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- TF01
- 3,The Hunter - Part 8
- 4,by Stuart Mackaness
-
- The Vanguard Chronicles - "The Hunter"
- ----------------------------------------
- by Stuart Mackaness
- ---------------------
-
-
- PART EIGHT
-
-
- Halk walked onwards, they seemed to be covering more ground than they
- did yesterday. Carstairs couldn't be buried, they had nothing to cut
- into the ground with. Hermandez's phaser had been damaged in the
- explosion and the ones beamed down were destroyed. Her tricorder
- seemed to be working though which was a positive sign. She was
- getting all sorts of strange readings, with her power being drained
- and then coming up to full power again. It was very strange.
- Hermandez suddenly pointed into the sky. Halk looked up and saw Karma
- motionless above them. She seemed frozen in mid-flight. Hermandez
- reached up and tried to grab her. She froze on the spot. Not daring
- to approach them, Halk pulled out her tricorder and scanned the pair.
- Everything seemed fine. She ran through several scan modes.
-
- "What the..?" she gasped surprised. 'Their cellular decay levels are
- non-existent! That can't be possible, they aren't aging!' she thought
- with amazement.
-
- Confused she sat down and set a new scan sequence into the tricorder.
- Hermandez suddenly wobbled slightly, and Karma flew forward on her
- normal flight path. She landed by Halk.
-
- "I came as fast as I could Commander." Karma said breathlessly.
-
- Hermandez snatched at the air. She turned to face Halk and then
- looked confused when she saw her having a conversation with Karma.
-
- "Are you alright Karma?" she asked. "You were frozen in the air."
-
- Karma looked up at her. "What are you talking about, I was only
- flying for a few seconds."
-
- "Something's not right." Halk replied.
-
- There was silence for a moment. Karma eventually broke it. "How are
- you two? I saw the explosion a few minutes ago."
-
- Halk paused. She looked across to Hermandez who was equally
- bewildered. "That was over a day ago."
-
- Karma took this in without missing a beat. "Just as I thought. Time
- is different in certain places in this chamber."
-
- Halk listened as Karma described her conversation with Dean.
- Hermandez worked on the tricorder, the conversation going over her
- head slightly. Even Halk was starting to get swamped with concepts.
-
- "Anti-time?" She asked.
-
- "Never mind, it's a hypothetical theory which has no real basis for
- existence." Karma said with a strong feeling of deja vu.
-
- "So you think there are pockets of time running at different rates
- all across this room." Halk summerised.
-
- "Maybe even the whole ship, we were together most of the time so we
- don't know."
-
- "Can we detect them with our tricorders?" Hermandez asked.
-
- "Only if we are actually seeing someone in another pocket. We can
- check their cellular decay levels."
-
- "See if they're aging." Halk translated for Hermandez.
-
- "Exactly." Karma replied.
-
- "But why are there pockets here? There must be a reason." Halk said.
-
- "Perhaps the pockets are other dimensions, like the hunter's shields
- were." Hermandez said.
-
- Karma looked at her surprised. "That's probably it! Parts of the ship
- exist in other dimensions. We can probably reach the aliens behind
- this elaborate ship at the tower. I think I saw some kind of door
- there."
-
- "Well then let's get to Dean at the centre of this thing and then get
- the hell out of here!" the security officer said, jumping to her
- feet.
-
- * * *
-
- The hunter watched as the bacteria moved around in it. It had been
- infected! They were poisioning it. Not satisfied with beating it in
- combat, they were now going to slowly kill it! Where was the honour
- in that. Better to be allowed to take it's own life than be poisioned
- by these organic things.
-
- * * *
-
- "You're the science officer, you figure it out." Dean retorted, the
- lack of food had started to irritate him.
-
- Karma ignored him and looked out to the horizon. "Who is that?"
-
- Dean followed her gaze. "It looks like humanoids !" He said
- surprised.
-
- A small explosion covered the three figures. Karma rose into the air.
- "I'll go and check it out."
-
- Dean stood up and watched her shoot forward into a dot on the
- horizon. He moved to sit down, then he realised something. He pulled
- off his boot and studied his ankle. It wasn't broken anymore.
-
- "Robert!" Came a shout from the base of the stairs. He walked over
- and saw Hermandez, Halk and Karma rushing up to greet him.
-
- "You just left!" He said to Karma confused.
-
- "I'll explain in a minute." Halk said. "We need to see what's behind
- that door."
-
- Dean stepped back and tugged at the metallic door. It didn't even
- rock slightly.
-
- "It won't budge, Commander." he said grimly.
-
- "Stand away Robert." Hermandez said aiming her tricorder at the door.
-
- "What are you doing Macha?" he asked puzzled.
-
- "I combined the tricorder with the working parts of my phaser. It
- should work now." she pressed a button on the screen, and a phaser
- beam lanced out. It struck the door in the top right corner.
- Hermandez slowy shifted the beam across to the left.
-
- Halk watched approvingly. "Excellent work Lieutenant."
-
- "So how are you all?" Dean asked.
-
- "We're all fine, but Carstairs is dead." Halk said. "It seems we have
- more time on our hands than I thought, so I'll bring you up to date
- on what we've discovered."
-
- Hermandez continued to phaser the door as the two of them talked. She
- began to cut down the left hand side to the ground.
-
- "So there are pockets of other dimensions scattered around the ship.
- That must be why this place is bigger on the inside than the
- outside." Dean said with growing understanding.
-
- "Exactly." Karma replied. "You Humans are smarter than I thought."
-
- "Thanks." Halk retorted, not sure how to take the comment.
-
- "I'm through!" Hermandez announced. She kicked the door and it fell
- inwards.
-
- Halk switched her tricorder's light beam on and illuminated the
- inside."Oh, great." she said annoyed, "Another door."
-
- Dean approached it. It parted to reveal a brightly lit cubicle. He
- stepped inside. A speaker began to calmly instruct him in an
- unfamiliar musical language. He waited for the universal translator
- to activate on his communicator. It remained silent.
-
- "Either the translator's off line, or else the language can't be
- translated right now. Let's give the computer a little while to work
- it out." Dean suggested.
-
- "Perhaps we aren't in contact with the ship anymore." Hermandez
- suggested.
-
- Halk tried her communicator. It was just producing static.
-
- "Shall we get into the lift?" Dean asked.
-
- Halk suddenly realised he was right. The cubicle was a large lift.
- She stepped inside and indicated that the others should follow suite.
- The doors closed efficiently and then opened almost immediately. They
- were on the top of the column, just above the mist. Infront of them
- lay a complex machine with crackling globes of energy and flashing
- pipes. A man shaped chamber was inset into the floor. Halk ran her
- tricorder over it. The screen filled with gibberish and then drained
- of power. Slotting it into her belt pouch, Halk bent down to join
- Dean in examining it. Inside the alcove was a soft velvet-like
- material. It was warm to the touch and slightly moist.
-
- "It's like living tissue." Dean whispered.
-
- Hermandez called them over from the other side of the room.
- "Commander Halk, there's a whole group of them over here."
-
- They examined them and found that they were identical in constuction
- to the first one. Dean tried to lie in one but was stopped by Halk.
-
- "It's my responsibility, Lieutenant." She said calmly.
-
- He stepped back and watched her lie down. Hermandez came over with
- Karma.
-
- "Are you crazy Commander?" the security officer exclaimed.
-
- "No I'm going to find out wh-" Halk began. A trail of lights lit the
- sarcophagus entrance and Halk's face became ridged.
-
- "Commander?" Hermandez asked tentatively.
-
- <Well done organic constructs, you have beaten me> Halk said in
- stiltied standard.
-
- "Who is this?" Karma demanded. "Am I talking to the hunter's crew?"
-
- <I am...> Halk paused. <The hunter. I have no infestations. I am
- alive like you only better.>
-
- "Obviously not that good, we beat you." Karma replied cooly.
-
- <Point taken.> The Halk/hunter agreed.
-
- "The ship is alive..." Dean whispered to himself. "Of course it all
- makes sense. The artery like corridiors, the green blood, the lake,
- the beating sound in the distance. We've been in the hunter's
- circulatory system!"
-
- "Where did you come from?" Karma asked.
-
- <This organic construct does not contain the information to give
- precice directions. You are surly a naieve and recluse species>
-
- "We are from the United Federation of Planets, a collection of many
- races in this part of the galaxy. Our mission is to explore space, by
- definition our quest is for knowledge and understanding. You attacked
- our ships, why?" Dean said.
-
- <Sport.> Halk/hunter replied instantly.
-
- "Why is it sport?" he asked agahst.
-
- <To prove that I am unbeatable by any creature in this part of the
- universe>
-
- "How many ships have you destroyed?" Hermandez said, a small measure
- of empathy seeping into her voice.
-
- <I have not killed enough creatures to prove myself>
-
- Karma was puzzled. "You refered to our ships as creatures, why."
-
- <They are not your ships, they are creatures who you infest like a
- plauge. You restrict them from controlling themselves. They are
- almost not worth killing, I feel sorry for them.>
-
- "Our ships can't function without us. We tried to let computers
- control starships but they malfunctioned." Hermandez explained,
- remembering what she had been taught about the M-5 experiments at the
- academy.
-
- "Are you a machine?" Dean asked.
-
- <Not by your paltry standards. I am mechanical though.>
-
- "You're telling me that this thing is a gigantic big game hunter. It
- goes around the galaxy blowing starships apart and then collecting
- parts of them as trophies!" Karma exclaimed.
-
- <Yes>
-
- "I wasn't talking to you." She snapped.
-
- Dean looked slightly worried. "So what happens now?"
-
- <I have been defeated. I am without honour, I should die.>
-
- "This thing sounds like a Klingon!" Karma muttered.
-
- "Woah! What do you mean die?" Hermandez said quickly.
-
- The lights around the coffin dimmed and Halk's body slumped back,
- limp. Dean grabbed her while Hermandez slapped her communicator.
- "Vanguard, this is Lieutenant Hermandez. We require an emergency beam
- out. Now!"
-
- The communicator remained silent. Jets of gas shot out from pipes in
- the wall as the deck began to shake violently. Terminals and energy
- conduits belw apart, flames began to shoot up from vents in the
- floor.
-
- Karma thumped her annunciator. "Vanguard, this is the away team, we
- need beaming now!"
-
- The floor began to heave. Dean lost his footing and fell backwards
- towards the lift. Fireballs blossomed from the machinery. Chunks of
- debris rained down on the group as the ceiling broke apart.
-
- "This is it!" Hermandez called over to Dean.
-
- Dean nodded and grasped her outstreched hand. Karma closed her eyes
- and braced herself for the explosion. She tensed up, her muscles
- screaming for peace after the flurried activity of the past day. A
- strange coolness washed over her body.
-
- * * *
-
- Warner watched as the Hunter began shudder slightly. He turned to the
- ensign at Ops. She was busy reading incomming data.
-
- "Status?" he demanded.
-
- She shook her head. "Fluctuating power levels. It looks like some
- kind of self-destruct."
-
- Warner inwardly cursed. "Helm, lay a course out of here at full
- impulse."
-
- He slapped his communicator. "Transporter room, get them out of
- there." He ordered.
-
- "I can't get a solid lock!" Briggs complained.
-
- "Dammit! We're going to lose six good people if you don't energise
- now!" he barked.
-
- The Vanguard began to thrust away from the suicidal ship. Gouts of
- flame shot into the void of space. A warrior was dying.
-
- "I've got a partial lock on them, but I don't know how stable it is.
- There's too much interference." Briggs reported, the pressure making
- his voice crack slightly.
-
- "Energise" Warner snapped.
-
- The Hunter detonated on the viewscreen. A huge fireball engulfed the
- angular vessel in an orgy of destruction. The Vanguard was buffeted
- by the subspace shockwaves for a few seconds until the inertia
- dampening field compensated.
-
- Horror clutched Warner's heart. "Transporter room, did you get them?"
-
- "There wasn't enough time to..." Briggs trailed off.
-
- Warner looked at the starfield displayed before him, trails of energy
- and vapourising debris marred the otherwise tranquil image. His mind
- travelled back to the time in the galley, Dean and Hermandez had a
- full life ahead of them. He thought how he had treated Halk when she
- was late for bridge duty, could he have been more lenient? And what
- about Karma? Did she deserve the deal that Starfleet had cut her? He
- had become attached to all of them in the short two years the crew
- had been together. Was life fair?
-
- "Sir! There's something in the transporter buffer!" Briggs exploded
- over the channel.
-
- Warner lept to his feet and rushed to the lift. He nearly knocked a
- crew member over, he muttered an apology. The journey to the
- transporter room was a haze for him, he fiercely tried to suppress
- his hopes and fears. He had an example to set. He paused for a second
- outside the room. What was going to be behind the doors? Was it death
- or a miraculous escape? It didn't matter, he had to know either way.
- Stepping forward, the doors parted to reveal...
-
- "Laughter?" Warner said out loud.
-
- The four were clustered together in a huddle, laughing from the shock
- and the adrenalin rush. Briggs was joining in as well. Warner ran
- forwards into the group, forgetting duty and rank. His family was
- safe.
-
-
-
- EPILOUGE
-
-
- Captain's Log: Stardate 47358.9
-
- With necessary repairs complete, we can finally head home. We are due
- to rendezvous with Counselor Reboxski at Starbase fourty-five in just
- under a day. The Vanguard is due at Starbase Montgomery after
- delivering Commander Halk and the Counselor to the Kreel summit. This
- mission has tested my crew to their full limit, but they have emerged
- the better for it.
-
- Personal Log: Supplemental
-
- Some day we may learn about the hunter's mission and origin, but
- until then I'm sure the the Science Council and Xenobiologists will
- be quite happy speculating to the President and the Commander in
- Chief of Starfleet. I can't help but hope that we never find them. We
- have enough enemies at the moment, with new information about the
- Dominion gleaned from our research in the DS Nine database it seems
- that Starfleet's policy of peaceful solutions and diplomatic
- relations may not live for much longer. The future is more uncertain
- than ever for the Federation.
-
-
- Warner ended his log and leaned back in his chair. His joy at the
- conclusion of the mission was overshadowed by his poor handling of
- his personal life. Yeoman Lesaari had requested a transfer. He wasn't
- sure what actually happened between them. He knew it was his fault
- though. He had given her responsibilities and spent time with her,
- but hadn't read the signals. They were as noticable as a warp core
- breach according to Halk. Maybe if he had seen what Lesaari was
- leading to he might have been able to sort out his own feelings
- before hand instead of blowing up infront of her like he did. His
- door chime called out to him.
-
- "Come in." He said automatically. It was Li, holding a bottle.
-
- "I heard about Lesaari," He began, "you want to talk about it?"
-
- Warner considered pouring his heart out to his friend. He didn't, he
- was a Starfleet officer.
-
- "I'll get over it. how about you?"
-
- Li looked at him puzzled. "What do you mean?"
-
- "You lost a lot of friends in medical." Warner explained, putting a
- reasuring hand on his friends shoulder.
-
- Li focused on a non-existent object. His thoughts now lay somewhere
- else. "Yes, I did."
-
- "You want to talk about it?" Warner asked quietly, trying not to
- sound like an echo of his friend's question.
-
- Li thought long and hard. He didn't, he was a Starfleet officer.
- Instead he offered the bottle to Warner. The Captain took it and
- examined the lable. He nodded approvingly and produced two crystal
- goblets from the replicator. Levitt poured a deep orange liquid into
- them and replaced the bottle's cap. They took their glasses and
- toasted each other and the Vanguard. Downing the drink in one, the
- pair stared into their glasses for several minutes. Each was lost in
- his own problems.
-
- Warner looked up at the doctor. "Fancy a game of zero-G football, old
- timer?"
-
- A small smile played across the other's lips. "Why not."
-
- They left the room together.
-
-