Star Trek: The Blood-Dimmed Tide
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About this ebook
A new six-part epic covering thirty years of Star Trek history, continuing with an adventure that takes between The Final Frontier and The Undiscovered Country!
Book 5: THE BLOOD-DIMMED TIDE
Twenty-five years after the disaster, Mestiko's recovery is stagnating amid social unrest. A lunar colony designed for scientific research might give the people hope -- until a local terrorist group called the Torye attacks the colony and steals an experimental subspace weapon. The is sent to find the Torye and retrieve the weapon.
But even as Captain Kirk and his crew -- Saavik, Scotty, Chekov, Uhura, and McCoy -- follow the trail, Captain Spock goes on a daring undercover mission to Klingon space that will have dire consequences for the future of Mestiko -- as well as the Federation...
Howard Weinstein
Howard Weinstein is the bestselling author of more than fifteen books, including numerous Star Trek novels and the award-winning Galloway's Gamble. He lives with his wife in Elkridge, Maryland.
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Star Trek - Howard Weinstein
Prologue
Seen from space, certain worlds—with wide blue oceans, emerald lands, and swirling veils of white clouds—whisper, Welcome.
This particular planet—with wind-scoured, cratered plains, rusty mountains, and one ragged, inadequate sea filling a basin left behind by some ancient cataclysm—this planet snarled, Go away. Only its location, in treacherous unclaimed space near the Klingon and Romulan Empires, made it worth the skirmish taking place there.
The lone, cloaked Klingon bird-of-prey in orbit was no match for two Romulan warships shedding their own cloaking fields as they opened fire. Several torpedoes found their target, confirming that no stealth technology was completely undetectable. A few explosive seconds later, all that remained of the Klingon ship was a bloom of shards glinting in the starlight as they hurtled away into space. Then the Romulan vessels turned their weapons on their primary target: a military outpost on the planet.
Hunkered in an equatorial valley, the Klingon base consisted of two structures linked by a tunnel—one a bunker housing a half-dozen soldiers and a bank of deep-space scanners, the other a turret capped by a pair of disruptor cannons. With only one big gun operational, and deflector shields failing fast, the Klingon troops were all too aware that they were overmatched by the warbirds pounding them from space. They expected to be marching into their honored afterlives in Sto-Vo-Kor shortly.
What the Romulan commanders didn’t expect, and did not detect in time, was the Klingon battle cruiser K’tanco sweeping in with its own weapons blazing. The element of surprise tipped the brief battle in favor of the Klingon cruiser. With precise fury, the Klingon ship routed the Romulans—one vessel destroyed, the other making a hasty retreat.
Lusty victory cheers filled the Klingon bridge. The weapons officer called for song, but their commander glowered, dark and angry. No,
Captain Kang said, not when we must prepare for war with the Romulans…and perhaps the Federation as well.
Kang’s bridge officers roared their approval once again, since the prospect of battle in the name of honor was always welcome. But Kang didn’t share their enthusiasm. He knew what they did not—that the Klingon Empire was rotting from within, teetering on the edge of a forbidding abyss promising none of the eternal glory of Sto-Vo-Kor. Kang had shared these fears only with Mara, his wife and first officer, and his two oldest comrades, Kor and Koloth.
Since before he had the strength to pick up a bat’leth, Kang had dreamed of living and dying as a warrior. His ancestors created a culture that prized uncompromising power so the Klingon people would never be subjugated. He’d served his empire with all his heart and soul, always marched into battle willingly, ready to shed his last drop of blood if his sacrifice would preserve the Klingon way. Now Kang faced the unthinkable. I know no other life. If the empire ceases to exist, what will I be?
Chapter
1
Dressed in the comfort of her coziest robe and slippers, Raya elMora stood at the window of her bed-chamber and looked longingly out toward the placid S’rii Tuuliie meandering past the grounds of her official residence. The river’s ripples reflected the full light of Varnex, the larger of Mestiko’s paired moons, and the only one still orbiting the planet, presiding over the midnight sky. Back when she was a girl, this was just another provincial Larendan town, called Hur-tuuliie. She and her friends spent many a lazy summer day sailing with the river’s gentle currents, pretending to be explorers, collecting the sweet fruit which fell from the noggik groves along the marshy banks.
That hometown was long gone, ravaged like most of the world by the same disaster that had sent the planet’s second moon, Kifau, careening out of Mestiko’s orbit. A new cosmopolis stood in its place. Renamed vosTraal, it was Mestiko’s global capital city. Raya’s childhood home was home again, but it wasn’t the same. Then again, she thought, nothing is the same, and it never will be.
She padded across the carpet and sat at her simple desk made of noggik planks, which never lost their fragrance. Bathed in the soft glow of a lamp and her computer screen, she scrolled through a revised proposal for celebrations marking the upcoming twelveyear anniversary of her return to leadership of the planet’s ruling Zamestaad council. How could it be that long since the end of her exile on Kazar and her smashing election victory over the remnants of the corrupt, mar-Atyya regime? Raya sighed. She’d rejected the first ceremonial plans from her staff as too elaborate and self-congratulatory, and her chagrined aides had retreated to craft something more in keeping with their leader’s modesty.
Frankly, she’d have preferred that the occasion pass with no more notice than the turning of a calendar page. But there was no escaping the tendency of civilized beings to pay considerable attention—too much, maybe—to milestones marking time’s progress.
Bureaucracies possessed that same tendency, if only to justify their own existence. With the approach of the somber thirty-sixth anniversary of the devastation of their planet, government agencies worldwide spared no effort in preparing voluminous reports measuring Mestiko’s progress. When her staff offered summaries, Raya insisted on reading the full documents. So she knew as well as anyone that her people had indeed come a long way since the days after the radiation-ignited firestorms, whipped by violent winds and fueled by vast forests, had incinerated wilderness and cities alike. The boundless flooding storms that followed had quenched the holocaust but left behind a toxic, seared surface, nearly stripped of life.
Call it the Pulse, the Scourer, or simply the disaster…no one knew back then if Mestiko could survive, much less flourish. Yet, even in those literally dark days of crushing despair, with a billion dead and wretched survivors forced underground, development and trade of natural resources had rebounded steadily and stabilized the planet’s economy. Once freed from Klingon meddling, the miraculous satellite system created by the Federation’s Dr. Marat Lon had restored the atmosphere, settled the climate, and permitted accelerated terraforming. That enabled the Kazarites to work their brand of ecological magic and achieve enough environmental regeneration to make the planet increasingly habitable and arable.
Though it would take generations more for the population to even approach predisaster levels, people did what people do and the birth rate had begun to blossom. Many Zamestaad council members insisted on heralding those triumphs, and Raya could hardly dispute that her world had made an amazing recovery, considering the near-fatal blow dealt by the rogue pulsar.
It was the curse of politics that Raya’s public statements focused on success while her private thoughts dwelled on failures and frustrations. Food production and land reclamation still lagged behind predictions, which had been conservative to begin with. Ugly swaths of the planet remained barren, like wounds reluctant to heal. Will we ever truly recover? Or is this as good as it gets?
Raya sighed again, slouched back in her chair, and picked up her mug of herbal tea. Never mind the debatable measures of material progress—it was the social-services reports that most troubled her. Rates of suicide, depression, and crime were rising. The planet’s once-thriving arts communities had failed to reinvigorate themselves. It might have seemed trivial that few important new dramatic works, novels, or musical compositions had been created since the Pulse. But Raya knew that culture sustained the soul, and the Payav soul seemed as charred and barren as the noggik groves after the disaster.
Mestiko faced a looming spiritual crisis, one resistant to the calculus of charts and graphs, and nothing worried her more. Various studies attempted to quantify a rift in attitudes between generations born before and after the disaster. Those old enough to remember the good old days often found themselves drifting into nostalgic lethargy. Those just coming of age seethed with frustration, knowing they might never taste the halcyon existence whose loss their parents lamented. Lost souls flocked to the latest lunatic-fringe fundamentalist faction, this one preaching yet another new twist on the corrosive mar-Atyya belief that the Pulse was punishment for having abandoned the old religious ways, and warning of an even greater and final apocalypse to come. Just what this wounded world needs.
Things could certainly have been worse at this point. But they could also have been better. Even Raya’s closest aides were unaware she’d been considering stepping down from Zamestaad leadership before her term was up. Not that she wasn’t proud of her stewardship, but maybe it was time for fresh hearts and minds….
A frantic pounding on her apartment door disrupted her ruminations, and she immediately felt queasy. In all her life, Raya had never known a late-night knock to be a harbinger of good news. She swung the door open to find Jaarg etDalka, her young chief of staff, standing there, looking even more harried and pale than usual. What’s wrong?
The Discovery Center.
Jaarg swallowed and tried to quell the shiver in his voice. It’s been attacked.
What? Who—?
We don’t know yet.
Raya’s head sank. She rubbed her long, still-elegant neck with both hands. She forced herself to breathe slowly, fighting off that spark of panic she always felt at the onset of a crisis. It was a reflex she’d learned to live with, and she knew the antidote: action. Does Blee know?
Jaarg nodded. I called her first.
Good boy.
Raya smiled despite the situation, knowing her old friend and chief adviser Blee elTorno was already organizing a response.