Return-Path: Received: from liberty.uc.wlu.edu by depot.cis.ksu.edu SMTP (5.65a) id AA25596; Tue, 12 Jan 93 15:54:20 -0600 Received: by liberty.uc.wlu.edu (16.8/16.2) id AA08444; Tue, 12 Jan 93 16:54:14 -0500 Message-Id: Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: TEXT/PLAIN; charset=US-ASCII From: "Colin J. Wynne" To: asc Subject: GhostsFromThePast.7 Date: Tue, 12 Jan 1993 16:53:50 +0500 (EST) This story is property of: Colin J. Wynne P.O. Box 4661 Lexington, VA 24450 (703) 464-4030 cwynne@liberty.uc.wlu.edu Permission is given to distribute this story freely as long as this header is included with all files/hardcopies/electronic postings. -------------------------------------------------------------------------- "Ghosts from the Past," Ch. 18 through Ch.19, and Epilogue: ----------------------------------------------------------- CHAPTER XVIII "Captain Picard?" "Admiral, they still refuse to answer any communications. They are being irrationally stubborn, and they are suffering terribly for it." "You and I both know that, Jean-Luc, but neither of us has been able to convince them of that. I'm still trying." "As am I, sir." "Flag out." Wesley took the liberty of burying his face in his hands for a few moments. With a heavy sigh, he faced reality once more. DiSanto stood nearby, glancing over a report that he didn't want to have to look at. "Admiral?" "Yes, yes." Wesley looked at the display screen. From the original one-hundred and eighteen ships, he had left at his command all three space control ships, three carriers (with the loss of Peregrine), four battleships, eighteen battlecruisers, fourteen heavy cruisers, and eight destroyers and frigates. He had made a decision to leave behind all those ships which were only crippled: Carnisaur, five battlecruisers, ten heavy cruisers, and twelve smaller ships. All in all, forty ships completely destroyed. And they had given themselves to neutralise almost ten time that number of Jhonkai. Even Ingram was damaged. A fiercely concentrated volley had overloaded shields and hulled the secondary landing bay. Fortunately, no shuttles were being refueled or armed at the time. The mission needed to be accomplished, and quickly. What to do? "Flag to all ships, standby for new orders." "Captain DiSanto, we know the location of the Jhonkai home- planet, do we not?" "Yes, sir. Information from Enterprise's logs, along with our own sensor scans, indicate which system with an accuracy of about eighty-five percent." "How far is it?" "Just over a parsec, sir. Under seven hours at maximum effective speed." Ingram's communications officer announced, "Fleet standing by, Admiral." "Thank you. "Ladies and gentlemen, we need to take decisive action immediately. What I propose is this. The main body of the fleet is going to the Jhonkai homeworld to increase the pressure. The secondary Task Force"--he referred to the crippled ships--"will remain behind to mop up logistics and shipyards in this system. "Comments?" It was Captain Fanek who spoke up first. "Sir, won't that be an open invitation for them to attack the damaged ships? They won't be able to defend themselves." "A possibility. But we've destroyed almost eighty percent of what they threw at us, and the rest turned tail and ran. Now, we're going after their home planet. I think that their priorities will not include TF 2. We've got to be hurting them at least that much." Fanek admitted grudging agreement. Their were a few more specific questions, but that was about it. "Fine. We'll warp into the target system, and move toward the planet at one-half impulse to give them time to respond. Again, we need to let them mass, so we only have to fight one battle, instead of several dozen. "All units of TF 1, prepare for warpspeed in ten minutes. Flag out." TF Odysseus, at least what was left of it, had dropped out of warp near the edge of the Jhonkai home star system. At one-half impulse, they would be within bombardment range in about thirty minutes. A planetary bombardment order would probably result in the quick and quiet retirement of Admiral Garrett Wesley, thrice awarded the Federation Superior Service Medal, and recipient of the Starfleet Citation for Bravery. If he attacked the Jhonkai homeworld, he would be casting aside everything that represented the high moral pedestal on which the Federation liked to pride itself. And if he, Admiral Wesley, decided that that was the only way to prevent the Jhonkai from overrunning the Federation, he would do it. And, technically, he would be within his orders, assuming of course, that he didn't get court-martialled outright for ignoring the recall order. Starfleet had been in a state of high anxiety when they drafted the orders for Odysseus, and so had allowed Wesley more options than would normally be expected, even for a commander under wartime engagement rules. His two mission goals were to protect the Federation, and secondly to protect the Task Force, and towards those ends, he had allowed given 'broad discretionary measures'. That very technical term meant that Wesley could legally order anything which was not expressly prohibited elsewhere in the orders. And planetary bombardments were not expressly prohibited. That didn't mean that he would give such an order lightly, by any means. "Admiral, Jhonkai forces are moving to intercept us." "Source, numbers?" "Looks like about eighty ships, half of them are dreadnaughts. And they're coming from all around us, sir." "Eighty, that's it?" Wesley was frankly shocked. "Aye, sir." "If that's the best they can mount, why in hell are they still fighting at all, much less taking an offensive posture? "Comm, get me the other admirals immediately." In moments, the main screen split to reveal the Klingon, Kzinti and Gorn commanders. Wesley filled them in, and posed the same question he had just asked himself out loud. Krond had an answer at once. "Is it unclear to you, Wesley? They know they are doomed. They wish to die gloriously in battle!" "Are you saying that our counter-invasion has done too well, and that they're just folding up?" S'Tyrrg snorted. "I find that hard to believe." "I agree." Wesley nodded emphatically. "Captain Picard has been broadcasting our terms to them almost constantly. They know we only want them to cease their invasion." Silence dominated for several long seconds. Suddenly, k'Rzaal hissed angrily. "They have a trick! This pitiful attack is only to delay us. What else makes sense?" The Klingon gestured his dismissal of k'Rzaal's thought. S'Tyrrg said, "Possible, but what-" Wesley cut the Gorn off abruptly, as he yelled a single word. "Reinforcements!" "What?" demanded Krond. "They must be recalling the invasion force--to deal with us." S'Tyrrg's hide turned slightly ashen. "That was over one thousand of their heavy ships." Wesley agreed, looking pale himself. "We'll be slaughtered. "Flag to all units. Urgent! Go to full impulse. Task Force Mateo is to orbit the planet, and prepare for planetary assault. All other units must screen the battlecruisers. All units acknowledge." They did so. The allied fleet hastily changed formation. The four battlecruisers Enterprise, Groombridge, Caesar Augustus, and Lugal Zaggisi pulled out in front, escorted by Excelsior, Reaver, Commodore Mateo's Deneva, and the dreadnaught Ascension. The remainder of the fleet formed into a hemisphere behind, the smaller ships surrounding the remaining carriers, SCS's and battleships; the whole formation looked like a solid parabolic dish, with the smaller group pointing forward like an antenna. Accelerating towards the Jhonkai homeworld, Riker felt a bead of sweat trickling across his brow. There was a significant possibility that he and his four ship contingent would attack the planet directly. It had, of course, been hoped that that particular end could be avoided, but circumstances were working against all of the Federation's hopes. "Captain," announced Data. "Massive energy reading, zero zero zero mark four five, range approximately ninety million kilometres." "What's the pattern, Data?" "Rip zone, sir." "Damn. Inform the Admiral." Even as the message was being sent, space split in twain, disgorging tremendous quantities of energy. Gravitational waves rippled out from it, shaking the Federation ships like toy boats in a child's bath. Through the storm of gravity and radiation, the battlecruiser's sensors picked out a few shapes appearing. Then more; dozens; scores; and still more. Riker's jaw gaped. "Data, how..." "Six hundred forty-five Jhonkai dreadnaughts, sir." Suddenly Admiral Wesley's voice burst over the fleet channel. "TF Mateo, remain on course. All other units, close and engage the new hostiles. Repeat, close and engage. Flag out." "Damn! They're going to buy time for us, with the rest of the fleet!" Riker was taken aback. Worf's bass rumble brought Riker back to the immediate. "Deneva advises a new enemy force approaching from behind the planet. Battleships are moving to engage." "Worf, keep an eye on that new force. Wes, stay tight with the squadron. Deborah Mateo swore inwardly at the tactical display facing her. The original eighty ships were moving to support the reinforcements from Federation space, which was good for her, but there were those fifteen other ships... The Jhonkai obviously still underestimated Federation abilities. They hadn't expected Mateo to see the small squadron coming around the planet with all of the subspace clutter caused by the huge rip. But her crew had seen them, seen the three battleships with their dozen escorts. But these particular three battleships didn't match the rest of the Jhonkai heavy units, and she didn't know why. All she did know was that they had obscenely large power curves. And that small group was heading directly to intercept her. "Computer, prioritise targets in Threat Group One. Select all scout size targets." A second later, threat numbers appeared on the tactical display. "This is Mateo to task force. Begin long-range fire on selected targets. Be prepared for warp speed." Photon torpedoes and disruptors lashed out, all eight ships against one of the scouts. Moments later, it veered off and fell out of position. Mateo's ships shifted fire to the next target. The Jhonkai were getting closer and closer. High-mag visual showed each of the heavy ships to have a huge open section at their bow. Maybe they were special rip-generators, and now they were being forced into battle. That impression died almost as quickly as the Deneva. Mateo's force had just disabled a fourth scoutship when the heavens lit like a star gone nova. The afterimage in Deborah's eyes recorded a beam of energy the size of a house bursting from the bow opening on the lead battleship. Commodore Mateo's eyes widened in horror. The Romulans had once experimented with a weapon called a mauler. Basically, they built a ship around a huge energy weapon which could draw directly on all ship's power. It was a crude weapon, to be sure, and not accurate at long ranges, but it was powerful. "All ships! Scatter and take evasive, now!" The second bolt hit Deneva, barely. After blowing through three layers of shields as though they weren't there, it vapourised the hangar bay along with the aft third of the ship, and one end of the closed anti-matter intermix feed. As most of her bridge crew picked themselves up off of the floor, Deborah noticed that her ship was drifting, and in freefall. The Engineer's voice, as he spoke, was filled with fear. "Commodore, containment field integrity failing. We have about two minutes." Mateo added the conclusion: until the ship explodes. "Not enough time for lifeboats." An icy calm pervaded her system as Commodore Deborah Mateo issued her last order. "Weapons, lock on the lead mauler." "Aye, sir. Locked." "Helm, slave the computer pilot to weapons lock." About seventy seconds. Would it be enough? The helmsman was puzzled. "Sir?" "Do it, please." "Yes, sir." Mateo floated forward to the helm station. The helmsman stepped aside, so didn't notice her set speed for maximum warp. "I've enjoyed serving with all of you," she said simply, and engaged the warp drive. Torrents of energy washed across the Enterprise's viewscreen. Riker thought that the ship was being fired upon, and that he was going to die. He thought himself remarkably detached from that thought, sort of like the feeling one has on the verge of fainting. Then the light faded, and half of the enemy formation was simply gone. He blinked and looked again. Two maulers and two scout ships were all that he saw. "Data, what happened? Did the middle ship self-destruct?" "Scanning," replied the android. "Sensors show strong warp ionisation trail, originating at the Deneva's last position. Explosion too large for anti-matter explosion. I conclude a high warp-velocity collision." Will knew that the Deneva had been badly damaged, but... Not knowing that their artificial gravity had failed, he assumed that all hands had been lost in the collision. He was wrong. Without acceleration dampeners, they had all died the moment the engines had engaged with acceleration stronger than one hundred earth gravities. "Captain." Data was still monitoring the sensors. "The remaining maulers are entering optimal range." Riker nodded. The squadron commanders, having just figured out the commodore's fate, were radioing back to the Admiral for instructions. Somebody needed to take charge, and quickly, before the other two maulers ripped them to shreds. As if to accentuate the point, the two ships fired on Reaver. One shot landed, hulling her neatly amidships. Will glanced at the target designations on the tactical screens. "Data, get me a channel to the squadron." "Open, sir." "TF Mateo, all units engage Target Delta-One. Enterprise will engage other. Acknowledge to Enterprise." Within moments, Data reported that they had. He also said, "Sir, we're being targeted." "Mr. Crusher, tactical warp to within fifty kilometres of target, now!" "Fif-" "Now! Worf, prepare to fire." In Starfleet Tactics classes, it was taught that when closing with an enemy at warp speeds, a ship would arrive before the light image from its previous position. Thus, what the target's sensors saw was that a ship at point A would instantaneously appear at point B, very nearby, whose light track would then trace back to the original position. And a battle computer would take precious seconds deciphering the strange data. One Starfleet captain had made very good use of this tactic, and it had since been named after him. It was called the Picard manoeuvre. From forty kilometres away, four phaser cannon destroyed the maulers shields. Individual phasers from the battlecruiser's saucer raked back and forth across the Jhonkai vessel. A mere instant later, a narrow spread of half a dozen photon torpedoes tracked down the bore of the mauler weapon itself, even as the ship was firing at the Enterprise's previous position. Not oblivious to the likely results of his tactic, Riker already had his ship warping away as the Jhonkai mauler converted itself into hundreds of gigatons of energy. Enterprise dropped out of warp several thousand kilometres away, in time to see Excelsior and Lugal deliver the coup de grace to the remaining mauler. They now had a clear channel to the planet. "Lugal, Caesar, Groombridge, form up on Enterprise. Excelsior and Ascension return to main fleet. Reaver, clear the area." Riker waited to make sure his orders were carried out, then turned to Wes at the helm. "Good piloting, Mr. Crusher. Now, get us around that planet. "Data, how's the Admiral doing?" Data reviewed the battle data he had been receiving on the rest of the fleet. "Admiral Wesley's initial close destroyed or crippled twenty-nine Jhonkai units before they recovered from the rip transition, without any significant damage to his own ships. Since then, he has kept the engagement range open. The smaller units have flanked the Jhonkai and are darting in and out at low warp speeds. Fighters have entered the Jhonkai formation, and are attacking from within to maintain confusion, but have taken almost thirty percent casualties. Also, warp capable shuttles have been laying mines through the Jhonkai ranks." "Data, how much longer can they keep it up?" "Sir, I estimate that they will be completely destroyed in under thirty minutes. All ships have taken some damage, and after several of the space control ships and battleships are destroyed, the situation will quickly become untenable." Riker mused. "Get me the Admiral." After almost forty seconds, Riker heard a curt, "Flag here." "Admiral, this is Riker on Enterprise." There was the sound of an explosion, a pause, and then, "Go ahead." "Sir, we'll be in planetary range in under five minutes. Withdraw your forces, and fight a retrograde action. You got us the time we needed, now protect yourselves." The answer came immediately; the relief in the Admiral's voice was tangible. "About time, Will. We thought you had forgotten all about us. Flag out." Suddenly, a thought occurred to Will. "Data, the Saipan?" "Lightly damaged, sir. No other reports." "Flag to all units. Commence a fighting retrograde withdrawal away from the planet, repeat away from the planet. Maintain best formation possible." Riker looked at his screens. "Data, scan the planet. Target industrial centers and population centers. Also, orbital and satellite industry and defenses." The seconds passed slowly. Riker's squadron removed all orbital defenses with long range photon torpedoes before they ever had a chance to open fire. Also, each ship, now stretched out in line abreast, launched an ESS, an electronic ship simulator, moving only marginally faster than the speed of light, to detonate mines in front of them. This was good, because almost one hundred mines were set off that way. Several orbitting factories were destroyed out of hand, as they were uninhabited. All the while, Enterprise beamed a demand for surrender. As soon as the main fleet started to retreat, the Jhonkai warships tried to return to the planet. But the Admiral was still doing an excellent job, and he made it abundantly clear to them that he would reduce the Jhonkai to scrap metal if they turned their backs on him. They didn't appear to be able to retrograde. Garrett danced a fine line between allowing the Jhonkai a chance to return to their homeworld and scatter Riker's atoms to space, and getting his own ships butchered in a close combat. "Ground based missiles and lasers firing, sir," reported Worf. "Take them out, Lieutenant." At that moment, Riker noticed Geordi standing over him. "Yes?" prompted Will. "Damage report, Captain. We're doing pretty well. A couple of burn throughs in the lower decks. Mostly cargo and crew quarters. Caesar took a glancing blow from one of the maulers. The port side of her saucer is pretty mangled, but she can still fight. The other two are a little worse off than us, but not much." "Good. We're better off than I thought possible. Any response from the planet?" Geordi frowned. "Just the missiles, sir." "Alright, damnit. I'm getting tired of this. Have all four ships deploy shuttles. I want low passes over their major population centres, five hundred metres or less. I want those people to read the Fed logo on the wings. Have the four battlecruisers spaced out, one polar orbit, one equatorial, two in between. Any defense installations are to be destroyed, as precisely as possible. Empty industrial locations likewise. If they have people in them, then phasers on heavy stun, wide dispersion." Geordi moved to a console and started issuing orders. He turned around and asked, "Shuttles to be armed, Captain Riker?" "Hmmm. Air-to-air missile load. How soon can they launch?" "Less than five minutes, sir." Coxswain Lieutenant (JG) Adalbert Schneider piloted his shuttle at mach four over the scurrying civilians below. Intel from First Officer LaForge, up on the bridge, said he was over the biggest population center on the planet. He smiled and watched the weird triply symmetric aliens hurry off the streets. Ensign Jones, in the second seat, heard the warning beeper, and stared at his screens. "Bert, atmospheric fighter closing from, uh, one four four." "I got him." The sleek black shape locked onto the shuttle and fired three missiles from an internal weapons bay. "Hang on!" Schneider popped three chaff charges while Jones cranked the jammer to max. The throttle was cracked wide open, and as the pilot pulled back the stick the shuttle accelerated into a steep climb. The three missiles exploded into the chaff, but the Jhonkai pilot matched the climb. Schneider figured he had some kind of cannon on that craft, and he didn't want to find out anymore about it. The two craft jinked back and forth in a twisting scissors pattern, and the civvies came back into the street. After all, when was the last time they saw a high-speed dogfight over their fair city? "Jonesie, how's his infrared?" "Pretty cool, Bert. Ain't gonna get a target out of him that way." "Alright." He jammed the stick to port and reversed the pursuit again. At this rate, they'd run out of fuel before either got a decent shot. "Can you get me a passive lock-on with the aft missiles? I don't want to go active and spook him." "Yeah. Can you get a good shot?" Schneider laughed. "You just leave that to me." Schneider throttled forward slightly and turned starboard again. The bandit was on his high six, just about to get a really juicy shot, when the lieutenant rolled skyward into a barrel roll. Schneider deliberately overthrottled coming out of the turn. The Jhonkai, who had braked on vertical thrust, cruised around to the shuttle's level six. Schneider grinned wide. The launch toggle on his stick was pulled once, twice. From racks in the belly of the shuttle two missiles launched straight back, fireballing its pursuer. Burning wreckage crashed about the city. "You know," said Schneider, "that was too ea-" "Jesus Christ! Air defense stuff, everywhere!" Warning receivers blared around the cockpit. One smoke trail appeared right in front of them. Schneider instinctively pulled high right. As he crested the turn into an inverted dive, he caught puffs of several more missile launches. He hadn't needed to tell Jones to jam anything and everything. On the ground, there was a large, impressive looking building, surrounded by defensive positions. The layout of the roads and buildings around it told Schneider that that structure was one of two things: the Jhonkai capital or their military headquarters. Either way, that had to get back to Captain Riker. He noticed all that in the three seconds before his shuttle rolled level and went supersonic down a cavernous urban valley. The last pursuing missiles detonated into nearby buildings, and he went ballistic to get back to the Enterprise. LaForge felt frustrated, and rightly so. "They haven't done anything yet, Captain. The main fleet is still engaging, and they still aren't responding to us." Riker stalked back to the command chair, and contacted the squadron. "Prepare for full-scale bombardment in ten minutes." He clicked off the channel and sat down heavily. "Hangar bay to Bridge." Geordi activated an intercom. "Bridge, LaForge here." "Sir, this is Bosun Grel," announced a brusque Tellarite voice. "I've got some good intelligence from Shuttle Four." Minutes later, Data narrowed the ships scanning radius and concluded that message traffic in and out of the building Schneider had found definitely indicated a planetary command centre. "Mr. Crusher," asked Riker, "how long until we orbit over that sight?" "Eight minutes, Captain." "Geordi, have the squadron standby on bombardment." "Aye, sir." "Wes, you and Mr. Data have exactly four and a half minutes to come up with the profile for an atmospheric dive to take us one kilometre over that city. We will hold position there for as long as possible. Worf, I want blanketing phaser fire on heavy stun all around, but not on, that building." Riker paused to let all of that sink in. "Clear?" The Strategic Command Bunker for the Jhonkai Concordium was quiet for the moment. Since that one enemy shuttle had escaped, no further harassments had been made. But electronic sensors still eagerly watched the sky. They found something. There was a bright infrared source high over the horizon. Tracking computers computed that it would pass over the city, but trained weapons anyway. Deeper in the atmosphere now, the object slowed and ceased burning. It took on a trajectory indicating a powered vehicle, and more weapons were brought to bear. They began to fire. Missiles were barely out of their launch racks when they, and the racks, were melted by spears of lightning from the intruder. Ground based lasers got off one shot, and no more before being likewise destroyed. Smaller vehicles emerged, diving straight for the city. The larger object resolved itself into a wide flat body with a disc shaped projection forward, and twin nacelles astride its aft end. The shuttles crisscrossed the Bunker, destroying radars and missile launchers. Within three minutes, dozens of fires raged around the Bunker, and now the large object was clearly visible, directly over the city. It was big, bigger than a fleet scout, and almost as big as a battleship. The small boats, their destruction wrought, cleared the area, and beams of energy began to connect the big ship with parts of the city. The command personnel in the Bunker tried to contact those sections of the city, to receive no answer whatsoever. The attack went on and on. Every remaining camera was trained on the attacker, and its huge, menacing shape filled every eye that was left to watch. "We demand your surrender and the cessation of all hostilities in and against the United Federation of Planets..." Admiral Wesley had fewer than thirty ships left against the four hundred remaining Jhonkai. All the space junk was scattering emanations from the planet, and he hadn't heard from Riker. He feared the worst. With all of his remaining ships damaged, many of them badly, he had few if any options remaining. Ingram was going to have to warp to the planet and bombard it with anti-matter. How much longer could he wait? Just then, the ship's science officer said in a slightly puzzled tone, "Admiral, the enemy is slowing." "Damn. Are they making for the planet again?" "No, sir. They appear to be stopping. Wait! They're ceasing fire!" "What?" "That's right, sir," noted DiSanto, watching her own screens. Garrett mashed a finger and opened the fleet channel. "Flag to all units, cease fire and hold position!" "Signal from the planet, Admiral." The bridge of the Saipan looked empty. With half of her normal bridge crew dead or wounded from the hit that had melted the starboard bulkhead, it was amazing that it still functioned as a command center. Picard stood in the middle of the bridge, with the big ship's captain standing slightly behind and beside him. "On screen." An ugly tripartite alien appeared on the viewer. "This is Second Marshall Jekhal of the Jhonkai Concordium. I am prepared to offer the surrender of my people to a diplomatic detachment of the United Federation of Planets." "I am Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation Starfleet. I have authority to negotiate that surrender. Do you understand that?" "Yes, Picard, I do, and I have since you destroyed our first fleet around J'chut. Our former leaders were more stubborn, however. Understand that there has been a...very recent change of power here which has left me in charge." "Marshall, I am deeply sorry for the extent of force which had to be used to bring about this conversation." "Picard is not to be blamed, rather my predecessors who insisted on fighting against your superior strength. "But let us meet and discuss our situation more thoroughly..." CHAPTER XIX Will Riker watched the slowly moving starscape through the viewing ports of the Galaxy class ship's main conference room, just off of the bridge. He gave a long sigh. Presently, the door sighed open and shut again behind him, and, without turning to look, he took note of quiet footfalls approaching him. "How's my ship, Will?" Riker half turned to note the shorter, balding form of Captain Picard beside him. "Just fine, sir. Not much can go wrong orbitting a starbase. I'd say it's been a fairly boring two weeks." Picard, himself, had been in Jhonkai space with the negotiators, disarmament supervisors, logistics personnel, and numerous others, since the cease fire. He was back at Starbase 93 to resume his normal duties, his major work with the Jhonkai having been completed, and the follow-up passed on to others. Jean-Luc joined his First Officer, once again wearing the three collar pips of a Commander, in staring at space. "It was worse than I first thought, Number One. Their whole economy had been tied up in three things: invasion, transports, and defense. To think, and to have seen, the amount of damage we did to those people..." Silence filled the air for several seconds. Riker broke it. "What about Jhonkai civilian casualties?" Will was afraid he didn't want to hear the answer. "Actually, they were quite minimal. And I am very glad for that." Will breathed relief. "So am I." "That's not all. Those ships of theirs were highly automated. The scouts had under a hundred crew, and the big ships scarcely twice that." Riker's voice turned bitter. "And Starfleet?" Picard sighed heavily. "Odysseus lost eighteen thousand people. Logistics is still trying to figure out casualties from before that. With all the civilians too..." Picard's voice caught on the words. "The preliminary estimates are a million and a half dead, half that many injured." Riker's face was stone, his eyes focused unblinkingly on some distant star. A remote part of his brain latched onto an optimistic thought, or, at the very least, an outcome that might have been worse. "And if the Admiral had acknowledged the recall? There are several trillion beings in the Federation." Silence filled the room for several minutes, the two men lost in their respective reveries. Riker had watched ship after ship of fellow officers die. Picard had wallowed in the devastation of the Jhonkai people for two weeks. Finally, Jean-Luc spoke. "Three votes, number one." "Sir?" "Odysseus was approved in the Council by three votes." Riker turned away from the viewport, anger on his face. "That's ridiculous! Those bastards let the Federation come within three votes of annihilation?" Picard was caught unawares by his exec's sudden vehemence. "Will, calm down. They were only doing their job. Their job-- ours too--is to keep peace." "Sir, with all due respect, there wasn't a whole bunch of peace to be kept three weeks ago. I watched several of my friends die in that battle, people I knew serving on those ships. I can't say they should have died, but at least they died serving the Federation, fulfilling their oaths. Damnit, I don't believe all of Worf's talk about dying gloriously in battle, but at least they didn't just get wiped out because some politician decided that it was against some ethical principal to move their ships out of dock. "I'm not happy about what we did to the Jhonkai, but as sure as I am standing here, I don't regret it." Picard moved toward the table. "Sit down, Will." Picard's tone was not entirely an order. Riker took a seat. Will Riker's face was still red, and tension gestated in the air for several long moments as the Captain thought about his words. "That was quite a bit of baggage you just let off there, wasn't it?" Will's mouth opened, but before he could speak, Picard continued. "Will, would you give your life to save mine? Or any other person on this ship? Or maybe even somebody you had never met?" Riker was caught off guard. Switching mental gears, but making sure to hold onto the core of the discussion, he said, "Yes, I would. You know that." Picard leaned forward. "Would you allow the entire crew to die if it would save a whole planet?" Riker concentrated harder, trying to grasp what his captain was getting at. "Yes." "Would you allow one race of people to die to save another?" Riker didn't answer. Picard prompted, "Where do you draw the line, Commander? When does sacrifice, self-sacrifice, end? And why?" Riker answered in a flat, emotionless voice. "I don't know. I don't have all the answers, but I know there comes a point where my choice is us over them. And this was definitely past that point." "Do you honestly think that the Council members who voted against it didn't consider that vote very seriously?" asked the Captain rhetorically. Picard stood and walked over to Riker's side. "Will, I know how you feel. Frankly, I was disappointed about that piece of news myself. "But I spent more time these past two weeks trying to curb bloodthirsty Federation personnel than trying to control the Jhonkai. After Jekhal took over, they were very cooperative. "Obviously things could have turned out much worse, but they could have been better as well. And there's plenty of blame to be spread around if that is what you really want to do." Riker shook his head. "Of course not." "Will, you've done your part, and I've done mine. What the Federation needs now is to start getting back to normal." Will leaned back in the chair and turned once again toward the viewport. After a short while, he asked, "So how did the negotiations go?" "Not as badly as I feared," answered Picard, "but not as well as I had hoped." Riker allowed himself a wan smile. "I believe I know the feeling." "Every ship that could still generate rips has already withdrawn. The ones that couldn't surrendered. We'll oversee their disarmament, of course. The Federation is allowing them to settle coreward systems that we've never had time to develop, and after they get set up there they have to provide merchant ships to the Federation and give us an assured trade status." "That doesn't sound to bad," observed Riker. "Well, some pretty stiff reparations have been assigned to them, but they've also been offered Federation membership at some unspecified time in the future. I am proud to say that the last was at my urging." Riker nodded. "Good idea, sir." "So, Number One, are you getting used to being a Commander again?" Riker chuckled. "I think so. Just forgive me if I try to give you orders by accident, okay?" "I think I can manage that. I am glad to have you back with me, Number One." "Mr. President, everything is going well." The President looked at Admiral Heirok, then looked around at the complete chaos which dominated Starfleet Command. Here a group dealt with the surrendering Jhonkai, in that corner a team monitored rips, over there Logistics was trying to organise repair and refit for dozens of starships, Personnel was arranging for all of the reservists returning from duty, Planetary aid was in full swing... "Excellent Admiral. And the stand-down?" Heirok nodded. "All sector commands have acknowledged the stand-down order. The United Federation of Planets is now officially off of Invasion Alert." The President knew how much work was left to accomplish, how much rebuilding would have to be done. Nonetheless, he looked relieved, for perhaps the first time in over a month. "I am glad to hear that, Admiral. What deployments are still in effect?" Turning towards a strategic display of Federation territory, the Chief of Starfleet said, "The local defense fleets have been put into service for relief efforts, and the PDF is overseeing Jhonkai transport and colonisation. The remainder of Task Force Odysseus is in Jhonkai space, with some reinforcements, observing and aiding with disarmament." "Fine, fine. Carry on Admiral, I have an appointment to attend to." "Yes, sir." "This Board of Inquiry is now in session. "Admiral Garrett Irving Wesley, you are accused of disobeying orders and mutiny. How do you plead?" What an obnoxious formality, thought Wesley. Garrett didn't exactly think himself a hero (although there were many who did), but he certainly didn't expect to get hanged for winning a war. Oh, there was no death penalty or anything, but the head of the board was an Academy classmate of Wesley's who had never really liked Wesley. According to the strictest letter of Starfleet law, he would have every right to hand Wesley a dishonourable discharge and some time in a Starfleet prison. But he wouldn't. Would he? Wesley's lips were forming around his answer when the door opened. The Chairman's face frowned. "Damnit, this board is closed-" When he saw who had entered, the Chairman was too flabbergasted to speak, so one of the commodores announced, "Attention on Deck!" "At ease, gentlemen. Mr. Chairman?" The presiding Admiral was at attention again. "Yes, Mr. President?" "I am ordering you to drop all charges against Admiral Wesley. Do you understand?" "Yes, sir. Perfectly." His voice sounded disappointed. The President obviously did not appreciate that tone. "Admiral, no mutiny took place. Admiral Wesley obeyed his orders perfectly." Everyone in the room, Wesley included blinked in surprise. "Mr. President?" The Chairman lifted a transcript of the orders. "But Admiral Wesley's orders-" "-were to keep the main Jhonkai force from wreaking havoc in the Federation. And he managed to force them all to withdraw. Every last ship. That is all, Mr. Chairman. The board is dismissed." The entire Board grabbed their papers and filed quickly out of the room. As the President watched them go, Wesley approached him. "Sir, thank you." The President turned to face him. "Admiral, there is not a being in the entire universe who does not make mistakes. My only wish is that they could all have someone as willing to recognise those mistakes as you. You have done the Federation a great service." For the first time in his memory, Garrett Wesley blushed. As Picard strode onto the bridge, Executive Officer Riker turned and informed him, "All preparation have been made, Captain. We're ready to get underway." "Excellent." Picard took his seat, surveying his bridge. "Make it so." Riker's large frame seemed to fill the centre of the bridge where he stood. "Mr. Worf, open a channel to Starbase Operations." Worf was about to acknowledge when an indicator at his console activated. "Sir, incoming transmission." Riker raised an eyebrow. "What's the source?" "Starfleet Command, sir." "On screen." The viewscreen changed from anonymous stars to a UFP logo. A voice announced, "Standby for the President of the United Federation of Planets." Picard and Riker exchanged glances, and Picard rose to stand beside his first officer. The President's features were suddenly looking down at them. "Greetings Captain Picard, Commander Riker." "Mr. President," they said together. "Gentlemen, you have both performed outstandingly in service of the Federation during the recent crisis. I would like to extend to you both my personal thanks, as well as that of Starfleet Command and the Federation." Picard answered first. "Thank you, Mr. President. We are flattered." "Not at all. Captain, I wish to congratulate you for the tremendous work you did with the diplomatic contingency. I am sure that no one could have done a better job with the situation you faced. In fact, let me know if you ever want a job with the Foreign Office." Picard laughed. "Not for a while, yet, sir." "And Commander. I am happy to be the first to inform you that you will receive both the Starfleet Citation for Gallantry and the Presidential Citation for Outstanding Service. That's a very impressive combination, Commander Riker." Riker was well aware of that fact. "Thank you, Mr. President." "And now, Captain, Commander, I have a special assignment that I think will please you both." EPILOGUE Jean-Luc Picard stood in full dress uniform in the largest viewing lounge of an orbital museum which cruised slowly about the planet Mars. Clustered near him, Beverly and Deanna showed smiles of happy expectation. The museum had been made out of the docking bay section of Starfleet's original Spacedock, salvaged when its replacement was built, and moved to its present location as a place to display with honour those ships whose names stood out most prominently in Starfleet history. And had survived... The corridors were lined with memorial plaques to all the ships Starfleet had sent out never to return. Though all well kept, Picard couldn't help but notice the gleaming new sheen on the almost sixty recent additions. Picard looked around the tremendous enclosed space on the other side of the clearsteel windows. Dozens of shuttles and fighters, small scout ships, several destroyers and even larger ships. Most conspicuous, by far, was the ship directly opposite the bay doors. Shining bright white and blue under the powerful lights, her twin nacelles and fine lines designed to grab the admiration of all who saw her, the United Star Ship Enterprise, NCC 1701-A, sat majestically in the role of guardian angel of all about her. Several smaller ships had been moved from nearby, allowing technicians to construct a huge berth next to the angel. The UFP anthem blared from hidden speakers suddenly. Picard came to attention, as did all the other officers around him. Civilians were in other lounges. The main monitor faded from the Federation flag to the Starfleet emblem--the curved arrowhead shape originally from the first starship Enterprise--to a view outside the museum. The Sol home fleet was in twin ranks, lining the approach trajectory to the museum bay. They forced energy through their deflector screens, and the onlookers watched rainbows of colour ripple down the line. Then, from the end of the line, two shapes began to move. Geordi commanded Picard's ship as she led the Alaska class battlecruiser Enterprise through the formation. The two vessels crept down the line, their serene glide punctuated only by the bursts of the twenty-one gun salute: a wash of bright phaser fire from Enterprise-D, followed scarcely seconds later from all the rest. Strobe lights pulsed red throughout the docking area. The monstrous doors showed a sliver of dull red light reflected off of the planet's surface, which widened until most of the fleet was visible outside. Just before the doors, Geordi banked high, parking over the museum. "Wes, time to doors?" asked Riker. "Fourteen seconds, sir," came the answer from the helm. The glow of the last shot of the salute flashed from the museum's bright surface, and Geordi conned his ship into a climb and rotation. As the battlecruiser's bow light passed through the bay doors, the Galaxy class ship faced opposite, looking back down the assembled ranks of ships. Wes Crusher watched his controls intently, caressing the manoeuvring jets just so,making sure every move the ship made was perfect. A beep sounded from the comm panel. Worf said, "Dock master is hailing, sir. Tugs standing by for assistance." Riker considered that. "Need the help, Mr. Crusher?" "No way, sir!" A playful smile crossed Will's lips. "Mr. Worf, signal the dock master that, after we dock this battlecruiser, we'll be more than happy to assist his tugs." Worf let slip a soft bark that might have been a chuckle. "Aye, aye, sir." As the shadow of the bay fell across the ship's nacelles, Will called to an open hailing frequency, "Thanks for the escort, Geordi. Good job." "No problem, Commander. That's a fine looking ship you've got there. Enterprise out." All too soon, scarcely minutes later, Riker felt the slight change in the humming which coursed through the deckplates that told him the thrusters had shut down. The ship was motionless. Data confirmed this. "Docking manoeuvres completed, Commander. Dock workers are approaching with the gangway and permanent bracings. Shall I begin powerdown sequence?" Riker sighed. How many times had he thought he was about to give his last order aboard this ship? But this was really it. Will was about to feel sad, but then he noticed the recently repaired battle damage. He saw Deneva explode in his mind, and watched scenes from the whole final battle around the Jhonkai homeworld dance through his head. William Riker knew that he did what had been necessary, but now that was done, and he could get back to the Enterprise, the one that really mattered. His home. "Power down all systems, Mr. Data." "Yes, sir. Main engines are cold, impulse shutdown beginning, and storage routines are running." Riker nodded. "That's everything, then?" Argyle spoke from his station. "Everything for us, sir. The museum will take care of the rest." "Let's go then." Riker watched the other four begin their way down the gangplank, then turned to close the airlock. The computer confirmed that nobody was on board, and accepted the command. As he started to walk away, he pondered briefly whether this end of the passage was under low pressure, or if there were some other invisible force making it hard for him to go. He heard noise up ahead, some kind of commotion, and wondered what might be up. Will brightened his pace. He was deposited into the museum proper, and as he rounded a turn towards the main lounge, he ran straight into a wall of sound. Cheering, whistling, a torrent of noise, all directed at the officers of Enterprise-C, and, specifically, Will Riker. As he threaded through the wall to wall uniforms, a melange of red, blue and gold, Will Riker's face was that of a little boy, jubilant at the praise he receives from those around him. Hearty pats on the back thumped him continuously. One short redhead in security gold planted a ferocious kiss on Riker's lips before retreating into the sea of uniforms. He was still pondering that when Picard and the others found him. "Well, Number One," said the Captain, his voice swelling above the rest, "it seems your reputation precedes you." Riker threw his head back and let out a tremendous laugh. Every bit of tension that had collected in him since the whole Jhonkai crisis had begun abandoned him in one cathartic moment. His eyes on the verge of tears, Riker acknowledged, "It would seem so. I could use a good party." Riker walked onto the Galaxy class ship's bridge, at a moderate pace, and trying not to move his head very much. He had a hangover. Kate Pulaski was also on the bridge. "Will, are you alright?" Riker had deliberately forgone any hangover treatments, to remind himself not to do this again. "I'm fine, Doctor." His voice was just a little slower than usual. Deanna said, "Will-" He knew what she was going to say. She was going to tell him he was not fine, and that he should let the doctor do something for him. She was absolutely correct. "I said I'm fine." She took his word for it. The ready room door hissed, and Picard walked briskly to the centre chair. He obviously noticed Will's slightly unnatural complexion, yet chose to ignore it. Riker was glad. If he had to tell one more person just how fine he was, he might very well keel over from the exertion. "We have our orders, Number One. We're to finish the training games that were interrupted. I'm rather looking forward to it." "Hmm." Even Picard couldn't resist after that pitiful response. "So, how did the party end last night, Will?" "I don't remember," he mumbled. Jean-Luc smiled--'Ah, youth', or some such sentiment--and let it be. "Mr. Data, set a course for Starbase 42, warp four." "Aye, aye, sir. Course laid in." "Number One?" Riker considered briefly, then answered. "No, thank you, sir. Your ship, your prerogative." "Very well." Picard's right index finger pointed forward. "Engage."