Star Trek 06 - James Blish
Star Trek 06 - James Blish
Star Trek 06 - James Blish
Kirk, Spock and the others of the Enterprise find a deadly Eden, discover
elemental life forces and planetary death wishes, and even meet Abraham
Lincoln and Genghis Khan, as they speed through space on new
assignments into the unknown.
BASED ON THE EXCITING
NEW NBC-TV SERIES CREATED
BY GENE RODDENBERRY
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Preface
THE SAVAGE CURTAIN
THE LIGHTS OF ZETAR
THE APPLE
BY ANY OTHER NAME
THE CLOUD MINDERS
THE MARK OF GIDEON
PREFACE
The fan mail continues to pour in, listing favorite shows, making helpful
suggestions and occasionally catching errors. (To reply to one persistent
complaint, it was not I who made Kirk address McCoy as “Doc” instead of
“Bones” in Spock Must Die! I know better than that; but there are several
editorial hands laid on the manuscript after mine before it reaches the
printer.) I am grateful for them all, including the pats on the back.
One recent letter was so extraordinary, however, that I think it deserves
passing on. With permission, I quote the important part of it:
The planet, newly discovered in an uncharted area of space, was clearly not
a Class M world. The atmosphere boiled with poisonous reds and greens;
the surface was molten lava.
And yet, from one small area Spock picked up persistent readings of
carbon cycle life forms—and artificial power being generated in quantities
great enough to support a considerable civilization. Hailing on all
frequencies at first produced nothing… and then, suddenly, the Enterprise
was being scanned, an incredibly swift and deep probe.
Kirk barely had time to call for alert status when the probing was over.
Almost immediately afterward, the image of the planet on the main viewing
screen dissolved into a swirling jumble of colors. These slowly gathered
together into a face and figure, entirely human, dressed in clothing like
those worn in the mid-1800's on Earth. He was sitting on nothing and with
nothing visible behind him, as though in limbo. His expression was benign
and calm.
“Captain Kirk, I believe?” the figure said. “A pleasure to make your
acquaintance, sir.”
Kirk, Spock and McCoy stared incredulously at the familiar figure.
Finally, Kirk motioned to Uhura.
“Your voice-telegraph device is quite unnecessary, Captain,” the figure
said. “Do I gather that you recognize me?”
“I… recognize what you appear to be.”
“And appearances can be quite deceiving.” The figure smiled. “But not in
this case, James Kirk. I am Abraham Lincoln.”
Kirk considered this incredible claim and apparition, and then turned to
his First Officer. “Spock?”
“Fascinating, Captain.”
“I’ve been described in many ways, Mr Spock,” the smiling man said,
“but never with that word.”
“I was requesting your analysis of this, Mr Spock.”
“They did scan us and our vessel,” Spock said, “and doubtless obtained
sufficient information to present this illusion.”
“Illusion?” the figure said. “Captain, will you permit me to come aboard
your vessel? No doubt you have devices which can test my reality.”
After a moment’s hesitation, Kirk said, “We’d be honored to have you
aboard, Mr President.”
The figure reached into its vest pocket, pulled out a large watch on a
heavy gold chain and snapped the lid open. “Do you still measure time in
minutes?”
“Yes, sir.”
Then you should be over my position in… twelve and a half minutes.
Until then, Captain…” The image on the screen rippled, dissolved and re-
formed itself as the planet. Amid the hot reds and poisonous greens of the
atmosphere there was now a spot of soft blue. Spock leaned into his hooded
viewer.
“An area of approximately a thousand square kilometers, sir,” he said.
“It’s completely Earthlike, including an oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere.”
“He called it to the second, sir,” Chekov added. “We’ll be over it in
exactly twelve minutes now.”
Kirk touched the intercom button. “Security. Send a detachment to the
Transport Room immediately. Phaser side arms—but be prepared also to
give presidential honors. Captain out.”
“Jim,” McCoy said, “you don’t really believe he’s Abraham Lincoln?”
“It’s obvious he believes it, Bones.” Kirk stood up. “Mr Spock, Doctor,
full dress uniforms, please. Mr Sulu, the con is yours.”
In the Transporter Room, Security Chief Dickenson had assembled two
security guards, phasers at port. Dickenson himself sported white boots and
belt, plus a traditional bos’n’s whistle on a gold chain.
Engineering Officer Scott, in full kilt, entered and moved to the
Transporter console, fuming. “Full dress! Presidential honors! What’s all
this nonsense, Mr Dickenson?”
“I understand President Lincoln is coming aboard, sir.”
Scott whirled. “Are you daft, man?”
“All I know, sir, is what the Captain tells me, sir,” Dickenson said
uncomfortably. “And he said he’d have the hide of the first man who so
much as smiles.”
McCoy entered, also in full dress, with his tricorder over his shoulder.
Scott eyed him dourly; McCoy gave back stare for stare.
“I’d have expected sanity from the ship’s surgeon, at least.” Scott
irritably punched controls on the console. “President Lincoln, indeed! No
doubt followed by Louis of France and Robert the Bruce.”
Kirk and Spock had come in in time to catch this last remark.
“And if so, Mr Scott, we’ll execute appropriate honors to each,” Kirk
said. “Gentlemen, I don’t believe for a moment that Abraham Lincoln is
actually coming aboard. But we are dealing with an unknown and
apparently quite advanced life form. Until we know… well, when in Rome,
we do as the Romans do.”
“Bridge to Transporter Room,” Chekov’s voice said over the intercom.
“One minute to overhead position.”
“Locking onto something,” Scott said. He looked closer, and then
gestured at the panel. “Does that appear human to you, Mr Spock?”
Spock joined him and inspected the console. “Fascinating!… For a
moment it appeared almost mineral. Like living rock, with heavy fore-
claws… Settling down into completely human readings now.”
“We can beam it aboard any time now, Captain,” Scott said.
“Set for traditional ruffles and flourishes. Security, stand ready.”
“Phaser team, set for heavy stun,” Dickenson said. “Honor guard, ready.”
The two security men posted themselves on opposite sides of the
Transporter chamber, weapons set, raised and aimed. The four men
comprising the honor guard snapped into parade rest. Dickenson raised his
whistle to his lips.
“Energize.”
The sparkling column appeared, solidified, vanished. The figure left
standing there seemed to be inarguably Abraham Lincoln, dressed in the
well-remembered 19th century suit, bearded, his face registering the sad
wisdom of his presidential years.
Dickenson blew his whistle. Spock pushed a panel button and everyone
came to attention. Ruffles and flourishes filled the air.
“Salute!” Kirk said. Everyone did except the two guards, whose phasers
remained ready. Lincoln, too, stood gravely at attention through the music.
Then Kirk said, “Two!,” broke the salute and stepped forward.
“The USS Enterprise is honored to have you aboard, Mr President.”
“Strange,” Lincoln said, stepping down. “Where are the musicians?”
“Taped music, sir. Starships on detached service do not carry full honor
detachments.”
“Taped music? Perhaps Mr Spock will be good enough to explain that to
me later.” Lincoln extended a hand to Kirk. “A most interesting way to
come aboard, Captain. What was the device used?”
“A matter-energy scrambler sir. The molecules of your body were
converted to energy, and beamed to this chamber where they were
reconverted to their original pattern.”
Lincoln hesitated. “Well, since I am obviously here and quite whole,
whatever you mean apparently works very well indeed.” He looked at the
two guards. “If those are weapons, gentlemen, you may lower them. At my
age, I’m afraid I’m not very dangerous.”
“Readings, fully human, sir,” McCoy said.
Kirk signaled the guards to holster their weapons, and then introduced
everyone present.
“Please stand at ease, gentlemen,” Lincoln said. “I hope to talk to each of
you, but meanwhile, your Captain is consumed with questions and I shall
do my utmost to answer them. And I trust your duties will permit time to
answer some of mine. At your service, Captain.”
“Mr Spock.” Kirk led his First Officer and his guest off toward the
Briefing Room.
The Enterprise was enroute to Memory Alpha when the storm first
appeared. Memory Alpha was a planetoid set up by the Federation solely as
a central library containing the total cultural history and scientific
knowledge of all planetary Federation members. The ship had a passenger,
Lt. Mira Romaine, an attractive woman of about thirty. She was on board to
supervise the transfer of newly designed equipment which the Enterprise
was also carrying. At the moment, she was on the bridge talking to Scott at
his position.
“Mr Scott, I hope I haven’t been too much trouble to you with all the
questions I’ve asked.”
“Well, I’m sorry the trip is coming to an end,” Scott said. “I’m going to
miss your questions.”
Kirk watched them amusedly. “Present position, Mr Chekov?”
“On course—one seventy-two mark four.”
“Mr Scott, as soon as we are within viewing range of Memory Alpha,
you and Lt. Romaine will go to your stations in the emergency manual
monitor. Prepare for direct transfer of equipment.”
“Yes, Captain.”
“We’re ready, sir,” Mira added.
“Lieutenant,” Spock said, “may I offer my congratulations on what will
be a first in the Federation.”
“And good luck,” Kirk added.
“Thank you, Mr Spock, Captain.”
“I didn’t think Mr Scott would go for the brainy type,” Chekov said,
almost too softly for Kirk to overhear.
“I don’t think he’s even noticed she has a brain. Has she?” Sulu said. A
red light came up on his panel. “Captain, I am picking up a high intensity
reading. Shall I display it?”
“Yes.” Kirk looked at the main viewing screen. In the blackness of space
there was a faint light source. “Is that Memory Alpha?”
“No, sir.”
“Magnification eight.”
The light now showed as a cloud of vaguely organic shape, almost like a
brain. It sparked and flashed intermittently in varied hues, like a series of
inspired thoughts.
“Is that some kind of storm?” Kirk said.
“Quite possible, Captain,” Spock said. “I’ve never seen one of such great
intensity and strange conformation.”
“Captain,” Sulu added, “it is approaching at warp two point six and
accelerating.”
“Recheck your readings, Mr Sulu. It is impossible for a natural
phenomenon to move faster than the speed of light.”
“It is definitely doing so,” Spock confirmed—and indeed the thing was
visibly growing on the screen. “It therefore cannot be a phenomenon of
nature.”
“Deflector on. Condition yellow.”
The light source filled the screen. The glare was almost unbearable. Then
the screen went blank.
Kirk tried to snap out an order and found that he could not. The whole
bridge was suddenly deathly silent. No one moved.
Then, just as abruptly, it was over. “Mr Sulu, full scan on that turbulence
or whatever it was!” Kirk noticed Scott staring uncertainly over Kirk’s own
shoulder. Turning to see what he was looking at, he was just in time to see
Mira crumple out of sight behind the command chair.
“Mira!” Scott leapt from his post, knelt beside her and lifted her head off
the floor. “Mira!”
She murmured unintelligibly. It was not that the sounds were indistinct,
but as though they were in an unknown language.
“What’s that you’re saying?” Scott said. Kirk and Spock were now also
bending close. The strange murmuring went on.
McCoy came onto the bridge and crossed at once to the group, his
tricorder already out and in use. He said, “Was she hurt by the fall or by the
action of that… disturbance?”
“I don’t know,” Kirk said. “You were closest, Scotty. Did you notice?”
“She collapsed when it was over.”
McCoy gave her a shot. The murmuring died away. Her expression
changed from a curiously rapt look to one of relaxation. Then her eyes
opened and she looked around in confusion.
“Easy now,” Scott said. “You took quite a fall.”
“I’m fine now,” she said.
“Let me be the judge,” McCoy said. “Can you walk to Sickbay?”
“Doctor, I’m fine, really I am.” Again she looked around the bridge,
obviously still puzzled. “Is everyone else—all right?”
“Aye, they are,” Scott said. “You do just as Dr McCoy says.”
“Why? I never felt better in my—”
“Lieutenant, report to Sickbay,” Kirk said. “That’s an order.”
“Yes, sir.” She followed McCoy resignedly toward the elevator.
Scott said, “Would it be all right for me to go to Sickbay?”
“You will stay at your post, Mr Scott. Lt. Uhura, damage report, all
stations.”
“All stations are operative.”
“Mr Spock?”
“Some equipment was temporarily out of order. My sensors were
inoperative.’'
“Any damage to the warp engines?”
“None, Captain.”
“Good. From the action of that—that storm, we may need all the speed
we can get.”
“It was not a storm, Captain,” Spock said.
“Mr Chekov, get a fix on whatever it was and try to project its path…
That was a novel experience for the Enterprise. Would you agree,
Mr Spock?”
“Unforgettable, Captain.”
“Yes? I was hoping you had an explanation.”
“None at the moment, Captain. Only a sharply etched memory of what I
felt during the onslaught.”
“Memory Alpha was hailing us a moment before,” Uhura said. “I wanted
to respond, but I couldn’t make my hand move.”
“It was not hands that were paralyzed, it was eyes,” Chekov said. “I
couldn’t force my eyes to look down to set a new course.”
“No,” Sulu said, “speech was affected. I couldn’t utter a sound.”
“Nor could I,” Kirk said. “You seemed to be having the same trouble,
Mr Spock.”
“Yes, Captain, I was.”
“Any explanation yet?”
“Only of the result,” Spock said, “none of the cause. In each case,
different areas of the brain were affected. Our voluntary nerve functions
were under some form of pressure.”
“Or of attack?”
“Attack might be a more precise formulation, Captain.”
“Lt. Romaine seems most susceptible. Mr Scott, perhaps you’d better go
down to Sickbay after all. If she was the only one of four hundred and thirty
people who passed out, we’d better find out why.”
“Aye, sir,” Scott said, heading for the elevators with alacrity.
“I have plotted the storm’s path, Captain,” Chekov said. “On its present
course it will hit the Memory Alpha planetoid as it did us.”
“Uhura, warn them of the proximity of the phenomenon. Can you give us
an ETA for it, Chekov?”
“It’s impossible, Captain. It has the ability to change speed.”
“Sorry, Captain,” Uhura said, “But I’m unable to establish contact with
the planetoid. Am hailing on all frequencies. No response.”
“It does not matter, Captain,” Spock said. “Memory Alpha has no
protective shields. When the library complex was assembled, shielding was
regarded as inappropriate to its totally academic purpose. Since the
information on the memory planet is freely available to everyone, special
protection was deemed unnecessary.”
“Wonderful,” Kirk said sarcastically. “I hope the ‘storm’ is aware of that
rationale.”
“We’re completing approach to the planetoid,” Sulu said. “But the
storm’s gotten there first.”
“Uhura, get through to—”
“I cannot,” Uhura said. “I cannot get past the interference, sir.”
“Mr Spock, how many people are there on Memory Alpha?”
“It varies with the number of scholars, researchers, scientists, from
various Federation planets who are using the computer complex.”
“Mr Chekov, maintain standard orbit.”
“The storm is now leaving Memory Alpha,” Sulu reported.
“And,” Spock added, “the sensors give no readings of energy being
generated on the planetoid.”
“Any life readings?”
“None, sir.”
“Check for malfunction.”
Spock did so. “Sensors inoperative again.”
“We’d better find out what’s going on down there.” Kirk turned to the
intercom. “Kirk to Sickbay. Is Mr Scott there?”
“Scott here. I was checking on the lass. She’s going to be fine, though.
Nothing wrong with her.”
“I’m relieved to hear your prognosis. Is the doctor there with you?”
“McCoy here, Jim.”
“How’s the girl?”
“I think she’s in good shape.”
“Apparently Scotty thinks so, too. Both of you, meet me in the
Transporter Room, on the double. Mr Spock, come with me. The con is
yours, Mr Sulu.”
In the emergency manual monitor, Mira and Scott were working side by
side. The inventory had proceeded for some time in silence. Then Scott
said: “When I—thought we lost you, back there in the Transporter Room—
well, you’re not to do that again.”
“It was so frightening,” she said. “I felt pulled apart.”
“You almost were. There was interference with the Transporter
mechanism.”
“And that’s more than you can say about me,” she said. What she meant
by this, Scott had no idea.
“I’ll tell you something. You are the sanest—the smartest—the nicest—
and the most beautiful woman that has ever been aboard this ship.”
“And what else?”
“Anything else, I’m keeping to myself for the moment.”
“But I’m so much trouble to you.”
Trouble? What trouble? Of course, you could drive a man daft, but that’s
not what I call trouble.”
She smiled. “Do I drive you daft, Scotty?”
“Well now—if it was me, you might have to work at it.”
“I’d be willing—” Then, as if embarrassed, she turned away and resumed
being busy.
The Enterprise has been my life,” Scott said. “I love this ship, and I love
every day I’ve spent on it. But, until you came aboard, I didn’t know how
lonely it is to be free in the galaxy… So, don’t you talk of trouble.” He took
her in his arms. “Now I want to forget about Memory Alpha.”
It was the wrong thing to say. She pushed against his chest, her hands
trembling. “Scotty… before that… I saw it—exactly as it happened.”
“What of it? That happens to lots of people. There’s a French term for it.
They think they’re seeing something before it actually occurs. But actually
one eye picked it up without realizing—”
“My eyes weren’t playing tricks!”
He smoothed her brow. “Then I’m sure there is some other perfectly
reasonable explanation that will erase that worried frown.”
“But Scotty, I saw the men dead in their exact positions—before I ever
left the ship.”
He put his hands on her shoulders. “Listen to me. I told you in Sickbay
what strange tricks a first trip in space can play on your mind. That’s all it
is.”
“No, Scotty.”
“Have you ever had visions of future events before this?”
“Never.”
“And, if you ask me, nobody ever has,” Scott said firmly. “That seeing
the future is pure bunk. You know that, don’t you?”
“I always believed it.”
“And you’re absolutely right.”
“But what is it, Scotty? What is frightening me? Ever since we’ve been
near that—that storm, I’ve had such strange thoughts… feelings of such
terror.”
“Space, space, space, that’s all it is.”
“Then I don’t have to report it?”
“If you want to spend the trip in Sickbay,” Scott said. “But what good
would it do? McCoy can no more cure it than he can cure a cold. It’ll pass.”
“When I get my permanent assignment… I hope it will be to the
Enterprise”
“You just better make sure of it.”
In the Briefing Room, Spock went immediately to his slave console; Kirk
sat at the center of the table, McCoy next to him.
“Go easy on her, Jim. She’s in a bad state.”
“I’ll try. But this can’t be postponed.”
“I know. I was pretty hard on her myself the first time this happened. I
needn’t have been. We might know more.”
“I’ll be careful.”
The door opened to admit Scott and Mira. He was holding her by the
arm. She seemed pale and distraught. After she was seated, Scott went to
his chair at the opposite end of the table.
Kirk leaned toward her and said gently: This is not a trial, Lt. Romaine.
You are not being accused of anything.”
“I know,” Mira said, almost in a whisper. She glanced toward McCoy. “I
didn’t mean to be uncooperative, Doctor.”
“Of course you didn’t,” McCoy said. “I told the Captain that.”
“I’ll tell you everything I know. I trust all of you implicitly. I want to
help.”
“Good,” Kirk said. This investigation is prompted by two events that may
be connected. The first time was when you passed out on the bridge. The
second is when we fired the ship’s phasers into the force that is attacking us,
and we seriously injured you.”
“It wasn’t serious, Captain. You mustn’t worry about hurting me.”
“We’re glad we didn’t. Nevertheless, we won’t take that particular
defense measure again. Now, this is how we will proceed. Spock will
provide everything we know about our attackers. Dr McCoy has access to
Starfleet’s exhaustive file on you. A comparison of the two may turn up
some unsuspected connection that will protect you—and ourselves. All
right, gentlemen? Dr McCoy, you begin. Does Lt. Romaine have any
history of psychosomatic illness?”
“Occasional and routine teen-age incidence.”
“Any evidence of any involuntary or unconscious telepathatic abilities?”
“None.”
“Any pathological or unusual empathic responses?”
“No, Captain. Not empathic. However, an exceptionally flexible and
pliant response to new learning situations.”
At this Spock leaned forward, but made no comment.
“There’s one other thing, Captain,” McCoy said. “Right after our phasers
hit that thing, I gave Lt. Romaine the Steinman Standard Analysis. I don’t
have the results here but Nurse Chapel is having it sent down. In the
meantime, I see nothing else very illuminating in the psychological file. Lt.
Romaine has developed strong defenses to guard against her extreme
competitiveness. Marked scientific and mathematical abilities set up an
early competition with her distinguished father. It appears that the problem
is still not completely resolved.”
“That’s not true,” Mira said, tears coming to her eyes. “It was over long
ago. I’m not like that—not any more.”
“Everybody’s record has much worse comments from the psychology
majors,” Kirk said. “Luckily for us, nobody ever reads ours. Pretend you
didn’t hear. Mr Spock, any functional and motivating data on the life
force?”
“I have asked the computer why these beings pursue the Enterprise. The
first answer was ‘Completion.’ When I requested an alternate formulation,
it gave me ‘Fulfillment’ instead. I find both responses unclear, but the
machine has insufficient data to give us anything better, thus far.”
The door opened and a yeoman entered with a cartridge which he handed
to McCoy. The surgeon inserted it into his viewer. Almost at once, he cast a
disturbed look at Mira.
“What is it, Doctor?”
“A comparison of our Steinman with Starfleet records shows that Lt.
Romaine’s fingerprints, voice analysis, retinal patterns, all external factors
are the same as before. But according to the two encephalograms, her brain
wave pattern has been altered.”
“Isn’t that impossible?” Kirk asked.
“That’s what I was taught. The BCP is as consistent as fingerprints.”
“Let’s see it.”
McCoy put the tape deck into the slot on the desk, and the tri-screen lit
up. They all looked at it for a moment. Then Spock said, “Doctor, I believe
that’s the wrong slide.”
“No it isn’t, Spock. It’s from tape deck D—brain circuitry pattern of Lt.
Mira Romaine.”
“No, Doctor. It happens to be tape deck H—the impulse tracking we
obtained on the alien life units.”
“Nurse Chapel followed this every step of the way. There can’t be an
error.”
Mira was staring in tense horror at the screen.
“According to your records, Dr McCoy,” Spock said, “Lt. Romaine did
not show abnormal telepathatic abil-ity.”
“That’s right, Spock. Exceptional pliancy was indicated. It might be a
factor.”
“It must be. There is an identity of pattern between these alien life forms
and the mind of Lt. Romaine. Their thoughts are becoming her thoughts.”
Scott said: “Mira’s tried to tell me all along that she was seeing things
happen in advance—”
“Why didn’t you report it?” Kirk said.
“You don’t report space sickness. That’s all I ever thought it was.”
“What else did she see?”
Scott thought a moment. “The first attack on the ship… the attack on
Memory Alpha… and—the time we almost lost her.”
“Those were all acts carried out by our attacker. Anything else?”
Scott got up and went over to Mira, who was still staring at the screen. “I
thought there was another time. I guess I was wrong.”
“Was he wrong, Lieutenant?” Kirk said.
Mira finally looked up at Scotty, who sank to one knee beside her. In a
trancelike voice, she said, “Yes. There was one other time.”
“What did you see?”
“I saw Scotty,” she said, still looking at him intently,
“Where?”
“I don’t know.”
“What was he doing?”
“He was dying.” Her hand went to Scott’s face. “Now I understand
what’s been happening. I’ve been seeing through another mind. I have been
flooded by thoughts that are not my own… by desires and drives that
control me—” Suddenly she broke completely and was in Scott’s arms.
“Scotty—I would rather die than hurt you. I would rather die!”
“What’s all this talk of dying?” Scott demanded. “They’ve called the turn
on us three out of four times. That’s a better average than anybody deserves.
It’s our turn now. Well fight them. So let’s not hear anything more about
dying.”
It was a bold speech, but Kirk could think of no way that the Enterprise
could back it up. He punched the intercom. “Ensign Chekov, what success
have you had with the evasive tactics?”
“Useless, sir. They’ll probably be through the shields again in a minute or
so.”
Kirk turned to Mira. “They may destroy you and us as they did Memory
Alpha. You are especially susceptible to their will. There is one way we
might survive. Do not resist. Let them begin to function through you. If we
can control that moment, we have a chance. Will you try?”
“Tell me what to do,” she said, her voice shaky.
“Everybody down to the antigrav test unit. Follow me.”
“Attention all personnel!” Sulu’s voice barked from the intercom. “Clear
all decks! Alien being has penetrated ship!”
The door to the gravity chamber opened off the interior of the medical lab.
As the group from the Briefing Room entered at a run, Kirk said, “As soon
as she enters the chamber, secure all ports.”
But as Mira started for the chamber, the swirling colors of the life force
pervaded the lab. She stopped and spun around, her hand going to her brow,
her eyes blazing, her face contorted with struggle. Scott started toward her.
“Don’t touch me!” It was a piercing scream. “Scotty—stay away—”
The multicolored flashes slowly and finally were gone, leaving Mira
standing as if frozen. Then her lips parted, and from them came once more
the sound of the unknown language.
“We’ve lost her to them,” Scott said desperately, starting toward her once
more.
“Stay where you are!” Kirk said.
McCoy added, “She could kill us all in this state.”
“She will,” Spock said, “unless we are able to complete what the Captain
is planning.”
Scott was looking at Mira in agony. “Stay with us, Mira. Stay with us,
Mira Romaine!”
“I am trying,” she said. It was her own voice, but coming out in
smothered gasps. “I want to be… with you… They are too strong.”
“Fight them now, Mira,” Kirk said. “Don’t lose yourself to them. Hold
on.”
The girl sank against the door to the gravity chamber. Her eyes closed,
her body became taut with the effort at control.
“I am Mira Romaine,” she said, and this time her voice was angry. “I will
be who I choose to be. Let me go!”
But the struggle was too much for her. Her body went limp, and her eyes
opened, inexpressibly sad. In a voice like a lost soul, utterly unlike anything
she had ever sounded before, she said: “She cannot prevent us. You cannot
stop us.”
Scott lunged forward, but Kirk grabbed him. “Mira! Mira!”
“That’s not Mira talking,” McCoy said.
“Captain, we must deal with them directly,” Spock said. “Now, while she
retains partial identity, we can speak to them. Her voice will answer for
them.”
“I am the commander of this vessel,” Kirk said to the entranced girl. “Do
you understand me?”
“We understand you. We have searched for a millennium to find the One
through whom we can see and hear and speak and live out our lives.”
“Who are you?”
“We are of Zetar.”
“All humanoid life on Zetar,” Spock said, “was destroyed long ago.”
“Yes. All corporeal life was destroyed.”
“Then what are you?” Kirk demanded.
“The desires, the hopes, the thoughts and the will” of the last hundred
from Zetar. The force of life in us could not be wiped out.”
“All things die.”
“At the proper time. Our planet was dying. We were determined to live
on. At the peak of our plans to go elsewhere, a sudden final disaster struck
us down. But the force of our lives survived. And now at last we have found
the One through whom we can live it out.”
“The body you inhabit has its own life to lead.”
“She will accept ours.”
“She does not wish it. She is fighting to retain her own identity.”
“Her mind will accept our thoughts. Our lives will be fulfilled.”
“Will she learn like the people on Memory Alpha learned?”
“We did not wish to kill.”
“You did kill!”
“No! Resisting us killed those on Memory Alpha. We did not kill. We
wanted only the technician, but she fought back.”
“The price of your survival is too high.”
“We wish only the girl.”
“You cannot have her,” Kirk said fiercely. “You are entitled to your own
lives. But you cannot have another’s!”
Mira herself seemed to hear this, and her eyes to respond. When she
spoke again, the voice was her own. “Life was given to me. It is mine. I will
live it out… I will…”
Her voice weakened, and she sank back. McCoy took a tricorder reading.
“The girl’s life reading is becoming a match to the—Zetarians,” he said.
“She is losing.”
“Do not fight us.”
“They will not accept their own deaths,” Spock said.
“They will be forced to accept it,” Kirk said.
“You will all die,” said the Mira/Zetar voice.
“Captain,” Spock said, “unless we can complete the plan at once, they
will carry out their threat.”
McCoy said, “Jim, you realize that the pressure you need to kill the
Zetarians might kill her, too?”
“At least, our way she has a chance. We must get her into the antigrav
chamber.”
They all moved in about her, in a close circle. Scott forced himself to the
front and said, “Mira will not kill me.”
He stooped and quickly picked her up in his arms. He faced the opening
to the gravity chamber, and his head snapped back, his face contorted in
agony. Nevertheless he got her into the chamber, and the doors closed
behind her. Then he crumpled to the floor. His face now, however, was
relaxed. As McCoy bent over him, his eyes opened.
“I knew she wouldn’t kill me,” he said, with a faint smile.
Kirk and Spock went to the chamber’s console, joined after a moment by
McCoy. After a sweeping glance, Kirk then crossed to the bull’s-eye port
which gave visual access to the chamber.
“Neutralize gravity, Mr Spock.”
Mira’s body lay on the floor of the chamber where Scott had put it for
what seemed to be a long time. Then she moved feebly, and the motion set
her to drifting weightlessly.
“The Zetarians are growing stronger,” McCoy said. “The weightless state
is their natural condition, after all.”
“Begin pressurizing,” Kirk said. “Bring it up to two atmospheres.”
Spock turned a rheostat slowly. There seemed to be no change in Mira.
Theoretically, there should begin to be some sort of feedback system going
into operation between Mira’s nervous system, as it responded to pressures
on her body not natural to her, and the occupying wave patterns of the
Zetarian brain; but no such effect was evident yet.
“Two atmospheres, Captain.”
“Increase at the rate of one atmosphere a minute.”
“Wait a minute, Jim,” McCoy said. “Not even a deep-sea diver
experiences pressure increases at that rate. They take it slowly, a few
atmospheres at a time.”
“That’s just what I’m counting on, Bones. If it’s something Mira can
adapt to, there’ll be no adverse effect on her, and hence none on them. Run
it up as ordered, Mr Spock.”
His hands darting, Spock tied the pressure rheostat into circuit with a
timer. “Rising now as ordered, Captain.”
A quick glance at the big bourdon gauge showed this. Kirk glued his face
back to the glass.
Still nothing seemed to be happening, except that Mira’s head was now
lolling from side to side.
“Jim, you’re going to kill her at this rate!”
Kirk did not respond. The chamber was beginning to look hazy, as
though water were beginning to condense out of the atmosphere inside it—
but that couldn’t be, because water vapor didn’t condense except to a
decrease in pressure—
The fogginess increased, and became luminescent. In a moment more,
the chamber was pulsating with the multiple lights of the Zetar life force. It
grew brighter and brighter for several seconds.
“Jim, you can’t—”
Kirk silenced the surgeon with a savage gesture. Almost at the same
moment, the lights vanished, and with them the fog.
“Cut, Spock!”
There was the snap of a toggle. Mira’s eyes were now open. She looked
entirely normal, though a little bewildered at finding herself floating in
midair. Scott snatched up the microphone which fed the intercom in the
tank.
“Don’t move, Mira! It’s going to be all right! They’re gone—they’re
gone!”
Kirk turned away and gestured to McCoy to take over.
“Reduce pressure very very gradually, Mr Spock,” the surgeon said.
“It will tax Mr Scott’s patience, Doctor.”
“We have all the time in the world, now,” Scott said, his eyes glowing.
“Precisely,” McCoy said. “And after all this, we don’t want to lose the
subject to a simple case of the bends. Lieutenant, lie perfectly still; you’re
in free fall and the slightest movement may bounce you off the chamber
walls—and I don’t want even the slightest bruise. Don’t move at all, just
take deep regular breaths… that’s it… Mr Spock, restore gravity very
gradually. I want her to ground without even a jar… Mira, don’t hold your
breath. Breathe deeply and continuously… That’s it—in, out, in, out, keep it
steady… Fine. You won’t be out of there for another two hours, so you
might as well relax. The battle’s over, anyhow.”
There was a deep sigh all around. Perhaps Mira had given up holding her
breath, but it was evident that she had not been alone.
“Spock,” Kirk said, “is it possible for you to judge the long-range mental
effects on the Lieutenant?”
“I am not an expert, Captain, and bear in mind that Lt. Romaine’s mind
was invaded by something quite inhuman. However, despite Starfleet’s
judgment of her pliancy, she put up a valiant struggle to retain her identity. I
would propose that that augurs well.”
“Spock is right, Jim,” McCoy said, to Kirk’s surprise. “While the truth
was hard for her to take, when it was brought out, the girl reacted well. The
struggle she put up in this experience, I would say, will strengthen her
whole ego structure.”
“Would either of you credit Scotty’s steadfast belief in her as a factor?”
Spock’s eyebrow arched suspiciously. “You mean ‘love’ as a motivation?
Humans claim a great deal for that particular emotion. It is possible, but—”
“No ‘buts’ at all,” McCoy said. “It was a deciding factor—and will be, in
the girl’s recovery.”
“Then, do I understand you both agree that Lt. Romaine need not return
to Starbase for further treatment?”
“I would say,” Spock said, “that work is the better therapy.”
“Absolutely, Jim.”
“Scotty, unsmash your nose from that port and give us a sober opinion.
How is Lt. Romaine now?”
“Beautiful, Captain.”
“Ready to return to work?”
“Positively, Captain.”
There was an exchange of grins all around. Then Kirk turned to the
intercom. “Kirk to bridge.”
“Sulu here, Captain.”
“Set course for Memory Alpha. Lt. Romaine has lots of work to do
there.”
THE APPLE
(Max Ehrlich and Gene L Coon)
Even from orbit, Gamma Trianguli VI seemed both beautiful and harmless,
as close to an earthly paradise as the Enterprise had ever encountered. Such
planets were more than rare, and Kirk thought for a few moments that he
might have happened upon a colonizable world—until the sensors indicated
that there was already native humanoid life there.
He duly reported the facts to Starfleet Command, who seemed to be as
impressed as he was. Their orders were to investigate the planet and its
culture. Under the circumstances, Kirk ordered a landing party of six:
himself, Spock, Chekov, Yeoman Martha Landon, and two security guards,
Marple and Kaplan.
Carrying tricorders and specimen bags, the party materialized in what
might almost have been a garden. Large exotic flowers grew in profusion,
and there were heavily laden fruit trees. Here and there, outcroppings of
rainbow-colored rock competed with the floral hues, and over it all
stretched a brilliant, cloudless day. Feeling a sudden impulse to share all
this beauty as widely as possible, Kirk called down McCoy and two more
security guards—Mallory and Hendorf, as it turned out.
McCoy looked around appreciatively. “I might just put in a claim for all
this and settle down.”
“I doubt that the natives would approve, Bones,” Kirk said. “But it is
pretty spectacular.”
“A shame we have to intrude.”
“We do what Starfleet tells us.”
Spock, who had knelt to inspect the soil, arose. “Remarkably rich and
fertile, Captain. Husbandry would be quite efficacious here.”
“You’re sure about that?” Kirk said, amused without quite knowing why.
“Quite sure. Our preliminary readings indicate the entire planet is
covered by growth like this. Quite curious. Even at the poles there is only a
slight variation in temperature, which maintains a planet-wide average of
seventy-six degrees.”
“I know,” Kirk said. “Meteorologically, that’s almost impossible.”
“It makes me homesick, Captain,” Chekov said. “Just like Russia.”
“It’s a lot more like the Garden of Eden, Ensign,” McCoy said.
“Of course, Doctor. The Garden of Eden was just outside Moscow. A
very nice place. It must have made Adam and Eve very sad to leave.”
Kirk stared at him; Chekov seemed completely straight-faced and
earnest. Was this just another of his outbreaks of Russian patriotism, or
some side effect of his developing romance with Yeoman Landon?”All
right. There’s a village about seventeen kilometers away on bearing two
thirty-two. We’ll head that way.”
“Captain!” The call had come from Hendorf, who was examining one of
the plants: a small bush with large pods, at the center of each of which was
a cluster of sharp, thick thorns. “Take a look at—”
With only a slight puff of noise, one of the pods exploded. Hendorf
staggered and looked down at his chest. Perhaps a dozen thorns were
sticking in a neat group near his heart. He opened his mouth in an attempt
to speak, and then collapsed.
McCoy was there first, but only a quick examination was needed. “He’s
dead.”
“What was all that about Paradise?” Kirk said grimly. He took out his
communicator. “Kirk to Enterprise… Mr Scott, we’ve already had a
casualty. Hendorf has been killed by a poisonous plant at these coordinates.
As soon as we’ve moved out of the way, beam up his body.”
“Aye, Captain. That’s a shame about Hendorf.” Scott paused a moment.
“We seem to have a little problem up here, too. We’re losing potency in the
antimatter banks. I don’t think it’s serious, but we’re looking into it.”
“What’s causing it?”
“We’re not sure. We’ve run measurements of the electromagnetic field of
the planet, and they’re a wee bit abnormal. Could have something to do
with it.”
“Well, stay on top of it. Kirk out.”
“I find that odd, Captain,” Spock said.
“So do I. But Scotty’ll find the problem. Turn up anything with your
tricorder?”
“Indeed, sir. Most puzzling. There are strong vibrations under the
surface, for miles in every direction.”
“Subsurface water?”
“I don’t believe so. They are quite strong and reasonably regular. Though
I have no evidence to support it, I feel that they are artificially produced. I
will, of course, continue to investigate.”
“Of course. It may tie in with Scotty’s trouble. Ensign Mallory, we’ll be
heading for the village. Go ahead and scout it out. Avoid contact with the
humanoids, but get us a complete picture. And be careful. There may be
other dangers besides poisonous plants. Keep in constant communicator
touch.”
“Aye aye, sir.”
Spock held up a hand and froze. “Captain,” he said, very softly. “I hear
something…” He swung his tricorder. “Humanoid… a few feet away…
moving with remarkable agility… bearing eighteen.”
Kirk made a quick, surreptitious gesture to the two remaining security
guards, who nodded and disappeared in opposite directions in the brush.
Kirk moved cautiously forward along the bearing. But there was nobody
there. Puzzled, he turned back.
“What is it?” Chekov said.
“A visitor,” Spock said. “One wanting to retain his anonymity, I would
say.”
Martha Landon, who had been sticking close to Chekov throughout,
shivered.
“What’s the matter?”
“Oh, nothing, I suppose,” the girl said. “But… all this beauty… and now
Mr Hendorf dead, somebody watching us. It’s frightening.”
“If you insist on worrying, worry about me,” Chekov said. “I’ve been
wanting to get you in a place like this for a long time.”
She beamed at him; obviously nothing could make her happier. Kirk said
sharply: “Mr Chekov, Yeoman Landon, I know you find each other
fascinating, but we did not come here to carry out a field experiment in
human biology. If you please—”
“Of course, Captain,” Chekov said, hurriedly breaking out his tricorder.
“I was just about to take some readings.”
Kirk rejoined Spock and McCoy, shaking his head. “Nothing. Whoever it
is, it moves like a cat.”
“Jim, I don’t like this.”
“Neither do I, Bones, but we have an assignment to carry out. All hands.
We’ve been watched, and we’ll probably be watched. Move out—formation
D—no stragglers.”
The start of the maneuver brought Spock to an outcropping of the
rainbow-colored rock. He picked up a piece, studied it, and applied slight
pressure. The lump broke into two unequal parts.
“Most interesting. Extremely low specific gravity. Some uraninite,
hornblende, quartz—but a number of other compounds I cannot
immediately identify. An analysis should be interesting.”
He tucked the smaller portion into his specimen bag, and tossed the
larger piece away. When it hit the ground, there was a small but violent
explosion.
Kirk, shaken, looked around, but no one had been hurt. “You wouldn’t
mind being a little more careful where you throw rocks, Mr Spock?”
Spock stared at the outcropping. “Fascinating. Obviously highly unstable.
Captain, if indeed this material is as abundant elsewhere as it is here, this is
a find of some importance. A considerable source of power.”
“Humph. A Garden of Eden—with land mines.” His communicator
buzzed. “Kirk here. What is it, Scotty?”
“Our antimatter banks are completely inert. I couldn’t stop it. But I found
out why. There’s a transmission of some sort, a beam, from the surface. It
affects antimatter like a pail of water on a fire. We’re trying to analyze it,
but it pinpoints in the area of the village you’re approaching, so maybe you
could act more effectively from down there.”
“Well try. Kirk out… Mr Spock, could this correlate with the vibrations
you detected? A generator of some land?”
“Possibly. If so, an immense one. And undoubtably subterranean—Jim!”
With a shout, Spock leapt forward and knocked Kirk to the ground.
When Kirk got back to his feet, more astonished than angry, Spock was
staring at a dozen thorns neatly imbedded in his chest. Then the Vulcan
slowly crumpled and fell.
“Spock! McCoy, do something!”
McCoy was already there. “Still alive.” He dipped into his kit, came up
with his air hypo, inserted a cartridge and gave Spock a shot, seemingly all
in one smooth motion. Then, after a moment, he looked up at Kirk. “Not
responding, Jim. We’ll have to get him to the ship.”
“And not just him. We’re overextended.” Kirk took out his
communicator. “Scotty? We’re beaming back up, all of us. Notify the
Transporter Room. And make arrangements to pick up Ensign Mallory; he’s
scouting ahead of us.”
“Aye aye, sir… Transporter Room, stand by to beam up landing party…
Standing by, Captain.”
“Energize.”
The sparkle of the Transporter effect began around them. The
surroundings started to fade out… and then wavered, reappeared, faded,
reappeared and stabilized.
“Mr Scott! What’s wrong?”
“No Transporter contact, Captain. The entire system seems to be
inhibited. The way it is now, we couldna beam up a fly.”
“Any connection with the warp drive malfunction?”
“I dinna ken, skipper, but I’ll check on it, and get back to you. Scott out.”
Kirk started to turn back to McCoy, then halted with astonishment as he
saw Spock stirring. The Vulcan sat up weakly, looking distinctly off his
normal complexion.
“Spock!”
“I am quite all right, Captain… A trifle dizzy…”
“Bones?”
“It must be hard to poison that green Vulcan blood. And then there was
the shot. I guess he just took a while bouncing back.”
“Just what did you think you were doing?” Kirk demanded, helping
Spock up.
“I saw that you were unaware of that plant, so I—”
“So you took the thorns yourself!”
“I assure you I had no intention of doing so. My own clumsiness
prevented me from moving out of the way.”
“I can jump out of the way as well as the next man. Next time you’re not
to get yourself killed. Do you know how much money Starfleet has invested
in you?”
“Certainly. In training, fifteen thousand, eight hundred a year; in pay up
to last month—”
“Never mind, Spock. But… thanks.”
“Jim,” McCoy said, “the more I think about this place, the more I get an
idea that… Well, it’s kind of far out, but…”
“Go on, Bones.”
“Well, when bacteria invade a human body, the white corpuscles hurry to
the invasion point and try to destroy the invader. The mind isn’t conscious
of it. The body just does it.”
“You might be right, Bones. Not only is something after us, but I think
it’s also after the ship.”
Spock shook his head. “To affect the ship at this extreme range, Captain,
would require something like a highly sophisticated planetary defense
system. It would hardly seem possible—”
He stopped as the group was suddenly enveloped in shadow. They turned
as one and stared at the sky. Great towering masses of storm clouds were
gathering there. It was impossible; thirty seconds ago the sky had been
cloudless. An ominous rumble confirmed that the impossible was indeed
happening.
With a deafening clap of thunder, a jagged, blue-white stab of lightning
flashed in their midst, tumbling them all like ninepins.
Then the shadow lifted. Kirk got up cautiously. At the spot where the
security guard named Kaplan had been standing, there was now only a spot
of charred, smoking earth. Helpless, at a loss for words, furious, Kirk stared
at it, and then back at the sky as Spock joined him.
“A beautiful day, Mr Spock,” Kirk said bitterly. “Not a cloud in the sky.
Just like Paradise.”
His communicator beeped. “Mallory here, Captain. I’m near the village.
Coordinates one-eighteen by two-twenty. The village is—” Mallory’s voice
was interrupted by a blast of static.
“What was that, Mallory? I don’t read you.”
“I’m getting static too. I said it’s primitive—strictly tribal from the looks
of it. But there’s something else—”
Another tearing squeal of static. Mallory’s voice stopped. Kirk could not
get him back.
“Captain,” Spock said, “those coordinates were only a few thousand
meters off that way.”
“Let’s go! On the double!”
They crashed off. As they broke out of the other side of the undergrowth,
Kirk saw Mallory running toward them over a field littered with rainbow-
colored rocks.
“Over there, Captain,” the security guard shouted. It’s—”
He had turned his head as he ran, to point. It was impossible to tell
exactly what happened next. Perhaps he stubbed his toe. A rock exploded
directly under him.
By the time they reached him, no check by McCoy was needed. His body
lay unmoving, bloody, broken.
Kirk, shaken, closed his eyes for a moment. First Hendorf, then Kaplan.
He had known Kaplan’s family. And Mallory… Mallory’s father had helped
Kirk into the Academy…
Spock took his arm, waving the others off.
“Captain… in each case, it was unavoidable.”
“You’re wrong, Spock. I should have beamed us all up the minute things
started to go wrong.”
“You were under orders. You had no choice.”
“I could have saved two men at least. Beamed up. Made further
investigations from the ship. Done something! This… blundering along
down here… cut off from the ship… the ship’s in trouble itself… unable to
help it…”
“We can help it, Captain. The source of the interference with the ship
must be here on the planet. Indeed, this may be the only place the difficulty
can be solved.”
“And how many more lives will I lose?”
“No one has ever stated Starfleet duty was particularly safe. You have
done everything a commander could do. I believe—” He broke off,
listening. “Captain… I think our visitor is back again.”
Reluctantly, Kirk turned to Marple, the last of the security guards of the
landing party. “Ensign, go ahead fifty yards, swing to your left, cut back,
and make a lot of noise. Mr Spock, Mr Chekov, make a distraction, a loud
one.”
He moved quietly away from them toward the brush. Behind him,
Chekov’s voice rose: “What kind of a tricorder setting do you call that?”
“I will not have you speaking to me in that tone of voice, Ensign!”
“Well, what do you want, violins? That’s the stupidest setting I’ve ever
seen—and you a Science Officer!”
Kirk crept stealthily forward.
“It’s time you paid more attention to your own duties,” Spock’s voice
shouted uncharacteristically. “Furthermore, you are down here to work, not
to hold hands with a pretty yeoman!”
There was somebody, or something, ahead now. Kirk parted the brush.
Directly in front of him, his back turned, was a small humanoid, his skin
copper red, his hair platinum blond. There seemed to be two tiny silver
studs behind his ears. Kirk tensed himself to spring.
At the same time, Marple came crashing toward them from the opposite
side. The alien sprang up and ran directly into Kirk’s arms. The alien
struggled. Measuring him coolly, Kirk struck him squarely on the jaw, and
he went down. Clutching his face, he began to cry like a child.
Kirk stood over him, slowly relaxing. Obviously, this creature was no
threat. “I’m not going to hurt you,” he said. “Do you understand? I won’t
hurt you.”
He spoke, without much hope, in Interstellar. To his surprise, the alien
responded in the same tongue, though much slurred and distorted.
“You struck me with your hand.”
“I won’t strike you again. Here.” Kirk extended his hand to help the
being up. After a moment, the hand was taken. “You’ve been following us,
watching us. Why?”
“I am the Eyes of Vaal. He must see.”
“Who is Vaal?”
“Vaal is Vaal. He is everything.”
“You have a name?”
“I am Akuta. I lead the Feeders of Vaal.”
The rest of the party began to gather around them. Akuta tried to flinch in
all directions at once.
“They won’t hurt you either. I promise. Akuta, we have come here in
peace. We would like to speak to your Vaal.”
“Akuta alone speaks to Vaal. I am the eyes and the voice of Vaal. It is his
wish.”
“This is fascinating,” Spock said. He stepped forward and put his hands
gently to Akuta’s head, turning it slightly for a closer look at the two small
metal studs. “If you will permit me, sir… Captain, observe.”
“Antennae?” Kirk said.
Akuta had suffered the examination without protest. “They are my ears
for Vaal. They were given to me in the dim time, so the people could
understand his commands, and obey.”
“The people,” Kirk said. “Are they nearby?”
“We are close to Vaal, so we may serve him. I shall take you there.”
Kirk’s communicator shrilled. “Kirk here.”
It was Scott: “Captain, something’s grabbed us from the planet’s surface!
Like a giant tractor beam! We can’t break loose—we can’t even hold our
own.”
“Warp drive still out?”
“Yes, Captain. All we have is impulse power, and that on maximum.
Even with that, we’ll only be able to maintain power for sixteen hours.
Then we’ll burn up for sure.”
“Mr Scott, you are my Chief Engineer. You know everything about that
ship there is to know… more than the men who designed it. If you can’t get
those warp engines going again—you’re fired.”
“I’ll try everything there is to try, sir. Scott out.”
Kirk turned to Akuta. “Tell me about Vaal.”
“All the world knows about Vaal. He makes the. rains fall, and the sun to
shine. All good comes from Vaal.”
“Take us to him. We want to speak with him.”
“I will take you, but Vaal will not speak with you. He speaks only to me.”
“We’ll take our chances.”
Nodding, Akuta led the way.
Vaal became visible from a clearing some distance away. He was a great
serpentlike head, seeming to have been cut out of a cliff. His mouth was
open. In color it was greenish bronze, except for its red tongue, which
extended from its open mouth. There were steps cut in the tongue, so that a
man could walk right up and into the mouth. Two huge fangs extended
down, white and polished. Vaal’s eyes were open, and they glowed dimly
red, pulsating regularly. Even from here, they could hear that the pulsation
was timed with a faint but powerful-sounding low-pitched hum.
They drew closer, both Spock and Chekov taking tricorder readings. “Of
a high order of workmanship, and very ancient,” the First Officer said.
“But this isn’t the center, Spock,” Kirk said.
“No, Captain. The center is deep beneath it. This would seem to be an
access point. In addition there is an energy field extending some thirty feet
beyond the head in all directions. Conventional in composition, but most
formidable.”
“Akuta, how do you talk to Vaal?”
“Vaal calls me. Only then.”
Kirk turned to the rest of the party, scowling. “Well, we can’t get to it,
and we can’t talk to it until it’s ready to talk.”
“Vaal sleeps now,” Akuta said. “When he is hungry, you may be able to
talk with him—if he desires it.”
“When does he get hungry?”
“Soon. Come. We will give you food and drink. If you are tired, you may
rest.”
He led them down the hill and back into the jungle. It was not very long
before they emerged in a tiny village, which looked part Polynesian, part
American Indian, part exotic in its own way. There were small thatched
huts with hanging batik tapestries, simply made and mostly repeating the
totem image of Vaal. At one end of the village area were neatly stacked
piles of the explosive rainbow-colored rock. About a dozen aliens were
there, men and women, all very handsome, all younger than Akuta. They
seemed to be doing nothing at all.
“Akuta,” Kirk said, “where are the others?”
“There are no others.”
“But… where are the children?”
“Children? You speak unknown words to me.”
“Little people,” Kirk explained. “Like yourselves. But they grow.”
“Ah,” said Akuta. “Replacements. None are necessary. They are
forbidden by Vaal.”
“But,” said Martha Landon, “when people fall in love—” Chekov was
standing next to her, and at these words he smiled and slipped his hand
around her waist. She pressed it to her.
“Strange words,” said Akuta. “Children… love. What is love?”
“Well… when a man and a woman are… attracted…” She did not seem
to be able to go any farther. Akuta stared at her and at Chekov’s arm.
“Ah. The holding. The touching. Vaal has forbidden this.”
“There goes Paradise,” said Chekov.
During the questioning, the People of Vaal had been drawing closer and
closer, not menacingly, but in simple curiosity. Akuta turned to them.
“These are strangers from another place. They have come among us.
Welcome them.”
A young man stepped forward, beaming. “Welcome to Vaal.”
A girl, beautiful as a goddess, though wearing slightly less, stepped out
with a lei of flowers in her hands, smiling warmly. She went to Kirk and put
the lei over his head. “Our homes are open to you.”
Thus encouraged, the others came over, giggling, touching, exploring,
examining the clothing and the gadgets of the strangers. Another young
woman put a necklace of shells around Spock’s neck.
“It does something for you, Mr Spock,” Kirk said.
“Indeed, Captain. It makes me most uncomfortable.”
“I am Sayana,” the girl said. “You have a name?”
“I am Spock.”
Sayana repeated the name, pointing to him, and so did the rest of the
natives, with a wave of laughter.
“I fail to see,” Spock said, “what they find so amusing.”
“Come,” said Akuta. He led the landing party off to one of the huts. The
rest of the People of Vaal continued to crowd around, laughing and probing
gently.
The interior of the hut was simple, indeed primitive. There were a few
baskets, a few wooden vessels, some hangings with the totem image on
them, sleeping mats on the floor.
“This house is your house,” Akuta said. “I will send food and drink. You
are welcome in the place of Vaal.”
He went out. Chekov stared after him. “Now we’re welcome. A while
ago this whole planet was trying to kill us. It doesn’t make sense.”
“Nothing does down here,” McCoy agreed. “I’m going to run a
physiological reading on some of those villagers.”
He went out after Akuta. Kirk took out his communicator. “Kirk to
Enterprise. Come in.”
“Scott here, sir.”
“Status report, Scotty.”
“No change, Captain. The orbit is decaying along the computed lines. No
success with the warp drive. We’re going down and we can’t stop it.”
“I’m sick of hearing that word ‘can’t,’ Scott,” Kirk said harshly. “Get my
ship out of there.”
“But, sir—we’ve tried everything within engineering reason—”
“Then use your imagination! Tie every dyne of power the ship has into
the impulse engines. Discard the warp drive nacelles if you have to and
crack out of there with just the main section—but get out!”
“Well, we could switch over all but the life support circuits and boost the
impulse power—black the ship out otherwise—”
“Do it. Kirk out.”
McCoy reentered, frowning. “Incredible,” he said. “I ran a complete
check on the natives. There’s a complete absence of harmful bacteria in
their systems. No tissue degeneration, no calcification, no arteriosclerosis.
In simple terms, they’re not growing old. I can’t begin to tell you how old
any of them are. Twenty years—or twenty thousand.”
“Quite possible,” Spock said. “It checks with my atmosphere analysis.
The atmosphere completely screens out all dangerous radiation from their
sun.”
“Add to that a simple diet,” Kirk said, “perfectly controlled
temperature… apparently no vices at all… no natural enemies… and no
‘replacements’ needed. Maybe it is Paradise, after all—for them.”
Outside, there was a curious vibrating sound, not loud, but penetrating,
like the striking of an electronic gong. Kirk went out, beckoning to Spock.
The People of Vaal were no longer lounging around. They were moving
off toward the cliff, picking up rocks from the stockpiles as they left. Kirk
and Spock followed.
At the cliff, the people entered the mouth of Vaal with the rocks, and
came out without them. The red eyes were flashing, brightly now.
“Apparently our hypothesis is correct,” Spock said. There is no living
being in there. It is a machine, nothing more.”
“The field’s down. The people are going in. Let’s see what luck we
have.”
Kirk took a step forward. There was an immediate rumble of thunder, to
the considerable alarm of the People of Vaal. Kirk stepped back quickly.
“That’s not the way.”
“Evidently not. It is no ordinary machine, Captain. It has shown a
capacity for independent action in its attacks upon us. It may well possess a
more than rudimentary intelligence.”
“But it needs to eat. It can’t have any great power reserves.”
“Indeed, Captain. But that does not seem to be of help. The ship now has
only ten hours to break free.”
“What if Vaal’s power weakens as it approaches feeding time? Mr Spock,
check with the ship; get an estimate of the total energy being expended
against it. And measure it every hour.”
“With pleasure, Captain.” Spock took his communicator out quickly.
Deep in thought, Kirk went back to the hut, where he found all of the
landing party outside.
“What was it, Jim?”
“Mess call, Bones.”
Spock came up behind him. “A perfect example of symbiosis. They
provide for Vaal, and Vaal gives them everything they need.”
“Which may also answer why there are no children here,” Kirk said.
“There are exactly enough people to do what Vaal requires.”
“In my view,” Spock said, “a splendid example of reciprocity.”
“It would take a mind like yours to make that land of statement,” McCoy
said.
“Gentlemen, your arguments can wait until the ship is out of danger.”
“Jim,” McCoy said, “you can’t just blind yourself to what is happening
here. These are humanoids—intelligent! They’ve got to advance—progress!
Don’t you understand what my readings indicate? There’s been no change
here in perhaps thousands of years! This isn’t life, it’s stagnation!”
“You are becoming emotional, Doctor,” Spock said. “This seems to be a
perfectly practical society.”
“Practical? It’s obscene! Humanoids living only so that they can service a
hunk of tin!”
“A remarkable hunk of tin, Bones,” Kirk said. “And they seem healthy
and happy.”
“That has nothing to do with it—”
Kirk’s communicator cut in. “Kirk here.”
“Scott, sir. We’ve got a reading on the power source as Spock asked. It is
dropping a bit at a time—nominal, but a definite drain.”
Kirk grinned triumphantly at Spock. “Good. Keep monitoring. How are
you doing with the circuit switchover?”
“We’re putting everything but the kitchen sink into the impulse drive, sir.
It’ll take another eight hours to complete the work.”
“That’s cutting it fine, Scotty.”
“Aye, sir. But if we don’t break out, I’d rather we didn’t have to wait long
for the end of it.”
Kirk took a deep breath. “Right. Carry on, Scotty. Kirk out.”
The hours wore away. A large assortment of fruit and vegetables was
brought to the landing party by the People. Martha Landon was nervous and
on the verge of tears; Kirk sent her out with Chekov for “a breath of air”
and whatever reassurance Chekov could give her. Privately, Kirk hoped also
that the People would spy on them; the sight of a little open necking might
give them a few ideas disruptive to the absolute control Vaal had over them.
Of course, that might provoke Vaal to retaliation—but what more could
Vaal do than he was doing now?
Spock seemed to read Kirk’s intentions with no difficulty. “I am
concerned, Captain,” he said. “This may not be an ideal society, but it is a
viable one. If we are forced to do what it seems we must, in my opinion, we
will be in direct violation of the noninterference directive.”
“I’m not convinced that this is a viable society in the accepted sense of
the word. Bones was right. These people aren’t living, they’re just existing.
It’s not a valid culture.”
“Starfleet Command may think otherwise.”
“That’s a risk I’ll have to take.” He called the Enterprise. “How’s it
coming, Scotty?”
“Almost ready, sir. We’ll need a half hour yet.”
“You’ve only got forty-five minutes until you’re pulled into the
atmosphere.”
“I know, sir. As you said, it’s cutting things a bit fine.”
“I think we’re going to be able to help down here. I’ll be back in touch
shortly.” Kirk cut off. “All hands. We’re coming up on the next feeding
time for Vaal. Before that happens I want all the Vaalians confined in one
hut—the women too, no exceptions. When that gong sounds, round them all
up.”
The gong in fact sounded only a few minutes later. By this time Chekov
and McCoy, phasers drawn, had herded all the People together. They milled
around inside the hut, appalled, some wailing and crying.
“Vaal calls us!” Akuta cried out. His face contorted in agony, and he
touched the electrodes behind his ears. “We must go to him! He hungers!”
The bell rang again. “Please! Let us go to him! We must!”
Kirk got out the communicator again. “Scotty, do you still have phaser
power?”
“Aye sir. But what—”
“Lock all banks on the coordinates of the energy field you located down
here. On my command, fire and maintain full phasers on those
coordinates.”
“Aye, sir, but they won’t penetrate the field.”
“If my guess is right, they won’t have to. Stand by.”
The bell rang again, louder, longer, more insistently. After checking to
see that Chekov and McCoy had the People under control, Kirk and Spock
went to the edge of the village. Spock pointed his tricorder toward the cliff.
“Interesting, Captain. The center of the emanations—Vaal—is somewhat
weaker than the readings I’ve been getting. There are wide variations in
energy transmission, as though it is drawing from other sources.”
“Tapping its energy cells?”
“I would assume so.”
“Right. I think the ship’s attempts to pull away must have weakened it
considerably. It needs to be fed, but the reserve capacity could hold out for
days.”
“If it has to reinforce its energy field to ward off a phaser attack, it will
have to draw more heavily on its reserves.”
“My plan exactly, Mr Spock… Kirk to Enterprise. Open fire as ordered
and maintain.”
The phaser beams came down, in long sustained bursts. They were
stopped short of the head of Vaal by the force field, but they continued to
come down. Sparks flew at the point of contact. A hum rose from Vaal. loud
and piercing.
“Tremendous upsurge in generated power, sir. Obviously Vaal is trying to
reinforce its energy field.”
“Good. Let’s see how long it can do it!”
The sky darkened. A strong wind began to blow. Strong flashes of lights
lit up Vaal’s maw, and some smoke began to appear. The hum was now
intolerably loud, and the wind was howling. Lightning flashed overhead,
followed by thunder. The din was terrific.
Then, almost all at once, the storm clouds dissipated, the flashes inside
Vaal’s mouth stopped, and its eyes went out. The hum too was gone.
“Kirk to Enterprise. Cease firing.”
“No power generation at all,” Spock said. “Vaal is dead.”
“Mr Scott, status report.”
“Tractor beam gone. Potency returning to antimatter banks. I’ll put all
engineering sections on repairing the circuits immediately. Well have the
Transporter working in an hour.”
Kirk felt as though a great weight had slid off his shoulders. “You’re
rehired, Mr Scott. When the Transporter’s fixed, form an engineering detail
with full analytical equipment and beam them down. I think they’ll find
some interesting things inside that cave. Kirk out… Bones, Chekov. Let
them out.”
The People emerged, huddled, frightened, still sobbing. McCoy came
over to Kirk and Spock.
“Allow me to point out, Captain,” Spock said, “that by destroying Vaal,
you have also destroyed the People of Vaal.”
“Nonsense, Spock!” McCoy said. “It will be the making of these people.
Make them stand on their own feet, do things for themselves. They have a
right to live like men.”
“You mean they have a right to pain, worry, insecurity, tension… and
eventually death and taxes.”
“That’s all part of it. Yes! Those too!”
“I hope you will be able to find a way to explain it to them.” He nodded
toward Akuta, who had moved out of the group toward them, tears
streaming down his face.
“Vaal is dead. You have killed him. We cannot live.”
“You’ll live, Akuta,” Kirk said gently. “I’ll assign some of my people
here to help you.”
The girl Sayana was crying quietly. One of the young men, standing by
her, obviously wanted to comfort her, but did not know how to start. He
made several ineffectual gestures; and then, as if by instinct, his arms went
around her waist. She moved closer to him, and her head went onto his
shoulder.
“But,” Akuta said, “it was Vaal who put the fruit on the trees, who caused
the rain to fall. Vaal cared for us.”
“You’ll find that putting fruit on the trees is a relatively simple matter.
Our agronomist will help you with that. As for Vaal taking care of you,
you’ll have to learn to take care of yourselves. You might even like it.
“Listen to me, all of you. From this day on, you will not depend on Vaal.
You are your own masters. You will be able to think what you wish, say
what you wish, do what you wish. You will learn many things that are
strange, but they will be good. You will discover love; there will be
children.”
“What are children?” Sayana said.
As the young man’s arm tightened around her waist, Kirk grinned. “You
just go on the way you’re going, and you’ll find out.”
As Kirk, McCoy and Spock were going toward the bridge, McCoy said:
“Spock has an interesting analogy, Captain.”
“Yes, Mr Spock?”
“I am not at all certain that we have done exactly the right thing on
Gamma Trianguli VI, Captain.”
“We put those people back on a normal course of social evolution. I see
nothing wrong with that. It’s a good object lesson, Spock, in what can
happen when your machines become too efficient, do too much of your
work for you. Judging by their language, those people must have been
among the very first interstellar colonists—good hardy stock. They tamed
the planet, instituted weather control, and turned all jobs of that sort over to
a master computer, powered by the plentiful local ore. I suppose the fatal
mistake was in giving the computer the power to program itself—and the
end product was Vaal… Bones said something about an analogy.”
“Perhaps you will recall the biblical story of Genesis, sir?”
“I recall it very well, Spock.”
“We found a race of people living in Paradise, much as Adam and Eve
did. They were obeying every word of Vaal. We taught them, in effect, to
disobey that word. In a manner of speaking we have given Adam and Eve
the apple… the awareness of good and evil, if you will… and because of
this they have been driven out of Paradise.”
Kirk stopped and swung around on Spock suspiciously. “Mr Spock, you
seem to be casting me in the role of Satan. Do I look like Satan?”
“No, sir. But—”
“Is there anyone on this ship who looks even remotely like Satan?”
McCoy was grinning broadly. “I am not aware,” Spock said stiffly, “of
anyone in that category, Captain.”
“No, Mr Spock. I didn’t think you would be.”
BY ANY OTHER NAME
(D. C. Fontana and Jerome Bixby)
The landing party answering the distress call consisted of Kirk, Spock,
McCoy, the security officer Lt. Shea, and Yeoman Leslie Thompson. At
first there seemed to be no source at all on the planet for the call—no
wrecked spaceship, no debris. Had the ship been destroyed in space and the
survivors proceeded here in a shuttle?
Then two people appeared from the nearby trees, a man and a woman,
dressed in outfits rather like Merchant Marine jumpsuits. The woman was
lovely, but it was the man who dominated their attention. He looked
fortyish, with enormous power in his sturdy frame, great authority and
competence in his bearing. Neither of the strangers seemed armed, but Kirk
noticed that they wore small unobtrusive boxes on their belts. Their hands
rested on the belts near the boxes in an attitude so casually assumed that it
seemed to be only a part of their stance, but Kirk was wary.
“I’m Captain James Kirk of the USS Enterprise. We came in answer to
your distress call.”
“It was very kind of you to respond so quickly, Captain. But now you
will surrender your ship to me.”
Kirk stared. “You have an odd sense of humor.”
The strangers touched buttons on the boxes. Instantly, Kirk found himself
paralyzed—and so, evidently, was the rest of the “rescue” party.
“I am Rojan, of Kelva,” the strange man said. “I am your Commander,
from this moment on. Efforts to resist us, or to escape, will be severely
punished. Soon we, and you, will leave this galaxy forever. You humans
must face the end of your existence as you have known it.”
The woman moved forward to relieve the people of the Enterprise of
their phasers and communicators. Rojan went on: “You are paralyzed by a
selective field that neutralizes impulses to the voluntary muscles. I will now
release you all, Captain Kirk.”
He touched the belt device. Kirk tensed to jump him, then thought better
of it. “A neural field?”
“Radiated from a central projector, directed at whomever we wish.”
“What do you want?”
“Your ship, Captain. We have monitored many. The Enterprise— a
starship—is the best of its kind in your galaxy. It will serve us well in the
long voyage that is to come.”
“Voyage to where?”
“To your neighboring galaxy, in the constellation you call Andromeda.”
“Why”
“The Andromeda galaxy is our home,” Rojan said in a remote voice.
“What brought you here?” Spock said.
“Within ten millennia, high radiation levels will make life in our galaxy
impossible; it is reaching the stage in its evolution which will make it what
you call a quasar. The Kelvan Empire sent forth ships to explore other
galaxies—to search for one which our race could conquer and colonize.”
“Sorry,” Kirk said. “This galaxy is occupied.”
“Captain, you think you are unconquerable—your ship impregnable.
While we have talked, three of my people have boarded it, and the capture
has begun.", He took one of the confiscated communicators from the
Kelvan woman and clicked it open. “Subcommander Hanar, report.”
“This ship is ours,” a strange voice said from the communicator. “We
control the bridge, engineering and life support.”
Rojan folded the communicator shut, and stowed it on his own belt.
“What good is capturing my ship?” Kirk said. “Even at maximum warp,
the Enterprise couldn’t get to the Andromeda galaxy for thousands of years.
It’s two million light-years away!”
“We will modify its engines to produce velocities far beyond the reach of
your science. The journey between galaxies will take less than three
hundred of your years.”
“Fascinating,’' Spock said, “Intergalactic travel requiring ‘only’ three
hundred years is a leap beyond anything man has yet accomplished.”
Yeoman Thompson asked the Kelvan woman: “Did you make a voyage
of three hundred years?”
“Our ships were of multigeneration design,” the woman said. “I was born
in the intergalactic void. I shall die there, during the return journey.”
“Our mission,” Rojan added, “will be completed by a Captain who will
be my descendant.”
“What happened to your ship?” Kirk said.
“There is an energy barrier at the rim of your galaxy—”
“I know. We’ve been there.”
“We broke through it with great difficulty. Our ship was destroyed. We
barely escaped in a life craft. Our time here has been spent scanning your
systems, studying you. And now we have the means to begin our journey
again.”
“Why use our vessel?” Spock said. “Why not transmit a message back to
your galaxy?”
“No form of transmission can penetrate the barrier.”
“Rojan,” Kirk said, “we could take your problem to our Federation.
Research expeditions have catalogued hundreds of uninhabited planets in
this galaxy. Surely some of them would be suitable for your colonization.”
“We do not colonize, Captain,” Rojan said sharply. “We conquer. We
rule. There is no other way for us.”
“In other words,” McCoy said, ‘this galaxy isn’t big enough for both of
us’?”
“What will happen to the intelligent races here?” Kirk said.
“They will not be mistreated. Merely subordinated.” Rojan shrugged.
“The fate of the inferior… in any galaxy. Ah, Hanar!”
While he had been speaking, another Kelvan had popped into being
beside him, a younger man, with a hard intelligent face. There was no
shimmer or any other such effect comparable to the workings of the
Transporter; he just appeared.
“Tomar has examined the ship,” Hanar said. “The modifications are
under way.”
“Space again!” said Rojan. “I don’t think we could have kept our sanity,
living so long on this accursed planet.”
It did not seem to be so accursed to Kirk; in fact it was quite a pleasant,
Earthlike place. But Hanar said: “It is an undisciplined environment; one
cannot control it Yet there are things of interest.”
“Yes. But—disturbing. These ugly shells in which we have encased
ourselves… they have such heightened senses. How do humans manage to
exist in such fragile casings?”
They did not seem to care at all whether they were overheard, an obvious
expression of supreme confidence. Kirk listened intently to every word; he
had known such self-confidence to be misplaced before.
“Since the ship is designed to sustain this form,” Hanar said, “we have
little choice.”
Rojan turned to the woman. “Kelinda, take them to the holding area. We
will be keeping you and your party here, Captain. Your crew will
undoubtedly prefer to cooperate with us if they understand you are
hostages.”
“Move that way,” said Kelinda. “Keep together.”
Hanar summoned Kirk out of the cave and brought him to Rojan, who was
lounging comfortably by a lakeside, with Kelinda close by. Rojan waved
Hanar away. “Proceed to the ship, Hanar. Rest yourself, Captain.”
“What do you want with me now, Rojan?” Kirk said angrily.
“We will beam aboard the vessel shortly. I wish you to understand your
duties.”
“My duty is to stop you in any way I can.”
“You will obey.”
“Or you’ll kill more of my people?”
“Captain, I cannot believe that you do not understand the importance of
my mission,” Rojan said slowly, as if trying to explain to an equal. “We
Kelvans have a code of honor—harsh, demanding. It calls for much from
us, and much from those we conquer. You have been conquered. I respect
your devotion to your duty. But I cannot permit it to interfere with mine.”
Kirk remained silent, thinking. It was impossible not to be impressed by
what seemed to be so much straightforward honesty. It was apparent that
that “code” was what Rojan lived by, and that he believed in it unshakably.
It was also impossible to forget the crumbled shards of what had been
Yeoman Leslie Thompson, scattered in the grass not far from here.
Kelinda had moved away to a nearby burst of flowers. Rojan watched
her, but not, Kirk thought, with any sign of ordinary male interest.
“I hunger to be in space again, Rojan,” she said. “But these—these are
lovely. Captain Kirk, what is it you call them?”
“Flowers,” he said, moving closer to her, cautiously. “I don’t know the
variety.”
“Our memory tapes tell us of such things on Kelva,” Rojan said.
“Crystals which form with such rapidity that they seem to grow. They look
like these; fragile things, somewhat. We call them ‘sahsheer.’”
“The rose,” Kirk said, “by any other name…”
“Captain?” Rojan said.
“A quotation, from a great human poet, Shakespeare. ‘That which we call
a rose by any other name would smell as sweet.’ ”
Kelinda bent to smell the flowers, while Kirk studied her. Did this
woman in reality have a hundred tentacles, all adapted to different uses? It
was hard to imagine.
“Kelinda, Captain, come away,” Rojan said. “We must leave now.”
Directly they were beamed up, Rojan directed Kirk to take him and
Kelinda to the bridge. There, Uhura was at her station, and Chekov at his,
but a Kelvan woman was in the Helmsman’s seat, and Hanar was standing
nearby.
“Drea has computed and laid a course for Kelva, Rojan,” Hanar said.
“Sir,” said Chekov, “we’ve jumped to warp eight.”
“And we’ll go faster yet,” Rojan said. Increase speed to warp eleven.”
Chekov looked around sharply at Kirk, who could only shrug his
helplessness and nod.
“On course and proceeding as planned,” said the Kelvan woman at the
helm, who was evidently Drea.
“Very well,” said Rojan. “Hanar, proceed with the neutralizing
operation.”
Hanar nodded and went to the elevator. Kirk said quickly: “What
neutralizing operation?”
“You humans are troublesome for us, Captain. There are not enough of us
to effectively guard all of you all the time. Further, the food synthesizers
cannot continue to manufacture food for all of you for our entire journey.
We are therefore neutralizing all nonessential personnel.”
“No!”
“Captain, you can do nothing to stop it. The procedure is already under
way. Now, as to bridge personnel…” He moved toward Uhura. “We have no
need of communications for some centuries.”
Uhura sat frozen in her chair, staring at Rojan in horror. He touched his
belt device—and there was nothing left in her seat but a geometrical solid.
“And since Drea is now capable of doing our navigating—” Chekov too
vanished. Drea had already neutralized two crewmen beyond Scott’s
station. Kirk stood frozen.
“They are not dead, Captain,” Rojan reminded him. “They are merely
reduced to the sum total of what they are.”
“That’s very comforting,” Kirk said sarcastically. “But not pleasant to
watch. I’m going to Sickbay. My First Officer was taken ill.”
“Yes, I was informed. Go ahead.”
Sickbay was deserted. Kirk found Scott, McCoy and Spock picking at food
at a table in the recreation room. Getting himself a tray, he joined them.
“Reports, gentlemen?”
“I’m a little sick,” McCoy said. “We burned out my neuroanalyzer, to no
effect. I saw one of the Kelvans, the one they call Tomar, reduce four of my
doctors and nurses to those… little blocks.”
“I’ve seen them do that too. Remember, the process is reversible. I only
wonder how far it’s going to go.”
“I have been checking our table of organization against their apparent
capabilities,” Spock said. “It appears that we will have very few ‘survivors.’
They will need none of the security men, for example. And once we cross
the energy barrier, Engineering can be reduced to a skeleton crew. Beyond
that point lies some three hundred years of straight cruising—at an
astonishing velocity, to be sure, but still cruising. And of the officers, it
would seem that only we four could be regarded as ‘essential.’ I am not
even sure of your status, Captain, or mine.”
“How so?”
“Rojan is in command now.”
“Quite so,” Kirk said bitterly. “Scotty, have you found out anything about
the paralysis projector?”
“Quite a lot, and none of it good. The machine is in Engineering, and it’s
encased in that same stuff the door of our jail was made of. Furthermore,
it’s nae a simple machine—and it’s the only one of its kind on board. I think
it must be the source of all their special powers—and it’s impregnable.”
“Any suggestions?”
“One,” Scott said. “Self-destruct.”
Kirk considered it. “We’ve been driven to that point, or almost, once
before,” he said at last. “But aside from my aversion to suicide—and the
deaths of everybody else—it’s not practicable. We’d never complete the
routine with the computer before Rojan paralyzed us.”
“I thought of that,” Scott said. “I could do it myself, though. Remember
that we’ve got to cross the energy barrier. It willna be easy at best. A little
sabotage in the matter-antimatter nacelles, and we’d blow, for good and
all.”
Kirk made a quick silencing gesture. Tomar had come in, and was now
approaching them, staring curiously at their trays.
“I do not understand,” he said, “why you go to the trouble of consuming
this bulk material to sustain yourselves.” He pulled a flat pillbox from a
pocket and opened it. “These contain all the required nutritional elements.”
“Not for human forms,” McCoy said. “Bulk is necessary to our digestive
systems, and there’s a limit to the amount of energy that can be crammed
into a pill, too. Perhaps you haven’t been in human form long enough to
find just pills debilitating, but you will—you will.”
“Indeed? Then you had better show me promptly what else we shall
need, and how to manage it.”
McCoy looked rebellious and Kirk himself felt a hope die almost before
it had been born. “I think you’d better, Bones,” he said.
“All right. Come on, I’ll show you how to work the selector.” McCoy led
Tomar off toward the wall dispenser.
“Spock,” Kirk said in a whisper, “shall we self-destruct? Crossing the
barrier may be our last chance to do so.”
“Granted,” Spock whispered back. “But it is said on Earth that while
there is life, there is hope. That is sound logic: no multivalued problem has
only one solution.”
“Well, we couldn’t knock out their central machine even if we were able.
It has to be kept intact to restore the rest of our people to human form.”
There was quite a long silence. McCoy had settled Tomar at a table with
a tray, and Tomar was gingerly forking some meat into his mouth. Judging
by his nod, he found it agreeable, and he began eating at a fair speed for a
newcomer to the habit. McCoy grinned and rejoined his colleagues.
“I’m almost sorry I did that,” he said. “It looks like he likes food—and I
wouldn’t want any of them to enjoy anything.”
Spock continued to watch Tomar. “Most peculiar.”
“What is?” Kirk said.
“The isolated glimpses of things I saw when I touched Kelinda’s mind
are beginning to coalesce in my consciousness. The Kelvans have superior
intellectual capacity. But to gain it, they apparently sacrificed many things
that would tend to distract them. Among these are the pleasures of the
senses—and, of course, emotions.”
“But then, Tomar shouldn’t be enjoying the taste of food.”
“He has taken human form,” Spock said, “and is having human
reactions.”
Kirk’s mind leapt ahead in response. “If they all respond to stimulation of
the senses, maybe we could confuse them. They don’t know how to handle
those senses yet. If we can distract them enough, we could try to get the belt
devices away. That’s their only hold on us.”
“It seems reasonable,” Spock said.,
“All right. We watch for opportunities to work on them—hit them every
way we can think of.”
Scott was studying Tomar. “I can think of one way right off,” he said. He
rose and went to the Kelvan. “Lad, you’ll be needing something to wash
that down with. Have you ever tried Saurian brandy?”
McCoy stopped Hanar as the Kelvan was passing by the door to the
examination room. “Come on in a moment, please, Hanar.”
“What is it, human?”
“I’ve noticed you’re not looking too well.”
“Impossible. We do not malfunction, as do you humans.”
“No? You’re forgetting you’re in a human body. And that does
malfunction—that’s why Rojan considers me essential. You look pale.” He
gestured to the table. “Sit up there.”
When Hanar complied, McCoy picked up his medical tricorder and
began taking readings. “Uh huh… Hmmm… I don’t know about that…
Hmmmm.”
“Please articulate, human.”
“Well, it looks to me like this body of yours is getting a little anemic, and
has some other subclinical deficiencies. Comes from taking your food in
pills, instead of good solid substance.” He turned aside and picked up a
hypo, which he set.
“What are you doing?”
“I’m going to give you a shot—high potency vitamin-mineral
concentrate. You’ll have to have one three times a day for a few days. And
eat some solid food.”
It had taken Scott a while to get Tomar down to serious drinking; initially
he had been too interested in the tartan, the claymore, the armorial bearings
on the walls, the standing suit of ancient armor in Scott’s quarters, all of
which he declared nonfunctional in a starship. He did not seem to grasp
either the concept of mementos or that of decoration.
Finally, however, they were seated at Scott’s desk with a bottle and
glasses between them. After a while, it was two bottles. Tomar seemed to
remain in total control of himself, as if he’d been drinking lemonade. “No
more?” he said.
“Well… no more Saurian brandy, but…” Scott looked around and found
another bottle. “Now, y’see, this liquor is famous on Ahbloron—I mean,
Aldibib-ble—on one of these planets we go to.”
“It is a different color from the other.”
“Yes. And stronger, too.” He poured some into Tomar’s glass with an
unsteady hand, and then, perforce, some into his own. Somehow this
experiment was not working out right.
Kirk paid a call on the cabin Kelinda had commandeered. When she invited
him in, he found her looking at a tape on a viewscreen. “Did I disturb you?”
“Disturb? What is it you wish?”
He went over to her. “I want to apologize.”
“I do not understand, Captain.”
“For hitting you. I wanted to say I was sorry.”
“That is not necessary. You attempted to escape, as we would have. That
I was taken in by your ruse is my fault, not yours.”
Kirk smiled and reached out to touch her face gently. “I don’t usually hit
beautiful women.”
“Why not, if there is need?”
“Because there are better things for men and women to do.” He moved
the hand down to her neck. “Was it here that I hit you?”
“No, on the other side.”
“Oh.” He leaned to the other side, kissed her neck, and nuzzled her ear.
“Is that better?”
“Better? Was it intended to be a remedy?”
“This is.” Drawing her to her feet, he took her in his arms and kissed her.
After a moment she drew back. “Is there some significance to this
action?”
“It was meant to express… well, among humans it; shows warmth, love
—”
“Oh. You are trying to seduce me,” she said, as if she were reading a
weather report. “I have been read-ing about you.”
“Me?”
“Humans. This business of love. You have devoted much literature to it.
Why have you built such a mystique around a simple biological fact?”
“We enjoy it”
“The literature?”
“Kelinda, I’m sorry I brought the subject up.”
“Did you regard this contact of the lips as pleasurable?”
Kirk sighed. “I did.”
“Curious. I wonder why.” Abruptly she put her arms around him and
kissed him back.
The door opened and Rojan came in. Kirk made a point of drawing back
with guilty swiftness.
“Is there some problem, Captain?” Rojan said.
“None.” Kirk left quickly. Rojan stared after him.
“What did he want here?”
“He came to apologize for hitting me,” Kelinda said. “Apparently, it
involves some peculiar touching contacts.”
“In what manner?”
Kelinda hesitated, then reached up to nibble at Rojan’s neck and ear.
Rojan stepped away from her, frowning.
“They are odd creatures, these humans. Please have the reports on fuel
consumption relayed to Sub-commander Hanar as soon as possible.”
Spock had taught Rojan to play chess; the Kelvan had learned with
breathtaking speed. They were playing now, in the recreation room.
“Yes, they are peculiar,” Spock said, moving a piece. “I very often find
them unfathomable, but an interesting psychological study.”
Rojan moved in return. “I do not understand this business of biting
someone’s neck to apologize.”
Spock looked up, raising his eyebrows. Then he looked back at the game,
saw an opening and quickly moved another piece. “I believe you are
referring to a kiss. But it is my understanding that such, uh, apologies are
usually exchanged between two people who have some affection for each
other.”
“Kelinda has no affection for Captain Kirk,” Rojan said quickly.
Spock studied Rojan’s next move and shook his head. “You seemed
disturbed about the incident Your game is off.”
“Why should I be disturbed?”
“It seems to me you have known Kelinda for some time. She is a Kelvan,
as you are. Among humans, I have found the symptoms you are displaying
would be indicative of jealousy.”
“I have no reason for such a reaction. Kelinda is a female. Nothing
more.”
“Captain Kirk seems to find her quite attractive.’'
“Of course she is.”
“But you are not jealous.”
“No!”
“Nor upset.”
“Certainly not!”
Spock made his move. “Checkmate.”
Kirk, Spock and McCoy were holding another council of war in the
recreation room. Kirk was depressed. “The thing is, I can’t tell if we’re
getting; anywhere. And I haven’t seen Scotty for what seems like months.”
'"You haven’t seen Tomar either,” McCoy said. “But the point is, these
things take time. The Kelvans started out with adapted human bodies in
superb physical shape—textbook cases, as Spock said. They have high
resistance. I’ve been giving Hanar shots that would have driven our whole
crew up the wall in an hour. He responds slowly—but he’s getting more
irritable by the minute, now.”
“And Rojan,” Spock said, “has exhibited symptoms of jealousy toward
Kelinda and you.”
“What about Kelinda, Jim?” McCoy said.
“No progress,” Kirk said, uncomfortably.
“What approach did you take with her? Could be you’re a little rusty—”
Kirk felt himself begin to bristle. Spock interposed smoothly: “I would
say it is sufficient that Rojan is jealous.”
“Right,” Kirk said quickly. “That’s the opening wedge. As soon as it’s a
little wider, we move.”
Behind Kirk, Kelinda’s voice said: “I would like to speak with you,
Captain.”
Spock stood up at once. “Doctor, I think I need another dose of
stokaline.”
“Huh?” McCoy said. “Oh, yes. Pardon us.”
They went out. Kirk leaned back in his chair and studied Kelinda. “You
had something to say?”
“Yes.” Did she really seem a trifle uncomfortable, even perhaps
awkward? Kirk waited. Then she took a deep breath and touched him,
lightly, on a shoulder. “This cultural mystique surrounding a biological
function…”
“Yes?”
“You realize it really is quite overdone.”
“Oh. Quite.”
“However, I was wondering… would you please apologize to me again?”
Rojan was in the command chair. Behind him, the elevator doors snapped
open, and then Hanar’s voice said, with surprising belligerence: “Rojan. I
want to talk to you.”
Rojan looked up in surprise. “Very well, Hanar.”
“First, I do not like the way responsibility and duty have been portioned
out to us.”
“It is the way your duties have always been assigned.”
“And that is my second quarrel with you. It was always unjust—”
Rojan snapped out of the chair. “Hanar—”
“And further, I do not care much for the autocratic way you order us
about on this ship, which we captured, not you—”
“Confine yourself to your quarters!”
Hanar hesitated, as though he had had a lot more to say, but had thought
better of it. Then he spun on his heel and left without further
acknowledgment.
Rojan found his own fists clenching in anger—and was suddenly aware
that Drea was watching him in amazement from the navigator’s station. As
Rojan turned his back to hide his expression, Spock came onto the bridge
and went toward his library-computer. Rojan followed.
“You were not called to the bridge, Spock. What is your purpose here?”
“Sensors and various other recording devices require monitoring and
certain adjustments.”
“Very well, proceed… Have you seen Captain Kirk?”
“Do you want him? I will call him to the bridge.”
“No. I… wondered where he was.”
“Dr McCoy and I left him some time ago in the recreation room.”
“He was alone, then?”
“No. Kelinda was with him. She seemed most anxious to speak to him.”
“I told him to stay away from her.”
“It would appear that you have little control over her, sir… or perhaps
Captain Kirk has more.”
Rojan turned abruptly and headed for the elevator.
Kirk and Kelinda were locked in a kiss when Rojan came through the
recreation room door. Kirk looked up, but did not release Kelinda entirely;
instead he kept a possessive arm around her as he turned toward Rojan.
Rojan stopped and stared.
“Kelinda, I told you to avoid this human!”
“I did not wish to,” she said.
“I am your commander.”
“I’ve found,” Kirk said, “that doesn’t mean much to a woman if she’s
bound to go her own way.”
“You have done this to her! Corrupted her—turned her away from me!”
“If you couldn’t keep her, Rojan, that’s not my problem.”
Furiously, Rojan leaped at Kirk. He seemed to have forgotten all about
the belt device, his bare hands reaching out. Kirk pushed Kelinda aside and
met Rojan’s rush.
The two men, equally powerful, slammed at each other like bulls. Rojan
was more clumsy, more unaccustomed to the body he was in. Kirk was the
quicker and the more adept fighter, but he was not possessed by the anger
which obviously drove Rojan.
Kelinda did not intervene; she only watched. After a moment she was
joined by Spock and McCoy.
Kirk delivered a final punch that sent Rojan spinning down, backward.
But he was not beaten yet. He started to climb back to his feet.
“Rojan—wait!” Kirk said. “Listen to me-”
Rojan flung himself forward, but Kirk fended him off. “Listen! Why
didn’t you use your paralyzer? Don’t you know why? Because you’ve
become a human yourself.” Kirk ducked a punch. “Look at you—brawling
like a street fighter—shaking with rage—”
Rojan paused and stared as the words began to sink in. “What?”
“You thought I took your woman away from you. You were jealous—and
you wanted to kill me with your bare hands. Would a Kelvan have done
that? Would he have to? You reacted with the emotions of a human, Rojan.
You are one.”
“No! We cannot be.”
“You have no choice. You chose this ship. Because of its environmental
systems, you had to take human form to use it. And you’re stuck with it—
you and your descendants—for the next three hundred years. Look what’s
happened to you in the short time you’ve been exposed to us. What do you
think will happen in three hundred years? When this ship gets to Kelva, the
people on it will be aliens, the Kelvans their enemies.
“We have a mission. We must carry it out.” But Rojan’s tone showed that
he was shaken.
“Your mission was to find worlds for your people to live on. You can still
do that. I told you we could present your case to the Federation. I know it
would be sympathetic. There are many unpopulated planets in our galaxy.
You could develop them in peace, your way.”
“They would do that? You would extend welcome to invaders?”
“No. But we do welcome friends.”
“Perhaps,” said Rojan, “perhaps it could be done.”
Spock said: “A robot ship could be sent back to Kelva with the
Federation proposal.”
“But what of us?” Rojan said. “If we… if we retain this form, where can
we find a place?”
“Seems to me,” McCoy said, “that little planet you were on was kind of a
nice place.”
“Pleasant… but…”
“The Federation would probably grant a colonization permit to a small
group of people who desired to settle there,” Spock said. “You do represent
an old and highly intelligent race.”
Rojan turned to Kelinda and jerked his head at Kirk. “You would want to
go with him?”
Kelinda glanced at Kirk and then back at Rojan. “As you have said, he is
not our kind. I believe I owe you an apology.” She kissed him. “It is
pleasurable, Rojan.”
“You know, Rojan,” Kirk said, “one of the advantages of being a human
is being able to appreciate beauty… of a flower, or of a woman. Unless
you’d rather conquer a galaxy?”
“No, Captain, I would rather not.” Rojan took Kelinda’s hand. “A link in
a chain—that’s all we were. Perhaps there is an opportunity for us to be
more.” He turned away, crossed the room and activated an intercom.
“Bridge, this is Rojan.”
“Yes, Commander,” said Drea’s voice.
“Turn the ship. We are returning to the alien… We are returning home.”
“Sir?”
“Turn the ship about.”
He led Kelinda out. Kirk, Spock and McCoy expelled simultaneous sighs
of relief.
“Jim, I was coming to tell you—”
“Yes, Bones?”
“I found Scotty in his room with Tomar. Apparently they’ve been having
a drinking bout all this time. They were both under the table—but Tomar
went down first. Scott had Tomar’s belt device in his hand. He just never
made it to the door with it.”
Kirk grinned. “The Kelvans,” he said, “still have a lot to learn about
being human, don’t they?”
THE CLOUD MINDERS
(Margaret Armen, David Gerrold and Oliver Crawford)
They were led into a large, oddly designed chamber. Its floor and three of
its walls glittered with a subdued iridescence. The fourth wall had been left
open to the expanse of sky beyond, its border a waist-high balustrade of the
same iridescent material. There was a careful carelessness about the manner
in which luxuriously cushioned benches were scattered about the room, a
calculated casualness that matched the surrealistic sculptural forms which
decorated it. Central to it was a small dais, flanked by two straggly carved
poles of almost ceiling height. They struck Kirk as purposeless even as
decoration.
From the balustrade, Spock called, “Captain, here, sir, please!”
The whole planet was spread out beneath them. Its surface could be only
half seen through drifting mists. What was visible was dwarfed by distance
to the dimensions of a relief map, its hills anonymous mounds, its valleys
vague shadows. There was both beauty and terror in such eminence. It
evoked a feeling of uneasiness in Kirk.
“Remarkable,” Spock said. “The finest example of sustained antigravity
elevation I have ever seen.”
The sound of a door opening behind them made them turn. A young
woman had entered the room of antigravity triumph. She was tall, willow-
slim, willow-graceful, her golden hair a mist of mystery around her perfect
face. She didn’t walk—she glided, her approaching movement so.supple it
lacked all suggestion of bone or skeletal muscle. Like the clouds which
obscured the planet’s contours, she drifted toward the two Enterprise
officers.
“My father,” she said to Plasus, “your sentinels informed me of our
honored guests’ arrival. I came to extend my greetings.”
“Gentlemen, my daughter—one of our planet’s incomparable works of
art. Droxine, Captain James Kirk and his First Officer, Mr Spock.”
Her eyes lingered for a moment on the satyr ears of the First Officer. “I
have never met a Vulcan before, sir,” she said demurely.
Spock bowed. “Nor I a work of art, madame.”
Kirk looked at Spock with quizzical amusement and surprise. Plasus
beckoned his guests back into the room from the balcony. “Come,
gentlemen, there is much to see in our city. This is our Council gallery. We
have some of our finest art forms assembled here for the viewing of all our
city dwellers. That piece there can boast of a special—”
He stopped abruptly. The piece he had turned to was a transparent solid
of flowing serpentine lines curled like coiling flames. A miner’s mortae had
been driven into it, webbing it with cracks.
“Disruptors again!” Furiously, Plasus jerked the tool from the sculpture
and dashed it to the floor.
“They are despoiling the whole city,” Droxine said.
“For what purpose?” Spock asked.
“Again, to force the Council to accede to their demands.” Plasus spoke
with the impatience of an adult irritated by a half-witted child.
“Just what are these demands?” Kirk said.
“Nothing you need concern yourself about, Captain.”
Kirk’s voice was very quiet. “I must concern myself with anything that
interferes with the delivery of the zenite, Mr Advisor.”
“Mr Advisor, plant life is the source of oxygen,” Spock added. “If all
plant life is destroyed on Marak II, all humanoid and animal life will end
there with it.”
Plasus had recovered his suavity. “I assure you, gentlemen, you will get
what you came for.”
“I hope so,” Kirk said. He paused. “Ardana is a member of the
Federation. It is your Council’s responsibility that nothing interferes with its
obligation to another Federation member.”
“And we accept the responsibility.”
Spock touched the webbed cracks in the sculpture. “But why destroy art
forms? They are a loss to everybody.”
“Art means nothing to the Disruptors.” Plasus stooped to pick up the
mortae. “This is the only form they understand.” Rage overpowered him
again. Nobody spoke as he fought to regain control of himself. “But no
doubt you would like to rest. A chamber has been prepared for you.
Sentinels will conduct you to it, gentlemen.”
It was dismissal. Droxine’s eyes followed Spock as the two from the
Enterprise left the room.
“The Disruptors must be mad,” she said, “to have attacked two such
charming strangers.”
“They grow more daring every day,” Plasus said.
“Do you think the Captain and his very attractive officer will feel we are
responsible?”
Plasus smiled indulgently down on his daughter. “Responsible for
injuries done to the charming strangers—or to our diplomatic ties?”
Droxine flushed. “Oh, I was concerned about both, father.”
Plasus laughed outright. “I am sure they will not blame you.”
She exhaled a breath of relief. “I’m glad. I like, them. They are not at all
like our men of Ardana… Father, promise me not to find the zenite too
soon?”
Before he could reply, two guards burst into the ; room. Between them
was a powerful man, his muscular shoulders tensed against their grip, but
not struggling to free himself. That he had been doing so before was evident
in the guards’ panting.
“Apologies, Mr Advisor,” said one of them. “This Troglyte was
apprehended leaving the city. As he lacks a transport card, we thought you
would want to question him.”
The man’s aspect bore little resemblance to the stunted figures of other
Troglytes. Despite the grime of his miner’s overalls, the unkempt tangle of
his shoulder-length hair, he was handsome. Proudly he drew himself to his
full height, his eyes bright with scorn as they fixed on Plasus.
“What is your business in Stratos City, Troglyte?” demanded the High
Advisor.
Though the flashing eyes burned with hate, the lips were silent.
“Speak! I command you!”
“My business is to repair,” said the prisoner.
“Indeed. Then you must have a repair order. Where is it?”
“It was forgotten.”
“Did you also forget your transport card?” The question was harsh with
irony.
“It was lost when your sentinels attacked me.”
“And where was your cavern mortae lost?” Plasus pointed to the empty
sheath at the waist of the overalls. Then, striding to the mutilated sculpture,
he plunged the mortae he still held in his hand into the hole it had made.
“Here, perhaps.”
“I came to make repairs,” the prisoner said stubbornly.
“You shall make them—by telling me the names of the Disruptors.”
“I know nothing.”
“I would advise you to increase your knowledge.”
An open sneer distorted the handsome face. “That is not possible for a
Troglyte. The Stratos City dwellers have said so.”
“Secure him to the dais,” Plasus told the guards.
They tried to. But as they pushed the miner toward the dais, he knocked
one guard aside and raced for the iridescent balustrade. The guards moved
for their guns, but Plasus shouted, “No! I want him alive!”
It was too late. The prisoner had flung himself over the balustrade.
After a moment, Plasus shrugged. “How unfortunate,” he said
philosophically. “How unfortunate.” He went out.
Droxine, as composed as her father, had been busying herself with an
arrangement of goblets on a cubical table. The gold metal of one rang as she
set it down, and a moment later, Spock came through the still open doors of
the Council chamber.
“Mr Spock!” the girl cried. “I thought you had accompanied Captain
Kirk to the rest chamber down the corridor.”
“There was some disturbance,” the First Officer . said. “It awakened me.”
“I was but setting the table. I did not realize I would disturb you.”
“Only Vulcan ears would find such a noise discernible from such a
distance,” Spock said.
The perfect eyelids lifted. “It seems Vulcans are fascinatingly different,”
said their owner. “In many ways.”
Their eyes met. “The same may be said of inhabitants of Stratos,” Spock
observed.
“Vulcan eyes seem to be very discerning, too.” She drew him down on
the bench beside her.
His attention was sufficiently on this Ardanan work of art for him to fail
his reputation for discerning sight for once. Behind him, a small figure
draped in the clothing of Stratos crept from behind a pillar and moved
stealthily down the corridor.
In the rest chamber, Kirk, breathing evenly, lay apparently asleep on a wide,
billowy-pillowed dais. Vanna, crossing to him silently, drew a mortae from
under her gown and laid its blade against his throat.
Kirk opened his eyes and he seized Vanna’s wrist. Twisting the mortae
from her grasp, he fell back with her on the bed. She kicked and writhed,
but shortly he got her arms pinned back above her head.
“Well, that’s better,” he said, breathing evenly. “You again!” The face
beneath his chest was lovelier than he remembered; but its eyes were cold
as death.
“You sleep lightly, Captain,” Vanna said.
“And I see you’ve changed your dressmaker.”
“Release me,” she said tonelessly.
“So you can attack me again?”
“Then call the guards,” she told him contemptuously. “They will protect
you.”
“But I don’t want protection. I find this very enjoyable.”
“I do not.”
Kirk grinned down at her. “All right, I’ll make a bargain with you.
Answer some questions, and I’ll let you up.”
“What questions?”
Kirk shook his head. “First, your word.”
Hesitation came and went in her face. “I will answer.”
Kirk released her. Panther-swift, she leaped to her feet and stooped for
the mortae beside the bed. As he gripped her wrist again, he became aware
that Spock’s bed was empty. Where was Spock in this place of sudden
treacheries? With that gliding girl?
The gliding girl was leaning back against a down cushion, its cream less
creamy than the skin of her face. Spock, sitting very erect, was saying,
“Yes, we Vulcans pride ourselves on our logic.”
“Also on complete control of your emotions?”
“Emotions interfere with logic,” he said firmly.
“Is that why you take mates only once in seven years?”
“The seven-year cycle is biological. At that time the mating drive
outweighs all other motivation.”
Droxine moved her head from the pillow and rested it against his
shoulder. He looked down at the spindrift of golden hair, its fragrance in his
nostrils, and their eyes locked. “Can nothing disturb the cycle, Mr Spock?”
The Vulcan logician cleared his throat. “Exceptional feminine beauty is
always disturbing, madame.”
She had lifted her mouth toward his when a clang resounded from down
the corridor. Spock sprang from the bench and ran for the door. Rushing
into the rest chamber, he stopped dead at the sight of Vanna. Kirk had
wrenched the mortae from her once more and dashed it to the floor.
“Captain, are you all right?”
From behind him Droxine cried, “Vanna! Why have you come here?”
Disheveled but still proud in her disarray, the Troglyte girl bent in a low
bow to Kirk and Spock. “To welcome our honored guests,” she said in a
voice that cut with sarcasm. “Just as I was taught to do when I served in
your father’s household.”
“It seems the Troglytes have the impression that our ship is here to
intimidate them,” Kirk told Spock.
“It is not an impression, Captain,” Vanna said hotly. “It is truth!”
Kirk picked up her mortae and shoved it into his belt. “We are here to get
that consignment of zenite. Nothing more.”
“Starships do not transport cargo!” Vanna cried.
“In times of emergency they do anything,” Kirk said. “And believe me,
this plant plague on Marak II is an extreme emergency.”
“Lies will not keep the Troglytes in their caverns, and neither will your
ship, Captain.”
Droxine said, “You speak like a Disruptor, Vanna.”
“I speak for my people! They have as much right to the skies as you
Stratos dwellers!”
“What would Troglytes do here?” asked Droxine disdainfully.
“Live! With warmth and light as everyone should!”
“Your caverns are warm,” said Droxine coldly. “And your eyes are
unaccustomed to light. Just as your minds are unaccustomed to reason.” She
moved to a wall and pressed a button. A sentinel appeared at the door; and
waving a casual hand toward Vanna, Droxine said, “Take her away.”
Kirk looked at Spock. “Surely,” he said to Droxine, “you don’t deny light
and warmth to the Troglytes?”
“The Troglytes are workers,” said the child of the High Advisor. “They
mind zenite and till the soil. Those things can’t be done here.”
“In other words,” Spock said, “they perform all the physical toil
necessary to maintain Stratos?”
Droxine smiled at him. “That is their function in our society.”
“Yet they are not allowed to share its advantages?”
“How can they share what they don’t understand?”
“They could be taught to understand,” Kirk said.
Droxine’s answer had the sound of a lesson learned by rote. “The
complete separation of toil and leisure has given Ardana a perfectly
balanced social system.”
Kirk was finding this conversation increasingly disturbing. He began to
pace. Spock said, “ ‘Troglyte’ is a corruption of an ancient Earth term,
Captain. Its technical translation is ‘cave dweller.’ ”
Kirk threw him a tight nod. “We should have realized—”
He was interrupted by a shriek of agony echoing from the Council
gallery. He and Spock exchanged a glance of alarm and raced down the
corridor to the room of luxuriously cushioned benches.
Tied tightly to its central dais, Vanna was screaming. Incandescing rays
from its flanking poles flooded her face with green fire. She shrieked again.
Droxine went back to the cubical table and straightened a gold goblet,
while Plasus watched. Kirk and Spock sprang to the dais to tear at the cords
that bound Vanna’s writhings.
“Stop it!” Kirk shouted at Plasus. There was a long moment. Then
Plasus’ hands came together in a faint clap. The rays faded. Still bound,
Vanna slumped into unconsciousness.
“She is stubborn,” Plasus said. “Physical discomfort is the only
persuasion they understand, Captain.”
“You have tortured her.” Kirk’s voice shook with anger.
“Is it preferable to spare Vanna—and allow an entire planet to be
destroyed? You yourself pointed out that the search for your zenite must be
short” Plasus’ voice was eminently reasonable.
Spock approached Droxine. “Violence in reality is quite different from
theory. Do you not agree, madame?”
“But nothing else moves the Troglytes. What else can they understand?”
“All those little things you and I understand,” the Vulcan said gravely.
“Such as kindness, justice, equality.”
She shivered slightly. Then she drew a fold of her gown around her, rose
gracefully and left the gallery.
“The abstract concepts of an intellectual society are beyond the
comprehension of the Troglytes, Mr Spock.” The High Advisor was angry
now.
“The abstract concept of loyalty seems dear to Vanna,” Kirk said.
“A few Troglytes are brought here as retainers. Vanna was one of them.
They receive more training than the others.”
“But obviously no more consideration,” Kirk said.
Open rage thickened Plasus’ voice. “I fail to see the use of this continued
criticism.” He beckoned to his guards and pointed to the slumped body on
the dais. “Revive her!”
Kirk leaped to the dais. “The only way you’ll use that device again is on
both of us!”
“An imposing display of primitive gallantry. Captain. You realize, of
course, that I can have my guards remove you.”
“Of course,” Kirk said. “But Starfleet Command seldom takes kindly to
having either rays or physical force used on one of its personnel. Think
twice.”
Plasus did so. “Why are you so concerned about this Disruptor’s well-
being, Captain Kirk?”
“I want that zenite.”
“Then stop interfering—and I’ll get it for you. We will get it for you in
our own way. Guards, take the prisoner to confinement quarters. As for you,
Captain, you will return to your starship at once—or I shall contact your
Starfleet Command myself to report your interference in this planet’s
society, in contravention of your prime directive. Should you reappear on
Stratos City again, it would be only as an enemy.”
The guards were removing Vanna’s unconscious body from the dais. Kirk
clicked open his communicator.
“Kirk to Enterprise?
“Scott here, Captain.”
“Returning to ship. Beam us up, Mr Scott.”
The Council gallery disappeared in dazzle.
Twelve hours.
Kirk moved restlessly in his command chair. The decision that
confronted him was no joke. Twelve hours—and all plant life on Marak II
would be irreversibly on its way to becoming extinct. Seven hundred and
twenty minutes to allow the plague to complete its lethal work—or to
persuade Ardana to make good on its pledge of the zenite consignment.
He swung his chair around to Uhura. “Advise Starfleet Command that
the methods being employed by the government of Ardana will not make
the zenite available. It is my view that I have only one alternative. I hereby
notify that I must try to reason directly with the Troglyte miners. I am
assuming full responsibility for these direct negotiations.”
McCoy walked over to him and laid a hand on Kirk’s shoulder. That
won’t be easy, Jim. Ardana has supplied us with data showing mental
inferiority in the Troglytes.”
“That’s impossible, Bones! They have accepted personal sacrifice for a
common cause. Mentally inferior beings aren’t capable of that much
abstract loyalty.”
“I’ve checked the findings thoroughly,” McCoy said gently. “Their
intellect ratings are almost twenty percent below the planetary average.”
Spock turned from his hooded computer. “But they all belong to the same
species,” he reminded McCoy. Those who live on Stratos and those who
live below all originated on the surface, not long ago. It is basic biological
law that their physical and mental evolution must have been similar.”
“True enough, Spock. But obviously the ancestors of those who live on
Stratos had left the environment of the mines. That’s how they avoided
further effects of their influence.”
“What influence?” Kirk asked.
McCoy held out a small sealed container, carefully.
“This is a low zenite ore sample I had brought from the surface. If I
unsealed the container, it would have detrimental effects on everybody
here.”
“Zenite is shipped all over the galaxy wherever there’s danger of plant
plague,” Spock protested. “No side effects have been reported.”
“After it’s refined there are none. But in its natural state it emits an
odorless, invisible gas which retards the cortical functioning of the brain. At
the same time it heightens emotional imbalance, causing violent reactions.”
“Then the mines must be full of this gas,” Kirk said.
McCoy nodded. “And the Troglytes breath it constantly.”
“But the Disruptors—Vanna, for instance. They’ve outwitted a highly
organized culture, apparently for years.”
“Captain,” Spock said, “you will recall Vanna’s experience as a servant in
Plasus’ household. She was removed from exposure to the gas for an
apparently significant period. Perhaps without long exposure, its effects
slowly wear off.”
“They do,” McCoy said. “The other Disruptors probably have similar
histories.”
“Any way of neutralizing the gas, Bones?”
“No. But filter masks would eliminate the exposure.”
“Get one, Bones—or make a mock-up of one, fast-end report back here
on the double. Lieutenant Uhura, call Advisor Plasus.”
After a considerable interval, the Council gallery materialized on the
main viewing screen. Plasus was sitting at the cubical table, drinking
slowly.
“Your further communication is not welcome, Captain,” he said.
“I may be able to change your mind,” Kirk said. “At least, I hope so. My
ship’s surgeon has made a crucial discovery. He has found that zenite ore
discharges a gas that impairs brain function. He thinks he can counteract it.”
McCoy appeared at Kirk’s elbow, a face mask in his hand. That is the
case, Mr Advisor. This filter arrangement in my hand is a gas mask. It
eliminates all gases injurious to humanoid life. If others like it are
distributed to the miners, we can confidently expect them to achieve
intellectual equality with Stratos inhabitants, perhaps quite soon.”
Plasus dropped the goblet. “Who are you? Who are you to talk of
‘intellectual equality’ for—for Troglytes?”
“Let me present Dr McCoy, Medical Officer of the Enterprise,
Mr Advisor,” Kirk said. “We have checked his findings with our computers.
They are absolutely valid.”
“Are you saying that this comical mask can accomplish what centuries of
evolution have failed to do?”
“Yes. That’s what I said, Mr Advisor.”
“Centuries isn’t a long time in terms of evolution,” McCoy added.
“And do your computers also explain how my ancestors managed to
create a magnificence like Stratos City while the Troglytes remained
savages?”
“Your ancestors removed themselves from contamination by the gas,”
Spock said.
“Preposterous!”
“We have no time to argue,” Kirk said. “I propose to inform Vanna that
the filters are available.”
“I doubt that even Vanna will credit such nonsense!”
“Are you afraid that the filters might work, Mr Advisor?”
Kirk’s question obviously hit home. Plasus stamped his foot on the
iridescent floor. “You are here to complete an emergency mission, Captain!
Not to conduct unauthorized tests!”
“I am here to collect a zenite consignment,” Kirk said. “If these masks
will help me do it, I will use them.”
“I forbid it, Captain! Your Federation orders do not entitle you to defy
local governments.” Plasus reached for a switch. “This communication is
ended.”
As he faded from the screen, Kirk said, “My diplomacy seems to be
somewhat inadequate.”
“Pretty hard to overcome prejudice, Jim.”
Kirk nodded. “Doesn’t leave us much choice, does it?”
“Not much time, Captain,” Spock said. “There are now ten hours and
forty minutes left us to deliver the consignment to Marak II.”
Kirk took the mask from McCoy. “Alert the Transporter Room to beam
me down to Vanna’s confinement quarters, Mr Spock.”
“Jim! You’re returning to Stratos against government orders?”
“Unless Vanna has something definite to gain for her people, she’ll die,
Bones, before she turns over the zenite to us.”
Spock intervened, an undertone of anxiety in his voice. “If you are
apprehended violating the High Advisor’s orders, he will consider it within
his rights to execute you.”
Kirk grinned. “If you’re about to suggest that you contact Vanna, the
answer is negative, Mr Spock;” And that goes for you, too, Bones.”
Spock said stiffly, “Allow me to point out that a First Officer is more
expendable than either a doctor or a Captain, sir.”
“This mission is strictly unofficial,” Kirk said. “Nobody is to have any
part of it—or take any responsibility for it but myself. That’s an order,
Mr Spock.”
Silently the Vulcan detached his phaser from his belt and handed it to
Kirk. Kirk took it, saying, “You have the con, Mr Spock. Stand by until I
contact you.”
Blinking in the planet’s relentlessly glaring sunlight, Kirk drew the mask
down over his head. Through its goggles, he could see Vanna’s delicate
figure, a dark shadow against the darker shadows of the mine’s entrance,
vanish into blackness. He followed her.
They were moving down a steeply descending tunnel. Ahead of him Kirk
could discern faint glimmers of unidentifiable light Then they were in a
large cavern. Its walls glowed greenly with the phosphorescence of zenite
ore lodes that etched themselves in cabalistic scribbles on the rock face like
messages left by witches. Other jagged rocks jutted from the floor. The
cavern might have been an underground graveyard of magicians’
tombstones.
A miner’s mortae lay against one of the floor’s peaked rocks. Picking it
up, Vanna struck the rock three times; the rock rang like a gong. As the
sound died, Kirk heard a stealthy movement from a narrow ledge high on
the left wall of the cave. Two big, begrimed Troglytes were climbing down
a series of crude steps, hewed into the rock, to the cavern floor.
Vanna touched their shoulders in greeting. Their faces lightened. “Anka,
Midro,” she said.
“Vanna. It is you.", Anka, the bigger Troglyte, touched her shoulder in
similar greeting. “You have returned.”
“And I have brought you a hostage,” she said. “Seize him!”
The Troglytes grabbed Kirk’s arms so swiftly that he could not make a
move in defense. They were twisted behind him as Vanna, jerking his
phaser from his belt, thrust it into hers. Then she snatched his
communicator and hurled it against a sharp-toothed outcropping of rock a
few feet away.
Kirk found his voice, but it was unfamiliar, hoarse, distorted by the mask.
“We had a bargain. Why are you breaking it?”
“Did you really think I would trust you, Captain?”
“I trusted you,” he said.
“You thought you’d tricked me with your talk of unseen gas and filters. I
don’t believe in it any more than Plasus does.”
“Then you are a fool,” Kirk said. “The filters can free you just as I said
they could.”
“Only weapons will free us,” she retorted. “And you have just furnished
us with two valuable ones. Yourself—and this.” She touched the phaser in
her belt
“Holding me will not help you. My men will still come for the zenite
consignment.”
She laughed. “Without that,” she said, pointing to the communicator,
“you will be hard to locate.”
“They will find me,” Kirk said.
“Perhaps.” She removed his mask and draped it over a mortae thrust into
a crevice on the wall. “I don’t think you will be needing this.” Then she had
a second thought, and taking the mask down again, handed it to Anka.
“Send this to Plasus. It will inform him that we have more to bargain with
than our mortaes and thongs.”
Anka’s eyes brightened. “You are clever, Vanna. Very clever.”
He hurried out of the cavern and she turned to Midro. “Go to the other
mines and tell the Troglytes to post watchers. Search parties may be coming
soon.”
Midro pointed to Kirk. “What of him?”
Vanna drew the phaser from her belt. “I will see that he does not escape.”
“If we kill him,” Midro said, “there’ll be no need to see to that.”
“A dead hostage is useless,” she told him.
His face set stubbornly. “Only the Troglytes need know.”
“I brought him—and I will say what is to be done.”
“You’re not the only Disruptor,” Midro said sullenly. “I too can say.”
“Can you do nothing but argue?” she cried impatiently. “Hurry—or the
searchers will be here!”
“When Anka returns, we will all say.” Nevertheless, he left.
Vanna kept the phaser leveled on Kirk. “Now, Captain, dig,” she said.
“Dig for zenite as the Troglytes do. I will give you a lesson in what our
lives are like.”
Silently, Kirk turned to the wall. It proved to be hard work. There was a
bag on the floor in which he was told to put the chunks of ore; it took him a
long time to get it half full. Vanna watched, smiling, as immaculate Captain
James Kirk of the Starship Enterprise tore a nail on a bleeding finger.
“Is that what the Disruptors are working for?” he said. “The right to kill
everyone?”
“Midro is a child.”
“The filter masks could change that.”
“Keep digging. You do it well, Captain. The unseen gas doesn’t seem to
be harming you.”
“It takes a while for the effects to become noticeable.” He straightened
his aching back. “How long do you plan to keep me here? Providing Midro
doesn’t kill me, of course.”
“Until we have help in the mines and our homes in the clouds.”
“That might be quite a while.” Kirk loosened another chunk of ore.
“Longer than I can wait!”
He hurled the rough lump full in her face. She staggered back with a cry,
and a moment later Kirk had wrested the phaser from her. He leveled it at
the cavern entrance and fired. The boulders supporting it disintegrated, and
the whole upper portion of its walls crumbled with a crash, sealing the
entrance with a massive pile of rubble.
“You have trapped us!”
“Obviously.”
“But soon the atmosphere will go! We will die!”
“Die? From something we cannot see or feel? You astound me, Vanna.”
He picked his way over the rubble to his communicator. As he had rather
expected, it was unharmed; these instruments had been designed for rough
use. “Kirk to Enterprise.”
“Spock here, Captain. Is anything wrong?”
“Nothing. Are you locked in on me?”
“Locked in, sir. Ready to beam up consignment.”
“Circumstances dictate a slight variation, Mr Spock.” Kirk eyed Vanna
warily. “Hold on these coordinates. Locate the High Advisor and beam him
down to me immediately. Without advance communication. Repeat—
without advance communication.”
“Instructions clear, sir. We’ll carry through at once. Spock out”
“You will seal Plasus in here also?” Vanna had gone rigid with alarm.
“I am preparing a slight demonstration of the effects of unbelieved gas,”
Kirk said. He waited. After a moment, the cavern shimmered and Plasus
materialized. Such fury shook him when he saw Kirk that at first he failed
to register the greenish darkness of his surroundings.
“Abduction of a planetary official is a serious crime, Captain! You will
pay for it, I promise!”
Awe struggled with the alarm on Vanna’s face. Kirk leveled the phaser at
them both. “Not till you’re convinced of the effects of zenite gas,
Mr Advisor.”
“What effects? I see no change in either of you!”
“You need closer exposure.” He waved to the half-filled bag at the cavern
wall. “Fill that container.”
“You suggest that I dig zenite?”
Kirk waved the phaser. “I insist, Mr Advisor.”
Plasus’ fists clenched. “You will indeed pay for this, Captain.” After
eyeing the steady phaser for a moment, he turned to the wall, and began to
scrabble at the open zenite lode. It was quickly obvious that he had never
done any physical labor before in his life.
Kirk’s jaw hardened, and he smiled a cold, thin smile. He felt strangely
vindictive, and was enjoying it. “You too, Vanna.”
She stared at him for a moment, and then obediently turned also to the
wall.
Time passed. After a while, the communicator beeped. “Enterprise to
Captain.”
“What is it, Spock?’
“Contact check, sir. May I remind you that there are only five hours left
to—”
“Your orders were to stand by. Carry them out.”
“Standing by.”
Kirk clicked out. Both his laborers were beginning to show signs of
exhaustion. Vanna leaned against the wall for a moment. “I grow faint,” she
whispered. “The oxygen is going.”
“She is right,” said Plasus, panting. “You must have us transported out of
here.”
“Dig.”
“You imbecile! We’ll die!” Plasus cried.
Kirk backhanded him. “I said, dig!”
Knocked back against the wall, arms spread, Plasus snarled, an animal at
bay; all trace of the urbane ruler of Ardana had vanished. “I will take no
more orders!” He lurched forward.
Kirk jerked the phaser. “Another step and I’ll kill you.”
Vanna stared at Kirk’s distorted face. “Captain—the gas!” she choked out
“You were right! It is affecting you!”
Plasus took the cue. “Are you as brave with a mortae as you are with a
phaser?” he taunted.
Infuriated, Kirk tossed the phaser to the floor. Plasus scooped two mortae
from the rock ledge, and one in each hand, charged Kirk like a clumsy bull,
slashing. Kirk dodged, grabbed Plasus’ right wrist and tumbled him with a
karate twist. The head struck rock. The two mortae clanged on the floor and
Kirk leapt for Plasus’ throat. As he fell on the High Advisor, the
communicator dropped from his belt.
Vanna grabbed it and began shouting. “Enterprise! Enterprise!” It
remained dead. Vanna shook it, and then found the switch. “Enterprise!
Help! They will kill each other! Help us.”
For a moment, nothing happened. Kirk’s fingers lightened on Plasus’
throat Then the cavern shimmered out of existence, and he found himself
wrestling on the Transporter platform of the Enterprise.
“Captain!” Spock’s voice shouted. “Stop! The gas—”
Kirk let go and got groggily to his feet. “The gas? What gas?” He looked
around, almost without recognition. The Transporter Room was full of
armed security guards. Vanna was cowering; Plasus was crawling off the
platform, all defiance fled. It had been a near thing.
“It appears to be Paradise, Mr Spock,” said Kirk, handing back the folder of
Federation reports and stepping onto the Transporter platform. “It’s taken
Gideon long enough to agree to negotiating membership in the Federation.”
“I’ll be interested in hearing your description, Captain,” said Spock,
taking his place at the console. “Since they have not permitted any
surveillance, or any visitors, you appear to be uniquely privileged to visit
Heaven early.”
“You won’t have long to wait,” said Kirk. Uhura’s voice replied at once
to Spock’s request for coordinates. Spock set the levers at 875; 020; 079.
“Let’s go, Mr Spock.”
“Energizing, Captain.” Spock did not, of course, smile at Kirk’s
eagerness to be off.
The Transporter Room shimmered, then steadied. Nothing seemed to
have happened.
“Mr Spock,” said Kirk, stepping from the platform. “Mr Spock?” There
was no one in the Transporter Room but himself.
He clicked the intercom button. “Mr Spock, I have not been transported
down, and why have you left your post before confirming? Mr Spock,
answer me…”
This was not at all according to regulations. Annoyed, Kirk stamped out
of the Transporter Room and headed purposefully toward the bridge. There
was nobody there either.
He hit the intercom with increasing irritation. This is the Captain
speaking. All bridge personnel report immediately.” He folded his arms and
waited; there had better be one hell of an explanation. Nothing happened.
He switched on the intercom again, alternately calling Engineering,
security, Dr McCoy, and listening. There was only silence.
“Lieutenant Uhura, report to the bridge immediately.”
The viewing screen showed only the planet Gideon exactly as he had just
seen it before stepping onto the Transporter, a perfectly ordinary M-type
planet peacefully poised in the screen. The readouts and lights on the bridge
consoles continued to operate in their usual conformations.
“Captain Kirk.” The smooth voice of Prime Minister Hodin emerged from
the communication screen. “The Council is still awaiting your arrival.”
A plump figure rose to its feet from among the Councillors of Gideon.
“This discourtesy is unforgivable!” he snapped. “Doesn’t your Federation
recognize that first impressions are most important?”
Spock blinked. “Captain Kirk was transported down minutes ago, sir.”
“That’s impossible.”
“I transported him myself,” said Spock firmly.
“He never arrived here,” said Hodin, evenly. Spock stared at Scott, and
turned back to the screen.
“He was beamed directly to your Council Chamber. Please check your
coordinates, Prime Minister.”
Hodin read out from a slip of paper, “875; 020; 079.”
Scott nodded.
“Somethings’ gone wrong with the Transporter,” said Chekov. “Captain
Kirk’s lost somewhere between the Enterprise and Gideon.” His voice rose;
Speck’s expression remained impassive. The planet hung in the viewscreen,
enigmatic.
The Prime Minister was speaking insistently. “We provided you with the
exact coordinates for this room, Mr Spock. And that is all we were
obligated to do. If he is not here it is your own responsibility and that of
your staff.”
“I do not deny that, Your Excellency. I was not attempting to blame your
personnel.”
“We are glad to hear that, sir.” Hodin’s voice sounded almost smug. “We
are, in fact, inserting it into the records of this… most unfortunate event.”
“Your Excellency, with intricate machinery so delicately balanced as
ours, there is always a margin for error,” Spock said sharply. “Captain Kirk
may have materialized in some other part of Gideon.”
Hodin said, “Let’s hope it was dry land, Mr Spock.”
“Your Excellency, to cut directly to the point, I request permission to
beam down and search for the Captain.”
Hodin sat back, hands on the table before him. “Permission denied,
Mr Spock. Your Federation is well aware of our tradition of isolation from
all contaminating contact with the violence of other planets…”
“Your Excellency, the wars between star systems no longer prevail in our
galaxy. If you will grant permission…”
“We shall institute a search immediately. In the meantime I suggest you
look to your machinery.”
“We have already done so, sir,” Spock’s voice was now extremely
controlled. “With regard to permission to land…”
But the Council Chamber had vanished from the screen.
“We must once and for all acknowledge that the purpose of diplomacy is
to prolong a crisis,” said Spock, deliberately closing the switch.
“What are we waiting for, Mr Spock? We’re not diplomats,” McCoy
flung himself on a chair.
“We are representatives of the Federation, Doctor.”
“That doesn’t mean we have to sit here like school-children and listen to
a damfool lecture by some… dip-lo-mat.”
“Unfortunately, diplomacy is the only channel open to us at the moment.
This planet is shielded from our sensors; we cannot observe it. Therefore
we are unable to select coordinates. They have to be given to us. We are
bound by Federation’s agreements with Gideon.” Spock turned to Lt.
Uhura. “Contact Starfleet immediately. Advise them of this problem and
request permission to use every means at our disposal to locate the
Captain.”
“D’ye think he’s there, Spock?” said Scott. “Or are there any other
possibilities?”
“They are endless, Mr Scott.”
“Where do we start?” said McCoy helplessly.
Spock leaned over Sulu’s console. “Institute three-hundred-and-sixty
degree scan, Mr Sulu—one degree at a time.”
“You’re going to scan space for him? But sir, that could take years!”
“Then the sooner you begin, Mr Sulu, the better,” said Spock grimly.
Sweating slightly, Kirk ran from the elevator and pressed a door; it did not
budge. He tried to force it with no success. He tried the next door; it opened
easily. Standing guardedly in the opening, he pushed it all the way open
with his elbow, one hand on the butt of his phaser. It whished slightly in the
silence. The tables in the lounge stood as though the crew had just been
summoned; a half-finished chess game, a sandwich with a bite out of it, a
book dropped carelessly on the floor. But the only sound was Kirk’s own
breathing. He went out into the corridor again, warily.
Two more doors, locked. The third, labeled “Captain’s Quarters,” opened
to the lightest pressure. His familiar room suddenly seemed alien—no
crackle from the intercom, the bunk neatly made up, his books orderly on
their shelf; his lounging robe swung eerily in the slight breeze made by the
opening door. Momentarily disoriented, he wondered for a wild moment
whether he had strayed from his own body and was visiting the Enterprise
long after he and his crew had perished from the universe.
Footsteps! Dancing footsteps, echoing in the corridor; he pivoted on his
now very real heels and stared. At the end of the hall a graceful figure
whirled and curtsied, feet pattering gaily on the utilitarian flooring.
She caught sight of Kirk in mid-pirouette, and stopped with a little cry.
He reached, and caught her; the sight of a human form brought his sense of
reality back with a bump.
“Who the… who are you?”
She frowned, her delicate forehead lovely even when wrinkling;
suddenly she smiled.
“Odona… yes. My name is Odona. Why did you bring me here?” She
indicated the ship’s corridor with a wide gesture.
Kirk was startled. “What are you doing on my ship?”
“This entire ship is yours?”
“It’s not my personal property. I’m the Captain.”
“And you have all this to yourself?” Her voice was full of wonder.
“At the moment, we seem to have it all to ourselves,” Kirk corrected.
Odona smiled, sapphire eyes looking up from under sable lashes. “So it
seems. You’re hurting me, Captain.”
Kirk hastily released her.
“Captain James Kirk. And I did not bring you here, incidentally.”
“If you didn’t…”
“Exactly. Who did?”
She shrugged helplessly. The decorations bordering her brief tunic
twinkled in the lights.
“What happened before you got here?” said Kirk. “Try to remember. It’s
important.”
She puzzled over it for a moment. “I remember… it seems I was standing
in a very large auditorium, crowded with people, thousands of people
pressed against me so hard I could hardly breathe… I was fighting for
breath, screaming to get out and they kept pushing and pushing…” She
shuddered.
“Don’t be afraid.” Kirk placed a comforting hand on her shoulder.
“I’m not.” She looked up at him. “But you are troubled?”
Kirk turned away. “I am the only one of my crew left on the Enterprise.
Out of four hundred and thirty. I may be the only one left alive.”
“I am sorry. If only I could help.”
“You can,” said Kirk earnestly. “Tell me the rest. You were fighting for
breath, screaming to get out, and…”
“And suddenly I was here on this… your ship. And there is so much
room, so much freedom. I just wanted to float.” She smiled impishly. “And
then, there you were.”
“How long have you been on the Enterprise?” Kirk’s questions were
almost random; any clue, any train of suggestion, might lead him to a
solution.
“I don’t know. Not long. Does it matter?”
“It might. Come on.” He started back toward the bridge.
Odona followed reluctantly.
“Do we have to leave this wonderful open place?”
Kirk glowered at the chronometer in the bridge, gripping Odona’s hand.
She tried to pull away from him; he held her firmly.
“Half an hour of my life is lost.”
Odona stared at him.
“Between the time I tried to leave this ship for Gideon, and the time I
found myself here alone, a full half hour disappeared—poof! What
happened during that half hour?”
“What is Gideon?”
“Your home, the planet you came from… don’t you remember?”
“I don’t know any Gideon.” She looked at him, apparently utterly lost.
“That’s impossible. We were in synchronous orbit over the capital city. I
was supposed to beam down. Something went wrong. You must have been
sent aboard from Gideon.”
She shook her head, trying to remember.
“I do not think so.”
Kirk flipped on the viewing screen. Gideon had vanished. The changing
patterns of the stars indicated the forward motion of the ship. Odona moved
closer, and put her hand in his.
“We are no longer over Gideon,” said Kirk in a flat voice.
“Where are we?”
“I don’t know. I don’t recognize that quadrant,” said Kirk dully.
Odona bit her lip. Thinking aloud, Kirk said, “Odona, you must realize
that we are not here together by accident. Someone must have arranged it,
for a purpose, an unknown purpose.”
A small voice replied, “Captain Kirk, before I said I wasn’t afraid. Now, I
think I am.”
He looked at her with compassion, and they turned back to the
incomprehensible pattern of stars.
“Go back two degrees, there was a pulse variation,” said Spock. Sulu
maneuvered the sensor screen.
“There,” said Spock. “There is something. Give me a reading.”
Sulu flicked switches. “I can’t make it out, sir.”
“Get chemical analysis and molecular structure.”
Sulu pointed silently at the indicators. Scott, McCoy and Chekov
watched anxiously. Spock shook his head.
“Space debris.”
Sulu sighed, and resumed tracking.
“Lieutenant Uhura, has Starfleet honored our request with an answer?”
“Not yet, sir.”
“Did you impress upon them that the Captain’s life is at stake?”
“Of course, Mr Spock,” she said indignantly. “But they insisted that the
matter had to be referred to the Federation.”
“What department?”
“Bureau of Planetary Treaties, sir.”
“Contact them directly.”
“I already have, Mr Spock. They insist we go though Starfleet channels.”
Sulu exploded, spinning in his chair. “With the Captain missing that’s the
best they could come up with?”
“A bureaucrat,” said Spock bitterly, “is the opposite of a diplomat. But
they manage to achieve the same results.”
He stared at the chronometer. The second indicator . clicked on. The
captain was waiting… somewhere. And time was passing inalterably.
Suddenly Uhura’s voice broke the tense silence.
“Mr Spock, Gideon is making contact.”
McCoy said sourly, “Now we’re in for another dose of doubletalk.”
“Since we must learn the language of diplomacy in order to deal with our
present problem, shall we just listen to what they have to tell us?” said
Spock. “Then, Doctor, we can decide on the relative merits of their
statements.”
Four poker-faced ministers flanked the Prime Minister as he appeared on
the viewer. Courteously, Spock began, “Your Excellency, we are pleased to
hear that you have news of the Captain.”
“Good news!” said the smiling image. “Very good news indeed,
Mr Spock. Your Captain is definitely not on Gideon. We have made a
thorough search, just as you requested. I am sure you will be relieved to
know you may now proceed to investigate all the other possibilities, and
forget about Gideon.”
“But that is not what we requested!”
“It is in the records, Mr Spock,” broke in the voice of the Prime Minister.
“You asked for a thorough search of Gideon. We have used every means at
our disposal to accommodate you, Mr Spock.” Outraged astonishment
overlaid the diplomat’s usual smile.
“Your record on this subject cannot be precise, Excellency.”
Hodin waved to an assistant, and took from him a thick book. With
ambitious eagerness the assistant had already opened it to a specific
passage.
“You do not intend, I hope, that a conference be made the subject of a
dispute between Gideon and the Federation, Mr Spock.”
“Your Excellency, a dispute is farthest from our minds. It’s quite
unnecessary to check your documents. I am merely suggesting to you that
the language of our request may not have been understood exactly as
intended.”
Hodin stood up, huffily indignant. He waved his puffy hand.
“Mr Spock, you are an officer of a spaceship. In your profession you
make use of many instruments, tools, and… weapons… to achieve your
objectives, do you not?”
“Yes, sir.”
Hodin’s eyes were squinting with an apparent effort to remain
diplomatically cool. His posture betrayed him.
“However,” he continued, “the only tool diplomacy has is language. It is
of the utmost importance that the meaning be crystal clear.”
Spock’s own posture was of stiff attention.
“I am basically a scientist, Excellency. Clarity of formulation is essential
in my profession also.”
“I am glad to hear that. Perhaps then you will make a greater effort to
choose your words precisely.”
The word “precisely” vibrated through the bridge like a red petticoat in a
bullring. The crew was coming to a full boil; all hands were fists by now.
McCoy muttered, “Are you going to let him get away with that, Spock?”
“No matter what you say, he’ll find a way to twist the meaning,” said
Scott.
Uhura growled, “How can you stand this, Mr Spock?”
McCoy leaned past Spock to the viewer and spoke directly to Hodin.
“Our Captain is lost out there somewhere. We don’t care how much you
have searched, we are going over every inch of space ourselves. He’s got to
be down there somewhere. We’re going after him!”
Too loudly, Chekov said, “This is no time to stick to rules and
regulations, this is an emergency!” McCoy gently pulled him back, and
leaned toward the screen again.
“We can’t leave without being absolutely positive ourselves that
everything has been done,” he said. “Surely you can understand our
feelings.”
Hodin turned back to the screen, smiling.
“Mr Spock. Mr Spock.”
“Yes, Your Excellency?”
“Are you still there?” That smile was imperturbable. “There was
considerable interference with your transmission. A great deal of noise
drowned out your transmission; could you please repeat more clearly?”
McCoy retreated, baffled. “Let me apologize for the noise, Your
Excellency,” said Spock. “To summarize, I request permission to transport
down to Gideon.”
The Prime Minister looked at his deputies and back at Spock. They all
burst out in offensive laughter.
“Forgive me, Mr Spock,” Hodin’s oily voice resumed. “No criticism of
your equipment is intended. But evidently it has sent your Captain on some
strange journey—we all still hope a safe one, of course.” He bowed
formally. “But it could create for us a grave incident with your Federation.
And now you propose to repeat the disaster with yet another officer? Are
you mad?”
Scott shouted, “I’ll not take that, Mr Spock. The Transporter was in
perfect condition… I pairsonally guarantee that mysel’. Transport me down
there this minute and I’ll be proving it to those… those… gentlemen!”
The chill in Spock’s quick glance froze Scott in his tracks.
“I could not quite make that out, Mr Spock. Would you be so good as to
repeat what you said?” Hodin gave every appearance of amusement at the
antics of the crew.
“The ship’s engineer was saying that the malfunction that existed has
now been repaired,” said Spock, a quelling eye on Scott. “We would like to
test it immediately. I would like to transport down to your Council
Chamber.”
“But, Mr Spock, you…”
Spock interrupted Hodin. “Your Excellency, grant this one request.”
“You are a very persistent fellow, Mr Spock.”
A moment of tension passed while Hodin again consulted with his staff.
“All right, Mr Spock.” A whistling sound passed through the bridge as
the entire crew released held breath. “You shall test the skill of your… er…
very excitable repairman.”
Scott’s teeth ground in Chekov’s ear. “He doesna ken what excitable
is…” Chekov grinned at him, and whispered, “But he’s letting him go…
Wait.”
“There is one further proviso. We cannot risk additional incident. You
will therefore transport a member of my staff to your ship. Let us first see if
that works.”
“Thank you, Your Excellency. Your proposal is accepted.” Spock turned
to Scott. “Transporter Room, Mr Scott, on the double.”
“At once, Mr Spock,” said Scott, rather stiffly. He stalked to the elevator
and punched the door.
On the screen, yet another assistant with a large book was talking to
Hodin, who looked up.
“My assistant will provide you with the proper, what is the word?”
“Co-or-di-nates,” said Spock, very clearly.
“Thank you. You may proceed.”
The Gideonite assistant placed himself at a corner of the Council
Chamber.
“875,” he said.
“875, Mr Scott,” said Spock.
“875, aye.”
“020.”
“020.”
“709.”
“709?” The last number was repeated. Spock hesitated for a moment.
'709, Mr Scott. Energize.”
“Mr Spock, the young gentleman from Gideon is here,” Scott reported
triumphantly.
“Very good, Mr Scott.” Spock turned to the screen. “Your assistant is
safely arrived, Your Excellency. And now we would like to send down
myself and if possible, a few technicians to follow through on…”
“Now, now, now, Mr Spock. Not so fast. That is quite a different matter.
We agreed to allow one representative on our soil, your Captain alone. Now
you suggest a ‘few technicians.’ And will the Federation then demand an
army of ‘technicians’ to hunt for these?”
Patiently, Spock said, “I will demand only one thing, Prime Minister; that
I be permitted to beam down to your planet to search for the Captain.”
“Your request,” said Hodin, smoothly triumphant, “will be brought to the
floor at the next session of Gideon’s Council. Er… do not look forward to a
favorable reply.”
“Your Excellency!” Spock pressed the switch several times rapidly; the
screen remained blank. He hit, the intercom.
“Mr, Scott. Send the gentleman from Gideon home.”
“I was just beginning to think you might find a new career as a diplomat,
Spock,” said McCoy.
“Do not lose hope, Doctor. Lt. Uhura, contact Starfleet Command.
Demand an instant reply to our request for permission to land on Gideon.”
The room was tense as Uhura operated her console.
“Enterprise to Starfleet Command.”
“Enterprise to Starfleet Command.”
“Enterprise to Starfleet Command.” Kirk and Odona bent over the console,
Kirk’s fingers expertly flicking the controls.
“Captain Kirk here. Red Priority Alert. Do you read me? Red Priority
Alert.” The console impassively continued its normal light patterns.
“Isn’t it working?” said Odona.
“It seems to be all right.” Kirk flipped the manual control and held it
open.
“Kirk here. Answer please. Red Priority Alert.”
“If it is working someone must hear you,” Odona said hopefully.
“There’s nothing. If they do hear they aren’t replying.”
“Why would they do that?”
“They wouldn’t.” Kirk glanced quizzically at her, then crossed the bridge
to Sulu’s board. With a few swift motions he altered the setting so that the
lights showed a different pattern.
“I’m taking the ship out of warp speed.”
“Out of what?” Odona looked utterly baffled.
Kirk laughed. “Space terminology. We’re no longer moving faster than
light. I trimmed her down to sublight speed till we can find out where we
are.”
“It doesn’t feel any different.”
“Well, no.” Kirk was amused. Abruptly, his smile faded. “Maybe it isn’t.”
He stared at the other consoles, one by one. No change was apparent. He
turned on the forward viewing screen. No motion was visible in the star-
filled sky, still and remote.
“Has the ship slowed down?”
“If we can believe the screen, it has.”
“Oh, don’t tell me the sky is out of order now!”
They stood side by side watching the glittering heavens; behind them the
console lights moved in rhythmic silence. Odona said softly, “It’s so quiet,
and peaceful.”
“It isn’t really, you know. Out there, it’s…” As he turned his head to look
at her he felt fingers against his lips.
“And it’s beautiful,” she said.
Kirk looked back at the panoply on the screen, and at the delicate oval
face in its black wings of hair.
“And it’s beautiful. Very beautiful.”
“We’re all alone here. Can it last a long, long time?” Her eyes were
raised to his, sparkling. His arm slipped around her.
“How long would you like it to last?”
“Forever.” Odona’s voice was barely audible.
“Let’s see now. Power; that’s no problem, it regenerates. Food; we had a
five years’ supply for four hundred and thirty. For two of us that should
last…”
“Forever?”
Their eyes met, and her hands touched his shoulders. He pulled her
closer. She said in a trembling voice, “All my life I’ve dreamed of being
alone…”
The startling intensity of her “alone” woke Kirk; the moment was
broken. Gently he released her. She stood, her arms still raised, eyelids
lowered, her expression rapt.
“Most people are afraid of being alone,” Kirk said.
She opened her eyes and looked him in the face.
“Where I live people dream of it.”
“But why? What makes the people of Gideon dream of being alone?” His
voice had recovered its tone of impersonal interest.
“I…” she caught herself. Her expression of puzzlement returned.
“Gideon? I told you I don’t know where my home is.” She shook her head.
“It might well be Gideon.” Kirk appraised her coolly.
“Does it matter so much?” She started toward him, her hands out.
“It might help me locate our position.” She stopped. Her hands dropped
to her sides. She shrugged, almost imperceptibly.
“And then you might find your crew. Being here with you, I forgot there
were others. I envy your sense of loyalty.” She drew close to him. “I wish I
could ease your fear for your friends.”
Kirk shook his head. “I must make contact with whoever is manipulating
us. I’ve got to find a way…” He paced the room, stopping in front of each
of the consoles, willing them to reveal something, the smallest clue.
Suddenly he whirled and faced the girl.
“Odona, can’t you remember why your people want so much to be
alone?”
A wave of utter panic swept over her face. She shivered, although there
was no change in the temperature.
“Because they cannot ever be.”
“Why not?”
“There are so many.” He could hardly hear her reply. She lifted her head.
A shuddering force seemed to rise from her slender body.
“So many… so many. There is no place, no street, no house, no garden,
no beach, no mountain that is not filled with people. If he could, each one
would kill to find a place to be alone. If he could, he would die for it.”
She stared at him, tears creeping down her cheeks, supporting herself on
Uhura’s chair. She looked exhausted.
“Why were you sent here, Odona?” Kirk put the question
compassionately.
Her head lifted proudly. “No one commands Odona. I was not sent here.”
Kirk strode to her side, and took her face in his hands.
“Have you come here to kill?”
Her tearstained face was shocked; unable to answer, her lips formed a
soundless “no.”
“Have you come here to die?”
“I don’t know. I don’t care… I only know I am here. I only know I am
happy here.” She threw her arms around his neck and clung to him,
desperately. The trouble in her eyes moved Kirk as her coquetry had failed
to do. He kissed her, gently, then more urgently. Yet in the back of his mind
the images evoked by her tormented outcry haunted him; faces of people
yearning for solitude, young, old, men, women and children unable to draw
a breath that was not their neighbor’s.
The stars on the viewscreen ignored them.
Suddenly Kirk drew back his arm with an exclamation. She flinched.
“I have done something wrong?”
“No.” Kirk smiled ruefully. But he let her go, and pulled up his sleeve.
There was a bruise on his forearm. Blood made a tiny dome in its center.
“Why does it take so long?” Odona asked, peering at it.
“Long? What?”
“The bruise. It stays the same.”
“And the irritation gets worse. If Dr McCoy were here he’d take care of it
with a simple wave of his medical tricorder.”
It was obviously the same as if he had said “his wand” to Odona, but she
said, “I would willingly give up some of this glorious space to Dr McCoy, if
he could take away your… irritation.”
“They took Dr McCoy, but they had to leave Sickbay,” said Kirk. He
took her arm and steered her to the elevator.
On the bridge of the other Enterprise, Uhura, Chekov, Scott and McCoy
were intently scanning the viewscreen. Spock stood at attention in the
Captain’s position. Over the air the voice of the Starfleet Admiral, slightly
distorted by its long journey, sounded extremely stern.
“I sympathize deeply, but Starfleet cannot override Federation directives
in this matter.”
“The crew will not understand it, Admiral.”
“Damn straight,” muttered McCoy.
“Has your crew suddenly become interested in provoking a war,
Mr Spock? That is hardly Starfleet’s mission.”
“We only want to save the life of the Captain,” repeated Spock.
“You have not proved your case to the Federation, or even to Starfleet,
for that matter,” said the Admiral.
“What’s the matter wi’ them all?” said Scott in a surly voice. “Ye’d think
naebody but us care at all…”
Spock shushed him with a wave of his hand behind his back.
“I’m positive I will be able to do so to your satisfaction, Admiral. It has
been clear to me since my first exchange of, er… courtesies with the Prime
Minister that they have taken the Captain prisoner.”
“Granted, Mr Spock.”
“I know now precisely where the Captain is being held.” A stunned
silence gripped the crew.
“Leave it to Spock, every time,” whispered Uhura. Scott nodded.
“? If he is at the same place to which we transported him,” Spock went
on.
“They would not dare to harm him in the Council Chamber!” The
Admiral was outraged.
“That is not where the Captain is, Admiral. He is being held nearby.”
“Well! You have now answered What and Where. I now await your
explanation of Why.”
“Since this planet is shielded from our sensors, by Federation agreement,
Admiral, we cannot possibly establish that without on-the-spot
investigation.”
“Mhm. What evidence have you that the Captain’s life is threatened?”
“Why else would they keep him?”
“I’m afraid that’s not good enough, Mr Spock. Permission denied.”
Spock took a deep breath, fists clenched. “I wish personally to go on
record that this decision is completely arbitrary.”
“So noted.” The screen blipped off.
“Diplomats!” exploded Scott. “What did you mean, Mr Spock? Didn’t
we beam the Captain into the Council Chamber?”
“Quiet, please!” Mr Spock broke through the agitated babble. “No,
Mr Scott, Gideon supplied us with two different sets of coordinates; one for
the Captain, and one for our… er… recent guest.” As Scott looked doubtful,
he said, ‘The Captain’s Log is evidence enough—I hope.” He turned to the
ship’s memory. The crew stared at the numbers on the readout.
“You’re right, Mr Spock!”
“Look at that!”
“What kind of finagle is this?” Scott turned to Spock, hands on hips and a
glare in his eye.
“What now, Mr Spock?” said McCoy. “Are we to sit here and wait with
our hands folded for the Captain to reappear?”
“This is typical of top echelon isolation.” Spock’s dry voice conveyed
disgust. “They are too far away from the elements that influence crew
morale.”
“At times like this I don’t think they remember that there is such a thing,”
said McCoy furiously.
“It is unfortunate. But for the first time in my career, I am forced to
violate a direct order from Starfleet.”
“Hear, hear!” shouted Scott. That’s absolutely the right decision, Spock.
I’m with you!”
“One hundred percent!” That was Chekov; it was very clear that if
Starfleet Command could but hear them the entire crew would be tried for
insubordination—at the least.
“I shall beam down there at once.” Spock’s resolute calm stirred
everybody into action; positions were taken.
“Mr Scott, the con is yours.”
“Aye, but ye’ll be needing me along,” said Scott, protesting.
“The Captain will be needing all of you at your posts.” This reminder had
the desired effect; subdued, Scott headed for the elevator behind Spock.
“It might be taken as an invasion,” McCoy whispered to Scott. “I’ll pick
up my medical tricorder and meet you in the Transporter Room, Mr Spock.”
“No, Dr McCoy; I cannot assume responsibility for ordering a fellow
officer to violate a Starfleet directive. I go alone.”
“Well, that’s just about the worst decision you’ll ever make, Spock,”
grumbled McCoy. “I hope you won’t regret it.”
As he entered the elevator, Spock said, “I’m sure this won’t take long.”
McCoy held out his hand in a good-luck gesture. Spock shook it solemnly,
and the doors closed.
“Isn’t that just what Captain Kirk said?”
Chekov’s words echoed in the suddenly quiet room.
Kirk knelt by the side of the bunk where Odona lay, flushed with fever, her
cloud of silvery black hair tarnished and lifeless. He looked up at Hodin.
“If you do not let me get Dr McCoy it will soon be too late for her.”
“We have told you, Captain Kirk. It is her wish and mine that there be no
interference with the natural development of this precious virus.”
“What is the matter with you? If she lives, her blood would contain the
virus just as mine does. She doesn’t have to die.”
“She must die. Our people must believe in this escape.”
“She is so young…”
“Because she is young she will be an inspiration to our people. Don’t you
see, Captain, she will become a symbol for others to follow? In time,
Gideon will once again be the Paradise it was…”
Odona’s sigh pierced the shell of exaltation Hodin had erected around his
consciousness. Kirk smoothed her blazing forehead; Hodin stood by her
bedside in a state of misery. But Odona’s weary eyes only gazed at Kirk.
“I… am glad you are here. Is my time short?”
“Very short,” Kirk whispered.
“I asked you to make the journey last forever.” She smiled wanly. “It
began here, didn’t it?”
Kirk spoke very clearly, hoping to penetrate the feverish haze that
surrounded her senses.
“The journey can continue. If you will let me, I can make you well.”
“Lake your arm?”
He nodded hopefully. She lay still, expressionless. Then, with a slight
cry, she raised her arms to embrace him. The delicacy that had given her
such grace in health now gave her too much fragility in his arms. He willed
her with all his might to agree to be cured.
“I am not afraid of… what will happen. I am not at all afraid,” she
murmured feebly against his shoulder. “It’s only that now… I wish it could
be… with you… forever…” Her voice sank. Gently Kirk laid her
unconscious head on the pillow.
The door closed with a decisive snap.
“I am glad to see you looking so well, Captain. Apparently Starfleet’s
analysis was correct after all.” Spock’s cool words cut into the air.
Kirk whirled; it was Spock. “I’m fine,” he managed to say. “But we do
have a patient.” He lifted Odona from the bed. Hodin stood, paralyzed.
“Spock to Enterprise. Spock to Enterprise Three to beamup Mr.Scott,”
Spock slipped the words out with machine-gun speed.
Three—? Er—same coordinates, Mr Spock?”
Scott had obviously grasped the need for haste.
Hodin plunged at Spock with an inarticulate sound of fury.
“Your Excellency, please do not interfere.” As the sparkles replaced the
three figures, Mr Spock’s last, “I already have enough to explain to upper
echelons, Prime Minister,” hung in the air over Hodin’s impotent rage.