The storeroom was without any source of light. He couldn't
judge the angle of his fall. His head struck the flooring,
making him gasp.
 "He's right in front of you," Stron called out.
    Picard felt the woman's foot hit his leg as she tried to find
him in the darkness. "Open the door and get some light in
here," she cried. Her hand grabbed Picard's boot. "I've got
him!"
    Picard tried to roll again, flopping the chair onto its back so
he looked straight up.
    He saw the woman looking straight down at him, encased
in an indigo glow.
Picard's first thought was that Stron had found the lights.
But then the woman's eyes widened in shock as she and the
storeroom were obscured by the familiar sparkle of the
transporter.
    A moment later, Picard was flat on his back, still tied to the
chair, on the deck of a shuttlecraft.

    Picard glanced around. "Hello?" he said, wincing as his
movements set off a new burst of pain from his burned face.
But no one answered. The shuttle was deserted. Then a
shimmer of blue light reflected from the ceiling as another
transporter beam materialized in the cabin.
    Beverly Crusher was kneeling at his side. She wore phaser
armor, blast shield pushed up, medical tricorder already open
and working.  "Beverly?"
    "Commander Riker shut down the station's forcefield," she
explained. "You've been beamed directly to the Galileo."
    The Galileo was one of the Enterprise's shuttles, Picard
knew. But that wasn't answer enough for his unspoken
question. "Where, exactly, is the Galileo?"
    "Shuttlebay One," Beverly said as she held a hypospray to
Picard's neck. "The bay has been decompressed. We're in
vacuum."
    The pain in Picard's face faded instantly in response to
Beverly's ministrations. "We're in quarantine, you mean."
    Beverly smiled as she lightly prodded at the bandages
Picard wore over half his face. "That's right. We've been
exposed to the virogen."
    Picard understood what the doctor had just done for him.
"You mean I've been exposed to the virogen," he told her.
"And you've been exposed to me."

    Riker raced onto the bridge of the Enterprise, followed by
Data and Rolk. Though he and his team had been plucked
from the ground before the attackers had succeeded in
overwhelming them~ the beamback had been rough.
    Operating under Starfleet's strictest quarantine protocols,
Riker and the others had been transported to a point in space
one hundred meters off the Enterprise's bow. Then, with
precision focus, they had been beamed out of their armor and
onto the ship.




    The contaminated equipment they had worn was left in
space. It would undergo the ultimate sterilization process as it
burned up on reentry. But Riker, Data, and Rolk were free to
return to the general areas of the ship, uncontaminated.
 Picard and Beverly were a different matter.
    "Put the Galileo onscreen," Riker said as he took the conn
from Troi. "Then get me Manager Kincaid."
    On the main screen, Crusher stood up in the cabin of the
shuttlecraft, safely isolated by vacuum in the shuttlebay.
Since contamination was no longer an issue with her, she had
been beamed directly to Picard's side and was still in her
armor.
    Riker felt relief as he watched her help Picard to his feet
and direct him to the copilot's chair.
 "Welcome back. Captain," Riker said.
    Picard lightly touched the sparkling antiseptic bandage he
wore over one eye and cheek. "Well done, Will."
    "Thank the chiefi" Riker said. "Transporter control had
you located and locked on to ten seconds after the forcefield
dropped." He leaned forward in his chair. "What did you find
out down there?"
    Picard took a breath to steady himself and Riker knew that
his captain had been badly injured, more than he allowed to
show. He was glad Crusher had chosen to go into quarantine
with Picard. Strictly speaking, it hadn't been necessary. She
could have beamed in'and out in biological isolation garb.
But onsite personal care was infinitely preferable.
    "Stron and his wife are still alive. They are working with
Chiton Kincaid as part of a... cause, or revolution, that is
somehow connected with the virogen and the alta mist."
    Riker sat back in his chair, stunned by the significance of
Picard's revelation.
    "By whatever means Stroh used to escape from the Ben-
nett. a shipment of alta mist was also transferred from the

essel and is somehow already in transit to an unknown
ocation. The blockade has been broken, Will."
 "And Chiton Kincaid is in on it?" Riker asked.
    "She attacked me with a protoplaser. When I regained
consciousness, I was with Stron and his wife."
    Riker clutched at the arms of his chair in cold fury. "I
understand, sir. I'll get to the bottom of this."
    On the screen, Picard forced a smile. "That would be most
gratifying, Number One."
    Riker turned to Troi. "Counselor, I'll want you standing by
for interrogation of Kincaid, Stron, whoever else is involved.
Riker to transporter room two: Stand by for--"
Rolk interrupted. "Sir, I have Manager Kincaid."
"Onscreen, and feed it to the captain in the Galileo."
The main viewscreen flashed from an image of Picard to
one of Chiton. Beside the station manager, Riker saw Stron
and his wife, both barely as tall as Chiton's shoulders.
    "Manager Kincaid," Riker began, "under the provisions of
the Federation's emergency disaster relief provisions of star-
date 35333, you are to consider yourself and your accom-
plices in custody."
     "We do not recognize the Federation's authority over our
actions," Chiton Kincaid responded. "You don't have a choice."
     "What do you propose to do, Commander? Beam us
aboard the Enterprise and contaminate it and your crew?"
 "There are quarantine measures that can be taken."
    But Chiton shook her head. "Quarantine implies separa-
tion, Commander. And that concept does not exist. All
worlds are connected. All life is one. And until the intelligent
beings of the galaxy realize that, all efforts to establish an
interstellar community are doomed to failure, with the lives
of billions at stake."
 "I suspect those lives are at stake because of actions you




yourself have taken," Riker said. "You will be held accounta-
ble for that."
    "Would you be willing to sacrifice your life for the life of
your crew, Commander?"
    Riker didn't understand the question. "What does that
have to do with--"
    "I attended the Academy," Chiton said, her voice rising
with emotion. "I know a commander's duty. Her life for her
captain. Her life for her crew."
    Riker stood, sensing he was losing control of this conversa-
tion. "I know my duty, Kincaid. You've betrayed yours."
    But the station manager ignored Riker. "Where does that
duty end, Commander? Your life for five hundred others?
Your ship to save a world? The Federation is dying! Its end is
inevitable. Would you condemn trillions of beings to hideous
lingering deaths if by sacrificing only a few billion you could
insure that suffering would not come to pass?" "A few billion?"
    Troi stepped close to Riker. "She's working up to making
some kind of decision, Will. You have to get her out of there."
    On the screen, Chiton continued passionately. "We know
our duty, Commander, just as you know yours. The symme-
try of all things must be preserved. You differ from us only in
degree."
 "Riker to transporter control: I want--"
    "The revolution will prevail," Chiton exulted. "Those who
survive will come to praise us for our sacrifice!" Then she
leaned forward and touched a control.
 The image winked out.
 "Will--" Troi's voice faltered.
 "Massive energy release on the planet's surface!" Rolk said.
 "Orbital view," Riker ordered.
    When the image changed again, where Gamow Station had
been was only a blazing fireball, rising slowly into the
superheated air above it.

    Troi staggered back and fell into her chair, ashen. "They're
... all gone..." she whispered in empathetic agony. "I felt
them die... all fourteen hundred .... "
  Riker looked at Rolk for confirmation.
    "They shut off the restriction fields in their matter-
antimatter reactor," the Bolian said. "Complete annihilation.
No survivors."
 Picard came back onscreen, looking as shaken as Riker felt.
    "There was nothing you could do, Will. They were fanatics
of the worst kind."
    Riker stared imploringly at Picard. Fourteen hundred
innocent lives lost. Was it because of something he had done?
Or failed to do?
     "Did you hear what she said?" Picard asked. "Just before
the end? About 'the symmetry of all things'?" Riker didn't know what he meant.
    "They're Symmetrists, Will. After more than a century,
they're back."




EIGHTEEN

Spock breathed deeply of the air of Vulcan. Of home.
    He had played in the red-tinged desert stretched out before
him on the Plains of Gol, when he had been a child and was
still permitted to play. It was to the Llangon Mountains in the
distance he had retreated, when he could not face his father's
disapproval. But it was to this mountain villa that he had
returned each time.
    Even when he had been reborn on Mount Seleya, it was to
this home he had come.
    He closed his eyes. Smelled the faint cinnamon dust of this
world. Could almost hear his mother, a fragile Earthling,
doomed to age and die before even halfa Vulcan lifespan had
gone by.
    Spook bowed his head. What would Amanda think of him,
knowing he had left his father unprotected when Sarek had
needed his family most? Needed his son.
 "Do you recall the name Tarok?" Srell asked.
    Spook was startled from his reverie. He had not heard his
young aide approach. He wondered if his Vulcan senses were
diminishing with each day he allowed his human emotions
greater reign.

    Spook turned to see Srell at the edge of the wide stone plaza
that joined the various buildings of his family's villa. Spook
still wore his ambassadorial robes, though his young assistant
had opted for a more functional, long-jacketed suit.
    Srell carried a small computer interface. One of Sarek's
antiques. It was a thick pane of transparent crystal that had
little of the capacity of a modern padd. But it served
adequately to link with the villa's computer system and Sarek
had seen no need to replace it.
    Srell handed the crystal to Spock. Spock angled it to more
easily read the Vulcan script that glowed within.
    "I found the database where Pertin said it would be," Srell
explained. "And I have cross-referenced it with the lists your
contacts provided. Of all the visitors and guests Sarek enter-
tained in his final months here, only one name does not have
a corresponding preference file in the home system."
 Spock read the name. Tarok.
    "There would be no need for a file," Spock said. "He is an
old family friend."
    Spock remembered sitting at Tarok's knee as the Vulcan
scholar had told him wholly inappropriate stories from
before the time of the Vulcan Reformation. There were tales
of fierce battles, jealousy and greed. Passionate romances,
cruel betrayals, kingdoms lost to forbidden love, sons sacrific-
ing all to avenge the wrongs done their fathers.
    As a child, Spock had been fascinated by that earlier age in
which Vulcans had not controlled their emotions. Sarek had
voiced his disapprovalmas he so often didmcomplaining
that it was he, not Tarok, who had to deal with his young son's
inevitable nightmares after hearing those stories. But
Amanda had been a co-conspirator with Tarok, encouraging
the story sessions, and keeping them secret whenever she
could.
    In human terms, Tarok had been Spock's uncle, though
there was no kinship by blood.




    "It might be possible that Tarok's file was erased," Srell
suggested, "in order to divert suspicion from him."
    Spock was puzzled that Srell persisted in suggesting Tarok
as a suspect. "Tarok and my father were friends when they
were boys. My parents knew all his preferences. A file would
not be needed."
    Srell was not dissuaded. "Amanda and Sarek would have
known him well, then. But what of your stepmother, Perrin?
She told me these files had all been updated after her
marriage to Sarek, to help her organize the diplomatic
functions held here."
    Spock stopped to consider Srell's observation. His father's
most recent wife, Perrin, was currently on Earth, continuing
her work with the Vulcan diplomatic corps as a cultural
attache. She had been most helpful in providing Srell with the
passwords and codes necessary to activate the villa's system.
    "You raise an interesting point," Spock conceded. Amanda
and Sarek had entertained Tarok so often, had him and his
associates as guests here so frequently, that any preferences
he had would be well known. But of course a new file would
have to have been created for Perrin when she had taken over
the villa's organizational duties.
 "Tarok now resides in Gonthar District," Srell added.
 "Indeed."
 "And, he also is afflicted with Bendii."
    Spock instantly squeezed the corner of the crystal that
changed it from a data display to a communications window.
"Please arrange transport to Gonthar," Spock said.
    Srell folded his hands behind his back. "I have already
done so."
    Spock nodded, remembering when he had been as sure in
his logic as Srell was now. In fact, Srell reminded him of
himself at a similar age.
    Spock wondered if that was why Sarek had chosen the
youth as his aide. Had he also seen an echo of another time,

an opportunity to replay history, to have a son who would not
run off to Starfleet?
    Spock thought of second chances as he placed a communi-
cations inquiry to Tarok's estate.
    Of all he had been given in this life, a second chance with
his father had been the one thing denied him.
    The inquiry went through. An aide answered. Spock made
his request.

    Though he did not reveal his own reaction, Spock was
amused by Srell's less than perfect attempt to control his
response to his first sight of Tarok's nurse. She was a Klingon.
    Young, dressed in a tight-fitting version of pale green
Vulcan healer's garb, but savage of brow, of hair, and of
attitude.
    "nuqneH?" she snarled as Srell and Spock stepped from the
small antigray flyer they had taken to Tarok's forest estate.
    Srell was clearly at a disadvantage. His thoughts did not
need to be stated. What Vulcan would entrust his well-being
to a Klingon?
    But Spock understood, all too well. Tarok would have hired
a Klingon nursing staff for the same reason he told blood-
thirsty tales of the Reformation to impressionable youngsters.
Too many Vulcans believed that control of emotions meant
they should have no emotions at all. But Tarok had always
reveled in his, clearly understanding the difference between
public comportment and private enjoyment. In its way,
Tarok's unorthodox philosophy was most logical.
    "I am Spock, child of Sarek, child of Skon," Spock said.
"This is my aide."
    The Klingon bared her teeth at Spock. Slowly she looked
Srell over, coolly assessing more than his emotional detach-
ment, apparently gratified by what she perceived to be his
nervousness.




She angled her head toward the large wooden doors leading
from the landing drive. "This way," she growled.
    She spun around and walked away, the tightness of her
uniform accentuating each taut curve of her well-exercised
flesh. Despite the seriousness of their mission, Spock could
not resist commenting to Srell, "I believe she likes you."
    Srell kept his eyes fixed on the nurse's head and nowhere
else as he followed her. Spock wondered if he himself could
possibly have been as mirthless as Srell when he had been that
age. He decided he probably had been. He was going to enjoy
visiting with Tarok again. It might be good for Srell, as well.
    As Spock and Srell were ushered into Tarok's sitting room,
they found that their host awaited them, picking at a corner
of the white robes he wore, his lips moving in a soundless
monologue. Attending him was a second Klingon nurse, in a
healer's uniform as revealing as that of their escort's.
    Tarok was much smaller than Spock had remembered him.
The elder Vulcan, 205 standard years old, had withered with
age. His short white hair stuck up in odd tufts, his cheeks
were hollow, but the lines on his face still conspired to make
him appear as if he constantly smiled.
    Tarok sat in a padded chair, a concession to his age and
infirmity, in the 1ow-ceilinged, wood-paneled sitting room,
which was adorned with mementos of his career in interstel-
lar commerce. Where Sarek had gone into diplomacy, Tarok
had joined the Vulcan trade mission. It was Tarok's keen
intellect and illuminating logic, more than any other being's
in the Federation, that had formulated the current economic
environment in which money was no longer necessary. Spock
understood that elegies of Tarok were burned during holidays
on the worlds of the Ferengi.
    "Takta," the second nurse said respectfully. Spock was not
surprised that she used a diminutive for Tarok's name that
was by tradition reserved only for the use of children. "Your
visitors are here."

    Tarok looked up at the nurse, blinking as if trying to
recall who she was. The first nurse leaned in closely to
Spook. "You are aware of the symptoms of Bendii?" "I am," Spock confirmed.
    The nurse dropped her voice to a harsh whisper. "He is a
great man. Treat him with respect, or my sister and I shall gut
you and feed you to the norsehlats. Understood?"
    Spock was not concerned by the Klingon's threat. "He is
my uncle," he said. "When I was a child, I called him Takta,
as well."
    "That is the only reason we have allowed you to see him."
The nurse snarled at her sister and they left together, though
Spock had no doubt they would be watching everything that
transpired on a hidden scanner.
    Spock approached the elder Vulcan. "Tarok, I have come to
see you." He spoke more loudly than he normally would,
hoping to cut through the haze of Benalii.
    Tarok peered up at him from within the enveloping billows
of his robes. For a moment, his eyes seemed to clear and a
childlike smile spread across his face. "Sarek?"
 Spock sat in the chair the nurse had used. "I am Spock, his
SOn."
"Ahh," Tarok said, as if everything were explained by that.
He blinked at Srell. "And this young man... ?"
    Srell carried another chair forward so he could sit at eye
level with Tarok. "I am Srell, child of Staron, child of Stonn."
But that association meant nothing to Tarok. "Aide to Sarek,
and to Spock," Srell added.
    "Sarek..." Tarok sighed. He reached out to take Spock's
hand, a terrible breach of Vulcan etiquette because of the low-
level telepathy all Vulcans possessed. Direct physical contact
was rare on social occasions, and only with consent. "Is
Amanda well?"
 Spock automatically called on his training in the Kolinahr




to clear his mind and keep his emotions at a level that would
not upset the old one. "My mother died, many years ago."
 "Ah, yes," Tarok said. "Human. Such a loss."
"I would like to talk to you about my parents," Spock said.
"Fine people. Sarek so unbending, though. At the meetings,
much too serious. The humans didn't like him. Trusted him.
Didn't like him."
    "When did you last see Sarek?" Spock asked gently, trying
to keep the old Vulcan focused. With Bendii, Tarok's recollec-
tions might well skip from one decade to another, blending all
his memories into one seamless tapestry where everything
happened at once.
    "Tried to warn him," Tarok sighed. He squeezed Spock's
hand as he studied him. His other hand reached out to touch
Spock's katra points but Spook lightly warded off the attempt.
It would be dangerous for them both to attempt ameld with
Tarok's symptoms so strong.
    "What did you try to warn Sarek about?" Spook asked. He
had no idea if this would be a useful line of inquiry. Sarek and
Tarok would have had uncountable dealings in the past.
Diplomatic agreements were almost always accompanied by
trade relations.
 "They were coming back, you see," Tarok said.
 "Who were?"
    "We thought it was over. We had ended it." Tarok's voice
quickened as if he were caught up in an intense memory. "At
your home. You weren't there, of course. Always going off to
the mountains." He took a deep and rasping breath. "Your
father was so worried. But I knew why you went." He patted
Spock's hand. His voice slowed, trembled. "Your Takta
knew."
    Spook resisted the sudden impulse to expose his emotions
to Tarok. He wanted him to know how much he had appreci-
ated the time they had spent together, the guidance he had
~oee~ ~x,4 ex'x.

    He glanced at Srell, but the young Vulcan was correctly
impassive, merely an observer.
  "What did you 'end' at my home?" Spock asked.
    Tarok took his hand away. Smoothed his robes. He now
spoke with the energy of a younger man. "You were not to be
part of it. Your father made that clear."  "Part of what?"
    "He knew what it meant. No chance to meld. A terrible
burden between father and son."
    Spock straightened in his chair, not certain what Tarok's
words meant but anxious to learn.
    "We could not risk it," Tarok continued. "None of us. We
could meld only with those who were in the cause."
    "What cause?" Spook asked urgently, forgetting all pre-
tense of holding his emotions in check, forgetting that Srell
was a witness to his loss of control.
    Tarok looked at Spook for a long time. His eyes dimmed, as
if he were looking beyond Spook to a different time. "I never
had a son. Sometimes, when I told you stories, I could almost
imagine that you were mine. Flesh of my flesh, riding forth as
in the days of old, a son to avenge his father's fate. That is
what they did then, you know. Long, long ago ...."
  "What cause?" Spock insisted.
    "I was so proud of you when you went to the Academy. But
that proved Sarek had been right. What if we had told you?
Your duty would have required you to report us."
 "Tarok," Spock said. "Forgive me .... "
    Tarok's eyes cleared. Became neutral. "Forgiveness is not
logical, Spock."
    It might have been Sarek speaking. Spock leaned forward,
disturbed, impatient. He would no longer have secrets kept
from him. Impulsively, he placed his hands on Tarok's face
and began to meld.
 A torrent of images, emotions, experiences, chaotic in the


throes of Bendii, mixed with glimpses of his father, of his
mother, an incoherent ocean of other minds, other thoughts,
drowning out Tarok's cries of confusion as Spock violently
burst into his mind andre
    Spock felt himself fly back through the air to hit the floor.
Before he could move again, one of the Klingon nurses was
kneeling on his chest, holding a d'k tahg knife to his throat.
The outrider blades sprang open as she forced it against his
skin.
  "Have you no honor.'?" she spat.
    Still struggling to make sense of the images he had experi-
enced, Spock stared past her and saw Srell in the armlock of
the other nurse, another knife at his throat. Tarok had
collapsed in his chair, hands fluttering at his face. His ragged
sobbing tore at Spock's heart.
    "You must go now," the nurse hissed in Spock's ear. Then
she hauled him to his feet as if he were a sack of trillium.
    Spock wrestled against the Klingon's grip. "Tarok! Who is
the prefect of Gonthar?"
    From across the room, Tarok looked up, tears spilling from
his ancient eyes. "I told your father they would kill him if the
codes were known! I told him they were back!" The old
Vulcan suddenly looked to the side. He held out a shaking
finger. "There! It's all there!"
    Spock followed Tarok's line of sight, even as the nurse
began to drag him' to the door. The aged scholar was pointing
to a table beside the doorway. The table held an antique IDIC
medallion, a scroll, and a handful of other artifacts of great
antiquity and cultural value.
    But among them, the black base of an ordinary, civilian
holoprojector, just like the one Spock had been given on
Babel. Completely out of place.
    Still in the implacable grip of the Klingon nurse, Spock
shouted: "Tarok! Who killed my father?!"

    Tarok staggered painfully to his feet, trembling, hands held
forward in supplication. "Forgive me, my child. Surak forgive
us all .... "
    Then the room shook with the first explosion and Spock
was swept once more into a maelstrom of fire and memories
that were not his own.




NINETEEN

Spock awoke in darkness. In the distance, he could hear
phaser fire, the crackle of disruptors. Another explosion
erupted nearby. He tried to get up. But Srell pushed him down.
 "The estate is under attack," Srell said.
 "Where is Tarok?" Spook asked.
    "The two Klingons took him. We have to get back to the
flyer."
 "No! It is imperative we locate Tarok!"
    Spock felt Srell back away from him, no doubt alarmed by
the raw emotion in Spock's voice. He sat up and looked
around, eyes gradually adapting to the darkness. He was
still in the sitting room. Only moments must have passed.
But he could smell smoke. The estate building was on
fire.
    "Why is Tarok important?" Srell asked. "Did he kill your
father? Is that what you saw in his mind?"
    Spock got to his feet, slipped off his robes so he wore only
simple black trousers and tunic. "I saw my parents there," he
said. "As they were years ago."
 Srell joined Spock as Spock moved quickly to the doorway.

  "They were Symmetrists," Spock said.
"The cult?" Srell asked, faint distaste evident in his voice.
"It was never a cult. It began as a political movement.
When it spread to other worlds, they called it a revolu-
tion."
    The hallway beyond the doorway was also in darkness. The
power lines in the estate must have been cut. Spock listened
carefully. He could hear people running and tried to estimate
how many attackers there might be.
    "That is what Ki Mendrossen spoke of," Srell said. "In his
recording. 'For the good of the cause,'" the young Vulcan
quoted. "'For the revolution.'"
    "The Symmetrist cause was repudiated almost two centu-
ries ago," Spock said. The attacking force seemed to be
coming from the woods at the rear of the estate. There might
be a chance to get back to the antigrav flyer at the front drive.
But he didn't want to leave without Tarok. He had no doubt
that was who the target of this attack was.
    "Then Tarok is wrong," Srell said. "He was thinking in the
past."
    Spock pointed down the hallway toward the main entrance
of the building. "Go to the flyer. Wait for me there. I will find
Tarok."
    "Let me," Srell said. "You are too valuable to Vulcan. And
to Romulus. You must not let your work end here."
    Spock appreciated the logic of Srell's request. But what he
had to do was personal.
    "If I cannot save Tarok, I might have to meld with him
again, so that his knowledge does not die. You go forward,
Sreil. You make the dream of unification a reality."
    Srell seemed to recognize his place was not to argue with
Spock's logic. "Peace and long life," he said. "I am honored
in my work with you."
 "Live long and prosper," Spock replied. "Now, go!"




    Srell hurried down the hallway. Spock headed off in the
opposite direction, to where the sound of fighting was
loudest.
    He came to a smaller hallway that, from what he recalled of
seeing the estate from the air, was a connecting structure
between two larger buildings. The fighting seemed concen-
trated around the second structure.
    Spock suddenly wondered who was fighting. Tarok obvi-
ously had a staff greater than two Klingon nurses. He also
wondered why anyone who wished to kill Tarok didn't just
use a quantum explosive to wipe out everything within a
kilometer.
    Too easy to trace, Spock decided. A simpler approach
would be more subtle.
    But he still couldn't reconcile that strategy with the increas-
ing sounds of all-out armed combat. Unless the attackers had
been completely surprised by the size of Tarok's home
security force.
    Spock moved silently along the narrow connecting corri-
dor, toward the second building. He could see flashes of
orange and blue energy reflected in the tall windows. Some of
the phaser fire seemed to match the wavelength of standard-
issue Starfleet sidearms. He assumed Tarok had many friends
in the service.
    At the end of the corridor, a large atrium flickered with the
firefight being waged outside. Spock judged the distance to a
sizable tree in the center of the large room, and estimated he
would have eight chances in nine of reaching it undetected.
He had no doubt that the fighting was centered on whatever
stronghold to which Tarok's Klingon nurses had taken the old
trader. Perhaps he could create a diversion by attacking from
behind.
    Spock turned his mind to improvising a weapon as he
began his sprint toward the tree.

    But after he had gone a single meter, he tripped over an
unseen obstacle and fell to the tile floor with a grunt.
    Before he could roll over to defend himself, an attacker had
leapt onto his back, then jabbed a knuckle punch under his
ribs.
    Spock's breath exploded from him, but he rammed his
elbow upward and had the satisfaction of hearing an answer-
ing grunt as his attacker slumped to the side.
    Instantly Spock was up on his hands and knees, then his
feet, and then--
    --down again as his assailant swept his legs out from under
him.
    Spock gasped for breath. It had been almost a century since
his last round of intensive, hand-to-hand combat training.
His stamina was down. But not his skill.
    He kicked out at the approaching silhouette of his adver-
sary and caught him in the stomach. He heard the body
tumble to the floor and launched himself toward it, rolling
over twice before bringing his hand down to deliver a fight-
ending nerve pinch.
 His fingers hit armor.
 A fist hit his face.
 Spock rolled again.
 His attacker jumped him.
    Spock's hands closed around his assailant's throatwan
intemperate move, because it allowed his opponent to do the
same.
    Now it came down to who could hold out the longest before
succumbing to suffocation.
    Spock wheezed as he put all his energy into closing his
fingers into fists.
    His assailant wheezed just as heavily, as if he weren't a
trained soldier either.
 Spock felt his strength failing.
 But his opponent's strength was failing just as rapidly.




 Something was wrong.
    A sudden phaser burst smashed through an atrium window
and hit the tree behind Spock. Dried foliage burst into flames,
and in the flickering light of the explosion, Spock at last saw
his attacker's face.
 And for one of the few times in his life, Spock screamed.

TWENTY

Kirk's scream was easily a match for Spock's.
     He couldn't have been more surprised if the firelight had
revealed he was fighting a Gorn.
 He jumped away from Spock.
 Spock gaped at him.
 "Jim?"
 "SpockT'
    Then Spock smiled broadly as he reached out to grab his
friend by his shoulders. "I knew it! I knew you escaped the
Borg homeworld!"
 Kirk ducked as another phaser burst shattered more atrium
glass.
    Spock took his hands away~ tried to collect himself. "What
are you doing here?"
 "Looking for you," Kirk said. "What are you doing here?"
    "Trying to save the man who knows who murdered my
father."
 "Tarok?" Kirk asked.
    Spock looked at Kirk through narrowed eyes. "Why am I
not surprised."
 Kirk leapt to his feet and angled a thumb toward an atrium




exit. "My crew's outside. There're at least five attackers with
phasers coming out of the woods."
 "Your crew?" Spock asked as he jumped up beside Kirk.
 Kirk chuckled. "Listen to us trying to catch our breath."
 "I am out of practice," Spock said.
 "Then let's make up for lost time."
 Kirk ran for the exit, Spook at his side.
    That simple fact alone made Kirk feel at least a century
younger. Maybe even two.

 The battle outside was short and to the point.
    Spock unerringly located each attacker from the angle of
the phaser fire. Kirk's crew kept the attacker pinned down.
Kirk unerringly slipped through the forest and surprised the
attacker. Spock used the nerve pinch to end each fight. They
used the attackers' own jackets to tie them up.
    Kirk was troubled that all five of them were Vulcan, but he
wasn't surprised. The involvement of Vulcans in the events
surrounding the virogen was precisely why he had come to
find Spock. He was fortunate that the Vulcan diplomatic
corps kept such careful track of Spock's travel plans, and had
deigned to reveal them to the commander of a Starfleet vessel.
    By the time the final attacker was neutralized, both Kirk
and Spock were wheezing uncontrollably, but Kirk wouldn't
have it any other way.
    "You know," he gasped, as he leaned over to catch his
breath, hands on his knees, "if you had asked me an hour ago
.. I would have said I missed this kind of nonsense."
    Spock leaned against a tree, gasping just as deeply. But he
clearly had other matters on his mind. "How did you...
survive the partial destruction of... the Borg homeworld?"
    Kirk glanced toward the estate as he saw shadowy figures
run toward him. "There'll be time for that later." Then
Commander MacDonald, Engineer Barc, and Dr. M'Benga
were upon them.

     Kirk made the introductions. The two young officers and
the Tellarite stared in openmouthed awe. "Kirk and Spock?" Christine said.
    "What did I tell you?" Kirk warned her. Then he took
M'Benga's medical tricorder and fiddled with the unfamiliar
controls. He pointed to a smaller building that stood alone.
"C'mon, Spock. You said you were looking for Tarok."
    Kirk ran off, the others at his side. He was amused to hear
how both he and Spock struggled to control their breathing
with an audience present.

    The small building was a meditation chamber. Kirk read
two life signs inside, both Vulcan, one very old. Again, not a
surprise.
    He eased open the ornately carved wooden door. Inside the
austere chamber, candles were lit, adding a warm glow to the
surreal violence frozen in place.
    Two Klingon females were sprawled on the floor, pools of
thick pink blood surrounding them. In the far corner, a young
male Vulcan cradled an old male Vulcan.
    Kirk quickly checked the tricorder's display. The old
Vulcan was fading quickly. M'Benga snatched the tricorder
from Kirk's hand as she rushed to the dying man.
    "Anyone know the history of this man?" the doctor asked
urgently.
    Spock pushed past Kirk. "Benalii Syndrome," he said. "I
must meld with him."
    But M'Benga stood in Spock's way. "He's dying, sir. And
with Benalii, not even his katra can be claimed at this stage."
    "You don't understand," Spock said. "He is the only one
who knows--"
 "It is over," the young Vulcan said.
    Kirk was hurt to see how his friend seemed to collapse at
that pronouncement, as if the old Vulcan had been the most
important thing in his life.




    Kirk went to Spock's side. "It'll be all right, Spock. We're
both on it now."
    Spock straightened his shoulders. The young Vulcan stood
up. "Srell," Spock said formally, "may I introduce James T.
Kirk."
    Srell stared at Kirk for several long seconds, then raised an
eyebrow in an all-too-familiar expression.
 Kirk smiled at Spock. "Friend of yours?"
 "My aide."
    "A pleasure," Kirk said, knowing better than to extend his
hand. "I wish the circumstances were more agreeable, but I
have the feeling we'll be working together." Srell still said nothing.
    Kirk was used to that reaction, especially since the repeated
reports of his death. He turned back to the Klingons.
M'Benga was kneeling by them.
 "How did they die?" Kirk asked.
    "Disruptor fire," the doctor said, but didn't sound con-
vinced. "I don't often see bleeding when that happens. Could
be close-range stun, but..." She stood up, adjusted her
uniform. "We'll have to wait for the authorities to conduct an
autopsy."
    "I do not believe it would be wise to contact the authori-
ties," Spock said.
 Everyone in the meditation chamber stared at him.
    "At this stage in my investigation," he explained, "I am not
certain if we can trust them."
 "Spock?" Kirk said. "We can't trust Vulcan authorities?"
    Christine stepped up beside Kirk. "He might have a point,
given who was in that fighter on Chal."
 At last Srell spoke. "You were on Chal?"
 "Five days ago," Kirk said.
    "But," the young Vulcan came close to stammering, "that
is one of the systems infected with the virogen. If you were
there, you have exposed Vulcan to it."

    M'Benga answered for the crew of the Tobias. "We're clear
of it," she said. "Jim brought us a compound that removes it
from animal cells."
    "A cure.9" Srell asked. Kirk noted that he seemed disori-
ented. If that was possible for a Vulcan.
    But M'Benga shook her head. "A way to slow down its
spread, but not a cure. At least the quarantined systems can
be opened up after proper treatment."
    Kirk knew the technical discussions could wait. He trusted
Spock to make the right decision about what strategy they
must follow right now. "It's your world, Spocl~. What do we
do?"
"For the time being, I believe we are on our own."
"Suits me," Kirk said. Some things never change, he
thought. Kirk looked at the bodies of the Klingons and Tarok.
"Let's send down a forensics team to clean the place up and
create records for the authorities for when the time comes to
involve them."
 "A forensics team?" Spock asked.
    "From Commander MacDonald's ship. You think I flew
here on my own?"
    "Under the circumstances, that would not surprise me
either," Spock said. With an imperceptibly slight trace of a
smile, he added, "And that would explain your fatigue."
    Kirk saw the look of confusion on the faces of Christine,
M'Benga, and Barc.
    "Did I hear right," M'Benga asked gruffly, "or did a Vulcan
just make a joke?"
    "You mean, tried to make a joke," Christine said with a
smile.
    Srell regarded them stonily, hands behind his back. "I
assure you, Vulcans never joke."
    "Rrrr, "Barc growled, "then you haven't seen how they can
translate technical manuals. They're responsible for the most
confusing ones in my collection."




    Kirk glanced over at Spock. "Is it just me, or do they
remind you of anyone?"
    Spock looked thoughtful for a moment, then raised an
eyebrow and said, "It is just you."
    Kirk grinned. He had forgotten just how much he had
missed his old friend. He fumbled with the Starfleet corem
badge on his civilian shirt.
 "Kirk to Tobias." he said as it chirped. "Six to beam up."
    Now that his team had been assembled, it was time to get to
work.

TWENTY-ONE

Except for the whisper of the environmental systems, the
observation lounge of the Enterprise-E was quiet. At their
chairs, La Forge, Data, Lieutenant Rolk, and Riker watched
the slowly rotating surface of Alta Vista 257 beyond the large
ports, or stared across the conference table at the display case
of golden Enterprises of the past. No one talked. They were
giving Counselor Deanna Troi a moment to compose herself.
    Though not a full Betazoid, Troi had been focusing her
empathic ability on Chiton Kincaid, Stroh, and his wife, at
the moment of their deaths. And of fourteen hundred others.
    The awful wave of emotion that had flashed from Gamow
Station in the horror of the reactor explosion still reverber-
ated within her, leaving her shaken and detached.
    Riker did not think it was necessary for her to be present at
this briefing, so soon after the disaster, but Picard had
insisted. He had his reasons, he had told Riker, for wanting
all his senior staff available.
    The somber mood in the room was suddenly broken as the
new virtual viewscreen shimmered into life in front of the far
bulkhead.
 Picard and Crusher appeared there, their images transmit-




ted from the Galileo. The captain and the doctor were still in
quarantine on the decorepressed shuttlebay deck. Riker was
relieved to see that Picard wore a smaller dressing on his
facial wound and seemed more rested. Crusher's treatments
were having some success.
    "I feel awkward at having to address you in this manner,"
Picard said, "but Dr. Crusher has confirmed that I am now a
carrier of the virogen."
 "As am l," Crusher added.
 "No ill effects?" Riker asked.
    "Mild," Crusher said. "Slight fever. Intestinal upset. But
we're both following the typical thirty-hour curve of symp-
toms. We'll be fine by morning, though still contagious."
    Picard began the meeting. "Lieutenant Rolk: Have you had
any response from Starfleet?"
    As the Bolian security officer frowned, the fleshy ridge
bisecting her blue face stiffened. "Sir, I've been having
difficulties establishing a repeater link with Starbase Seven-
eighteen." Rolk didn't wait for Picard to ask the obvious
question. "All the ship's systems test out, but I'm not
receiving a signal confirmation. None of the ships in the
blockade can."
"Is it some type of subspace interference?" Picard asked.
The Bolian looked over at Riker. They had already dis-
cussed the situation and Riker could see she was feeling out of
her depth. He took up the report.
    "Captain, it could just be subspace chatter, but there have
been unconfirmed reports of... a riot at the starbase."
    Picard looked grim, yet offered no response. At any other
time, such a thing would have been impossible. But for
months now, the signs of growing strain in the infrastructure
of the Federation had been clearly increasing. Full-scale food
and resource riots were breaking out on the most badly
affected worlds. But for a Starfleet installation to suffer the

same fate was a serious matter, and an alarming indication of
how rapidly the situation was deteriorating.
    "I have not been able to confirm that report," Riker added.
"But given that no ship in the immediate sector has been able
to raise Starbase Seven-eighteen for the past seven days, it
seems reasonable to assume that something... disruptive
has happened there."
    Riker was familiar with the stoic expression that now came
to his captain. Whatever Picard's personal thoughts on this
escalation of the virogen's impact, he would keep them to
himself. First and foremost, he was a starship captain.
    "Lieutenant Rolk, you are, of course, establishing contact
with Command through other links in the subspace relay
network," Picard said.
    "Yes, sir," the security officer confirmed. "The fleet system
is... suffering sporadic overloads and shutdowns because of
the unusually high level of emergency traffic, but I will
establish contact within the next day."
    "A fast transport can travel more than five light-years in a
day."
 Riker knew what the captain meant.
    They had finally discovered how Stroh, his wife, and the
alta mist samples had survived the destruction of the
Bennett--they had beamed to the asteroid designated Alta
Vista 257 during the suspicious burst of subspace static from
the Bennett's deflector dish, only instants before the warp-
core breach had begun. That static had been the source of the
previously unexplained reading.
    Picard had suggested the possibility of a surreptitious
transport once it was determined that no organic residue of
Stron and his wife could be found. But there had been no
other ships within transporter range, and the Enterprise had
been unable to detect any sign of an artificial structure or
even a portable life-support shelter on the asteroid. Because
there hadn't been one.




    Instead, the crew and the cargo of the Bennett had been
beamed into a naturally formed bubble in the nickel-iron
asteroid, 2.8 kilometers below the surface, completely con-
tained, with no physical link to the outside. Data had
explored the bubble after Picard had ordered the Enterprise
to return to the asteroid for a more thorough search.
    The bubble, frozen in the metal when the asteroid had
cooled from Alta Vista's planetary-accretion disk more than
eight billion years ago, was one of hundreds in the object. The
roughly spherical chamber was approximately twenty meters
across, and had been lined with an insulating foam and
outfitted with glow strips, a cargo tank for the alta mist
samples, and a small life-support unit used to fill the bubble
with an atmosphere and warm the contents above the aster-
oid's normal interior temperature of -357 Celsius.
    When Polk had detected the faint though anomalous hot
spot in the asteroid's interior, he had transported a remote
sensor array to scan the bubble. Then Data beamed in to help
recover the equipment that had been installed there.
    Only now, days after the Bennett's apparent destruction,
was it clear to Riker and the others what had happened.
Based on the replicator load Data had calculated from the
life-support unit's consumables supply, the android had
reported that Stroh and his wife had hidden in the bubble for
only a few hours. At that time, a second ship from outside the
system came to the asteroid and beamed the two of them out
along with the alta vista from the holding tank. Residual
amounts of the one-celled, airborne plant cells still remained
on the inner surfaces of the tank. The level of virogen
contamination within it was exceedingly high.
    How that second ship then returned Stron and his wife to
Alta Vista III and left the system, Riker wasn't sure. But Rolk
confirmed that while in orbit, the Enterprise had made no
special efforts to scan for the tachyon signature sometimes
associated with cloaking devices. Thus, Riker did not find it

impossible that one small, fast, cloaked vessel might have
successfully passed through the quarantine blockade unde-
tected.
    Which meant that that same ship could already be dozens
of light-years distant, taking the contaminated alta mist to an
unknown destination. And as the captain had pointed out,
each hour's delay took that unknown vessel and its deadly
cargo even farther away.
    "With the destruction of the Gamow Station," Picard told
his assembled senior officers from the viewscreen, "mainte-
nance of the blockade in this system has become moot. In the
absence of orders from Command, as senior ranking officer, I
am freeing the blockade vessels to move on to other vital
assignments."
    Riker asked the question he knew would be on everyone
else's mind. "What will our new assignment be?"
    "That is where I am going to need your advice," Picard
said. "It is my opinion that based on the events we have
witnessed here, the ,irogen plague that is threatening the
stability of the Federation is a deliberate terrorist attack,
conducted by the organization known as the Symmetrists."
    "Who, or what, are the Symmetrists?" La Forge asked.
"I've never heard of them."
    "Few have," Picard explained. "They grew out of an
environmental movement begun on Vulcan more than two
centuries ago, just after the founding of the Federation."
    "In fact," Data unexpectedly continued, "the Symmetrists
considered themselves a political response to the Federation's
formation. They were the equivalent of the isolationist par-
ties on Earth, which lobbied to keep that world from joining
the Federation. The Symmetrists felt that logic demanded
Vulcan and her colonies remain independent."
    "Data, you sound as if you've studied the movement,"
Crusher said from the screen.
"I am endlessly fascinated by the differences of opinion




that arise among Vulcans. For a people who follow logic, they
exhibit many of the same tendencies of other, more emotion-
al races, to fragment into different political factions
which--"
    "I'll take that as a yes," Picard said, to stop the threatened
lecture. "However, on Earth, the various isolationist groups
were the last gasp of twenty-first-century regionalism, swept
away in the Reconstruction that followed first contact. There
was never any serious opposition to the Federation among the
members of Earth's world government. But on Vulcan, those
who opposed the Federation were not driven by political
motives. Rather, they perceived a threat to the galactic
ecology."

    With that phrase, Riker abruptly remembered an obscure
history course he had taken in his second year at the Acade-
my. The idea of a galactic ecology was still widely debated
among exopaleobiologists. Certainly, evidence clearly estab-
lished that many worlds shared related life-forms. Some of
this was due to the interplanetary exchange of bacteria and
viruses fueled by violent meteoric impacts. In Earth's own
system, life on Earth, the underground bacteria of Mars, the
oceans of Europa, and the ice viruses of Mercury all shared
common origins.
    Exciting similarities between more distant worlds, such as
Earth, Qo'noS, and Vulcan, were then proven, in part by this
very crew, to have originated as the result of the genetic
seeding of dozens of planets by the first humanoid race to
evolve in the galaxy, more than four billion years ago.
    But where the experts still disagreed was in accepting the
existence of a natural, interplanetary web of connectedness
throughout the galaxy.
    The majority view held that any such theory was based on
inaccurate observations and flawed reasoning. To those who
controlled the scientific status quo, each life-bearing planet

was a separate storehouse of biological riches to be exploited
at will, with the confidence of knowing individual worlds
existed in a natural quarantine enforced by the cold,
radiation-filled vacuum of interstellar space.
    But on Vulcan, a vocal minority said it was the majority
who were mistaken. Just because a web of connection could
not be rigorously demonstrated by the science of the day did
not mean that the web did not exist, in a form unknown, and
perhaps unknowable, to human observers.
    These scientists, the forerunners of the Symmetrist move-
ment, said that each planet was a link in a chain of life that
had evolved according to the rhythms of the galaxy's natural
ebb and flow of matter and energy. To those who accepted the
Vulcans' postulates, the galactic ecology could be perceived as
a single organism, indescribably vast, operating at a timescale
in which the birth and death of stars passed in an eyeblink.
    To interfere with the natural state of that galactic ecology,
by traveling between the distant worlds on warp-powered
ships, subjecting delicately balanced planetary biospheres
indiscriminately to the shock of alien microbes, plants, and
animals over the course of years and not eons, was a crime.
An ecological crime.
    As the newly formed Federation began to codify the rules
and regulations of an organized, concerted effort to explore
all the worlds of the galaxy, it was on Vulcan that the scientific
opposition to this strategy became most vocal.
    That opposition argued that intelligent beings must be
stewards of the galactic ecology, not exploiters. Humans,
Vulcans, Tellarites, Andorians... the citizens of all space-
faring civilizations had a responsibility to recognize and
preserve the symmetry of all things.
    The highest ideal of that symmetry stated that the galaxy
was no different from a living being.
Therefore, if the Federation accepted the sanctity of an




individual's right to exist, which it did, then the Federation
must also accept the sanctity of all life, including that of the
galaxy itself.
    Led by some of the most noted biologists and philosophers
of the day, the Symmetrists pleaded with the Federation to
amend its charter so that strict quarantine protocols would be
followed on each world discovered to have a native biosphere,
and that colonization and terraforming would occur only on
those worlds that were completely lifeless. Logic demanded no less.
    But, Riker recalled, the Federation had rejected the Sym-
metrists' arguments as unfounded and unproven, and per-
haps, more importantly, as potentially expensive and capable
of bringing galactic exploration to a standstill.
    Only if the concerned scientists could return with the hard
data necessary to prove their far-fetched view of the galaxy
would the Federation Council deign to revisit their proposals.
    But until then, the Council ruled, the Federation would
continue to regard the galaxy merely as a resource that
belonged to everyone.

    "When the Vulcans who opposed the Federation's ambi-
tious exploration plans were rebuffed," Picard continued,
"the Symmetrist movement began. At first, they were a
loosely knit academic group, committed to compiling the
data necessary to prove their case to the Federation Council.
Eventually, the Symfiletrists became aligned with other scien-
tific groups on other worlds, and the scope of their activities
expanded."
    "That was about the time of the hostage incident on
Deneva." Riker said.
    Picard looked pleased that another member of his staff
shared his knowledge of history. "Precisely, Number One. At
the time, Deneva was considered one of the most beautiful
worlds in the quadrant. Its biosphere was fully developed,

 Earth-normal. Exactly the kind of world the Federation
 sought to colonize. And exactly the kind of world the Sym-
 metrists said must be kept isolated and untouched."
  "More hostages," Deanna Troi said softly.
  Everyone at the table looked at her with concern.
    She kept her eyes on the tabletop. "As part of my counsel-
or's training, I've taken part in the Deneva incident in a
holosimulation. A group of radical environmentalists from
Alpha Centauri said that any attempt to colonize Deneva
would end in disaster. To prove their point, they took over the
first colony ship, set it with explosives while it was still in
orbit, and threatened to blow it up with all colonists aboard,
unless the Federation withdrew."
    Troi looked up at the captain on the viewscreen, and Riker
could see how she was forcing herself to regain control of her
emotions, to serve her ship and her fellow crew. "The radicals
said it was necessary for the Federation to be taught a lesson.
Rather than letting the colonists die due to environmental
collapse over decades, they felt the authorities would take
more notice if all the colonists died at once. So the Federation
couldn't hide from the tragedy and would be forced to
reevaluate their policies."
 "How many colonists, Data?" Riker asked.
    "Six hundred and fifty. Of which four hundred and eight
died when an assault team from the Archon attempted to
board the colonists' ship. Thirty-two Starfleet personnel were
lost, as well as all of the radicals."
    "The frightening thing is," Troi continued, "is that in all
the simulations I tried, I couldn't get a better result. It was
before subspace radio had been invented. There was no
support from Command. No contact with other ships." She
sighed, as if the deaths of all innocent hostages throughout all
time were her personal responsibility.
    "The radicals at Deneva were fanatics," Picard said
sharply. "They had no intention of ever letting the colonists




go. They had a point to prove. A lesson to teach. And they
would let nothing stand in their way."
    Riker could see what Picard was thinking. "Do you think
that's what's happening today? With the virogen?"
    "I do," Picard said. "The virogen and its effect on the
agriculture of the Federation is precisely the type of ecological
disaster the Symmetrists warned us off"
    Rolk had a question. "But were the Symmetrists responsi-
ble for what happened on Deneva?"
    "A radical offshoot of their organization claimed responsi-
bility," Picard said. "For the next fifty years or so, the
Symmetrists existed almost as an underground community of
scientists, trying to make their concerns known, but thwarted
as extreme elements among them enacted schemes of ecologi-
cal terrorism."
    Data clarified the timeline. "Records show that by 2248,
Symmetrists had ceased to exist as an organized group,
completely discredited by their more radical followers."
    Riker wasn't convinced. "Captain, that's one hundred and
twenty-five years ago. Are you suggesting descendants of the
Symmetrist cause have been working as an underground
group all this time?"
    Picard's face hardened into a mask that told Riker his
captain was not revealing everything he knew. He spoke his
next words carefully. "You're forgetting, Number One. The
Symmetrist movement came out of Vulcan. There are indi-
viduals alive today who could have been founding members
of it almost two centuries ago. And judging from the partici-
pation of Stron, it seems likely that whole new generations as
well have been drafted into the cause."
    La Forge gave a low whistle. "Are you saying that this whole
virogen plague is nothing more than... than some lesson the
Federation is being taught? By a group of Vulcan terrorists?"
Riker tried to determine what it was Picard wasn't telling

them. Normally, when the ship was not facing immediate
danger, the captain encouraged his crew to question his
conclusions. Consensus was a valid operating principle for
something as complex as a starship. But to Riker, it appeared
as if Picard considered this time to be one of immediate
danger, and La Forge's attitude was not welcome. Was it
possible the captain had knowledge of an individual Vulcan
who might be linked to the Symmetrists today?
    Riker tried to catch La Forge's eye, to suggest the engineer
ease off, but Picard responded too quickly.
    "I am saying, Mr. La Forge, that the virogen plague
resembles other acts of environmental terrorism carried out
by the Symmetrists in the past, though on a vastly larger scale.
And my questions to you are,/./'that is the case, then why is
the alta mist an important part of that act of terrorism, and
where would the Symmetrists be taking it?"
    Riker could see that La Forge felt sufficiently chastised by
the captain's tone. The engineer rubbed at his eyes, an
unusual sight to Riker, who still hadn't completely adjusted
to the replacement of La Forge's visor by eerie, blue-
circuitry ocular implants. "The alta mist is how the plague is
spread," La Forge said, with a tinge of desperation. "That's
got to be it."
    "No," Picard said. "The alta mist exists only on Alta Vista
Three. Starfleet has conducted extensive bioassays of every
affected system. If the alta mist had been found anywhere
else, we would have known about it six months ago."
    "Perhaps all the Symmetrists wish to do is measure the
extent of the virogen's spread," Data suggested.
    "Again," Picard said, "unlikely. When we captured the
Bennett, Stron said he had intercepted all Starfleet communi-
cations. Certainly, that is not beyond the capabilities of any
group so well prepared as the Symmetrists appear to be. And
if that's the case, then they have no need to conduct their own




surveys of the virogen's spread. They can simply eavesdrop
on Starfleet's own findings."
      Riker smiled ruefully at the captain. "In other words, we
now have three mysteries in the same region of space."
 "And all connected," Picard agreed.
    Dr. Crusher appeared to have a sudden flash of inspiration.
"What if we skip over the mystery of the alta mist for now,
and ask ourselves the critical question--if the Symmetrists
are somehow involved, where're they located?"
    Just as Wolf might have done, Rolk offered the most
obvious answer. "Somewhere safe."
    "A valid point," Picard agreed. "Though true Symmetrists
would be the first to say that no place in the Federation is
safe."
    Troi suddenly straightened in her chair. "Fear," she said.
All eyes turned to her. "That's what was missing~" She turned
to the viewscreen. "Captainwwhen Kincaid destroyed the
station, I felt her fear, even the fear of Stron and his wife,
and... everyone else caught in the explosion. But... when
we captured the Bennett by this asteroid, I felt only...
tension coming from Stron. He knew he was in a dillcult
situation, but he did not consider it a life-threatening one.
    "I assumed his emotional response was deadened because
he was a Vulcan. But when we discovered the life-support
bubble in the asteroid, I realized Stron's emotional response
was correct. He knew there was a way off the Bennett. He
wasn't in a life-or-death situation."
    Troi paused. Though Riker knew everyone else in the
room, and on the Galileo, was eager for her to continue, no
one dared interrupt whatever chain of thought and emotion
the counselor was following.
    She spoke again. "I'm certain of it, sir. In all the conversa-
tions I witnessed with Stron and Kincaid, in every mention of
the virogen and its effect on the Federation"--her dark eyes

gleamed as she stared intently at the viewscreenw"l never
felt the fear of death."
    Silence ruled the lounge as the import of Troi's observation
made itself known.
    Then Picard stated the obvious conclusion, his face flushed
with the excitement of discovery. "They weren't afraid of the
virogen, because somewhere, somehow, the Symmetrists al-
ready have a cure."
    For Riker, the shock of that statement brought both relief
and tension. There was a chance that the virogen was not the
Federation's death knell, that the disease could be controlled.
But where would the Symmetrists be keeping it? With two
quadrants of the galaxy to search, how could one hiding place
ever be found?
    Fortunately, the captain had already considered that ques-
tion, and reached a decision.
    "If we're to find that cure, we must first find the Sym-
metrists. And to do that, the best place to begin is where they
themselves arose."
    Riker stood at once, not even waiting for the order to be
dismissed. The captain's logic was unassailable.
    Less than two minutes later, the Enterprise-E tore open the
fabric of space, and blazed through warp for where it had all
begun.
 And where, Riker hoped, it would all end.
 The Enterprise flew to Vulcan.




TWENTY-TWO

"Please state the nature of the medical emergency."
    In the sickbay of the Tobias, Kirk literally jumped back into
M'Benga as the ship's Emergency Medical Hologram re-
solved before him.
 "What the hell is that?" Kirk said.
    For a hologram without a personality, to Kirk the EMH
looked distinctly annoyed. "I beg your pardon?"
    "It's a backup medical program," M'Benga explained. "I
don't have a large staff, so he comes in handy when I've got a
lot to deal with."
    Kirk glanced around the sickbay. It was small, even by the
twenty-third-century standards of his own Enterprise. But it
was hardly crowded. M'Benga was treating Spock for a few
cuts and scrapes. Christine MacDonald was cleaning herself
up at a sink that had folded out from a wall. And then there
was Kirk and the holographic doctor.
It was not what Kirk would consider a medical emergency.
"What, exactly, do you have to deal with?" Kirk asked. He
was winded from the fight and the chase at Tarok's estate, but
the exhilaration of the physical conflict had left him feeling

much better than he had after the purely mechanical confron-
tation in the skies of Chal.
    Fighting the Orion attack wing, he had been little more
than a puppet master, pressing buttons, ordering changes in
vectors and velocities with all the passion of a computer.
    For all that starships had opened up the galaxy to humani-
ty, there had come a time in his career when the emphasis had
seemed to shift from technology as a tool to technology for its
own sake.
    Perhaps more than any other person in the Federation, he
knew the horror of the limits to which that worship of the
machine could be taken. He could still recall the inhuman
sensation of the nanites moving within him, infesting him,
reworking his flesh according to their own unknowing pro-
gram.
    The Emergency Medical Hologram was a disturbing re-
minder of what had happened to him after his escape from
the Borg homeworld. Especially since he could see no use for
the program's presence at the moment.
    But Dr. M'Benga apparently had another view of the
situation.
 "What I have to deal with," she said, "is you."
 "Me?"
    M'Benga stopped running her instruments over the cut on
Spock's forearm. Green blood had crusted around the minor
cut, but the flesh beneath was already being pushed together
by the medical treatment field.
 "Vulcans I can handle," the doctor said.
    "Like great-grandfather, like great-granddaughter?" Kirk
asked. He remembered the M'Benga who had served so well
on his Enterprise. That M'Benga had been one of the first
human specialists in Vulcan medicine.
    "It runs in the family," the doctor agreed. "But you're
another matter."




 "I feel fine," Kirk said. "Never better."
    M'Benga harrumphed in response, reminding Kirk of
another doctor who was not inclined to have his patients talk
back. "According to records, you're one hundred and forty
years old. How you 'feel' and how you actually are is a bit out
of my experience."
     Christine joined the conversation. "Bones, there was the
little matter of the temporal anomaly Picard reported."
 "Thank you," Kirk said.
    But M'Benga held her ground. "There was also the 'little
matter' of you dying."
    Kirk didn't know where to begin. So he did what he had
found always worked best in these awkward situations.
"Spock, explain it to them."
     Spock carefully brushed off the last of the dried blood on
his treated arm. "I cannot," he said. "Spock?"
    "Captain..." Spock paused. "Admiral..." That still
wasn't right. Then he had it. "Jimwwe last met two years ago
on a mission that to my knowledge has remained classified at
the highest levels of Starfleet. Even if we were at liberty to
discuss it among present company, I have no idea what has
happened to you in the ensuing two years."
    Kirk realized there was only one way out--fight back. "Dr.
M'Benga, classified matters aside, I am not one hundred and
forty years old. When the Enterprise-B was launched, I was
sixty, and that's how old I was when I helped out Captain
Picard on Veridian. It's two years later. I'm sixty-two." He
stared belligerently at the EMH. "And I don't need a holo-
gram to give me a physical."
    M'Benga shrugged. "All right. Sixty-two I can handle. Take
off your clothes."
    Kirk didn't like the sound of that. "Don't you people have
... scanners? A medical tricorder?"
 "Think of me as an old country doctor," M'Benga said with

a predatory smile. She pulled a pair of isolation gloves from a
supply drawer, giving them an alarming snap. "I prefer the
hands-on approach."
    Kirk knew when he had been outmaneuvered. For whatev-
er reason, the doctor of this vessel wanted a medical report on
him, and he had long ago learned that not even a starship
captain could fight a ship's doctor and win. "On second
thought, I'll go with the hologram."
 "How nice to be wanted," the EMH said.
    M'Benga knew she had won and let Kirk know she knew
with a sarcastic smile. "Thank you for your cooperation." She
gestured to the others. "Why don't we give our guest some
privacy."
    M'Benga, Christine, and Spock began to leave. But Kirk
called Spock back.
"We should talk," Kirk said. "About what happened."
Spock remained as the sickbay doors slipped shut. Kirk saw
Christine turn to glance back at him, and he held her gaze for
just an instant before he and Spock were alone.
    The EMH came at him with a medical probe. "Say 'ahhh,'"
the hologram told him.
 "Is there any way to turn you off?." Kirk asked.
 "Several."
 "I don't suppose you could tell me the best one."
 "Not a chance."
    Kirk opened his mouth and said "ahhh." Then, as the
hologram busied himself with other readings, Kirk turned his
attention to Spock, apprehensive about the answer to the
question he knew he must ask. "How's... McCoy?"
    For a moment, Spock looked uncomfortable, and Kirk
feared the worst. But the answer was not what he had
expected. "I attended the doctor's one hundred and forty-
sixth birthday party on Wrigley's Pleasure Planet."
 "Wrigley's? What was the doctor's... pleasure?"




    Spock seemed even more uncomfortable. "Dancing girls. I
told the doctor it was most unseemly for a man of his years to
be cornporting himself in such a manner." "And... 7"
    "The good doctor informed me that in his considered
opinion, the mere fact that a man of his years could comport
himself in any manner, let alone still draw breath, was reason
enough to celebrate in whatever fashion he chose."
    Kirk grinned as he thought of his friends still bickering
after all these years, knowing that each argument served only
to bind their friendship closer. "I'm sorry I missed the
party," Kirk said, and he meant it.
    "He has something special planned for his one hundred
and fiftieth birthday," Spock said. "He will not tell me what it
is, but no doubt we will both be invited."
    Kirk winced as the hologram pushed his arm through a
series of twisting bends. "Do people really live that long in
this time?"
"In Dr. McCoy's case, he tells me he does it to spite me."
"Oww!" Kirk said as he felt his shoulder blade click
painfully. He pulled his arm from the hologram's grip.
"You're supposed to make people feel better."
    "I see, you're telling me how I should do my job? And how
many years of medical training have you had?"
    "You're a hologram," Kirk said. "How many have you
had?"
    "Combining the years of training of all the medical experts
who contributed to my programming, one thousand seven
hundred and eight." The hologram sounded far too pleased
with himself for Kirk's liking. "What? No snappy comeback?
Has the great James T. Kirk been bested by a mere machine
who--"
 With a flash of light, the EMH suddenly winked out.
    Kirk turned to see Spock standing by a medical computer,
one finger still on a button.

 "Fascinating," Spock said. "An Off switch."
 Kirk sighed with relief. "You've done it again."
 Spock waited patiently for clarification.
 "Saved me," Kirk said.
    "I would not go so far as to characterize the act of switching
off an emergency medical hologram as a--"
 Spock stopped in response to Kirk's upheld hand.
    Kirk glanced around the sickbay. "Do you suppose this
place is fully stocked? The way McCoy would stock it?"
    Spock nodded in understanding, and began opening supply
cupboards with Kirk, until he found a bottle of Jack Daniel's.
It was from Manozec XII, but the label said the oak casks
were made with wood cloned from the original forests on
Mars. At least it was the right solar system. Kirk poured two glasses.
 Spock joined him in a toast without protest.
 "To absent friends," Kirk said.
 "And Dr. McCoy."
    For a moment, the two men stood in silence, their lives and
their careers so closely aligned that it was at times as if they
were one force moving through the universe. Kirk was glad to
be back. He had no idea how many more second chances he
might be given, so he intended to make the most of this one.
 The most of every day remaining.
    Kirk looked at the whisky swirling in the glass he held. "So
what now?" he asked his friend
    "For now, we must wait," Spock answered "Srell is direct-
ing the forensics team at Tarok's estate. At the same time, he
will attempt to obtain data from the estate's computers that
might guide us to other people linked with Tarok, my parents,
and what he referred to as 'the movement.'" "'The movement.' What's that?"
    "I do not know." Spock told Kirk the story of the holo-
graphic recording of Ki Mendrossen he had received on the
Babel planetold, of how it indicated that his father had been




murdered. And how Spook and Srell had followed a chain of
evidence that led back to Vulcan, to Sarek's villa, and finally
to Tarok's estate, looking for any clues to a possible
conspiracy--what Spook took to be "the cause" that Tarok
had mentioned.
    "As you can see," Spock concluded, "without additional
data, I am at a loss."
    "'The cause,'" Kirk repeated. "Why does that sound
familiar?"
    "It is a generic description for any manner of undertak-
ing," Spock said. "Little information is contained in it."
Cautiously, he sipped at his whisky.
    "You never used to like alcohol all that much," Kirk
observed.
    Spock took another sip. "You have yet to tell me how you
escaped from the Borg homeworld, and rid yourself of the
nanites."
    Kirk found a chair, pulled it over to the desk. Spock did the
same.
    "I take it that Picard told you what happened in the Central
Node."
    "Up to the moment you 'slugged' him, was the way he put
it. Then had him beamed aboard the ship. Quite against his
will, he informed us."
    "He's a good ma.n," Kirk said. "Carries on the tradition
well. He's just, I don't know, too... by-the-book."
    "The 'book' says little about fellow officers slugging each
other in the jaw."
 "Maybe not in the twenty-fourth century."
    "The Borg homeworld," Spock said, recalling Kirk's atten-
tion to the topic at hand. "You were in the Central Node. You
had Picard beamed out. And then what? Did you pull the
lever?"
 Kirk braced himself for what was to come. As much as he

was a man who lived in the present, always traveling toward
the future, there were times, he knew, when he must return to
the past.
 This was one of them.
 "I pulled the lever," Kirk said.
 It was time to tell the story.




TWENTY-THREE

It was a transporter beam that had claimed him, and that had
ripped him from the Node.
     Kirk knew all that the instant he re-formed in darkness, felt
the physical burden of reality return to him.
 Then he had dropped a full two meters.
 Into mud.
    He opened his mouth for air and the stench of the mud
choked him.
 It reeked of sewage. Of death.
    He struggled as the heavy, freezing sludge engulfed him.
From instinct more than thought, he strained to keep his head
above the suffocating grasp of whatever held him. He had no idea where he was.
    An ordinary transport lasted scant seconds at most, accom-
panied by a slight vertigo, a glittering spray of light, and then
solidity again.
    But an ordinary transport could beam matter only twenty-
five thousand kilometers.
    This transport had lasted longer than any he had experi-
enced before. Long enough that he had actually been con-
scious of his immaterial state.

    There were other technologies possible, other rules, Kirk
knew. Once his ship had intercepted a transporter beam that
had originated from across the galaxy.
    But how far had Kirk been transported within this beam?
And by what or whom?
    Then any thoughts as to where he might be, how far from
the Borg homeworld he had come, and who or what might be
responsible were vanquished by the sudden incredible pain
that convulsed his body, nearly submerging him in the
odiferous mud.
    The nanites were still at their work in Kirk's body. Submi-
croscopic machines of Borg and Romulan origin. The ma-
chines that renegade Romulans had used to reconstruct his
body according to the template laid down in his own DNA.
Once activated, the nanites could not be stopped, or re-
moved. They would continue their work of restructuring him
until they had played out their function by accelerating the
genetically programmed apoptosis that brought death by
aging to all living beings.
    When Kirk had pulled the lever in the Borg Central Node,
he had had only hours to live. And though he had escaped the
explosion that devastated the Borg homeworld, he was not
going to escape his fate.
    Kirk contorted in agony as he felt the organs of his body
shift and twist in response to the burrowing, cutting, re-
arranging nanites. His fingers spread into useless claws to dig
against the clinging mud.
    From the surrounding darkness, he could hear the groaning
sounds of other struggles. And in the distance, the rumble of
vast explosions and unceasing machines.
He lay back, half-buried in the muck, gulping for air.
Whatever part of Kirk that had lived in him as a child and
had made him think there might be something under the bed
or lurking in the closet, it whispered to him now.
 He was dead.




 This was hell.
 And it was here he would spend eternity.
    The nanites ate away at him as the eagle tore at the liver of
Prometheus. But in the void, he chose neither the comforts of
mysticism, nor the escape of desperate fantasy.
    Instead, a single word emerged from Kirk's frozen, mud-
oaked lips.
  . . . no...
 He was not dead.
 There was no hell.
    But there was an explanation. There must always be an
explanation.
    He was somewhere in the universe. Somewhere physical.
Therefore real. And he was--
 "... still alive..." he whispered.
    Then, through force of will alone, he smiled fiercely,
drawing his lips back from chattering teeth.
 Because high above him, the sky was growing lighter.
 The sky.
    Low gray clouds lit by a sun that rose unseen on the
horizon.
    He was on a planet, exactly as he had believed. The
explanation had been found.
 He thrust himself up to assess his surroundings.
 He was in a field of mud.
    Far in the distance, he could see dark shapes moving closer,
like the roiling clouds of a storm front or peaks on a slow-
moving wave, something within them sparking with red and
blue fire. Somehow, he knew they were the source of the
machine rumbling and explosions.
     But he ignored them for the moment, because they were
still far off. And because the mud so much closer to him...
 removed.
 At first he thought it was alive. The very mud of this planet

a living creature hungrily gnawing at him, as inexorable as
death, drawing him deep within itself to be consumed.
    But as the light continued to increase, as day broke on this
new world, Kirk saw the nightmarish landscape around him.
Writhing, twisting, stretching out, reaching out, caught as he
was caught, dying as he was dying.
    Wherever he was, however he had come there, James T.
Kirk faced the last hours of his life, trapped in a field of fellow
sufferers.
    He was surrounded by thousands upon thousands of dying
Borg ....

 "Fascinating," Spock said.
    Kirk knocked back the last of his whisky and poured
himself another shot. He swallowed that as well, letting the
heat of it take away the memory of that horrible place.
    "Fascinating my ass," he said. "I was in a garbage dump,
Spock. A Borg garbage dump."
 "Then the transporter beam you leapt into... ?"
    "Was part of the homeworld's evacuation system. Our
ships have escape pods, so maybe the Borg have escape
beams. They punch through transwarp space so their range is
virtually unlimited, and they enable Borg units that are still
connected to the Collective to regather and re-form whatever
branch they're from."
    Spock looked thoughtful. "Last year, a Borg vessel attacked
Earth. It was defeated, but during the unusual events of its
attack, Captain Picard encountered a most interesting Borg
individual whom all records indicate had perished years
earlier in the destruction of another Borg cubeship. Perhaps
these escape beams offer a possible explanation for that
individual's survival."
    Kirk shook his head. "Individual survival isn't what the
Borg system was set up for."




    Spock looked at Kirk with immediate understanding. "The
machines on the horizon," he said.
 Kirk nodded "They didn't stay on the horizon for long."

    Whatever sun this planet circled, its glow seemed to surge
through the clouds in uneven jumps.
    The machines on the horizon did the same, lunging closer
in manic advances each time Kirk closed his eyes.
    He could see them more clearly now--moving walls of
multilayered metal, propelled by treads that rose a hundred
meters in the air, each monstrous machine with a deep slot at its
base, large enough to swallow a runabout, filled with grinding,
gnashing blades, and lit by flashing beams of fusion fire.
    The mechanical beasts swept over the mud as voracious
devourers of all they encountered. Borg by the thousands
were swept into their jaws, to be torn apart, reclaimed, and
reassembled.
    Kirk located the machine that was bearing down on him,
still kilometers distant He calculated it would reach him near
sundown. Though he doubted the nanites would let him last
that long.
 He had to laugh at the irony of his end.
 On the literal garbage heap of galactic history.
    But still, somehow he could not give up. He found himself
wondering what the insides of those machines might look
like. He set himself the goal of surviving the nanites long
enough to be swallowed by the machine.
    Hadn't that, in fact, been what had happened to him ages
ago, when he had taken the center chair for the very first
time? When the starships had swallowed him, making him
little more than another plug-in component in a cosmic
machine?
    "I'm ready for you," Kirk whispered to the monster that
drove for him. And time and again, the sun jumped in the sky
as the monster leapt forward.

    In his lucid moments, Kirk realized the strobing effect
meant he was lapsing in and out of consciousness. He forced
himself to concentrate, to keep himself alert until the end.
Determined not to waste a moment of life.
    But all that came to him was a scattered vision of the bridge
on Veridian III. Then, like now, he had been certain that
death had claimed him, inescapably.
    That day beneath the Veridian sun, after his fall, after the
Nexus had passed, he had seen again the dark shape that had
chased him all his life... felt that he was finally alone, how
he had always known he would die. He had stared up into
that mystery for what, in his final thoughts, he had believed
would be his last moment of awareness... .. and seen Sarek?
    Reliving that moment, Kirk muttered to the mud and the
Borg that lay round him. As little more than an observer of
his own fate, shut off from the horror around him, some
still-rational part of his being decided that this must be how
the human brain died. Cut off from oxygen. Brain cells
making up hallucinations to hide the face of impending
extinction. Floods of endorphins released to ease the suffer-
ing. Creating a white light that drew him forward. But in that light...
 .. he saw Sarek once again.
     For a time, it seemed to Kirk that he now stood beside
himself in that field of mud, Sarek next to him, silent.
 Only they weren't in the field of mud.
    They were in a forest. At night. Beneath a sea of stars. Kirk
recognized the setting.
    Yosemite. Fragrant smoke from a crackling fire mingling
with the green scent of pine and the richness of earth.
    "We've been here before," Kirk said. He looked around
and saw three people in sleeping bags, resting by the fire.
Spock, and McCoy, and... himself.




  Then Kirk recognized the time.
    It was the day he had fallen from E1 Capitan. Plunged to
certain death. The day when, against all reason, he had felt no
fear.
    That night by the fire, after Spook had rescued him, after
McCoy had scolded him, he had revealed to his friends what
he had never told another soul.
 I've always known... that 171 die alone.
 "Yes, Kirk. That is the key," Sarek now told him.
    Kirk closed his eyes and heard the rumbling of the ma-
chines, the cries of dying Borg. He opened his eyes, and saw
the forest, Sarek beckoning to him from within the trees.
    "You must leave them behind," Sarek called out. "They
cannot be with you."
    Kirk wasn't ready. He needed to know why. "I've had this
dream before," he said.
    But Sarek gave no answer. His robes seemed to glow,
billowing about him as if caught in a breeze that Kirk
couldn't feel.
    Memories flooded into Kirk then, each one about this
dream, this hidden knowledge of his death.
     And as always happened when this occurred, he was filled
with the knowledge that he had had this dream before.
 As long ago as he could remember.
 And always it was the same.
 Always it came with...
    "Sarek..." Kirk pleaded, "why has it always been you in
my dreams? Even before we met. Before I met your son.
Before I left Earth... it has always been you who comes to
take me from my friends and to my death."
    Sarek now was only a light in the forest--shafts of radiance
lancing out from the dark trees and branches.
 "Because of what we share," Sarek said. "Or will share."
 "My dream? Or my death?" Kirk asked.

    Sarek's voice came from all around him, a roll of thunder
in the air. But Kirk already knew the words Sarek spoke.
They were always the same.
    As long as a single mind remembers, as long as a single
heart still beats with passion, how can a dream die?
    Kirk held his hands up to the night, imploringly. "But what
of the dreamer?"
 Look to the stars, James Kirk.
 Kirk felt Sarek's hand on his arm.
 Just as Sarek had taken his arm that first time...
 That first time on...
    But once again that final link in the chain would not come
to him, no matter how hard he tried to bring it forth, as if a
portion of his mind and memory were lost to him, as if
hidden behind some barricade to the truth.
    Long ago on Tarsus IV, here again in Yosemite, there on the
field of dying Borg... Sarek kept his hand locked around
Kirk's wrist, to keep him close.
 And the words he spoke electrified Kirk.
 As they always did.
 Avenge me.
    Kirk closed his eyes in the agony of lost knowledge, lost
time, lost life.
    And even as the dream evaporated and the machine
loomed above him, there was still a hand holding on to his
wrist.
    But the dream was over. Kirk looked up into the untrou-
bled eyes of a young female humanoid, streaked with filth,
naked except for a mud-caked loincloth. Beneath the filth, her
skin was a quilt of brown and white.
    "... who are... you... ?" Kirk gasped, his throat al-
most closed by the ravages of the nanRes.
    The youth looked over at something Kirk couldn't see.
"This one is operational," she shouted.




    Barely conscious, Kirk felt the thunderous pulse of the
approaching machine blend in his body with the unceasing
waves of pain from the nanites. His death would be violent.
He felt as if the end must come in mere moments, when his
body could no longer take the stress and would simply
explode.
    A second humanoid joined the first. This time, a male, as
mud-coated and as lightly clothed as the female, also with the
same odd patchwork pattern of skin, this time white and
pink.
    The youth knelt down beside Kirk, felt his pulse, briefly
touched his mud-darkened fingers to points on Kirk's face
that called up the whisper of forgotten memories.
    "He is not 'operational,'" the youth said to the female. "He
is alive. Just as we are."
    Roughly, the youth lifted Kirk's head from the mud. The
towering wall of metal was visible above him, only a minute
away from claiming them all.
 "What is your designation?" the youth asked.
    Time stopped for Kirk. He rallied himself to identify his
existence before it ended forever.
 "... Kirk," he whispered. "... James... Tiberius..."
    The youth stood and, with no sign of exertion, hoisted Kirk
to his feet.
    Kirk could not feel his legs. He remained upright only
because the two young people supported him. Effortlessly.
    "Welcome, Kirk James Tiberius," the young male said.
"My name is Hugh."

"Hugh?" Spock said. "I have studied Captain Picard's
detailed accounts of his encounters with the Borg. Could that
have been the same Hugh who was infected with individuali-
ty? And who then was part of a revolt against the Collective?"
Kirk stretched back in the chair in sickbay. He was feeling
hoarse after so much explanation. Another shot of whisky

eased the irritation in his throat. "I have no idea, Spock. Half
the people in the clan that found me were called Hugh. It was
a common name, as if it had been passed on to them from
other branches." "The clan?"
    Kirk shrugged. There were still events from those first few
days on that world that weren't clear to him. "They were
Borg," he said. "Or, had been Borg. Apparently, they'd
renounced their implants."
    "Everything we know about the Borg suggests that is
impossible."
    "If a Borg named Hugh can be infected with individuality
and then revolt against the Collective, then I'd say the
different branches of the Borg are capable of evolving their
own, unique modes of organization. And the Borg who found
me had access to unique forms of biotechnology."
    "That would explain many inconsistencies in their be-
havior."
     Kirk stared at his friend. "Spock, is that all you can say?
That what happened to me explains Borg inconsistencies?"
 "What would you have me say?"
     Kirk put his glass down on the table. Despite his Vulcan
heritage, Spock had to see the irony in what had happened.
 "Don't you see? I was... recycled."
    From Spock's expression, Kirk could see that his friend
didn't see the irony at all.
    "I was beamed by a Borg emergency escape transporter to a
planet where damaged Borg components were sent to be
broken down and reassembled. A clan of Borg who had
abandoned their cybernetic implants found me, detected the
nanites, and assumed I was like them. So they processed me,
Spock. By whatever means they used to rid themselves of
their machine parts, they took the nanites from me. I was...
cleansed. Recycled. Made human again only by being treated
like... a product."




     Spock regarded Kirk for long moments. "You say you had a
 vision of my father?"
  Kirk sighed. "Why do I even bother?"
    "I am trying to understand," Spock assured Kirk. "And i
am fascinated that you claim to have had dreams about my
father even before you met him. Though that is a common
aftereffect of mindmelding, and you and I have melded often
enough in the past that you undoubtedly acquired and
retained early images of my father, based on my own memo-
ries of him."
    Kirk thought that over. "You know, I melded with your
father once myself."
  Both of Spock's eyebrows shot up.
      "In San Francisco," Kirk said. "After... after what hap-
pened with Khan. When you..."  "When I died."
    "Your father came to me, searching for your katra. He
didn't know you had placed it in McCoy."
    Spock looked as if Kirk had just slugged him instead of
Picard. "You never told me this," he said, but it was as if his
words were not meant for Kirk. "It is no wonder that you
have dreamt about Sarek. You have not been trained in the
methods of controlling the residual effects of a meld."
    Kirk was puzzled. "You mean, I haven't dreamt about your
father since I can remember? It's all been some sort of false
memory?"
    Because they were' friends, because they were alone, Spock
spoke gently, trying to lighten the blow, Kirk knew. "Unless
you melded with my father when you were a child, the dreams
you experienced were merely a result of the effect of my
father's more disciplined mind on yours."
    "No different from the hallucinations of a near-death
experience?" Kirk asked.
 "An illusion," Spock agreed.
 Kirk tapped his fingers against the table, considering

Spock's analysis. As always, it seemed logical. It just didn't
seem right.
 "But my memories of Sarek seem so clear," Kirk said.
    "Then I envy you, Jim. For I never melded with my
father."
    Kirk was surprised by the emotion in Spock's voice. He
knew that Spook had just revealed something of great impor-
tance to him. As important, perhaps, as Kirk's own feelings
about coming so close to death.
    What could one friend say to another after such a revela-
tion? So much time had passed between them, yet when they
were together, it was as if no time had passed at all. There
must be something Kirk could say. There must bern
    Every unsecured object in sickbaymincluding the bottle of
Jack Daniel's and the two friends in their chairs--was hurled
to the side as the ship's hull creaked in protest. Kirk caught
the whisky bottle just before it jumped from the table. An instant later, red alert sounded.
     Kirk looked around for a wall communicator. But Spock
beat him to it by pulling a comm badge from within his shirt.
 "Spook to bridge. Are we in difficulty?"
    Commander Christine MacDonald's young voice replied.
"It depends on your definition of difficulty, Ambassador. We
have just been grappled with tractor beams by Vulcan patrol
ships. It seems they wish to question us about an incident at
Tarok's estate. Our forensics team is already in their custody
and is being beamed aboard."
    "That, Commander MacDonald," Spock said, "fits my
definition of 'difficulty' to perfection."




TWENTY-FOUR

Vulcans were nothing if not efficient. Within an hour, the
Tobias had been escorted to a civilian spacedock, her entire
crew was in custody, and her senior officers had been assem-
bled to face a Vulcan magistrate in the spacedock's justice
facilities.
    In the magistrate's antechamber, deep within the space-
dock's administration levels, Kirk squirmed uncomfortably
in his new uniform. Like Christine's, it was black with gray
shoulders. The pips on the command-red shirt he wore under
the tunic gave his rank as lieutenant. He ran his fingers
behind the small metal disks, trying to stretch out the collar
fabric. He glanced at Spock. "The longer I stay in Starfleet,
the lower my rank gets. Think someone's trying to tell me
something?"
    Once more in the company of Christine, M'Benga, Barc,
and Srell, Spock had reverted to his more usual stoic behav-
ior, as well as changed back into his black robes. "If this
charade is to work, 'Lieutenant,' it will be necessary for you
to appear comfortable in that uniform, as if you have always
worn it."

    Kirk let his hands fall to his sides. "You honestly think we
can fool a Vulcan magistrate?"
 The doors to the magistrate's office slid open.
    "There are always possibilities," Spook said quietly. Then
he, Srell, and the officers of the Tobias followed the direction-
al lights on the wall and, in single file, entered the office.
    As the legal preliminaries were under way, Kirk took the
opportunity to glance around and was surprised to see that
the Vulcan style of architecture and decoration had changed
little from his age to the next. An exquisitely etched glass
panel was the centerpiece of the simple room, showing the
IDIC symbol in the muted earth tones and deep reds so
common to all of Vulcan's art.
    Even the proceedings had changed little from Kirk's day.
The magistrate was a middle-aged Vulcan female, dark-
skinned, in a simple robe adorned by only a few polished
gemstones. She had four padds on her desk, and shifted her
attention easily from one to the next, each no doubt con-
nected to a different database relating to the complex case
before her.
    Under normal conditions, Kirk doubted that anyone could
deceive the Vulcan legal system, though he was certainly
willing to give it a try. But Spock maintained that because of
the virogen's impact on interstellar communications, condi-
tions were anything but normal.
    The magistrate's aide, a stern Vulcan male in an under-
stated brown suit with a simple jeweled clasp, stood by her
desk and read the names of all present for the hearing--they
were not yet called prisoners. For the purposes of this
appearance, Kirk had assumed the name of Lieutenant Adri-
an Plummer.
    The real Lieutenant Plumruer had served on the Tobias for
fourteen months, and was now with the sixty crew members
who had stayed on Chal with Teilani, to carry on the relief




mission. However, Christine had altered the ship's records to
show that Plummer had remained aboard for the journey to
Vulcan, and she had replaced all of Plummer's medical and
identification files with Kirk's. Spock had felt they would
have quite enough to explain, without sidetracking the space-
dock inquiry by revealing Kirk's identity. No matter how
disruptive the threat of the virogen, anyone, like Kirk, who
had a connection with the Borg would be seen as an even
more immediate concern to the Federation's security. Spock
was adamant that they could not risk the extra level of
scrutiny Kirk's presence would immediately bring.
    After formal identification of those present, the magistrate
seemed to decide that the only person in the room worth
talking to was Spock. She addressed him with deference.
    "Ambassador Spock, I am pleased to meet you in person.
Your services to Vulcan, the Federation, and the cause
of galactic peace are most remarkable, and bring honor to
Vulcan and the teachings of Surak. However, I would be
remiss if I allowed your reputation, and the debt which all
Vulcan owes you, to influence any dealings with this office."
  "Your position is most logical," Spock assured her.
  "Thank you."
  "You are welcome."
    The magistrate's aide cleared his throat. "There are many
other matters we must attend to this day," he said.
    The magistrate took on a more neutral demeanor. "Ambas-
sador Spock," she began, "current Starfleet records show that
the U.S.S. Tobias is assigned to relief efforts on Chal. Yet it is
in Vulcan orbital space. Is this a dereliction of duty on the
part of its commander?"
    Kirk would never have accepted that kind of charge, and he
was glad to see that Christine wouldn't, either. She instantly
stepped forward to protest. "Your Honor, I am here on a
matter of utmost--"

 "Kroykah!"
    Whether Christine understood the Vulcan word or not, she
recognized its intent and stopped speaking at once.
    "I apologize for Commander MacDonald's interruption,"
Spock said sincerely. "However, I must point out that you
will not find the Tobias's current assignment on the open
Starfleet channels, as we are engaged in a classified mission."
    Kirk hid his smile. Technically, Spook hadn't lied. But he
had managed to convey the impression that their classified
mission was somehow connected to Starfleet.
 "At what level of classification?" the magistrate asked.
 "Above the level of this office," Spock said firmly.
    The magistrate eyed him carefully, clearly understanding
that Spock was challenging her authority to hold him.
"Therefore, if this office were to make further inquiries to
Starfleet, we would be told nothing?"
    "I believe the cover story Starfleet would be required to
relate to you would state that the Tobias was still on duty at
Chal."
    The magistrate moved one padd to sit atop another, as if
shuffling old-fashioned papers. "Therefore, whether the facts
you present are accurate or not, the response from Starfleet
will be the same. You present me with an intriguing paradox."
 "That is true," Spock agreed.
    The magistrate shifted the padds again. "Then there is the
matter of three unnatural deaths in Gonthar District: Tarok,
and two of his staff--K!ingon nationals, whose involvement
contributes another level of complexity. As does evidence of
multiple-weapons discharge in violation of local codes."
    Kirk marveled at the smoothness of Spock's reply. "We
were attempting to gather evidence of those crimes to present
to the authorities when the authorities arrived."
    "Are you, or any of those present, responsible for the
deaths?"
 "We came to Vulcan attempting to stop them," Spock said.




    At that admission, Kirk cringed inwardly. Spock had just
given the magistrate an opening for charging them with a
crime. How could he have made such a mistake?
    "Therefore, you had previous knowledge of a potential
crime, yet you did not report it to the proper authorities?"
    Spock hesitated before answering, as if acknowledging his
guilt.
 "That is true, Magistrate."
     "Are you aware that as a Vulcan citizen, your act of
omission is considered a breach of the public good?" "l am."
 The magistrate looked at Srell. "As are you?"
 "I am," Srell said contritely.
    The magistrate turned her attention to the others in the
room. "For the rest of you, though you are not Vulcan
citizens, you are Starfleet personnel, and as such, bound to
the laws of this world by the articles of Federation. Therefore,
you are equally subject to charges in this matter."
    Barc buffed noisily and Kirk could see the Tellarite's ear fur
bristle. Fortunately, though, the engineer knew enough to
control his temper. In a Vulcan court, emotional outbursts
had severe consequences.
    The magistrate picked up a small baton and tapped it
against a tiny hanging metal plate, no larger than a hand. An
electronically produced gong note sounded, and Kirk recog-
nized the small device as a symbolic version of the larger ones
used in important ceremonies on Vulcan.
    "The Vulcans, Spock and Srell, the Tellarite, Bare, and the
humans, MacDonald, M'Benga, and Plummet, are remanded
to protective custody, pending investigation of charges to be
brought, concerning violation of Vulcan laws. The prisoners
will be beamed to a custodial facility on the surface, and--"
    Kirk was surprised as Spock interrupted the magistrate's
recitation. "Magistrate, that would not be wise."
 The magistrate gestured with the small baton. "Are you

aware of the penalties involved with the obstruction of
justice, Spock?"
    "Please check your records," Spock said. "The crew of the
Tobias have been on active duty on Chal. They have been
exposed to the virogen."
 The magistrate dropped the baton on her desk.
    "Though they claim they are uninfected, it would be
prudent to test them for exposure before beaming them to the
surface."
    Though the magistrate's expression was unchanged, even
Kirk could see that her composure was no longer perfect. She
turned to her aide. "This spacedock is now in quarantine.
The prisoners are to be placed in detention cells in this
facility. Medical workers are to be dispatched at once, to test
them for exposure to the virogen:" She rose, staring at Spock
with all the intensity her Vulcan impassivity would allow.
"You have exposed this facility and threatened our home-
world, Spock."
    Spock was unperturbed. "Your charge is not logical. You
brought us aboard spacedock without first ascertaining the
duty status of the Tobias."
    Kirk thought the magistrate was going to suffer apoplexy, at
least in a Vulcan fashion that would be undetectable to
untrained observers. "You did not warn us, Spock."
    "I did not expect to have a vital Starfleet mission inter-
rupted by so junior a functionary."
    Kirk and Christine exchanged a glance. Spock had just
called the magistrate an incompetent novice. In a time before
the Vulcan Reformation, his head would have been cut off
and on a pike before he left the magistrate's presence.
    "I will conduct a full investigation into your claims," the
magistrate said in a voice of iron.
    "I welcome it," Spock said. "As I welcome your presence in
the detention cells once our government realizes what you
have done."


The magistrate fumbled for the baton, then hit the small
gong once more. "Take them away," she ordered.
    As Kirk and the others were shepherded away through
another door, Kirk thought he heard the sound of the baton
being snapped in two just as the office doors slid shut. Such an
act would have been an unthinkable display of emotion for
the magistrate. But then, Spook could have that effect on
humans. Perhaps he did the same for some Vulcans.
    The prisoners were now in a utilitarian corridor that
gradually curved to match the spacedock's circumference.
The lighting was distinctly redshifted, matching normal illu-
mination on Vulcan. The magistrate's aide led the way. Two
Vulcan security guards, with no obvious weapons, had
emerged from another door and now marched behind the full
party.
    Kirk fell into step beside Spook. "Was that necessary?" he
asked in a low whisper. "You just made a powerful enemy for
US,'~
    "I assure you, the animosity of a spacedock magistrate is
preferable to being placed in custody in a Vulcan jail," Spock
said. "Escape is not possible. At least in a spacedock deten-
tion cell, we will have a chance to get back to the Tobias."
    "Is that why you slipped up by admitting you didn't warn
the authorities about the attempt on Tarok's life?"
    "It was not a 's!ipup,'" Spook explained. "If the magistrate
had continued to ask us questions about our presence, she
would eventually have determined that Srell and I arrived
separately from you and the Tobias. That would imply that we
were not part of a Starfleet mission, which would have raised
her suspicions even more, and quite possibly have brought in
a higher rank of investigator. If we are to continue our own
investigation, this is by far the least difficult facility from
which to extricate ourselves."
 Kirk felt relieved that Spook had not made a mistake after

all. It was in matters of strategy and diplomacy that he had
come to depend on his friend the most. "So, how do we
escape from a Vulcan detention cell?" Kirk asked.
    Spock looked at Kirk. "I have the utmost faith in you, Jim.
It is precisely in these situations that I have come to depend
upon you the most."
    Before Kirk could say anything more, the magistrate's aide
stopped by a forcefield frame, then placed his hand on an
identity scanner. The forcefield winked out. The detention
cells waited in the blind corridor beyond.
    Kirk was encouraged to see that the doors of each cell were
solid, not forcefields. Solid doors meant there would be locks;
locks meant there were computer controls; and computers
were meant to be outsmarted.
    Kirk was further encouraged when Christine and Dr.
M'Benga were ushered into one cell. It would be much easier
for them to plan an escape with a partner. Unfortunately,
Kirk saw he was going to be given the wrong one. Spook and
Srell were being directed to the next cell, with Kirk and Barc
obviously intended to share the last.
    Kirk knew he had to be paired with Spock. Between the two
of them, there was nothing they could not accomplish.
    "Human, Tellarite, in here," a guard said, indicating the
cell across from Spock and Srell.
 Kirk looked at the Tellarite. There was only one way out.
 He sneezed.
    "You can't lock me up with a Tellarite. All that fur..."
Kirk looked apologetically at the guard, rubbed his nose,
squinted his eyes. "I'm allergic."
    Barc snarled and Kirk guessed what he had said was
considered an insult. But he couldn't turn back now.
 "I'll need my medication," Kirk continued. "Otherwise,
my throat swells up, I can't breathe ...."He sneezed again in
the guard's direction.




 The guard looked at Spock and Srell.
    Kirk saw Spock subtly step back, knowing full well what
Kirk was attempting.
 The guard pointed at Srell. "You, with the Tellarite."
 Srell and Kirk changed places.
Spock and Kirk walked into their detention cell together.
When the solid door slid shut, Kirk quickly examined the
cell. It was surprisingly large, about four meters square, but
had nothing in the way of chairs, benches, or beds. It was just
an empty cube of a room.
    "How Vulcan," Kirk said with a wry smile. Then he looked
at the door, checking its outline to find some indication of its
locking mechanism. There was a small control panel by the
doorframe. It would be a good place to start. "But between
the two of us, we should be out of here within the...
Spock?"
    Kirk reached out to grab Spock's arm as he felt the floor slip
beneath him, angling dramatically as the outline of the door
seemed to blur, then spiral away.
    The sense of disorientation had been too sudden. Both
Kirk and Spock stumbled to the ground. Kirk recognized part
of the sensation--the artificial gravity field in the cell had
cycled swiftly through multiple areas of central attraction.
    When he looked up from the floor, trying to locate the door
again, he recognized another trick of technology.
 He and Spock now appeared to be in a garden.
    The sky was Vulcan red above them. Leaves in a nearby
glade of trees rustled in the gentle breeze. Birds sang. And a
small plot of meditation stones to their side, artfully placed
among furrows of red and brown sand, compellingly invited
their contemplation of the infinite.
    "It's a holodeck, isn't it?" Kirk grumbled as he stood up.
The metal deck beneath him now seemed to be made of
interlocked clay bricks.
 "Apparently so," Spock said. "It would appear to be a re-

creation of the meditation gardens surrounding the Surak
Memorial in ShirKahr." Spock pointed into the holograph-
ically simulated distance. "You can see the dome of the
memorial through those trees."
    Kirk felt all his encouragement evaporate. He knew the
walls of the detention cell were no more than four meters
away in any direction. But he also knew that if he started
walking in what he thought was a straight line, he could
probably continue for what would seem kilometers. Between
the holoprojectors creating the scenery, and the forcefields
and gravity control that could alter his path without him
realizing it, he was trapped.
    It was the ultimate prison cell because it had no walls to
climb and no locks to pick.
    He found it far too logical, but he had to admit that the
Vulcans had known what they were doing. For the first time in
his life, Kirk wondered if he was in a trap from which there
could be no escape.




TWENTY-FIVE

"Well, Spock," Kirk said as he brushed holographic dust from
his uniform's trousers, "I'm certainly glad we're not in a jail
on the surface. I've heard those are tough."
    "This is what jails are like on the surface," Spock replied.
"I was not aware the spacedock facilities had been up-
graded."
    Kirk looked around, trying to ignore the pang of despera-
tion he felt. The illusion of being outdoors on Vulcan was
staggeringly detailed. Somewhere, perhaps even within arm's
reach, there was an exit that led to the spacedock's corridor.
But it might as well be on another planet. "I don't suppose
you have any Vulca. n tricks up your sleeves."
    Small specks of dirt and grit crunched under Kirk's boots.
The sun gleaming off the golden dome of Surak's memorial
was a pinpoint of blinding brilliance. He could scent the
water from the fountain that splashed a hundred meters
away.
 Spock didn't grace Kirk with a reply.
 Then Kirk took a second look at Spock.
    In the midst of all this simulated detail, how could he know
if Spock was even Spock?

 "Is something wrong, 'Lieutenant'7" Spock asked.
    Kirk narrowed his eyes at what might or might not be his
friend. Could Vulcan logic be that devious? Would the justice
authorities go so far as to make two prisoners seem to share a
cell, them separate them holographically with simulated
duplicates that might elicit a confession? Technology made it possible.
 But Kirk would bet on the human touch every time.
    "It's all right, Spock. We're alone. You can call me by my
real rank."
    Spock's expression remained detached. But he idly
scratched an earlobe. "Unless there is something you have
not told me, as far as I know, your real rank is that of
lieutenant."
    Kirk had to think it through. That might have been the
response of a holographic duplicate fishing for information.
Or, Spook might have said that, knowing that everything they
said to each other in the cell was being monitored. Is that why
Spock had scratched his ear? In warning?
    "Just checking," Kirk said. His mind worked furiously as
he tried to figure a way around Vulcan logic--both that of his
captors, and Spock's. It was worse than trying to figure out
temporal anomalies. And it was giving him a headache.
    "Ah," Spock said. "You believe I might be a holographic
duplicate intended to elicit details of your crimes."
 Kirk frowned. "Spock, we committed no crimes."
    Spock, if it were Spock, spoke in a low voice. "I was
speaking for the benefit of the listening devices which even
now might be recording everything we say." "Is that legal on Vulcan?" Kirk asked.
    "Until we have been tested for exposure to the virogen, I
think we may assume we are under the jurisdiction of one of
the planetary defense bureaus. As a member of the diplomat-
ic corps, and with you as a member of Starfleet, our civil




liberties are severely constrained by the oaths of duty to
which we both attested."
    Kirk frowned at Spock. With conversation like that, how
could he tell the difference between a computer-driven ver-
sion of a Vulcan and a real Vulcan? Especially if the real
Vulcan didn't want to reveal any important information that
might be used against them in future legal proceedings?
    It would have to be something trivial, Kirk decided. Some
small detail that would be known only to Spock and himself,
unavailable in any database.
    Kirk scratched at the side of his jaw. He had it. "Spock, do
you remember when we were on that planetoid in the Gamma
Canaris region? Do you remember who we found there?"
    That was a safe question, Kirk knew. In Gamma Canaris,
he and Spock and McCoy unexpectedly had come upon the
human inventor of the warp drive, Zefram Cochrane himself.
Cochrane had survived his own era because of the influence
of a mysterious alien he called the Companion. When Kirk,
Spock, and McCoy were ready to leave, Cochrane had asked
them to promise never to reveal his existence to anyone else.
He wanted to remain with the Companion undisturbed, to
live out the remainder of their lives in peace.
    Kirk had kept his word. Spock and McCoy were the only
two people who shared that secret with him. If this Spock was
a hologram, he would have no idea to what Kirk referred.
    But Spock's reply revealed a third possibility. "I am afraid
you are mistaken. I was last in the Gamma Canaris region on
stardate 3219.8; one hundred and six years ago. Clearly, you
had not been born at that time."
    Kirk stared up at the simulated sky. Of course. In this
detention cell, for the benefit of their Vulcan captors, Kirk
was Lieutenant Plummer. Spock's reply could have come
from a holographic duplicate, or from the real Spook, deter-
mined to keep Kirk's identity a secret. Whatever question

Kirk asked, it would have to be based on more recent events.
He cleared his throat.
    "Ambassador Spock, when we were on Tarok's estate, I
asked you if the crew of the Tobias reminded you of anyone."
    "No," Spook said. "You asked me if the senior officers of
the Tobias with Mr. Srell reminded me of anyone."
    Kirk closed his eyes in relief. No one else had heard him
ask Spock that question.
 "And I told you they did not," Spock added.
 "Thank you," Kirk said. "I'm convinced you're you."
    Then he realized that now Spock was giving him a ques-
tioning look.
    "Don't tell me," Kirk said as he understood the reason for
Spock's expression. "Now you're wondering if I'm a holo-
gram."
    "Someone else might have overheard you ask that ques-
tion, and then related it to an interrogator for inclusion in a
holographic simulation," Spock said.
    "So, ask me something, Spock. Something that only I
would know. That would never have been input into a
database or told to anyone else."
    Spock looked thoughtful for a few moments. "Once, I and a
mutual physician friend of ours had to access the personal
safe in your quarters on... your vessel."
    Kirk thought frantically. The mutual friend was certainly
McCoy. The unnamed vessel had to be the Enterprise. But
when had Spock and McCoy gone into his safe? It was
something they would have done only if they thought he had
died in the line of duty, and they required copies of his final
orders. And the only time that had happened was... in
Tholian space?
    "Just a minute," Kirk said indignantly before Spock could
finish. "At the time of the incident to which you're referring, I
specifically asked you and... our friend if you had looked at
the orders in my safe, and you told me you hadn't."




    "We lied," Spock said blandly. "Returning to the safe.
What was the combination?"
    Kirk didn't have to think. "Five three four," he said. They
were the birth months of his brother, Sam; himself; and his
nephew, Peter--certainly not trivial. And certainly not any-
thing he would ever forget.
    Spock nodded. "I am satisfied. Only the real...
Lieutenant Plummer would have known that code."
    Kirk still couldn't get over Spock's earlier admission. "You
lied to me."
 "It was the doctor's idea," Spock countered.
    Kirk was getting tired of standing. He took a few steps
toward the low wall surrounding the meditation garden and
sat on the gold-colored, metallic ledge that topped it. It was
difficult to believe it was only a holographic illusion, but his
feet felt better. "So what now?"
    Spock joined Kirk on the ledge. "I am open to sugges-
tions."
    Kirk drew in a deep breath. The illusion of being on Vulcan
was so complete that he could even detect the faint scent of
cinnamon that seemed to perfume the dust of the planet.
"The magistrate said we were to be tested for exposure to the
virogen. ls that something that can be done by medical
scanners?"
 "No. The test will require blood samples."
     That gave Kirk a starting point. "Then we'll have company
any time now. A medical technician. Probably a guard."
 "That would be logical."
    And if they can get in, Kirk thought, they'll know the way
out. How's that for logic?
    "We should keep our eyes open," Kirk said. "Try and see
where they come from."
    Spock looked skeptical. "Though I am willing to be open-
minded, it is a Vulcan prison. You can be sure there are
countermeasures for every strategy you can devise."

    Kirk reached behind himself and ran his fingers over the
sand in the meditation garden, disturbing the precise align-
ment of two channels of red and brown. The deception was so
perfect, he could even feel small particles of sand cling to his
fingertips.
     "Since we have nothing else to do at this time," Spock said,
"perhaps you could continue your story." "Story?"
    "About... our friend," Spock said. "Who last found
himself being helped by Hugh's clan."
    Kirk took a handful of holographic sand and let it fall from
his fist. It leathered into a wispy plume in the artificial breeze.
    "Why not?" Surrounded by the artifice of technology, it
seemed the perfect setting to explain how it came to be that
he had freed himself from it.
 Or, at least, how he had tried.

    The female's name was Miko. She and Hugh had carted
Kirk through the mud, past the dead and dying Borg, letting
his useless feet drag behind him.
    To Kirk, it was as if he floated over a war zone, the
aftermath of a battle waged by demons.
    Looking back on it, perhaps it was a suitable way to think
of the life he had lived up to that place and time--a war of
demons, out of control.
Perhaps it was time that control finally emerged.
Eventually, the rapacious monsters that cleansed that bat-
tlefield were left behind, to scoop up and dismember the
remnants of whatever Borg bastions had fallen.
    In time--how long, he couldn't tell--Kirk was aware that
Hugh and Miko were carrying him across solid ground.
    They climbed a worn path hacked out of obsidian stone,
fieeked with glints of red and silver, bearing him up a
mountainside shrouded in the low-lying clouds of this world.
 The cold, cloying mist enveloped Kirk as they climbed.




    He felt the nanites burn within him. The pain now unceas-
ing. All the peaks and surges of it joined in one continuous
wave of agony.
  He knew he would never live to see this journey's end.
      And then, they passed through the clouds, and the sun of
this world blazed down upon him.  But it was not a sun.
  Kirk trembled as he saw the vision that awaited him.
      Its beauty was so overwhelming that he did not know when
Hugh and Miko had lowered him to the ground.  For it was not one star that shone on him.
    It was thousands, millions, all the stars that he had ever
seen in his entire life, brought together in some way to shine
their light on him alone.
    Long after, he would come to understand that what he saw
was a galactic core--a dense collection of stars so closely
packed that supernovae flared among them in a cosmic chain
reaction, creating a star-strewn ball of luminescent fire that
filled a quarter of the sky.
    Kirk stared up at that fire and that brilliance, seeing wisps
of matter and energy dance with incalculable energies, and
knew he was no longer in the galaxy of his birth.
    Removed beyond all reason from everything that he knew,
he cried with the joy and the pain of facing death while
beholding such beauty. To know such transcendence only in
the final moments of his life seemed both miraculous and
cruel, a gift desired but acquired too late.
Had he really come to take the universe for granted?
With all that he had been given by fate, with all that he had
earned by effort, had he really grown so inured to the wonders
he had encountered that he had forgotten there were wonders
more, still to be discovered?
    Kirk raised his hand to that vast assembly of stars, longing
to reach them, to touch, to go on.
 He had forgotten.

AVENGER

 There was still more to do.
    But his realization of that simple truth was far too late. The
nanites were almost finished with their work.
    Kirk's vision shifted from the infinity of stars to his own
tattered flesh. Blood welled from a thousand microscopic cuts
on his arm as the nanires at last reached the surface of his skin
and burst through.
    Blood dimmed his vision as he lost all sense of feeling and
fell up to those stars...
    ... only to feel the gentle pressure of Miko's hands, hold-
ing him back, soothing his wounds with a smooth, fragrant
salve.
    Then Hugh and Miko brought him to a stream that gushed
into a hollow in the slick, black rock.
    They plunged him into the icy depths and it was as if his
flesh froze and shattered and he was plucked from within it,
new, and whole, and cleansed.
    Kirk lay beside that stream as Miko wiped the mud and the
salve from him. He did not know it at the time, but when she
was done, the nanites were no longer within him. The salve
had lured them out and neutralized them with plant-based
pheromones and genetic markers that the nanites' voracious
programming could not resist.
    Thus had technology succumbed to its own selfish appe-
tites.
    It might have been days later. It might have been months.
But when at last Kirk felt sensation return to him, all he could
see on his skin was a faint pebbling of tiny scars. "The nanires?" he asked.
    Miko drew a cloth across his brow. "All that was machine
has been taken from you. Just as it was taken from us."
    He stared at her then, and saw the logic of the brown and
white skin that covered her.
    She had been Borg, but now, wherever Borg implants had
been taken from her, new brown skin was in its place. White




skin showed where she had remained untouched at the time
of her assimilation.
 "How?" Kirk asked.
    Hugh took Kirk's hand as he led him from the water. "We
will show you," he said.
    And Kirk went with them from the mountain to the village
of the clan.

 "An actual village?" Spock asked.
    "It's the best word for it," Kirk said. "Some of the
dwellings were carved from the rock walls. Some were wood.
And the whole of it was filled with... others who had been
reclaimed from the Collective. Humanoids, aliens, skin, fur,
scales..." Kirk shook his head at the memory of it. "Every
day, that galactic core would blaze like a sun. And every
night, the sky burned with transwarp transporter beams,
bringing in reclaimed material from... from wherever a
Borg installation had failed but was still in contact with the
Collective's backup systems." Kirk rubbed the grains of sand
between his fingers. "It gave me... it gave my friend, the
feeling the Borg were everywhere. Not just this galaxy,
but... everywhere. As if the fusion of flesh and machine
were... inevitable."
    Spock regarded Kirk intently. "It appears to have been a
profound experience. For your friend."
    Kirk grinned for a moment, marveling at Spock's gift for
understatement. Then he gave up any pretense of trying to
make possible eavesdroppers think he was relating a tale told
to him by someone else. He doubted the Vulcans would know
what to make of his story anyway. It was one purely of
emotion, not logic.
    "Spock, in the true sense of the word, I had become Borg.
Not like Picard. Not with implants. I hadn't been assimilated.
But figuratively, metaphorically, if you want, I had allowed
myself, in the way I had lived my life, to become ....

AVENGER

absorbed by the objects and the things around me." Kirk
tossed the sand away, not bothering to see where it would fall.
"I lost myself. Everything else was just trappings. My career
in Starfleet. Whether I could have that chair again. Whether
there'd be another mission for me. Maybe falling into the
Nexus was the best thing that could have happened to me. To
die on Veridian, to finally be cut off from history... really, it
ended up freeing me in a way I'd never have expected."
    "Yet," Spock said, "you have returned. You could have
stayed with Teilani, out of sight, undisturbed, like our mutual
friend in the Gamma Canaris region."
    "I'm not who I was, Spock. For what I did in the past, I've
no regrets. And maybe, if the Federation survives, somehow
I'll keep on doing what I've always done. But why I'm doing
it, and how, that's different now. To lose everything, and then
to have a chance to get it back, that experience makes
everything different."
 "Is this what you were taught?" Spock asked.
 "It's what I was shown. It's what I came to know."

    Miko had stayed with him, in a shelter made of wooden
beams and woven fibers that had never seen a replicator.
    She took him to the fields where the clan grew the crops
that fed them. She took him to the forests where the clan
hewed the wood that sheltered them. She took him to her bed,
where she let sensation rule him, driving out the need for
thought.
    When his strength had recovered, Kirk had joined Hugh in
the clan's work. Moving through the reclamation fields to find
those who could be saved from assimilation. Hugh showed
him how to touch those precise points on a being through
which the life force could be sensed.
    Kirk recognized the placement. They were the same as
those Vulcans used in mindmelds.
 Hugh agreed. He knew about Vulcans.




    The Borg had assimilated thousands of worlds, tens of
thousands of cultures. Though Hugh and his clan had aban-
doned the machine, they retained the knowledge that had
been absorbed by the Collective.
    "That knowledge is the same," Hugh said. "That spark of
life that fills the worlds of all the galaxies, it is the same
everywhere. A necessary part of existence. As sure as the
fusion of hydrogen or the orbit of a star."
    Kirk took other Borg to the stream to cleanse them of their
implants. Miko showed him the secrets that would free and
redeem them, secrets that had been learned only here, known
only to the Borg who were brought to this world.
    The transwarp transporters brought everything here--
Borg, and machinery, and clumps of soil from worlds
throughout the universe.
    Some of the clan sorted through that soil, to find green
shoots and seeds. These they grew on the mountain slopes.
These they used to make the salves and dried compounds that
would ease the pain of those who were reclaimed.
    Kirk learned well. Held the Borg down as their implants
were rejected. Applied the medicines that would heal their
wounds.
    Since he had not been Borg himselL it was simpler for him
to handle those implants, to gather them together, some still
moving with a macabre machine-echo of life, and take them
to the dumping grounds where they could never be recycled
by the all-consuming machines.
  It was there Kirk found the Borg scoutship.
  Intact.
    And he realized the time had come for his journey to
continue once again.

TWENTY-SIX

"It was as simple as that?" Spock asked.
    Kirk was irritated by the question. "Spock, it wasn't simple
at all. I spent two years with Hugh and his people. My wounds
healed. I lived with them. Celebrated with them. Learned
from them. But they had all been Borg. The life they led there,
it was what the3. needed. I had my time with them, and then it
was time for me to move on with what I had to do."
 "How did you know how to operate a Borg scoutship?"
     "I didn't have to. The clan knew. Some of them, who
weren't afraid of the machine, they operated it for me."
 "And brought you where?"
    Kirk smiled. "Heaven. Chal. IfI were really going to have a
second chance at life, I knew I had to lay my old life to rest. It
didn't matter how Teilani and I had met, that we'd both been
manipulated by Drake, I knew I loved her. I had to see her
grave. To say good-bye."
 Spock nodded. "But she hadn't died."
    "A second chance," Kirk said. "After all the things this
universe has taken from me, it finally gave me something
back. Something I know how to treasure now."




WILLIAM ~HAI I~[:;K                                                                                                     ,,iv r-.,l~t.~Ell

    Spock stared far away, as if this false garden really were
Vulcan, as if this really were his home.
    "I understand the irony now," he said. "The universe has
given you a second chance at life, at love, and yet the
Federation, the very thing that makes your life possible, is on
the brink of ruin."
 "We've saved it before," Kirk said.
    "From its enemies. Hugh told you the spark of life was
intrinsic to the universe. It could well be that the virogen
confronting us is a natural by-product of the Federation's
own unprincipled growth. I do not know how we might save
the Federation from itself."
 "When has not knowing stopped us before?"
    Spock rose to his feet. He seemed offended by Kirk's
attempt at humor. "My father was murdered. I was not there
to protect him." Spock pointed at Kirk. "What I want from
the universe is a chance to set that right."
    Kirk stood up slowly, alarmed to see his friend actually
begin to tremble with what could only be rage. He reached
out to touch Spock's arm. "Are you all right? This isn't like
you at all."
 But Spock tore away from Kirk's grasp.
    "I am tired of 'being like me.' I am tired of control, and
denial, and the blind, Vulcan acceptance of everything that is
wrong in this world!"
    Kirk stared at Spock as if he were watching a transforma-
tion at work. As if some shapeshifter had taken Spock's form.
Because what Spock was saying simply could never come
from him.
 "Spook, this isn't the time or the place forw"
"It is! It is what I feel! And I will not deny it any longer?'
For an instant, Kirk's instinct was to slap Spock, to focus
his attention, to break the momentum of whatever had
caused his friend's startling loss of self-control. But before he
could act, a new voice called out in the cell.
  "Do not move from your positions!"

At once, Kirk and Spock both turned their heads toward
the direction from which the voice had come.
    Two Vulcans stood two meters away, as if they had stepped
out from the air. One was a spacedock guard. The other, from
her pale green cloak, was a healer. She held a medical kit and
had obviously come to draw blood samples.
    Both Vulcans stared at Spock with disquieting intensity.
They had obviously witnessed his most uncharacteristic
outburst.
 The healer broke the silence. "Are you well, Ambassador?"
 Spock smoothed his robes. "I say again for the benefit of
the magistrate, you are interfering in vital Starfleet affairs."
 The healer approached Kirk. "The magistrate is attempting
 to contact Starfleet Command to confirm your assignment. In
 any event, this test is necessary in order to insure the safety of
 Vulcan's biosphere."
    The healer took Kirk's arm and motioned for him to roll up
his sleeve.
    "Where is your logic?" Spock complained. "We have
already been down on Vulcan. Do you really think I would
allow my home to be placed in danger?"
    The healer drew a sample of Kirk's blood from his inner
elbow. "The magistrate is aware of that," she said calmly.
"There are many aspects to your presence and your actions
here that trouble her."
    Kirk rolled down his sleeve as the healer deftly placed the
ampule of his blood into her kit. He saw four other arepules
there. One green, one purple-black, two dark red. Vulcan,
Tellarite, and human. "Are our friends all right?" he asked.
    The healer looked at him as if a trained monkey had
addressed her. "The others are as you last saw them. Their
blood will be tested for the virogen, as well." She looked away
from Kirk as if he had ceased to exist. "Ambassador, please
expose your arm."




w ILLIAM ~I-IAI I~I:zK                                                                            AV~I'~/r~K

Kirk watched as Spock chewed his lip, as if debating the
healer's request.
    "Ambassador, this is a serious matter. I am authorized to
have you stunned in order to obtain a sample."
    Spock wrenched his sleeve up and thrust his arm at the
healer with a barely restrained expression of anger.
    When the healer approached Spock with her syringe, Kirk
sensed her caution. "Sir, I am a healer. Is there anything else I
can do for you?"
    Spock fixed his eyes on the ampule that filled with his green
blood. "Release me."
    Once she had obtained her sample, the healer stepped away
quickly. "I am sure the magistrate is doing everything in her
power to expedite your request."
    She rejoined the guard. Kirk watched them closely, hoping
to see them step through the doorway that was hidden by the
holographic imagery.
    "Good-bye, Ambassador," the healer said. "May your
journey be without incident." Then she nodded at the guard,
he touched a control on the belt he wore, and both Vulcans
appeared to take on the colors and details of the scenery
behind them, then faded from view.
    Kirk fixed their exact location by counting the bricks
between him and where they had last stood. He looked at
Spock. "What happened to them? Don't they have to step
through an arch to get in and out?"
    "That is on a standard holodeck," Spock said, as if an-
noyed that Kirk was speaking to him. "In the event your
attention has been elsewhere, this is a prison."
    Kirk regarded his friend with concern, but did not move
toward him. He was determined to keep his feet in exactly the
same position they had been when the Vulcans had faded into
the background. It was the only way he could be sure of what
constituted the real volume of the holodeck.
 "Spock, I don't know what's happened to you, but if you

want to get out of here, you're going to have to work with
me."
    "What leads you to believe you can possibly escape a
Vulcan cell?"
    Kirk was appalled by how much Spook sounded like a
petulant child. "Because you said you had faith in me," he
snapped. "Now get over here."
    Reluctantly, Spock walked over to Kirk. Both their backs
were to the meditation garden. Kirk maneuvered Spock into
position and had him place his feet in Kirk's own footsteps,
one foot after another. "All right, now don't move. You're
going to give me a lesson in holosimulations."
    Kirk ran a few steps to the meditation garden, leaned over
the low wall, and scooped up two handfuls of sand. "First
thing, where does the sand come from?"
    Spock sounded totally disinterested. "It is replicatot mat-
ter. Everything physical with which we can interact is some
form of replicator matter combined with precision force-
fields."
    Kirk started a trail of sand from the toe of Spock's boots,
on a direct line toward the bricks where the guard and the
healer had been standing. His first handful of sand ran out as
he reached that brick. He kept going, checking to make sure
he was keeping the line of sand straight. When he was finished
with the second handful, he had a trail of sand at least eight
meters long.
    Kirk stood at the end of the sand line. "We're now farther
apart than the room is wide. Explain to me how it works,"
Kirk called back to Spock.
    "It is, of course, a logical impossibility," Spock said, still
irritable. "As you walked away from me, sensors in the floor
tracked your footsteps. As you neared the wall, forcefields in
the floor began moving like a treadmill, giving you the
physical sensation of walking, even though you remained in
place. The OHD panels lining the cell projected holographic




images to keep the scenery moving to match your apparent
physical progress."
"But you look as if you're eight meters away, Spock."
"What you are seeing from your vantage point is a holo-
graphic image of me in forced perspective. In actuality, I am
no more than three or four meters from you, as logic
demands."
    "So the real you is hidden behind a holographic screen,"
Kirk said.
    "Until you come within a logical visual range of me. Then
the plane of the holographic illusion will pass over me,
allowing you to see me as I really am."
    Kirk walked back along the line of sand. In his mind's eye,
he pictured the bare cube of the holodeck, filled with a series
of virtual-projection screens that changed their position
according to the position of the two people within the ceil.
The trick was to get behind one of those screens. And Kirk
knew how to do it.
    He stood on one foot and pulled off his boot. Spock
watched him with a frown.
    "I assure you, the tactile response works on feet as well as
fingers," Spock said.
    "That's not what I had in mind," Kirk told him. "Watch.
And listen."
    Then Kirk threw his boot as hard as he could, straight along
the line of sand.
    About three meters away, he heard a faint thump, as if the
boot had hit something solid. But visually, the boot seemed to
sail another five meters before tumbling onto the ground.
    "Let me tell you what just happened," Kirk said. "My boot,
which is not replicator matter, hit the wall of the cell
somewhere between here and the end of that trail of sand. But
what the holoprojectors did was to create an image of the
boot continuing on its trajectory, while at the same time

putting a holographic screen over the boot as it fell to the
floor against the wall."
 "Exactly," Spock said. "So."
    Kirk looked down at the blank spot on his uniform where
his comm badge had been fastened. Unfortunately, it had
been removed by the guards before he had been brought
before the magistrate. "So, my friend, the trick is, we need to
know exactly how far the wall really is."
    "I fail to see how that information could possibly be
useful."
    "I don't suppose they let you keep your comm badge? We
need something hard."
     Spock fingered his ID1C medallion. It gleamed in the
artificial light of the artificial garden. "Would this suffice?"
 Spock handed the medallion to Kirk.
 "May I throw it?"
 Spock shrugged. "I have."
    Kirk didn't bother to ask for an explanation. "Close your
eyes," he said. "You have to listen for the medallion hitting
the wall, and then tell me how far away it is." Spock closed his eyes.
Kirk hurled the medallion like a miniature discus.
Though it appeared to soar far away, he heard the metallic
impact of it striking the wall only a second after release. A
section of the background scenery even wavered for a mo-
ment, as if one or two of the OHD panels had been broken.
 Kirk turned to Spock. "How far?" he asked.
    "Two point six meters," Spock answered. "And you broke
the medallion."
 'TII get you another. How're your arms?"
    Spock instantly knew what Kirk had in mind. "You cannot
be serious."
    Kirk was hurt. "Did I miss something about how this
holocell works?"
 Spock followed the line of sand with his eyes. "Two point




i, 4

six meters," he repeated. "It will have to be done with
sufficient force to strike the wall before touching the floor."
    Kirk nodded. "Exactly, so the forcefields on the floor will
lose track of me."
 Spock looked dubious.
"It worked for the boot," Kirk said, "and the medallion."
Spock took off his robe and dropped it to the holographic
bricks, then cupped his hands and adjusted his stance. "You
will have to do it without running, to take the program by
surprise."
    Kirk put his bootless foot in Spock's cupped hands and
braced his hands on Spock's shoulders. "What if we're being
watched?"
    "Then I trust the guards will be entertained," Spook said.
"On the count of three.'?"
 Kirk counted off, setting their timing.
    On "three," he pushed up and forward as Spock pivoted
and threw him in the same direction.
    For an instant, Kirk saw the meditation garden swirl
around him, and then he felt the jarring shock of hitting an
invisible wall.
    He slapped his arms against it, trying to absorb some of the
impact, but he had miscalculated and felt his breath explode
from his lungs as his chest was momentarily paralyzed.
     Fortunately, the jolt against the floor as he slid down the
wall relieved the symptom. He could breathe again, almost.
 "Are you all right?" Spook called out.
    Kirk raised his head from the floor and looked in the
direction of the sound of Spock's voice. Beneath his hands, he
could feel, and more importantly, see the bare floor of the
cell, not holographic bricks. He ran his fingers along the dark
metal, confirming the texture of the miniature OHD panels
that lined it. He was out of the illusion!
  Spock was less than three meters away, but appeared to be

 little more than a splotchy collection of coarse pixels, shim-
 mering with out-of-phase color and motion.
     "Spook! It worked!" Kirk shouted. He was behind the
 holographic screens. The program running the simulation
 had treated his thrown body as if it were an inanimate prop.
 "What do you see?"
    "You appear to have rolled onto the bricks about four
meters away," SPOck called out. "I suggest you hurry, before
the program's heuristics realize what you have done and
trigger a restart."
    Kirk got to his feet and turned to face the wall, keeping in
as close contact with it as possible. He looked to both sides.
To the left, he saw the outline of the door. He edged toward it,
pressing against the wall so that he wouldn't slip back into the
holographic illusion.
    It was better than he had hoped. He easily found the small
control panel by the door which he had noticed the first time
he had looked, just before the simulation had begun. The
panel had only two control surfaces. He pressed the one on
the left.
The door slid open onto the corridor, no exit code needed.
Kirk could understand the simplicity of the mechanism
from a Vulcan's point of view: Why bother to lock a door that
the prisoner would never find?
    He pressed the control on the right, confident of what the
result would be. Sure enough, there was a flashing flurry of
lights behind him, and when he turned again, Spook was
standing in the center of the bare holocell, his robe on the
metal floor beside him.
    "Pick that up, would you?" Kirk pointed to his boot lying
against the wall. "I'll hold the door." Then he stepped
halfway through the doorway and glanced down the corridor.
 Christine and M'Benga were running toward him.
 Kirk stared at them. "How... ?"
 M'Benga rotated her shoulder with a tight-lipped expres-




sion of pain. "Chris had this bright idea of throwing me
against the wall."
 "It worked, didn't it?" Christine said.
    Spock appeared in the doorway and handed Kirk his boot.
Kirk pointed across the corridor. "Barc and Srell are in
that--"
    They heard a dull clang of metal and a Tellarite's grunt of
pain. A moment later, the cell door slid open to reveal Barc
shaking his head. Srell stepped out from behind him.
    "Did everyone figure out the same flaw?" Kirk asked
incredulously.
    Srell adjusted his jacket. Kirk realized that Srell and Spock
were the only two who hadn't seen the way out. "When
Vulcan prisoners are placed in a holographic re-creation of
Surak's meditation garden," Srell said loftily, "they are
expected to meditate and reflect on their wrongdoings. These
are new facilities, and I imagine the authorities will augment
the simulation to take into account the actions of non-
Vulcans."
     "A logical assessment," Spock said. "And now, I believe we
should continue our escape." "Of course," Srell said.
    But it was a blind corridor. Kirk pointed toward the only
exit. "Forcefield," he reminded everyone. He reached down
for his boot.
    Barc merely growled and waddied toward the forcefield
frame. In seconds, he had popped a wall access panel with a
powerful punch. Then, boot forgotten, Kirk watched in
amazement as the Tellarite used his seemingly clumsy hands
to pick the metal pips from his collar, tie them together with a
thread he pulled from his tunic, and dangle them inside the
access port. He pushed his head half inside, one eye closed,
the tip of his broad tongue sticking out from the side of his
snout in an expression of rapt concentration.
 Barc grunted to himself once or twice; then he pulled back

his hand, and the forcefield frame shorted out in a gratifying
display of static and sparks.
    Barc shook his fingers back and forth. The fur on his
knuckles was smoldering.
  "Next," he said with great satisfaction.
      Christine thudded him on his shoulder, making him rock.
"You did it again, Bares!"  "Rrrr. that I did."
    Kirk looked up from pulling on his boot. "Am I the only
one who wants to know what's keeping the guards?"
    Srell gingerly passed his hand through the forcefield frame,
confirming that the field was down. "Until the blood samples
confirm that we are free of virogen contamination, there will
be no guards assigned to this section."
    Kirk walked through the frame. However the Tellarite
engineer had managed to shut down the field, there wasn't
even a residual static charge left. Very impressive. But the
force field couldn't be the only security measure in use. "Why
aren't they using scanners in the corridor?" he asked.
    "That would not be logical," Spock said. "Since no one can
escape from a holocell, there is no need to look for escapees."
    Kirk saw Barc turn to Christine and M'Benga. "It's still too
easy if you ask me."
    Kirk agreed, but wasn't inclined to join the debate. "Why
don't we just keep moving," he suggested. "After all, when on
Vulcan .... "
    He turned and began to jog down the corridor, away from
the magistrate's office, in the general direction of the turbolift
banks that served the spacedock's umbilical docking levels.
He was gratified to hear the others quickly catch up behind
him.
    Kirk had long ago learned that when faced with an appar-
ently complex problem, it was sometimes better to make a
quick decision, rather than remain immobile while trying to
determine the correct one.




'fflLLIhlVl bHPtl |'N I'~K

    But even with his decision made, he still wrestled with
himself to determine if he was doing the right thing. Because
Barc had been right. Vulcan obstinacy aside, this escape was
too easy.
    Which meant he could be leading his team into another
trap, even worse than the last.
    Wouldn't be lhe.first time, he thought. And with no other
options before him, Kirk did the only thing he could.
 He ran faster.

TWENTY-SEVEN

Picard had never felt so frustrated.
    All around him, he could feel the pulse and the rhythms of
his ship. Even in the vacuum of the shuttlebay, the vibrations
traveled through the deck plates, through the landing skids,
and brought the hull of the Galileo to resonant life. The life of
a starship.
    Yet because he was in quarantine, Picard could not be part
of it.
     Beverly placed a cup of Earl Grey on the work surface that
folded out from the Galileo's main instrument panel.
 "This is quite maddening," he said.
 "The tea?"
    Her smile was enough to ease some of his tension.
Her presence, even more. He returned the smile gratefully.
The week they had spent in the close quarters of the shuttle
had been a reminder of the rare treasure of time spent in each
other's presence~ free of the ever-present responsibilities both
took so seriously.
    "Certainly not the tea," Picard said as he savored the
aroma. "Nor the company. But..." He gestured wistfully at
the small navigational display on the instrument panel.




    Upon it, the planet Vulcan, in all her stern and crimson
majesty, was reduced to little more than a dull red disk on a
ten-centimeter screen.
    The flight deck of a shuttle was never meant to be the
bridge of a starship.
    Beverly sat on the arm of Picard's flight chair. "We won't
be in here forever."
    "Does that mean you have faith in my supposition that the
Symmetrists' cure can be found on Vulcan?" he asked. "Or
are you about to tell me you've discovered an antivirogen
yourself?."
    Picard had asked that last question almost in jest. He still
hadn't dared share with anyone Stron's startling identifica-
tion of Sarek as the Symmetrists' leader. That possibility, if
true, was the key reason why Picard believed Vulcan might
hold the answer to the mystery of the virogen's creation and
purpose.
    "As a matter of fact," Beverly said, "Starfleet Medical may
be making some progress. Three clays ago, they completed a
simulated clinical trial using an old Klingon herbal treatment
for certain types of food poisoning. Dried trannin leaves, of
all things.
    "Apparently, when the leaves dry, they exude a resin
containing a compound that binds perfectly to the virogen's
silicon spine, so its RNA can't cleave. That stops reproduc-
tion of the virogen, and tags it so antibodies can form. The
simulator trials indicate that the trannin compound can
reduce the virogen load in a typical animal model to zero
within thirty hours."
    "That is most encouraging. Can the treatment be applied to
plants as well as animals?"
    "Not yet. The compound is a macromoleculemtoo large to
efficiently penetrate plant cell membranes the way the virogen
does. But if the compound really does test out, and it can be
synthesized and replicated, then we have a good chance of

AV EN ~!~R

stopping all animal transmission. Which means, we can get
out of this shuttlecraft."
 "Are you in that much of a hurry? It's so peaceful."
    "I could erase the medical logs," she teased. "We might
have to stay here for years."
    Picard made a show of thinking the possibility over. But
one detail stopped him. "How did Medical ever come up with
the idea of testing an old Klingon folk remedy for a new
disease organism?"
    "Well, technically, the virogen isn't an organism. And the
idea came out of a medical log filed from one of the affected
systems. Apparently, a doctor assigned to a relief mission
reported positive results on some of her patients and recom-
mended the leaves for further study. I only read the abstract,
but I gather she got the leaves from some sort of Klingon folk
healer on the planet."
 "How fortunate for us all."
    'Td say it was time something fortunate happened in all of
this." Beverly's smile faltered. She glanced away for a mo-
ment, looking through the shuttle's forward viewport at the
deserted bay. "Jean-Luc, the latest figures from Medical put
the number of affected systems at nineteen."
    Picard was stunned. "That's more than double what it was
a week ago."
    "Between emergency transport of food supplies, relief
missions... Starfleet no longer has enough ships to ade-
quately maintain the quarantine. Blockades are being run
everywhere. The contagion's spreading."
    Picard sat forward to enter his access code into the shuttle's
communications system. Instantly, all command bulletins he
had received from Starfleet over the past seventy hours
appeared onscreen. Picard had read them all as they had been
received, but he checked their subject headings again. "Bev-
erly, my command updates report only nine affected sys-
tems."




    Beverly leaned forward to read over Picard's shoulder. She
found the reason for the discrepancy at once. "Look at the
stardates. These were already four to five days old when you
received them."
    Picard expanded the most recent update and accessed the
routing information embedded in it. It was horrendously
complex--a hopelessly inefficient web of starbases, subspace
relay stations, and even ship-to-ship transmissions. A mes-
sage which normally should have reached the Enterprise in
less than half a clay had taken five.
    Picard traced the data on the screen with his finger,
astounded by the revelations contained within them. "The
whole subspace network is breaking down. There are missing
starbases, retransmissions... How can Medical's communi-
cations be so far ahead of Command's?"
    Beverly input her access codes to call up her own most
recent medical bulletins on another display. The routing
information contained in them explained part of the reason
for the timing differences. "The Command bulletins are
originating from Starfleet Headquarters on Earth. The medi-
cal bulletins originate from the Virogen Task Force Head-
quarters at Starbase Five-fifteen."
    To Picard, it made perfect sense that in this emergency
Starfleet would decentralize its command structure to insure
a more rapid response, and he knew from personal experience
that the medical facilities at 515 were superb. But according
to the time delays indicated in the routing information,
Starfleet Headquarters and Starfleet Medical were no longer
in direct communication with each other.
    "They're not coordinating their actions," Picard said.
"They've lost the capability .... "He sat back in the flight
chair, rubbing his hands over his face in exhaustion. "Bev-
erly, even if we find the Symmetrists' cure on Vulcan... or
even if those Klingon leaves were found to be a total cure for
every expression of the virogen, animal and plant, if this

communications breakdown continues to spread, Starfleet
won't be able to disseminate its discoveries." Picard looked
up at the doctor. "And if the virogen's range continues to
double every seven days .... "
    Beverly didn't need him to complete the calculation. "In
less than three months, every home system, every colony,
every world in the Federation will be contaminated."
    Picard stared out the viewport, overcome by the escalation
of the disaster's scope. "Why didn't you share your medical
logs with me, Doctor?"
    He could see Beverly stiffen defensively at his use of her
title. She replied in an equally brittle tone. "Because, Cap-
tain, I had no reason to suspect that Medical's updates were
appreciably different from Command's?'
    Picard immediately regretted the severity of his question.
He wondered how often in the past week this same conversa-
tion had been enacted on starships and starbases throughout
the Federation, as the extent of the communications break-
down became apparent.
    "Beverly, forgive me," he said. "That didn't come out the
way I had intended."
     Beverly understood. She put a hand on his shoulder. "The
Federation has faced worse, Jean-Luc." "And so have we," he said.
    She was too close, too caring, the home of too many
memories.
 He reached up and placed his hand around hers.
 She leaned down, her lips close to his.
    "Captain?" On the display beside Vulcan, Will Riker
suddenly appeared.
    Beverly straightened up so quickly, she almost fell from the
arm of the flight chair.
    Picard replied to his first officer with equanimity, as if he
and Beverly had just been conferring as usual. "Yes, Number
One?" At any other time, Picard would have expected to see




WILLIAM ~HAI NLK                                                                                                           AVLN{JER

  i
:11

at least a hint of a smile play over Riker's face, for having
caught his captain in so human a moment.
    But Riker continued seriously, as if he had seen nothing out
of the ordinary, or as if he didn't have time to deal with it.
    "Sir, we've arrived on orbit, but none of the Vulcan orbital
authorities has a record of our arrival notice."
    Because of what he had just seen in his own updates, Picard
knew why. Upon leaving the Alta Vista system, he had filed
the Enterprise's new flight plan through regular Starfleet
channels. Given what he'd just learned about the state of the
fleet's communications system, it was most likely the message
hadn't even arrived at Earth for processing. "Have any of the
support vessels we requested arrived?"
    Riker shook his head. "Lieutenant Rolk has contacted all
other interstellar Starfleet vessels in the Vulcan system. There
are fifteen in total, none larger than Miranda-class. Eight are
here on other Starfleet assignments, and their commanders
have offered whatever support they can provide to help us
search for a Symmetrist base. Six are in transit under urgent
orders connected to other relief missions, and must decline."
 "What about the fifteenth?" Picard asked.
    "That appears to be a troubling matter, sir. The ship is
currently impounded at a civilian spacedock."
Picard let his expression of surprise ask his next question.
Riker continued. "Rolk has put through a formal request
for information from the civilian authorities. But, unoffi-
cially, sir, a local magistrate has forwarded a report to
Starfleet recommending a possible mutiny investigation. The
impounded ship is listed as being currently assigned to relief
duties near the Klingon-Romulan border. She shouldn't be
anywhere near here."
 "What ship, Number One?"
    "The Tobias, sir." Riker looked offscreen to check his own
data display. "Commander Christine MacDonald's ship."
 Picard knew of the Tobias. a standard Starfleet science

 vessel that had been in service for decades. But he was
 unfamiliar with her commander.
    A hundred questions came to Picard then. Why had the
Tobias abandoned its duty? More importantly, why had an
allegedly mutinous vessel come to Vulcan, instead of trying to
escape to a nonaligned system? Still, Starfleet maintained
considerable resources on Vulcan, and the question of the
Tobias must properly remain with the local command. Espe-
cially if it was up to Picard alone to convince the Vulcan
authorities that the Symmetrists might be behind the virogen
outbreak.
    "Has there been any further word on the possibility of riots
at Starbase Seven-eighteen?" Picard asked. Mutiny was a
virtually nonexistent crime in the fleet. But if the rumors of
riots at Starfleet facilities were true, how long could it be
before dissent and fear did incite mutiny on individual ships?
    Riker frowned and Picard suddenly realized how haggard
his senior officer looked. Locked away in the Galileo, Picard
felt increasingly out of touch with his crew as well as his ship.
    "Seven-eighteen's sector is in a complete subspace shut-
down, sir." Riker's response left no doubt that there was
more bad news he had to report. "What else, Number One?"
    "I've been trying to sort out all of this... confusion with
local command. But Admiral Strak and his staff left on the
IntrepM five days ago, and--" "Left the Vulcan system?"
    "There's an emergency situation at Bajor. It's the Cardas-
sians and the Dominion, sir. With the fleet spread so thin,
they appear to be testing our defenses and response times.
Intelligence has also reported a buildup of Romulan ships just
off the Neutral Zone. The alerts are coming in from every-
where."
    Picard stood. "Why am I just hearing this now, Com-
mander?"




WILLIAM bHAI NLK                                                                                      AVI:.I~tJIsR

    Riker gestured uselessly. "As far as I can tell, sir, these
alerts haven't been relayed out of Vulcan command. Rolk says
Starfleet facilities here are operating with about ten percent of
their normal workforce, with most replicators already
shipped out for emergency duty, and no spare parts."
    Picard braced himself on the work surface that still held his
untouched tea. All starship captains were prepared to carry
out their missions while out of contact with Command. It was
the nature of the job. But those situations arose only on the
farthest reaches of the frontier. To be cut off within the heart
of Federation space, in the Vulcan home system itself, was
unthinkable. And in this time of crisismunacceptable.
    Picard concentrated on controlling his voice. Anger had no
useful role to play in what was happening. He had to arrange a
full planetary search for a hidden Symmetrist base. And only
Starfleet Command could give him the necessary influence to
persuade Vulcan civilian authorities to allow such an unprec-
edented intrusion into the planet's security. "Will, with
everything you're reporting, is there a Starfleet presence in
the Vulcan system at all?"
    Riker hesitated, as if recognizing the absurdity of his
captain's question. His reply was cautious, but definitive.
"Sir, as far as I can tell, all starbase facilities in the Vulcan
system are intact and operational, staffed by skeleton crews of
support and administrative personnel who have not been
transferred to relief duty. But, if you mean, is there a Starfleet
command presence here... sir, I'd have to say, no. Except,
perhaps, for the Enterprise, and you."
    For a moment, Picard was overwhelmed by a feeling of
being completely powerless. He couldn't help thinking that if
he were not confined to the Galileo, if he were only back in his
command chair, that he could seize full control of the
situation.
  But control required information.
  He and his ship were but tools of the Federation. They had

duties to perform, capabilities to unleash. Yet, without direc-
tion, without consensus, even the Enterprise could be ren-
dered as ineffectual as if it had been hit by a quantum mine
with all shields down.
 The situation was intolerable.
 And Picard would not--could not--allow it to continue.
    With deliberation, he slowly sat back in his flight chair.
Beverly now stood at his side.
    "Commander Riker, in light of the extraordinary circum-
stances surrounding our presence in Vulcan spacem
specifically, my belief that the virogen plague is a deliberate
attack on the Federation, an attack that has already crippled
our lines of communication and supply--I am, under Star-
fleet Wartime Regulations, initiating a Code One alert."
    Picard could see that Riker understood the seriousness of
his decision, but the first officer showed no sign of protest.
    Cut off from Command, the captain of the Enterprise had
just issued a declaration of war.
    Picard reached for his tea. "Have Rolk alert the command-
ers of the other Starfleet vessels standing by. I would like to
have them gathered in the observation lounge within the
hour, and I will brief them via viewscreen to coordinate our
search of Vulcan. We'll need to contact senior members of the
Vulcan government to attend as well, but their presence will
be merely as observers. Stress that, Will. We will make the
search as unobtrusive as possible, but we will be conducting it
on a war footing." "Aye, sir."
    Picard was about to sign off, when he felt Beverly's hand on
his shoulder.
    "Excuse me, Captain," she said. "But if we really want to
conduct high-resolution scans of Vulcan as quickly as possi-
ble, perhaps we should see about getting the Tobias released
from impound and staffed with personnel from the other
ships."




J

    Picard didn't even have to think about the suggestion. As a
science vessel, the Tobias would have permanently configured
sensors that could be used at once.
    "An excellent suggestion. Follow up on that as well, Num-
ber One."
 Riker nodded. "At once, sir."
    "I'll be standing by to talk to whichever Vulcan representa-
tive wishes to lodge the most serious protest to our presence
here," Picard added.
    At that, Riker finally smiled. "I'm certain there will be
considerable competition for the honor." Then his image
winked out.
    Beverly sat in the second flight chair as Picard stretched
back in his. He could see from the corner of his eye that she
was watching him. "Yes?" he said.
    "For as long as I've known you, you've always shown
respect for the system, the chain of command. I've watched
you in crisis situations and seen someone who enjoys the
interplay, the challenge of being part of a team."
    Picard turned to face her. "Are you being a psychiatrist
now, Doctor?"
    Beverly smiled. "Off the record, if I didn't know better,
seeing you right now, cut off from Command, with no
support from Starfleet, the chain of command broken... I'd
almost say you were enjoying yourself even more."
    "Acting unilaterally can be rather exhilarating. And it
certainly gets things done faster."
    Beverly's smile faded. "What about acting correctly?
Shouldn't that be the overriding concern?"
    Picard understood what she meant, from both sides. But
the key to survival was adaptability. It was a lesson he had
learned only after years of unbending rigidity and devotion to
rules and regulations written to serve an organization that
might not exist in the next three months.

    "Absolute certainty requires time, Beverly. That is a luxury
we and the Federation no longer have."
    She had no reply for him. Instead, she watched the tiny disk
of Vulcan slowly rotate on the screen.
    Picard decided to enjoy the silence. Once Riker made
contact with Vulcan and the other vessels, he knew it
wouldn't last.
 He sipped his tea.
 It was cold.
 So, as he had so many other things in his life, he set it aside.
 And waited for the Federation to fall.




21,

TWENTY-EIGHT

The problem was insoluble.
    Kirk, Spock, and Srell, and Christine MacDonald,
M'Benga, and Barc, were trapped in a thruster repair cham-
ber on one side of the spacedock's cavernous cargo bay. The
circular chamber was narrow, but stretched twenty meters
above them--high enough for disassembling most impulse-
thrusters, including the one that currently towered overhead
on the central work platform.
    Outside the chamber's half-open personnel doors lay the
cargo bay, and the turbolift station at which Kirk and the
others had arrived. The incessant thrumming that pulsed
from the bay was a combination of noisily vibrating antigray
loaders, cargo containers slamming into each other and the
deck, and the shouted commands of the stevedores.
    A full half-kilometer distant was the bay's far wall, inset
with several multilevel viewports. Through those viewports,
Kirk could see the even larger expanse of the spacedock's
enclosed docking area, where a handful of ships rested in
webs of umbilical tunnels, and were serviced by darting
maintenance shuttles.

 The closest of those ships was the Tobias.
 Which was where the problem lay.
    Between the repair chamber and the far wall of the cargo
bay, there were just too many customs patrol points, safety
inspectors, and ID stations. The six escapees didn't have the
slightest chance of reaching the airlock doors that led to the
Tobias's umbilical. And even if they could make it that far,
the two Vulcan security officers guarding the airlock were an
effective last line of defense.
"We're done for," Barc growled. "There's no way through."
"There's a way through everything," Kirk said. "It's just
another Kobayashi Maru." Kirk knew the Academy still ran
that supposedly unbeatable scenario for its students. He
looked expectantly at Christine, waiting for her to ~irgue with
him. Then he'd be able to explain how he had defeated the
test's no-win scenario, and enlighten her about looking at
problems from a different perspective.
    Christine carefully studied the layout of the bay outside.
"Unfortunately, there're no computers to reprogram out
there."
    Kirk stared at Christine. "You know how to beat the
Kobayashi Maru?" He had been the first cadet to do itmthe
first to ever win.
    Christine shrugged. "Who doesn't? Figuring out new ways
to change the parameters is the whole reason for the test. How
else could anyone win?"
    Kirk consoled himself by deciding he had blazed the path.
But it appeared Christine might not need as much instruction
as he had thought. He turned to the Tellarite engineer.
    "Bare, you know how these docks are built. Are there any
Jefferies tubes running under this chamber and the cargo bay
deck.9"
    Barc nodded his understanding of what Kirk was after.
"You're thinking we might tunnel our way out."




"It'd be a good start," Kirk said. "Provided we don't take a
detour into hard vacuum."
    Bare scratched at the fur around his snout, then glanced
around the narrow chamber. "If I had a tricorder and an
anaphasic jack for the floor plates..." He lumbered over to
an equipment pod, still muttering to himself.
    Christine caught Kirk's attention and pointed to a diagnos-
tics display screen on a nearby section of the wall. "We might
need a few other strategies to fall back on. According to the
schedule up there, the next shift is due here in eight minutes."
    Kirk felt a twinge of embarrassment. Christine had noticed
a critical factor in the situation which he had overlooked.
Quickly he glanced around, saw a row of storage lockers on
the far wall. "Let's see if we can find some engineer coverails.
Maybe try a disguise." He led Christine and the others across
the chamber to began the search.
    "l still say we're better off talking to the Vulcans," M'Benga
grumbled as she followed them around the thruster platform.
    Srell dismissed her suggestion. "You are not being logical,
Doctor."
    M'Benga glared at the presumptuous Vulcan, but allowed
him to explain himself without interruption.
    "If we were to turn ourselves back in to the authorities, we
would no longer be simply held for further disposition.
Instead. they would deliver you and your crew to Starfleet
security, and arrest -Ambassador Spock and myself. Split up,
our capability for action would be diminished. Additionally,
we would undoubtedly be incarcerated at a greater distance
from the Tobias. further limiting our ability to escape."
    "That's where you're losing me," M'Benga said. "If we tell
them the truth, it'll be clear we're not guilty of anything, and
we won't have anything to escape from. Logic your way out of
that one." M'Benga looked pleased with herself for having set
a logical trap for her maddeningly self-assured adversary.
  Kirk and Spock exchanged a glance as they arrived at the

lockers. Kirk knew the answer, but he was curious to see how
well Spock's young prot6g6 could handle himself.
    "Consider the reasons which have brought the ambassador
and me to Vulcan," Srell began. "We are searching for a
sophisticated, likely criminal organization, which apparently
is capable of infiltrating the Vulcan diplomatic corps and
murdering our planer's most revered statesmen. Our search
took us to another elder Vulcan who might have shed light on
the circumstances of Sarek's death. Yet at the very time we
visited Tarok, assassins struck and he also died. I submit that
those responsible for Sarek's death therefore might also be
capable of intercepting private communications and of infil-
trating other Vulcan organizations. That would explain how
our presence at Tarok's estate was known, as well as the
relatively early arrival of the peacekeeping forces who took
our forensics team into custody."
    As Kirk and Spock began searching through the first pair of
lockers, Kirk listened nostalgically for M'Benga's response.
The doctor and the Vulcan were bringing back memories of
another unlikely pairing of friends, and he wondered what the
future held for these two young adversaries.
    M'Benga and Srell continued their debate as they searched
through a second pair of lockers. Beside them, Christine
searched a third set.
    "All right," M'Benga said, "I'll grant that covers you and
the ambassador, but what about Commander MacDonald
and the crew of the Tobias? We're not involved with you or
your search."
    "My good doctor, may I remind you that whatever brought
you to Vulcan also had the misfortune of bringing you to
Tarok's estate at the time of the assassins' attack."
    M'Benga's eyes narrowed. "I wouldn't exactly call it mis-
fortune. If it weren't for Jim and Christine and Bare and me,
the assassins would've won."
 In the first locker, Kirk had found nothing but old tools, a




ILLI/"II?1 ~I1AI l~r-.l~                                                            AV ]~.I'~{.JI~K

/:

few water bottles, and a pair of scanner goggles. He looked up
at the diagnostic display. Six minutes to shift change. In the
few minutes left to them, he needed everyone working on a
way out of the chamber, but Srell might be onto something.
    "Mr. Srell raises an interesting point," Kirk said. "The
crew of the Tobias came to Vulcan for virtually the same
reason. We're also looking for a sophisticated, definitely
criminal organization of Vulcans--one able to intercept
Starfleet communications. Only the crime is different. The
group we're after might be responsible for murdering mil-
lions, if not billions, of people by releasing the virogen."
    From the next locker, Spock looked over at Kirk. "At
Tarok's estate, you said you were looking for me."
    Kirk shut the door of the locker he'd been searching. Still
nothing that could be a disguise. "Who better to investigate a
Vulcan terrorist group? You mention the possibility to most
people, and all they'll say is that Vulcan terrorists can't exist."
 "They cannot," Srell said.
    "Yet, here we are," Kirk pointed out, "all talking about
Vulcan murderers and criminals as if they're as common here
as everywhere else."
    M'Benga looked thoughtful. "You don't suppose we're
looking for the same people, do you? I mean, it's pretty
remarkable to be thinking there's even one group of Vulcans
that's capable of murder. But two groups? The odds would
have to be pretty low."
    Kirk glanced at Spock, but it was Srell who gave the
inevitable response. "I believe the odds would be roughly on
the order of... 10,126,582,300 to one."
"'Roughly'?" M'Benga asked with a hint of contempt.
Kirk saw Srell stiffen, as if he didn't realize the doctor was
leading him on. "The calculation is based on the total number
of Vulcans who have lived on the planet since the Reforma-
tion, and assumes that any effective terrorist organization
would require a minimum of ten individuals. I thereby

calculated the odds that any twenty Vulcans at random from
the total population would happen to be alive in the current
generation, and divided by the number of Vutcans who, since
Reformation, are known to have engaged in terrorist acts.
Given the understandable ambiguity surrounding population
figures for the first few hundred years following the establish-
ment of Surak's peace, I do not believe I am off by more than
a factor of two. Hence, the modifying descriptor, 'roughly.'"
    "Are you saying that Vulcans have been known to partici-
pate in terrorist acts in the past?" Kirk asked his question
before M'Benga could torture Srell with another provocative
remark. The math didn't interest Kirk. Srell's startling revela-
tion did. For the moment, the search of the lockers and the
impending arrival of the next shift of workers could wait.
    Srell looked pained, as if he had just given away a planetary
secret. "Not counting those individuals whose violently anti-
social actions resulted from alien mind-control, disease, or
physical injury to the brain, a total of three hundred and
twelve Vulcans are known to have committed terrorist acts in
the past millennium."
    Kirk looked at Spock for confirmation. "That is correct,"
Spock said.
    Kirk was astounded. He had assumed that the Vulcans they
were looking for were modern aberrations, perhaps unduly
influenced by alien upbringing on a Vulcan colony world. Yet
now it appeared that Vulcan actually might have a history of
such criminal behavior. In all their many discussions of
Vulcan, Spock had never admitted to Kirk that his planet had
had such problems. But then, after the incident with Balok
and the Fesarius, Spock had become quite skillful at poker.
    "What could possibly make a Vulcan think it was logical to
commit an act of terrorism?" Kirk asked.
    Christine pointed to the display again. "Four minutes," she
warned.
But Srell did not make use of her warning as a way to avoid




/~? I: P~t. Jl:.K

answering. Especially when Spock nodded at him, as if to say
the teacher condoned the student's report of hidden knowl-
edge. "Terrorist acts on Vulcan have been rare, generally
limited to expressions of extreme political theory and, in the
past, to sporadic attempts to return to the violent philoso-
phies that ruled our world in the days before Surak."
    Kirk could see a possible connection forming. "If the
terrorism came out of politics, then that implies it was
organized, correct?"
 "It does," Srell conceded.
    Kirk could tell that even with Spock's approval, the young
Vulcan was uncomfortable to be discussing what must be, for
him, an embarrassing facet of Vulcan history.
    "Is there a chance," Kirk persisted, "that any of those
political terrorist groups might exist in some form today?"
    Srell fumbled for an answer. "Within reason, anything
is possible. That is to say... any number of political
groups... but if they are secret..."
 "Good Lord," M'Benga said. "Just spit it out. Yes or no?"
 "Yes," Srell said, clearly displeased.
    Kirk gestured for the young Vulcan to hurry. "What
groups? Their goals? Who are the most logical ones to remain
active today?"
    Srell glanced up at the distant ceiling of the thruster
chamber. "The Adepts of T'PeI," he began, as if reading from
a hidden list. "They are a guild of assassins dating from the
time of Surak. Some say they continue their secret traditions
among the Romulans today."
    Kirk quickly looked to Spock. "What about it, Spock?
Could there be a Romulan connection to all this?"
    "I am doubtful. The majority of Romulans know that a
strong Federation is necessary to keep the Klingon Empire in
check. It is not in Romulan interests to destabilize the
Federation, and certainly not with a biological weapon that
could spread to their own planets."

  Kirk looked back to Srell. "Who else?"
    "The Kahrilites. A small group that fought for the indepen-
dence of a southern district more than three centuries ago.
They were given independence and the movement quickly
died." Before Kirk could prompt him, Srell continued. "The
Followers of the Cupric Band. Their mistaken logic led them
to reject the concept that intelligence is possible in beings
with non-copper-based blood. They were active at the time
Vulcan's first contact protocols were formulated."
    Kirk could see Spock's interest was piqued by that. "What
is it, Spock?"
    "In his holographic confession, Ki Mendrossen said he
reported on my father's activities regarding the redrafting of
Starfleet's first contact protocols. But as one of one hundred
and fifty Federation member worlds, the question of first
contact as it applies to Vulcan is moot. We are a fully
interplanetary society. The Cuptic Band is not applicable to
this situation."
    "The Binaries," Sreli continued. "Opposed the introduc-
tion of duotronic computer circuitry. The Traxton Com-
pound. They follow a school of logic that does not focus on
Surak, believing the concentration on the individual to be in
conflict with the attainment of Kolinahr. The Central Source.
Aggressive opposition to financial policy and the abolition of
money as a means of exchange." Srell paused, then unfolded
his hands, ending his recitation. "In addition, a handful of
other violent individuals acted on their own for reasons best
described as politically unsound. To the best of my knowl-
edge, that is the extent of terrorism on Vulcan."
    Kirk felt his excitement fade as he realized his first guess
must be closer to the truth; that the Vulcans who might be
involved in the spread of the virogen were a relatively recent
group, diverted from peaceful Vulcan ways because of alien
influences. But Spock's next statement changed all that.




    "Srell," Spock said, "you did not mention the Sym-
metrists."
    Srell seemed unperturbed by the omission. "They were not
politically motivated. And whatever acts of terrorism they are
alleged to have committed, historians disagree as to the
extent to which Vulcan Symmetrists were responsible for the
actions of non-Vulcans."
    As long as there was a single pathway to explore, Kirk was
not ready to abandon a possible connection to an existing
group. He checked the display again. They were almost out of
time. But he had to know. "Tell me about the Symmetrists,"
he said to Spock.
    Spock kept his gaze on Srell. "More than two centuries ago,
they began as a group of noted scientists concerned about the
ecological ramifications of the newly formed Federation's
plans for exploring other worlds."
    "They were environmentalists," Srell said. "Not political
activists."
    Kirk noted, with interest, the difference of opinion between
Spock and his student.
    "An interesting distinction," Spock said. "But the environ-
mental issues they addressed were defined by the political
process."
    Christine raised her hands. "This is all very fascinating, but
we've got precisely two minutes to come up with something
here."
    M'Benga looked back at the personnel doors. "Can't we
seal those doors? Buy us some more time?"
 Kirk and Christine both spoke at the same time.
 "They'd just transport in a repair crew..." Kirk began.
 "Not with so many transporters in this..." Christine said.
 Kirk and Christine looked at each other, sharing a single
 thought. Then they looked up at the thruster assembly
 towering above them. It was far too large to have entered the
 chamber through the personnel doors.

AVENGER

  And the doors were the only way in or out of the chamber.
  "Barc!" they both shouted.
     The Tellarite looked out from behind the central platform
 with an answering growl.
  "The platform!" Christine called out.
  "It's a cargo transporter pad!" Kirk added.
  Bare almost danced as he waved everyone over.
    They ran to climb up on the platform as the Tellarite
scurried to find the transporter controls.
    But Kirk hadn't forgotten what had brought them this far,
nor how much farther they still had to go.
    "Quickly, Srell--what acts of violence did the Symmetrists
commit?" he asked as he and his team reached the platform.
    "Please bear in mind that at one time, they were respected
scientists," Srell said as he looked for a handhold to begin
climbing. Kirk marveled again at the Vulean's emotional
control, even in times of crisis. His own heart was pounding,
15ut Srell revealed no concern. "Only later did off-planet
factions take up violence in the Symmetrists' name. And the
subsequent public outcry led to the cause being abandoned
on Vulcan."
    Kirk felt electricity shoot through him. "The 'cause,'" he
repeated. "Spock--what did the Symmetrists do?"
    Kirk could see that Spock sensed his excitement, though he
couldn't know what fueled it.
    Spock pulled himself up onto the platform beside the
thruster, and reached down to help M'Benga complete the
climb. "If memory serves, the Symmetrists would board
colony ships and take hostages in order to 'save' pristine
planets from ecological contamination. They poisoned water
sources and food supplies to force colonies to relocate.
They--"
    Kirk jumped up beside Spock on the platform. "Kodos!"
he said.




 Sreil stared at him blankly. Spock seemed intrigued.
    "Kodos the Executioner? Of Tarsus Four?" Christine asked
as she climbed up behind the others.
    "Tarsus?" M'Benga added. "That was one of the first
systems hit by the virogen."
    "When Kodos was governor, the eolony's grain supply was
infected with... a fungus," Kirk said, overwhelmed by the
memory of what he had seen when little more than a child.
"He butchered four thousand colonists. A lesson, Mr.
Spock?"
    "It is an intriguing hypothesis. Subsequent to Kodos's
death on the Enterprise, I researched the events at Tarsus
Four. No cause for the fungal infection was ever found, thus
sabotage could not be ruled out. As policy, emergency food
supplies were maintained only to support the colony for a
three-week period, which was the normal shipping time from
the closest port worlds. However, at the time the colony's
grain stores were infected, the Romulans constructed several
outposts at the outer boundaries of the Neutral Zone. Fearing
a new outbreak of hostilities, Starfleet closed all shipping
lanes. Resupply of Tarsus Four was impossible, and only an
unsanctloned relief mission undertaken by ships of the Earth
Forces managed to avert the total loss of all colonists."
    Kirk looked at Spock closely. "Earth Forces? Weren't the
Vulcans involved in the rescue mission?"
    Spock thought a moment, then shook his head. "There was
no mention of Vulcan involvement in the records."
Kirk frowned. "That's odd. I thought I remembered..."
But Kirk's memories were cut short as a blue light abruptly
began to flash in the thruster chamber, accompanied by the
echoing of buzzers from the cargo bay beyond the doors.
     "Is that a prisoner alert?" M'Benga asked with sudden
 worry.
     But Barc flailed up onto the platform beside the others, an
 engineer's remote-control padd in one hand. "It's the shift
 change," the Tellarite grunted. "We've got sixty seconds."

t'~V ]~IN It..lr I~K

 Kirk eyed him. "Is this a transporter pad?"
    Barc's tiny black eyes sparkled. "Rrrr, that it is." He held
up the padd. "And I've set it for a one-minute delay to give
me time to get up here with the rest of you."
    M'Benga gave the Tellarite an inquiring look. "You are
sending us to the Tobias, right?"
    Barc bared his teeth. "No, Doctor, I'm beaming us back to
the magistrate's office. What do you think?"
    "It's a cargo transporter," M'Benga said. "And we're not
cargo."
    The Tellarite smiled. "If that's what you're worried about,
let's just say I've made a few small adjustments to the
resolution buffers."
 M'Benga seemed relieved. They waited.
    Christine stepped closer to Kirk. "Are you thinking Kodos
was a Symmetrist? And that what happened on Tarsus Four
was just... a trial run for what's happening across the
Federation? I mean, Bones is rightwthat world was the first
to collapse because of the virogen."
    Kirk wanted to answer, but there was a memory just
beyond the reach of his consciousness. Why was he so certain
that Vulcans had been part of the relief mission to the colony?
    "Jim was at Tarsus Four during the crisis," Spock ex-
plained. "He was one of nine eyewitnesses to the first wave of
executions by the governor."
    Christine put a hand on his shoulder, misunderstanding the
reason for his concern. "Jim, I'm sorry. Was your family... ?"
    Kirk brushed her question aside. "They were on Earth. My
mother was, at least. My father was on his ship. Spook, it was
something Kodos said."
    "His notorious address to the colonists he selected for
execution?"
    As if he were a boy of thirteen again, Kirk heard that harsh
voice in his mind. He spoke aloud the words he could never




forget. "'The revolution is successful... but survival de-
pends on drastic measures .... '"
    Spock broke in. "Of course--Mendrossen referred to the
revolution in his confession. 'For the good of the cause, for
the revolution,' he said."
    Kirk pounded a fist into his hand. "Spock! That's it! It
wasn't what Kodos said on Tarsus Four--it was what he said
to me on the Enterprise.t"
    M'Benga looked nervously around. "Didn't Barc say we
were on a sixty-second delay?"
    "That I did," Barc confirmed. He held up his padd. The
time display on it counted down the last five seconds.
    Across the chamber, the personnel doors slid open and the
voices of the arriving crew of technicians became clear over
the din of the cargo bay.
  "You spoke with Kodos?" Christine asked Kirk.
    Kirk heard the initiating hum of the transporter circuits
start up. He took Christine's hand.
    "It'll have to wait," he said as the first glimmer of golden
light began to shimmer around them.
    But even as Kirk vanished in the transporter beam, he
knew he had found the answer to what had happened.
  All that remained was to prove it.

TWENTY-NINE

"You will forgive me, Captain Picard, if my logic is uncertain,
but you have apparently had Starfleet declare war against
Vulcan."
    At any other time, Riker would have laughed. But the
tension in the observation lounge was at a dangerous level.
    He and Data shared the table with eight starship com-
manders and three representatives from the Vulcan planetary
government. Each of the Vulcans was more than a century
old, their robes resplendent with the polished gemstones of
their office.
    Solok, the most senior of the three, steepled his fingers as he
fixed his green eyes on the virtual viewscreen on the far wall.
The observation-lounge lights gleamed from his hairless,
black scalp. He was framed by the crimson mass of Vulcan
that filled the observation ports behind him. Somewhere over
the equator, storm clouds flashed with hidden lightning.
    From the viewscreen, Picard returned the Vulcan's patient
stare. "With respect, Representative Solok, the time for
debate is at a later date. I have merely invoked a condition of
war. I have not stated who our enemy is."
  Solok tapped two fingers together. "Captain, you have




issued a Code One alert. It is a declaration of war. You then
inform the Vulcan government that a fleet of nine Starfleet
vessels will englobe our world and subject it to a full-
spectrum sensor sweep at maximum power and resolution,
with the intent of locating the base from which your 'enemy'
is thought to operate."
    Beside Solok, Representative T'Pring continued the state-
ment. Her stark white hair was cut short to reveal her
dramatic ears, accentuating her sharp features. "Your search
of Vulcan under these conditions is a violation of our
sovereignty, will interfere in numerous scientific and indus-
trial endeavors, will reveal the nature of Vulcan planetary
defenses in a way that third parties might exploit, and cannot
logically be expected to yield positive results."
    The third representative, Storm, concluded the statement
of the Vulcans' position. Riker had escorted Stonn and
T'Pring from the transporter room, and had learned they
were husband and wife.
    "Captain Picard," Stonn said, "all other matters of sover-
eignty and interplanetary law and treaty aside, the fact
remains that you believe the enemy you seek is on Vulcan.
Therefore, the enemy is Vulcan. Therefore, you have declared
war on Vulcan."
    Solok delivered the summation. "The situation is unsatis-
factory. Permission to search our world in this manner is
denied."
All eyes turned to the viewscreen and Picard's response.
"I agree," Picard said, and Riker could tell how the captain
struggled to maintain a reasonable tone. They had expected
reticence on the part of the Vulcan government, but not
outright refusal. "The situation is most unsatisfactory. But it
is your position that is without logic."
    Riker checked. None of the Vulcans reacted. But the
Starfleet commanders were fully on Picard's side.

    "We are facing the gravest threat our worlds have ever
known. You have seen the figares provided by my chief
medical officer. The lifetime of the United Federation of
Planets can be measured in days unless a cure to the virogen
is found. Does not logic demand that every means must be
undertaken in order to find that cure?"
    Solok carefully folded his hands in his lap. "Your tales of
the long-forgotten Symmetrists are sheer speculation, not
logic. It is impossible to conceive of a group so clever, and so
secretive, that they could operate on Vulcan without attract-
ing the scrutiny of our peacekeepers."
    "We submit," T'Pring continued, "that you have access to
information which you are not sharing with us. That suggests
that you have an ulterior motive for your desire to subject
Vulcan to such an unwarranted intrusion of its fundamental
fights as an independent world."
    "And that," Stonn said, "suggests that for some reason, you
have declared war on a sister member of the Federation.
Either that or, as certain developments suggest, you and the
ships you represent no longer speak for Starfleet, and have
mutinied."
    All the commanders began to protest at once, but Picard
cut them off with an authoritative command for silence. This
time when he spoke, he wasn't concerned with hiding his
anger.
    "I submit to you that your reluctance to participate in an
operation that could save the Federation suggests that you are
also in possession of information that you wish to keep
secret."
    Solok's steely gaze did not waver. Yet Riker noted that
Solok avoided directly looking at Picard. "To use an Earth
term, Captain, that statement is preposterous. And unless you
can provide some evidence to support your incautious accu-
sations, this meeting will end and you and your vessels will be
served formal notice to quit our system."




    Solok, T'Pring, and Stonn exchanged quick glances, then
rose as one, their decision made.
 "I know who the Symmetrist leader was," Picard said.
 That stopped the Vulcans.
    "Was?" Solok asked. He still looked away from the view-
screen, as if Picard still offered nothing of interest or impor-
tance.
    "He died five years ago. But given his renowned abilities
and accomplishments, his role as leader could explain the
ability of a secret organization to exist on Vulcan without
detection."
     Solok smoothed his robes. "You are prepared to share the
name of this 'leader' with us?" "Ambassador Sarek."
     Everyone except the Vulcans reacted with stunned silence.
But even Riker could see the effect that name had on them.
 Solok finally stared at Picard. "Sarek... of ShirKahr?"
 "Yes," Pieard said.
    Solok raised a hairless eyebrow as he considered that
information.
    Riker saw Storm and T'Pring lean close to each other so
that T'Pring could whisper in Stonn's ear.
    "Did you know the ambassador?" Riker asked, hoping to
break up their private conversation.
    T'Pring addressed Riker as a queen might address a com-
moner. "All on Vulcan knew Sarek. That he would be
involved in the Symmetrist cause is... absurd."
    "Do you have evidence to support this accusation.'?" Solok
asked.
    Picard touched his temple. "I have the evidence of what I
learned in a mindmeld on Alta Vista Three. I invite you to
meld with me, and know I speak the truth."
    Storm pushed his chair back, ready to depart. "You would
have us expose ourselves to the virogen based on your
improbable theory?"

    Beside Picard, Dr. Crusher spoke. "Representative Stonn,
Starfleet continues to make progress on a treatment for
animal exposure to the virogen. If you, or some other
member of your party, joined us in quarantine, I feel confi-
dent you would not be confined for more than a few weeks."
    "Is that not a small enough price to pay for the truth?"
Picard asked.
    Solok hesitated, as if prepared to seriously consider the
captain's argument. But T'Pring would have no part of it.
    "It is also a clever pretense for a trap," she declared. Then
she turned to Solok. "The Federation is in danger. Of that
there can be no doubt. But surely part of the problem is
Starfleet itself. Recent developments in our own system prove
that Starfleet has already been destabilized. We cannot trust
them, Solok. As long as we keep our world free of contamina-
tion, Vulcan can survive the collapse of the Federation.
Therefore, it serves no logical purpose for us to sacrifice our
world for a spurious argument from an emotional being."
    Riker saw his captain reflexively straighten his tunic, as if
getting ready to issue an ultimatum. He saw that this meeting
was about to fall apart. He saw a way out.
    "Representative Solok," Riker said, "what if Captain Pi-
card is correct? Even if there is the smallest chance, is that not
worth a few more minutes of your time?" "To what purpose?" Solok asked.
    "Let's find out about the mutiny on the Tobias." Riker
looked at T'Pring and Storm. "That is what you're concerned
about, isn't it? That whatever happened on that ship might be
happening on the Enterprise, and on all the ships represented
here?"
    Before T'Pring could reply, Solok said, "That is a reason-
able request. How do you propose to proceed?"
    "The crew was called before a magistrate on one of your
spacedocks. Let's contact that magistrate, review the crew's
statements. Even interview the crew if we have to. Whatever




it takes for you to be confident that we are not involved with
them. Then we can arrange a mindmeld with Captain Pi-
card."
    Solok nodded gravely, and sat down. "Given the stakes, I
will wait." He looked up at T'Pring and Storm. Reluctantly,
they sat as well.
    On the viewscreen, Picard gave Riker a small nod of
approval. Then Riker tapped his corem badge and put Rolk
to work on the bridge, setting up a communications link to
the civilian spacedock where the Tobias was impounded.
    It took less than a minute. The virtual viewscreen shifted so
that Picard and Beverly in the Galileo appeared on one side,
and a stern female magistrate appeared on the other. She hid
her reaction well, Riker knew, but the presence of Solok,
T'Pring, and Stonn surprised her.
    Riker got to the point at once. "Magistrate, we are most
interested in learning more about your request that the crew
of the Tobias be investigated for possible charges of mutiny."
    The magistrate cleared her throat, as if she were not used to
speaking with government representatives of the rank present
here. "The Tobias is not where orders require it to be. Her
commander could not give adequate explanation for her
presence here. Three people are dead, perhaps because of
actions taken by her crew. And in an alarming breach of all
Federation policies, her crew may have exposed our world to
the virogen."
    This time, Riker noted, even the Vulcans at the table
reacted.
    "Did the commander of the vessel give an explanation for
her actions?" Riker asked.
    "She did not. The explanation given was that her ship was
on a classified mission at Starfleet's behest."
    Solok abruptly stood. "That is all I needed to hear." He
glared at the viewscreen, and at Picard. "Are you satisfied,

Captain? A classified Starfleet mission to expose this world to
the virogen? Your mutinous ruse has been penetrated."
    Stonn and T'Pring rose beside Solok. Riker realized that all
control had been lost. He had no idea how to reclaim it.
    But apparently Data did. "Representative Solok, may I ask
your patience for one final question of the magistrate?" the
android asked.
    Solok gave no answer, but he remained where he was,
giving Data tacit approval.
    Data addressed the viewscreen. "Magistrate, you stated
that the ship's commander did not give an explanation for her
actions, but that an explanation was given, nonetheless. May I
ask who gave that explanation?"
    The magistrate looked uncomfortable. "This is a delicate
matter." She looked to Solok for guidance.
 "It is also crucial," Solok replied. "We await your answer."
    Riker looked at Data. His machine memory and attention
to detail might have come through for them again.
    "The explanation was given by Ambassador Spock," the
magistrate said.
    Riker saw Solok's grip on his robes tighten. "Spock, child of
Sarek?"
 "The same."
    "Indeed," Solok said. "Is it possible you have a recording
of Spock's statement?"
    The magistrate seemed relieved to be excused from assum-
ing further responsibility in relating what had happened. "I
will play it for you at once, sir." She adjusted some controls
out of scanner range; then her image was replaced by a log
tape of her office.
    Riker watched as the time and date codes slipped by in
Vulcan script. Then, onscreen, two carved wooden doors in
the office slid open, and a group of six people entered the
magistrate's office, four in Starfleet uniforms, one of them a
Tellarite.


    Spock was unmistakable, his distinctive features known to
half the Federation on sight. To one side was a young Vulcan
civilian, to the other a Starfleet lieutenant. Though, Riker
thought, the lieutenant seemed mature for what was a rela-
tively junior--
    "Sacre merde!" Picard sputtered. "Computer--freeze
frame! Enhance grid section twelve!"
    On the viewscreen, the image from the magistrate's office
expanded into coarse pixels, then resolved into finer detail
until the Starfleet officer beside Spock filled the screen.
    An instant later, Riker felt the hair on his neck bristle as he
saw what Picard saw.
 That was no lieutenant.
 It was James T. Kirk.

THIRTY

With unerring accuracy, Barc had placed them on the bridge
of the Tobias.
    Seconds after the transporter effect had faded, Kirk
watched as Christine spun around, quickly assessing the
status of every station. He recognized the fire in her eye, the
territorial gleam.
 This was her ship.
 "You did it again, Barcs," she said.
     The Tellarite was already making his way to the engineer-
ing station. "I always do," he growled. "Only one problem," Kirk said.
    Christine nodded. More than half the bridge stations were
dark. "We've been powered down and placed on umbilical
supply from the spacedock."
    "And any surge of power drawn through the umbilical is
going to raise someone's suspicions," Kirk said.
    "Therefore, we should disconnect the umbilical," Srell
suggested.
    "Which would also raise suspicions," Spook said. "And
would leave us in the precarious position of powering up the
vessel while a security team came to investigate."




    Kirk looked around the circular bridge. The basic design
had changed little, even from the days of his first five-year
mission. But who knew what advances hid behind the sleek
control surfaces? "How long will it take to get a ship like this
up to full power?"
    "With a full crew," Christine said, "we've drilled at one
minute, eighteen seconds."
 "And under present conditions?" Kirk asked.
    Christine looked over at Barc. "What do you think, Barcs?
We reset the main power buses throughout the ship manually,
leaving the final connections isolated to the bridge controls,
then we detach the umbilical and throw all the final switches
at the same time from here?"
    The Tellarite rubbed his thick fingers along his snout.
"Maybe thirty minutes to set up the buses. But then no more
than ten seconds to bring us up to full shields and impulse."
 "How long to warp capability?" Kirk asked.
    Barc checked the readouts on the engineering station, and
huffed approval at what he read. "At least they had the good
sense to keep the core on standby. I'll get you warp three
minutes after we have power."
"Sounds good," Christine said. "Here's the breakdownre"
But before she could continue, Srell interrupted. "A ques-
tion. Once we are powered up and have warp capability,
where, exactly, do you propose to take us?" Christine looked at Kirk and Spock.
    "If you're right about the Symmetrists, where do we go?"
she asked.
    Kirk was surprised Spock didn't respond to Christine's
question, as if he didn't have the answer. But only one answer
was possible. He was sure of it. "You get this ship powered up.
I'll get us where we need to go."
    "Good enough for me," Christine said. If she was curious
about their ultimate destination, she held whatever questions

she might have in check. Kirk appreciated her professional
acceptance of his command of the mission, if not of her ship.
    Christine began to describe the sequence by which the
Tobias would be brought to life. Barc would begin in engi-
neering, with M'Benga helping Christine set the power con-
duits in the deflector and shield control rooms.
    Since Srell had no experience with ships of any kind, he
would remain on the bridge with Kirk and Spock. Kirk and
Spock would watch the individual station boards as internal
connections were set throughout the ship. They would be
responsible for placing the bridge switches on standby, so
they could be activated when the umbilical joining the Tobias
to the spacedock was disconnected.
    Then Christine, Barc, and M'Benga were gone, using the
interdeck ladders instead of the turbolifts to avoid drawing
noticeable amounts of power.
    Kirk and Spock positioned themselves by the science
vessel's engineering and deflector stations. Srell studied the
blank main viewer. For now, all they could do was wait.
    Kirk took advantage of the few moments of respite. He
closed his eyes, rubbed the bridge of his nose, and again
reached back into the past. Once more he was on the
Enterprise of old, face-to-face with the acclaimed Shakespear-
ean actor Anton Karidian, a man whose history began only
where that of Kodos the Executioner ended.

    When the supply ships had finally reached Tarsus IV,
Governor Kodos had disappeared. A burned body had been
found in a crashed orbital transfer shuttle, a body so badly
charred that not even DNA analysis could be performed. But
the craft had been Kodos's personal transport and the search
for him was called off, the case closed.
    Twenty years later, the Karidian Company of Players had
come aboard the Enterprise, and Kirk had learned that the
actor and the executioner were one and the same.




    Kirk went to the actor's quarters to confront the monster
from his past, not knowing if he were searching for justice as a
starship captain, or vengeance as the victimized boy he had
been on Tarsus IV.
    But instead of a monster, Kirk had found a confused old
man whose memory had grown dim. Kodos did not hide
from his past, nor deny it. He was tired of it.
    At the time, Kirk had been a young man, and could feel
nothing but contempt for Kodos. The old man's point of view
was beyond Kirk's understanding.
    "Here you stand, a perfect symbol of our technical socie-
ty," Kodos had said. "Mechanized, electronicized, and not
very human."
    Kirk had had no interest in an old man's demented
ramblings, but the words had somehow stayed with him, and
they came back to him now with surprising clarity.
    "You've done away with humanity," Kodos had said accus-
ingly, as if Kirk and not he were the guilty one, "the striving
of man to achieve greatness through his own resources."
    Full of himself, his mission, and his youth, Kirk had
discounted Kodos and all that he was or believed.
    "We've armed man with tools," Kirk had answered. "The
striving for greatness continues."
    Kirk paused in his recollection, rehearing his own words of
so long ago, wondering how he had survived those early years,
understanding so little of what life was about.
    For part of what Kodos had told him was true. Kirk himself
had said as much to Christine MacDonald when he had
stepped aboard her ship at Chal--that her generation placed
too much emphasis on the machinery of their lives, and not
enough on the spirit; paid too much attention to the starship,
not to the crew.
    Kirk wondered if Christine saw him as he had seen Kodos:
unable to comprehend, let alone meet, the challenges of
modern life; no longer relevant; old.

    He wondered if Kodos had seen him as he himself now saw
Christine: a distant reflection of what he had been once:
headstrong; talented, though unseasoned; young.
    Was this cycle of the generations bound to continue for-
ever?
    Had Kirk come all this way in his life's journey only to
discover the unthinkable--that the worst monster from his
past, Kodos the Executioner, had in some cold-blooded way
been right?
    Uneasily, Kirk now remembered being on the bridge of the
Tobias over thai, ordering the destruction of the Orion
fighters. Ordering their pilots to their deaths to prevent more
deaths in the future.
 Had he become Kodos?

 "Are you well, Jim?"
    Spock's concerned voice broke Kirk from his reverie. He
quickly checked the engineering board. The status lights were
still out. Barc had yet to complete his tasks. "Sorry, Spock. I was just remembering."
    "What Kodos said to you on the Enterprise?" Spock asked.
It was what they had been discussing before they had been
transported from the spacedock to the Tobias. Spock forgot
little.
    "'I was a soldier in a cause,'" Kirk said, quoting what
Kodos had said in his quarters more than a century ago.
"There were things to be done. Terrible things."
    Spock nodded, then turned to Sreil. "After consideration, I
concur with Jim. It is possible Kodos was a Symmetrist and
what happened on Tarsus Four can be considered a model for
what's happening throughout the Federation."
 Kirk saw Srell's reaction to what Spock had said.
 "Objections, Mr. Srell?" Kirk asked.
    "Three," Srell said promptly. "First, the Symmetrists, at
least those who embraced violence, were not reserved about




i?

claiming responsibility for their actions. Yet they made no
claims about actions on Tarsus Four. Second, there was no
Vulcan involvement in Tarsus Four. Third, though a case can
be made that the colony's grain was exposed to a fungus in
order to halt a colonization program, there is no support for
the theory that today's spread of the virogen is a political
action. The intelligent mind searches for patterns, Mr. Kirk,
with the danger that patterns are often seen where the data do
not support the conclusions."
    "I beg to differ," Spock said, and Kirk could see something
in Spock's face that told him his old friend was about to say
something that he was reluctant to share, but felt obliged to
state.
    "If I am in error, I would be pleased to be corrected," Srell
replied stiffly. Not even Kirk was convinced the young Vulcan
meant what he said.
 "My parents were Symmetrists."
 Both Kirk and Srell stared at Spock in surprise.
 "Sarek?" Kirk said. "A Symmetrist?"
    "I learned of it only recently myself," Spock explained. "In
my mindmeld with Tarok, just before his death."
    "I must protest," Srell said. "Sarek's belief in nonviolence
formed the core of his reputation and personal beliefs.
Consider the source of your information, Ambassador--the
confused recollections of a diseased mind."
    An expression of concern came to Spock. "Do not misun-
derstand, Srell. My parents were not terrorists, and as Surak
and logic demand, they denounced violence as a means to any
end. But it does explain much about my childhood."
    Kirk could see that Spock was now retreating into long-
buried memory, just as he himself had clone moments earlier.
    "The conversations that would stop when I entered a
room," Spock said. "My father's unexplained absences when
he was not on diplomatic assignment. So many inconsequen-
tial yet perplexing occurrences are now so obvious. For quite

legitimate reasons, Sarek and Amanda were members of an
organization the galaxy abhorred because of acts of violence
committed by others in the Symmetrists' name. It is quite a
profound discovery to make about one's parents after so
many years."
    Kirk asked the necessary question. "Spock, do you think
your father's tie to the Symmetrists could be the reason he
was murdered?"
    Spock considered the question for long moments. "Logic
suggests--"
    "Logic suggests nothing," Srell interrupted. "How could
you even conceive that someone like Sarek, whose every
move and appointment were rigorously scheduled, could
have the time to consort with criminals?"
    Spock looked at Srell as if the young Vulcan were a
misbehaving child. "Srell, I said my parents were Sym-
metfists. Quite clearly in Tarok's mind I saw that their group
disbanded, long ago, when I was a youth, when they realized
that their beliefs were being distorted and their influence
misused."
     Something about Spock's reference to his being a youth
prompted Kirk to ask, "How long ago?" "More than a century."
 "I mean, how old were you?"
 "In standard years, sixteen, I would suspect."
    Kirk did the conversions from stardates. "That would
make it... 2246."
    Spock angled his head as he made the same connection.
"Fascinating."
    Srell folded his arms in a show of Vulcan impatience. "I fail
to see the significance of the date."
    "Twenty-two forty-six," Kirk said. "Spock was sixteen, I
was thirteen. And Kodos was governor of Tarsus Four."
    "And at about the same time, my parents withdrew from
the Symmetrists."




    Kirk took the chain of logic to its ultimate conclusion.
"Because someone had used whatever information the Sym-
metrists had developed about ecological disaster to deliber-
ately engineer the events at Tarsus Four."
    Srell was as close to sputtering as a Vulcan could ever get in
public. "Are you seriously suggesting that Ambassador Sarek
was responsible for the events there?"
    "Not directly," Kirk said. "But it seems clear he had some
connection to them. A connection that led to him withdraw-
ing from the Symmetrist cause after what happened. And a
connection that might have led to his death in this age."
    Srell confronted Spock. "Ambassador, are you going to let
this... this human besmirch your father's name?"
    "He has done no such thing," Spock said. "My friend has
simply pointed out a series of logical connections between
uncontested historical events. You would do well to reconsid-
er your reluctance to accept that logic."
 Srell reacted as if Spock had slapped him.
    Then four power-supply panels lit up on the engineering
board and Kirk knew the time for reflection and discussion
had passed. Somewhere in engineering, Barc had manually
reconnected all the power couplings, with the final break in
the circuit routed to this board.
    The theory was the same as in Kirk's cadet days, and he
quickly touched the standby controls on the board. "That's
impulse, environmental, gravity, and internal power," he
said.
    Spock was already pressing the controls on the deflector
board, responding to what Christine and M'Benga were doing
in their sections of the ship. "We now have navigation,
shields, sensors, and deflectors on standby," Spock reported.
    Kirk and Spock swiftly rotated to other dark stations,
placing additional systems on standby as Christine, M'Benga,
and Barc ran through the ship.
 Fifteen minutes after they had left, the commander, doctor,

and engineer scrambled up the ladder in the emergency
alcove off the bridge.
    Christine was flushed, her blond curls stuck to her fore-
head, but there was no sign of exhaustion in her. Kirk
recognized the cause of her excitement. When her ship came
to life again, so would she.
    She hurried to the ops console to check the ship's status,
gratified by what she saw. "Barcs did it again. We took less
than half the time he thought!"
    Kirk glanced at the bulky Tellarite as he stepped up to the
engineering board. "Or else he thought it would take fifteen
minutes to begin with, and multiplied by two," Kirk said
softly.
    Barc glared at Kirk and drew back his lips in a subtle
warning snarl.
    Kirk smiled as he relinquished the engineering station to
him. "Your secret's safe with me." Then he went to join
Christine.
    "All we have to do now is drop the umbilical," she said as
the main viewscreen switched on, showing the forward view
from the leading edge of the Tobias's command saucer.
    On the screen, Kirk could see two viewports in the cargo
bay wall. Beyond them, the cargo activity was unceasing,
normal. More importantly, there was no sign of security
forces conducting a search.
    "Can't we just back out?" M'Benga asked as she stood at
Kirk's side. "Why give them any warning?"
    "We might rupture the airlock," Christine explained. "Too
many people could get hurt."
    "In my day," Kirk said, "most spacedock umbilicals had
manual release locks with physical timers, so computer error
couldn't cause an accidental disconnection."
"This spacedock was built in your day," Spock said dryly.
Kirk grinned. "Then we shouldn't have a problem discon-
necting, should we, Spock?"




7
 ;z

 "I take it I have volunteered, again."
 "Some things never change. Let's go."
    As Kirk and Spock headed for the emergency ladder, Srell
joined them.
    Kirk stayed out of what he thought might become a
confrontation between Sarek's devoted defender and Sarek's
son. But Srell wasn't looking for conflict.
    "Ambassador, I would like to do something concrete to
assist us in our... escape," the young Vulcan said.
"Your help will be most appreciated," Spock replied.
Between Vulcans, that was all it took. Kirk saw that an
apology had been made and accepted. He jumped onto the
ladder, hooked his feet around the outer poles, and slid from
the bridge.
    Only when he had reached the first full deck and swung out
to the corridor did he suddenly realize he wasn't on a
Constitution-class ship. He had no idea where the umbilical
airlock was.
    Spock and Srell swung out from the alcove seconds later.
Spock instantly grasped Kirk's dilemma. Ever discreet, he
pointed helpfully down the corridor. "Starboard, outer corri-
dor, section four."
    "Thank you, Mr. Spock." Kirk began to run, the Vulcans
keeping up beside him.
    When they reached the airlock, it was open. It led to a
circular umbilical~ tunnel that extended ten meters to a
matching airlock that opened onto the cargo bay. Kirk was
pleased to see that the inner doors there, the ones that opened
directly onto the bay, were closed. Back in the impulse repair
chamber, he had looked across the cargo bay and noted the
two Vulcan guards posted at those doors. But as long as the
airlock remained closed, he wouldn't have to deal with them.
    Kirk led Srell to the edge of the Tobias's airlock. "All we
have to do is go through this tunnel, keeping low so no one
can see us through the umbilical's viewports. When we get to

the cargo-bay airlock, you close the outer doors so the cargo
bay will be sealed off behind both sets of doors, then run back
here. Spock and I will set the timers on the manual releases
and follow."
 Srell nodded, but Kirk thought his eyes were a bit too wide.
 "You do know how to close an airlock, don't you?"
    "I have undergone basic safety training on transport
ships."
 "That is adequate," Spock said.
    Spock's confidence was good enough for Kirk. He started
along the umbilical tunnel, crouching low to avoid the small
viewports that studded both sides every two meters.
    At the cargo-bay airlock, Kirk and Spock positioned them-
selves at the manual release levers that physically clamped the
umbilical collar to the airlock. Srell continued inside.
    "Press the control, then run," Kirk reminded him. "You'll
have..." He looked at Spock.
 "Fifteen seconds," Spock said.
 Srell nodded. He pressed the control.
 And the inner doors began to open.
    "Get out!" Kirk shouted as a small gust of wind blew
through the tunnel and the atmospheric pressure between the
cargo bay and the Tobias equalized.
    He ran into the airlock just as the two Vulcan guards
appeared between the still opening doors. A Vulcan green
warning light flashed overhead to indicate the umbilical was
open at both ends.
    Kirk pushed Srell back as he hit the Close controls for both
sets of doors.
 A Vulcan guard grabbed him.
    Kirk whirled around and kicked out, hard, connecting with
the guard's chest, sending him into the airlock wall. Both sets
of doors began sliding shut. Fifteen seconds left.
    The second guard swung at Kirk. Kirk ducked. As he came
up ready to swing back, the second guard's body was already




crumpling to the floor, Spock's fingers pressing on the key
nerve points in his shoulder.
    "I'm sorry!" Srell said, revealing far too much emotion. "I
activated the incorrect controls."
    "Don't apologize!" Kirk told him. Ten seconds left. He
pointed toward the tunnel. "Move/"
    Kirk and Spock rushed through the half-closed doors to the
umbilical. Eight seconds. But two meters into it, Kirk realized
he couldn't hear Srell behind them.
 Together, Kirk and Spock turned to see--
 mSrell still in the airlock, in the grip of the first guard.
 And the first guard had a phaser.
 Small, green gleaming metal.
 Ten centimeters from Srell's chest.
 Five seconds.
 "No!" Spock said.
 He started forward.
    Kirk grabbed Spock's arm, pulled him back. "Get to the
ship!"
    Srell looked out at them, the doors almost closed. Three
seconds.
 "I'm sorry/" he cried.
    And then Srell grabbed at the phaser as if to push it away
and the weapon discharged. A bolt of blue phased energy
blasted Srell's chest. His eyes glowed. A gout of green blood
burst from his mouth and he flew back from the guard's grip
against the wall as--
Zero seconds. The airlock doors shut and sealed.
"Srelllll/" Spock's shocked cry sounded human.
"Spock, no! We have to get back! We've set the timers!"
Spock looked at Kirk in crazed despair. In all their years of
friendship, Kirk had never seen Spock so disturbed, even
when Spock had been in the violent throes of the Plak-tow,
the Vulcan blood fever.

    Kirk heard the hiss of the first umbilical collar releasing. He
yanked Spock forward by his robe. "Run!"
    But it was Kirk who did the running, dragging Spock who
stumbled behind him.
 Five meters from the Tobias, the second release hissed.
 At three meters, the ship's umbilical detached.
    At two meters, a hurricane blasted Kirk as the Tobias
decompressed.
 He nearly fell, sucked into vacuum.
 Spock nearly tumbled back and out of his grip.
 But Kirk had not come this far to fail.
    He defied the raging wall of wind that tore at him. Step
by step he leaned against it, pulling Spock with him until he
could push his friend through the outer doors of the Tobias's
airlock and stagger through himselfi
    He braced himself on the airlock frame and used every
ounce of strength he had to lift his arm against the howling
wind to press the airlock control.
     He heard the pressure sirens wailing in the Tobias, almost
inaudible above the raging storm.
 But the doors began to close.
 The wind diminished.
    The umbilical tunnel deflated behind him and already he
could see that the Tobias had begun to drift away from the
cargo-bay wall.
    Then the airlock door thunked shut and the rush of air
ended.
     And beneath the mad howl of the sirens, Kirk heard a
sound he had never heard before. Spock weeping.
    Kirk drew his old friend near, knowing too well the burden
of guilt Spock felt, but not comprehending how it had so
thoroughly shattered his Vulcan training.
 He slammed his hand against the airlock corem panel.




    He was tired of death. Tired of the price that had to be
paid.
 He was beginning to understand what Kodos had felt.
 What Kodos had meant about being tired.
 And it frightened him.
 "Kirk to bridge," he said. "Get us the hell out of here .... "

THIRTY-ONE

There was pandemonium in the observation lounge of the
Enterprise-E. Half the starship commanders were on their
feet, arguing with each other or trying to get Picard's atten-
tion. But it was Representative Solok's resonant voice that
rose above the confusion.
 "That cannot possibly be the James T. Kirk."
    Again Riker resisted the urge to laugh. "Oh, yes, it can be,"
he said.
    It had been two years since Riker had last seen Kirk, a
traveler out of time. Afterward, the Borg homeworld had
been devastated; at Starbase 324, the engineers responsible
for devising anti-Borg weaponry were now closing in on a new
understanding of the secrets of the Borg transwarp drive; and
an alarmingly unexpected alliance between the Borg and
renegade Romulans had been totally defeated. All because of
James T. Kirk, a man who had died twice. At least, twice that
history knew of.
    "It appears you were right, Number One," Picard said from
the virtual viewscreen.
    It took a moment for Riker to understand what his captain
meant. Then he remembered: Two years ago on the bridge of




a Defiant-class starship that had unofficially been christened
the Enterprise, he'd watched a pyre of destruction erupt from
the Borg homeworld. At the time, he'd been certain that the
spectacular fountain of flame was Kirk's final, fitting me-
morial.
    But beside him on that bridge, he also remembered seeing
the expression on Ambassador Spock's face. It told him that
Spock did not believe that Kirk was dead.
    Riker had shared his observation with Picard. Somehow,
the captain had understood what Riker could only suspect.
The mindmeld Picard had undergone with both Kirk and
Spock at the same time had left him with a deeper sense of
Kirk's fate. Something to do with an echo of Kirk's mind that
told Picard that Kirk had always known how he would die.
The Borg homeworld was not the time, and not the place.
"There are always possibilities," Picard had said.
    "We both were right," Riker now told Picard. He raised his
voice to be heard over the other conversations in the observa-
tion lounge. "Along with Ambassador Spock."
    "Captain Picard, the government of Vulcan demands an
explanation," Solok said.
    "I wish I had one to give you," Picard answered. "But
believe me, Representative, I have no more explanation for
Kirk's presence on that ship than you have for Spoek's."
Picard reached down to touch a control out of the scanner's
view. "Magistrate,'.' he asked, "what is the disposition of the
people you took into custody?"
    On the viewscreen, the unlikely image of Kirk in Starfleet's
latest uniform rippled away, to be replaced by the stern
magistrate.
    "Spock, his aide, and the crew of the Tobias were placed in
detention cells awaiting Starfleet's response to this office's
request for investigation."
    Riker looked up at Picard and saw in his captain the same
amused skepticism he felt himself.

     "Magistrate," Riker asked, "how long ago did you place
Kirk and Spock in detention?" "Two point three hours."
    Riker gave her a smile of commiseration. "Magistrate, if
you check your detention cells, I believe you'll find you've
had a breakout." "Impossible."
 Riker shrugged. "Not if history is to be our guide."
    A green light suddenly began flashing beneath the magis-
trate's face. She looked down and Riker saw the unmistakable
hallmark of Vulcan surprise--a slowly raised eyebrow.
 Then Riker's corem badge chirped.
 "Bridge to Commander Riker." It was Lieutenant Rolk.
 "Riker here."
    "Sir, we've received a distress call from a civilian space-
dock. The impounded Starfleet vessel . .. it seems it's being
stolen."
     Riker kept his eyes fixed on Solok, trying with difficulty not
to gloat. "I take it you're referring to the Tobias?" "Aye, sir."
    Riker addressed the senior representative. "That would be
the ship on which Kirk and Spock arrived." He looked at the
magistrate. "Are your prisoners in their cells, Magistrate?"
    The magistrate folded her hands inside her robes and took
on an air of unnatural calm. "We appear to have suffered a
systems malfunction. That is the only explanation."
    "Don't bet on it," Riker said softly. "Captain Picard,
should we intercept the TobiasT"
    "Take us to the spacedock, Number One, and have Rolk
open communications."
    Riker got up and gestured to Data. "Mr. Data, please take
over."
    Data glanced around the observation deck. Noisy confu-
sion still reigned. "Of course, sir. But take over what?"
 "You'll think of something." Then Riker hurried out to the




bridge. Behind him, above the excited babble, he was glad to
hear Representative Solok's sonorous voice cut off in midsen-
tence as the observation lounge doors slid shut.
    "Helm, take us to the spacedock," Riker said as he took the
center chair. He touched a comm switch on its ann. "Coun-
selor Troi, Commander La Forge, to the bridge."
    On the main screen, the scarlet arc of Vulcan rolled beneath
them as the Enterprise changed orbits. By the time the
turbolift doors opened and Troi and La Forge arrived, the
impressive, elongated mushroom shape of the spacedock was
already coming into view.
 *'Where is the Tobias?" Riker asked.
    Behind him, at the security station, Rolk said, "Still within
the main enclosure, sir. Traffic control reports spacedock
doors are closed and locked." "Not for long," Riker said.
    Deanna Troi slipped into the chair to Riker's left. "Are we
transferring crew to the Tobias for the search?" she asked.
    "The Tobias already has a crew." Riker watched for Troi's
reaction to what he said next. "It includes Ambassador Spock
and James T. Kirk."
    Her mouth opened in shock. "Will... you're joking.
Aren't you?"
    "You should have seen the look on the Vulcan representa-
tives' faces when they saw him."
    La Forge stood beside Riker, watching the spacedock grow
on the screen. "Kirk and Spoek back together? Now, this I've
got to see." Then he looked down at Riker. "But you didn't
call me up here to watch, did you?"
    Riker shook his head. "This is the situation. Almost three
hours ago, Kirk, Spock, a Vulcan aide, and three members of
the Tobias's crew were placed in detention cells. They've
escaped--"
 "That's a surprise," La Forge joked.

    "--reclaimed their ship," Riker continued, "and are now
attempting to leave the spacedock."
"Do we have any idea what they're after?" Troi asked.
"That's what the captain would like us to find out." Riker
shifted in his chair to look behind him. "Rolk, put the captain
on the corner of the screen, and keep feeding our main sensor
view to the Galileo." He turned back to La Forge. "Geordi,
the spacedock doors are closed, but I have no doubt that Kirk
will get the Tobias out. When she's clear, I want you ready to
stop her with absolutely minimal damage."
    "You've got it, Commander." La Forge moved forward to
replace the ensign filling in for Data at ops.
    On the screen, the visual feed from the Galileo appeared in
the upper right-hand corner. Both Picard and Beverly were
there.
    "I trust you've reached the same conclusion I have?"
Picard asked Riker.
    "Sarek was the leader of the Symmetrists, and Sarek's son
is now present on Vulcan under unusual circumstances,"
Riker said. "I'd say that's four mysteries to deal with, which
means they're all connected."
    "The only wild card is Kirk," Picard agreed. "But if he's
involved with Spock, I'm certain he can only be a benefit to
what we must do."
    Beside Riker, Troi leaned forward. "Captain, I think we
should remember that the last time we encountered Kirk, he
was infused with Borg nanites. There's no way to predict what
his condition is today."
    Suddenly, the bridge was sharply illuminated by a web of
flickering energy discharges arcing from a section of the
spacedock's outer hull. As the discharge faded, Riker saw two
massive doors begin to slide open.
    "Stand by, Mr. La Forge. I believe Kirk is right on
schedule."




    Rolk cleared her throat behind Riker. "Sir, spacedock is
reporting a power surge in all their computer controls. The
doors are opening in response to an outside signal."
    "I'11 bet they are," Riker said. "Helm, head in to block the
Tobias, hold at five hundred meters and dip our bow. I'd like
the people on that ship to know who they're dealing with."
    On the viewscreen, the Tobias eased out from the space-
dock doors, probably at the exact instant the doors were open
wide enough to allow her to pass, Riker guessed. If Kirk was
known for anything, it was his timing. Then the image of the
small science vessel grew to fill the screen as the Enterprise
moved into the path of the Tobias.
    The observation lounge doors opened again. Riker was
pleased to hear that the sounds of heated argument had
diminished to a less-confrontational murmur. Riker saw Data
leading the three Vulcan representatives to the side of the
bridge. Then Data approached Riker.
    "I am sorry," the android explained, "but the Vulcans are
within their rights to insist on monitoring Starfleet activity in
their system."
    "That's all right," Riker said. "I guarantee they'll find this
interesting."
    "Commander," La Forge reported from ops, "the Tobias's
warp core is powering up. She'll have warp in... ninety
seconds."
    Riker stood up from the center chair and faced the screen.
"Open hailing frequencies, Lieutenant Rolk, and patch
through the captain."
 "Aye, sir," Rolk replied. "Going to visual."
    Riker smiled with anticipation. He wished he were in a
position to see the Vulcans' faces this time. Because, as the
Vulcans might agree, Riker was certain the next ninety
seconds should be... fascinating.

THIRTY-TWO

Kirk and Spock stepped onto the bridge of the Tobias just as
she cleared the spacedock doors.
    Christine MacDonald was in the command chair, Barc at
the helm, M'Benga at ops. Kirk supposed he should go to the
engineering station, to make certain the warp-core power-up
was proceeding correctly. But he didn't want to leave Spock.
His friend looked dazed. The death of Srell clearly weighed
heavily upon him.
    Barc glanced back at Kirk. "I wouldn't have believed it, but
that override command sequence worked," the Tellafire
engineer said. "Once I updated it, of course."
    "A little trick I learned from one of your colleagues," Kirk
said. He helped Spock to a chair at one of the science stations.
    "Ninety seconds to warp," Bare announced. "We could be
using a heading sometime soon."
     Kirk took a final concerned look at Spook, then went to the
helm, just as a huge white disk swept up on the main screen.
 A collision alert siren roared.
 "Full shields!" Christine ordered. "All stop!"
    Kirk grabbed the back of Barc's chair as the bridge lurched.
Then he saw the name and number erablazoned on the disk.




    "The E?" he said. "What's wrong? Has Starfleet run out of
names?"
    "It's the new one," Christine said from behind him. "The
tradition continues."
    Then the image of the Enterprise cut out, to be replaced by
a familiar face.
 "Jean-Luc," Kirk said with a wary grin, "what a surprise."
    On the screen, Picard returned the smile, a bit too warmly.
"Jim, a pleasure as always."
    Kirk nudged Barc aside and slipped into the helm position.
'Td love to talk, but we are running late. I don't suppose
you'd like to move out of our way?"
    Kirk checked his board, saw the distance to the Enterprise,
gave a nudge to the stationkeeping thrusters to give the Tobias
just a few meters per second of relative forward motion.
    "Talking sounds like a grand idea," Picard said. "Why
don't you come aboard, and we can... catch up on old
times?"
    Kirk shot a quick glance toward M'Benga's ops board. A
display of the Enterprise's online defenses showed that her
shields were set for low-risk orbital navigation, holding steady
at ten meters from the hull. She was not expecting any
trouble. Always a good sign for the other side. The Tobias kept drifting forward.
    "Jcan-Luc, trust me. We don't have the time. The Federa-
tion doesn't have the time."
    The ships were three hundred meters apart. Two ninety.
Two eighty.
 "I believe we can help you," Picard said.
    Kirk saw with satisfaction that the Enterprise was now
drifting back as well. The larger ship was taking measures to
avoid collision, probably assuming that with only a handful
of people on board, the Tobias was not under full control.
 "Help us do what?"

    Picard's polite smile vanished. Kirk saw that a line had
been crossed. "You are not the only one who is running out of
time. You are here because of events involving the Sym-
metrists. Yes? Or no?"
    Kirk was aware of Spook moving to stand behind him.
With the Enterprise backing off to match the Tobias's forward
drift, the ships were holding at 285 meters separation.
"What do you know of the Symmetrists?" Spock asked.
Picard's expression became even more serious. "Ambassa-
dor Spock, I am truly sorry we meet again under these
circumstances. I regret even more to inform you that in
investigating the spread of the virogen, I am forced to
conclude that its spread is the result of a deliberate attack on
the Federation, and that your father was a part of the
organization responsible. The Symmetrists."
    Kirk felt Spock's hand tighten its grip on the back of his
chair.
    "That is true," Spock acknowledged. He sounded ex-
hausted. Despairing.
    Kirk could see that Picard was hesitant, as if uncertain how
to deal with a Vulcan who appeared to be expressing his
emotions. "Ambassador, please give careful consideration to
what I am about to say. I believe the Symmetrists' base is
hidden on Vulcan. I believe that at that base we will find a
cure for the virogen. To find that cure, Starfleet must subject
Vulcan to an intensive and intrusive sensor sweep. And to do
so, we will need the permission of the Vulcan government.
Three representatives of the government are on board the
Enterprise. Will you talk to them? Will you help me do what
must be done?"
    Spock said nothing. Kirk checked the board. Warp power
would be online in thirty more seconds.
 "Put the representatives on," Kirk suggested.
  Picard vanished. Three Vulcans appeared on what was




apparently the Enterprise's bridge. Kirk recognized Com-
mander Riker and Counselor Troi standing behind them. He
took a closer look at the Vulcans. Two were familiar.
    Spock raised his hand in the traditional greeting. "Peace
and long life, Representative Solok."
    The dark-skinned Vulcan returned the salute. "And to you,
Ambassador."
    But then Spock turned his attention to the other Vulcans.
"Representative T'Pring, Representative Stonn, I bear unfor-
tunate news.'*
    T'Pring? Kirk thought. Stonn? No wonder the two Vulcans
were familiar. The woman had been Spock's betrothed. Stonn
had been her suitor. Kirk had almost been killed in hand-to-
hand combat with Spock in the machinations that had
surrounded T'Pring's new choice of husband. "Your grandchild, Srell, has died."
    Kirk half rose from the helm, then pushed himself back in
position. Srell? The grandson of the woman who was to have
been Spock's wife? Kirk had seen Spock treat the young
Vulcan as if he were his own son. Was that the reason for
Spock's unprecedented loss of self-control? Was Srell the son
Spock felt he had never had?
    Kirk suddenly thought of his own lost son, David. For all
that Kirk and Spock had shared, Kirk now wished he could
spare Spock the pain that would never lessen. Of a future
never realized.
    On the screen, both Stonn and T'Pring remained emotion-
less. "Do you carry his katra?" T'Pring asked.
    "l do not," Spock said. He lowered his eyes. "His death was
unanticipated."
 "Regrettable," Stonn said.
    That appeared to be the extent of the grandparents'
mourning.
 Kirk kept one eye on the screen as he entered a warp

heading for the Tobias. The new Enterprise was undoubtedly
faster than Christine's ship. But if he timed his next maneu-
ver properly, he was certain he could get an appreciable
head start. And if Picard was convinced he would find the
Symmetrists' base on Vulcan, then more power to him. But
Kirk already knew where that base had to be, the only logical
place it could be, and those were the coordinates he fed into
the helm.
    On the screen, Solok stepped in front of T'Pring and Storm.
Kirk noticed that in the background, Deanna Troi was
whispering something into Riker's ear. Riker looked even
more intent than usual, his attention fixed rigidly on Srell's
grandparents.
    "Ambassador," Solok said, "Captain Picard has made
troubling charges in regard to your father. He uses them as
justification for an unprecedented violation of Vulcan's secu-
rity. Can such charges be true?"
    "Regarding my father and the Symmetrists, yes," Spock
said. "I believe it was for that very reason that my father was
murdered."
    Kirk saw the barely perceptible expression of shock on
Solok's face. Stonn and T'Pring gave no reaction. But then,
neither had they responded to the news of their grandson's
death.
 "Spock," Solok said, "that cannot be possible."
"If I had time, I could relate the logic of it. But it is true."
Solok licked his lips in what was almost a gesture of
nervousness. "Is the rest of it true? Can the Symmetrists be
found on Vulcan?"
    "Some, undoubtedly," Spock said. "But not their base.
And as for a cure for the virogen, of that I have no knowl-
edge."
    The bridge scene disappeared at once, to be replaced by
Picard. Kirk suddenly wondered where exactly Picard was.




His surroundings looked more like a small flight deck than
anything else. But for whatever reason, if Picard were re.
moved from the center of the action, even longer delays in his
response were likely.
    "Ambassador," Picard said urgently. "Do you know where
the Symmetrist base is? I guarantee you the cure will be found
there!"
    "Captain Picard, I know you are an honorable man."
Kirk was surprised to hear Spock almost slur his words, as
if overcome by a sudden exhaustion. "But the truth is, I can
no longer trust the Federation. Not under present con-
ditions."
    Kirk saw the look of puzzled hesitation on Picard's face as
he assessed Spock's condition. Kirk seized the advantage.
The time was right.
    He punched the forward impulse controls and the Tobias
jumped forward.
    Instantly, the main screen blazed with the energy discharge
as the Tobias's shields impinged on the Enterprise's.
    But Christine had ordered her ship's shields set to full
power. The Enterprise's were on low.
 The physics of the situation were clear in any age.
 David beat Goliath.
    Kirk reached back to brace Spook as the Tobias pushed
through the Enterprise's navigational shields. Spock seemed
disoriented and slipped from Kirk's grasp. Then the Tobias's
own shields made violent contact with the bare hull metal of
the huge new ship, before rebounding away as the Enterprise's
shields finally responded automatically and cycled to full
power. The impact sent shudders through the small science
vessel, and Spock fell to the deck.
    By then, the Enterprise was spiraling away from the Tobias,
her crew obviously aware that any rapid respo~ to corm~
her course might lead to a collision with the spacedock.

    Onscreen, the stars, Vulcan, the Enterprise, and the space-
dock spun rapidly around a central point as the small science
vessel rolled. Adjusting for that could come later, Kirk knew.
For now, he hit the warp controls and all other objects were
gone in a heartbeat, replaced by the comforting passage of
stars seen from warp.
    As Kirk used the attitude controls to level the Tobias~
orientation, M'Benga jumped up from her chair to attend to
Spock.
 "How are we doing, Mr. Barc?" Kirk asked.
    "Warp five point eight and climbing," the Tellarite an-
swered. "We'll get you nine point two and then some."
    Kirk checked that M'Benga had Spock in hand, then faced
Christine, who still sat in her command chair, little more
than a passenger at the mercy of Kirk's maneuvers. She wore
an expression that was equal parts bemused delight and
apprehensive confusion.
 "How fast is the new Enterprise?" Kirk asked.
    "If she's still in one piece after that little trick, she's fast
enough to catch us for breakfast."
    Kirk checked the automated heading indicators. They were
on course. He got up and went to Spock. "That's if Picard
decides to chase us. He seems convinced that what he's
looking for is on Vulcan."
    "Let's get him to sickbay," M'Benga said as she took hold
of Spock's arm and helped him up from the deck. Kirk took
hold of his other arm and they guided him toward the
turbolift.
    Christine watched as the lift doors opened. "If the Enter-
prise were my ship and you did that to me, there's no way I'd
be staying around Vulcan."
    "But the Enterprise isn't your ship," Kirk said as he en-
tered the lift with Spock and M'Benga. "She's Picard's. And
he likes to look at the big picture." Kirk studied Spock.




The Vulcan hung his head as if unaware of his surround-
ings.
    "Our job's to look after our own," Kirk said. "We won't be
seeing Jean-Luc Picard anytime soon. Trust me."
    "As if I have a choice," Christine said as the doors began to
slide shut. "You haven't even told me where we're going."
    Kirk looked again at his friend. "Would it make a differ-
ence?"

THIRTY-THREE

As the collision alarms blared, Riker pushed himself up from
the deck of the bridge and ran for the helm. "Geordi! Pursuit
course! Maximum warp!"
    But La Forge slammed his fist against the console in
frustration. "No good, Commander! We've got physical dam-
age to the forward saucer!" The engineer looked at Riker in
amazement. "He actually hit us. Through the shields."
    "Can't the structural integrity field compensate until we
make repairs?" Riker asked.
    "Sure, but we can't risk warp until we've done a visual
inspection. We're stuck here for a couple of hours at least. He
knew what he was doing, all right."
    Riker threw his hands up in defeat. "He's had a hundred
and forty years to practice," he complained.
     Troi joined Riker at the helm. "Will, you were the one who
was so positive he'd escape the spacedock." "But from the Enterprise?"
    Picard appeared on the screen again. "How are our passen-
gers, Number One.'?"
    The Vulcans were on their feet, apparently unperturbed by
what had happened. Solok stepped forward.




    "Captain Picard, in light of Ambassador Spock's confirma-
tion of your charges linking his father to the Symmetrists,
logic suggests we allow your request to search Vulcan."
 "We are in agreement," Stonn added.
    Picard seemed surprised by the Vulcans' acquiescence.
"The emotional content of Spoek's confirmation was not
alarming to you?" Picard asked.
    Solok looked noncommittal. "We have seen such behavior
before, Captain. We prefer not to comment on it. If you could
beam us to our assembly, we shall begin making preparations
for your task."
    Riker had Data escort the Vulcans to the transporter room.
The individual Starfleet commanders still in the observation
lounge had their own ships beam them directly from that part
of the upper deck.
    Ten minutes after the Tobias's remarkable escape, Riker
was reduced to sitting in the command chair, tapping his
fingers, waiting for La Forge's damage-control team to certify
the Enterprise for warp travel. The Tobias, whose last speed
had been edging up to warp nine, was long gone from sensor
range. Instead of a chase, it was now going to be a search.
     Troi came over to Riker with a cup of replicatot coffee.
"Come into the observation lounge with me," she said.
 "Are you going to show me the starsT' Riker asked.
    "l believe I already have," Troi replied, then headed for the
lounge.
    When Riker and she entered, Picard and Beverly were back
on the virtual viewscreen. Riker was still not used to dealing
with the captain at such a remove.
    "The counselor told me what she reported to you about the
Vulcans' emotional response to Spock's revelations," Picard
said.
    Riker took a chair beside Troi and warmed his hands
around the coffee cup. Troi's report had been little more than

a whispered warning in his ear as the Vulcans and Spock had
conversed by viewscreen.
    "I just checked the records about that," Riker said. "There
was another emotional dynamic at work. Spock used to be, I
suppose the word is 'engaged,' to T'Pring. She chose Stonn,
instead."
    "No, there was something more present," Troi said. "I
sensed no emotions relating to any previous entanglements
between Spock, Stonn, and T'Pring. Instead, it was the
absence of emotion I felt."
    "They're Vulcans, Deanna. Of course there was an absence
of emotion."
    But Picard interrupted from the viewscreen. "No, Number
One. That's too simple an explanation for what the counselor
sensed."
    "It was Solok who reacted emotionally to the news of
Srelrs death," Troi said. "On the surface, he showed nothing,
but inside he experienced... sadness. Yet T'Pring and
Stonn, they felt nothing, Will. And I sensed that same absence
of feeling in Stron and his mate when the Enterprise con.
fronted the Bennett. They were not afraid because they knew
they had a way to escape us. And I propose that Stonn and
T'Pring felt nothing about the death of their grandson be-
cause they do not believe he's dead."
 "I don't know, Deanna. That's quite a leap."
 "Go on, Counselor," Picard said.
    "I sensed an even stronger emotional response from Solok
when Ambassador Spock began... having difficulty speak-
ing. Solok became alarmed, and again, very sad. But at the
same time, Stonn and T'Pring seemed pleased that Spock
appeared to be experiencing a problem. It was almost as if
they were expecting it."
    Riker took a sip of his coffee, giving himself a moment to
think. "I think I see part of what you're getting at. You're




suggesting that Stonn and T'Pring have information about
Srell that Solok doesn't. And if they're not surprised by
Spock's behavior, then perhaps..." He shook his head. "No.
I don't see the connection. Especially since we have been
given permission to search Vulcan."
 "This is the connection," Beverly said.
    Riker glanced up at the viewscreen and beside Picard, he
saw the doctor holding up a medical padd.
    "When Spook and the others from the Tobias were placed
in detention, they were given blood tests to determine if they
had been exposed to the virogen. Fortunately, the virogen
tests came back negative, which means Vulcan has not been
exposed, and neither has the spacedock. However, the magis-
trate was concerned by what she thought was Spock's overly
emotional behavior at the hearing. She ordered additional
tests."
 "And... ?" Riker asked.
    "Well, the only conclusive diagnostic test would be to
culture tissue from his metathalamus, but Ambassador
Spock's blood shows antibodies suggestive of the presence of
Bendii Syndrome."
Riker went on alert. "That's the disease Sarek died of."
"Officially, yes," Picard said. "But remember what Spock
told us. He said his father had been murdered because of his
connection to the Symmetrists."
    "Bendii is a disease of extreme old age," Riker said. "How
can someone be murdered by it?"
    "I'm not an expert on Vulcan medicine," Beverly an-
swered, "but I presume that measures could be taken to
introduce the pathogen directly into the victim's body."
     "And in the case of Spock," Picard continued, "I think we
have proof that that is exactly what happened." "I don't understand," Riker said.
    Beverly explained. "Bendii is very rare, and almost entirely
limited to Vulcans over the age of two hundred. Spock is a

hundred and forty-three years old. That either makes him the
youngest Bendii sufferer in the entire history of Vulcan, or a
potential murder victim, just like his father."
    Riker stared across the table at the collection of earlier
Enterprises. He picked out the simple, geometrical lines of
Kirk's ship. Spock's ship. Two of them, actually. The first,
and the A.
    "You're right. That's the connection," he said at last.
"Stonn and T'Pring are Symmetrists. They're killing Spock,
or they're at least aware of the attempt to kill him, for the
same reason Sarek was killed."
    "And," Picard concluded, "they no longer protest our
proposed search of Vulcan."
    Riker understood. They had been manipulated from the
beginning. "Which means," he said, "that what we're looking
for is obviously not on Vulcan, and they don't want us going
off anywhere where we might find it."
    "Precisely," Picard agreed. "And it is my order that we not
reveal that conclusion to any member of the Vulcan govern-
ment, or to any other member of Starfleet present in this
system."
    "You think the Symmetrists are that powerful?" Riker
asked.
    "If they have survived the centuries with the power to
infiltrate the Vulcan government, to kill her most revered
citizens in an indetectable manner, and to bring the Federa-
tion to its knees, I think they are more dangerous than any foe
we have ever faced before."
    Riker was having a hard time accepting the inescapable
conclusion. As members of the Federation, Vulcans had been
among its greatest and most valuable supporters. To now
imagine them as enemies was to see the Federation dead.
    "Kirk knows, doesn't he?" Riker asked, as he put the final
pieces of the puzzle together. The final picture was appalling.
"I believe so," Picard said. "I believe he was the one




element that Vulcan logic could not predict. The Symmetrists
conceived what they believed to be a perfect plan. Sarek's
murder, committed without a hint of suspicion, is more than
enough proof of their ability to make perfect plans that cover
every eventuality."
 "Except for one," Troi said.
    Riker straightened his shoulders. Their next move was
obvious. "Shall I lay in a pursuit course, sir?"
    "Exactly, Number One. And contact Virogen Task Force
Headquarters at Starbase Five-fifteen to let them know where
we're going. We'll need a full medical support team when we
arrive."
 "Excuse me, sir," Troi asked, "but where are we going?"
 "We follow Kirk," Picard said. "To the source."

THIRTY-FOUR

Spock sat in silence in his quarters on the Tobias. He kept the
lighting dim, the temperature Vulcan warm. At any other
time in his life, he would have meditated. But he could no longer see the point.
    What was the sense of discovering inner peace when the
universe tore itself apart in chaos all around him?
    Too late he realized that chaos was the goal he should have
sought. To fight the forces of existence with logic was to build
a fortress of reeds. The storm did not care about aesthetics.
Only about wiping the worlds clean.
    Spock put a hand up to cover his eyes. He lowered his head.
He wept.
 For Sarek. For Srell.
 And for himself.
 In time, his door announcer chimed.
     He looked up, unmindful of the tears that streaked his face.
"Come," he said, not caring who was on the other side.
 But it was Kirk.
 He carried a tray of food, though Spock wasn't hungry.
    Kirk seemed to sense that. He put the tray on a dresser at
the side of the room, pulled up a chair, sat next to his friend.




 "It wasn't your fault," Kirk said.
 "Does it matter?"
    "Sadness is one thing. Guilt is another. You have no cause
to feel guilty."
     Spock looked away. "I have no cause to feel anything. Yet I
do. I always have. And I have never understood why."
 "Spock..."
 But Spock wasn't ready to listen.
    "How much time have I wasted, Jim? I thought... l
believed I had conquered this war inside me."
    "It's not a war, Spock. You've told me yourself: It's a
balance. Harmony. You found it once. Not the harshness of
total logic. Not the... the madness of total emotion. But the
blending of the two."
    Spock looked at his friend with haunted eyes. "Have you
found it? Can it ever be found?"
    Kirk returned Spock's thoughtful gaze. Got up. Went to the
tray of food. Returned with the black base of a commercial
hoioprojector.
    Spock stared at it, bewildered. "Ki Mendrossen's confes-
sion?" As far as he knew, the holoprojector containing the
message that had shattered his life was still on Vulcan. He had
left it at his family villa.
    "M'Benga found this in one of the onboard labs," Kirk
explained. "When the peacekeepers at Tarok's estate took the
forensics team into custody, they beamed everyone back to
the Tobias, along with everything they'd collected. I suppose
the authorities didn't want to move it again until they were
certain it hadn't been contaminated."
    Spock took the black base from Kirk, turned it over. It was
the same model as the one that had contained Mendrossen's
recording.
    "The notation on this one said Srell collected it person-
ally," Kirk added.
 "I remember," Spook said. "I saw it in Tarok's sitting

room. It was on a table with... quite rare antiques. Objects
of great value. It seemed out of place." "Maybe not," Kirk said.
    Spoek didn't know what his friend meant. "You have seen
it?"
 "So should you."
    Spock hefted the base in his hand, wondering if there was
any reason he should ever care about anything again. There
was nothing this projector could do to repair his past.
Nothing it could do to restore his future. If he had the
superhuman strength required, he would have been tempted
to heave the base through the viewport and follow it gladly
into the oblivion of space. "Play it, Spock."
    Spock sighed. He'd play it. If not for himself, then for his
friend.
    He placed the holoprojector on the low table beside him,
and touched the switch.
 A shaft of rose-colored light grew from its center.
    Spock waited to see his father's image resolve from that
light. It was the only logical explanation for Kirk's insistence
that he watch the recording. But Spock was wrong.
    There was another explanation. One that had little to do
with logic.
 And everything to do with emotion.
 The figure was Amanda.
    Tears stung Spock's eyes, as once again he heard his mother
speak.
    "Oh, Spock," she said, her long-silent voice like magic to
him, "I've waited so long to tell you this, and I know your
father's right and that even after I've made this recording, it
might be years before you hear it. But you must hear it. And I
must say it. Because we... I... have not been honest with
you.




    "Just yesterday, you left for Starfleet Academy, to learn to
sail the stars. How I envy you. How proud I am of you. And
even your father, in his way, feels the same.
    "Oh, I know you're not speaking. I know that you know
why your father objects so forcefully to your joining Starfleet.
And I know all about the Vulcan traditions between fathers
and sons so I am not going to try to use this to bring you back
together. That is something only the two of you can do.
    "But there is one small part of your father's decision that
you do not know. Something you have to know. And maybe it
will help you understand.
    "Spock, I know what's gone unspoken between you and
Sarek. And I know that you especially feel that if only your
father could touch your mind, he could feel what you feel,
understand what you need and desire.
    "And I know the Vulcan pride that keeps you from asking
for that contact.
    "Believe me, Spock, it is not Vulcan pride that keeps your
father from offering you that joining of minds. He only wishes
to protect you."
    Spock looked at Kirk but Kirk pointed back to the glowing,
radiant image of Amanda. She held her hands together, above
her human heart, speaking to a son she didn't see, and now
would never see again.
    "Spock, I am going to give this recording to Uncle Tarok,
and he will see that you get it... when he thinks that enough
time has gone by." Spock understood the hesitation in his
mother's voice. For some reason, she did not intend for him
to hear her words until both she and Sarek were dead. "When
you see this, go to Tarok. He will answer all the questions I
know you'll have when you hear what I have to say."
    Amanda placed her hands at her side, glanced down, as if
preparing herself to make a confession, just like Ki Mendros-
sen. The light that formed her image sparkled through
Spock's tear-misted vision.

    "Years ago, when we were young, your father and I believed
our worlds, Vulcan and Earth and all the other planets of the
Federation, faced great danger. We were members of a group
called the Symmetrists. And you must believe me when I say
we intended no harm toward anyone. We only wished to
gather information, to make others see the unifying symme-
try of all things the way we did, and then use those insights to
solve the problems we faced, together and in peace.
    "But others, whose identities we do not know, took up our
cause without our knowledge, and corrupted our ideals,
committing hideous crimes in the name of our cause. And so
we, and Tarok, and our friends have abandoned our organiza-
tion.
    "We have done nothing wrong, Spook. But the false Sym-
metfists have. And your father is fearful that if you meld with
him, and see these secrets in his mind, then your duty as a
Starfleet officer will force you to denounce him. And your
own connection by birth to such a group could end the career
that even your father knows means so much to you.
    "Someday, I know he hopes to explain this to you himself. I
know he longs to share his mind with you as his father did
with him. But for now, he cannot. And for his sake, I ask for
your understanding and forgiveness.
 "I love you, Spook. And so does your father.
 "Never forget that. Never."
    Then, like the fading luster of a comet's tail, the rose-
colored image from the past diminished, its light swallowed
by the darkness of the room, and the years.
    Kirk and Spock sat in the dim light and the silence
together. There was no need for either to speak.
    Presently, Spock straightened in his chair, wiped the tears
from his face. When he spoke, his voice was stronger, more
assured.
    "I was eigtaeen when I joined the Academy," he said. "My
father and I did not speak again until .... "


    "The Babel Conference," Kirk said. "About the Coridan
admission. That was when I met your..."
 Kirk paused, looked into a far dark corner of the room.
 "Jim?" Spock said.
    Kirk shrugged. "That mindmeid confusion," he said. "I
know I never met your father until he came on board the
Enterprise that time. But... Spock, those dreams of your
father seem so real."
    Spock carefully took the holoprojector in his hand. "An-
swers sometimes lie in unexpected places," Spock said.
    Kirk smiled at his friend. "Then you admit that there are
answers?"
    Spock nodded. "I am afraid I have not been myself. I have
been... a burden to the mission."
    "Never," Kirk said. He hesitated again. "That's what I told
your father... ? Never forget... no! He told me to forget? I
said never?" Kirk closed his eyes, grimaced in his efforts to
remember. Spock grew concerned. Kirk stood up, held out his
hand as if to grasp an answer from the air. "There was
something your father told me, Spock. Something important.
But... what? And when?"
    Spock was glad to have something other than his own pain
to focus on. "Do you remember the context? he asked.
    Kirk's comm badge chirped. Kirk touched it, gingerly, still
becoming used to his new environment. "Kirk here."
    It was Christine. reporting from the bridge. "We're coming
up on orbit, Jim."
    "I'll be there," Kirk said. He looked at Spock. "What do
you say? One more mission?"
    Spock allowed just the hint of a smile to form, almost as if
he were himself again. "At the very least."
    Kirk touched his comm badge again. "We'll both be there,"
he said.

THIRTY-FIVE

Kirk and Spock stepped onto the bridge of the Tobias. It didn't matter that it wasn't an Enterprise.
 It didn't matter that it wasn't even Kirk's ship.
    It wasn't the machinery that was important, it was the
people. And with Spock at his side, with Christine, M'Benga,
and Barc, Kirk knew he was ready for what would come next.
 For what he knew had been waiting for him all his life.
 If only he could remember why he knew. And how...
 He stood by Christine's chair as the small disk of their
 destination grew against the stars. The last time Kirk had
 seen this world, it had been a sweep of equatorial green and
 purple vegetation with milky blue seas, bordered by bands of
 snow in the temperate zones, and wreathed in misty clouds.
    Now, except for the white of the swollen polar regions, it
was black, and brown, streaked with red, its waterways
clogged with eruptions of strange yellow formations that
resembled spreading colonies of mold.
"Coming up on standard orbit," Bare said from the helm.
Christine leaned closer to Kirk. "You're sure about this?
This planer's so far gone we didn't even have to run a Starfleet
blockade."




     "I'm sure," Kirk said as the dead world filled the screen
and scrolled beneath them. "It's where it started." Spock nodded. "And where it will end."
    "Standard orbit," Barc growled. "Welcome to Tarsus
Four."
    Christine pushed herself up from her chair, nodded at Kirk.
"You take the conn. I'll be more useful at the sensor stations."
    Kirk looked at the empty chair. "I can't," he said. He had
to put those days behind him. "I'll take the helm."
    Christine didn't argue, told Barc the conn was his, then
moved to the main science station to prepare for the first
sensor sweep. Spock joined her there, to offer assistance. Kirk
could see she was alert to Spock's change of mood.
    Kirk took his place at the helm. M'Benga was beside him at
ops. "Why here?" the doctor asked.
    Kirk's eyes stayed on the screen. He could see the outlines
of landforms and lakes and mountains he had memorized as a
child, when coming to an alien world for a summer trip from
Earth was to be the greatest adventure of his life.
    "Logic," he said. "The Symmetrists tried an experiment
here before. It worked."
    M'Benga's dark eyes flashed with outrage. "Kodos executed
four thousand innocent people on this world, and you say the
experiment 'worked'?"
    Kirk understood her reaction, but for him, the outrage of
Tarsus IV had passed into history, when he had seen Kodos
die to save Kirk's life. The executioner had been executed by
his own daughtertthe final step in the old man's efforts to
forget the past of which he had grown so tired. Outrage meant
nothing in the face of that. The memory of boyhood terror
remained. But he had nothing left to feel about Kodos the
man.
    "Because of what happened here," Kirk said, "food distri-
bution policies changed throughout the Federation. Crop
diversity was mandated to prevent another case where a

single disease organism could wipe out a colony's entire food
supply." He glanced at the doctor. "Of course, that was when
I was a teenager. By the time I graduated the Academy, those
rules had all been rewritten or forgotten."
    "So, you think the Symmetrists came back here to try
again, but on a bigger scale?" M'Benga asked.
    "I don't know," Kirk said. On the viewscreen, he saw the
main continent of Tarsus Four coming up. In the central plain
would be the main city, where the first colony had been
founded. Where the mass graves remained as a memorial, in
mute testimony to the madness that had come to this place.
"Maybe they never left. Maybe they felt they could make a
stronger point if this became one of the first worlds to be
infected by the virogen. History repeats itself. The lesson
reinforced by blood."
    "That doesn't sound like logic," M'Benga said. "It sounds
like emotion."
    "When you get right down to it," Kirk said, "there's not a
lot of difference between the two. It's just a question of
finding the proper balance."
    M'Benga eyed him skeptically. "You're the same Jim Kirk
who stole your old starship from under Starfleet's nose, risked
war with the Klingon Empire, blew up the Enterprise, and
hijacked a Bird-of-Prey to rescue Spock? And you talk about
balance?"
    Kirk saw his control boards change configuration as
Christine switched sensor control to the helm and ops. "Dr.
M'Benga, all I can say is, at the time, it seemed like the logical
thing to do."
     M'Benga had the decency to laugh. She obviously knew
when she was being set up, and understood the game.
 "Coming up on main city," Kirk said.
 M'Benga asked quietly, "Did it ever get a name?"
    "New Haven," Kirk said. "But after Kodos, they just called
it the city."




    Kirk brought the sensors online and the first returns were
depressing. Frequency of viable life-forms was less than eight
percent of the figure given in the Starfleet database from the
last planetary survey only two years ago. "No sign of any colonists," Kirk said.
    "That's probably why there was no blockade," Christine
said from her station. "The evacuation was completed."
    "You'd think they'd keep at least one ship on station," Kirk
said as he kept scanning the sensor returns. "If only to keep
Orion pirates from looting the place."
 "Acquiring main city," Spock announced.
    Kirk reassigned sensor sensitivity to search for humanoid
life and industrial installations. Both should be present if his
theory was correct.
 "Picking up sensor scatter," Spock said.
    Kirk saw it. "Looks like there's a forcefield operating in the
city."
 "No life signs," M'Benga reported.
    "Someone's got to be keeping that shield going," Christine
said. "Going for high resolution on the surrounding area.
Putting it onscreen."
    The dying continent that slowly moved below them was
replaced by a false-color enhanced image ofone small section
of the main city. The widest thoroughfares were familiar to
Kirk. They were the same ones laid out when the colony had
been founded, the same streets he had walked when he had
been a boy.
    Near the intersection of two of the largest streets, a large
amorphous shape pulsated--indicating the area protected
from sensors by forcefields.
    "Jim," Christine asked, "any idea what that installation
is?"
    Kirk frowned. "If that's the old center of town, it's about
where the Starfleet administration center was. But that was
more than a century ago."

  On the screen, a map overlay appeared, labeled: crry re. AN,
NEW HAVENs TARSUS IV.
    The Starfleet delta was positioned directly over the sensor-
opaque area.
    "Looks like it still is the Starfleet center," Christine said.
"Bones, any chance there's a team from Medical down there
we don't know about?"
  "Not without a support ship on orbit," M'Benga said.
    Christine made her decision. "Then that's it. We've found
your base, Jim. What happens next?"
    Kirk didn't have an answer right away. He hadn't expected
the base to be so easy to find. Either the Symmetrists were
overconfident, or--
    Kirk's hands flew over the helm and reconfigured the
controls for warp flight. "Brace yourselves! Get ready for--"
    The viewscreen blasted the bridge with blinding white light
as the ship screamed and spun to the starboard, throwing the
crew from their chairs.
    Kirk scrambled back to the helm as Bare squealed and
every alarm on the bridge clanged, wailed, and beeped at
once. Shadows danced crazily from all the flashing warning
and overload lights. An irregular vibration pulsed through ~he
deck.
"Damage reports!" Christine shouted over the cacophony.
The screen cleared slightly, enough to show the planet
below them, and then a golden sparkle of light appeared
and --
    The Tobias seemed to fall as artificial gravity failed in the
impact of another explosion. Kirk hooked his feet under the
console and pulled M'Benga back into position. If they got hit
again before gravity was reestablished, inertia would smash
them against the ceiling, deck, or bulkhead.
    "Bares!" Christine shouted. "Inertial control! Full gravity
now! What are they hitting us with?!"




    "Transporter mines," Spock said. "They are being beamed
directly into our path from the surface."
    This was exactly what Kirk had suddenly realized. For the
Symmetrists' base to be so obvious meant they had to have
exceptional defenses.
"Barcs! Forget the environmentals! Get us out of---"
"New mine materializing, fifty meters astern," Spock said.
Kirk braced himself, but he knew it would do no good.
When that mine went off, the Tobias would lurch forward at
hundreds of kilometers per second, while the inertia of her
crew kept each person at relative rest until the back wall of the
bridge hit them and reduced them to little more than organic
paste.
     Kirk stared at the screen, at Tarsus IV below him, knowing
it was not supposed to end this way. It didn't.
 The transporter mine didn't detonate.
    "Spock?" Kirk called as he twisted to look behind him.
"What's happening out there?"
     But Spock, anchored to the science station beside
Christine, merely pointed forward at the main screen.
 Kirk twisted back.
    Just in time to see the enormous but familiar white disk of
a starship's command saucer eclipse the screen.
    He didn't even have to wait to see the lettering on the hull
to know what ship.it was, and who commanded her.
    So much for thinking Picard would stay behind to search
Vulcan instead of following the Tobias.
    The screen flashed once, and a direct visual communica-
tions feed began.
    Jean-Luc Picard appeared, inexplicably still in his small
flight deck, but most definitely the captain in control.
    "Greetings, Tobias," Picard said with a smile. "I was
wondering if we might offer you the services of a slightly
larger vessel?"

    Kirk hit the comm switch on his console. "Just so there're
no misunderstandings, we have a mission to perform here.
And you're not taking us back until we're done."
    "I don't think you're in a particularly strong position for
stating your terms, Jim, but we have no intention of taking
you back. In fact, since we both have missions here, perhaps
we could work together, instead of trying to ram each other
out of space?"
    Kirk slowly settled back into his chair as Barc brought the
gravity online again. He could only guess that the Enterprise's
shields or firepower or both were keeping them protected
from the transporter mines.
 "What, exactly, is your mission?" Kirk asked.
    "You're here for the Symmetrists," Picard said. "We're
here for the virogen cure. And as far as our sensors are
concerned, we'll find both directly below us."
 "You've got yourself a partner," Kirk said.
 Picard smiled. "You're welcome."




THIRTY-SIX

Beneath the dark clouds that covered the main city, the Great
Seal of the Federation was fifteen meters across, carved from
the distinctive bluestone of Tarsus IV, and inlaid with a
mosaic pattern of minerals from each of the fifty-two worlds
who were members at the time it was dedicated.
    As a teenager, Kirk had stared up in awe at the monument
outside the Starfleet administration building. But now the
seal was cracked, the top third fallen off, most of the mosaic
stones missing. Like the Federation it represented, the monu-
ment was crumbling in the aftermath of the virogen.
    Kirk materialized before that monument, still in his new
Starfleet uniform, though now with a jacket and a hand
phaser. Spock, Christine, Barc, and M'Benga resolved beside
him. Barc and Christine carried phaser rifles. M'Benga a
hand phaser and a medical field kit.
    Kirk studied the cracked seal for a moment, but quickly
dismissed it as a mere symbol. Throughout history, people
had been obsessed with creating similar icons, imbuing them
with power, rallying around them, going to war for them. But
not Kirk. There had been other symbols in the past, there
would be new ones in the future. The Great Seal of the

Federation was not the reason he and the others were here
today. The ideals from which those symbols arose were far
more important.
    Kirk leaned out from behind the decaying monument and
checked the state of the Starfleet installation beyond.
    A domed forcefield rippled around it, enclosing it safely
and completely, impenetrable to everything except limited
wavelengths of visible light.
    Kirk tapped his comm badge. He was beginning to appreci-
ate how convenient this type of communicator was. "Kirk
here. The buildings inside the forcefield appear to be intact."
Riker's voice responded. "Can you see any guards?"
    "None visible," Kirk said. He glanced around at the rest of
what he could see of the main city. Burned-out buildings,
crashed flyers, signs of looting. Scans from orbit had failed to
pick up a single life-form in the ruins larger than a rat. He
thought of Chat and Teilani. "I don't think there's anything
left to guard."
    "They've got to know we're coming," Christine said as she
slipped in beside him. "They targeted the Tobias precisely, so
they must have seen the Enterprise."
    "Commander MacDonald's right," Kirk said as he touched
his corem badge. "If the Symmetrists have guards at this
installation, then they'll all be inside, waiting for us."
    "Then let's not keep them waiting," Riker replied. "Stand
by. Enterprise out."
    A moment later, two new columns of transporter energy
appeared by Kirk's team. They resolved into Picard and
Beverly Crusher.
    "Nice of you to drop in," Kirk said. "But I thought starship
captains were supposed to mind the store these days."
    Picard looked around, his grip on his phaser rifle almost
casual, as if he did this every day. "Beverly and I have already
been exposed to the virogen, which makes us perfect volun-
teers for this mission."




    "I hate to disappoint you," M'Benga said, "but I can
eliminate the virogen from animal carriers."
    Beverly looked at M'Benga in delight. "Dried trannin
leaves?"
 M'Benga returned the smile. "You read my report?"
    The two doctors excitedly introduced themselves to each
other, shook hands. "Medical's already sent out the replicator
programs for your compound," Beverly said. "It's a brilliant
piece of work. And how fortunate that Klingon folk healer
was on your world."
    "Klingon... folk healer?" M'Benga repeated. She glanced
at Kirk. He shook his head, not wanting the attention. "Right.
A real mystery man. Never did catch his name."
    "A shame," Beverly said. Then she looked around,
saw Spock. "Ambassador, may I have a word with you,
please?"
    Spook looked surprised. "Dr. Crusher, this is hardly the
time."
    But Beverly insisted. She motioned for Spock to step away
from the others with her.
 "Is something wrong?" Kirk asked Picard.
 "A medical matter," Picard said.
    "Bendii Syndrome?" Even as he finally said those words,
Kirk hoped his suspicions were incorrect.
 Picard was impressed. "How did you know?"
    "l've known Spock for... forever. The way he's been
behaving these past few days, it hasn't been like him at all.
But I read the reports of Sarek's deathrathe official results.
The symptoms seemed the same."
    Kirk and Picard watched Spock and Beverly in whispered
conversation. "Bendii can't be confirmed without specialized
procedures," Picard said. "But blood tests suggest he has
been deliberately exposed to the same pathogen that killed
his father."

    Kirk felt a wave of inexpressible sorrow pass over him. "Is
there any chance of a cure?"
    "It might not even be Bendii, Jim Just a poison that
mimics its effects."
  "Any idea how he was exposed?"
  "Not yet."
  Beverly gave Spock an injection from a hypospray.
    "That will help him maintain control," Picard said. "For a
little while at least."
    Spock returned to the group, his face revealing nothing of
his conversation with the doctor.
    Kirk allowed his friend his privacy. "What now?" he asked
Picard.
    "Now, my first officer and my engineer will show off a new
technique they're quite proud of."
    "A new technique for what?" Kirk asked. "Shouldn't we be
starting a bombardment to wear down that forcefield?"
    "Welcome to the twenty-fourth century," Picard said. Then
he tapped his comm badge. "Picard to Enterprise. You may
begin."
    Instantly the air filled with a powerful transporter harmon-
ic. Picard gestured to the others to look past the protection of
the monument at the forcefield.
    Kirk was startled to see what appeared to be an umbrella
of... cargo containers? They were materializing along the
precise boundary of the domed forcefield.
    Interference patterns formed, sending ripples of energy
disturbances across the field, so bright that the low clark
clouds were illuminated from below. Kirk squinted to bring
the scene into clearer focus.
 "Watch your eyes," Picard warned him.
    Then at least two dozen Starfleet personnel in black phaser
armor materialized within the forcefield on the dead lawn of
the administration building.




    "Punch through!" Barc snarled. The Tellarite beamed in
delighted approval. "Interference disruption and transporter
punch through! Absolutely brilliant! Not that there aren't
twenty different settings I could make to stop it from ever
happening again," he added.
    "It works best on atmospheric shields," Picard said. Then
he ducked and a moment later Kirk saw all the cargo
containers disappear, followed by a series of explosions that
covered the forcefield's surface.
    Some of the troops in phaser armor stumbled under the
force of the overhead blasts, but they were all quickly up on
their feet and running for the building.
    The surprise and the novelty of their attack had been so
unexpected that fully half of them had burst into the closest
building before the first shots of defensive phaser fire were
directed at them. There were Symmetrist guards hiding
inside.
    Picard tapped his comm badge as the last of the armored
crew dived into cover. "Picard to Enterprise. The second
team is in. No casualties."
    Kirk could hear Riker's grin in his reply. "All transporters
standing by, sir."
    Then, from far away, Kirk could hear muffled explo-
sions, the whine of phaser fire. No more than a hundred
meters away, the trQops from the Enterprise were fighting
the Symmetrist defenders--fighting and dying, and for
what?
    Kirk could almost hear Kodos's reply: Survival depends on
drastic measures ....
    Then a larger explosion rumbled through the ground. Kirk
saw the forcefield shimmer, then wink out.
 Riker's voice came from everyone's comm badges.
    "The shield is down. Third team is beaming in now. We
will transport targets out at will."

    Picard nodded at Kirk as he hefted his phaser rifle. "Right
now, minding a store doesn't seem like a bad idea."
    Kirk smiled. He suspected that he and Pieard were more
alike than either of them knew, or would admit.
    Then the transporter claimed them again and the real
battle began.




THIRTY-SEVEN

Christine's ears popped as she materialized in a dark under-
ground room, somewhere in the lower levels of the old
administration building. The blueprints from the main com-
puter libraries of the Enterprise had shown that this building
had originally been equipped with deep shelters for the city's
population. Tarsus IV was close to the Neutral Zone, and the
colony's founders had decided to be prudent.
    In the attack's planning sessions, conducted while the
crippled Tobias had been unceremoniously towed from orbit
by two of the Enterprise's shuttles, Speck had reasoned that
the underground shelter complex would be the perfect setting
for the antivirogen installation Picard expected to find. Thus,
Picard's team had been chosen for the deepest penetration
into enemy territory.
    Christine swung her phaser rifle up to cover the area as
Kirk and Picard, Speck and Bare, and the two doctors took
form beside her. Crusher and M'Benga were crucial to this
part of the operation. Both Kirk and Speck agreed that the
Symmetrists would have outfitted their installation with self-
destruer charges. The two doctors would be responsible for
locating and isolating samples of the antivirogen before those

charges could be detonated. Picard and the others would be
responsible for getting everyone out alive.
    An explosion rumbled from somewhere many levels over-
head.
 "Was that a phaser hit?" M'Benga asked nervously.
    Picard shook his head. "An explosive. And my people
aren't carrying any."
    Christine understood what that meant. Kirk and Speck had
been right about the self-destruct charges, and they were
already being activated.
    "The Symmetrists are fanatics," Picard reminded every-
one. A second explosion thundered from far away. "If they're
destroying this installation, they'll do it methodically, wheth-
er they feel they can escape or not. We only have a few
minutes at most."
    Dr. Crusher moved her medical tricorder back and forth,
then pointed toward a narrow doorway in a distant corner.
"Diffuse life signs," she said. "Plant-based. Maybe in a
growth medium."
    Picard motioned ahead with his rifle, exchanged a tight
smile with Kirk. Together, they ran to the doorway. Speck ran
with them.
    Despite the gravity of the situation, Christine had to fight
down a sudden rush of elation. She was on a mission with
Kirk and Speck, and Picard. The Symmetrists, however
fanatical, didn't have a chance.
    Another explosion shook the floor. This one was closer.
Christine told Crusher and M'Benga to run ahead, she'd
follow with Bare.
    "Feels like we're making history, doesn't it?" she asked the
engineer as she ran beside him.
    "Rrr, I'd rather be juggling antimatter in a variable gravity
field."
    As they reached the doorway behind the others, an even
closer explosion cracked the air around them. "Careful what




you wish for, Barcs." Then she and the Tellarite ducked
through the door and ran on.
    Ahead of them, a pipe-lined corridor stretched about fifty
meters. Crusher and M'Benga used their tricorders at every
closed door on either side, but all readings indicated the
strongest life signs came from straight ahead.
    That was where the corridor opened into a large, well-lit
storage chamber, at least three stories high, with white-tiled
walls, holding five enormous, spherical white tanks ringed by
catwalks, plastered with warning placards, and attached to
diagnostic pressure displays.
    Kirk and Picard ran to opposite sides of the storage
chamber, checking each likely hiding place among the al-
coves, computer stations, and stacks of packing crates. Since
the main lighting sources were centered in the ceiling, there
were impenetrable shadows everywhere--under the tanks,
under catwalks, even on the catwalk ringing the top level of
the chamber.
    Crusher and M'Benga cautiously approached the tanks
with their tricorders. Each tank was positioned on thick metal
legs that raised it high enough for workers to walk under
it. From a protected position between two large packing
crates, Christine peered into those shadows.
    "This tank is full of virogen culture," Crusher announced
from the first tank. She read the results of her scan from her
tricorder. "This must be where they were growing it in the
first place."
 "Virogen," M'Benga confirmed at the second tank.
    Barc slung his phaser rifle over his shoulder and pulled out
his own engineering tricorder. He started scanning for explo-
sives.
    Christine peered up at the highest reaches of the chamber.
There were shadows enough in each corner of the catwalk to
hide two or three watchers, or soldiers with weapons.

    "More virogen cultures," Crusher said from beside the
third tank.
    "Dr. Crusher," Christine called out to her. "Could you
sweep those balconies for life signs?" She indicated the
shadowed areas with the barrel of her phaser rifle.
    "Certainly," Crusher said. She adjusted the setting on her
tricorder, pointed it up, and began to move it.
    Then she screamed as an orange disruptor bolt blasted her
back into one of the tank's support legs and sent her tricorder
flying.
    Instantly Kirk's and Picard's voices echoed in the chamber.
"Everyone down!"
    Christine saw where Picard fired to try and pick off
whoever shot Crusher. Christine began firing to the right and
left of Picard's target zones.
 "Over there!" Barc suddenly shouted.
    Christine saw where the Tellarite was pointing--at the
catwalk circling the fifth tank--and fired at a moving shadow
just as Picard fired again.
    But another disruptor bolt shot down and hit Barc, throw-
ing him squealing across the floor.
    Christine wheeled as Kirk leapt to cover beside her. She
was surprised to see he hadn't drawn his phaser.
    "There are two of them," he said in a low voice. "On tank
five, and on the catwalk up in that corner. M'Benga's safe
under the fourth tank. Picard's standing by in the far corner.
I'm going after Dr. Crusher and pull her under the tank for
safety. When I draw fire, you go for the one on the catwalk,
Picard goes for the one on the fifth tank."
    "When you draw fire?" Christine said. "You're not a
target!"
     "Someone has to be." He gave her his phaser. "And I can't
do this anymore." He got ready to run into the open area.
 "Jim, wait!" Christine said.
 He turned, just for a moment, to face her.




 It was now or never. She reached out for him, kissed him.
 He was startled. Pulled back. "This isn't..." he began.
 And then it was too late.
    Christine shoved the phaser rifle into his hands, pushed
him down between the packing crates, and charged out across
the chamber floor, heading for Dr. Crusher.
    She heard the crackle of a disruptor bolt hit the floor
behind her, but she kept pumping her legs and arms, never
slowing.
    Phaser whines screamed behind her, from two different
sources. She smiled, knowing that Kirk was doing some of the
shooting.
    A scream rang out, but it came from the wrong place to be
either Kirk or Picard. It had to be one of the two other
shooters. The Symmetrists.
    She dived behind a stand of pipes at the base of the third
tank and slid in beside Crusher. The doctor was conscious,
barely, and Christine jammed one arm around her and
dragged her to shelter beneath the tank.
    She blew her hair up off her forehead and peered back the
way she had run.
    Kirk was kneeling where she had left him between the
crates, phaser rifle in his hand, perfectly positioned to pick off
more attackers.
    She felt proud of herself for having outmaneuvered him.
She wondered if Kirk would forgive her the kiss.
    And then she felt the cold emitter of a disruptor dig into the
back of her neck.
"Resourceful," a familiar voice said. "For a human."
Christine turned around as a powerful hand gripped her
hair and sharply tugged her off balance to keep her from
trying anything sudden.
 But she already knew who had captured her.
 The voice belonged to Srell.

THIRTY-EIGHT

Kirk breathed heavily, from exertion, from anger, he didn't
know which.
    He could still hear the scream of the man he had shot on
the catwalk. The man who had then fallen three stories to
certain death on the chamber floor.
    But he also still tasted the unexpected softness of Chris-
tine's lips on his.
     Life and love in the face of death. The juxtaposition had
been enough to let her take him by surprise. She had changed the rules. On him.
 He didn't know whether to be angry or proud.
    He decided to think about it later. He touched his comm
badge. "Kirk to Enterprise."
    No response. He could hear the hiss of a jamming device in
operation. The Symmetrists had been thorough in the defense
of their installation.
    Then he heard another explosion roar from the corridor
that had led to this chamber. If a communicator signal
couldn't get through, he knew the Enterprise could never lock
on a transporter beam. From the sounds of the explosions, all




the exits were being shut down, so there would be no physical
way out, either.
  He tapped the comm badge again. "Kirk to Picard."
    "Go ahead," Picard answered. The communicators still
worked over short distances.
    "I picked off the one on the catwalk." There was no pride in
Kirk's voice. He had merely done his job.
"The one on the tank didn't show himself," Picard said.
Kirk was relieved that Picard didn't ask why Christine, and
not he, had made the run to Beverly. "Do you think he might
have left the chamber?" Kirk asked. "There's one way to find out."
    Kirk knew what Picard had in mind. Another run across
the chamber to draw a sniper,s fire. But then the loudest blast
yet detonated on the level three stories directly overhead.
Tiles and chunks of extruded silicon rained down from the
ceiling. Overhead pipes burst and water sprayed in one
comer, gushing forth and splashing like a waterfall.
    Kirk checked on Barc. The Tellarite was unmoving in the
center of the chamber floor, but he hadn't been hit by any
debris.
    A new voice came from Kirk's corem badge. "Spock here.
If the explosions we have been experiencing are following the
pattern I have discerned, then the next sequence will begin on
the level directly above us. And the sequence after that, on
this level."
 "Do you have a suggestion, Mr. SpockT' Picard asked.
 "To proceed with dispatch, Captain Picard."
    Kirk laughed silently. If Spock wasn't careful he might
become a comedian in his old age.
    Then Kirk's laughter froze as he saw Christine stumble out
from beneath the third tank, a dark figure holding a disruptor
to her head. When the figure spoke, Kirk's heart froze as well.
    "Kirk! The rest of you! Reveal yourselves or the command-
er loses her head!"

    Kirk didn't stop to think. He was on his feet at once,
striding forward, ready to use the weapon in his hand, ready
to use his hands alone if he had to, to rip out Srell's throat.
 "That's close enough, Kirk. Drop the phaser."
    Christine gasped as the young Vulcan jammed the disrup-
tor against the base of her skull
    Kirk threw the phaser rifle away as if it were a spear. It
clattered noisily among the debris that had fallen from the
ceiling.
 "Where is the logic in betrayal?" Kirk demanded.
     "Spock!" Srell shouted to the chainher's ceiling. "I need
your counsel!" No reply.
    "You're too exposed where you are," Kirk said, taunting
Srell. "There are at least three other weapons pointing at you
right now. Give up and you'll live."
    Srell was unimpressed by the threat. "You're not from this
time. Otherwise, you would recognize what's behind me."
Kirk saw that Srell stood close to a display panel. "So?"
"We are not dealing with the modified phaser that led you
to believe I had been killed in spacedock. If a misplaced
phaser bolt hits that panel, the tank explodes." Srell shouted
again. "Spock. t All you others, come forth now or I shall kill
the commander and Kirk."
    "Save your breath," Kirk said. "They're not coming out."
He took two more steps toward Srell. They were only three
meters apart. "This is a war. Soldiers die."
    "Without knowing the symmetry of all things, you cannot
understand the meaning of death," Srell said. He tightened
his hand on the disruptor. "But I shall be your teacher."
 Time stopped for Kirk. This time he had no doubt.
 Srell was going to fire.
 Christine was going to die.
    He started forward, knowing he could never reach her in
time.




    And then, like some dark avenging angel, Spock dropped
from the sky, from the eatwalk on the tank above them, and
landed on Srell as Srell's weapon discharged.
    As if in a low-gravity ballet, Christine spun away from
Srell's grip and the two Vulcans tumbled to the floor.
    A halo of disruptor energy shimmered endlessly through
Christine's hair, setting it ablaze.
    Then time snapped back into place. Kirk threw himself at
her and caught her in his arms as they both fell to the floor.
    He gasped as he felt a sharp crack in his ribs, but his
outstretched arms broke her fall.
 He pulled himself up, gathering her close in his arms.
 He couldn't speak as he felt how limp she was.
    He touched her face, so young, still warm. Turned her head
to see the ruin of scorched hair and charred skin that
blackened her scalp.
 But just a small part of her scalp.
 Kirk spoke her name.
 Touched her neck.
 Felt a pulse.
 Christine opened her eyes.
 Smiled at him despite the pain he knew she felt.
"... not bad for a hundred and forty..." she rasped.
He squeezed her hand, unable to speak. Then M'Benga was
beside Kirk, pushing him away. A glittering medical instru-
ment already whirring in her hand.
"She'll be okay," the doctor said. "Just give me room."
Kirk stumbled to his feet, holding his arm around his chest
where his rib had cracked. Then he saw Spock and Srell
locked in combat on the floor.
    Spock lay on his back. Srell held him down, squeezing
Spock's neck with all the ferocity of youth.
    Kirk saw Picard running forward, aiming his rifle, ready to
take his shot.
  But this wasn't Picard's fight.

    Spock was in danger. And that meant Srell belonged to
Kirk.
    Kirk charged forward and kicked at the youth's head as
hard as he could.
    The violent impact threw Srell from Spock. The young
Vulcan's body hit the floor, rolled, then lay still.
    Pieard skidded to a stop. "It's under control," Kirk said,
each breath a victory over the stabbing pain that lanced his
side. "Beverly needs you."
    Picard ran on to the Enterprise's doctor. She was sitting on
the floor under the tank, cradling her head, still shaken by the
disruptor blast she had taken.
 Kirk held out his hand to help Spock to his feet.
 Spock rose and looked at him. Eyes blank.
 "Spock, it's all right."
    But Spock shoved Kirk aside and went to Srell, lifting him
one-handed by his neck. Then Kirk watched in disbelief as
Spock struck the youth, keeping him upright by clutching the
front of his tunic, not letting him fall.
    "Spock, no!" Kirk shouted. But then he coughed weakly as
his cracked rib robbed him of breath.
    Spock's closed fist struck Srell again. One of Srell's eyes was
closed, dripping with green blood.
 Kirk caught Spock's fist to stop another blow.
 "Think what you're doing, Spook."
    Spock glared wildly at Kirk, breathing through his mouth
in spasmodic gasps. "This is what I feel," he raged.
    "It's Bendii! Picard told me! You've been poisoned. In-
fected. This isn't you!"
    Spock spoke through clenched teeth. "Dr. Crusher has
treated me. Perhaps Benalii affected me in the past. But not
now." He stared at Srell with murderous intent. "Now I am
in perfect control."
 He wrenched his fist from Kirk's grip.
 Then a gigantic explosion burst through the far wall of the




chamber at the second-story level, causing a hailstorm of
pulverized tile and shards of stone. Fire crackled along two
exposed power conduits, sending sprays of sparks to hiss in
the spreading water released from the already broken pipes.
The main lighting flared, then dimmed. Low vapor began to
form against the floor.
    Spock lost his balance in the concussion of a second blast,
releasing Srell.
    The youth fell heavily to the floor, tried to push himself up.
Could barely move.
    "Get up!" Spock spit at him. He swayed on his feet, one
arm half-raised as if ready to strike again. Both Vulcans were
near total collapse. Srell, physical. Spock, emotional.
    Srell stared up at Spock with contempt. "Kill me here.
Finish your assignment."
    Spock dropped to his knees, looked at Srell. The clipped
style of Vulcan speech returned to him. "Explain."
    Srell sneered at him, all pretense at control lost in the
primal emotions of their conflict. "You have known all
along." He coughed up green blood, spit out a clot of it on the
chamber floor. "You were manipulated, Spock. Just as you
said on Babel." "Why?"
    Srell raised a shaking hand to his swollen face. "It was so
logical. The lesson had to be taught. The ecology is weak. The
systems too complex." Srell stopped to taste the blood on his
cracked lip. "Our projections showed the Federation would
collapse on its own in less than thirty years, beyond the power
of anyone to stop. The virogen was a necessity."
    Spock's voice was deep, congested. "But the Federation is
collapsing now, precisely because of the virogen."
    "Because today, it can recover on its own. But thirty years
from now..." Srell's gaze was locked on Spock. "The fall of
a galactic civilization, Spock. Can you imagine the waste?

The horror?" Srell turned his head toward Kirk. "That is the
death you must understand! Billions! Trillions! On your
hands!"
    Kirk stood over Srell. "How can the Federation recover?"
His voice was commanding, compelling.
 "We're... we're making an antivirogen here."
    Kirk widened his eyes in shock. "You released the virogen
without having a cure?"
    Srell opened and closed his mouth like a drowning fish.
"We had a cure. But... the virogen mutated. Our cure
doesn't work. That's why we needed the alta mist. A new
mode of delivery." Srell looked up at them both, madness
growing in his eyes. "It is the symmetry of all things .... "
    Kirk felt near to collapse himself. The Symmetrists had
sought to teach the Federation a lesson about the complexity
of the environment, without first understanding that lesson
themselves.
    "Why manipulate me?" Spock asked, seeking understand-
ing of his own.
    Srell doubled up with a violent cough. Green blood bub-
bled at the corner of his lip. Kirk looked over to see M'Benga
still treating Christine. Picard was still assisting Beverly.
Medical attention for Srell would have to wait.
    "You were to test us, Spock. Your fine mind put to our use,
to find the weak parts of our plan. And I was to follow beside
you on your investigation. The dutiful student. Correcting
any errors that you found. Obscuring any clues that others
might discover. As long as we could be sure you would not
report what you found to anyone but me, the plan was
perfect. Even to the perfection of you seeing me die so I
would never be suspected of betrayal."
    "Not logical," Spock said wearily. "Eventually, I would
have to tell someone else."
 Srell shook his head. Blood dripped from his mouth to the




floor. "Mendrossen's confession. The holoprojector the
Klingon brought you. The first time you touched the switch to
play it."
"Benalii," Kirk said. "That's how you infected him."
Srell stared up at Kirk with almost an expression of
admiration. "Not exactly Bendii, Kirk, but a poison so close
that no doctor would suspect the difference."
 "Your plan was flawed from the beginning," Spock said.
    "My plan was perfect. It worked on Tarok. It worked on
Sarek. It--"
 Too late, Srell stopped, as if just realizing what he had said.
    Spock lurched forward, raised a fumbling hand for Srell's
tunic. "Explain."
    Srell tried to crawl away but couldn't escape Spock's grip.
"Sarek knew the Federation was doomed," he gasped. "More
than a century ago. His work gave our cause the scientific
basis we needed to proceed here."
 "Here?" Kirk asked. "On Tarsus Four?"
    "The lesson must be taught," Srell whispered. "If anything
is to survive, an example must be made. But Sarek denied the
logic of the fate that awaits us. He knew the time had come
for the Federation to experience its future while steps could
still be taken to avoid collapse. But he wanted to stop us."
  "What did you do?" Spock demanded.
    "I was a soldier in a muse!" Srell muttered. "There were
things to be done. Terrible things!"
    Spock raised trembling hands to reach for Srell. "What did
you do to my father??
    "I killed him.t" Srell said. "For the good of the many--Sarek
had to diet"
    Spook covered his mouth with his hand, stifling the terrible
sob that tore through him.
    But something other than anguish for his friend tore
through Kirk. Long-buried memories broke free. Finally
unleashed.

 There were things to be done. Terrible things...
 For the good of the many...
 Sarek . . .
 Here, on Tarsus IV...
    Kirk lifted Srell to his feet. He grabbed Srel!'s hand, spread
his fingers, thrust them against the katra points of his own
face.
 "Show me," Kirk said. "Show me, damn you!"
    And in fear, in terror, and, at last, in relief, Srell revealed
his final secret, and opened his mind to James T. Kirk.




THIRTY-NINE

At first in Srell's mind, there was pain.
  But Kirk knew pain. The nanites had brought him that.
  Then there was Srell's j~ar of death.
But Kirk had died. There were no mysteries there.
Confusion came next, terrifying for a Vulcan like Srell for
whom logic and order were the cornerstones of life, built on the
sand of the universe's indifference.
    But confusion was a necessary part of being human, and
Kirk knew it well. He willingly accepted all of Srel!'s youthful
failings, his pain and fear, because he had felt them all before.
    What Kirk sought in Srell's immature mind was unexpected
wisdom.
 Brought there by the touch of other minds.
 Older minds.
    With the disciplineshe had learned from Hugh and his clan
of reclaimed Borg, with the secrets culled Jkom a thousand
assimilated worlds, Kirk controlled the meld. It was not his
power that drove it, for that ability belonged only to Vulcans.
But it was Kirk's will that harnessed Srellg talent and forced it
to his own purpose.
 Kirk moved through Srel!~ thoughts like a whirlwind.

    He saw $tonn and T'Pring, knew they were secret conspira-
tors with Srell. He saw a dozen other minds he did not stop to
identify. For he only sought one.
 And he found it.
 Sarek.
    My mind to your mind, Kirk told Srell, peeling back the
layers of the youth's experience to reveal that which Kirk
sought.
    And then Kirk touched Sarek's mind again. But not for the
second time.
 For the third.
    Because the second time had been in San Francisco. And the
first had been here. On Tarsus IV. When Kirk had escaped
from Kodos only because Sarek had saved him.
    Kirk saw it all, felt it all, knew it allmevery memory that
Sarek had taken from him that night was now returned. And
Sarek's memories came with them.
    Kirk saw how Sarek had calculated the effects of disruption
in the galactic food supply.
    Kirk saw how others had taken $arek's scenarios for destruc-
tion and had chosen to demonstrate them.
    Understanding the horror of what he had wrought by acci-
dent, Sarek had risked his life and his career to brave the
Neutral Zone and lead the relief forces here. He had saved
thirteen-year-oM Jimmy Kirk on the night he had arrived. And
to insure the boy's safety, he had entered his mind to bring
forgetfulness.
  How like my son ....
    The echo of that thought was here as well, poignant,
bittersweet, brimming with emotion that Sarek couM never
express.
    That night on Tarsus I V, Sarek had touched Kirk's mind as a
father to a son, and had opened the boy's mind to the call of the
stars. And Kirk in turn had touched Sarek's mind, sharing with
him his youth, his wonder, his dreams for the future, all the




possibilities that Sarek would never touch and know in his own
son.
    Filled with understanding, slowly Kirk withdrew from the
mind of Srell, taking all that was there of Sarek and that night.
    He heard Kodos's threats again in the swirling snow. He
knew now why he had always felt that he would die alone--
because that is what Kodos had told him. He knew now why he
had always' been pursued by the dark shadow through his
dreamsmbecause that was how Kodos had chased him.
    Now, closer to the end of his life, Kirk had reached back to its
beginning, and at last seen and understood how each part fit
into the next in turn, and how the beginning had defined what
would be the end.
 That was why it had always been Sarek in his dreams.
 That was why he knew his duty now.
    The duty every Vulcan son had shared since before the
Reformation.
 Avenge me, the voice of Sarek cried.
    And so Kirk prepared to be what he had always known he
must become.
 His father ~ son.
 Avenger.

FORTY

Kirk tore Srell's hand from his face, the knowledge of what he
must do burning in his mind, and in his blood.
    Another explosion tore apart the far wall. Debris thudded
against the first tank, making its metal groan. Sparks flew,
times erupted, vapors swirled above pooling water.
 But nothing could distract Kirk, or change him from his
course.
    Srell scrambled back from his pursuer, slipping on the wet
floor. He stared up at Kirk, his eyes reflecting the chilling
knowledge that he had no secrets from him.
    Behind Kirk, Spook still knelt, trapped by the onslaught of
emotions he had denied too long, not knowing how to escape
them.
    Picard moved quickly over to Kirk and Spock, Beverly at
his side. "We have to leave. The next explosions will take out
this entire level."
    Kirk kept his eyes on Srell. "We need a sample from tank
five," he said. He had seen the purpose of this installation in
Srelrs mind. "It has the alta mist they've engineered to carry
the antivirogen."
 Picard's face lit up. "Then they do have a cure?"




    "Get the sample," Kirk said. Explanations could wait.
There was little time left. Picard and Beverly ran for tank five.
    M'Benga and Barc half-dragged Christine toward Kirk,
Spock, and Srell, through the billowing white vapor that
covered the floor. The commander of the Tobias was dazed,
but alive and on her feet. Barc listed, as if Christine were
supporting the Tellarite as much as he was supporting her.
    Kirk took M'Benga's phaser before she could think to stop
him.
 Its controls were simple.
 He set it to kill.
    Picard and Beverly returned on the run. Picard held a small
pressure cylinder from Beverly's medical kit. "We have it," he
said.
    From somewhere on this same level, a new blast made the
air snap past them like a sonic boom. When the echo died,
Kirk was aware of Picard's intense gaze, directed at the
phaser he held.
    "Kirk, whatever this man's crimes, we will need him for
questioning."
 "No," Kirk said.
 "You're a Starfleet officer!"
 "Not anymore."
 "You have a duty to the Federation!"
 But Kirk ignored him. "I've done my duty. More than
enough."
    In a lightning move, Picard grabbed Beverly's phaser from
her side and swung it up to Kirk's headm
 --just as Kirk swung his phaser to Picard.
    They froze there, eyes locked, weapons held only centime-
ters from each other's neck, so close even a stun blast would
kill, each only a finger twitch from oblivion.
    No one else in that chamber dared move. Not even as the
explosions continued, coming closer, growing louder

    "I will not allow you to kill that man," Picard said through
clenched teeth.
    Kirk's answer was equally to the point. "Then logic dictates
that I kill you first."
    Sweat glistened from each man's brow. The phasers they
held kept their aim with unshaking precision.
    "Listen to the words you're using," Picard pleaded.
"You've shared another's mind. Someone else's thoughts are
influencing you."
 "Put down the phaser, Jean-Luc."
 "You first."
 Seconds passed, with neither man so much as breathing.
    Then slowly, and deliberately, Kirk moved his phaser from
Picard to Srell. "Then kill me," he said. "If you can."
    Kirk waited then, his weapon locked on Srell. Until he
heard, as he knew he would, the slow escape of breath from
Picard. The captain of the Enterprise was an honorable man.
He couldn't kill Kirk. "Jim, please..." Picard said. But that
was all the protest he could make.
    Kirk leveled his phaser at SreU. Somehow he knew the
words he must say in an ancient Vulcan tongue he had
never studied, or even heard of. "Terr'tra stoi nu, kRen
jhal. "
 .. and so I avenge my father's death...
     But Srell threw back his head, defiant. "You forget, Kirk--
even as you looked into my mind, I looked into yours."
 Kirk's phaser wavered as his hand trembled.
    "Keep running, boy," the young Vulcan said mockingly,
echoing Sarek's words to thirteen-year-old Jimmy Kirk. "Run
as you've always run. From your past. From your failures.
From yourself."
    Another explosion, nearer, closer, louder, slammed into the
chamber. But Kirk didn't flinch. It was as if he drew strength
from its fury.




 Because, however harsh they were, however damning, he
 heard the truth in Srell's words.
    He had spent his life running. From his past. But not from
failures. He had run from what he knew lurked deep within
him, that hidden part that drove him to always find another
path, a different solution, a way to change the rules.
    Because at the heart of every confrontation he had faced,
he had known there was always one simple answer:. to release
the beast that lay in the heart of every human and let it lash
out and destroy all that was wrong.
    Destruction and chaos whirled around Kirk and for the
first time in his life, Kirk embraced it.
    Let this base be blown to dust. Let the Federation fall. Let
all the stars of all the galaxies be thrown into oblivion.
    Nothing else mattered except this time and this place. This
intersection of all the events of his life when he at last stopped
running.
    Kirk leveled his weapon at Srell and the Vulcan became
for him the focus of all that was evil in his life, in his uni-
verse.
    "Look into my mind," Kirk challenged him. "Tell me what
you see now."
    Completely unbidden, a wave of primal anticipation
erupted in Kirk as he sensed the first weakness exposed in the
youth's contemptuous Vulcan armor of superiority.
    Whatever secrets Srell had seen in Kirk's mind, he was at
last beginning to understand them, even as Kirk did. And
Kirk could see that Srell at last recognized what he had
freed.
    The Vulcan raised his hands uncertainly. "... no..." he
whispered.
    But his final word was lost to the noise of the base's
destruction. Lost to the raw fury of Kirk's unrestrained
emotions.

    Kirk thrust out the phaser before him as if it were a
thunderbolt to be hurled from the heavens.
    He shouted a cry that came from a place so deep within
that it seemed to stop time.
    And in that infinite instant Kirk at last threw off the final
vestiges of his outer shell and became what he had struggled
all his life to hold in check. Pure passion.
     Srell stumbled back, his eyes filled with the terror of total
understanding of what was to happen next.
 And it did.
 Kirk fired.
    And at the same instant the chamber reverberated with a
sequence of escalating explosions that caused the closest tank
to blossom like a dying flower, releasing a torrent of gelati-
nous growth medium in a solid wave that engulfed Srell even
as the phaser's beam lanced toward him.
    He vanished in the mist the phaser blasted from the thick
swirling liquid, gone forever.
    Kirk breathed deeply as time resumed for him. Whether he
had killed SreU, or the liquid had consumed him, he might
never know. But his intention had been clear. And that
unexpected knowledge was enough.
    Kirk let the phaser slip from his hand, to fall into the ankle-
deep sludge of the growth medium that flowed across the
floor, hidden by the billows of white vapor.
    From somewhere far off, he heard Picard call for the
Enterprise. This time, there was no answering hiss of a
jamming device. Riker responded.
     Then Picard's stern voice eclipsed the dying convul-
sions of the chamber and the Symmetrists' dreams. "Six to beam up," he said.
 Swept up by the ship they had all served, Kirk and his




fellows escaped destruction, just as the chamber blew apart
around them.
 But Kirk was not concerned.
 He felt... clean, free of pain and doubt.
 Sarek's death had been avenged.
 As had Kirk's life of denial.
 Even in the midst &destruction, Kirk was, at last, at peace.

FORTY-ONE

Kirk closed his eyes, and saw the flames of Tarsus IV.
 Cleansing. Purifying. Costly.
    The battle to take control of the Symmetrists' base had
been brutal. Fourteen of the Enterprise's crew had been
killed. along with fifty-two Symmetrists, half of them Vulcan.
Another eight crew members were in sickbay, in intensive
care. Only twelve Symmetrists had been captured, all so
badly wounded that they had not been able to kill themselves.
They were being treated in triage areas set up in the shuttle-
bay, under constant guard.
    Even now, a full day after the battle, the collapsed adminis-
tration buildings in the main city still burned. Kirk had seen
the conflagration only from orbit on the Enterprise% main
screen, but he could picture how those flames rose into the
night, illuminating the crumbling monument that had been
the Federation's great seal. In that image, he saw the future.
 Federation's end.
    "I've finished my preliminary report to Starfleet," Picard
said.
    Kirk opened his eyes. He had been sitting at a workstation
Beverly Crusher had set up for him in an alcove off sickbay.




Before him, he had laid out all the herbs and leaves Hugh's
people had given him when he had left their world. La Forge's
repair crew had recovered the botanicals from his quarters on
the Tobias. and he catalogued them, recording what he knew
of each, to be sure his knowledge wasn't lost. Though he knew
that all anyone was interested in were the trannin leaves that
had saved Teilani and the children of Chal.
    Picard stood in the alcove entrance, still waiting for Kirk's
reply. Behind him, at least twenty medical personnel worked
at consoles and lab tables. A few were from the Enterprise.
But most were specialists who had come in the emergency
flotilla launched from Starbase 515. More medical vessels
were arriving every hour as word of what had happened here
spread through the stars.
    "It will be a useful addendum to the reports we've received
from Vulcan. Stonn and T'Pring have been arrested. They
have confessed to the Symmetrists' complicity in Sarek's
murder, as well as Tarok's. And they have named other
members of the movement. Apparently, now that their plan
has failed, they are eager to explain the... logic of their
beliefs."
    Picard held Kirk's gaze for a moment, as if deciding how he
should continue. "My report states that Srell died when the
tank burst," Picard said.
 "That's not what killed him. I did."
    "You can't know that for certain. The tank burst. Srell's
body was swept away intact."
    "It doesn't matter," Kirk said. "I fired the phaser. l wanted
him to die."
    Picard glanced over his shoulder, as if to check that no one
in the work area behind him could hear what he said. He
stepped into Kirk's alcove.
    "I've read your biographies, Jim. I've worked with you. On
Veridian Three. The Borg homeworld. Now Tarsus Four. And

everything I've learned about you tells me that if what you say
happened is true, then it was an aberration. A shookwave
from an explosion made you reflexively press the firing stud.
Or you weren't aware that the weapon was set to kilL"
    Picard was grasping at straws. Kirk knew it. He could see
that Picard knew it as well.
 "People change, Jean-Luc."
 "Rarely so profoundly."
    Kirk rested an elbow on the work surface, rubbed his face
with his hand. How could a life like his be explained in a
handful of words? "You're right. I take it back." Picard looked intrigued by that admission.
    "People don't change." He remembered what Kodos had
told him, alone on the Enterprise. His Enterprise. "But after
enough time has passed. After they've seen enough of the
atrocities that make up our civilization .... they become
tired, Jean-Luc. Impatient. And as I've grown older, I've
found that... I no longer want to wait for the things that are
important in life."
    "Why would that young man's death have been important
to you? For honor?"
    "For vengeance," Kirk said, though he could see that
Picard didn't understand the emotional wellsprings from
which that answer had come. At least, not yet.
    "Some people," Picard said, "would argue that a civilized
society has no place for vengeance."
    "And while those people argue, civilizations fall. I don't
have the patience for arguing anymore. Time is the ultimate
nonrenewable resource, and we are rapidly running out of it."
    Kirk could see that Picard wanted to question him further,
but Spock stepped up behind him, disturbing the moment.
    Like Kirk, Spook had returned to his civilian garb, setting
aside his ambassadorial robes. Instead, he wore an unadorned
black tunic. One sleeve had been rolled up to allow for the




small inducer pump on his forearm, through which his blood
was continually filtered.
    Beverly Crusher had finally identified the contact poison
the Symmetrists had used to mimic Bendii Syndrome. It
would take a month of treatment to cleanse Spock's system of
it, but the total length of his exposure had been limited, and
Beverly expected a full recovery, Though Kirk knew the scars
of Spock's emotional outbursts, caused by the poison that had
robbed him of his self-control, would take far more than a
month to heal.
    "Excuse me, Captain," Spock said to Picard. Then he
looked at Kirk. "Dr. M'Benga is ready for you, Jim."
    Kirk stood up, and smoothed the Vulcan trader's clothes he
once again wore. He felt their simple design was preferable to
the new uniform he had worn on the Tobias. And all the other
old uniforms he had worn in the past, as well.
    "Do you think this will be it?" Picard asked as Kirk
stepped past him.
 But Kirk had no answer. Only time would tell.

FORTY-TWO

Kirk, Spock, and Picard went to a lab off the main sickbay.
All the parts of the puzzle were laid out on the large work-
table at its center: a pressurized container of alta mist, whose
importance had been discovered only by Picard's dogged
pursuit of the mysterious destruction of the Bennett; a tray of
replicated trannin leaves brought to Starfleet's attention only
by Kirk's unexpected return; and a beaker of pure virogen
culture obtained from Tarsus IV, the planet Kirk had identi-
fied as the Symmetrists' base, a base only Picard's Enterprise
could have subdued.
    It wasn't symmetry that had brought all these elements to
this one place and time, Kirk knew. It was tapestry, the subtle
interweaving of individual threads to create a picture greater
than the whole.
    Spock brought the tray of trannin leaves to Kirk. The
Vulcan was the puzzle's final piece. For if not for Spock's
pursuit of his father's murderer, then Kirk and Picard might
never have been brought together.
    "All right, everyone," Dr. M'Benga said to Beverly Crusher
and the five other Starfleet doctors and technicians in the tab.
"Watch carefully."




    Feeling just a bit self-conscious at having to perform such a
modest task, Kirk picked up the dried leaves and began to
fold them in his fingers, feeling them crack, then crumble,
exactly as Miko had taught him on the world whose sun had
been a galactic core.
    He let the fine leaf fragments fall like coarse powder onto a
clean patch of filter mesh. After he had created a mound
about three centimeters across, he stopped.
    "See," M'Benga said. "That's the consistency we need. We
have to crack it along the leaf veins to expose the resin
compound without contaminating it with stomatic residue."
    Kirk stepped back from the lab table to let the experts go to
work with the sample he'd prepared. In principle, he knew
what M'Benga and Beverly and all of Starfleet Medical were
now working toward. The trannin compound could stop the
virogen's reproduction, but it was useful only in animals. Alta
mist was fine enough to circulate through a planet's entire
biosphere, drawing nourishment only from the air, thus not
interfering with existing food chains.
    The medical team believed that if they could somehow
insert the trannin compound into the alta-mist cells, so the
cells would generate the compound and spread it as they
reproduced, then Starfleet would have an antivirogen that
could move through plant populations as quickly as the
virogen itself, cleansing whole worlds just as the inducer
pump cleansed Spock's blood of poison.
    But thus far, no matter how precisely Kirk had prepared
the leaves, no matter how rigorously the technicians had
attempted to artificially re-create the compound's molecular
structure at a smaller scale, the two critical components Kirk
and Picard had discovered--the trannin leaves and the alta
mist--had not yet joined together.
    And with each day of failure, more systems fell prey to the
destabilizing virogen contagion and the Federation moved
another step closer to total collapse.

    Kirk watched as a technician agitated a sample tube in
which the trannin and the alta mist had been mixed. Beverly
ran her tricorder over the tube. Shook her head. Still no
progress.
    "What exactly is the problem?" Kirk finally asked. How
difficult could it be to mix two biological substances that
should have a natural affinity? Especially for twenty-fourth-
century science?
    "We have to establish a precise degree of permeability for
the membrane of the alta-mist cells," M'Benga said. "If we
leave the cell walls too rigid, the trannin compound can't
penetrate them. If we leave the walls too permeable, then the
trannin gets in, but the cell's chloroplasts and nucleii can
migrate out."
    "The frustrating aspect of it," Beverly added, "is that the
possible solutions to the problem are almost infinite. We just
can't work fast enough to try all the different variations in a
reasonable time."
    M'Benga suddenly looked over at her colleague. "Dr.
Crusher, maybe there's a way we can automate the process.
Do you have an EMH?"
    Beverly scowled. "Yes," she said, and to Kirk it sounded as
if she were confessing to a particularly embarrassing crime. "I
suppose that as long as I'm not letting it work on my patients,
I can't really complain." She sighed. "Computer, run the
EMH."
    There was a flash of light and a holographic doctor took
form beside Kirk. It looked exactly like the one he had seen
on the Tobias. "Please state the nature of your medical
emergency," the hologram said, as if even a technological
illusion had more important matters to attend to.
    Beverly and M'Benga briefed the nameless doctor on the
tasks they wanted him to perform: the rapid trial-and-error
mixing of different alta mist and trannin combinations.
 "You consider that a medical emergency?" the doctor




asked. The irritation in his voice made it clear that his
program certainly didn't recognize it as such. Not for the first
time, Kirk wondered whether personality chose profession,
or if it were the other way around.
    "The fate of the Federation may rest in the successful
completion of these experiments," M'Benga explained.
    "Well," the doctor said reluctantly, "if you put it that way."
Then he began rearranging the equipment on the lab table in
order, he said, to make his work more efficient.
    Kirk glanced over at Spook. Much of the twenty-fourth
century wasn't so very different from what he was used to.
But some of it was simply peculiar. "So where does that thing
get its personality?" Kirk asked. "What there is of it, I mean."
    "I believe it is a simulation based on its original program-
mer, augmented by a database of all the different medical
experts whose specialized knowledge and experience were
combined to produce--"
    The hologram suddenly looked across the lab table at Kirk
and Spock. "Do you two mind?" he said. 'Tm taking critical
measurements and your voices are causing minute vibra-
tions."
    Kirk gave Spocka bemused look. "Did a computer just tell
us to shut up?"
"I'm a doctor, not a computer," the hologram muttered.
Kirk thought about that response for a moment, then
walked around the talale to Beverly, ignoring the hologram's
sharp look of annoyance.
    Kirk whispered a question into Beverly's ear. She nodded
in agreement, though not understanding, then took Kirk to a
medical display screen where she called up a list of all the
medical personnel who had been modeled as expert systems
and combined to create the EMH.
    .At the display screen, Kirk scrolled through the list until he
found the one name he knew had to be there.
 He typed in a commalid tO isolate a single visual and

AVENGER

 personality subsystem from the EMH program, then turned
 to watch in satisfaction as the image of the holographic
 doctor rippled. In moments, the prickly bald doctor in the
 black and blue uniform transformed into a prickly whito-
 haired doctor in an old-fashioned wine-colored uniform...
  Medical expert Leonard H. McCoy. Age seventy.
    "Well, what the blazes are all you people just standing
around for?." the simulated McCoy groused. "We've got a
galaxy to save. As usual."
    Kirk walked back to Spock with a grin as McCoy barked
orders to doctors and technicians alike. M'Benga was as-
!~ned to clean sample tubes. Beverly measured trannin
samples. McCoy completely rearranged the lab-table equip-
ment into an ungainly, though apparently even more efficient
confi,a~'ation. 'Tin a doctor, not an interior designer," he
complained.
  Kirk saw the look of affectionate amusement in Spock's
    and the sadness. Though the Bendii poison was being
leached from his body, its emotional effects were obviously
   present.
 "Now that's what I call a simulation,, Kirk said.
 Spook agreed. "I think 1 would like to help it."
 "For old time's sake?" Kirk said.
    Spock tilted his head to one side, as if not comprehending
the question. "To save the galaxy from collapse," he said
mrm~ly.
    Kirk watched with anticipation as the simulated McCoy
looked up to see Spock. For a moment, the program paused,
as if it had just received input which it could not categorize.
 "Do I know you?" the program asked.
 In an act of pure illogic, Spock said, "Yes."
    "Well, then, haul your pointy ears over to the sterilization
unit and set up a sterile field around the alta mist. You
         have so many contaminants mixing into these
mmq01es, it's no wonder you can't get the same answer twice."




WILLIAM SHAI-NER

    Eventually, the simulated McCoy got around to ordering
Kirk to keep the table wiped down. And within the hour,
instead of facing an infinite number of possible mixing
combinations, McCoy had narrowed the possibilities to a
limited range. Instead of months of work, M'Benga said they
were now within days of a solution. If the Federation could
last that long.
    By the time another hour had passed, a medical debate had
broken out. Spock, Beverly, and the simulated McCoy were
arguing about which strategy to follow for the next round of
tests. M'Benga had removed herself from the discussionreit
was outside her area of expertise. But she reminded everyone
that because of the equipment configuration that would be
needed, choosing the wrong strategy could delay the project
by an additional day.
    "Why are you people so dead set against harming the alta
mist organism? That's what's holding you back," McC0y
said. "I say, harm the beast, but then give it the tools it n~ds
to repair itself after the trannin has been absorbed."
    Spock rose to the challenge. "The alta mist is a one-celled
plant, Doctor. It wouldn't know what to do with 'tools.'"
    "Now don't get smart with me, you green-blooded hobgob-
lin. Stop trying to force everything in such neat compart-
ments."
 "It is called logic."
    "Well, I call it a waste of time. Life has a logic of its own,
and I suggest we use it."
    Kirk was ready to wade in and break up the argument that
was paralyzing the medical team. But it was a medical matter,
and Beverly Crusher assumed the role of mediator before he
could act.
    "Dr. McCoy," she began. "Could you please explain your
approach? What do you want to do here?"
    The hologram rolled his eyes in exasperation. "I thought
you'd never ask. I simply want to exploit the existing signal

AVENGER

pathways for general defense and tissue repair in the alta mist
cells," he explained, as if it were the most obvious thing in the
universe. "We'll use elicitors: oligogalacturonide fragments of
pectin polysaccharides; the 18met peptide, systemin; and
fatty acid derivatives including jasmonic acid. The cells will
repair themselves like that!" The hologram snapped its simu-
lated fingers.
  "That's it, do it the hard way," McCoy said.
    Kirk blinked. The holographic simulation had just spoken,
but its mouth hadn't moved.
    "If you want to keep the wound repair process under
control in plants, then forget all that fancy gene expression
crap and stick to salicylic acid. Plain old aspirin."
    Kirk suddenly realized that though the holographic McCoy
was in front of him, the familiar gruff voice was coming from
behind. Kirk decided it must be an equipment failure. But
then he noticed everyone else in the lab looking behind him,
even the holographic McCoy. Kirk turned--
    --to see Admiral Leonard H. McCoy, age 146, gaping right
back at Kirk with as stunned an expression of surprise as Kirk
knew was on his own face.
    Starfleet's greatest doctor was frail, and moved with the aid
of exoskeleton braces on his legs and the support of Data's
arm. But there was no mistaking the brightness in his eyes,
and the quickness of his smile.
 "Hell. I thought you were dead, Jim."
    "I thought you'd run off with some dancing girls from
Wrigley's."
 McCoy winked. "These days, they can run faster than I
can."
    With deference and great care, Data escorted McCoy into
the lab, where the medical personnel stared at a legend in the
flesh.
 Then Kirk saw Data react to the presence of the holograph-




WILLIAM SHATNER

ic McCoy across the room. The android smiled delightedly at
Kirk. "Given the present conditions," Data said, "I think we
might say that I have on my arm the real McCoy."
    McCoy peered up at Data as he pulled his arm away. "Since
when did you get a sense of humor?"
 "Two years, two months, six days, eight hours, three--"
    "Good Lord," McCoy muttered. "And I thought Spock was
bad."
    McCoy made his way to the lab table on his own, his
exoskeleton braces humming as his legs moved with slow,
deliberate steps.
    He steadied himself against the table, then looked around
at everyone who was looking at him.
    "Well, what do you think this is? A picnic? I'm a doctor,
not a sideshow. Someone mix up an aspirin solution, get mea
chair--"
    The holographic McCoy stepped forward. "In my opinion,
the proper strategy is to elicit cell-repair functions, not
degrade them."
    "And somebody shut that damn thing off," McCoy
snapped.
    Two technicians ran toward the medical control panel and
an instant later the EMH faded from view.
    McCoy flashed a triumphant smile at Kirk. "By God, it's
good to be old.:' Then he turned to the rest of the workers.
"Well, don't just stand there--let's get this show on the
road."
 They did.
 Two hours later, Mceoy had the cure.

FORTY-THREE

In a violent and uncaring universe of chaos and uncertainty,
there were still some absolutes that were never meant to
change, and never would.
    It was with that thought that Kirk stood with Spock and
McCoy on the bridge of the Starship Enterprise. For just one
perfect moment, he heard Teilani's words, that time had no
dominion.
    But from bittersweet experience, Kirk knew that moments
had a way of passing, and that this new Enterprise belonged to
a different crew: Picard in the center chair, Riker and Troi to
either side of their captain. Data at ops, La Forge at engineer-
ing, and Beverly Crusher at the main science station.
    Kirk gazed approvingly at the new team. All at their posts,
so intent on their mission.
    As he had finally come to know from all his voyages, it had
always been the crew who had mattered most, and in this new
team he saw the best of his own.
    But then he looked to the main screen, and wondered if
even they would be worthy of the challenges that lay ahead.
    Challenges not just for them, for Starfleet, and the Federa-
tion. But for all the people of the galaxy: Earthling, Vulcan,




and Klingon alike, humanity in all its colors, shapes, and
chemistries.
    "Coming up on terminator and planetary dawn," Data
said.
    Kirk looked to his friends. Spock stood with his hands
behind his back, his expression at peace, hiding the inner
turmoil that Kirk knew still ravaged him. McCoy rested his
hands on the belt of his exoskeleton support, thoughtfully
chewing his bottom lip.
    A wash of golden light filled the bridge as the sudden flash
of the Tarsus sun lit the thin shell of its fourth planet's
atmosphere. An arc of that dying world slowly grew, glowing
in the early dawn.
 "Beginning sensor sweep," Beverly announced.
    No one spoke. Kirk didn't have to be a Betazoid to sense
the tension on the bridge.
    Three days ago, after the Enterprise had replicated enough
of McCoy's antivirogen to fill the auxiliary propellant tanks
of five terraforming runabouts, the first full-scale assault on
the Symmetrists' plan had begun.
    For twenty hours, the runabouts had circled Tarsus IV,
streaking through its stratosphere, releasing their cargo as a
fine mist.
    McCoy had said the effect would be noticeable within fifty
hours after exposure.
  If the antivirogen worked.
    On the screen, a wedge of sunlight grew across the planet's
surface as the Enterprise flew through her orbit. But the world
that light illuminated was still black and brown and dying.
    Then Kirk peered more closely at the screen. He pointed at
the lower left corner. "Spock... do you see that?"
    "Dr. Crusher," Spock said, "scan the southeast quadrant of
the landmass directly below us at full resolution, if you
would."

~? gIN ~.2EK

  "Full resolution," Beverly confirmed.
      The image on the viewscreen expanded until Kirk could see
the shadows that individual clouds cast on the ground.
 Green clouds.
 "There!" Kirk said.
  "By the mountain range!" McCoy directed.
    Beverly's voice rang through the bridge. "Sensors detect
chlorophy!lf It's pure, uncontaminated alta mist! The anti-
virogen is working!"
    As one, the bridge crew stood up from their stations and
turned to McCoy. Their applause thundered.
    "I'm getting returns from all over the southern continent,"
Beverly said, ecstatic.
    McCoy grinned proudly at Spock. "Hear that? They're
applauding me for a change."
 "Doctor," Spock replied, "I am pleased that you think so."
 Kirk cupped a hand to his ear. "Is someone applauding?"
    McCoy's grin faded as he looked back to the screen. "I liked
you both better when you were dead."
    As the crew returned to their duties with elation, Picard
joined the Enterpnse's honored guests at the side of the
bridge. He smiled broadly as he spoke.
    "Dr. McCoy, this is indeed a monumental achievement.
l've instructed Lieutenant Rolk to begin broadcasting the
antivirogen's complete replicator code on all subspace fre-
quencies, Starfleet and civilian. Even with the current com-
munications difficulties, within two weeks every affected
system in the Federation will be able to begin combating the
virogen."
    But Kirk shared none of Picard's optimism, and for good
reason. He drew Picard aside. "You mean, every system that's
maintained an operational subspace communications sys-
tem," Kirk said. "You saw what Tarsus Four was like. The city
was torn apart before the evacuation was completed. How
many other worlds are there like this one?"




    Picard dropped his smile. "We shall find them all, Jim.
Starfleet no longer needs to maintain quarantine blockades.
Our ships are free to patrol our borders, to make contact with
any world or colony that may have succumbed to .... "
    "Anarchy," Kirk said flatly. "It's what happens when the
system doesn't work."
    "But the system is working," Picard insisted. "Food sup-
plies are already arriving at their destinations. Because of
what you and Spock and McCoy have done here, we are now
able to release seed stores to agricultural centers without fear
of contamination. And with the threat of further contagion
eliminated, the unaffected sectors of the Federation can and
will reach out to those in need. Jim, you should be proud of
what you've accomplished. What we've all accomplished.
The Federation is secure."
    "For how long?" Kirk asked. "The Symmetrists did this
because they wanted to teach us a lesson. Did we learn it?"
    Contempt shaded Picard's reply. "The Symmetrists were
terrorists, not teachers. Tens of thousands have died because
of what they've done."
  "And billions more may have been saved."
    Picard's body stiffened. "Are you condoning what these
maniacs have done?!"
      "Of course not," Kirk said. "But that doesn't change the
fact that they are. right.t"  "That's absurd."
    Kirk gestured at the viewscreen. "Look at that world, Jean-
Luc!" Despite the promise represented by the small patches
of green alta mist that again floated in the air of Tarsus IV, the
world below bore the scars of ecological collapse, and would
for decades still to come. "That could have been Earth, or
Vulcan! Unless we learn our lesson, someday it will be! And
what's the Federation doing to change that future--nothing!"
     No one else on the bridge spoke. The only sound was the
 background hum of the instruments.

    Picard flushed with anger. "The Federation Council is
holding emergency sessions around the clock. At this very
moment, it is reviewing its colonization and expansion pro-
grams in order to identify and insure the integri~ of the
entire galactic ecosystem. New committees will be formed.
New studies begun."
    Kirk held out both hands to Picard. "Don't you see? That's
what they did in my age. They haven't learned, Jean-Luc.
They can't see what's coming." "And you can?"
    Kirk heard the reproach in Picard's question, and under-
stood why it was there. Kirk wasn't a scientist. He had no
special skills as an environmentalist or biologist. But he did
have the capacity to learn from those who did have the skills
and the knowledge that the future needed.
    "I can see what's coming," Kirk said, "because I've seen
through better eyes than mine. Experienced the thoughts of
better minds. Sarek saw the future. There're a hundred other
scientists throughout the Federation who know what he knew
about how much more expansion and exploration and coloni-
zation the galaxy can absorb."
    Picard stared at Kirk, and Kirk knew what he was thinking.
It was one thing for two starship commanders to have a
difference of opinion.
 But Sarek was another matter.
    "Thirty years," Kirk said. "That's it. You look at the
statistics. The growing pattern of complexity. There are other
virogens waiting out there, other environmental disruptions
that we can't even imagine because we have no real concep-
tion of our interstellar environment and our place in it.
Thirty years, and it won't be fanatics trying to teach us a
lesson. It'll be the real thing. A complete and total interplane-
tary collapse."
    Picard shook his head. "Thirty years is a long time, Jim.
Surely, someone will solve this problem before then."




    "But who?" Kirk asked softly. "I've done all I can. Now...
it's up to you."
    Picard held Kirk's gaze and did not look away. Kirk knew
the challenge had been issued and accepted.
    Picard held out his hand. Starship captain to starship
captain.
    "Somehow I feel that we will meet again," Picard said. A
truce declared, despite their differences.
    Kirk shook Picard's hand in turn. "When we do, let's hope
we're still on the same side."

    Later, Data escorted Kirk, Spock, and McCoy through the
corridors of the Enterprise, on their way to transporter room
two. In matching orbit of Tarsus IV, the newly repaired
Tobias waited to receive her passengers. Commander
Christine MacDonald had been given her orders by a grateful
Starfleet Command: She would take Kirk, Spock, and McCoy
wherever they wished to go, then return to collect the rest of
her crew on Vulcan.
    Also, in light of the result of her unauthorized mission to
Tarsus IV, questions concerning matters of disobeying orders
and outright mutiny had been set aside. A personal note
added to her orders from Admiral Strak of Vulcan, suggested
that Commander MacDonald might wish to discuss the
historical precedents for this ruling with one James T. Kirk.
    The doors to the transporter room slid open as Kirk and
the others approached. Data stepped to one side and stood at
ease. "I will wait while you say your good-byes."
 Kirk, Spock, and McCoy looked at the android.
"To whom will we say these good-byes?" Spock asked.
Data looked from Kirk to Spock. "This is the transporter
room. I assumed that after you two left, I would escort
Admiral McCoy to a shuttlecraft."
    "The hell you will," McCoy said. "I'm beaming out with
my friends."

    Data blinked in confusion. "My apologies, Admiral. But I
recall that you do not like the transporter as a mode of
transportation."
    "Hell, son. At my age, if my molecules get scrambled it can
only be an improvement."
    McCoy laughed. Spock frowned. Kirk shrugged at the
android. "I can't take them anywhere," he said.
 The three friends started into the transporter room.
 But then McCoy stopped and turned back to Data.
    "Son, you remember what I told you when you headed out
on that last ship of yours?" he asked.
     "I do, sir," Data replied. "You specifically told me to
remember what you said." "Well?"
    "You said, 'You treat her like a lady. She'll always bring you
home.'"
    McCoy gave Data a cautioning look. "You keep remember-
ing that, son. And take care of this one for a change, all
right?"
 Kirk smiled at the android's bemused expression.
 "C'mon, Bones," he said. "It's time to go home."




FORTY-FOUR

 Mount Seleya beckoned, and this time Kirk heard her call.
    He stood with Spock and McCoy on the windswept moun-
taintop, the crimson Vulcan sunset bathing them in the alien
color of human blood, human passion.
    In the distance, they could see the sprawling temple in
which Spock had been returned to life so long ago, his katra
rejoined to his reborn body.
  But the temple was not their destination this night.
    Instead, they stood before the fal-lan-tral--the Passage of
All Mysteries.
    A worn path paved with ancient blocks of dusty red stone
led up to the opening of a cave in the mountain's side.
Within, in a labyrinth of hand-carved tunnels and passage-
ways which none but Vulcan eyes had ever seen, waited the
tral katra--the keepers of the spirits of the past.
    The secret of the tral katra had never been revealed to
outworlders. Some rumors said they were enormous crystals
which held the wisdom of the Vulcan departed. Others
claimed the tral katra were Vulcan priestesses who sat in
yearlong meditations, each holding the katras of a thousand
dead.

    But all that was known for certain by non-Vulcan investiga-
tors was that beyond that dark entrance into the cave lay the
repository of Vulcan souls, the place to which each katra was
returned.
     That fathomless cave was Spock's destination. And, as
Spock had said, it must also be Kirk's. "Can you feel it?" Spock asked.
    Kirk pulled his cloak closer as the mountain breeze cooled
with the approaching night.
    Spock was right. He could feel it. Somewhere in the
darkness beyond, Sarek's katra was in reposewall that Sarek
had been, all that he had known, saved from extinction by the
power of the Vulcan mind.
 "We must go together," Spock said.
 But Kirk shook his head.
    Spock put his hand on Kirk's shoulder. "You are his son as
much as I am."
    Kirk stared at Spock. Deep within himself, he acknowl-
edged the special bond that had formed between himself and
Sarek. He knew it explained so many things about his past,
his present, and his future.
    But Kirk also knew what Spock truly meant, and desired at
this moment.
 Absolution.
 "You didn't abandon him, Spock."
    Spock looked out at the fiery Vulcan sun as it touched the
horizon, only minutes from setting. "Then help me tell him
that."
 "You go to him, Spock. Touch his mind. He'll understand."
    Spock hesitated. "I find, with age, my emotions are no
longer my own, Jim. I need yours to guide me."
    Kirk knew Spock's confession had been difficult for him,
but the truth was that time had eroded Kirk's own ability to
experience his emotions, just as it had eroded Spock's ability
to control his. "Spock... you're being illogical."




  "But it was you who avenged my father's death."
     "There was more to it than one man's life," Kirk said. He
 thought of the pilots he had consigned to death above the
 jungles of Chal. He thought of his decisionmhis desire--to
 fire his phaser at Srell. Was either action different from what
 Kodos had done? Or what the Symmetrists had attempted? Is
 this what age had brought him to? "It was my duty." And so
 complete was Kirk's catharsis that to himself, his voice was as
 devoid of emotion as a Vulcan's.
     "Good Lord," McCoy suddenly said. "Is this what it's
 come down to?"
    He had been their silent witness, wrapped in a long
admiralty coat against the rising wind.
    "Have you two grown so close that you've managed to
switch sides? With Spook too full of confusing emotions, and
Jim cut off from what makes him human?"
  "Your point, Doctor?" Spock asked coldly.
    "What is it that stops you two from seeing yourselves as
you really are? Spook, Jim may be cut off from what makes
him human--but he's still human. It's the way he was born.
But you--you had a choice, and you chose to be Vulcan. And
I'm going to hate myself for telling you this, but you're
damned good at it. No matter how old you are."
    The three friends stood together, huddled against the fall of
night, before the cave that led to mysteries unexplored.
     Above them, the stars of Vulcan slowly brightened, shim-
mering through the growing crimson twilight. "Have we changed?" Spock asked.
    Kirk held out his hand to Spock. He had been asked that
question before. He knew the answer.
    "Not us," he said. As the two friends clasped hands, Kirk
was struck by a stunning bolt of clarity. He recalled his first
glimpse of Spock, not when they had met, but the image that
had been in Sarek's mind that night on Tarsus IV, when
Spock had been a youth, no different from himself.

 How like my son, Sarek had thought.
    Kirk finally understood the ultimate mystery that had
united them.
 He and Spock were Sarek's sons.
 And in that moment, Spock understood as well.
    "You are my brother, Jim. I, of Sarek's flesh. You, of Sarek's
mind."
    "Go on," McCoy told them. "You have to." His coat
fluttered around him like resting wings. On the horizon, the
last spike of day flared against the fall of night. He smiled.
"Don't worry. I'll still be here when you come back."
 Above them, day had ended. Night was absolute.
    Spock looked to Kirk, as if uncertain what to think about
what would happen next.
 Kirk looked to Spock, uncertain how he should feel.
    But he was certain that the answer was just ahead. There
was always an explanation to be found.
    And with his friends, his family, at his side, those things
without which no life has meaning, he was not afraid to take
the next step on his journey.
 Into his future.
 Into the fablan-tral.




FORTY-FIVE

The Tobias blazed through space, the stars a rainbow in her
wake.
  On her bridge, Christine MacDonald held the center chair.
      She ran her fingers along the inside of her uniform's collar.
Counted the four metal disks that were now affixed to it.
 Captain MacDonald.
    Her final passenger smiled at her. She smiled back, realiz-
ing she had been caught.
    "I know," she said. "It's not important. Just more trap-
pings."
 But Kirk shook his head.
    "It was important to me when I was your age. It should be
important to you." He looked ahead to the viewscreen,
watching the stars pass, thinking of the cycle of the genera-
tions.
    Christine reached out and took Kirk's hand, held it close.
She spoke diffidently, but her true emotions were apparent.
    "I don't suppose you're looking for another ship? There's
still a lot of galaxy left out there."
    Kirk felt the eyes of every member of her crew upon him.
Barc and M'Benga, the blond communications officer whose

name he'd never learned, the blue-scaled helmsman whose
species he'd never seen. This crew would take her far. But not where he was going.
    He gently slipped his hand from hers, and turned away
from the stars to look at her in her chairathe chairato
remember one last time how it felt. "Explore it for me. And if
you ever pass this way again..."
    On the viewscreen, the stars stopped moving as the Tobias
fell from warp, coming up on her destination--a world where
blue oceans and white clouds beckoned once again. a planet
healed.
 "I'll know where to find you," Christine said.
 Below him, Chal waited. His world. His dream. Teilani.
 Kirk had come home to stay.




EPILOGUE

That night he lay in Teilani's arms, listening to the gentle
rhythm of her breathing.
    She'd been surprised when he'd appeared in the doorway of
their simple cabin. "You came back, "she said, as if this time
she'd believed he never would.
    "The commander of that ship," Teilani said. "She was very
young."
 Kirk kissed the gray of Teilani's hair. "She was," he agreed.
 "She was very pretty."
    Kirk traced the scar that ran across Teilani's cheek, beyond
even the powers of this age's doctors to heal. He kissed her
cheek. "Very pretty," he assured her.
  "And you came back," she said.
  '7 came back."
 Kirk had been to Mount Seleya.
    With Spock at his side he had seen what no other human on
Vulcan had seen. Touched the mind that had first touched his.
And seen the beginning and the ending of his life reconciled.
    Spock, at last at peace with his father, would remain on
Vulcan for a time. But the fate of the Romulans still tugged at
him, and would draw him out again.




    McCoy had come up with some ideas for improving the
EMH and was back where he had always been on Earth,
working hard, complaining, to all who wouM listen, and even
more to any who didn't.
  But in time their paths wouM cross again, Kirk knew.
  This universe still had some absolutes.
      That night he had carried Teilani to their bed and they made
love. For the first time, for the hundredth. It didn't matter.
  Time had no dominion.
    Later, they lay in contentment, sheltered by the night and
their love.
    "This time, James, I was afraid. That you wouldn't come
back."
    Kirk hem her close, but knew that she was right. Someday he
would not return, because death was the way of all things. But
now, for the first time since Tarsus IV and Sarek, he no longer
had the knowledge of how his end wouM come. Freed of that
burden, he had at last become like all other men, with the
future stretching out before him, as endless and unknowable as
the stars.
 At last, in Teilani's embrace, James T. Kirk fell asleep.
    And for the first time since Tarsus IV... and Sarek. . . he
did not dream of falling.
  For tonight, at last, his journey had ended.
  For tonight, at last, the future couM wait.

At least, until tomorrow...

POCKET BOOKS
PROUDLY PRESENTS

ICEFIRE

By Judith and Garfield Reeves-Stevens

Coming soon in hardcover from
       Pocket Books

Turn the page for a preview of
      ICEFIRE. . . .

