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HISTORIAN'S TIMELINE

2061 Zefram Cochrane returns to Earth's solar system
after the first successful faster-than-light voyage
to Alpha Centauri.

2079 Earth endures the Post-Atomic Horror as it recov-
ers from World War III.

2117 At the age of 87, Zefram Cochrane leaves his home
in the Alpha Centauri system and disappears in
space.

2161 In the aftermath of the Romulan Wars, the Federa-
tion is incorporated and Starfleet is chartered.

2267 In the second year of Captain James T. Kirk's first
five-year mission aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise
NCC-1701, Kirk and his crew discover the Guard-
ian of Forever. In the third year, Kirk, Spock, Dr.
McCoy, and Federation Commissioner Nancy Hed-
ford encounter Zefram Cochrane and the Compan-
ion. Later that year, Ambassador Sarek comes
aboard for passage to the Babel Conference.

2269-70 Following the completion of the first five-year mis-
sion, Kirk is promoted to admiral; Dr. McCoy and
Spock retire from Starfleet.

2295 The Excelsior-class U.S.S. Enterprise NCC-
1701-B is launched from spacedock on its maiden
voyage.

2366 In the third year of Captain Jean-Luc Picard's
ongoing mission aboard the U.S.S. Enterprise
NCC-1701-D, Ambassador Sarek comes aboard
for passage to Legara IV. Several weeks later, the
Borg attack Federation territory for the first time.

2371 Captain Picard returns to Earth's solar system
following the incident at Veridian III.

Rest enough for the individual man, too much and too
soon, and we call it death. But for man, no rest and no
ending. He must go on, conquest beyond conquest.
First this little planet and all its winds and ways, and
then all the laws of mind and matter that restrain him.
Then the planets about him, and, at last, out across
immensities to the stars. And when he has conquered
all the deep space, and all the myswries of time, still he
will be beginning.

--H. G. Wells
Things to Come
1936




PROLOGUE

ON THE EDGE OF
FOREVER



ELLISON RESEARCH OUTPOST
Stardate 9910.1
Earth Standard: Late September 2295

Kirk knew his journey would be ending soon.
That feeling overwhelmed him even as he resolved from the
transporter beam and felt the gravity of this world reassert its
hold on him--a hold it had never once relinquished over all the
years, all the parsecs, which had passed from that first time to
now. All that had happened since that first time was but a
heartbeat to him, as if his life were dust streaming from the tail of
a comet, without mass, without consequence, measured only by
the moment he had first arrived at this place, and by the moment
of his return.
It had been twenty-eight years since he had first set foot here,
and Kirk had no doubt that he would never do so again. He could
hear Spock's patient voice in his mind, blandly noting the illogic
of that conclusion, given that the unexpected was all too common
in their lives. But in some matters emotions took precedence.
Which is why he had returned. Everything was coming to an end.
No matter what Spock concluded, no matter how McCoy argued,
Kirk's heart knew the truth of that feeling.
This is the last time .for so man3' things, Kirk thought, falling
into the litany that had grown in him since his retirement. Soon
Would come his last passage by transporter. His last look at



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
starlight smeared by warp speed. His last glimpse of fleecy skies
and Earth's cool, green hills. He thought of the old song for space
travelers, written before spaceflight had even begun on Earth. He
was saddened that he could not recall all of it.
"Captain Kirk, we are honored by your visit."
The words caught Kirk by surprise, though he knew they
shouldn't have. The speaker was a young Vulcan woman, Acad-
emy fresh, standing at attention before the slightly raised trans-
porter platform in the outpost's central plaza. Kirk guessed her
age as no more than twenty-five years Earth standard. He
hesitated on the platform, thinking back. When she had been
born, he'd been returning home. The first five-year mission almost
at an end. An admiralty waiting for him. Kirk cast back to the
memory. He had not gone gentle into that good night. His time as
a deskbound admiral had lasted less than two years. Two years of
going to bed each night on Earth knowing that she was orbiting
above him, being readied for another mission. And each night he
had known that she would not leave spacedock without him,
Starfleet and all its admirals be damned. Kirk had been right.
V'Ger had come to claim the world and Kirk had beaten the
odds again. As he always would.
No, Kirk thought. Had. Past tense. He was sixty-two years old.
McCoy told him he could look forward to one hundred and
twenty, even more. But the trouble with odds was that you could
never really beat them, just avoid them for a while. Spock would
be the first to admit that, in time, everything evened out. That was
one way of looking at death, Kirk knew, the inescapable evening
out of the odds. The thought brought him no comfort.
"Captain Kirk?" the Vulcan began, a polite query in her tone.
"Is everything all right, sir?"
"Fine, Lieutenant," Kirk said. Even though he was finally,
unthinkably, retired from Starfleet, a civilian again, however
unlikely, the Fleet always remembered her own and this, his last
rank, would be his forever.
He stepped down from the platform, hearing the whisper-soft
grinding of fine red dust beneath his boot. He smiled at the
Vulcan, and because Spock had been his friend for thirty years, he

FEDERATION

could see an almost undetectable shadow of emotion cross her
face. Kirk blinked and looked again at the rank insignia on the
white band of her tunic. He corrected himself: "Lieutenant
Commander." He supposed he should wear his glasses more
often. But a lieutenant commander at twenty-five? Could the
Academy really be making them that young now? Couldlreally be
that old?
"May I show you to your quarters, sir?" The Vulcan nodded to
indicate a collection of prefab habitat structures a few hundred
meters away, assembled within a clearing in the ruins of the
city.. or whatever it was. A quarter-century of study by the
Federation's best xenoarchaeologists had been unable to reveal
the purpose of this place, only that its primary structures were at
least one million years old, and the age of its oldest structure was
exactly what Spock had later surmised: six billion years.
There was a time when the significance of such antiquity had
been overwhelming to Kirk. The central stones of this place had
been carved and assembled before life had ever arisen on Earth,
before Earth herself had coalesced from the dust and debris
surrounding her sun. But now six billion years was merely an
abstraction--a mystery he would never comprehend in his
lifetime, just another fact to be placed aside, abandoned, with so
many other unattainable dreams of youth.
"No, thank you," Kirk said. "I'm afraid I won't be staying long
enough to make use of any quarters. The Excelsior will be arriving
shortly to pick me up."
"The staff will be disappointed to hear that, sir." Kirk noted
that the Vulcan hid her own disappointment well, as she did her
disapproval that Starfleet's flagship had been relegated to provid-
ing a civilian with taxi service. That's not how Captain Sulu had
viewed Kirk's request for a favor, but Kirk understood how others
might see it.
"As you are one of the few people to have interacted with the
device," the Vulcan added, almost boldly, "we had looked
forward to hearing of your encounter in your own words."
Kirk looked around the plaza, anxious to continue without
further conversation. "It's all in my original logs. I'm sure they
Offer more detail than I could recall today."



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
In what was, for a Vulcan, surely a near act of desperation, the
lieutenant commander impassively asked, "Is there nothing we
can do to have you extend your stay with us?"
"No," Kirk said. It was that final. In less than two months the
Excelsior-class Enterprise B would be launched from spacedock.
Kirk wasn't certain what was drawing him back to Earth for that
occasion. He had no intention of ever again setting foot on a
starship as anything other than a passenger. He still recalled too
well the haunted look on Chris Pike's face when they had spoken
the day Kirk had taken command of the first Enterprise. From
that first day, that first hour, somehow Kirk, too, had known that
that was how his own journey would end. With the Enterprise, or
her namesake, going on without him. Even here, it made him
uncomfortable to contemplate that moment to come in his future.
There had been so much he had wanted to accomplish, so much
he had accomplished, and yet the two never seemed to overlap.
Forty-six years in Starfleet, and his losses still seemed to outweigh
his gains.
Kirk caught sight of a distinctive pillar at the far edge of the
plaza. Floodlights had been set up on slender tripods around it,
changing the dark color of the stone he remembered to something
lighter. There was writing on it as well, intricate lines of alien
script like the overlapping edges of waves on a beach. He didn't
remember having seen writing there before, but no doubt the
archaeologists had cleaned away the encrustations of millennia.
"That way, isn't it?" Kirk asked, already walking toward the
pillar, knowing what he would find beyond.
"Yes, sir," the Vulcan said. She fell into step beside him, her
tricorder bouncing against her hip as she hurried to match his
stride. "If I may, sir, as you know, it gave no indication that the
conversation of stardate 7328 would be its last communication
with us."
"And that surprises you?" Kirk interrupted. He picked up the
pace before she could answer. He felt he was swimming in
sensations--the taste of the bone-dry air that drew the moisture
from his lungs, the lightness of the gravity, the slight reediness of
sound distorted by the thin atmosphere. He was thirty-four again,

FEDERATION

filled with purpose, pushing eagerly at the edge of all the
boundaries that encompassed him.
"Surprise connotates an emotional response," the Vulcan said
primly, "which has no place in a scientific investigation."
Her response, all too predictable, wearied him. Such earnest-
ness was best served by youth. Let her devote the next four
decades of her life to this mystery if she would. Kirk no longer had
that luxury.
'Instead," she continued, "it could be said we were perplexed
by its silence, especially in light of the conversations you reported
with it, and its apparent willingness to answer any--"
"Yes, fine, very good, Lieutenant Commander." Kirk let the
sharp words spill out of him, anything to have her stop talking. "If
I could just have a few moments..."
He sensed her falter beside him and he walked on, alone, past
the pillar and the floodlights, around a fallen wall, a tumble of
columns, and--yes!--there--right where he remembered it.
Right where it had remained through all these years, haunting
him, forever haunting him, just as its name had foretold. The Guardian of Forever.
A large, rough-hewn torus, three meters in diameter. A reposi-
tory of knowledge. A passageway into time. Its own beginning and
its own ending. A mystery. Perhaps, the mystery.
Kirk paused and gazed upon the Guardian. Like the pillar, its
color was different, changed by the floodlights that ringed it.
There were sensor arrays nearby as well, sheets of gleaming white
duraplast on the ground around it to keep the soil from being
disturbed by the many scientists who toiled to learn its secrets.
Kirk gazed upon the Guardian, and remembered.
.4 question. Since before ),our sun burned hot in space and before
your race was born, I have awaited a question ....
Those had been the first words the Guardian had spoken to
him. An investigation of temporal distortions had brought the
Enterprise to this world. McCoy had accidentally injected himself
with an overdose of cordrazine and in fleeing his rescuers had
passed through the Guardian into Earth's past. There he had
changed history so that the Federation never arose, so that the



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVt
Entelj2rise no longer flew through space, so that Kirk and Uhura
and Spock and Scott were trapped in this city, on the edge of
forever, with their only chance of restoring the universe they knew
waiting in the past.
Kirk closed his eyes, the cruel memories still alive within him.
The universe had been restored. The Enterprise returned to
him. And the price had only been the death of one woman. The
one woman he had truly loved.
Her name formed on his lips.
"Edith," he whispered.
Kirk knew the Vulcan would hear him, but he no longer cared.
Caring was for youth, and at this moment, Kirk felt as old as the
stones of this place.
He walked across the ruddy soil until he came to the duraplast
sheets. A permanent static charge repelled the dust and kept the
sheets clean. His boot heels clicked across their hard, slick
surface. He heard the Vulcan follow.
Now, no more than a meter from it, Kirk stopped to study the
mottled surface of the Guardian. It had glowed when it spoke so
many years ago, pulsing with an inner energy no one had ever
been able to trace to a source, just as they had been unable to
replicate whatever mechanism had initially allowed the Guardian
to act as a gateway through time. The most detailed sensor scans
possible consistently reported that the Guardian was no more
than a piece of granitic rock, hand-carved, and that was all.
"Perhaps you could ask it something, sir," the Vulcan sug-
gested, after a moment of respectful silence.
There were a thousand questions Kirk could think to ask.
Perhaps that was why he had returned. But for now, none seemed
worth asking.
"Do you really think it would do any good?" he asked. He
glanced behind him and saw the Vulcan staring intently at the
Guardian, as if that simple question asked in a familiar voice
might stir the intelligence locked within the stone.
"The Vulcan Science Academy spent years in conversation with
the Guardian, sir. It offered virtually infinite knowledge, ours for
the mere asking. But--"
Kirk held up his hand to stop her. He knew the story. The

)N

Guardian did claim to be the repository of infinite knowledge,
present, past, and future. But it seemed that there were inherent
limitations to the languages of the Federation and the minds of
the scientists who had engaged the Guardian in conversation. Too
many times the Guardian had said it was unable to respond until
a more precise question had been asked, yet it provided no clues
a> to how particular questions might be framed more precisely.
A human scientist had summed up eight years of frustrated
~-esearch by equating the total of recorded conversations between
the Guardian and humans to an exchange that might be expected
between a human and dogs. The smartest, non-genetically engi-
neered dogs might have a vocabulary of five hundred words, and
comprehend a handful of actions and even abstract concepts such
as direction and the duration of short periods of time. But what
about the other hundred thousand words a dog's master could
use? What hope did a dog have of understanding its master's
philosophy and biochemistry and multiphysics? How could a dog
even attempt to respond to its master in the human's own spoken
words? It was frustrating and humbling for humans to be rele-
gated to the status of mute animals, knowing no way to reach up
to the Guardian.
The scientist had bitterly concluded that the researchers at
Ellison Outpost had spent eight years conversing with a stone,
and had gotten exactly the same results as they might get from
asking questions of any rock. A few months later, the Guardian
had ceased to respond to questions at all, as if confirming the
scientist's assessment.
The Vulcan kept her face blank, but her next words, to Kirk's
attuned ears, were a plea by any other name. "I would find it most
interesting if you would ask it a question, sir."
Kirk nodded. It was a small enough request. In a few minutes, a
few hours at most, he would be gone, but the Vulcan would still
~vork here. Why leave her with regrets?
He turned to the Guardian, focusing on its wide opening
through which the other side of the plaza was clear and unob-
structed. The ruins beyond stretched to the horizon.
"Guardian," Kirk said in a firm, commanding tone, "do you
remember me?"

8 9



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
The Vulcan betrayed her extreme youth by holding her breath
in audible anticipation. An instant later, she remembered the
tricorder at her side and brought it up to check its readings of the
mute stone.
"Guardian," Kirk repeated, "show me the history of my
world."
The space bound by the circle of stone was unchanged.
Kirk turned to the Vulcan. "I'm sorry," he said. And in an
abstract way, he was, even though the mysteries of the Guardian
had moved beyond his concern.
"Thank you for trying, sir," the Vulcan said. Then she switched
off her tricorder and stood with her hands behind her back, as if
she were stone herself and had no intention of leaving his side.
In the past, Kirk might have paused to consider a polite way to
ask what he asked next, but time had become more important
than hurt feelings these days.
"Lieutenant Commander," he said, "I would appreciate it if
you would leave me alone here."
The startled Vulcan hid her surprise again, though not as well as
the first time.
"Is anything wrong, sir?"
"I wish to meditate." It was a lie, of course, but one with which
no Vulcan would argue.
"Of course, sir," the Vulcan said. She began to walk away. Kirk
turned back to the stone. Then he heard her footsteps stop. He
looked back at her. A wind had sprung up. Her severely cut hair
fluttered against her pointed ears.
"Sir," she called out over the growing wind, "this outpost has
standing orders that personnel are never to step through the
opening in the Guardian. We do not know if or when it might
become operational again."
"Understood," Kirk called back, and the Vulcan left him. He
was alone with the Guardian. He stared through the opening. Is
this what I've come back for? Kirk thought. With no more future
before me, did I hope in some way to return to the past?
The wind gusted and Kirk felt himself pushed toward the stone,
caught in a swirl of obscuring dust that made his eyes water and

FEDERATION

his throat raw. He reached out a hand to steady himself. The
Guardian was cold to his touch. He felt tired.
He thought of the stateroom Sulu would have for him on the
t.lw'c/s'ior. A soft bed. He could even turn down the gravity to ease
the ache in his back. The old knife wound he had gotten just
before the Coridan Babel Conference so many years ago had been
coming back to taunt him of late. Assisted by too many other past
injuries. too many sudden transports into different gravity fields.
"Has it come to this?" Kirk asked the wind and the dust. "Will
there be no more worlds to explore? No more battles to fight?"
The Guardian was silent.
Just as Kirk had known it would be.
There would be no more miracles for him in this universe. He
had captured a part of it in his life, imprinted a thousand worlds
in his mind, had experiences and adventures that humans of
centuries past could not conceive, and which humans of centuries
to come could never repeat.
He should be content with that, he knew.
But he wasn't.
For all his confidence, his bravado, his skills and talent and
drive to be the best, in his heart, at his core, there were doubts.
Too many words left unsaid. Too many actions left undone. Too
many questions gone unanswered.
And now, with the journey's end in sight, with the knowledge
that it was time to put aside those things left unfinished, Kirk was
not ready.
His doubts tortured him.
Edith, his love, in a roadway of old Earth, the truck rushing for
her...
David, his son, on the Genesis planet, with a Klingon knife
above his heart...
Garrovick, his commander, and 200 crew facing death on
TychoIV...
For all that Kirk had done, had he done enough?
Could anyone have done enough?
Or was it all without meaning? Was life a simple tragedy of

10 11



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

distraction from birth to death, with no more purpose than this
stone before him?
Kirk knew his journey would be ending soon, and this far into
it, he still did not understand what had driven him to take it, nor
long to continue it.
Alone, he whispered a single word to the wind and the dust.
"Why?"
And for the first time in two decades, the Guardian of Forever
answered ....

Part One

BABEL

12



THORSEN

]'he Eugenics Wars of the late twentieth century were more than
lifiY years in the past, but the evil that had spawned them lived on.
Ha,'ed, intolerance, unrestrained greed, all those qualities which
defined humaniO, so well, proved fertile ground as always.
,q ,k, eneration unborn at the turn of the millennium grew up with
a /~lscination for those who had promised order and salvation in the
mi&t of chaos. In the worm of the mid-twenty-first century',
crumbling beneath the environmental outrages of the twentieth,
that promise was a heady dream. A perfect worm was possible if
,n/~' the mistakes made by Khan Noonien Singh and his followers
could be avoided.
Adrik Thorsen was one of that generation determined not to
repeat the mistakes of the past.
He heard the call of the supermen whispered through the ages,
predating even Khan. He rallied beneath the red banners and dark
ea~,/e ~/' the Optimum Movement. He wore the red urnform of
Cob;he/Green. He awoke each day with the knowledge that the
desUny of the world, of all humanity, lay in the hands of those who
h~d the will to take drastic, necessary action.
.4drik Thorsen had that will, and in the mid-twenO,-first century,

15



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

in pockets of despair, regions overcome by anarchy and hopeless-
hess, Thorsen was allowed to enact his policies.
His quest.for perfection began with the weeding out of the unfit.
Those who were less than optimal, by infirmit),, by geneties, then by
religious belie~ and political persuasion, were the first to be coded
,for deletion. In those earl), days, killing children for the sins off their
parents had been distressing to Thorsen. But in time he came to see
the anguish he experienced, and then transcended, as a sign of his
own growing perfection.
True to his own theories, Adrik Thorsen was becoming optimal.
If the world would only follow in his footsteps, he could lead all
humanity to an era of peace and prosperity that would surpass all
understanding.
But his progress tormented him because he knew that whenever
great men such as he dared dream great dreams, inevitably there
were those who would attempt to drag them down. By their very
opposition, he considered his opponents to have proven themselves
less than optimal. Thus, they, too, could be coded for deletion with
all the others unfit to share the world.
As he journeyed on his own inner search for the Optimum, Adrik
Thorsen's dream consumed him. Then it consumed his own pocket
of the world. In time he was certain it would consume the world
itself and Paradise would follow from that moment as surely as
night followed day, as constant as a law of nature.
But ,first Thorsen understood he must vanquish the laws of
histor)'. The biggest mistake that had been made by Khan's
supermen was that they had lost. Adrik Thorsen would not permit
that mistake to be made a second time.
Thus on the morning of ;l/larch 19, 2061, Thorsen himself led the
mission against the WED Research Plat/brm, geostationary orbit,
Earth. Six carbon-shelled, single-passenger orbital transfer units
carried Thorsen andfive trusted troopers to within two kilometers
off the corporate space station, undetected by proximiO' radar. The
transfer units were jettisoned and the final approach was made in
membrane suits, using nonignition maneuvering units.
The); made magnetic contact with the station's hull at 01:20
G.xll', precisely as scheduled. Their induction scans showed that no
alarms had been triggered.

FEDERATION

:tl 0l;27 GMT, they detonated the first spinner charge on the
zq~link dish, shutting off all communications with the platform's
~,otporate headquarters. Eight seconds later, a series of secondary
dctotTations flashed along the staff module, splitting it in two.
T17orsen watched with satisjaction as he counted seven platform
crew members expelled from the resulting hull breach, arms and
/c~s kicking frantically, mouths horrifically gaping with silent cries
i, the vacuum. As he had suspected, two of the crew members wore
t/l~' bhtc and white unzforms of the New United Nations peacemak-
it~,~/brees. It was clear that Thorsen and the Optimum Movement
were t7ot the only ones who knew what breakthrough had been
~%~,~itleered at this facility.
,tccording to the operations manifest Thorsen had obtained, ten
researchers and an unknown number of peacemakers remained on
the platform. By now, the platform ~ automated emergeno' decom-
[,'ession procedures would have sealed internal airlocks. It would
bc at least .five minutes before any remaining peacemakers could
ctr;~l their own membrane suits and launch a counterattack.
Tllor,sen and his troopers were unopposed as they jetted directly to
t/ze oz~termost arm of the platform, where the revolutionary new
test vehicle was stored in its own docking module.
Thorsen knew he could not explosively decompress that module
without risk of damaging the vehicle itself. And it would be suicide
/i,' a~iv of his troopers to attempt entry through the personnel
(lir/ock, where they would become a captive target. Accordingly,
T/zor,s'en ordered one of his troopers to the airlock to deploy an
i~!flatable decoy. The decoy' was the size and shape of a trooper in a
,Tc,Tbrane suit, and would draw the attention and laser fire of any
o'cw members inside. At the same time, Thorsen commanded two
other froopers to assemble an emergency evacuation blister on the
(~,,'side e f the docking module, sealing it to the hull and pressuriz-
i~, it. 5k)w his forces could breach the module's hull without loss of
i~f~'r~zal atmosphere. The vehicle inside would be safe.
,-tt Thorsen 5' signal, the first trooper cycled the inflatable deco),
t/,'oz~,h the personnel airlock as the troopers in the evac blister used
c'z~tiqk' lasers to breach the hull.
The two troopers floating near Thorsen, ten meters away from

17



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
the module, watched for the approach of peacemakers from the
other airlocks.
But whoever remained inside the vehicle storage module did not
share Thorsen's respect for rational military action. Before
Thorsen's troopers in the evac blister could finish cutting their entry
point, a gout of crystallizing moisture exploded from the vehicle
airlock doors at the end of the module. Debris blew out with it,
meaning both the interior and exterior doors had been opened at
once.
Thorsen guessed what desperate strategy was being attempted
and instantly moved to counteract it. He and the two troopers with
him .jetted to the open vehicle airlock door. The .first trooper to
arrive was cut in half by a particle beam, his suit and flesh
rupturing in an explosion of instantly frozen blood.
Thorsen directed a fiy-by-wire fiare pack to the lip of the vehicle
airlock door and ignited it. Anyone inside who had seen the flash
would be blind for at least thirty seconds. Then he and the
remaining troopers flew into the docking module, lasers on contin-
uous,fire, tuned for membrane fabric, not for metal or carbon.
There were no peacemakers inside, only' unarmed researchers,
all but one cowering in their pressure suits. Soon, only that one
remained alive. She was in the vehicle itself, a reconfigured Orbital
Fighter Escort with a single particle cannon on its nose. The
modifications that Thorsen knew had been made to the fighter's
vectored impulse drive unit appeared to be all interior. From the
outside, it was no different from any other fighter he had piloted.
Thorsen ~ troopers on watch outside the airlock door reported
that no peacemakers had yet emerged from the other modules.
Thorsen conferred quickly with the troopers in the module with
him. They c'ould see the researcher in the .fighter through the
vehicle's jTight-deck windows. It was dij~cult to assess what she was
doing on the control consoles, but it was apparent that the fighter
was still locked into position on its launch rails and would not be
able to leave without a manual release.
Then Thorsen's induction scans alerted him to impulse circuits
cycling through their ignition sequence. The researcher was at-
tempting to power up the fighter's main drive. Thorsen knew that
when the researcher activated it, the plasma venting would kill

FEDERATION

overtone in the docking module, including her, and the mechanical
strain against the launch rails would tear what was left of the entire
?/af/brm apart.
Thorsen admired her for her willingness to die for her ideals.
He nodded at her with respect as he tuned his laser to optical
j).cqtwncies that would pass through the fighter's flight-deck win-
dows. Though he forgave her the terror she showed as she saw the
muzzle of the weapon point at her,' she died badly', without
~lcceptance of her fate at the hands of her superior. She was
obviottsly not optimal. Thorsen thus had no regret as he watched
tter lff~,less body slowly spin in the fighter~ cabin.
ItJthin ten minutes, the troopers had removed the researcher~'
body and Thorsen was strapped into the pilot's chair. Despite the
,todlifications to the vehicle, there were no major changes to the
jlifitt controls. He approved. The best innovations were always the
~implest. EJficieno' was always optimal.
Thorsen ~ troopers released the fighter from its launch rails and
Thorsen used the maneuvering thrusters to gent/), guide the vehicle
from the storage module. He told his troopers he would use the
particle cannon to decompress the platform's remaining intact
modules,' then, when the danger of a peacemaker counterattack
/tad been neutralized, the); could board.for the next phase ()f the
mission.
I[ took Thorsen three minutes to destro), the pla(form. Bodies
/1oating everywhere, a cloud of death surrounding the distant
Earth. as it always had. In two more minutes, he had used the
particle cannon to neutralize his own troopers as well. History' had
too often shown that great men were brought down by' those who
dared to share the glory for others' actions. Thorsen.felt no remorse
because none was warranted.
At 02.'11 GMT, Thorsen sent a coded signal to an Optimum
listerling post on the moon. The listening post responded with a
/li~17t plan that would guide the.fighter to Thorsen'3' meeting with
de.sti~Tv. And Thorsen's meeting with destiny would be humaniO"s
~t~rt~ing point as well.
Because, as of March 19, 2061, the key to total victory over the
Optimum's opposition, and to the resulting emergence' of a new
Order and salvation for the world, lay in the hands of a young

18 19



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
scientist named Zefiram Cochrane, who was poised on a threshoM
from which he would forever change humaniO'%' place in the
universe.
Driven by the wings qf history and dreams of salvation for all
who were ~vorthy, and determined not to repeat the mistakes of the
past. Adrik Thorsen fiew jbr Titan.
His plan was simple, efficient, optimal--whoever controlled the
genius of Zqfram Cochrane would control the future of humanity.
And as o['March 19, 2061, the future of humaniO' belonged to
Adrik Thorsen.

ONE

CHRISTOPHER'S LANDING, TITAN
Earth Standard: March 19, 2061

For just one moment, a fleeting instant of the time his life
would span, Zefram Cochrane thought he heard the stars sing
to him.
He could see them overhead, through the transparent slabs
of aluminum that formed the dome over this part of the colony
of Christopher's Landing, Earth's largest permanent outpost
in near-Saturn space. Beyond the dome, the frozen nitrogen
winds of Titan swept away thick orange streamers of crys-
tallizing methane and hydrogen cyanide, as they chased the
terminator to clear the dense atmosphere for only a few min-
utes between the clouds of day and the mists of night, allowing,
briefly, dark bands to appear in the sky above. In that darkness,
the stars flickered for Cochrane, creating a shimmering jeweled
band around the dull yellow arc of Saturn that filled a quarter
of the sky, so far from the sun that the light reflecting from it
made the enormous planet almost imperceptible in Titan's
twilight. Its rings, head-on in the same orbital plane as the moon,
Were invisible.
In that narrow window of time, between the beginning and end
of a day unlike any other in human history, Cochrane stared at
Stars he had known all his life, and they were unfamiliar to him.

20 21



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Alone among all humans now alive, as far as he and most others
knew, he had seen them as no one ever had. Blazing in deep space.
Orbiting a world belonging to another star.
Four and a third light-years from Earth.
Four months ago.
Cochrane closed his eyes to see the stars as he had seen them
then, the constellations familiar to billions of his fellow beings
shifted to new perspectives never seen before.
Four and a third light-years. A world so far away the fastest
impulse-powered probes took more than two decades to reach it,
and then took more than four years longer to transmit back the
data they recorded.
And Zefram Cochrane had gone there and returned in two
hundred and forty-three days.
Faster than any human had ever traveled before.
Faster than light.
Cochrane blinked open his eyes at the sudden feeling that the
stars here were staring down at him with shock and approbation
for daring to invade the sanctity of their domain. In response, he
felt laughter rise up in him. He couldn't help it. He stamped his
foot into the engineered soil beneath his boots and unexpectedly
bounced a few centimeters in the moon's half-gravity.
The awkward moment as he waved his arms for balance broke
the previous moment's spell, and he finally realized that the
pleasing harmonies he heard were not from the offended stars
above, but from the string quartet that played in the assembly hall
of the governor's home adjoining the domed field. The faint
melody, festive even over the perpetual background hum of the
immense air circulators and muffled howl of the outside winds,
sounded like something by Brahms, but he couldn't place it.
Cochrane looked down at the bare soil beneath him, the
crushed and sterilized decomposed rocks of an alien world in
which Earth bacteria worked to change its composition, cleansing
it of Titan's octane rain and hydrocarbon sludge. Someday grass
and trees would grow here, so that children would run in play and
lovers would stroll and old people would sit in contentment on
benches by a splashing fountain as they grew old together, gazing

22

FEDERATION

up at the stars and knowing that others like them looked back
from different distant worlds.
Now the laughter that had been growing in him faded and he
felt tears form in his eyes for no reason he understood. What
books would he never read that were still to be written on those
different distant worlds? What poetry would he never under-
stand? What music? What paintings, what sculpture, what histo-
ries unimagined would play out without him now that the human
stage had been expanded to... "Infinity."
Cochrane jumped at the word so aptly spoken, startled by the
unexpected company. He recognized the voice, of course. His
ship, the Bonaventure, had cost more than 300 million
Eurodollars, and the precarious state of the world was such that
government agencies were not inclined to turn over that level of
funding to thirty-one-year-old physicists who had the audacity to
question the most basic tenets of nature. But the voice belonged
to the man who had paid for his ship--Micah Brack.
Brack owed allegiance to no government funding committee or
board of directors. The debit slips the tycoon had authorized over
the eight years of Cochrane's single-minded pursuit to overturn
the Einsteinian mind-set of the Brahmins of modern science had
come from Brack's own pocket. Considering that most data
agencies placed him among the ten wealthiest individuals in the
system, with holdings on every planet and moon humans had
colonized, that pocket was virtually without limit. Most of
Christopher's Landing existed because of Brack's foresight, and
his impatience with those who merely looked up at the stars,
unable to grasp the promise they held. In Micah Brack, Cochrane
had found a champion, a backer, and most importantly, a friend.
'%orry to startle you." Brack put his hand on Cochrane's
shoulder, glancing up to see what Cochrane had seen, so far away.
He nodded to the sounds of the reception coming from the lit
doorways and windows of the governor's metal-walled home.
"But they're about to notice the star of their party is missing."
Cochrane knew that as well. Since his return to the system, less
than fifty hours ago, he had had no time to himself. He wasn't
Used to that kind of intrusion. He didn't like it. Never had. And

23



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
he had no intention of ever getting used to it, even though Brack
had warned him about the publics probable reaction to news of
his accomplishment almost three years ago. At the time of that
conversation, they had been out past Neptune, with Sternbach
and Okuda, literally bouncing off the walls of the John Cabal, an
old lunar ice freighter Brack had refitted as Cochrane's
microgravity lab. The freighter had allowed Cochrane and his
team to conduct their research light-hours from Earth's military
surveillance nets and the gravimetric disruptions of the sun's
gravity well.

Brack had been with them that day, on one of his infrequent
trips from Earth--the day the team's first, hundred-kilogram,
fluctuation superimpellor test sled had literally warped itself into
a smear of rainbow-colored light and streaked off into something
other than normal space-time. Eight minutes later, Cochrane's
scanners had picked up the distinctive radiation signature of the
miniature particle curtain he had rigged to self-destruct the sled
one minute after launch. It had been a drastic measure, but at the
time he had known of no other way to cause a continuum-
distortion generator to reenter normal space at a precise moment,
had no precise idea of how far the sled would travel, and had no
way to predict in which directions it might drift while not in
normal space.
When the signature had been confirmed, the vast, hollow drum
of the John Cabal's science bay had echoed with cheers. The sled
had traveled eight light-minutes--more than 143 million
kilometersrain sixty seconds.
The prototype superimpellor was massive in proportion com-
pared to the initial test devices Cochrane had used in his twenties
at MIT to accelerate electrons to twice the velocity of light. But its
size had not lessened the effect of the distortion and it had
transported the sled at a pseudovelocity eight times faster than
light, corresponding to a relativistic time-warp multiplier factor
of 2-'!
That day they had toasted farewell to the EinsteinJan universe,
drinking hundred-year-old cognac from squeeze tubes~
microgravity was no place for effervescent champagne. It wasn't



FEDERATION

tha~ Einstein and Hawking and Cross and all the other giants of
ph> sics had been proven wrong--the universe had simply opened
another window onto its infinite, unpredictable nature for hu-
man~, ',o peer through, and a whole new science had to be created
to de. scribe phenomena that earlier scientists had never seen. and
that same. like Einstein, had refused to imagine.
In th;tt refusal, at least, Einstein had been wrong. Because, as
('ochral~e had predicted, and as he had finally given up trying to
explain to nonscientists, whose eyes inexplicably yet inevitably
dxxcd over whenever multidimensional equations entered the
coxvc~:4ation. the effects of relativity were limited to normal
space-time alone. Cochrane's subsequent bench tests on rapidly
decaying particles had shown that once the superimpellor had
entered a fluctuating continuum distortion, the well-known time-
dilation effects of very fast-speed travel no longer occurred.
Beca~use there was no way for information to be exchanged
bct~cen the normal universe and the volume contained within
the di~tortionIfor non,, his team continued to remind him--
time could progress within the continuum distortion at the same
rate ~t had progressed when it was last in contact with normal
space-time, without contradicting anything that had been estab-
lished about light-speed being the fastest anything could travel.
OF course, Cochrane knew that eventually, given enough
11uc~uation-superimpellor-driven ships visiting enough distant
stellar % stems with their own rates of relativistic time, variations
in tir:;ckeeping would mount up. He could see that eventually,
~ivcn enough superimpellor-driven spacecraft visiting enough
distan~ planets, a whole new technique of timekeeping and
date-recording would have to be developed to account for those
local rate-of-time variations and relate them to each other in a
mean;,ngful, if complex, way. But by slipping the bounds of
[~inste]nian space-time, time dilation was no longer a limiting
FactoF to the human exploration of space. More importantly,
Brack had observed that day, neither was distance.
Hewever, Brack had gone on to warn, there was a price that
~ould have to be paid. When Cochrane returned from the stars as
the ~r%t human to have traveled faster than light, his name would
be uttered in the same breath as Armstrong, Yoshikawa, and

24 25



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Daar. He would no longer be able to lead a normal, low-profile
existence--he and his life would belong to the world. To the
universe.
Judging from Cochrane's reception in Christopher's Landing,
everything Brack had said had come true. Cochrane sometimes
wondered about the insight or science behind his friend's ability
to predict the future. He did it so often and so well. But Brack
himself denied having any special gifts. "The events of the future
are reflected in the events of the past," he often said. He claimed
only to be an attentive student of history.

Cochrane looked back up at the dome, but the brief twilight
clearing had passed. The mists of Titan's night billowed beyond
the transparent slabs, roiling in the external floodlights, as if the
colony were a lone oceangoing vessel, plying Earth's North
Atlantic in the winter. Cochrane tried not to think about icebergs.
"What was that you said about infinity?" he asked his friend.
Brack grinned and the years dropped from his face. Cochrane
guessed the billionaire was in his fifties, middle-aged for the
citizens of Earth's industrialized nations. His short hair was
white--Brack paid no attention to fashion or fads--and worn in
a style reminiscent of the Caesars. But his eyes sparkled like those
of a much younger man, and the smile in his rugged face was
always full of the promise of youth. Cochrane guessed having
enough wealth to affect the course of human history might give a
person reason enough to feel young and energetic, but he often
thought there was more complexity within Brack than the man
would ever reveal.
"I saw you looking at the stars," Brack answered. "So wasn't
that what you were thinking? About the new limits to human
growth? Or, should I say, that now there are no limits."
"But how did you know that u'as what I was thinking?"
Brack glanced away, a smaller smile flickering at the corners of
his mouth. Cochrane recognized the expression. Brack wasn't
going to answer the question. Instead he asked one of his own.
"What are the prospects for a colony?"
"At Centauri B II?" Cochrane was surprised by Brack's sudden
change of subject. He was operating in his business mode now.

26

FEDERATION

.-Those surveys were complete before I left," Cochrane answered.
,'They were complete practically before I was born, weren't
they?"

The whole world knew the prospects for a colony at Alpha
Centauri were good, and had for decades. Of the hundred or so
known solar systems detected beyond Earth, the Centauri system
xvas the most thoroughly mapped, primarily because it was also
the closest solar system to Earth's.
Seen with the unaided eye, Alpha Centauri was the third
brightest star in the sky, though only visible south of latitude
+ 30 Its brilliance was due to its closeness and to it being, in fact,
a ternary system composed of three separate stars. Alpha Centau-
ri A was a spectral-type G2 star, a close twin to Earth's own sun,
gravitationally locked to Alpha Centauri B, a slightly larger and
brighter K0 star. Alpha Centauri A and Alpha Centauri B orbited
each other about the same distance apart as the diameter of
Earth's solar system. The third stellar component of the system,
Proxima Centauri, was a much smaller red dwarf star, in excess of
400 times more distant from A and B than they were from each
other.
Just after the turn of the century, astronomers on Earth, using
ground-based, adaptive optic telescopes, had resolved at least two
additional bodies in the Alpha Centauri system: two large planets
caught up in a complex, oscillating orbital pattern around the A
and B stars. The scientific world was shocked by their discovery
because common wisdom presumed that no planet could main-
rain a stable orbit between two such closely situated stars.
In the decades that followed, a new generation of astronomers
employed liquid vacuum telescopes on the moon's farside to
resolve three more planets in the Alpha Centauri system. One,
about the size of Mercury, was locked in an eccentric orbit around
Alpha Centauri A. The other two Earth-size planets occupied
interweaving orbital paths around Alpha Centauri B, in a region
roughly corresponding to that defined by the orbits of Mars and
Venus in Earth's solar system. Such an orbital pattern was, of
cOUrse. also considered impossible. The charting of the Alpha
Centauri system made it a fascinating time to be an astronomer.

27



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Lunar-based spectroscopic interferometry analysis of the five
Centauri planets eventually confirmed that one of the two Earth-
size planets orbiting B exhibited a strong oxygen-absorption line.
Since the planet's size and mass and, therefore, gravity were only
a fraction higher than Earth's, and since oxygen is a light enough
gas that it would dissipate within a few thousand years under
Earth-type gravity, the strong concentration of oxygen in that
planer's atmosphere could mean only one of two things--either a
completely novel chemical reaction was occurring on the planer's
surface, constantly replenishing the supply of oxygen-- --or there was life.
The news electrified the world. In the solar system, only on
Earth had life taken hold with such success. Mars had merely
shown promise. The microfossils excavated from its ancient
seabeds had shown the existence of early forms of plankton and
archaeobacteria--suspiciously similar enough to forms that had
evolved on Earth to lead several scholars to suggest that some
agency other than catastrophic meteoric impact had been respon-
sible for the same seeds of life being sown on Earth and Mars
together.
As the new century progressed, uncrewed probes were launched
toward the Alpha Centauri system. Most met the same fate as the
disappointing Nomad series at the turn of the century, rapidly
and inexplicably failing after passing the hellopause surrounding
Earth's solar system. The development of efficient, vectored
impulse drives led inevitably to a second and third generation of
probes launched toward Centauri and other likely extrasolar
systems at substantial fractions of light-speed. Though some of
these new series also met with unexplained failures and disap-
pearances, dozens of probes did succeed, blazing past alien
worlds as they transmitted relativistically attenuated data back to
Earth.
By the time of Cochrane's own birth in 2030, scientists were as
certain as scientists could be that a fully evolved, self-regulating,
Gala-type ecosystem was flourishing on Centauri B II, just as on
Earth. So certain were they that crewed expeditions were
launched. But a further series of mysterious failures, culminating
in the tragic loss of telemetry from the NASA vessel Charybdis,

28

7

FEDERATION

brought an end to the first attempted wave of the human
exploration of extrasolar space. Some commentators fond of
conspiracy theories even put forward the idea that Khan Noonien
Singh and his followers were not frozen in some long-lost sleeper
ship. but were prowling the outer solar system, blowing up space
probes. keeping their genetically inferior conquerors planet-
bound.
Whatever the reason for Earth's initial difficulties in pursuing
advanced exploration, as the political tensions of the mid-twenty-
first century worsened, funding for purely scientific endeavors
became less popular and harder to obtain. As had happened so
often in human history, Brack assured Cochrane, even with the
potential rewards of cooperation and exploration so obvious,
humankind once again turned in on itself, becoming insular
and distrustful and forgetful of the need to look beyond the im-
mediate.

There was always a weariness in Brack when he spoke about the
incessant repetition of failure in human affairs. Cochrane de-
tected that same weariness now.
"I know what the scanners say," Brack continued impatiently.
"I've seen the simulations, read the reports, the speculations." He
gestured dismissively. He was a man who only wanted results.
"But what I came out here to ask you, Zefram, is what did
Centauri B II look like to you? What did it.feel like.'?" He held out
both hands as if beseeching Cochrane. "I know what the oxygen
percentage of the atmosphere is. But what did it taste like to
breathe alien air? Do you think a man could live there and call it
home?"
Cochrane recalled the tang of that air: sere, dusty, but filled
with the scent of life. After the fact, he knew he had been a fool to
slip off his breathing mask even for the few minutes he had
allowed himself. Computer analysis had shown the ecosystem of
Centauri B II to be DNA-based with the same range of amino
acids~more fuel for the fire of those who thought Earth and
Mars had been deliberately seeded. There was no way of knowing
~vhat kind of bacteria and viruses he had exposed himself to with
those lungfuls of air never before tasted by humans. But other

29



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
than two days of sinus discomfort, and some stinging grit in the
corners of his eyes, Cochrane had suffered no ill effects. Maybe he
had been lucky. Or maybe humanity was meant to go to other
worlds unencumbered.
"Yes," he told Brack, numbers and scanners aside. "No night
for half the year, but it's a place where people could live with no
more hardship than desert equatorial regions on Earth."
"Good," Brack said. He winked at Cochrane. "You remember
the law of mediocrity?"
Cochrane understood the law was a much misunderstood
scientific principle, which translated to the lay public as "things
are pretty much the same all over." If chemistry behaved a certain
way on Earth, then the law of mediocrity suggested that chemistry
would behave the same way on a planet a thousand light-years
distant, or on Earth a billion years in the past. Cochrane knew
what Brack was getting at.
"You're thinking that if the first planet we visit in the first solar
system we explore has an Earth-like planet, then the galaxy is
filled with them."
Brack nodded. "And humans will be like dandelion seeds
blown on the wind, filling them all."
Cochrane smiled at his friend's grandiose dream. "You know
how long it would take to establish even a single colony in another
solar system--even with the superimpellor? You know how much
it would cost?"
Brack didn't smile as he answered. "One billion Eurodollars."
He held up the fingers of one hand, the thumb folded in. "Four
years."
Cochrane stared at Brack as the industrialist spread his arms to
indicate everything around them. "Think of it, Zefram. A
Christopher's Landing-type colony. Fusion generators to begin.
Solar and thermal in the second decade. Hospitals, libraries,
self-building factories. Drone mines. Even an orbiting space
platform for mapping, communication, and ship maintenance
and repair. I'm assembling the modular components on the moon
as we speak."
Cochrane was startled by the news, and by Brack's audacity.
"You were that certain I'd succeed?"

30

FEDERATION

..lf you've been in business as long as I have, you learn how to
pick winners."
Cochrane's eyes narrowed. He wanted to ask exactly how long
Brack/lad been in business, even though he knew from experience
that that was another topic Brack didn't like discussing. But there
were other questions. "Why the hurry, Micah?"
Brack thought about his answer, pursed his lips, stared up at the
dome. but focused on something only his eyes could see. "In
1838, a British steamer, the Great ~bstern. crossed the Atlantic,
Bristol to New York, in fifteen days." He looked back at
Cochrane. Cochrane shrugged. He didn't see the point. "It was
the first fully steam-powered vessel to make the crossing. Another
ship arrived the same day, but it had taken nineteen days to cross
from London. Now, the sailing clippers could make the crossing
t'aster if the winds were right, but the Great Western moved
independent of the winds and the weather. It was technology.
Dependable. Repeatable. Fifteen days from London to New York.
:\ trip that used to take months."
Cochrane waited. "I sense an analogy building."
Brack rubbed at his temple, as if he were caught up in a memory
instead of reciting facts he had studied. "You know what the
American newspapers--they were the data agencies of the time
--you know what they said?" 'Tin at a loss."
Brack quoted. "'The commercial, moral, and political effects of
this increased intercourse, to Europe and this country, must be
immense.'"
"They were right, weren't they?" Cochrane asked.
Brack's eyes burned into him. "And, they said, because of the
expansion of business, the rapid spreading of information, and
the resulting reduction of prejudice, it would make 'war a thing
almost impossible.'"
Cochrane shrugged. "Simpler times."
"No," Brack said emphatically. "There's never been a simpler
time. Never. In all of human history, everything has always been
as complex as it is right now. The people change. The technology
Changes. But the... the forces at work, whatever it is that drives
us to be human, that's always the same."



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Brack looked back at the governor's home. The quartet still
played. Cochrane could hear faint laughter mingled with the
music--a cocktail party on Titan. He wondered what the newspa-
per data agencies of 230 years ago would have thought about that.
"Eighteen thirty-eight," Brack continued. "That same year, the
Boers slaughter three thousand Zulus in Natal. British forces
invade Afghanistan. Eighteen thirty-nine: Ottoman forces invade
Syria. Britain and China start the Opium War. Eighteen forty: the
Treaty of London unites Britain, Austria, Prussia, and Russia
against Egypt. Steamships didn't do a thing except get troops into
battle more quickly. It's never going to end, Zefram."
Cochrane thought he saw where his friend was headed with his
argument. "You're worried about what's going on back on Earth,
aren't you? Colonel Green. The Optimum Movement."
But Brack went on as if he hadn't heard Cochrane. "A century
later, nineteen forty-four: World War Two." He rolled his eyes in
mock exasperation. "We actually started numbering them. And
all eyes were on television. You know what the data agencies said
about that?"
"You tell me."
"Exactly what they said about steamships!" Brack held his
hand to his eyes, recalling something he had read. Or heard.
"'Television offers the soundest basis for world peace that has yet
been presented. International television will knit together the
peoples of the world in bonds of mutual respect.'" Now Brack
rubbed his hand over his eyes, as if overcome by a sudden wave of
fatigue, not just weariness. "Television! And after Korea, and
Vietnam, and Afghanistan, and Africa, and Khan, and Antarcti-
ca, war was still with us. And television..." Brack snorted
disdainfully. "It's been twenty years at least since anything's been
done with it on an international level. It's dead. Steamships are
curios for collectors. But people are still people."
Across the domed field, the concert ended. Cochrane heard the
polite applause. As Brack had said, the guest of honor would be
missed soon.
"What's your point, Micah?"
"They're going to say the same thing about what you've done."
"That the fluctuation superimpeller will bring an end to war?"

FEDERATION

Brack's wry smile didn't do anything to warm his grim tone. "I
promise you that that will be the lead editorial on a hundred
serxices by the end of the week."
-'Well, why not?" Cochrane asked. "I mean, wars are fought
over resources, and the superimpeller opens up the galaxy.
'thefts no end to resources now."
Cochrane followed Brack's gaze to the governor's home. There
were silhouettes in the windows. People looking out, trying to find
the man of the hour. Of the century.
"Wars are fought because that is what people do," Brack said.
"Resources are an excuse, nothing more."
Cochrane felt frustration rising in him. Usually, he was all for
these philosophical talks with Brack. The industrialist could go
on as if time had no meaning for him. But Cochrane was about to
be pulled back into the governor's reception. Who knew when he
would have five minutes to himself again?
"Micah, the superimpeller has no military function, if that's
what you're worried about. It can't even be used out here by
Saturn without getting twisted up with the sun's gravity well. On
Earth, it can't function for more than a nanosecond without
self-destructing. Remember Kashishowa?"
Brack's expression hardened. "I know it has no military
function--the little 'accident' at Kashishowa Station notwith-
standing. I would never have funded your work if I had thought
otherwise. But no matter what the editorialists say over the
months ahead, the superimpeller has no peacefid function, either.
It*s technology, Zefram. Neutral. It's only what humans make of
it."
At last Cochrane saw the question to be asked. "And what
should we make of it?"
"An insurance policy."
Cochrane didn't understand.
"War won't end, Zefram. The superimpeller won't do it. Matter
replication or teleportation won't do it. Nothing on the thousand
drawing boards I fund ever will. But what the superimpeller wi/[
do is make sure the next war won't cause humanity's extinction."
"There won't be a 'next' war. The New United Nations--"
"Are a joke. There will always be a next war. And each next war

33



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
brings crueler weapons. And the more cruel the weapons, then the
more cruel the person who uses them." Brack stepped closer to
Cochrane. Someone was in the open door of the governor's home,
waving her arm as if calling Cochrane in. "We're ten years from
World War Three, Zefram. Twenty at most. The New United
Nations is destined to collapse like its predecessors. And a third
world war fought with twenty-first-century technology is going to
be something from which Earth might never recover.
Cochrane frowned as he finally understood what Brack meant.
"But Centauri B II will be far enough away not to get involved."
within the decade.
Centaurl B II and a half-dozen others
Perhaps twenty within the same number of years."
Cochrane gave his friend a skeptical look. "Not even you can
afford to spend twenty billion Eurodollars on twenty extrasolar
colonies."
"You're right. But I can get four or five started. And when my
competitors see me doing it, they're going to think I see profit in
it, so they're going to try and beat me at my own game. They'll :'
form consortlures. Sell shares. Attach superimpellors to every
probe sled and impulse freighter in the system to flood the nearby
systems with a wave of exploration and I intend to give them
the patents to do it."
Cochrane nearly choked. "Give them the patents? After what
you spent to develop them?"
Brack patted Cochrane on the back. "You've made space travel
quick, now leave it to me to make it inexpensive. Trust me, my
friend, by the time I'm finished with giving your invention away,
they'll be naming planets after you. And by the time any of my
competitors figure out I'm just throwing my money away on
colonies, with no hope for any kind of reasonable return, it will be
too late. A whole industry based on interstellar exploration will
have emerged." Brack's eyes narrowed as his most serious tone
returned. "An industry that will be able to survive the collapse of
Earth."
"You re telling me all of human history is a race, aren't your"
Cochrane asked. "That we've always been running away from our
own worst instincts, and that we always will be."
Brack gave Cochrane a look the physicist knew too well. A
34

FEDERATION

surprise was coming, and it wouldn't be pleasant. "Zefram,
Colonel Adrik Thorsen left Earth two hours ago. He's coming
here. To see you."
Cochrane felt a chill that had nothing to do with the chill air of
Titan. Thorsen was one of Colonel Green's cadre. He was
rumored to have quelled a ration demonstration in Stockholm by
deploying battlefield pulse emitters designed to be used against
armored infantry. The civilians taking part in the demonstration
had had no radiation armor. Hundreds had been killed. Thou-
sands left impaired, their synaptic connections sundered at a
molecular level.
Then Thorsen had joined with the Optimum Movement in the
Pursuit of Perfection. Perfection was whatever Colonel Green and
those of his countless analytical committees said it was. And if
something, or someone, or some group of people wasn't perfect,
then that thing, or that person or group, didn't deserve to exist.
Cochrane understood what Brack had said about history re-
peating itself. The coldly efficient bureaucracies of Green's Ana-
lytical Committees, the stark design of the interlinked OM
triangles, all were just new skins for an old and hideous ideology
that should have been consigned to its ashes more than a century
ago.
"I've had nothing to do with the Optimum," Cochrane said.
"Why does he want to see me?"

"Don't flatter yourself. He wants to see your ship."
"Our ship."
'~The point is, he wants to make it his."
The answer seemed obvious to Cochrane. "But we won't let
him."
Brack sighed. "There have been a great many changes while
.~ou've been away, Zefram. The Optimum Movement has been
expanding its influence. Rapidly. There are some nations on
Earth that don't like the way things are going. They're the ones
clinging to the illusion of order the Optimum offer, and ignoring
the price they'll have to pay."
"Well," Cochrane said, his mind working quickly, "if Thorsen
leh two hours ago, then we've still got a few days before he gets
here. We can work out something tomorrow."

35



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"Colonel Thorsen will arrive on Titan in nine hours."
Cochrane's eyes widened. Whatever vehicle Thorsen was in, he
was traveling at almost five percent the speed of light. Impulse
drives could boost a space vehicle to that kind of velocity in less
than an hour, but the rapid acceleration would crush any living
thing on board into a thin organic paste against the aft bulkhead.
True, there were specially constructed impulse ships designed to
operate at multi-g accelerations with humans aboard, for military
or emergency rescue missions, but those required the pilots to be
suspended in liquid-filled command capsules, "breathing" an
oxygen-rich saline solution to prevent their lungs from being
crushed. Crewed ships could reach light-speed velocities without
harming their living cargo only through gradual acceleration. But
even at a constant, military-standard three-g acceleration, it
would take almost five days to achieve the speed with which
Thorsen was coming to Titan.
"What's he sending? An artificial-intelligence surrogate?"
"He's coming himself, Zefram."
"Not in nine hours, he's not. This time of year, we're thirty-
seven light-minutes from Earth. No human could survive that
kind of impulse acceleration."
A handful of people were walking across the bare soil to
Cochrane and Brack. They only had a minute left to talk
undisturbed.
"As I said," Brack said emphatically, "there have been a great
many changes since you left."
Cochrane's eyes widened as he realized what Brack was imply-
ing. "Inertial damping?"
Brack frowned. "l've spent a fortune trying to develop that over
the past thirty years, too. And the breakthrough came out of the
R-and-D section of a chain of simulator theaters, of all things."
He looked away to gauge the approach of the party guests. "But on
the bright side, between your superimpellor and control of
inertia, there's not a place i'n the universe humans can't travel."
cochrane felt as if he'd been kicked. Control of inertia put the
full power of vectored-impulse space travel in the hands of human
crews and passengers. The solar system could be crossed in hours.
An Earth-moon flight would be little longer than a maglev train

36

FEDERATION

trip between San Francisco and New Los Angeles, with more time
spent getting out of Earth's atmosphere than traveling the next
380,000 kilometers in vacuum. And Adrik Thorsen, the Opti-
mum, was already using that technology.
A part of Cochrane wished he could see the specs of an inertial
damper. The device, if it were real, might help him overcome
some of the superimpellor's engineering shortcomings. But it was
human shortcomings that concerned him now. "After all you've
just told me about human nature, do we really want the Optimum
to spread into the universe?"
Brack shook his head. "The Optimum aren't interested in the
universe. They're interested in control. And how can they have
control if the superimpellor can whisk their potential subjects
light-years beyond their influence?" The reception guests were
almost upon them. 'Tm guessing Thorsen's coming here to see if
he can suppress your invention."
Cochrane clenched his fists at his sides. Alone in space, it was
easy to convince himself that science was as pure as the numbers
glowing on a scanner screen. But being back among the madding
crowd, he was once again reminded of how impossible that ideal
was. As long as people remained blind to the clarity with which
the universe was laid out, there would always be those who would
seek to obscure and twist its truths for ugly political and philo-
sophical goals. Cochrane could see Brack read that growing sense
of resentment and anger within him.
"Don't worry," Brack said. "There's no chance he'll be able to
suppress anything. I'm giving away the patents, remember? As
soon as you download a systems assessment I can include as an
engineering supplement, I'm going systemwide to transmit your
design theories, your blueprints, and your manufacturing log. By
the time Thorsen arrives, the information will already be on its
way back to the inner planets. By the time the editorialists start
pontificating on the end of war, millions of people will have access
to your work. The genie, so to speak, is out of the bottle and will
never go back in."
Cochrane felt overwhelmed. After so much time alone, his
emotions were too rarefied. Though he had never admitted it to
anyone, indeed, had taken great pains to deny it, he had looked

37



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

forward to a scientific triumph. He especially had wanted to hear
the apologies from those who had scoffed at his work years ago. "I
had hoped to publish in the normal way," he said hesitantly.
"Peer review. A data conference upon publication. That sort of
thing. I... I don't know what to say, Micah."
"That's why you're with me, my friend. I do. And this is not the
time for things to be done normally. I want humanity to explode
out of this system as if a dam had burst."
Cochrane wanted that, too. More than ever. More than any-
thing. "So what do we do about Thorsen?"
Brack lowered his voice as the approaching partygoers came
within earshot. "Leave Thorsen to me. In two hours, my yacht
will be prepped for launch at Shuttlebay Four. She'll take you
back to the Bonaventure. I've got a tug up there now replenishing
her." Brack suddenly turned to the approaching guests and held
up his hands. "Ladies, gentlemen: an indulgence, please. I'll
return him to you in just a moment." Then he put his arm around
Cochrane's shoulder and guided him across the soil, away from
the excited and slightly annoyed buzz of conversation that grew
behind them.
Cochrane was annoyed, as well, as he pictured strangers' hands
on his ship. "Micah, please. The antimatter field containers are
still too sensitive. And I've got to do something about the lithium
converter. It only runs at twenty-two percent of---" But Brack cut
him off.
"There's no time for that, Zefram. Put it in your engineering
download. The point is, when the Bonaventure's fueled and
stocked, I want you to leave."
Cochrane stopped dead. He could tell Brack didn't just mean
Titan or near-Saturn space. "As in, leave the system?"
Brack nodded. His expression was grim as he heard the
partygoers swarming toward them again. "That's right. Far
enough out that you can use the superimpellor again."
Cochrane grimaced. It would take him two weeks to get far
enough away from the sun's gravity well. Two more weeks of being
alone in space.
"Not for long," Brack added, obviously sensing Cochrane's

FEDERATION

unspoken reaction. "Just enough that the military nets will lose
track of you. Because when Thorsen arrives and finds you gone,
they will be tracking you."
"And then what?" Cochrane asked.
Brack quickly laid out his flight plan, telling Cochrane to
reenter the solar system opposite Saturn's present position, then
come in like an Oort freighter on a long-fall passage, to rendez-
vous with asteroid RG-1522. "I've got a manufacturing setup
there," Brack explained. "You can get started on the second
generation of the superimpellor. Get the fields up to the volume
of a freighter."
"And be safe from Thorsen?"
'Tll be honest," Brack said. "Thorsen's just a puppet. I want
you safe from the Optimum." "When will that be?"
"When they realize that anyone with a few hundred thousand
Eurodollars can retrofit an existing space vehicle to make a
faster-than-light vessel. And that anyone with a few hundred
Eurodollars can book passage on one. When Colonel Green and
his cohorts realize they can't stop the spread of the superimpellor,
they'll lose interest before they'll admit defeat."
There were footsteps immediately behind them. Chiding voices
told Brack he had monopolized Cochrane long enough.
"Come with me, Micah," Cochrane said impulsively, as if the
two of them were still alone. "See what I've seen."
Brack smiled with no hidden meanings. "Soon, but not now."
He gestured to the bare soil around them. "I've still a lot of work
to finish here before I move on"--he waved his hand at the dome
and what lay above it--"out there." "What kind of work?"
For a moment, the weariness left Brack's eyes. "I want to see the
grass grow here, Zefram. A billion kilometers from where it
evolved." He patted his friend's arm, almost in a gesture of
farewell. "And then, I want to plant a fig tree."
Someone handed Cochrane a drink. He felt hands on his arms
and back. Conversation, a dozen questions, flew around him. But
he looked over at Brack and asked, "A fig tree?"

39



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Brack looked almost sheepish, being parted from Cochrane by
the throng that gathered. "From which the Buddha drew enlight-
enment. It reminds me of home," he explained. He touched his
fist to his heart. "A man's entitled to that."
Brack nodded once, then stepped aside with an expression of
finality as the crowd bore Cochrane away in triumph, as if he had
safely tossed Cochrane into the currents of history but must
himself forever remain on the shore.

Through the long hours that passed that night, until he stood at
the airlock doors of Shuttlebay 4, Cochrane thought of all that
Brack had told him, and of Colonel Thorsen hurtling toward him
with a technology that had not existed a year ago. But most of all,
he thought of Brack's final words.
What more could any person want than a home? And what was
the purpose of Cochrane's work if not to make the entire universe
humanity's home?
The thought of home brought back memories of the small
house outside London where he had lived with his parents on
their last posting. Sitting in the back garden, a few days after his
eleventh birthday, playing with a simple plastic wand and tub of
soap solution, he had cast shimmering bubbles into the air. The
colors had transfixed him that day, along with the reflections
caught within reflections when one bubble formed within anoth-
er. And for some reason he still did not understand, his mind's
eye had suddenly conjured an image of a different sort of bubble
twisting around another so that they both popped up in a
somewhere-else his young mind could see but not describe.
It had taken Cochrane twenty years to work backward from
that moment of intuition and create the technology that could do
what he had seen so clearly. All because he had sat beneath a tree.
Cochrane thought of fig trees then, as Brack's yacht was
buffeted by Titan's winds, lifting through them. As the clouds
were left behind, Cochrane stared out a porthole to see a distant
star, brighter than any other but a star nonetheless, not easily
resolved into a disk. Somewhere near it, too faint to be seen, was
the home of all soap bubbles, all fig trees. Cochrane's home.

40

FEDERATION

Planet Earth. It would be seventeen years before he returned to it,
and he would never see Micah Brack again.
The ancient race humanity ran to escape its own worst attri-
butcs continued, but on this day, unlike any other in human
history. for the first time the race's destination was in sight. And
though he had not yet fully grasped his position in what would
unfold, it was now up to Zefram Cochrane to lead the way.

41

TWO

U.S.S. TERPRISE NCC-1701
IN TRANSIT TO BABEL
Stardate 3849.8
Earth Standard: November 2267

Kirk knew the inevitable could be avoided no longer. There was
no time left to consider the odds, to devise strategies, or even to
change the rules. He had to take action and he had to take action
Y/OW.
His opponents stared at him, their thoughts unreadable. All
Kirk could hear was the faint hum of the environmental system's
fans, the slow sighs of his ship while she slept, late on the
midnight shift. Kirk allowed no emotion to show on his face as he
reached forward. All eyes were on his hand.
He dropped five tongue depressors onto the pile on the shim-
mering fabric of the medical diagnostic bed, and in his most
authoritative voice, he said, 'Tll see your five."
Without expression, Sarek of Vulcan, son of Skon and grandson
of Solkar, turned over his cards.
Kirk lost control of his own expression as he stared at the
ambassador's poker hand. A pair of sixes.
Kirk sat back in the chair he had set up beside the ambassador's
bed in the Enterprise's sickbay. "You were bluffing," he said.

FEDERATION

Sarek blinked. He looked over at Spock, who sat placidly in a
second chair, wearing his blue medical jumpsuit and black tunic
as if they were a formal uniform. "It is the nature of the game, is it
not?" Sarek asked.
Spock nodded sagely. "Indeed."
Kirk didn't like the sound of that. There was something wrong
here. "Spock, I thought Vulcans couldn't lie."
"Though we are capable of it," Spock explained, "we choose
not to. In most circumstances."
Kirk narrowed his eyes at Sarek. "But isn't bluffing a form of
lying?"
Sarek's expression remained bland, though Kirk was certain
that something in it had changed. The more time he spent around
Spook, the more he had convinced himself that Vulcans betrayed
just as much emotional information in their faces as humans did,
though in a much subtler fashion.
"In this case, Captain, bluffing is an expected strategy of the
game. Indeed, it is encouraged. Therefore, by betting in a manner
inconsistent with the actual value of my cards, I am, in fact,
lollowing the true intent of the game, which therefore, by
definition, cannot be false."
Spock nodded thoughtfully. "Well put, Father."
Sarek lay back against his pillows. "Thank you, my son."
Kirk wrinkled his brow. Not two days ago he had heard Sarek
tell his wife Amanda that it was not necessary to thank logic. He
didn't know how, but something told Kirk his leg was being
pulled. Perhaps being cooped up in sickbay with him for two days
was beginning to take its toll on the Vulcans.
"So this isn't the first time you've played poker?" Kirk asked
accusingly. Chess was more his game, and he enjoyed the never-
ending tournament he and Spock had fallen into. But with three
players to account for, poker had seemed a better way to socialize
with his fellow patients. To Kirk's chagrin, however, the pile of
tongue depressors was deepest on the blanket beside Sarek.
$arek maintained his maddening composure. "My wife taught
me many years ago, after Spock joined Starfleet. The insights it
afforded me have been beneficial in certain negotiations
with ... certain species."

42 43



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
I bet they have, Kirk thought. "Coridan's going to be admitted
to the Federation, isn't it." He made it a statement. If Sarek
negotiated as well as he played poker, the other delegates to the
Babel Conference didn't stand a chance against him.
"I will argue for admission," Sarek acknowledged, "but my
wishes are in no way an indication of what the result of the final
vote will be."
"With that much dilithium on the planet," Kirk continued,
"how could Coridan not be admitted? The Orions were willing to
start an interplanetary war over it." The knife wound in Kirk's
back was a direct result of Coridan's dilithium. Orion smugglers
had conspired to prevent the planet's admission to the Federation
in order to maintain their illegal mining and smuggling opera-
tions and profit from supplying both sides with dilithium in the
war to come.
But Sarek did not agree. "It is true that dilithium is the
lifeblood of any interstellar political association. Without it, warp
drive can never be exploited to its full potential. But, it has been
my experience that wars are seldom fought over resources. At the
time, the question of resources may appear to be a valid excuse for
hostilities, indeed, a rallying cry. But upon reflection, most
conflict is inevitably based in emotion." Sarek fixed Kirk with a
steady gaze--an emotional signal of some sort, Kirk was certain.
"I mean no disrespect," Sarek concluded.
Kirk mulled over that last statement, which from anyone else
would have meant the opposite of what it appeared to mean, and
despite the ambassador's recent heart attacks and cryogenic
open-heart procedure, Sarek had never once lost his mental edge.
Kirk wondered if there was such a thing as Vulcan humor. He
looked back at Spock, trying to detect any sign of hidden Vulcan
laughter.
But Spock merely raised a quizzical eyebrow. "You have a
question, Captain?"
Kirk couldn't bring himself to ask the obvious. He knew he
could talk with Spock about Vulcan emotions, but it might be too
embarrassing a topic for Spock to discuss in front of his father. If
Spock could feel embarrassment, that is. Kirk decided that

FEDERATION

changing the subject was a better tactic. "Did your mother teach
you how to play poker, too?"
Spock shook his head. "Dr. McCoy did, after our encounter
xvith the First Federation ship."
"Actually," Sarek volunteered, "I have often thought poker
would be a useful exercise for Vulcan children, to help them learn
to control the display of their emotions."
Kirk saw his opening and pounced. "Gentlemen, it sounds as if
you're suggesting that the famed Vulcan reticence to display
emotion is nothing more than a prolonged bluff itself. In fact, it
could be said that for a people who pride themselves on choosing
never to lie, their whole demeanor is, in fact, just that." Feeling
proud of himself, Kirk folded his arms.
Sarek and Spock exchanged a look. Spock spoke first. "Captain,
what you have suggested is not logical." Kirk didn't understand. "Yes, it is."
Spock was about to reply when Sarek interrupted. "Captain,
the 'pot' is still unclaimed. We have yet to see your hand."
Damn. Kirk thought. He had hoped they had forgotten. He
turned over his cards. A pair of fives.
"It would appear you were bluffing, as well," Sarek said, with
just the slightest hint of smugness in his tone.
"He is quite good at it," Spock offered.
"Indeed."
Kirk looked from father to son, realizing that they had success-
fully changed the topic on him. Kirk decided that whatever effect
the past two days were having on Sarek and Spock, they were
certainly beginning to take their toll on him.
Sarek reached out to scoop up the tongue depressors. "I believe
the cultural incantation required at this time is 'Come to
poppa.'"
"That is correct," Spock said.
At the sound of those words coming from the revered Vulcan
diplomat, Kirk clamped his hand to his mouth to try and contain
his laughter, but he knew he wasn't going to make it. It erupted
from him with a barely contained snort. He tried to cover his
unfortunate reaction with a series of coughs, but that just made

44 45



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
the knife wound in his back flare with sharp pain, bringing tears
to his eves.
In their most subdued Vulcan manner, Spock and Sarek looked
alarmed.
"The incantation is not 'Come to poppa'?" Sarek asked.
Kirk waved his hand. If he even tried to open his mouth, he'd
go on a laughing jag that could set Earth-Vulcan relations back by
a decade.
"Captain?" Spock said with Vulcan concern. "Are you all
right?"
Kirk nodded. He wiped the tears from his cheeks. "Water," he
gasped in what he hoped was a convincing simulation of some-
thing caught in his throat. He started to get up from his chair.
The door to the examination room puffed open, taking Kirk by
surprise. It was too early for Nurse Chapel and far too late for Dr.
McCoy.
But it was McCoy who entered, eyes bleary, hair mussed,
uniform obviously just thrown on. Kirk instantly knew that
whatever had brought McCoy to sickbay at this hour, it had also
wakened him unexpectedly.
The ship's surgeon came to a stop in the middle of the ward. He
stared at his three patients with an open mouth. "What in God's
name are you two doing out of bed?!"
Sarek folded his hands in his lap. It was clear the doctor was
referring to Kirk and Spock.
Spock answered the question. "Playing poker."
McCov's eyes dropped to Sarek's bed, took in the deck of cards,
the piles'of tongue depressors. "So help me, I'll sedate the lot of
you! Put you in... restraints/"
Kirk finished getting to his feet. "Bones, it's all right. Your
treatment made us feel better even faster ...."But then he
winced. The knife wound in his back seemed to twist in place, as
if the knife were still in it. He felt the blood leave his face. From
the look on McCoy's face, it was an alarming departure.
Kirk suddenly felt Spock's arm slip under his, steadying him.
But McCoy disapproved of that, too. He grabbed Kirk away from
the science officer and manhandled the captain across the ward,
telling Spock to get back to bed before he was put into isolation.

FEDERATION

Kirk flopped back on the medical diagnostic bed and felt his
breath escape him. McCoy activated the diagnostic board and
Kirk heard his own heartbeat racing. "I told you this could
happen," McCoy snapped as he held a whirring medical scanner
over Kirk's chest.
Kirk mouthed the words "What could happen?" Now he really
couldn't talk. He felt as if the bandages around his chest were
solid duranium, slowly constricting, cutting off any chance he had
of breathing again.
"The knife was treated with a protein inhibitor." McCoy deftly
clicked a drug ampule into a hypospray. Kirk heard his heartbeat
accelerating. "It's an old Orion trick. Keeps the wound open and
bleeding with no poison to show up in an autopsy. Makes sure
there's no blood left on the weapon, either." The cold tip of the
hypo pushed against Kirk's shoulder and he felt the sudden pinch
of its high-pressure infusion. "Fortunately, you were lucky
enough to get in here before you needed an autopsy. Barely."
Though Kirk didn't feel as if his condition had changed, the
sudden caustic tone in McCoy's delivery told him he was going to
be all right. He felt his breathing ease. His heartbeat began to
slow. He recognized the effect from his last visit to Vulcan.
"Tri-ox?" he whispered.
McCoy glared down at him "When I hear that you've earned
your medical degree, I'd be happy to discuss drug therapies,
Captain. Now stay put."
"Yes, sir," Kirk whispered. He squinted to the side as McCoy
spun around and advanced on Spock. "And as for you," the
doctor began.
Kirk closed his eyes and smiled as McCoy's tirade continued.
Sometimes he thought the doctor was only happy when he had
something to complain about, and Finagle knew Kirk and Spock
went out of their way to oblige him.
The pain in his back began to lessen, and Kirk guessed that
McCoy had included something else with the tri-ox compound
without telling him. Just as he hadn't mentioned anything about
the protein inhibitor on the knife.
Probably didn't want to worry me, Kirk thought, feeling himself
beginning to drift as McCoy and Spock argued over medical

47



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

procedures, and Sarek maintained an appropriately diplomatic
silence.
Kirk slipped back to three days earlier, walking near his
quarters on Deck 5. An Artdorian had passed him: Thelev, a
minor member of Ambassador Shras's staff. Thelev had nodded
in greeting. Kirk had nodded in return, eager to get back to the
bridge, eager to continue the investigation into the murder of
Ambassador Gav--the murder for which Sarek was prime sus-
pect.
In retrospect, Kirk decided it was his eagerness that led him to
ignore Thelev's unexpected change in pace. In retrospect, he knew
he had distinctly heard Thelev stop, turn, and start again, walking
behind him. At the time, Kirk had worried that the Andorian was
going to raise vet another matter of concern to the ambassador, as
if having 114'dignitaries on board for the past two weeks hadn't
given Kirk his fill of ambassadorial concerns. Part of him was still
hoping he could make it to the turbolift before Thelev called his
name when he felt the first blow to the back of his neck.
Starfleet training had taken over then, diplomatic immunity be
damned. But the first blow Kirk had taken had dulled his reflexes,
and just as he thought Thelev was finished, he felt the long narrow
blade of the Andorian ceremonial dagger rip into his back, grating
against bone, igniting shocking streamers of pain like lava
through his chest.
What had happened next, Kirk still wasn't too certain. Whatev-
er had transpired, he had ended up in sickbay and Thelev had
been taken to the brig.
But the threat to the Enterprise hadn't ended with the
Andorian's arrest. An unknown vessel was still pacing them.
Thirty-two ambassadors whose loss could mean an interplanetary
war were its probable target. And Sarek was only hours from
death, unless McCoy could operate. Which he couldn't do
without Spock's cooperation in providing a transfusion. Which
Spock wouldn't provide while Kirk was in sickbay and the
Enterprise was being followed by an unidentified vessel.
In the end, Kirk and McCoy had convinced Spock that the
captain's wound was minor. Spock had relinquished command,
donated blood, and Sarek's operation had been a success.

FEDERATION

Xo. Kirk suddenly thought, jerking awake from his reverie. It
was too soon to think of success. Thelev had turned out to be a
surgically altered Orion. The pursuing ship, also Orion, had
destroyed itself when the Enterprise had disabled it. But the Babel
Conference had yet to take place. Coridan's fate was still in
quesuon. What if the Orions had a contingency plan? For all the
effort they had put into placing Thelev on the Andorian ambassa-
dor's staff, into reengineering one of their vessels for a suicide
mission, into sanctioning Gav's murder--it just wouldn't be like
the Orions to give up after a single attempt.
l/lave [o talk to Spock about this, Kirk thought. He opened his
eyes. McCoy was standing above him. Kirk had a sudden feeling
of' panic that he had slept. That he had missed something. But
McCoy was in as much disarray as he had been when he had
caught his patients at their midnight poker game.
"Can you breathe now?" McCoy asked. It wasn't a friendly
question.
'Wes." Kirk said. His throat felt normal. The pain of the knife
xvound throbbed with each heartbeat, but it was dulled.
"Good," McCoy said. "Then get up."
"Up?" Kirk felt a rush of adrenaline as he connected McCoy's
command to his unexpected presence here. Something had woken
him up. Something had brought him to sickbay to waken the
captain. Knowing that, Kirk was instantly alert, the knife wound
a memory. "What is it, Bones?"
"Nothing I'm in favor of," McCoy complained. "But then, I'm
just a doctor, not a fleet admiral."
"Admiral?" Kirk asked as he slowly sat up and swung his legs
over the side of the bed.
"Kabreigny," McCoy answered, keeping one eye on the scanner
he held to Kirk's side.
Now Kirk was even more alert. Quario Kabreigny was one of
the most powerful admirals at Starfleet Command, in charge of
the entire Exploration Branch. Starfleet had been from its very
beginning, more than a century ago, an organization whose prime
mission was scientific, whose very charter clearly stated its
mandate "to boldly go where no man has gone before." Yet the
nature of the universe was such that Starfleet vessels quickly took

48 49



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
on responsibility for upholding the law at the boundaries of the
Federation's expansion, for protecting shipping lines and colo-
nies, and for maintaining watch over security threats from other,
nonaligned systems. The fact that Starfleet and the Federation
itself had risen from the nightmare of the Romulan Wars further
added an inescapably defensive flavor to its role.
But whenever the critics grew too loud, whenever the members
of the Federation Council grew concerned over the ongoing
dichotomy between Starfieet's scientific and military missions,
Admiral Kabreigny would step into the fray. By the time she had
finished addressing her questioners, detailing the impressive
scientific advances engendered by Starfleet, and showing how
they stood above and apart from its "secondary mission," as she
characterized it, which involved phasers and photon torpedoes
more than sensors and diplomacy, the debate would end for
another year or two, until the next funding cycle.
Without question, Kabreigny was one of the great shapers of
the modern Federation, following unwaveringly in the footsteps
of those giants who had drafted the Paris Charter in 2161. Books
had been written about her and her influence. Hers was a name
that was spoken with a respect reserved for Black, Cochrane, and
Coon--all people without whom the Federation would not exist.
And she wanted to speak with James T. Kirk.
It was a bit like waking up to find the finger of a god pointing
down at you.
"When did the message come in?" Kirk asked. He knew he'd
have to reply right away, which is presumably why McCoy had
been wakened in the middle of ship's night, to see if the captain
was in a condition to receive a communication from Command.
Kirk could get to his quarters, into a uniform, and be onscreen
inside of five minutes.
"No message," McCoy said. He closed his hand around the
scanner, shutting it off. "When that tri-ox wears off, you are going
to have such a headache."
But Kirk ignored the prognosis. "What do you mean, no
message?"
"She's here, Jim. On the Enterprise."

5O

FEDERATION

Kirk stared blankly at the doctor. Admiral Kabreigny was
seventy-seven years old. She didn't leave Earth lightly. She
certainly didn't journey all the way to the Babel Conference for a
strictly political debate.
McCoy read the questions in Kirk's eyes. "She arrived about
thirty minutes ago. No warning. Communications blackout, she
says. Showed up at my door demanding to know why you weren't
in your quarters and when you'd be fit for a meeting."
Whatever was going on, it didn't sound good to Kirk. Subspace
radio was as secure a method of communication as had ever been
invented, and it was so fast, its signals propagating at better than
warp factor 9.9, that the delay between Earth and the Babel
planetoid was only a matter of minutes. What could she have to
say that was so critical? And that justified the risk to her health?
"Did she give any indication of what this was about?" Kirk
asked.
McCoy frowned. Clearly, he knew something. He glanced over
his shoulder at Spock and Sarek. Kirk saw them watching the
proceedings with indifferent expressions, but was certain their
Vulcan ears had picked up every word that he and McCoy had
said. "Excuse me, Ambassador, Spock."
"Of course, Doctor," Sarek said magnanimously.
Then McCoy pointed at Kirk, followed by a quick gesture at the
door to the examination room. "And you, in there."
Kirk gave McCoy a half smile as he started for the door. "I'm
not going to be your patient forever, Bones. You keep that attitude
up and I'll have you swabbing decks."
As the door opened before him, Kirk heard Sarek speak in a low
voice. "Can he do that?" the ambassador asked.
As the door slipped shut behind him, Kirk heard the beginning
of Spock's answer. "I believe he would like to, but regulations
clearIx, state--"
Kirk took a deep breath as he faced McCoy in the privacy of the
examination room. "All right. What's going on?"
McCoy's eyes darted around the room, looking everywhere but
at the captain. "I think it's pretty bad, Jim. You see, this passenger
liner has... disappeared."

51



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Kirk tried to understand what that would have to do with
Kabreigny's unprecedented visit. "Sabotage? Piracy? Important
passengers? What, Bones?"
"None of that," McCoy said hesitatingly. "It's where the liner
disappeared that has the admiral concerned."
Kirk held up his hand. "Just a minute. You're telling me that
the admiral has come all this way from Earth under a communi-
cations blackout and suddenly she's telling everything to the
ship's surgeon?"
The irritation was gone from McCoy. Instead, he just looked
nervous. "I think it involves me, too, Jim. And Spock. But he's in
even worse shape than you are right now."
Kirk was starting to feel dizzy, but whether it was the medica-
tion or straight frustration, he couldn't be sure. "All right. Where
did the liner disappear?"
"The Gamma Canaris region."
Kirk sat back against the examination room's diagnostic bed.
He was afraid he could see where this was going. There was only
one way out, a slim one. "Command doesn't think the disappear-
ance has anything to do with hostilities on Epsilon Canaris III,
does it?"
"If that's what Command thought, I doubt if the admiral would
be here right now." McCoy dropped his voice to a whisper, even
though they were alone. "You know what Kabreigny suspects just
as well as I do, Jim. I was there. Hell, the three of us were there."
"You didn't tell her, did you?" Kirk asked, then immediately
regretted having done so. "Of course you didn't. I'm sorry.
I'm ... tired."
"That's nothing compared to the way you're going to be feeling
in about three hours. Do vou feel up to meeting with her? I could
tell her your medical condition is worse than I thought."
Kirk shook his head. "I knew we'd have to face this sooner or
later. We all did. I just didn't think it would be so soon." He
straightened up. Certain situations had a way of repeating them-
selves. No time to consider odds, devise strategies, or change the
rules. "Where is she?"
"Conference Room Eight. Do you want me to at least go with
you?"

FEDERATION

"Did she ask for you?"
"No."
Kirk smiled, trying to make it easier for McCoy. "It could be
nothing, Bones. Leave it to me." Kirk headed for the door to the
corridor. He stopped when McCoy called after him.
"Don't get any ideas about taking all the blame on your own.
We all agreed. The three of us are in this together. And if you
don't tell her that, I will."
Kirk wasn't in the mood to argue with McCoy. He was the
captain. He didn't have to. "Understood, Doctor. Tell the admiral
1'11 be with her in ten minutes." Kirk left.
He was back in his quarters within five minutes, back in
uniform in another two. He paused for a moment by his door,
looking at his bed. It was very inviting. Despite his complaints to
McCoy these past two days, he had to admit to himself that he
had appreciated the chance to rest. It wasn't often that the
Enwrprise's mission was so straightforward as transporting diplo-
mats within a well-protected region of space. It had almost been
like a vacation, a chance to get away from it all.
Bur I'm no Zefram Cochrane, Kirk thought, then turned his
back on his bed and left his quarters. There was a limit as to how
far away he wanted to get from the rest of the universe, and for
how long.
Kirk thought of Cochrane the entire way to Conference Room
Eight. Zefram Cochrane. Of Alpha Centauri. The giant who had
invented warp drive for humanity and led the way to the stars.
History recorded that Cochrane had disappeared in space in
2117, at the age of eighty-seven.
But six months ago, Kirk, Spock, and McCoy had found him,
still alive, a young man again, on a planetoid in the Gamma
Canaris region, accompanied only by an energy-based life-form,
which Cochrane called "the Companion."
It had not been a pleasant meeting at first. War was threatening
to break out on Epsilon Canaris III. Federation Commissioner
Nancy Hedford was that world's only chance for achieving a
negotiated peace. But she had been stricken with Sakuro's dis-
ease. forced to return to the Enterprise for treatment. It had been
on that trip that the Galileo shuttlecraft had been pulled from its

53



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

course by the Companion. Kirk, Spock, McCoy, and Hedford had
been kidnapped to provide company for Cochrane. The four of
them had been a gift from the Companion to Cochrane, because
the Companion had fallen in love with him.
All that had happened had happened because of that simple,
universal emotion. That revelation had not surprised Kirk then,
and it did not now. Empires had been forged and destroyed,
entire worlds conquered and laid waste for no less a reason. Even
Spock had seen no reason to question what had transpired. The
fact that to him humans were irrational was explanation enough.
In the end, things had worked out. After a fashion. Moments
before Hedford had succumbed to her affliction, the Companion
had somehow joined with her, combining to form a single entity
that shared both Hedford's and the Companion's memories and
personalities. Cochrane had finally comprehended the nature of
his relation with the Companion. And because the Companion
could not survive being away from the planetoid for more than a
handful of days, and even though her powers could no longer be
used to arrest Cochrane's aging process, Cochrane had decided to
remain with her on the planetoid.
"There's a whole galaxy out there waiting to honor you," Kirk
had told Cochrane.
But after gazing into the Companion's new human eyes,
Cochrane had said that he had honors enough. When Kirk had
asked him if he was sure, Cochrane had sidestepped the question
with the skill of a Vulcan.
"There's plenty of water here," the father of warp physics had
said. "The climate's good for growing things. I might even try and
plant a fig tree. A man's entitled to that, isn't he?"
Kirk hadn't been sure what Cochrane's allusion to a fig tree had
meant, but he understood the conviction in the man's voice and
in his eyes. After 237 years of life, Kirk supposed, a man was
entitled to just about anything.
Then, just before the Enterprise was to beam her crew home,
Cochrane had said something that did surprise Kirk. "Don't tell
them about me."
If it had been anyone else, anywhere else, Kirk would have

FEDERATION

argued. But after all that he had seen on the ptanetoid, he
understood Cochrane's request without agreeing with it. "Not a
xvord. Mr. Cochrane," Kirk had promised, immediately sensing
the objections of McCoy and Spock.
Those objections had been strong and well thought out, not the
least being what should be said about Nancy Hedford's fate, to
her family and the Federation.
Kirk, Spock, and McCoy had spent several long nights in
McCoy's quarters, debating the possibilities, and the extent of
their duty to Starfleet and to history. Between Spock's unassail-
able logic and McCoy's unalloyed passion, it was Kirk who had
come up with a compromise which was acceptable to all and that
still respected Cochrane's wish.
Kirk stood before the door to Conference Room Eight. Like all
compromises, he had known that the course of action he had
taken after returning from Cochrane's planetoid exposed him to
some risk. He just hadn't thought he would be exposed this
quickly, or at such a high level.
He stepped forward. The doors parted before him. Admiral
Quarlo Kabreigny sat at the end of the long table, a cup of coffee
beside her. She was a thin woman, her dark skin deeply lined after
a lifetime of service, her snow-white hair drawn back tightly into a
coiled bun, her admiral's uniform loose on her spare frame.
'Tin sorry to have kept you waiting, Admiral," Kirk began
diffidently.
But the admiral was in no mood for pleasantries or politeness.
She told Kirk to sit down and pay attention. Then she slid a data
wafer into a player at her side. The table's central viewer came to
liffe. It displayed a passenger liner with three warp nacelles, an
ungainly design that provided a much smaller increase in speed
than the math suggested it would. Twin nacelles was still the most
e~cient design for warp travel.
~'The Cio' of Utopia Planilia, "Kabreigny stated, identifying the
liner. "Mars registry. Crew complement of fifteen. Passenger
manifest as of stardate 3825.2: eighty-seven." The viewer flick-
ered to show a Fleet chart of the Gamma Canaris region. A solid
line indicated the liner's course. It ended midscreen.

54 55



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

It had happened before, Kirk thought. It could happen again.
He tried to get straight to the point. "Admiral, I think there's a
possibility the liner was not destroyed."
Kabreigny's smile was cold. "Oh, you do, do you? Are you
going to tell me it was drawn off course, the way your shuttlecraft
was six months ago?"
"A possibility," Kirk said, hearing the controlled anger in the
admiral's words.
"Are you further going to report that you encountered a threat
to navigation and neglected to include it in your logs, putting
civilian shipping in harm's way?"
Kirk realized he would have to move carefully. Kabreigny was
not the type of officer of whom it was wise to make an enemy. "As
my log recorded, I believe we hit a random energy field that
affected the Galileo's guidance controls. I had absolutely no
indication that it was a repeatable phenomenon." Why should it
be? Kirk thought. The Companion had provided company for
Cochrane. Now she was content with him and he with her.
Besides, what reason would she have to go after an entire liner?
And she had said she no longer had the power to control
spacecraft.
"Let me put it this way, Kirk, in simple language I think even
you will understand: I don't believe you."
Coming from an admiral, that was a serious charge. Kirk placed
his hands on the table. He had given his word to Cochrane. He
would not betray that. But he had no idea how he could escape the
admiral's accusation.
"May I ask the admiral why?" Kirk said evenly.
"The liner hasn't vanished completely. One week ago, while I
was in transit, we picked up an emergency subspace transmission
from the liner's last known general location. Unfortunately, we
couldn't lock on to its origin point, but there's nothing else in the
region that could be transmitting." The admiral touched a control
on the player. The viewer changed again. This time it showed a
frozen, blurry image of a woman, human, her dark hair in
disarray, her skin smudged with what looked like dirt or blood.
But still the face was recognizable. The woman was Nancy
Hedford.

FEDERATION

~Recognize her?" Kabreigny asked.
"Yes." Kirk answered warily, "I do."
Kabreigny adjusted the control. Hedford's image came to life,
broken by static.
-'... trying to contact Captain Kirk of the Starship Enterprise.
Please answer. The man is lost. We cannot continue. We need
your help again." The image completely broke up into static and
then began again from the first. The admiral cut the sound.
"That was received Starfleet Command, stardate 3812." The
admiral's eyes bore into Kirk's. "Care to work out the math?"
Kirk shook his head. It was obvious what the admiral was going
to say next.
"In other words," she continued, "that message, to you, was
sent almost five months after you informed Command that
Commissioner Hedford had died of Sakuro's disease." The
viewer displayed a certificate of death. Kirk could recognize
McCoy's illegible signature. "We even have this, sworn and
attested to by Leonard McCoy as the attending physician."
Kirk leaned back in his chair. It was going to be a long night.
"What do you want to know?" he asked.
Admiral Kabreigny nodded with clinical acceptance. She
popped the data wafer from the player and slipped in a second
one. Kirk saw her hit the controls for Record.
"1 want you to start at the beginning, Captain, and explain
quite carefully why it is you're receiving messages from a dead
woman." She leaned forward, eyes glinting. "And if you ever want
to command a starship again, you'd better make your story a
damned good one."

56 57



THREE

U.S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
STANDARD ORBIT LEGARA IV
Stardate 43920.6
Earth Standard: May 2366

Picard knew the inevitable could be avoided no longer. Odds had
nothing to do with it. Strategies were no longer applicable. The
rules were firm.
His opponent continued to look downward, his thoughts un-
readable. All Picard could hear was the faint hum of the environ-
mental system's fans in his ready room, the steady mechanical
pulse of the Enterprise's life-support systems at normal operation,
on standard orbit of Legara IV. Picard revealed no emotion in his
voice as he leaned forward to rest his hands on the table.
"I'm afraid it's quite hopeless, Mr. Data. Stalemate in four."
The android sitting across from Picard blinked his artificial
eyes as he finally looked up from the three-dimensional chess-
board in the center of the captain's desk. "I find it most
remarkable," he said. "That is the third stalemate you have forced
on me in the past forty-seven minutes. I am aware of no other
human with the abiliD7 to do that. Even Grandmaster Parnel of
the--"
"That's quite all right, Mr. Data." Picard tried to smile at his
operations manager to show he had no real objections to a

FEDERATION

three-dimensional-chess history lesson, but the expression felt
forced, as if he had forgotten how to move those particular facial
muscles. In a sense, he supposed he had. "This has not been a test
of my abilities."
Data reset the board with the efficiency of an automated
construction drone. "I understand, Captain. You believe your
proficiency in three-dimensional chess is a result of your recent
mind-meld with Ambassador Sarek, who is, himself, a
grandmaster many times over." As quickly as that, all the pieces
were restored to their starting positions. "Though the intrinsical-
ly unpredictable nature of probability theory, or 'dumb luck,' as it
is called, tends to put me on a more equal footing in games of
chance. such as poker, I would look forward to a fourth round of
chess with you. The opportunity to play a challenging game of
logic with a human is one I am not often presented with." Data
patiently waited a few moments for his captain's reply. "I mean
no disrespect by that."
Picard gazed at the multilevel chessboard. Without conscious
thought, a flood of opening strategies swept through his mind as if
the logic of the game were instinctual to him. "Sir? Is something wrong?"
Picard jerked his head up. "Poker?" he said. Had Data men-
tioned something about poker?
The android was most solicitous. "It is a card game, sir. I play
each Thursday night with my fellow officers. If you recall, we have
often invited you to join us."
The captain looked up to the ceiling of his ready room, trying to
remember something about poker. Picard rubbed at the side of
his face. He could still feel Ambassador Sarek's fingers there, on
the katra points of his nervous system. The effects of the
mind-meld still trembled within him, though the maelstrom of
emotions that had raged through him yesterday had now dwin-
dled to slight, recurring eddies. But still his mind dealt with
disturbing flashes of detailed knowledge of the ambassador's life.
t I ~dcan would know how to deal with this, Picard told himself. A
It/~time ()/' training in mind-control techniques would permit the
ca,sv setting aside of information obtained from other minds. And
there were other minds. Sarek had mind-melded with hundreds of

59



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
different beings in his more than two centuries of life, and the
echoes of the psychic force of all their collective experiences now
also reverberated within Picard.
"Captain Picard?" Data said more emphatically. "Shall I call
Dr. Crusher?"
Data's familiar voice brought a moment of clarity. Picard
shook off a sudden visual image of the red-tinged mountains of
Sarek's walled estate--not his. The only property in which Picard
had an ownership interest was located in France. Picard tugged at
his uniform to smooth nonexistent wrinkles.
"No, Mr. Data, I'll be fine. It's just that... from time to time I
find myself overwhelmed by an unexpected memory from Am-
bassador Sarek's past."
Data observed Picard carefully. Picard understood his pur-
poseful gaze.
"But the memories are lessening in both strength and frequen-
cy," Picard said firmly. "Both the ambassador's wife and Dr.
Crusher have agreed that there will be no long-term, detrimental
effects."
"I hope that that is true," Data said. "It has been my observa-
tion that emotions can be confusing and dangerous when allowed
to develop out of control."
Picard smiled at Data, and this time the expression came
naturally. "And yet you still wish to experience them."
Data took on a thoughtful expression, one of his subroutines,
Picard knew, designed to help the android relate to humans by
providing subtle body-language cues to his thought processes. "It
is, as the ambassador would say, a most illogical goal, but one to
which I aspire, nonetheless."
"You sound as if you're halfway there already," Picard said
with amusement, mixed with a sudden burst of friendship for his
ofihcer, a feeling he shared to some extent with almost all of his
command staff, but which, like Sarek, he too often allowed to
remain hidden. Since he had first taken command of the Enter-
prise, almost three years earlier, Picard had enjoyed watching
Data's growth as a... person. There was no other word for it. To
watch that complex intellect wrestle with ideas and ideals that

FEDERATION
most humans took for granted helped Picard see the universe
through fresh eyes, innocent eyes. At the age of sixty-one, he
realized he needed that rejuvenating experience more often. It
was a law of nature that when growth stopped, stagnation set in.
For now, the Enterprise helped Picard keep that law at bay. But it
was always out there, circling, like predatory norsehlats worrying
a herd of vral, waiting to pick off the old and infirm.
Picard blinked, momentarily distracted. "Mr. Data, would you
happen to know what a norsehlat is?"
Data responded without hesitation. "A nonsentient predator
native to the southern, high-mountain deserts of Vulcan, filling a
similar ecological niche to that of the Terran wolf." "I see. And a vral?"
~'In context with norseMat, I would presume the word vral is a
plural form of vralt, which is a nonsentient herbivore, similar to a
Terran mountain goat, again indigenous to the same areas of
Vulcan as is the norsehlat, and thus its prey." Data cocked his
head. "Are you experiencing another of Ambassador Sarek's
memories?"
"No, not a memory, really. An allusion. Referring to animals of
which I have no personal knowledge." Picard found that innocu-
ous aftereffect much easier to deal with than the torrent of
anguish that had stricken him in the first hours after his mind-
meld. "It is a... most fascinating experience." "Indeed," Data commented.
Picard stared at his operations manager for a moment, experi-
encing a strong feeling of deja vu. Something about the conversa-
tion. something about seeing Data on the other side of a three-
dimensional chessboard.. Picard could almost put his finger on
it... almost grasp that memory... almost--
His communicator chirped. Picard tapped it. "Picard."
Riker's voice emerged from the tiny device. "Sorry to disturb
you, sir. but Ambassador Sarek's party is ready to beam to the
-'~h'rrimac. "
Picard stood. "On my way, Number One. I'll meet you in the
transporter room. Mr. Data, please relieve the commander."
Data left the ready room as Picard opened the storage compart-



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
ment in which a folded dress uniform lay ready. Three days ago,
when Ambassador Sarek had beamed aboard, Picard had had
such hopes for their meeting. More than any being now living,
Sarek had shaped the Federation, guiding it in its transition.
Under his direction, it had evolved over the past century from an
expansionist cobbling-together of idealistic, often unrealistic
worlds eager to forge an unprecedented alliance without a clear
idea of how that could be accomplished, to a mature and stable
institution for which each new admission was a further infusion
of strength for the integrated whole.
In standard English, the Vulcans called that basic precept IDIC,
one of the most profound philosophical cores of the United
Federation of Planets. The acronym meant Infinite Diversity in
Infinite Combinations. Simply put, it was a celebration of how
simplicity could arise from complexity.
In physics, the matching term was "the self-organizing princi-
ple," perhaps the most basic condition underlying the universe's
existence. Simply put, it was the tendency for replicating systems
to arise from the chaotic conditions of the fractal boundaries that
, separated domains of high and low energy.
In high-energy domains, physical bonds could not form. In
low-energy domains, physical bonds once formed could not be
broken. But somewhere between the two extremes, in the flux of
the Second Law of Thermodynamics, there existed domains
where a balance could be achieved. And it was the same in the
Federation, thought Picard with a sense of satisfaction, both in
the institution and the role he played in maintaining it.
In the universe at large, between those domains of high and low
energy, galaxies had coalesced like jewels on the cosmic strings
formed in the first instants of the universe's birth. In those
galaxies, stars had condensed, then burst into life, shedding
energy on their planets, creating pockets of still more boundary
domains, neither too hot nor too cold.
In those domains, molecules had formed that could survive the
more minor fluctuations of local conditions. Among those mole-
cules that were good at surviving, some could replicate duplicates
of themselves. Not perfectly, for that would lead to stagnation,

FEDERATION

but bnperfectly. For in imperfection, Picard believed, as did the
Federation's scientists, there was room for improvement; room
l'or improvement inevitably brought change; and what was life but
change--the constant shuffling of attributes and abilities to
insure that life would continue, even to the extent that life on a
planetary scale would evolve the capacity to affect the planetary
environment such that it remained a suitable habitat.
Thus on a planetary scale, there was no distinction between life
and habitat. Life itself and life's home were like space and
time--they could not be thought of as independent entities, only
as different reflections of each other.
More and more, Picard knew, the restrictive use of the phrase
"on a planetary scale" was being questioned by Federation
scientists. Even "systemwide scale" was not broad enough for
them. "Galactic scale" was better, for as life begat intelligence
and intelligence begat technology, life spread forth from its origin
points to propagate into more domains, creating more habitats.
But as Picard had discussed with Will Riker, in one of their
t'requent philosophical debates, even thinking of life and its
influence on a galactic scale was increasingly viewed in some
quarters as missing the point. As in all things in the science of
cosmology, at some point the study of the very large inevitably led
back to the study of the very small, just as the analysis of the very
complex uncovered the very simple principles from which com-
plexity emerged.
Derived from that research, Picard had learned, there was a
realization that was slowly spreading through the worlds of the
Federation. He found he was almost ready to grasp it himself, like
searching for a single misplaced memory a hairsbreadth out of
reach. It was the notion that the self-organizing principle, the
most simple principle in nature, which had led to all the forms
and structures of the universe, also had its mirror in the affairs of
intelligent beings.
Infinite Diversity in Infinite Combinations. In sociology and
politics as it was in physics. From the simple came the complex.
From the complex came stability.
Picard believed the founders of the Federation had understood

63



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
this intuitively. The horror of the Romulan War had truly been
the last lesson in valuing life, in all its disturbing complexity, that
humanity had needed to learn.
Those who had inherited the founders' Federation had strug-
gled to keep intact what had been forged at such cost. The first
contact with the Klingon Empire in 2218, only fifty-seven years
after the Federation's birth, had been a trial by fire. But in that
trial, what had been created in the Earth city of Paris in 2161
revealed its true strength. Through all the dark years of conflict
with the Klingons that followed, until the rapprochement of the
Khitomer Conference of 2293, all-out war did not break out
between the Empire and the Federation.
The Federation had entered a new phase. It no longer reacted
simply by learning from its mis[akes, it took action, truly going
where no one had gone before, by learning from its triumphs.
Picard, who had not been born until 2305, twelve years after
Khitomer, was a child of the new century, the era the poets had
called "Technology Unchained," when quality off life became
paramount for all beings, not just an elite.
He had grown up in LaBarre, a small Earth city a short distance
from Paris where the president of the Federation Council kept his
official offices. Paris was a city continually enlivened by the
constant stream of alien diplomatic missions. The Federation had
been as much a part of young Picard's early life as had the
pastoral charms of his horne's vineyard and winery, each an
unquestioned condition of life which, to the child's mind, had
always existed, indistinguishable from the constancy of the sun or
a parent's love.
Those two images of sun and parents played in Picard's mind as
he felt the turbolift carry him to Deck 6 and the transporter room
Sarek's party would use. The sun: a force of nature, blind and
unthinking. Love: a force of sentience, but equally primal.
Even in Sarek Picard had felt the unity that had arisen from the
acknowledgment of emotion as essential to life--the same unity
that linked the Federation to the universe it inhabited until, like
space and time, like life and habitat, the two were inseparable.
Picard stepped through the sliding doors of the transporter
room with a revelation in his mind, created from the images of

FEDERATION

the sun and the Federation of his childhood--two extremes: the
logic of Vulcans, the passion of humans. Perhaps neither one
could ever have achieved alone what they had achieved together.
Humans a domain of high energy, where structure could never
form. Vulcans a domain of low energy, where structure once
formed could never change. But together, on the boundaries of
their separate domains, from the fractal chaos of their meeting
and desire to work together, a new system had come into being.
Riker was already waiting in the transporter room and Picard
could see him give his captain a curious look. He realized that the
excitement of his thoughts must be showing on his face. Real
excitement. Because what had just come to mind was not the
result of his own thought processes--it had arisen from that part
of Sarek that was still within him. What Picard knew now, all
Vulcans knew. The exchange was exhilarating. He made a mental
note to add these thoughts to his next discussion with Will.
"Captain?" Riker said. He stood in the center of the room, even
more imposing than usual in his long dress coat. The rest of his
question about the captain's well-being went unasked. No doubt
because of the presence of Transporter Chief O'Brien and Lieu-
tenant Patrick standing off to the side.
"I am having a most... unusual day," Picard explained to his
first officer. "Impressions from Sarek's mind are still... making
themselves known to me." Picard saw in Riker's expression the
same concern Data had voiced in his ready room. "But it is not a
distraction from my duties," Picard reassured his first officer.
Riker marginally relaxed. He gave Picard a quick, sardonic
smile. "Be careful what you wish for, sir."
It took Picard a moment, but then he understood Riker's
comment. Just after Sarek had beamed aboard, Picard had told
Riker and Counselor Troi that he had looked forward to sharing
Sarek's thoughts and memories, his unique understanding of the
history the legendary Vulcan had made.
At the time he had stated his expectations, he was feeling
disappointed. Sarek's aides had preceded him--Sakkath, a tall
and characteristically dour Vulcan, and Ki Mendrossen, a human
and senior member of the Vulcan diplomatic corps.
The aides had explained that Sarek's age would prevent the

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JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
ambassador from undertaking any social functions that would
normally be part of the honors given a visitor of his rank. The
negotiations Sarek would be concluding with the Legarans--after
ninety-six years of patient effort on the ambassador's part--were
too vital to the Federation. Picard had understood, but had been
disappointed that he would not have a chance to renew his
acquaintance with the ambassador, whom he had met years
earlier at the wedding of Sarek's son.
But in the days that followed, Picard learned the truth behind
the aides' concern for their ambassador. Sarek was suffering from
Bendii Syndrome, a rare affliction that occasionally struck
Vulcans over two hundred years of age. He was losing his ability
to control his emotions. Although Sarek was surreptitiously
buttressed in his attempts by the telepathic powers of Sakkath,
the end result was that the ambassador's confused emotions bled
out to the crew of the Enterprise, leading to a series of alterca-
tions, fistfights, and even acts of insubordination.
With the meeting with the Legarans absolutely unable to be
changed, the only chance Sarek had had to maintain his self-
control had been put forward by his human wife, Perrin. She had
come to Picard's quarters to suggest the captain share a mind-
meld with Sarek. Picard had agreed and the elder Vulcan then, for
a few hours, had made use of Picard's self-discipline and iron
willJvital tools for this final stage of negotiations to be con-
ducted on board the Enterprise herself.
But Picard, in turn, had been left with Sarek's emotions
unchecked--the pent-up rage and regrets of centuries, the unspo-
ken love, unvoiced anguish, the soul-crushing despair of ap-
proaching, inevitable death. There had been good reason why the
Vulcans of millennia past had chosen to suppress their emotions
--they were too powerful. The strength of them, even filtered
through a mind-meld, had crippled Picard for most of a day,
leaving him racked with tears, shaken by fear and anger.
Yet without question the exchange had been worthwhile. Sarek
had successfully concluded his negotiations with the Legarans,
and the benefits of that achievement would be incalculable to the
Federation.

FEDERATION

In the end, as Riker's smile had suggested, Picard had also
received all he had hoped for from the voyage from Vulcan to
Legara IV, but not in the manner he had anticipated.
Picard reflexively smoothed his coat and turned to watch the
door expectantly. "They're almost here," he said. "Remarkable.
It's as if I'm still in some kind of telepathic contact with him."
"Perhaps you should talk to Deanna about your experiences,"
Rikcr suggested, facing the closed doors with his captain. "l intend to, Number One. As soon--"
Picard stopped talking as the doors slid open. But it was the
ambassador's aides who entered, accompanied only by two duty
off~ccrs. Neither Sarek nor Perrin was with them.
Riker stepped forward with a hint of unease that only Picard
could detect. "Will the ambassador be joining you?"
But Picard put him at ease as he suddenly understood the
reason .~br Sarek's absence. '~It's all right, Will. The ambassador is
lening us say our good-byes first, as he has noticed that his
presence at such times can prevent people from speaking freely."
Riker considered that. "Quite gracious," he conceded.
"I hope your journey aboard the Me~rimac will be uneventful,"
Picard said to the ambassador's aides.
Sakkath, in deference to what a human would expect to hear,
stated the obvious in reply. "With all the pressures of the
conference behind him, I believe I can help him maintain his
control until we return to Vulcan."
"What will happen to him then?" Riker asked.
Mendrossen. though human. answered with Vulcan control.
"The effects of Benalii Syndrome are irreversible." Then, in an
afterthought that belied his emotions, he added hopefully, "Med-
ical research is always continuing."
There was nothing more to be said. Riker told O'Brien to stand
bx for transport. It was then that Perrin entered, tranquil and
COmposed, her placid expression the legacy of a life on Vulcan.
But there was nothing Vulcan about the warm smile she gave to
Picard as she thanked him for what he had done for her husband.
For a moment, as Picard took her hand in his, he was once
again caught between two minds, seeing Perrin as he had known

67



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
her--a charming guest aboard his ship--and as Sarek had known
her--his lifemate, his lover. Picard fought with the confusion,
trying to express to the woman who had lost her heart to a Vulcan
what that Vulcan could never say, would never say.
"He loves you," Picard told her. So simple, yet so profound.
"Very much." The words came nowhere near expressing the
richness of the emotions he was experiencing.
But Perrin regarded him as if she understood what he was
feeling, what he was trying to say, and at that moment, like a
sudden flash of sunlight through the trees of a forest, Picard had a
glimpse of Perrin's mind. She had melded with Sarek. An essence
of her remained in Sarek's mind and was now in Picard's.
Without knowing how, without seeing details, Picard saw that
Perrin truly understood, and was content.
"I know." she answered Picard. "I have always known."
And Picard knew without question that she spoke the truth.
With that final farewell between humans, Sarek entered, serene,
implacable, a force of nature not by the strength and purpose that
enveloped him, but by the unquestionable sense that he could not
be stopped in anything he chose to do.
Except for the matters of your heart, Picard thought. The image
of a young Vulcan boy came to mind, a scrape of green blood on
his cheek, sullen, a forbidden tear forming in his eye. Picard felt
afresh the warring desires to instruct the boy in his Vulcan
heritage and to hold him in his arms, to keep him safe from harm,
to tell him his tears were permissible. The boy was Spock, Picard
realized, and from just a quick flutter of Sarek's eyes, Picard knew
that the ambassador had shared that memory, which had passed
between them as a spark. Though it would never be acknowl-
edged.
Sarek spoke first. "I will take my leave of you now, Captain."
Each word perfect. Even so simple a statement vested with
unshakable authority. "I do not think we shall meet again."
"I hope you are wrong, Ambassador." Picard, at least, was able
to say what Sarek could not. Earlier, Perrin had told him that the
ambassador had taken an interest in his career, that he had found
Picard's record "satisfactory." Picard had been gratified by that

68

FEDERATION

verdict, the highest of praise in Vulcan terms. And he saw now in
what he shared with Sarek that Sarek, too, had hoped for more
time with Picard, and hoped, too, that this would not be the last
time they met.
Sarek's eyes stared knowingly into Picard's. "We shall always
retain the best of the other, inside us."
Picard already knew that to be true. "I believe I have the better
part of that bargain, Ambassador." He held up his hand, parting
his third and fourth fingers. "Peace and long life," he said.
Sarek nodded, almost imperceptibly, and returned the tradi-
tional Vulcan gesture. "Live long and prosper."
Sarek joined his party on the transporter pad. A moment before
he departed, he took Perrin's hand in his, as couples often did
before a shuttlecraft took off, or when any journey together began.
Then the giant of the Federation dissolved into the quantum
mist of the transporter effect, and except for one small part of him
still in Picard's mind, was gone.
"Merrimac confirms transport," O'Brien announced from his
console.
"Very good," Picard answered. He looked at Riker, Riker at
him. They both glanced down at each other's long coat.
"Time to get out of these monkey suits?" Riker asked.
Picard appreciated the sentiment. "But we'll need them again
on Betazed." Counselor Troi's planet of birth was their next port
of call, in conjunction with the biennial Trade Agreements
Conference. Picard was actually looking forward to the mission
--it promised to be dull. Despite his need for rejuvenating
experiences, just for now he could use a few days of restful
routine. He suddenly felt weary.
Riker followed Picard into the corridor. "The conference is ten
da~s away, sir. I thought until then we might trade the dress
uniforms in for some natty, wide-lapeled suits, loud ties, and a
couple of gats, if you know what I mean."
Picard was tempted. The Dixon Hill programs in the holodeck
were getting better all the time, and he was intrigued by the notion
of matching wits with a criminal genius like Cyrus Redblock
while his mind still retained some of Sarek's impressive logic. If

69



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
he could force Data into three stalemates, who knew what he'd be
able to accomplish against the En[erprise's computer in 1930s San
Francisco'?
But another wave of fatigue swept over him. A cup of Earl Grey
in the quiet of his quarters seemed to be what he needed most.
"Not right now, Will. Maybe in a few days."
Riker upped the stakes with an almost conspiratorial come-on.
"Are you sure'?. Geordi's been adding some refinements to a new
scenario. A lady in red... a mysterious black bird... it should
be a real challenge."
They came to the turbolift. "Tempting, but I think I'm going to
call it a day. Have Data take us out on our course to Betazed."
The doors swept open. Riker hung back. "It's going to be a long
ten days without something to break it up," he said in a final
attempt to have the captain change his mind. "Even Dr. Crusher
said--"
Riker stopped as Picard's eyebrows lifted in reigned suspicion.
"Oh, I see. You've been discussing this with Dr. Crusher."
Riker put his hand out to stop the turbolift door from shutting.
"A deep Vulcan mind-meld can be a terrible strain, sir. Dr.
Crusher suggested you could use some R-and-R to help recuper-
ate."
But Picard shook his head. "I appreciate your concern. But as
the ambassador said, it is the best parts of each other we shall
retain. A few days of quiet rest is all I need, and a direct course to
Betazed is the best way to get it."
Riker knew when he had been overruled, and he took it well.
"Understood, sir." He stepped back from the doors. "Let me
know when you get bored. We could even discuss philosophy, if
you feel up to it."
Picard smiled. "I look forward to that."
The doors began to shut. And just in time for Picard and Riker
to catch an instant of surprise in each other's eyes before the
doors closed completely, it was then that the corridor filled with
the sirens of a Red Alert.
The Enterprise was being called to battle.

FOUR

LONDON, OPTIMAL REPUBLIC OF
GREAT BRITAIN, EARTH
Earth Standard: June 21, 2078

London was in flames. Not even the drug-controlled soldiers of
the Optimum could contain the riots any longer. Zefram
Cochrane had no trouble admitting that his return to the planet of
his birth had been a mistake.
His companion in the backseat of the stately Rolls limousine
tapped the silver handle of his cane against the viewscreen that
angled out from the seat back before them. The windows of the
limousine were set to maximum opacity and the external scanners
were the only way to see what was going on in the streets they
traveled.
"Look at them," Sir John Burke said in disgust. "Worse than
bloody Cromwell and his lot." The elder scientist was a shrunken
man. frail, in his seventies, with transparent skin, a dusting of
xvispy gray hair, and a thin mustache. Once he had been chief
astronomer for the Royal Astronomical Society. But that had
been before the Optimum Movement had triumphed in the
general elections of 2075. Now the word "Royal" was banned
from this island nation, Queen Mary was in Highgate Prison, and
most of the rest of the Royal Family had gone into hiding in what
had become the Republic of Great Britain, or cowering in exile in

70 71



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
the United States. And who knew what was happening over there
anymore, with the Constitution suspended and only the fifteen
states with Optimal majorities permitted to send representatives
to Washington.
Everything Micah Brack had said to Cochrane on Titan,
seventeen years ago, had come to pass. It was no longer a question
of if there would be a third world war, but when it would start. As
for where, between the splintering of the Optimum Movement,
Colonel Green's atrocities, the collapse of the New United
Nations, and a dozen other nightmarish escalations of global
tension, there was no end of places where the first shot could be
fired, or the first atomic charge detonated.
What his friend Micah Brack thought of these developments,
Cochrane could not be certain. Eight years earlier, after three
Optimum assassination attempts against him in as many months,
the industrialist had intentionally disappeared. Rumors placed
him on Mars, helping draft the Fundamental Declarations of the
Martian Colonies; on Altair IV, excavating the ruins of an alien
civilization; or still on Earth, leading any one of a number of
resistance cells in regions ruled by the Optimum. Cochrane didn't
know which stories to believe. Perhaps each of them was true to
some extent. All he knew was that the bulk of Brack's fortune had
been given to the Cochrane Foundation for the Study of
Multiphysics, and that Brack himself had vanished so completely
and so thoroughly that Cochrane couldn't help but suspect his
friend had had considerable experience in the process.
Cochrane glanced at the viewscreen beneath Sir John's cane.
The limo was approaching a checkpoint near the Thorsen Central
Hub, once known as Victoria Station. The data agencies were
reporting that some maglevs to Heathrow were still running.
From there, an orbital transfer plane to any platform would be
enough to get Cochrane off planet.
But Cochrane wasn't hopeful. On the viewscreen he saw the
ominous gray hulks of zombies--the name the public had given
to the Fourth World mercenaries the Optimum employed--lining
civilians up against a wall. Some zombies stood with inhaler tubes
from their self-medication kits pressed to one nostril, then the

72

FEDERATION

other. Cochrane had been told the drugs took away all fear, and all
moral compunction.
And I wanted to take this species to the stars, he thought with
repugnance. He was forty-eight years old but felt far older because
of what he believed might be his complicity in what was happen-
in2 on Earth--nothing less than its destruction.
~'hat sense of reason existed among the humans of this system
in the late twenty-first century was exclusive to the burgeoning
colonies on the moon and Mars, those orbiting Saturn, and those
newly established in myriad other sites around the sun. Those
colonies, Earth's children, had rightly declined to become in-
volred in their parent's self-mutilation.
Cochrane wondered if that ready indifference would exist if
the solar colonies were still dependent on Earth for critical
supplies and technology. With the extrasolar colonies now, on
average, no more than four months away from the home system--
about the same time it took to travel across the system in the first
decades of the century--the solar colonies for the first time could
turn to other worlds. Already manufacturing specialties were
emerging in many extrasolar communities: biochemical engineer-
ing in Bradbury's Landing, molecular computer farms in Wolf
359's Stapledon Center, and continuum-distortion generator
design and manufacture on Cochrane's own Centauri B II.
Brack had been right when he had told Cochrane that every
airtight freighter in the system would become an interplanetary
vessel when retrofitted superimpellors became readily and inex-
pensively available. But the en. suing grand, faster-than-light,
second wave of human exploration had developed far more
s~iftlv than even Brack had anticipated. Still, the result, also as
Brack had intended, was undeniable: Earth was no longer critical
to the survival of the human race. And all because of Zefram
Cochrane.
Cochrane watched Optimum's mercenaries on the screen with
dismay. and wondered if it might be best if he didn't escape
tonight, if he could somehow find a way to atone for what he had
caused to be.
But then he recalled Brack's voice from so many years ago:

73



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"The genie is out of the bottle and will never go back in." True
enough, once again more rapidly than the industrialist had
predicted, there were now thirty-three self-sufficient human colo-
nies on ten extrasolar, class-M planets, and the Optimum had
been unable to influence them. It took so much time and effort to
restrict the free flow of information and resources on Earth that
its leaders could not extend their repressive reach the necessary
dozens of light-years. Everything had unfolded exactly as Brack
had said it would, because people remained people no matter
what new technological advances came their way.
Micah Brack's successful prediction and analysis of the conse-
quences of the human condition, however, gave Cochrane no
cause for happiness. He still couldn't help but feel responsible.
And guilty.
Cochrane and Sir John shifted against the deep upholstery of
the Rolls's passenger compartment as it dropped gently from
inertial-dampened, urban-flight mode to its wheeled configura-
tion, slowing as it approached the checkpoint. On the viewscreen,
one of the civilians against the wall they were passing turned to
flail wildly at the mercenaries. One of the impassive brutes, bulky
in radiation armor, swung up a fistgun. But its threat did nothing
to halt the civilian's outraged tirade.
Cochrane saw a stuttering blue pulse of plasma fire erupt from
the fistgun and looked away as the civilian's body crumpled to the
ground, all protests at an end. Cochrane, miserable, wondered
again why he had ever decided to return to Earth. The Multi-
dimensional Physics Conference he had attended on the moon
last week, the first he had ever attended off Centauri B II, was as
close as he should have come.
But he, too, was only human. And just as the leaders of Earth
had been unable to believe that the followers of the Optimum
could be as dangerous and as destructive as the past two decades
had proven, he, like most others of his species, had found it hard
to believe that something bad could happen personally to him.
Whether that was a result of self-delusional blindness or tran-
scendent optimism, Cochrane didn't know. But it was a weakness
of all humans, and Cochrane felt sickeningly certain he was about
to pay for his naivete.

FEDERATION

The compartment speaker clicked on and Cochrane heard the
chauffeur's clear young voice, calm and composed. "Checkpoint
ahead, gentlemen. You'll need your cards."
Sir John grumbled as he reached inside his jacket and removed
his identification card. Cochrane had never put his away since it
had been given to him back at Sir John's town house and its
forged contents described to him. The slender strip of flexible
glass, sparkling with quantum-interference inscriptions, falsely
identified him as an American businessman from one of the
Optimum-controlled states. Sir John's network had further estab-
lished an elaborate scenario to preserve Cochrane's real identity.
In the trunk were two suitcases with American-made clothes in
Cochrane's size, as well as suitable business records and doctored
family photos.
The need for such subterfuge had been prompted by the leader
of this region's Optimum Movement, Colonel Adrik Thorsen
himself. Acting as the provisional governor of the British Repub-
lic, Thorsen had appeared on data-agency uploads, proclaiming
Cochrane to be an enemy of the Greater Good. At first, Cochrane
had hoped ThorseWs motivation had only been the result of the
long-ago insult to his pride when he had arrived at Titan to meet
Cochrane and found only Brack. At Brack's urging, Cochrane had
/led Thorsen then and wished he could do so again, right now.
Especially since Sir John's network of contacts in the lower
echelons of' the movement's headquarters, in what used to be the
Parliament Buildings, had revealed that Thorsen's continued
obsession with Cochrane appeared to go far beyond any simple
redress for personal insult. The Optimum had apparently con-
cluded that Cochrane's superimpellor did have military uses, and
that Cochrane alone held the key to unleashing that potentially
unconquerable power.
It was a mad hypothesis, Cochrane knew, derived from an
incomplete understanding of his work. But despite all that Brack
and he had done to spread his work to the broadest possible
audience, the Optimum still clung to the belief that Cochrane had
held back certain aspects of his research--aspects they obviously
now thought they could extract from Cochrane's mind by the
most optimal methods.

74 75



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Fortunately, when Sir John had learned of Thorsen's true
intent, he had immediately arranged the cancellation of the
informal private sessions scheduled between Cochrane and
Europe's independent scientific community. Three days after
arriving on Earth, two days after visiting his parents' graves and
walking past the home where he had grown up, Cochrane was
bundled off to a safe house as preparations were made to return
him to the stars.
There was a harsh tapping on the window next to Sir John. The
elderly astronomer touched the control that cleared the window.
A mercenary leaned down, her features swollen by the chemicals
flooding her system and distorted by the encircling elastic of her
radiation headgear. Her bizarre countenance flashed red then
yellow in the harsh glare of the spinning warning lights of the
checkpoint barricade. She tapped again, harder, using the upper
barrel of her fistgun. From her expression, if she had to tap a third
time she'd use that upper barrel to launch an imploder into the
Rolls.
Sir John touched another control and the window slid into the
doorframe.
"Cards," the zombie said. She slurred the word. Through the
open window, Cochrane could smell a sudden onslaught of smoke
and other burning things he did not want to think about. A few
hundred meters off, a thin voice wailed, inconsolable. He passed
his card to Sir John, who gave both to the trooper.
The trooper slid each into the scanner on her shoulder, then
read the output on the status screen on her fistgun. She snorted to
herself, and without apparent conscious thought pulled the
delivery tube from her medication kit and absently inhaled a dose
of whatever concoction her duty roster called for. Cochrane
watched with distaste as the mercenary's eyelids fluttered.
The zombie threw Sir John's card back at him. "You're old,"
she mumbled. "Not optimum. "Sir John didn't meet her gaze. He
looked down at the floor of the compartment. His lips involuntar-
ily trembled out of the mercenary's line of sight.
The trooper leaned forward, her radiation armor scraping
against the edge of the window. She stared at Cochrane, then at
the status screen. "Yank, huh?"

FEDERATION

"That's right," Cochrane said.
"Passport?"
Cochrane nodded at the fistgun. "It's encoded on the card."
The trooper looked back at her status screen with a disbelieving
expression. She tapped a control, blearily strained to focus on the
screen, then snorted again. She pointed her fistgun at Cochrane.
The preignition light on the lower plasma barrel glowed ready.
"You wait here. Go anywhere, an' you'll be contained."
The trooper pushed herself back from the car, then lurched
a~vay, heavy boots scraping the old asphalt street.
"Contained?" Cochrane asked.
Sir John frowned. "The movement's polite term for murder. As
in containing the spread of contagion." He tapped his cane
against the privacy shield between the driver and the passenger
compartment. "Not optimum," he hissed. "Bloody monsters."
The shield cleared. The chauffeur, a distractingly attractive
young woman in a traditional black uniform, looked back at Sir
John.
~What's the holdup?" the old astronomer asked.
"They appear to be running your guest's card through an
uplink," the chauffeur replied lightly, as if commenting on the
weather.
~'I see." Sir John slumped heavily back in his section of the
passenger bench. Cochrane heard the adjustment motors in the
upholstery change their support characteristics to account for his
change in position.
"To be candid, Mr. Cochrane, it doesn't look good. Not by a
long shot."
Cochrane inhaled slowly. In his all-too-brief forty-eight years,
he had already had a life no other human before him could have
imagined. He had walked the lands of alien worlds so distant that
Earth's sun was only a twinkling point of light. He had seen
healthy, happy babies born beneath alien suns, their very exis-
tence a promise for a future without limits. He had glimpsed the
stars at superluminal velocities through some trick of physics that
even he could not yet fully explain. Perhaps that was enough for
any one person. Perhaps he had reached the end. He put his finger
on the door control.

77



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"I should go," he told Sir John. If he ran, the zombies would use
their fistguns on him. He doubted he would feel a thing. "You can
say I lied to you. The network will be safe."
"Monica!" Sir John said quickly. "Override!"
Cochrane heard the door lock click beside him. He pressed the
control, but nothing happened. "Sir John, I appreciate all you've
done for me. But your network is worth more than my life."
The astronomer gazed at Cochrane, then gave him a wink.
Once again Cochrane thought how impossible it was to tell what
an English person ever really felt. There was no hint in Sir John
that he thought he might be facing death, or optimal interroga-
tion, within minutes.
"This isn't the end of the ride, young fellow." He sat up
straighter and squared his shoulders. "You forget you're dealing
with a Fellow of the Royal Astronomical Society."
"With respect, sir. That's not quite the same as dealing with an
agent of UN Intelligence." Two of those dedicated professionals
had met with Cochrane between sessions on the moon. They had
strongly suggested he avoid traveling to Earth, and had sought his
advice about whom to contact in order to make arrangements for
the transfer of provisional New United Nations headquarters to
Alpha Centauri. Cochrane had not taken that as an encouraging
sign. Nor, however, had he listened to their warnings.
Sir John leaned forward. "I shall take your comment as a
challenge, sir." He tapped on the privacy shield. "Plan B, if you
please, Monica. Drive on."
"Done," the chauffeur replied.
An instant later, Cochrane felt himself slammed down into the
passenger bench as the Rolls seemed to explode beneath him. His
first thought was that an imploder had hit the car. But a moment
later he saw city lights and the fires of Buckingham Palace through
the window beside him as the limousine banked sharply, leaving
the checkpoint far behind.
"Inertial control!" Sir John boomed out delightedly, tapping
his cane on the floor. "I still say it's impossible, but, by God, it's
exceedingly useful."
Another moment passed, and any sense of acceleration van-
ished as the internal inertial compensators caught up with the

FEDERATION

fields propelling the car. The fanjets, which had been designed to
make a one-tonne vehicle hover a meter off the ground, were now
being used to control a car with an inertially adjusted mass of no
more than ten kilos. The city flew by.
"We'll never make it past the coastal defenses," Cochrane said,
marveling at the abrupt change in their situation. However, the
rest of Europe might as well be light-years away. Even with
inertial damping, he doubted the Rolls had enough fuel to reach
North America. The Rolls was a sleek-looking vehicle, but its
aerodynamics were designed for surface travel, not atmospheric
Ilight.
"Give us credit for having half a brain between us," Sir John
said. "We brought you to Earth under the Optimum's nose and
we'll bloody well see to it that you get back where you belong."
Cochrane judged their progress by watching the city pass by
below. Whole grids of London were blacked out, small fires from
the riots flickering like stars in oceans of darkness. For all their
vaunted efficiency, the Optimum couldn't even keep the country's
Fusion reactors on-line. Then, it seemed to Cochrane, after less
than a minute's flight time, the limousine began to descend into
one of those pits of blackness.
"What, exactly, is Plan B?" Cochrane asked, beginning, in spite
ot' himself and their situation, to feel the stirrings of excitement as
the whistle of air around the Rolls diminished. The car had
leveled out and was now dropping straight down. What seemed to
be a large curved wall, unlit, blocked out the lights in the next
powered grid, about a kilometer distant. Cochrane felt as if they
were descending into an enormous well.
"Controlled panic," Sir John said briskly. "Since we can't get
you out by regular means, we shall resort to something a bit more,
shall we say, unorthodox."
The inertial field around the car winked out as it came within a
meter of the ground. Cochrane rocked once, then felt the limo
bounce as the wheels made contact.
Sir John checked his watch, a golden Piaget from which a small
pattern of red bars was holographically projected. It was an
astronomer's watch, at least half a century old, from a time when
stargazers worked in the dark. actually peering through telescopes



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
with their own eyes, instead of letting computers reconstruct
images. The pale red bars would not interfere with any observer's
night vision.
"Just about now," Sir John said, "those drug-addled zombies
will have gotten word to their commanders about our escape. But
when they check for air traffic, we won't be there." Sir John
gestured with his cane. "Well, get out, young fellow, we're here."
Cochrane pressed the Open control and this time the door
swung up without being overridden by the chauffeur. The oppres-
sive humid heat of London in June enveloped him and made it
difficult to breathe. Humidity, thankfully, was not a problem on
Centauri B II, where most water came from underground reser-
voirs and there was only a single ocean, the Welcoming Sea, which
was no more than ten percent of the planet's surface. Cochrane
thought wistfully of the cool, dry air of his home.
"And where, exactly, is 'here'?" Cochrane asked as he looked
around. They were ringed by a tall circular structure. Looking up
at the dull orange glow of the low clouds reflecting the fires and
streetlights of London, he could see that they had entered the
structure through a large, irregular hole in its roof, at least a
hundred meters overhead. But with the limo's running lights
extinguished, there was not enough illumination to see what kind
of a structure it was.
"As I recall from an interview you once gave to the Times," Sir
John said as he walked around the Rolls to join Cochrane,
"you've been here several times before. As a child, I believe."
The chauffeur stepped out of the limo, being careful to keep the
interior lights switched off. Cochrane looked around again, his
eyes slowly adjusting to the lack of light. It came back to him in a
flash of recognition.
"Battersea Stadium." he said with a long-forgotten sense of
wonder. He heard his mother's voice complete the timeworn
phrase, "Home of the London Kings."
"Nail on the head," Sir John said approvingly. "Ghastly game
though. Can't say I'm sorry to see it go."
Cochrane peered into the darkness, wishing he could see more.
Back in the thirties, his mother had brought him here to watch
baseball games. Sitting in these stands, eating roasted peanuts and

FEDERATION

battered fish and cold greasy chips, and staring at the men and
women in white who were running around in incomprehensible
patterns on the artificial grass were some of his earliest memories.
Knowing what had happened to baseball, he guessed the stadium
had been shut down for years, even before the Optimum had
imposed restrictions on public events.
"Mr. Cochrane," the chauffeur asked, "do they have baseball
on Alpha CentauriT'
Cochrane looked at her closely for the first time. She was
surprisingly young, glossy brown hair sleeked under her cap,
expression serious. She reminded him of someone he had met
long ago. But there was something about the set of her large, dark
eves. even in the gloom, that also reminded him of Sir John.
~'Lacrosse, mostly," Cochrane said as he held out his hand.
'Call me Zefram, Ms .... ?"
She shook his hand politely. "Monica, please. Monica Burke."
'Granddaughter," Sir John confirmed. "A year away from
graduating medical school when the bloody Optimum closed the
universities."
~'There's a wonderful medical college in Copernicus City,"
Cochrane said. "I toured it when I was on the moon. Very
inspiring."
Monica Burke frowned. "Can't get travel papers." She took off
her cap and ran her hand across her thick, coiled braids. "And
besides. Grandfather and his friends need an errand girl from
time to time."
"And a doctor," Sir John added, standing next to his grand-
daughter. "'From time to time,' the network has run-ins with the
Optimum, and all weapons injuries must be reported to the
movcment's headquarters."
Cochrane sighed. It was like living in a war zone down here. But
as Brack would say, when had it been any other way? "May I ask
what we're waiting for?"
Cochrane could hear the smile in Sir John's voice, even if he
couldn't see it on his face. "A slightly more direct route back
home."
"An orbital transfer plane?" Cochrane said in disbelief. "Land-
ing here?"

81

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Sir John put his arm around his granddaughter. The smile was
still in his voice. "Not quite, but you've got the right idea. You
just wait."
Then, shockingly, for the first time in thirty-six years, since the
playing of the final game of the last World Series before a solemn
crowd of only three hundred die-hard fans, the night-lights of
Battersea Stadium flared on, bathing the stained and tattered
artificial playing field with harsh blue light.
Cochrane, Monica, and Sir John threw up their hands to shield
their suddenly blinded eyes.
"The fools!" Sir John breathed. "They don't need lights to
land!"
Cochrane tried to scan the opening in the torn fabric of the
stadium's roof, but it was hidden in darkness by the contrast with
the blazing lights that ringed the stands.
"We didn't wire this place," Monica said in matching alarm.
She moved in front of Sir John. "Get into the car, Grandfather.
We'll have to--"
A precise line of baseball-sized explosions stitched across the
field at the front of the Rolls, ripping across the gleaming black
hood over the engine compartment, shattering the Flying Lady
hood ornament, and continuing on to the ground on the other
side. Coolant vapor vented explosively from the punctured metal.
A shrill grinding noise rose sharply as the kinetic-storage flywheel
tore free from its severed moorings.
Years spent in space had honed Cochrane's reflexes to emergen-
cy situations and instantly he grabbed Monica and Sir John and
shoved them behind him.
Then the stadium's announcement system blared into life, and
on three sides gigantic viewscreens flickered with the first image
they had carried for decades. Despite the failure of a quarter of
the pixels on the screens, the striking face of the man who looked
down from them was unmistakable. Colonel Adrik Thorsen.
"Attention on the field," Thorsen said, his hoarse voice boom-
ing from all directions at once. "Under the provisions of the
Emergency Measures Act of 2076, you are under arrest. Those

FEDERATION

who resist will be contained. Those who cooperate will be dealt
with under optimal conditions."
"Monster," Sir John shouted, shaking with anger or fear,
Cochrane could not tell which. But Cochrane agreed with the
assessment, and at that moment, Cochrane saw his future clearly:
he would never leave Earth again.

83



FIVE

U.S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC-1701
IN TRANSIT TO BABEL
Stardate 3850.1
Earth Standard: Nevember 2267

For Kirk, there was no mistaking the disapproval in Spock's tone.
"Captain, there is a fine line between withholding the truth and
lying. It may well be that that line has been crossed."
Though under strict doctor's orders not to undertake strenuous
activity, Spock was in uniform again. McCoy had hurriedly
discharged him from sickbay while Kirk had met with Admiral
Kabreigny. It was ship's morning now, and Kirk, Spock, and
McCoy had gathered in the relative privacy of the captain's
quarters. Kirk's meeting with the admiral--confrontation, really
--had not gone well, as he had just recounted for his friends. And,
according to the admiral, he thought, fellow conspirators.
"I would never lie to Command," Kirk said coldly. The tension
between the captain and his first officer had been slowly escalating
through their discussion. They had had differences of opinion in
the past, and their friendship, in part, grew from the understand-
ing that addressing those differences often led to a new course of
thought or action, becoming a learning experience for two minds
dedicated to the pursuit of the best of which they were capable.
But Kirk's handling of their unexpected discovery of Zefram

FEDERATION

cochrane was threatening to become a real division between
them. offering no hope of conciliation.
For once, though, McCoy was the peacemaker. "We know
you'd never lie, Jim. But what we all agreed to six months ago just
~Joesn't seem to apply anymore."
Kirk made a fist and went to pound the bookshelf beside his
desk. But he stopped the action at the last instant so that he gently
tapped it instead, barely disturbing the antique books and statu-
ary arranged on it. This was not the time to lose control, no
matter how badly the wearing off of the tri-ox compound was
affecting him. He felt as if he needed to sleep for a week, but he
was the only one still standing in the room and he was determined
to keep it that way. These men were his friends, but at times like
these. his command of this ship must always take precedence.
"I gave Cochrane my word that I wouldn't tell anyone we had
found him," Kirk stated flatly. "And I won't."
McCoy was getting tired of the argument. "But you already
did, Jim. Your personal log. You set it all out there...
finding Cochrane... what happened to the commissioner
... everything."
"That log is for the historians," Kirk said. "It's sealed in the
Starfleet Archives. Not to be opened for a century." It had seemed
such an elegant solution at the time, Kirk remembered. Even
Spock had approved, if reluctantly.
Under Starfleet regulations, log officers were required to record
all details of activities relating to their duties. But Kirk had
argued to McCoy and Spock that their meeting with Cochrane did
not fall under those standing orders.
Clearly, their mission of stardate 3219 had been to transport
Commissioner Hedford to the Enterprise, treat her for Sakuro's
disease, then return her to Epsilon Canaris III. Clearly, they had
failed in their mission, but through no fault of their own. Kirk's
report to Command had described the conditions that had led to
that failure, without falsehood.
Kirk had reported that while en route to the Enterprise, the
shuttlecraft carrying himself, Spock, McCoy, and Hedford had
encountered an unknown energy field that affected guidance
COntrols and resulted in a forced landing on a planetoid in the

85



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Gamma Canaris region. By the time the En[erprise had located
the missing shuttle, Nancy Hedford had succumbed to her
affliction. In the interim, the energy field had dissipated, so there
was no reason to think that any other vessel in the area would ever
run afoul of that particular navigational hazard again. It was the
truth and nothing but the truth. Just not all of the truth.
Kirk had placed his name on the report without misgivings.
McCoy had signed a death certificate for the commissioner in
good conscience, not because her body had died, but because
Nancy Hedford no longer existed in the strict sense of the word.
At least, not as she used to exist.
With his duty to Starfleet discharged, Kirk had then turned
himself to fulfilling his duty to history in a way that Starfleet
officially encouraged.
Starship captains had a way of being on hand when history was
made, and some aspects of important events were best left
unreported for a time. History might record that a peace treaty
was signed on a particular date at a particular place, but for the
participants, it was best if some years passed before the starship
captain in attendance made public any personal observations
about those people involved. Let the moment of glory be cele-
brated before details about a diplomat's marital problems, or a
general's predilection for Antarean brandy, became public knowl-
edge.
To insure discretion, but to encourage the preservation of
historical facts, Starfleet maintained a system of sealed, personal
logs. Officers were free to record their unique, non-duty-related
observations and opinions, then deposit those records in the
Starfleet Archives on Earth's moon with a note indicating how
long they should remain sealed--a century was usual if only
because humans were so long-lived these days.
It was in such a log that James T. Kirk had recorded every detail
of his encounter with Zefram Cochrane. For now, the brilliant
scientist's remaining years would be undisturbed, and his fate
would remain a mystery, just as he had wished and Kirk had
promised. But a century on, when Kirk's record was released, to
the delight of historians the mystery would be solved. Any
resulting mission to Cochrane's planetold would uncover only a

FEDERATION

siinple shelter cannibalized from an antique ship, an overgrown
garden gone to seed, and the skeletons of two people who had
lived out their lives together, untroubled and bound by love.
..Acceptable," Spock had declared six months ago when the
captain had laid out his compromise. Even McCoy had said it
sounded almost logical, grimacing as he did so.
But as of now, upon hearing what Admiral Kabreigny had
related to Kirk, Spock had changed his mind. "I submit that the
point of such secrecy is moot," he said. He sat with folded arms
on the other side of the desk from the captain. McCoy sat beside
him. his medical kit on the desk beside the viewer. "We agreed to
withhold purely personal, nonessential facts from Starfleet Com-
mand. based on the assumption that what the Companion did to
the Ga/i/eo, and to Commissioner Hedford, would never be
repeated. However, with the disappearance of the Cio, of Utopia
Planilia under similar circumstances in the same region of space,
logic compels us to consider the possibility that the Companion is
once again a threat."
"She was never a threat," Kirk insisted. "What she did was
without malice. She loved Cochrane. Cochrane was lonely. So she
brought him visitors. The Companion didn't know about
Sakuro's disease."
"On Vulcan, norsehla[ also have no conception of right or
wrong. yet we do not allow them to eat our citizens." "What's a norsehlat?" McCoy asked.
"A type of Vulcan wolf," Kirk answered. But he kept his
attention on Spock. "I don't give a damn what logic compels us to
do in this case. When the Companion... merged, or whatever
she did with the commissioner, she lost her powers. She couldn't
keep us on the planetoid anymore. So how can she be responsible
for the liner's disappearance.'?"
'~The Companion is an energy-based life-form unlike any ever
encountered. It is improbable that we know the full extent of her
pOWers given the short time we had to study her."
Kirk and Spock stared at each other, neither willing to move
from their position. Kirk knew the only way to break the impasse
~as to pull rank and issue an order. But McCoy stepped into the
fra~ again.

87



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"Jim's right, Spock. I certainly got the impression that her
bonding with the commissioner was permanent. What was that
she said.. ?" McCoy looked up to the ceiling of the small room.
"'Now we are human. We will know the change of the days. We
will know death.' That sounds awfully permanent to me."
Kirk was thankful the argument would not escalate further. He
gave his science officer a conciliatory smile. "Two to one, Mr.
Spock."
But Spock was unimpressed. "I doubt Admiral Kabreigny will
embrace the notion of command by democratic vote."
McCoy added, "How did you leave it with her, Jim?"
Kirk tried to think of the simplest way to put it. He had spent
two and a half hours with the admiral, going over his original
report, word by word. Kabreigny had acted as if she believed
some information was being withheld, but Kirk had been able to
answer all her objections in detail. "Let's call it a bluff," he
decided. He directed his attention to his science officer again. "I
know as well as you do that if there is any indication that the
Companion is once again capable of threatening space vessels,
that I can withhold nothing from Command. No matter what I
promised to Cochrane. But for now, there's no evidence--" Kirk
saw Spock about to protest and qualified his terms. "--not
enough evidence to convince me that's what's happened." He
took a deep breath as a sudden wave of fatigue rushed through
him. "I managed to convince the admiral that there was a slight
possibility that a second energy field similar to the one we
encountered has manifested in the Gamma Canaris region, and
because of our previous experience with it, the Enterprise is the
ship to investigate."
"And how did you explain the message from a 'dead woman'?"
Spock added, with so little inflection that the irony was readily
apparent.
"I didn't," Kirk said simply. "Because I can't. Obviously the
'S
Compamon using the subspace transmitter we beamed down
with the other supplies before we left. But since it's a secure
unit--so Cochrane could use it without giving away his location
--there's no way Command can track the signal from a distance.",
"The admiral must have asked for some kind of theory,

88

FEDERATION

Mc('oy insisted. Kirk could see the doctor wasn't comfortable
with the idea of patients he had certified dead turning up in a
subspace transmission. Kirk doubted Starfieet's Medical Branch
~ould be impressed, either.
But there were larger issues to be worried about here. "I told the
admh'al that before the Commissioner's death, she was badly
affected by her encounter with the energy field. What we're seeing
might be another manifestation of that field, re-creating an
c~sence of the commissioner."
Mc('oy frowned skeptically"You think she believed you7"
"Not a hope in hell," Kirk confessed. "But I wasn't expecting
heF to."
"'~gu ~xcre just buying time," Spock commented.
Kirk leaned against the edge of the bookshelf, too tired to stand.
"Spock. there's nothing wrong with buying time at this point. I
think the admiral is just playing out the line, hoping to reel me in
xvhen whatever scheme she thinks I'm involved in explodes in my
face."
McCov stood up and moved around the desk to the captain,
medical scanner in hand. "Did she say what kind of a scheme she
thought that would be?"
Kirk leaned his head back against the bulkhead as if the
artificial gravity in his quarters had been turned up to three g's.
"Something 'worthy of a starship captain,' she told me. It seems
the good admiral is not all that taken with the officers in charge of
xvhat she feels should be the cutting edge of scientific explora-
tion."
Spock remained seated. "Admiral Kabreigny was instrumental
in having the Intrepid placed under the auspices of the Vulcan
Science Academy."
McCoy kept his eyes on his scanner as he moved it over Kirk's
chest. "That's the ship with the completely Vulcan crew, isn't it?"
"Correct, Doctor. I believe the Vulcan approach to scientific
investigation is closer to the admiral's view of how Starfleet
should be run. 'Any military operation is automatically a fail-
ure'" Spock had quoted an old Starfleet adage.
"And 'The most expensive army in the world is the one that's
Second best.'" Kirk countered. It was an old debate in Starfleet

89



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
and would likely remain so. There was little chance that Kirk and
Spock would settle it here and now. "Spock, we don't need to have
this argument. You know as well as I do the balancing act Starfleet
has to put on between its military and scientific missions. So far, I
think it's working."
"Captain, for Starfleet to have success in any of its missions,
each member must act consistently in the manner laid out by
Command."
Kirk stared at Spock, knowing what had to come next. It did.
Spock said, "I believe you should tell the admiral the complete
details of our encounter with the Companion and Mr. Cochrane."
Kirk didn't think he was going to last much longer, and McCoy
was making no move to get another miracle from his medical kit.
Kirk knew he'd have to recuperate from the tri-ox on his own. He
struggled to keep his mind focused. "I've already said that telling
the admiral everything was an option, Spock. When circum-
stances warrant. Instead of sticking so blindly to what you think is
the most logical course of events, why not give me the benefit of
the doubt for a few hours?"
"I do not see what that would accomplish. In a few hours, we
will have arrived at the site of the Babel Conference. Once the
diplomats and dignitaries have been accommodated there, I
presume we will go directly to the Gamma Canaris region."
"Exactly. Whatever I tell the admiral, we're going to end up at
Gamma Canaris anyway. So why say anything I don't have to?"
McCoy agreed. "Put your damned logic to use, Spock. Assume
for the moment that the captain is right--that the Companion is
still merged with Commissioner Hedford and no longer has the
power to divert space vessels. Now tell us, under those conditions,
what happened to the liner?"
Spock took on the manner of a stern Academy lecturer. "Logic
is not a poker game, Doctor. We cannot change initial conditions
with a new deal of the cards. Whatever happened to the liner must
be connected to the Companion's message to Captain Kirk. She
said, 'The man is lost.' The Companion called Cochrane 'the
man.' If he is lost, then it is logical to assume that she is looking
for him. To look for him, she might require a space vessel."
Kirk felt his head begin to pound with the effort of remaining

FEDERATION

upright. "What if the connection goes the other way?" he asked.
'What if the liner's disappearance is linked to Cochrane being
'lost.' and not to anything the Companion might have done?"
Spock raised both eyebrows to indicate how preposterous the
idea was. "Cochrane had no way to leave the planetold. He could
not have interfered with the liner."
"What about the other way around?" McCoy said. "Somebody
got the liner, and used it to go after Cochrane."
Spock looked away. "That would presuppose that your hypo-
thetical 'somebody' knew Cochrane was on the planetoid. And no
one has that information except the three of us."
"Not necessarily," Kirk said. He could hear his voice fading as
quickly as his strength. "The information is in my private log."
"The Enterprise's computers are quite secure," Spock said. He
had customized most of the starship's computer programs, and it
would be a point of personal, if emotional, pride to him that no
unauthorized access to restricted files could occur.
But that wasn't what Kirk had meant. "What about Starfleet
Archives?"
Spock's serene demeanor faltered for a moment, an indication
of his surprise.
Kirk pressed on with his sudden revelation. "Is there any way
you can check on the security of the archives without doing
anything that would arouse Kabreigny's suspicions that addition-
al information might be found there?"
Spock considered the request. "Informally, I believe there are
one or two avenues open to me." "How long?" Kirk asked.
"Since it would not be advisable to transmit my requests as
priority messages, I estimate that responses to initial inquiries
xvill take several hours." Kirk saw Spock become aware of McCoy
staring at him expectantly. "Seven point two hours, to be pre-
cise." Spock said, regarding McCoy with detached curiosity.
MeCov smiled. "I knew you couldn't leave it at 'several
hours.' '"
"Really, Doctor. I hardly--"
Kirk wouldn't let them get started. "Do it, Spock." If the ship
had been under attack by Klingons, Kirk knew he could keep his

91



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
eyes open for a few minutes longer. McCoy might even risk
another shot of tri-ox. But there was no immediate crisis here. It
would be safe to let his body start to heal itself. He began to relax
his concentration. "How long till we reach Babel?"
"Eight point--" Spock looked at McCoy. "Approximately
eight hours," he said. Then he added, "More or less."
Kirk saw McCoy's expression of consternation. He hoped his
two officers wouldn't do anything foolish while he was indisposed.
"Let me know as soon as you learn anything about the archives,
Spock. And, Doctor, somehow I have to be in condition to speak
to the delegates before they leave."
McCoy nodded. "A few hours' sleep will work wonders. If
Spock doesn't get word from the archives first, I'll look in on you
before we reach Babel."
"Fair enough," Kirk said. "We'll reconvene then." Then he
waited until Spock and McCoy had left his quarters before he
allowed himself to walk around the room divider to his bed, lie
back, and close his eyes.
As he let his mind drift, Kirk thought of Cochrane. Spending
four months alone in a converted interplanetary scoutship,
making the first faster-than-light voyage to Alpha Centauri.
Without subspace sensors or communications, the scientist had
been forced to drop out of warp every five days to fix his location
and adjust his course. Without dilithium crystals he had run his
warp-field generators at less than fifty percent efficiency. Without
Starfleet behind him or a Federation to cheer him on, he had
journeyed to the stars.
Cochrane was a real hero, Kirk thought, and Kirk could never
think of himself that way. Not with the power and grace of the
Enterprise to carry him through the void. Not with the dedication
of a crew of 430, committed to following his every order. What
was heroic about that? Where was the real excitement of interstel-
lar exploration today?
Gone, Kirk thought. Those days of true adventure are a hundred
years in the past, when everything was new. He had an image of
himself as a small speck riding the expanding surface of an
impossibly thin bubble. The stars rushed past him, but it was the
bubble that was doing all the work. He remembered a long

FEDERATION

sumlner's afternoon as a child, lying under a tree with his brother,
Sam. waving a wand dipped in soap, watching the glistening
spheres they made ride the sun-warmed currents, floating into the
sky of Iowa, so overwhelming, so enveloping.
But those days were long behind him, Kirk knew. Childhood.
Bubbles. Cochrane. All his thoughts arranged in chaos, he fell
asleep--

--and awoke what seemed an instant later as the computer told
him Spock was outside, waiting to come in.
Kirk asked the computer the time and it told him. He had been
sleeping for just under six hours. He got up, told the computer to
switch on the lights, told it to open the doors.
Spock entered, as direct as a Klingon, not even inquiring about
the captain's condition. "Twenty-seven days ago, an explosion
interrupted main and auxiliary power at the Starfleet Archives at
Aldrin City. All security systems were down for forty-two min-
utes. Several storage areas were exposed to vacuum when pressure
locks failed."
"Including the storage area containing my personal log," Kirk
concluded.
"The storage cylinder containing your personal log was out of
place upon the restoration of power. Several others were as well.
Whether any of them were the main target of what appears to
have been an attempt to breach the security of the archives is
unknown."
"It sounds as if the 'attempt' succeeded," Kirk said. "Do they
know what caused the explosion?"
"My sources do not know," Spock said. "Though Starfleet
Securitv's investigation is ongoing with the cooperation of the
Lunar Police."
"Conclusion, Mr. Spock?"
The science officer looked uncomfortable. "There is a possibili-
tx that a person or persons unknown have read the contents of
.~Our personal log and learned of the continued existence of
Zefram Cochrane."
"And went after him," Kirk said.
"Captain. I can think of no reason why. Despite his genius, his

93



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
original work has been eclipsed many times over by the scientists
and engineers who followed in his footsteps."
"Just because we can't think of a reason, Spock, that doesn't
mean someone else can't."
Kirk was wide awake and alert. The knife wound still ached in
his back, but the aftereffects of the tri-ox were gone. He had a new
mission. He felt it was time to start living again.
Someone else had learned the whereabouts of Zefram Cochrane
and gone after him, most probably not for good reasons.
And Kirk couldn't shake the feeling that he himself was to
blame.

SIX

U. S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC- 1701-O
STANDARD ORBIT LEGARA IV
Stardate 43920.6
Earth Standard: ~ May 2366

The Romulan Warbird filled the main viewscreen, its sweeping
curves and lines giving it the look of a predator about to spring
forth from the distant cloud bands of Legara IV. The wavering
optical haze of the ship's cloaking device still clung to it as Picard
and Riker rushed onto the bridge. Picard thought it odd that the
ship was still decloaking, given the time it had taken him to reach
the bridge, but it wasn't the time to stop to question what he saw.
Data jumped from the captain's chair, relinquishing command.
Red Alert warning lights flashed silently. "As soon as sensors
perceived a decloaking pattern I ordered Red Alert," he reported.
"Our shields are at maximum. The Romulan is not responding to
our hails."
"Weapons report on the Warbird," Riker called as he swung his
command console into its ready position.
"Romulan weapons are not on-line," Worf growled from his
tactical station directly behind and above the command chairs.
The powerfully built Klingon moved his fingers over his consoles
~ith the grace of a concert pianist. "We have not even been
Scanned, Commander."

95



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Picard and Riker exchanged a quick glance. "That's not a
standard Romulan procedure," Riker said.
Picard stepped up behind Ops. Ensign McKnight could handle
that station during Red Alert, so Data wasn't needed at his usual
post. But a replacement was needed for navigation. "Mr. Data,
take the conn." In an instant, Acting Ensign Wesley Crusher
slipped out of his chair to be replaced by Data. The look of relief
on the teenager's face was evident. Piloting the Enterprise in
standard orbit was one thing, but facing a potentially hostile
vessel with the same responsibility was another. Picard kept his
attention on the screen as his crew responded smoothly and
efficiently around him. "Ops, magnify the Warbird. Keep our
weapons off-line, as well, Mr. Worf."
"But, Captain, this could be a Romulan trick to--"
Picard held up his hand to silence his security officer. On the
viewscreen, the image of the Warbird wavered; then a full third of
it expanded to the edges of the screen. But the image still rippled
and would not come into sharp focus.
"Is there a problem with the viewer?" Picard asked.
At her Ops station, Ensign McKnight reset the optical enhanc-
ers on the ship's main sensors. "Main viewscreen is within
operational tolerances, Captain."
Data spoke quickly before Picard could ask another question.
from
Captain, I believe we are detecting residual cloaking bleed
the Romulan vessel."
Picard wrinkled his brow. "'Residual cloaking bleed'? I've
never heard of it."
"Until now, it has only been detected in high-speed, optical
sensor scans of decloaking vessels. Usually, it appears for only a
few tenths of a second when the cloaking field is switched off."
"Is the ship damaged?" Riker asked.
'~I do not know, sir. However, it would appear that some part of
its cloaking device is not operating correctly."
Picard stepped back to confer with Riker. "What do you make
of this?"
Riker's expression indicated he was neither impressed nor
concerned. "It's not answering our hails. It's not making any

T

FEDERATION

demands. lfit were any other kind of ship, I'd scan it for life signs,
but the Romulans might mistake that as preparation for locking
our weapons. Then again, as long as its cloaking device is
operational. it can't fire its weapons."
,'Captain Picard," Data said. "The Warbird is cloaking."
On the viewscreen, the ominous green ship began to ripple as if
seen through water. But it didn't disappear entirely. After a few
seconds. the rippling effect lessened again.
"My mistake, sir," Data amended. "It appears to have been a
power surge in its defensive systems."
Picard turned as Counselor Troi hurried onto the bridge. She
~ore a shimmering blue Parrises Squares uniform and her face
was flushed. The Red Alert had obviously caught her at practice
on the holodeck. She stared at the bizarre image on the screen as
the Warbird faded out of and into view again. "Are they in trouble?" she asked.
"I was hoping you could tell me, Counselor," Picard answered.
Troi took a deep breath and her face fell into an expression of
concentration. "Without a screen image to focus on, it's difficult
reading anything at this distance." Her eyes focused on something
beyond the confines of the bridge. "I'm sensing... that's odd."
She looked at Picard with an apologetic frown. "I'm not sensing
anything from the Romulan ship, Captain. I'm only picking up
the crew of the Enterprise."
Picard frowned. "Is it possible the whole Romulan crew is
incapacitated?" He turned to Worf, waiting impatiently at his
console at the back of the bridge. "Mr. Worf, I think we're going to
have to risk a sensor scan. Make it as low-power and as brief as
.~ou can. But I want to know about the general health of the crew
aboard--"
"Just a minute," Riker interrupted. He reached down beside
McKnight at Ops and tapped the viewscreen's enhancement
controls. "Those aren't Romulan markings .... "
Picard stared at the viewscreen as it went into its enhancement
mode, freezing pixels of clear optical information in each refresh
cscle until a still picture of the Warbird, free of residual cloaking
bleed. began to fill in.

97



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS ~!
"They're Ferengi," Riker said.
Picard didn't bother to hide his surprise; the evidence was there
before him. Instead of the blocky, vertical calligraphy of the
Romulans, erablazoned on the Warbird's hull were the branching,
hard-angled, bidirectional ideograms of the Ferengi Alliance.
"Can you read it, Will?" Picard knew his first officer had taken
advanced courses in the language and engineering philosophies of
nonaligned worlds. If he ever found himself on a Ferengi ship, he
could most likely pilot it.
Riker squinted at the screen as the image became sharper. "I
believe it says, 'The 62nd Rule.'"
"Commander Riker is correct," Data said.
"Any idea what that might mean?" Picard asked.
Data's eyes momentarily flashed to the side as he exhausted his
onboard data banks and accessed the Enterprise's main comput-
er. "None at all, sir. Perhaps it has a mythical connotation."
"Unlikely for a Ferengi name," Riker said. "And what the hell
is it doing on the side of a Romulan Warbird?"
cloaking bleed is
,,
Captain, Data announced, "the residual
diminishing. It appears they have their cloaking system under
control."
"Go to main viewer," Picard said.
"Shall we go to Yellow Alert?" Riker asked.
Picard shook his head. He knew that the Ferengi were officially
considered to be less of a threat than the Romulans. Romulans
were known to shoot first and ask questions later. The Ferengi,
though, often tried to beguile or outbargain their victims first,
then shoot.
But Picard still remembered the incident at the Maxia Zeta Star
System, which the Ferengi insisted on calling the Battle of Maxia.
Eleven years earlier Picard had lost his ship, the Stargazer, after
an unprovoked attack by a Ferengi Marauder-class vessel. Picard
had managed to destroy the attacker before being forced to
abandon ship, but the shocking savagery of the unexpected
encounter would forever color his dealings with the Ferengi.
"We'll stay on Red Alert until we find out what they're up to,"
Picard said.
98

FEDERATION

Worf announced that the Warbird was finally responding to his
hail.
The captain pointed to the main viewscreen. "Put it onscreen,
Mr. Worf."
The Warbird image was replaced by the grinning face of a
Ferengi DaiMon, obviously if surprisingly the commander of the
Romulan vessel. He was male--spacegoing Ferengi were a/wa);s
male, as they never allowed their females to leave the homeworld
--and his enlarged cranial lobes glistened with sweat as the
hand-sized ears framing his pinched face dripped with rivulets of
the same.
Picard did not need Trot to tell him the Ferengi was agitated
about something. Which was just as well. Betazoids could not
form empathic or telepathic impressions of Ferengi, which sug-
gested that the Romulan ship had a completely Ferengi crew.
Why. or even how, such a thing could be possible, Picard did not
venture a guess. He hoped the Ferengi would tell him. "This is
Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Starship Enterprise. Are you in
need of assistance?"
The Ferengi drew himself up, as imperiously as a Ferengi could
manage. and through twisted teeth said, "What makes you think I
am in need of hew-man assistance, Captain Jean-Luc P--"
The image of the DaiMon dissolved in a burst of static and was
instantly replaced by the forward view of the Warbird.
"We have lost their signal," Worf reported. "They no longer
appear to be transmitting."
Riker smiled, a mischievous glint in his eye. "What do you
~vant to bet they stole it?"
Picard considered the possibility for a moment, but rejected it.
"Not even the Ferengi could be so brazen." He sat down in his
chair Danger seemed less imminent each moment, but he still
~asn't ready to step down from Red Alert.
But Trot was apparently not convinced by the captain's certain-
~v. "Though I can't read the DaiMon's emotional state, I heard no
~ense of guilt in his voice, Captain." She sat down in her chair to
the captain's left.
Riker took his own position to the right. "Deanna, a Ferengi

99



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
wouldn't feel guilt about stealing a starship from a Romulan. I
doubt a Ferengi would feel guilt about stealing a crust of bread
- rs"
from his starving mother. If they have motne Picard spoke over his shoulder. "Can we pick up anything at all,
Mr. Worf?. Perhaps intercept their intraship communications?
Under the circumstances, I think we can risk a more powerful
sensor scan. If we keep it brief."
Worf sounded perplexed. "I am detecting no intraship commu-
nications in use, Captain." There was a flash from the screen and
when Picard looked back at it, every interior and running light on
the Warbird had gone out, followed a moment later by the slow
fading of its green propulsion generators. "In fact," Worf contin-
ued, "I am now detecting no power usage at all."
Riker reacted with urgency. "Full sensor scan, Mr. Worf. I want
to know if they've lost containment of their warp core. All
transporter rooms stand by for emergency evacuation of the
Romulan vessel."
Data interjected, "Excuse me, Commander, but it is not known
if the D'deridex-class vessels employ warp cores.
"Then find out if they've lost containment on anything," Riker
amended.
But by the time he had finished speaking, the Warbird's
running and interior lights were back, and its propulsion glow
intensified.
"Warbird power back on-line," Worf said. "We have reacquired
their signal."
"Riker to transporter rooms: Stand by."
The viewscreen image changed again as the Enterprise resumed
communication with the Romulan ship. The Ferengi DaiMon
was caught hissing at someone out of the visual scanner's range,
off to his side. He instantly recovered as he realized Picard was
watching, and a patently false smile grew over his face.
"I repeat," Picard said, making no attempt to hide his own
Q*,
smile, "are you in need of assmtance,
The DalMon leered into the scanner. "We have not come to ask
assistance, Captain Pee-card. We have come to offer it."
Picard looked from Riker to Troi in an unspoken poll of their
opinions.
100

FEDERATION

Riker leaned forward in his chair. "Whom do we have the
pleasure of addressing?"
The Ferengi's tiny eyes narrowed suspiciously. "I am Pol,
DaiMon of this vessel."
"And how do you come to be in possession of a Romulan
military vessel. DaiMon Pol?" Riker's gaze was riveted on the
Ferengi's image. Picard did the same. Something was definitely
not right here.
The Ferengi's lips drew back from his pointed teeth. "By the
most fundamental law of the universe, hew-man.' Everything has a
price."
Picard heard a beep from the tactical console behind him,
indicating that the audio portion of their signal to the Warbird
had been cut.
Worf spoke: "Captain, I recommend a full sensor sweep of the
Warbird. This could be an unprecedented opportunity to study
Romulan technical capabilities."
Picard nodded. The Warbird was obviously stolen and it
appeared likely that its Ferengi crew had neither the training nor
the experience to use it to launch a realistic attack on the
E~m'rl,'ixe. "Make it so," he said to Worf. To Riker he added,
"And let's try to keep the DaiMon busy while the scan's under-
~3,'av."
The tactical console beeped again as audio was restored.
"DaiMon Pol," Riker began. "The Enterprise is in no need of
any form of assistance. You have nothing which we would like to
or need to buy."
Picard's face tightened in alarm. He stood up, looked at Worf,
and drew his fingers quickly across his neck, signaling for the
audio to be cut again. Then he spoke to Riker with his back to the
,~creen.
"I said keep him busy, not break off negotiations."
Riker looked hurt. "I am negotiating, Captain. In the Ferengi
tradition."
Picard had had better things to do in his career than to study
the economic traditions of the Ferengi. But as long as his first
officer felt he knew what he was doing, though it seemed rash this
time, Picard was still inclined to trust him. He cleared his throat.

101



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"Very well, Number One. By all means continue." He nodded at
Worf to restore audio once again.
"--and what you say might very well be true," DaiMon Pol
said, finishing his reply to Riker's opening volley. "But the
assistance we have to offer is something which will have great
value to some motivated buyer. If not the Federation, then
- c),,
perhaps the... Romulan t:mp~re.
Picard saw the look that flashed over Riker's face. A game of
negotiation was all well and good if it involved just a small matter
of one ship dealing with another. But the Ferengi had invoked the
name of the Federation, suggesting the stakes might be higher
than Picard had first thought.
"Let me take this," Picard told Riker. He stood up and
approached the screen. Behind him, Worf muttered softly that the
sensor scan was underway.
"I am curious, DaiMon Pol," Picard began. "What could the
Ferengi Alliance have that might be of any assistance to the entire
Federation?"
"This is not an Alliance matter," the DaiMon hissed angrily.
He suddenly looked off to the side, blinked in consternation, then
barked out another command in his own language.
"The Warbird's shields are up," Worf said more loudly. "Full
power. Our sensors can barely penetrate them." "I
DaiMon Pol dropped any pretense of being a friendly trader.
did not come here to be insulted, Pee-card. If you wish to know
the secrets of this vessel, you will have to pay for them like any
respectful buyer. But you are fools indeed if you do not realize
that there are other, greater concerns facing your Federation than
the weapons of the Romulan Empire."
Riker stepped up behind Picard and spoke in a whisper. "He
seems to be in a hurry to make a deal. Too much of a hurry."
Picard understood what Riker meant. If the Warbird were
stolen, the Ferengi could not very well make an offer to sell
whatever he had to the Romulans, without risking automatic
execution for piracy. Picard turned back to Riker so his face was
hidden from the screen, and whispered in return. "Perhaps we
have a motivated seller."
Picard faced the inexplicably nervous Ferengi again. It was

FEDERATION

time to find out how much of what the DaiMon was saying was
hyperbole, and how much was truth.
' .'What do y'ou believe is of more concern to the Federation than
the ~eapons of the Romulan Empire?" Picard asked.
DaiMon Pol hesitated a moment. A sly smile began to grow.
But then he shook off the expression in anger and snapped his
fin~ers at someone offscreen.
Y\ second display area on the screen appeared beside the
Fcrengi, displaying an image of a mechanical object.
Picard had a sudden flash of recognition. And of fear.
The object on the screen was an artifact--a dark and twisted
assemblage of power conduits, junction boxes, weapon nodes,
and hull metal laid out in a perverse system of maniacally
redundant engineering. Picard had first seen its stvle of construc-
tion more than a year ago, at System J-25, seven thousand
light-years from the Federation's boundaries.
Whatever the object on the screen was, there was no doubt as to
its origins. It had been created by the greatest threat the Federa-
tion had ever faced. A threat that even now was moving forward
through space toward the Federation's borders as Starfleet under-
took the largest defensive buildup in the history of Earth and a
thousand other worlds.
That threat was the Borg.
No member of the Federation had ever managed to lay hands
on any sizable artifact of the Borg's alien manufacture. The object
on the screen might just hold the secrets of how to defeat them
and save the Federation from assimilation into the Borg Collec-
tive.
Picard knew that whatever the price, he had to acquire that
artifact.
And judging from the smirk on DaiMon Pol's pinched face, the
Ferengi knew it. too.

103



SEVEN

LONDON, OPTIMAL REPUBLIC OF
GREAT BRITAIN, EARTH
Earth Standard: June 21, 2078

Colonel Adrik Thorsen held out his hand to Zefram Cochrane
with a friendly, cheery smile. "Mr. Cochrane, as you must know,"
he said affably, "I have been looking forward to the pleasure of
this meeting for a long time."
But Cochrane remained seated, his hands on the arms of the old
wooden chair. He only stared at Thorsen, seeing the pale,
handsome face he had seen a thousand times on update transmis-
sions, fiche, and the networks--icy blue eyes, sleek blond hair,
short in a military style, all the attributes of a demigod, a
deranged fiend.
Thorsen slowly lowered his hand with a self-deprecating grin of
good humor. If he felt slighted by Cochrane's rejection, he didn't
show it. "I think we have a great deal to talk about" was all he
said, in the slightly raspy voice that invariably made people strain
to listen carefully, lest they miss anything, creating the impression
that everything he said was worth hearing. Then he sat down on
the desk behind him and made an offhand gesture to the guard
behind Cochrane to step out into the hallway.
"Where's Sir John?" Cochrane demanded. "And his driver?"
"They're simply waiting in another office," Thorsen said easily.

104

FEDERATION

-'And believe me, I'm not comfortable holding them. But, I have
to tell you, by avoiding that checkpoint... I don't know,
Zefram. The mood of the citizens today. They don't want to think
that the rich and the privileged are above the law." He grinned
obscenelY. it seemed to Cochrane, as if he were speaking as one
equal to another. "And who can blame them, hmm?"
Cochrane remembered the citizens he had seen lined against a
x~all by' the Fourth World mercenaries. "What's the penalty for
avoiding a checkpoint?"
For the first time, Cochrane saw a glimmer of the real Thorsen.
The man's face became expressionless, just for an instant, as if its
mask had slid aside. But the practiced smile, perfected for the
interyielders and the public, returned just as quickly. "Hard to
say. I'm no expert on these matters. It all depends on mitigating
circumstances, doesn't it?" Thorsen stood up again, glanced
away. adding, "If there are any, of course."
Cochrane stared at Thorsen as he in turn studied the posters on
the wall. The office was in an underground section of the
Battersea Stadium. Flat photographs of old baseball players with
their bats and gloves were faded behind dust-streaked glass.
Newson, Jein, Delgado, Bokai... the names again stirred mem-
ories from Cochrane's youth. A youth that increasingly seemed
centuries past, not merely decades.
"It is a pity we're not meeting under more favorable circum-
stances." Thorsen said. He reached out to straighten a crooked
team photograph of the Manchester Druids. "I've been getting
the impression--surely unintended--that you've been trying to
avoid me."
'q have been."
Thorsen paused to regard Cochrane, then walked slowly,
menacingly, around him, returning to sit down behind the
desk of some nameless administrator, long retired, along with
the sport he had served. He folded his graceful, beautifully
shaped hands before him on the writing surface. The office
~vas lit with retrofitted emergency fixtures and the strong
light from overhead cast clark shadows across his finely featured
face. When he spoke, it was as if the words came from a
death's-head.

105



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Yet here you are at at last."
"Only because six of your zombies held fistguns on me."
"These are dangerous times, Mr. Cochrane. It would not serve
the Republic well if it was learned that a noted visitor such as
yourself had come to harm here."
Cochrane didn't understand the game Thorsen was playing.
Nor did he care to learn what it was. "So now that I'm safe, am I
free to go?"
Thorsen opened his hands. "Of course you're free to go. Any
time."
To test the theory, Cochrane stood.
Thorsen remained seated. "Of course, I would appreciate a few
moments to talk with you, but.. 7' "But what?"
"Nothing. I have work to do, too, Mr. Cochrane. These are busy
times for the Republic. For the whole planet for that matter. And
you were just a passenger in the limousine." Thorsen sighed, as
if with the burden of his office--an office which he had taken,
not been given. "Of course, at some point, Sir John and
his... 'driver' will have to be interrogated. And my troopers can
sometimes get... carried away in their zealous pursuit of perfec-
tion." Thorsen's mask slipped again. "Shall I call for an escort so
you can be on your way?"
Cochrane remained standing. "I want to leave with Sir John
and his driver."
Thorsen's voice slowly colored with a terrible, restrained fury.
"And I would like to talk with you, sir. As I have wanted to talk
with you for the past seventeen years. You at least owe me that
much common courtesy if you expect me to show the same
toward your friends."
Cochrane sat down.
Thorsen's calm returned. "Better," he said.
"What do you want to talk about?"
"'The time has come, the walrus said,' hmm?" Thorsen replied
playfully. His anger seemed to have vanished as quickly as it had
appeared. "And what I want to talk about is... you and me. But
I know we're both busy men. In fact, I know a great deal about
you." Thorsen pursed his lips and stared down at his folded hands

106

FEDERATION

as if checking unseen notes. "To begin, you were born in what
used to be the United States."
"The last I heard it was still there," Cochrane said with a slight
edge to his own voice. This man was dangerous, but Cochrane
had difficulty accepting that Earth now allowed such arrogance as
Yhorsen's to so routinely threaten others' well-being.
"Things change, Mr. Cochrane. Like your life. Raised in
Hawaii. in London, India, Seoul--your parents were teachers,
weren't they, traveling the world? Then education at MIT."
Thorsen glanced up to give Cochrane a significant look. "Left
after three years, no degree. Genius is seldom appreciated, as I
well know. Then to Kashishowa Station on the moon, thanks to a
grant from Brack Interplanetary. And finally swallowed up by
useless. self-indulgent, private industry."
Cochrane locked eyes with Thorsen. "I go where my work takes
Hie."
"Does that include Centauri B II?" Thorsen smiled horribly.
Cochrane did not look away although he wanted to, desperately.
"Alpha Centauri is my home," Cochrane stated with an inward
shudder at the thought of this man's beliefs ever invading his
world. It had taken four years to establish a self-sufficient farming
community there that could support a fully equipped continuum-
distortion research facility, and now the small colony was thriv-
ing. Cochrane was perhaps the first human to have ever said that
another world was his home, but it was true.
"I am so sorry to hear that, especially from you." Thorsen
fro~vned slightly in disapproval. "I'm sure you're aware that the
sentiment here on my home is that anyone who leaves Earth in
these turbulent, troubled times is a coward, if not an outright
traitor, for abandoning one's birthplace at the time of her greatest
need."
Cochrane knew the argument all too well. Years ago, when he
had finally decided to accept Micah Brack's offer and establish a
Cull5' equipped facility on Alpha Centauri, he had taken part in the
same debate a dozen times over, arguing from the other side,
Thorsen's side. In the end, Brack had convinced him otherwise.
And for the right reasons. Modern technology had made Earth
too Small. For humanity to survive, it was imperative that it leave

107



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

its cradle and establish itself on other worlds around other suns.
That way, Brack had finally persuaded Cochrane, even the
destruction of an entire planet, by nature or by folly, would not
doom the species.
"It is tragically wrong to believe that the advancement of
humanity must proceed at the pace of its slowest members,"
Cochrane said forcefully, thinking how ironic Brack would find
this moment.
Thorsen looked troubled. He cracked his knuckles and the
sudden noise in the tense, silent room startled Cochrane. "Are
you suggesting that because I care about my home, because I care
about saving the planet instead of abandoning it, that I am
somehow holding back the species?"
Cochrane was tiring of Thorsen's game and the wretched
restraint it required of him. "I am suggesting that your Optimum
Movement has brought Earth to the brink of destruction and that
because there are functioning, independent colonies on other
planets, the species will survive despite your insanity."
The corner of Thorsen's mouth twitched. "Because of my deep
and abiding respect for your work, sir, I will overlook such
treasonous slander. But I do suggest you choose your next words
more carefully. As a friend of Sir John's, anything you say will be
held against him. And his driver. With most unpleasant conse-
quences."
Cochrane resisted the impulse to strike the sneer from
Thorsen's handsome face. But this tyranny had to end. Someone
had to take a stand.
"Just what is it you want from me?"
Thorsen stared intently at Cochrane, as if to bend the scientist
to his will by the force of his obsession. "I want you to help your
real home, Mr. Cochrane. I want you to contribute to Earth
instead of sucking it dry and abandoning it."
"I have helped Earth. There's an interstellar community grow-
ing. New economic possibilities for mutual expansion. A whole
new--"
Thorsen suddenly slammed his palm against the desktop,
making Cochrane jump. "A whole new mentality that says

108

FEDERATION

because Earth is no longer unique, it is permissible for it to be
destroyed!"
"It's your Optimum Movement that's doing that," Cochrane
snapped.
"On the contrary, sir--it is your greed and selfishness that is at
fault."
Cochrane gripped the arms of his chair in frustration and rage.
This man was stupid as well as venal. "Then what do you want me
to do'?! Go out and ask everyone to give back their super-
impellors? Tell the colonists there's been a mistake and would
the>' all like to come back to Earth now?"
"Don't be infantile," Thorsen said coldly. There was more
open threat in his manner now than there ever had been.
Cochrane forced himself to calmly try again. There had to be
something he could do to help Sir John and Monica, and everyone
else this lunatic held hostage. "You say you want me to
contribute... then tell me how."
"I want, quite simply, the secret of the continuum-distortion
generator."
Cochrane stared at Thorsen, not understanding the request.
"Complete information on the superimpellor is available in any
library. Through the Cochrane Foundation, you can download
plans for fifty different models at no charge. You can buy parts or
fully assembled units or even complete spacecraft from a hundred
different companies. Hell, man, if you've got fifty thousand
Eurodollars for parts and two graduate students, you can build
one for yourself in a week. Is that what all this is about?"
Thorsen's reply was slow and measured. "You misunderstand
me again, Mr. Cochrane. It's becoming a bit of a habit with you,
isn't it'?" Cochrane felt the hair on his arms bristle. He saw
insanity in Thorsen's empty blue eyes.
"I am not interested in escaping from Earth. Your fluctuating
superimpellor holds no interest for me as a mode of transporta-
tion. But the continuum-distortion generator at the heart of it
does."
Cochrane knew he had to be extremely careful. For Sir John's
and Monica's sake, he couldn't risk raising his voice again, not the

109



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

way Thorsen was looking at him now. "Again, sir--the plans for
my generator are available from any library, or from my Founda-
tion, free of charge."
"I have been patient for seventeen years, Mr. Cochrane. Please,
p/ease, don't make me lose patience with you now."
Cochrane continued with as much composure as he could. It
was obvious that Thorsen was about to reach some kind of
decision point. "Then with respect, Colonel Thorsen, allow me to
say that I do not understand your request. What exactly is it that
you want.'?"
Thorsen stood up, leaned forward on his knuckles, his face
completely hidden in shadow.
"I want the secret of the warp bomb, Mr. Cochrane. And if you
expect yourself and your friends to live to see the dawn, you will
give it to me now."
Of all the emotions Cochrane felt at that moment, the most
powerful was relief. He knew how precarious his position was, but
at least he finally knew why Thorsen had pursued him with such
obsession. And that obsession had been for nothing.
Cochrane looked at the madman with a steady gaze. "There is
no such thing as a 'warp bomb,'" he said. "Listen to me carefully:
That's an old, senseless rumor without a particle of truth to it."
But Adrik Thorsen shook his head. "On August 8, 2053, a
pressurized dome one hundred kilometers from Kashishowa
Station literally... disappeared from the face of the moon."
Cochrane sighed. It seemed that old tale would haunt him
forever. Shortly after that event, he had appeared at a hearing of
the Lunar Safety Board. His testimony had lasted for three days.
Weapons research was not allowed on the moon, which is how the
rumors had presumably begun. His residency permit was threat-
ened with suspension. But he had been able to convince the board
that his work was not weapons-related. In fact, the explosion was
proof that the continuum-distortion generator he was trying to
perfect as a precursor to the superimpellor had no possible
military application.
'Tll say it again, Colonel Thorsen: The destruction of that test
facility was the result of the failure of the lithium converter and

110

FEDERATION

the resulting uncontrolled mixing of matter and ant/matter. The
instability of lithium under these conditions is probably the single
biggest problem we've still to overcome in regulating the intense
energy flow we need."
Thorsen stared fiercely, uncomprehendingly, at Cochrane, and
the scientist could see that the soldier was not willing to let go of
his dream so easily. "Yet your own testimony at the hearings
confirmed the total absence of radiation traces. You are a scien-
tist. sir: How is it that matter and ant/matter can annihilate each
other willlout the creation of prodigious amounts of ionizing
radiation?"
Cochrane struggled to maintain control. Not just for himself
but for Sir John and his granddaughter. "If you had reviewed all
of my testimony before the board, you would know the answer to
that. An engineering failure created a runaway continuum distor-
tion that made everything within it vanish from normal space-
t i me-- including the radiation."
Cochrane leaned forward, drawing the outline of the asymmet-
rical distortion field with his hands, as if he were back in the lab
talking to students. "It's a simple concept," he said frantically,
trying to reduce physics only a handful of people truly understood
to something Thorsen would grasp. "The radiation created by the
matter-ant/matter reaction traveled outward from the point of
annihilation at the speed of light. However, the momentary surge
in power to the continuum-distortion bubble, in the two
Emroseconds the generator remained intact, propagated at one
poiu~ .~/x times the speed of light--faster than the radiation.
When the bubble was pulled out of normal space-time by the
proximity of the sun's gravitational distortion, eveo, lhing within
it was pulled out of space-time, too. Including the generator, the
explosion. and all radialion released by the explosion."
Thorsen narrowed his eyes. "Leaving behind a perfect, hemi-
spherical crater in the lunar surface with a diameter of eighteen
meters. beyond which nothing was disturbed." Thorsen rose
slox~lx and walked around to the front of the desk again. "You do
understand that you created the perfect weapon, don't you?"
Even the dim emergency lights were enough to reveal the cruelty

111



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

in his eyes. "Complete destruction of the target, with no radiation
fallout, no blast effects. The ultimate surgical strike guaranteed
not to produce unwanted civilian casualties."
"You're not listening," Cochrane pleaded. "It doesn't matter
how big a generator you build, or how powerful you make it, all
you will ever get out of it is a bubble of displaced space-time
eighteen meters in diameter. This close to the sun, that's as large
as the continuum-distortion bubble can grow before it no longer
exists in space-time."
Thorsen gazed steadily at Cochrane, as if willing him to change
what he knew to be true. "I never thought you would be a fool
who suffered from a lack of imagination, Mr. Cochrane. Your
superimpellors regularly travel at what velocity now? Sixty-four
times the speed of light? Earth to Alpha Centauri in a little less
than a month? What kind of hole would you have left on the
moon if your distortion bubble had propagated at that speed? I'll
tell you: half a kilometer. If you boost it by another of your time
multiplier factors: three-quarters of a kilometer. And by another
factor: almost a kilometer and a half of complete destruction.
With no collateral damage!"
"What you are suggesting is impossible," Cochrane stated
firmly, though his heart sank as he realized why he had become so
important to Thorsen's demented vision of Earth's future. "I
haven't been able to prove it yet, but I suspect it's because the
sun's gravity creates wormholes when continuum-distortion
fields are formed too close. Empirical experiments show that near
Earth, the distortion field can only ever be eighteen meters in
diameter no matter how fast it propagates. On Mercury, it would
be no more than six meters across. Out by Neptune, perhaps one
hundred meters. Any farther out, and you have continuum-
distortion propulsion. The sun's gravity is the limiting factor. Not
technology."
Thorsen loomed over Cochrane, casting his shadow across him.
"I have read your research, sir! I know for a fact you are working
to control the size of the field. I know for a fact you can control the
size of the field!"
"To make it smaller," Cochrane insisted. "So superimpellors
can operate more closely to a star. So we can use it planet to planet

112

FEDERATION

instead of system to system. Someday we might even be able to
launch from the surface of a planet with them.
'The whole trick is to shape the region of distortion around the
spacecraft. I can increase the efiYciency and the operational range
of the superimpellor within a gravity well. All I need to do is
create an alternating series of overlapping fields. Each field helps
shape the other at finer resolutions. Look at the designs of most of
the ships--two generators balanced like a tuning fork offset to
either side of the center of transitional mass. I have nothing at all
to do with that. My engineers have nothing to do with that. It's the
nature of the continuum."
Thorsen stepped back to lean against his desk again. He
regarded Cochrane thoughtfully. "As I have said, I have read your
papers. I have studied your work and your life. I even admire your
mind. I consider your accomplishments to be the hallmark of
what the Optimum Movement is striving to become--what it
,zu~f become if this world, if humanity, is to survive." He rubbed
the bridge of his nose as if he had gone too long without sleep.
"But the Optimum has enemies, sir. Ignorant cowards who would
have us huddling by fires in caves, afraid of what lies outside, and
of each other." He looked away, seemingly lost in remembrance
of some secret regret. "Those enemies attack us even now. They
rail)' against us across the globe. No matter how hard I try to bring
enlightenment and a new order to the world, they' want to stop
me, throw away everything I have achieved."
Thorsen looked at Cochrane as if inviting him to reply, to offer
encouragement. But Cochrane restrained himself from saying
anything. He knew who the Optimum's enemies were: decent
women and men who had the courage to stand up to fanatics, who
believed that order could never come out of any group that
governed by exclusion, prejudice, hatred, and genocide.
"A warp bomb could save us, Mr. Cochrane. With such a
weapon. purely for self-defense, no one would dare attack us. War
would at last become unthinkable."
Cochrane stared at Thorsen with incredulity, hearing the man
sax exactIx, what Micah Brack had predicted would be said,
though un~ter different circumstances.
"Colonel Thorsen," Cochrane said slowly, "even if a warp

113



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

bomb were possible, if it were the only thing that would keep the
Optimum Movement in power, I would rather die than build it
for you."
Thorsen reached into the breast pocket of his blood-red jump-
suit and withdrew a local net phone from his pocket--a slender,
pen-shaped object with a tip that glowed green when he twisted it
on. He glanced at Cochrane and his mouth flickered up into a
ghastly approximation of a smile. "Even if you resist me, Mr.
Cochrane, you are too valuable to die. For now. But, fortunately,
there are many other nonoptimal people available to take your
place."
"This is Colonel Thorsen," he said into his net phone, as if with
great reluctance. "Mr. Cochrane and I appear to have reached a
deadlock which must be broken. Bring in the old man. And his
driver."

114

EIGHT

U, $, S, VTPRI$N C C - 1701
STANDARD ORBIT BABEL PLANETOlD
Stardate 3850.7
Earth Standard: ~ November 2267

As he entered the transporter room, Ambassador Sarek's face was
tinged with a greenish cast, the perfect picture of Vulcan health,
completely recovered from McCoy's surgery. At the ambassador's
side, Amanda, his human wife, walked with a placid smile. The
other delegates given passage on the Enterprise had already
beamed down or had been taken by shuttle to the Babel planetoid.
Only Sarek and Amanda remained.
Kirk, uncomfortable in his dress uniform, had been look-
ing forward to a final meeting with the ambassador. But the pres-
ence of Admiral Kabreigny had forced him to scale back his
expectations. The admiral was impatient to get under way
for the Gamma Canaris region and there would be little time
tbr Kirk and Sarek to converse. The presence of the transporter
technician behind the console would also constrain what could
be said.
"Ambassador Sarek," Kirk said formally, "though I wish the
circumstances had been less trying, it has been a pleasure having
~ou aboard."
Sarek nodded his head respectfully. "The voyage has been most
interesting,, he allowed. Then he looked tellingly at Spock,

115



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

standing at Kirk's side, between the captain and McCoy. "And
most productive."
Spock and Sarek regarded each other impassively, but Amanda
beamed. "I would take that as a supreme compliment, Captain."
"I'm pleased to have contributed in any way to ... what has
transpired," Kirk said. In deference to his science officer he tried
not to match Amanda's emotional display. Prior to this voyage,
Spock and his father had not spoken in eighteen years, and
Amanda was clearly delighted that the impasse between her
husband and son was at an end.
Kirk became aware of Admiral Kabreigny looking at Sarek in
agitation. Kirk realized the admiral had no idea what the ambas-
sador and his wife were talking about. That suited Kirk. He
decided to add to her confusion.
"And I look forward to having you aboard again," Kirk
continued, "especially so I can have a chance to win back some of
Dr. McCoy's tongue depressors."
With an air of complete detachment, Sarek said, "You can try,
Captain."
Kirk kept track of the admiral's look of extreme confusion. As
far as he was concerned, Sarek had just made a joke.
With the same unchanging expression, Sarek addressed
McCoy. "Dr. McCoy, I find your surgical skills to be satisfac-
tory."
Kirk watched as McCoy's grin faded. "Satisfactory" was not
the accolade he apparently had been expecting to hear from a
patient whose life he had saved under exceptionally trying
circumstances. But before he could register his dissatisfaction,
Spock quickly addressed him. "I will explain later, Doctor."
Then it was Spock's turn to say farewell to his parents. "Father,
I wish you success at the conference."
"That is not logical, Spock. Your wishes will not affect the
outcome."
"But as someone who respects the Federation and your posi-
tion on the question of the Coridan Admission, it is logical for me
to have those wishes."
"Undoubtedly. But why do you find it necessary to share them
with me when they can have no part in what I must do?"

116

FEDERATION

"I do not find it necessary. I merely state them so you may
know your logic is supported by independent analysis." "I see. It is a logical position."
Amanda sighed with a happy smile. "Just like the old days.
Thank you. Captain. And Dr. McCoy--" She stepped up to the
doctor and gave him a hug, leaving him with a large Southern
smile of his own. "--thank you for all you've done for Sarek."
She glanced back at her unsmiling husband. "We are both deeply
appreciative."
Then Amanda stood in front of Spock, and Kirk could see the
internal struggle she underwent, forcing herself not to hug her son
as well. "I do hope you'll come home the next time you're on
leave. There's so much to catch up on."
"I do write as often as I can, Mother."
Amanda smiled at her son, a smile warm enough for both of
them. "That's not the same and I know you know it."
Sarek held out his hand, extending only his first two fingers.
"My wife, attend me." With an expression of peace, Amanda
joined her fingers with her husband's in the traditional way for a
married Vulcan couple to physically interact in public. Sarek held
up his other hand, parting his middle fingers in the familiar
salute. "Live long and prosper, my son."
Spock returned the salute, and in a tone equally devoid of
emotion. replied, "Peace and long life, Father."
"Dr. McCoy has seen to that," the ambassador replied; then he
stepped up on the transporter platform, Amanda at his side.
Kirk and McCoy gave their own versions of the salute--McCoy
still couldn't get his fingers to behave--and Kirk gave the order to
energize.
When Sarek and Amanda had departed, Spock turned to
McCov and raised an eyebrow. "Doctor, I have never seen my
father'so full of gratitude."
McCoy's own face screwed up in confusion. "That was grati-
tude'?"
"Of profound depth. In addition, I have never seen him behave
in such an emotional manner in public."
"Emotional?"

117



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Spook held his hands behind his back. "For whatever reason,
my father seems to have become quite taken by you." McCoy turned to Kirk. "This is a joke, right?"
But it was Admiral Kabreigny who answered. "Vulcans don't
joke, Doctor."
Kirk was surprised to hear the admiral say that. She obviously
didn't know Vulcans the way he did. Vulcans might not under-
stand human humor, but they had their own version of it, Kirk
was sure.
The admiral glared at Kirk. "And now that this... family
reunion or whatever it was is over, your duties at Babel are
completed, Captain."
Kirk went to the intercom panel by the door and called the
bridge. Sulu answered. "Lay in a course for the Gamma Canaris
region," Kirk said. "Proceed when ready, warp factor seven."
Sulu acknowledged, and by the time Kirk had rejoined the
admiral, he could already hear the distant thrum of the Cochrane
generators begin to resonate through his ship. Warp factor seven
would be a strain, and undoubtedly Mr. Scott would complain
after a few days, but the speed would bring the Enterprise to her
destination in less than a week.
But Kabreigny said, "Warp factor seven isn't good enough,
Captain. There are one hundred and two crew and passengers on
the P[anitia."
Starfleet admiral or not, Kirk did not take kindly to officers
attempting to give him orders on his own ship. "I'm certain that if
Command thought their lives were in real danger, then other
ships would have gone to the region before now, instead of
waiting for the Enterprise."
Kabreigny pursed her lips in stern disapproval and a network of
fine wrinkles formed around them. "Since when is it your job to
guess what Command thinks?"
Kirk replied with equal forcefulness. "Since I took command of
this ship, Admiral, and was given standing orders to interpret the
laws and regulations of the Federation and Starfleet whenever 1
am outside the range of timely communication with both--which
is just about all the time."
Kabreigny stepped closer to Kirk, staring up at him furiously.

118

FEDERATION

"I am Starfleet Command on this ship, Captain. And we are in
communication. The Enterprise isn't a private yacht for your own
amusement--for games with tongue depressors."
Kirk made one of the hardest command decisions he had made
in months: he kept his mouth shut.
"Warp factor eight, Captain. Unless you've let standards on
board the Enterprise drop so low you don't think she can
maintain it."
"Is that an order, Admiral?" The ship could manage warp eight
for brief periods of time, but it strained all systems, as well as the
ship's structure.
"You're damned right it is."
"Then we'll go to warp factor eight at my chief engineer's
discretion. And I shall also log my objection to the unnecessary
risk to which your order has exposed this ship and crew."
Unexpectedly, Kabreigny almost grinned. She was clearly an
officer who thrived on confrontation. "Noted, Captain. I will look
forward to any board of inquiry you care to call." Then, before
Kirk could try to get the last word, Kabreigny turned her back on
him and left the transporter room.
Kirk stared at the doors as they slid shut behind her. McCoy
came to stand by his side.
"How's your back, Captain?" He obviously thought there was
more to Kirk's foul mood than the provocation of the admiral's
curt manner.
But Kirk ignored the question, just as he ignored the constant
low-level pain around the knife wound. He thought McCoy was
on the right track, but from the wrong side. "There's something
more to Admiral Kabreigny's presence on this ship than that
missing liner. isn't there?" Kirk said.
McCov didn't reply until Spock had dismissed the transporter
technician and the three senior officers were alone.
"The message from Nancy Hedford can't be going down too
xvell at Command, either," the doctor said.
But Kirk shook his head. "No, even more than that. Her whole
confrontational manner... I know she's got a reputation for
being abrasive, single-minded, determined to get her way no
matter what the cost..."

119



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"They let people like that into Starfleet?" McCoy interrupted
with an innocent expression.
Kirk narrowed his eyes at the doctor's idea of a joke. He
preferred Sarek's dry wit, instead. He turned to his science oflScer.
"Mr. Spock, those... friends of yours who informed you
about the explosion at Starfleet Archives, do you think they might
be able to shed some light on the admiral?" "In what sense, Captain?"
Kirk frowned thoughtfully. "Any special projects she might be
involved in, special interests... anything that might explain
what appears to be her overreaction to that liner's disappearance
and the message from the commissioner."
McCoy put his hand on Kirk's arm in a cautioning gesture. "Is
it an overreaction?" he asked.
Kirk was certain. "On the surface, the worst thing I could be
guilty of is failing to report a navigational hazard and conspiring
with my ship's surgeon to hide the true cause of death for an
important passenger. From Command's point of view, those are
serious charges. But not as serious as the admiral is making them
out to be."
"You don't suppose she knows anything about Cochrane, do
you?" McCoy asked.
Kirk shrugged. "What if she does? As Spock said, he's little
more than a historical curiosity. His desire for privacy is so he can
avoid the onslaught of historians he'd be subjected to." Then Kirk
caught sight of Spock's expression, as if he were about to speak.
"You don't agree?"
"Could it be possible that Cochrane has another reason for
keeping his whereabouts secret?"
McCoy rolled his eyes. "Like what? An ex-wife waiting
for... what did they call it back then... 'alimony,' Mr.
Spock?"
Kirk agreed with McCoy's assessment. "As far as anyone else
knows, he's been dead for one hundred and fifty years."
"As I recall," Spock continued, "history does not record much
detail about the nature of his disappearance."
Kirk didn't like his idea being sidetracked. "He was eighty-
seven years old, Spock. He told us himself he was going to die and

120

FEDERATION

he wanted to die in space. That sounds like a man who had made
a deliberate decision to break off with the details of living. I doubt
he had any unfinished business."
Spock studied Kirk and McCoy for a few moments, then
appeared to make his own decision. "Nonetheless, I shall investi-
gate both avenues: Admiral Kabreigny's interest in these matters,
~md the nature of Zefram Cochrane's latter years, prior to his
disappearance."
"At warp eight, you've got less than seventy-two hours," Kirk
said. "Which reminds me, I should be hearing from Mr. Scott
right about--"
The intercom signaled and Chief Engineer Scott's agitated
voice said. "Captain Kirk to Engineering."
Kirk went back to the wall panel, hit the Send switch. "Go
ahead, Scotty."
"Captain, Admiral Kabreigny was just here--in the engine
room. sir. And she says we're t' make warp eight all the way t'
Ganmla Canaris."
"Is the Enwrprise up to it, Mr. Scott?"
"Ave. Captain. Warp eight and a wee bit more if you'll be
needing it."
"Then what's the problem?" Kirk asked.
"No problem, sir. It's just that..." Scott obviously couldn't
bring himself to admit the reason for his call.
"I understand, Scotty," Kirk said. "Your orders are con-
firmed."
Scott quickly replied, "I wasn't looking for confirmation,
Captain."
"I know" Kirk said with a smile. "No Starfleet officer would
need to check the orders of an admiral." "Absolutely not, sir."
"But off the record, Mr. Scott, there's good reason to push the
engines to warp eight," Kirk z~id. "The admiral is not taking
them for granted."
The relief in Scott's voice was unmistakable. "OFF the record,
thank ye. sir. Scott out."
"Off' the record," McCoy added, "I'd say the admiral is not
endearing herself to too many of the crew."

121

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Off the record," Spock said, "I shall endeavor to find out
why."
"And on the record," Kirk said, "I don't believe there is good
reason to strain this ship. So for the Enterprise's sake, and the
admiral's, Mr. Spock, I hope you do come up with something."
"I would prefer not to," Spock said. To Kirk's unvoiced
question, he added, "As things stand now, the only logical
explanation for the admiral's behavior would be most distress-
ing." But he would not elaborate further, and left Kirk and
McCoy in the transporter room, alone to wonder what Spock
knew, and when they would learn it.

122

NINE

U.S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
STANDARD ORBIT LEGARA IV
Stardate 43920.6
Earth Standard: May 2366

Picard touched the communicator at his chest and called for
Engineering. Lieutenant Commander Geordi La Forge responded
immediately.
~'Mr. La Forge, I want your opinion of the artifact being
displayed on the main viewscreen." "Calling it up now, Captain."
The chief engineer's disembodied voice was the single one
heard in the silence of the bridge. The only other sound was the
pervasive background whisper of the Enterprise's many systems.
Everyone else had recognized the provenance of the artifact the
Ferengi had displayed and which now filled the entire viewscreen,
but Picard knew his crew remained silent in order not to interfere
~ith their captain's negotiations with DaiMon Pol.
La Forge whistled. "I know what it looks like, Captain. Part of a
Borg ship. Any idea what scale we're dealing with?" Picard spoke to the empty air. "DaiMon Pol--"
As quickly as that the Ferengi was back on the main screen.
"You have our attention," Picard admitted. "Can you provide
any details as to the size, location, and operational status of the
object you have shown us?"

123



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

The Ferengi settled back in his own version of a captain's chair.
Unfortunately, it was designed for the larger frame of a Romulan
and gave the impression of a child in a grown-up's seat. Picard
could imagine the Ferengi's feet swinging back and forth above
the deck.
"Because I like you, Pee-card, I will give you some information,
even though this generous offer on my part cannot profit me in
any way." The grin had returned. The DaiMon obviously felt he
had regained control of the negotiations. "The object's mass is
forty-five point three five kilotonnes. And it has no operational
status, though it does have a functioning power supply. The
location, alas, is something I, as a poor though honest trader,
must keep to myself. At least, for now." The Ferengi's grin
broadened for a moment, then became an insincere frown. "But,
if you are not interested, you are not interested. Such is the woeful
lot of a trader. However, if there is anything else I might be able to
provide for you or your crew... Romulan ale, Deltan
holochips... anything at all, please do not hesitate to call upon
me. I shall remain in orbit of Legara IV for, let us say, one
standard hour." DaiMon Pol's image winked out, replaced by a
forward view of the Warbird. It was crisp and steady. Whatever
had earlier been wrong with its cloaking device had apparently
been rectified.
Picard turned to face his crew. "Lieutenant Worfi Send a
priority message to Admiral J.P. Hanson, Starbase 324. Inform
the admiral that a Ferengi trader has offered us the opportunity to
'purchase' what appears to be a sizable and inactive section of a
Borg vessel. Transmit the visual image DaiMon Pol showed us."
Picard tugged on the bottom of his tunic. "Senior officers, to the
observation lounge." He had an hour. It was time to plan strategy.

In the observation lounge, Legara IV moved slowly past the
windows and the image of the Borg artifact was displayed on the
main wall viewer. But everyone's attention was on the captain.
"At this distance from Starbase 324, we will not hear back from
Admiral Hanson before DaiMon Pol's time limit is up," Picard
said. "Which is a shame, because the admiral is leading the effort
to prepare the Fleet for the inevitable arrival of the Borg."

124

FEDERATION

"I think we can assume that the admiral will want that artifact,
whatever the price," Riker added thoughtfully.
"Oh, I agree, Number One. But don't let DaiMon Pol hear
those words, 'at any price,' because that's exactly what he'll
charge."
"Not necessarily," Riker replied. Picard and the other officers
at the conference table waited expectantly. La Forge had arrived
from Engineering, Dr. Crusher from sickbay, and Worf from his
tactical console. Counselor Troi was still in her Parrises Squares
uniform. but her face had returned to its usual, less florid color.
Data sat beside her.
"Please. Continue," Picard said.
Riker did. "I agree with your assessment of DaiMon Pol's
chances of conducting business with the Romulans. That ship is
obviously stolen and the Ferengi are having a hard time operating
her. There's no doubt that the Romulans have had their own
run-ins with the Borg, and would dearly love to get hold of that
Borg artifact. But they'd dearly love to get hold of DaiMon Pol as
well, so we might well be his only customer."
"Which will put us in a powerful negotiating position," Troi
concluded.
"However," Data added, "if there is even the slightest possibili-
ty of DaiMon Pol selling the artifact to the Romulans, I suggest
we do all that we can to prevent their acquisition of it. If the
Federation obtains the artifact and learns from it a suitable
defense against the Borg, then the Federation will share that
information with the Romulans and, indeed, with all the non-
aligned systems. If the Romulans do the same, their past record
indicates that they will not be as forthcoming."
Worf looked troubled. "Why should the Ferengi want to sell the
artifact': Why not examine it themselves, come up with defensive
strategies. and sell those instead?"
Data responded. "The sum of known Ferengi science and
technology is basically an elaborate collection of devices and
knowledge which they have acquired from other cultures. They
have no strong research and development capability of their
OWn."

"So," Riker continued, "it's to their advantage to sell it to us

125



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

because we stand a better chance of unlocking the Borg's secrets
before anyone else." He smiled at the captain. "Our position is
looking better all the time."
But La Forge raised an objection. "There is another possibility,
Commander. What if the Ferengi have already examined the
artifact and found out it's just junk? Instead of throwing it away,
they're trying to cheat us."
"Or," Dr. Crusher added, giving Picard a skeptical look from
beneath her vibrant red hair, "the Ferengi are attempting to sell
the same artifact to a number of different buyers at the same
time."
Troi looked surprised. "I wouldn't have thought of that."
"You're not as devious as the doctor," Riker said with a grin.
"But the Ferengi are," Picard stated. Then he saw his officers'
amused expressions. "Um, sorry, Dr. Crusher. Not quite what I
meant."
"In anv case," Troi suggested, trying not to smile, "I recom-
mend we'ask DaiMon Pol to let us see the artifact for ourselves.
To be certain no one else has made off with it."
"And," La Forge added, "to be sure it's something more
worthwhile than a twisted hunk of old Borg plumbing."
Picard looked around the table. Each of his senior officers had
stated his or her view, and he sorted them now to determine the
best course of action. He had found that that was generally the
one course which did the least to limit future options.
"Very well," Picard concluded. "We shall ask DaiMon Pol to
take us to the location of the artifact so we can examine it prior to
making our offer."
"And if he refuses?" Riker asked.
Troi answered. "Then I would tell him that we interpret his
refusal as an indication that the artifact is no longer in his
possession, or is a fraud, or contains nothing of value. If it is any
of those things, the DaiMon will continue to refuse, and we will
have lost nothing. If it is a legitimate Borg artifact of scientific
interest and the DaiMon does take us to it, then we will have cost
him time. And the longer he remains in that stolen ship, the more
anxious he will be to sell."
"I agree," Picard said. "And since we're not due at Betazed for

FEDERATION

at least two more weeks, we have some time to pursue this
negotiation." The captain folded his hands on the table before
him. "So... now that we know what we're going to do, all we
need is a negotiating stance to get us the best possible deal. Any
suggestions?" he asked.
As he expected, everyone spoke at once.

'-Impossible!" DaiMon Pol exclaimed. "If we tell you where the
item is. you will steal it!"
Riker leaned close to Picard and whispered, "What he means
is. in our position, the Ferengi would steal it."
The DaiMon obviously overheard Riker's comment and ap-
peared shocked. "It would not be stealing, hew-man. It would
simply be exploiting a negotiating advantage. There is no crime in
that."
Picard remained seated in his chair at the center of the bridge.
Troi. now in her Starfleet uniform, and Riker were in their usual
command positions, Dr. Crusher was to the side, and all three
otScers also remained seated. Riker had suggested that standing
up to address the Ferengi might indicate an unseemly eagerness to
close the deal.
"We have stated our concerns, DaiMon," Picard said flatly. He
covered his mouth as he yawned, one of Troi's contributions to
their negotiation tactics. "We do have an interest in acquiring the
artifact you have shown us, primarily to see if it might be a
smaller part of the other pieces of Borg technology already in the
Federation's possession." That had been Dr. Crusher's sugges-
tion, implying that the Ferengi's offer to sell the artifact did not
represent an all-or-nothing opportunity for the Federation.
DaiMon Pol narrowed his tiny eyes skeptically. "If the Federa-
tion has other pieces of Borg technology, then why has the
Alliance not heard about it?"
Picard saw Rik-r lean forward with a wide smile and let him
take the rejoinder. "Perhaps because the Federation pays Ferengi
spies more than the Ferengi do," he said.
DaiMon Pol clamped his mouth shut, outraged by Riker's
suggestion.
"I repeat, DaiMon Pol," Picard said. "We are willing to buy the

127



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
artifact. And we are authorized to act on behalf of the Federation
in this matter. But we must examine it--ourselves--in order to
be certain it is what you represent it to be."
"I am crushed, Captain Pee-card, that there is so little trust in
you."
"And I am in a hurry, DaiMon Pol. Do you wish to sell to us or
not?" Picard made a show of turning around and saying, "Mr.
Worf, alert Engineering to prepare the warp engines. We'll be on
our way soon." Picard could see it took Worf a moment to realize
the odd request was part of the negotiating tactics. Except during
scheduled maintenance, the Enterprise's warp engines were al-
ways on standby mode. And Mr. La Forge was sitting almost
directly behind Worf at the propulsion station.
"Aye-aye, Captain Picard," Worf replied heartily. "I shall
certainly inform Engineering that the engines must be ready for
immediate departure at once. I will do so now."
Picard frowned at the Klingon's overacting, but decided it
would do no harm. He turned back to the screen.
"This is not a question of trust," Picard explained to the
Ferengi commander. "It is a question of timing. The Enterprise
has a schedule to keep and unless we become involved in serious
negotiations, we must keep it. However, in the interests of
fairness and better relations between the Federation and the
Ferengi Alliance, we can make arrangements for another Federa-
tion starship to rendezvous with you, in say..." Picard glanced
at Riker. "Four weeks, would you say, Number One?" The time
delav had been Mr. La Forge's contribution. He said the DaiMon
wouid froth at the mouth to see a deal slip through his fingers
because of a scheduling conflict.
"More like five weeks," Riker said seriously.
Picard nodded, as if disappointed. "Five weeks it is, Number
One." He looked expectantly at the screen. "If that would be
convenient?"
Apparently, it wouldn't be. "Very well, very well," the DaiMon
complained. "I shall escort you to the artifact's location. But
there will be conditions."
"How can there be conditions if we haven't even begun to
negotiate?" Riker said in surprise. He turned to Picard. "Captain,

FEDERATION

wc really should leave this to a Federation commercial negotiat-
ing team. Besides, they've been trained on Vulcan so they'd
probably be able to get a better deal than we ever would." Mr.
Data had come up with that particular addition to the overall
strategy. Why should the DaiMon want to wait for experts if he
might be able to get a more generous price right now?
"Conditions? Did I say conditions?" DaiMon Pol said quickly.
He laughed quickly, insincerely. "I meant to say suggestions. Just
a l'c,x suggestions to make things go ... more smoothly. Faster,
evell."
Picard gave the Ferengi a cheery smile. "Ah, splendid. And
what suggestions might those be?"
DaiMon Pol looked pained. "Um, so I can be sure there is
no... ill intent on your part, you will not use your ship's main
sensors to examine the artifact. After all," he added quickly, "that
could tell you everything you need to know and then where would
I be'?"
Picard frowned. "DaiMon, really--the whole point of this
exercise is that we must examine the artifact before we buy it."
"And you shall," the Ferengi said hurriedly. "But with hand-
held tricorders. Optical sensors, even. You can crawl all over it if
you wish to. But if you don't buy it, you... will have to give the
tricorder records back to us."
Picard looked at Troi and Riker. Though no one else would be
able to read the subtle signals, both officers agreed.
"Very well," Picard said. "We accept your 'suggestions.'"
The Ferengi emitted a large sigh for such a small being. "That
xvasn't so difficult, was it?" he asked, almost plaintively.
"Not for us," Riker said quietly through unmoving lips.
"Now." Picard said, "how far away is this artifact?"
DaiMon Pol wav?d a finger at someone offscreen. "Transmit-
ting coordinates now, Captain Pee-card."
Data spoke up from the conn. "We have received coordinates
for a point approximately three light-years distant. sir. It appears
to be deep space. No astronomical bodies of note have been
charted there."
"DaiMon," Picard asked, "is this the location where you found
~he artifact. or where you have hidden it?"

129



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
The Ferengi grinned as for the first time in an hour he clearly
realized he was truly back in control. "When you have completed
your purchase, Captain, I shall of course be more than happy to
answer all your questions. But for now, I 'suggest' you follow me."
The transmission ended.
Picard stood up and stretched his back. "How did we do?" he
asked his officers.
"I believe the threat of a Vulcan-trained negotiating team
strengthened our position considerably," Data offered.
"I'd say it was the time-constraint issue that really got a rise out
of him," La Forge suggested.
"I was watching him carefully," Dr. Crusher said. "When he
heard that the Federation had other pieces of Borg technology,
that's when he started to fold."
Picard eyed his officers, each having given credit to her or his
own tactic. "And what is your opinion, Mr. Worf?." The Klingon's
suggestion had been to' send a boarding party to the stolen
Romulan vessel, capture the Ferengi crew, then offer them
immunity from extradition to the Romulan Empire in return for
the artifact's location. In the meantime, the Romulan ship could
be taken back to the Utopia Planitia Fleet Yards for reverse
engineering. He had offered to lead the boarding party personally.
Unfortunately, Picard had told him, Starfleet tended to frown
on acts of piracy, even when they were committed against pirates.
"My opinion," Worf answered, "is that we are being led into a
trap."
Troi looked up at the Klingon. "Worf, you think that about
everything."
"It is my job to be prepared," Worf conceded. "But why should
the Ferengi leave a potentially valuable artifact unguarded in
deep space?"
"We don't know that it's unguarded," Riker said.
Worfgave him a withering stare. "I know it is unguarded. I have
scanned the coordinates the Ferengi provided. There are no
vessels of appreciable size anywhere near them."
"Can you detect an artifact there, Mr. Worf?" Picard asked.
"If it is of the mass DaiMon Pol told us, it would not register at
this distance."

FEDERATION

"Then how can it be a trap?" Riker asked.
Worf frowned grimly. "The Ferengi are an exceptionally tricky
species."
"Does anyone have any other interpretations of events?"
Picard asked. Sometimes when his senior officers went after each
other like this. he felt more like the captain of a debating team
than a starship. But their quest for excellence could not be
faulted. and they were always supportive.
"l'd say it's a test," La Forge said.
"A test?" Riker repeated.
'Makes sense," the engineer continued. "The Enterprise is at
least two factors faster than a D'deridex-class Warbird. If we
x~anted to. we could get to those coordinates a good five hours
bctbre I)aiMon Pol, and he's got to know it."
Picard had to admit that assessment did make sense. "So you're
suggesting that he's just giving us what is no more than a
rendezvous point. To see if our intentions are pure."
La Forge nodded, then patted Worf on the shoulder. "Either
that or it's a trap."
Captain Picard surveyed his officers with appreciation. "I am in
axve ol'vour ability to think devious thoughts, every one of you,"
he ~old them. "You must have brutal poker games."
"Alx~avs room for a fresh victim," Riker said charmingly, "if
xou'd ever care to join us."
Picard opened his mouth to answer, then stopped. There was
,omcthing in the sudden juxtaposition of thoughts of poker and a
x ictim . . . the had seen a deck of cards... a knife held high. He
put his hand to his eyes, shook his head. Counselor Troi was
beside him in an instant, looking up at him with concern.
"Captain, I've never felt you react like that. Are you all right,
~ir'?"
Picard allowed himself to be helped to his chair, still overcome.
"It must be an aftereffect of my mind-meld with Ambassador
Sarck" he said. "Some memory not my own." He looked into
Froi's questioning dark eyes. "But what a memory. Something to
do xvith a poker game and a knife... it makes no sense."
"There are no known games extant on Vulcan involving both
pla3ing cards and cutting weapons," Data said helpfully, turning

131



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

around in his chair at the conn. "However, among the Ecklarians,
there is a ritual form of recreational surgery which is played
with--"
"That will be all, Mr. Data," Picard said. "Thank you."
Data fell silent, blinking innocently in a behavior that told
those who knew him well that his programming had been
interrupted for no reason which he understood.
Picard knocked his hand in the air, as if beating time for an
imaginary orchestra. "I think the ambassador once played a poker
game with someone who... who had been injured by a
knife... a victim? I think that's the connection. The ambassador
was quite impressed with the way the victim conducted himself.
Most satisfactory."
"Any idea who it was?" Riker asked.
Picard tried to call up a picture from the memory but nothing
came to mind. The impressions were fading as quickly as they had
come. "There's something about an Andorian," he said. "But
that's all." He sighed. "The ambassador has been in contact with
many minds in his career. Many different beings."
"Captain," Data announced, "the Warbird is preparing to leave
orbit."
"Give it a comfortable lead, Mr. Data. Just in case they press
the wrong control on their intervalve."
"A wise precaution," Data agreed. A moment later he said,
"They have gone to warp."
"Are they still in one piece?" Riker asked cynically.
"And continuing to accelerate," Data confirmed. "Holding at
warp seven."
Picard shook his head again. The flashback incident had
passed. "Mr. Worf," he said, "send a follow-up message to
Starbase 324 and advise Admiral Hanson of our intentions. Be
sure to give him our destination coordinates."
Troi sat back down by the captain. "Do you think there's a
chance this is just some plot to draw us into a trap?"
Picard didn't have a straightforward answer for the counselor.
"All I know is that whatever's waiting for us out there, it involves
the Romulans, the Ferengi, and quite possibly the Borg." He
settled back in his chair. "Therefore, I believe it is incumbent

132

FEDERATION

upon us to be ready for anything." Picard glanced up to the side.
..Would you agree, Mr. Worf?"
"A wise decision, Captain."
..Number One?" Picard asked.
.Without question, sir."
Picard smiled. Whenever Worf and Riker agreed on the same
course of action, then he could be certain he had achieved
consensus on his bridge.
"Mr. Data," Picard said, "take us out of orbit and match course
and speed with the Warbird."
"Should I hold a course slightly offset from theirs, sir? So we
don't run into them in case they come to a sudden stop?"
"Make it so," Picard agreed.
Then he settled back into his chair and did the hardest thing it
~vas for any starship captain to do--he waited.
And despite what any of his officers predicted was going to
happen, Picard felt certain that whatever the Enterprise discov-
ered at the coordinates the Ferengi had provided, it was going to
be unexpected.
The universe, Picard had found, generally tended to work like
that. And he wouldn't have it any other way.

133



TEN

LONDON, OPTIMAL REPUBLIC OF
GREAT BRITAIN, EARTH
Earth Standard: June 21, 2078

Cochrane lunged at Thorsen, both hands outstretched, aimed for
his throat.
But he never reached the madman. Instead, Thorsen seemed to
blur, to shift, sidestepping easily even as a rigid hand scooped up
to strike Cochrane beneath his sternum, changing his angle of
attack just enough to carry him past Thorsen and into the desk
behind.
Cochrane saw stars of a different kind explode before him as the
edge of the desk slammed into his stomach, knocking his breath
from him in a wrenching gasp. Before he could even think to try
to breathe again, the side of Thorsen's open hand slammed into
the back of his head, smashing his face onto the writing surface.
The pain was unlike anything he had felt before, fiery needles
shooting up through his nose, behind his eyes, into the back of his
head.
He tried to moan, but his lungs were off-line. He tried to push
himself up, but ThorseWs boot crunched into his side and with a
crack he felt more than heard, Cochrane rolled from the desk to
the floor.
Thorsen stood over him. His face was in darkness against the

134

FEDERATION

overhead light. Cochrane tasted blood in his mouth. He couldn't
catch his breath. He felt he was smothering, enveloped in pain.
The door to the office was open again. Two zombies stood
inside it, vacuous, drug-puffed faces staring at him with dull
indifference, fistguns pointing at him.
"'~)u are only a scientist," Thorsen said. "I am a leader of men.
I trust the lesson will not have to be taught again."
He reached down to Cochrane, grabbed his hand, pulled him
up as if he were without mass.
Cochrane found his breath and his voice as he screamed with
the agonx of the broken ribs where Thorsen had kicked him.
Thorsen flung him back into the wooden chair like old garbage.
The rigid chair legs squealed against the floor as the chair slid into
one of the mercenaries. The butt of a rifle pushed Cochrane
tbrward again.
Thorsen squatted down in front of the scientist so Cochrane
~vouldn't have to look up again. Cochrane doubted he could. He
shook with spasms of wordless torment. His nose, his head, his
ribs. Thorsen handed him a white cloth from another pocket.
"What you must always remember, Mr. Cochrane, is that
people such as you exist only because people such as I allow it.
'~bu and your kind are a luxury in this world. The food you
consume could be given to my soldiers. The ideas you spread can
disrupt the public order. And the public, my public, will not stand
for that."
Cochrane took the cloth, and even that simple movement shot
pain across his back. He tried to use the cloth to wipe the blood
from his nose, but he couldn't bear the pressure of the fabric
an>where on his face.
He opened his mouth, gasping as he felt cold air strike a broken
tooth.
"~bu're nothing more than a thug," he said with extreme
dithcultv.
Thorsen looked amused. "Mr. Cochrane, really. I was discuss-
ing physics. You attacked me." He stood up again.
Dim[x, through his pain, Cochrane heard footsteps behind him.
Sir John and his granddaughter were pushed roughly into the

135



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
office. Cochrane was thankful to see that neither of them looked
the way he felt. They hadn't been harmed. Yet.
"See here," Sir John exclaimed in shock as he saw Cochrane.
"There is no call for this." He rapped his cane on the floor for
emphasis. "This man was only a passenger. I instructed my driver
to leave the checkpoint in order to get to Heathrow on--"
"Please, Mr. Burke," Thorsen said in a tone of supreme
aggravation. The old astronomer's royal honors would not be
acknowledged by the Optimum. "We're not playing games any
longer. I know this passenger is Zefram Cochrane. I know you are
part of some ill-considered, futile resistance organization. And I
know your driver is your granddaughter. My time is short so,
please, let's not waste it."
Sir John smoothed down his wispy, flyaway hair. Monica stood
ramrod straight at his side, her dark chauffeur's uniform giving
her the look of a soldier as well.
"To get to the point," Thorsen said, "I have asked Mr.
Cochrane for information which he does not wish to provide.
Therefore, I am hoping that one of you might persuade him to
change his mind." He stood too close to Monica. "Ms. Burke? Is
there anything you'd care to say to Mr. Cochrane which could
convince him of the, shall we say, precariousness of his position?"
Monica spit on Thorsen's gleaming black boots, never breaking
contact with his eyes. Cochrane admired her defiance and her
aim. It was good to know there were still humans on Earth who
could and would fight oppressors.
Thorsen didn't move. "Very good, Ms. Burke. But hardly
wise." And then his fist shot out and caught Sir John in the
stomach, making the old man grunt and stumble backward into a
mercenary. The mercenary jabbed him in the back with the barrel
of his fistgun, knocking him jarringly to his knees, making his
cane fly from his grip to clatter on the floor. Even before
had come to a rest, Thorsen's hand had caught Monica Burke by
the throat as she attempted to strike him.
"Do you know what my soldiers do to people like
Thorsen asked her silkily, his voice barely betraying the t
the muscles of his arm. Then he released her and she
her knees by her grandfather, who wheezed to catch his

FEDERATION

Cochrane had had enough. He struggled to his feet. The pain in
his side was unbearable but he knew what he had to do.
Thorsen watched him, seemingly puzzled. "What drives you
people? You're supposed to be scientists. You're supposed to be
smart. Can't you see the inevitable?"
"If I had accepted the inevitable," Cochrane said thickly, "we'd
still be traveling slower than light." He reached out his hand. "A
pen, something."
Thorsen looked intrigued. He slipped Cochrane a pen from a
side pocket on his jumpsuit. "You're not going to try to kill me
with that, are you, Mr. Cochrane?"
Cochrane shuffled to the desk. There was an old paper calendar
on the writing surface, showing a month at a time. It hadn't been
changed for more than thirty years. With uncertain movements,
he ripped off the top sheet and turned it over. Dust flew. "Here,"
he said weakly. "Look."
Thorsen moved around the desk to see what Cochrane would
do. Cochrane squeezed the pen and its ready light came on. He
tapped it twice for a broad nib and the tip of it changed shape.
Then he drew a star shape. He had given this presentation a
thousand times to his students and he no longer even had to think
about it. The standard asymmetric energy-curve comparison
diagram told the whole story to anyone who would bother to look
at it and understand. It was the fundamental basis of all he had
done to create faster-than-light physics; as important, he believed,
as pi or e.

"This is it," he began, tapping the pen on the topmost tip of the
star for emphasis. "Right here. The Holy Grail. The speed of
light. The absolute fastest, ultimate speed anything can move in
this universe."
"Very pretty," Thorsen said dryly.
"You know what happens when you try to reach the speed of
light?',

137



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Enlighten me, Mr. Cochrane."
"Einstein happens. Plain, old-fashioned, hundred-and-fifty-
year-old relativistic effects. Like time dilation. I know you've
heard of time dilation. The faster you go, the more your subjec-
tive time flow decreases. And at the same time, your mass
increases. It's a straightforward ratio: the faster you go, the more
massive you become, and therefore the more energy you need to
continue to increase your speed." With some difficulty, he
brought the pen to the paper again. "So look what happens." He
drew an energy expenditure curve over the star.


With the pen tip, he moved again up the curve's left-hand side
for emphasis. "See? The closer you get to light-speed, the more
your mass and energy requirement increases, until at the very
speed of light"--he tapped the curve's topmost point, above the
star that represented absolute speed--"your mass becomes infi-
nite so you need infinite energy. Now, once you get past
light-speed..." Cochrane's voice gained in strength as he contin-
ued. "... over here to the right, sure, the Clarke corollary shows
that power consumption will drop off dramatically. But you can't
get past light-speed without getting to light-speed first. And that's
up here. Thorsen. Off the scale. Beyond the infinite. Can't be
reached. Can't. Be. Done."
"Yet you do it, Mr. Cochrane."
"Exactly," Cochrane agreed, hoping Thorsen would listen to
him, that somewhere in the soldier's military training he had had
some introduction to basic physics. "Because I do not exceed the
speed of light in normal space-time. I change the rules. I distort

138

FEDERATION

the continuum to change a small volume of it into something else
M~cre the restrictions of normal space-time no longer apply. And
look what happens."
He brought pen to paper again and sketched a rough approxi-
mation of the asymmetric peristaltic field-manipulation function,
this time below the star representing the speed of light, where it
belonged, where it made all things possible.


"Look at it, Thorsen. This is the literal, bottom-line energy
expenditure for my superimpellor. It's well below infinity, easily
obtainable from a basic matter-antimatter reaction. But look how
it's (!Ifs'el--separated--from the standard energy expenditure of
normal space-time." He tapped the pen to the top of the bottom
curve, where it reached its peak to the right of light-speed. "Don't
xou see'? Because the field is asymmetric, because it doesn't reach
peak power until after it's outside normal space-time, you can
~Tcvo. have a warp reaction cause a destructive release of energy
that's anywhere near as great as matter-antimatter annihilation.
),s soon as you get into that range, you're going faster than light in
a different continuum. There can be no interaction. It cannot
function as a bomb. Period."
Cochrane threw down the pen. "It's a law of nature, Thorsen.
No matter how big you build it, no matter how powerful you
make it, the (,nlv thing a warp bomb could ever possibly do is to
destroy itself. And a few grams ofantimatter will do the same, far
more cheaply, far more efficiently."
Thorsen took the pen, switched it off, then slipped it back into
his side pocket, all the while looking at the diagram Cochrane had



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
drawn. He lifted the sheet of paper. He folded it in half, in half
again, and again, so it made a small booklet in his hand. Then he
stared at Cochrane and crushed that booklet into a ball, dropping
it back to the desk.
"Corporal. Take the old man outside and kill him."
"No!" Cochrane gasped. He saw two mercenaries grab Sir John
by his coat and haul him to his feet. Monica tore desperately at
one of the zombies, ripping away his inhaler hose. But the
mercenary swung his fistgun up into her face and sent her slight
form crashing to the wall, then the floor.
"You can't do this!" Cochrane said. Forgetting his own injuries,
he grabbed Thorserfs arm, and was grabbed fiercely in return.
"You're the only one who can change my mind, Mr. Cochrane."
In Thorsen's implacable grip, Cochrane craned to look at Sir
John.
"It's all right, young fellow," the astronomer said, and
Cochrane was amazed by the aura of calm around him. "It seems
that every once in a while, history requires that the monsters
win." The old man glared undefeated at Thorsen. "So that when
they are utterly defeated, future generations may count their
blessings."
"No, Thorsen," Cochrane said urgently. "Maybe there's some
other way I can--"
"Don't," Monica implored him.
Cochrane acted as if he ignored her. There was no way he could
explain to her his motives. He was willing to promise anything
just to buy time. "But the warp bomb is still impossible."
Thorsen shrugged. "Then none of you is worth anything and
you've lived seventeen years too long." He nodded at the merce-
naries holding Sir John. "Record that one's death, then take the
body to Sandringham and feed it to my dogs. Record that, too.
For his naive friends in the resistance."
"What about 'er?" one of the zombies asked, unconscious of
the small trickle of drool that ran from his mouth. He nodded at
Monica. She was on her feet, barely, blood dripping from a ragged
gash on her cheek.
"What about her, Mr. Cochrane?" Thorsen asked.

FEDERATION

"Do nothing for him," Monica warned. "Nothing."
Cochrane's gaze met her dark eyes. Saw the passion there. The
thrilling intensity of her determination to stop Thorsen.
Cochrane realized that saving Monica Burke by capitulation
would be no favor to her or to those like her. Every lesson Micah
Brack had taught him about history came back to him now. The
genie was out of the bottle. No matter what Thorsen and the
others like him did to Earth, humanity would survive.
Cochrane faced Thorsen squarely. "You've got it wrong again,
Thorsen. People like you exist because of people like me. Because
we're smarter than you, more aware than you'll ever be, so in your
jealousy, you try to destroy everything we stand for--rationality,
humanity, common decency and respect." Thorsen's face tightened.
"You're everything that's base in humanity," Cochrane contin-
ued. "Drawing up strict, senseless rules for the sole reason of
putting you at the top and excluding anyone you say doesn't
belong or fit in, for no other reason than just because you say so."
He turned to the mercenaries holding Sir John. "What's your
leader going to do when he's killed all of us?He can only survive if
there's someone he can crush. When we're gone, are you his next
enemv?"
One of the zombies burped loudly. Both laughed, the sound
ugly. disturbed.
"Finished?" Thorsen asked, then he addressed the mercenaries.
"Transport the girl to Highgate for interrogation." He looked
back at Cochrane. "There are specialists there, Mr. Cochrane.
Some of them even used to be doctors of a sort. Now they're
interface experts. Have you ever seen what happens to human
nervous tissue after the insertion of Josephson probes into the
brain?" He stroked the bridge of his nose with a thin finger. "Well,
~ou will."
Thorsen snapped his fingers at his mercenaries. "Make the old
fool suffer. I'll want close-ups for the uploads." They started to pull Sir John to the door.
"You dare call vourself a soldier?!" the astronomer called out.
"I am [he soldier," Thorsen corrected.

141



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"Then at least give me the dignity of walking to my fate under
my own power, sir."
Thorsen sighed. He looked around, saw Sir John's cane,
reached down and brought it to the old man.
"Let him walk to his fate," Thorsen told the mercenaries. He
looked down at Sir John. "I'll put your head on this when they're
finished with you." He slapped the cane into Sir John's hands.
Sir John shook himself loose from the mercenaries, tapped his
cane on the floor as if to see if it still worked, smoothed his coat,
then nodded his head at Cochrane. "Accept my apologies, sir. On
behalf of the planet." He looked over at his granddaughter.
"Monica," he said, "you were always the light of my life."
"I understand," Monica said. And that was all. Cochrane found
the whole subdued exchange excruciatingly British, though there
had almost been something to the way Sir John had said "light"
that made Cochrane wonder if the astronomer had been passing
on a hidden message.
Then Sir John turned his back on Thorsen and the office and
walked ahead of the mercenaries, out the door. The mercenaries
plodded after him, indifferent to their destination.
Thorsen crossed his arms and faced Cochrane. "I'm thinking of
making Centauri B II the first example of what happens to
colonies who don't contribute to Earth. What do you think, Mr.
Cochrane? Superimpellors with antimatter bombs? Are they any
match for your warp bombs?"
"If you come out of a distortion field within half a parsec of my
planet, you'll have asteroid interceptors locked on to you two
weeks before you get within a million kilometers," Cochrane said
fiercely. Every colony world had the same defense because no
extrasolar system had been studied in enough detail for asteroid
impacts to be predictable. The result was that superimpellors,
which could not operate close to a sun, were not a viable military
threat.
"Still." Thorsen replied, "it might be worth a--"
A hideous shriek echoed down the corridor outside the office.
Cochrane felt sick.
"How surprising," Thorsen said as he studied Monica's reac-

FEDERATION

tion. "I thought he would be the stiff-upper-lip type. 'So sorry to
bleed on your carpet.' That sort of--"
A second scream echoed. It was not made by the same person
who first had cried out.
Cochrane felt electrified with hope. Thorsen reached for his net
phone. Monica, for some reason Cochrane didn't understand,
immediately leaned over and ripped at the heel of her boot.
"This is Thorsen," the colonel barked into his slender phone.
"Get me--"
And then Sir John was in the doorway again, cheeks flushed, the
few strands of hair he had standing straight out to the side, and he
was aiming his cane at Thorsen as if it were a rifle.
"Put it down, Colonel," Sir John commanded, only a bit out of
breath.
"Get me Operations!" Thorsen shouted.
A spike of red light lanced out from the tip of Sir John's cane
and swept across Thorsen's chest. The red fabric of his jumpsuit
was unharmed but the interlinked triangles of the Optimum
Movement he wore on his chest exploded in a spray of molten
metal. his net phone burst into blue-white flames, and white
smoke burst from the back of his hand as Cochrane heard the
sizzle of burnt flesh.
Thorsen grunted in pain but made no other sound. He clutched
his injured hand to his stomach. "You will never survive," he
panted. "You are unfit."
Then Monica was at him, the black plastic of her heel in her
hand. She jammed it against Thorsen's arm as he tried to avoid
her and this time he did scream.
His swinging fist sent Monica back. He started for her, snarling
something incomprehensible. Cochrane could hear a capacitor
~hine from Sir John's cane. Whatever system powered its laser
~asn't ready to fire. Someone had to act.
"77zor.sen'" Cochrane yelled in challenge.
Thorsen s~'un around, his arm still raised to strike Monica. His
narrow face was twisted in animalistic fury. Cochrane matched it.
The scientist charged the soldier, ignoring the pain of his own

143



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
nose and ribs. He heard the alarming sound of grinding bones
below his lungs, but he would not let Thorsen win. No matter
what it took.
Cochrane slammed his head into Thorsen's chest and howled in
pain as the shock of impact tore through his own chest. Thorsen's
fist crashed down on his back but the counterblow was too late.
The two men flew back into a wall, shattering the glass over an
old baseball photograph, then slid to the floor. Cochrane pushed
himself off Thorsen, feeling shards of glass dig into his hand.
Thorsen kicked at him, tried to get up, then shivered, arms stiff at
his side. His heavy boots thumped at the floor for a moment, then
were still.
Cochrane caught his breath, staring at Thorsen lying on the
floor. The madman wasn't unconscious. His pale blue eyes
remained wide with hatred and still bored into him. Then Monica
was at Cochrane's side, holding out her hand. In the other, she
still carried the heel of her boot.
"We have to hurry," she told Cochrane as she helped him to his
feet. She smiled at him as if he were an old friend, a trusted ally.
Cochrane felt an unexpected warmth in his chest. He hoped it
didn't mean he was bleeding to death from internal injuries.
"What happened to him?" Cochrane asked. Thorsen still stared
unblinking at him.
Monica held up her boot heel. Cochrane could see three silver
needles arranged in it, stained by blood. "Selective neural inhibi-
tor," she explained. "Shuts down the section of the brain respon-
sible for physical movement. Same process that keeps us
motionless when we dream we're moving." She tugged on his arm
and Cochrane winced. "Sorry, but there're more zombies at his
Rover. We have to leave."
Cochrane looked back at Thorsen's hate-filled stare. "Why not
kill him?"
"Tempting," Monica said. "But then we'd become him,
wouldn't we?"
Cochrane saw something in Monica's eyes that brought the
warmth back to his chest again. Perhaps he wasn't mortally
wounded after all.

FEDERATION

"Come along, you two, our ride will be waiting," Sir John
t]rged.
Cochrane turned away from Thorsen. "Nice shooting, by the
way." he said.
"Optics are optics," Sir John answered with satisfaction.
"Though I must say they never went into this at Cambridge." He
tapped his cane against the floor. It was buzzing now with a
constantly resetting capacitor hum, ready to fire at any time.
The three of them headed for the corridor. Cochrane found he
had to limp to keep his ribs from grating. In the office doorway, he
stopped. then turned back to Thorsen's fallen form as he suddenly
thought of a way to get the final word.
'Don't you even think of leaving Earth," Cochrane told him.
"The colonies are the future of humanity and people like you have
no place in it."
Cochrane noted with appreciation the way Thorsen's whitened
face began to redden.
"And if you do come after me," he added, unable to resist doing
so. 'Tll use my warp bomb on you."
At that. Thorsen groaned, mouth half opening. Whatever was in
him was wearing off. The scientist turned his back on his pursuer
and stepped out of the office.
Cochrane, Sir John, and Monica moved through the dimly lit
corridor three levels below the playing surface of the Battersea
Stadium. Sir John moved slowly with the cane that was just as
necessary for his support as it was for their defense. Monica
stumbled along awkwardly because of the missing heel of her
boot. Cochrane could only shuffle because of his breath-stealing
injuries. They were in sorry shape. But they had won. So far.
"Ix there such a thing as a warp bomb?" Monica asked in a low
voice as they began to ascend a pedestrian ramp. The sliding
pathx~av beside it had long since ceased to function. Old advertis-
ing posters for beer and suborbital airlines studded the drab walls.
"Utterly impossible," Cochrane said.
'~So you just said that about the bomb to annoy him?" Monica
asked.
"I had to do something to him." Cochrane was surprised at the

145



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

vehemence he heard in his own voice. But he loathed people like
Thorsen, the strong preying on the weak with no other reason
than that they could.
"I, uh, I liked what you said back there," Monica told him, still
whispering as they came to the last level of the ramp. "About
people like Thorsen being created by people like, well, like you
and my grandfather. Not on purpose, of course, but as... a sort
of by-product."
Cochrane didn't have the strength to get caught up in a
philosophical discussion, but he felt gratified by the fact that she
had paid attention. He had taught students like Monica Burke on
Alpha Centauri, thoughtful, capable, and he had always enjoyed
doing so. But for now, all he said was "I liked what you did back
there. Sometimes I worry I don't do enough."
"You're joking," Monica said. She spoke aloud.
Sir John turned around and shushed her. "This isn't over, you
two. Adrik Thorsen does not travel alone." His old voice shook
with exhaustion.
Cochrane whispered to Monica. "Should I go ahead of Sir
John? I mean, your grandfather's been through a lot."
"You should take a look at yourself," Monica said. She gingerly
touched the gash on her cheek. "We've all been through the
stareper." She looked ahead. Sir John had reached the top of the
ramp where it exited into a main lobby. All the lights were out,
creating a cavern of darkness, but a white glare streamed in
through the large entrances leading to the lower level seats around
the playing field. The astronomer motioned to his granddaughter
and Cochrane to stay where they were.
"Grandfather's been through things like this before," Monica
said softly. "After the elections, when the Optimum dissolved the
Royal Academies, it was all we could do to keep him from flying
his car into Parliament."
"We?" Cochrane asked. He suddenly wondered if Monica was
married, or at least involved with someone. Whoever the lucky
person was, Cochrane was surprised to discover he was envious.
Confused by his new and unexpected emotion, he kept his eyes on
Sir John, who looked carefully around ahead.
But Monica said, "My father and I."

146

FEDERATION

Cochrane heard it in her tone, in her hesitation. Monica's
t'z~thcr. Sir John's son or son-in-law, was no longer alive.
Monica confirmed his guess. "The Cambridge Riots," she said.
-.~,Vhen the Optimum sent zombies in to close it down. Father was
~ botanical engineer. He knew nothing of politics. He was part of
the group who sat down on the commons, expecting to be arrested
and get carried off."
'Tin sorry," Cochrane said. The news of the shredderbomb
:lssaults on England's universities had made it to Alpha Centauri.
"Come along, come along," Sir John whispered loudly to them.
.\s Cochrane and Monica joined him at the top of the ramp,
Cochrane could hear the stuttering pops of distant plasma pulses.
There was a firefight somewhere near. Probably out on the playing
field.
"It doesn't sound like we should go out there," he said.
"On the contrary," Sir John said. "That's what we've been
waiting for. We have some associates clearing the landing site."
The astronomer stumped off toward the entrance to the lower
level scats. Monica followed. Cochrane followed also. He didn't
have much choice.
The playing field was still brightly lit from the banks of light
channels that ringed the stadium. Sir John's Rolls-Royce was
parked out past second base, and Cochrane could see the dark
tbrm of a Fourth World mercenary stretched out on the artificial
turf beside it. For a moment, he thought the zombie was staying
low for cover, but then he saw the dull metal of a fistgun lying a
meter away from the zombie's hand. He had been shot. But by
x~ h om'?
"Stax' low. children," Sir John said. He handed his cane back to
('ochrane. "The trigger's under the cap," he explained. "There're
only two more discharges left. You know what energy density is
like For these contraptions."
":\ren't we staying together?" Cochrane asked. He wouldn't
allow the old astronomer to sacrifice himself for them.
"Of course we are," Sir John answered. "But when we're
craxvling between ,he seats, I'm afraid this old back won't let me
pop up with the abandon of my youth. It will be up to you to cover
Our withdrawal, as it were."

147



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Cochrane hefted the cane in his hands, trying not to jar his
chest with sudden movement. "Withdrawal to where?"
Sir John pointed up toward the ragged hole in the roof of the
stadium. The dull orange glow of low clouds over London shone
through it. "You're going home, young fellow. Just as we prom-
ised."
They were a Few meters from the entrance. Sir John motioned
them to the side, then down to their knees. "Heads down, follow
me."
Plasma fire continued to echo in the stadium, but it seemed far
enough away not to be directed at them. Sir John crawled behind a
row of seats, and Cochrane followed, awkwardly keeping the cane
in front of him, with Monica close behind.
Suddenly, a bright flare flickered around them, followed a
second later by a thunderclap. After that, there was no more
plasma fire.
"Keep down," Sir John called back to them. "It's just a
temporary respite."
They came to the end of the row and Sir John started down a
wide aisle. Cochrane got to his feet, remaining crouched over.
"Where are we headed?"
"Home plate," Monica said, squeezing his hand. "Almost
there."
Now she ran directly after her grandfather, head ducked.
Cochrane did the same. He began to hear a strange pulsing in the
air. Not gunfire, but something else.
A distant voice yelled out through the stadium. "Mr. Bond/
Casino Royale/"
Sir John waved Cochrane and Monica to a stop by the next to
last row before the low wall separating the seats from the field.
"Our associates," he wheezed. "Right on schedule." "Who's Mr. Bond?" Cochrane asked.
Monica smiled fondly as she patted her grandfather's shoul-
ders. "Grandfather is a devotee of twentieth-century literature.
For some reason known only to him, his code name is 'Mr.
Bond.'"
"And we only have two minutes to wait," Sir John added,
apparently explaining the rest of the enigmatic message.

148

FEDERATION

"Code name?" Cochrane asked.
Monica had a serious expression as she stared up at the opening
in the roof. "No matter what Thorsen thinks of it, the resistance is
quite real, Mr. Cochrane. And quite well organized."
"Her Majesty's Royal Resistance Force," Sir John said proudly.
Before Cochrane could ask any additional questions, the puls-
ing that he had heard intensified to the point where he would have
to shout to say anything. The sound was coming from overhead.
Then a blinding flash of light shone through the roof opening.
Retlexively, Cochrane looked away, covering his eyes with his
arm. When he squinted back at the playing field, a craft had
landed. but what kind, he couldn't tell. It was circular, a flattened
disk shape with a gently elevated center, top and bottom, with no
obvious markings or registry numbers. No landing legs had
extended fi'om it, yet there was no sign of a fan effect on the turf
beneath it. either. It was, however, the source of the pulsing sound
he heard.
"Move along," Sir John said urgently. "Move along."
Monica pushed ahead to the low wall, straddled it, then held
out her hand to Cochrane. Gingerly, Cochrane sat on the wall,
moved one leg over, then the other, and dropped the five feet to
the turf, losing his grip on the cane. Dark spots sparkled in his
vision with the pain of the landing. He coughed and tasted blood
again. He felt and heard gurgling with each breath he took and
knew a lung had been perforated.
~\ moment later, Sir John dropped beside him, but landed far
more professionally, rolling from his feet to his knees to his side,
absorbing the Force of impact along the entire length of his body.
Sir John blinked up at Cochrane with delight. "Just like in the
blood) paratroopers," he said. Then he awkwardly got to his
hands and knees as Monica leapt lightly down beside them.
Cochrane retrieved the cane. It was still humming and resetting
it,~elf. He doubted the batteries or whatever it used could last
much longer even if it wasn't discharged.
In the center of the field, not far from Sir John's Rolls, the
circular craft wai'ed; two brilliant searchlights were deployed
From its far edge and swept the distant stadium seats in a search
pattern.

149



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"What is that thing?" Cochrane asked, though he had a good
idea. He just couldn't believe it.
Monica stared at it, as if waiting for a signal.
"Plan B," she said. "A lunar transport disk. Inertial gravity
drive."
Cochrane decided he'd believe it when he saw it take off.
Inertial gravity drive couldn't take anything from the earth to the
moon in any reasonable length of time. Maybe someday it could
be used to generate artificial gravity fields, but as a propulsion
method, it had proved inefficient except for landing and surface
maneuvers.
A blue strobe light on the forward edge of the disk suddenly
flashed three times.
"Clear!" Monica shouted. "Run!"
Sir John took off with surprising speed and Cochrane, after a
moment of startled hesitation, followed, trying not to pump his
arms as he ran. He heard Monica right behind him.
Then a new sound swept through the stadium, so powerfully
that Cochrane couldn't tell where it came from. "Down?' Monica shouted behind him.
He felt her arms hit his legs as she dove onto him from behind,
pushing him to the ground with an explosion of pain that cut
through him like red lightning.
He couldn't talk, felt only the harsh spikes of the artificial turf
pressing into his cheek. Monica was lying beside him, one arm
across his back. "Sorry, sorry," she said into his ear. "Sir John?" Cochrane suddenly gasped.
"He's all right," Monica answered, but there was worry in her
eyes and voice.
Cochrane looked ahead. Another vehicle had entered the
playing field, floating forward from a players' entrance, fanjets
flattening the turf below it.
He recognized it as an armored troop carrier, with a plasma
cannon mounted at its back.
The carrier's headlight strip blazed across the turf, turning it
from green to white, catching the disk on its side.
The carrier's cannon flared, and the stadium rocked with

150

FEDERATION

thtlnder as the plasma explosion hurled a projectile forward at
supersonic velocity.
But the projectile exploded a heartbeat later in the far stands, as
if it had ricocheted from the disk.
.'What's that disk made of?." Cochrane said faintly. He didn't
think he could keep talking much longer.
"The shell never hit the disk," Monica said. "It's generating an
[M shield. Nothing physical can touch it."
Cochrane felt the stadium melting and twisting around him in
time to his thundering pulse. "Then how can we get on board? Is
it a selective frequency?" Even facing death, the drive for knowl-
edge in him was still never far from the surface.
'Shh," Monica said, sensing and soothing his confusion.
"Almost home."
Cochrane stared back at her. From that angle, he couldn't see
the wound on her other cheek. He tried to touch her face. She
looked at him, surprised, but not troubled.
"Thank you," he said, and he knew his words were almost
inaudible, drifting off.
'~For what?" she asked.
"Paying attention," Cochrane mumbled. He wasn't sure what it
meant. but he did mean it.
Another flare of blinding light hit them. Wearily, Cochrane
struggled to turn his head to see the light's source.
There was an enormous gout of flame shooting up from the field
From the point Sir John's Rolls had been parked. The car was
~one.
"Betsy!" Sir John moaned as if he had lost an old family friend.
The fanjet carrier sped for the disk. When it had disappeared
behind its bulk, Monica pulled Cochrane to his feet. He felt as if
he were floating, losing touch with his body. He decided there was
too much pain for his brain to deal with. He was disassociating.
He fought against the temptation of unconsciousness. But it was a
difficult battle, so much easier to give up.
Abruptly, he rea!ized he was heading toward the disk, Monica
~Upporting him, Sir John beside her. There was another explosion
~Omewhere else, perhaps on the other side of the disk. He saw

151



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

flickerings on the overhead roof. Monica told him the disk had hit
the carrier. But to Cochrane, everything seemed to be happening
to someone else. He was no longer in his body. He was no longer
on Earth. He thought he saw Micah Brack before him, floating in
microgravity, out by Neptune.
"This is the way it always goes," Brack told him. "Fire and
destruction."
"No," Cochrane whispered to his absent friend. "No more.
We'll change that. Can't we?"
Monica asked him what he had said.
Cochrane couldn't remember.
And then he heard his name, blaring, echoing, coming at him
from every surface in the stadium as if the gods themselves were
calling for him.
They were almost at the disk, a gangplank was extended, but
Cochrane stumbled, looked up to the side.
The giant visage of Adrik Thorsen looked down upon him.
"You will not leave/" Thorsen screamed. His enraged face was
repeated on the display boards ringing the stadium, blotched by
imperfect pixels, incomplete, flickering. His cruelly commanding
voice echoed from everywhere all at once. "Air defense will
destroy you a hundred meters from the ground."
"Don't listen to him," Monica shouted. She pulled on
Cochrane's arm. He cried in turn with pain. "You are the dead? Thorsen thundered.
The gangplank was almost before them. And then it disap-
peared in an eruption of fire.
Sir John whirled in a circle like a mad ballerina, a dozen small
fires at work on his coat. He fell to the turf even as Monica
doubled over atop him.
Cochrane staggered to a stop. He thought he heard plasma
pulses, or were they just the echoes?
"You will never escape the Optimum!" Thorsen shouted. "You
will never escape your destiny?'
Dimly, terrifyingly, Cochrane became aware that Thorsen's last
words l~ad not come from the displays. They had come from
behind him. He turned.

FEDERATION

Thorsen stood on the wall by home plate. He had a fistgun. It
~as aimed directly at Cochrane.
-'Earth will be your graveyard," Thorsen said. "Unless you join
me. Zefram Cochrane. Only I can unchain your science."
Cochrane listened, thought, considered. He half-convinced
himself he was asleep on the John Cabal, that this was all a dream,
a nightmare, deep within the crew quarters of the old ice freighter.
He leaned on Sir John's cane to keep a semblance of his
balance. His body shook as a sharp cough brought up bright red
blood to spatter on the green turf. He realized he wasn't dream-
ing. He realized he was going to die soon.
Thorsen jumped from the wall and began walking forward,
tistgun held ready.
"Cochrane--think--your only possible future lies with me."
One of Thorsen's hands held death. The other was outstretched in
friendship. "Give me the warp bomb. Let me celebrate your
genius. '~bu need not die when that ship is shot down."
Cochrane heard the cane cycle up and reset itself.
He heard Monica moan. Smoke drifted up from Sir John's still
body.

Cochrane realized he could kill Thorsen.
In his mind, he heard Monica's voice, telling him that by killing
he would only become Thorsen.
Cochrane closed his eyes. This was all happening to someone
else, anyway. Besides, he had made Thorsen. "I am Thorsen," he
5aid.
"Did xou say something?" Thorsen called out. He was only fifty
meters distant.
"'~bu exist because of me/" Cochrane heard himself shout. He
saw blood spray from his mouth in the brilliant blue light of the
stadium, a halo of blood around him.
"'~bu're delirious, my friend," Thorsen said. "Let me help
.xou."
Cochrane raised the cane, aimed it at Thorsen from the hip.
Thorsen stopped moving forward. He turned sideways, de-
creasing the size of the target he offered. He raised the fistgun,
keeping the barrel pointed up.

153



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"There are still secrets to be discovered, Mr. Cochrane. Don't
let your work end here. Don't let your life mean nothing."
Cochrane put his finger on the trigger stud. Suddenly, he
realized he didn't care about his work anymore, he didn't care
about secrets. He only cared about what he had done with his life.
And he was certain he had not done enough. Had not shared
enough.
"You hurt Monica," Cochrane said.
The capacitor in the cane built up to discharge level.
"What does the life of one person matter?" Thorsen called
back. He began to lower the barrel of the fistgun, taking aim.
"Everyone matters," Cochrane said, his voice so weak he knew
he could no longer speak loudly enough for Thorsen to hear him.
"This is your last chance!" Thorsen screamed.
"I know," Cochrane said.
He fired the cane, and even as the red laser hit Thorsen's
fistgun, Cochrane realized that as fast as that beam was, Thorsen
had been faster.
The fistgun fired, then exploded.
Something burned past Cochrane's cheek.
Thorsen's scream pierced the air.
Cochrane felt hands grab him from behind. The sudden
movement brought such intense pain that he dropped the cane,
dropped from his body, became only an observer in his mind.
He felt himself carried up the gangplank into the disk. Some-
where, Monica's voice still murmured. That meant she was still
alive. That meant she would continue. Even without him. The
knowledge made him feel better, somehow.
Gentle hands strapped him into a reclining chair, a blast couch,
a display screen above it. Nearby, he thought he heard Monica
call out her grandfather's name. He thought he heard other people
asking about Thorsen. But they had the name wrong, he could see
that now.
"His name is Ozymandias," Cochrane muttered. He remem-
bered his mother reading that poem to him. It had made him
think of history. Micah Brack could recite it as readily as if the
industrialist had written it himself. "'Look on my works, ye
mighty,'" Cochrane said.

154

FEDERATION

No one heard him.
An artificial voice ordered everyone to prepare for orbital
insertion. Cochrane wished he could say good-bye to Monica. He
wanted her to have a happy life. She deserved that. He wished he
could give it to her.
The blast couch shook beneath him. On the screen above, he
saw the stadium grow smaller. Then it disappeared in a gout of
blue plasma, in waves of explosions.
In a far-off corner of his still lucid mind, Cochrane understood
that was how the disk traveled from the earth to the moon.
Inertial gravity generators for landing and surface maneuvers, but
an impulse drive for propulsion.
The fusion flames of the disk's departure bathed whatever had
been below it. He pictured Battersea Stadium melting as ira small
sun had ignited within it. Baseball really was dead, he decided.
And so was Thorsen... or Ozymandias... whatever his name
was. All would soon be incandescent. Back to the stuff of stars.
Cochrane felt a hand grip his. He looked through blurring,
closing eyes to see Monica at his side. He heard the hiss of a spray
hypo. but felt nothing.
"I wanted to do more," he said to her. He knew she would
understand.
She smiled at him. Her smile was beautiful. She would make
someone very happy someday, he decided, and he tried to tell her
so. Then he realized that he could not last until they cleared the
atmosphere. Darkness rolled up for him like the clouds of Titan,
bringing on the night. "The stars," he said to her. "I wanted to see
the stars again." He could see her lips move as she said something
back to him. but he could no longer hear.
Then Zefram Cochrane slowly closed his eyes and waited
peacefully for death and history to claim him.
But history wasn't finished with him yet.

155



ELEVEN

//.S.S. VTPRISNCC-1701
6AMMA CANARIS RE610N, PLANET01D 527
Stardate 3853.2
Earth Standard: Nevember 2267

Kirk, Spock, and McCoy resolved from the transporter beam and
set foot once again on Cochrane's world. Without question, as
sensors had indicated, things had changed.
The air, once a pleasant and constant 22讈, was cold. Frost
covered the ground. Wispy clouds stretched like a web across the
sky, dark now, almost as if it were dusk, though the planetoid's
sun was directly above at local high noon.
Kirk could guess what had happened, but he waited for Spock
to confirm it with tricorder readings.
"Gravity is at eighty-two percent of what it was six months
ago," Spock announced, reading from the device's tiny screen.
"Resulting in loss of atmosphere," Kirk stated, not surprised.
"And heat," Spock added. The energy once held by the dense
air of the planetold had evaporated into space with the atmo-
sphere.
"Any indication of what caused the change?" Kirk asked.
Spock moved the tricorder in an arc about them, watching it
intently. "The tricorder detects no underlying cause." "What about you, Spock? Any theories?"
Spock looked'at McCoy. "Doctor, have you detected any life
signs?"

156

FEDERATION

McCoy studied the screen of his own medical tricorder, which
Spook had adjusted so it would pick up life signs from the
Companion as well. But the doctor shook his head. "Nothing, Mr.
Spock. No sign of Cochrane or the Companion."
Mr. Scott had beamed them down to the precise location where
the Grdi/co shuttlecraft had been brought to a landing when the
Companion had controlled it. Admiral Kabreigny had remained
on the L'mcrprise, though she had approved the landing site as a
reasonable place to begin an investigation. But Kirk knew some-
thing the admiral did not, that around the ridge to the west,
Cochrane's small shelter waited. He didn't want to think what
they'd find there. Especially given what Spock had uncovered
about Cochrane's final days on Centauri B II.
"Could it have been a symbiotic relationship between the
Companion and this place?" Kirk asked as he reached for his
communicator.
"Intriguing," Spock said. "And possible."
The Companion had told them she was unable to leave the
planetold for more than a tiny march of days, that she drew her
life from this place. Perhaps the planetoid's unusual gravity and
climate had also been the result of the Companion's presence as
well, as if conditions here could no longer exist without her, as if
life and habitat were one. So much about that type of energy-
based creature was unknown.
Kirk flipped open his communicator. "Kirk to Enterprise."
"Kabreigny here."
Kirk frowned at that response, thankful that Starfleet consis-
tently rejected requests to include standard optical sensors on
communicators. He didn't want to see her sitting in his chair on
the bridge, and he certainly didn't want her to see his expression
as the spoke with her. "We're at the Ga/i/eo landing site," Kirk
reported. "No energy readings of any kind."
But Kabreigny wasn't going to give up easily. "What about the
wreckage that sensors are showing about a kilometer to the west?"
~he asked.
Kirk had known the admiral would see the sensor readings of
Cochrane's shelter, and so had prepared her for them by stating



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
that they had previously discovered the crash site of an antique
ship, apparently drawn off course the same way the shuttlecraft
had been. For Kabreigny, the presence of the wreck was further
indication that Kirk should have noted there was a chance that a
permanent navigational hazard existed. But Kirk knew that if he
had done so. within a year Starfleet would have dispatched a
mapping and survey expedition to the area to determine the
extent of the hazard, and they would inevitably have discovered
Cochrane.
"We're proceeding to the wreckage now," Kirk said. "I'11 report
when we get there. Kirk out."
"She seems to be taking it well," McCoy said as he switched off
his tricorder and let it hang at his side.
"She has no choice," Spock reminded him. "She does not yet
have all the pieces of the puzzle she is assembling."
"Gentlemen." Kirk waved toward the ridge and began walk-
ing in that direction. He heard McCoy and Spock fall into
step behind him. Unfortunately, they didn't have all the pieces
of the puzzle either. Though they had more than the admiral
did.

Kirk, Spock, and McCoy had met earlier that morning, as the
Enterprise continued on her way to Cochrane's planetoid.
McCov's office in sickbay was deemed to be secure from Admiral
Kabreigny's sudden intrusion. In any case, the admiral was more
concerned with remaining on the bridge and observing the sensor
sweeps firsthand than she seemed to be with the captain's
activities, or those of his senior crew.
Just the same, McCoy had instructed the computer to lock the
sickbay doors so they could talk in peace, unless any crew member
required medical attention.
As Spock related them, the events of Cochrane's final days were
as Kirk had remembered them--history recorded few details.
That paucity of information could be explained by the fact that
following his historic accomplishment, Cochrane had developed
a reputation for being a private, reclusive individual. Historically,
Kirk knew that that had been the response of Neil Armstrong to

FEDERATION

personal historic achievement--the first human to set foot on
another world had virtually disappeared from public view for the
remainder of his life, at great cost to history and undeniably
afi'ccting public support of the fledgling space exploration pro-
grams of the time. Yoshikawa had also behaved in a similar
fashion. though by his remaining on the moon, his life of
seclusion was more understandable to many. How Daar would
have chosen to live following her own unique success would
lbrcver be a mystery, since her life had been cut short by the
tragedy that had befallen her during her return from Mars.
But Spock had suggested there was more to the lack of
inlbrmation about Cochrane's final years than could be explained
by mere human eccentricity and a desire for privacy. Spock's
intbnnal communications with the Cochrane Foundation of
Alpha Centauri revealed that many of the contemporary accounts
of Cochrane's friends and coworkers, and Cochrane's own jour-
nals, remained sealed, though for what reason, no one at the
Foundation seemed able or willing to say. Even the .journal of
Cochrane's wife, the granddaughter of celebrated astronomer Sir
John Burke, was not available to the public. Most intriguingly,
there was apparently no indication as to how long those records
x~ould remain sealed. The Foundation had simply reported that
an~ potential release date was subject to ongoing review.
Spock had concluded that such an arrangement indicated that
someone within the Foundation was indeed aware of the contents
of the sealed journals and associated files, and was only then
~aiting until certain conditions were met before allowing them to
be released. But what those certain conditions could possibly be
after a century and a half, not even Spock would hazard a theory.
In short, all that was available to be known about Cochrane's
final >cars was all that had already been known since the date of
his disappearance. At the age of'forty-eight, he had attended a
scientific conference on the moon, during which he had met
Monica Burke, the woman who became his wife. They had
returned to Alpha Centauri together, shortly before World XVar III
devastated Earth.
During the reconstruction period, when all Earth colonies had

159



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
strained themselves to their limits to aid the home planet,
Cochrane had devoted himself to further refining his warp drive
and had traveled among the many worlds to insure that each
colony had the scientific and engineering capability to support its
own warp drive industry. Recordings of the talks he gave showed
how he stressed again and again that for his invention to truly
benefit humanity, no one world or group of worlds should ever be
able to develop a monopoly on it.
Several years before his disappearance, Cochrane's desire to
share the fruits of his labor drove him to take part in one of the
first diplomatic missions to a colony world established by a race
then known as the Vulcanians, from Vulcanis, a more accurate
phonetic version of the Vulcan name for their world. In a daring
move vehemently protested by conservative human organizations
at the time, Cochrane turned over al! his research on warp drive
technology, without conditions. The Vulcans, of course, had
independently created their own version of the drive, but the
explosion of scientific advancement that resulted from
Cochrane's unprecedented gift was quickly reciprocated by the
enigmatic Vulcans. Far from weakening Earth, Cochrane's gift, in
fact, had led to a long-term and unshakable alliance between
humans and Vulcans in which, many historians said, the first
seeds of what would become the Federation were sown.
Thus did a shy and reclusive scientist live to see his invention
forever change the shape and history of humanity. It was even
widely accepted that Cochrane had made it possible for the
species to survive atomic devastation; had made it possible for
war-torn Earth to be rebuilt in decades, not centuries or millennia
as had happened on some worlds; and had lived, too, to witness
many more first contacts between humans and spacefaring alien
cultures.
When Cochrane was eighty-seven, his wife, Monica, had died,
apparently in a vehicle accident near the Cochrane ranch on
Centauri B II--Cochrane, ever modest, had objected to any
efforts to rename the world after him during his lifetime. The
details of her accident were not available, either because no
account survived, or because no account had been released.

160

FEDERATION

Shortly after, Cochrane had revised his will, leaving his surpris-
ingly small estate to the foundation that bore his name. He then
filed a flight plan to Stapledon Center and disappeared.
The search that followed had been massive by contemporary
standards. But the invention of subspace radio and subspace
sensors remained several decades in the future, and ships that
vanished while in warp were typically never seen again, as no
faster-than-light method existed for communicating with or de-
tecting them. A year after his failure to arrive at Stapledon Center,
Cochrane was declared dead and the human worlds officially
mourned his loss.
The story Spock told was the same as the one Kirk remembered
studying in school as a child. But it was McCoy who detected the
anomaly. He tapped his fingers on his desk in a sign of his
agitation.
"Cochrane told us he was dying, Jim," McCoy said after
Spock's report. "Isn't that an odd coincidence? His wife dies in an
accident just as he's dying of... of whatever he was dying from."
Spock seized on McCoy's recollection of their conversation
with Cochrane. "Contemporary accounts do indicate Cochrane's
health was excellent," he said. "Moreover, colonists in those days
generally lived longer and healthier lives than did their counter-
parts on Earth, owing to an absence of environmental toxins,
though of course they had a higher death rate from accidents
involving heavy machinery, as Monica Cochrane's death would
illustrate."
"Perhaps he wasn't dying when he left Alpha Centauri," Kirk
countered. "He told us the Companion had brought his disabled
ship to the planetold. Maybe something happened to him on
board his ship."
"Another accident?" McCoy asked skeptically. "That's even
more of a coincidence."
When given a choice, Kirk tended to favor the simplest solution
to a problem--a predilection Spock proclaimed eminently logi-
cal. So he wasn't enthralled by McCov's suggestions that
Cochrane's disappearance and his wife's c(eath might not have
been accidental.

161

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
But Spock's second report, concerning Admiral Kabreigny's
intense interest in the Enterprise's previous visit to the Gamma
Canaris region, seemed to go in that direction as well.
"This is what Starfleet knows," Spock began. "Six months ago,
the Galileo encountered navigational difficulties in the Gamma
Canaris region and was delayed in making its rendezvous with the
Enterprise. As a result of that delay, Federation Commissioner
Nancy Hedford died of Sakuro's disease. Within twenty-four
hoursof his return to the Enterprise, Captain Kirk filed a detailed
log describing those events. Those events, while regrettable, are
not uncommon occurrences during starship exploration on the
Federation's boundaries.
"However," Spock continued, "Starfleet is also aware that
within five days of the captain's return to the Enterprise, he
shipped, by message pouch, an item for deposit in Starfleet
Archives: a personal log to be sealed for one hundred years. Again,
this in itself is not an unusual action for a starship captain to take.
The archive review board informally concluded that his personal
log contained specific details of the death of Commissioner
Hedford, withheld, perhaps, to spare her family any unwarranted
grief."
Kirk could feel Spock building to a substantial "but." He
wasn't disappointed.
"But since then, the archive review board, in conjunction with
Starfleet Security and the Lunar Police, have decided that whatev-
er the nature of the information in the captain's sealed log, it was
the reason for the recent break-in."
Kirk was shocked. "That's not possible."
Spock's expression of concern told Kirk it was more than
possible. "Captain, what I am about to say is considered classified
by Starfleet Command. I regret to inform you that I have obtained
this information by other than official channels and it would be
best if you did not inquire as to my methods. I would like to point
out, however, that given the precariousness of our situation in
regard to Admiral Kabreigny, and in light of the admiral's interest
in these events, it is my opinion that I have been justified in
pursuing this course of investigation in a nonregulation manner. I

FEDERATION

am. of course, willing to make that case before any Starfleet board
of inquiry and submit myself to its judgment."
McCoy had had quite enough. "For heaven's sake, Spock, just
get on with it."
"By sharing this information with you, Doctor, I am making
both you and Captain Kirk subject to disciplinary proceedings at
least, and I want you to be so informed."
"We're informed, Spock," Kirk said. "What have you found
out?"
"The Starfleet central computer system on Earth's moon has
becn compromised."
"That's impossible," McCoy sputtered.
"Apparently no longer," Spock replied calmly. "Starfleet Secu-
rity has learned of unauthorized data-retrieval worm programs
that have somehow been inserted into the system. How or why
this has been done is unknown. However, it is known that one of
the triggers for a particular program was the reference 'Gamma
Canaris.'" Spock paused and looked at Kirk.
Kirk understood the significance of Spock's information. "I
included that on the filing data for the personal log."
"Precisely," Spock said. "And though the actual contents of
your log were not uploaded to the system, its filing data were,
gMng the source of the item, the time and place of its creation,
and--"
"Its location within the archives storage stacks," Kirk con-
cluded grimly. "And since the information it contained was not
available in the computer itself, someone needed to physically
break in to obtain the log."
~But you said the log wasn't missing," McCoy objected.
Spock regarded McCoy with extreme forbearance. "Doctor, the
log was in the form of a standard, unencrypted data wafer. A
simple tricorder could record its data in seconds without leaving
any trace of the process."
Kirk was deeply troubled by Spock's revelation. "Why would
anyone be so interested in the Gamma Canaris region, Spock?
And who would have the technical ability to compromise
5tarfieet's central computer?"

163



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Spock appeared almost apologetic. "I have been able to arrive
at only one, extremely tenuous connection between Gamma
Canaris and current events," he said. "According to celestial
navigation charts as they were used one hundred and fifty years
ago, the Gamma Canaris region is almost directly opposite the
course that would be set at the time between Centauri B II and the
colony of Stapledon Center at Wolf 359."
Kirk understood instantly. "If Zefram Cochrane had been
intending to... throw off anyone who might be following him,
for whatever reason, what better way to gain some distance and
some time than by heading off in the opposite direction from the
one anyone would suspect?"
"Without subspace sensors," the science officer agreed, "the
possible volume of space Cochrane might be found in would grow
exponentially with each passing second."
"You're saying Cochrane was running from someone?" McCoy
asked, clearly astounded at this sudden expansion of his foul-play
theory.
Spock crossed his arms, clearly not eager for a debate. "I said it
was only a tenuous connection, Doctor. If it is real, I do not
pretend to understand its significance."
But the events of one hundred and fifty years ago weren't Kirk's
immediate concern. "What about Starfieet's computer system,
Spock? Who has the capability to enter it without detection?
Klingons? Romulans?"
"It is inconceivable that any hostile force could get operatives
close enough to the system's programming units. Such a force
would have to infiltrate key input stations on Earth's moon in
order to upload the sophisticated worm programs Starfleet has
detected," Spock said. "Then who?"
"Only someone working within Starfleet would have both the
opportunity and the capability to circumvent existing security
protocols."
The logical outcome of Spock's reasoning hit Kirk like a phaser
blast. There was no other explanation.
McCoy leaned forward, his voice an urgent whisper. "Do you
know what you're saying, Spock?"

164

FEDERATION

"I am well aware of the conclusions that can be drawn from the
information I have uncovered, Doctor."
Kirk stated those conclusions out loud, as repugnant as they
were. "There is a possibility that Admiral Kabreigny herself is
involved in a conspiracy at the highest levels of Starfleet, and that
that conspiracy has something to do with Zefram Cochrane."
McCoy was incensed. "That's madness. Next thing you'll be
saying that it's up to us to find the conspirators on our own
because we can't trust anybody!"
Spock nodded. "Indeed, Doctor, you have anticipated me. I
suggest we proceed with utmost caution, pursuing these affairs
outside of normal channels, as I have already begun. By acting
against Admiral Kabreigny, it is possible that we are helping to
preserve the stability of Starfleet and the Federation itself."
"But," Kirk warned, "if there is no conspiracy, it is just as
possible that we're engaging in treason."
On that encouraging note, Kirk recalled uneasily, the meeting
had ended.

As Kirk, Spock, and McCoy rounded the ridge to the west, they
didn't need their tricorders to tell them what had happened to
Cochrane's home.
The jewel-shaped prefab shelter had been torn apart by phaser
blasts. Half of it had fallen in on itself and the remnants were
streaked with soot from a long-extinguished fire. Two standing
wall sections were partially melted, and the ripples of solidified
metal that had formed around the beam blasts bore the unmistak-
able glitter of phasered metal.
'~Good Lord," McCoy whispered.
"We didn't give them any weapons," Kirk said with bitter
regret. Before leaving orbit six months earlier, he had personally
beamed clown two pallets of supplies, with seeds, farming imple-
ments, a computer reader, a library of data wafers, even a
subspace radio in case Cochrane changed his mind about commu-
nicating with the galaxy. But he had included no phasers.
Spock checked his tricorder. "Judging from the ferocity of the
attack, Captain, hand phasers would not have offered much in the
way of defense." He pointed to a rise in the distance. "Note the

165



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
disturbance in the soil on that small hill." Kirk saw it. "I surmise
a craft of some kind landed there. Most likely armed with a phaser
cannon."
Kirk felt sick. Is this how the twenty-third century had wel-
comed Cochrane? Is this what Kirk had done to him?
Spock squinted at his tricorder screen. "Doctor, are you still
detecting no life signs?"
McCoy broke out his medical tricorder. "I... I don't know."
He looked at Spock. "The Companion?"
"Captain, there appears to be something in the wreckage of the
shelter which is alive. Barely."
Kirk was scrambling through the loose, sandy soil before Spock
and McCoy had shut off their equipment. "Cochrane?!" he
shouted. "Companion ?!"
He looked down as he sprinted toward the shelter. There were
dozens of bootprints in the soil, overlapping, many switching
directions, all the signs of a fight. Most were softened by the wind,
but no more than a few weeks old.
Kirk came to the melted doorway of the shelter. There was no
way in. He called out again.
There was an answer: a moan from the back.
Kirk swung around to the left. Spock and McCoy went to the
right. One fallen wall panel had been propped up like a lean-to
against an empty supply pallet from the Enterprise. Empty water
packs were strewn around it along with wrappings from Starfleet
emergency rations.
"Cochrane?" Kirk asked of the shadows beneath the wall panel.
Someone--something--moved within the darkness. A thin,
white hand fell out. There was another moan. Spock and McCoy
ran up from the other side as Kirk dropped to his knees and
reached in to gather the small figure in his arms.
"Companion," he said gently. "I heard your message. I've come
for you."
I~irk stood up with the limp form of Federation Commissioner
Nancy Hedford in his arms. She was dressed in a torn, pale orange
jumpsuit similar to the one Cochrane had worn. Her face was
smudged with dirt, dried blood at the corner of her mouth and
under her nose. on one side of her head, her dark hair was caked

166

FEDERATION

with blood. On the other side, it was little more than singed
bristle. with angry red blisters visible on her scalp. She was also at
least five kilos lighter than she had been when Kirk had seen her
last. on a frame that could not remain healthy with that loss.
McCoy held a scanner delicately to her temple, ran it above her
chest. adjusting the device's sensitivity to block out Kirk's
readings.
.'Companion, what happened?" Kirk asked. "Where's
Zefram?"
The Companion's eyes fluttered open at the name. The white of
one eye was dark red with broken capillaries. She had been hit by
a strong phaser blast, Kirk realized; probably left for dead by
whoever did this.
"Zefram..." the Companion whispered. Her voice was dry,
weak, but there was still the faint, haunting overlay of two voices
speaking at once--the energy being and Nancy Hedford com-
bined as one.
Kirk glanced at McCoy. McCoy shook his head grimly. He
pulled a hypospray from his medical kit and held it to the
Companion's arm. It hissed softly.
"They took him," the Companion said weakly. "They took the
man and he is gone." Then whatever McCoy had injected her
with took hold. For a moment, awareness blossomed in her eyes
and she looked directly at Kirk.
"We are alone," the Companion cried out in anguish. Tears cut
furrows through the smudges on her cheeks. Kirk felt her frail
body tremble in his arms. "How do you bear it? How... ?" Her
body shuddered, then went limp. Kirk looked at McCoy in alarm.
"I can't tell you why she's still alive, but she is," McCoy said.
"Extreme symptoms of exposure bordering on hypothermia.
Dehydration. Starvation. Massive phaser damage to the central
nervous system. Jim, she was hit by a beam set to kill."
Kirk looked at his officers and made his decision. "We can't
keep this to ourselves any longer."
"No," McCoy agreed. "She must be treated on the Enterprise."
Spock disagreed. "She draws her life from this place, Doctor.
She cannot remain apart from it."
"Damn it, Spock--if I can't stabilize her, it won't matter where

167



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
she is. Besides, look around you. Whatever it is she draws from
this planetoid, somehow it must be getting something from her in
return. And the way she is now, she's in no condition to keep it
functioning. It's all going to blazes." McCoy turned to Kirk. "Jim,
if I keep her in isolation, we can probably avoid Admiral
Kabreigny hearing any mention of Cochrane, but I've got to treat
her up on the Enterprise."
"The admiral can't be our main concern now," Kirk said. "But
keeping her in isolation is worth a try. Call for a beam-up, Doctor.
Medical emergency. Mr. Spock, I want a full security detail down
here. I want to know what kind of phasers were used, what landed
on that hill, and how many attackers were involved. I also want a
full orbital scan, looking for any ionization traces of a ship that
might have left here in the past four to five weeks." "I shall remain here to coordinate," Spock said.
McCoy spoke into his communicator. "Enterprise, three to
beam up at these coordinates. Mr. Spock is staying on the surface.
Alert sickbay we have a medical emergency. The patient
is... human."
Kirk shifted his grip on the Companion's unconscious form.
She felt so fragile he was afraid she might break in his grasp.
Spock stepped away from Kirk and McCoy to give the trans-
porter technician on the Enterprise an easier fix. "Good luck,
Captain," he said.
Kirk regarded his friend with a slight smile. "That's not very
logical, Spock."
"Perhaps," Spock agreed. "But I have found there are times in
human affairs where logic does not apply. This, unfortunately,
may be one of them."

"They came for him," the Companion said, her voice twinned
in eerie'harmony with Nancy Hedford's. "At night, a ship landed,
not far, on the hill. Zefram was so happy, so excited." She looked
over at Kirk with a bittersweet smile. "He thought it might be
you, Captain Kirk."
Kirk squeezed the Companion's gaunt hand. Her pulse as
amplified by the life-sign monitor above the medical bed was

FEDERATION

regular, though weak. She had been cleansed of blood and dirt,
and McCoy had worked his magic so that there was color in her
face again, but the glittering bandage around her forehead and
over her phaser-damaged eye still attested to the seriousness of
her condition.
However, McCoy was certain she would pull through, if only
because the effect of the Companion on Nancy Hedford's human
body had a cumulative, restoring influence, no doubt the same
process by which Sakuro's disease had been vanquished. But Kirk
didn't know if the Companion would maintain the will to survive.
The security detail on the planetoid's surface had found no trace
of Zefram Cochrane. Only indications of wanton destruction, as
if whoever had come for the scientist had wanted to leave no trace
of his presence there.
"Do you know who they were?" Kirk asked, keeping his hand
closed over the Companion's, trying to help her fight the desper-
ate aloneness he knew she must be experiencing.
"Part of us does not," the double voices sighed, "but part of us
says... ~Orions.'"
Kirk tried to stay calm. McCoy was by his side and had been
firm in his insistence that Kirk not alarm or tire his patient. "Did
they have green skin?" Kirk asked.
The Companion nodded. "And they came with phasers
. phasers..." She closed her one exposed eye. "Such a hateful
thing it is. The man ran to them, he welcomed them to our home,
and they used energy against him, made him fall. We heard his
thoughts cease. We were so alone .... "
Kirk wasn't sure what she meant by hearing Cochrane's
thoughts cease. "Was Zefram alive?" he asked. "Did he
... continue?"
The Companion looked up to the ceiling of sickbay. "The man
continues" she said. "We can feel him still. But he is so far away."
"How far?" Kirk asked.
The Companion opened and closed her mouth as if trying to
answer. ~Part of us knows, but the other part cannot say." She
sighed again. "We will not feel him for long. He is that far away."
'~Could you take us to him?" Kirk said.

169



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
But that was crossing McCoy's line. "Jim! You know she can't
leave the planetoid."
"Companion," Kirk said, leaning closer to her, "how long can
you remain away from your home?"
"Without us there to tend it, care for it, our home is dying," she
said wistfully. "We will know death. Without the man, how can
we have a home? How can we live?"
McCoy took over. "Companion, listen to me. I'm your doctor.
Part of you has to know what that means. And as your doctor, I
guarantee you you're not dying. You're strong, getting stronger.
You'll be able to continue. But what I need to know is, how soon
must you return to the surface?"
"A tiny march of days," the Companion said. "Less than a year,
less than a month. You have so many names for what is the same
thing, this passage of time. How do you keep it all in your mind,
worrying about such things?"
"Less than a week?" Kirk asked. "Can you stay off your home
for no more than a single week? Two weeks?" "We do not know."
"Try," Kirk implored her. "Both parts of you must work
together if you ever want to see the man again. Do you understand
me? Nancy Hedford must Ilsten to the Companion, translate her
thoughts into terms we can understand."
The Companion stared straight up in silence. At last she spoke.
"Six days," she said. "If we do not return in six days, we will not
continue."
"And how far away is the man?" Kirk said. "Ask the Nancy
Hedford part to remember what she knows about starships. Can
we reach the man and return with him here in less than six days?"
Kirk felt McCoy's hand on his shoulder, silently warning him not
to continue this pressure on the woman much longer.
"It is so confusing," the Companion said. "Zefram would help
us when this happened."
"Can I help?" Kirk said urgently, knowing that McCoy would
act to stop him soon. "Is there anything I can do to make this
easier?"
"He is close," the Companion wept. "He is in such pain."

FEDERATION

"How close?" Kirk demanded.
.-Captain! You can't push her like this," McCoy finally
snapped.
Kirk ignored the doctor. "Companion, talk to Nancy Hedford
again. Wherever the man is, can this ship go to him and return
here in six days?"
'Yes." the Companion whispered after a moment. "At your
fastest speed."
"Can you tell us where to go?" Kirk asked, excited to finally be
getting somewhere.
"We do not have the words," the Companion replied. "No part
of us has the words."
Kirk squeezed her hand. "That's all right. We'll teach you the
words." He looked at McCoy. "Do whatever you have to to get
her to the Auxiliary Control Center." "What?!"
'TI1 have Sulu meet us there. He can go over the charts with
her. work out some sort of mutually understandable coordinate
system we can feed into navigation without being on the bridge."
Refusal was in McCoy's eyes. "She won't be able to take the
strain."
"She loves him, Bones. She'll be able to take the strain. Or
neither of them will continue."
"This is insane," McCoy said. But as Kirk had known he
would, the doctor was weakening at the mention of the power of
romantic love.
"Only for six days. Then... it won't matter."
"And what will you tell the admiral? I can't keep saying that
Commissioner Hedford is in a coma."
"We'll tell the admiral we're searching for the missing liner.
And we will be. It has to be connected with this." The heartbeat
from the medical board began to slow. Kirk felt the Companion's
fingers loosen in his.
McCov checked the board. His tone was stern, filled with
medical authority no captain could override. "She's sleeping
again. It would be advantageous if she were allowed to continue to
do so."

171



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Kirk thought it over. "Spock needs another hour on the surface.
But then I want her working with Sulu."
McCoy nodded though it was clear he wasn't pleased. Then he
took on a different expression, troubled, wondering. "Who do you
think has him, Jim?"
Kirk shrugged. "Orion pirates? Smugglers? They were behind
the attempt to derail the Babel Conference."
"But if Spock's right about the Gamma Canaris connection to
Cochrane, then this has been going on for longer than we've even
known about Coridan. Longer than there's even been a Federa-
tion."
"I can't answer that, Bones, because I don't know." Kirk wasn't
happy with the answer but it was the best he could do. "What
matters is that someone has Cochrane, and they have him because
of my log. Why they were even looking for him in the first place, I
don't know. Why Admiral Kabreigny is interested in all this, I
don't know. But what I do know is that we're going to find
Cochrane, we're going to free him, and then we can look into the
other questions." Kirk paused for a moment. "Besides, chances
are that Cochrane's the one who can answer all of them for us."
McCoy shook his head as if trying to clear it. "What can
possibly last a hundred and fifty years?" he asked.
Kirk looked down at the sleeping form of the Companion.
"Love," he said.

Kirk stepped out of the turbolift and onto the bridge of the
Enterprise. At once he was rewarded with the pulse of the great
ship, the constant background sounds of her computers, the
lowered voices of her crew, speaking quickly, competently, keep-
ing her on her course. But he felt punished, too. His chair wasn't
empty. Admiral Kabreigny still sat in it, a cup of coffee in her
hand, speaking with Uhura.
Kirk stood by his chair but the admiral made no move to
relinquish her position of command. Kirk could see unease flicker
across Uhura's face. He wasn't the only one to think that only one
person had the right to that chair.
"How's the patient?" Kabreigny asked. "Still in a coma?" The
way she asked the question left Kirk no doubt that she did not
172

FEDERATION

believe McCoy's diagnosis. But still, the admiral had made no
attempt to see Nancy Hedford herself.
"The doctor thinks she'll recover," Kirk said.
"She's already come back from the dead once, Captain." The
admiral smiled tightly. "I have no doubt she'll be able to throw off
the effects of exposure just as easily."
--With respect, Admiral: The patient in sickbay is not, strictly
speaking, Nancy Hedford. She is a... blending of two life-forms
into one. The energy anomaly that drew the Galileo off course
has--"
But the admiral was not in the mood for Kirk's story. "Spare
me. Captain. Commissioner Hedford is not why I'm out here."
Kirk waited for her to continue. In the meantime, the urge he
felt. the need, to sit in the command chair was almost physical.
'Tve been reviewing the commissioner's first transmission with
your communications officer," the admiral said.
Uhura glanced at Kirk as if to ask if it was all right for her to
ha~e worked with the admiral. Like Mr. Scott, she was seeking
confirmation for orders, though none was necessary. Kirk nod-
ded, certain that Kabreigny had caught the exchange. "And what have you found?" Kirk asked.
Kabreigny leaned back in the chair, making a show of how
comfortable she found it. "Because of the smeared carrier wave
~hich prevented anyone getting a fix on its source, Command
originally presumed it had come from the missing liner. However,
I noticed among the sensor scans of the 'wreckage' Mr. Spock is
investigating on the surface that there is a Starfleet secure
transmitter down there."
'What's correct," Kirk said. He and McCoy and Spock had
already prepared the next level of revelation for the admiral--
telling the whole story of what had happened six months earlier,
only leaving out the parts about Cochrane. "I left it for the
Hedford being in case she ever wished to change her mind about
her desire for privacy."
Kabreigny checked a list on the writing padd in her lap. "Along
x~th farming supplies, emergency rations, computer equipment,
library wafers, et cetera, et cetera?"

"From the stores we carry specifically for the support of

173



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
colonies," Kirk said. His standing orders made ample provision
for the Enterprise to provide help of any kind for beleaguered
colonies. He had done nothing wrong in leaving supplies for
Cochrane and the Companion.
"Of course, of course," Kabreigny agreed offhandedly. "I was
just checking through the titles of the computer journals and
books you left behind for the... the 'Hedford being.'"
Kirk prepared himself. He and Spock had picked out most of
those titles together. He knew what they were and what the
admiral had found.
"It seems," Kabreigny said, "that the Hedford being has made
quite a hobby out of multiphysics and warp-drive theory."
"As an energy being, she was capable of moving at warp
velocities on her own," Kirk said unconvincingly. "We
thought--"
"Captain Kirk," the admiral interrupted sharply. "Join me."
She indicated the turbolift, handed her coffee cup to Uhura, who
didn't know what to do with it, then rose majestically to her feet,
leaving the command chair.
Kirk let her lead the way. Chekov took over the chair behind
them. That didn't bother Kirk. As part of the crew of this ship,
Chekov belonged there in the established chain of command
during nonemergency duty. It was only the admiral's presence
that rankled him.
The turbolift doors shut. Kabreigny stood facing forward,
hands behind her back. "Take this car out of service," she said.
The computer replied, "This car is not experiencing any
mechanical difficulty."
Kabreigny's lips thinned. "Is everyone on this ship going to
question my orders?"
"Computer," Kirk said, "take this car out of service."
Instantly the lift car began to drop through the ship several
levels, before shunting to the side and parking near a turbolift
service bay.
When the car came to a stop, Kabreigny faced the captain. "You
know what it means when you get to be my age, Kirk?"
Kirk shook his head, steeling himself to endure whatever it was
the admiral felt she must say to him. All he wanted to do was save

FEDERATION

Cochrane. Keeping the admiral mollified might help him accom-
plish that.
"It means you don't have much time left, so you're not inclined
to waste it. So I won't." She fixed him with a penetrating stare.
Her bright eyes displayed no hint of the age of the rest of her.
'Zefram Cochrane was down there, wasn't he?"
Kirk had already made up his mind not to be surprised by
anything the admiral might say, but that hadn't prepared him for
this. There was only one possible explanation.
"It appears that personal logs aren't that personal after all," he
said.
Kabreigny's stare became fierce with displeasure. "The archive
personnel take their jobs seriously, Captain. I didn't read your
log. But from your comment, am I to assume your log contains a
/it//account of what transpired here six months ago?" "It does."
"Well, that's one consolation, at least. You weren't completely
derelict in your duty."
Kabreigny might as well have slapped Kirk for the response her
comment drew from him.
"Does the admiral wish to bring formal charges against me?"
he asked coldly, barely restraining his own anger.
"At ease, Captain. This conversation is off the record."
Kirk held his derisive laughter with some difficulty. So far, it
seemed, this whole mission was off the record. "Then may I ask
xvhy you think Zefram Cochrane was present on this planetoid?"
Kabreigny patted the back of her head, without disturbing the
tightly coiled bun of white hair.
'Wou can ask, Captain. But I'm not inclined to answer. Howev-
er. what I intend to know is: Do you know where Cochrane is
now?"
"You do realize Zefram Cochrane was born on Earth in the year
2030" Kirk said. If the admiral wasn't going to give up informa-
tion. he didn't see why he should, either. He still had no
indication that what she was doing was under authority of
Starfleet. "If he's anywhere, he would be two hundred and
thirty-seven years old."
~Mere calendar age is becoming less and less of an issue these



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

days, Captain. Cryonic suspension, EinsteinJan time dilation
from high-velocity impulse-powered flights... there're lots of
opportunities to slow down the clock, as I know you know from
your run-in with Khan." Kabreigny's eyes narrowed as she
regarded Kirk with suspicion. "Now, Captain, I am ordering you
to tell me: Was Zefram Cochrane present on the planetold six
months ago, and, if so, where is he now?"
The inevitable had arrived. One option was for Kirk to refuse to
obey the admiral's orders and have her placed under arrest until
he could determine the reason for her involvement in the search
for Cochrane. If Spock was correct in implying that the admiral
was somehow connected to a conspiracy within Starfleet, then
Kirk would be acting within the bounds of the Starfleet charter.
However, if the admiral was not part of a conspiracy, if she was
involved in a classified program of which Kirk had no knowledge,
then he faced charges ranging from insubordination to mutiny.
But Kirk had long ago determined that when faced with an
impossible decision, the best choice was to change the playing
field. In this case, the playing field was the Ente~7~rise. And Kirk
held absolute control over it. His decision became much simpler.
He would acquiesce to the admiral's demands, secure in the
knowledge that she would not be permitted to send one message
from this ship without Kirk's knowing about it and approving it.
He felt the hum of the Enterprise through the floor of the
turbolift. It was as if his ship were urging him on, a part of him.
For a fleeting instant, Kirk wondered if this was how Nancy
Hedford had felt when she had merged with the Companion--
two life-forms becoming one.
"On stardate 3219.8, Mr. Spock, Dr. McCoy, Commissioner
Nancy Hedford, and I met Zefram Cochrane on the planetold
we're orbiting."
Kabreigny folded her arms and leaned back against the wall of
the turbolift, an expression of intense interest on her face. '*A wise
decision, Captain. Now, what was his condition?"
"Excellent. Mr. Cochrane related to us that he had set off into
space at the age of eight?seven, that his ship was diverted by the
energy being who lives on the planetold--"

FEDERATION

Kabreigny's eyes widened. '*There is an energy being?"
Kirk nodded. "The name Cochrane gave her is 'the Compan-
ion.' She somehow rejuvenated him, bringing him back to the
2eneral health and appearance of a human in his thirties, and
jnaintained him at that level for the next century and a half."
Kabreigny unconsciously touched her own wrinkled face. "Re-
juxcnated him? Brought back his youth?"
Kirk continued. "The Companion subsequently merged with
C'ommissioner Hedford, moments before Sakuro's disease
claimcd her. They have since become a single life-form."
Kabreigny spoke slowly, deliberately. "To be candid, Kirk, I
thoughi you were making up all that crap."
"We were simply trying to respect Mr. Cochrane's wishes not to
hc disturbed."
"l;nibrtunately, Mr. Cochrane no longer has that luxury. Do
xot! k~o~ where he is now?"
"No." Kirk said, "but the Companion does."
"Can she take us to him?"
~' Possibly." Kirk decided to test the new relationship he seemed
to have with the admiral. "By all indications below, it appears
that someone... unfriendly... learned of Cochrane's presence
on tinis planetold by reading my personal log, then came after him
ands. kidnapped him."
~'That's a fair assessment," Kabreigny agreed.
"Do you know who that might be?"
"Possibly." The admiral did not elaborate.
"Klingons?" Kirk prodded, trying to provoke a response from
her. Anything to provide him more clues to work with.
But Kabreigny shook her head. "If only it were that easy." Then
shc continued before Kirk could say anything else. "And any
suspicions I might have are classified, Captain. I'm sorry," she
added. as if she really were trying to sound apologetic, "but you're
going to have to trust me just a bit longer."
Kirk thought that was an odd thing for her to say, considering
he wax finding it increasingly difficult to conceal that he didn't
trust her at all.

"No~v get this lift back in service and get the Companion up on

177



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

the bridge. At this moment, Zefram Cochrane holds the future of
Starfleet in his hands. And I want him before... anyone else gets
to him. Do I make myself clear, Captain?"
"Not really," Kirk said. "But the Enterprise is at your dispo-
sal."
Kabreigny looked thoughtful. "I appreciate your cooperation,"
she said. "I wasn't sure I'd get it so quickly."
Kirk smiled noncommittally. He had no intention of being
cooperative with someone who might be out to tear down
Starfleet and destroy the Federation. But there was no need to tell
the admiral that.
Until it was time to stop her, of course.

TWELVE

#.S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
DEEP SPACE
Stardate 43921.4
Earth Standard: May 2366

178

"Coming up on Ferengi coordinates," Acting Ensign Crusher
reported from the conn.
Beside him, back at his regular position at Ops, Data confirmed
what Picard and his officers had suspected. "No sign of any object
with a mass of forty-five point three five kilotonnes, Captain. In
fact. sensors detect no sign of any object other than the Romulan
Warbird within range."
Picard glanced at Riker. "What did they use to call this,
Number One? A 'wild-goose chase'?" Riker smiled appreciatively.
But Data added, "Perhaps I should clarify that, sir. Other than
the Ferengi crew, sensors also report no life-forms of any kind in
the surrounding region, including representatives of the class
(t l'(?~$. "
"It was just a colloquial expression, Data," Picard explained.
Data blinked, assimilating his misinterpretation. "I see. Then
should I file 'wild-goose chase' under the same classification as the
~snipe hunt' Commander Riker had me engage in while we were at
Starbase Twelve?"
Picard hadn't heard about that incident. He had been otherwise

179



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

engaged with Vash when the Enterprise had been at Starbase 12 a
few months earlier. But Mr. Data's snipe hunt must have gone
well, because he saw Riker cover his mouth in order to stifle a
laugh.
"That would probably be a good idea," Picard agreed.
"Have you ever attempted to capture snipe, Captain Picard?"
Picard concentrated on keeping his voice neutral. "In my
Academy days, Mr. Data. I believe it is an activity all cadets
become familiar with."
"I see," Data said refiectively. "I was not successful, though I
did hold the bag and call for the snipe exactly as Commander
Riker had instructed me. Snipe appear to be exceptionally well
evolved for remaining unseen. Even the ship's computer has no
record of--"
Riker couldn't contain himself any longer. He laughed. Data
looked back at him, then at Picard. "Captain?"
"I'm sorry, Data. It's just that, well, there are no such things as
snipe."
"What?" Wesley Crusher said.
Data looked across at him in commiseration. "Have you also
hunted snipe, Wesley?"
The acting ensign's face tightened. "Geordi told me--"
But Riker interrupted. "Eyes on the board, Mr. Crusher!"
"Aye, sir." The acting ensign went back to his duties, as did
Data.
"At least that would explain why no one has ever seen one,"
Data said.
Picard and Riker exchanged a smile.
"Dropping to sublight," Mr. Crusher announced. "And full
stop."
The Ferengi-operated Warbird appeared in the center of the
main viewscreen.
"Full sensor sweep," Picard ordered.
"We are the only two objects within range," Data responded.
Picard made a gesture toward the screen. "Hail the Romulan--
uh, Ferengi vessel, Mr. Worf." "Onscreen, Captain."
DaiMon Pol appeared. "Greetings. Captain Pee-card. I am--"

180

FEDERATION

"1 do not wish to engage in additional small talk," Picard said,
full of bluster, trying to keep the Ferengi on his toes. "Where is the
artil2~ct'?"
DaiMon Pol appeared hurt by Picard's attitude. "Negotiations
should be a time of social interaction, Captain Pee-card. There is
no need--"
"Look," Picard said more forcefully. "You have given us
coordinates that were supposed to have been those of an object
you wished to sell us. There is no object here. Now explain
~ourself or we will withdraw." Picard turned to Troi. She gave
him a nod. He was carrying out his role perfectly.
DaiMon Pol shook his head sorrowfully. "I will never under-
stand /ww-mans. You have no sense of the joy of commerce in
your souls." DaiMon Pol pointed a finger offscreen. "When next
we talk. Pee-card, you will make your offer or I will withdraw."
Then DaiMon Pol vanished from the viewscreen, replaced by an
image of his ship a kilometer distant.
Riker looked at Picard. "What was all that about?"
"l'm not sure," Troi answered with concern. "He's acting as if
he does not expect to talk with us again."
"Captain," Data stated calmly. "A second Warbird is
alecloaking."
Picard stood as, in front of DaiMon Pol's ship, an optical
wavering began. "Red Alert, Mr. Worf. Maximum shields."
"I knew it!" Worf exclaimed, even as the sirens began and the
warning lights flashed. "All phaser banks on standby. Photon
torpedoes armed and ready."
The second Warbird finished its materialization, becoming
solid before them.
"Battle readout on the second ship," Riker said.
'qts shields are down, Commander," Data replied. "In addi-
tion, none of its weapons systems are on-line."
'Tull magnification on the Warbird's markings," Picard said.
He looked over at Riker. "Do you think the Ferengi are bold
enough to have stolen two Romulan ships?"
The viewscreen image jumped to a close-up of the second ship's
hull. clearly showing Romulan script on its side.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Maybe they haven't had a chance to repaint it," Riker
suggested sarcastically.
"The second ship is hailing us," Worf reported.
Picard sighed. He was getting exactly what he had anticipated
--the unexpected. "Onscreen, Mr. Worf. And switch off those
alarms, please."
The alarms ended as the viewscreen image changed, once again
showing the interior of a Romulan bridge. But, for a change, a
Romulan was present. She wore a standard military uniform and
her black hair was pulled back tightly to her skull in a warrior's
queue, making her vulcanold ears more pronounced. Her heavy,
angular brow threw dark shadows across her eyes, but Picard
could tell that unlike most Romulans he had encountered, she was
not attempting to hide anything. She was clearly anxious, though
about what, he did not know.
"Captain Picard," the Romulan began. "I am Taft, commander
of this vessel. I apologize for the subterfuge that was used to bring
you here."
Picard was aware of Troi standing behind him, out of sight of
the optical sensors that were relaying his image to the Romulan
ship. "I'm picking up worry, Captain."
Picard turned to face Troi, his back to the screen. "Is this a
trap?" he whispered.
Troi shook her head. "I do not sense she means us harm. Only
that she fears others wish to do her harm."
"I see," Picard said. He turned back to the screen.
"Commander Taft, I must ask for an explanation of this
subterfuge. Am I to take it that there is no Borg artifact?"
"Oh, but there is, Captain," the Romulan said. "Though it does
not belong to the Ferengi."
Picard waited expectantly. "Please. Continue."
The Romulan lifted her chin defiantly.
"This is difficult for her, Captain," Troi said softly behind him.
"I have stolen the artifact from my people," the Romulan said.
"I wish to give it to the Federation in exchange for a ship and
supplies for myself and my supporters."
"She's hiding something," Troi whispered.

182

FEDERATION

"May I ask why?" Picard said.
The Romulan appeared deadly serious. "I am not a traitor,
Captain. But I know the threat the Borg represent to my people.
And I know that the politics of the central command preclude any
chance of understanding the nature of the artifact before the Borg
reach our borders." She sighed. Even Picard could tell that what
she said was painful for her. "I want your Federation scientists to
study the artifact, to devise some kind of defense against those
creatures, and to share it with us. Otherwise, the Romulan Star
Empire will not survive."
"Then why go through all this to sell the artifact to us?" Picard
asked. "And why involve the Ferengi? Why not just give it to us?"
The Romulan's face darkened in anger. "Understand my
situation! I have stolen from the Empire! There is no escape for
me except what you can provide. A ship, supplies, a chance for my
crew and me to survive, in exchange for a chance for your people
and mine to survive. The Ferengi are my brokers, Captain, no
more than that. I needed them to seek you out and entice you here
in a way that would not alert your Betazoid counselor. DaiMon
Pol has received a Warbird in partial payment for his services.
When you give me a new ship, he will have this one as well." She
clasped her hands before her, a most human gesture of supplica-
tion. "I am not bargaining with you, Captain. The artifact is yours
without conditions. I only ask recognition that I have not acted
against the best wishes of the Empire, and a chance to live."
Picard chose his next words carefully. "Your proposition is
extremely compelling, Commander. But I must confer with my
staff before giving you what you have asked for."
"Then be quick about it," the Romulan said. "The compliance
divisions are searching for me even now."
She disappeared from the screen. Two green Warbirds hung
against the stars. Picard went to Data.
"Well. Mr. Data, it appears your analysis of the Federation's
generosity was not only correct, it is shared by the Romulan
COmmander" Picard told the android.
Data turned to Troi. "I would be interested to know if the
counselor feels Tarl was telling the truth."

183



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Troi looked thoughtful. "For the most part, yes, I believe she is.
But she is holding back something."
"Something harmful?" Picard asked.
Troi shook her head. "I don't think so, Captain. But she is
afraid of what will happen to her if her mission fails."
Riker stepped up beside Picard and Troi. "It would be nice to
know exactly what that mission is."
Worf added his opinion. "I see no need to try and second-guess
a Romulan. She has said that there is an artifact. Let us demand
to see it. There is still the possibility that this is nothing but an
elaborate hoax."
"That seems most reasonable," Picard said. Riker and Troi
agreed. "Put the Romulan commander back onscreen, Mr.
Worf."
When Tarl had appeared again, Picard laid out his conditions.
"So you see," he concluded, "it is imperative that we examine the
artifact in order to know how to proceed past this point."
Tarl looked impatient. "I do not understand how people so
cautious have accomplished all that you have. If you had been
Romulan, this business would have been completed within a
minute of our meeting."
"If we had been Romulan," Picard observed, "you would
already have been executed for treason, and the Borg would still
threaten your Empire. Now, where may we find the artifact?"
"Assemble a scientific team, then beam them to my hangar
deck. The artifact is there."
"On your ship?" Picard asked.
The Romulan's lip curled in a sneer. "I have already answered
that." She made a curt gesture and the transmission ceased again.
Picard turned to Riker and Troi. "Well, this should be most
interesting. I have never seen the hangar deck of a Warbird."
"And you're not going to see it today," Riker said with an edge
to his voice. "With all respect, sir, there is no way I'm allowing
you to beam over to a hostile vessel."
"That is not a hostile vessel, Number One. Commander Tarl is
no longer part of the Romulan Empire."
But Riker remained unconvinced. "We'll transmit images of

184

FEDERATION

the artifact as we examine it," he said. "Data, Worf, you're with
me." He touched his communicator. "Mr. La Forge, report to
Transporter Room Four. Bring a field engineering diagnostic kit."
Riker headed toward the aft turbolift. Data and Worf were
already falling into step behind him as La Forge acknowledged.
"Will." Picard said just before the lift door closed. "Be careful
over there."
Riker smiled at his captain. "That's my job, sir." Then he was
gone.
Picard was left on the bridge, feeling removed from the action
once again. That was the problem in dealing with the unexpected,
he decided. It never worked out the way he hoped.

The Romulan D'deridex-class Warbird was almost twice the
length of the Federation Galaxy-class starship, and her hangar
deck was at least three times the volume of the Enterprise's main
shuttlebay. Even on the bridge viewscreen, the structure was
impressive to Picard, and he couldn't help wondering what it
would feel like to walk its green metal deckplates himself.
The image Picard and Troi watched from their command
chairs was being transmitted by a small optical sensor carried by
Data. For the moment, the android was using it to scan the entire
hangar deck. Picard lost track of the number of smaller Romulan
craft he saw, some ready for launching, others stacked in metal
grillwork on the distant walls. He was hopeful that no matter what
information they recovered about the artifact, these interior
iexvs of the Warbird would be useful to Starfleet Intelligence.
Data's voice came over the bridge communication system.
"Are you receiving the images clearly, Captain?"
"xa~ are," Picard answered. "Is the artifact nearby?"
The image on the screen began to shift as Data pointed his
sensor in a new direction. "Commander Taft is directing us to it
no~. Can you see it?"
Picard felt his heart rate quicken. The artifact was there, at least
the size of three Federation runabouts crushed together, encased
in green metal scaffolding and ringed by portable lights. It grew
larger on the screen with each step Data took toward it. From

185



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

time to time, the backs of La Forge, Riker, and two Romulans
intruded on the scene, but that did nothing to lessen the visual
impact of the object.
Troi smiled at Picard. "I can sense your excitement without
even trying, Captain."
Picard nodded. He was not embarrassed to admit it. What
could be more exciting than discovering something that could
save the Federation? "The survival of the Federation might be
about to be dropped in our laps," he said. "This could be a pivotal
moment in our history."
"In the galaxy's history as well," Troi agreed.
"Captain," Data transmitted, "Commander Taft is permitting
us to examine the artifact now. Initial scans confirm its composi-
tion closely matches that of the Borg vessel we encountered at
System J-25."
"Wonderful," Picard said under his breath, hoping his excite-
ment was not as apparent to Tarl as it was to his counselor. "May I
speak with the commander?"
The viewscreen image swung to the side until Tarl appeared.
She looked into the optical sensor. "Yes, Captain?"
"Commander, can you tell me where you obtained this speci-
men?"
The Romulan looked grim. "I obtained it when I took com-
mand of this vessel with a small group of supporters. As for where
the Empire obtained it, I am too much of a patriot to reveal all the
details. Suffice it to say a Borg vessel attacked one of our most
distant outposts. In the ensuing battle, a fleet of twenty ships was
lost, five of them Warbirds. At the height of the battle, a freighter
managed to collide with the Borg ship and some debris was
knocked free. This artifact is part of that debris, removed by
mechanical force and not energy weapons. That is all I can tell
you."
"That is enough," Picard said compassionately. "I have no
wish for you to compromise the security of the Empire."
"Thank you, Captain." Commander Tarl stepped away and
Data returned the optical sensor to a view of the artifact. Then the
image jiggled beyond the capability of the ship's computer to
steady it.

186

FEDERATION

~'Captain Picard," Data said, "I am going to mount the optical
sensor on a light stand so that you may monitor our activities. I
will be more useful working on the artifact myself." "Carry on, Mr. Data," Picard approved.
Data's back appeared on the screen as he walked toward the
Borg monstrosity. Riker, La Forge, and Worf were already on the
scaffolding, scanning the artifact intently with tricorders. Picard
turned to Troi. "Was there much equivocation in the command-
cr's story about the origin of this artifact?" he asked.
"Some," Troi said. "But mostly she was hesitant about reveal-
ing the location of the outpost. Also, she was feeling a great deal of
frustration over the number of ships that had been lost in the
attack."
"Twenty," Picard repeated. "And five Warbirds. A significant
loss. But I do have to wonder why such an armada was available
for the defense of one of the Empire's farthest outposts."
"Perhaps they had some warning that the attack was immi-
nent?"
"If they do have some way of detecting the Borg at great
distances, perhaps the commander can be persuaded to share that
secret with us as well."
La Forge's voice came over the communications system. "Cap-
tain, this chunk of machinery is in better shape than it looks. The
outside is pretty banged up, but the interior structure seems to be
intact. And I am picking up a low-level energy reading."
Picard grew anxious. "You're certain there are no defensive
systems in the artifact which you might inadvertently trigger?"
"Fairly certain, Captain. If the Romulans have been poking
around this thing as much as this scaffolding suggests and they
haven't run into anything, we're not going to either."
~'Just the same, monitor that energy reading continuously and
withdraw if it starts to increase."
~'Understood, Captain. I'm going to try to squeeze in between
two conduits here and take a look inside. But I'm almost positive
that this is a legitimate piece of Borg technology."
"Thank you, Mr. La Forge. Carry on." Picard looked over at
the counseior.
"I agree," she said, responding to his emotional state.

187



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

For the next few minutes, little happened. Picard overheard
some of the conversation among his away team, mostly exhorta-
tions to hold something still, or to shine a light in a different
direction, but what exactly they were doing was impossible to see
from the optical sensor's angle. Commander Tarl contacted
Picard once to ask that the process be accelerated. But Picard
politely declined to interfere with his people. La Forge had said he
was "almost positive" about the artifact's origin. When he said he
was absolutely certain, that was when Picard would act.
More silent minutes passed, until Troi commented on the fact
that they had heard nothing for quite a length of time.
Picard frowned. "Enterprise to Commander Riker. Status
report, please."
Uncharacteristically, Riker replied, "Just a moment, Captain.
We're in the middle of a... tricky measurement." "That was, without question, a lie," Troi said.
But Picard knew Riker would never lie to him. "Are they in
danger?"
Troi shook her head. "On the contrary, sir. They seem to be
giving absolutely no thought to the fact they're on a Romulan
vessel inside a piece of potentially deadly technology." The
Betazoid counselor looked perplexed as she struggled to under-
stand the impressions she received. "If anything, sir, they're even
more excited now than they were when they first saw the artifact."
"More excited?" Picard said.
As if in answer, Riker finally replied to Picard. "Sorry for the
delay, Captain. Commander Tarl is here beside me and I think we
should go ahead and make our deal with her. But I also think you
should probably take a look at the artifact yourself, just to confirm
its ... condition."
Picard looked to Troi. "He's concealing something, Captain.
Extremely powerful emotions of... discovery."
"But no sense of danger?"
"Absolutely none."
"Commander Riker," Picard said, "could you move into range
of the optical sensor?"
"Certainly, sir."

188

FEDERATION

As Picard asked his next question, he saw Riker, La Forge,
Worf, and Data step in front of the artifact. Tarl was with them.
Two other Romulans were at the side.
"Lieutenant Worf," Picard began, "as security officer, have you
any objections to my coming aboard the Romulan vessel?"
Tarl frowned in disgust at the question. But Worf stepped
tbrward.
~'Absolutely none, Captain. The vessel is secure."
Troi confirmed the Klingon's statement. "He is convinced there
is no threat, sir. I pick up no sense of coercion or mind control of
any kind. However, I do get the impression that they have
obtained some knowledge which they do not wish to share with
Commander Tarl."
Picard stood up and tugged at his tunic. "How extraordinary.
What do you suppose they've found over there?"
Troi smiled at her captain indulgently. "There's only one way to
find out, sir."
Picard understood the amused expression she wore. It was .just
that for all the wonders the Enterprise encountered, he sometimes
felt a prisoner upon her, his well-being so fervently guarded by
Riker and the rest of the crew. But now, to be free to go aboard a
Romulan vessel, to take part in something of obviously great
import, he felt such elation that he really was embarrassed to
consider what his counselor might think of him if she sensed the
depth of his emotional response. He wondered if she knew how
frustrated he so often felt to merely be an observer and advisor
during his colleagues' adventures.
~No need to be embarrassed," Troi said, proving his point. "I
think you should do what Will suggests and go over to the vessel."
~'I look forward to it, Counselor, very much. Alert the trans-
porter room. You have the bridge." 'Wery good, sir."
Then Jean-Luc Picard walked up the ramp to the aft turbolift,
trying to imagine what could intrigue his crew even more than a
piece of Borg technology. As he did so, he had a sudden wave of
misgiving, even of danger. Yet, upon reflection, he could discover
no reason for it, other than some deep-seated feeling of distrust

189



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

for the Romulans, a distrust which he was suddenly surprised to
find was not his own.
Then Picard smiled in the privacy of the turbolift as he realized
the source of the unease he felt. Somewhere deep inside of him, a
small part of Ambassador Sarek, the best part, he hoped, was
giving him warning.
The Romulans were not to be trusted.

THIRTEEN

LAZY EIGHT RANCH,
MICAH TOWNSHIP, CENTAURI B II
Earth Standard: Early April 2117

Zcfram Cochrane removed the woven hat from his head and let
the early evening breezes of the secondary winter dry the mois-
ture there. His scalp was bare, darkened from the suns, spotted
with age, ringed by shaggy gray locks. Monica had teased him
about the look, said it had made him seem quite the authentic
gentleman farmer. But Cochrane knew the style reminded her of
her grandfather, Sir John, gone these many, many years. So much had gone with him, then and now.
"Mr. Cochrane, sir?" Cochrane recognized the voice. Mont-
calm Daystrom had arrived from the Foundation. The youth was
Cochrane's personal assistant, a promising student, part of the
family. But he was twenty Earth years old, seventeen Centauri,
and like all the first children of this world, treated Cochrane with
a respect and deference that made the old scientist cringe and
wonder when he had stopped being a person. Instead, somewhere
in the past decades, he had somehow become an icon, a symbol
for this brave new era of humanity.
Cochrane could hear Micah Brack laughing at that label, even
as he thought it. No era of humanity was new, according to Brack.
Simply a succession of new skins for old ceremonies. Cochrane

191



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

missed his friend. No word of his fate had ever come back to him,
though he doubted a man of Brack's age would still be alive.
Looking at Montcalm's far too solicitous smile made Cochrane
also think that the first children of Centauri could stuff it, and he
told Montcalm so.
But Montcalm only smiled and stepped closer to Cochrane. He
was used to the fabled scientist and his ways, both in the lab,
where the young man excelled, and in Cochrane's private life,
where more and more he needed an extra pair of arms. Together,
student and teacher, they stood on the crest of a rich purple-green
hill from where the Landing Plains stretched out to the edge of the
Welcoming Sea. At this point midway in the planet's bizarre orbit
in the ternary system, Centauri B was setting even as Centauri A
rose. Centauri C, as always, was nothing more than a bright star,
lost among the alien constellations, and the sea shimmered on the
horizon with light of two different hues coming from two different
directions.
Monica had loved this view. So had Cochrane. But now that its
splendor continued without her, he begrudged each day it re-
newed itself, each day that it increased his time alone. "The guests have arrived, sir," Montcalm said.
"Guests," Cochrane muttered. Was there no other name for
those who had come to attend a funeral? Why not mourners? Why
not victims?
"May I assist you?" Montcalm asked. He held out a powerfully
muscled black arm. Growing up under high gravity had produced
a generation of weight lifters here. The medical facilities in Micah
Town worked round the clock to develop the technologies and
treatments these children invariably required as they reached
their fortieth Earth birthday and their strained hearts began to
rebel against Centauri B IFs gravity. But the answers were locked
in their cells, needing only a slight medical coaxing to come out
and protect them, so their lives were safe. As Cochrane had
thought fifty-six years ago, when he had first set foot on this world
and done the unthinkable by removing his breathing mask to
taste alien air without ill effect, humanity was meant to go to
other worlds unencumbered--though his sinuses still troubled
him each primary winter, when the planet was exposed to the

192

FEDERATION

light of a single sun and the plains exploded with temperate
vegetation and a convulsion of flowers.
Standing before that view, Cochrane didn't move away from
Montcalm. He knew the young man meant well, though Cochrane
would be damned if he'd admit it. Here on this world, his home,
Cochrane had come to accept his age and his infirmities, mostly
through Monica's good humor and patience, and it was with that
humor and acceptance that he took Montcalm's arm and began
the long walk back to the farmhouse. That welcoming white
building, trimmed in green, had been Monica's delight as well. Its
facade was real wood, shipped from Earth at a horrendous cost no
one would ever reveal, a gift from the newly formed world
government to the man who had created the conditions for
Earth's dramatic recovery from World War III, though that
recovery continued still.
Natural wood remained a luxury on Centauri B II, a world
where rigid trees had not evolved. Engineered forests of Earth
pines had been planted for fuel and cellulose production, but it
would be decades still before there was a sustainable forest system
which would allow the harvesting of trees for decorative purposes.
Monica had understood the rarity of the gift Cochrane had been
given. She had sketched the clapboard design for their house
herself, overseen its installation, even sanded and painted sec-
tions of it on her own, to make it perfect for him.
And she had made it perfect. Everything she had done for him
had been perfect.
Cochrane felt tears slip down his cheeks. How could she be
gone from this world when so much of it reminded him of her?
How could her youth have fled before he himself had died, almost
thirty years her senior?
What had drawn him to her at first, Cochrane still didn't know.
Love, he supposed, though he didn't really understand that
emotion any bel;ter now than when he had been young. They had
survived Battersea together. They had escaped the Optimum and
found safety on the moon. Sir John had recovered there, in
Copermcus City. The scar on Monica's face had faded.
Cochrane's shattered ribs and punctured lungs had been made
whole.

193



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

They had shared so much, Cochrane and Monica, that by the
time their wounds had healed he supposed it had been inevitable
they would feel themselves bound together. She had returned to
Alpha Centauri with him, to finish her medical training at the
colony's first and only medical facility. She had been granted her
degree here, one of this world's first. Sir John had given her away
at their wedding and had become an astronomer again, establish-
ing the colony's first observational outpost in his final, most
productive years.
As those years and more had passed, Monica had always set
aside time in her own life to listen to Cochrane, and to pay
attention to him as no other had before her, and late at night as he
dreamt of his role in the horror that had unfolded on Earth,
thirty-seven million people dead in a war that had consumed the
world like no other, she had held him and told him that he had
done enough, that it had not been his fault.
Whatever he had meant to her, and he had never really
understood why she had chosen to share her life with him, she had
let him carry on. The superimpellors grew faster, sleeker, more
efficient, the result of a thousand minds at work on the secrets of
continuum distortion. While Monica had pursued her medical
career on Alpha Centauri, Cochrane had ridden those new
engines to other worlds, met other intelligent creatures, marveled
at the similarity of their DNA and suspected, like half the
scientists he knew, that some deeper pattern was afoot in the
universe, or at least in this section of the galaxy.
And Monica had always been waiting for him when he re-
turned, keeping him focused, understanding, paying attention.
Until two days ago.
Cochrane's feet dragged along the dusty path leading from the
ridge to the farmhouse. He could see the vehicles of the guests
parked near the barn. Wheels had become passd on Earth, where'
energy had passed into a golden age of fusion reactors and sarium
krellide batteries with virtually limitless energy density. But here
in the colonies, cars and trucks and carriers still rolled and
bounced along the unpaved roads on spring tires. Monica had
said that in a hundred years, the entertainments of Alpha
Centauri's frontier days would depict wheeled vehicles in the

194

FEDERATION

same way the old flat movies of the American West depended on
horses and wagons to show how times had changed.
She had always been looking to the future, the future she said
Cochrane had created.
For that devotion to him, he had accepted her love, for though
he had never understood why she loved him, never had he ever
doubted her enthusiasm. In return, he hoped he had at least given
her adventure, at least fulfillment. She had wept the night she had
met the Vulcanians with him. She had thanked him for that, for
including her in a moment in history when everything had
changed because of what Cochrane had done. The Vulcanians,
though some called them Vulcans, even now were negotiating
closer ties with Earth, and Cochrane knew his gift of
superimpellor research to those aliens had in part convinced
them of what they would call the logic of the situation.
And now both Sir John and Monica were gone from his life.
The dust of Earth to the dust of Alpha Centauri. It had happened
before, Cochrane knew, and would happen again, this merging of
the worlds through death. But once again he felt the sting of
self-doubt without his wife, and feared he had been selfish once
more--taking more from her than he could possibly have given.
Never had he ever felt he had done enough. Never.
"They're gathered out back," Montcalm said as they passed the
parked vehicles.
Cochrane knew why his guests were there, and not inside. He
had planted fig trees in the back. Legend said it was under a fig
tree that the Buddha had sat when he had received enlightenment.
Cochrane liked the story and understood why Brack had told him
about the trees. Newton had had his apple. Cochrane some
nameless oak or elm in a suburb of London. And now, who knew
who else would sit under trees on a hundred different worlds in
the future. thinking new thoughts, receiving new enlightenment?
Because of Buddah, Micah Brack, and Zefram Cochrane, there
were fig trees on Alpha Centauri waiting just for that moment.
They passed a carrier whose flywheel hummed deep within it,
the linear motors over its wheels still ticking as they cooled. It had
a symbol of the scales of justice crookedly affixed to the door. The
Centauri B II police force had arrived.

195



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Cochrane remembered the way Monica had laughed at Sergei's
vehicle--the whole colony's police force dependent on a single,
used farm vehicle. Cochrane actually enjoyed that dependence,
the fact that the whole colony could depend on just a single officer
of the law in a single, slow-moving vehicle. Sergei spent more time
working at the power station than he did as a police officer. There
was no real need for police here. The lack of crime on the colony
worlds had once given Cochrane hope that perhaps there were
some parts of human nature that had been left forever in the past,
burned in the fires with the ashes of the Optimum.
Sergei waited for them in the doorway of the farmhouse, hat in
hand, looking glum through his immense walrus mustache. He
approached Cochrane and Montcalm, hand extended, mouthing
his sorrow and his regret and speaking of his respect for
Cochrane's wife. Cochrane didn't hear a word. He still could not
believe Monica was no longer with him, that she wasn't just on
her way back from the clinic, smelling of antiseptic, anxious to
slip out of her whites and share with him the adventures of her
day and his. Surely these words Sergei said were meant for
someone else to hear.
Cochrane knew that in his younger days, full of energy, full of
his questing spirit, he had always wanted to be alone, always
appreciated solitude, yet now in these latter years, when he had
been granted his wish, he knew he was no longer desirous of
solitude. He wanted to hear Monica's soft voice again. He wanted
to--
"--wasn't an accident, sir."
The last four words exploded in Cochrane's mind. He blinked
at the colony's lawman. "What did you say?" he asked.
Sergei looked pained. "I took the wreck to the recycling depot,"
Sergei said loudly, speaking too slowly and too precisely, as if
talking to a child, or someone over eighty. Cochrane hated that
kind of treatment. "To see if anything could be reclaimed."
"Of course you did," Cochrane said, wishing the young man--
Sergei was fifty--would get to the point. "Of course you did.
SOP."
"And Crombie--he's the tech on duty when I went there~

196

FEDERATION

Crombie takes one look at the engine hood and says some of those
holes in it, well, sir, some of those holes aren't from the flywheel
fragments busting out. They're from something else busting in."
Cochrane stared at the lawman who was really a power station
technician, trying to comprehend what he was saying.
Monica had been driving their carrier back to the farm from
Micah Town. The flywheel had slipped out of its capsule and
ripped apart the engine compartment, sending shrapnel into the
passenger area. It had been a tragedy. But tragedies still hap-
pened. Every once in a while, things just broke.
The carrier had been ripped in halfi The electrical system had
ignited the fuel tanks. The storage batteries had exploded.
At the hospital, the medical team had not allowed Cochrane to
view the body.
"I don't understand," Cochrane said. His heart fluttered in his
chest.
"What I mean, sir, is that I think someone deliberately shot at
your wife's carrier."
"Shot?" Cochrane repeated. He felt Montcalm's powerful arm
move around him as his legs weakened.
"I had Crombie cut out those hood sections--you know, entry
holes--took them to the metallurgical department at the Founda-
tion. Ionized gas residue, sir. All around the metal."
Cochrane shook his head. This had no meaning for him.
"Whatever projectiles hit your car, they were propelled by a
plasma burst."
The memories flooded back to Cochrane. "You mean, a fist-
gun?"
Sergei shrugged, out of his league. "A military weapon of some
sort. sir. But not a beam weapon. Projectiles absolutely. The
Foundation's going to go through the wreck again, see if they can
find projectile fragments."
Cochrane gaped at the man without speaking. His pulse
hammered in his eardrums, the roar of a distant dark wave
sweeping forward, unstoppable, consuming all.
Sergei had wrung his hat into a cloth tube. "Sir, I've never
handled a homicide case before. I mean, this whole entire

197



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

colony's never had a homicide case before. I'd like... I'd like to
turn it over to the Orbital Defense Bureau. They're the closest
thing to military we've got around here. Maybe they can send a
pouch to Earth. Get some lab there to identify the weapon."
Cochrane felt his chest continue to constrict. Could it be true?
Could someone have taken Monica from him? Deliberately?
"Is... is that all right, sir?" Sergei asked.
Cochrane nodded. Of course it was all right. Whoever did this
must be found, must be punished, must be... He heard
Monica's words come back to him from so long ago, even as he
was consumed by the desire for revenge. Tempting, she said, her
voice so young, so sure, but then we wouM become him.
"Please do... whatever you must," Cochrane choked out.
Sergei nodded grimly. He started to walk off. Then he stopped,
turned back, one finger lifted. "Uh, sir, just one more thing. I
know they're going to ask me. I..." He looked embarrassed.
"Sir? Do you have any enemies? You know, someone who might
have wished you harm?"
"Enemies," Cochrane said, thinking of ashes. "Let me bury my
wife, Sergei. Then we can talk."
"Thank you, sir." Sergei walked back to his carrier, smoothing
his hat.
Montcalm escorted Cochrane around the house, toward the fig
trees, where the guests were assembled by a simple grave. Sir John
was buried nearby, out of the shade, so he could always be
beneath the stars.
Throughout the service, Cochrane continued to feel as if each
moment were happening to someone else. Just as he had felt that
night on Earth, thirty-nine years ago, fleeing across the artificial
turf of Battersea Stadium, the Optimum in its death throes all
around him. The world hurtling toward the atomic horror.
London in flames.
He heard another, less welcome voice from his past, echoing
from long-vanished stadium seats and walls, a face repeated an
infinite number of times around him.
You will never escape the Optimum/that voice screamed. You
will never escape your destiny/

198

FEDERATION

Throughout the service, hearing nothing, Cochrane stared up at
the fluttering leaves of the fig trees. But there was no enlighten-
ment for him that day. Only his destiny, bleak and inescapable as
it had always seemed to him.

Later that day, that night, it was difficult to tell under the
lighting conditions of midpoint, Cochrane sat in his study,
listening to patient young voices, and he knew it would take a
lifetime to explain the truth behind what their words described.
Sergei was there, and Montcalm. Melanie Ark from the Foun-
dation's metallurgical department, quiet and intense. Sirah
Chulski of Orbital Defense, massive enough to block an asteroid
on her own.
Montcalm had put down a plate of sandwiches left over from
the food the guests had brought. Cochrane wasn't hungry.
Doubted he would be hungry ever again. But Ark went through
them, one at a time, as methodically as she constructed
superimpellor shielding, one molecular layer after another.
"There can be no doubt," Chulski said. "It was a murder, Mr.
Cochrane."
Cochrane sat behind his desk and fingered a small metal
medallion one of the Vulcans had given him years ago. It was a
circle in which an off-center jewel served as the origin point of a
triangle. The translation of what it represented had not been
perfect. The linguists felt it would be many years still before
communications were effortless. But the disk had held great
meaning for the somber, pointed-ear aliens. Everyone fit within
it, they had told him. But it was more than just a symbol of the
universe; it meant behavior as well, as if they meant that all beliefs
fit within it, too.
Cochrane decided the planet Vulcanis had never given birth to
its own Optimum Movement.
He had no doubt that that was who had been behind the murder
of his wife.
He just didn't know if he could tell these young people the
truth, without them discounting him because they thought that
age had finally moved to claim his mind.

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JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"But for us to be able to solve a murder," Chulski said, "we
need to know a motive."
Sergei looked more sorrowful than even Cochrane felt. "Who
would want to kill Dr. Burke?" he asked.
Cochrane sighed. "I don't think whoever did it cared whether
or not Monica lived or died." All eyes were on him. "They wanted
to hurt me."
Chulski leaned forward. "Who did, sir?"
Cochrane couldn't bring himself to say it. But he had no other
choice. In the end, what did it matter if anyone believed him or
not?
"The Optimum," Cochrane answered, and from the reaction of
the people in the room, he might as well have said Jack the
Ripper, as if that monster from old Earth could possibly be
resurrected on another world.
"Sir," Chulski said far too politely. "The Optimum Movement
died a long time ago. And it was strictly an Earth-based aberra-
tion."
"I'm from Earth," Cochrane said, carefully putting the Vulca-
nian medallion down on the desk. "I had run-ins with the
Optimum before the war. Colonel Adrik Thorsen in particular."
"Colonel Thorsen's dead, sir. So's Colonel Green. The whole
cadre."
"'The evil that men do lives after them,'" Cochrane said.
Ark took another sandwich from the plate on the small table
beside her. She looked at it intently, as if wondering what an
atomic reading might reveal about its contents. "I have heard
stories of Optimum cells still functioning," she admitted. "There
have been so many rumors of war criminals escaping Earth to live
under assumed names in the colonies... maybe some of them
are true."
Sergei looked unconvinced. "You're saying we have an Opti-
mum cell on Alpha Centauri? C'mon, Melanie. They'd be re-
ported so fast we'd be shipping them home before they had a
second meeting."
Ark popped the sandwich into her mouth and chewed it
methodically.
"Maybe someone just arrived?" Montcalm suggested hesitant-

200

FEDERATION

Iv. "'~bu know, there's a cell somewhere else, and they sent
someone here to . . . to you know."
Chulski shifted her impressive bulk in her chair, managing as
al~a}s to make the others seem less significant. "We could check
xvith immigration. Find out who's come here in the past six
months or so, and from where." She glanced back at Cochrane.
..'~au sure there's no one else you can think of, Mr. Cochrane?"
"Of course there's not," Montcalm said, too forcefully. "He
created the interstellar community single-handed. We owe our
existence to him. Who could possibly want him dead?"
The light bar on the desk communicator flashed. Cochrane
watched it. The farmhouse system would pick it up in a moment.
But he nodded at Montcalm to answer.
The young man lifted the handset. The viewscreen remained
dark. "Mr. Cochrane's office," he said. His eyes widened. He
looked at Cochrane. "There's been an accident, sir. At the
Foundation." He passed the handset to Sergei. "The fabrication
cre~ is... dead, sir. All of them."
Cochrane slumped back in his chair. The students on the
fabrication team were the ones who engineered the latest theories,
hand-wrapped the coils. They were the Foundation's best. The
brightest. Already Cochrane knew that whatever happened, this,
too. had been no accident.
Sergei listened to the details. The others stood in agitation.
Cochrane alone remained seated.
Sergei confirmed it. "It was a matter-antimatter blast," he said.
Montcalm was confused. "They never have fuel in the fabrica-
tion facility."
Sergei looked to Cochrane for confirmation. "He's right,"
Cochrane said. He closed his eyes and saw the faces of the
fabrication team. Saw their parents' faces. Their children's.
V~'as Micah Brack right? Did evil never die? Was the battle never
over?
The communicator flashed again. Sergei grabbed it, identified
himself'. After a moment, he passed the handset to Cochrane. The
viewscreen was still blank. Cochrane wondered bitterly who had
died IlOV,,
"Cochrane here," he said.

201

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"You know what I want," Adrik Thorsen answered. It had been
thirty-nine years, but the voice, the tone, the cruelty were
unmistakable. "You promised you'd use it against me if I came
after you. And I am coming after you."
Cochrane wanted to drop the handset but his body was
paralyzed with shock. "You're dead," he said, his voice sounding
older than even his years.
"You're confused," Thorsen said. "It's your wife who's dead.
It's your students who are dead. But you and I, we're still alive."
Cochrane was aware of the others in the room watching him.
Sergei went to a home system panel and inserted his police ID
card, punching numbers furiously into the keypad, trying to
override the privacy circuits.
"One by one," Thorsen said. "One by one, I promise you they'll
fall--until I have your attention."
"You've got my attention!" Cochrane said to stop that terrible
voice.
"Then give me what I want."
"It doesn't exist! It never has!"
"I don't believe you, Mr. Cochrane. But I'll make certain that
you believe me."
Cochrane stared at the handset. This couldn't be happening
again. It had ended in Battersea. In a blast of fusion fire. "You
can't..." he said, already knowing that if anyone could, it would
be Thorsen.
"You're weak, Mr. Cochrane. Weakness is not optimal. Perhaps
I was weak to ever have admired you. But in--"
Sergei ripped the handset from Cochrane's rigid hand. "Who is
this?!" he shouted into it.
But from Sergei's expression, Cochrane could see that Thorsen
had already broken the circuit.
"Mr. Cochrane?" Sergei demanded. "Do you know who that
was?"
"Could you leave, please," Cochrane said. He felt exhausted.
But Sergei didn't let go of the handset. "Does your home system
automatically record calls?"
It didn't. Monica hadn't thought that was right. Few systems on

202

FEDERATION

Alpha Centauri were set for automatic record. But Cochrane
didn't say that. What was the point? "Leave," he told his visitors.
"Except you." He pointed a shaking finger at Montcalm.
No one made a move to the door. Cochrane grabbed the
handset from Sergei and slammed it down on his desk. The
VulcanJan medallion bounced up and rolled off onto the floor,
M~ere it spun and clattered on the tile.
Sergei motioned to the others. Chulski and Ark followed him
out. though both seemed uncertain it was the right thing to do.
Montcalm stood in front of CochranCs desk. The young man
was tense. muscles bunched, ready to strike wherever his teacher
directed. "Will you tell me who it was, sir?"
Cochrane wondered what it would be like to have youth again.
He wondered what it would be like to have second chances. He
wanted Montcalm to have a better life on Alpha Centauri. This
horror pursuing him was something from the past. His past. It
shouldn't concern Montcalm or anyone here. "It was someone
who... just wants me," Cochrane said.
"There're only two million people on this planet," Montcalm
answered earnestly. "We can find him. We can find anyone."
But Cochrane shook his head. The truth was that his own
arrogance had caught up with him.
Arrogance, he thought with sorrow. That final word he had felt
compelled to have with Thorsen in the stadium, thirty-nine years
ago. Turning back in the doorway to say that he would use his
warp bomb if Thorsen ever came after him. Just to torment him,
to hurt him, to be better than Thorsen ever could be. Monica had
been right. He had become Thorsen. And that transformation had
cost him her life and others, just beginning their journey.
Cochrane felt so weary. Here he had hoped that his invention
might someday let humanity leave the worst of its inner nature
behind, yet he'himself was a repository for it. The cursed need [o
/'(' hcUer. He wondered if the Vulcans included that in their
medallion.
"I want you to prep my ship," Cochrane told Montcalm.
"You don't have to run, sir. I can protect you. This whole world
can Protect you."



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Cochrane shook his head, tried to smile reassuringly. No need
to disturb another life. "I'm not running. I want to go
to... Stapledon Center. They have a good fabrication shop
there. We're going to need new staff."
Montcalm studied Cochrane carefully. "Are you sure? What
about that call? Aren't you going to do anything about it?"
"Life has to go on," Cochrane lied. Monica had always told him
that. He hadn't believed her then, he didn't believe her now. But it
was important to the safety of everyone he cared for on this world
that Montcalm believe him at this moment. "Send a message
pouch to Stapledon. Let them know I'm coming." "When do you want to go?"
"Right away," Cochrane said. "Look after it for me?"
Montcalm nodded slowly, anxious to do something, anything,
for his teacher. "Do you want to keep the trip a secret, sir? I mean,
if there is someone after you..."
"I have nothing to hide," Cochrane said. "That call... it was
just a crank." He looked around his study, all the books, the fiche,
the computer cards, the building blocks of his mind, no longer
with purpose. "I'1l feel better helping the Foundation. Really."
"Can I at least post some guards around the house? I know they
keep some old rifles out at the landing facilities."
"That's not necessary," Cochrane said. "Increase security
at the Foundation, that's all. So there won't be any more...
accidents."
Cochrane was relieved to see that whatever Montcalm believed
about his real motives, he headed dutifully for the door.
"And, Montcalm?"
"Yes, sir?"
"Thank you. For everything."
Montcalm studied Cochrane carefully. "You're not thinking of
doing something stupid, are you, sir?"
Now Cochrane smiled. "You know me better than that."
Montcalm tried to smile back but his effort lacked sincerity.
Then he was gone.
Cochrane remained at his desk for some time, staring into the
years, remembering all the times Monica had come in here to tell
him he had been working too long, too late. And all that time,

FEDERATION

Thorsen had been somewhere else in the galaxy, doing... what?
Plotting what'?
Why had it taken so long for his return? Cochrane wasn't hiding
out on Alpha Centauri. Everyone knew it was his home. But
where had Thorsen's home been since Battersea, since the world
war? And whv had he come here now, wanting a technology that,
even if it did exist, could no longer give him the power he had
craved? In the end, Cochrane decided, the madman's motives
were merely an abstraction--a mystery Cochrane would never
comprehend in his lifetime, just another question to be placed
nside. abandoned, with so many other unanswerable questions of
youth.
Cochrane pressed the control that made his computer rise up
from his desktop. He asked it to display his will. It would be
rcmiss of him not to at least give some thought to the future, the
future Monica had seen, and he had been blind to.
Then. with the changes made, leaving all that he had to the
Foundation Micah Brack had established, Cochrane's thoughts of
the future came to an end.
Instead he remembered back to a time when he had wanted to
take on the universe. He thought of that first night back in his
home system, under the dome at Titan. So many possibilities, so
much to do.
But now he was only tired. And alone.
He wanted to see the stars once more, then die.
He wondered if this feeling was something built into the human
species. the sense that when death was inevitable, it must be
accepted, embraced.
Or was it just his way of making certain someone like Adrik
Thorsen could never win?
Cochrane had no answer. As much as it sickened him to admit
it, the war that had begun on Earth so long ago still continued,
and he was to blame.
}te had given humanity the stars, and then he had defiled them.
But now finally, that intrusion would end. For no matter how
his friend Micah' Brack might argue if he were here to do so,
Zefram Cochrane believed there was still hope for humanity.
That things could change.

204 205



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

For only a moment, he felt a brief twinge of regret that he would
not live to see those changes. But his time was over. Alpha
Centauri was no longer his home.
The stars would have to beckon to someone else.
He remembered another old, old poem his mother had read to
him. It seemed to fit the moment.
Deep space was his dwelling place, and death his destination.
There was never any escape from that. Not for anyone.

?l


FOURTEEN

#. S.S. E/VTEflPRISE N C C - 1701
LEAVING THE GAMMA CANARIS REGION
Stardate 3854.7
Earth Standard: ~ Nevember 2267

The Enterprise blazed through space so that the stars were
rainbow smears of light around her. Kirk watched them pass on
the main bridge viewscreen, knowing they had been a sight at first
unknown to Zefram Cochrane in his early voyages.
The key to being able to perceive anything of normal space-time
while in warp was directly related to the characteristics of the
warp field itself. Cochrane had quickly learned that for warp
propulsion to be eflScient, a minimum of two fields must be
generated. so that one overlapped the other, offset at oscillations
on the order of the Planck interval--the smallest possible unit of
measurable time. Unfortunately, when the two warp fields were of
suthcientlv different sizes, any photons from normal space-time
that impinged on the outermost field generally were absorbed by
what was. to them, a perfect radiation sink--the gap between the
fields.
In the beginning, Cochrane had accepted this state of affairs
because it neatlv explained why Einsteinian notions of time
dilation did not apply inside the warp field--with no possibility
for the exchange of meaningful information, there was no conflict
x~ith established physics. The existence of information-free,

206 207



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

faster-than-light phenomena such as this was well known, dating
back to experimental confirmation of the Einstein-Podolsky.
Rosen Paradox in the mid-1900s.
Thus, Cochrane's first faster-than-light voyages had left him
literally in the dark. Once he entered warp space, he lost all
communication with the normal universe. Eventually, as his
system became more efficient and the warp fields became more
tightly focused and layered, photons were able to penetrate into
the warp bubble, bringing with them the breathtaking image so
dear to Kirk of stars passing by so quickly that they became little
more than streaks of light. And, once scientists were able to
exploit subspace as a medium in which they could propagate
electromagnetic signals at speeds in excess of 190,000 times the
speed of light, standard computer enhancement techniques cre-
ated hyperreal images from subspace sensor scans, much the way
old-fashioned radar systems on old Earth had created echoes of
distant objects in centuries past.
Though science had not been Kirk's first love in school, he
could understand how scientists had arrived at these break-
through innovations. Like Cochrane, they had not wasted their
time running headlong into the solid walls of accepted theories.
Instead, they had chosen to broaden their arena, change the rules,
and step outside accepted boundaries. Kirk knew the approach
well.
His ship was proof that the approach worked in physics. The
fact that he commanded her was proof it worked in the world of
human affairs as well.
But the fact that it was Admiral Kabreigny who still occupied
the Enterprise's command chair told Kirk that he still had some
lessons to learn in applying the approach.
For now, Kirk stood at the admiral's side, eyes fixed on the
screen. The Companion, wearing a standard blue technician's
jumpsuit, sat behind him on the upper level, in the chair at
Spock's science station, guiding the Enterprise's course by her
mysterious contact with Cochrane, which Sulu had managed to
translate to navigational charts. Spock was with her and McCoy
was nearby with a fully stocked medical kit. So far, more than a

FEDERATION

day out from her home planetold, the Companion's stamina had
noi yet fidled her. But McCoy wanted to be prepared for anything,
alld was.
"Keptin," Chekov announced. "I mean, Admiral, I am picking
Lip a wessel in the indicated flight path."
"Onscreen," Kabreigny ordered. "Full magnification."
Sulu adjusted a control and the stars rippled as the viewer's
image expanded to include a tiny spot of light, clearly not a star.
"She's at the limit of our sensor range," Sulu said.
Kirk glanced back at the Companion and Spock. The Compan-
ion held her hands to her face. She whispered something Kirk
couldn't hear. Spock nodded.
"That could be it," Kirk said. He fought the urge to give the
next orders as he reluctantly deferred to the admiral. Like most
women in Starfieet's upper echelons, Kabreigny had earned her
rank in the science and support branches, meaning she had no
frontline command experience. But that rank technically did
allow her to take over the Enterprise, and after a day of seeing her
in his chair. Kirk was getting better at remembering that state of
affairs. Though he had no intention of getting used to it.
"Target vessel's speed?" Kabreigny asked.
"Cruising at warp factor three," Chekov said. "No indication
that she's seen us."
"If it is the Planitia, her sensors won't be effective at this
range." Kirk said.
"Zefram!" the Companion suddenly gasped. "The man is
closer... so alone..."
Kabreigny leaned forward in the chair. "Navigator, I want you
to slowly drop speed and match course with the target vessel.
Come up behind like a sensor echo. It's just a civilian ship so it
shouldn't be difficult."
"Aye-aye. Admiral." Sulu went to work on his board. The stars
shit'ted as the Enterprise changed course.
Kirk watched the admiral closely, trying to fathom the reason
for her order. "A luxury liner has no defenses or weapons that can
stand up to the Enterprise, Admiral. Why the caution?"
'~It's not the liner I'm worried about," Kabreigny said, not

209



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

bothering to explain further. Without looking at Kirk, she added,
"I presume you have a transporter team experienced in high-
velocity transport."
'TI1 put my chief engineer on it."
But Kabreigny put her hand on Kirk's arm before he could
activate the chair's intercom panel. "Leave Mr. Scott right where
he is. We might need better than warp eight in a few minutes.
Who's your next choice?"
Kirk understood that for whatever reason, Kabreigny was
preparing for a fast flyby and transporter retrieval of Cochrane.
She didn't want to risk a showdown. "Mr. Spock," Kirk said.
"Will you be able to handle the Companion?"
"The Companion can handle herself quite well."
Kabreigny ignored Kirk's insubordinate tone. "Have Mr.
Spock stand by in the transporter room and wait for my signal."
Kirk did not acknowledge the order, but he went to Spock,
explained what the admiral was preparing for, and took the
science officer's place at the Companion's side. Spock left the
bridge.
"We have matched course," Sulu announced.
"Come up on her slowly, Navigator," the admiral said sharply.
"I want to see her onscreen as soon as we have her in range."
Long moments passed. Kirk was aware only of the Compan-
ion's erratic breathing. McCoy had earlier suggested it was the
result of the connection she felt with Zefram Cochrane. It was
Zefram Cochrane who was in bad enough shape that he was
having difficulty breathing, wherever he was. The Companion's
health, so far, was fine.
"Wessel coming into range," Chekov called out. "Onscreen."
The target vessel was a civilian liner--an elongated ovoid
about half the length of the Enterprise, with three nacelles in the
same configuration as the missing City' of Utopia Planitia.
"Are you receiving any identification signals?" Kabreigny
asked.
Chekov answered without taking his eyes from his side of the
command console. "Negative, Admiral. The liner is powered-
down. No communications. But sensors confirm her warp signa-
ture as the Planitia."

FEDERATION

"Shield status?" the admiral asked.
Sulu answered. 'Tm reading navigational shields only."
Kabreigny spoke rapidly over her shoulder to Uhura. "Com-
munications: Relay that to Mr. Spock. I want him able to hear
everything on this bridge from now on."
Uhura contacted Spock in the transporter room. Kirk knew as
long as the liner was using only her forward navigational deflec-
tors, deployed solely for sweeping debris out of her flight path, the
t:'ntcrprisc would be able to come up from behind and transport
Cochrane without difficulty. But only as long as the crew of the
liner--presumably Cochrane's kidnappers--didn't realize the
l:'ntcrprL~'e was closing on them.
Uhura looked up from her board after talking with Spock.
"Open channel established, Admiral."
"Distance to target?" Kabreigny asked, intent on the screen.
Sulu read from his board. "One hundred thousand kilometers."
"Take us into transporter range, Navigator. Mr. Spock, stand
bv for emergency transport. Lock on to human life signs on the
target vessel."
Spock's voice answered from the bridge speakers. "What if
there are multiple human life-sign readings?"
~Transport them all, Mr. Spock. We'll sort them out later."
Kirk couldn't stand it any longer. Kabreigny was going by the
book, but it wasn't enough. "With respect, Admiral, if you're
planning on transporting hostiles aboard the Enterprise--"
Kabreigny cut him off. "Security detail to the transporter room.
Phasers set to stun."
Kirk relaxed, but only a bit. "May I make another suggestion,
'Xdmiral?"
"Coming up on transporter range," Sulu announced. "Still no
indication that they've spotted us."
Kabreigny looked at Kirk. "Say what you have to, Captain."
'qf the liner is in the hands of Orion pirates, where's their
original ship?"
Kabreigny tightened her grip on the arms of the chair. "The
craft that landed by Cochrane's shelter on the planetoid was
Small. Captain. I presume it's docked on the liner's hangar deck."
Kirk could feel nervous energy roiling up inside him. "The pad

210 211



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

marks on the planetoid were from a landing craft, Admiral.
Something that small couldn't have taken over a liner."
"Then they took it over from within," Kabreigny said, but for
the first time Kirk could hear uncertainty in her voice.
So did McCoy. "For God's sake, Admiral--what liner is going
to let Orions book passage without packing them in freeze tubes?"
"Do you have a recommendation?" Kabreigny asked in annoy-
ance.
"Full sensor sweep of the surrounding area," Kirk said, step-
ping down from the operations section to the command-chair
level.
"Why not fire a photon torpedo across their bow," Kabreigny
snapped, "and really let them know we're here?"
"Admiral--you're taking my ship into danger."
Kabreigny pushed herself out of the chair, towering over Kirk
because of the chair's raised platform. "Captain, you are attempt-
ing to warn the enemy."
"What?!" McCoy said. "Since when are Orion pirates the
enemy? They're criminals, annoyances... but enemies?"
"Dr. McCoy," the admiral ordered, "you will leave the bridge."
But McCoy had no intention of following that order. "I will not
leave my patient."
Kirk shot a glance at the Companion. Her face was still buried
in her hands. Alarmingly, her breathing was coming in shorter
and shorter gasps.
Kabreigny pointed at McCoy. "I have given you an order,
Doctor."
McCoy bristled with indignation. "You are outside your au-
thority, Admiral."
Kabreigny matched him, bristle for bristle. "Very well. You
force me to relieve you of duty."
"You cannot relieve me of my medical obligations to my
patient."
"We are in transporter range," Sulu said, his voice carefully
neutral.
Kirk watched the admiral intently, ready to step in the instant
she made a mistake that would stand up to review. His fists
opened and closed in frustration at his sides.

FEDERATION

Spock's cool voice came from the speakers again. "I have
detected eighty-three humans aboard the liner, Admiral. Do you
~vish me to transport them all?"
,'Eighty-three?" Kabreigny said, momentarily distracted.
"What did you expect? It's a passenger liner!" Kirk shouted.
"One hundred and two crew and passengers!"
Kabreigny looked confused. "But they kill their prisoners."
"Who are you talking about?" Kirk demanded. "Tell my people
~vhat to do or step down, Admiral!"
"I am awaiting orders," Spock said.
The Companion moaned.
'Keptin, warp signature approaching, dead ahead. It is the
same configuration as we encountered en route to Babel, sir."
"Admiral! Give me command!" Kirk demanded.
"Shields!" Kabreigny ordered, ignoring Kirk. "Go to Red
Alert!"
Chekov confirmed shields up. Warning lights flashed and sirens
pulsed.
"Liner has raised her shields," Chekov said. "She's coming
about."
"Unidentified warp vessel closing," Sulu reported. "Her weap-
ons are preparing to fire."
"Evasive maneuvers!" Kabreigny ordered.
"What?!" Kirk sputtered. "What about Cochrane?"
The deck pitched as the inertial dampeners lagged behind the
sudden change of course Sulu initiated.
"Wessel firing!" Chekov shouted. "Torpedo impact in ten
seconds."
Kabreigny leaned back in the command chair. "Warp seven.
Take us out of here."
The Cochrane generators whined as they surged with power.
"t:'nfcrprise is moving out of range," Chekov confirmed. "But
enemy wessel is pursuing." Chekov paused, then looked over his
sheraider. "Awaiting orders, Admiral."
"We're going to outrun them, mister," Kabreigny said stoutly.
"We can't outrun them," Kirk countered, his voice rigid with
Suppressed rage. "They've tied all their power into their warp
drive. It's a suicide configuration for a one-way mission."

212 213



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Enemy wessel closing."
Kabreigny eyed Kirk suspiciously. "You seem to know an awful
lot about our adversary, Captain."
"We faced a ship just like it last week."
"How convenient."
"Are you implying that I'm somehow in league with our
attackersT'
McCoy stepped up to the other side of the command chair.
"Careful, Captain."
"No," Kabreigny said. "By all means, Captain Kirk, continue."
"Enemy wessel has fired," Chekov said. "Impact in eight
seconds."
"Come about," Kabreigny ordered. "Concentrate power in
forward shields."
Sulu glanced over his shoulder in alarm. Kirk reached his limit.
"Belay that order! Drop to impulse on my mark! And cut those
blasted sirens!"
The Red Alert lights remained but the sirens instantly cut out.
Sulu smiled as he turned back to the console. "Aye-aye, sir!"
"Captain Kirk, you are relieved of duty!" Kabreigny barked.
"Leave the bridge."
"Impact in four seconds, three... two..."
Kirk hammered his fist in empty air. "Mark.f"
Sulu slammed his hands over his controls and the ship lurched
as it dropped to sublight the instant the enemy's phaser fire hit.
But the energies of that blast were dissipated, half in warp
velocity, half in normal space, as the Enterprise threw off her warp
fields. The ship rumbled, shook, but Kirk could tell from the way
she absorbed the blow that she had resisted damage.
The admiral hit the intercom switch on the chair arm. "Securi-
ty to the bridge," she commanded.
"Admiral, I'd advise you to consider your next move very
carefully," Kirk warned.
"Enemy vessel coming about," Sulu said.
"Prepare photon torpedoes," Kirk ordered. He moved in close
to Kabreigny. "If we had taken that blast with full power to our
forward shields, shield capability would have dropped fifty per-

214


FEDERATION

cent for the next round. The case could be made that you were
deliberately trying to sabotage the Enterprise's defenses."
"That's ridiculous! I was putting us in position to return
point-blank fire."
'Enemy wessel in range."
"Fire one. three, and five," Kirk said swiftly.
The capacitor hum of the torpedoes' linear induction launching
tubes echoed on the bridge.
"You were the one who gave us away," Kabreigny accused Kirk.
"~bu already know what's on that liner."
"I'm in the dark, Admiral." Kirk shielded his eyes as the first of
the torpedoes detonated, sending a flare of orange light into the
bridge.
"Enemy wessel breaking off attack."
"Pursue!" Kirk said. "Maximum warp! Don't give it time to
come about. Ready phasers!"
Sulu's voice was filled with tension. "Closing on enemy... it's
changing course again... it's running, Captain! Warp factor
seven.. , seven point five..."
Kirk jammed his finger against the chair intercom. "Kirk to
Engineering--Scotty, give me everything you've got, just for a
minute."
The engineer didn't waste time replying. Kirk felt the Enter-
/,'i,~c lurch again. Her engines whined. "Range?" Kirk asked.
"Twenty thousand kilometers," Sulu answered. "They're
climbing to warp eight. Sir... we're at eight point three!"
Kirk grinned. That was almost four percent greater than the
ship's fastest possible speed. He had no idea how Scott was
managing it. Kirk could almost feel the wind in his hair, hear the
tlap of the sails, smell the smoke from the cannons as the seas
raged all around him. "Thatta boy, Scotty..." he whispered.
The enemy ship began to grow on the screen. It could outrun the
E~z~er/,'/,s~i Kirk knew, but it would take a few moments to
accelerate to faster than warp eight point three. And Kirk wasn't
going to give it those moments ....
"In range, sir!"

215



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Fire phasers! All banks!"
Twin strands of glowing blue energy erupted through space,
converging toward the glowing orange light of the enemy.
The orange light blossomed into a shimmering white flower.
"Direct hit!" Chekov exclaimed, fist in the air.
A second explosion silently filled the screen, more violent than
the first. Kirk held his hand to his eyes before the screen
compensated for the increased level of optical radiation.
"That was her antimatter containment field," Sulu said. "Read-
ing only fine debris, sir. The target is completely destroyed."
"Resume heading back to the liner," Kirk said. "Warp factor
seven." He hit the intercom again. "Scotty, you're a miracle
worker."
"Aye," the chief engineer replied with exhaustion over the
speaker, "that's what I keep telling ye."
Then Kirk released the Send button and stepped back from the
chair. "Now that my ship is safe, Admiral, where were we?"
"You and Dr. McCoy were leaving the bridge."
The turbolift opened and two security officers sprang out,
phasers drawn.
"At ease," Kirk told them. He stepped in close to the admiral
and dropped his voice. "There's no need to make this harder than
it already is. Remember, everything we say, everything we do on
this bridge, goes directly into the flight recorder. Command's not
going to have any trouble seeing that I stepped in to save the ship
when you endangered her."
McCoy joined them, also whispering. "The captain's done
everything regulations require to accommodate you, Admiral.
But if he should decide that you should be relieved of command,
as chief medical officer I will support him."
Kabreigny's face twisted in anger. She stared at McCoy in
outrage. "Do you know what you're saying, Doctor?"
But McCoy didn't escalate the confrontation. His reply was
kind. "It's not what you think, Admiral. But what I am saying is
that your expertise is in other areas than the command chair of a
starship. And that at your age your health might not be up to the
challenge of command under fire."
Kabreigny's lips thinned.

216

FEDERATION

~I saved the ship," Kirk said. "Now let me save Cochrane."
Kabreigny drew in a ragged breath and Kirk could see her
struggle to remain calm. "How can I know that's what you intend
to do?" she asked.
McCoy brought up a medical scanner and waved it by the
admiral.
"I don't understand," Kirk said. "Why wouldn't I want to save
Cochrane'?"
"You could be involved in this whole business," Kabreigny
said.
'Keptin, we are coming up on the liner."
McCoy checked the reading on his scanner. "Admiral, if you do
not relinquish command now, I will have you relieved for medical
reasons. Your heart's beating like a blasted trip-hammer."
"Involved in what?" Kirk asked.
"The conspiracy," Kabreigny said. Her voice was raspy. Her
dark face was becoming ashen.
The Enterprise creaked as sparkles of light flared across her
viewscreen.
"The liner is firing her navigational phasers at us," Sulu
reported. "No damage to shields."
"What conspiracy?" Kirk demanded.
Kabreigny stared him in the eyes. "You're either telling the
truth, or you're even better than Starfleet thinks you are." She
stood up. "Captain Kirk, I am ordering you to bring Zefram
Cochrane safely aboard this ship. I now turn over command of
the E~zterprise to you." Head held impressively high, she stepped
down from the chair.
In seconds, McCoy had pressed a hypospray to her arm, telling
her it would lower her heart rate.
Kirk took the chair. It was like coming home. The liner's
navigational phasers struck again and he felt like laughing as the
E~z[o'pri.se effortlessly rode out their attack. Nothing could stop
him now, nothing could stop them. ~'Mr. Chekov," Kirk announced.
'.'Standing by, Keptin." There was almost joy in Chekov's
\ OlCe.
Kirk leaned back in his chair as if his ship embraced him. "Take

217



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

us in to five hundred meters. I want pinpoint hits on the liner's
navigational phaser emitters. Low power. No damage to the
interior."
Chekov liked the sound of that. No ship should be able to fire at
the Enterprise and expect to get away with it.
"Uhura, opening hailing frequencies. Tell the City of Utopia
Planitia to prepare to receive a boarding party."
But as Uhura transmitted her message and the Enterprise
moved in, Sulu said, "Captain, I am picking up venting of interior
atmosphere. Someone has opened an airlock on the liner."
"Onscreen," Kirk said.
The side of the liner sprang up into full magnification. Kirk
instantly saw what had happened. The writhing form of a human
drifted away from an open airlock. "Spock! They've thrown
someone out through an airlock. Get a fix and beam him in!"
"Animals," McCoy gasped.
Spock's reply over the speakers was calm, but not encouraging.
"Whoever has been ejected from the ship is within the navigation-
al shields. The transporter cannot save him."
The figure floating at the side of the liner ceased its struggles.
Kirk knew there were only seconds remaining to save a life.
"Chekov! Target the liner's shield generators! Fire at will!"
"Aye-aye, sir." Chekov's fingers flew over his controls. But then
he paused. "Keptin--I am picking up multiple life-sign readings
around the liner's shield generators."
Kirk couldn't take his eyes off the drifting figure. Someone's life
had been sacrificed to make a point. And now more hostages were
assembled by the shield generators to make another.
Uhura broke the silence of the bridge. "Captain Kirk, the liner
is responding." "Onscreen."
As quickly as that the face of the enemy appeared on the main
screen.
And the enemy was Klingon.

218

FIFTEEN

ROMULAN VESSEL TEARS OF/IIGERDIV
DEEP SPACE
Stardate 43921.5
Earth Standard: May 2366

The Romulan ship smelled damp.
That was Picard's first impression of the Warbird as the
transporter effect faded around him and he gazed into the vessel's
cavernous hangar deck in person for the first time. Damp, and
hot, and with an unsettling blend of spices and alien sweat.
He found it invigorating.
Commander Tarl stood before him, impressive in her battle
uniform. She was taller than he by almost half a meter, and in
person she looked strained. But then, Picard considered, how
vuld he appear if he had stolen the Enterprise in order to deliver
stolen property to the Romulans? The Romulan commander had
taken a dimcult path. Picard felt obligated to honor her.
"Request permission to come aboard," Picard asked formally.
Tarl narrowed her eyes at him. "You are aboard. This way." Sl~e
turned her back to him and began to walk toward the scaffolding
t~enty meters away. All in all, Picard decided his reception
lacked a certain grace. He breathed deeply, committing the scent
of the vessel to his memory, realizing that in Sarek's memories the
scent was already there and known.

Picard smiled as he approached his away team. He felt like an

219



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
explorer, and the exotic expanse of stars seen through the open
hangar doors, obscured only by the slight flickering of the
forcefield retaining the ship's atmosphere, enhanced that feeling
for him.
The artifact, though partially hidden behind the green scaffold-
ing and in the glaring halos of the encircling lights, was just as
impressive as the stars. It was at least five meters tall, ten meters
long, and who knew how many meters deep. The angular arrange-
ments of conduits and pipes along its one flat side were certainly
reminiscent of the Borg approach to engineering, and when
Picard looked more closely, he saw that the exposed surfaces were
pitted with small impact craters, most no larger than a finger-
tip.
"Is this part of the Borg vessel exterior?" Picard asked.
"Judging from the scarring," Riker said, "the consensus is yes."
Picard smiled at his number one. "I appreciate the chance to
come aboard and see this firsthand, Will, but it's so obviously of
Borg manufacture, I'm surprised you found it necessary for me to
be here."
Riker responded with a matching smile, though Picard could
see it was patently false, assumedly only for the benefit of Tarl and
the two stern Romulans who accompanied her. "It's the interior
we think you should see, Captain. There are some... unusual
Borg components there."
"I do not see the reason for this delay," Tarl said impatiently.
"The artifact is yours. I need a ship for my crew."
"Commander, please, a few minutes more," Riker said. "We
have strict protocols we must follow. I'm sure your command
structure is no different from our admiralty."
Tarl frowned. "Deliver me from subpraetors with their comput-
er screens and regulations," she muttered.
Riker nodded and sighed in agreement. "They're everywhere."
Tarl gestured for them to continue. "A few minutes then."
As Picard moved around the side of the artifact and saw it
extended another ten meters, he gave Riker a puzzled glance.
"The protocols we must follow in a matter like this are very
straightforward, Will. It's all at the captain's discretion."

220

FEDERATION

"We needed an excuse to bring you over," Riker said in a
suddenly lowered voice. "Data, where are you?"
Picard was startled by the android's head suddenly poking out
from among some tightly woven conduits on the surface of the
artifact. He was already inside it.
"Allow me, Captain," Data said. His body emerged just enough
to allow him to push aside some strands of metal, bending them
back until a narrow entry hole had been opened. "There is a
corridor inside which is more or less undamaged. If you could
come this way."
Then Data disappeared back inside the mass of the artifact.
Picard didn't hesitate. This was thrilling. He climbed in after
Data.
Picard's uniform snagged a few times on rough pieces of metal
or wiring, he couldn't tell which, but after gingerly edging through
a two-meter-thick section of the artifact, he found himself inside
a large, well-defined passageway, whose appearance suggested
that it had been sliced clean out of the interior of a Borg ship. As
hc stood up, Picard grew even more intrigued. If Starfleet could
determine what kind of weaponry had been used to penetrate
Borg defenses to cause such physical damage to their ship, the
Federation would have nothing to fear when the Borg finally
arrived at its borders.
"I am very encouraged by this," Picard said. He looked around
at the complex construction all around him. Starfleet engineers
would be ecstatic.
"Just around this corner, sir." Riker led the way now, Data
hanging back. The internal passageway was lit by the small palm
torches the away team carried, sending bars of light and shadow
rippling through the mesh and interwoven conduits. La Forge
handed his torch to Picard as he came to the corner where Riker
stood. Picard was aware of how quiet everything seemed, as if the
passageway were lined with a perfect acoustical shield.
"Do you notice the flattened quality of the sound in here?"
Picard asked. He wondered if it had any significance.
Then La Forge held up a tricorder. "That's because I've set up
an acoustical baffle, sir. So we can talk without being overheard."

221



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Talk about what?" Picard asked.
Riker glanced at the rest of the away team, then looked the
captain in the eye. "We know the Borg assimilate the technology
of whatever race they come in contact with."
"Yes..." Picard said, not knowing where this was leading.
"Around this corner is another artifact, sir. An object which
was obviously incorporated into the original Borg ship. It is our
conclusion that neither the Borg nor Commander Tarl has
realized what it is. We can't be certain ourselves, but with your
archaeological expertise, we think you should be able to confirm
our suspicions."
"I must say you have piqued my interest, Number One. But
why not link up your tricorder to the Enterprise's history com-
puter?"
"If the Romulans are monitoring our communications, which
they should be, we didn't want to reveal what we suspect." Riker
extended his hand to the hidden passageway. "Take a look for
yourself, sir. You be the judge."
Picard tightened his grip on the palm torch and with a thrill of
excitement, walked around the corner. He found himself in a blind alley.
"What, exactly, am I looking for?" he asked as he moved the
beam of the torch over the heavily textured walls. The moisture in
the air gave the beam shape, making it glow as a blue cone against
the dark Borg machinery.
"At the end, sir. The silver panel," Riker said from behind him.
Picard shone his torch straight ahead. Sure enough, a patch of
silver gleamed back at him. He could see where a metal panel had
been pulled back to expose more of it, about a square meter in all.
He moved closer to it. There was something engraved on the
silver surface.
"This panel here?" he asked. "With what appears to be
inscriptions?"
"Yes, sir," Riker said.
Picard was aware of Data, and Worh and Mr. La Forge all
standing behind Riker at the open end of the passageway,
watching the captain's every move.
"And it's more than a panel," La Forge added. "My scans show

222

FEDERATION

it's the surface of a discrete object about two meters by three
meters by five meters."
Picard touched the silver panel. It was cold. Moisture had
condensed on it.
"The object is also the source of the power readings for the
entire artifact," Data said. "Because there appears to have been
no effort to remove the object from the artifact, we assume that
the Romulans have decided it is a power supply of some kind."
'But you don't believe that's what it is," Picard said. He
rubbed at the gleaming silver surface, smearing the water drop-
lets, feeling the depth of the inscriptions. They were an odd
combination of delicate cuneiform wedges, broken up by simplis-
tic, almost geometrical drawings of circles and squares and dotted
lines. He could see why his away team had asked for him. The
markings did look familiar.
"You're certain we can't risk even a brief contact with the
Enterprise?" Picard asked. The ship's computer would be able to
identi[v these markings within seconds. "That's up to you, sir," Riker said.
Picard turned his head sideways, seeing if that would make the
inscription more recognizable. "I don't know if I appreciate all
this mystery, Number One. Perhaps my archaeological acumen
leaves something to be desired when compared to Mr. Da--"
The pattern jumped out at him like lightning.
"Sacr~ merde," Picard whispered.
He had seen inscriptions like this before. Just never so many of
them at once. In Professor Galen's study at the Academy.
Reproductions of engravings from a hundred different worlds, so
controversial that the professor would not even show them in
class. Only to a select few students in whom he believed rested the
future of exoarchaeology.
Picard realized he had stopped breathing. "What--" He had to
clear his throat before he could make any recognizable sound.
"Mr. Data... what is the age of this... object?"
"Overall, the age of the rest of the Borg artifact in which the
object rests is approximately four centuries. However, the object
itself is, at minimum, three point five billion years old."

Picard's mouth was open. He held his hand reverentially to the

223



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

silver surface, feeling the textures that had been placed there by
thinking beings when life on Earth was still primordial soup.
"And its power supply still functions?"
"That is correct, sir."
Riker was beside the captain. "Have you recognized it, Cap-
tain?"
"Without question." Picard almost felt as if the passageway
were spinning around him, leaving him motionless in its well of
silence. He looked at his first officer, and realized that the next
words he spoke he would remember for the rest of his life. "This
object was made by... the Preservers."
It was not known what the Preservers had called themselves.
Some Federation scientists still doubted that they had in fact
existed. Others maintained that the relics and legends attributed
to the Preservers were actually the work of a dozen different races
over a broad range of time, blended only by the passage of cons.
Still others believed that the ancient race, whether one species or
many, was little more than a myth, similar to a hundred others
common to almost all sentient, spacefaring species--the much-
desired promise that somewhere in the void the answers to all
questions were waiting to be found, if only the seekers were
worthy.
It was a powerful belief, the fuel of uncounted religions and
space-exploration programs. Privately, Picard was of the mind
that it was far better to discover things than to be given them. But
the secrets the Preservers represented were so profound that he
sometimes doubted there would be much difference between
discovery and revelation in their case, should they actually be fact
and not fiction.
Among humans, what would eventually become the Preserver
legend had begun at the same time as the exploration of space,
reflecting more a change in the way of thinking about humanity's
place in the universe than any response to the discovery of
evidence of extraterrestrial visitation of Earth. But as humanity
ventured to other planets and met other spacefarers, tantalizing
fragments of evidence did accumulate. It was clear that life was
everywhere. It was clear that just as there were cultures on the
224

FEDERATION

brink of space travel, and cultures that had traveled among the
stars for centuries, there were also advanced cultures that had
arisen thousands, if not millions, if not billions, of years earlier.
The ruins of their cities and accomplishments could be found
throughout the galaxy. Picard had seen his share of them,
including those of the Tkon and the Iconians.
But which among these ancient civilizations had given birth to
the Preservers was still unknown. The most recent and probable
sign of their hand had been discovered on an Earth-like planet to
which a group of humans from the North American plains
civilization had been transported almost six hundred years earli-
er. The largest known artifact attributed to the Preservers, a
powerful graviton-beam generator contained in a metal obelisk
also marked with inscriptions, had been discovered there, and
~vas still being studied, as it had no apparent source of power.
In the decades since that artifact's discovery, other examples of
the mysterious writing on it had been uncovered at archaeological
sites throughout the galaxy, including the inscriptions on a
handful of metallic shards dating back more than a billion years.
With that discovery, still controversial, made by Professor Rich-
ard Galen, arguably the greatest living archaeologist of the day,
excitement had spread through the Federation. It was unheard of
that anv culture had survived with its writtenlanguage unchanged
for more than a few millennia at best. Yet Galen insisted that the
similarities between the inscriptions on his shards and the
so-called Preserver obelisk proved that an astoundingly stable
culture. dedicated to the preservation of life, still existed today,
unseen.
Galen's critics, citing Hodgkins's much-maligned Law of Paral-
lel Planet Development, pointed out that given the enormous
number of civilizations that had arisen in the galaxy, it was
statistically inevitable that some forms of writing had been
devel鷴ed'that were similar, and saw Galen's claims of a single,
founding culture only as an inescapable coincidence.
In response, Picard had read, Professor Galen had since gone
on to a more scientific mode of exploration, analyzing the
similarities of the DNA structure among many of the galaxy's

225



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

sentient life-forms, searching for other, more irrefutable signs of a
Preserver-like race. But there were others in the Federation who
pressed ahead to extend Galen's early work at an archaeological
level, searching for physical evidence of a culture that might have
seeded the galaxy with life at the beginning of time, preserved it
from destruction in the ages that followed, and somewhere
unknown kept watch even now, for reasons unfathomable but
endlessly compelling.
In the instant he had recognized the inscriptions, Picard
understood that the object in the Borg artifact might be that one
telling piece of evidence which had been sought on thousands of
worlds. No mere handful of shards, but an actual, functioning
device, richly detailed with Preserver-style writing, perhaps hold-
ing the key to understanding the origin of life. And its ultimate purpose.
Picard had good reason to feel magically isolated while his
world spun around him. Within his grasp could be the absolute
answer to the ultimate question of existence.
And why else was there a Starfleet but to discover exactly that?

"I will make the following arrangements," Picard said to
Commander Tarl. He hoped that in the past few minutes he had
recovered enough from the staggering discovery within the Borg
artifact that his voice sounded normal and unremarkable. So far,
at least, Tarl and the others of her crew seemed to suspect nothing.
He continued reading the points he had entered on the small padd
Riker had given him. La Forge, Worf, and Data remained by the
Borg artifact, running a structural load analysis to devise a
method to take it to the Enterprise.
"To begin: Immediate transport, under cover, for yourself and
your crew to Starbase 718," Picard said.
Riker added, "I've already requested four high-speed trans-
ports to rendezvous with us back at Legara IV, for your journey."
Tarl regarded the captain and his first officer without expres-
sion, arms crossed.
"At Starbase 718," Picard continued, "you will be provided
with a Nautilus-class colony ship, fully equipped for the auto-

226

FEDERATION

mated construction of a self-sustaining, class-M-world, farming
and mining community, with a range of two thousand light-years
at warp six before refueling. That should take you far beyond the
Federation's boundaries, and the Empire's."
Tarl stared at the deckplates. "Farmers and miners." She shook
her head as if she could imagine nothing worse.
"Other options are available," Picard reminded her. "But they
would require you to remain within the Federation. In time,
should the Empire discover what you have done, we might be
asked to extradite you for charges of piracy and... treason."
Tarl unfolded her arms. "The Empire already knows what I
have done, Captain. Your assistance is... acceptable." She
didn't sound convinced, but Picard knew she had no other choice.
")~mr assistance is most appreciated," Picard replied. "And
when the time comes, I shall personally see to it that you receive
the honor that is due you."
Tarl looked as if she hadn't understood a single word. "When
~vhat time comes?"
"When the Federation enjoys the same relationship with the
Romulan Empire as it does today with the Klingon Empire."
Tarl reacted with amazement. "You actually believe that will
come to pass'?"
"Of course," Picard said. "It is inevitable."
Tarl stepped closer to Picard, making him look up at her. "The
Federation will never conquer my people."
Very calmly, Picard replied, "The Federation does not conquer,
Commander. It invites. There is a considerable difference. And
someday, when your rulers are convinced that the Federation's
ideals are their own, shared by thousands of worlds and cultures,
the>. will a, to join and the invitation will be extended to them as
it has been extended to so many others for more than two
hundred years."
Tarl stared down at Picard for long moments. Then she said,
"'~bu humans truly are the most arrogant life-form the galaxy has
ever seen."
"Humans are not the only species in the Federation, Com-
mander. Therefore, your argument is not logical."



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Logical," Tarl sneered. "The corrupt Vulcan influence is
everywhere." She then strode away, her boot heels clicking loudly
on the deckplates.
"'Not logical'? I take it Ambassador Sarek is still with you,"
Riker said.
Picard sighed. "From time to time." He regarded Commander
Tarl's diminishing form. "She doesn't seem happy, does she, even
though we're giving her all that she's asked for. Even more."
"Who understands the Romulan mind?" Riker said. "I know
she thinks she's actually helping the Empire by turning over the
Borg artifact to us, but still, for a Romulan to not think that her
system and science and technology are the best..." Riker
shrugged. "But she is doing the right thing."
"You mean," Picard said, "according to us. In our...
'arrogant' viewpoint."
Riker eyed his captain with interest. There was little the two
men could hide from each other. "Are you having second
thoughts about this transaction?"
For the first time, Picard wondered if he was. Or was it just an
echo of Sarek's long-held doubts about the Romulans that was
affecting him?
"You don't suppose it's gone too easily, do you?" Picard asked.
"You mean: Are we being set up?"
Picard nodded.
Riker laughed. "Now you sound like you're recovering from a
mind-meld with Worf." Riker saw that Picard was not returning
his laughter and he responded to the question seriously. "If it is a
setup, you have to admit it's fantastically elaborate."
"It all depends on what the purpose of the setup is," Picard
said.
"Any theories?" Riker asked.
Picard had been asking himself the same question. "Perhaps
their intention is to mislead us about the nature of the Borg.
Therefore, they have given us this artifact to study, to base our
defenses on, only for us to discover in battle that it's not true Borg
technology at all and that all our efforts have been wasted."
Riker shook his head. "Our defeat under those conditions
would leave the Romulans facing a Borg Collective which had

FEDERATION

assimilated all the technology and firepower of the Federation. I
doubt even they could be so shortsighted."
That had been Picard's only plausible theory and he was glad
that Riker had pointed out its obvious flaw. He supposed there
was a possibility that the Borg artifact contained a bomb of some
sort. But any explosive device powerful enough to damage the
En[erprise would have been easily detected by the away team. And
if the Romulans were that intent on destroying a Federation
starship, then there were other, more direct and efficient ways to
go about it.
"Do you suppose they know about the Preserver object within
the artifact?" Picard asked.
"lt's apparent that Commander Tarl doesn't. No matter what
she thinks about the Empire's scientific capabilities, she would
have to be a fool to give away something with a power source
that's still functioning after three and a half billion years. I can
only think of a few devices like that that have ever been dis-
covered, and so far they've given up none of their secrets."
Picard agreed. The Preserver object about to come into his
possession was on the order of the Guardian of Forever in terms
of age. And that device had defied all attempts to understand it
over the century it had been studied.
"So the only question remaining," Picard said, "is how to get
the artifact aboard the Enterprise."
"Geordi is mapping out the tractor-beam support points in its
structure," Riker said. "At close range, we could probably handle
it with our cargo transporters, but Geordi and Data are both
concerned about whether or not the artifact's power supply will
remain functioning after transport."
Picard understood. There was an entire class of molecules,
substances, and devices that could not be transported without
having their structure subtly altered. Until his engineer knew
exactly what was powering the device, it made good sense to treat
it cautiously.
"Then if Mr. La Forge is considering towing the artifact to our
shuttlebay,,, Picard said, keeping caution in mind, "I'd recom-
mend using two tractor beams from two shuttlecraft, just so we
have the extra factor of safety."

229



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"I'm sure Geordi is already planning on that," Riker said. "But
there is one other problem we have to address. Commander Taft
has a 'skeleton' crew of three hundred and twelve personnel on
board. She's insisting on turning over this vessel to DaiMon Pol
as soon as the artifact is off-loaded, so we'll have to make
arrangements for taking all those Romulans back to Legara IV."
"For one day we have ample room for that many passengers.
I'm sure Mr. Worf can handle the security arrangements. Any-
thing else?"
Riker looked serious. "Only that we not send word of the
Preserver object to Starfleet until after we're back in friendly
waters. Once word gets out about this, I have a feeling a lot of
people are going to come looking for it."
"If," Picard emphasized, "it is what we think it is."
Riker angled his head questioningly. "Is that Ambassador
Sarek speaking again?"
"Only Jean-Luc Picard," the captain replied with a shake of his
head. "With so much at stake, I prefer to take the conservative
approach."

Though his excursion to the Romulan ship had been exhilarat-
ing, and a welcome change, Picard had no doubt that his proper
place was on the bridge of the Enterprise. He sat in his command
chair, perfectly at ease, as the great ship pulsed with its own inner
life around him. He was glad to be part of it. He felt at home. Here
he could deal with any problem the universe presented him, and
that included 312 Romulans and what might be the greatest
archaeological find of human history.
La Forge's voice came over the bridge communications system.
"Captain Picard, the Gould and the Cochrane have established
tractor-beam linkup with the artifact. We're ready to bring it
aboard."
"On visual," Picard requested. At his Ops station beside Ensign
McKnight, Data changed the main screen image. Instead of the
two Warbirds, Picard now viewed the interior of Tarl's hangar
deck as seen from the optical sensor Mr. La Forge carried with
him there. The presence of two of the Enterprise's sleek, type-7
shuttlecraft, hovering among the predatory designs of the

FEDERATION

Romulan Warbird's parked fighters and shuttles, was incongruous
to say the least. But perhaps it was a harbinger of things to come.
There would be peace between the Federation and the Romulans
one day. Picard was certain. Perhaps this exchange would some-
day be seen as its starting point.
-'Picard to main shuttlebay," the captain said. "Are you
prepared to receive the artifact?" Riker acknowledged.
"XVe're standing by, Mr. La Forge," Picard confirmed. "Pro-
ceed when ready."
On the viewscreen, the two Federation shuttlecraft began to lift
even higher off the hangar deck, and the angle of the sensor
changed so that Picard could see the Borg artifact, now clear of
scaffolding and lights, begin to rise, bathed in the shimmering
blue glow of twin tractor beams.
"We are registering no stress on the artifact," La Forge re-
ported. "Taking it out."
The Gould and the Cochrane and the Borg artifact began to
move slowly forward, until they escaped the Warbird's bright
interior lights and were framed by the wide hangar doors.
"Switch to external viewers," Picard said.
The viewscreen image changed again. Gracefully, the two
shuttlecraft emerged from the hollow void between the Warbird's
dorsal and ventral planes. The artifact, four to five times the size
of each shuttle, trailed easily fifty meters behind them.
"We're clear. Captain," La Forge announced. "I'm beaming
back to our main shuttlebay."
"Well done. Mr. La Forge," Picard said.
"Registering no change in the artifact's power load," Data said.
"After all that artifact has been through," Picard observed, "I'd
be surprised if it reacted at all to this gentle ride."
"Captain~La Forge here. I'm back on the Enterprise.
Shuttlecraft pilots advise two minutes to landing."
Picard Felt pleased with himself. Everything was proceeding
perfecth. exactly as planned. Sometimes he suspected the Enter-
priw actually ran herself.
"Mr. Data," he said, "once the artifact is stowed, begin the
transportation of Commander Tarrs crew to Shuttlebays Two and

231



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Three." Dr. Crusher had set up the standard refugee-processing
centers in those bays. Picard was almost certain the treatment the
Romulan crew would receive there would be better than they
received in their own quarters on Tarl's Warbird.
Data acknowledged the order, then added. "Captain, I am
picking up an increased neutrino flux."
Picard leaned forward. "Is it coming from the artifact?"
"Negative, sir. It seems to be emanating from the Ferengi
Warbird. The signature is as if the ship were decloaking. But since
it already is decloaked, I am at a loss to explain the reading."
Picard sat back. "Perhaps the Ferengi have found something
else to break on their new ship. Mr. Worf, hail DaiMon Pol."
"Coming onscreen, Captain."
Picard forced himself to smile as the image of the Ferengi-run,
Romulan bridge appeared on the main viewer. "DaiMon Pol," he
began, about to inquire if there was any assistance the Enterprise
could once again supply.
But DaiMon Pol was not in the command chair. Instead, Picard
saw two Ferengi rush past behind it. He heard Romulan warning
sirens, Ferengi shouts of alarm.
"DaiMon Pol!" Picard said, getting to his feet. "What is the
status of your ship? Mr. Data: Full scan of the 62nd Rule."
Then DaiMon Pol lurched into the range of the viewscreen.
"They've cheated us/" he squealed, high-pitched, full of anger.
"None of it works! They've--"
In a burst of static, DaiMon Pol and the Romulan bridge
disappeared from the screen, to be replaced by a forward view in
which Commander Tarl's vessel still maintained position on the
right, but where DaiMon Pol's vessel had been to the left was
nothing more than a rapidly expanding ball of plasma, studded
with spinning hullplates.
"Data..." Picard said in alarm. "What happened? Did they
self-destruct somehow... ?"
But before Data could reply, Picard saw the answer to his
question for himself.
A third Warbird flew through the cloud of destruction that had
been the 62nd Rule.
All phasers blazing, it flew for the Enterprise.

Part Two

METAMORPHOSIS



THORSEN

Some of them had been doctors once.
But the Optimum had closed the universities. The Optimum had
believed in the survival of the fittest, and medical care was
considered a luxury. To the Optimum, those who were too old,
unhealthy, incomplete, were little different from those of the wrong
color, the wrong religion, the wrong political beliefs. Doctors were
unnecessary because those who were nonoptimal would be cleansed
,/horn the Earth by the raging fire of change, of purification, of
rebirth.
But the fire had come to Adrik Thorsen first.
In the long weeks of his recovery, he remembered little of how
that last night in Battersea had ended. He remembered Cochrane,
O/'course. He remembered how the scientist had mocked him, had
lied to him. had dared to touch him.
He remembered how the scientist had raised his laser, rejecting
Thors'en, rejecting the.future.
Cochrane ~, light had cut across Thorsen's face, seared his eve, so
t/~at in all the years ever after, whenever he was in darkness, the
xcintillation of that laser still echoed in what remained of his optic
nerve. A flickering shadow, a shimmering souvenir of his.first and

235



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
only meeting with the one man who could have guaranteed a new
life for the Earth. The one man who, through his refusal of the
Optimum, had brought about all that had followed in the vacuum
of the Optimum's collapse.
Thorsen had crawled along the turf of Battersea, the laser
afterimage burning in his eye, his brain. He had screamed
Cochrane's name as he had crawled, tasting blood, feeling pain,
seeking darkness and coolness and relief
He had crawled onto concrete, down rough stairs, to a place
where cameras had once been installed, when the Battersea
Stadium had meant something.
Then the night had caught fire and he remembered nothing else
until they woke him up to scrub the dead skin from his body with
wire bristles that found each nerve on his shiny new skin.
Eventually, the worst of the pain faded, except for the light that
would shine forever in his missing eye, and the ache that would
haunt his arms and legs.
Although those who had been doctors explained that he had no
arms and legs.
Adrik Thorsen had been cleansed by fire.
And been left incomplete.
Nonoptimal.
As he lay helpless in his sterile bed, what had happened to
Thorsen happened also to his dreams of salvation.
The mistakes of Khan had been avoided. But new mistakes had
been made. The Optimum collapsed. Pilloried by those who had no
vision.
From his sterile bed, Adrik Thorsen called for doctors to make
him whole, so he could escape with the others of the cadre. Go into
hiding. Learn from their mistakes and try again.
But those who answered his call were no longer doctors. He had
helped see to that. They were interface experts now. And Adrik
Thorsen learned firsthand **,hat happened to human nervous tissue
when Josephson probes were inserted into the brain.
When they were through with him, Thorsen was whole, after a
fashion. He could walk, he could pick up and manipulate objects,
after a fashion. But his new limbs ran on batteries, and every nerve
236

FEDERATION

impulse intended to cause movement also triggered intense pain
through the crude interface of the Josephson probes.
Nonoptimal.
In return for information about those in the cadre who had
abandoned him, certain fanatics eager to replace him gave Thorsen
passage .from the Earth, forcing him to become what he despised
most--someone who deserted the homeworld.
The night he left, another fire ignited round the globe, and when
the ashes fell and Earth's sun shone through the smoke again, and
the postatomic horror had exhausted itself and the planet, thirty-
seven million corpses shamed those who had survived.
The inevitable cry went out: This must not happen again.
And this time, on the colony worlds, that cry was finally heard.
Something changed in humanity with that last war, because for
the first time it was clear even to the masses that no human conflict,
even one that could consume a world, could ever be allowed to
overshadow or assume more importance than the human race
itself
There was a universe waiting, and with the infinite possibilities it
offbred, there came a generation that had no time or need for
bigotry, intolerance, and greed.
Even as enemy soldiers turned to one another to share water on
the battlefield once the guns had fallen silent, humanity finally
abandoned the old ways and learned the new.
But Adrik Thorsen was not of that generation. He would always
be a creature of Earth's past, and in time he fled even the system of
his birth, to hide on distant colonies, using his artificial nerve
pathways to control machinery and spaceships, finding safety in
the oblivion of mindless work.
And during all his struggles to survive, he seethed with the
kno~vledge that each ship he rode was powered by the genius of
Zeam Cochrane.
He still ~'oke at night screaming Cochrane's name.
The laser beam still burned hellishly in what was left of his optic
nerve.
The same energy that had fueled the Optimum now fueled
Thorsen and his obsession.

237



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Hatred.
He dreamed of revenge. He dreamed o f forcing Cochrane to build
a warp bomb so powerful whole systems wouMfall before it. Before
him. He knew it could be done. He wore out pens in his mechanical
fingers and wrote out the figures and diagrams on endless sheets of
paper, on endless display screens, on walls, on sheets, on whatever
surface he could find
In time, other geniuses created machines into which he could
plug his stumps with their artificial pathways to see his work
appear on screens as fast as he could think.
His dreams came alive then, no longer bound by nonoptimal
flesh. He only feared that he would die before he had a chance to
complete his work. To make Cochrane finally do what he should
have done so many years ago. To bow down and submit to his
master.
But the universe hem many possibilities.
And one of them was an alien race called the Grigari.
Thorsen saw in them his future.
He was eighty years old now, but flesh itself, he had come to
realize, was nonoptimal.
And the Grigari did not deal in flesh.
Thorsen paid their price and he was renewed.
From his exile, he journeyed to Alpha Centauri.
He set in motion his challenge to Zefram Cochrane--one that
wouM take from the scientist everything he had held dear, just as
Cochrane had taken from him.
His plan was perfect. Cochrane would suffer. And then, because
he would be left with no other choice, the scientist would at last be
forced to give Thorsen the secret. The warp bomb.
It did not matter that Thorsen no longer had the armies to use
that secret. It only mattered that Thorsen win.
It would be him against Zefram Cochrane, just as it was meant
to be, as if they had met on Titan as history had demanded.
The challenge began. Cochrane's wife died at Thorsen's hand.
Cochrane's students were consumed by fire.
But then Cochrane the scientist did the unthinkable--what
Thorsen the warrior had never considered.

FEDERATION

Cochrane ran.
Thorsen was stunned. Cochrane was supposed to be a genius.
A genius would have known. There was no escape from the Opti-
trl It In.
Thorsen had not escaped it.
And neither wouM Zefram Cochrane.

239



ONE

BI71 AlffIT#flE II
OUTWARD BOUND
Earth Standard: April 2117

It was over, and Cochrane was glad of it.
Alpha Centauri was light-years behind him. Stapledon Center,
where he was expected in the next month, light-years farther still.
And his past life, farthest away of all.
His small ship hummed along at time-warp factor four. In his
first voyages, half a century ago, he had had to drop back to
normal space every few days, in order to check his bearings. But
now the continuum-distortion fields were so tightly focused that
he could see the stars slip past the viewports, and a navigation
computer could constantly adjust his course.
Which was good, because he had no intention of ever again
leaving the continuum he had discovered. He would die here, for
no other reason than that he had nothing more to do except bring
pain to others.
The ship, a personal yacht with one hundred square meters of
living space, luxurious by the standards of the day, was filled with
music, a symphony by Brahms. For years he had been haunted by
the melody he had heard that first night back at Christopher's
Landing. At the time he had thought that it had sounded like
Brahms. But he had never been able to find it again, in any

240

FEDERATION

collection of recordings. Almost as if Brahms had dropped into
the twenty-first century and written one final piece.
But even this music was just background noise now. He had
given up his search. He had given up everything.
His Monica lay in the soil of Centauri B II. His staff and
students were at risk. Colonel Adrik Thorsen had returned from
the dead. And all because of him. Cochrane no longer felt like
fighting. Science and the thrill of discovery had been his life and
they had brought him nothing.
Fame, yes. There were planets named after him.
Fortune, as much as he wanted, though when actually given the
choice, he had realized he wanted very little. Admiration. An unconscionable amount.
The ears of the powerful, the beds of the beautiful, the eyes of
the media on a hundred worlds.
Zefram Cochrane knew that by anyone's measure, he had been
given everything.
But he had nothing.
And he didn't know why.
What he did know was that the action he took now wasn't
killing himself. He was simply returning to his natural state.
One of nothing.
He welcomed oblivion.
Io be free of the selfish loneliness left by Monica's death, of the
unreasoning implacability of Thorsen's hate, of all the useless
regret and self-doubt that had plagued him all his life.
He watched the stars slipping past him. But it wasn't the stars
that drew him now. It was the void between them.
Perhaps this was why he had invented the superimpellor. Not
to take humanity to other worlds, but so that he could cast himself
into nothingness.
After an unchanging week of travel, sitting passively in his
pilot's web, venturing out only to use the head, Cochrane believed
he was beginning to think less often of his past. He found the
tedium blessedly healing. Numbing. The stars slipped by. Forever.
The same music recordings played for the twentieth cycle. The
fiftieth cycle.

241

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

He didn't move. His beard grew shaggy. His fingernails ragged.
He wondered idly how long it would take for his body to just
stop.
He could open the airlock, he knew. At his age, in ten seconds it
would be over.
He could jump out the airlock and be the first human to
experience continuum-distortion propulsion without benefit of a
spaceship. For about one nanosecond.
He could plot a course to a star and be drawn into its endless
gravity well, or drop to impulse and drive into it at half the speed
of light, creating a nova that all the human worlds would see.
But all those deaths required willful action. And he who had
never believed that life would run out of challenges to inspire
him, was spent, without the will even to die.
It seemed to Zefram Cochrane that he had faced life's chal-
lenges, but life had won.
He was old, he was sick, he was ready to die.
And life's final challenge to him was that it would not let him
go.

Five weeks passed.
He knew they would be searching for him now. But the
knowledge meant nothing to him. Not only had he succeeded in
blanking his mind to his past, he was beginning to hallucinate, to
create new images for his future.
In spite of himself, he found this development wildly funny.
Deprived of stimuli, the brain created its own diversions.
He wondered when his fantastic mirages would begin talking to
him.
They began at the end of the fifth week.

He awoke, distraught that he still lived, his body clamoring for
sustenance, stinging from the sores on his skin where restraining
straps kept him from floating in the cabin. His mouth was
parched. His lips cracked and dry. A squeeze bottle of water was
hooked to his chair, but he merely watched it swing back and
forth on its tether, the water thick weightless globs within it.
The aurora was back.

242

FEDERATION

He had seen it before. Three times now. Maybe four.
Gold-flecked and shimmering, it would rush up beside his ship,
swirl around it, then rush away.
The first time he had seen it, it had reminded him strongly of
dolphins following the wake of a ship, playing and splashing in the
free ride.
The second time he had seen it, he had wondered how a
phenomenon like it could travel at faster-than-light velocities.
The third and fourth times, he had decided it was a hallucina-
tion like all the others.
Except he liked this one.
It was pretty.
Now, instead of swirling all around his ship, the glowing cloud
hung on the viewports, obscuring the streaking stars beyond. Its
shifting, shining patterns pressed against the transparent alumi-
num panels, and through some trick of the lighting or his failing
eyesight, Cochrane was almost convinced that he saw tendrils of
the thing push through the window to reach inside the cabin.
He tried to speak. To say, Careful there, you'll make a breeze if
you open the window. But he had not spoken for many weeks and
no sound came from him.
Yet the tendril withdrew. Or it seemed to, at least. And the
cloud remained against the viewport, as if it were looking in. As if
it wanted something.
Wanted something.
Cochrane squinted, trying to see it more clearly. The absurd
question expanded in his mind. What could an energy cloud
capable of traveling faster than light want?
His thoughts seemed to clear as he focused on the cloud. It was
interesting to have a problem again.
After an hour or so, he figured it out.
He forced his stiff fingers to reach out and grab the floating
water bottle, then close around it. You're thirsty, aren't you? he
asked, though he couldn't speak the words, only think them.
He was fairly certain the answer had been, Yes.
He studied the problem even longer. Then he pulled out the
straw and slipped it between his raw lips. He drank for the first
time in days.

243



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

How's that? he asked, still without words.
The answer seemed to be that drinking water had been exactly
the right thing to do.
But the cloud didn't leave.
Cochrane almost smiled. You want more, do you?
Shimmering reflections danced in the viewports, answering
again.
Okay, Cochrane said in his mind. Okay, I get you.
He fumbled with the seat webs until he floated free and pushed
himself back to the food dispenser. He hung there, exhausted,
until he could ask another wordless question. Soup? he asked, and
soup it was.
Then he set up the shower tube and washed himself.
His scalp felt strange when he used the shampoo. As if there
were hair growing on the top of his head again. In his dreams.
He dried off, rubbed ointment on his strap sores, put on a fresh
jumpsuit, then strapped himself loosely to his seat and slept.
When he awoke, he was disappointed to discover that the cloud
wasn't at the window anymore. It had been an interesting game he
had played with the hallucination.
Then Cochrane realized the stars were no longer streaking by.
They were still. He was traveling at sublight. But the impulse
engines were switched off. He had disabled them himself.
He peered through the viewports. A string of glowing dots were
laid out before him. Planetoids, he guessed. Too many of them to
be planets. Too big to be asteroids.
He found himself hoping he wouldn't crash into one of the
planetoids, for then the cloud would come looking for him and
wouldn't be able to find him. He wondered if not finding him
would upset the cloud, if it would miss him. He didn't like that
thought.
But that was exactly what was going to happen, he realized
about an hour later, when he saw a planetoid looming before him.
Sorry, he said to the cloud wherever it was. I won't be here to
feed and water you.
The window sparkled at him.
Cochrane released his straps, and his fingers moved so quickly
and so easily that he looked down at them in surprise.

244

FEDERATION

There were no age spots on the back of his hands. His fingers
weren't gaunt as they had been. They were strong, well fleshed.
But he couldn't stop to think about that now. He pushed himself
to the window. He put his hand to it.
From the other side, a tendril of the glowing cloud pushed
through and wrapped gently around his fingers.
Cochrane had spent forty days alone in space preparing to die.
The sensation of the cloud's touch felt like the most natural thing
of all.
He wiggled his hand inside the cloud, as if he were scratching
the ear of a dog. You don't like it up here, do you?he said. You want
to find a home.
Cochrane knew he had figured it out. Poor thing, he said. How
about that planetoid right down there?
The cloud let him know that was a magnificent idea.
He went through a list of questions for the cloud, finding out all
the things it would need to be content on the planetoid--the right
kind of shelter, the temperature range, the force of gravity, food
and water.
Amazingly, what the cloud needed was exactly what was
conducive to human health and growth. And it could all be found
on the planetoid beneath them.
Cochrane landed his ship without touching the controls or
using the engines. After forty days in space, why not?
He stepped outside and breathed the air. It tasted just as he
remembered the air had been on Centauri B II. He was also
surprised by how deeply he could inhale without coughing. He
was surprised by how his legs didn't ache. How he felt he could
run right around the planetoid if he wanted to. It was almost as if
he were young again. If only that could be true.
The cloud, he decided, was fortunate to have found such a
perfect place for itself.
The cloud, right beside him, agreed. He liked the way it swept
around him, carefully, tentatively, not enveloping him all at once.
Poor thing, Cochrane said. All alone down here. You need a
friend, don't you?
The cloud needed a friend.
Do you want me to take care of you? Cochrane asked.

245



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

The cloud thought that would be fine.
Well, I don't seem to have anything on my agenda, Cochrane
said. Why don't you let me stay here and help you?
The cloud thought it over for about half a second. The cloud
thought it was the best idea ever in the history of the universe.
Cochrane spent the next few weeks using the supplies from his
ship to build a shelter for the cloud, plant some seeds, and make
things right. During that time, as he threw off the mental lethargy
of the past forty days, he figured out what the cloud had done. It
was more than just a dolphin or a lonely dog looking for company.
It had been quite shrewd. Its agenda had included him.
At another time in his life, Cochrane might have resented the
manipulation. But that life was over. He had left so much that was
old and unnecessary behind.
The planetoid seemed like an interesting place. The cloud was
an interesting companion. And it felt good to have someonemor
something--to care for. It was as if he had never felt that way
before.
Because for all that the cloud took care of him, Cochrane had
no illusions about what he was doing when the cloud embraced
him.
He was taking care of the cloud, as well.
It seemed a fair bargain.
He decided his life might have room for one more challenge.
Once again, Zefram Cochrane realized he was looking forward to
finding out what would happen next.

TWO

//.S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC-1701
RENDEZVOUS WITH THE CITY gF UTOPIA P//UVITI/I
Stardate 3854.8
Earth Standard: November 2267

On the main viewer, the Klingon's dark face was distorted by his
forced smile. It twisted his stringy beard into an unnatural angle.
"Greetings, Captain Kirk of the U.S.S. Enterprise."
"Save it," Kirk shot back. "Drop your shields and let us beam
in the poor bastard you blew out the airlock."
The Klingon widened his eyes insincerely. "Ah, you noticed
that, did you?"
"Drop your shields now!"
"And put myself at your fabled terran 'mercy'? Come now,
Captain. I may be Klingon, but that doesn't make me stupid. We
have other matters to discuss."
Kirk stood up from his chair. As far as he was concerned, there
was only one thing Klingons understood, and the Enterprise was
the ship to deliver it. "Drop your shields now/ Then we can
discuss anything you want."
/he Klingon turned to the side and spat out some commands in
his own guttural language.
"Keptin, their shields are weakening by the open airlock."
The Klingon smiled broadly. "You have five seconds, Captain
Kirk. Any treachery will result in the deaths of even more of--"

246 247



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Spock! Now!" Kirk shouted.
Over the bridge speakers, Spock acknowledged from the trans-
porter room. "Transporter locked, and energizing."
Chekov confirmed that the body had vanished from the side of
the liner. A moment later Spock announced recovery and called
for a medical team.
"Shields restored," Chekov said.
"Spock here. The recovered human is dead, Captain. From his
uniform, he was one of the crew members of the Planitia."
Kirk was enraged. "You killed him!"
But the Klingon on the screen shook his head. "Not I, Captain
Kirk. Au contraire, it was your unfortunate and unprovoked
attack which caused such... unpleasantness."
"Your hijacked liner is no match for this ship," Kirk said.
"But my hostages are more than a match for your conscience,
Captain Kirk." The Klingon settled back into his own command
chair, an ornate, high-backed style popular on human civilian
ships. "Now, I believe you said that once I dropped my shields to
allow recovery of the body of the man you killed, we could talk.
And I would like to talk, Captain Kirk. About so many things."
Kirk had never run across a Klingon who liked to talk. "Shut
him down, Uhura." The screen jumped back to a view of the
liner.
"Aren't you going to negotiate with him?" The question came
from Admiral Kabreigny. McCoy had positioned her at an
unused navigation station on the upper level. Her color was better
and she appeared to have recovered her composure. Just in case,
McCoy hovered close by, a medical kit at his side. At Spock's
science station, the Companion sat hunched over, silent and still,
face in her hands, breathing almost back to normal. The two
security officers remained at ease by the turbolift doors.
"Klingons don't negotiate," Kirk said. "He's just stalling for
time."
"Why?" Kabreigny asked. The bridge crew braced themselves
for a repeat of the earlier clash of wills.
But Kirk found it easier to answer, now that the command
chair was his again. "He'd never make it back to the Empire in
that liner. He must be heading for a rendezvous point."

248

FEDERATION

"No Klingon ship could get this far into Federation territory to
meet him."
Kirk tapped his fingers against the arm of his chair, working out
his options. "Admiral, he doesn't need to rendezvous with a
Klingon ship. The ship that attacked us was an Orion. It was fast
enough to get him back home in a month and not even the
Enterprise could have caught him."
McCoy leaned forward on the rail circling the upper level. "Do
you think that ship we destroyed was his ride home?"
"Possibly," Kirk said. "But he's bound to have a backup plan.
The question is, when does it go into effect?" He turned his chair
around to face the Companion. "Companion, is the man near?"
She sighed and spoke into her hands. "The man continues."
She looked up. Her one, unhandaged eye was full of pain. "Part of
us wishes to tell you he is in the ship before us."
"Can you tell us where in the ship he is?" Kirk asked.
But the Companion shook her head. "We cannot," she said
sadly. "We only know that he is near."
Kirk stared at the liner on the screen. A clock was ticking. He
had no idea what schedule it was on, but sooner or later another
ship would be arriving to rendezvous with the Planitia. Cochrane
had been kidnapped by Orions, but then brought to a hijacked
liner under the command ofa Klingon. Kirk wouldn't put it past
the Orions to work with the Klingons--they specialized in
playing both ends against the middle in any conflict. But what did
the Klingon Empire want with Zefram Cochrane? Their level of
warp technology was at least the equal of the Federation's.
Cochrane would be a century and a half behind the times in the
Empire, as well.
Then there was the matter of Admiral Kabreigny's conspiracy.
What or who it involved, Kirk didn't know. Only that Kabreigny
still thought that he might be part of it, just as Kirk was still
Worried that she was a part of another conspiracy. He bounced his
fist on the arm of his chair. The only connection to all of this was
Cochrane. Whatever else was going to happen, 7efram Cochrane
had to come first.
But how could Kirk save one person from a ship filled with
hostages and a bloodthirsty Klingon who wouldn't balk at killing

249



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
everyone? Kirk didn't need Spock to tell him that the answer was
that it couldn't be done. Which meant, Kirk knew, he had to find
another approach, he had to come up with a different question.
One that did have an answer.
Change the rules. Do the unthinkable.
The question came to him. The answer was outrageous. As
outrageous as a commercial liner armed only with navigational
phasers being able to keep a Constitution-class starship at bay.
"Admiral Kabreigny," Kirk said as pleasantly as he could as he
stepped down from his chair, "do you feel up to negotiating with a
Klingon?"
Kabreigny eyed him warily. "I thought you said Klingons don't
negotiate."
"They don't," Kirk agreed. "But then, you won't be negotiating
either. You'll just be buying time." "For what?"
"So I can follow my orders and rescue Mr. Cochrane." Kirk
looked over at Uhura. "Lieutenant, cancel Red Alert. All hands
stand down."
McCoy put his hands behind his back. "This is going to be
good, isn't it?"
Kirk shrugged. Spectacular was a better word. Good or bad,
win or lose, what he was planning was definitely going to be
spectacular.
"Admiral, I'd like you to take the chair again. I'd like you to
identify yourself to the Klingon and tell him that you have
relieved me of duty because... I wanted to blow the liner out of
space." He guided the perplexed admiral to the chair. "Play it
straight with him. You want to get those hostages back. But don't
let on in any way that you know about Cochrane. Give him that
edge. It will make him feel in control."
Kabreigny settled back in the command chair. "And what Will
you be doing during all this?"
'Tll be in the Auxiliary Control Center." He turned to the
command console. "Mr. Chekov, Mr. Sulu, report to me there as
soon as your replacements arrive."
The helmsman and navigator acknowledged their orders.
"Dr. McCoy, Companion, please accompany me." Then Kirk

250

FEDERATION

ducked down to Uhura and whispered. "Lieutenant, monitor
every word the admiral and the Klingon say. If you detect any
hint of a code, or if the admiral says anything that could endanger
the ship, close the channel and contact me at once." Uhura nodded. "Aye-aye, Captain."
Kirk ushered the Companion and McCoy onto the turbolift.
"Admiral Kabreigny, you have the conn."
The doors swept closed and the lift began to descend. McCoy
studied Kirk closely. "Now can you tell me what you're plan-
ning?"
"Spock and Scott had better hear it, too," Kirk said. If he was
going to have all of his senior officers think he was crazy, he
wanted to get it over with at once.

Buried deep within the decks of the Enterprise, the Auxiliary
Command Center was the ship's backup command facility. From
it, all basic command functions could be controlled in the event
the main bridge was damaged or lost. But in this case, the main
bridge was serving as the backdrop of a diversion carried out for
the Klingon commander of the hijacked liner. As the Klingon
conducted his negotiations with Kabreigny, Kirk and his officers
prepared behind the scenes for the moment they would take
control of the situation.
Just over an hour after Kirk had left the bridge, he was minutes
away from enacting his plan. Spock gave it a thirty-three percent
chance of success, much higher than Mr. Scott allowed. McCoy
thought it was just plain impossible. But Kirk knew his crew and
his ship. He was confident, and that confidence was contagious.
At the smaller command console in the cramped control center,
Sulu and Chekov ran one final simulation. They reported a
twelve-percent casualty rate.
"Not acceptable," Kirk told them. But he knew there was no
more time to rehearse. Whatever help the Klingon commander
was obviously expecting could arrive at any moment. The Planitia
was a soft target. There was no guarantee that what was coming to
rendezvous with the liner would be as simple to overcome.
Kirk checked the readouts on the command console, scanning
Mr. Scott's data from the engine room. The warp-eight-point-

251



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

three chase had cracked one of the dilithium crystals in the
matter-antimatter converters and engine efficiency had dropped
dramatically. The chief engineer couldn't promise speed, but he
did promise that all the power the captain's plan needed would be
available on demand.
McCoy was standing by in the main transporter room. Ten
other emergency medical teams were at their positions through-
out the ship. Everything had been arranged by runners. Kirk had
not permitted any of the detailed planning stages to be transmit-
ted over the ship's intercom system. He presumed the Klingon's
crew would be attempting to monitor the Enterprise's internal
communications. He didn't know if the liner had the capability
for that, but they were close enough to each other that he didn't
wish to take the chance.
Kirk checked behind him. The Companion sat quietly, focusing
all of her attention on her heart's desire, less than a kilometer
away through the void. "We'll get him back," he promised her.
Then at Kirk's signal, Spock and the transporter chiefs confirmed
their readiness by code.
Kirk took a breath, preparing himself. He knew he'd feel better
if Spock had been able to verify that anything like this had been
tried before. But the procedure books had nothing like it. As
McCoy had dryly noted, it wasn't as if trying something new was
unusual for this ship.
Kirk touched a communications control so he could listen in to
the admiral's conversation with the Klingon.
"... escort back to the Empire," she said, "but the City of
Utopia Planitia is private property and must be returned to us at
the border."
"Alas," the Klingon replied, "that cuts to the core of any
possibility of friendship between our two peoples. By transport-
ing known Orion pirates, this liner has been used in crimes
against the Empire, and we must have it for justice to be served."
Kirk rolled his eyes. It was all nonsense and obfuscation. The
Klingon was claiming some cover story about the Planitia having
been used to smuggle Orion criminals convicted in the Klingon
Empire to safety in the Federation. At least Kabreigny was playing
252


FEDERATION

along, and the Klingon did seem to be delighted to be negotiating
with a fleet admiral. Kirk decided the Klingon thought he'd be
able to kidnap her as well. He frowned and turned down the
volume of the negotiations, reducing them to a background
whisper.
"One minute, gentlemen," Kirk announced. The command
chair in this facility was smaller and less comfortable than the one
on the bridge, but it filled him with the same power.
"Science officer?" he asked. It was an innocuous request that
would mean nothing to any unwanted listener.
"Spock here," Spock replied over the intercom. The simple
announcement meant all transporter circuits were on-line--
every single one of them. "Engineer?"
"Scott here." The ship's power plant was ready for what would
be demanded of it. "Medical?"
"McCoy here. But I still say--"
"Thank you, Doctor," Kirk said, quickly cutting off McCoy's
objections.
"Mr. Sulu," Kirk asked his navigator, "are you ready with the
tractor beams?"
Sulu didn't take his eyes off the board. "Target sites located,
Captain."
"Mr. Chekov?"
His hands were poised over his controls, ready for action.
"Torpedoes armed. Phasers ready for cold start."
Kirk leaned forward to better see the image of the Planitia on
the reduced-size viewscreen in front of the command console.
lhe instant he put this in motion, the lives of everyone on board
the liner Planitia would rest with the skill of the Enterprise crew.
In fifty seconds, the operation would be successful, or more than
one hundred innocent people would be dead. But Kirk would not
accept that possibility, and neither would his crew. "Let's make
this one for the history books," he said. "Mr. Spock, you may
begin."
"Energizing," Spock replied from the transporter room. There

253



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

was no longer any need for communications security. One way or
another, the Klingon would know what was happening within
seconds.
On the screen, a hundred meters out from the forward tip of the
Planitia, Kirk saw a tiny, twinkling dot of transporter energy just
ahead of the liner's invisible shield boundary. A second later, the
image disappeared in a flare of orange light as the transported
photon torpedo detonated. Four seconds had passed.
With the liner's shields at full force, Kirk knew the explosion
would not harm it, but those shields--intended to prevent impact
with space debris--would be disrupted and thrown into timing
disarray, which was all that Kirk required.
"Energizing," Spock said again. A moment later, a second
transported torpedo detonated at the liner's stern. Kirk saw
flickering arcs of energy ripple across the vessel's normally
invisible shields as they tried to compensate for the power
overload the torpedoes caused at opposite ends of the protective
field. Eight seconds.
"Reading multiple airlock openings," Sulu announced tensely.
Kirk felt his fingernails dig into his palms. The Klingon was
repeating himself, exactly as Kirk had gambled. If he had decided
to shoot hostages at the first sign of Kirk's treachery, rather than
eject them into space, the plan wouldn't have worked, even this
far.
Kirk could hear the Klingon's harsh voice on the open channel.
Kabreigny was silent, obviously as surprised as the Klingon was.
"Here they come," Sulu said. Ten seconds.
Kirk saw them--dark figures twisting in the vacuum. More
hostages tossed out to their deaths. But Kirk would not allow that.
"Mr. Chekov--now!" Kirk ordered.
At precisely twelve seconds, a broad beam of cool blue phaser
energy spread over the liner, completely encompassing this side of
its shields, making the usually invisible forcefields glow in kind.
Spread out to its widest beam width, the energy per square meter
from the prolonged phaser burst would not be enough to harm
anyone caught in it, but by hitting the liner's shields equally over
half their area at once, after the disruption caused by the
torpedoes exploding at opposite ends--


FEDERATION

The blue glow winked out like a light being shut off.
,'Shields down!" Chekov exclaimed. "Total failure!"
Fifteen seconds.
Kirk allowed himself half a second to breathe. If the shields
hadn't failed, the hostages would have been lost. But they had
failed, exactly as he had anticipated and Spock had confirmed.
Now. according to the computer's analysis of the liner's backup
systems, Kirk's team had fifteen seconds before the shields could
be brought back on-line.
"Next phase," Kirk said. Then he did what was hardest for any
commander--he waited.
At exactly seventeen seconds into the operation, multiple dots
of transporter energy sparkled around the liner's airlocks as the
hostages cast adrift were retrieved only ten seconds after being
exposed to the vacuum of space. The Enterprise had four main
operational transporter rooms, each capable of transporting six
people at a time, two cycles per minute. In addition, there were
five emergency personnel transporters, each capable of moving
twenty-two people at a time, one cycle per minute in their safest,
most redundant signal mode.
As long as sensors could find targets--and at a distance of only
a few hundred meters that was assured--the Enterprise could
beam aboard every living being on the liner within thirty seconds,
well within the safety limits of vacuum exposure. According to
sensor scans, those living things included eighty-three humans,
four Klingons, six Orions, one Andorian, two dogs, five cats, and
twelve small avians, which appeared to be part of a display in the
liner's bar. The Klingons, Orions, and Andorian would be
beamed to a single emergency transporter ringed by security
officers with drawn phasers. Kirk wished he could be there to see
their faces, especially the Klingon commander's. But he still had
one important task before him.
After disabling the shields in order to start the process, success
for the daring operation lay in making certain that the shields
could not be reestablished, while at the same time insuring that
the captors would not begin indiscriminately shooting their
hostages when they realized the ones in space had been rescued.
So Kirk had come up with the ultimate distraction.

255



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Now, at twenty-one seconds into the operation, he deployed it.
As the transporter flares vanished around the liner, nine seconds
before the liner's shields could come back on-line, narrow phaser
beams shot out from the Enterprise under Chekov's expert aim.
The beams were directed not at the shield generators, where
hostages had been gathered to prevent such a direct attack, but at
key superstructure support beams. In six seconds, the pattern the
beams scorched into the hull took on the pattern of an orange
being sectioned. But none of the beams penetrated the hull. They
only weakened it so that no passenger would be harmed. Fright-
ened, certainly, by the roar of coruscating energy blazing across
the hull metal around them. But not harmed.
When the scorch pattern was complete, Kirk issued the last
order. "Final phase, Mr. Sulu." They were twenty-seven seconds
into the operation, two seconds from the liner's shields being
raised. This was the point at which Spock had said the odds grew
worse. Two seconds was not enough of a safety margin. But it was a margin, Kirk had said.
Instantly, the phasers were replaced by tractor beams. Kirk
imagined he could almost hear the Planitia creak and groan as the
tractor beams took hold, applying carefully calculated stress to
key areas. Suddenly, just as the liner's shields should have come
on again, all running lights winked out at once. Interior lights
followed and every window went dark. Only thirty seconds had
passed since the first torpedo had detonated and Kirk was certain
that even the most battle-hardened Klingon warriors on that ship
would have better things to do than shoot hostages as the gravity
shut off and the ship came apart around them.
The Klingon commander's futile background ranting cut out as
communications failed. Spock's voice was clear and calm over the
speakers. "Cargo transporters have locked on to the liner's
antimatter supply. Wide-beam dispersion astern." Thirty-thre~
seconds.
Kirk tapped his fist against his hand. So far, everything waS:
working perfectly. There wouldn't even be an antimatter explo'
sion from the failure of the liner's magnetic bottles.iii
The City of Utopia Planitia came apart like an eggshell..AI
sudden cloud of air and crystallizing moisture formed around
256

FEDERATION

her. swirling like fog. Sparks and flickerings from small explosions
of internal gas mixtures and storage batteries lit up her inner
decks as if a thunderstorm raged within her. She was like a
computer graphic being torn apart, each deck exposed. Loose
furniture, bedcoverings, luggage, cargo modules, constellations of
glassware and gambling chips, all spun madly, glittering in the
blue tractor beams.
"Spock here, Captain--transporter teams confirm positive
lock on all personnel. We have retrieved everyone." Thirty-seven
seconds exactly.
Kirk wanted to cheer for his crew but the mission wasn't a
success yet. "Medical condition?"
McCoy's answer was harried. Kirk could picture him leaning
over patients in the transporter room, treating them expertly as
he frantically coordinated the other medical teams by the other
transporters.
"No casualties so far. Some youngsters in bad shape. We've got
a woman in premature labor... no, hold that clamp there,
damreit!"
Kirk stood up. He looked at the Companion. "Is he here?" he
asked. "Is the man here?"
A tear welled up in the Companion's uncovered eye. "He is
with us," she said with joy. "Oh, Captain, the man is with us."
Kirk could breathe again. He hit the ship's public-address
control. On the screen, the liner was no more than eight slowly
rotating sections in a cloud of debris, torn apart gently without a
single major explosion, without a single destructive use of phasers
or torpedoes. And no casualties. He'd beaten the odds again. The
Enterprise had beaten the odds again. Together, they'd won.
"This is the captain to all passengers of the P[anitia. Will Mr.
Cochrane please make himself known to security personnel."
Lieutenant Kyle reported a moment later from emergency
transporter three. "Captain Kirk, sir. I have a gentleman here
identifying himself as Mr. Cochrane. He looks like he could use
medical attention."
"Escort him to sickbay, Mr. Kyle. Tell him... the Companion
Will meet him there."
Sulu called for the captain's attention from the command

257



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
console. "Sir, Admiral Kabreigny is demanding to know what just
happened."
"Ask the admiral to meet me in sickbay," Kirk said.
"Captain Kirk?" The voice on the intercom was unsteady, but
recognizable, and for the first time Kirk allowed himself the
luxury of believing that the plan had worked perfectly.
He pressed the Send button on the arm of his chair even as the
Companion rushed to Kirk's side. "Welcome aboard the Enter-
prise, Mr. Cochrane," Kirk said.
"Can you... can you tell me what's going on?" Cochrane
asked. Over the speakers, Kirk could hear the confusion of Mr.
Kyle's transporter room. Children were crying. Medical techni-
cians were shouting at each other. To Kirk, the noise sounded like
victory. They were all alive and safe.
"Well, sir," Kirk answered, "I was hoping you could tell me. It
seems--"
The Enterprise shuddered as a barrage of explosions echoed
through her. Kirk was driven back against his chair. Gouts of
flame shot out of the equipment lining the walls. Chekov cried
out. Alarms wailed.
Kirk looked up at the flickering viewscreen.
The help the Klingon commander had been expecting had
finally arrived.
Three Klingon battle cruisers hung in space beyond the spin-
ning wreckage of the Planitia.
And as Kirk watched helplessly, the lead ship fired again.

258


THREE

U. S. S. Enl TERPRISE NCC-1701-D
ENGAGED WITH THE ENEMY
Stardate 43921.8
Earth Standard: May 2366

"Maximum shields!" Picard ordered.
The bridge shook as the first bolts of Romulan phaser fire
splashed against the Enterprise's saucer section. Then the third
Warbird shot past the forward sensors and disappeared astern.
Sirens blared. Damage reports flooded the bridge.
"It must have decloaked directly behind the 62nd Rule so we
could not detect it," Data said.
But Picard had no time for the fine points of Romulan tactics.
He had two shuttlecraft in transit. "Picard to La Forge--where
are those shuttlecraft?!"
"One minute to docking, sir!" the engineer replied from the
shuttlebay. "What the hell was that anyway?" "Another Warbird," Picard said.
"The Warbird is returning, Captain," Data announced.
Picard turned to the tactical station. "Mr. Worf, extend shields
around the Gould and the Cochrane. Transporter control, once the
shields are established, beam in the pilots. Commander Riker?"
Riker answered from the shuttlebay.
"You are responsible for bringing the artifact in. Use cargo

259



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

tractor beams directly on it and abandon the two shuttlecraft if
you must, but get it aboard."
Worf acknowledged that the shields had been thrown around
the Gould and the Cochrane. Transporter control acknowledged
the pilots were safely aboard.
The third Warbird flashed by the main viewscreen again. But
this time it did not fire.
"We are being hailed by the attacking vessel," Worf said.
"Onscreen," Picard snapped. He was furious. He glared at the
new Romulan commander who appeared on the viewer, elegant
fingers steepled before him as if the wholesale murder ofa shipful
of Ferengi were only an idle diversion.
"Commander of the Federation vessel," the Romulan said,
"you will withdraw or be destroyed."
"You are in Federation space!" Picard shouted, ignoring the
commander's order. "You have fired upon a neutral vessel! You
will lower your shields and prepare for boarding."
The commander appeared bored with Picard's bluster. "We
have destroyed a stolen Romulan vessel in order to prevent
military secrets from falling into our enemy's hands. We have no
quarrel with you. Withdraw so we may deal with our own affairs
in our own way."
"Cargo aboard," Riker announced from the shuttlebay. "We
have recovered both shuttlecraft as well."
Picard was surprised by that news. He had expected the
Warbird to destroy the shuttlecraft on its return run. Perhaps the
commander hadn't wanted to risk destroying the artifact.
"The Enterprise will not withdraw from any location in Federa-
tion space," Picard retorted indignantly. "The Romulan vessel
here with us is under our protection. And we will use force to
defend it." Picard glanced around as he heard the turbolift doors
open. Counselor Troi rushed onto the bridge.
The Romulan commander moved his hands apart in feigned
resignation. "To whom am I speaking?"
"Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Starship Enterprise."
The Romulan's eyelids flickered slightly as he looked to the
side, as if that had been the last name he had wanted to hear.
"Captain Picard," he said, adopting a more conversational tone.

26O


FEDERATION

"I repeat: I have no desire to fight you. But the ship you are
rnisguidedly trying to protect is Romulan property. The com-
mander you are defending is a traitor to the Empire. This is
strictly an internal affair. And I know the Federation prides itself
on noninterference. In this matter, I am sure you will wish to
withdraw before this turns into an incident neither of us desires."
Troi stood beside Picard. "He's telling the truth, Captain. He's
not eager for a confrontation. But he will fight if he feels you force
him to."
"In this matter, the Romulan Star Empire does not fall within
the scope of our Prime Directive," Picard said. "It is you and your
presence which are interfering with us, and we have the right to
defend ourselves from any such encroachment."
"Captain," Worf announced, "Commander Tarl wishes to
speak with you as well."
Picard didn't understand why Tarl hadn't taken the opportuni-
ty of his conversation with the new Romulan commander to flee.
"Onscreen," he said.
The viewscreen now displayed two images: Tarl to the right, the
new commander to the left. Both were on their respective bridges.
"Captain Picard," Tarl said, "I appreciate your offer of asylum.
But I have come to understand that it is wrong of me to turn my
back on my own people. Please, let me return without further
violence. To make amends." She hung her head, as if in shame.
"She's holding something back," Troi said for the captain's ears
only.
The new commander gestured with open hands. "Captain
Picard, you have heard the traitor speak with her own words.
There is no need for you to become involved in this."
The turbolift doors flew open again and Riker sprinted onto the
bridge. He saw the two Romulans on the screen and immediately
asked, "Are they asking for... anything to be returned?"
Picard turned away from the screen and signaled Worf to cut
the audio. "The new commander hasn't mentioned the artifact.
It's almost as if he doesn't know it's missing."
"Or else he thinks that it's still on board Tarl's ship," Troi
Suggested.
"No," Picard said, "sensors would let him know where the

261



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

artifact is within seconds. I think the new commander really has
come just to retrieve Tarl and her vessel."
"And she appears to want to go along with that," Troi observed.
"Because she wants us to get away with the artifact," Picard
agreed. "But I'm not about to abandon someone who has proven
herself so brave, and so farsighted." He faced the viewscreen
again and motioned for Worf to restore the transmission.
"To whom do I have the honor of speaking?" Picard asked.
The new Romulan commander nodded his head in greeting.
For some reason as yet unclear to Picard, the Romulan command-
er certainly wasn't behaving like the belligerent type of Romulan
Picard knew all too well. "I am Traklamek. Will you withdraw,
Captain Picard?"
"I would like to propose a compromise," Picard said.
"That is not necessary," Tarl replied, and there seemed to
Picard to be a warning in her voice. He looked to Counselor Troi
for confirmation that she had sensed it, too. Troi nodded slightly.
"Nor is it acceptable," Traklamek added curtly.
Unperturbed by the lack of both commanders' encouragement,
Picard continued. "Commander Traklamek, the Federation has
no desire to compromise the safety of the Empire, and we are
willing to turn over Commander Tarl's vessel to you. However, we
do wish to provide sanctuary to the commander, and however
many of her crew wish to join her."
"Completely unacceptable," Traklamek stated.
"I do not wish to escape my fate," Tarl said in a tight voice. "As
a warrior, Captain Picard, you must understand." "She's still not being truthful," Troi said softly.
Picard heard the tone which indicated Worf had broken audio
transmission again. "Captain," the Klingon announced from
behind, "I am reading a considerable volume of subspace com-
munication between the two Romulan vessels." "Can you intercept?" Picard asked.
"The communications are heavily encrypted."
"Traklamek might be trying to take control of Tarl's comput-
ers," Riker suggested.
Picard considered their options. "We were prepared to beam
aboard Tarl's crew. Can we do so while under attack?"

FEDERATION

Riker said, "We can't beam through shields, but if we were able
to get close enough to Tarl's ship so that our shields and hers
combine, as we did with the shuttlecraft, it might be possible."
"How long would we have to stay beside her?" Picard asked.
"If we're limited to just our own transporters, maybe fifteen,
twenty minutes to get all three hundred plus of her crew." 'And if Tarl uses her transporters as well?"
'Faster, but still no less than ten minutes. Warbirds aren't set
up for evacuation."
'Captain Picard," Traklamek's voice resounded from the
screen. "I must have your answer now."
Picard addressed his crew, including the navigator who had
replaced Wesley Crusher. "Mr. Worf, prepare to launch a wide-
burst spread of photon torpedoes. Ensign McKnight, on my mark
you will bring us to within five meters of Commander Tarl's
forward hull. Resume audio, please."
Picard stepped forward to face the Romulan commanders. "I
have already given you my answer," he said defiantly. "You have
five seconds to withdraw."
Instantly Traklamek's image disappeared from the screen.
"He has gone to maximum shields," Worf said. "Romulan
phasers coming on-line."
"You had your chance to get away!" Tarl exclaimed. "Why
didn't you take it?"
"The Federation does not abandon its friends," Picard said.
"Traklamek is firing?' Worf growled.
Picard pointed at the screen just as Tarl's image winked out.
"Fire torpedoes! Ensign--mark!"
The bridge lurched as more phaser fire burst against the ship,
the thunder of its disruption joining the echo of the torpedo
launching tubes. Then, just as a wall of photon-torpedo plasma
flared around Traklamek's ship, Ensign McKnight's hands swept
over the helm controls and the Enterprise raced toward Tarl's
massive vessel.
"Traklamek must have been expecting an attack, sir!" Worf
said with surprise. "He is engaged in evasive maneuvers."
Picard smiled. A fortunate miscalculation on the Romulan's
part.

263



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"He'll be mad as hell when he figures out we aren't going after
him," Riker said.
"Five meters!" Ensign McKnight announced.
On the screen, Picard could look directly into viewports on
Tarl's ship. The Enterprise, less than half the length of the
Warbird, was now protectively nestled in the curve of the massive
ship's main dorsal and ventral hulls leading to the masklike
forward bridge.
"Transporter control," Picard said quickly, "commence emer-
gency evacuation of Commander Tarl's--"
The viewscreen image unexpectedly rippled, and then the
optical rippling continued off the viewscreen and across the bridge.
Picard stared in horror as he saw Ensign McKnight and Data
flutter as if they were no more than mirages at a desert's edge. He
felt a wave of nausea flood through him as he stared down at his
own hands and saw them ripple as well.
Picard spun around as the distortion continued moving
through the bridge. He saw the look of shock on Worf's face as it
passed through him. And then it was gone.
Riker strode forward, eyes wide. "Data! What the hell was
that?!"
Data looked up from his board with the android equivalent of
surprise. "It appears Commander Tarl has cloaked her vessel, sir,
and that the Enterprise is close enough to have been caught in the
cloaking effect. The unusual optical effect must be the result of
our being on the fringe of that field."
Worf confirmed Picard's hopes. "Captain, Traklamek's ship
appears to have lost track of us. He is using broad-beam sensor
sweeps to scan the region, but is not receiving any positive
feedback. I believe we are cloaked, sir."
Picard approached Riker. He could see in his first officer's eyes
that they were thinking the same thing--this was even safer than
combining the two ships' shields. "Mr. Data, lock tractor beams
on Commander Tarl's ship to maintain close contact. Mr. Worf,
maintain communications silence and target Traklamek's--"
La Forge's voice cut through the background noise of the
bridge. "Engineering to Captain Picard--we've got an emergency
situation down here!"

264

FEDERATION

"Go ahead, Mr. La Forge."
,'Captain, some kind of field distortion wave just passed
through us--maybe a new Romulan weapon--but whatever it
was, it's disrupted the magnetic constriction elements of the warp
core. We're going to have to shut everything down or the
computer's going to initiate an automatic core ejection."
The last thing Picard needed was to face battle with no power
lbr his warp engines, shields, or phasers. The warp core must not
eject itself from the ship. "Shut it down, Mr. La Forge," Picard
ordered. "But begin immediate emergency transfer of power from
the impulse propulsion reactors to shields and phaser banks."
The bridge lights flickered and dimmed as the ship's main
matter-antimatter reactor ceased operations.
"We are now in reduced-power mode," Worf said. "Life
support on reserve power. Impulse generation has begun. Full
shields, phaser, and transporter capability in fifteen minutes."
"Captain," Data said, "the plasma exhaust vented from our
impulse engines will eventually provide Traklamek with the
means by which to locate us."
"How long before that happens?" Picard asked.
"Provided we do not use impulse power for propulsion, we may
be able to avoid detection for another three and a half minutes."
Picard's mind raced. On the screen, he saw Traklamek's
Warbird poised at relative stop, maintaining its original distance
from Tarl's last known position. "Are the Warbirds still commu-
nicating with each other, Mr. Worf?."
"Negative, sir. Both ships are observing total communications
silence."
"Any indication that Tarl is preparing to leave this position?"
Data answered. "None, sir. Warp and impulse engines are in
standby mode."
Picard stared at the screen. "I know what Traklamek's waiting
fOr--us. But why is Tarl still here?"
"Perhaps she knows she's protecting us with her cloaking field,"
Riker suggested.
"That might be it, Number One. But if she's expecting us to
help her now, she obviously doesn't know that field knocked out
OUr warp core."

265



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Two minutes, thirty seconds before detection, sir."
"Two minutes ..." Picard repeated, staring at the screen in
intense concentration. With only impulse engines available to
her, the Enterprise couldn't run from Traklamek's Warbird and
she couldn't fire her phasers for another fifteen minutes. She did
have torpedoes but she'd never be able to fire enough of them to
penetrate Traklamek's shields before the Romulan commander
returned fire. And the Enterprise did not have enough power for
her shields to withstand more than a single round of phaser fire.
The only advantage the Enterprise had right now was that she was
invisible to Traklamek's sensors. And that advantage would only
last another...
"Two minutes," Data said.
The bridge was silent, all eyes on the captain.
Picard laughed silently at himself. What was that he had just
been thinking? About the ship running herself?. As good as she
was, it was her crew who made the Enterprise work. And the crew
that mattered most now was the occupant of the center chair.
"Considering that we can't run," Picard said, "can't fight, and
can't remain hidden, and that Traklamek will never accept our
surrender now that we've fired upon him, I am open to sugges-
tions."
Riker was the only one who spoke. "Some of our people might
escape if we launch all emergency evacuation pods at once," he
suggested grimly.
"Ninety seconds," Data said.
Picard shook his head. "Without warp capability, Traklamek
would have days to pick them off one at a time."
Data looked up from his board. "Sir, I have just conducted an
exhaustive analysis of all situations similar to this in the annals of
Starfleet. It appears our only chance of survival, admittedly slim,
is to throw ourselves on Traklamek's mercy."
"I know what Romulan mercy is like," Worf snarled. "Better to
die a warrior's death in battle."
"Better not to die at all," Picard said, and he discounted his
officers' suggestions and methodically continued to arrive at one
of his own.

266

FEDERATION

He told himself he was the captain of the Enterprise. Even now,
with only seconds left in which to make his decision, he thought
of the other vessels who had carried her name--all on the
sculpted mural in his ready room. He thought of the company he
kept: April, Pike, Kirk, Harriman, Garrett. They had never
abandoned their ship or their crews. Picard would not either.
There/lad to be some way out he hadn't considered. Some...
... Something deep within him spoke to him... an echo of
Sarek's mind ... an echo of another mind Sarek had
touched... he couldn't be sure. But he was reminded at once
that there had been other Enterprises even before the ones that
plied the stars. Other captains. Other...
Picard could almost feel the wind against his face, hear the flap
of the sails, smell the smoke from the cannons as the seas raged all
around him.
Something in him told him to change the rules of the encounter
--not to concentrate on the Enterprise's limitations, but on
Traklamek's.
He saw the way.
Data gave the countdown. "Thirty seconds."
"Distance to Traklamek's Warbird," Picard said.
"Two kilometers," Data answered.
Picard stood behind Data, put his hand on the back of the
android's chair. "Residual cloaking bleed, Mr. Data--how long
does it last?"
Data angled his head questioningly. "A few tenths of a second,
sir."
Picard nodded. "Then ten kilometers per second should do it.
Mr. Data, transfer all power to the structural integrity field."
Data carried out the command instantly, but Riker moved to
Picard's side to swiftly question him. "All power to the SIF? We're
not in atmosphere, and without warp speed, the Enterprise
doesn't even need the SIF."
"Where we're going," Picard said, "we don't need warp speed."
He looked behind him to tactical. "Mr. Worf, target the dorsal
bridge spine of Traklamek's ship. Then feed those coordinates to
the helm. Now."

267



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Worf immediately acted as directed, without questioning his
captain's order. But Riker looked at Picard with wide eyes, at last
understanding. "Captain, you can't be serious," he said.
"Five seconds to detection," Data announced.
"Number One," Picard said, "I have never been more serious
in my life. Ensign McKnight--on my mark."
Then as he pointed his finger at the screen, he gave an order that
had not been heard aboard an Enterprise for centuries--
"Ramming speed!"

Instantly the Enterprise sprang forward, her inertial dampers
protecting all aboard from the monstrous force of the 103-gravity
acceleration her impulse engines could achieve. Traklamek's Warbird didn't have a chance.
Its defensive shields were tuned to the frequencies required to
protect it from Federation phasers and photon-torpedo radiation.
At relative rest under battle conditions, its navigational shields
were configured to deflect dust and debris, and to leave energy
available for weapons. They would only draw more power when
the ship began to move again, or when sensors picked up
incoming objects.
Undoubtedly, in the ship's last microseconds of existence, its
sensors did pick up one incoming object--the 3.71-million-tonne
mass of the U.S.S. Enterprise. But the residual cloaking bleed
from Tarl's cloaking field distorted the Enterprise's sensor image
and Traklamek's computers automatically requested verification
before altering the allocation of power to the shields under battle
conditions. Romulan programmers had foreseen that danger
might arise if shield frequencies were permitted to change in
response to spurious sensor ghosts.
But even running at one billion operations per second, there
was no time for confirmation of any sensor readings.
The Enterprise passed through the Warbird's navigational
deflectors as if they did not exist.
The defensive shields set for radiation did not even register the
Enterprise's presence.
And on the Warbird's bridge, destruction was so swift that there

268

FEDERATION

was not even time for realization of their fate to form in the minds
of the crew.
The leading edge of the Enterprise's saucer section hit the
dorsal bridge spine of Traklamek's ship at 36 thousand kilo-
meters per hour. The Galaxy-class starship's internal forcefield
system was designed to augment her structural integrity under the
strains of warp acceleration. The system was tuned to the highest
setting it would require to withstand velocities in excess of 1.78
trillion kilometers per hour--giving her a rigidity that rivaled
that of degenerate matter at the heart of neutron stars.
Contact lasted less than one-hundredth of a second. If the
Enterprise's warp core had been active, the shock-wave feedback
through the ship's structural integrity field would have triggered
an instant antimatter compression wave, destroying the ship at
once. But the warp core was off-line, and the Enterprise sliced the
Warbird's head from its body and flew on intact.
In the Warbird's main hulls, the shock of the Enterprise's
passage crystallized duranium. The mechanisms of that ship's
artificial singularity reactor shattered so suddenly that all gravita-
tional containment fields failed at once in a massive implosion.
In the Warbird's bridge, all power conduits were severed at
once. Immediately, its own inertial dampers and artificial gravity
systems shut down. The force with which the accelerating bulk-
heads then hit the suddenly motionless crew members reduced
them to superheated pulp in less than a thousandth of a second.
Mere thousandths of a second after that, that pulp was consumed
by the energy release of the singularity implosion erupting from
the ship's other half.
In less than a second, there was nothing physical left of
Traklamek's ship larger than an isolinear chip.
Resolute, the Enterprise flew on.

On the bridge, every alarm built into every console and piece of
equipment sounded at once. Picard heard obscure warning
chimes he had heard before only in simulations. All lights
flickered, display screens rolled. The bridge speakers squealed as
they were momentarily overloaded by the messages inundating

269



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

them. The straining inertial dampers sent fluttering shivers
through the ship as they tried repeatedly to reset themselves,
making the superstructure creak and groan.
Picard blinked. It had taken no longer than that for the
Enterprise to have obliterated her enemy. Then he moistened his
suddenly dry lips. He glanced over at Ensign McKnight. Her face
was drained of any color. Strands of blond hair hung in sweat-
soaked tangles on her forehead.
Riker stared at Picard with an expression the captain could not
read. "When Starfleet hears about this, I don't know if they're
going to give you a medal or a court-martial."
"I'11 settle for a refit," Picard said. He turned to tactical. Worf
was also staring at him with a strange expression. "Yes, Mr. Worf?." Picard asked.
Worf grinned, baring his teeth as only a Klingon could. His dark
eyes sparkled beneath his heavy brow. "It is an honor to serve
with you, Captain Picard. Songs will be sung about what you did
here today." Then he went on speaking in Hol, so rapidly that
Picard couldn't pick up any of it.
"Mr. Worf?. Mr. Worfi." Picard said to interrupt what he took to
be his tactical officer's praise. "Damage report, please."
Worf nodded and looked down at his board as he sighed. "It is
difficult to know where to begin," he said.
In the end, it would have been briefer to list those ship's
systems which had not sustained some type of damage in the
collision. When Lieutenant La Forge was informed what had
caused the severe shock to the ship, after a pause his response had
been, "No, seriously, what just happened?"
But for all the overloaded circuits, the assaulted nerves, the
delicate scientific instruments thrown out of alignment by the
sudden surge in the SIF strength, the damage to the Enterprise
was not major, just extensive.
Twenty minutes after the event, by which time the ship's
damage-control routines were in full operation and power to the
bridge had returned almost to normal except for the food
replicator and the science stations, Data mildly observed that
what Picard had had the Enterprise do did not even appear as a

270

FEDERATION

footnote in the ship's operational manuals. Starships had collided
in the past, but never before with such bold purpose.
"Because I sincerely doubt that precise combination of condi-
tions has ever occurred before," Picard said. "IfTraklamek's ship
had not been at relative rest; if his shields had not been set for
battle conditions;/four warp core had not been shut down; if the
Enterprise had not been cloaked; and if we had not been so close
to him, the maneuver would certainly not have succeeded."
Data studied the captain carefully. "I am curious, sir: If those
conditions had not all been present, what would you have done?"
"I have no idea," Picard answered truthfully. "We couldn't
fight, we couldn't run, and a Romulan would never have accepted
our surrender after we had already fired upon him." He glanced
over at Riker. "Number One, make a note to refine this scenario
for a training simulation."
Riker nodded. "It should give the Kobayashi Maru some stiff
competition." Under his breath, he added, "Ramming speed,"
and shook his head.
Thirty minutes after the collision, the Enterprise's redundant
systems had almost completely restored the ship to normal
operation. Sensor grids remained severely limited in capability
until full realignment could he carried out, and the warp core
remained to be reactivated. But in every other regard, Picard's
Enterprise was whole. She was also alone.
No trace of Commander Tarl's Warbird could be found. Only
the widely dispersed ionized gas cloud that remained of
Traklamek's ship, and the scattered debris from DaiMon Pol's
62nd Rule. And without full sensor capability, the Enterprise was
unable to detect either a warp trace or impulse exhaust trail to
indicate where Tarl's ship might have gone.
Two hours after the collision, at the standard senior officers'
debriefing in the observation lounge, Data offered a suggestion:
"Commander Tarl's Warbird might still be nearby, provided it is
cloaked at a distance beyond Counselor Troi's ability to sense its
crew."
But Picard discounted that possibility. "It would make no sense



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

for her to stay near a site where two other Warbirds have been
destroyed. Perhaps Commander Tarl really was serious about
returning to the Empire to atone for her actions, or else she has
gone off on her own. It could be that the idea of becoming a
farmer or miner did not appeal to her."
"I think what we should focus our attention on," Riker said, "is
that we now have both the Borg artifact and the Preserver object
on board."
"Let's just hope it is a Borg artifact," La Forge said. "Especially
after the lives it cost."
Everyone at the table turned to the engineer.
"Do you have some reason to doubt its authenticity?" Picard
asked.
"I'm not sure, Captain." La Forge looked up at the ceiling as if
searching for the best way to let Picard's hopes down gently. "The
Borg ship we encountered in System J-25 was a hodgepodge
collection of bits and pieces from other vessels, other machinery,
all sorts of things jumbled together."
"Isn't that what the artifact in the shuttlebay is?" Riker asked.
"Well, yes it is, sir. But remember what Data said about the age
of it."
"Approximately four centuries," Picard said.
"Exactly. The entire artifact. Every conduit. Every piece of
mesh, wire, light guide, and photonic circuitry in it is the same
age, except for the Preserver object."
"What's your point, Geordi?" Riker asked.
"Well, if all those parts had been assimilated from other
vessels, they should show some variation in their age. I mean, as
we've been taking it apart, it's clear we're dealing with material
that's come from a lot of different cultures and levels of technical
sophistication. But it's all the same age."
Data regarded the engineer without expression. "Geordi, are
you suggesting that the artifact might have been deliberately
aged? Perhaps by exposure to intense, non-ionizing radiation, in
order to simulate the condition of having been in space for an
extended period of time?"
La Forge made a half smile. "Something like that, Data."

272

FEDERATION

Dr. Crusher looked perplexed. "Why would the Borg want to
make their ships seem older than they really are?" "Not the Borg," Troi said. "The Romulans."
Dr. Crusher wrinkled her brow as if the distinction made no
difference. "Either one. What's the point?"
Picard looked at his engineer. "Any theories, Mr. La Forge?"
"Not really, Captain. If the artifact is a fake, it's a damned good
one. It matches what we know about Borg construction exactly.
Offhand, I'd say that the only way anyone could have faked it so
perfectly would have been to take apart a real Borg artifact,
replicate the pieces, then reassemble them."
'Which would account for the artificial aging it might have
been subjected to after assembly," Data said. "Molecular-level
replication would not accurately reproduce the age traces of the
original components and it would be apparent we were observing
a recently made duplicate."
"What about the Preserver object?" Picard asked. "Could that
also be a duplicate?"
La Forge shook his head. "Oh, I doubt that, Captain. First of
all, I can't identify the material it's made from. And most of it is
opaque to every kind of sensor I can turn on it, including a
neutrino stream which could penetrate a light-year's worth of
lead. So it is definitely the product of a technology that we can't
duplicate."
"How extraordinary," Picard said. "There is another so-called
Preserver object, an obelisk that houses a graviton-beam genera-
tor. It also is opaque to neutrinos."
"That's good to know," La Forge replied. "The library comput-
ers are still down and I haven't been able to pull up any
archaeological files to match against the object's configuration."
Picard straightened up with interest. "Would you like me to
take another look at it?" Archaeology was more than a hobby for
the captain.
"Give me an hour to cut it out of the artifact and you're on," La
Forge responded immediately. Then he added more seriously,
"Captain."
"So, I stand corrected," Riker said as he leaned back in his

273



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

chair. "What we need to focus on is that we have a mystery on our
hands."
"But what kind of mystery?" Troi asked. "Borg, Romulan, or
Preserver?"
Picard looked out the observation room windows to see the
stars, silent and impassive. Given those three choices, he couldn't
shake the feeling that the real answer to the mystery would be
something they hadn't yet considered. Or, perhaps, something
that they all were unable to consider.
The unexpected had a way of continuing to turn up on this
voyage. He decided he wouldn't be surprised if it did so again.

274

FOUR

//.S.S. EfflTERPIIISE NCC-1701
ENGAGED WITH THE ENEMY
Stardate 3855
Earth Standard: Nevember 2267

Cochrane pushed himself up from the corridor floor, disoriented
bv the shifting angle of the walls, the screams of the sirens, the
flashing red lights. He felt the officer named Kyle grab his arm and
pull him forward. Captain Kirk's voice echoed from the corridor
speakers.
"This is the captain. We are under attack. All hands battle
stations. This is not a drill."
"Who's attacking us?" Cochrane asked as loudly as he could to
be heard over the cacophony as he jogged beside Kyle. They
passed a corridor intersection. Cochrane looked down it. It
seemed to go on forever. No ship could be that large. "And where
are we?" he added.
"You're on the Enterprise," Kyle shouted back, not breaking
stride. "And I have no idea who's bloody firing at us."
The floor suddenly shifted again, but the movement was weaker
this time. As he and Kyle made their way along the corridor,
Cochrane heard strange mechanical sounds reverberate through
the walls. He even heard a rhythm that reminded him of the
matter-antimatter generators he had used to power his
SUperimpellors.

275



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Kyle stopped when they came to a ladder on the wall. It
extended up through the ceiling. Other men and women in
uniforms like Kyle's raced through the corridor. Surely, too many
for any one ship, Cochrane decided.
"C'mon," Kyle said, waving at the ladder. "This is faster."
Cochrane had no idea what the ladder was faster than. He
began to climb.
"Two decks up!" Kyle called up from below him.
Cochrane smelled smoke as he passed the next deck. The floors
lurched and he grabbed onto the ladder. "What was that room I
was in?"
"Climb!" Kyle urged as the shaking ceased.
Cochrane's entire body ached but he forced one hand over the
other, one foot above the next. He came to the second deck and
stumbled off the ladder. This corridor was almost deserted. Kyle
leapt out behind him. "This way!" He tugged Cochrane on again,
double-time.
"Just tell me--how did I get here?" Cochrane gasped. One
moment he had been locked in a stateroom on the liner, then
something cold had passed through him, and he was suddenly
standing on a glowing circular plate surrounded by the other
prisoners he had seen when he had been captured. He was certain
he hadn't been drugged, but he had no other explanation for how
he had been moved from one ship to the Enterprise, whatever it
was.
"You were transported," Kyle said unhelpfully as they rounded
a corner. At the end of the new corridor, Cochrane could see a
group of people, mostly in blue uniform shirts, gathered around
other people on stretchers, arranged against the wall. He guessed
this was sickbay.
"I know I was transported," Cochrane said with mounting
exasperation. "But by what?"
"By transporter, what else?" Kyle answered. He sounded equal-
ly irritated and out of breath.
Cochrane gave up. Perhaps Kyle was under orders not to
disclose military secrets. What other explanation could there be
for such deliberately circuitous logic? They stopped again, near
the people on stretchers. Kyle pointed through an open set of

276


FEDERATION

doors. "You're to report in there," Kyle said. "I have to get to my
station." Then he was gone, not wasting an instant.
Cochrane stepped out of the way as two blue-shirted crew
members rushed in carrying an unconscious red-shirted woman
between them. He followed them into the room. Finally, he saw a
familiar face.
"Dr. McCoy!"
The doctor looked up from a patient stretched out on a bed.
The patient's gold shirt was ripped open, smeared with dark red
blood. Cochrane could see more blood pulsing weakly out
through a charred, ragged gash on the man's chest. "What are you
doing here?" McCoy said abruptly.
Cochrane felt even more confused. "I... I was brought here.
Captain Kirk said the Companion would--"
McCoy didn't let him finish. "We're under attack. The cap-
tain's on the bridge and that's where you should be." He turned
back to his patient, waving a glittering device over the bloodied
chest as if he were some kind of witch doctor, never once touching
the torn flesh.
"But who's attacking us?" Cochrane asked plaintively. He
stared in puzzled fascination as the patient's bleeding seemed to
slow, then stop, all without the doctor appearing to do anything
but gesture at the wound.
"Damned Klingons!" McCoy muttered. He looked to the blond
woman at his side. "Close this one up." He looked out over the
room. "Where's the compound fracture?" A blue shirt waved the
doctor over to another ravaged body on another bed. Some sort of
medical display flashed and blinked above the second victim.
Cochrane wondered how anyone could function in the room's
chaos, yet somehow the doctor seemed to be in control of
everything at once without effort.
He followed McCoy to his next patient. The doctor still wasn't
touching flesh or bone as he treated the man with the broken leg.
"Dr. McCoy, please--how do I get to the bridge?"
McCoy looked around angrily. Cochrane couldn't tell if it was
real anger, or just the result of interrupted concentration. The
doctor jabbed a finger in the direction of a young woman with her
arm in a sling and a red uniform that consisted only of a

277



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

shockingly brief dress. Cochrane wondered if she had been
changing when she had been injured and hadn't had time to finish
dressing. By the early-twenty-second-century standards of Cen-
tauri B II, the woman might as well have been naked. "Ensign!"
McCoy barked. "This man's to report to the captain. Take him to
the bridge."
The ensign was clearly in pain, but she instantly sprang to her
feet and nodded at Cochrane. "This way, sir," she said, and led
him rapidly past the crowd outside, then around another corner.
"What are Klingons?" Cochrane asked as he tried again to
catch his breath.
The ensign glanced at him sharply. "Where're you from?" she
asked.
Cochrane understood her reaction. Apparently, everyone knew
what Klingons were. Except people from the twenty-second
century.
"Never mind," Cochrane said. This wasn't the time for a
history lesson. But maybe he had been wrong about Kyle's
apparent reticence to discuss how he had come here. "Ensign, can
you at least tell me what a transporter is?"
The ensign stopped in front of a set of flush-mounted doors.
They sprang apart to reveal a tiny room no larger than a closet.
After a moment, Cochrane realized it was an elevator, and felt
foolish. He had been expecting more twenty-third-century wiz-
ardry.
"You been frozen or something?" the ensign asked curiously as
she stepped inside.
"How'd you guess?" Cochrane said, grasping her question and
seeing in it a chance to escape further suspicion. The technical
manuals Kirk had left behind had contained only vague allusions
to the politics of the day, and there had been so much to do in
order to prepare to support himself and the Companion that
Cochrane had never gotten around to reading the history updateS.
He hadn't been all that interested, either. "I'm from 2117. I don t
know a thing past that."
The ensign whistled. "Twenty-one seventeen? That's a long
time." She grabbed a downward-projecting handle and said,
"Bridge."
278 :i!

FEDERATION

The elevator doors closed and Cochrane felt the car move
sideways. "What is this?" he gasped as he grabbed for another
handle.
"Turbolift," the ensign said. "Like. a... an elevationer, I think
they were called back in your day."
'Elevator," Cochrane corrected. The car stopped moving side-
ways and began moving up. He watched the lights flashing by the
frosted window, wondering if each flash could represent a deck. If
so. the ship was monstrous. "So, what's a transporter?" Cochrane
asked, no longer caring how out of touch he seemed. Information
was information, and he'd always been a quick study.
"Matter-energy conversion," the ensign answered. She shifted
her arm, apparently trying to find a more comfortable position
than the sling would allow. "Converts you to energy, beams you
to a new location, reconverts, and there you are."
Cochrane felt his stomach drop out of him, and it wasn't the
turbolift. He stared at his hand. It looked like the same one he'd
been born with.
"Are you all right, sir?"
"That's terrible."
"What?"
Cochrane was appalled. Had human life become so cheap? So
meaningless? "Each time you're converted to energy, you're
killed," Cochrane said. "What comes out the other end is just a
duplicate that thinks it's the original."
The ensign gave him a wide-eyed look that she might have
reserved for a child. "You're thinking about old-fashioned matter
replication, sir. In replication, the original is destroyed so that
duplicates can be reconstructed at any time. But the transporter
process operates on a quantum level. You're not destroyed and
re-created; your actual, original molecules are tunneled to a new
location. You're still you, sir. Believe me. We do things differently
these days."
Cochrane could believe it. He felt marginally better. The lift
doors opened.
"Bridge, sir. This is where the doctor said you were to report."
Something flew at Cochrane. He whirled in time to seca
"Zefrarn/"

279



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

--the Companion.
All thought left Cochrane as he embraced her. The attack at
home, the interrogation, the imprisonment, conversion to energy
--all of it left him as if the universe itself no longer mattered. He
held the Companion in his arms. He had been afraid to even think
of what had happened to her, had not dared to hope of being
reunited, until Kirk had said she would be here.
"Oh, Zefram, we were so frightened," she whispered into his
chest.
"Shh," he comforted her. He placed his hand to her head,
wincing as he felt the bandage there. "What's happened to you?
How long have you been away from our home?"
She gazed up at him with one luminous eye, the other hidden
beneath the sparkling fabric that wrapped her head. "Nothing's
wrong, Zefram," she said. "And we have not been gone long. Dr.
McCoy said we're strong, getting better. And we are, now that
you're with us."
Then Cochrane was aware of someone standing outside the
turbolift--the Vulcan who had accompanied Kirk.
"Mr. Spock," Cochrane said. "Is the captain here?"
"This way, please," Spock said. The ensign remained in the
turbolift, most likely to return to sickbay.
Cochrane stepped forward, his arm securely around the Com-
panion's frail shoulder, and his mouth opened in shock.
The bridge of Kirk's ship was larger than the total living area
had been on the Bonaventure. He gazed at it with delight. Beside
him, above a dedication plaque, there was a schematic of a vessel.
He recognized the twin nacelles as a classic continuum-distortion
configuration, but the rest of the clean design was a revelation. So
many problems of distortion-field stability were solved just by
comparing the proportions of the lead saucer to the secondary
hull from which the superimpellor nacelles sprang. He wanted to
reach out and touch the image. Could it really be he was aboard
this vessel?
"Mr. Cochrane, if you please," the Vulcan insisted.
Cochrane moved forward, his fingers just brushing the image of
the ship. Then the stairs took him by surprise. He nearly lost his
footing when he reached them, so intent was his gaze at the

FEDERATION

viewscreen before him. There was some kind of wreckage dis-
played on it, rotating in microgravity--what had been another
spaceship, he decided. Beyond the wreckage, three other ships
hung poised in space, a different design from any other he had
seen so far. But if the level of continuum-distortion propulsion
today had been properly represented by the schematic back by the
elevator, then the only reason the three ships on the screen looked
the way they did--stretched out in two dimensions with a
precariously long forward section--was that they were warships.
That inefficient design could only be acceptable in order to
provide a smaller target silhouette in head-on attacks. Cochrane
had no idea about the politics of this era, but physics were
physics.
With the Companion still nestled close at his side, Cochrane
saw Kirk in the center chair. He realized he would have expected
to see him nowhere else.
"Captain Kirk?" he said.
Kirk glanced at him, then moved his eyes back to the screen.
"Glad to have you aboard, Mr. Cochrane. My apologies for the
rough ride." He leaned forward. "Mr. Sulu, status on the shields
on the number-three ship?"
An Asian human at the center console replied, "Eighty-seven
percent, Captain. We won't be able to touch them if they try it
again."
Kirk bit his lip, deep in thought. But for all the confusion
Cochrane had seen so far, the captain was an oasis of calm and the
bridge and its crew were a natural extension of him. "Are those... Klingons?" Cochrane asked.
'~Yhey're Klingon ships," Kirk answered. "But since they don't
appear interested in communicating with us, I can't tell you who's
on board."
"What are they after?"
Kirk looked at Cochrane again. "They're after you."

Cochrane swayed, but the Companion steadied him. He closed
his eyes. He ha(~ wanted this all behind him.
When Monica had died, he, too, had wanted to die, rather than
continue the fight. It had cost him too much already. But then,

280 281

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

when the Companion had found him, rescued him, he had
allowed himself to believe that the battle that had consumed his
life might, in fact, be over. The time spent with the Companion,
even in the strangely appealing energy pattern in which she had
originally appeared to him, had been like a second life, a dream
filled with a contentment and satisfaction he had never thought
possible; a sharing of thoughts and ideas and emotions so healing,
he had been freed from his past, missing only, ironically, the
rituals of conversation and social interaction that he had always
avoided before.
Thus, when she had brought Kirk and the others to him, and
the Companion had miraculously become flesh and blood in the
form of Commissioner Nancy Hedford, Cochrane had felt his life
move toward true completeness.
Finally holding the Companion in his arms, knowing that the
pure mind that had captivated and delighted him was encased in a
physical body that entranced him... he was overcome.
There was nothing more that he had wanted, nothing more that
he--the scientist who had never felt there would be time enough
to do and learn all that he might--felt compelled to do. Whatever
name the poets wished to give the feeling that had come upon him
then, it was to him one thing and one thing only-- Zefram Cochrane was at peace.
Once, as a child, he had dreamed of a bubble twisting within a
bubble so that both twisted up together somewhere else. From
that dream he had given humanity the stars.
But there had been another dream in Cochrane, a dream
encoded in his cells, perhaps in the very structure of the universe
that had caused him to come into being.
In the Companion he had found that dream made real.
But now his past was reaching out once more to steal that
dream from him, as it had stolen the lives of his wife and his
friends a century and a half before.

"They're not Klingons," Cochrane said with inexpressible
sadness.
"Indeed." Spock said beside him.
Cochrane opened his eyes. An old woman stepped up to him.

282

FEDERATION

She was dressed in a gold-shirted uniform like Kirk's, but the
decorations on her sleeves were different, and the emblem on her
chest was a rainbow-hued starburst, not the asymmetric field-
distortion symbol Kirk and his crew wore.
"Am I to take it you know who's after you, Mr. Cochrane?" the
old woman asked imperiously, as if she were used to being
answered.
Cochrane looked at Kirk, seeking direction.
'This is Fleet Admiral Quario Kabreigny," Kirk said.
Cochrane supposed he should be surprised, but the surprises of
the twenty-third century were beginning to wear him down. He
knew that in the late twentieth and early twenty-first centuries,
women had literally fought to be in the military. But after the
nightmare of World War III, with the preservation of the species
at the forefront of everyone's minds, the conservative influence of
the colony worlds had placed females back in a protected catego-
ry. At the time, Cochrane had read that it was all part of some
grand sociological cycle in gender roles, and he wondered now if
the abbreviated uniform he had seen on the ensign was an
indication of another move toward greater independence for
women in this era. Still, for someone of his time period, he found
it difficult to truly accept that this older woman was in a position
to give orders to Kirk.
"The admiral has taken quite an interest in your career, after
5'our disappearance," Kirk continued. "If you can clear up any of
her questions, it will probably help all of us."
"Should I repeat the question?" the admiral said pointedly.
Now Cochrane definitely had the feeling that the old woman was
not used to having to repeat herself.
'~That's not necessary," Cochrane said. "I had hoped that the
Optimum Movement would have died out by now. That we would
have grown smarter, stronger than that."
~'The Optimum Movement?" Kirk said.
$pock placed his hands behind his back and began to recite
historical facts. "The name given to a collection of loosely
a~liated fascist political organizations that sprang up on Earth in
the early to mid-twenty-first century," Spock said. "Among its
adherents were the infamous Colonel Green--"

283



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

But Kirk stopped him. "I know what the Optimum Movement
is, Spock."
Cochrane was puzzled that an alien would know so much about
Earth history. Kirk had an equally puzzled expression. "Mr.
Cochrane, the Optimum Movement's takeover of certain coun-
tries is widely considered to be a contributing cause of World War
III. At the beginning of the reconstruction, the movement was
thoroughly discredited. Its leaders captured and tried. It's dead
and gone."
"It was still alive in 2117, Captain. They killed my wife and
students on Centauri B II. I was supposed to be next."
"That's why you disappeared? To die in space?"
Cochrane felt his body tremble as the old sense of futility hit
him again. He felt the Companion draw closer to him, wanting to
protect him from all that was bad in this universe, in whatever
time. It was unbearable to him that she, in turn, should be placed
at risk, because of him.
"Keptin." A young Russian officer at the center console spoke
up. "The enemy wessels are changing formation."
As Kirk glanced at the screen, Cochrane saw two of the three
battleships change position. In the same instant, he suddenly
realized that the wreckage on the screen was what was left of the
spaceship he had just been on.
"Keep watch on their weapons readiness," Kirk said calmly.
"Uhura, keep trying with all hailing frequencies." He looked back
to the Vulcan. "Spock? Did you know that? That the Optimum
Movement survived into the early twenty-second century?"
Cochrane was impressed with Kirk's ability to keep track of so
many situations at once, much as Dr. McCoy had managed in
sickbay. He wondered if all people of this time were equally
capable, or if by some coincidence two of the best had ended up
on the same ship.
"Records show," Spock began, "that the original Optimum
Movement was destroyed during the postatomic horror. Howev-
er, it would not be impossible for splinter organizations to have
sprung up, much as neo-Nazi groups continued to arise for more
than six decades after Earth's second world war. That likelihood
is increased if we accept that some Optimum leaders were able to

FEDERATION

escape to the colony worlds, as the popular entertainment of the
time repeatedly proposed."
Kirk looked back at the screen, keeping track of the warships.
"What about the chances of the Optimum Movement surviving
till today?"
"1 would suggest that was highly improbable, Captain. There is
not a world in the Federation where such a political movement
would be tolerated. The Klingons, for all their barbarity, would
find the Optimum ideals abhorrent for their lack of honor. And
the Romulans would never support any political organization that
did not originate with them."
"Which leaves us with our opening question," Kirk said.
"Who's in those ships?"
"Sir," the Asian officer said, "we're being scanned again."
"Shields to full power," Kirk ordered. "Give them some
feedback to confuse their readings."
The admiral ignored Cochrane for a moment. "How long are
we going to hang here doing nothing?" she asked Kirk irritably.
Kirk shifted in his chair, and Cochrane was surprised yet again
at the familiarity with which the captain addressed his command-
ing officer. Whatever organization ran this ship, it was unlike any
military group he had ever encountered back in his time.
"Admiral, we've got a cracked dilithium crystal, damage to the
port nacelle strut, thirty crew injured, and weapons capability less
than sixty percent. Ten kilometers out there are three top-of-the-
line D7 battle cruisers. Two are untouched, the other has shields
at eighty-seven percent, and they're jamming every subspace
frequency in the spectrum so we can't call for help. The only
reason we're not in pieces like that spaceliner is that we backed
away from the wreckage so they could scan it. My guess is that the
onlv reason they didn't press the attack is that they don't know if
we have Cochrane on board or not. Right now, I'm betting they're
asking for additional orders from wherever their command center
~s. And each minute they wait before they come at us is another
minute my engineer has to try and get us back into fighting
condition."
Kirk turned back to Cochrane, apparently not concerned that if
he had spoken to a commanding officer that way in Cochrane's

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JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

time he would have been court-martialed. If anything, Cochrane
thought, the ship ran along the same lines he had run his research
facility on Centauri B II: he had been in charge, but everyone was
free to question him, provided the work proceeded responsibly
and on schedule.
"Now, Mr. Cochrane," Kirk said, "forget everything we've just
told you about how history deals with the Optimum Movement.
Who kidnapped you from the Companion's planetoid? What did
they do to you on board the Planitia? And who the hell do you
think is commanding those cruisers?"
Cochrane sighed. He directed the Companion to a seat on the
upper level behind Kirk. He was grateful that she was content to
remain a silent comfort to him as he struggled to interact with
others of his kind in this new time. He knew, however, that she
would be at his side the moment he faltered. As Cochrane turned
to face Kirk, he felt more tired than he ever had when his body
had been eighty-seven. "On the planetoid where you found me, I
was attacked by humanoids with green skin. I had run up to their
ship. It was small, like your shuttlecraft. I thought it might be you
again. One of them had some kind of rifle. That's the last I
remember of that night."
"Those men were Orion pirates," Kirk told him. The captain
kept his eyes riveted on the screen. "The rifle was either a phaser
or disruptor. Either way, it would shock your nervous system,
knock you out. What happened next?"
"I woke up, sore, sick, on a large spaceship." Remembering
what had happened was almost as unpleasant as what he had
actually experienced. "I could hear people shouting, crying. The
humanolds with green skins told me the others were hostages. To
make sure nothing happened until... until some kind of trade
was arranged."
"Who told you about a trade?" Kirk asked.
"A different type of humanoid. Definitely alien. Oily skin,
black beard and mustache."
"That was a Klingon," Spock said.
"They're the enemy?" Cochrane asked. He could believe it. The
alien had been objectionable from the moment he had stormed

FEDERATION

into Cochrane's stateroom and offered him a plate of still-
wriggling worms. When Cochrane had refused, the alien had
acted outraged, as if eating live worms was a great honor where he
came from.
But the admiral apparently didn't agree with Cochrane's assess-
ment. She interjected swiftly, "Let's just say that, so far, the
Federation and the Klingon Empire have yet to discover common
ground. At the moment, we're finishing negotiationswamong the
Klingon and Romulan Empires, and the Federation--to establish
a joint colony on Nimbus III. It will become the Planet of
Galactic Peace--a crowning achievement for interplanetary di-
plomacy at the highest level."
Kirk rolled his eyes at that; then he asked Cochrane to
continue. "What else did the Klingon tell you? What kind of trade
was he expecting?"
Cochrane shrugged. "At the time, he didn't say. I thought it was
some kind of hostage situation, a mass kidnapping." "Did they ever ask you your name?" Spock asked.
Cochrane shook his head. "No. That's why I thought I was just
a random victim. Until Captain Kirk said those ships were after
me."
Spock looked at Kirk. "Captain, we have yet to hear an explicit
mention of Cochrane, or a specific demand for him. There is a
slight chance this could all be a coincidence."
Kirk laughed. "Don't let McCoy hear you say that." He took on
a thoughtful expression. "Mr. Cochrane, why was the Optimum
Movement so eager to hunt you down in your own time? And how
could that same reason possibly be valid today, one hundred and
rift>' years later?"
Cochrane hesitated, trying to think of the simplest way to tell
Kirk what people had once thought the continuum-distortion
field capable of. But before he could answer, the admiral stepped
in front of him.
"Mr. Cochrane, the answer to that question is classified, and I
insist you do not answer it."
Cochrane and Kirk both objected at the same time. Spock
raised an eyebrow.

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JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Nothing is classified after a century and a half," Kirk said
testily. He looked angry, and unlike the doctor's earlier mood,
Cochrane could see that this anger was real.
"I am not a part of whatever organization you represent,"
Cochrane told the admiral. He could feel himself grow upset as
well. "I can say whatever I want about my work." The military
had not been able to restrain him back in his own time, and he
was not about to allow them to begin now.
But the admiral was unlike any older woman from Cochrane's
day. She stepped closer to him. She was a foot and a half shorter
than he, but still she tried to stare him down. "The 'organization'
I represent is called Starfleet, Mr. Cochrane, and this is a Starfleet
vessel. By being present on it, sir, you are compelled to obey my
orders. You will not answer Captain Kirk's question."
Cochrane glared down at the woman, forgetting her age.
Arrogance, it seemed, had not gone out of fashion.
Kirk tried to reason with her. "What work could Cochrane
possibly have done so long ago that it's still classified today?"
The admiral turned her fury on Kirk. "I've had enough of your
interference, Captain. You will not--"
Cochrane had had enough. "The warp bomb," he said, and
before anyone else could react, the admiral slapped him.
The Companion gasped and with surprising swiftness moved to
Cochrane's side, pulled him back, inserting herself as a shield
before him. She was half-crouched, hands out as if ready to
physically attack the admiral. Kirk jumped out of his chair in the
same instant. The entire bridge crew turned to see what had
happened. Spock stepped to the admiral's side, ready to intervene
from that position. The admiral herself stood with her hand still
upraised, quivering with fury.
"I said no," she shouted, voice quaking.
"Admiral," Kirk said quickly, trying to mollify her, "the warp
bomb is an illusion. An engineering impossibility."
The admiral snapped her head around to confront Kirk. And
in that moment, seeing the look that passed from her to the cap-
tain, Cochrane had the horrible realization that both he and
the captain had been wrong--the warp bomb was not an impos-
sibility. ,,'

288

FEDERATION

Somehow, in this future time, it had become real.
And it was still a secret.
Kirk looked over at the Vulcan. "Spock, it is an impossibility,
isn't it?"
Spock studied the admiral with interest. Cochrane guessed he
had interpreted the look that the admiral had given the captain in
the same way he had. "To the best of my knowledge," Spock said,
"it is.*'
"Admiral Kabreigny," Kirk said quietly, "it is apparent that
you are under a great deal of strain. With respect, I must insist
that you explain yourself, or leave my bridge."
The admiral closed her hand into a fist. "Starfleet is all that
stands between the United Federation of Planets and...
anarchy, Captain. I am a Fleet admiral. I will not explain myself
to you."
Kirk shook his head, as if trying to find something to say and
not succeeding. "I'm sorry, Admiral. I really am." He touched the
arm of his chair. "Dr. McCoy to the bridge. Medical emergency."
"You traitor," the admiral said to Kirk. Cochrane had the
feeling he had stepped into the middle of a conflict that had been
going on for years. If not between the admiral and Kirk, then
between the two factions they represented. "You're part of it,
aren't you? That's why those ships haven't attacked. Because they
know you're going to turn him over!"
The admiral made a move as if to strike Kirk. Kirk grabbed her
wrists, awkwardly holding her back. "Admiral, please," he begged
her. "I'm not part of anything. I assure you I will not turn Mr.
Cochrane over to--"
"Liar."' the admiral said. She struggled in Kirk's grasp, her
situation all the more maddening to her because it was so evident
that she did not have the strength to free herself.
Mr. Spock moved behind the admiral and put his hand on her
shoulder as if about to give her an encouraging pat. But suddenly,
the admiral groaned, arched back, then fell limp into Spock's
arms.
Cochrane was appalled. The admiral had worked herself into a
heart attack. Once again, his life's work had disturbed the
balance.

289



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Spock lifted the admiral into his arms as if she were a doll.
"Shouldn't you start CPR?" Cochrane asked. Surely that
wasn't a lost art.
Kirk put his hand on Cochrane's shoulder. "It's not a heart
attack. A Vulcan nerve pinch. The admiral's health is not...
robust."
Cochrane twisted his head to see Kirk's hand on his shoulder.
He had heard that Vulcans had strange mental powers. He
wondered if they could be taught to humans.
Kirk saw what Cochrane was looking at. He removed his hand.
"Relax. I can't do it. And despite what the admiral said, I'm not
your enemy."
McCoy rushed out of the turbolift, followed by what Cocl~rane
took to be two other medical workers in blue shirts. In moments
the doctor was gesturing over the admiral's unconscious form
with his glittering instruments while his assistants carefully took
the admiral from Mr. Spock and laid her gently on the deck.
Spock told McCoy about the nerve pinch; McCoy agreed it had
been a good decision, something about the admiral's heart; then
he touched a standard spray hypo against her arm. Cochrane was
surprised to see such an antique device in the doctor's arsenal. It
looked barely different from the spray hypos he remembered as a
child, though he assumed it had to be far more sophisticated on
the inside.
"Could anyone tell me what all that was about?" Cochrane
asked. He was beginning to think all he was good for any more
was asking questions. But old habits died hard. Perhaps some-
thing he might learn would give him a clue to his role in this new
age.
"Secrecy has taken its toll," Spock answered, after Kirk nodded
at him to do so. "There is apparently some conspiracy afoot
which involves both you and a purported warp bomb. The senior
officers of this ship were concerned that the admiral was part of
that conspiracy. On the other hand, it appears that she was
equally worried that we were in fact the conspirators."
"So who are the conspirators?" Cochrane asked.
"Presumably, whoever is on those ships," Spock said.

FEDERATION

Cochrane studied the viewscreen image of the three battle
cruisers, as Kirk had called them. "And they won't talk to you?"
"Not so far," Kirk said.
'Because they can't be sure if I'm on board?"
"There has to be some reason why they didn't continue their
attack," Kirk said. "If you go by the numbers, in our present
condition we're no match for them."
Cochrane liked the qualification in Kirk's assessment, as if Kirk
still believed he and his ship were a match for whatever they
faced. "You don't strike me as someone who goes by the numbers
very often, Captain Kirk."
Kirk grinned at him, and in that moment Cochrane felt again
that they could be friends. They seemed alike in many ways, their
different paths the result of their different times. Cochrane had
had no rules to play by, everything about interplanetary explora-
tion had been new. But Kirk also seemed to him to be the same
unrestrained, questing spirit he himself had once been, though
Kirk was obviously forced to work within a bureaucracy of
exploration. Cochrane was bemused by the concept--
interplanetary exploration becoming so commonplace that it was
run by the twenty-third-century equivalent of civil servants.
~'Do I detect a suggestion, Mr. Cochrane?"
Cochrane smiled back at the captain. His gradually returning
calm was having an effect on the Companion, still vigilant at his
side. She no longer looked as if she were ready to kill the admiral.
"Let them know I'm here," he said. "Then they won't attack."
Kirk nodded thoughtfully. "I've considered that. The drawback
is: What if they want to kill you?"
"Wouldn't they have done that on the other spaceship?"
~'Not necessarily," Spock said. "At that time, you were in their
control. If you had secrets, they could be extracted from you.
However, now you are in our control. Depending on how valuable
--or how dangerous--our opponents consider you, they might
conclude it is better to kill you than allow you to remain in our
hands."
Kirk gave Cochrane a commiserating look, as if those had been
his thoughts exactly. "Do you have any such secrets, Mr.

290 291



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Cochrane?" He nodded at the admiral's still form. "Admiral
Kabreigny obviously thought you did."
But Cochrane shook his head. "None that I know of. Judging
from those technical manuals you left me, my knowledge of what
you call warp propulsion is at the same level as what a schoolchild
probably starts with these days."
"So you never worked on a warp bomb?"
"I think those rumors go back to an accident at Kashishowa
Station, back in the fifties. The twenty-fifties."
Kirk looked at Spock. Spock looked at Cochrane.
"What accident would that be, Mr. Cochrane?"
Without knowing why, Cochrane was troubled by the question.
"It was a test facility on the moon's surface. About one hundred
kilometers outside Kashishowa, but that was our base. Anyway,
the lithium converter failed. We had a runaway continuum
distortion too close to the sun's gravity well and everything in the
field got pulled into what I think was a wormhole." He didn't
understand Spock's look of concentration. "There must be re-
cords. That's when we moved all our research to an old ice
freighter so we could work out past Neptune."
Kirk had the same expression of concentration, as if he were
trying to recall hearing anything about the incident. "Check it
out, Spock."
The Vulcan went back to the bridge's upper level to access what
Cochrane assumed was some sort of computer. McCoy and his
medical assistants carried Admiral Kabreigny to the turbolift.
The rest of the bridge crew worked on with remarkable concentra-
tion as if there had been no change in their operating conditions.
"Did I miss something?" Cochrane asked.
"Probably not," Kirk said as he settled back into his chair. "But
anything that might tell us what our friends out there are thinking
could help us."
Cochrane again studied the battle cruisers on the screen.
Combat, it seemed, had not changed much in the future, either.
Long periods of waiting broken only by short bursts of violence.
"Captain?" he asked. "What are the primary weapons of the
day?"

292

FEDERATION

"For this ship, phasers," Kirk answered, eyes also on the screen.
"Urn. phased energy rectification. Basically, a concentrated
hadion beam that interrupts the nuclear binding forces, strong
and weak. At low power, it can disrupt cellular processes to stun
or kill. At high power, it can cause the constituent components of
matter to disassociate without a resulting release of energy."
Cochrane had never heard of nadions, but he understood the
implications of what Kirk described. If the Optimum had had a
weapon like that...
"In addition to phasers, photon torpedoes. Essentially a
matter-antimatter bomb, but with a warp-capable casing."
Cochrane understood the implications of that, too. "So you
fight battles at warp speeds?"
Kirk understood the meaning behind Cochrane's question.
"Technology is neutral, Mr. Cochrane. It's what we choose to do
with it that gives it a military application or not."
"I've heard the argument," Cochrane said. He decided Micah
Brack would have liked Kirk, too.
Then Spock looked up from the computer station he had used.
"Captain, there is no record of a catastrophic warp research
failure at Kashishowa Station in the 2050s, or at any time."
"But that's not possible," Cochrane protested. "I was there,
two kilometers from the test dome, when it... it disappeared."
Kirk tried to explain. "Many records were lost in the Third
World War, Mr. Cochrane."
"On the moon?" Cochrane asked. "On Centauri B H?"
"What about it, Spock?"
Spock looked thoughtful for a moment, then touched a control
at the computer station. "Spock to Engineering. Mr. Scott, do you
have a moment?"
A Scotsman answered. Cochrane found the distinctive accent
and attitude reassuring. Like the spray hypo, engineers at least
hadn't changed at all in this future time.
"Not bloody likely, Mr. Spock. Not if you expect me t' get
this--"
"A moment only, Mr. Scott," Spock said, unperturbed. "In
your studies of the history of warp propulsion, do you have any

293



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

recollection of an early setback, in the 2050s, involving the
inadvertent creation of what might have been an unstable static
warp field on the Earth's moon?"
"Aye," the Scotsman replied hesitantly. "As I recall, it was what
led Zefram Cochrane's team t' conduct further experiments out
of the sun's gravity well. Can I ask ye what this has t' do with
anything?"
Spock looked impressed, in a quiet, Vulcan manner. "Do you
happen to know when and how you first heard of the incident?"
he asked.
The unseen Scotsman sighed. "I canna tell ye, Mr. Spock. At
the Academy, perhaps, one of the first-year courses. Look, I've got
a lot of work t' do down here, and--"
"Very good, Mr. Scott," Spock said. "Please carry on." He took
his finger off the control and the engineer's voice cut out.
Kirk looked at Cochrane. "Curiouser and curiouser. It used to
be known to Starfleet, but now it's no longer in the computer. A
worm program, Mr. Spock?" "Perhaps, Captain."
Cochrane was lost. Kirk saw the incomprehension on his face.
"In the past few days, we've discovered that Starfleet's main
computer system may have been infected with programs designed
to locate references to you," he explained. "And, perhaps, to
selectively erase elements of your work."
"What about printed records?" Cochrane said. "Or computers
not connected to yours?"
"Printed records would be unaffected," Spock said. "As for
other computers, it would depend on the nature of the worm
program itself, and whether or not it had the capability to move
between different systems and remain effective."
"But why?" Cochrane said. It made no sense to him. Both he
and Micah Brack had seen to it that the records of continuum-
distortion propulsion development were disseminated through-
out the known worlds without restriction. How could anyone
hope to contain that information? Why would anyone want to?
"Theories, Spock?" the captain said.
"In the past, there have been many instances where a scientific

294

FEDERATION

discovery has been overlooked at the time data were accumu-
lated, only to come to light when the data were reexamined.
Lasers. so-called black holes, many astronomical sightings, natu-
rain occurring transtator phenomena, all were found to be
supported by experimental data obtained well before their 'offi-
cial' discovery."
Cochrane didn't like the sound of that at all. "You're saying that
a warp bomb is possible? That whatever happened at Kashishowa
Station wasn't what I thought it was?"
"I merely suggest that other parties might believe that in your
findings of the time, there might be data which would reveal a
different explanation of the event if they were examined today."
Kirk seemed to be no more convinced than Cochrane felt.
"After one hundred and fifty years, Spock?" "Science is a gradual process, Captain."
Kirk shook his head dismissively. "Going back all that time
doesn't sound like science. It sounds like obsession."
Cochrane didn't know what to believe. He squeezed the Com-
panion's hand in his. "The Optimum Movement excelled at
obsession, Captain."
But Kirk was not convinced. "Flawed organizations like that
tend to reinvent themselves over time, Mr. Cochrane. There's no
clear-cut set of ideals to be handed down from one generation to
the next. Goals change, especially if they're based on political
expediency. Even if the Optimum Movement did still exist today,
it would be in name only. Colonel Green and his kind are long
dead."
Cochrane pointed out the one key flaw in Kirk's argument. 'Tm
still here."
Kirk looked at him with a crooked smile, as if acknowledging
the point Cochrane had made.
Then the Russian called out--"Keptin! Wessel approaching at
high warp speed. Configuration matches the ship we destroyed
earlier... a~Td the ship that followed us to Babel, sir."
To Cochrane, it felt as if the bridge had been electrified, but
Kirk betrayed no sense of urgency. "Ready on shields, Chekov.
Let's not use full power until we have to."

295



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"There, Keptin!" Chekov said as a twinkling orange dot of light
flew across the screen and vanished behind the center battle
cruiser. "Docking in progress."
Kirk spoke over his shoulder. "What do you say, Mr. Spock?
Their commander has arrived to take care of things personally?"
"That would be a logical development, Captain." Spock sat
down at the computer station. Cochrane saw him stare into the
small viewer of what seemed to be a holographic display. He knew
vulcans had developed an elaborate system of processing three-
dimensional data. Cochrane remembered trying one of their
viewers once, and only getting a headache. "There is increased
intraship communication," Spock reported. "Hard to make out
with all the jamming."
"Enemy wessels changing formation again, Keptin."
The Asian navigator added, "Weapons systems powering up."
"Keep what's left of the Planitia between us, Mr. Sulu," Kirk
said. He touched a control on the arm of his chair. "Mr. Scott,
we're just about out of time. What's the best speed you can give
us?"
The Scotsman answered. "I can give ye warp factor seven, but
only for a few hours, sir. Anything faster and the port strut will
fracture; anything longer, and we'll lose our dilithium."
"Understood," Kirk said. He glanced at Cochrane.
"Warp seven," Cochrane said. "Is that a time-warp multiplier
factor?"
Kirk nodded. "We called them time-warp factors in my cadet
days. Now just warp factors."
"That's still pretty fast," Cochrane said.
"Those ships are faster," Kirk answered. "It won't pay to run."
"Even with a head start?"
"It would have to be a big one," Kirk said. "And even then it's
only delaying the inevitable. Help's too far away."
Then the black woman seated at the station behind Kirk spoke.
"Captain, they are finally responding to our hails. Requesting
visual communication."
Cochrane sensed a quick feeling of relief from the captain.
"Show us their visual, Lieutenant, but only send audio." He
looked at Cochrane and held his finger to his lips. "Let's not give

FEDERATION

them any information we don't have to." Then he looked toward
the screen.
"This is Captain James T. Kirk of the Starship Enterprise to
unidentified Klingon cruisers."
Cochrane liked the sound of "starship." It had an almost
magical connotation. He wondered if the people of this day
thought the same, or if they had become jaded by the wonders of
their age.
The captain continued. "You are in Federation space without
authorization. You must identify yourselves."
Then the image on the screen changed, no longer showing the
three battle cruisers, and Cochrane felt as he had when he learned
he had been converted to energy and re-formed--completely
disoriented, without any sense of order or control.
The face on the screen was as far out of time as Cochrane
himself.
The commander of the alien force was Adrik Thorsen.
There was no escape from the Optimum.

297



FIVE

U. S. S. EIV TERPRISE NCC-1701
ENGAGED WITH THE ENEMY
Stardate 3855
Earth Standard: November 2267

Kirk heard Cochrane's intake of breath and instantly knew that
the scientist recognized the commander of the Klingon ships. But
he had no idea how that was possible. And there was no time to
ask him, either.
"Give me Cochrane and I will spare your ship," the figure said
roughly, but with slow precision. He was humanoid, possibly
human, though because the screen showed him only from the
shoulders up, it was difficult to judge what form his body took.
His leathery skin was deeply lined, reminding Kirk of asteroid
miners he had met whose helmet visors hadn't afforded enough
protection from a star's ultraviolet radiation. His hair was lucid
white, cut almost to bristle length, and covered only half his scalp
as if part had been burned away, exposing old scars, almost
regular, as if they were a surgeoh's work and not the result of
accidental damage.
But Kirk decided they were battle scars. The commander had
an unmistakable military bearing. He doubted any other human
could occupy the command chair of a Klingon vessel. If it truly
was a Klingon vessel.
"I repeat," Kirk said, "identify yourself."

FEDERATION

The commander's face changed into what at first looked like a
grimace of pain. But Kirk finally recognized the expression to be a
smile. or at least an attempt at one. Only half the face moved, as if
the rest had suffered irreparable nerve damage.
"Ask Cochrane who I am." He spoke the scientist's name as if it
were the invocation of a demon.
"Who is Cochrane?" Kirk asked. If bluffing was good enough
for Spock's father...
But the commander looked at something off the screen and
snarled, "pu'DaH! ghuH baH!"
"Disruptors powering up," Sulu reported. "Leftmost ship.
Shall I increase power to shields, Captain?"
Kirk shut off his audio transmission. "Negative," he said.
"We don't want them to know we don't have one hundred per-
cent." He switched the audio back on. "Klingon vessel:
Take your weapons off standby and identify yourself or you will
suffer the consequences. You will not be warned again." He
switched off again, turned to Cochrane. "You recognize him,
don't you?"
Cochrane nodded. The Companion looked up at him with
attentive concern, clearly sensing more emotional turmoil than
showed on the scientist's face.
But before Cochrane could say anything, the commander's
harsh voice exploded from the speakers. "You have five seconds,
Enterprise. Vagh... loS... wej..."
Cochrane hit the audio switch at Kirk's side and spoke before
Kirk could stop him. "Shut it down, Thorsen. I'm here."
On the screen, the commander opened his mouth with a sound
that was somewhere between a hiss and an exhalation of surprise.
To Kirk, despite the commander's appearance, it didn't sound
human.
"Go to visual, Uhura," Kirk said. If this was the way Cochrane
dealt the hand, then Kirk would play along. Nothing could be
gained by trying to hide Cochrane's presence any longer. "Who is
this Thorsen?" he asked the scientist.
Onscreen, half of Thorsen's face reacted with dismay at what
he saw as his own viewer came on.
".4drik Thorsen," Cochrane said with revulsion.

298 299



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
The name was vaguely familiar to Kirk. Something historical.
"The Adrik Thorsen?" Spock asked. "Of Colonel Green's
cadre?"
"That is not Cochrane," Thorsen hissed.
Cochrane stepped in front of the Companion as if protecting
her the way she had earlier protected him. "Look at me, Thorsen.
You know who I am. The way I used to be. Think back to Titan.
The first time I escaped you."
Whatever Cochrane had done to Thorsen on Titan, Kirk could
see that the reference had the desired effect. Thorsen's face
revealed recognition and hatred.
"But you're young! How is that possible?" he said. "After all
these years?"
Cochrane apparently had no intention of feeding Thorsen's
twisted interest in him. "How are you possible?"
Kirk heard Spock approach from behind. He spoke in a low
tone. "Captain, computer records show that Colonel Adrik
Thorsen died in a resistance attack in London, just prior to the
onset of World War Three."
On the screen, Thorsen emitted a hollow drawn-out laugh. He
held up a fist. Or what Kirk thought had once been a fist.
It was mechanical, three-fingered, the color of burnished
duranium.
"Only part of Adrik Thorsen died at Battersea Stadium, oh six,
two one, two oh seven eight," Thorsen said.
The mechanical fingers opened and flexed as the equivalent of a
wrist socket rotated fully. At the same time, the image on the
viewscreen changed its angle of coverage, so more of Thorsen was
revealed.
"Fascinating," Spock said, as the full, horrifying extent of
ThorseWs cybernetic transformation could be seen.
What flesh remained to him was supported upon and within a
flattened exoskeleton, which ended at his shoulders. Both arms
were mechanical, each with two elbow joints. Woven through the
intricacies of the open chest, Kirk could see hanging pockets of
skin connected by glistening, pulsating cords, as if human organs
still remained, removed from no.longer-necessary muscle and
bone. All that was flesh was encircled by tendril-like power
30O


FEDERATION

conduits and gleaming wire. And where metal made contact with
flesh. the living parts were swollen, inflamed, encrusted with
dried fluids.
What Cochrane had addressed as Adrik Thorsen now stood up
from the modified command chair on three duranium legs.
Behind the obscene apparition, Kirk saw two members of a
Klingon crew, and an Orion. All were in civilian clothes; none of
them wore uniforms.
"Colonel Thorsen appears to have made use of Grigari technol-
ogy." Spock commented.
Kirk corrected him. "Outlawed Grigaft technology."
"What have you become?" Cochrane said in disgust.
"What you have made me," Thorsen answered. His arms
moved like the questing feelers of some enormous insect, twisting
up to hold two clenched fists by his still human face as if to display
them for their owner's admiration. "I have become optimal."
Thorsen probed at his face with the mechanical pincers of his
duranium hands. Kirk recognized their distinctive design just as
Spock had. Each metal pincer ended with three smaller grippers
inset at the tip, and each of those in three smaller ones, and so on,
into the nanometer realm, giving each hand the capability to take
apart living tissue on a cell-by-cell level.
Nanotechnology was the secret of the success of Grigari medi-
cal technology. Their molecular assembly devices could expertly
weave together flesh and steel, uniting living nervous systems
directly with computer-control circuits. But it was not a static
situation.
The flesh of most life-forms would eventually reject the fila-
ments of connection the Grigari devices wove. So the devices
were programmed not to stop, in order to continually maintain
the connection. Thus, as each layer of living cells became dam-
aged. they were stripped away and replaced by more filaments of
circuitry and steel. Eventually, the living body of a Grigari
amalgam was completely discarded, replaced with an inexact,
mechanical substitute.
The Grigari had proclaimed themselves as traders come to offer
eternal life to the worlds of the Federation. But when their
treatments had been investigated and found hideously flawed, the

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JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Grigari ships had left as one, moving on to other, uncharted
sectors, leaving behind only gruesome tales of the horrors their
painful technology had wrought.
But for some people, Kirk knew, death was an even worse
horror, and despite all that was known about what must inevita-
bly happen when living matter and Grigari technology merged,
there were still some worlds beyond the Federation's boundaries
where the forbidden operations were available. For a price.
Adrik Thorsen, it appeared, had paid that price years ago, and
what was left of him was paying it still.
"I don't care what you think you are!" Cochrane called out. His
hand cut through the air in a forceful gesture, as if to ward off
Thorsen and what he represented. "The Optimum Movement is
over, Thorsen! You lost!"
Thorsen's pincers worried at the flesh of his face, distorting the
expression of his frozen side. Kirk frowned at the sight. He
doubted there was much of the original Thorsen underneath.
"I lost but a battle," the amalgam said. "The war continues."
Having observed the nature of his adversary, Kirk had already
begun formulating his strategy, and now he began implementing
it. "The Federation is at peace, Colonel Thorsen. The war you
remember is long gone."
The pincers came away from Thorsen's face. The skin of his
cheek was broken now, like the cracked bed of a dried river. But
there was no blood. Only dark shadows, cutting deep, deeper.
"There will always be a war, Enterprise. It is the nature of the
beast. And only Cochrane can stop it."
"How?" Kirk asked. He quickly shut off his transmission and
told Spock to confirm which of the three battle cruisers ThorseWs
signal was coming from.
"He knows the secret of the ultimate deterrenL" Thorsen said.
His pincers fastened on his immobile eyebrows. The eyelids
beneath the activity didn't blink. "He is the reason why the war
was fought. Why Earth was devastated by the weak, who were
cowards, incomplete, less than optimal. If he had listened to me
on oh six, two one, two oh seven eight, Earth would be a paradise.
None would have been able to oppose me."
"There is no ultimate deterrent," Kirk said, trying to keep this

FEDERATION

deconstructing madman engaged in debate as long as necessary.
Spock stepped in front of him, hands behind his back, gesturing to
indicate that Thorsen's signal was coming from the leftmost ship,
as Kirk had already assumed.
'-Starfleet knows," Thorsen said as he placed the tip of another
pincer against his unmoving eye. "I looked into their computers.
Sent little strands of myself into their circuits." He treated them
to his eerie half-smile, half-grimace again. "I can do that now, you
know, Mr. Cochrane. Unlike you, I am much more than the sum
of my parts."
Spock glanced at the captain. "I believe he is implying that he
used Grigari nanocomponents to infiltrate Starfleet's main com-
puter system. If so, by actually reconstructing themselves into
duotronic circuits, the nanocomponents could create worm pro-
grams with impunity, making it appear that the network had been
compromised by insiders, when, in fact, it was the system itself
that was in control."
Thorsen inhaled with an oddly fluttering breath. "I am the
system. now. I was always meant to be the system. And every time
I reached out into the system, Starfleet moved against me, to
classify more and more that had to do with Kashishowa Station.
Now, Mr. Cochrane, I ask you, why go to all that trouble to hide a
secret. unless there is a secret there to hide?"
Cochrane and Kirk turned to each other at once.
"Is that what this is about?" Cochrane asked.
On the screen, Thorsen sighed as he plucked at his unmoving
eyelid. "I see it all, now," he whispered madly.
"It would appear so," Kirk said, answering Cochrane. To
Thorsen he said, "The battle's been fought for nothing."
Kirk could see exactly how the scenario played out, even to the
point of Admiral Kabreigny believing the officers of the Enter-
?ri~c were involved in a conspiracy against Starfleet.
Thorsen, with the abilities ofa Grigari amalgam, had somehow
come into contact with a Starfleet terminal and created worm
programs to search out information about the Kashishowa Sta-
tion incident, believing it would reveal the secrets of a Cochrane-
devised warp bomb. Kabreigny, or her staff, perhaps always on
the alert for unauthorized weapons research, discovered that

303



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

someone was digging into old science connected to long-since
disproven rumors of the warp bomb. Concerned that someone
else might know more than the Federation, that there was a
chance that a warp bomb might exist, she had used her position to
classify the results of Cochrane's early research and deployed
worm programs of her own to selectively erase that data from the
Starfleet computer network. But her response only confirmed
what Thorsen had believed, so he began to intensify his search,
trying to find some trace of information she might have forgotten,
widening his areas of inquiry until it became a general inquiry
covering anything at all to do with Cochrane, even down to the
reference "Gamma Canaris." And each escalation Thorsen un-
dertook must have convinced Kabreigny that she should take
further measures in response, intensifying a secret war where no
one knew who the real opponent was, and all fought over an
ancient experiment that meant nothing.
"But however illusory the reason for the war," Spock said, "the
stakes are very real." He glanced at the screen. So did Kirk.
Kirk felt nauseated. Thorsen had peeled away the skin around
his eye to reveal more duranium.
"Look at him," Cochrane said. "He's insane."
"At his stage of transformation," Spock suggested, "it would be
more proper to say he is malfunctioning."
"Give me Cochrane," Thorsen rasped. "I want him to appreci-
ate what he has done." First one pincer, then another plunged
deep within Thorsen's eye socket, but there was no sign of organic
damage. To his sickened onlookers, if there was anything left of
Thorsen that was human, it was no more than a vestige.
"Very well," Kirk said, forcing his eyes to remain on the screen.
"But I want your word as an officer that you will then allow me to
withdraw with the other rescued passengers from the Utopia
Planitia. I have many injured who require immediate medical
attention."
"No!" the Companion abruptly cried out as she realized what
Kirk was doing. "We will not allow you to endanger the man!"
She moved toward Kirk. Spock intercepted her, pulled her firmly
away.

304

FEDERATION

"Stand by for transport," Kirk said, his focus unshaken. "This
might take a moment. Enterprise out." He killed the transmis-
sion, audio and visual, just as Thorsen's pincers began to with-
draw from deep within his eye socket. Kirk felt better not
knowing what they might have emerged with.
He stepped out of his chair. "Spock, it's all right. Companion: I
will not harm the man."
"Thank you," Cochrane said. He went to the Companion as
Spock released her. "But what will you do?"
"We have an edge, Mr. Cochrane," Kirk said, adrenaline
flowing as once again he saw the way out. "The armaments and
response time of those ships are handicapped by their command-
er. You saw the bridge personnel behind Thorsen. No uniforms.
It's a smuggler's crew. Maybe he stole those ships, maybe the
Empire's in such bad shape that they're starting to sell their battle
cruisers, but we're not facing top Klingon warriors. That's a big
advantage to start with."
Kirk went to the command console and reached down between
Chekov and Sulu to check sensor readings. "Mr. Spock, have a
shuttlecrati prepared for maximum warp on automatic pilot.
We'll need a decoy in a few minutes." "What heading, Captain?"
For that, Kirk didn't have an answer. Yet. "Mr. Sulu, we've got
warp seven capability for only a few hours. Find us somewhere to
go where we can disappear. Back to the asteroid belt in Gamma
Canaris. A nebula. Somewhere we can avoid their sensors." Kirk
left the console. "Then chart a course for the shuttle directly
opposite that heading." "Aye-aye, Captain."
"I thought we couldn't outrun them," Cochrane said.
"Not for long," Kirk replied. "But they're not the enemy I
thought they were." He took his seat again. "Mr. Chekov, when I
give the order, I want what's left of the Planitia blasted to plasma
to create a sensor screen. Immediately after, we will concentrate
all phaser fire on the bridge of the leftmost battle cruiser, and
target all photon torpedoes on its warp nacelles."
Chekov acknowledged his orders enthusiastically.

305



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Hit and run?" Cochrane asked in disbelief at the daring of it.
Kirk nodded, smiling. "With luck, they'll be leaderless. And
we've already seen that the crews of those ships won't take action
without Thorsen's presence."
"Captain," Uhura said. "We're being hailed by Colonel
Thorsen."
"Keep him offscreen, Lieutenant. Don't transmit visuals."
Thorsen's transmission was a single word, long and slow.
"Cochrane."
"He's not cooperating," Kirk answered curtly. "Security is
chasing him. We'll have him in a few minutes." "One minute."
"All three ships are powering up their phasers," Sulu an-
nounced.
Kirk ended his audio transmission. "Do you have a heading,
Mr. Sulu?"
"Three possibilities, Captain." Sulu turned around in his chair.
"The Gamma Canaris asteroid belt is at the edge of our range, but
once we got there, it would be cat-and-mouse until reinforce-
ments arrived. Nothing to really confuse their sensor scans."
"What else?" Kirk asked. According to the chronometer, they
had forty-five seconds before Thorsen opened fire.
"Epsilon Canaris. G-type star. Several planets including a gas
giant. If we make it to Epsilon Canaris III, they have planetary
defenses that could help us."
Kirk discounted that possibility at once. That planet was still in
a precarious state as Federation commissioners continued to
broker a peace treaty. The sight of the Enterprise rushing in,
pursued by Klingon cruisers, would definitely be destabilizing to
the fragile peace process.
"Third choice," Kirk said. Thirty-five seconds remaining.
"Shuttle ready for launching," Spock announced.
"I want the shuttle out of here the instant the wreckage is hit,"
Kirk said. "Mr. Sulu?"
"It's a singularity. T'Lin's New Catalog number 65813. Six
hours at warp seven."
"A naked singularity?" Kirk asked.
"According to the survey charts, it has an event horizon."

306

FEDERATION

Hope built in Kirk. A black hole could be just what he needed
now. "Size'?"
.-Diameter is eight hundred kilometers."
Kirk saw that this had possibilities. Twenty-five seconds re-
mained. "Mass?"
"Two hundred solar masses."
Kirk turned to Spock. "Can we use it to slingshot, Mr. Spock?"
The right approach at the right warp speed around a massive
enough object could propel the Enterprise back in time. Starfleet
prohibited the maneuver except under controlled circumstances
approved by the full Admiralty. But Kirk was willing to face them
after the fact, if it meant he could get Cochrane and the Enterprise
to safety, several days in the past.
But Spock put an end to that possibility. "The ship's present
condition precludes a slingshot trajectory, Captain. Neither the
remaining dilithium crystals nor the damaged port nacelle strut
cotlid withstand the strain."
Fifteen seconds remained.
"Keptin." Chekov said, "their targeting sensors are locking
on."
"Spock: Will there be sufficient relativistic distortions near the
black hole's event horizon to disrupt sensors?" Kirk asked.
"Without question," Spock answered.
Kirk made his decision, committed his ship. "Sulu, set course
to TNC 65813. Chekov, ready on phasers and photon torpedoes."
Both men acknowledged. Ten seconds remained.
"Open a channel to Thorsen, Lieutenant," Kirk said to Uhura.
"Audio only. Let's keep them off balance. Ready to fire on my
mark. Mr. Chekov."
"Channel open, sir."
"Colonel Thorsen, we have captured Cochrane and are taking
him to the transporter room. Which ship would you like us to
beam him to?"
Thorsen appeared on screen. Half the skin remaining on his
face now hung in fluttering strips. Where his eye had been was
onlv a dark socket. "Beam him to me," Thorsen cackled in
triumph. "We have a great deal of time to make up for. We both
have secrets to share in the Pursuit of Perfection."

307



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"Standing by in the transporter room," Kirk said. "We will
beam him to you as soon as you lower your shields." He ended
transmission.
Chekov next words were full of wonder. "Keptin, he is drop-
ping his shields."
"Definitely not a Klingon," Kirk said. "Mr. Chekov, Mr.
Spock, proceed with firing sequence and shuttle launch."
Instantly the deep hum of the phasers echoed through the
bridge as Thorsen's image winked off the viewscreen, to be
replaced by a split-second image of the Planitia's wreckage just
before it turned into an expanding field of incandescent plasma.
The bridge of the Enterprise shook as the photon torpedoes
launched, leaving glowing trails into the plasma cloud. Cochrane
held tightly to the Companion, marveling at the audacity Kirk
and his crew regularly displayed.
"Shuttle away," Spock confirmed. "Maximum warp."
"Phasers locked on Thorsen's ship," Chekov announced. The
Registering hits but impossible to tell their
phasers sang again." ' '
shield status."
"Get us out of here, Mr. Sulu. Warp factor seven."
The bridge tilted as the Enterprise moved out of normal space
and the plasma ball vanished from the viewscreen. "No sign of pursuit, Keptin."
"That's it?" Cochrane asked. "We're at time-warp factor seven
that quickly?"
Kirk smiled. His ship and crew had performed perfectly. "Warp
readout, Mr. Sulu." The distant whine of the ship's engines
increased.
"Factor five point five... point eight... six point two...
point five... point nine... warp factor seven, sir."
Cochrane whistled. "In my day, it would take three hours just

to get up to time-warp four."- ne"
"These are your days, Mr. Cocnra , Kirk said. "It's your
engines driving this ship. You made all this possible."
"I also made Thorsen possible," Cochrane answered. "Like you
said, Captain: Technology is neutral."
Chekov interrupted. "Keptin, I have clear sensor readings

3O8

FEDERATION

around the ?lanitia wreckage. One cruiser crippled, sir. It has
ejected its warp core."
-Good shooting, Mr. Chekov. What about the others?"
"One cruiser is in pursuit of our shuttlecraft decoy. Estimated
time to intercept, fifteen minutes."
"If they don't think to scan it for life signs before that," Kirk
said. "Last ship?"
"Staying within transporter range of the crippled wessel, sir. It
appears they're beaming aboard the crew." "Any sign of the Orion transport?"
"Negative, sir. It was docked with the damaged cruiser."
Kirk almost felt like relaxing. Each second the cruisers delayed
chasing the Enterprise increased the odds of success. And they
were finally out of Thorsen's jamming range. "Uhura, open a
secure channel to Starfleet Command and request urgent assist-
ance." Kirk thought about Admiral Kabreigny. She had been
convinced that security at Starfleet had been compromised. But
was it solely because of Thorsen, or did he have other accom-
plices? "Identify our attackers as Orion smugglers operating D7
battle cruisers. Make no mention of Colonel Thorsen for now."
Uhura acknowledged, and now that the immediate danger had
passed, Kirk could see Cochrane looking around the bridge, eyes
wide.
"All that about the condition of those ships behind us,"
Cochrane said, "you were able to detect it with... subspace
sensors?"
Kirk nodded. "Would you like a tour?"
Cochrane stared at him in amazement. "Aren't we running for
our lives?"
"Keptin, cruiser two is now in pursuit of the Enterprise."
"Time to intercept?" Kirk asked.
'~Five hours, ten minutes."
"Time to the singularity?"
'~At present velocity, five hours fifty-five minutes."
The Enterprise would come under attack forty-five minutes
before she reached safety. Cochrane was right. They were running
for their lives. And the urge to relax left Kirk as quickly as it had
COme upon him.

309



SIX

U.S.S. EfflTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
EN ROUTE TO STARBASE 324
Stardate 43922.1
Earth Standard: May 2366

An hour after the senior officers' debriefing, three hours after the
collision with Traklamek's Warbird, the Enterprise's warp core
was back on-line and Picard's mighty ship made way for Starbase
324, the heart of Starfleet Tactical's effort to develop a defense
against the Borg. With his ship at peace once again, Picard arrived
in the main shuttlebay as Geordi La Forge had requested, eager to
examine the unexpected treasure that had been found.
By now, La Forge had completely removed the Preserver object
from what might or might not have been a Borg artifact. The
artifact itself was spread out over a section of the shuttlebay deck
marked with a detailed grid. The grid's purpose was to aid in the
analysis and reconstruction of damaged or destroyed vehicles and
equipment. Optical sensors recorded the original position of each
item on the grid from several different angles so the computer
could create three-dimensional models to be studied in greater
detail and under various simulated conditions. Portions of the
Borg artifact were precisely laid out on that grid, and Picard knew
that even now a compressed data stream containing everything
La Forge and Data had managed to learn about it was being
sent via subspace to Admiral Hanson at Starbase 324.

310

?

FEDERATION

picard only hoped that the information was not part of a
Romulan effort to mislead the Federation about the Borg's true
nature.
The Preserver object, however, was not on the reconstruction
grid. La Forge had mounted it on several equipment cradles
normally used to support shuttlecraft undergoing maintenance or
repair. Though it was a purely subjective, emotional conclusion,
the instant Jean-Luc Picard saw the object unobscured by the
.jumble of the Borg artifact, he felt certain that the object was
authentic, and made by the same hand as the Preserver obelisk. It
was, to Picard, a thing of beauty.
'~Quite a sight, isn't it?" La Forge asked as he approached the
captain. wiping his hands with a cleaning cloth.
"Oh, it is, Mr. La Forge, it is," the captain said.
Perfectly displayed against the stars that streaked to a vanishing
point past the open shuttlebay doors, sealed only by an atmo-
spheric forcefield, the object seemed to glow with a polished silver
sheen beneath the bright shuttlebay lights. Its proportions, far
more subtle than just the first reported gross measurements of two
meters by three meters by five meters, included graceful indenta-
tions and curves that made it resemble a shaft of liquid cut from a
magnificent wave of molten metal and frozen in a sparkling
instant of time. Picard gazed at it and saw visions of oceans. The
reservoirs of life. From what seas had the makers of this object
emerged? How distant in time and space?
"You can almost hear the ocean roar, can't you?" La Forge said
quietly.
"It's... magnificent," Picard replied, knowing the word did
no justice to the depth of his feeling. "I cannot believe that this
was constructed by the Romulans."
"And that's not all of it," La Forge continued. "Check out the
other side."
They walked together, and on the far side of the object, where
Data and Wesley Crusher worked with elaborate molecular
probes held against the object's surface, Picard saw what he could
only consider as an ugly scar that marred the object's beauty. It
~vas a clark and ragged scrape a meter square which appeared to

311



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
have broken off a corner of the object, just where the eye--and
the heart--demanded its curves should continue to a graceful
conclusion.
"It's some kind of stress fracture or abrasion," La Forge said as
they stopped beside the wound. "The outside skin is so tough I
can't think of anything that could have done this short of a
supernova, but sometime in the past three and half billion years,
this thing suffered quite a shock."
Picard held his fingers above the abrupt demarcation line
between the smooth outer surface and the dark indentation. "May
IT' he asked La Forge nodded"There's no danger. I can't tell yet if the dark
material is what happens to the silver covering when it's subjected
to intense heat and deformed, or if it's the normal appearance of
whatever's inside. Data thinks we're actually looking at a tightly
packed, molecular quantum computer of some kind, so complex-
ly interconnected that it appears to be a solid. If that's true, this
object could contain more computing power than... all the
~d ''
computers in the Federation cornrune La Forge pointed to a
textured section of the scar. "Now, over here, you can't see it, but
with my VISOR I can detect a pattern of microscopic holes,
almost like wiring conduits. This is the interface area where the
Borg artifact had tapped into the object to draw power "It's still generating power?" Picard asked.
"SomewhereSomehow," La Forge sighed"Wesley's suggested
that when we get to the starbase, we might see about creating a
specialized type of nanitc to crawl inside and look around
"A splendid idea. Just so long as Mr. Crusher doesn't create the
nanites onboard the Enterprise this time," Picard said. He
remembered all too well what had happened with the acting
ensign's last experiment in nanotechnology.
"I'11 make sure of that," La Forge agreed"Anyway, Data and
Wesley are going over the undamaged surface to see if there are
any interface areas that are intact."
Picard was intrigued"Do you think this object was made for
the purpose of mtenacmg. The Preserver obelisk, which had
been studied so intensely, and so ineffectively, seemed to be
designed specifically to not give up its secretsThe idea that this
312

FEDERATION

Preserver object was purposely constructed to communicate was
tantalizing, to say the least.
"That's what Data thinks." La Forge pointed to the front of the
object. "Come take another look at the inscriptions."
The object was now oriented so that Picard could identify the
markings on its forward face without turning his head. He had no
idea what the inscriptions meant, of course, but he did recognize
them.
La Forge pointed to one of the geometric drawings that
appeared among the Preserver cuneiform markings: the first
drawing when the sequence was read top to bottom. "Does this
look familiar?" he asked.
Picard was startled by the question. "Should it?"
"It did to me, as soon as Data pointed it out. It's surprising how
obvious it is."
Picard studied the drawing, all the more baffling now that he
knew it should have some obvious meaning. He traced the open
border around it, ran his fingers over its sequence of vertical
lines...

lllll[lll[ll
'77',,

I


IllIll


I

. but its pattern meant nothing to him.
"Are you suggesting this is similar to the old space-probe data
records'.)" Picard asked. At the dawn of space exploration, hu-
mans had affixed various data-storage media to its space probes in
the unlikely event they were ever recovered by aliens: first, analog

313



i,


ists at the time had hoped would be universal symbols, each
derived from basic physical constants that could be interpreted by
any spacefaring culture. The purpose was to show the recordings'
place and time of origin, and to indicate how the data should be
interpreted to produce sound and pictures. Earth's historical
societies were still asking alien cultures to try decoding replicas of
those variously packaged space messages. To date, none had
succeeded. Though the Vulcans had come close.
"Data thinks it's a possibility," La Forge confirmed, "though
it's intended for a more sophisticated level of interpretation."
"I can see that," Picard said. "As I recall, the engraved plates
our ancestors sent out began with the depiction of simple
hydrogen transition states, to establish basic increments of time
and distance, based on the law of mediocrity, the assumption that
even alien systems would be based on similar laws of nature."
"Well, this engraving definitely starts a bit higher up the scale of
physics than hydrogen transitions."
Picard took his hand away. He could see nothing he recognized
in the collection of lines. "How much higher?"
"Would you believe continuum distortion?" La Forge asked.
He held his finger to the diagram, starting on the left. "Data
interprets this inverted T marking and the four dashes below it as
a standard tachyon decay event." He drew his finger down the
thin vertical line. "Here's the tachyon." He jumped over the thick
bar and tapped the dashes. "And after the tunneling discontinui-
ty, here are the tachyon's four constituent quarks."
Picard nodded slowly. "So the thick horizontal bar is the
tachyon decay threshold."
"Which is the speed of light," La Forge confirmed. "Then, if we
consider these two short, thick lines on either side of the vertical
line pattern to represent the speed of light..."
Picard saw it instantly. It was in two dimensions, without a
logarithmic or any other kind of curve, but the ratios looked right.
He touched the 'thin, clear vertical line that cut through the

314

extended below the speed of light. "And this is the energy
required for movement into warp space, which is less than
infinite."
"And." La Forge continued, indicating the three clear vertical
bars on the diagram's right, "once you're in warp space, here's
~our offset of the theoretical peak power consumption at one
hundred percent efficiency."
~'Do the ratios work out?" Picard asked.
"Data measured the width of each line and the spaces between
them to within an angstrom. This diagram was engraved with
precision particle etching that gives the numerical relationships of
all warp ratio values to five decimal places. Captain, the diagram
on this object is just a bare-bones version of this." La Forge
tapped his chest beside his communicator pin, which was fash-
ioned in the shape of Starfleet's familiar delta design. "It's the
basis of warp physics established by Zefram Cochrane--a dia-
gram of the asymmetrical distortion field function, missing one of
its axes."
Picard was impressed. "If this is true, then whoever built this
was indeed counting on a considerable level of achievement from
those who found it."
'TI1 say. Especially considering this is just the first diagram of
twenty-four."
Picard rubbed at his chin. The power-consumption relation-
ship depicted bv the diagram was as obvious to him now as it was
in the Starfleet insignia he wore, just as La Forge had said. But
there were still parts of the diagram that didn't fit. "If the vertical
line on the left is a tachyon decay, what about this vertical line on
the right.'?" he asked.
La Forge shrugged. He pointed to the right-hand line and the
vertical bar at the center bottom. "Data's best theory is that these
lines have something to do with zero-point energy extraction." He
indicated the horizontal line cutting across the six upper bars on

315



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
the right. "And these lines might have something to do with
transwarp propulsion in other dimensions."
"My word," Picard said. "Getting energy from a vacuum has
eluded our scientists for generations. And Starfleet abandoned the
whole idea of transwarp propulsion as impractical decades ago."
La Forge touched his finger thoughtfully to the diagram. "You
know, Captain, if Data's right about this, if it is some sort of
message that's set up for extremely technologically advanced
cultures to interpret... it sort of makes me wonder if we were
supposed to find it yet."
Picard had also been thinking exactly that. "You mean, some-
how the object was damaged, perhaps, as you suggested, by a
supernova. The Borg then incorporated it into their vessel
without recognizing it for what it was, and the Romulans ac-
quired it by accident, by destroying the Borg vessel."
"If the Romulans did acquire it from a Borg vessel. I'm still not
convinced of that."
Data and Acting Ensign Wesley Crusher came around the
corner of the object, molecular probes switched off.
"Hi, Captain Picard," Wesley said. He grinned at the object,
eyes full of wonder. "Isn't this incredible?"
Uncomfortable as he was with children, even those as old as
Wesley, Picard appreciated the acting ensign's youthful enthusi-
asm for an archaeological find of the first order. It indicated that
the youth showed promise, which Picard had always suspected.
"That and much more, Mr. Crusher," Picard said. He looked at
Data. "Were you able to find an intact interface area?"
"No," Data said, "but that does not mean that one does not
exist. Regrettably, I suspect it is simply beyond the means of our
technology to identify."
"Do you agree with Mr. La Forge, then?" Picard asked. "That
we have come upon this object before we are technologically able
to understand it?"
"That is a distinct possibility," Data agreed. "I have used my
subroutines to analyze the diagrams as Wesley and I have been
working. It is the equivalent of the way in which humans
consciously put aside problems so their subconscious can work on
solving them without conscious effort." Data paused and looked

316

FEDERATION

to the side. "Though in my case, since I remain conscious of
everything, the analogy does not hold."
"Data," La Forge said gently, "let's not keep the captain
waiting."
"My apologies, Captain," Data said. "In any event, this first
diagram is understandable."
"We've been over that diagram, Data," La Forge said.
Data looked at the object, indicating the path of the inscrip-
tions and the diagrams along its front panel. "The diagrams
that follow this first one clearly increase in complexity. I believe
the next in the sequence relates in more detail to zero-point
energy extraction, though to our knowledge of physics, it appears
to be a mathematical description of a perpetual-motion ma-
chine."
"If we ever create the technology for extracting zero-point
energy," Picard said, "we will have perpetual-motion machines."
"In a manner of speaking," Data allowed. "The third diagram
bears some connection to the second, but I cannot comprehend
its meaning at all. The fourth diagram appears to relate back to
the first, referring again, I believe, to other spatial continuums
beyond the one in which warp drive operates. I then do not have
the slightest conception as to what nineteen of the remaining
twenty diagrams mean, though judging from the preponderance
of prime numbers in the ratio of line thicknesses to length, I
presume they elaborate profound relationships of nature. Rela-
tionships which, as of now, are beyond our present level of
science."
Picard nodded thoughtfully. Then he realized what Data had
said. "Nineteen of the remaining twenty? Then you do under-
stand another of the diagrams?"
"That is problematic," the android replied. He crouched down
on his knees to point to a diagram at the bottom of the first row of
inscriptions. Its position marred the otherwise symmetrical ar-
rangement of the double columns.
"Quite clearly," Data said, "it is related to the first diagram in
the series, though according to the established pattern, it should
be much more complex, and thus indecipherable."

317




I

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
IIII" ,,,,
_ ,,Jill II!111
[t -


Picard knelt down beside Data to examine the engraved lines.
"But you feel you understand what this one means?"
"Taken in context, I believe the clear diagonal lines relate to the
infinite power release once thought to accompany unstable warp
fields."
Picard tried to place that within his knowledge of the develop-
ment of warp propulsion. It had been a long time since he had
taken that class at the Academy.
But Wesley spoke up impulsively. "You mean, what they called
the 'warp bomb'?"
"Precisely," Data agreed. "It was Zefram Cochrane, the human
father of warp propulsion, who early on in his research faced the
possibility that a warp field might be used to create a near-infinite
energy release in a confined area."
"I'm pretty sure the captain is familiar with Cochrane's work,"
La Forge said.
Picard got to his feet again. "I am, but please continue with any
insights you might have."
"As an interesting historical corollary, when human research-
ers developing the first explosive atomic-fission device originally
performed their calculations of the chain reaction they sought to
create, they determined that there was a chance the chain reaction
might extend from the enriched uranium in the device into the
Earth's atmosphere, igniting the atmosphere and consequently
ending all life on the planet."
Picard could see La Forge's impatience building but was eager
to know what else Data had concluded about the Preserver ob-

318

7~

FEDERATION

ject. "And how does that relate to the object at hand?" Picard
asked.
'Betbre detonating the first fission explosive, the researchers
had managed to detect the flaw in their theory and were fairly
confident that the Earth's atmosphere would not ignite."
"Fairly certain?" Picard repeated.
"Scientific rigor was not the same in the nineteen hundreds, sir.
In any event. it was quickly seen that there was no possibility of
an atomic chain reaction extending to the atmosphere. In the
same way. Zet'ram Cochrane and his team were eventually able to
definitively prove that even the most unstable warp field could
never generate a destructive force greater than could be achieved
by an ordinary matter-antimatter reaction. Yet," Data concluded,
"according to this diagram, such a reaction is possible."
Picard re-created the steps of Data's argument. He didn't see
what the problem was. "However, you think the earlier diagrams
show that zero-point energy extraction and transwarp propulsion
are possible, if technologically beyond us for the moment. So why
is it a warp bomb does not fall under the same category?"
"Because." Data said, with no hint of exasperation, "zero-point
energy extraction has been known to be theoretically possible
since the first mathematical descriptions of inertial damping in
the early nineteen-nineties. Similarly, when Starfleet abandoned
its transwarp propulsion studies, it was for reasons of practicality,
reliability, and efficiency. If in the future the unlimited resources
of zero-point energy ever become available, transwarp propulsion
indeed might be feasible. But the warp bomb is as much a
scientific impossibility as igniting Earth's atmosphere with an
atomic bomb."
"Which raises the question," Picard concluded, "of why this
particular diagram is included on the object."
"Since the warp-bomb diagram differs from the others and
seems out of place in the sequence, it is possible that it was added
much later. by someone other than the original manufacturers of
the object."
"To what end?" Picard asked, frowning.
"Though I feel I have some expertise in the analysis of technical
information, when it comes to understanding the motivation of

319



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
sentient beings, I must defer to those who have had firsthand
experience." Data looked at La Forge.
"Mr. La Forge?" Picard said encouragingly.
La Forge in turn looked at Wesley Crusher. "Well, actually,
Captain, Wesley is the one who came up with the idea."
Picard tugged on his tunic. "Very well. Mr. Crusher?"
Wesley looked uncomfortable in a gawky, adolescent way.
"Well, sir, I've been spending a lot of time getting ready for the
Academy, and... I think it might be a test."
"The object?" Picard said. "A test?" He stared at the object,
trying to see it in this new light.
"Some of the entrance exams I've had to take were complete-
ly visual," Wesley explained in a hurry. "You know, pattern
matching, spatial orientation, identifying mathematical func-
tions... Maybe that's what this is. Sort of."
"And the purpose of it would be... ?" Picard prompted.
Wesley looked embarrassed, shrugged, and said nothing more.
"Wesley thinks that like the old Earth space-probe instruction
plates," La Forge said quickly, covering for the young man, "these
diagrams might be the instructions for how the object operates.
And if we can figure out how it works, then maybe we could use it
to communicate with whoever built it."
Picard eyed Wesley dubiously. "So you think this might be
some sort of subspace... or shall we say, trans-space radio?"
Crusher's cheeks burned bright red and Picard was genuinely
sorry that he affected the youth that way. "More likely a computer
of some sort, sir," Wesley mumbled as he glanced down at the
shuttlebay deck. "At least, according to what Data said about it
appearing to have molecular quantum circuitry."
Picard looked at Wesley until the acting ensign glanced up and
caught his eyes. "Mr. Crusher, I consider your idea a valid theory.
To be part of the Starfleet team, you should never hesitate to
contribute or to speak your mind. Good work."
Wesley abruptly beamed, though he still looked slightly discon-
certed.
t- ' 1 ''
"But, unmrtunate y, Picard went on, "if this is a test, it seems
unlikely we are in any position to pass it." The captain rested his
hand on the object. For a moment, he suddenly recalled Wesley

32O

FEDERATION

when the young man had been unsuccessful in his first attempt at
the Academy entrance exams two years earlier. But Beverly
Crusher's son hadn't abandoned his goals then. He had simply
applied himself to study harder for the next opportunity to retake
the exams.
"The next opportunity..." Picard said to himself.
"1 beg }'our pardon, Captain?" La Forge asked.
Picard smiled. "The Romulans failed the test," he said.
Data. La Forge, and Wesley just looked at him uncomprehend-
ingly.
"Don't you see," the captain said, "this has nothing at all to do
with the Borg. I think Geordi was right." Picard missed La
Forge's reaction to his sudden use of the engineer's first name, a
sign of the captain's enthusiasm. "That Borg artifact over there
probably is just a replicated duplicate, built solely for us, so we
would believe that we stumbled upon this Preserver object on our
own."
"But whv not just give us the Preserver object?" La Forge said.
"Wh5 go to all the trouble of wrapping it up in part of a Borg
ship'?"
Picard smiled as the logic of it became clear. "Because the
Romulans correctly assessed our weakness--our need for new
knowledge. Imagine if they had tried to give us the object alone.
We would have been suspicious, mistrustful. We probably
wouldn't have allowed it on the Enterprise, fearing some trick."
The captain patted the object now. "But a piece of Borg technolo-
gy would receive a different reception. Starfleet wants something
like that so badly that we were bound to be less critical when it
was offered.
"And the whole scenario of coming to us directly--not leaving
it in a space lane where someone else might have come across
it--but bringing it directly to the attention of the Enterprise, the
first ship to have engaged the Borg, how could we resist? And
approaching us through the Ferengi--pure genius. We were so
busy trying to avoid being cheated by DaiMon Pol that we didn't
bother to examine what he was saying very carefully."
"But, Captain," La Forge pointed out. "All those
Ferengi... they were killed, sir."

321

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
Picard frowned. He was aware of the specter of death surround-
ing this object. "Dead men tell no tales, Mr. La Forge. Whoever
was behind this plan wanted no witnesses."
"And what about Traklamek?" La Forge continued. "I can
understand the Romulans deciding to sacrifice Ferengi, but not
their own people."
Picard nodded in agreement. "Traklamek's fate might very well
have been a miscalculation on the Romulans' part. In hindsight,
Commander Taft did seem too eager to return home to the
Empire. It's possible that it was intended from the beginning that
she would be 'recaptured' by Traklamek, leaving us with the Borg
artifact and feeling fortunate that we had escaped with it.
Remember, Traklamek made no mention of the artifact, nor did
he attempt to destroy our shuttlecraft when we were bringing it
aboard. However, he was not prepared for our commitment to
helping Tad escape to a new life."
"Which would mean Tarl is probably halfway home by now,"
La Forge said, "thinking we've fallen for her story hook, line, and
sinker." At that remark, Data looked at La Forge as if the android
were about to ask a question, but La Forge held up his hand and
said, "I'll explain later, Data." The engineer addressed Picard
again. "I'll admit it makes sense, but you've got to admit it's an
incredibly complex plan."
Picard agreed with La Forge's sentiment, but he said, "Think of
the incredibly high stakes, Mr. La Forge. This object could open a
window onto technology centuries, if not millennia, in advance of
our own."
"That's another problem," La Forge said. "If it's so valuable,
why give it to us?"
"So we can do what the Romulans could not," Picard answered.
"Unlock its secrets."
Data rejoined the discussion. "If that is true, Captain Picard,
then the Romulans must have devised a second part to their plan,
to allow them to reclaim this object once we have determined its
function, if we are able."
Picard had already considered that. "A very good point, Mr.
Data. Would your investigation of this object have uncovered any
Romulan listening devices?"

FEDERATION

-Without question," Data said. Then he looked over at the
reconstruction grid on the shuttlebay deck. "However, there is no
telling what may be hidden in the complexities of the apparent
Borg assembly. I will require some time to scan that assembly
detail."
"In the meantime," Picard said as he studied the mound of
parts already removed from the Borg-like material, "perhaps it
would be wise to surround the entire artifact with a security field,
in order to disable any hidden sensing devices."
'Tll get on it right away, Captain," La Forge acknowledged.
"But what should we do about this?" He indicated the object.
Picard studied the inscriptions carefully. If he were to follow
the rules apparently inscribed on it, he would turn the object over
to Starfleet, where a science team would begin analysis and trial
and error. It could be decades before any results might be
forthcoming, if at all. But as his attack on Traklamek had shown,
sometimes the rules could be changed.
"Is it possible," Picard asked, "that the conduits used by the
Borg to tap the object's power might also be used to link it with a
computer?"
La Forge nodded. "That's why we were scanning for an
interface area on the surface."
"Why not try to access the object from the exposed interface
area?"
Wesley was the one who answered. "Wouldn't that be
like... cheating, sir?"
Picard shook his head. "In this case, we're making up the rules
as we go along, Mr. Crusher. I see nothing wrong in exploiting
every opportunity which presents itself."
La Forge looked thoughtful. "I could hook up a type-three
interface connection between the ship's computer and the ob-
ject in just a few minutes, sir. It won't tell us anything imme-
diately. but at least we could start probing the object's circuit
structure."
Picard nodded. "Make it so."

A half hour later, the Borg-like artifact was encased in a
sparkling forcefield that would prevent any type of monitor from



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
recording the events on the shuttlebay deck and transmitting
them to any potential Romulan spy.
At the same time, beside the Preserver object, La Forge, Wesley,
and Data had set up a portable engineering computer-console. A
thick bundle of monofilament induction leads ran from the
console to a universal connector that was attached to the interface
area on the object's scarred section. Picard had watched his crew
set up the equipment with interest.
Finally, La Forge looked up from his tricorder and flipped the
tiny device shut. "We're getting positive signal strength from all
microscopic conduits, sir."
Data spoke from his position at the console's controls. "I have
established a program which will allow our equipment to probe
each conduit in terms of signal strength and its interrelationship
with other conduits. It will be a trial-and-error method at first, but
in time we should gain a basic understanding of the circuit logic
used within the device, which might lead to our being able to
communicate with it."
"Splendid," Picard said to his team. "Any idea how long it
might take?"
"On the order of hours to days, sir. Assuming that we are
correct in identifying the object as containing computational
ability."
Picard had been hoping for faster results, but it would take the
Enterprise more than two weeks to reach Starbase 324, so at least
there was a chance of achieving some breakthrough before then.
"Please proceed, Mr. Data."
Data ran his fingers over the console's control panel. "I am now
completing the connection."
Status lights flickered over the console's displays and on the
universal connector.
"Intriguing," Data said as he studied the readouts.
Picard stepped closer to look over the android's shoulder. He
could see that patterns were already beginning to emerge.
"Look at that," Wesley said, standing on Data's other side.
"The object is probing our equipment the way we were trying to
probe it."
"Is that right, Mr. Data?" Picard asked.

FEDERATION

"It is. sir. It appears the object is considerably more sophisti-
cated than I anticipated." He pointed to the largest display screen
on the console. where geometric shapes created by multicolored
lines swirled like mixing water currents. "The data-relay pattern
that is developing is similar to that which was created by Dr. Ira
Graves when he downloaded his intellect into the ship's com-
puter."
Picard reacted with alarm. "Is the object attempting to down-
load information?"
Data angled his head, eyes fixed on the displays. "It is unlikely
that--"
Riker's voice came from Picard's communicator. "Bridge to
Picard." He sounded troubled.
Picard tapped the Starfleet delta on his chest. "Go ahead,
Number One."
"Sir. the Enterprise has just changed course."
"Under whose authority?" Picard asked.
"That's just it, sir. No orders have been received or given. We
simply... changed course and the helm no longer responds."
Picard looked at the universal connector attached to the
Preserver object. He had been in space long enough to guess what
had just happened. "Disconnect the interface at once," Picard
ordered. Perhaps the object wasn't to blame, but the interface
could always be reestablished later.
Data quickly entered commands on the control surfaces.
Picard heard the Enterprise's engines begin to whine.
"Sir," Data said, "the interface no longer appears to recognize
our abort commands."
"Captain Picard," Riker announced. "We're at warp eight and
continuing to accelerate."
"Mr. ka Forge!" Picard called out as he pointed at the universal
connector.
But Wesley was closer and immediately saw what the captain
meant. He grabbed the monofilament fibers attached to the
connector.
"Wesley, no!" La Forge warned.
Too late. The instant Wesley yanked on the fibers, sparks
erupted from the connector, traveling along the fibers to flare

325



around the youth s hands. He cried out as he was flung back to ~
land heavily on the deck. The connector, now free, clattered on

the deckplates.
La Forge and Data rushed to Wesley's unconscious form.
Picard hit his communicator. "Number One--what's our sta-
tus?"
Sparks continued to flutter over the surface of the connector,
along the monofilaments, and onto the console itself. None of the
controls could be touched now. The engines continued to increase
their pitch.
"We've just hit warp nine?' Riker answered tensely. "All bridge
controls are locked."
Picard glared at the Preserver object. "Willmlisten carefully.
Our computer has been invaded by an override program. You
must shut down all computer functions. We will have to reset
the--"
Picard's communicator squealed. He tapped it again. "Picard
to bridge?" But the connection had been severed. It made perfect
sense. All communications on the ship were controlled by the
computer.
A few meters distant, Wesley moaned as La Forge and Data
succeeded in helping him to his feet. Picard moved swiftly to an
equipment locker and pulled out a phaser. As he jogged back to
the console, he set the weapon to level nine to vaporize the
interface console and keyed in his security override command to
permit that level of power discharge on board. But as he raised the
phaser to take aim, all lights in the shuttlebay went out at once.
Picard held his finger over the phaser trigger button, loath to
fire when he could not see Data, La Forge, and Wesley. It took a
moment for his vision to adjust to the emergency storage lights
that came on-line. They were independent of the computer
system, but would only provide a few hours of low-level illumina-
tion.
"Stand back?' Picard warned his crew. Then he fired at the
portable computer console. It took only a few seconds for the
console to dissolve beneath the phaser's fury.
But the scream of the Enterprise's engines still rose.
La Forge ran to the captain's side, shouting to be heard above

326

the din. "Sir, if something has taken over the computers and can
control all the ship's systems, we have to get out of the shuttlebay
?lOW/"
Picard was about to ask his chief engineer why. But then he
became aware of the characteristic sputter of a forcefield being
shut off and he looked in horror at the hangar-bay opening. For an
instant. time stopped for Picard as he realized what had hap-
pened.
The atmospheric containment field had been shut down.
The wind began to howl as the bay began to explosively
decompress.
Picard felt himself yanked forward, feet sliding across the deck,
as the wind propelled him inexorably to the vacuum of space.
And oblivion.

327



SEVEN

U.S.S. E ITERPRISE NCC-1701
APPROACHING TNC 65813
Stardate 3855.5
Earth Standard: Nevember 2267

The first phaser volley struck Kirk's Enterprise ten minutes before
she had reached her destination. Mr. Scott had managed to coax a
few extra decimal places of warp propulsion out of the engines,
but it was not quite enough to avoid interception. Still, Cochrane
saw that Kirk was pleased that his ship would now only be
vulnerable for ten minutes, and not forty-five. But as far as
Cochrane could tell, a starship could be destroyed in seconds, so
the difference between ten and forty-five minutes seemed incon-
sequential.
Cochrane and the Companion were back on the bridge when
the attack began. Spock had prepared a station for them, two
chairs close together by unused environmental controls. They had
managed to clean up and eat in the interim. They had toured the
Enterprise's vast engine room. Some of the basic components
Cochrane felt he could understand, but most had been a mystery
to him. Mr. Scott had been quite kind in attempting to explain
key systems, but Cochrane had realized the pressure the engineer
had been under and had left as soon as possible.
He and the Companion had even found a few moments to
themselves, and Cochrane had immediately apologized to her.

328

FEDERATION

They were to have had years together, full of peace, uneventful,
and yet, after only six months, this had happened.
But for the Companion, she regretted nothing. "When we
became as we are," she had told him, "we knew each hour with
you was numbered, each moment spent was a moment less in the
iime we would have. But we have had those six months, and we
will have years more to come before we are no more."
Cochrane had held her then, admiring her strength. For one
who had come so late to understanding humanity and the brevity
of human lives, she had courage enough for them both.
But Cochrane had heard the hidden tension in Kirk's words
thesc past five hours. He had seen the intent expressions on the
faces of Kirk's crew. He had realized that it wasn't just Kirk and
McCoy who were the best in their roles on board this ship--each
inctuber of the crew he observed excelled in the same way.
Whether that meant Starfleet had discovered staffing methods
unknown in Cochrane's time, or whether in the face of interplane-
tary exploration humans had actually begun to change in the past
century and half, Cochrane couldn't be sure. But despite the
talent on board the Enterprise, despite her near-miraculous
technical capabilities, Cochrane knew that the captain felt their
situation was precarious.
Yet if the Companion was not capable of detecting that tension
in others, Cochrane did not feel it was his place to take her hope
from her. Let her dream of a peaceful future with him. He owed
her that much, not because of duty, but because of the love he felt
for her.
Cochrane wanted to protect her as she had protected him. But
as the bridge trembled beneath the pursuing cruiser's first phaser
hit, all he could do was hold her hand. At least her smile told him
it was enough. For now.
"Damage report," Kirk said. He sat in his chair as a king
would occupy his throne. All power emanated from that one
position.

"They're still too far away to inflict damage," the Russian, Mr.
Chekov. reported. "No damage to ship or shields."
"Time to the black hole?" Kirk asked.
"Nine minutes," Mr. Sulu replied.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Status of second cruiser?"
"Thirty minutes away."
The second cruiser had intercepted the decoy shuttle, destroyed
it, then doubled back to join the pursuit of the Enterprise.
Thus far, there was no way to know which of the two cruisers
carried Thorsen, or even if Thorsen had survived the attack on
the third.
The bridge shuddered again. "Minimal damage," Chekov
reported without being asked. "Shields stabilizing."
"Transfer all power to aft shields," Kirk said. "Those hits are
going to get worse."
"Photon torpedoes launched from pursuing wessels!"
"All hands stand braced for impact," Kirk broadcast through-
out the ship. "Ready on phasers, Chekov."
But Chekov did nothing. He spoke with a question in his voice.
"Torpedoes passing us, Keptin."
"Damn," Kirk said. "Full power forward shields!"
Instantly the viewscreen flared with orange energy as the
Enterprise bucked. A moment later, sirens sounded as she shook
again.
Chekov called out above the cacophony. "No damage from
impact with photon torpedoes! But direct phaser hit on port
nacelle and hangar-deck doors."
Spock also raised his voice to be heard through the inundation
of noise. "Shields at sixty percent."
Cochrane realized what had happened. As soon as Kirk had
reduced the strength of his forward shields, the pursuing cruiser
had launched torpedoes on a trajectory that would carry them in
front of the Enterprise to detonate where her shields were
weakest. Then, when Kirk had recognized that strategy, when he
had strengthened the forward shields, the cruiser had taken
advantage of the starship's exposed aft by firing again.
As damage reports filtered in through the bridge speakers, Kirk
said, "At least we know Thorsen isn't on that ship."
Cochrane agreed. The attack had been too well thought out.
Whatever else Thorsen had become in the past century and a half,
Cochrane doubted he was capable of that kind of sophisticated
strategy.

FEDERATION

-'Arm plnoton torpedoes," Kirk ordered. "Let's be ready when
ttney try that again."
"Cruiser has launched again," Chekov said.
"As soon as they pass us, drop from warp and launch our
torpedoes at the aft of the cruiser," Kirk said. '-Torpedoes passing... now/" Chekov said.
Ttne Enterprise shuddered as she dropped to sublight and the
sounds of her torpedo launching tubes echoed. On the screen,
Cochrane saw the pursuing cruiser pass in a blur, and even as he
braced lbr impact, he tried to analyze the computer imaging that
enabled him to see an object moving faster than light.
But no impact came. Instead, a double set of silent explosions
pulsed from the screen.
Chckov raised his fist in victory. "Got them! Fore and aft, sir!
They ran into their own torpedoes just as ours hit. Reading heavy
damage."
Kirk remained calm. "Go to maximum warp, Mr. Sulu."
"Cruiser is coming about, sir."
"Maintain course. Chekov, ready on phasers."
Then impact finally came as the Enterprise swept past the
damaged cruiser and both ships exchanged torrents of phaser fire.
Cochrane saw an eruption of plasma on the cruiser's starboard
flank. and then it was gone from the viewscreen.
Spock reported. "We took no significant damage from that
barrage, but our shields are now at forty-three percent."
"Status of the damaged cruiser?" Kirk said.
"Still in pursuit," Sulu answered. "But only at warp five."
~'Time to destination?"
"Seven minutes, fifteen seconds."
Cochrane watched as Kirk stretched, and was amazed at the
captain's ability to remain so focused on the moment. Cochrane
knew tinat with the differences in their speeds, the Enterprise
~ould make it to the singularity before the cruiser could attack
again. But even though that next attack was minutes away, Kirk
behaved as if his work was finished. Cochrane decided that was
the only way a starship captain could approach his work. If he
really stopped to think about the power he controlled and the
danger he faced on an ongoing basis, he'd be paralyzed.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Kirk slipped out of his chair and headed for Spock's science
station. "Uhura, status on Starfieet's response?"
"The Excalibur and Lexington are en route, priority one. ETA:
Excalibur, fourteen hours; Lexington, twenty-two hours."
"What do you think, Mr. Spock? Can we elude both of
Thorsen's cruisers for fourteen hours?"
Spock remained seated at his station as the captain ap-
proached. "We need only elude them for thirteen hours, twenty-
two minutes," he said.
Kirk smiled. "That makes me feel so much better." Then he
became serious again. "What are our chances, really?"
Spock considered his answer for a few moments. "For the
entire period, virtually nonexistent."
Kirk didn't seem fazed by his science officer's pronouncement,
though, as if he had already come to the same conclusion. "How
long can we last?"
"Two, perhaps three hours," Spock said. "If we manage to
destroy or cripple one of the cruisers, we might be able to survive
an additional four hours. However, sublight maneuvers close to
the singularity's event horizon will exert a sizable strain on our
structural integrity field. Even if we avoid additional weapons
damage, we will be forced to leave the vicinity of the singularity at
that time."
Kirk rubbed his eyes, the first indication Cochrane had seen of
the exhaustion he must feel. He also rubbed at a spot on his back,
wincing as he did so.
"I am open to suggestions, Mr. Spock."
But Cochrane spoke first. He needed to understand exactly
what kind of danger he was exposing these people to. "What's a
structural integrity field?" was his first question.
"An internal forcefield system that augments the mechanical
strength of the Enterprise's spaceframe," Spock answered. "The
stresses involved in moving from sublight to warp velocities, in
changing course at high-impulse speeds, typically are in excess of
what the ship's physical components can withstand. While we are
close to the singularity's event horizon, we will need considerable
power from both our artificial gravity generators and the structur-
332

FEDERATION

al integrity field in order to overcome the intense, gravitational
tidal forces we will experience."
"Is this giving you any ideas, Mr. Cochrane?" Kirk asked.
-Couldn't we last longer if we didn't move as close to the
horizon? The gravitational stresses would be less."
"True," Spock said. "But as gravitational stresses decrease, so
does the distortion effect on the cruisers' sensors."
Cochrane understood. "Like a submarine," he said. "The
closer to the event horizon we are, the harder we are to detect, but
the more pressure we're under." "Very apt," Spock agreed.
"And if we hit bottom," Kirk said, "we get smeared across the
event horizon of a black hole with two hundred times the mass of
the sun collapsed into..." Kirk looked at Spock. "What's the
estimated size of the singularity at the heart of TNC 658137"
"No more than a meter," Spock said.
Cochrane shook his head. "In my time, we had no way of
knowing what was inside a singularity. It was the point at which
our understanding of physics completely broke down."
"In our time as well, Mr. Cochrane," Spock said. "There are
many valid theories worked out in considerable detail, and we
have discovered some technologies that allow singularities to be
used and manipulated as power sources. But since there is no
possible way to extract useful information from inside a singulari-
t3, no attempt to probe one, or to see inside one, has ever yielded
results. Thus, no theory can be tested."
"Destination in four minutes," Sulu announced. "TNC 65813
onscreen."
Cochrane looked at the screen and saw a luminous whirlpool of
glowing gases and dust slowly expanding as the Enterprise neared
it. At almost ninety degrees to the spiral arms of the whirlpool,
solid shafts of light shone top and bottom, slowly precessing like
sweeping searchlights. And in the center of the whirlpool, right
where the gas and dust reached maximum velocity in their long
fall into the singularity hidden at the black hole's center, where
their kinetic energy should make them glow the brightest, right at
the edge of the event horizon, there was only a black disk.

333



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Incredible," Cochrane said, overcome by the sight.
The black disk marked the point at which the gravitational
attraction of the singularity within accelerated everything to the
speed of light--including light itself. No matter, no electromag-
netic impulse, could ever have enough energy to emerge from that
point. The black hole would inevitably swallow everything which
came near, pulling it endlessly down to the inconceivably dense
singularity at its heart.
"Have any ships ever been this close to this object?" Kirk
asked.
"Automated probes only," Spock said.
"Then let's put all nonessential sensors on 'record,'" Kirk said.
"We shouldn't waste the opportunity."
Once again, Cochrane was impressed. Only minutes from a
life-and-death struggle, Kirk was concerned with science, with
exploration.
"'O brave new world,'" Cochrane said, softly enough that only
the Companion could hear him.
But Spock looked at him and nodded, as if acknowledging the
sentiment, and Cochrane decided the shape of Vulcans' ears must
be more than purely decorative.
Kirk kept his eyes on the screen, but Cochrane doubted he was
taking in the beauty of the sight. "Mr. Spock, is there anything we
can do to add to the sensor confusion we're trying to exploit? So
we can stay farther above the point of no return as Mr. Cochrane
suggested?"
"An interesting proposal," Spock said. He joined the captain in
staring at the screen, and again Cochrane was certain that it was
not to appreciate the power of nature.
"By setting photon torpedoes to explode just above the event
horizon, it might be possible to cause it to oscillate, setting up
gravitational disturbances. Using the transporter to deposit small
amounts of antimatter within the gas and dust could also create
gravitationally distorted sensor echoes indistinguishable from
the Enterprise, which should serve as effective camouflage."
Spock turned to his station. "I shall attempt to work out the
details."
Kirk nodded at Cochrane. "Good work, Mr. Cochrane."

334

FEDERATION

Cochrane appreciated the captain's sentiment. He was making
the outmoded scientist feel like part of the crew, a talent Kirk
used on all the people under his command. Cochrane knew he
had only made a wild suggestion. It was Kirk and Spock who had
applied the suggestion to the situation at hand and found
something useful in it. Still, it encouraged him to try again. Who
knew what other wonders of technology this age held?
"If you're trying to create a real disturbance," Cochrane said,
"is there any way you can rig one of your torpedoes to detonate
.just und,'r the event horizon?"
Kirk angled his head in forbearance. "The force of the explo-
sion could never emerge on this side of the horizon," Kirk
explained.
"I know," Cochrane said. He let go of the Companion's hand
and went to Spock's science station. "But a matter-antimatter
explosion a few meters underneath the horizon could make it ring
like a bell, setting up gravity shock waves all around the black
hole, like waves in a pond."
Kirk looked at Spock. His expression said he had no argument
against the suggestion.
Spock raised an eyebrow, indicating significant surprise,
Cochrane knew. He began to adjust controls on his computer
interface. "That is an admirable tactic. But there would be
relatMstic time-dilation effects to take into account, and they
xvould delay the appearance of oscillations on this side of the
horizon."
"What about detonating the torpedo at warp velocity?"
('ochrane said. "The continuum-distortion field eliminates time
dilation."
"Unfortunately," Spock said, "the torpedo's warp drive would
be destroyed at the instant of detonation, causing time dilation to
return."
Cochrane fwned. Spock was right. But then Kirk raised a
finger.
"Put the torpedo in something, Spock! A shuttlecraft!"
Spook raised both eyebrows. "Of course. If a shuttlecraft
containing the torpedo pierced the event horizon, the torpedo
Could be detonated inside the shuttlecraft's warp field. The

335



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
explosion would proceed in real time for the few nanoseconds
before the shuttlecraft was destroyed."
"Provided the warp field is still within contact of the event
horizon!" Cochrane added excitedly. Then his elation left him.
"But how do you get something the size of a shuttlecraft through
an event horizon?"
"Theoretically, that is not difficult," Spock said. "It has artifi-
cial gravity and inertial dampening systems in place, as well as a
structural integrity field. Since it can withstand the stress of
moving from sublight to warp speed, it can assuredly survive the
transition through the event horizon. In terms of overall accelera-
tion, this would be several orders of magnitude less stressful."
Spock hesitated for a moment. "Once inside the event horizon,
though, the shuttlecraft's power plant would only be able to power
the necessary systems for an hour at most."
Kirk looked pleased. "But we'll only need a few seconds, Spock.
Have the hangar-deck crew load photon torpedoes with timers
onto the remaining shuttlecraft."
"Coming up on TNC 65813," Sulu said.
Onscreen, the black disk flared and sparked with flashes of
energy as dust particles collided at relativistic speeds above it.
"Close orbit, Mr. Sulu. Five thousand kilometers to start."
"Dropping to impulse," Sulu said.
Cochrane could hear the ship's engines strain. He understood
that without the Enterprise's artificial gravity, inertial dampening
systems, and structural integrity field, the ship would already be
breaking up under the black hole's tidal forces the way the gravity
of planets like Saturn created the dust and debris of its rings by
breaking up larger bodies that passed within the Roche limit~
the critical distance any object could remain without being torn
apart.
Cochrane went back to the Companion. "Don't be frightened,"
he said.
"When we are with you, we fear nothing," she said.
"I wish the captain had someone like you to draw strength
from," Cochrane said.
The Companion watched Kirk take his chair, saw the way his

FEDERATION

hands found their way to the arm controls. "He does," she said.
cochrane wasn't sure he understood what she meant.
The screen was awash in streaks and flares of energy as the
t.~zfc~7,.ise's navigational deflectors pushed the high-speed dust
and debris orbiting the black disk out of the way.
"How much longer till those cruisers arrive?" Kirk asked.
"Cruiser one in six minutes. Cruiser two in twenty," Chekov
answered.
"Does that give us enough time to test one of the torpedoes in a
shuttlecraft?" Kirk asked Spock.
"l would recommend against it, Captain. If the technique
works. we will need each of our remaining shuttlecraft to deliver
torpedoes to the black hole. If it does not, testing will not matter."
"Very well. Have the hangar crew stand ready for launching
shuttlecraft on automatic pilot. Mr. Sulu, change orbits as soon as
we're out of line of sight of the cruisers, then scan for regions of
high sensor distortion. We've got six minutes to find a hiding
place."
The ship began to buck, just a gentle rhythm, but noticeable
nonetheless. Cochrane looked at Spock.
"That is the expected operation of the inertial dampeners,"
Spock said in response to Cochrane's unasked question.
"What would happen if it wasn't the expected operation?"
Cochrane asked.
"At this distance from the singularity," Spock replied calmly,
"we would be little more than thin layers of organic paste,
smeared on opposite sides of the Enterprise's ruptured hulls."
"She's quite a ship, isn't she, Mr. Spock?"
"Indeed she is," Spock said; then he turned his attention back
to his computer.
On the screen. Cochrane had difficulty orienting himself. There
~ere only flashes against utter blackness, but no indication of the
curve or size of the object they orbited.
"Out of line of sight," Sulu announced. "Changing orbital
planes. Picking up sensor distortion nodes directly ahead."
"Very good. Mr. Sulu," Kirk said. "Let's try to sneak into one."
As Cochrane watched, the orientation of the screen image

337



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

changed so that he saw a large black ellipse at the bottom, against
glowing auroras of scintillating gas and dust. Directly ahead, a
twisting knot of glowing yellow light, dropping streamers of red,
slowly grew larger. Cochrane decided it was the sensor distortion
node, rendered into something the human eye could make sense
of by the Enterprise's computers. He could believe a starship
could hide in one. Once again, Kirk had come up with a worthy
strategy.
But he wasn't the only one.
As the image grew larger on the screen, collision alarms
sounded and a dot of orange light flew out from the node.
Cochrane just had time to see the flash of blue phaser fire erupt
from the closing light, and then the universe exploded around
him.

338

EIGHT

/,/.S.S. iTIPIII$NCC-1701
CLOSE ORBIT TNC 65813
Stardate 3855.9
Earth Standard: November 2267

The instant the Orion ship hurtled out of the distortion node,
Kirk realized his mistake.
Because there'd been no sign that the high-speed transport had
been pursuing the Enterprise, Kirk had assumed he'd crippled it
in his attack on the Klingon cruiser it had docked with. But
obviously, Thorsen, or whoever was now commanding the attack-
ing force, had anticipated the Enterprise's destination and had
sent the Orion ship on ahead in a circuitous route.
The strategy was obvious, but Kirk's recognition of it was too
late.
Thc screen flared white as the collision alarms sounded and for
a moment Kirk feared the Enterprise had been rammed. She
could withstand considerable mechanical stress under normal
operating conditions, but her structural integrity systems were
already strained to the limit by being so close to the singularity.
But the Enterprise held. Kirk gripped the arms of his chair as
the bridge twisted beneath him. He smelled smoke and fire and
the chemical spray of the fire-suppressor systems. But the Enter-
prise held.
"Track it, Chekov!" he called out over the alarms.

339



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Coming back at us!"
"Photon torpedoes--two, four, six! Make him break off."
Kirk clenched his teeth as he waited. He heard only two
torpedoes fire and knew there must be damage in fire control.
"Hit, sir!"
"Onscreen!"
The viewscreen jumped to a port-side angle. Kirk saw the
Orion transport engulfed in a nimbus of glowing plasma, stream-
ing off to the dark curve of the event horizon below.
"It's venting antimatter, Keptin. We must have hit its engineer-
ing section."
Kirk was surprised. Where were the transport's shields? Unless
its configuration required too much energy to be transferred to its
own structural integrity field...
"Power failing, Keptin. It's--"
Chekov stopped as the orange glow of the Orion ship winked
out, leaving only the angular silhouette of its hull. An instant
later, that silhouette stretched out like taffy, one point shooting
downward toward the event horizon, the other arcing away until
the strand of distant metal broke apart into glittering fragments,
all at different trajectories, but all falling.
Kirk took a deep breath. What happened to the transport was
exactly what would happen to the Enterprise if her power failed.
He wondered if Thorsen had been on board.
Kirk called for a damage report. At the same time he heard
Spock call for a medical team to the bridge. As the damage reports
came in, Kirk turned to see Cochrane cradled in the Companion's
arms. The sleeve of his technician's jumpsuit was charred.
Transtator current feedback from the environmental controls,
Kirk guessed. But Cochrane was obviously alert. His hand could
be healed.
Whether the Enterprise could be was a different matter.
Only two photon-torpedo launch tubes remained functional,
and the forward phaser banks had been completely shut down.
The Orion transport had aimed its weapons well, and left the
Enterprise almost defenseless.
But at least Kirk knew the distortion nodes did manage to fool
sensors. They still had a chance.

340

FEDERATION

Then Scott called the bridge.
,.Captain--we've lost another crystal, sir. We canna keep up
with the power demands for more than another hour."
That wasn't what Kirk wanted to hear. "Scotty, we have to hold
out for thirwen hours."
"Captain. when the last crystals go, our matter-antimatter
reactor shuts down and there's nothing t' be done about it. We'll
be on batteries only, and under these conditions, they'll only hold
us together for a few minutes at best, without the chance to go to
warp."
"Any good news, Scotty?"
"Ave. When the structural integrity fails, we'll be flattened so
fast we won't even know it."
"Do what you can." Kirk went to break the connection, but
Scott kept talking.
"Just so ye know, Captain. I'm fresh out of miracles down here.
The Enwrprise is a fine ship but she was never meant for this kind
of strain. If ye want her t' hold together for another thirteen
hours, then you'll have t' get her well past that bloody singularity's
Roche limit. And if we stick to impulse--which I recommend--
that means we'll have to break orbit a good thirty minutes before
the last crystals fail to be sure we have enough power to get there.
You understand what I'm saying, Captain?"
"The Enterprise leaves orbit in the next thirty minutes, or she
doesn't leave at all."
"Just so ye know, Captain. I'm sorry."
"So am I, Scotty. Do what you can. I'll get right back to you."
And then there was nothing more to say.
"Entering the distortion node," Sulu said.
"Hold her steady," Kirk ordered. He went to Spock. "You
heard Mr. Scott?"
"Yes," Spock said. "His report adjusts the odds of our survival.
Dramatically. Downward."
"Why don't you carry more dilithium?" The question came
from Cochrane. He was back in his chair at the environmental
station. looking dazed. The Companion had dressed his hand
with a first-aid kit.
Kirk shrugged. "I ask that question myself, Mr. Cochrane. And

341



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Starfleet tells me the operational life of a set of starship-grade
dilithium crystals is twenty years and that I should take better
care of them because there's not enough to go around."
"Any way to go back to an ordinary lithium converter, the way
it used to be in my day?"
Spock shook his head. "Ordinary lithium crystals cannot
operate at the efficiencies required for modern starship opera-
tion."
"So," Kirk said, facing what he thought he would never have to
face--the inevitable. "We have thirty minutes to come up with a
way to get past Thorsen's cruisers. Other than relying on a lucky
shot."
"There is no way," Spock said. "We do not have the weaponry
available to fight. We do not have the warp capability to flee. We
do not have the energy capacity to remain hidden. Therefore, we
have only one option."
Kirk knew what that option was, but he rejected it. "The
Enterprise will not surrender."
"She doesn't have to," Cochrane said. He stood up, still groggy,
steadied by the Companion at his side. "If he wasn't in that ship
that was destroyed, Thorsen wants me. So turn me over. I
volunteer."
The Companion spoke for them all. "No. You cannot."
"It's the only way," Cochrane said. "The only reason Thorsen
even came after the Enterprise is because I'm on her. I..."
Cochrane stopped as he saw Kirk and Spock look at each other.
"What is it?"
"Can he leave the ship?" Kirk asked. "In a shuttlecraft with a
torpedo aboard?"
"A suicide mission?" Cochrane asked. Was this finally how he
would end?
But Kirk said, "No. When you're close enough to Thorsen's
ship, we'd beam you back, then detonate the torpedo."
"Even if a single torpedo detonation were enough to overload
the structural integrity field of ThorseWs ship, that would still
leave the second cruiser," Spock said.
"It would double our chances," Kirk said.
"Twice zero is still zero," Spock replied.

342

FEDERATION

,'Captain," the Companion suddenly said. "If the man were not
here. would you be safe?"
Kirk looked at the Companion intently. She had said so little
since he had rescued her from her planetoid that he had begun to
think of her only as a silent extension to Cochrane. But he
reminded himself that within her, no matter what the origin of
her alien half, there were still the mind and skills and talents of a
Federation commissioner. "There is a chance that Thorsen or his
followers would leave us alone. Slim to none, but still a chance.
Why?"
"Then let us hide, away from you, as we hid with the man so
long ago."
Kirk didn't understand. He looked at Cochrane for enlighten-
ment, but he seemed no more certain than Kirk.
An intercom hail sounded and McCoy's voice asked, "What's
the situation on the bridge? You still need medical up there?"
Cochrane held up his bandaged hand. The glittering fabric was
stained with blood.
"Affirmative," Spock said.
"Emergency?"
"No."
"All right. I'm finishing up in phaser fire control. Tell the
captain. no fatal casualties. I'll be up soon. McCoy out."
Cochrane used his good hand to hold one of the Companion's.
"There is no place where the captain can take us to hide," he said
quietl} to her.
The Companion looked troubled. Her brow creased in concen-
tration. "Part of us understands. But part of us... remembers
what it was like to flv among the stars."
Spock leaned forward. "Companion, when you were in vour
energy state, before you merged with Commissioner Hedford,
> ou were able to move at warp velocity. Can you do so now?"
But the Companion shook her head with a gentle smile. "No.
VVe have become human. We no longer fly among the stars, but we
knox~ love. It is a fair bargain."
"What are you trying to tell us?" Cochrane asked her. "Do you
know of a place to hide?"

343



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

The Companion pointed with her free hand. All eyes followed
in the direction she indicated. The viewscreen. The dark ellipse.
"There," she said. "Where light stops."
"If you go there," Kirk explained, "you can never come out.
That doesn't make it a good place to hide."
"But we can come out," the Companion insisted. "Part of us
knows that place. Part of us understands what you said to the man
about fields and torpedoes and shuttlecraft. Between our two
halves, we know it can be done." She pulled herself close to
Cochrane. "Zefram, please, in a shuttlecraft, we can go in to the
place where light stops, and we can come out again. We know this
to be true." Her face twisted, as if in pain, as if struggling with
some inner fight. "Zefram, I know this to be true."
Cochrane looked surprised. He turned to Kirk. "She hasn't said
T for months, Captain."
Kirk had neither Spock's logic nor McCoy's passion to guide
him now. His ship was in danger. Only minutes remained before
Thorsen's cruisers would arrive and the Enterprise would have to
leave the protection of the distortion node, putting herself at their
mercy. If ever there was a time to change the rules, this was it.
Kirk looked at Cochrane. Somehow, he felt he saw himself, in a
different era perhaps, fewer rules, fewer choices, but a kindred
spirit just the same. "Do you trust her, Mr. Cochrane? With your
life?"
Cochrane didn't hesitate. "With all my heart, Captain Kirk."
Kirk made his decision. He did the unthinkable.
He put the fate of the Enterprise in the hands of the Compan-
ion.

NINE

//.S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
DEEP SPACE
Stardate 43922.1
Earth Standard: May 2366

Even as the stars called out for him, Picard felt a hand with the
strength of molybdenum-cobalt alloy close on the back of his
collar. restraining him against the gale that rushed from the
shuttlebay to empty space. Debris blew all around him--cleaning
cloths, tricorders, the smaller wire and mesh segments of the
Borg-like artifact no longer contained by their security field. But
Picard was held in place and he knew why. Data.
Picard twisted to see the android behind him, unaffected by
brief exposures to vacuum, standing immovably on the deck.
Data's other hand held Wesley Crusher firmly by the collar, the
youth's face wide-eyed with fear but impressively without panic.
La Forge had wrapped his own arms around one of Data's to
grimly hold himself in place.
The wind vanished, the air completely gone, and though
artificial graxity still held them to the deck, only seconds re-
mained to Picard, La Forge, and Wesley before lack of oxygen
claimed them all.
Already Picard felt his lungs demanding that he breathe.
V~'csley's mouth gaped open, trailing tendrils of sublimated vapor.

344 345



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Picard could see him beginning to struggle like a drowning
swimmer. Starfleet trained its members to remain conscious for a
minimum of ninety seconds after explosive decompression
events, but Wesley hadn't had that training yet. Picard realized
with chagrin that for himself, it had been too long since his last
refresher course.
In the eerie total silence of the vacuum, Data started forward,
pulling his captain forward across the deck. The android still kept
hold of Wesley under one arm, legs dragging. La Forge stumbled
alongside him, still clutching Data's arm. Picard could not hear
the Enlerprise's engines or the clatter of their boots, but he felt the
vibrations of his ship through the deck and they seemed to match
the flickering of the black dots at the side of his vision.
Data stopped and Picard was dimly aware that they stood
before a door--exactly where, he couldn't tell in the dull illumi-
nation of the emergency lighting. La Forge dropped to his knees,
hands at his throat. Picard felt cold, a cooling prickling sensation
over all his skin. His eardrums ached with the pressure within
them. He tried to blink to relieve the pressure building in his eyes,
but his lids were stuck as if frozen open.
Data's hand moved to a door panel control. Picard tried to
warn him not to open itmthat he would only decompress the rest
of the corridor beyond. But no words came out. As some part of
him, the composed and thoughtful part he had shared with Sarek,
fought to deal with the knowledge that he was suffocating and had
only seconds of consciousness remaining, Picard finally came to
the realization it didn't matter what Data did. Every door on the
ship was under computer control. Whatever had taken over the
Enterprise would never allow them to be opened. They were
trapped on the shuttlebay. Picard would never draw breath again,
and as he faced his death in those final moments, his one
overwhelming regret was that he would never know the truth
about the Preserver artifact.
His legs gave way as his vision shrank through a well of
darkness. He felt as if gravity had been switched off and that he
was tumbling down without end. Then a bright light gathered him
up in a blinding luminescence. He felt surprise. Could the stories
of the moment of death be true?

346

FEDERATION

He felt himself thrust upward into the light. He welcomed it.
The adventure would continue after all.
His body spasmed. Safety carpet bristled into the side of his
face. He inhaled with one last shudder. Safety carpet? He tasted air.
Picard's vision was blurred, his eyes were still stuck open, but
as what they gazed upon became evident, he saw enough to
understand just where he was, where Data had brought him.
Inside a shuttlecraft.
The light had been the craft's interior being revealed as its door
had opened wide. That same door was now shut tight.
Picard's lungs heaved as he gasped hungrily for more air and he
heard the sounds of life again as the craft was repressurized: La
Forge and Wesley breathing deeply, Data's footsteps on the
shuttlecraft deck.
"Please do not be alarmed," Data's calm voice announced.
"We are on board the GouM and I have disabled all communica-
tion with the Enterprise's computers. We are quite safe. I will now
pass out decompression treatment kits. Please use them as you
have been instructed."
Picard resisted the incredible impulse to laugh. Data sounded
like a flight steward on the Earth-moon shuttle. La Forge did
laugh. though, presumably for the same reason. Wesley still
wheezed deeply, hoarsely.
Picard took the small first-aid kit Data handed him, opened it,
and instinctively reached for the parabolic cups that would treat
the surface of his eyes, damaged by the sudden sublimation of
their moisture. That part of his basic Starfleet training he did
remember. and within a minute he could see clearly again and
was sitting in the pilot's chair of the shuttle.
Data was beside him. La Forge sat behind them with Wesley.
The acting ensign's throat had been damaged by his understand-
able attempt to hold his breath in the vacuum. The resulting
explosion of air from his lungs would remind him what to do in
the next incident of explosive decompression better than any
Academy training program.
"Are you able to pick up anything from the Enterprise?" Picard

347



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

asked as Data scanned the sensor readouts. "Any signs that the
rest of the ship has been depressurized?"
"Shuttlebays two and three are also exposed to vacuum," Data
said. "But the rest of the ship appears to be intact. Since life-sign
sensors indicate many unconscious bodies in the immediately
adjacent pressurized areas, it would appear that whatever is
controlling the Enterprise's computers has flooded the ship with
anesthezine gas."
Picard felt relief at that. He had feared that the entire crew had
been exposed to vacuum. But the only harm that had been done
was that they would awaken with splitting headaches. "Are we able to communicate with the bridge?"
Data adjusted some controls without effect. "That does not
appear to be possible. All computer-mediated communication
capabilities are off-line."
"Can you tell where we are heading?"
"The shuttlecraft controls display our course, but without
contact with the Enterprise's main navigational library, I do not
know what our likely destination might be." Data glanced at his
captain. "However, to anticipate your next question: We are not
traveling toward the Romulan Empire."
"That was my next question," Picard said. He took a deep
breath. His lungs still ached from exposure to vacuum. "Well,
there should be environmental suits in the storage lockers on the
shuttle, so perhaps we can move along the outside of the hull to a
manual airlock and gain entrance to the bridge that way."
"Would it not be better to transport to the bridge from the
shuttlecraft?" Data suggested. "As we are traveling inside the
same warp field, we would not experience any spatial disorienta-
tion."
Picard had thought of that possibility, but had ruled it out.
"Check the corridors for security forcefields. With anesthezine
released, I think you'll find all are in active mode."
Data did so. "You are correct, Captain. It would be impossible
to beam directly to the bridge through the forcefields now in place
in the decks above us." Then Data paused. "However, since the
security force fields in question are limited to protecting specific

348

FEDERATION

doors and corridor pathways, it should be possible for me to
maneuver this shuttlecraft to a position beside the bridge, so that
we may beam directly through the hull."
La Forge leaned forward. "Data, are you sure you can keep the
shuttlecraft close enough to the Enterprise to remain in her warp
field':" he asked. "If we get too far away and slip out of it, the
doxvnwarping stress will tear this thing apart."
"I have already calculated the necessary safety margin, Geordi.
W'c shall be safe within the Enterprise's warp field. At the same
time, we will also be within her navigational and defense shields,
so there will be no impediment to the transporter." Data looked
at Picard. "Do you wish me to proceed with the appropriate flight
path, Captain?"
"At once," the captain said.

With a barely detectable thud, the Gould made hard contact
with the Enterprise's hull directly behind the observation lounge.
Picard looked out the shuttlecraft's forward canopy and saw
through the observation windows that emergency lights were
operating in the lounge. But the doors were closed, so it was
impossible to see what condition his bridge was in.
"Deploying magnetic grapple," Data warned, and two louder
thuds echoed in the shuttlecraft. "Switching off interior gravity."
At once the shuttlecraft seemed to move to a gentle slant,
matching the angle of the saucer hull she had landed on. "I believe
we are now firmly anchored, sir."
Picard adjusted the life-sign sensors to scan the bridge only
meters away on the other side of the lounge. Six unconscious
bodies were present. The apparently abnormal readings from one
of them indicated the body in question was Worf.
Picard stood up, leaning against the seatback to keep his
balance on the angled deck. "Gentlemen, this shuttlecraft will not
be safe if whatever's in control of the Enterprise decides to shake
it off'. either through violent maneuvers or with a tractor beam.
Therefore. we will all beam over to the bridge, taking with us the
shuttlecraft's emergency supplies and setting the transporter here
for automatic return, just in case. Any questions?"

349



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"What about the anesthezine gas?" Wesley asked, then
coughed.
Picard had already checked the shuttlecraft's medical locker.
Among the hypospray ampules included in it was an anesthezine
antagonist. The three of them would be safe from the gas's effects,
and the unconscious crew members could be roused.
Two minutes later, hyposprays in hand, Picard and Data
materialized on the bridge. In addition to Worf, the other crew
trapped on the bridge when the ship had been taken over were
Riker, Dr. Crusher, Ensign McKnight, Counselor Troi, and Miles
O'Brien, who was slumped over at the ops station.
Thick white anesthezine mist still floated low to the deck, but
other than that, the bridge looked relatively normal. Emergency
lighting here maintained normal illumination levels, and all
screens and displays showed standard function. At once Picard
and Data began using their hyposprays on the unconscious bridge
crew. Wesley and the emergency supplies beamed in a few
moments later, followed after another short delay by La Forge.
Only after insuring that all life-support functions continued to
operate throughout the Enterprise, and confirming that none of
the ship's controls would respond to their input, Data and La
Forge began the tedious process of disconnecting nonessential
bridge systems from the ship's computer by physically pulling out
isolinear chips from control consoles. By the time bridge environ-
mental systems were under manual control and the anesthezine
gas had been vented, Picard had briefed his bridge crew on what
he believed had happened--the suspected Preserver object had
somehow downloaded an override program into the Enterprise's
computers.
"What would be the purpose of such a program?" Worf
growled. He was barely containing his angry frustration at the fact
that none of his tactical or security controls were operational.
"Ensign McKnight," Picard said, "can you identify any likely
destinations for us on this heading?"
The young ensign was back at the conn beside Mr. O'Brien. She
called up a navigational display. Because the request did not
interfere with the Enterprise's operation, it was not affected by the

350

FEDERATION

override program. McKnight put a computer graphic of their
destination on the main screen.
"Our present heading will take us directly to this, Captain," the
ensign explained.
On the screen, Picard recognized the classic glowing gas disk
and twin ionized polar jets of a singularity.
'It's listed as the Kabreigny Object," McKnight continued.
'Also on the charts as T'Lin's New Catalog number 65813. I, uh,
can't pull up anything on it from the library computer, but if this
black hole's got a name as well as a number, it's been studied."
'What is our estimated time of arrival?"
McKnight checked her board. "We're doing warp nine point
six. sir. That'll put us there in just under six hours."
Riker approached the screen, holding the side of his head.
"Why would a three-and-a-half-billion-year-old Preserver device
want to take us to a black hole?"
Data, on the upper level of the bridge with Worf, said, "Perhaps
we should ask it, sir," Data said.
Riker looked at him, bewildered, one eye fluttering with the
pain of what Picard recognized as an anesthezine hangover. "I
beg your pardon?" Riker said.
"As I noted in the shuttlebay, the Preserver object appears to
have downloaded not just a program, but a personality matrix.
Since the Enterprise has been taken over in a precise and logical
manner. without pushing her systems beyond their limits, I
believe it is likely that the personality matrix will share enough
common thought patterns that we might be able to converse with
it in a meaningful way."
Dr. Crusher sat on the bench beside Counselor Troi to the
captain's left. "You mean, you could just talk to it as if it were the
ship's computer'?" she asked.
'It is a possibility," Data said noncommittally.
Picard glanced up from his position in the center chair.
"Computer: What is our heading?"
In its familiar feminine voice, the computer answered, "Food
replication services are temporarily suspended. Please rekey
selection.,,

351



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

From his position in the center of the bridge, Riker spoke.
"Computer: Identify command override authorization prevent-
ing bridge crew from controlling the Enterprise."
"Rook to king's level four," the computer replied. "Touch-
down."
Without a hint of embarrassment, Data commented, "It would
appear the computer's verbal interface functions have not yet
been fully integrated by the personality matrix."
Riker smiled ruefully. "Any other suggestions?"
"It might be possible for me to interface directly with the
computer, processor to processor," Data said.
"No way," La Forge protested. He was on his back, head
jammed into a service opening beneath the first science station.
Wesley worked with him, keying in commands on the input panel.
But La Forge sat up as he continued his objection to Data's plan.
"If the personality matrix or override program or whatever it is
could take over the ship's computer, it could easily do the same to
you, Data."
"It is possible to make the connection one-way, Geordi. In
effect, write-protecting my memory so that no new program can
be input."
Picard didn't like the idea of risking Data's life, or his opera-
tional status, but neither was he prepared to sit back while his
ship operated under something else's control. "What would you
hope to accomplish from a one-way connection?" he asked the
android.
"At the very least," Data replied, "I might be able to identify
the source of the personality matrix. Romulan programming
techniques are quite recognizable."
Troi looked surprised. "Data, do you still think this all could be
part of some Romulan deception?"
"That does not seem unlikely, Counselor. A three-and-a-half-
billion-year-old Preserver object would have few motives for
taking over a starship," Data replied.
"But what motive would the Romulans have?" Dr. Crusher
asked.
"That is what I would hope to find out," Data answered.

352

FEDERATION

"Likely it is connected to the singularity we are approaching. But
ho~, I do not know."
Picard gave permission for Data to attempt the linkup with
whatever controlled the ship's computer, provided the android
could convince La Forge that the interface would indeed be
one-way. Life-sign indicators continued to show that the rest of
the crew was incapacitated throughout the ship, and that all doors
were locked and security forcefields in operation. However, the
t:)lw~7~ri~c maintained her speed at warp nine point six, a strain,
but within her operational limits, at least for the length of time it
would take to arrive at the black hole. For the moment, it was only
frustration that drove Picard, not danger. But all that might
change soon.
Eventually. La Forge was convinced that Data had taken
sufficient safeguards to protect his own memory pathways. The
android sat at a science station on the upper level, ringed by La
Forge. Picard, and Riker. Troi, Worf, Dr. Crusher, and her son
remained off to the side. McKnight and O'Brien held their
stations at their command consoles, in case control of the ship
should return unexpectedly.
Outwardly, there was no change in Data. During normal
operations, he had the capability to communicate directly with
the ship's computer through short-range radio. He would do so
now. though the communications loop would consist of Data's
transmitting to the computer by internal radio, then watching for
any response through visual images displayed on the main
science-station screen. With no physical or radio connection
between them, the risk of Data's being exposed to the personality
matrix was zero.
La Forge adjusted the science-station display to show a visual
representation of a specific area of memory within one of the
E~cr/~ri.se's three main computer cores. For now, the image was a
rapidly shifting random flurry of light and dark pixels, each
corresponding to a specific memory location in a communica-
Uons processing node. Data would transmit to that section and
see what response, if any, was forthcoming. If there was no
response. he was prepared to isolate warp-drive operations from

353



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

the rest of the computer, then transmit a shutdown code to the
entire system, effectively erasing the personality matrix.
"I will begin now," Data announced. He cocked his head and
his eyes seemed to focus on something past the display screen.
The screen immediately flashed to nonrandom patterns. Picard
saw dark diagonal bars roll down through alternating squares of
light and dark. Clearly a directed signal was being received by the
computer--Data's transmission.
"Curious," Data said. "The patterns being displayed are simply
my signal. There is no response from the computer, as if the
personality matrix is no longer present."
"Ensign McKnight," Picard called out. "Drop to sublight."
The sound of the engines didn't change.
"The helm will not respond," McKnight said.
"It was worth a try," Troi told the captain.
"I will attempt to make contact again," Data said.
An intricate pattern of curved lines flashed over the screen,
creating a strobelike image of white circles flashing in a spiraling
curve.
"That is interesting," Data said as he gazed at the screen.
"Something is generating a recursive feedback loop."
La Forge looked at Data with alarm, but Picard did not know
why. "Data, slow down your visual-recognition subroutines.
Don't let that feedback... Data?"
Data was frozen in position, staring at the screen, the light from
its rapid flickerings painting his yellow skin.
"No!" La Forge shouted as he placed both hands over the
display, blocking the pattern. "Pull him away!"
Riker slapped both hands on Data's shoulders to haul him back
from the screen. Picard moved in to help. But Data's right arm
came back like lightning, his elbow driving into Riker's leg. Picard
heard a wet crunch and Riker cried out in sudden pain, falling
back into Worf. At the same time, Data's left hand grabbed both
of La Forge's, crushed them together, then twisted so that the
engineer was thrown to the side.
The remaining crew members could only watch as the science-
station display screen went dark and Data turned away and slowly
got to his feet.

FEDERATION

Methodically he scanned the surrounding area, fixing his gaze
on each crew member in turn. Then he looked down at his own
hands. turning them over, flexing them, as if he had never seen
them before.
Even before Data spoke, Picard knew what had happened.
Somehow the personality matrix in the computer had generated a
visual signal which had compelled Data to adjust his settings and
allow two-way communication, permitting the matrix to down-
load itself into the android's positronic neural pathways. Data
was now under the same control as was the Enterprise. But bv
~hat kind of matrix? And for what purpose?
"Better," Data said, and there was a different quality to his
voice, deeper, slower. "Much better to have a body again.
Especially one without flesh."
Picard stepped forward, putting himself between Data and the
rest of his crew. "Identify yourself," he demanded.
Data, or the thing that had been Data, stared at Picard, then
smiled as if somehow amused.
"I do not take orders from you, Captain Picard." His hand shot
out, grabbed the captain by the collar of his tunic, then twisted so
hard that Picard couldn't breathe. "You will take orders from
me."
Picard wrapped both hands around Data's hand but couldn't
budge it. Worf leapt onto Data, but the android's free hand shot
out and with an open-palmed shove forced the Klingon back to
flip over his tactical station.
"If anyone else tries to interfere," the Data-thing stated, "the
captain will die."
Those crew members still on their feet stepped back, showing
the~ would do nothing to endanger their captain.
"A wise decision," the Data-thing said. "Most optimal."
He let go of Picard and the captain staggered back, gasping for
breath as he clutched at his throat. But he glared at the Data-thing
in controlled outrage. "Whoever you are, return Lieutenant Data
to me at once!"
The Data-thing gave Picard a thin smile. "Lieutenant Data isn't
here. Captain Picard. I am. You may call me... Thorsen."

354



TEN

#.S. $. ENTERPRISE NCC- 1701
CLOSE ORBIT TNC 65813
Stardate 3856
Earth Standard: November 2267

"I will not let you go alone," the Companion said.
Cochrane stood by the doorway of the shuttlecraft Ian Shelton.
"If you're sure this plan will work," Cochrane told her, "there's
no need for you to come. The captain can take you back to your
planetoid. You'll be safe until I return. A few days and we'll be
together again."
But the Companion would not release his hand. "Our lives are
entwined, Zefram Cochrane. I can no more leave you than I can
be what I was."
Spock stepped forward. "We are ten minutes from our point of
no return," he said. "You must leave now if the plan is to have any
chance of success."
Cochrane understood the Vulcan's understated urgency. It had
all gone perfectly up to now. The Enterprise had contacted
Thorsen when his cruiser had arrived in orbit of TNC 65813.
Thorsen had eagerly agreed to the exchange Kirk had offered,
backed up by visual images of Cochrane bound and gagged in the
custody of security. Kirk had convinced Thorsen he didn't know
what had happened to cause the explosion of the wreckage of the
Planitia. Perhaps the warp core had finally lost its shielding. But

356

FEDERATION

when the explosion had occurred, what else could Kirk do but fire
his torpedoes and run for safety? Surely, Thorsen could under-
stand.
Kirk had told Cochrane that it was a story that would never
have played out with a Klingon. But Thorsen had accepted it,
blinded by his desire to obtain what he had searched for through
the years, what he had cheated death to obtain. How could he not
believe when what he desired was so close at hand?
"What chance?" McCoy grumbled. He had been late getting to
the bridge and had come to treat Cochrane's burned hand on the
hangar deck.
Cochrane looked at him with an unworried smile. "Doctor, if
the Companion says it will work, then I believe her."
"Black holes and the laws of physics are one thing," McCoy
replied. "But that madman Thorsen is another. How do we know
he won't blast you out of creation the instant you're outside the
En[erprixe' s shields?"
"Because he's obsessed, Dr. McCoy. He has always wanted to
see me die with his own eyes. Or whatever he's been using to see
these days. To pay me back for what he thinks I did to him almost
two hundred years ago. Adrik Thorsen wants me aboard his
ship."
Kirk's voice came over the hangar-deck speakers. "How are we
doing there, Mr. Spock?"
Spock gestured to the door. "They are just boarding now,
Captain."
Cochrane realized he couldn't argue with the Companion
without continuing to endanger the Enterprise. He looked at
Spock. "When the Excalibur recovers us, we'll have to get back
home in two davs," he said. The Companion could remain apart
from her planetold no longer than that and still live.
"It shall be done," Spock promised. "Admiral Kabreigny has
said she will make it her personal responsibility."
"Will she be well enough to do that?" Cochrane asked.
"The admiral is still not convinced that our conclusions
concerning Thorsen's responsibility for compromising Starfleet's
COmputers are correct, but her health is good. Now, please, sir."

357



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Cochrane stepped onto the shuttlecraft. The Companion fol-
lowed. He turned to see Spock raise his hand and hold it palm out,
fingers split in the center. Cochrane guessed it was a twenty-third-
century wave and waved back. Then he and the Companion went
forward to the pilot and copilot seats.
"I remember this," the Companion said after a moment as she
looked around.
Cochrane smiled at her as they took their seats. He still wasn't
used to hearing her say 'T' so often. But he understood what her
increased use of the singular personal pronoun meant. Somehow,
all these months after the energy being had merged with Nancy
Hedford, the two disparate parts of her had finally reached a total
consolidation. Her voice still had its unusual harmonic, as if two
voices spoke at once. But she was clearly an individual now, part
alien, part Nancy Hedford. In a way, he supposed, what had
happened to them in the past few days had caused her to grow. To
grow up, even.
He shook his head. He didn't know how it was possible, but just
thinking about her made her even more a part of him and his
continued existence.
A voice came from the shuttlecraft's control console. "Mr.
Cochrane, this is Sulu. Are you ready for launch?" "Yes, sir," Cochrane answered.
"Very good. We're opening the hangar doors now. I'm going to
fly you out on remote control and toward Thorsen's ship."
Cochrane felt the shuttlecraft shift below him. He looked out
the front viewport and saw they were moving closer to the
immense hangar doors. The doors were parting and he wondered
how the machinery of the Enterprise managed to depressurize the
deck so quickly. He hoped he'd be back to find out.
Sulu kept talking. "I'm going to keep control until we're sure
that Thorsen has scanned you and confirmed that you're on
board. Then I'll initiate the autopilot as we've programmed it.
The ride will feel turbulent. Internal gravity will be a bit higher
than normal to help hold you together. Mr. Spock tells me that
passage through the event horizon will be like breaking the sound
barrier. The flight should smooth out considerably past that
point."

358

FEDERATION

The hangar doors disappeared to either side as the shuttlecraft
slipped between them.
'Shuttle away." Sulu said.
The small forward windows didn't give Cochrane much of a
view. He could see part of a glowing, gaseous arm, then the huge
cylinder of the EnterprHe's starboard nacelle as the shuttlecraft
eased past it.
"Thorsen's ship should now be dead ahead," Sulu said.
And it was. About a kilometer distant, framed by a distant,
rippling aurora of glowing gas, the ominous silhouette of the
Klingon battle cruiser hung before him, growing larger with each
moment.
'You're being scanned," Sulu told Cochrane. "And Thorsen is
hailing you. l'm switching you to an audio and visual signal
directly to his ship. I'll stay off the circuit until it's time to make
our move."
Cochrane glanced at the Companion. She reached her hand
across the aisle between them and took his.
"This will work, Zefram. Have no doubt, no fear."
"Never," Cochrane said. He was surprised to discover he
meant it.
Then, what had been Adrik Thorsen appeared on the
viewscreen on the shuttlecraft's control console.
"I've thought of you each night since Battersea," Thorsen said,
his voice a terrible low whisper, as if the power of speech was
eroding as quickly as the last traces of his human origins. The skin
Cochrane had last seen hanging in ragged strips from Thorsen's
face was now back in position, tiny silver scars marking where it
had split and where the Grigari nanocomponents had repaired it.
But the eye that had disappeared was now a glowing emerald orb,
completely inhuman. "We have so much to talk about. Old times.
Optimum times I still see the laser you shone at me."
"We have nothing to say to each other, Thorsen. Starfleet has
confirmed that there is nothing to the warp bomb. You're insane if
you think__"
"Silence! There is still time to remake the worlds. Old dreams
need not die. Order. Salvation. Red banners wave and black
eagles fly. There can still be a bright future for humanity."

359



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

ThorseWs breathing was disturbing. It hissed and bubbled, hint-
ing of further internal changes.
"You missed your chance, Thorsen. You're like I am--a
dinosaur. We shouldn't be in this age."
"This age shall be remade in my image," Thorsen said. "And
my first--"
The audio and visual feed ended. Sulu's voice returned on the
secure and scrambled channel. "Here you go," the navigator said.
"Make it look good and we'll see you in twenty hours--or thirty
minutes from your point of view. Smooth sailing, sir."
The shuttlecraft rocked. The forward boom of the Klingon
cruiser swung by the viewports as the Ian Shelton's orientation
suddenly veered away. Cochrane held the Companion's hand
tightly in his. He cleared his throat. Then he activated the
communications link. And just as Spock had coached him, he
screamed out in panic.
"Enterpriser Enterprise.f This is Cochrane! Thrusters have mal-
functioned! We're headed for the horizon! I can't control it!"
Seeing the flashes just above the ominous darkness of the event
horizon inspired Cochrane to make his cries sound real.
Sulu's voice returned to the console speakers, transmitted so
that Thorsen could hear him as well. "Shuttlecraft: This is
Enterprise. Stand by for tractor beam."
Just as Kirk had surmised, the next voice was Thorsen's.
"Stand back, Enterprise! Zefram Cochrane is mine!"
A blue glow came through the viewport. Cochrane had been
told to expect it. It was the radiation signature of a focused linear
graviton beam. The Klingon cruiser was using it to attempt to
drag the Ian Shelton back on course. But just as Spock had
calculated, it was almost impossible for gravitons to remain
focused this close to the event horizon. The sharply climbing
gravity gradient smeared the beam, dropping its effectiveness.
"Warning," the onboard computer announced. "Approaching
event horizon. Impact in twenty seconds."
But Cochrane saw that the blue glow of Thorsen's tractor beam
did not diminish. Instead, it intensified.
"Course altered," the computer said. "Impact in fifty seconds."

360

FEDERATION

The Companion said, "Zefram, that is wrong."
Cochrane knew it.
The blue glow grew even brighter. Spock had said that
Thorsen's tractor beam would fail.
"Course altered. Impact in three minutes."
They were being pulled away from the event horizon. Cochrane
swung the spherical tactical viewer from the side bulkhead and
peered into it. A portion of the display screen showed an aft view.
Thorsen's ship was closing on them. Spock had said the Klingon
~essel couldn't operate this close to the event horizon. That
Thorsen wouldn't risk coming after the shuttlecraft. But there he
was, close enough that his tractor beam was working. "What can we do?" the Companion asked.
Cochrane felt the onboard gravity increase. According to the
autopilot. they should be just seconds from entering the event
horizon. But they were minutes away because of Thorsen's
interference.
Cochrane reached out his hand to the controls. He had to tell
the Enterprise what was happening. They had to change the
program, recalculate the trajectory inside the event horizon.
Everything depended on the shuttlecraft describing a perfect
parabolic arc around the heart of the black hole and then coming
back to within a few meters of the event horizon in twenty-two
hours. For Cochrane and the Companion, because of relativistic
time dilation, the total flight would be no more than thirty
subjective minutes. But the trajectory had to be exactly as Spock
had calculated it, and now, because of Thorsen's interference,
there was no chance it would even be close.
A ready light glowed on the control console even as Cochrane's
hand shook against the increased gravity, trying to switch on the
communications circuit. The light showed that the shuttlecraft's
warp engines were powering up.
"No," Cochrane gasped. "The trajectory is wrong." In the
tactical viewer, the Klingon battle cruiser filled the screen.
"No!"
The ready light stopped flashing. Cochrane heard the whine of
the Ir~t Shefion's warp engines begin. He looked straight ahead

361

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
through the viewport. The blue glow of Thorsen's tractor beam
vanished. Darkness rushed at him, enormous, unstoppable, swal-
lowing everything.
"Impact," the computer said.
Zefram Cochrane and the Companion passed through to the
place where light stops.

ELEVEN

i/.S.S, VrPRISNCC-1701
CLOSE ORBIT TNC 65813
Stardate 3856
Earth Standard: = Nnvember 2267

One instant, the Ian She/ton was on the main screen, a glowing
spot of blue light barely ahead of the Klingon ship. The next
instant, it was gone.
"I could not override," Spock said.
"Where is he?" Kirk demanded.
Spock had set the shuttlecraft's trajectory personally. It was
supposed to pass through the event horizon on a parabolic curve
that would bring it around the singularity and return it to just
beneath the horizon in time to rendezvous with the Excalibur. At
that time, if the lan She/ton were limited in its movements to only
normal space-time and electromagnetic phenomena, it would
never be able to return to the other side. But the small craft
carrying Cochrane and the Companion had warp capability and
could easily move past any barrier that light could not escape.
But Thorsen's obsession had gone beyond the limits of even
~hat Kirk had counted on. When it had become apparent that the
tSucr/"'Lse's shuttlecraft was beyond rescue as Spock had planned,
Thorsen had followed it toward the event horizon.
At first. Spock had not been concerned by Thorsen's cruiser's
change of course. He said that the structure of the Klingon ship

363



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
was designed for combat, and did not have the integrity of the
Enterprise.
But Thorsen's ship had held together. His tractor beam had
deflected the Ian Shelton to a new trajectory.
For all Kirk knew, Cochrane could be on a direct descent into
the singularity itself--the point of absolute mass and pressure
where physics broke down and from which not even the technolo-
gy of the twenty-third century could rescue him. "Spock," Kirk repeated, "where is he?"
"Sensors indicate the shuttlecraft has entered the event hori-
zon, Captain. I am detecting no increased level of Hawking
radiation from the boundary layer; therefore, we may assume the
Shelton has survived the passage intact."
Kirk couldn't remain seated. "I know it survived, Spock. The
whole plan was based on the fact that it would survive. But what's
its trajectory?"
Spock finally looked up from his station. His expression was
pained, and not just in a subtle Vulcan way. "At the angle it
entered, it will spiral into the singularity within ten of our
subjective hours."
Ten hours. The Excalibur wouldn't even have arrived by then.
"How long will it seem to Cochrane and the Companion?"
"As they approach the singularity, their relativistic velocity will
approach the speed of light, and the corresponding time dilation
will, from the perspective of the outside universe, stretch out their
final seconds to infinite length."
Kirk felt as if he'd been kicked. Stars would form and die.
Whole cultures evolve and become extinct, and Cochrane and the
Companion would still be falling to their deaths. There was
nothing they could do. Nothing Kirk could do. He refused to accept it.
Spock suddenly pointed at the viewscreen. "Captain, Thorsen
is attempting to follow the shuttlecraft."
Kirk wheeled in time to see the Klingon battle cruiser flash into
the absolute darkness of the event horizon. "That's suicide. Isn't
it?" he turned to Spock. "Did he make it?"
"Scanning for Hawking radiation... scanning..." Spock

FEDERATION

looked up, making no attempt to hide his surprise. The tension of
the moment was bringing out his human half. "No radiation."
'He made it," Kirk said. The concept was sickening. The
pursued and pursuer trapped in an endless, infinite fall. But if the
Klingon ship could do it...
"Spock! You said the D7s weren't built for the stress the
Entcrprixc can take." Kirk pounded his fist on the railing separat-
ing the upper level of the bridge from its center. "If Thorsen can
do it. we canF'
Spock's expression of Vulcan calm returned to him. "Captain, I
understand your desire to save Mr. Cochrane and the Compan-
ion. But they are but two individuals, and the Enterprise has a
crew of---"
"Don't tell me about my crew!" Kirk shouted. "If Thorsen can
go in there, then he can come out with Cochrane! And what
happens if the warp bomb is possible? Are you willing to risk it
being put into that madman's hands? Can the Federation risk
that?"
Kirk's heart was pounding. He knew he was right. "Calculate an
angle of entry, Spock. Now!"
The intercom whistled. "Engineering to the bridge," Mr. Scott
said. "Captain, if we don't start out within the next two minutes,
we won't have the power t' be out of range when we lose the
crystals."
"We're not leaving, Scotty."
"Captain? We've only got another thirty minutes in our crys-
tals. Less than a second if we try to go to warp."
"That's all right, Scotty. We'll be here when the Excalibur and
Lcnk, lon arrive." Kirk went to the rail by Spock's station.
"Won't we, Mr. Spock?"
"Captain Kirk," Scott protested, "those ships are hours away.
~,Ve'11 never last that long out here."
"Understood, Mr. Scott. That's why we're going into the event
horizon."
Scott said nothing.
Kirk continued. "With time dilation, we can spend a day down
there and have only thirty subjective minutes pass."

365



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"Aye," Scott said, sounding definitely unconvinced. "She'll
hold together on the way in, but to come out again, she'll need to
go to warp, and the crystals will never take the strain." "Will they give us a second of warp, Scotty?"
"After thirty minutes on the other side of the event horizon,
we'll be lucky to get a tenth of a second."
Kirk looked to Spock. He knew a tenth of a second would be
close, but he couldn't be sure. Spock exhaled, as if making a
decision. Kirk waited to hear if the next words to come from his
science officer's mouth were to relieve him of command.
"Spock here, Mr. Scott. We will only need to move faster than
light for a distance equal to five times the ship's length, once we
return to the event horizon. Can you guarantee us warp propul-
sion for even one one-hundredth of a second?"
Scott replied as if a phaser had hit him. "Guarantee?! Mr.
Spock, no ship has ever gone through an event horizon before and
come out to tell the taleY Can you guarantee a ship this size can
even make it through?"
"We have just witnessed a D7 Klingon battle cruiser do exactly
that, Mr. Scott."
"What?!" Scott squealed. "You're saying a tin can piece o' junk
D7 can make it?"
Kirk grinned. "One hundredth of a second, Scotty. Just a small
miracle."
"Aye," Scott sighed. "And if I don't come through, we'll never
know it."
"Is that a guarantee, Scotty?" Kirk knew what he wanted to do.
He knew what he thought his ship and crew were capable of. But if
his chief engineer couldn't be convinced, Mr. Spock was right--
he couldn't throw away the lives of 430 crew members and the
rescued passengers from the Planitia, even for the sake of the
Federation, without a guarantee.
"It's as close to one as you'll get from me," Scott finally said.
"Keep a clear channel open so I can hear what foolishness you'll
be dreaming up next." "Is
Kirk gave Spock a questioning look.that good enough for
you, Mr. Spock?"
366

FEDERATION

A corner of Spock's mouth actually twitched up in a partial,
unpracticed smile.
"It would not be good enough for my father," Spock said,
"because there is little logic in the decision. But it is the right
thing to do." Spock looked past his captain. "Mr. Sulu, I am
transferring trajectory coordinates to your navigation system.
Please follow them exactly."
At the command console, Kirk saw Sulu and Chekov exchange
a glance of surprise, perhaps even of excitement. "Aye-aye, Mr.
Spock," Sulu acknowledged. "Trajectory plotted." "Are you ready, Mr. Scott?"
"As I'll ever be," the engineer replied.
Kirk returned to his chair. His course was set. "Uhura, launch a
flight recorder with a transcript of everything we've just said here,
along with complete sensor records of the flight paths of
Thorsen's D7 and the Ian Shelton. I want the recorder sent on an
intercept course to the Excalibur so they'll know what to be
looking for when they get here." He settled into position. "Mr.
Chekov, what is the position of the second Klingon cruiser?"
"It has withdrawn to a higher orbit, sir."
"Perhaps waiting to see if the other cruiser emerges," Spock
suggested.
"Flight recorder away," Uhura announced.
"Any sign that the second cruiser spotted it?"
"No, sir." Uhura answered. "There's so much interference, I
doubt anything that small could be scanned."
Kirk glanced back at Spock. Spock nodded. It was enough.
"Mr. Sulu, take us in."
Sulu's hands hovered over his controls. "Coming up on trajec-
torv entry in eighteen seconds."
Except'for the sounds of the ship herself, the bridge was silent.
No one spoke, because there was nothing more to say. At five seconds, Sulu began a countdown.
Kirk tightened his grip on the arms of his chair. He had
Changed the rules once again, and now it was time to see if the
universe was playing the same game as James T. Kirk.
"Two." Sulu said. "One..."
hnpact.

367



TWELVE

11.S.S. ENTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
APPROACHING TNC 65813
Stardate 43922.2
Earth Standard: May 2366

"Who the hell is Thorsen?" Riker asked.
The first officer was on the floor, leaning back against Worf's
inoperative tactical console, as Dr. Crusher applied a nerve
masker to his broken leg.
"You will lose your ignorance soon enough," the Data-thing
said. "Ensign McKnight: Course and speed! Report at once!"
But McKnight said nothing. Picard could see the young
woman's back stiffen in determination as she kept her eyes fixed
on her board.
The Data-thing grimaced. "Captain Picard, while part of me
retains professional admiration for the command structure your
crew follows, the rest of me will tear Ensign McKnight's head
from her body if she, or any one else on this bridge, does not
follow my orders as they would your own." Slowly, chillingly, he
made a fist. "You know this bociy has the capability to do that."
"Ensign McKnight," Picard said. "Tell Mr. Thorsen our course
and speed."
The Data-thing glowered directly at Picard, who found it
unnerving to see such emotion play over Data's usually placid

FEDERATION

features. The Thorsen personality matrix was even more turbu-
lent than Data's brother, Lore.
"And it isn't Mister Thorsen. It's Colonel Adrik Thorsen." A
sudden smile brightened the android's face as he glanced about
the bridge. The sudden changes were unsettling. "The next one to
forget that will die."
"Ensign McKnight," Picard said, not looking away from Data's
xello'a eves. "report to Colonel Thorsen."
"On course for INC 65813," the ensign said. "Velocity at warp
factor nine."
The Data-thing looked suspicious. "This ship is capable of
greater speed."
"Not without an engineering crew," La Forge said. He still
nursed his hands against his chest. Picard could see that the
engineer's fingers could move, though with obvious pain. He
could also see anger beginning to build once again in the android's
face.
"'~bu did have us traveling at the ship's top speed," Picard said
quickly, trying to defuse the situation. "But that requires constant
adjustment of the warp core, which we are unable to carry out
without a lull complement of crew members in engineering."
The Data-thing hesitated, then pushed past Picard to the
propulsion system station. Rapidly, his fingers moved over the
Ilashing control surfaces. Then he turned to La Forge. "I have
vented the anesthezine from engineering and opened a communi-
cations channel to that section. Your crew will be awake in a few
more minutes. You will then supervise them to have this vessel
operate at its maximum speed for the remainder of its journey."
La Forge looked at Picard.
"Don't look at him/" the Data-thing ordered. "/ am your
commander now!"
Picard could see that La Forge couldn't help the sneer that
briellv touched his lips. But the engineer said, "Yes, sir," and sat
down' at the station.
The Data-thing looked pleased with himself. Then, without
x~arning, he reached out and grabbed Counselor Troi by her thick
hair. twisting her around until he held her tightly against him,
back to fi'ont, with one hand crushing her neck. "I shall keep this

369



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
half-breed alive for three minutes. At the end of that time, I expect
to see every phaser on this bridge stacked up on that chair." He
grinned as he tightened his grip on Troi. "Two minutes fifty-nine
seconds, fifty-eight seconds ..."
With Wesley's assistance and before the time limit was up, all
phasers from the bridge storage lockers were on the chair. The
Data-thing discarded Troi by dropping her to the deck, then
methodically picked up the phasers and crushed them, one by
one. His concentration on the task allowed Picard to analyze their
position. He surprised himself by thinking things didn't seem as
grim as he had feared they'd be.
In terms of crew, O'Brien and McKnight were unharmed and at
their stations. Worf was on his feet again, with a minor concus-
sion Dr. Crusher wanted to treat in sickbay. Riker was pain-free,
though it would be at least a day before the first officer's broken
leg was healed, and he would not be capable of much walking for
at least the next twelve hours.
Except for a raspy throat, Wesley had recovered from the
explosive decompression in the shuttlebay, and remained close to
his mother, helping her with her medical duties. La Forge was
reduced to activating controls with only two fingers, but could still
function adequately. And the counselor, though her neck was
bruised and she appeared shaken, was otherwise unharmed.
Most important, however, was the status of the unusual person-
alitv matrix that had taken over Data the way it had taken over
the'Enterprise. Picard was sure he had heard the name of Colonel
Adrik Thorsen before. He had some recollection of the man as an
underling in Colonel Green's cadre in the period of upheaval
directly preceding Earth's third world war. How or why a
machine intelligence would take on that persona, Picard had no
idea. But where there was reason for hope was that Thorsen now
had to ask for information about the Enterprise's status. Whatev-
er kind of phenomenon Picard was facing here, the personality
matrix that had taken over the ship was no longer operating in the
ship's computer system. If Data could be overcome, then there
was a chance the Thorsen personality could be defeated.
The only difficulty would be in physically overcoming the most
powerful member of Picard's crew without causing any perma'
370


FEDERATION

nent damage that could compromise the safety of the real Data.
picard hoped that personality was still somewhere in the
android's body and could, at some time, be restored.
The last crushed phaser clattered to the deck, scattering pieces
of its casing, as the Data-thing turned to face Picard. "I'm fully
aware of the strengths and weaknesses of this body, Captain
Picard. I have access to the full range of what you call Data's
mcmory. If any of you attempt any action--absolutely anything
--that is intended to harm me, I know I can remain operational
long enough to kill several of you and seriously damage your
ship."
Picard studied the Data-thing for a moment, then deliberately
adopted a belligerent tone. It was worth taking a chance if he
could provoke the Thorsen personality into another round of
crratic emotional responses--anything to keep him off balance.
"First of all, Colonel Thorsen, I know you will not cause any
damage to the Enterprise because you need her to get to the black
hole. And second, you won't kill anyone because you need us to
operate her."
The Data-thing cupped his chin in a thoughtful pose, then
chuckled. "Jean-Luc, just as a friendly reminder: I don't need the
Wesley child to run the ship; this body I wear doesn't need the
doctor: and I certainly don't need the empath. So if I do need to
make an example of anyone, they'll be the first to die. Are there
any other threats you'd care to make?"
"Why are you doing this?" Riker asked from his position on the
floor.
"Don't question your orders," the Data-thing warned.
"You're not my commanding officer," Riker said.
The Data-thing looked at Riker in confusion. "What kind of
army is this? Do you all question your superiors?"
"This is not an 'army,'" Picard said forcefully. He was begin-
ning to wonder if it was somehow possible that the personality of
a twenty-first-century military madman had survived to the
Present. If so, it might give him a clue as to how to reason with
Thorsen. "We,re explorers, not soldiers."
"You mean you're weak," the Data-thing said contemptuously.
"You*11 never be optimal."

371



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Optimal? Do you honestly expect us to believe that you're the
Adrik Thorsen from the Third World War?" Riker asked in
disbelief. Picard was pleased that his first officer had made the
same connection to Thorsen's name as he had. Perhaps Riker also
realized that there was a chance to regain control of the ship if
anyone could get close enough to Data.
"I am more than Adrik Thorsen ever was," the Data-thing said.
"I contain the core of him, the best of him, spread out to realms
undreamed of in his day. I have transcended the Thorsen flesh
and become the one true Optimal."
"What's so optimal about having to threaten to kill people to
get them to do what you want?" Wesley asked, making no attempt
to hide his angry frustration, though it was still tempered by fear.
"I forgive you your doubts because you are not yet formed," the
android replied. "If you survive to serve me, you will learn."
"Serve you in what way?" Picard asked.
"You shall be the soldiers in my army in the war to come," the
Data-thing said emphatically, swept up in the grandeur of what-
ever perverted vision he held. "Old dreams need not die. Red
banners wave and black eagles fly. I shall remake this age in my
image. A new order among the worlds. Peace in my time.
Salvation from chaos."
"You're too late," Riker said dismissively. "The worlds of the
Federation are at peace. There is no chaos in our affairs."
"Commander Riker, you forget, I have all the knowledge of
your Data. I know the true condition of the Federation. Treaty
disputes, planets on the brink of war, inefficient resource
allocation--you're just a duplicate of Earth and her colonies
before the atomic cleansing. Your Federation is crying out for
order. Nothing has changed except the size of the battlefield."
Picard stepped closer to the android. "Colonel Thorsen, no
planet in the Federation has been on the brink of war for decades.
You're thinking of the nonaligned worlds. As for treaty disputes,
they are a given in any collection of thriving civilizations. The
wants and needs of cultures change from generation to genera-
tion. The Federation exists to accommodate those changes in the
most peaceful and equitable manner, and we do. And however inefficient our allocation of resources is, we do a better job of it

372

FEDERATION

today than we did ten years ago, and we will be doing a better job
again ten years hence." Picard could not help himself. He felt his
voice become more powerful, as if he were speaking to an
audience far greater than just Thorsen. "The Federation is not
static. which is what gives us our strength. The Optimum Move-
ment's backward, inhumane dreams of a society made perfect
Ioccause every regimented member looks alike, behaves alike, and
believes alike was recognized for the hateful abomination it was
centuries ago and rightfully abandoned.
"I don't know what you really are or how you came to be in this
time. but no matter how you threaten us, we have outgrown you
and you no longer have a place among us."
The Data-thing looked around at Picard's crew in sarcastic
amazement as they regarded their captain with pride. "A philo-
sophical debate about humanity's maturity? On a starship with
weapons enough to destroy entire planets?" The android turned
back to Picard. "Captain, this is an argument I am destined to win
for one very simple, very self-evident reason."
"Which is?" Picard demanded, taking another step closer,
preparing to make the one move he hoped the Data-thing would
not anticipate.
"This." the Data-thing said. And then his fist moved up so
quickly that Picard never saw it coming.

~How are you feeling?" Beverly Crusher asked.
Picard blinked up at her. The lower half of his face felt numb.
He touched his chin.
"Careful," the doctor said. "You've got two broken teeth so I
had to switch off a few of the nerves."
Picard realized he was flat on his back, though he could hear the
steady sounds of the bridge and knew where he was. He started to
sit up and Dr. Crusher helped him. On the main screen, he saw
the glowing gas spiral of TNC 65813, but it was no longer a
COmputer graphic--it was a real-time sensor image. "Beverly, how long--"
"Almost six hours," Crusher said. "He didn't hit you that hard,
but he decided you would not be 'conducive to the smooth
running of the mission' so he had me use a neural blocker on

373



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
you." Crusher frowned, apologetic. "I'm sorry, Jean-Luc, but if I
hadn't, he would have medicated you himself."
"You did the right thing," Picard assured her as he got to his
feet. "But why am I being allowed to awaken now?"
"We've arrived at the black hole," the doctor said softly, "and
there's another ship here."
Picard saw the Data-thing sitting in his command chair, legs
crossed, hands cupped around one knee. The other seats in the
command area were empty. Except for McKnight and O'Brien,
the remaining crew were on the upper level, looking grim, ready
to fight.
"So good of you to join us," the Data-thing said to Picard. He
indicated the seat beside him. "Join me."
"Are we about to rendezvous with your partners?" Picard
asked as he walked slowly toward the android, carefully rubbing
his jaw.
"And who would those partners be?" the Data-thing asked.
"The Romulans, of course."
The Data-thing laughed scornfully. "Captain, the Romulans
are just pawns. Commander Traklamek was even easier than you
to convince that he had found an authentic Preserver device."
"So the object in the shuttlebay isn't what it appears to be?"
The Data-thing shrugged. "Maybe it is, maybe it isn't. The
point is, it's so old and so badly damaged that it's completely
inoperative. I've been searching space for a long time, Captain,
and it's surprising the things that can be found in it. That object,
half-destroyed as it is, is just one of many unusual items I've ~
salvaged. Originally, I had planned to use it as a test. I added a ~
diagram of my own to its inscriptions, to see if anyone could build
the warp bomb for me. But once I had contacted the Romulans, ii
and learned that they had their own reasons for seeking a
Galaxy-class ship, I had only to add a power source and
some... 'appropriate circuitry' to the object to get me passage
on your ship."
"What was Traklamek expecting out of all this?"
"What else?" the Data-thing replied. "Your ship. Traklamek
thought he was dealing with a machine intelligence eager to be
374

FEDERATION

transported to the vessel from which it had been separated. So we
worked out an 'arrangement.' If Traklamek could get me aboard
the En[ct7"'ise' then I would seize control of it, send it into the
Neutral Zone to initiate certain aggressive acts, and then make
certain that he could capture it relatively intact." "And in return?"
"l told Traklamek that I knew where the rest of'me' was, and if
he would take me there, I could reunite with my own ship and be
free to go home." The Data-thing grinned nastily. "Romulans
have such childlike devotion to their home that Traklamek
believed me without question. Such a gullible people."
"So you coming aboard the Enterprise was his idea," Picard
asked. Fie still wasn't any closer to understanding what the
Thorsen personality was after.
"Of course not," the android replied in irritation. "Being here,
now, was tin' goal from the beginning. I just had to do it in a way
that would guarantee you would connect me with your comput-
ers. And if you had just 'happened' to find me floating by in space,
you would have been far too cautious to ever allow that.
"No, the Romulans were very clever to use the Borg artifact as a
Trojan horse. And to bring in the Ferengi to add further layers of
deception designed to lull you into acceptance. But it is my goal
which has been achieved."
"What about Commander TariT'
"She was Traklamek's wife. Those fools had visions of becom-
ing proconsuls or some such together. I really couldn't spare
much attention for their backward culture."
For a moment, Picard didn't know what to say. If Tarl and
Traklamek had been mates, then Picard was surprised that the
instant the Etz[erprise had destroyed Traklamek's Warbird that
Tarl hadn't attacked in revenge. He wondered if the Thorsen
entity was actually speaking the truth. Picard was certain no
Romulan mate could leave such an outrage unavenged.
"So who h meeting us around the black hole?" Picard asked,
hoping that Data's possessor would continue to shed light on his
actions and thus help Picard and his crew to outmaneuver him
~Omehow.

375



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
"That's why I called you back from the void, Captain. I'm not
expecting to find anyone around the black hole. I believe the ship
that is there is one of yours. And I want you to deal with it."
"In what way'?."
The Data-thing's eyes glittered. "It seems to be a Federation
vessel. Feel free to order it to withdraw. And if it doesn't, destroy
it."
Picard stood in front of the android. "If you want me to do
anything, get out of my chair. Anyone who sees a lieutenant
commander sitting there with the captain beside him is going to
know something's wrong."
The Data-thing shrugged and moved over to sit in Counselor
Troi's position. Picard watched the move with increased interest.
The Thorsen personality hadn't moved to the first-officer posi-
tion. If he had access to all of Data's memories, he should have
known that that was where he belonged as operations manager in
the first officer's absence. Perhaps the slipup meant that while he
had access to Data's memories, he wasn't in the habit of looking
up every detail in them. That might be another advantage to be
exploited.
Picard made himself comfortable. Just by being in this seat, he
felt the situation was halfway back to being salvageable. "Mr.
O'Brien, status update, please."
Fromhis position at the ops board, O'Brien replied, "We're
operating on ninety-percent automatic controls, sir. Engineering
is under direct control of the engineering crew. The majority of
the crew remains unconscious after exposure to anesthezine. The
ship remains closed off by locked doors, security fields, and
inoperative communications."
"None of that is your concern," the Data-thing warned. "I want
that Federation vessel gone."
Picard tried to ignore the android beside him. "Do we have
identification of the vessel in question?
"None, sir," O'Brien answered. "It appears to be an Oberth-
class starship, now orbiting one thousand kilometers above the
singularity's electromagnetic event horizon. Without access to the
computer, I can't call up any Fleet records so I have no way of
knowing which ship she is or what she's doing there."

FEDERATION

-Where are we, exactly'?" Picard asked.
'Three million kilometers away and closing on impulse."
"Mr. Worf." Picard said. "Open a hailing frequency."
1'he Klingon's response was terse. "Communications remain
inoperative. sir. Colonel Thorsen has placed lockout codes on all
key t'unctions."
i'icard looked at the Data-thing with a shrug. The Data-thing
shrugged theatrically in return, swung around a command con-
sole. and entered a series of commands.
'Subspace communications back on-line," Worf said. "Hailing
tile unidentified vessel."
1'he main viewscreen image of the plasma jets and gas disk was
~uddcnlx replaced by a transmission from a Starfleet vessel. A
young human captain sat in her command chair, brushing crisp
brown hair from her forehead. "Hello, Enterprise and Captain
t'icard." she said cheerfully. "Captain Bondar, U.S.& Garneau. I
knew this recovery operation was big, but I didn't know it was this
big. Glad to have you along."
Picard didn't recognize the woman, though she obviously knew
of him. "Greetings. Captain Bondar," he began. "What recovery
operation do you mean?"
The Data-thing spoke in a menacing whisper. "Tell her to leave
or you will destroy her."
Captain Bondar shifted position in her chair, suddenly taking
on a more tbrmal demeanor. "Excuse me, Captain Picard, but
you ~m' here as part of the recovery mission, aren't you?"
Picard could see that the Data-thing was about to speak again,
~o he replied quickly, before he could be stopped. "We have no
kno~ledge of any recovery mission."
"Last ,:hance," the Data-thing said.
"We are. however, on a classified mission," Picard continued.
"~\nd we require you to leave your position at once."
Bondar looked stern. All sense of friendly welcome was gone.
"Under x~hose authorization?"
"Admiral Hanson," Picard said, grabbing the first name to
Come to mind. "Starbase 324."
Bondar reacted with dismay. "Oh, damn, it's something to do
with the Borg, isn't it?" She motioned to someone out of the

376 377



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

viewer's range to come closer. "Captain, you're presenting me
with a real conflict. We've been on station here as a priority-one
science mission for the past three months, and we're coming up to
a critical time in the mission profile." A Bolian commander
stepped up beside Bondar, giving her a padd as she continued
speaking. "Our command authorization is such that I am going to
have to request verification of your orders from Starfleet Com-
mand. I hope you i"
"Viewscreen off," the Data-thing said. He tapped more com-
mands into his console. "Phaser banks on-line. Tactical officer
will now target the Garneau."
"Captain Picard," Worf said in consternation. "I cannot fire on
a Federation vessel."
Picard turned to the Data-thing. "Why is it so important for us
to be here and that ship not to be?"
"The Enterprise will be going into hiding soon, and the fewer
who know her last location, the better." The Data-thing looked up
over his shoulder. "Now, Klingon, destroy that ship or I will do it
myself and kill one of you as an example."
Picard clenched his fists. "Mr. Worf, fire a warning shot across
the Garneau's bow."
"Locking phasers," Worf replied.
"What pathetic weaklings this species has become without
leadership," said the Data-thing, shaking its head in disgust.
The phasers hummed.
"Low-level burst detonating one kilometer in front of the
Garneau," Worf reported. "Captain, we are receiving an urgent
hail."
Picard stared defiantly at the Data-thing. "Onscreen," he said.
"What the hell do you think you're doing, Picard?!" Bondar
was on her feet, shouting into the viewer. "You are interfering in a
classified Code One Alpha Zero rescue operation! Back off now or
we will return fire!"
Picard didn't understand Captain Bondar's use of the code.
One Alpha Zero meant a spaceship was in distress. But there were
no other ships in the area. What did she mean?
The Data-thing's voice rose sharply. "Go to battle stations at
once. That puny vessel is no match for this ship."

378

FEDERATION

"This ship has no crew," Picard snapped. "If we go into battle
relying on automatic controls only, that puny vessel could blow us
otlt o1' space."
The Garneau's captain stared out from the viewscreen in
conl'usion. "Picard? What was that about having no crew? Are
you in some kind of operational difficulty?"
Picard started to answer but the Data-thing stood up in front of
him.
"There is no difficulty," the android said. "Worfi Fire?'
Picard saw his chance. He reached out for the android's back
a n d --
The Data-thing's hand moved in a blur and closed around
Picard's right wrist. With a burning twist, Picard felt bones crack
and he cried out in shock.
"Fire!" the android shouted.
"All hands battle stations!" Bondar ordered on the viewscreen.
Then she added quickly, "Listen Enterprise, whoever's in charge,
just remember the gravitational environment you're in. No ship
can survive being crippled this close to the event horizon. One
shield fluctuation and the tidal forces will stretch you to taffy.
This is your last chance. You must withdraw?'
"F/i/re/" the Data-thing screamed, and he wrenched Picard
forward to throw him on the deck of the bridge at the same time.
Picard hit and rolled with a gasp of pain. His right hand hung
useless. He saw the Data-thing spin to face Worf, but Worf took
his hands from the tactical controls. He refused to fire.
Incoherent with rage, the Data-thing rushed to the side of the
bridge rail, leapt over it, and threw himself at Worf. The Klingon
braveIv stood his ground, got in one powerful though ineffectual
blow to the android's head, and then was smashed sideways into a
control console, which exploded in the impact. Worf slumped
senseless to the deck as Troi, Wesley, and Dr. Crusher ran to his
aid. Riker, clutching his leg on the floor, could only watch in
helpless frustration.
The Data-thing took over Worf's console, and the Enterprise's
phasers fired. Picard pushed himself up to look at the screen.
The bridge of the Garneau rocked with the hit it took. Picard
heard warning sirens sound on the science vessel. "Captain

379



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Bondar!" he called out. "The Enterprise has been hijacked! It is
no longer under Starfleet control! Withdraw at once!"
The Enterprise lurched as three photon torpedoes from the
Garneau burst across her primary hull shields. Damage warnings
sounded on his own bridge.
"This is a rescue operation, Picard! We cannot withdraw,"
Bondar shouted.
"Where is the other ship you're to rescue?!" Picard demanded
as he heard the Data-thing fire phasers again.
"Beyond the event horizon!" Bondar answered. She held on
tightly as her command chair shuddered. Picard saw sparks erupt
from a console behind her. "It's a science package Starfleet
launched ninety-nine years ago. We've got to--" The transmis-
sion washed out in a wave of static, then came back half-strength.
"Damn you, Picard! Can't you take responsibility for your own
ship?!"
Picard groaned in pain and frustration. Why wouldn't this
captain realize the danger she was in? He heard the twang of
photon torpedoes launching even as the Enterprise trembled
beneath the Garneau's phaser blasts. "Get out of there, Bondar!
Starfleet can always launch another science package!"
"You don't understand!" the captain said. "There is a passen-
ger on board it! He is crucial to the security of the Federation! He
is--"
The transmission ended without static, signifying a complete
shutdown of the Garneau's communication system. But from the
view of the gas disk that returned to the main screen, Picard could
see no indication of the science vessel's fate.
But he knew the real mission of the Thorsen personality.
Picard confronted the Data-thing. "You want that passenger,
don't you? Whoever he is, he's from a century ago; you're from
almost three centuries in the past... you're still fighting some
war that ended generations ago."
The Data-thing contemplated Picard. Its rage was no longer
evident. "Very impressive, Captain, except that the war contin-
ues. And I will triumph."
"How?" Picard asked. "By leaving the passenger inside the
event horizon? Trapped forever?"

380

FEDERATION

But the Data-thing slowly shook his head. "Oh, no, Picard, I
came to 'rescue' the passenger myself. I saw him go in there, and I
intend to bring him out. Personally." -'Why'? Who is it?"
"He is a man who dared claim that I exist because of him. So I
xvant him to see what he has made of my existence, before I
destro}' his."
"'~bu*re mad," Picard said. It was the only explanation.
"The entire universe is mad, Captain Picard. That's why it
needs me to lead it. I'm going to protect the rest of you from
yourselves." The Data-thing looked past Picard. "Mr. O'Brien--
status of the Garneau."
"No readings," O'Brien reported sullenly.
"Destroyed?" Picard asked.
"This close to the event horizon, sir, I can't be sure. Half of our
sensors are still off-line."
The Data-thing walked purposefully down the ramp to the
command area again. "That's all right," he said. "I understand
the environment beyond an electromagnetic event horizon is
quite simple. Sensors will not be taxed."
With those words, for the very first time, Picard also under-
stood whv the Thorsen personality had come for the Enterprise.
"No," Picard said. "You cannot do this."
"Correct," the Data-thing agreed as he walked past Picard and
casually reached out to snag McKnight's uniform and toss her
from her station. "I cannot. But the Enterprise can."
Picard stood helplessly by the android as he watched the new
heading entered into the navigation controls. "The Enterprise has
,just experienced a collision," he said. "Her crew is incapacitated.
Her structural integrity field has been overloaded."
The Data-thing glanced up at Picard with contempt. "I have
had subroutines monitoring Starfleet computers for decades,
Pieard. I know this ship was designed to withstand warp tunnel-
ing through electromagnetic event horizons."
"Theoretically!" Picard insisted. "Event horizon missions have
only been carried out by remote probes--never by crewed
vehicles." He looked up at the main screen. The giant, dark ellipse
of the event horizon curved across the bottom of the image, lit by

381



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS
blinding flashes wherever gas and dust and debris fell in, acceler-
ated to light-speed by the monstrous gravitational pull of the
singularity deep within it.
"Then it appears I know something you don't," the Data-thing
gloated. "Where we are going, we will not be the first."
Collision alert sirens sounded.
"But we will be the last."
Absolute darkness filled the viewscreen.
Impact.

Part Three

WHERE NO ONE
HAS GONE BEFORE



THORSEN

Adrik Thorsen ~' dream had consumed him until only that dream
remained.
What once had been human had died on Earth, centuries before,
as humanity had stood on a threshold and rejected him and his
kind, moving Jbrward.
What once had been human, restored, augmented, and en-
hanced b), the products of human technology, had brooded and
plotted alone in space, until the Grigari had offered their bargain,
the age-old trap--hfe eternal in exchange for all that made life
worthwhile.
I~'hat once had been a Grigari amalgam, the last vestiges of fiesh
augmented by blindly programmed, self-organizing machines, had
huntedJbr revenge. Only to find itself a silent witness to the events
O[ TNC 65813, stardate 3856, orbiting in the second Mingon
cruiser, watching all that played out below him.
(k;chrane had escaped that day. Revenge was denied. Incom-
plete. Non-optimal.
But knowledge burned deeply within what remained of Thorsen,
as pait~fit/ as the laser burst .forever etched within his optic
nerve--the knowledge that though Cochrane had escaped,
(bchrane, in time, would return.

385



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Thorsen vowed to be there when he did.
And then the Grigari bargain claimed its.final payment and all
that was left of the original Thorsen died.
But the evil that had spawned him lived on. Hatred, intolerance,
unrestrained greed, all those qualities which had once defined
humanity so well, proved fertile still, even in this day when they had
been vanquished in so many others.
Blindly, the Grigari machines continued their work, replacing
the necrotized fiesh in its entirety, maintaining the form and the
function,.following the most basic program that had fueled Thorsen
in his life. The desire to destroy Cochrane and all those like him
whose very humanity now mocked the travesty that pursued them.
7b fulfill Thorsen's purpose, the Grigari machines spread out, an
invisible, mechanical plague, infecting computers and starships,
scanning for any clue or event linked to Zefram Cochrane and the
time of his return.
Eventually, the time of the fabled scientist's return was calcu-
lated by Starfleet, and the Grigari machines knew. They brought
their information back to the construct that they' served, the
construct that existed now with only one program, an echo from a
distant past, a version of a personality driven by desires no longer
based in living thought or tissue.
A mathematical duplicate of Thorsen's intellect devised theplan.
A Galaxy-class starship must be found to survive the mission to
recover Cochrane, to save him, and then destroy him. A long-lost
alien object would be the bait for the trap. The Romulans, caught
up by' hatreds of their own, proved willing accomplices. Thorsen's
personality matrix would continue, jumping from one storage
device to another, as blind in its desires as were the unknowing
machines that had formed it.
As of stardate 43922.2, there was no conscious thought behind
this goal of hatefid destruction, and no humanity.
But then, in truth, there never had been.

386

ONE

TNC 65813

The turbulence ended.
Zefram Cochrane was aware only of the low whisper of the
shuttlecrafi's air circulators, the soft hum of her engines, the
warmth of the Companion's hand in his.
He looked out through the forward windows and saw darkness,
limitless, featureless, broken only by a faint blue glow to port.
"We survived?" the Companion asked.
Cochrane smiled. "Did you doubt we would?"
She returned his smile and Cochrane felt the peace of this
journey fill his heart because the Companion was with him.
"I only knew I had to be with you," she said, "whatever
happened."
Cochrane felt relief that for the first time since they had been
reunited, the Companion seemed to have finally relaxed. The
bandage over her eye, the condition of her hair, all might be part
of some avant-garde fashion on a world he had never visited. He
marveled at Kirk and Spock and McCoy for devising this plan, for
making it possible. The human race had changed so much in his
extended lifetime, become so strong. He could hear Micah Brack
telling him he should take credit for at least part of what had

387



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

happened to humanity and those who joined them in their future,
for giving them the stars. For in reaching out to explore the
heavens, all had found themselves, as if the stars were where they
were always meant to be.
Cochrane himself would never forget taking off his mask on the
plains of Centauri B II, drawing that first breath of alien air.
Unencumbered.
For the first time, Cochrane could see that Micah Brack had
been right but not in the way he had expected. All else in human
history had followed from that moment, and Cochrane could
finally admit that he had done something extraordinary--that he
had given Earth's peoples a way to achieve what they had always
searched for--freedom, growth, the unending adventure of liv-
ing. Yet all that mattered to him now was that in exchange for his
gift to humanity, the events of his existence had brought him the
gift he had searched for: the Companion, who gave to him all that
made the adventure of life worth living. Love.
For a moment, Cochrane was overcome by the path he had
taken to reach that final understanding of his life's journey, that
acceptance--from a child's dream beneath a tree on Earth to the
uncharted and complex dimension that lay within a black hole in
space, all so he could arrive at such a simple destination, such a
simple understanding.
"I love you," he said to the Companion.
Her smile was answer enough. Journey's end.
She glanced through the forward windows. He saw her eyes as
she gazed off to port.
"What causes that glow?" she asked.
"Photons above us," Cochrane said, admiring the line of her
precious face, so softly lit by the glow from the shuttlecraft's
instruments. "The ones falling toward the singularity that we'll
swing around. We see nothing ahead of us because no light can
escape the singularity from that direction. But we can see the
blue-shifted light beginning its fall."
"But not all the light is blue, Zefram."
From his position, Cochrane could not see as far to port as the
Companion could. He swung the spherical tactical monitor out
from the bulkhead and checked the aft view.

388

FEDERATION

He gasped.
Directly astern, flaring from within a rainbow-streaked halo of
gravity-smeared light, a Klingon battle cruiser raced straight for
him.
Even here, even now, there was no escape from the Optimum.

The turbulence ended.
Kirk eased his grip on the arms of his chair, a parting caress.
The Enterprise might just as well have been flying at half-impulse
through normal space.
"We have tunneled through the event horizon," Spock an-
nounced.
"Scotty," Kirk asked, "how's she doing?"
"Captain Kirk," a Scottish lilt answered back, "considering
we're in a region o' space where nothin' bigger than a molecule
should be able to exist, th' fact that we can have this conversation
at all should be answer enough for ye."
It was. The Enterprise had done it again. Her crew had done it
again.
Kirk had done it again.
"Mr. Chekov, any sign of the shuttlecraft and the Klingon
cruiser?" he asked. The main screen was black and Kirk could see
Chekov working frantically on his sensor controls, trying to
establish an image.
"There is no forward optical information available to us in this
environment," Spock said. "I am switching all sensors to
subspace ranging-echo only."
Instantly, the main viewscreen came to life with a collection of
indistinct green splotches--an irregularly shaped blob to the
lower right, and two much smaller dots to the upper left.
"Analysis, Spock?"
"In the upper left of the screen, I believe we are seeing sensor
returns indicating that both the shuttlecraft and the Klingon
vessel survived the event horizon. However, I am also recording
extreme quantum compression waves that correspond to no
known theory of gravitational singularities. Those waves are
preventing me from obtaining finer display resolution."
"Range to Klingon vessel?" Kirk asked. He sat forward in his

389



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

chair. At least he could see that the small dots were expanding.
The Enterprise was gaining.
"Keptin," Chekov said plaintively. "Sensors indicate the
Klingon vessel is more than one million kilometers away."
"Impossible. The diameter of this event horizon is only eight
hundred kilometers."
"The quantum compression waves are to blame," Spock ex-
plained. "They are distorting spatial dimensions, though not as
theory predicts."
"Then how can we set a course in here?" Kirk asked. "How can
we target that Klingon ship and save Cochrane?"
"I am attempting to create a conversion program for our
navigational routines. However, the compression waves are errat-
ic. It appears our presence here is disruptive and the computer
cannot cope with the changing spatial conditions."
Kirk hadn't come all this way to be stopped by a computer
shortcoming. "Dammit, Spock--what's the source of those
waves?"
Spock adjusted controls at his science station, and the image on
the main screen expanded to show the irregularly shaped blotch
from the lower right corner. As the green shape filled the screen, it
became better defined, until Kirk could see that part of its
distortion came from movement--it appeared to be pulsating
with three expanding and contracting lobes.
"That is the source," the science officer answered. "It is the
subspace event horizon. The boundary from which not even warp
engines could return us to normal space-time."
"But why isn't it a sphere, like the electromagnetic event
horizon we passed through above?"
"Unknown, Captain. Our sensors cannot obtain any informa-
tion from beyond that boundary. However, judging from the
pulsations, I suspect that instead of one singularity being at the
heart of this black hole, there are in fact three. They appear to be
linked into tight orbits of each other, at what would, from
necessity, be faster-than-light speeds."
Kirk turned to look at his science officer to be sure he had heard
correctly. "Three singularities? Orbiting faster than light?"

39O

FEDERATION

Spock made a dismissive expression. "I do not pretend to
understand how such a thing could exist at all."
"All right. It's there. How can we deal with it to stop the
Klingon ship?"
"I would suggest launching a photon torpedo. Its onboard
guidance system can perform necessary course corrections in
flight."
Kirk turned back to the screen. "Put the cruiser and the
shuttlecraft on the screen, Mr. Chekov."
The pulsating tri-lobed shape disappeared, replaced by two
green, rough-edged silhouettes. One was little more than a few
pixels across, showing no detail, but the other image was identifia-
ble as a D7 battle cruiser.
"Lieutenant Uhura," Kirk said, "can we use subspace radio in
here?"
Uhura frowned as she listened carefully to her earpiece. Her
expert fingers moved swiftly over her controls. "Barely, sir. There
is considerable interference."
"Try to hail the cruiser. We'll give it one warning at least."
"The ship is not responding, sir."
Kirk turned to Spock again. "Any way to know how shock
waves will travel through this region? If we do destroy the cruiser,
what might that do to our shuttlecraft?"
"Shock waves will not propagate here faster than the relative
velocity of the shuttlecraft. It will not be harmed."
Kirk took no pleasure in what he knew he must do next. It
might be better if the Klingon ship had tried to fight back. "Does
the cruiser even know we're here?" he asked.
"Each ship in this region experiences time at a different rate. It
could be that their sensors cannot even perceive us," Spock said.
"The compression waves we've disturbed are creating pockets of
temporal distortion as well as spatial ones."
Shooting at a blind enemy didn't make it any easier for Kirk,
but he knew he could delay no longer. "Mr. Chekov, target the
Klingon cruiser."
"Cruiser targeted, sir."
"Fire photon torpedo, self-guided mode."

391



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

The sound of the torpedo launcher hummed through the
bridge. Kirk watched as a tiny point of green appeared on the
screen, then seemed to spiral in the general direction of the
cruiser, making constant course corrections.
"As I suspected," Spock said, "as the torpedo passes through
different compression nodes, its sensors are perceiving the
Klingon ship in different locations at different times. This is a
most fluid environment. Quite fascinating."
The tiny green dot moved past the Klingon ship. Kirk tensed,
worried the torpedo would lock on to Ian Shelton. But the dot
doubled back, merged with the cruiser's silhouette, and then both
were gone.
"That's it?" Kirk asked.
"As soon as the torpedo disrupted the cruiser's structural
integrity field," Spock said, "tidal forces would have reduced the
ship to little more than a molecular mist."
"Then Cochrane and the Companion are safe?"
"Only if we can adjust their trajectory, and ours. For the
moment, both our vessels are being drawn down toward the
linked singularities and the second horizon."
Kirk was too fueled by adrenaline to remain seated. He paced
the area behind Chekov and Sulu. "Mr. Sulu, match trajectory
with the shuttlecraft." He glanced back at Spock. "At least we'll
be able to beam them back aboard."
But Spock shook his head. "There are too many temporal
distortions present, and we are creating even more as the com-
pression waves bounce off our shields. Our transporters would
never be able to hold a coherent signal, even at close range."
"Then we'll use tractor beams," Kirk said.
"If we are able to generate sufficient power."
Kirk heard the unspoken message in Spock's tone. "Are we
going to be able to correct our trajectories, Spock?"
"I do not believe we have that capability, Captain. We are too
deep within the gravity well."
Kirk stopped pacing. "Even if we go to warp?"
"The condition of our dilithium crystals is such that we cannot
remain in warp long enough from this position to reach the event
horizon. If we even make the attempt, our crystals will burn out

FEDERATION

within a second, our structural integrity field will collapse,
and--"
Kirk finished it: "--we'll be reduced to a molecular mist, like
the ship we just destroyed." He tapped his fist against his open
palm. brain afire with possibilities. "Can we adjust our trajectory
enough to slingshot us past the linked singularities and use the
velocity we'd gain to carry us upward to the first event horizon?"
"I am endeavoring to calculate that course," Spock said. "But
the compression waves are reducing the amount of space we have
in which to maneuver. The closer we approach the singularities,
the more problematic course corrections become."
Kirk could see he shouldn't interrupt Spock again. If there was
a course correction they could make, Spock would find it. But
only if he had time.
Kirk sat back down, forcing himself to remain calm. "Uhura,
try to raise the shuttlecraft so we can at least let Mr. Cochrane and
the Companion know what's going on."
He tapped his fingers against the arm of his chair. There had
been a way into this black hole, there would be a way out. All he
had to do was find it.
"No response from the shuttlecraft," Uhura said. "Too much
interference."
"Keep trying," Kirk said. He watched the tiny dot on the screen
slowly expanding as the Enterprise drew near. At least wherever
they were bound, they would all get there together.
Uhura suddenly murmured with surprise and Kirk turned to
see her pull out her earpiece.
"Sorry, sir. I just got a flood of interference."
"Keptin," Chekov called out. "Sensors are picking up the
presence of another wesseE It has just passed through the event
horizon above us."
Kirk's jaw tightened. "Ready photon torpedoes," he ordered.
He had been half expecting this. The second Klingon cruiser had
finally arrived. And by being in the higher orbit, it had the upper
hand. "Onscreen," he said.
The screen flickered as an aft view was displayed. Instead of a
black background, the screen was alive with flashes of color and
light. the result of the infall of photons and subspace signals from

392 393



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

above. In the middle of the visual confusion was the smeared,
irregular silhouette of the third vessel. It looked wrong.
"Can you make that any clearer?" Kirk asked.
"Trying, sir," Chekov said, but no matter what adjustments he
made, the level of interference remained the same.
The third ship was gaining, its silhouette growing larger.
"That's not a Klingon cruiser," Kirk said. The silhouette showed
a distinct saucer section and twin nacelles. "Spock, have we been
down here long enough for that to be the Excalibur?"
"It is possible," Spock said. "The temporal-distortion nodes
are interfering with normal time-dilation effects. I will attempt to
trace the vessel's trajectory to calculate its time of entry."
"Keptin, the wessel is making course corrections, matching our
trajectory."
"Uhura," Kirk said, "open hailing frequencies to that vessel.
Warn them away from our trajectory."
"Too late, Keptin. They've matched it precisely."
Uhura went to work on her board. Kirk was too impatient to
wait for Spock. "Come on, Mr. Spock--is that the Excalibur or
the Lexington?"
Spock looked up from his science viewer with an expression of
un-Vulcan-like bemusement. "Captain, it is neither. According to
my calculations, that ship is from the future."
Kirk's eyes widened. "How far in the future?"
"A century at least," Spock said. "And it is trapped in the same
fatal trajectory we are."

The turbulence ended.
For Picard, it was as if the Enterprise had moved into the eye of
some galactic hurricane. All he was aware of was the gentle
background symphony of normal bridge functions. And his
throbbing, broken wrist.
The main screen flashed with static as the sensors reset them-
selves. When the image cleared, Picard could see that most of it
was computer-enhanced, as if very little of what the sensor grid
was able to perceive would make sense to human eyes. Picard

394

FEDERATION

guessed that, for the most part, he was looking at subspace sensor
returns. But of what?
The Data-thing shouted commands to O'Brien at Ops, telling
him how to adjust sensor readings to improve the screen image.
Unfortunately, the sensor grid had not been reset since the
Romulan collision and O'Brien was unable to comply with the
settings he was ordered to make.
Finally, though, the blurred images coalesced on the screen. In
the lower right was a bizarre, three-lobed object which appeared
to pulsate. Picard guessed it was the subspace event horizon,
though could not explain the shape and movement unless the
second, lower horizon hid three singularities linked in close
orbit--which would require velocities in excess of the speed
of light. Picard remembered reading abstracts about multi-
singularities as an exotic new form of gravitationally collapsed
object, but whatever phenomenon the Enterprise was now facing,
this was no ordinary black hole.
To the upper left of the screen were two much smaller objects.
One was only a dot of light, presumably the science package the
Garneau had been on station to recover. But the second object
was clearly a starship--and the Garneau's captain had not
mentioned that. In addition, it was clear that both objects were
spiraling down toward the subspace event horizon, and not away
from it. Picard didn't know how the Garneau had been expected
to recover either.
"I compliment you on your ship," the Data-thing said. "It is
hours away from failure."
The main screen images changed their position as the Enter-
prLYe changed course.
"Captain Picard..."
Picard turned at the sound of Worf's voice, weak and shaky. He
had a bad cut across his warrior's brow, being treated by Dr.
Crusher even as he leaned over his tactical board. "The course we
are on... we are heading for the singularity..."
"Just for the time being," the Data-thing said. "First there is a
shuttlecraft we must rendezvous with. And then your mighty ship
will take us back."

395



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"We'll never make it," La Forge said urgently. He was still at his
engineering station but Picard could see science displays on his
screens. "Captain, the Kabreigny Object is a multisingularity.
The closer we get to the subspace event horizon, the more the
quantum metric of space will be compressed around us. It won't
matter how much power we have for our engines--we just won't
have enough space left to maneuver in!"
The Data-thing looked over his shoulder, about to speak. But
he didn't. Picard could guess what had happened. The Thorsen
personality had accessed Data's onboard data banks and discov-
ered that La Forge was right.
"Take us back now," Picard said. "You know we can't make it
back if you take us further in."
The Data-thing remained silent, looking as Data often had,
eyes to the side, as if engaged in some internal conversation. "I
will never surrender," the android said at last. He looked at
Picard. "I must destroy him, no matter what the cost." He turned
back to his board, rapidly entering more commands. Picard heard
the Enterprise's impulse engines increase their output.
"What are you doing?!" La Forge cried. "Captain! He's drawing
power from the SIF to give us greater speed."
For the first time since passing through the event horizon, the
great ship shuddered. Picard heard creaking from the superstruc-
ture around the bridge. The images of the two objects on the
screen were becoming larger as the Enterprise gained on them.
She shuddered again.
"I can't override him, Captain!"
"You'll destroy the ship!" Picard shouted at the Data-thing.
"What can be worth that?"
"To prove I am right," the Data-thing said.
An ominous vibration started as the engines began to whine.
Picard felt the full weight of command descend upon him. More
than a thousand crew members depended on him to get them
back to safety. But there was nothing he could do. The Thorsen
machine could not be reasoned with. It could not be swayed. It
could not be stopped.
In frustration, Picard swung his left fist against the Data-thing's
head. "Give me back my ship!"

FEDERATION

Slowly. the Data-thing rose from his position. Picard did not
back away. He would not face death cowering. This monster from
the past would have no power over him.
'q will kill you now," the Data-thing said.
'At least I'll die knowing that you've been stopped," Picard
shot back. "Swallowed forever by this black hole. Exactly where
you belong."
The Enterprise shuddered again as the Data-thing raised his
fist.
"Stop!" Beverly Crusher stepped in front of Picard, medical
tricorder in hand. Her son was beside her, carrying a first-aid kit.
"Can't you see the captain is delirious?" the doctor said to the
Data-thing.
The Data-thing paused, distracted by the interruption. "All the
more reason for him to die. He is nonoptimal."
"But you'll need him when we get out," Dr. Crusher insisted.
She responded to the android's expression of confusion. "I heard
Worf and La Forge talking. The ship has enough power to get out
of here. They were just trying to scare you."
The Data-thing's eyes flashed dangerously. He glared at La
Forge and Worf on the upper level. "Is that so?"
The Enterprise lurched. Wesley almost lost his grip on the
medical kit.
"Yes," Crusher said. She aimed the medical tricorder at Picard.
"I mean look at this. His brain functions are all scrambled by
pain. He's not responsible for--" She stopped suddenly, then
turned the tricorder on the Data-thing. "Oh, my," she said. "Do
you feel all right?"
The Data-thing drew back from her in disdain. "I am not
organic."
"Some of you is," Dr. Crusher said, adjusting the tricorder
controls. "Check your design specifications. You've got several
biological components and I'm picking up a disturbing break-
down in functions."
The Data-thing slid his eyes to the side again.
"Here, look at this," Dr. Crusher said. "Goodness, you're
facing a major system shutdown."
The Data-thing seemed to struggle to bring his eyes to bear on

396 397



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

the tricorder. "No! I am optimal! I am beyond the flesh!" He
snatched the instrument from Dr. Crusher's hand, twisted it
around, rightside up, and--
--crashed to the deck, immobile.
Wesley Crusher stood behind the space the Data-thing had just
occupied, a single finger extended. Where it had activated Data's
Off switch.
The Enterprise lurched heavily, throwing those standing to the
side.
Picard lost his breath with the sharp stab of pain from his wrist.
Recovering with difficulty, he ordered McKnight back to the
conn. "Status report!" he called out over the whine of the engines
and the creaking of the deck.
"SIF at seventy percent!" La Forge answered. "Switching power
back from impulse engines."
"Sir!" Worf added, "we are still in a direct trajectory toward the
singularity."
Crusher slapped a hypospray to Picard's wrist, startling him.
But moments after it hissed, he felt blessed relief, though his hand
hung limp and useless.
"Can you identify those vessels?" Picard asked as he moved
back to his command chair. Troi was helping Riker down the
ramp to join the captain. Wesley dragged Data's inert form to the
side of the bridge. Worf remained leaning against his tactical
console, La Forge near him at engineering.
The Enterprise bucked as if she had hit something solid.
Collision alert alarms sounded.
"SIF feedback!" La Forge shouted as the Enterprise seemed to
careen into a spiral, vibrating coarsely.
"We passed through some sort of molecular dust cloud,"
O'Brien yelled out. "Reads like vessel debris."
"Another vessel?" Picard exclaimed. "Why all this interest in
this black hole?"
Then Riker was beside him, broken leg held tight in a splint,
and Troi sat to the captain's left. Picard's bridge was fully staffed.
With engineering, this crew was the Enterprise's last hope.
"Routing power," La Forge called out as the Enterprise contin-
ued to angle, inertial dampers straining to hold the interior

398

FEDERATION

together. hull metal screaming all around them as the structural
integrity field fought the staggering tidal forces straining to tear
the ship apart.
'Sir." Worf boomed, "sensors have identified the larger ship
below us. It is a Constitution-class vessel!"
..Constitution-class?" Picard repeated. "They've been out of
service for at least fifty years."
"Captain Bondar said the scientific package was launched a
century ago," Riker said. "Maybe the starship's part of an earlier
recovery attempt."
"Is it possible we're being exposed to temporal distortions as
well as spatial ones?" Picard asked. He raised his voice. "Worf,
plot a four-dimensional point-of-origin solution to the starship's
entry point."
Computer graphics flickered over the viewscreen. Then the line
tracing back from the Constitution-class vessel began to flash.
"Sir," Worf replied in loud and obvious consternation. "Trajec-
tory calculations indicate the vessel penetrated the upper event
horizon from a point approximately eighty to one hundred years
in the past."
"Mr. Worf," Picard said, as the shaking of the ship seemed to
quiet. "Can you identify that vessel?"
"Scanning for identification codes..." the Klingon said.
'~Scanning..." Then it seemed as if the universe itself became
still as Worf spoke again, his voice filled with disbelief and awe.
"Captain Picard, the other ship is the Enterprise 1701. And
sir... her captain, James T. Kirk, is hailing us .... "



TWO

TNC 65813
t=~

At the precise instant that he felt sure all was lost, Zefram
Cochrane saw the Klingon battle cruiser ripple in a flash of golden
light, then dissolve into a sparkling band of luminescence. As
quickly as the threat had come, it had vanished. For a moment,
the shimmering remains of the cruiser reminded Cochrane of the
stars he had watched from beneath the dome at Christopher's
Landing, as if they were the common thread woven through his
life.
"Zefram, what happened?" the Companion asked.
"James T. Kirk," Cochrane said, not even considering any
other possibility.
There were giants in these days.
He felt fortunate to have lived to have seen them.

Uhura's clear voice rang out over the confusion of the bridge.
"Sir, I am picking up a Starfleet standard identification code from
the vessel."
Kirk and Spock locked eyes. A Starfleet vessel. From the future.
There was only one thing they could do.
"Uhura, cut communications!" Kirk ordered.
At the same time, Spock downgraded the resolution of the main

FEDERATION

screen. Where the image of a familiar, saucer-and-twin-nacelle-
style starship had been taking shape in greater detail the closer it
approached, only a handful of blocky pixels remained to indicate
the future ship's position.
Reluctantly, Uhura shut down the automatic hailing sequence.
She turned to the captain. "But what if they're our only way
home?" she asked.
Kirk held up his hand to tell Uhura he would answer her in a
moment. "Spock, how much longer to impact with the subspace
event horizon?" he asked.
"In subjective time, perhaps an hour. However, we will only be
able to maintain our structural field integrity for another twenty-
six minutes."
The turbolift doors opened and McCoy came onto the bridge.
"Then we still have a few minutes to decide what to do," Kirk
said to Uhura. "But if that ship is our only way home, it will be to
our home in the next century."
"The next century?" McCoy said. He looked at the screen.
"Damn. We're past the event horizon, too, aren't we?"
"And we've just made contact with a Starfleet vessel from at
least a century into the future."
McCoy raised an eyebrow. "Really? Did you communicate
with it?"
Kirk shook his head. He knew Starfleet's standing orders. Time
travel to the past was possible. The Enterprise had done it herself.
Now all Starfleet vessels had been given procedures to follow in
the event they encountered a ship from the future and those
procedures forbade communication. The reason was that the
Prime Directive worked both ways. Just as Starfleet did not want
to interfere in the normal development of other cultures, neither
did it want anyone else to interfere in the normal development of
the Federation. If information from the future were to be inad-
vertently transmitted to the past, new timelines might develop,
ones that diverged from the Federation's natural evolution. Even
a detailed sensor image of a ship from the future might transfer
advanced design knowledge to the past, so Starfleet had decreed
that all viewscreens must be set to low-resolution modes in the
event of visual contact.

400 401

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

But there was one exception to the no-contact rule: If a
present-day vessel faced certain destruction, contact was permis-
sible provided the present-day crew abandoned their own era and
went forward through time with their rescuers. Only in this way
could all knowledge of the future be kept from those still in the
past.
Kirk knew that the logic of the situation meant that it was the
ship from the future which must make first contact. The future-
clay crew were assumed to be in a position to know the historical
circumstances they were involved with. If their history showed
that a ship had been lost in the past, then the ship from the future
was authorized to make a rescue attempt.
Kirk also knew that whatever was going to happen to his ship in
the next twenty-six minutes was already ancient history to the
vessel above him. According to regulations, he had to trust to
them to act accordingly. And he would.
For a few more minutes at least.
But then, regulations be damned.

"Captain," Worf said, "the 'Enterprise' has stopped hailing us."
"Was it a live hail, or a recording?" Picard asked. He clung to
his chair as his Enterprise continued to shake all around him. But
the movements were becoming less severe.
After a moment's delay to compare the sound signatures, Worf
reported that they had received an automatic recording.
"Respond anyway, Mr. Worf."
"Our send capabilities are locked out, sir. Colonel Thorsen only
keyed open our channel to the Garneau."
"Damn," Picard said. "Can our sensors show if there is any
crew on board?" Picard asked.
"There is too much interference at this distance to be sure, sir."
Troi asked, "What makes you think there wouldn't be a crew?"
Picard sighed. "This trajectory is carrying that Enterprise to
certain destruction," he explained. "And history shows that that
ship was destroyed under Captain Kirk's command. But for the
life of me, I can't remember when. Do you, Number One?"
Riker shook his head. "It's been a long time since I read
Admiral Chekov's books," he said.

iz!

FEDERATION

La Forge announced that the SIF had been restored to full
power. The whine of the ship's impulse engines dropped back to a
steady thrum and Picard's Enterprise regained her stability.
Picard leaned forward. "Wesley, have you read the accounts of
Kirk's missions?"
"Yes, sir," the young man replied promptly. "I know that the
original Enterprise was destroyed by Captain Kirk himself,
in.. twenty-two... eighty-five. I think. But it was on a classi-
fied mission so I don't know where it happened."
"Seventy-nine, eighty years ago," Picard said, growing more
annoyed with himself. "Just within the margin of error Worf
calculated." He tapped his temple. "This is maddening. Have we
come to depend on the computer and Mr. Data for all our
historical needs?"
Troi looked even more perplexed. "I don't understand your
problem, Captain."
Picard pointed at the screen with his uninjured hand. "That is
James T. Kirk's Enterprise and it will be destroyed within
minutes. It may be within our capability to save it. Yet, we might
be observing it in the mission in which it was destroyed, so if we
do change its fate, then we are changing our past." Picard shifted
in his seat again. "Mr. La Forge, ask your engineering crew if any
of them recall the exact circumstances surrounding the destruc-
tion of Kirk's Enterprise. And see if there is any way to get even
some of the ship's library computers on-line."
La Forge began polling the crew members in engineering, still
locked behind the isolation doors that were immovable without
the lockout codes devised by the personality that had taken over
Data.
Picard instructed Ensign McKnight to bring their Enterprise
closer to Kirk's, to see if their sensors could pick up any sign of
life on board.
"Why are life signs so important?" Troi asked.
"Because there was no loss of life when Kirk's Enterprise was
destroyed. If we find there are crew members on board, then the
ship is not meant to be destroyed here, and we are free to attempt
to rescue it."
"Captain Picard," O'Brien said, "the faster we go along this

402 403



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

course, the more difficult it will be to return. The quantum
compression waves are beginning to pile up like waves breaking
against a shore. And they're starting to limit the amount of space
we have to maneuver in."
"What is our point of no return?" Picard asked.
"We'll hit it in twenty minutes, sir."
"Can't we go faster?"
"Not if we want to match trajectories. If we gain too much
velocity compared to the other Enterprise, we'll slip out of their
relativistic time frame and never get near them."
La Forge reported that no one in engineering had any informa-
tion to share, beyond confirming Wesley's recollection of the year
of the original Enterprise's destruction on a classified mission.
"I can sense nothing in these distorted conditions, but perhaps
they'll hail us," Troi suggested.
"Not if they're following Starfleet standing orders," Picard
said. "Regulations are quite clear that in these situations involv-
ing Starfleet vessels, it is the ship from the future which must
make the first contact, in accordance with recorded history. And
here we are, without any access to recorded history." He tugged at
his tunic, grimacing as he inadvertently moved his broken wrist.
"There's always another possibility," Riker suggested.
Picard looked at him expectantly.
"We all know what regulations say. But if I remember my
history correctly, Captain Kirk wasn't all that much for regula-
tions. If he's on that ship, and he knows we're here, he'll contact
us. All we have to do is wait. Regulations be damned."

404

THREE

TNC 65813

"Computer," Cochrane asked. "How long until we make contact
with the singularity?"
"Unable to calculate," the computer replied.
"Why?" Cochrane asked.
"Standard navigational functions do not permit the use of
infinite values in calculating estimated times of arrival."
The Companion looked at Cochrane with concern. "What does
it mean by 'infinite values'?"
Cochrane knew. Time would become so relativistically dilated
for them that the moment of impact with the heart of the black
hole would stretch out to infinity. The rate of the passage of time
would come to equal zero.
"It means we'll be together forever," he told her.
"Do you promise me that?" she asked.
"With all my heart."

"I don't understand it, Keptin. The other vessel is accelerating
along our course. If they're coming from the future, I would think
they'd know as much about conditions down here as we do."
Kirk looked at Spock. "Could it be damaged? A runaway? Do
you think there's anyone aboard her?"

405



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Under present conditions, our sensors are not up to the task."
Kirk looked at Uhura. "Anything?"
Uhura sighed. "Captain, they could be hailing us on all
frequencies right now and I wouldn't hear it through the interfer-
ence."
McCoy stepped in front of Kirk. "Contact them, Jim. At least
you'll know you tried."
Kirk nodded. He had waited long enough. "Open hailing
frequencies, Uhura."
The communications officer shook her head. "I doubt they're
going to have much better luck hearing us." But she tried.
"Fascinating," Spock said, apparently in response to nothing.
Kirk and McCoy stared at him intently.
"What's so fascinating?" McCoy asked peevishly. "The fact
that in twenty minutes we're going to be relativistic dust?"
Spock ignored the doctor and spoke to Kirk. "I have detected a
pattern to the compression waves rebounding between us and the
linked singularities."
"It took you long enough," McCoy said.
Spock gave him a withering glance. "Doctor, the pattern was
not established until the other vessel matched our course. Under
the circumstances, I believe I have--"
"Spock, the pattern?" Kirk said to get his science officer back
on the subject. "What's the significance?"
Spock shrugged as if he were discussing the color of the bridge
carpet. "It should be possible to time a maneuver such that we
would cause our leading compression wave to combine with the
compression wave of the vessel from the future, in effect stealing
spatial distortion from it the way we would steal kinetic energy if
we attempted the maneuver in normal space-time."
McCoy looked pained. "What the hell does that mean, Spock?"
"He means slingshot around it, Bones," Kirk said.
"Essentially, though in higher dimensions. A better metaphor
for Dr. McCoy, perhaps, would be surfing. Allowing the compres-
sion wave to do the work of moving us."
"Whatever, does it mean we could get out of here?" McCoy
asked.

406

FEDERATION

"It does, and within the limits of our power consumption,"
Spock answered.
McCoy was smiling but Kirk had one more concern. "What
about Cochrane and the Companion?"
"If we time the maneuver correctly, we should pass by them
closely enough to be able to snare their shuttlecraft with our
tractor beam. then hold them within our deflector shields, taking
them with us."
Kirk was pleased. It almost seemed simple. Like the best of
ideas. "Let's do it. Feed the coordinates to Sulu."
"However, there is one other factor we must consider," Spock
added.
"Whv did I know he was going to say that," McCoy moaned.
"In stealing spatial distortion from the other vessel, we will be
accelerating them downward into the subspace event horizon
beyond the ability of any technology to save them."
"So it's them or us," Kirk said. "And they already know the
way this turns out."
"If there is anyone aboard her."
Kirk rubbed at his back. The knife wound throbbed, making it
difficult to concentrate on the problem facing him. If he did
destroy a ship from the Federation's future, at the very least he
would not be changing his own timeline. But what about the
future's timeline? How many people might be on a ship that
size? There were too many variables to handle at once. Even
for him.
"When can we make the maneuver?" he asked.
"Anytime. And the sooner we perform it, the greater our
margin of safety."
Kirk looked at the screen, and the block of pixels that repre-
sented his only hope of survival. "Is there no other way, Spock?
Anything at all?"
"If we were able to communicate with the other vessel," Spock
allowed, "there would be another option."
".4rid... ?" McCoy urged with exasperation.
"In seven minutes we will be coming up to a triple-
COmpression-wave overlap pattern. If both ships were to maneu-

407



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

ver together, precisely at the moment the triple wave is exactly
between us, we could both slingshot around each other. The result
would be that both ships would steal spatial distortion from the
linked singularities, enabling us to exit upward through the
electromagnetic event horizon together."
"If we could communicate," Kirk said. "Which we can't."
"What happens if the joint maneuver isn't done precisely?"
McCoy asked.
"The slightest miscalculation on the part of either ship,"
Spock said, "will accelerate both our descents with no hope of
escape."
"The Prisoners' Dilemma," Kirk said.
"Precisely," Spock agreed.
Kirk saw McCoy's look of incomprehension. "It's an old
problem in strategy, Bones. In this case, the first prisoner to act
selfishly goes free while the other remains in prison. But if we both
cooperate, we both go free. The trick is, we can't communicate
with each other. So neither prisoner knows what the other is
thinking."
McCoy held out his hands to Spock. "This is no time for story
problems. What does your damned logic say to do?"
"In the Prisoners' Dilemma, the solution is quite clear," Spock
said matter-of-factly. "Logic dictates that the first player to act
selfishly will always fare better."
"I've always hated your logic," McCoy said. "Now I know
why." He looked at the captain. "Jim, if you do act first, you could
be condemning a ship full of our descendants to an infinite
death."
"I know that, Bones. I also know that if it turns out there is no
one aboard that ship and I wait, then I'm condemning my ship
and all of us to the same fate."
McCoy displayed all the agitation that Kirk felt. "Is there no
way to find out if there's someone on that blasted ship?"
"No, Doctor," Spock said with finality. "We have all the facts
we shall ever have. All that remains is for the captain to make his
decision."
Kirk looked away from the eyes of his crew to stare at the
screen. The lives of everyone aboard the Enterprise rested in his

FEDERATION

hands. balanced against the lives of people he might never know,
never see, but also, who might not exist at all.
The guarantee of survival at the cost of strangers' deaths?
Or the chance of cooperation, which might lead to joint
survival or meaningless death for all?
It was the ultimate command decision.
The one he had been born to make.
And in that moment before he gave his order, he felt free.

'The Prisoners' Dilemma," Picard said as he studied the three
trajectories Ensign McKnight had brought up on the main screen.
'The first one to act gets away at the cost of the other's freedom. If
they cooperate, they both escape."
"But there's no way to know if there's anyone on that ship to
cooperate with," Riker said.
"And even if we did know if there were someone on board,"
Troi added, "we wouldn't be able to communicate with them to
plan the maneuver."
"That wouldn't be necessary," La Forge said. "The physics of
the maneuver remain the same from any viewpoint. If anyone on
the other Enterprise sees the opportunity and does the calcula-
tion, that is."
Picard stared at the screen. They had drawn close enough that
even with the intense interference brought on by spatial compres-
sion, the sensor return image had more detail. There was an
old-style shuttlecraft leading the original Enterprise toward the
heart of the black hole. Picard had already concluded that the
shuttlecraft was the scientific package the Garneau had expected
to recover. Someone was on it. Someone vital to the security of
the Federation. Was that why Kirk's Enterprise was chasing it?
But then, what had happened eighty to a hundred years ago?
Obviously Kirk's Enterprise hadn't succeeded in saving the
shuttlecraft, otherwise the Garneau wouldn't have been dis-
patched in Picard's time. But then, what had happened to Kirk's
Euterprise? Was this how Kirk had destroyed it on its final
mission? What would happen ifPicard interfered in the outcome?
There were too many variables. Even for him.
"Captain Picard," Worf said suddenly.

408 409



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Picard turned to face the Klingon.
"The original Enterprise exploded, sir."
Everyone was looking at Worf now. "Are you certain?"
"Yes sir. I just remembered. Something my father taught me. In
Admiral Chekov's book, in the other histories of Kirk, everyone
makes the point that Captain Kirk destroyed the Enterprise
without causing any loss of life."
"That's what I remember," Picard said impatiently, wondering
what point his officer was trying to make.
"But that was not true," Worf continued. "What the books
meant was that none of Kirk's crew died. But there was loss of
life. A Klingon boarding party."
Picard understood. "At the time the incident took place, at the
time those books were written, the Federation and the Klingon
Empire were deadly enemies."
"I know, sir. That's what my father taught me. That once we
were such great enemies that the Federation did not consider the
deaths of Klingons to be the same as the deaths of humans."
"We have changed a great deal since then, Worf."
Worf nodded carefully, trying not to dislodge the healing
emitters Dr. Crusher had attached to his head wound. "I know,
but I remember more about the story, from the Klingon side. The
Klingon boarding party died in an explosion. Therefore, because
that Enterprise we see on the screen is still intact, it is not on its
final mission."
Picard eagerly seized on the scrap of information. "Splendid,
Worf. That's it!" He turned back to the screen. "Captain Kirk is
on that ship! He must be saved. He obviously was saved for us to
have read about his latter exploits."
"But are we the ones to save him?" Riker asked from his chair.
"If not us, then who?" Picard asked.
"The only way we know how to save him is to perform a risky
joint maneuver that must be executed with precise timing. How
do we know Kirk even knows about that maneuver?"
Wesley turned with an excited smile. "Sir, if Captain Kirk is on
that Enterprise, then Commander Spock is with him. He'll have
figured out the maneuver. He was incredible."
"Even given that," Riker said skeptically. "How can we be sure


FEDERATION

Kirk will elect to perform the joint maneuver? Maybe he's going
to choose the selfish maneuver any second, as soon as Spock
works out the math. Maybe Kirk survived in the past because he
consigned us to the linked singularities."
"As Mr. La Forge has said, Number One, the physics are the
same. The law of mediocrity still holds. Kirk will understand
what must be done for us both to escape."
'As I remember history, Kirk was not noted for being a team
player, sir."
Picard paused in thought. Riker was correct. Kirk was entirely
capable of doing the unexpected to survive, no matter what the
cost.
"Captain," Ensign McKnight said, "we're coming up on our
point of no return. Either we break away within the next minute,
or we will have to wait for the triple compression wave. And that
joint maneuver will be our last and only chance to escape."
"Understood, Ensign," Picard said.
Picard looked away from the eyes of his crew to stare at the
screen. The lives of everyone aboard the Enterprise rested in his
hands, balanced against predicting the decision of a man who had
been revered for his unpredictability, who had been perfectly
capable of consigning a ship from the future to an endless fall in
order to see his Enterprise survive.
Picard's options were clear. The guarantee of survival at the
cost of consigning a hero to death, before that hero could do the
same to him. Or waiting for the chance of cooperation, which
might lead to joint success or, if Kirk acted first, to senseless
defeat.
It was the ultimate command decision.
The one he had been trained to make.
And in that moment before he gave his order, he knew what
duty compelled him to do.

410 411



FOUR

TNC 65813
t--~

"Zefram," the Companion said, "sing to me. As you did when we
lay beneath the stars. Sing to me, so I will remember you forever."
Darkness loomed before the shuttlecraft once again and
Cochrane knew it was the singularity that would claim them in an
endless fall. Even the Companion knew that.
But their hands were entwined and would remain so for as long
as stars still shone.
"Sing to me, Zefram."
He did.

"Amazing Grace, how sweet the sound
That saved a wretch like me
I once was lost, but now I'm found
Was blind, yet now I see ....

She joined him and their voices rose together in the tiny bubble
of light and warmth, poised on the brink of oblivion.
And together, there was nothing that they feared.

"Mr. Sulu, prepare to initiate the triple-wave maneuver on
Mr. Spock's mark. Mr. Chekov, stand ready on those tractor

412

FEDERATION

beams to bring Cochrane's shuttlecraft into our shields as we
pass."
McCoy took Kirk's arm. "Are you sure, Jim? That's a big
risk to take, counting on someone who probably hasn't been
born yet."
Kirk had no doubt. "That's a Starfleet vessel out there, Bones.
That means a hundred years from now, the Federation is still
there. too." Kirk took his chair. He felt nothing but confidence.
"That's what I'm counting on. Not a person. But tradition. An
ideal."
Kirk settled back, decision made, course set, with no possibility
of failure.
"Your reasoning is most illogical," Spock said.
"In this case, my reasoning doesn't have to be logical," Kirk
said lightly. "It just has to be right." He looked behind him at his
science officer and friend. "Your father might not agree with that,
but I'll bet you could persuade him."
Spock inclined his head as he thought for a moment. "It would
require a bluff," he said.

"Ensign McKnight, prepare to initiate the triple-wave maneu-
ver on Mr. Worf's mark. Mr. O'Brien, stand ready with tractor
beams to catch the shuttlecraft as we pass."
"Are you certain, Jean-Luc?" Riker asked. "You're taking a big
risk gambling on someone with Kirk's reputation."
Picard had little doubt. "Whatever his reputation, Number
One, James T. Kirk remained a part of Starfleet for almost fifty
years. He wasn't the kind of man to make that kind of commit-
ment without feeling something for the institutions he was sworn
to defend." Picard took his chair. He was fairly certain he had
made the right choice. "That's what I've based my decision on.
Not the person. But tradition, and the ideals he served."
Picard settled back, decision made, course set, with little
possibility of failure. "I believe it is a logical course of action," he
said.
Riker looked at him closely. "Another echo from Ambassador
Sarek?"
Picard was startled by the sudden feeling that Riker was



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

somehow correct. He had a flash of another bridge surrounding
him--smaller, cruder.
"Will, I think you're right," Picard said. "I think that sometime
in the past, Ambassador Sarek did touch the mind of Kirk."
"Any memory of how this turned out?" Riker asked.
Picard concentrated but found only fleeting impressions. "No,"
he said at last. "We're going to have to discover that for
ourselves."

FIVE

TNC 65813

The triple compression wave moved through the Ian Shelton first,
unfelt and unnoticed by Cochrane and the Companion. Their
shuttlecraft was too small, their absorption in each other too
strong for anything in this universe to disturb them. Their course was set. They flew on.
The triple compression wave moved through Kirk's Enterprise
next, following close behind the shuttlecraft, though the nature of
space in this environment defied ordinary units of distance and
time. Spock measured the wave as it pulsed through his instru-
ments, and he started the countdown.
On Picard's Enterprise, Worf undertook the same countdown,
his forward tactical sensors pushed to their utmost limits to
obtain even the weakest reading of the wave's progression.
When the wave reached the exact halfway point between the
two ships, Worf and Spock both gave their signals at the same
instant. On those signals, Sulu fired his impulse engines in full
reverse, slowing Kirk's Enterprise just as McKnight fired her
impulse engines for more forward velocity.
Picard's Enterprise crested the triple compression wave and
rushed forward, balancing the countercompression caused by
Kirk's Enterprise. Thus the triple wave rolled on between the two

415



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

starships, restored, unchanged, and for all values of velocity and
compression to remain equal in that environment, energy was
stolen from the linked singularities. Just as Spock and La Forge
had predicted.
Both ships used that energy to alter their courses in the tightly
compressed space, to swing past the black hole's pulsing, triple-
lobed subspace horizon and loop around it, accelerating up
toward freedom and the electromagnetic horizon separating them
from their destinations.
Kirk's Enterprise and Picard's Enterprise--they flew together,
side by side, the Ian Shelton nestled between them, securely
cradled by the tractor beams of both ships.
Space flowed around the two starships as they moved together,
coming so close that their shields merged in a sparkling of shared
energy on a common course.
Protected together, protecting each other, the Enterprises es-
caped their fate, linked not by the captains who commanded
them, but by the ideals that were common to both.
The event horizon loomed above them, and on Kirk's Enter-
prise, Spock determined that they were being drawn along the
wrong worldline, to a time that was not their own. On Picard's
Enterprise, La Forge calculated the same.
It was suddenly imperative that momentum be exchanged
between the ships and the means to do it was obvious to both.
Communicating, indirectly, by common knowledge of the
unchanging laws of physics, the universal law of mediocrity,
Kirk's Enterprise gently released her hold on the Ian Shelton. Just
as gently, Picard's Enterprise took up the task.
Minutes from the event horizon, the shuttlecraft and its mo-
mentum safely exchanged, the ships parted, Kirk to his time,
Picard to his own. But just before their handshake across time was
broken, before their relativistic frames of reference grew too
separated in the mesh of temporal distortions, someone on the
bridge of Picard's ship, someone whose straitlaced aura of
correctness concealed just a touch of Kirk's rebellion, that
someone happened to touch a control that sent out an automatic
hail, in complete and utter defiance of Starfleet's strict standing

416

FEDERATION

orders governing the transmission of information from the future
to the past.
On the bridge of Kirk's Enterprise, Uhura caught the hail, faint,
almost nonexistent as the separation in time grew larger. But she did hear enough of it.
She took her earpiece out. Wide-eyed, she turned to her
captain. She told him what she had heard.
"Captain Kirk," she said. "They sent a hail." She smiled in
awe. "The other ship... it was the Enterprise, sir."
Kirk nodded. And silently sent his thanks out through time
itself to the someone who had broken regulations to send that
small acknowledgment, that tiny confirmation that the future was
secure.
And on Picard's Enterprise, Picard himself nonchalantly
moved away from a communications control panel where he had
just happened to find himself with his uninjured hand resting by
the automatic hailing frequencies controls, unaffected by the
coded lockouts. He returned to his chair. Troi smiled at him. She
knew. She understood.
The years once again grew between Kirk and Picard but in the
grand scale of things, there was little that separated them.
Each to their own time, both servants of the Federation, they
reached the upper event horizon, and together yet apart they
made their way back to their separate times and the destiny they
served . . .
... the United Federation of Planets.

The stars burst like fireworks before Cochrane's eyes and he
blinked in surprise and excitement.
"We're free!" the Companion exclaimed. "Oh, Zefram, we can
go home!"
Cochrane could still not believe what had happened. He had
seen two starships, the Enterprise and one twice its size, fly in
formation to either side of the shuttlecraft. He had seen the
Emerprise veer off and disappear in the murk of the environment
beyond the event horizon. He guessed that some rescue had been
organized. Perhaps the larger ship that kept the shuttlecraft safe

417



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

was the Excalibur or the Lexington, both of which Kirk had said
were on their way to help.
There was no sense of movement as the gas disk of the black
hole fell away from beneath them. They were in warp space,
heading away from the tidal forces of the singularity. It had all
worked out.
Then, in the moment of his rejoicing, Cochrane saw a shimmer-
ing of green light through the forward windows, and as he
watched in utter astonishment, a green starship materialized out
of the vacuum, and flew at him, weapons firing.

The stars burst like fireworks before Kirk's eyes and he knew
they were free from the event horizon.
An instant later, the bridge lights dimmed and damage alarms
sounded.
"Och," Scotty said from engineering, "there go the crystals.
And after what we've been through, we've only got a minute of
power left."
"Shut down every system!" Kirk commanded. "Communica-
tions, environmental, everything! Put it all into propulsion, Mr.
Sulu." Kirk knew they had to get as far away from the region of
the black hole's crushing tidal forces as they could, before his
ship's structural integrity field failed and the Enterprise was torn
apart.
Spock was to Kirk's right. "I regret to point out that we do not
have sufficient reserves to escape the Roche limit," he said flatly.
"These efforts are useless."
McCoy was on Kirk's left. "You regret it?"
"Scotty will get us out of here," Kirk said. Scotty always did.
But Scotty said, "Not this time, Captain. With no matter-
antimatter reactor, I've got nothing more t' draw from. I'm sorry,
sir."
Kirk straightened in his chair. There were no more options. No
more rules to change. The odds could only be beaten so many
times before the law of averages made itself known. The journey
was over. As simple as that.
"You warned me, Scotty," Kirk said, uncharacteristically

418

FEDERATION

quiet. the fire gone from him in this moment, accepting that
even he had limits. "We took this ship into a black hole and we
brought her out again. Maybe this is the way we're supposed
to go out."
"Being the first," Spock said.
'And the best," McCoy said.
Scott started the countdown from engineering. "Thirty sec-
onds, Captain."
"l'm proud of you, Scotty. You kept her going when no one else
could."
"Glad to have been aboard, sir," the chief engineer replied
softly. "Twenty-five seconds. The lights will go first. The SIF will
fail a moment later. Just so ye know."
Kirk touched the intercom control on the arm of his chair. He
spoke to his crew, to his ship, telling them of his pride in all of
them. He spoke to the passengers he had rescued from the
t'/w~itia. telling them of his sorrow. He ended the broadcast and
in the privacy of the bridge said his farewells to Uhura, to Chekov,
to Sulu.
He was surprised that in the end there were no real regrets.
"Ten seconds," Scott said.
"I never thought it would end this way," McCoy said.
Kirk forced a smile as he stared at the screen, wondering what
he might see the instant before it happened, and the instant after.
"I never thought it would end, period," he said.
"Five seconds," Scott announced. "I'll see you in Valhalla,
gentlemen."
Beside him, Kirk heard Spock sigh. "At least it can be said that
it was f--"
A blinding blue flash flared from the viewscreen. A second flash
followed, and with that all systems failed--the lights, the dis-
plays. the engine roar. Only battery lights remained, offering dim
illumination for the final second.
Which became the final two seconds.
The final five seconds.
"Why are we still here?" McCoy asked.
"She didn't go!" Chekov exclaimed.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Obviously," Spock commented.
And instantly Kirk realized what had happened. The flight
recorder he had launched! The twin flashes of blue light!
He turned in his chair. "Uhura! Full battery power to commu-
nications! And get that screen going!"
A moment later, Captain Harris of the U.S.S. Excalibur was
grinning from that screen. "Welcome back, Enterprise."
Kirk felt like laughing, felt like crying, both together. "Tom.
Hello. Glad you could make it."
"I'11 bet you are," Harris laughed.
Another voice came over the speakers. "Jim, you old spacedog.
Am I reading my sensors right? You've got no power, no crystals,
no nothing?"
The screen image changed. Commodore Robert Wesley ap-
peared, front and center on the bridge of the Lexington.
"Hello, Bob," Kirk said to his old friend. "Thanks for the lift,
and the tractor beams, and the shields."
Wesley shook his head in admiration. "Hold on tight, Jim.
We'll be taking you to warp as soon as we calibrate with the
Excalibur. "Wesley looked off to the side, grinned back at Kirk. "I
tell you, Jim, from the damage statistics we're getting from your
ship, you'd better hope Starfleet doesn't decide to deduct the
damages from your salary. You could be flying these things for the
next thousand years."
Kirk leaned back in his chair. "I'd settle for a hundred," he
said. "That would be just about right."
Then, like a wounded warrior carried victoriously from the
field, the Enterprise rested in the shields of her companions.
Flanking her, supporting her, but adjusting their beams so she
had the honor of leading the way, the Excalibur and the Lexington
delivered the Enterprise from the gravity of TNC 65813, and
returned her to the stars where she belonged.

The stars burst like fireworks before Picard's eyes.
They had succeeded.
"Congratulations," Riker said to Picard.
"To us all, Number One." Picard turned to his engineer. "Mr.

5~

FEDERATION

La Forge. can we handle warp speed long enough to get us away
from here?"
"We should be able to manage a few light-hours, Captain."
"Mr. O'Brien," Picard continued. "What is the status of the
shuttlecraft?"
"Two strong life signs," O'Brien answered. "One human,
one. ." He shrugged. "Not human, I guess."
"Two? The captain of the Garneau was aware of only one
passenger," Picard said. "Will the tractor beam hold them till we
get away from here?"
"Yes. sir. For an hour or so at least."
"Very good," Picard said. Already the next course of events was
becoming clear to him. A brief warp flight to empty space. Then, a
complete shutdown of the Enterprise's computer system so they
could bring it back on-line without the lockout codes the Thorsen
personality had somehow programmed into it. To begin, work
crews could get around the sealed doors and security screens by
using the personnel transporters in the several shuttlecraft the
ship carried. Those transporters could also be used to bring
aboard their mysterious passengers from the past. "A day or two
and we should be able to get underway for Betazed," Picard said.
There was no sense in delivering a counterfeit Borg artifact to
Admiral Hanson. "In time for the trade conference. And then we
can see what we can do about restoring Mr. Data."
Riker carefully touched the splint on his leg. "And the rest of
us," he said.
"Ensign McKnight, plot a general heading toward Betazed,
warp factor three."
"Course plotted, sir."
"Engage."
With only a slight hesitation, the Enterprise came to life around
them. The gas disk of the Kabreigny Object began to shrink in the
viewscreen.
"I wonder if that black hole was named after Admiral Quarlo
Kabreigny?" Picard asked. "I have always found her essays about
the dual nature of Starfleet most compelling."
"We'll know as soon as we get our computer back," Riker said.

421



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

A collision alarm sounded.
"Warbird decloaking!" Worf called out.
There could be only one explanation. "Tarl!" Riker said.
The viewscreen flickered as a phaser burst hit the ship.
"Shields at forty percent!" Worf announced.
"Captain," La Forge said, "without a crew, we're not going to
be able to maintain even that strength for long."
"Maybe we should have brought Kirk into our time," Picard
said. "Mr. Worf, ready on phasers! Ready on photon torpedoes!"
"The Warbird is coming around," Worf said. "Our phasers are
at fifty percent."
"Prepare for evasive maneuvers," Picard warned his crew.
The Romulan Warbird filled the screen. The Enterprise shook
from the fury of its attack.
"I'm all out of tricks," Picard said. "The only thing we can do
is--"
The Warbird's port side flared with a phaser hit. The ship
twisted with the sudden vaporization of its hull plates. Two
streaks that could only be photon torpedoes swept in through the
shield opening and slipped between the double hulls. Then golden
light flared within those hulls and the Warbird split in half, top
and bottom, with her bridge tumbling forward until it, too,
disintegrated in a fireball.
"Good shooting, Mr. Worf," the captain said, impressed.
"I did not fire," Worf answered, perplexed.
Picard and Riker looked at each other with startled glances, a
single name on their lips. Had he come back with them? Could it
be--
"Sir, we are being hailed by Captain Bondar of the Garneau,"
Worf announced.
Picard sighed. It had been too much to hope for that he would
ever have a chance to meet Kirk in the flesh. "Onscreen, Mr.
Worf."
The captain of the Garneau was far different from her first
appearance on the screen. She was forbidding, implacable.
"Who's in charge of your vessel now?" she said bluntly.
"Jean-Luc Picard," the captain answered. "We have regained
control."

422



FEDERATION

.-Good." Bondar said. "Otherwise, after what you did to my
ship. you would have been next. Any idea what that Romulan
wanted?"
"It's a long story," Picard replied.
'What about that shuttlecraft you're carrying in your tractor
beam?" she asked. "Did you bring that out from the event
horizon?"
"Yes, we did," Picard confirmed. "I believe it is the science
package you were supposed to retrieve."
Bondar frowned. "I hope not. It looks like the Romulan shot it
up pretty bad."
The next few minutes were confusion compounded by frustra-
tion. With the entire Enterprise at his disposal, Picard was unable
to have the ship do anything.
The Garneau beamed aboard the two passengers from the
damaged shuttlecraft. The Garneau beamed Dr. Crusher to its
own sickbay to examine the passengers. The Garneau then
beamed La Forge to the Enterprise's engineering section and a
team of computer technicians from the areas in which they were
trapped to the Enterprise's computer cores.
Dr. Crusher reported back to Picard twenty minutes after
boarding the Garneau. Both passengers were seriously injured.
"Severe radiation burns," Dr. Crusher said from the main
viewscreen. "The male will require major organ replacement.
And the female, well, she seems human but I'm getting strange
double readings. To the naked eye, she's in just as bad shape as the
male. but on my tricorder, she doesn't seem as badly off for some
reason."
"Will they survive until we can take them to a starbase?" Picard
asked.
"That's just it, Jean-Luc. The female says they can't go to a
starbase. She has to go home, or she'll die. She says home is where
Captain Kirk was taking them." "Where is her home?"
"A planetold in the Gamma Canaris region. Designation five
two seven."
Picard nodded. "We're very near. Will there be medical treat-
ment available for her there?"



Zefram Cochrane." Earth Standard: May 2366
Picard felt a chill lift the fine hairs on his neck. "The Zefram

Cochrane?"
"His features are very close to the portrait in one of the engine
manuals they have over here. Much younger, but he would have
been well over two hundred years old in Kirk's time period, so
there might be something at work here we don't know about."
"That, Dr. Crusher, is an understatement if I have ever heard
one." Picard shifted in his chair. His broken wrist was beginning
to regain feeling. But there would be time enough to deal with that
later.
"Ensign McKnight," Picard said, "lay in a course for the
Gamma Canaris region, planetoid designation five two seven. Mr.
Worf, get me Captain Bondar."
"We're not taking them to a starbase for medical treatment?"
Riker asked.
Picard shook his head. "Captain Kirk was taking them home,
Number One. After what he did for us, the least we can do is
complete his mission."

Cochrane remembered the light and the pain of the Romulan's
attack and he thought he was on the Bonaventure H again, life
ebbing, the light enveloping him, bringing him peace, bringing
him--
He awoke.
On the Enterprise again.
But not the Enterprise.
Kirk's ship he had felt he could almost understand. He had
glanced at some of the technical manuals Kirk had left with him
on the Companion's planetoid. He had seen the ship's design on
the plaque, seen it in space from the shuttlecraft. The lines made
sense. There was a logic to its construction that clearly derived
from his work.
But this Enterprise... it made him think of Clarke's law, that
any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from
magic.
That's what this Enterprise was.
Magic, pure and simple.
The first night, he had sat up late in his bed in sickbay, scanning
the manuals La Forge had flagged for him. More than a thousand

425



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

crew. Matter replicators. A top speed beyond what his most
optimistic projections had ever predicted would ever be possible.
And there was still no end in sight.
The first night on this ship, this miracle, he had held on to the
Companion's hand as she sat beside him by his bed. He had
drifted in and out of sleep, in and out of fragments of his life. He
was increasingly sure that there was a path there, one he could see,
and the feeling only added to a sense of completeness he felt
building within him. But he knew now the path itself had begun
before he had been born and he could see it would continue after
his death. His own life had only intersected for a moment with
that larger path, already filled with so many others' journeys.
Three hundred and thirty-six years he had seen. Three hundred
and thirty-six! He wondered what his friend Micah Brack would
have said to that. If he would have been jealous.
What wonders he had seen. What wonders he knew were still
ahead.
The second morning he awoke smiling, thinking of those
wonders, cradling the Companion in his arms.
She had slipped into her coma shortly after. The ship's doctor
had been concerned, but Cochrane had convinced her not to
worry. When they returned to the planetoid, all would be well.
The Companion drew her life from that place. She would do so
again.
Picard came for him that morning as the Companion slept in
Cochrane's arms.
They had been moved from sickbay and given an ordinary
stateroom. One of unthinkable luxury to someone used to the
twenty-first century.
To Cochrane, Picard seemed a serious man. Almost too con-
trolled, as if he had a touch of Vulcan blood inside him. "We have arrived," the captain said.
Cochrane nodded his thanks. It was difficult to talk. The doctor
said that he had been badly irradiated. That he would need
drastic medical treatment. But Cochrane had not been worried.
Once the Companion was well, there would be time enough for
him.
"And I have some rather bad news," the captain continued.

FEDERATION

Cochrane tightened his embrace of the Companion. She didn't
stir. though he could hear her, feel her breathe.
"The planetold is no longer there," the captain said. "Instead,
at its coordinates, we're reading rubble, almost a century old.
With a high degree of some unusual energy matrix our scientists
have been unable to identify."
Something in Cochrane slowed and was still. Three hundred
and thirty-six years. He was not surprised it was coming to an
end.
"From what you have told us about the Companion, in her first
form. we're wondering if it is possible she had some symbiotic
relationship with her home. You said she could maintain the
temperature, and air, and gravity as long as she was there, but
when the Orion pirates injured her, her control failed. That could
be a sign that she was bound to that place and that place was
bound to her."
Cochrane nodded. Life and habitat were always intertwined.
Anything was possible. His existence was proof of that.
"We can take you to a starbase where there are medical
facilities more advanced than what we can offer."
Cochrane smiled sadly. He had seen this ship's sickbay. Medi-
cal facilities more advanced than these belonged only to the gods.
Perhaps that was where the larger path led. Eventually.
Cochrane swallowed, preparing his throat for the effort of
speaking. Picard waited attentively, respectfully. In his mind's
eye, Cochrane saw Kirk stand beside him. That man would have
been raging, consumed with frustration at not being able to save
his passengers. He wondered at the difference between them. Two
so unlike, yet so much the same. One so full of timeless youth and
confidence, forever searching, full of passion. One so seasoned by
his years and measured doubt, forever considering, full of time-
less wisdom.
Youth and maturity. Not just the men but the culture they
inhabited. A common culture. The Federation. But at different
stages. Following its own larger path.
And it was time for Cochrane's interception of that path to end.
He knew that now.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

"Could you move the ship?" he asked in a whisper. "So we can
see the stars as we would see them from the planetoid."
No rage. No bluster. Acceptance. "Of course," Picard said
gently. "I will make it so."
Cochrane thanked him silently. He was weary. The Companion
lay warm and at peace in his arms. But just once more, he wanted
to see the stars.
Who knew? Perhaps they would sing to him one final time.

SEVEN

#.S.S. E/V TERPRISE NCC-1701
EN ROUTE TO NEURAL III
Stardate 3858.7
Earth Standard: Nevember 2267

In the conference room, at the end of two hours, Admiral
Kabreigny offered Kirk a cup of coffee. Kirk took it as a good sign.
Maybe some progress had been made during this meeting after
all. The nerve pinch had not been mentioned at all.
Spock declined her offer. McCoy accepted, but he looked as if
he'd rather be having a mint julep.
"And so," Kabreigny said, staring intently at Kirk, "I will be
able to report unequivocally to Starfleet that no information
about the future was transferred to our present?"
"None," Kirk said firmly. His bridge crew had been sworn to
secrecy. The name of the ship that they had encountered in the
black hole would never be revealed. In that way, Kirk could be
truthful in saying no information had been passed from one age to
another. After all, he would never lie to Command.
Kabreigny appeared to accept his assurance and sipped her
coffee.
"I am curious, Admiral," Mr. Spock said. "What will you
report?"
Kabreigny shrugged. "I will have to seek out advice on that
matter. Obviously, since a ship from the future penetrated the

429



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

event horizon in a trajectory that brought it to you and the
shuttlecraft, someone in that time knew that the shuttlecraft
would be there. I don't want it publicly known that Zefram
Cochrane is on board, so we'll keep your secret of your meeting
with him as you originally intended. The last thing we'd need is
for one of Thorsen's collaborators to drop a few antimatter
bombs through the event horizon to try and destroy him. Before
he gets rescued the way you observed he already has been
rescued--will be rescued.
"Perhaps we could say that Starfleet dropped a science package
into the event horizon," she continued. "We could then ask that it
be recovered on whatever date the shuttlecraft's original trajecto-
ry would have brought it closest to the event horizon."
Spock looked skeptical. "You are treading close to a causal loop,
Admiral."
Kabreigny actually smiled at Spock. Kirk thought it was the
first time he had seen a real smile on her face. "Which is why I will
seek out advice, Mr. Spock. Starfleet is very cautious when it
comes to time travel. And this is a good example why."
Kirk saw his opening and decided to take it while the mood was
auspicious. "How does Starfleet feel about conspiracies?" he
asked.
The smile left the admiral's face. "It would appear that I need
to seek out some advice about that as well."
"At least there was a conspiracy," McCoy said, trying to be
helpful. "It wasn't just some paranoid delusion." His smile faded,
too, as he realized no one was sharing it with him.
"The conspiracy didn't originate within Starfleet, Doctor. For
which we can all be grateful. But Colonel Thorsen was able to
exploit an unsuspected weakness in our security and it could take
years to build in the proper safeguards."
"In the meantime," Spock said, "Adrik Thorsen might still be
at large."
That possibility did bother Kirk. When the Lexington and
Excalibur had escorted the Enterprise from TNC 65813, there
had been no sign of the second Klingon battle cruiser, and no way
to know which of the two cruisers Thorsen had been on. He might

430

FEDERATION

have died in the cruiser the Enterprise had destroyed in the black
hole. Or he might still be free. Free to pursue Zefram Cochrane.
"I don't think we'll have Thorsen to worry about much longer,"
Kabreigny said. "The Grigari nanomachines will take care of
him, cell by cell."
'Still." Kirk said, "'the evil that men do...'"
Kabreigny shook her head. "There's no room for evil in the
galaxy anymore, Captain."
'Science isn't enough to guarantee that," Kirk said.
Kabreigny put down her cup. "Captain Kirk, after all we've
been through, is it going to end like this? With us still on opposite
sides of the old debate?"
"It doesn't have to," Kirk said. "If your secret committee had
shared with the rest of Command your concerns about a possible
military plot in Starfleet, revolving around Cochrane and the
Klingons and a warp bomb, we might have been able to stop this
before it escalated as far as it did."
"Knowing what we knew at the time, how could Starfleet's
science divisions trust the military branch?" Kabreigny asked.
Kirk folded his hands on the conference table. "Knowing what
you know now, about how that lack of communication led to such
a profound division between us, how can you not trust them?"
Across the table, Kirk and Kabreigny faced one another. Neither
readv to give way.
"You must not remain on opposite sides of the debate," Spock
said to the two of them.
"You can't afford to," McCoy added, damned if he was going to
allow Spock to be the peacemaker.
"Admiral, we're both part of Starfleet," Kirk began after a
long moment. "Perhaps the question is not whether or not we
have to label ourselves as a military organization or a science
organization. Perhaps we should just say we're Starfleet and leave
it at that. Something new. A label all its own. Let the conflict
go. With Thorsen and the Optimum. Where it belongs. In the
past."
Kabreigny stood. Regal. "Somehow, I don't think we're going
to solve this problem today, but, Jim, my thanks for trying." She



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

paused, then held out her hand dramatically. Kirk stood to shake
it with equal flourish.
"I wonder what kind of galaxy Zefram Cochrane's going to find
a century from now?" Kabreigny asked.
"A better one," Kirk said. "I guarantee it."
Kabreigny looked at him as if she were going to ask another
question, perhaps to check again that no information had come
back from the future. But she seemed to think better of it.
"Your guarantee," she said. "That's good to know."
She gathered her data wafers together and slipped them into her
attach6 case. "The Lexington is going to take me back to TNC
65813 before you get to Neural III," the admiral said. "I have a
feeling I'm going to be studying that particular black hole very
carefully in the next while, trying to figure out where--and
when--Cochrane's going to come back."
McCoy grinned. "Well, who knows? Maybe they'll name the
black hole after you, Admiral."
Kabreigny simply stared at the doctor, then said good-bye to
Kirk and Spock, and left.
As soon as the doors had slipped closed behind her, Kirk turned
to McCoy. "Naming a black hole after an admiral? What were you
thinking of?."
McCoy looked hurt. "That's not any black hole. We're in it.
And Cochrane is in it. And that other Enterprise is in it. Right
now. And for the next century." McCoy's smile returned. "Sort of
makes you think, doesn't it?"
But the concept stopped Kirk cold. He put a hand to his temple.
"Gentlemen, I hate time travel."
"It is not logical to have an emotional reaction to what is a
natural outgrowth of the laws of physics."
Kirk started for the door. "Mr. Spock, I think it's time you took
a long, relaxing leave. We'll send you back home to visit your
parents."
As the doors swept open before them, Spock fell into step to one
side of the captain, McCoy to the other.
"Good idea, Jim," McCoy agreed. "Spock and Sarek can
discuss logic all day, and play poker all night."

432

FEDERATION

,.Doctor, I do not understand why you continually--"
But Spock stopped talking as Kirk suddenly laughed, for no
other reason than that he was alive, and on his way to the bridge of
his ship.
There was still so much more to be done.
And he intended to do it all.



EIGHT

U.S.S. EIfTERPRISE NCC-1701-D
THE GAMMA CANARIS REGION
Stardate 43924.1
Earth Standard: May 2366

"How are you feeling?" Picard asked.
"That is not an appropriate question," Data replied, "consider-
ing that I have no feelings to begin with."
Picard smiled. La Forge looked up from his tricorder. "That's
Data, all right. No sign of the Thorsen personality at all."
Data looked around the shuttlebay. The Preserver object was
where Picard had last seen it, on the equipment cradles, near what
was left of the counterfeit Borg artifact.
"Where is the Thorsen matrix?" Data asked.
"Back in the Preserver object," La Forge answered.
"I can detect no programming residue from the Thorsen matrix
in me," Data said. "Is the ship's computer system similarily free
of residual effects?"
La Forge closed his tricorder. "Completely. A personality
matrix isn't like a program. It's like human brain waves--analog,
not digital--so it can't be duplicated the same way. Only trans-
ferred. Like you and Lore."
La Forge disconnected the positronic leads from Data's open
scalp and closed the access port there, carefully positioning
Data's hair back into place. "Of course, when the Thorsen matrix


FEDERATION

downloaded itself from the computer into you, it left program-
ming codes behind, blocking access to certain ship functions, but
that was all. And those codes were erased when we did a full
restart of the system."
Data got up from the workbench he had been lying on and
checked his hands and arms, assessing his condition.
'The last thing I remember, I was sitting at the science station,
trying to communicate with the matrix."
"'And as soon as it realized that you were a better host than the
ship's computer, it downloaded itself into you."
Data moved his head back and forth in a series of short, jerky
movements. "Geordi, have I been struck recently?" he asked.
La Forge looked away. "Uh, Worf tried to push you away from
the controls."
"I hope I did not do anything inappropriate while I was not
myself," Data said.
"You bear no responsibility for what happened," Picard re-
plied.
Data gave him a curious look, concentrating on the splint on
Picard's hand and wrist. "Geordi, how did you induce the matrix
to leave my system and return to the Preserver object?"
La Forge finished stowing away the delicate tools he had used
on Data. "You were switched off, Data. When I made the
connection back to the object, the matrix was drawn to the system
where it could function. I didn't switch you back on until all
connections were broken. Your backup subroutines restored your
own matrix, and Colonel Thorsen, or what used to be Thorsen, is
now trapped."
"What will you do with the object now?"
La Forge looked at Picard.
"One of the hardest things I will ever do," Picard answered.
He walked over to the wondrous silver object and for the final
time put his hand on it, wondering what other hands had touched
it when it first had been forged. There was still not enough
evidence to tell if it was a true product of the Preserver culture or
not. Picard tried to tell himself that that should make what he had
to do easier. But it didn't. The only positive side to acquisition of

435

JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

the object was that he had had full sensor recordings made of its
inscriptions, and of its provocative diagrams of science as yet
unimagined. The real archaeologists would appreciate those.
Though how they'd react to the news of what an amateur had
done to the object was something Picard would rather not deal
with at the next conference he attended.
He slipped off his communicator pin and placed it on the
object. Two versions of the same warp function now adorned
it--the Cochrane delta of his pin, and the alien version inscribed
in its surface.
He stepped away.
Data was beside him. "Is it necessary to destroy it, Captain?"
"It nearly destroyed this ship, Mr. Data. And the creature
inside it nearly destroyed humanity three centuries ago when it
had its chance to control the world." He looked at the android,
knowing how human in fact Data was because of the compulsion
Picard now felt to explain himself. "'The evil that men do lives
after them,'" he quoted. "Thorsen died centuries ago; now it's
time for his evil to die as well." He spoke to the air. "Picard to
Transporter Room Four."
"O'Brien here," the transporter chief answered.
"Lock on to my communicator, Mr. O'Brien. One object.
Unknown composition. Set for wide-beam dispersal. Maximum
range."
"Transporter locked," O'Brien acknowledged.
Picard took a last look at the object, so hauntingly beautiful, so
full of mystery, of promise. "Watch carefully, Mr. Data," Picard
said, overcome with deep melancholy. "This is a lesson in life.
Checks and balances."
"Good and evil," Data said. "I understand the equation, even if
I do not feel the deeper meaning behind it."
Picard nodded. Three and half billion years of history about to
vanish. When would this chance ever come again? He looked at
Data. "Then... could you... Mr. Data?"
"I understand, sir." The android looked at the object. "Mr.
O'Brien: Energize, please."
The transporter harmonic filled the shuttlebay. The silver

436

~5

FEDERATION

object dissolved into mist, into time, taking with it the past and
the future.
Picard sighed and turned away from the empty equipment
cradles. The galaxy was safer now that it had been a moment ago,
but that didn't help make him feel any better.
He left the shuttlebay, thinking that some days he didn't like his
job at all.

Beverly Crusher called him hours later, during the middle of
ship's night. She told him it was urgent. He came at once to
Cochrane's stateroom.
Dr. Crusher was there, in her blue medical coat. A medical kit
lay on a table nearby. And in the bed, Zefram Cochrane, a giant of
his time, now out of time, his eyes turned to stare without seeing
to the stars beyond the viewports, just as they would have
appeared to someone on the surface of planetoid 527, one
hundred years ago. The Companion lay beside him, her hand in
his, eyes closed, barely breathing.
"They're going quickly," the doctor whispered.
"Is there nothing you can do?" Picard asked. There had been
too much death this voyage. Any death was too much.
Crusher shook her head. "I told him earlier that we could try
putting them both into transporter stasis and get them to a
starbase to try some experimental treatments, but he said no. And
I have to respect that."
"He's come so far," Picard said. "Done so much."
"No one ever does it all," Crusher said softly, to comfort him.
"No," Picard agreed. "I suppose not."
He sat with the doctor then, at her side, in the darkened room,
keeping watch on the passengers from another age.
Sometime in the hours that followed, beneath the starlight, the
doctor took the captain's hand. It felt right. To reaffirm life so
close to death.
Sometime in the hours that followed, Jean-Luc Picard stared
out at the stars, trying to remember the first moment he had
noticed them. As a child, he supposed, in the fields near his home.
Walking out with his parents. He would always remember his

437



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

parents. One generation to the next. But now even more genera.
tions whispered within him, the final echoes of Sarek and the
minds the legendary Vulcan had touched in his long life. Picard
reflected upon that expanse of time, and wondered what his own
legacy would be. How it could possibly measure up to all that had
gone before.
Sometime in the hours that followed, Beverly Crusher squeezed
his hand. "Jean-Luc," she whispered. "Look."
Picard turned his eyes from the stars and looked across the
stateroom where Cochrane and the Companion lay.
But there was something different. Something about the
lighting...
The bed was glowing. Their forms were glowing.
Picard stared in amazement. A glowing halo of some dazzling
golden energy was rising from the Companion's frail body. It
danced in delicate rhythms, casting flickering fairy light on all
that was in the stateroom.
Cochrane slowly turned his head to the light. Picard could see
the strain on the man's face as he looked up into that energy.
Cochrane let the Companion's fingers slip from his grasp and
raised his hand instead to touch the cloud.
The cloud coiled around him, ephemeral, translucent, heart-
breakingly alive with color.
Cochrane turned his head back to the windows, to look out to
the stars, a smile of wonder growing on his face as all sign of
struggle left him.
The cloud slipped down the length of his arm, merging with
him just as it had separated from the Companion. His entire body
shone with a steady inner light. ~i}
"Can you hear them?" he whispered in a voice full of love.
And to Picard's amazement a voice that was more than a voice 53
answered back with equal love, I do. ~
Cochrane lowered his arm. Slowly the glow faded from his :~
body. Slowly Picard realized that Zefram Cochrane's journey had
at last come to an end.
Picard sat there a long time in the ship's night, with Beverly
Crusher beside him. Both touched by the incredible sense of




438

FEDERATION

peace and completeness in what they had witnessed. He put his
arm around her. She rested her head on his shoulder. There was still so much more to be done.
But just for now, just for this stolen moment, they could
rest.
The Federation would endure.

439



Part Four

REQUIEM



ONE

CHRISTOPHER'S LANDING, TITAN
Earth Standard: March 19, 2061

As the guests gathered around the musicians on their dais in the
assembly hall, Zefram Cochrane stepped outside the governor's
home and into the comparatively vast space of the dome built
beside it.
He could smell rich soil, reminiscent of Earth but with a
faint after-scent of something different, something alien. In
time, he knew, the area beneath this dome was intended to be
a park.
Cochrane stepped off the patio and onto that alien soil. It felt
loose and crumbly beneath his boots, but in the light gravity of
Titan, he did not sink into it as much as he had expected.
As he walked across the thus-far barren soil, he thought of the
gravity of Titan, of Mars, of the moon, and of Centauri B II. He
had walked on all of them, felt the pull of four different worlds.
How many more would he feel in his lifetime?
He stopped beneath the center of the dome. At the age of
thirty-one, he had accomplished a feat of which humans of
centuries past could not conceive, and which humans of centuries
to come could never repeat.
He should be content with that, he knew.
But he wasn't. Not yet.

443



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

As the music started up in the governor's home, Cochrane
looked up through the slabs of transparent aluminum, to where
the floodlights outside the dome lit the thick, churning clouds of
Titan.
Most of the time, this moon's atmosphere was completely
opaque, but with night coming on, Cochrane had heard that there
was a narrow window in which a high-pressure ridge moved
with the terminator, clearing the sky for only a few minutes,
sometimes creating a brief opening through which to see the
stars.
That's what Cochrane wanted to do right now, to be away from
the meaningless noise and confusion of the party held to honor
him.
He longed to see the stars again, only hours after he had seen
them last.
It was a foolish desire on his part, he suspected. But who could
explain the needs of the human heart?
He waited expectantly beneath the dome, eyes fixed on the
heavens, so far unseen.
In time, he knew, he'd have to go back to the party. He had
to talk to Micah Brack. He should catch up with events on
Earth over the year he'd been gone. But that was all in the
future.
For now he would see the stars. It was as simple as that.
Long minutes passed as he gazed up at the twisting of the
atmosphere, watching the spikes of illumination from the flood-
lights disappear into dark shadows as the gaps between the
blowing cloud banks grew larger.
He thought of all that countless humans had accomplished to
make it possible for him to be standing here this evening. He
thought of all that would happen in the future because of what he
had done.
He wondered how many others might stand here after he was
gone, just as he did now, looking up, seeking the stars. The distant roar of the wind diminished.
Between the day and the night, the clouds lessened.
The sky above turned dark.

444

z~
Jl

FEDERATION

High above Zefram Cochrane, the stars began to appear, and
for just one moment, a fleeting instant of the time his life would
span. Zefram Cochrane was certain he heard those stars sing.
He wondered if anyone else could hear them.
Someday, he decided.
But for now, it mattered only that they sang for him.



TWO

CHRISTOPHER'S LANDING, TITAN
Earth Standard: -- March 19, 2270

Admiral Kirk stopped just inside the dome of Founder's Park
and took a deep breath. He was surprised by how much like
Earth the air smelled. But Christopher's Landing was an old
colony, and its tailored ecosystem had had time to become as
complex as the one it had sprung from, more than a century
ago.
Birds of Titan sang as he resumed his way along the worn stones
of the path through the grass. He could hear the laughter of
children on their swings, the splashing of a fountain, the rustle of
the fan-driven wind through the... Kirk squinted at the grove of
tropical trees at the edge of the dome.
Fig trees, old and robust, with their own bank of dedicated
ultraviolet lights above them.
He wondered who had brought them here. One of the first
colonists, he decided. Trying to make an inhospitable world more
like home.
Kirk adjusted the slim package under his arm and walked
along the path to the monument standing beneath the dome's
exact center. McCoy was already waiting for him there, look-
ing outlandish in his civvies and a patchy beard. Kirk tried
to suppress a smile as he shook hands with the doctor. He saw




FEDERATION

McCoy suppress the same smile at seeing Kirk in his admiral's
uniform.
"I never thought you'd stay an admiral for so long," McCoy
said.
"I never thought you'd stay retired for so long," Kirk an-
swered.
McCoy gave a short mirthless laugh. "There's about as much
chance of my coming back to Starfleet as there is for Spock."
'Have you heard from him?"
"Why would I? Probably taken some damned Vulcan vow of
silence for his pursuit of kohlin-whatever."
Kirk smiled with understanding. "I know, Bones. I miss him,
tOO."
McCoy looked alarmed. "Now look here, I--"
But Kirk shook his head and pointed at the monument so
that McCoy had no choice but to stop talking and look at it as
well.
"What do you think?" Kirk asked.
A twice-life-size bronze statue of Zefram Cochrane stood on a
base of granite brought from Earth. The scientist was looking up,
eyes fixed forever on the heavens. In one hand he carried a laurel
branch, curved to suggest it was one half of the frame of the Great
Seal of the Federation. With the other hand, he gestured, as if
inviting the viewer to follow him.
"The cheekbones aren't right," McCoy complained.
"I don't think that was the point," Kirk said.
On the granite base, a simple plaque had been inset:

ZEFRAM COCHRANE
Human scientist, inventor of the warp drive
8. 2030 A.C.E.--D. ?
Erected by the Christopher's Landing Historical Board
to commemorate the 100th anniversary of the founding of the
UNITED FEDERATION OF PLANETS
and the 200th Anniversary of
Zefram Cochrane's triumphant return to his home system
following humanity's first faster-than-light voyage to another world.
March 19, 2261



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Kirk liked it. There were similar statues on more worlds than he
could remember, but this one had special meaning because this
marked where Cochrane himself had returned.
"He might have stood right where we're standing now," Kirk
said.
"Was this dome even built back then?" McCoy grumbled.
Kirk didn't know. It didn't matter.
McCoy scratched at his beard. "You ever regret going by the
book on that one, Jim? I mean, not trying to communicate with
them earlier. Before the interference got in the way?"
Kirk smiled. "I can communicate with them," he said.
McCoy looked perplexed.
Kirk held up his package, started to open it.
McCoy felt the stationery sheets that Kirk withdrew. "Is that
real paper?"
"Hand-made," Kirk answered. "A little shop in San Francisco
still makes it. They supply the Vulcan Embassy."
McCoy raised an eyebrow. Kirk didn't dare mention where the
doctor had undoubtedly acquired that expression. "You're going
to write a letter to the captain of the other ship?"
"That's right. I've put it off too long. He deserves to know the
whole story behind his mission."
"Jim, he probably hasn't been born yet. If you set down what
happened--what will happen--and he reads it... you're telling
him his future. He might not do exactly what he did before--will
do--good Lord, no wonder Starfleet doesn't like time travel."
Kirk laughed. "That captain won't get it until well after the date
Spock calculated his ship came from. I'm including a few years'
margin of error, just in case."
"Starfleet Archives, I suppose?" McCoy asked.
"Their security has been much improved. I've taken a personal
interest in it."
McCoy stared back up at the statue of Cochrane. "And then
what?" he asked. "After the letter? What are you going to do?"
Kirk shrugged. "Get back to work. The refit is progressing
nicely but Mr. Scott still needs some strings pulled from time to
time. And I have to begin reviewing candidates for... her new
captain."

448

FEDERATION

McCov stared at Kirk. "I don't believe you."
Kirk didn't know how to respond. "About what?"
"You're going to take her out again. And you know it."
'Bones. they don't give starships to admirals."
"That's right. And the Kobayashi Maru is a no-win scenario."
Kirk sighed. He held up his stationery. "Care to make any other
predictions for future generations to judge? I could add them as a
footnote."
McCoy put his hand on Kirk's shoulder. "Just don't think that
when you're writing that letter to the future, that you're somehow
writing your epitaph. I don't approve of this... this mood of
summation you're moving into. As if you're about to give up or
something. You're thirty-six. Almost thirty-seven. Too young to
be an admiral, too young to be behind a desk. You belong where
that letter's going." He looked up at the dome where Zefram
Cochrane's eyes were forever aimed. "Up there, out there, any-
where but here."
Kirk looked up, too. The engineering of Titan's atmosphere was
proceeding on schedule and the thin clouds just after sunset let
the stars shine down in almost all their glory. He wondered if the
dome had been here when Cochrane had arrived. He wondered if
Cochrane might have had even a glimpse of the stars from the
surface of Titan. Probably not, he decided. But the same stars had
shone down on them just the same, and they always would.
"Want to get some dinner?" McCoy asked. "I know this little
place over by the shuttlebays."
"Later," Kirk said. He held up the package of stationery and
glanced over to the side of the dome. "Right now, I'm going to go
sit under those trees and write my letter."
"Just don't fool yourself that you're writing your memoirs, Jim.
There's still a lot of life left in you. Even if you are an admiral."
Kirk said his good-bye to his friend and made his way to the
grove of fig trees. There was a bench there and he arranged
himself on it, the package balanced on his knee as a writing
surt~ce.
He wrote the date on the first page, then stopped to think how
to proceed. McCoy was probably right. The captain of the other
ship was most likely not yet born, wouldn't be for decades. And



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

yet his actions--or her actions--or its actions--had made it
possible for Kirk to escape the event horizon of a black hole and
be here. He found it troubling to think how actions in the future
could ripple through time to have an effect in the past. But given
all he had seen in his career, he supposed that quirk of the
universe made as much sense as anything else.
So how then to reply to the captain of the other ship? What
message should he set down on these pages, what wisdom from
the past, what revelation of hopes and fears deserved to be
preserved and passed into the future, to thank someone who did
not yet exist, for actions not yet taken?
Kirk sat for a long time on the bench beneath the trees. He
heard again the noisy laughter of children playing, saw lovers
strolling alone in their intimacy, watched old couples sitting
comfortably on other benches by the splashing fountain as they,
too, savored the signs of life in all its stages that flowed around
them. And invariably, everyone Kirk saw, at some point or
another, looked up past the dome, in the direction Cochrane had
shown them, and he knew for a certainty that countless others just
like them looked back from different distant worlds.
Kirk stared at Cochrane's statue. Someday that question mark
about his death would be filled in, all truths would be known. But
until that day... he followed the scientist's gaze upward. He looked at the stars.
And soon he knew exactly what to say.
Alone on his bench, under some long-ago colonist's trees, Kirk
began to write. It was many hours before he looked up again. And
when he was finished, the letter complete, he knew McCoy had
been right.
One way or another, when her refit was completed, he was going
to take the Enterprise out again.
The stars demanded it of him.
He could almost hear them calling.

!!

71

THREE

CHRISTOPHER'S LANDING, TITAN
Stardate 48988.2
Earth Standard: May 28, 2371

Picard closed his eyes for a moment as he stood in the center of
the Founders' Park dome. The rich scent of Titan's air, the rustle
of the leaves, the songs of the birds--all reminded him of what
had happened on Veridian III, of all he had lost there. And of the
millions of lives that had been gained in return.
But he was here now. For whatever reason, fate and the
universe had conspired to keep him moving forward, to bring him
to this moment while others were left behind. His whole life could
be viewed that way, he knew. For whatever reason, he had had
experiences and adventures of which humans of centuries past
could not conceive, and which humans of centuries to come could
never repeat. If he considered the progress of his life that way, he
was content.
Picard opened his eyes and gazed upon the unchanging face of
Zefram Cochrane. He found it comforting.
Five years had passed since the scientist had come aboard the
Enterprise for his final voyage among the stars. His body had been
returned here since, and lay buried deep within the soil of Titan,
with the granite of Earth his marker, this bronze statue his
monument.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Picard read the plaque inset in the stone. The numerals giving
his date of death were brighter than the other letters in the metal,
attesting to how recent their addition had been.
Picard heard familiar footsteps approaching, so easily recog.
nized after eight years.
"Hello, Will," he said a moment before Riker spoke.
He could hear the smile in Riker's voice as he replied. "Cap-
tain."
They stood together, gazing up through the dome, seeing what
Cochrane would see forever--the stars, brightly flickering
through Titan's cleansed atmosphere, a jeweled band around
Saturn's majesty. This moon of Saturn was still far too cold for
anyone to venture out without an environment suit, but the
citizens of Titan had begun a geothermal venting project, and in a
few more centuries, who knew? This whole park might be open to
the night sky. Picard wondered what Cochrane would have
thought of that.
"A most remarkable man," Riker said.
"A most remarkable life," Picard agreed.
They remained together in silence, contemplating the monu-
ment and what it represented. For all that they had been captain
and first officer for eight years, for all that they did not know what
the future would hold for them now, they were friends, and the
silence between them was as meaningful as any conversation.
In time, another set of footsteps approached, ones that Picard
did not recognize. He and Riker turned together.
The visitor was a Vulcan in a red Starfleet uniform and
short-cropped hair. She was approaching middle age for her
species, no more than one hundred Earth standard years. The
attach6 case she carried was embossed with the emblem of the
Starfleet Archives.
"Captain Picard?" she asked.
"Yes?"
"Forgive me for intruding." She opened the case and removed a
clear aluminum cylinder. Fixed inside there appeared to be an
old-fashioned envelope. Made from real paper, it seemed.
Picard was immediately intrigued by the object, even more so
when the Vulcan handed it to him. "This is for you, sir."

FEDERATION

Picard held the cylinder in his hands, turning it to read the
careful handwriting on the envelope inside. "What is it?"
"It is a personal communication, sir. A letter. Deposited in
Starfleet Archives one hundred standard years ago."
'I don't understand," Picard said. "How could it be for me?"
There was no name on the envelope, just a series of handwritten
dates and coordinates.
"The letter is addressed to the commander of the Starfleet
vessel who took part in a special recovery operation within the
event horizon of TNC 65813, on or about stardate 43926."
Picard felt a sudden chill of recognition as he heard the Vulcan
speak. Those words were exactly what was written on the outside
of the envelope, and the time and place they referred to had never
been far from his mind. Picard's eyes met those of the Vulcan. He
dared not ask the question he knew he must. The potential answer
was more than he should hope for.
"The letter was contained in a personal log vault, marked for
release this year. The person who deposited it was apparently
following Starfleet regulations regarding the temporal transmis-
sion of information in other than a causal manner."
"In other than a causal manner..." Picard repeated as he
realized what he might be holding. "And the person who depos-
ited this letter?"
The Vulcan nodded her head slightly, a subtle sign of respect for
the name she spoke. "James Tiberius Kirk, sir. At the time it was
written, Admiral, Starfleet Command."
Picard slowly drew in a breath of anticipation, surprise, won-
der, he wasn't sure which. In the years since his ship and crew had
recovered Cochrane, he had had the opportunity to discuss the
incident within the event horizon with Ambassador Spock, and
with Montgomery Scott when he had come aboard the Enterprise.
But when Picard had spoken with Kirk on Veridian III, even at
the time he had been overwhelmed by the feeling that there was so
much more they should be saying to each other, so much more
they had to share, even beyond the events of TNC 65813. But
time had been too short, it was always too short. Like a law of
nature.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

The cylinder seemed to float in Picard's hand. The envelope
within seemed to glow.
"I met him once, sir," the Vulcan said. "Admiral Kirk. Captain
Kirk," she amended. "After he had retired. At the Ellison
Research Outpost."
"Did you?" Riker replied, saving Picard the pain of describing
the circumstances of his own meeting with Kirk on Veridian III.
"A most remarkable man," the Vulcan said.
"A most remarkable life," Riker agreed.
The Vulcan nodded, her silence acknowledging how little words
could convey about some subjects. She closed her case. "The
cylinder is filled with nitrogen," she explained. "It would be best
if, after opening it, you used archival storage methods for the
letter inside. I would be pleased to provide the latest guidelines at
your convenience."
Picard thanked the Vulcan and she departed.
"Well? Aren't you going to open it?" Riker asked.
Picard ached to do exactly that. But he said, "Not here, Will.
Up there. Where his words belong."
Riker smiled softly as he nodded. "I understand."
Picard held the cylinder as Cochrane held the laurel branch, as
if it were the frame of something much bigger, unseen, still in the
future. "The three ages of the Federation," he said softly.
"Cochrane, Kirk, and us." The envelope was fat. The letter inside
must be long, rich with detail, with... who knew what secrets
there were to be shared only by those who commanded starships?
"I wonder what the next ages will bring?" Picard asked. "And
to whom they'll bring it?"
For a moment, he could almost hear the stars answer him.

THE ARTIFACT
New Stardate 2143.21.3

The ship moves through domains of space unimagined by
Cochrane, powered by engines incomprehensible to Scott or La
Forge. But all three engineers would recognize its destination, deep
wit/tin the voids between the galaxies.
The captain of the ship holds up her hand to the main bridge view
wall and with her thumb blots out the Milky Way as it recedes from
tter. sidewarp factor 55.
"Beacon signal converging as predicted," her data officer an-
nounces. "Dropping to warp speed." The ship slows to a relative
craw/as the main viewer switches to the forward scan. Against a
.vprin/,'ling of distant galaxies, one blue beacon stands out as the
,~'hip closes. "Moving to sublight. . . and relative stop."
The ship hangs tens of millions of light-years from any star, from
am' matter larger than a grain of dust, except for the silver
.s'tructure dead ahead, the structure whose presence was made
known to them by sidespace radio after the final inauguration
ceremony and all spacefaring cultures in the Milky Way had been
joined in one grand Federation. That, so the current theory went,
had been the trigger for the invitation.
The translator tanks identify markings on the side of the
,s'[rttcture as consistent with similar markings recorded on so-ca/led



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

Preserver artifacts. The Cochrane delta is there among them.
Science tanks confirm that the radiation signature is consistent
with postulated controlled-access corridors to multiple universes.
The captain shakes her head in amazement. "Multiple universes,"
she says to her data officer, the words, the entire concept, still unreal
to her. The data officer holds his hands ready over the control
surfaces. "Do we accept the invitation, Captain?"
The captain stares into the beckoning doorway of the silver
structure between the galaxies, contemplating an infinite ocean of
time and space into which life couM expand, its fate no longer tied
to a single world, a single galaxy, or now, even a single universe.
"Helm, full ahead," she orders. "Let's see what's on the other
side." Like another explorer centuries before her, who stood on the
brink of an equal adventure, her eyes blur with tears even as she
laughs, the reason for either response a mystery to her, rooted deep
in that which makes her human.
In the language of the time, the ship is called Enterprise, and she
slides forward, accepting the invitation, once more going where
none has gone before.
For even here, even now, the adventure is still just beginning ....

EPILOGUE

ON THE EDGE
OF FOREVER



ELLISON RESEARCH OUTPOST
Stardate 9910.1
Earth Standard: ~ Late September 2295

Kirk took his hand from the Guardian and for a moment felt as if
he had forgotten how to breathe.
The Guardian seemed to spin around him. Vortices of stars.
Images of gateways unimaginable. Paths and possibilities and
multiple universes-- "Captain?"
He became aware of the Vulcan standing close to him. The
impossibly young lieutenant commander with the tricorder slung
against her hip. He had not heard her approach over the duraplast
sheeting.
"Did you require something, sir?"
Kirk tried to answer but his throat was dry as dust, as
if he hadn't spoken for days. It struck him that he had no idea
how long he had been standing by the Guardian, listening toto
what? ' ' '
"How--" He coughed to clear his throat and began again.
"How long have I been here?" he asked. He glanced over his
shoulder to see the Vulcan attempt to hide her concern.
"Beside the Guardian, sir?"
"Touching it," Kirk said.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

The Vulcan's hand played over her tricorder. Kirk could see she
was struggling with her desire to turn it on.
"Only a moment, sir," she said. "I thought you said something
to me so I came back and..." She fixed him with an expression
of curiosity that was more familiar to Kirk than she would ever
know. "Sir, did... something happen?"
Kirk shook his head. He could say that he had asked a question
and the Guardian had answered, but whatever had been related
had apparently been only for him. If it had happened at all.
Kirk closed his eyes again and the myriad images the Guardian
had somehow shown him burst across his mind's eye as if a clam
had burst
. . as ifa dam had burst...
He heard the echo of Micah Brack saying those words
to... to... Zefram Cochrane? Had it really been Cochrane he
had seen, there on Titan? Was Brack really Flint, the immortal
human Kirk had met so many years ago? Or had some trick of the
Guardian, some alien static charge somehow flashed through
him, weaving together his own disparate memories of forty-five
years in Starfleet, creating an illusion, nothing more?
Kirk heard the Vulcan switch on her tricorder, heard it scan-
ning, and made no move to stop her. He had no idea at all how
much of what he had seen, experienced, imagined, been shown,
was real. Perhaps the tricorder would have an answer. "Is anything different?" Kirk asked.
"No, sir." Kirk's trained ear could hear her disappointment,
though few others who were not from her world could have done
the same.
Kirk held his hands together, squeezing his fingers. The hand
that had touched the Guardian felt stiff, as if he had held a
position too long, for centuries.
Then he realized he had felt this way before.
Ten years ago, in San Francisco, when Sarek had come to his
apartment seeking information about Spock, his son.
Kirk had undergone a mind-meld with the ambassador that
night, and the aftereffects had been much the same as what he

460

FEDERATION

felt now--memories not his own colliding with half-remem-
bered dreams from all the other minds Sarek had touched in his
life.
The other captain had felt the same way, Kirk suddenly
remembered. The other captain in the other ship, the other
Enterprise.
For an instant he had an impression of that other captain,
standing by a monument of... of... it was gone as quickly as
that.
Kirk rubbed his hands across his face, as if waking from a long
sleep. The tricorder still trilled behind him but he suddenly felt
certain that it would discover nothing.
Had he really seen a past he could never have known? Had he
really seen a future that he would never be part of?. A future now
seventy years distant, a thousand years distant? Was there a
difference in whatever time stretched on beyond his own years?
Could he believe anything he had seen or was it all just an
indulgent dream of self-justification?
Sarek would know, Kirk thought. He felt certain that the
ambassador's thoughts were somehow woven through all of this,
as if through the Guardian the normal limits of space and time
and causality had been sundered and a mind-meld of a different
order had occurred, between Kirk, between the other captain,
between the Guardian itself, all minds linked by some agency
unknown.
He tried to recapture the details, but they were lost in the
tapestry the Guardian had woven for him, until he only saw the
larger pattern, the grand design.
The need for life to continue.
The certainty that life would.
Above the gentle wind, the subtle silence of the ancient stones,
Kirk heard faint, familiar music play.
He turned to see two shimmering pillars of light swirl into
existence upon the dust of this world. And as the figures within
took shape, became whole, through a trick of the transporter
nimbus that surrounded them, he seemed to see them as they had
been almost three decades ago.
Commander Spock. Dr. McCoy.



JUDITH AND GARFIELD REEVES-STEVENS

At the beginning of their adventure.
Then the transporter effect vanished and his friends as they
were now came for him.
McCoy stood by his captain's side and stared at the Guardian.
Spock nodded politely to the young lieutenant commander and
then it was as if she did not exist.
"Captain Sulu sends his regards, Captain. The Excelsior is at
your disposal."
Kirk took a last look at the Guardian.
"C'mon, Jim. It's time to go home." McCoy reached out to
touch Kirk's shoulder.
"I know," Kirk said, "I know," and with his friends at his side,
he walked to the edge of the sheeting, stepped again onto the soil
of this world, and readied himself for what would happen next.
Whatever it would be.
The story that the Guardian had shared still resonated within
him, and even as the details fled, he was left with what he had
always known--that his journey would be ending soon.
But he realized at last that one thing had changed--perhaps
the Guardian's gift--the new recognition he had that though
his journey would be ending soon, the journey itself would never
end.
However small, that knowledge made a difference.
Kirk stood between his friends. Held the communicator. The
last time for so many things. But not for everything.
"Kirk to Excelsior," he said. "Three to beam up."
The gentle chime of the transporter claimed them then, Kirk,
Spock, and McCoy, and together they dissolved into the quantum
mist and were swallowed by the light.
The young Vulcan stared a moment into the space the three
legends had occupied. Looked at their footprints in the ancient
dust, then shook her head as if suddenly chiding herself that what
she thought wasn't logical.
She turned her back on the Guardian and walked to the
research huts.
Alone once more in its solitude, the Guardian watched her go,

462


FEDERATION

waiting patiently, silently, as it had for eons, until another would
come who was worthy to ask it a question.
It would be a long wait, the Guardian knew. But eventually
another would come.
There was so much of the story still to be told. And not even the
Guardian knew how it would end.






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