
PROLOGUE

He fell .... Alone.
    Twisting through the air of Veridian 111. The shriek of the
metal bridge echoing in his ears. Spinning. The sun flashing
into his eyes. The shadows engulfing him. One following the
other, over and over as he fell. Light. Shadow. Light. Shadow.
Like the beating of wings. Like all the days of his life.
Intersecting...
    In an Iowa cornfield--he sees the stars. A boy of five in his
father's arms. I have to go there, he says. And you will, Jimmy,
his father answers. You will...
    In Carol's arms, in their bed--even as he knows he must
leave her, the son they had created quickening within her...
    In Starfleet headquarters--Admiral Nogura reaching out to
shake his hand.' Congratulations, Captain, the Enterprise is
yours ....
    In Spacedock--Captain Pike beginning the introduction:
Your science officer, Lieutenant-Commander Spock. . .
    On the streets of old Earth--squealing brakes, Edith, haloed
in the headlights of her death...
                 !




    Through all these days and more, alone he jell, hearing the
whispers of the past....
     I am, and always will be, your friend.... Dammit it,
Jim- I'm a doctor not a bricklayer.... Let me help .... I've always known I'll die alone....
    Then one shadow blocked the light. Broke his fall. Ended the
kaleidoscope of days. He turned his head, looked up, saw a face
he recognized, not from the past, not from the present.
 From the future.
    "Did we do it?" the falling man asked. "Did we make a
difference?"
    The other, in his odd uniform, but with the familiar touch-
stone of Starfieet on his chest, knelt by his side.
  "Oh, yes. We made a difference. Thank you."
    Somewhere within him, the falling man was aware of pain,
deep and incurable. Somewhere within him, he became aware
he couldn't feel his legs, his arms, as if he and all existence
were evaporating together.
    The edges of his vision blurred, darkened, joined one final
shadow deep enough to swallow whatever else remained.
    But the other, this stranger, this... Picard, had offered his
friendship. In another lifetime, perhaps it might have been so.
So much might have been. So many possibilities.
    "Least I could do," the falling man said, ignoring the final
shadow for the sake of his friend, 'for the captain of the
Enterprise."
    Voices called to him from the darkness then, their summons
more than whispers.
      Through the latticework of the twisted metal above him, he
glimpsed the edge of something moving, coming closer.  He closed his eyes.
      What was it he had said to Picard when they had met? When
Picard had challenged him to return for one last mission?
 He remembered. His eyes opened.
    "It was... fun," he told Picard. He tried to smile. To spare
this friend.
                2

    What lay beyond the bridge swept closer, chasing him as it
had always chased him.
    Through the mangled steel the shape was clearer now.
Closer. Known.
 He gazed up at it, amazed Picard did not see, did not know.
    He tried to warn Picard. To help him escape what he no
longer could.
    But the momentum of his days had crested. The dark well of
his vision swirled inward. Too quickly. And the face of that
which chased him, caught him, claimed him.
    The final wisps of existence lifted from him in a feathered
haze of light, revealing all that lay beyond, still to come.
 "Oh my," he whispered.
 As he saw.
 As he knew.
 And then he fell again.
 Alone...




ONE

James T. Kirk was dead....
    As Commander William Riker resolved from the trans-
porter beam beside the grave of that Starfleet legend, he was
surprised by the sudden thought that had come to him. Of all
that had happened on this desolate world of Veridian Ill only
a month ago, inexplicably, the fate of James T. Kirk weighed
most heavily on his mind.
    Half a planet away, the shattered hulk of the U.S.S.
Enterprise lay in ruins, slowly being carved into transporter
loads of recyclable scrap by a team of Starfleet engineers.
Though the ship was beyond salvage, in accordance with the
Prime Directive no trace of it could remain on this world. A
primitive civilization existed on Veridian IV, the next planet
out from the Veridian sun. If someday voyagers from that
world landed here, they must find no trace of advanced
technology which might affect the natural development of
their science.
    Riker had expected that the full emotional consequence of
the great ship's loss would have consumed him by now. She
had gone before her time, and in his dreams he had always
hoped to one day sit in her captain's chair.
                5




    But in the days that had passed since the Enterprise had
blazed through the atmosphere of this world to her first and
final landing, Riker's thoughts still kept turning to the fate of
the captain of an earlier Enterprise. The first Enterprise...
 "Sir, is that... him?"
    Riker turned to Lieutenant Baru. The seam ridge that
bisected the young Bolian officer's deep blue face pulled taut
as her eye ridges widened. She looked into the distance, past
the grave.
    Riker nodded, smiling inwardly at her reaction, recogniz-
ing the earnestness of youth. The Farragut's chief of security
had personally recommended Baru, and the three other
officers accompanying Riker, to be part of the honor guard to
escort Kirk's remains to Earth. Riker knew what she saw.
What they all saw now.
    A lone sentinel on a distant outcropping. The dry desert
wind shifting the elegant black robes he wore. The reddening
sun reflected from the silver script embroidered in their folds.
 He had come.
 From Romulus.
 Against all logic.
 "Spock," Baru said. With awe.
 Riker understood.
    He knew the Vulcan ambassador--had worked with himm
as a living, breathing individual. Yet Spock was as much a
legend as Kirk.
    As much a legendas the friendship that had bound those
two on the first Starship Enterprise.
    The officers of the honor guard stood at ease, respectfully
refraining from staring at the distinguished visitor. Instead,
they faced the simple cairn of rocks Jean-Luc Picard had built
for Kirk's remains. The setting sun drew long shadows from it
and caught an old-fashioned Starfleet insignia pin with a
gleam of dying light.
    Riker breathed the still, dry air of the Veridian desert. He
glanced upward to the darkening sky, as if he might see the
                6

l'~trragut sliding into orbit far overhead, come to claim
Starfleet's honored dead, to bear Kirk home.
    From his sentinel's position, Spock remained as motionless
as the time-smoothed stones of this place.
    What could it be like, Riker wondered, to lose your closest
friend, then seventy-eight years later, to lose him again?
    A hint of the power of that answer existed in the extraordi-
nary circumstances that had brought Spock here. In fewer
than four days after the crew of Riker's Enterprise had been
rescued, Starfleet Intelligence had mounted an emergency
extraction mission to bring Spock from the homeworld of the
Romulan Star Empire to Veildian Ill, so he might accompany
his friend on his final voyage.
    The extraction was not an operation to be undertaken
lightly. Relations between the Romulans and the Federation
had been strained for centuries. Spock had become instru-
mental in the efforts to reduce those tensions by decades of
secret negotiations intended to reconcile the Romulans with
the Vulcans and, hence, the Federation.
    Though the Romulans were an offshoot of the Vulcan race,
they had rejected the logic which had saved their Vulcan
ancestors from succumbing to their primitive, passionate,
blood-drenched beginnings. So who better than Spockma
child of emotional humans and logical Vulcansmto under-
stand both sides and work for unification?
    Riker had spent many long evenings discussing Spock with
Captain Picard. Both understood that the process Spook was
involved with was simply the playing out on a larger scale of
the struggle he had faced in his own divided heart.
    But whatever extraordinary actions Starfleet had taken to
bring the ambassador to this world at this time, Riker knew
that none of them would have been questioned, even given
the Federation's need to officially remain ignorant of Spock's
activities.
    Starfleet, the Federation, the galaxy itself, owed Spock too
much to deny him anything.
                7




 Just as they owed too much to Kirk.
    On the horizon, the last radiant spike of the dying sun
flared, then vanished behind a distant peak.
 Overhead, stars emerged from the deepening twilight.
    Far away, Riker saw Spock bow his head, as if lost in
memory.
 What would it be like? Riker wondered.
     A warm breeze stirred the small branches and dried leaves
of the lone bush that shared the outcropping. Lieutenant Baru caught Riker's eye.
    "Yes, Lieutenant?" Riker realized he had whispered his
inquiry. In the fading of the day, this forsaken plot of alien
rock had become a solemn place.
 "Sir, shouldn't we have heard from the Farragut by now?."
     Riker tapped his communicator badge. "Riker to Farragut.
The honor guard is in position." No response.
    "We arrived ahead of schedule," Riker told the lieutenant.
The Farragut had been the workhorse of the rescue and
recovery mission on Veridian Ill. Riker was not surprised the
overburdened starship might be running late. "We'll give
Captain Wells a few more minutes before we sound general
alarm." He smiled at her.
    Lieutenant Baru was too new to her rank to return the
smile. She nodded once in silent acknowledgment, then
returned her gaze to the cairn.
 Silent minutes passed.
 The night grew darker.
 His communicator chirped.
    Riker smiled again at Barn as he tapped it. She was too
tense. He'd have to talk to her about that. Not every day in
Starfleet brought life-or-death decisions. "Riker. Go ahead."
    But his smile faded as he realized the garbled, static-filled
call did not come from the Farragut.
                8

    "Commander Riker! This is Kilbourne! We're--" An ex-
plosion of static washed out the rest of the transmission.
    Riker held his fingers against his communicator, forcing an
override. Kilbourne was the chief engineer at the salvage site.
The honor guard stepped closer, on alert. "Kilbourne, this is Riker. Say again."
    Static whistled. Riker didn't understand the cause of it.
There was nothing in this planetary system that could cause
subspace interference.
    Then, for a heartbeat, the static cleared and Kilbourne's
distraught voice cut through the Veridian night.
     "--can't tell where they're coming from! Two shuttles
gone! We need--"
 Then nothing.
 Not even static.
    Riker's communicator chirped uselessly as he tried to
reestablish a link.
    Riker looked at the four officers gathered around him.
Their Starfleet training came to the fore. There was nothing
youthful about the intent expressions they wore.
    "This will have to wait," Riker said. He tapped his badge
again. "Riker to Ambassador Spock."
 A moment passed. Then the deep, familiar voice answered.
 "Spock here."
    "Ambassador, there appears to be some trouble at the
salvage site. I'm going to have to ask you to remain here while
we beam back to check the situation."
    "Of course, Commander," Spock agreed calmly. "What is
the nature of the trouble?"
    "I'm not sure," Riker replied. He looked through the
darkness that now blanketed Kirk's burial mound to where he
knew Spock waited. But in his black robes, the ambassador
was invisible. "It almost sounds as if they're... under at-
tack."
    Spock did not respond. Logically, Riker knew, he required
no response.
                9




    "Riker to transporter control--five to beam to salvage
site."
    With Kirk's honor guard beside him, Riker tensed with
anticipation as the computer-controlled satellite transport
system reacted at once. "Energizing .... "
    In the cool tingle of the transporter effect, the gravesite
shimmered. There was an unsettling moment of quantum
transition ....
 And then Will Riker beamed into Hell.

TWO

Driving rain sprayed through the ragged hole in the canopy of
the portable transporter platform, drenching Riker the in-
stant the transporter's exclusion field shut down.
    The platform shuddered in the concussion of a nearby flash
and bone-jarring thud.
    There had been thunderstorms at the salvage site for days
now.
 But the flash hadn't been lightning.
 The concussion hadn't been thunder.
    "Move! Move! Move!" Riker shouted over the storm and
the nonstop roar of explosions. The platform shuddered
again. Sparks flew from one of the pads. Riker shoved the
honor guard ahead of him, toward the steps that led to the
duraplast walkways linking the buildings of the salvage camp
spread out before him.
                10

    When the guards were clear, he charged after them into the
storm.
    It was night in this region of Veridian III, and Riker had
been prepared for partial darkness. But the emergency lights
weren't operating, and the bombarded camp had become a
collection of looming shadows, black against black, hidden by
night and rain.
  Except when the sky blazed with alien fire.
    Riker caught up with Barn. She leaned over the walkway
railing, staring to the east where a sputtering ball of plasma
flared against the duranium skin of the Enterprise's lifeless
saucer. The starship's primary hull rose from the raw mud
like a cliff of glacial ice, two hundred meters distant. All
around the ship, energy beams and the flash of chemical
explosions played like crazed lightning over the towering
cranes, personnel barracks, and hastily constructed shuttle
landing pads to the west of her.
    "What's happening, sir?" Baru shouted, her voice almost
lost in the deafening barrage.
    Riker angrily pushed his rain-flattened hair from his eyes.
"We're under attack!" he yelled back. A sudden wind caught
him and spun him offbalance--the wake of a low-flying craft,
he knew. Released from its grip, he grasped the railing to
steady himself, then looked up. But he saw nothing except low
storm clouds, flickering with their own lightning and the
explosions that bloomed beneath them in the camp. Baru still
clung to the handrail, mesmerized by the infernal spectacle
before them.
    A wave of heat blasted him from the side as a barracks
building detonated in a rocketing fountain of blinding plasma
fire. Flaming debris arced downward, its flame untouched by
the rain. Riker rapidly calculated that they were within range
of the downfall. He grabbed Baru's arm, yanking her off the
walkway, into the mud. "Let's go!"
 Riker jabbed at his communicator as they ran, their boots
                11





caking with thick mud each labored step. "Riker to
Kilbourne.t"
    An enormous thunderclap reached out and scooped them
up from behind, tossing them into the rain. Baru's arm flew
away from his grasp.
    Riker twisted as he fell through the hiss of crisscrossing
shrapnel, in time to see the transporter platform engulfed by
plasma. As he struck ground, columns of steam shot up all
around him where molten metal hit cold mud.
    Riker lay face-down in the mud, lungs aching with the need
to breathe. His ears rang with the thunder of whatever had hit
the transporter platform.
    A double pulse of wind shocked him into action. As he
fought to lift his arms from the mud, he heard the sound of air
being sliced by fast-moving vehicles.
    He wrenched his back as he rolled free and struggled to his
feet. His uniform clung to him, with ten extra kilos of thick
clay that not even the stinging rain could dislodge.
    Riker brushed his hair again without thinking. Mud stuck
to his forehead.
 "Lieutenant Baru!" he called.
    A thick shaft of green energy stabbed through the night and
the storm, piercing the Enterprise's hull, The impact point
was close to a wedge already removed by the engineers. Piker
saw the inner decks lit up with the discharge of whatever type
of weapon was being used. He saw no trace of Baru or the
other members of the honor guard.
    The beam sliced through the Enterprise, pivoting from its
origin point, fired by a flying craft.
    A chain reaction of explosions started deep within the hull
of the Enterprise. Instinctively, Riker knew that some of the
ship's self-destruct charges must have been triggered. They
had been deactivated by the engineers, but not all of them had
been removed.
 "Commander!"
 Riker wheeled to see Baru struggling toward him. She was
                12

layered in mud, its dark wetness shimmering fitfully in the
strobing flares of the attack. She limped, one hand wrapped
tightly over her shoulder. Her other arm hung uselessly.
    An enormous gout of flame flared from the Enterprise's
hull. A second later, another gout blasted out through the
saucer's side. Even through the wind and the rain, Riker
could feel the heat.
  "Who's doing this?" Baru cried as she reached his side.
  Riker shrugged. He had no idea, nor even suspicions.
  "We have to get to a shuttle," he said.
    There was nothing they could do down here. But some of
the engineering shuttles were armed. He had to go up. To fight
back.
    Baru's gaze swept the camp. The mud around them glis-
tened in firelight, lightning, and plasma bursts, as if they
stood in a sea of flames. "There won't be any shuttles!" she
said.
    Riker took hold of her good arm. "We won't know till we
look. This way."
    Bodies lay scattered around the debris of the burning
communications center. More explosions shook the saucer
hull. Riker's jaw tightened as he heard screams blend with the
roar of the unseen craft, the hum of their weapons, the roar of
the flames.
     But there was no way to know from where the screams
came. No time to search for whoever made them. Never enough time...
    They skirted the burning mound of wreckage that had been
a storage warehouse. Beyond it, Riker could see the smoking
pits that were all that remained of the shuttle pads.
    Two Tesla-class shuttles lay in pieces nearby, split open like
used packing crates. A third shuttle was intact, though its
frame was out of alignment where it angled into the mud,
hurled there by an explosion not quite near enough to destroy
it. Ragged figures milled about it. Riker and Baru fought the
mud as they staggered closer.
                13




 Kilbourne was there. Four engineers worked with him. Two
still in their sleeping robes. The attack had been that sudden.
 "Who are they?" Riker asked as he leaned gratefully
 against the shuttle's hull, leaving a muddy handprint to be
 washed away by the pounding rain.
    Hunched over his trioorder, Kilbourne looked up at him
with shadowed eyes. "I don't know. They... they took out
the Farragut."
    Riker felt acid course through his stomach. The only other
Starfleet vessels in the Veildian system were a handful of
transport freighters and engineering support cruisers. With-
out the Farragut, the survivors of the salvage camp--and
Deanna Troimwere at the mercy of its attackers.
    Kilbourne returned his attention to the small screen of his
trioorder. Riker touched Kilbourne's shoulder. "Then what
are they after?" Both of them glanced over at the looming
mass of the Enterprise's saucer. The open ground between it
and the camp was a nightmarish field of destruction. The
saucer itself still crackled with energy discharges, long bolts of
plasma sparking out as if in combat with the lightning.
    "I don't know," Kilbourne repeated wildly. "There's noth-
ing important left in her. All the tactical computer cores were
pulled on the first day. Phasers... shields... everything
classified has already been taken out."
    The ground shook as a blinding flash of light exploded from
the saucer's interior with a booming echo.
    Kilbourne held out his tileorder. Riker recognized the
traces on its display.
    "Whoever they are--they're flooding us with sensor scans.
They know where each one of us is." Kilbourne stared up at
Riker. His haggard face was streaked by blood and rain and
mud. "We've got to retreat, Commander. Into the forest."
    Baru stiflened at Riker's side. Riker looked at the engineer-
ing shuttle. It couldn't fly. But that wasn't all it was good for.
    "Does this shuttle still have demolition charges?" Riker
demanded. They were low-yield photon torpedoes designed
14

for clearing orbital wreckage. The shuttle would normally
carry four and be capable of firing two at a time.
  But Kilbourne looked at him as if Riker were mad.
  "You can't be serious."
    Riker grabbed the chief engineer by his shirtfront, twisting
the Sodden fabric in his fist. He ignored the startled protests
of Kilbourne's staff as they gathered around him. "Starfleet
doesn't run," Riker spat at him.
    He grabbed Kilbourne's tricorder and thrust it at Baru. "I
want both torpedoes prepped for atmospheric detonation. Do
it manually so they don't show up on the enemy's sensors."
    Kilbourue's agitated voice shook. "The second you turn on
the shuttle's targeting system, whatever's attacking is going to
incinerate us!"
    Riker smiled grimly. "Probably." Then he turned his back
on Kilbourne and told Baru how to use the tricorder to open
the shuttle's torpedo bays.
    It took less than two minutes to prepare the torpedoes for
simultaneous activation, target lock, and launch. Throughout
that time, the unknown assailants' attack never lessened. The
Enterprise's saucer crumpled in on itself in three sectors.
Fires blazed inside every open level.
    One of Kilbourne's junior staff huddled against the side of
the shuttle, hands pressed tight to his ears, eyes clenched shut,
rocking, trying to shut out the assault on his senses.
    Baru handed the trioorder back to Riker. Her expression
was unflinching. "That's all we can do with the tricorder, sir.
If you want to launch those things, we're going to have to do it
from inside."
 Riker met her gaze. He nodded his understanding.
    The torpedoes could be launched only by the controls on
the shuttle's flight deck. But the instant they were brought
online, the enemy's sensors would detect them, target them,
and direct fire at them.
 And at whoever was on the flight deck.
 "Get your people out of here," Riker ordered Kilbourne.
                15




 Riker felt Baru's hand on his ann.
 "Sir... you can't do this alone."
    Riker watched as Kilbourne and his engineers fled into the
rain. The ground shuddered in a series of explosions. Riker
wondered what was left to explode in the camp.
 "Don't worry," Riker said. "I plan to live forever."
    He punched a command sequence into the tricorder. Then
he hefied the tricorder in his hand, paused for a moment, and
threw it into the storm. It landed fifty meters away, disappear-
ing into the mud.
    Riker answered Baru's unspoken question. "In thirty sec-
onds, that tricorder's going to put out a signal that makes it
look like a phaser bank coming online."
    "A distraction," Baru said. She smiled. Riker had no time
to smile back.
    He jerked his head to the side. "Follow Kilbourne. Take
cover in the forest." Then Riker pulled himself through the
off-angle door of the shuttle, out of the rain.
    Inside the shuttle, the flight deck was at a twenty-degree
slope. Riker braced himself on the copilot's chair as his mud-
coated boots slipped on the traction carpet. He forced himself
to finish counting out the thirty seconds in his head. He
counted out an additional five to give the enemy time to react.
Then he activated the shuttle's torpedo substation.
    Swiftly, he set the torpedoes to target any moving object
one hundred meters in altitude or above. As soon as the panel
confirmed his input, he hurried back through the shnttle's
cargo hold to the airlock door.
    The instant he appeared in the doorway, a green bolt of
energy hit the mud fifty meters in front of him, vaporizing the
tricorder in a spray of steam. Riker felt the rush of reliefi The
distraction had worked.
    But the beam did not shut off. It pushed on through the
mud, rending it like water before the prow of a ship, closing
on the second weapons signal--the shuttle.
                16

  Riker gripped the sides of the door and pushed to leap free.
  His boots slipped.
     He fell, chest slamming into the raised ridge of the airiock
 seal.
    He felt a rib crack, lost his breath, looked up to see the
inexorable green bolt crackling toward him, ten meters away,
wreathed in steam.
  He pulled himself up even as he knew he wouldn't make it.
  Never enough time...
    "Deanna," he gasped, willing his final word to her, his final
emotion. Imzadi . . .
  He thought of Kirk.
  Falling...
  The beam reached out for him.
  A hand grabbed his wrist.
  "Commander!"
  She hadn't left him.
    Riker's eyes met Baru's as she hauled him out of the shuttle
with desperate strength.
      He saw what she saw. Knew what she knew. All in that one
terrible moment as he was hurled away from her to safety.
 And heard her cry...
 Heard the hiss of vaporized flesh...
 Heard the hum of torpedoes launching...
 The shuttle sliced in two...
    The taste of Veridian mud for a second time as the shuttle
erupted.
 Too late for Baru.
 But not too late for the torpedoes.
    Riker rolled onto his back in time to see two ionized streaks
of plasma exhaust bank into the storm clouds as the torpe-
does sought their targets.
 The clouds lit up like dawn.
    A heartbeat later, the concussion of the torpedo detona-
tions shook Riker deeper into the mud.

                17




 For a silent moment after, even the rain stopped.
 When it began again, it felt gentle. Warm. Slow as tears.
    Riker carefully, painfully, drew himself up into a sitting
position. He strained to breathe. He choked on mud.
    He saw Baru's hand, reaching for him, out of the mud. In
relief, he gripped it. Pulled.
    And the hand and forearm and nothing else of the young
Bolian slipped from the mud.
 Riker dropped the hand in horror.
 In the awful silence, he heard it hit the mud.
    He sat alone in the night. Hellish fires from the camp and
the saucer still lit the low roiling clouds. But there were no
more explosions. No more screams of low-flying craft. The
warm rain bathed his eyes. The attack was over.
    Then Kilbourne was beside him. One of his engineers,
still in a sleep robe, held a medikit. They helped Riker to
his feet.
    "Why?" Riker asked. Though he expected no answer.
Certainly not from Kilbourne.
    "I... don't... know," Kilbourne said grimly as he broke
open a hypospray. "There was nothing here to steal. No
secrets left. No... nothing. If you hadn't launched those
torpedoes .... "
    But Riker knew that part wasn't true. "They didn't stop the
attack because of two demolition torpedoes."
    "Why else would they?" Kilbourne jammed the hypo
against Riker's neck. Its cool tip hissed as it delivered its
healing agents.
    "For the same reason all successful attacks end," Riker
said, rocking as the painkillers flooded his body, as he finally
surrendered to the overwhelming exhaustion he had held at
bay. "They accomplished their objective."
    "What objective?" Kilbourne raged. "Name one thing on
this stinking planet worth dying for!"
                18

 For that question, Riker had no answer.
 But somewhere, someone did.
    And Riker knew he couldn't rest until he had found those
responsible, and answered that question for himself.

THREE

Alone in the darkness by the gravesite, Spock had found a
rock to sit on, the better to preserve his strength. Once settled,
he had rearranged his robes, the better to conserve his body
heat.
    He was 143 standard years old. Advanced middle age for a
Vulcan in good health. But whatever encounter Riker and his
officers had beamed into, those days of action were behind
him.
 Quite illogically, he found he missed them.
    For almost half an hour, he maintained his position,
observing moving points of light against the stars, and the
streaks of multicolored light that were exchanged between
them.
 Starships in orbital battle.
 "Fascinating," Spock murmured.
    As his eyes adapted to the distant discharges, he recognized
the distinctive blue signature of Starfleet phasers.
    But the return fire was unidentifiable. He had never seen its
like before.
    The situation presented an interesting set of problems. In
his mind, Spock began to analyze them as a series of logical

                19




arguments, attempting to identify likely attackers, their mo-
tives, tactics, and probable odds of succesS.
 But he was interrupted in his calculations.
    The night air thrummed. Something large was approaching
through the sky.
    Spook rose slowly to his feet. He scanned the dark horizon,
searching for any occultation of stars that would indicate
the presence of a flying craft operating without running
lights.
 The thrumming increased.
    He could see nothing, but his robes began to swirl around
him, blown about by some kind of backwash.
    Spook raised his hand to shield his eyes from a rising
whirlwind of dust.
    Directly above him, the stars wavered and then disap-
peared, blacked out by a silhouette of something he couldn't
identify. A sudden light danced at the edge of his vision.
 Spook looked down the slope toward Kirk's grave.
    Amber rays spiked out from between the rooks of the
simple cairn.
    Above the thrumming and the wind, Spook heard an oddly
musical chime.
    The light emanating from Kirk's grave brightened, then
began to fade. Spook clearly heard the sounds of rooks falling
against themselves.
    The logic of this situation was inescapable, yet made no
sense.
    Among the stars, the signs of a space battle ended. Above
Spook, the watching stars returned and the thrumming back-
wash ceased as suddenly as if a ship had gone to warp.
    Spook drew an emergency light from his belt. He began to
descend the slope to Kirk's grave.
 He played the light against the cairn.
 The rocks had fallen in.
 The grave was empty.
                2O

 Spook looked to the stars.
    It was not at all logical, but for a moment, a most
improbable thought came to him--
 Perhaps some journeys were never meant to end.
 "Jim... ?" he said.
 There were always possibilities ....

FOUR

High above Veridian III, flashing in sunlight, a thirty-meter-
wide slab of curved duranium hull metal slowly spun in the
silence of space. The black letters etched into its surface read
U.S.S. Faragut NCC-60597.
    It was the largest piece of debris that remained of the
starship. The rest was a cloud of dazzling shards, slowly
dispersing.
    Aboard the Avatar of Totned, the Romulan commander,
Salatrel, watched the hull metal impassively on the main
viewscreen of her bridge. Beside her, she could sense her
subcommander's elation.
 "A great victory, Commander," Tran said.
    Salatrel turned in her command chair. One upswept
eyebrow arched, disappearing beneath the dark bangs
that framed her aristocratic features, pointed ears, and full
lips.
 "This was no victory," she said. "They had no reason to
                21




expect us. They had no warning. It was an operational
procedure. Nothing more."
    But the young Romulan officer held her eye in a way he
would not dare if this ship had still been a part of the
Empire's fleet. With an insincere inflection of servility, he
said, "They were expecting something, Commander. We lost
two attack craft to torpedoes at the secondary target site. We
are at war."
    "I have not yet given that command," Salatrel replied
sharply. "Don't make me remind you again."
    An instant too slowly, Subcommander Tran dropped his
gaze in response to the icy threat in his superior's tone. The
most common language of the Romulan homeworld con-
veyed precise meaning by word and by inflection, and the
weapons officer knew how close he had come to insubordina-
tion.
    The communications officer's voice rang out, across the
expansive bridge. "Commander, the second wing has con-
firmed transport at the primary target site."
    Salatrel rose from her command chair. How long had she
waited for this moment?                     ' '
    "Kirk?" she asked. The harsh and hated human name felt
odd in her throat. Alien.
    Her science officer answered from the engineering console
where transporter displays flashed. "DNA analysis confirms
identity of the remains, Commander. When the attack craft
dock, the remains will be beamed directly into the stasis
unit."
    For the first time since this mission had begun, Salatrel
permitted herself a small smile. She sat back in triumph.
    "Decloak," she commanded her crew, "and prepare to
receive incoming craft."
 She glanced up at Tran, who remained standing beside her.
 "You'll have your war soon enough, Subcommander."
    Tran's eyes narrowed with predatory anticipation. "War,
and victory," he said.
                22

    On the viewscreen, the frozen cloud that was the Farragut
sparkled in its death throes.

    Closer in, amongst the spinning, twisting wreckage of the
Farragut, a handful of shapes moved of their own accord.
    Some of the starship's crew had managed to don environ-
mental suits as their ship was torn apart around them in the
unexpected attack.
    Now they moved toward each other in the maelstrom of
debris, homing in on each other's rescue beacons. Circuit
panels, bulkhead sections, chairs, blankets, and frozen bodies
sailed lazily past them, glittering with ice crystals.
    Some larger pieces, intact equipment operating on self-
contained power sources, still sparked.
    The survivors avoided them. Using their maneuvering
thrusters, they each eased out from the slowly tumbling ruins
until they could see Veildian unobstructed.
    From the voices on the emergency channels, six had
survived. From a crew of six hundred forty.
    Gradually, they floated free and toward each other, linking
hands, exchanging information, until they formed a single
six-spoked star.
    But as they linked their communicators and broadcast their
position to whatever fleet vessels had survived the attack,
their view of Veildian III once again became obstructed.
    By a wavering green mass that shimmered like a mirage,
until it solidified into the double-hulled, raptor-prowed form
of a D'deridex-class Romulan Warbird. The Avatar of Tomed.
    The veterans among the survivors knew they only had
seconds remaining to them.
 The Romulans were not known for taking prisoners.
    As the monstrous starshipmalmost twice the length of
Starfleet's Galaxy-class vessels--smoothly changed its orien-
tation, the twin hangar bay doors in its lower hull slid open.
 Like flashes of verdant light, seven sleek attack craft, no
                23





larger than transport shuttles, returned, slipping easily
through the forcescreens that held the Warbird's internal
atmosphere.
 The hangar doors slid shut again.
    For a long heartbeat, the first visual discontinuities of the
Romulan cloaking field began to warp the edges of the
Warbird's silhouette.
    And then, almost as an afterthought, a particle beam spun
out through space and vaporized the six survivors.
    By the time their incandescent atoms had dispersed in the
vacuum to join the remains of their crew and their ship, the
Avatar of Tomed had vanished as simply and as swiftly as it
had appeared.
 The hull metal fragment spun slowly in the silence of space.
 The name of the Farragut faded into darkness.
 Phase One was complete.

FIVE

Most Starfleet vessels were duranium white, proudly bearing
the Federation's colors, boldly lit by running lights and
identification beacons so all would recognize them on their
missions of exploration.
 But not all Starfleet missions involved exploration.
    And some Startling vessels were as dark as the void between
the stars, intentionally coated in microdiffracted carbon to
absorb all visible radiation that fell upon them.
 The U.S.$. Monitor was one such vessel, the latest in the
                24

Deftant-class, space black, on silent running, closing in on a
dying, ancient world deep in the Core Frontier. Its destina-
tion: New Titan.
    The ship was little more than an armored command saucer
with integral warp nacelles. Over-powered, densely shielded,
excessively armed, carrying more weaponry than three
Galaxy-class starships. She was the result of Starfleet's fe-
vered preparations to fight a war against the Borg. A war that
had yet to come to pass.
  But there were always possibilities ....
    The Monitor eased into a nonstandard polar orbit over
New Titan. The only sign of its presence was the winking out,
then reappearance, of the stars it passed. Its double-sealed hangar door opened.
    A small personnel shuttle emerged, propelled by low-gain
tractor beams, undetectable past ten kilometers.
    The shuttle was aerodynamic, designed for unpowered
atmospheric gliding. Like its base ship, it carried no mark-
ings, no operational running lights.
 Its mission was not exploration, either.
    The shuttle swiftly twisted through three axes at once,
setting its course. Its impulse engines glowed faintly, tuned to
emit in the almost invisible ultraviolet instead of the visible
blue spectrum. Much less efficient, but far less noticeable.
    It moved away from the Monitor, dropping for New Titan
like a falling lance. In less than three minutes, hidden within
the coruscating aurora of the planet's north pole, the shuttle
met atmosphere and began to leave its blazing trail.
    Inside, the craft shuddered heavily. Artificial gravity and
inertial dampening had been turned off to reduce the risk of
stray radiation being detected on the planet's surface.
    The pilot, tightly strapped into her seat, maintained her
calm expression and kept her hands steady on the controls.
Behind her, her five passengers hung tight to the bench seats
running along both sides of the shuttle's hold.

               25




    Their expressions were unknown, for each wore a carbon-
black combat helmet with an opaque blast shield in place,
capable of deflecting a full force beam from a type-3 phaser.
The rest of their black uniforms were as heavily armored.
    Their seat webs creakedas the shuttle slowed, increasingly
buffeted by the thickening density of the air. Equipment
swung from straps, metal clips creaking.
    Three of the passengers braced themselves with phaser
rifles, wedging the stocks against the shuttle's deck, The only
identifying insignia they wore was the Starfleet delta slashed
by a bolt of red lightning--the unit crest of Starfleet's newest
intelligence division. That, and their nametags: WE1NL~,
BEYER, KRUL.
    The other two passengers also wore carbon-black comman-
do armor, though not the lightning-bolt insignia. Instead of
weapons, their equipment harnesses carried sealed carryall
pods.
 But they also wore nametags: CRUSHER, P]CARO.

    Jean-Luc Picard felt himself shift as the shuttle slowly
banked. The hum of its engines shut off, making the hold
eerily free of sound. Picard knew that he and his team were in
glide mode now, covertly traveling where a transporter beam
couldn't be risked.
     Through the heavily filtered blast shield he wore, he saw the
subdued overhead lighting switch from full-spectrum to red.
 It was almost time.
 He opened his helmet.
    Across from him, Weinlein lifted her own blast shield, and
yanked open her helmet's visor. She was mostly human,
though there was a hint of alien heritage in the assured gaze of
her dark eyes. Picard regretted there had been no time to
train with her directly. But then, events had moved too
quickly for even Starfleet to be completely prepared.
    With a black-gloved fist, Weinlein tapped the helmet of
Beyer beside her. He opened his helmet as well. Fully human.
                26

And surprisingly young to wear the intelligence section's
delta, Picard thought. Though the very idea of Starfleet
forming a unit of this nature had been an even greater
surprise.
    But he knew it shouldn't be. Starfleet had given Command-
er Elizabeth Shelby a free hand to develop whatever systems
and technologies she felt were necessary to fight the Borg.
Both the Defiant class of starship and this unit were the
results of that mandate.
 Beyer tapped the helmet of the third commando.
    Krul lifted his shield, opened his visor, and grunted, sweat
gleaming from the ridges of his crested forehead.
    Years of working with Worf on the Enterprise were respon-
sible, Picard knew, for the sense of confidence he felt now in
the presence of a Klingon on a mission such as this.
    Weinlein looked past Beyer at Krul, responding to his
growls with a grin. "Are you still complaining?"
    Krnl bared his teeth at her. Unlike Worf, he wasn't
Starfleet. He was an exchange officer from the Klingon
Defense Force, just as Shelby had drawn the other members
of the unit from independent planetary defense forces
throughout the Federation. "Human battle gear," Krul
snarled. "Too much protection. Not enough weaponry."
    Picard hid a smile as Weinlein and Beyer exchanged a
puzzled look. Each commando carried the equivalent of two
kilotons of explosive force. In addition, Krnl carried extra
Klingon munitions. Just in case, he had said.
    Weinlein unfastened her seat web, stood up, holding one
hand against the shuttle's low ceiling as she leaned over to tap
Beverly's helmet.
    The doctor fumbled with her shield and visor, and looked
up at Weinlein grimly. Mutely.
     Picard could see the unasked question in Beverly's eyes.
"How much longer?" he asked for her. "You in a hurry?" Beyer asked.
 "Stow it, Jerry," Weinlein ordered. She checked the read-
               27





out on her wrist-mounted tricorder. Picard recognized it as a
heavy-duty model, specially hardened for use in non-Class-M
environments. "We'll be over the drop zone in three hundred
seconds." She strapped herself back in her seat web.
    Beyer held up his fist. Beside him, Krul reached up to meet
it with his own. The salute of warriors ready to face death.
    Picard and Beverly looked at each other past the confines of
their battle helmets, uncertain of how to respond to the
bravado of their support team. "This isn't a side of Starfleet
we see very often," Beverly whispered.
    Picard caught sight of the equipment pod strapped to her
waist, marked with the Starfleet caduceus. It was the inter-
face, he knew. He had thought of little else since Shelby had
first proposed this mission to him .....He forced himself to
smile. "It's a big galaxy, doctor."
    But Beverly frowned as she followed his gaze to see what he
looked at.
    Awkward in her battle armor, she reached out to put her
hand on his. "It will be all right, Jean-Luc. We won't have to
use it."
It was Picard's turn to recognize the lie in Beverly's smile.
Their team leader unfastened her seat web again. "Thirty
seconds," Weinlein announced. She stood up, then moved to
the rear of the shuttle and pulled down three times on a side-
mounted, manual release lever.
    With a sudden roar of wind, the rear decking of the cargo
hold dropped open onto darkness.
    Exactly as they had trained, Picard and Beverly sealed their
helmets and got to their feet.
    Weinlein watched the readout on her tricorder. She raised a
finger, paused, brought it down, pointing to Krul.
    Without hesitation, the Klingon stepped over the open
deck and dropped through it.
    Weinlein was already pointing at Beyer. The human fol-
lowed Krul two seconds later.
                28

    Pieard approvingly noted the precision of Weinlein's com-
mand of her troops. Perhaps her combative approach was
necessary, given the nature of the personnel she led. He would
remember that when they reached their objective and com-
mand authority switched to him.
    Then Weinlein pointed at Picard, and as he had done a
dozen times in the Monitor's holosuite, he stepped out into
nothingness. Trying not to dwell on the fact that he had never
done this before, in realtime.
    For the first few seconds, Picard had no sense of movement
or direction until he felt the abrupt tug of the antigravs
pulling on his equipment harness.
    He flipped over, dangling feet first, with still no sensation
of falling, though he knew from the training simulations that
the surface of New Titan was rushing up at him at ninety
kilometers per hour.
    He looked up and saw the densely packed stars of the
galactic core, blazing in the cloudless night sky, brighter than
the Earth's full moon. A dark object moved against them,
then slowed, becoming the silhouette of Beverly, he decided.
Or Weinlein.
    He felt a gentle tugging to one side and wheeled slowly as he
descended. Weinlein had told them she'd be using discontinu-
ous sensor sweeps to monitor their position and rate of fall.
The antigrays would step up their displacement effect fifteen
meters off the ground, so that the actual landing would be no
more jarring than stepping off a curb.
    At least, that's what the holosuite technician had told
Picard during the simulations.
 He recalled the technician's grin as he had said it.
    Picard rocked in his harness as the antigravs on his back
began to work harder, changing his angle of fall and rate of
descent. He tried not to speculate if it had felt like this on the
Enterprise, as she had fallen through the atmosphere of
Veridian III.

29




 Tradition held that the captain must go down with his ship.
 But Picard had been on the surface with Kirk.
    He still awoke at night, these past weeks, anguished,
sweating, wondering if he might have made a difference had
he stayed aboard, in command, as every regulation in
Starfleet had stated he should.
    But then, he and Kirk would not have had their chance to
make a difference on the planet's surface, as they indeed had
done.
    So many possibilities, Picard thought. And never enough
time to explore them all.
    The harness dug into Picard with a sudden, sharp snap. His
simulated training paid off as he reflexively swung his legs
together and bent his knees.
    Then he slammed into dirt as if he had stepped off a three-
meter wall, not a curb.
    But he rolled as he had been trained, absorbing the impact
along the side of his body.
    A moment later, Beverly hit and rolled an arm's length
away. He was about to reach out to her when Weinlein landed
between them, coming to rest on her feet with no sign she had
done anything more than step forward.
    Before Picard could speak, he felt Krul and Beyer behind
him, soundlessly detaching his antigray units from the back
of his harness. Weinlein unhooked Beverly before reaching
around to deftly disconnect her own antigrays.
    Picard watched, silent. This was a part of the mission the
commandos controlled. And they did their jobs well.
    Krul and Beyer piled the antigrays together, preparing
them for phaser immolation. Picard used the moment to pull
down his visor and touch a forearm control on his armor.
    Instantly, small projectors on the inside of his helmet cast a
green-tinged, three-dimensional image of the people and
terrain around him, created by low-level, discontinuous sen-
sor scans. Because of the sensor emanations it produced,
3O

night-vision gear had not been safe to operate in the air. But
close to the ground, there was less chance of signal scatter.
  Above all else, Picard knew, they must remain undetected.
    A phaser hummed. The antigrays expanded in a cocoon of
light, then faded into nothingness.
    Beyer was the first to break the silence. "They tracked
us..." he hissed, pointing ahead where a Starfleet-blue
phaser beam cut through the night from the horizon and
found an unseen target that flared in a silent explosion.
  Picard recognized the glimmer of an antimatter reaction.
  "Was that our shuttle?" Beverly asked.
    Weinlein nodded. "She had to activate the engines to climb
out of the atmosphere. Which means the sensor fields they're
using are more sensitive than we thought." She looked at Krul
as the Klingon held out a small Klingon trio0rder. "Give me a
reading, Krul. Starfleet phaser cannon?" Krul growled in acknowledgment.
    Weinlein glanced at Picard. "That's a good sign. It means
whoever's there is making do with the equipment at hand.
They haven't brought in anything new."
    Picard was struck by Weinlein's apparent complacency.
Had she simply dismissed what had just happened so easily?
"Our pilot just died. How can that be a good sign?"
    "We all knew the risks," Weinlein said briskly. She pointed
ahead. "Two kilometers, double time. Krul on point."
    The Klingon jogged off into the darkness, distinguishable
only by the green trace he left on Picard's visor.
    Weinlein turned to Picard. Her features were ghostly in the
soft glow of the galactic {:ore, overlaid by her night-vision
silhouette. "Not to put too fine a point on it, Captain Picard,
but move it."
    Startled again by her directness, Pieard started after Krul,
keeping the Klingon's sensor shadow centered in his visor. He
could hear Beverly just behind him. Weinlein and Beyer ran
behind Beverly.
                31




    The terrain of this region of New Titan was rough, strewn
with boulders. It reminded Picard of the nature preserves on
Mars. But the air was different here. The terraformed craters
of Mars were sharp with the tang of oxide-rich soil and lush
vegetation. New Titan smelled acrid and lifeless. Whatever
ecosystem had spawned the oxygen in this world's atmos-
phere had long since fallen into extinction. Extinction.
    As they ran, Picard's attention kept flicking ahead to their
destination, to what Starfleet Intelligence projected they
might find there. And how, of all the possibilities they faced,
extinction was, he feared, one of the most likely.
    Fifteen minutes and two kilometers later, Krul waved them
to a stop at the base of a low hill. Thankful for the respite,
Picard bent over, hands on his knees, gasping for breath. This
short run was nothing compared to the marathons he com-
peted in on the holodeck. But to run across broken terrain at
night, carrying thirty kilos of equipment, armor, and
supplies--that wasn't part of his job description.
    Beside him, Beverly breathed deeply but evenly, as if she
were used to this kind of exertion. Picard wondered if he
should take up dancing.
    Their team leader stood before them, commanding their
attention. "This is it. All systems power down. Stay low."
    Her hands hit the controls on her forearm padd. The green
glow of her night-vision display faded from her helmet.
Pieard did the same and blinked as his eyes adjusted to the
starglow.
    He followed Weinlein up the hill, dropping to his belly a
few meters from the top as she did.
    Then they looked over the rise, and Picard's throat sud-
denly felt as dry as the rocks he lay across. In a barren arroyo,
where half a kilometer away a plasteel perimeter barrier
glowed in the glare of fusion-powered spotlights, lay their first
objectivemStarbase 804.
  To the side Picard saw an equally brightly lit landing pad,
                32

safely away from the low buildings within the perimeter.
There were no shuttles on it.
    Studying the base, Picard could identify all the familiar
structures without having to read their markings--,subspace
relay, clinic, recycling processor.
    By the manuals, what lay before them was a type-seven,
forward reconnaissance starbase, standard issue on Class-M
planets when atmospheric domes were not required. But this starbase was no longer standard issue.
    Weinlein pointed straight ahead. "Captain, do you confirm
what I see?"
    Picard swallowed hard. The reports from Starfleet Intelli-
gence were correct. How could he not confirm it when the
jarring truth rose before him from the very center of Starbase
804?
    Floodlights sprayed up its sides, bringing every centimeter
of chaotic detail into hideous reliefmpipes and conduits,
duranium sheets, prefab housing sections, even parts of the
shuttles that should be on the pad. There were traces of
everything used in the construction of a starbase, now taken
apart and reassembled into one of the most basic shapes of
technology. A cube.
    "I... confirm .... "Picard said. His gut, his chest, his
body felt packed in ice.
    Weinlein brought her forearm up to her helmet and tapped
a single control. Picard knew her words would be recorded,
compressed, then transmitted in a theoretically undetectable
microburst to the Monitor, far above them in polar orbit.
 But her words would also be forever burned into his mind.
    "Archangel, this is red leader. We have positive confirma-
tion. Repeat, positive confirmation."
    Picard kept his attention riveted on the cube in the center
of the starbase. He thought of the equipment Beverly carried.
Of her assurance that it would not have to be used.
 But all that had changed.
                33




 Beside him, Weinlein completed her report.
 "Starbase 804 has been assimilated by the Borg."
    Within their armored gloves, Picard squeezed his hands
into fists.
 He was running out of possibilities.

SIX

Over the centuries, the Dante Field had been mapped,
explored, and abandoned by every spacegoing culture in the
sector. Drifting in interstellar space, dozens of light-years
from the nearest star, it was simply a collection of asteroidal
debris, the castoffs of some unknown system's Kuiper Belt,
perhaps even the remnants of a solar system which had never
formed.
    Whatever its origin, each of the thousands of asteroids in
the field was worthless and without interest. Devoid of
minerals, too far from the trade routes to even qualify as a
hazard to navigation:
    But being worthless had become, to some, its greatest
value.
    The Avatar of Tomed decloaked as she dropped from warp
on the outskirts of the Field.
    Moving with deceptive grace, the giant Warbird effortlessly
banked through the cloud of frozen rocks, avoiding the larger
bodies, scattering the smaller ones with her shields and
tractor beams.
                34

But her course was not intended to avoid all the asteroids.
Near the field's center, one asteroid remained in the
Tomed's heading. It was more than three kilometers long, a
slowly spinning shard of rock, scarred by millennia of impact
craters.
    The Warbird closed on it, without slowing, until a new
impact was inevitable.
    But then one small part of the asteroid's surface rippled
with holographical distortion as the Warbird made contact
and--
  repassed safely through.
    Inside the hollow body, beyond the holographic camou-
flage, the rough interior was studded with directional grids of
docking lights.
    Eight other Warbirds were docked within the main cavern,
with twenty-seven Romulan Birds-of-Prey, more than a hun-
dred scoutships, and uncounted other, smaller vessels.
    The Totned followed the line of pulsing lights that guided it
to its bay. It expertly slipped between two other Warbirds and
made precise contact with the docking conduits that would
hold it in place.
    On the Totned's hangar deck, Commander Salatrel stood
with her senior officers as the artificial gravity fields of her
ship and the asteroid base were brought into phase. Then,
with a rumbling hiss of air, the hangar doors opened into the
main conduit leading to the station corridors. A sudden wind
rushed past her as the atmospheric pressure of the Tomed
equalized by expanding into the endless tunnels of the base.
The folds of her uniform were disturbed, and her dark hair
fluttered for just that instant of equilibrium being sought.
    Before the sudden wind had died, service technicians on
wheeled cargo haulers rumbled in, bringing new armaments
and supplies for the smaller craft parked on the Tomed's deck.
Shouted commands echoed back and forth. Mechanics' tools
whined. Induction motors roared. Metal clanked against
                35




metal as the hangar filled with the smells of ozone, lubrica-
tion sprays, and carbon.
    Salatrel took a moment to contemplate the sudden on-
slaught of activity, then walked through the maelstrom, an
eye of calm.
    She had not yet given the order, but there was no mistaking
the swell of anticipation and excitement that flooded the
station in her wake.
 Without doubt, Dante Base was now on a war footing.

    Deep within the hollowed-out asteroid now designated
Dante Base, Salatrel ignored the tunnels that led to her
private quarters. There would be time enough for rest when
the mission was under way. Or when she was dead.
     Instead, she headed through two sets of blast doors to
arrive at the ultrasecure secondary docking cavern. Where the other ship waited.
    What the other ship's ultimate configuration had been,
Salatrel could not be certain, for its forward hull covered the
observation ports beside the main airlock portals, obscuring
everything beyond.
    Even its method of docking had been unorthodox. Instead
of the clean seal between adaptable docking rings, the other
ship appeared to have grown into the metal and rock of
Dante. Tendrils of cable and connecting conduits spread out
of the portal like connective tissue, anchoring the ship to the
asteroid not in one ptace, but in hundreds.
    Salatrel walked from the corridors of the asteroid to those
of the ship without ever seeing a clear line of demarcation
between one and the other.
    But once she was without doubt within the ship, Salatrel
followed the Romulan markings that had been afftxed to the
bulkheads, to lead her to the security doors protecting the
cavern's central chamber.
  As the doors unfolded, grinding on their metal hinges,
                36

Salatrel stood for a moment in the entrance, scenting the
slightly fetid liquid that pulsed through the twisted pipes
lining the chamber. Overhead, where the arching dome of the
chamber's ceiling swept into shadow, there was nothing to
see. But ahead and to the sides, an overlay of technology, both
alien and Romulan, defined the chamber's circumference and
its roughly textured walls.
    Directly ahead, sunken into a central, circular deck, was the
control pit, where Romulan computers had been installed.
The shafts of light from their screens and operational surfaces
spiked up through the haze that filled the chamber, mercifully
hiding those who worked among them.
    Her eyes traced the myriad light channels that snaked along
the curved walls, angling in through the empty air to converge
like a web on the immense machine at the heart of the
chamber. Here and there along the machine's alien outline,
she could see, Romulan devices had been attached to its
ancient golden metal. The haphazard patches were based on
incomplete knowledge, she was certain. Still less than a
quarter of the machine's inner workings were understood to
any degree.
 But those were merely details.
     Her scientists had assured her that as far as results were
concerned, the restored machine would perform as promised.
 "Commander Salatrel?"
    Salatrel turned to acknowledge Tracius, her centurion. She
accepted his salute with sincere warmth.
    The elder Romulan was taken aback, as always, by
Salatrel's familiarity. His family and hers were joined by
centuries of common purpose, but he was old fashioned
enough to still believe that their familial association and
affection should not be part of their professional relationship.
    "I understand you have had great success," Tracius said
stifi]y.
 Salatrel smiled at his predictability. "That remains to be
                37




seen." Then she noted the diplomatic padd he carried--a
small computer device programmed with the stolen codes of
the Star Empire's diplomatic corps. "You have news?" she
asked.
    Tracius held up the padd. Its compact screen glowed with
Romulan script. "Spock is no longer on Romulus."
    Salatrel stared at the padd, intrigued. "Dead?" Though she
knew that was too much to hope for.
    "Extracted. Starfleet Intelligence mounted a most extraor-
dinary operation. Beamed him out of the capital."
    Now Salatrel was more than intrigued. "How is that
possible?" The government maintained strict control over all
transporter activity in Dartha.
    "Apparently, Starfleet has developed methods of circum-
venting our security precautions."
    "And they risked exposing those methods to recover one
aging ambassador who does not even have official status?"
    Tracius offered Salatrel the padd. "Spock is gone. More
than that is supposition, my commander." His bearing was
rigid with disapproval. As if she were still a child and he still
her tutor.
    Salatrel graciously declined Tracius's unspoken offer to
check his conclusions.
    "Perhaps I should have asked: What is your interpreta-
tion?"
    The eenturion paused--a delaying tactic, Salatrel knew,
which allowed him to gather his thoughts. In that moment,
she studied Tracius pityingly. His white hair, cut short in the
old style, looked dingy and limp in the dull amber light of the
chamber. He deserved better than this. At his age, he should
be writing his memoirs in a country estate, revered at court
for his hand in guiding the history of his people.
 But history had not unfolded as it should.
 Because of one man.
 One human.
                38

  "I believe it is connected to Kirk," Tracius said.
  Salatrel waited for more.
  "They were friends."
  "A long time ago, Tracius."
    Tracius's eyes didn't waver from her own. It was not a
challenge of insubordination, as Subcommander Tran had
proferred so daringly. It was a reminder of an unpleasant
lesson taught long ago.
    "What is time between friends, Commander? Is that not
why we are here today? Because of the past?"
    Salatrel drew herself up and smoothed the silver mesh of
her command tunic. The lesson this time would be for
Tracius to learn. And he would learn it from her. "We are here
only for the future."
    She turned from him, then, and was surprised to feel his
hand on her arm.
    It was not proper behavior for a centurion. But it was for a
friend.
    "Spoek, with his insane dream of unification, is more
dangerous than you know. And what you're planning can
only serve to involve him in our plans. And for what?" He
waved his hand to the murky outlines of the waiting machine.
"This... abomination? It is without honor, Commander.
This new plan of yours--so hastily conceived of--once put in
motion, can end in only one of two ways."
     "No," Salatrel said. "It shall end in only one way." She
lifted Tracius's hand from her arm. Defeat was not an option.
 Only victory.
This time when she turned, Tracius did not stop her.
Unaccompanied, Salatrel approached the ark. That was the
name her scientists had given to the alien machine's central
component--an elongated container, three meters along its
widest axis, made from bulging, asymmetrical panels of a
transparent mineral, bound by gilded struts of tarnished
metal, like some grotesque inner organ trussed in gold wire.

                39




    Salatrel studied the curves and swellings of the machine
that cradled the arktthe forms of flesh and technology
combined as one. It was no wonder her scientists could not
fully comprehend its workings. Even those who had supplied
it said it was tens of thousands of years old, removed from the
ruins of a race so obscure they had no name, as if fate had
wiped them from the memory of the universe.
    She glanced into the shadows of the control pit facing the
ark. The Technicians worked among their Romulan comput-
ers there in the dark center of the chamber, precisely moving
silhouettes, pinpointed by red dots of coherent light shining
from their various arrays.
    A scientist's voice echoed from hidden speakers. "Trans-
porter systems are online."
    Another replied, "Locking on to stasis unit. Commander, it
is time for Phase Two."
    Without knowing it before, Salatrel now realized she had
waited all her adult life for this moment, never expecting it
would be so perfect, so personal. Yet it had come and gone in
less than a heartbeat. "Proceed," she said. As simply as that,
the shape of the galaxy would now change.
    Responding instantly, the alien machine began to vibrate.
Thick conduits, formed of fleshlike plastics, not metal,
swelled as their internal pressure increased. A rhythmic
thudding began to shake the scarred metal deck.
    "Backup buffer initialized," an unseen scientist an-
nounced.
    The deeper, duller voice of a technician intoned, "Phase
transition coils are online. Temporal translator is phase
matched."
     An electrical hum spread thrillingly through the moist air
 of the chamber. Mist spilled out of the control pit where the
 Romulan computer consoles had been installed to operate the
 device, bypassing the original alien controls that appeared to
 require direct implantation into a living nervous system.
                40

    Salatrel's chest tightened. Despite her bravado before
Tracius and the station crew, she knew she had gone into
battle feeling less tense than she felt now. She had led a
mutiny against her own admiral and hijacked her warbird
with less fear and less doubt than she felt now.
    Ever faster, the broadcast voices of the scientists and the
technicians rattled through the rest of the systems check until
the phase transition coils were synchronized with the pattern
buffer and the temporal isolation conduits.
    Salatrel fought to compose herself by picturing the sub-
space pathways now linking her warbird with this device, and
the unimaginable pathways through sidestepped spacetime
that reached back into the past. She forced herself to focus on
the one final command that remained to be given.
    The deadened voice of Vox, the warrior who once had
been her lover, reached out to her through the sounds of ma-
chinery and power, gushing liquid and hissing steam. "Com-
mander... ?"
    Salatrel stared fixedly at the ark, now suffused with a blue-
white glow.
 "Energize," she ordered.
 It all happened at once.
    A soaring exhalation filled the chamber, disconcertingly
like the cry of a living thing. It came from the machine.
    The slow wave of light within the liquid-filled ark quick-
ened rhythmically with an orange gleam that fractured into
stabbing golden flickers.
 The conduits labored, pulsing erratically.
    A harsh, warning alarm sounded sharply on a Romulan
console.
 "Primary matter stream confirmed."
 "We have initiated temporal lock."
 A second warning alarm sounded.
 "Switching to backup emitter."
 "Secondary matter stream confirmed."

41




    An energy discharge crackled off a resonating coil a hun-
dred meters away, lighting the vast chamber with the uncon-
tained fury of a storm.
    "Matter streams blending. Temporal consolidation is con-
firmed."
    Salatrel realized she was digging her thumbnail into her
palm.
 Retrieval had been the easy part.
    The light in the ark began to fade. A shadowy mass now
became visible in the dense, murky liquid.
     Desiccated, corrupted, monstrous remnants of the hated
past, floating before her. Awaiting invasion.
    "Now confirming nanitc transmission," a Technician
stated.
    Salatrel glanced up. Above two of the consoles in the
control pit, holographic images of DNA helices spun through
the air faster than she could read their base pairs.
    Three alarms shrieked at once. A siren warbled, filling the
chamber with its desperate song.
 The projected DNA models lost focus and cohesion.
 "Vox?" Salatrel called out to the darkness.
    A sudden flash and explosion from the machine's flank sent
sparks cascading through the chamber. The machine had
rejected one of its Romulan devices.
    "Vox.r' Salatrel shouted, poised to run to the control pit
where the silhouettes of the Technicians still moved at the
same plodding, deliberate pace.
"Medical team to the ark," Vox calmly announced.
Three Romulan scientists charged out of the darkness
toward the small scaffold platform built around the transpar-
ent container. Salatrel ran to get there first.
    She ducked as a nearby conduit burst, spewing thick green
liquid through the air that splashed noisily on the rocky floor.
The Second Complex now reeked with the unlikely stench of
chlorophyll.
                42

    Salatrel reached the scaffold first. The ark was two meters
above her. She stared up into its darkened heart, saw the
shape within.
 Saw that shape move.
    She leapt for the ladder, two of her scientists close behind
her.
    "Open it!" she commanded as they reached the top of the
ark.
     The two scientists attached a polyphasic grappler to un-
latch the metal clamp holding the topmost panel in position.
 The shape within the ark struggled, arms flailing.
    "No!" Salatrel shouted. She grabbed the tool from the
startled scientists' hands, spun it around and smashed it
handle first on the transparent panel.
 The panel cracked.
 She swung again.
    A gout of liquid sprayed into her face. She lost the grappler
in the depths of ark.
    She dawed at the edges of the shattered panel with her
hands.
    The shards of it slashed her palms. The dark liquid streaked
with the green of her blood. But the pain could not stop her.
    Salatrel tugged at the metal band between the broken panel
and the next. Her scientists saw what she was doing and
pulled on the opposite side.
    The few remaining Romulan controls and devices exploded
spectacularly in the pit and on the machine. Salatrel and her
scientists held fast to the scaffolding.
    Salatrel's face was smeared with the ark's nutrient fluid.
Rivulets ran into her mouth. It tasted bitter, salty, like an
ocean choked with life.
 "Get him out! Get him--"
 She gasped as a hand shot up from the ark, grabbed her
arm.
    She felt something sharp slice along her arm, into her
shoulder, as the unexpected power of that hand drew her
                43




against the ragged edges of the panels, toward the suffocating
depths of the ark.
    But to die now, here, with him, was not why she had risked
her life, her name, her world.
    With the strength of primal rage, Salatrel pulled back,
bracing herself against the ark itself, feeling it bend and
buckle until the terrible hand slipped off her arm and she
stumbled back, free. Except...
 The hand was gone, swallowed again.
The dark shape settled in the fluid, no longer moving.
The scaffolding gave way in one comer, sending the two
scientists tumbling to the deck below. But Salatrel did not
fall.
  "No," Salatrel choked.
      Flashing lights and sirens blended with the spraying mist of
chaos and the roaring liquid from the dying ark.  "No," Salatrel shouted.
  Dark liquid erupted from the ark.
  "Live!" Salatrel screamed, daring to command even him.
      Then above it all rose the soul-shattering wail of pain, of
confusion, of...  ... life.
  For a moment, Salatrel stopped breathing.
  And then she felt the hand return.
  This time grabbing her neck.
  Pressing, squeezing, crushing.
      Salatrel gripped the muscled forearm with her own torn
 hands. And saw-- '  Kirk.
 Eyes alive with a madness she could not comprehend.
 The flesh of his shoulders and neck twisted and shimmered
 as its contours changed, reformed and realigned by the
 microscopic nanitc devices that still worked within him,
 restoring him, rebuilding him.
     His mouth gaped open as he heaved with deep, desperate
 gasps for air.
                44

    But Salatrel could hear only the pounding of her own
blood, thundering in her ears as her creation increased the
pressure.
      His mad eyes bore into her. His mouth moved, awkwardly,
trying to form a word.  ... why...
    Salatrel's vision flared with searing silver dots. She felt
herself spinning into darkness, saw the shadowy shape of her
grandfather reaching out to welcome her as this monster's
next victim, asm
 A different hand joined hers in the struggle.
    She saw that hand squeeze and twist on the iron-muscled
forearm that held her, and suddenly the pressure was gone.
     Salatrel pawed at her neck, felt the acid pain of air rushing
into her ravaged throat. Vox had saved her.
    He stood before her, in profile, his noble Romulan brow
high and defiant, his ear fiercely pointed, his eye dark and
piercing. He held Kirk in place without effort.
 Salatrel shook her head as her vision cleared.
    For a moment, she was confused. Her beloved was before
her, standing in profile.
 She touched his shoulder, about to say his name.
 His real name.
 And then he turned to her and the nightmare returned.
 Half his face was gone.
    Obscenely replaced by black circuitry patches, laser sights,
tubes and coils of bioneuronic implants--the inescapable
hallmarks of assimilation.
     His old name was no longer a part of him, along with
everything else he had been. He was Vox, now.
 Romulan speaker for the Borg collective.
 The alien machine stirred, rumbling ominously.
 "We must leave the chamber," Vox said impassively.
 Salatrel nodded, unable to speak.
               45




    Kirk's body was frozen in a contorted posture, his strength
no match for the implanted manipulator that had replaced
Vox's right arm.
    The other technicians came then. Their proud Romulan
features also torn apart by the machinery that had claimed
them.
 The technicians were Romulan no longer.
 They, too, were Borg.
 Like Vox.
 But for now, they served Salatrel.
    "We will take him to the medical facilities in Dante Base,"
Vox said.
    Manipulator arms swung up. Drill bits and cutting blades
spun. What remained of the ark was disassembled in seconds.
    "We should save these components," Salatrel said distract-
edly. The ark's transparent mineral still hadn't been identi-
fied by her scientists or the Borg technicians. It seemed to
have a dilithium-like fourth-dimensional molecular branch.
Her scientists had told her it helped the reanimation machine
focus the necessary temporal transference. Without the tem-
poral capture of Kirk's final pattern of brainwaves from the
moment of his death, this machine would have produced
nothing more than a mindless, biological reproduction of the
original.
  But Vox stared blankly at Salatrel, not answering.
  "So we can use it again," she explained.
    "This device cannot be used again," Vox said. "It will be
assimilated."
  Salatrel sighed, but she knew resistance was futile.
    With Vox beside her, she watched as her attacker, her
monster, her creation was taken away, staggering, unable to
speak. Kirk's ancient uniform hung in tatters, destroyed by
the energies that had coursed through him once his body had
been transported into the ark. He walked stiffly, like an
auroto--the living dead of Romulan myth. Salatrel found
that fitting.
                46

    "Amazing," Salatrel whispered. She felt herself begin to
tremble as the enormity of what she had done began to filter
into her consciousness. "In ten days, that creature will cause
the Federation itself to fall before me."  "You are wrong," Vox said.
    Startled, Salatrel forced herself to look into her former
lover's left eye, trying to ignore the hideous visual sensor that
had replaced his right one.
    "We have made an agreement," Vox said. "The Federation
will fall before us."
    Salatrel nodded, relieved that Vox had meant nothing more
than what she had already accepted.
 Romulans and Borg working together.
    It was the price she had paid to restore the hated James T.
Kirk to life.
    In ten days, she would know if it had been worth the
bargain.

SEVEN

Come back, Jean-Luc. . . .
    Picard ignored the distant whisper deep within his mind
and walked among the Borg alone.
    His heart raced. He felt sweat trickle beneath the combat
armor he wore. His hesitant breaths thundered in his helmet
behind his closed visor.
 But the Borg ignored him.
 All around Picard, they went about their task of assimilat-

                47




ing Starbase 804. Teams of them worked as little more than
ants or termites, using their biomechanical implants and
augmentations to carve up the prefab buildings, remove the
Starfleet equipment, and process everything for the greater
good of the collective.
 Picard tried his best to ignore them in return.
    To his left, where the infirmary had been, a heavy construc-
tion Borg--a configuration Pieard had never seen before,
with four arms and thick, double-kneed legs--fired micro-
bursts from an implanted energy weapon into a diagnostic
bed that was balanced precariously on a pile of rubble.
    To his right, a severed human leg was draped across half of
a transport cart.
    Two dogs--sleek Dobermans, pets of the personnel who
had been assigned here, no doubtmtrotted past. But they did
not stop to investigate. Bioneuronic implants studded their
skulls. Biomechanical tubes were grafted to their chests.
    One dog turned to look at Picard as it passed. One eye clear
though expressionless, so unlike the breed. The other eye had
been replaced by a laser sensor.
    But Picard was alone, and the Borg were not concerned
with individuals. The dogs trotted on, into the smoke that
still clung to the ruins of the starbase, echoing with the
sounds of machinery.
    With the same icy control which had let him face the
unknown for decades on the bridge of a starship, Picard
grimly kept one foot moving after the other, as if he were no
more than a machine himseft.
    It was his greatest fear. But one he would have to face--if
not for his own sake, then for that of Starfleet. Or even the
Federation.
    After Veildian III and his encounter with the Nexus, by the
time he had been evacuated to a Starfleet facility with his
crew, Picard had been sure he would draw at least a year
behind a desk.
  A Galaxy-class starship had been lost on his watch. The
                48

 flagship of the Fleet. The boards of inquiry alone would take
 months.
    But Starfleet was nothing if not responsive, and realistic.
True, the Enterprise had been lost, but three other of her sister
ships had also experienced catastrophic failure in less than a
decade since the Galaxy class had first flown. Clearly, there
were matters of design and technology implementation to be
addressed by Starfleet's Engineering sections.
    Picard felt fortunate that the Enterprise's flight recorders
had been recovered intact. His bridge crew had given their
reports to investigation teams staffed with Betazoids, to
whom no lie could be told. And acting on depositions given
by Guinan, other EI-Auilan survivors of the Lalcul disaster
had been located and interviewed. Thus the power and the
nature of the Nexus had been confirmed by the EI-Aurians, if
not fully comprehended by Starfleet.
    And neither Starfleet nor the Federation Council could
forget the millions of innocent lives which had been spared
on Veridian IV by the actions of Picard, his crew, and, most
notably, James T. Kirk, in keeping with the highest and most
noble ideals upon which the Federation had been founded.
    By the time Pieard was asked to testify before the formal
hearing on Starbase 324, Starfleet already had all the infor-
mation it needed to begin an overhaul of starship defensive-
shield systems. Antique scows like an almost century-old
Klingon Bird-of-Prey would no longer threaten the Fleet's
most advanced, state-of-the-art vessels.
    Given all the ground that had been covered behind the
scenes, Picard's testimony had taken less than half a day.
    He was still reeling from the speed of the inquiry and its
conclusion as he and Will Riker had left the hearing room.
    And only when Picard saw Commander Elizabeth Shelby
waiting for him did he understand that Starfleet had its own
reasons for dealing with the Enterprise hearings so quickly.
    The young commander had been as brusque and efficient in
that hallway as when she had been temporarily assigned to
49




Picard's Enterprise after the destruction of the colony at
Jouret IV. She waved Picard into an empty office and bluntly
stated the facts.
    Starfleet Intelligence had reason to believe that a series of
distant outposts on the Core Frontier was being raided by the
Borg.
    "But the Borg are defeated," Picard had protested. He had
seen it himself. Hundreds of the once-mindless creatures had
been awakened to their own individuality. The threat of the
collective had been removed.
    But Shelby had looked on Picard with an expression almost
of pity. For a moment, Picard had felt as if he were withering
into doddering antiquity, faced with the clear-eyed judgment
of youth.
    "Captain, it is Startleefts belief that what you contacted,
what you and your crew defeated, was only one branch of the
collective. A single tentacle, if you will, of a monster that's
spreading through the galaxy." She had clasped her hands
together and leaned closer over the office's bare conference
table. "Think of what you've seen of the Borg's activities,
Captain. Starting eight years ago with the missing outposts on
the Neutral Zone. Go back eighty years to the El-Aurian
dispersion. Truly contemplate the unstoppable power and
technology of the Borg, and their mission to destroy life."
 Picard had felt the sweat break out on his forehead.
    "Do you honestly think you have changed that by changing
just the handful of Borg with which you've had... personal
contact?"
    Picard had found it hard to breathe in the cramped office.
Elizabeth Shelby had taken his lack of response as an invita-
tion to continue.
     "We're not saying we believe that facing the Borg is a
 hopeless proposition. You were able to neutralize one branch.
 To us, that clearly implies the other, yet-to-be engaged
 branches can also be defeated."
  At that Picard had disagreed, vehemently. "But whatever
                50

 strategy we use on one branch, the next branch instantly
 knows what to defend itself from."
     Shelby had only smiled at his passion. Picard still remem-
 bered that smile. Predatory, focused, and intense. How had
 one so young become so cold? Almost as if there were
 something of the Borg in her as well.
      "We're not just going after the branches, Captain," she had
 said, making a fist for emphasis. "We're going after the head."
  Picard's lack of comprehension had been obvious.
    "The source," Shelby had explained. "Somewhere out
there is the central point from which all the branches ema-
nate. We shall find that source, and we shall destroy it. And
when we do, each branch of the Borg will wither and die
without any further action from us. Or any other civilization
unlucky enough to encounter them."
    The young commander's argument had been persuasive,
Pieard allowed. There was even a kind of logic to what she
had told him.
    But then she had given him his new orders, direct from
Admiral Stewart, Hanson's replacement at Starbase 324.
    Picard was to join the tactical team to he based at Starbase
804, the closest fleet facility to the threatened region on the
Core Frontier. Once there, when suspected Borg activity was
detected, Picard was to be deployed with Startleefts new, anti-
Borg intelligence unit, to investigate and, if necessary, infil-
trate the area of enemy action. His task would then become to
carry out the mission objective--the capture and return of a
Borg vessel. Shelby gave him to understand that even if the
Enterprise had still been intact, he would have been tempo-
rarily reassigned for this mission.
Picard had known the reason why as well as Shelby did.
Four years ago, Jean-Luc Picard himself had been
assimilatedremade part of the Borg collective and its irresist-
ible groupmind.
    As Locutus of Borg, he had actually led the collective
against Starfleet in the devastating Battle of Wolf 359, giving
                51




the Borg full access to every Starfleet secret locked in his
mind.
    And though every trace of Borg technology had been
surgically removed from his body...
    .. in his mind, the tendrils of the collective remained.
And Starfleet knew that, too.
Shelby had put the pieces of the interface on the table then.
The latest from Starfleet R & D--special branch. The
branch Shelby headed at Starbase 324 in preparing the
Federation for all-out war with the Borg. The ungainly,
overpowered Deftant-class starships had come from that
effort.
     Along with the innocuous-looking pieces of microcircuitry
and inert silicon that lay on the table before Picard.
 Pieces which he recognized.
 And which filled him with dread.
    One part was simply an insulated cable, containing a
microprocessor on one input jack and a slender transformer
on the other.
    The other was a sleek power cell, coupled with a short-
range subspace transmitter, small enough to be carried un-
seen in a hand.
      But the third piece was an asymmetrical plate of silicon,
curved to fit the contours of the human face and skull.  In this case, Picard's face and skull.
    Together they formed a Borg-derived neural interface. Just
like the one that had been implanted in Picard's flesh, and
into his mind.
     "You will be accompanied by Dr. Beverly Crusher," Com-
 mander Shelby told him. "She's already been briefed."
     "What about Will?" Picard had asked. For what Starfleet
 was asking of him, he wanted to be fully prepared--to go into
 action with his own command crew, the best crew in the
 Fleet.
     But the commander had only replied, "Riker has other
 duties." Picard had had no trouble hearing the dismissal in
                52

 her young voice as she said his name. That, too, was left over
 from the events of four years ago. Will Riker's refusal of a
 captaincy in order to remain Picard's first officer on the
 Enterprise had prevented the ambitious Elizabeth Shelby
 from taking his place.
    At the end of their meeting, Shelby had ushered Picard out
a back door, where two security officers had met him and
taken him under armed guard to the private quarters that had
been put aside for his use.
    The guards, Shelby had assured him without irony, were
not because he was a prisoner. But because he had become an
invaluable resource.
    After all, if the Borg were indeed massing on the Federa-
tion's frontier, and if, as had been long suspected, all-out war
with the Borg was inevitable, then Jean-Luc Picard had
become the most important living being in the Federation.
And Shelby would see to it that he would be treated as such.
    Except for Beverly, Picard had had no contact with his
crew since that day.
  "We require your power pack."
    The flat, emotionless voice startled Picard from his reverie
into the past.
 A Borg barred his path.
 Once it had been human, female. Starfleet.
    Beneath the cyberuetic augmentations fused to its chest
and rib cage, he could see the remnants of a Starfleet duty
uniform. The fabric had been cut away over its left shoulder,
heartlessly exposing a ravaged section of blue-white flesh. But
its communicator was still in position. Borg wires extended
from it and entered that abused skin in a seemingly random
series of small puckers. A thicker red cable ran up from the
communicator and into its temple.
    Whatever it had been, it was a Borg now, manipulator arm
extended, a cutting blade whirring.
 "Are you defective?" the Borg asked.
                53




    If Picard didn't answer, he knew his remaining life span
could be measured in seconds.
 "I will give you my power pack," he said.
    Everyone on the team had been ordered not to argue with
any Borg they might contact unless hostilities had begun.
Picard didn't need to be ordered. He still remembered the
parameters by which individual Borg operated: Achieve the
collective's goals through the expenditure of the least amount
of energy and resources.
    It was the same natural law which had arisen from the
principles of self-organization to govern everything in the
universe, from simple chemical reactions to the evolution of
reproductive strategies among living creatures.
    Thus, Borg were likely to first ask their victims to cooperate
before exerting any physical effort in assimilating them. Each
major Borg offensive invariably began with the selection and
assimilation of a leading individual from the target popula-
tion who could function as Speaker--bridging the gap be-
tween the collective and its new component.
     So far, that cautious, though logical, busbanding of re-
 sources was the only quirk of Borg behavior that gave
 Starfleet any hope of victory.
     But even as Picard hurriedly slipped his suit's power
 generator and battery coils from his back, he knew that,
 eventually, one of the many branches of the Borg collective
 that Starfleet suspected had spread throughout the galaxy
 would, sheerly by oh/race, discover the survival advantage of
 overwhelming its technologically advanced victims without
 negotiation. When that happened, when the Borg ceased
 being socialized ants and became blindly guided sharks,
 intelligent biological life was doomed.
  Picard handed his power pack to the Borg.
  The Borg did not take its eye or its sensor off Picard.
     "We require the protective device encasing your sensory
 stump."
                 54

     Picard blinked, taking precious seconds to realize the Borg
 meant his helmet.
     The Borg responded by going back into its secondary
 programming loop.
  "Are you defective?"
     "I will give you my protective device," Picard said quickly,
 steeling himself for the result.
    The mission to Starbase 804 was dependent on Picard
removing his helmet and revealing himself to the Borg only at
a key point in the operation. But that point hadn't been
reached. Picard knew that Weinlein and her commandos had
not yet determined an access path into the Borg vessel at the
center of the starbase. But he also knew that if he did not
remove his helmet now, the mission would be over before it
had begun.
  The Borg held out its living hand.
    Picard surrendered his helmet, keeping his head downcast,
eyes averted. He became strongly aware of the oily smoke of
burning flesh, mingled with the acrid fumes of scorched
plastic and synthetics from the devastated starbase.  The Borg did not step away.
    "You will direct your visual sensors upward," the Borg
said.
 Picard took a deep breath.
 What if he met the Borg's gaze?
 What if he stared into that eye and...
 "Locutus?"
    The name carried such weight and importance within the
collective that recognition of Picard's face had somehow
triggered a deeply buried emotional response of surprise--a
relic of the biological being this Borg had once been.
 Picard himself was not surprised.
    Starfleet had counted on him being recognized in just this
way, exactly as he had been recognized by the Borg known as
Hugh, years ago.

55


    Hugh had been a young Borg, lost to the collective when his
scoutship had crashed in the Argolis Sector. Picard's Enter-
prise had rescued him. Picard's crew had nurtured the
nascent individuality in Hugh, and those newly formed
threads of lone personality had eventually led to the total
subversion of one of the Borg collective's many branches.
    But the Borg who stood before Picard now was not from
Hugh's branch. It looked troubled.
    Picard understood the programming conflict it must be
going through.
    Hugh had been cut off from the collective. Because of that
loss of communication, when he had first met Picard aboard
the Enterprise, he had not been troubled by his inability to
detect Locutus within the groupmind. But this human Borg
was still a functioning unit of whatever branch of the collec-
tive was assimilating Starbase 804. And clearly, from its
confusion, the collective was troubled because Locutus was
physically here, yet not present among their joint thoughts.
     The Borg trained its manipulator arm on Picard. The
 whirring blade stopped and folded into an inner compart-
 ment, even as Picard heard the click of another compartment
 opening.
     The thin blue rod of an X-ray welding unit glowed along the
 mechanical arm. Picard knew the welder could torch through
 duranium as easily as through human flesh.
     The collective had long ago evolved the response of treating
 anomalous phenomena as threatening, and therefore subject
 to immediate destruction.
  At this moment, Picard was obviously a threat.
  But he also knew how the Borg functioned.
  "Are you defective?" he asked.
     Whatever the Borg had been about to do, its primary
 behavior was now circumvented by a diagnostic subroutine.
 A verbal order from Locutus had been enough to trigger it.
     Picard looked around quickly. A work crew of augmented
 Borg carried pieces of a shuttle in a single file, like cutter ants
                 56

 carrying carved sections of leaves. Why the Borg had not
 simply scooped this base up with one of their tractor beams,
 Picard didn't know. The Borg ship that had landed in the
 base's center was smaller than most of the cubeships Starfleet
 had catalogued. Perhaps it was not powerful enough to
 assimilate whole installations at once, as the colony on Jouret
 IV had been assimilated. There the Borg ship and crew had
 left only a smooth-sided crater behind.
    Picard could see no sign of the rest of Weinlein's comman-
do team. Each had planned to enter the base separately, to
avoid attracting the collective's attention. They were to
rendezvous by the ruins of the communications building in
two more hours to brief each other on what they had seen.
But until then, they were to remain alone.
    "No defects detected," the Borg announced. It raised its
manipulator arm again.
    "You will continue your work with the power packs,"
Picard ordered. It was a shock to discover how easily the
harsh tone of/.x)cutus returned to him.
    The Borg angled its head. Communing, Picard knew. He
remembered the feeling well. The sense of support. The
release of abandoning power to--
    "Locutus is missing," the Borg stated. "You are defective."
It stepped toward Picard. Its manipulator arm rose with the
hum of its internal actuators. The X-ray welder began to glow,
began to whine as its quantum capacitor built its charge.
 "No," Picard said, thinking fast. "You--"
    Picard stumbled back as the female Borg suddenly shim-
mered in a blaze of phased energy, then vanished. He looked
around. Saw Sue Weinlein three meters away. The stock of
her phaser rifle was braced on her hip as she scanned the
immediate area, paying careful attention to the long line of
workers carrying the shuttle parts.
    "Don't look at me," Weinlein said. Even as a group of only
two, they couldn't appear to be interacting, otherwise they
might become a target for assimilation.
                57




    "Have you been following me?" Picard asked. The after-
image of the phaser burst still floated across his vision.
    "My job's to get you to that cubeship," Weinlein said.
"Keep walking."
 Picard marched forward.
 "Picard!"
 He turned.
 Weinlein tossed him his helmet. "Save it for showtime."
 Picard pulled the helmet on, closed the visor.
     He wished he were somehow locking Locutus back into his
deep and hidden cell, somewhere in his core. But he knew it was too late.
    All around him, he heard the whisper of the collective.
Though whether it sprang from the Borg or his own subcon-
scious, he could not be certain.  Come back, Jean-Luc ....
  Picard marched deeper into the starbase.
  Deeper into enemy territory.
  And for the first time, despair took hold of his soul.
  Because he knew he would no longer be alone.
  Come back....

EIGHT

,A-

The hull of the Starship Enterprise had been built to with-
stand asteroidal impact, Iopene antimatter streams, and the
distortional stresses of warp speed.
 But here, on Veridian III, echoing with the soft drumbeat of
                58

 a summer rainstorm, the once-mighty ship leaked like a
 molecular sieve.
     Riker moved carefully through the tilted corridor on deck
 eight. He had learned his lesson and wore engineer's grip
 boots, to keep from slipping on the waterlogged carpet.
 Beside him, Deanna Troi moved just as carefully.  The saucer creaked.
     Riker's hand found Deanna's, and for a timeless moment,
 they held their breaths.
     Then they looked at each other in the soft light of Riker's
 handheld torch and laughed.
     "That sounded just like an atmospheric containment
 breach," Deanna said.
  Riker nodded. "I know."
    But planetbound, sliced to pieces, and half-disassembled,
the Enterprise no longer had to be atmospherically sealed.
Their sudden apprehension had been the result of training,
not fact.
  "Settling?" Deanna asked.
    Riker nodded again. The settling of a body decaying in
death.
    A third of the saucer had already been removed before last
night's attack on the salvage camp. With so many support
beams missing, and with no structural integrity force field to
keep the immense structure in alignment, the saucer was in
no shape to even support its own mass. And no additional
salvage operation would begin until a Starfleet support team
answered the distress calls Riker had put out after the attack.
    "We'd better hurry," Riker said. He had survived the crash
of this grand ship. He had no desire to die in her collapse,
weeks later.
    Deanna held her tricorder ahead of them. She had been
trapped in her barracks during the attack, spared the on-
slaught of energy weapons by a well-placed locker which had
struck her from behind, The locker threw her forward be-

                59




tween two bunks, where she had been sheltered by their
mattresses.
    The rescue crews had found her unhurt an hour after the
last explosion had rocked the camp. Riker had sat by her side
until she had awakened with the dawn.
    He remembered the look that had appeared on her face as
she sensed his emotions at seeing her safe. She hadn't been
prepared for the intensity of them. Neither had Riker.
    Wisely, at least for now, both had tacitly agreed not to
mention it. The events of the past few weeks had been
confusing enough without adding the extra complication of a
return to the emotions of years gone by.
    Riker read Deanna's tricorder's display, then looked along
the corridor, past a shifting curtain of water that trickled
down from the outside rainstom, into impenetrable dark-
ness. The emergency lighting circuits had long since ex-
pended their power. The once-familiar ship might as well
have been an ancient network of tunnels and caves.
  "That way," Deanna said. "One of the classrooms."
    They moved carefully down the corridor, following Riker's
torchlight, sliding their feet so as not to lose their footing.
     Deanna paused at an intersection, squeezed Riker's hand
 tightly. "I know," she said. "I feel it, too."
     Sadness, Riker thought. For all the ship had been through,
 to end like this, in a meaningless crash that had accomplished
 nothing.
     He thought of the other Enterprises which had been lost in
 service to Starfleet. Kirk's original, whose sacrifice had
 bought an unexpected victory over the Klingons at the
 Genesis Planet. Rachel Garrett's Enterprise-C, whose val-
 iantly hopeless efforts at Narendra III had cemented the
 peace between the Federation and the Klingon Empire. And
 joining them now, the Enterprise-D, a random victim of a
 lucky shot.
  Riker felt Deanna's eyes on him. "Don't start," she said.
                60

 "Sometimes, things happen for no reason at all. This was one
 of them. Accept it, and move on."
     At the end of the next corridor, near an inoperative
 turbolift station, Riker and Deanna found the door to class-
 room twelve jammed open with a fire-blackened chair. A light
 shone over the chair from the classroom.  "In there," Deanna said.
     The corridor floor shifted suddenly. Riker almost lost his
 footing again. "If anyone would know better than to be in this
 death trap..." he muttered.
     Then Riker and Deanna stepped over the chair and into the
 classroom.
     "Commander Riker, Counsellor Troi. I shall be able to
 converse with you in a moment."
    Spock was lit by the glow shining up at him from the
computer display inset on the small desk top at which he sat.
A handheld torch rested on the edge of the study corral.
    "I'm surprised you could find a terminal in working
condition, Ambassador," Riker said. Riker had no idea from
where Spock had been able to draw power. But the ambas-
sador's prowess with starship systems was legendary.
    "It was not working when I found it," Spock acknowl-
edged.
    Riker and Deanna glanced at each other, not quite certain
how to proceed. It was not as if either felt they could order the
ambassador to do anything. But they certainly could not
allow him to remain here. Whole decks had given way in the
saucer. This section of Deck 8 was already unsupported at too
many critical points.
    Riker watched the ambassador change the configuration of
his input panel from the simple controls of a child's educa-
tional datapal to that of a full-functional library retrieval
terminal. He wanted to know what Spock was doing, what
had compelled him to risk entering the ship, but couldn't
bring himself to ask. He felt he had no right. It was the legacy
of living in a chain of command.

61




    "The children's educational computers were not tied in to
the tactical cores which Starfleet engineers have already
removed," Spock said. "It was a simple matter to use this
terminal to access the noncritical memory cores still remain-
ing in the ship's main system."
    "We have computers in the salvage camp," Deanna said.
"Whatever work you need to do can be done there. In safer
surroundings."
    Spock did not bother to look up. "Thank you, Counsellor,
but I find I am in need of Starfleet personnel records
extending back quite some time. They would not be part of
the salvage system."
"Personnel records?" Riker asked. "Anyone in particular?"
Spook hesitated. But he kept his attention focused on the
screen. "James T. Kirk... I never really accepted the fact
.. never really believed... that he was dead."
    Riker saw how stiffly, almost formally, the ambassador sat
in the child-sized chair. It had been a difficult admission for
him to make.
  "You were not the only one," Deanna Troi said softly.
    Spook turned to regard the counsellor with an upraised
eyebrow. "Indeed."
    Deanna smiled. Riker felt bathed in her warmth, though it
was directed at Spock and not him. "Montgomery Scott said
the same thing," she told the ambassador. "Believed as you
believed."
    Riker remembered 'his conversations with the feisty old
Scotsman. Scott had been the chief engineer on the original
Enterprise, where Kirk and Spock had first served together.
After Kirk's first recorded death, on the maiden flight of the
Enterprise-B, Scott had led an intensive search of the sector in
which that ship had been damaged by the mysterious energy
ribbon known as the Nexus.
    Decades later, when the chief engineer had been rescued
from transporter storage and had come aboard the
                62

Enterprise-D, he had explained the details of his search, how
he had used experimental sensors sensitive enough to detect
individual molecules, let alone the body of his captain.
    In his personal quest, Scott had found the remains of other
victims of the force of the Nexus--shattered bodies blown
clear of the ruptured EI-Aurian ships. But he had not found
all of the recorded EI-Aurian dead. And, more importantly to
him, he had been unable to find any trace whatsoever of a
human body.
    "In fact, the first thing Mr. Scott said when he was
recovered from transporter storage," Deanna explained to
Spock, "was that he half expected to hear that it was Kirk
who had rescued him, taking the first Enterprise out of
mothballs just to come after his old friend."
    "Hardly logical," Spock replied. "The Enterprise-A was
destroyed at Chal, long before Mr. Scott's unfortunate crash."
    Deanna wasn't willing to let the conversation go. "It was
what he hoped, Ambassador. Not what he knew."
    Riker sat back against another small desktop. It had been
decorated with crude, cut out crayon drawings of some
unfortunate adult with a Starfleet uniform and no hair. Riker
decided Picard would not be amused. "What about your
inability to accept Kirk's death, Ambassador? Is that log-
ical?"
    Spock's expression was unreadable. "Yes," he said. "I have
mind-melded with the captain. That process typically creates
a trace impression in the minds of the participants--a
fleeting sense that they still remain in contact with one
another, even after the meld has dissolved, as long as both
remain alive."
    Deanna glanced at Riker. Her expression he could read.
Spook was not being forthcoming, and she knew it. Vulcans
controlled their emotions, but they still had them. And
Deanna's Betazoid heritage allowed her to detect each re-
pressed nuance.
                63




    "In all the years that have elapsed since his disappearance,
I have never felt him die," Spock said. The Vulcan ambassa-
dor spoke as if to himself, as if Riker and Deanna weren't
present.
    Deanna leaned forward, fascinated. "Is his death some-
thing you would expect to feel?"
    Vulcan and Betazoid, Riker thought, looking at the two of
them. Thought without emotion, and the sensing of emotion
without thought. He remembered the underpinnings of the
Vulcan philosophy of lincrain finite diversity in infinite com-
bination. He was looking at a strong example of it now. By
such was the Federation made strong.
    The computer terminal chimed. Spock turned to it without
answering Deanna's question.
At least, Riker concluded, he had not answered it in words.
A multicolored image of a tropical fish darted across the
display screen. Riker recognized it as something for the
children.
 "Program completed," the computer announced.
    Riker stepped forward to look over Spock's shoulder. On
the display, he saw a picture of Kirk he recognized from
history tapes. In it, Kirk was a young man, wearing a century-
old Starfleet uniform. It felt odd to see the same delta insignia
on Kirk's chest that Riker wore as a communicator. Most
images of Starfleet personnel from that era showed them with
a variety of different symbols on their uniforms. At the time,
each ship and starbase had had its own distinctive symbol--a
historical echo from the first, primitive days of space explora-
tion when each separate flight had been awarded its own
unique mission crest.
    But over time, for all it had come to mean to the Federa-
tion, the Enterprise delta had been adopted by all of Starfleet,
so today it could be seen throughout the known galaxy. But to
see it on the uniform of someone from another century
reinforced in Riker the sense that when he looked at images of
                64

 the original Enterprise's crew, he was looking at how it had all
 begun.
    Text flowed up the screen beside Kirk's image. Riker swiftly
scanned it and recognized it. It was Kirk's service record. The
key events were required reading in the academy, and Riker
was once again reminded just how much of the man's career
had been key events.
    "Even given what you feel, is there a reason you've called
up Kirk's personnel file?" Deanna asked.
    Spock kept his eyes locked on the screen. He adjusted a
control so the scroll rate of the text increased. Riker was
impressed by how quickly the ambassador was assimilating
the information. Even for a Vulcan.
    "The captain was not known to exist in our present era,"
Spock said, still reading. "Yet, within two weeks of his unan-
ticipated return to... life, a well-planned and -equipped
military operation was carried out to retrieve his remains
from Veridian III."
 Deanna folded her arms in thought.
    "Are you suggesting that someone expected Kirk to appear
in this time period?" she asked.
    Riker could see that Spock was flagging certain entries in
Kirk's record, as if marking them for further consideration.
But consideration for what?
    "That would not be logical," Spock answered. The sound of
dripping intensified in the hallway. Riker could hear water
beginning to flow like a stream. But there was no sense of
distraction in Spock's voice as he continued to scan the
rapidly moving text. "It would imply a cross-temporal knowl-
edge of events. If someone from the future, having learned of
the captain's return on this planet, decided to travel into the
past to retrieve him, then why would that observer not return
to the moment before his death, instead of so many days after
it?"
 The text on the display froze in place for an instant. Spock
                65




glanced up at Deanna who now stood beside him. "There-
fore, the answer to the mystery with which we are faced will
not be found in the present or the future, but in the past.
Specifically, Captain Kirk's past." He turned back to the
screen.
    The deck shifted suddenly. Riker grabbed the corral wall,
without comment, trusting to the legendary Vulcan's assess-
ment of the odds.
    "But how could anyone from the past know Kirk would
end up on Veildian III?" Riker asked. "I don't understand
.. the logic of it."
    "Perhaps because there is no logic to what has happened,"
Spook said. "What this salvage camp has been subjected to
was an act of unrestrained emotion. A deeply felt, indeed,
uncontrollable need to wreak some sort of vengeance on the
captain."
    Riker was surprised by the emotion he heard in Spock's
voice. "Forgive me, Ambassador, but now it sounds as if
you're applying logic to emotion."
    Spock lowered his head for a moment. "Believe me, Com-
mander Riker, at the most fundamental level, they are one
and the same." The ambassador imperceptibly sighed then,
and Riker was reminded he was speaking with a being who
had lived for almost a century and half.
    "So you came here to look for the captain's enemies?"
Deanna asked
 "That is correct," Spock said.
    "But how many of them are likely to have survived. into this
time?" Riker asked.
 "All it takes is one," Spock replied.
    Riker watched as Spock swiftly sorted the flagged entries
on the display screen. He saw an image of a human wearing
what seemed to be formal wear from Earth's seventeenth
century, complete with ruffled shirt front and collar. Beside
him, an image formed of the twentieth-century madman,
Khan Noonien Singh. Then a large humanoid with a silvery
                66

 robe. And then the infamous Tholian Grand Admiral
 Loskene--Riker was startled that Kirk might have had
 dealings with that brilliant Tholian leader, who still vexed the
 Federation today
    After a few more unrecognizable aliens joined the collec-
tion, another human in a extravagant outfit appeared--this
one a man with a large moustache and a plumed hat. Then
Riker saw a Klingon commander in a uniform as old as the
one on Kirk.
    "Your friend seems to have made more than his share of
enemies," Riker noted.
    "His was a forceful and direct personality," Spook said.
"Such people are loved, or they are hated. By their natures,
they allow no middle ground."
  "Are all these beings alive today?" Deanna asked.
    More images sorted themselves on the screen. A female
Romulan commander appeared in an equally antique cos-
tume. Riker remembered her face but not her name from his
academy studies. She had been involved in Starfieet's first
retrieval of a Romulan cloaking device. The details of that
operation were still classified, but Riker decided it would
make sense that Kirk had been involved. Was there nothing
the man hadn't done in his lifetime?
    "I do not know how many of them survive," Spoek said.
"These are merely the ones with the motive to hate the
captain beyond ordinary reason, and the native ability or
technological opportunity to have cheated the years between
their time and this."
    Another Klingon appeared. And another. Klingons had
clearly had no love for Kirk, nor he for them.
    Spock entered more commands on the control panel.
Several of the images vanished from the screen as the
computer apparently cross-referenced other sources and dis-
covered who was dead.
 In the end, Spook was left with four possibilities. As the
                67




program came to an end, Riker pointed at the screen, trying
to be helpful.
 "Khan Noonien Singh is dead," he said.
    Spock turned to look at Riker. Riker could almost swear he
saw the flicker of a smile form on the ambassador's lips. "I
know."
    The dark classroom creaked as if it were on a seagoing
vessel, moored in rough waters.
    Riker glanced at Deanna. Time was rapidly running out for
this shell of a starship.
    Spock stared at the four faces on the display screen. Four
ghosts from the past: Khan, the humanoid in seventeenth-
century clothing, the human with the plumed hat, and an
insectoid creature whom Riker thought resembled one of the
Kraal, long since vanished from Federation space.
 Deanna broke the silence.
    "Ambassador, please excuse my directness. But do you
honestly believe that one of those four beings is responsible
for attacking this base and stealing Kirk's remains?"
    Spook put a hand on the screen, as if trying to blank out his
past.
  "They were not his remains," he said softly.
  "I beg your pardon?" Riker said.
    Spock rose from his chair and tugged on his cloak to
straighten its folds. The formal aspect which Riker had first
noticed had returned to the venerable Vulcan.
  Spock looked Riker in the eye, hiding nothing.
    "I remind you that I still have not felt James Kirk die," he
said.
    Before Riker could respond, Spock held up a hand to
silence him. "As illogical as it sounds, Commander, I still feel
his presence. As the counsellor can confirm."
    Deanna nodded at Riker. She sensed he was telling the
truth.
  "A mind-meld echo?" Riker asked.
                68

    But Spock slowly shook his head, almost with an expres-
sion of sorrow.
    "He is out there, Commander. In some way I cannot yet
fathom, James Kirk still survives." Spock held his hand to his
temple, terribly fatigued. "And he is calling to me .... "

NINE

Spock.t
 Kirk ran, calling for help, something chasing him.
 His movements were slowed by liquid. Something thick.
    The deck below him seemed to shift with the characteristic
lag of artificial gravity. Voices called out to him.
    This is the El-Aurian transport ship Lakul . . . we're caught
in some... energy distortion ....
    Someone was in trouble. Kirk had to run faster. Always had
to run faster.
 Their hulls are starting to buckle under the stress ....
 Faster. Neverenough time.
 The young captain looked at him.
 You have the bridge.,..
    Kirk took the chair. The center chair. When had he wanted
anything else? Anything more?
 But this time, it wasn't right.
 He turned his back. Left the bridge.
 Keep things together until I get back....
 I always do ....

                69




 Into the bowels of the ship.
 Running. Always running.
     Reconnecting the circuits. Making the deflector arrays do
what they were never supposed to do.
 Changing the rules.
 The way he always had.
 That5 it.t Let's go!
    The command from the bridge, the young captain: Activate
main deflector ....
 And then...
 And then...
 And then what?
 Nothing made sense.
    Horses. Antonia. The stars in space. Making the jump.
Burning the eggs in the kitchen. The man in the strange
uniform. Starfleet uniform. Make a difference ....
 The man from the future.
 Picard?
 Jumping through space. Through time.
    You don't appreciate the gravity of your situation, Cap-
tain ....
 Falling.
 Yosemite.
     The ground swirling up and the sudden pressure on his
ankle as... Spock!
  He hadn't been alone at Yosemite, climbing the mountain.
  But this time, he was.
  Until he felt the pressure of a cold cloth on his forehead.
    Kirk's eyes flew open as the shifting gravity stopped its wild
movement.
  The only darkness he saw was caused by the cloth.
    He reached for it. Needed to take it away. To get away.
Something was gaining. He had to keep running.
                7O

  "Shhh."
  He moved the cloth and saw...
  He didn't know her.
  "Do you know where you are?" the woman asked.
    At some level, he understood she was beautiful. Dark hair.
Haunting eyes. Sensuous, upswept, pointed ears. The word
"Romulan" came to him, though he didn't know what it
meant.
    "My ship?" he asked. Somehow, he was always onboard his
ship.
 Wherever that was.
 But the woman shook her head. So serious.
    He felt she needed help. He wanted to help her. It was one
way to stop running.
 "Do you know who you are?" she asked.
 Of course he did. He smiled. Opened his mouth.
 Nothing came out.
 Panic.
 "It's all right," the woman said.
 She soothed his forehead, his temples, with the cool cloth.
 "I know who did this to you."
 "Did this?" Kirk said.
 "You were very brave."
     Kirk felt reliefi People counted on him. All four hundred
thirty aboard the... the Enterprise. He frowned.
 "The Enterprise... what is it?"
 "Can you sit up?" the woman asked.
    Kirk did. His head swam but he hid his symptoms. It
wasn't right to show weakness. Not when so many needed
him. Looked to him for strength, for guidance. He looked around.
 He was on a bed. A medical gurney, he knew.
    But the room he was in wasn't familiar. A black cube of a
room, marked with yellow grid lines.
                71




    "Where am I?" he asked. He felt he had nothing to hide
from this woman.
 "You were injured," she said. "In battle."
 Battle. His next question was reflexive. "The ship?"
 "Your ship... it's out of danger."
 Kirk sighed. Nothing else mattered.
 "For now," the woman concluded.
    "I have to get back to the bridge," Kirk said. He wasn't
clear as to what the bridge was, or what he needed to do there.
But if he could set foot on it. Sit in that center chair one more
time~ He knew everything would be fine. "In time," the woman said.
    She shifted her position where she sat on the edge of the
gurney. Kirk was aware of a cool breeze across his chest. He
looked down, expecting to see a uniform of some sort. But
what kind of uniform? He saw nothing.
 Nothing...
 He gasped.
 Who was he?
 The woman looked at him in concern. "Are you all right?"
    Again, Kirk refused to admit weakness. "You said I was
injured. In battle?"
 "Against the enemy."
 Kirk was at a loss. "Who is the enemy?"
    The woman picked up a small padd, pressed a control. A
far corner of the stark room faded away, opening up into the
immensity of space. Kirk braced himself for the wail of the
loss-of-pressure alarms. But the air remained still. "This is the enemy," the woman said.
    The viewpoint in space shifted. A vessel came into view.
Kirk felt a tugging in his heart. The vessel was magnificent.
    Her forward saucer was connected by a short neck to a
small, tapered engineering hull. From both sides of that lower
hull, bold pylons thrust out on dynamic angles, ending in
flattened warp-propulsion nacelles.
                72

     Kirk gazed at the ship, knowing every centimeter of her but
 not certain if he had ever seen her before.
     "The Enterprise," the woman said, spitting out the name.
 "The enemy."
    Kirk was surprised. This ship didn't feel like the enemy. He
was missing something.
    The woman looked at him. "Say it. The Enterprise. The
enemy."
  The woman adjusted another control on her padd.
  Kirk gasped with sudden pain.
  "Say it," she said.
  "The Enterprise," Kirk gasped. "The enemy."
  The woman smiled her approval. Instantly Kirk felt the
pain end, a wave of pleasure sweeping through him.
 "Who are you?" he asked.
    She caressed his face. "The monsters who did this to you
will not survive," she said.
  Kirk took her hand, the question still in his eyes.
  "Salatrel," she said.
  Then she leaned forward and kissed him.
    Kirk responded, surprised by the sudden explosion of
emotion he felt. He heard her fingers on the padd. More
waves of pleasure pulsed through him.
  He looked into her dark eyes. "Are we... ?"
  "Yes," she whispered.
  She held him close. "I thought I had lost you," she said.
    The thought of losing her was unbearable to Kirk. He
crushed her to his chest, determined never to let her go.
  He made his confession.
  "I... I don't know who I am ...."
 Her eyes blazed into his. Twin novae.
 "They will not go unpunished."
 "Who?"
 "The enemy."
 Kirk looked past her at the Enterprise. It was a holographic
               73




model, he finally realized. A wave of fear swept through him
as he gazed upon it. Revulsion.
    "The Federation," he said as the word floated to his
consciousness.
 "Starfleet," the woman said.
    Instantly, Kirk felt a stab of incredible pain slice through
his bowels.
"Starfleet," he gasped. The word was foul. Loathsome.
"Look what they did," the woman said, her hand busy on
the padd she carried. Kirk's heart began to race with appre-
hension.
    The image of the hated ship faded away, replaced by
another--dynamic, birdlike, with a double hull and raptor-
prowed bridge.
 The Enterprise streaked at it, weapons blazing.
 The raptor ship erupted in plasma, in death.
    "A colony vessel," Salatrel said. "Women and children.
Farming supplies."
 Kirk's breath quickened. Sweat beaded on his forehead.
    Another image rippled into view. A fleet of raptor-prowed
ships.
 "A mercy mission," Salatrel said. "Defenseless."
    The fleet was consumed by the fire of the Enterprise, one
ship after another.
 "And this," she said.
    A planet spun through space. The holographic viewpoint
spiraled in like a reentering spacecraft. Below Kirk stretched
farming fields in checkerboard perfection, rolling with the
gentle curves of the world. Until over a rise, a city appeared.
Fresh, bold, new. A colonial capital.
    Then the tractor beam struck. Scooping up the city like a
handful of dirt. Within the immense tractor beam, the
delicate spires of the city's temples crumbled. Kirk could hear
the distant eries of hundreds, thousands.
    The city ascended into the clouds, dropping huge clumps of
soil. Only a gaping, scooped-out crater remained.
                74

  "Why?" Kirk asked.
 "Butchers," Salatrel answered. "Remember," she said.
 Another ship appeared. Kirk recognized it. Knew it was
 old. A foreshortened saucer with small nacelles close to its
 body. Its underside painted with a bird of prey.  And inside, the bridge.
  "I've seen this before," he told Salatrel.
  His stomach tightened. He knew how this ended.
  "Was I there?" he asked.
  "Yes," she said.
    Kirk saw the bridge of the vessel. Other Romulans. The
commander in his silver mesh and cloak of command came
forward. Green blood ran from his mouth. Kirk stared at the
image intently. He had been there. He had witnessed this
himself.
    The commander spoke. "I regret that we meet in this way,"
he said. "You and I are of a kind. In a different reality, I could
have called you friend."
    "Yes," Kirk said. He remembered the words. Understood
the kinship he had shared with this commander. They had
been the same. Yet now, the commander was dead and Kirk
lived. Why?
 The bridge collapsed, blew apart. The transmission ended.
 "He didn't have to die," Kirk said.
    Regret overwhelmed him. A regret he had harbored for
years.
    "A noble house fell with him," Salatrel said bitterly.
"Chironsala. One of the oldest on Romulus. And all the
generations that followed were cursed."
    Kirk turned to Salatrel. He reached out to her face, to her
ears, traced their tips.
 Then touched his own.
 "Am I... ?" he began to ask.
    "No," she said. "Human. A patriot. Dedicated to peace. To
noninterference."
                75




    "Noninterference," Kirk repeated. Of course. It was as if
the words were engraved on his mind.
    "Dedicated to the destruction of the enemy," Salatrel
added.
"The Enterprise," Kirk said. "The Federation. Starfleet."
In the wave of hate he experienced with each word, the
regret and the pain retreated from his body. Warmth re-
turned. Understanding.
 "What do you want to do?" Salatrel prompted.
    "Help," Kirk said. "Let me help." The words felt perfect.
As if he had always longed to say them.
 Salatrel smiled. She touched the padd she held at her side.
     Her smile was like the sun of a summer day in Iowa. Kirk
wanted to fall into it. Find his answers there. "How?" she asked.
    Kirk thought a moment. He replayed the sickening scenes
she had shared with him. The senseless brutality. The pain he
felt as he recalled them was physical, as if his nerve ends were
actually being fired.
  "Stop them," he said. The pain lessened. Momentarily.
  "Destroy them?" Salatrel asked. The pain increased.
    "Destroy them," Kirk said. This time, the pain did not just
fade. Pleasure took its place.
    "Kill them," he sighed. Nothing sounded better. Felt
better.
    Salatrel moved her hand across his chest. He drew a deep
breath. Every sensation felt new.
  "They almost killed me, didn't they?" Kirk asked.
  Salatrel studied him. "Almost," she agreed.
    Slowly, she drew away the thin sheet that covered him.
"But I wouldn't let them take you away from me."
    The coolness of the air was like water washing over Kirk.
He dimly understood that his mind was full of questions.
How had he been hurt? How long had he been in this place?
How long had he known this exquisite woman? The very
thought of her filled him with longing and anticipation.
                76

    But he was unable to focus on any of those questions. He
could only respond to the here and the now.
    The pressure of her nails across her shoulders. The cinna-
mon scent of her dark hair as it brushed his face.
    "Are you glad you're back?" Salatrel whispered in his ear.
The heat of her breath pulsed into him, making his lungs
falter, forcing him to inhale through his mouth.
    "Yes," Kirk said. He nuzzled his face against her neck.
Hungrily kissed the fine hairs that covered her nape.
    "Are you ready to help again?" she asked. Her hands
moved over his shoulders, squeezing the muscles there,
digging in, releasing, making a promise.
 "Anything," Kirk said.
 "The enemy?"
 "Destroy him. Kill him."
    Her lips moved over his, the tip of her tongue electric
against him.
 "Who is the enemy?" she asked.
    Kirk struggled to concentrate. He needed Salatrel. He had
to feel her in his arms. It was almost as if he had never held
anyone ever before. But he didn't have the answer she
wanted. It was one of those elusive questions floating in the
shadows. The questions he couldn't answer. Couldn't yet
focus on.
 "Show me?" he asked.
 "Is that what you want?"
 "Show me," he pleaded.
     Anything to answer the question. To give her the answer. To
quell the pain that rose within him again. "Watch," Salatrel said.
    She aimed her padd at the holographically blurred corner,
pressed a control.
 An image appeared there. Life size. A humanoid.
 Kirk gasped as the figure resolved.
 Kirk recognized him.

                77




    "The enemy," Salatrel hissed. "He must be destroyed. He
must be killed."
    "Killed," Kirk agreed. It was the only way. The only way to
find peace. The only way to find himself.
    The figure reached for him from the holographic haze,
gloating, fueled by the thousand atrocities committed by the
Federation and Starfleet against the Romulan race.
 "Kill," Salatrel urged.
 Kirk nodded. He spoke the name of the enemy.
 "Jean-Luc Picard."
 His body arched. There could be no escape from the agony.
     Until Salatrel came to him and held him, and the agony
became ecstasy so incredible that nothing else mattered.
  Except the single thought... his single purpose...
  Jean-Luc Picard must die.

TEN

Wolf, son of Mogh, groaned with pleasure as the fangs of the
krencha lanced into his shoulder.
    The Klingon shifted his mass to the side, going with the
impact of the ravenous beast instead of fighting it. He
slammed into the hard solid dirt of the forest path, felt the
rough bite of the ragged stones pierce his flesh, even as the
krencha, taken by surprise, flipped forward, losing the pur-
chase its fangs had given it.
 Woff continued his sideways roll, kicking his legs into the
                        78

air to build momentum, then pushed with one arm to leap
onto his feet.
    The krencha was already waiting for him. Its four running
legs scuffed the soft soil of the ground off the path. Its two
killing legs thrust forward. Its tongue slithered out from its
reptilian lips, scenting the air, to detect its prey's fear.
 But there was no fear in Worf.
    He reveled in his long-delayed vacation to the Almron
Preserve--the boundless tract of pristine nature encircling
the First City of the Klingon Homeworld, Qo'noS.
    Slowly, he bared his fangs at the three-meter-long creature
before him, drawing his lips back in a fierce grimace of
victory as he shook his head from side to side. His tightly
bound warrior's queue of hair thrashed his shoulders and
spattered the blood that flowed from his wounds. The blood
dripped down his bare chest to the simple belt and loincloth
he wore.
    In the face of death, Worf was aware of each subtle
movement of life all around him--here the errant stirring of
a breeze among the leaves, there the passage of an insect. He
heard each crack of a twig. Each creak of a branch. And every
silver-purple leaf was distinct in his peripheral vision. Even
the stench of the predator before him cut into his nostrils like
the exhilarating bouquet of that nectar of the gods--prune
juice.
 Worf was alive.
    As he had not been since the saucer of the Enterprise began
its long fall, since life and death were separated only by the
space between two heartbeats.
    Here, in Almron, Klingons could live as Klingons had
always been meant to live--always in that space between
heartbeats, between death and life, defeat and victory.
 The krencha sprang.
    Worf ducked forward, presenting his uninjured shoulder,
again to absorb the energy of the attack and turn it back
against the beast.
                79




    But the creature was not fooled a second time. Its thick,
stubby tail lashed out to the right, altering its trajectory so
that Worf came in too low.
    As Wolf stumbled, the krencha slashed downward with its
killing legs. Its razor-sharp claws slashed at Worf's unpro-
tected back.
    The sudden shock of pain stopped him from slapping his
arms to the ground to break his fall. He was out of control.
Sent sprawling. Tasting dirt as the rich soil of Qo'noS filled
his open, gasping mouth.
 Behind him, the krencha shrieked in anticipation.
    The forest erupted with a cacophony of blas rika calls--the
flying scavengers of Qo'noS. Krencha could be counted on not
to finish their kills all at once. There would be offal remaining
for the leather-winged creatures of the night. But Worf had not lost yet.
    The krencha bent forward so that all six legs came in
contact with the forest path for greater speed.
    It charged forward, shrieking, rippling toward its fallen
prey.
 Worf was still down. Defenseless.
 And he wouldn't have it any other way.
    For only in this instant, this sacred still moment from one
heartbeat to the next, could he step into the perfection of
K'ajii--the warrior's path.
 Worf took that first step and time seemed to slow.
    He saw the creature's square-pupiled, yellow eyes lock onto
him like sensors. He saw the spittle stream from its razor
fangs with each jarring thump of its forward legs.  Its dense fur rippled in the wind of its passage.
    Its powerful, thick tail curved up behind it, ready to change
direction in a moment.
    But with the way of the K'ajii silent and still within him,
Wolf chose that moment with exquisite precision.
  The curled toes of his bare foot came up under the
                80

krencha's primary tracheae when its fangs were only a meter
from his throat.
    The explosion of acrid breath from the creature enveloped
Worf with the stench of rotted meat as the krencha sailed past
him, missing its target.
    Then, even before his adversary had landed, Worf spun
around and leapt forward, landing on the creature's midsec-
tion before it could right itself.
  Its scream made Worfs ears vibrate.
    Its killing legs lashed out to embrace Worf in a deadly
corkscrew hold, a last attempt to crush the life force from
him.
     But this was no mere fight to the death. For a Klingon, no
fight ever was so meaningless. It was a fight for honor.
    For if a Klingon did not have mastery over nature, then
how could he expect to protect and preserve it?
    Worf risked freeing one arm from around the krencha~
right front killing leg and slapped his hand forward to grab
the creature's snout. At once, it collapsed its neck, trying in
turn to loosen his grip so it could snap off his offending
fingers.
    There was a graft and cloning first-aid station at the
entrance to the nature preserve, but Worf had never had to
use its services. Since he had been a teenager, at least. And he
had no intention of starting again now.
    Then, the krencha paused. It was tiring. Like most preda-
tors, it had evolved for the sudden sprint and quick attack.
Prolonged battle was a waste of resources.
    Worf swung his other hand up and grabbed the creature's
lower jaw.
 The krencha wailed as if it knew the battle had been lost.
 It had.
    Worf wrapped his legs around the creature's elongated
chest, locked his heel against his instep, and began to squeeze.
The creature's struggles were lessening.

                81




 Then Worf pulled the creature's jaws apart.
    He shimmied along the beast, bringing his face perilously
close to the gleaming fangs.
    His fingers pressed into either side of the krencha's dark
gums. The sticky saliva threatened to make him lose his grip,
but the knowledge that he would also lose his fingers help him
focus, maintaining K'ajii.
    WoWs arms quivered with exhaustion as he brought the
creature's head around to face him. He locked eyes with the
beast. Saw its soul.
    And with the last erg of strength he possessed, Worf pulled
the creature's jaws apart and snapped one hand forward and
one hand back, pivoting its neck to hear the telltale snap.
 At once, the krencha went slack beneath him.
    Woff trembled as he pulled open the creature's jaws and
inhaled deeply of its dying breath, infusing its spirit and its
strength into his own body, honoring the beast as Klingon
hunters had for millennia.
    Then he stood respectfully beside his fallen foe. He drew
his fingers through the bite wound on his shoulder and traced
the blood around the krencha's lips, giving his valiant oppo-
nent its final reward.
Then Woffknelt and said the words of the hunter's bargain.
If Woff had lost this battle, then he would have fed the
creature. But Worf had won, so he graciously accepted the
creature's matching offer to feed him.
     Worf took his d'k tahg knife from his belt, and held it over
the first of the creature's two hearts. '~ilyajbe' Isn't that overkill?"
    Though strained and exhausted by his battle, Worf leapt to
his feet, instantly adopting the warrior's first position, d'k
tahg held ready as its secondary blades clicked into place.
    The voice had spoken in the Warrior's Tongue of Qo'noS. It
had been natural, not broadcast over a communicator. But
Worf had heard no one approach, no transporter harmonic.
                82

How could it be possible for someone to sneak up on him
here, with all his senses so refined for the hunt? He cursed
himself for his lack of preparation that had made him so
vulnerable.
 "Show yourself," Worf called out in challenge.
    He whipped his head around as branches moved behind
him. Too late he realized they had moved because a rock had
been thrown into them. When he turned back, his visitor was
facing him, showing no sign of having just moved, as if he had
always been there.
    Worf slowly took his measure of the being who had
outmaneuvered him so easily. His first impression was that
the visitor was a holy man. He wore the ceremonial robes and
mask of a k'hartagh--one who sought peace in maintaining
the balance ofpredator and prey. They were common enough
in Klingon nature preserves. The ceremonial combat Worf
had just undertaken was based in part on a belief system of
endless cycles in which the hunter and the hunted traded
places. The k'hartaghan offered themselves up to nature as
prey in order to return as predators. Provided a predator
could be found which could defeat them.
    Though Worf carried a knife, he would not have used it
against the krencha, as that would be a violation of the
balance. But what had the k'hartagh meant about overkill?
That was. a military term, out of place in the forest.
    "Who are you?" Worf demanded, keeping his confusion
hidden.
    The k'hartagh made no move. His intent was impossible to
read through the silvery purple and brown camouflage robes
he wore. Even his eyes were shielded from view by the carved
wood slit eyeshields he wore, and the cloth mask that hung
from them.
    "That is not important," the k'hartagh said in the War-
rior's Tongue. "You are Worf, son of Mogh."
 WoWs eyes widened with surprise. He growled softly. His
               83




retreat to this preserve had been confidential. He had a career
in Starfleet to consider. And some of the more ancient
Klingon ceremonies were not ones of which Starfleet might
approve.
 "Do not make me repeat myself," Wolf warned.
    The k'hartagh's hands moved behind his robes, drawing
something from his back. Then in one fluid movement,
sliding one foot forward while throwing his robe aside, the
k'hartagh took a stylized pose Which Worf recognized as the
position of Heaven's Centered Balance, First Level. And in
his hands, the k'hartagh held a gleaming bat'telh.
    Worf blinked despite himself. He slowly realized that the
k'hartagh's move and pose were part of the raLk~jo bat'telh
discipline--an ancient school of martial combat that had not
been practiced in the Klingon Empire for almost a century.
The k'hartagh's age notwithstanding, Worf did recognize that
the difficult First-Level move had been perfectly executed.
    Faced with such an ancient, stylized form of battle with the
distinctive, crescent-shaped weapon, whose name meant
,blade of honor," Worf dismissed the possibility that the
k'hartagh intended the display as a provocative gesture. From
his study of history, Worf knew that warriors of the raLk~o
discipline viewed the bat'telh largely as a ceremonial weapon.
    Worf lowered his knife and assumed a nonconfrontational
stance. "I have never met a master of the raLkyo discipline,"
he said respectfully.
    "Is that why you face me with a coward's posture?" the
k'hartagh said with'an inflection of disdain.
    Worf felt his grip tighten on his knife. "Do you wield the
bat'telh in other than a ceremonial demonstration of your
discipline?" Worf asked.
    "If I have to, I will kill you with it," the k'hartagh calmly
replied.
    Worf instinctively bared his teeth, appalled by the
k'hartagh's lack of respect for an ancient school of combat.
 "Control yourself," the k'hartagh said in response to Worf's
                84

expression. "I'm not interested in butchering you where you
stand."
    His arm shifted again behind his robe. Then Worf mar-
velled as, one-handed, he brought out a second bat'telh,
flipped it around, and threw it to stick into the ground a
meter in front of Worf.
    "Does that ease the sting of my insults?" the k'hartagh
asked.
    Worf straightened and slid his d'k tahg back into its
scabbard. The bat'telh was not a plaything. The k'hartagh was
insane.
    "I will not fight you," Worf said. "It is clear you do not
know what you are doing."
    Again, the k'hartagh slipped his hand inside his robe.
When it withdrew, he held a disruptor. "I need answers," he
said. "And how can I be sure you're telling me the truth, if I
haven't beaten you in combat?"
    Worf snorted at the k'hartagh's audacity. Was that what
this was about? He expected to defeat a Klingon in combat so
that he would answer questions truthfully?
    "Go away," Worf said. In the surrounding forest, he could
hear the wingbeats of scavengers approaching. It would be
dishonorable if he did not dress the krencha before sunset and
take measures to preserve its meat. And the shadows were
already lengthening.
    The k'hartagh extended his arm, aiming the disruptor at
Worf. It was a new model, Wolf saw. Government-issue. He
found it curious that such an advanced energy weapon was in
the possession of one trained in such an old way of combat.
 "Fight me," the k'hartagh said, "or die without honor."
 "There is no honor in fighting the insane," Worf growled.
 The disruptor's golden beam punched a hole in the ground
 five centimeters in front of Worf's feet, sending a billow of
 dust and smoke into the Klingon's eyes.
    "There is no honor in dying without combat," the
k'hartagh replied.
               85




Worfs eyes narrowed. "Very well. But when I defeat you,
you must answer my questions."
    The k'hartagh stepped back as Worf approached the
bat'telh imbedded in the ground. "If you defeat me," the
k'hartagh said.
    Worf drew the bat'telh and hefted it in both hands. The
balance was good, though he sensed it was a mass-produced
model. Something of offworld manufacture, for no Klingon
would dream of owning a bat'telh that was not handcrafted
and thus imbued with its maker's spirit. Worfs own, which he
had pulled from the ruins of the Enterprise, had been in his
family for ten generations.
    The k'hartagh stepped sideways, presenting his weapon in
the ancient pose called the Dragon's Passage from Thought to
Action, Third Level. As Wolf understood the ancient disci-
pline, it was meant to be a conservative opening, showing
respect for his opponent .... It was not what Worf would
have expected from an insane holy man.
    Remembering his history tapes, Worf countered the
k'hartagh~ presentation with the Position of Unwavering
Determination, Third Level. In the symbolism of this specific
bat'telh discipline, Worf thus signified he would not give in to
idle threats.
    The k'hartagh stepped forward, now facing Worf directly,
angling his bat'telh gracefully through the arc of the Gentle
Cut, to end in the Repose of the Dragoh's Teeth, First Level.
Worf was again surprised.
    The underlying philosophy of the raLk~jo discipline re-
quired that no presentation could be made unless the warrior
had perfected that move in combat. If the k'hartagh had
indeed mastered the Repose of the Dragon's Teeth, then Worf
realized he was in trouble. The Dragoh's Teeth was an
especially savage attack, and Worf was not certain if his own
defenses were adequate to deflect the attack without fatal
injury to the k'hartagh.
 Knowing he had waited a heartbeat too long, Wolf coun-
                        86

tered with the point-forward pose of the Mountain's Scorn,
Fourth Level. In that way, he told the k'hartagh he did not
believe the holy man's expertise matched the boldness of his
posturing. And making the presentation with his hands in the
taLkJo's simple, Fourth Level alignment implied that Worf
believed the k'hartagh could be beaten at that juvenile level--
a grievous insult.
    But though it was impossible to read the k'hartagh's
expression through his cloth and wooden mask, Worf did see
the amused nod his opponent made. Since there was nothing
amusing about the insult Worf had made, for the first time he
had the sudden suspicion that the insane k'hartagh wasn't
even Klingon.
 And then the k'hartagh attacked.
    Even as the crescent blade of the k'hartagh's bat'telh sliced
through the air, Worf recognized that it was not a killing
blow. Perhaps the holy man had been telling the truth when
he said he merely wanted Worf to answer questions.
    Rather than deflect the blow, Worf sidestepped with a
modern evasive step, moving his own weapon out of the
other's path, thus avoiding any chance the k'hartagh could
turn his own movement against him.
 But the k'hartagh had anticipated him.
    His blade dipped to the side, then followed Wolf in a move
so swift it had begun before Worf had even made his own
decision to act.
    The k'hartagh's bat'telh caught Worfs and slid along its
upper length in a spray of sparks, almost succeeding in
wrenching it out of Worfs startled grip when the two curved
tips met and momentarily locked.
    Worf reacted instinctively, pulling his weapon in close to
his chest. He pivoted in place, extending the blade in midspin
to bring it into slashing position, fully expecting to meet the
k'hartagh's blade in a defensive block.
 But when Worf had spun completely around, his blade
                87




slipped through empty air. Once again the k'hartagh had
anticipated him and had ducked, rising the instant Worf's
blade had passed, swinging his own point first against Worf's
arm.
    Worf cried out, more in surprise than in pain as the slick
blade sliced through his triceps as if his flesh offered no more
resistance than a cloud.
    He wrenched his bat'telh back into a forward defensive
pose, with no attempt at fighting within the bounds of the
k'hartagh's discipline, expecting a savage follow-up and pre-
paring to block.
    But the k'hartagh had stepped back, breaking the rhythm of
his attack. He held his bat'telh straight forward in the
Whelpling's Lunge, Tenth Level. In the taLkS/o, it Was one of
the first poses taught to children. Thus, in a battle such as this,
there was no deadlier insult.
 "Will you yield?" the k'hartagh asked.
    Worf bellowed a Klingon death cry and lunged forward,
bat'telh whistling through the air.
    The k'hartagh had not been ready for the ferocity of Worf's
attack. Still, he skillfully sidestepped, leaving his weapon in
place to deflect Worf's blow. But Worf again did the unthinka-
ble by releasing one hand from his weapon and striking out at
the k'hartagh. Worf's nails raked his attacker's throat and
chin, attempting to grab the ceremonial mask and rip it off.
    But the k'hartagh's leg came up in a completely unexpected
Vulcan defensive' strike, adding to Worf's momentum and
making him slam into the ground.
    As Worf pushed himself to his knees, he was momentarily
shocked when he looked to the side and saw that the ap-
proaching k'hartagh wore trousers and boots beneath his
robes. But then, he also carried a disruptor. Clearly, the
k'hartagh was not what he appeared to be.
    And then Worf had no more time for observations as he felt
the k'hartagh's bat'telh smash him on the back of his skull.
                88

    Worf wondered if it were just his head that fell forward as
the forest floor flew up at him. No bat'telh master could have
missed such a simple decapitation blow when his enemy's
 back was turned.
     Worfs last thought flew to the Enterprise slicing through
 the atmosphere of Veridian IlL And then, like the noble
 Klingon warrior he was, Wolf, son of Mogh, embraced his
 death as K'ajii demanded and fell unrepentant into darkness.

ELEVEN

Thirty minutes later, Wolf awoke with a hideous headache.
    His arms and legs were bound by rope, tying him securely
to the rough purple trunk of an arhksarnm tree.
    Worf shook his head. It was a bad idea. But the sudden
increase in pain made him even more alert. And even angrier.
From the lump on the back of his head he could tell he had
been hit with the flat of his attacker's bat'telh/It was the
ultimate act of mockery. What a teacher did when instructing
a novice.
    Then he smelled something burning. Wood. And...
krencha meat.
    Worf turned his head. The k'hartagh was crouched by a fire.
On a purple branch, he had skewered the krencha's gizzard. A
delicacy. Worf's mouth watered despite his outrage.
    The k'hartagh glanced over at Worf. Saw he was awake. Got
to his feet and walked over to him.
                89




 Worf glowered at him.
    The k'hartagh, still in robes and mask, tore a strip from the
gizzard and offered it to Worf. Juices flowed down from the
punctured organ, dripping onto the forest floor. The scent
made Worf ravenous. The cooking had restored it to body
temperature--it would be the same as eating right after the
kill.
    But Worf turned his head. "You did not kill me," he
complained.
    "That wasn't the point," the k'hartagh said. "I need you to
answer my questions. Truthfully."
 Worf stared back at his attacker.
    His attacker waved the strip of gizzard before his face.
Then he sighed. "Are you going to deny the krencha its
reward by wasting its death? What about the hunter's bar-
gain?"
    Worf clenched his jaw. The alien k'hartagh was right. The
flesh of the beast he had killed must be eaten, or else the death
had been wasted. But the way the k'hartagh explained himself
.. something was wrong.
 "You are not Klingon," Worf said accusingly.
    "Eat," his attacker replied. He held the gizzard strip close
to Worf, quickly snapping his fingers back as Worf bit into the
meat.
    It was delicious. Worf could feel the power of the krencha
surge into his body. For an instant, the arhksarnm tree to
which he was tied was nothing more than a twig. The ropes
that held him, mere threads.
 "We can be finished in a few minutes," the k'hartagh said.
    Worf frowned at his use of "minutes." That was an Earth
term.
    The k'hartagh studied Wolf in silence for a few moments,
as if giving Worf a chance to say something. When it was clear
that Worf wouldn't, he began.
  "Where is Jean-Luc Picard?"
                90

     Worf hid his surprise. He replied by asking, "Where did a
 human learn bat'telh of the raLk~/o discipline?"
    The k'hartagh rocked back on his heels and held up a
cautionary finger, hidden in gloves. "Know your enemy," he
said.
    Worf frowned. What was that supposed to mean? "Kling-
ons and humans are not enemies."
    The k'hartagh angled his head as if surprised. Worf didn't
know what to make of it.
  "Since when?" the k'hartagh asked.
    For Worf, the interrogation was taking on a surreal aspect.
He momentarily forgot his shame and discomfort. "Who are
you?" he demanded.
 Again, the k'hartagh seemed to hesitate.
 "Jean-Luc Picard. Where is he?"
    Worf took a deep breath. "I am a Starfleet officer. I will
not--"
  "What?"
 Worf blinked at the k'hartagh.
    The k'hartagh held a hand to the side of his head, as if he
felt the same pain there that Worf did.
    "If you are in trouble," Worf said warily. "Perhaps I can
help you."
    But when the k'hartagh spoke again, his voice was harsher,
withdrawn. "Where is Jean-Luc Picard?"
    "Why do you want to know?" Worf asked, now genuinely
puzzled by the entire situation. His thoughts of honor and
death receded as he studied the stranger. His Starfleet train-
ing claimed him in their place.
    The k'hartagh's hand shot out and grabbed Worf by the
neck. "I have to kill him!"
 That was all Worf had to hear.
    In a sudden flush of rage--his immediate reaction to a
threat against his commanding officer--Worf pushed against
the ropes that bound him to the tree.

91




 The tree trunk creaked.
 The k'hartagh's hand tightened on Worfs throat.
    Worfs blood-smeared and bared chest swelled as he drew a
mighty breath to roar.
    But the k'hartagh's hand unerringly found both sets of
carotid arteries. He squeezed, blocking the flow of blood so
that Worfs voice was effectively silenced.
    Worf saw dark stars flicker at the edges of his vision. Knew
he had only seconds of consciousness remaining. Felt his
wounded arm burst through the rope and fly ahead of him to
smash the k'hartagh across his face. The k'hartagh flew backward.
    Worf struggled against the remainder of his ropes. The ones
tied across his chest were unbroken. He clawed at them, only
then noticing he had the k'hartagh's ceremonial mask tangled
in his fingers.
    He looked across at the k'hartagh as he rose from the
ground.
     Worf felt his mouth drop open, all elements of K'ajii driven
from his mind, so great was his shock. He recognized his attacker.
    Even with the bloody streaks that Wolfs raking nails had
left, his face was a perfect match for that on the history tapes
Worf had scanned after hearing of Pieard's encounter on
Veridian III, when the Enterprise met her death.
 "What are you staring at?" his attacker snapped.
 Worf couldn't think what to say.
 His attacker was a dead man. A dead man twice over.
 And a hero from the past. Starfieet's past.
 James T. Kirk.
  "Where is Picard?" Kirk demanded.
    In his confusion, Worfs voice was uneven. "I... don't
know." All he could do was stare at Kirk. At the impossibility
of Kirk.
    Kirk stared at the Klingon, as if searching for something in
his eyes.
                92

    Then Worf began thinking like a warrior again and tugged
at the ropes across his chest.
 Kirk pulled out his disruptor, adjusted its setting.
    But Worf refused to go quietly. He strained against his
ropes. One snapped. A second. He snarled as he gathered his
strength. To stand. To lunge forward and--

 --the disruptor beam took the Klingon in midleap.
    Kirk did not step back as the Klingon's body crumpled to
the forest floor at his feet.
    Despite the pain that had burned into him as he had made
the decision, Kirk had set the disruptor to stun, not to
disintegrate.
    Kirk knelt by the motionless body. Turned the face upright
to face him.
 "You recognized me."
    The Klingon remained silent, eyes closed, his breathing
rough and erratic.
    Kirk released the Klingon's massive head, letting it fall
back into the dirt.
    A part of him wanted to kill this alien monster. To crush
the life from it. Kirk knew such an act would bring him
intense pleasure.
 But for a reason he could not articulate, he resisted.
    Instead, he stood, reached to his belt for a communicator,
flipped it.
 Then stared at it as nothing happened.
    He tried again to flip open its top. Then he remembered.
The device wasn't meant to open. He pressed the activation
control.
 "Go ahead," a disembodied voice said.
 "I'm finished down here."
 "Did the Kiingon know anything?"
 "No."
 "Is he dead?"
 Kirk stared at the Klingon's body, lying helpless before
               93




him. He winced as he felt a sharp stab. He longed for
Salatrel's caress. For her to take these troubled thoughts from
his mind and make everything better.
    But still he wondered why he needed to have those thoughts
taken away by someone else. Shouldn't that be his responsi-
bility? When had he relinquished it?
 But the disruptor was heavy on his belt, so easy to use.
 To destroy the enemy.
 Starfleet.
 The Federation.
    Klingons were the enemy, too. He knew that without
Salatrel's having to tell him.
    But then, why did he find it so hard to understand why a
Klingon would be part of Starfleet? If both were enemies, why
did that strike him as so wrong?
 He shook his head to clear it of confusion.
 "Is the Klingon dead?" the voice persisted.
    Kirk put his hand on his disruptor. Drew it. Set it to full
disruption.
 Aimed it.
    It was the easy way to get rid of the confusion. The pain.
Simply press the stud and it would go away, dissolving like
the flesh of the Klingon at his feet.
  What could be easier?
  Kirk made his decision.
  He pressed the stud.
     The tree behind the Klingon bloomed with a wavery light,
then vanished into quantum mist.  "He's dead," Kirk said.
    Sharp pain still attacked him as he voiced the lie. But
somehow, it hurt less than he had expected. Perhaps the pain
could be controlled, at least in part, without Salatrel's touch.
    And if so, what other secrets had she hidden from him?
What other lies had she told?
  "Stand by for beam-out," the voice said.
                94

 Kirk stared down at the Klingon lying silent at his feet.
 The Klingon opened his eyes.
 "Who am I?" Kirk asked.
    But before the answer could reach him, the transporter
beam found him and beamed him away.

TWELVE

Starbase 804 was gone.
    Through the low-lying haze that blanketed the devastated
site, the broken ridges of injected foundations traced out the
plan of the buildings and the walkways that had once existed.
Tattered clothing and fabric fluttered across the stripped
ground like dying animals, snagging on snapped-offpipes and
power conduits. Here and there, crumbled bricks of silicon
and twisted sheets of duraplast formed random accumula-
tions of debris. Apparently neither substance was of much use
to the Borg.
    Picard gazed over those ruins. Seventy-eight people had
been stationed here--humans, Vulcans, a family of Klingon
archaeologists, children, pets, dreams. All gone.
    Absorbed into the monstrous cube that had arisen in the
center of the base, towering thirty meters above them, omi-
nous and all-devouring. The alien graveyard of the raw
materials assimilated from the starbase.
 In only three days.

               95




    "This makes no sense," Beverly said. Her voice betrayed
the stunning sense of loss they both felt.
    She stood beside Picard in the twilight, both still in the
black commando armor they had worn since their arrival.
Weinlein and the rest of her team had determined that the
Borg here did not view two humans together as a group
worthy of assimilation, provided they kept one hundred
meters distant from any other member of the team.
     The long, red rays of New Titan's sun hit the starbase
dedication marker lying half-buried in the ground at Picard's
feet. The Starfleet delta brought back to Picard the image of
the insignia on the cairn of rocks he had built for James T.
Kirk.
    The sun had set on a legend of Starfleet the day Picard had
buried Kirk. Now he felt as if the extinction of Starbase 804
marked the end for the Federation as well. Because the Borg
that had been at work here were unlike any Starfleet had faced
before: Starfleet's greatest fear had become real.
    There were indeed other branches of the Borg collective
active in the galaxy. And Picard knew all too well that
whatever defenses worked against one branch would not
necessarily work against another.
    "It must make sense," Picard said, though in his heart he
did not feel any conviction. "They are machines. Ruled by
logic. What they are doing has to fit their programmed
purpose to survive."
    He felt Beverly took at him. With the professional gaze of a
physician. For three days, he and Beverly, and Weinlein's
team of specialists, had had to watch as Starbase 804 melted
before them. For three days, Picard had had to fight the
overwhelming pull of the groupmind, never really knowing if
it were truly there, or simply a manifestation of the secret
doubts he harbored.
    For the same three days, he had been unable to carry out his
mission.
                96

  Because there was no Borg vessel here to recover.
    Picard felt the vibration of the communicator in his armor.
The modified versions developed for the commandos were
designed to be silent in the field, and experiments on the
second day had confirmed the Borg were not interested in the
commandos' ground communicator signals. Weinlein, how-
ever, still used untraceable microbursts to report to the
Monitor in polar orbit.
    Picard touched the contact surface at his neck. "Picard
here."
    It was Weinlein. She was on the other side of the Borg
structure, a kilometer away. The other two commandos were
hidden somewhere else among what few ruins remained.
    Weinlein began speaking rapidly, wasting neither time nor
words. "Krul and Beyer have completed the scan of the cube.
Absolutely no indication of a propulsion system. No field
coils. No warp core. Not even any propellant."
    "That proves my point. They are waiting to be retrieved,"
Picard said. That had been Krul's theory as well.
    But Weinlein still didn't agree. "By what? Anything that
could pick up that cube by tractor or by transporter could
have lifted the starbase out of here in minutes. Just like Jouret
IV. Why send down an assimilation crew if they've got a
vessel that could do the same work in a thousandth of the
time?"
    Picard frowned and glanced at Beverly. She tightened her
lips in silent commiseration. They both knew Weinlein was
committed to her conclusion that they had made contact with
a group of Borg who had somehow been separated from
whatever branch of the collective they were part of. The team
leader had reasoned that however this orphan branch of Borg
had come to New Titan, their actions against Starbase 804
were only their blind response to their programming. Like all
Borg, they were compelled to assimilate raw material and life-
forms to serve the collective. And when they had reached the

               97




limit of what the starbase had been able to offer, they had
simply retreated to their cube and entered their sleep mode.
    The commando leader compared the Borg to worker ants
in an ant farm, who would continue to build their network of
tunnels, even if they had no queen to serve. Thus, in her
opinion, the primary objective of this mission could not be
achieved. Without a real Borg vessel to capture, Weinlein
maintained there was nothing Starfleet could learn here.
    But Picard felt just the opposite. He knew, as no one else
did, that if any Borg were cut off from their branch of the
collective, their nature absolutely dictated they make every
effort to rejoin it.
    The material at Starbase 804 had included two runabouts
and six shuttles. But their propulsion systems hadn't been
incorporated intact into the cube.
  Because the cube didn't need to go anywhere.
  Because something was coming to retrieve it.
"You and I have been through this before," Picard said.
"And I was willing to wait to see what the Borg would do.
To give you the benefit of the doubt, Captain. But I have no
more doubt. All the Borg in that cube have been in sleep
mode for more than three hours. There are no further signs of
construction or modification. Therefore, in accordance with
our orders, we will proceed with our secondary mission."
    Picard had known it would come to this. He was ready, if
not enthusiastic. "Understood," he said, without further
argument.
     "Rendezvous in fifteen minutes, behind the barracks wall.
 Weinlein out."
  Picard took a last look at the sun on the horizon.
     Beverly tried to reassure him. "This will be easier, Jean-
 Luc. We won't need the interface. Only you."
     But Picard didn't believe that either. "They are waiting for
 retrieval. And when their vessel comes and finds its assimila-
 tion crew is gone, captured by Starfleet, the result could be
 .. most calamitous."
                98

    "But the Monitor is still here. And it was designed to fight
the Borg." For an instant, despite her words, Beverly's voice
wavered.
    Picard knew why. He looked into her eyes. But all he saw
was the flames of war. Of destruction. "At Wolf 359, Starfleet
lost thirty-nine starships. Eleven thousand beings perished.
That is what it means to fight the Borg. Whatever Command-
er Shelby's intentions are--one lone starship, no matter how
well designed, will not even slow them down."
    Beverly met his gaze directly, but Picard could see she did
not want to say what she was going to say next.
    "At Wolf 359, the Borg knew each weakness in our ships
and shields. They knew our tactics and our weapons' capabili-
ties and limitations. It was as if they could read our minds."
    "They could," Picard said. He would not hide from the
truth, no matter how harsh. "Mine."
    Beverly took hold of both of Picard's arms, to make him
understand.
    "You were not responsible, Jean-Luc! The Borg sought you
out to be their Speaker. Their liaison. You couldn't resist
them. No one could."
    Picard felt his jaw clench. Felt emotions he had buried far
too long rush up in him like magma, seeking the violence of
release. "I tried to resist them, but..." Then the next words
froze in his throat. Words he had never dared speak before.
But words he could no longer hold back.
 "What if I didn't resist them enough?"
    Beverly's mouth curved down in confusion. "What?" She
released her hold on him.
    How long had he held this secret? Picard didn't know. It
had been four years since the Borg assault on Earth. But his
terrible knowledge of what he believed to be his own personal
failure seemed to have been with him all his life. Poisoning all
his memories.
 "When I was... taken..." Picard felt what was almost a




wave of relief pass through him as he finally felt himself begin
to say the words that might expose him for what he feared he
was, what he had been. Not even his Starfleet debriefers had
heard everything that had happened to him at the hands of
the Borg. Counsellor Troi had known he was hiding some-
thing. Had tried to get him to talk about it over the years. But
he had always resisted. Until now. When the possibility of
failure rose up before him again.
    And there had never been room for failure in his life. He
would not allow it.
    "When I was taken, the Borg... they put me in... an
assimilator. A chair. A frame. Something that... grew from
the wall of their ship. There were straps, or metal bands.
Something held me there, physically.
    "I fought them the whole time. I tried to get out. To get up.
But they were all around me. Simply staring at me. And then
... before... the process began... and I gave up .... "
Picard kept his eyes fixed on the horizon, almost invisible
now. "Do you understand, Beverly? Before they assimilated
me, I stopped fighting."
    Beverly stared at him as she struggled to comprehend what
Picard was confessing.
    "... you were in their ship. We know they have drugs.
Sonic and visual brainwave inducers. They wouldn't let you
fight. It was no longer your decision to make."
    But Picard shook his head. "There were no drugs. No
inducers. There were just Borg. Watching. Waiting. Letting
me sense the... presence of the collective."
    Picard stared into the darkness enveloping the desolate
ruins before him. Like a web of shadows, spun by the monster
at its center. The cube. The Borg. Enveloping everything.
    "Jean-Luc, the Borg collective is a machine-based, sub-
space communications system. How could you possibly sense
it before they had put implants in you?"
  "How does Deanna sense emotions?" he asked the dark-
                         100

ness. "In their ship, in the face of so many of them, I knew. I
felt. It--them--their overwhelming... presence. And I
somehow watched with them, through them, at myself, re-
maining in that frame, as the machinery descended." He
closed his eyes, seeing it all anew. "The blades. The needles. I
felt them cut into me!" He couldn't breathe. "And I didn't
fight them. Because... I wanted to belong .... I wanted so
much to belong .... "
    Picard felt Beverly's arms draw him close to her. His cheek
brushed the hard surface of her armor, her soft fragrant hair.
Her hand moved from his armored back to stroke his neck,
the back of his head.
    "It's all right," she said. "None of it was real. The Borg
manipulated your mind, made you one of them, so you could
do nothing except want to be part of the collective."
    He recoiled from her support, forced his breathing to
become normal, squared his shoulders, and shook his head
once. "No."
    Beverly's voice sharpened. "If you insist on having this
argument, let me tell you that I am going to win it. Because
you're too close to what happened to understand it." She held
up her hand to stop Picard before he could protest. "But right
now, we have a mission. And we will perform that mission.
And we will beam back to the Monitor with our prisoners.
And then I'm going to take you into the holosuite and...
well, never mind what I'm going to do. But you're going to
feel a great deal better."
    She was so intent, so like the Beverly of old, that Picard
almost smiled.
 "I'm sure I will," he said. "I do already."
    This time, Beverly shook her head. "You never could lie to
me, Jean-Luc. But the point is, you were not responsible for
your actions as Locutus. Any more than you'd be responsible
if I gave you... ten milliliters of cordrazine."
 Picard tugged on the waist of his armor in a futile attempt
                101




to straighten his cumbersome chestplate. He tried to lighten
the moment. "If I have to live in this outfit much longer, I
might take you up on that, Doctor."
    Beverly smiled at him as if the real Jean-Luc were back. But
Picard knew even her relief was a charade. The only thing
that had returned was his self-control. As long as he didn't
have to use the interface, surely self-control would be more
than sufficient to capture ten Borg and return to the Monitor.
  "Time to play soldier?" Beverly asked.
     Picard appreciated her more in that moment than he ever
had. For trying to set right what she never could. "Thank you," he said.
 Beverly regarded him seriously. "Save it for the holosuite."
 Picard nodded, not even daring to think that far ahead.
 Once again, it was time to engage the Borg.

THIRTEEN

Kirk held his dying wife in his arms. Over the evacuation
alarms, he heard his children screaming, caught behind the
sealed doors of his quarters.
    "Help them," Kalinara sobbed. Half her face was ripped
away by the cluster explosives that had been transported
throughout the Talon of Peace. Her green blood smeared
Kirk's hands and arms, bubbled at the comer of her tom lips.
But still she thought only of the children. Their children.
 "I can't leave you," he choked.
                102

     "For our children," Kalinara murmured, fading quickly.
 "For our future..."
      He felt her grip loosen on his hand. Heard the terrible rasp
 of her last breath as it escaped her seared lungs.  Kirk's cry of denial overcame the sirens.
    The ship shuddered all around him. The cowardly attack
continued. One thousand colonists aboard Kirk's ship faced
death.
    "Father/" screamed the piteously young voice behind the
door. "He's here! He ~ gore"
    Kirk staggered to his feet as his child's voice stopped
midword. He stumbled to the sealed door as the deck in his
quarters lurched beneath his feet.
    The artificial gravity generators couldn't last much longer.
And after they went, the structural integrity field would fail.
    He could picture his double-hulled ship collapsing in space.
Its quantum core spiraling out of containment. The explosion
that would result, one dying star among so many.
 Everything would be lost.
 But it wasn't lost yet.
    Kirk joined his hands together and swung them down
against on the door, trying to jar the backup battery circuit. It
had to open. It had to release his children. There might be
time to reach an escape pod. He could carry Kalinara. The
medics could stabilize her. It might not be too late. It couldn't
be. He wouldn't let it be.
His fists bled as he pounded on the unmoving door.
"Lora!" he shouted. "Tranalak!" Team streamed down his
face. He smelled smoke. Somewhere belowdecks he heard a
rumbling explosion. The sirens wailed in unison.
    His wife had just died. His children were dying. And all
because of--
 The door trembled beneath his blows.
    He drew back. Hope soared within him. There was a
chance.
 But then the door ground open.

                103




 He was here.
 The monster. With Kirk's children.
    Five-year-old Tranalak lay sprawled at his feet, dark eyes
staring up, lifeless. Eight-year-old Lora was held aloft in the
his grip, her tiny feet kicking and flailing as she struggled to
free herself.
    The monster grinned at Kirk as his hand flew across the
child's throat with a glint of Federation steel.
    Then he discarded her small body, letting it fall awkwardly
to the deckm
 Kirk flung himself at the monster before him.
 Kirk flung himself at Pieard.
 His hands were talons as they sought Picard's throat.
 But the monster threw back his head, laughing, laughing--
 revert as Kirk's hands grasped in vain at his fading body.
 Even as Kirk fell alone to the floor. No longer a deck.
 The shuddering stopped.
 The sirens faded.
    Kirk lay gasping on the black floor, marked with its grid of
yellow lines.
 Alone with his hate. His rage. His pain.
 "Do you remember now?" Salatrel asked.
    Kirk pushed himself up, still trembling. He stared at his
hands, unbloodied, unmarked.
 "Your wife?" Salatrel said. "Your children?"
 Kirk stood up, body aching, out of breath.
      He looked past Salatrel at the entry arch behind her. At the
controls to the side. The closed door in the center.
 "What is this place?" he gasped.
    The Romulan woman frowned. She aimed a tricorder at
him.
Kirk knew it was a tricorder, though it seemed too small.
"A holodeck," she said as she adjusted controls on her
device. "One of the few useful contributions the Federation
has made to the galaxy."
                104

     Kirk struggled to make sense of it. Some terms seemed so
 familiar. But the context was so wrong.
  "But this is a... Romulan ship?" he asked.
  Salatrel stepped closer. He could sense her annoyance.
    "I have nothing to hide from you," she said. "You are on
the Avatar of Tomed. It is a D'deridex-class starship. Just as
was your own Talon of Peace."
    "Starship... ?" Kirk said, grasping at the familiar word.
"I had a starship, didn't I?"
 Salatrel's frown eased. "You are remembering."
 "And my wife and children?"
    "Killed. Five years ago. When Picard led his cowardly
attack under color Of truce."
    "Picard," Kirk repeated, hearing the sound of it in his own
mind. He was certain he knew that name. It was from his
past. But then, why didn't the context fit?
    Salatrel glanced up from her tricorder. Her eyes narrowed.
"Do you doubt me?" she asked.
 "Why would IT' Kirk replied. "You saved my life."
    Satatrel stepped closer, put a hand to his face. "Just as you
saved mine," she said.
    Kirk felt his heartrate slow as he gazed into Salatrel's eyes.
"Will I remember that, too?"
    "The doctors say you will eventually recover all your
memories." Salatrel replaced her tricorder on her belt. She
removed her pard. "You will be restored."
 Kirk nodded. He was impatient for that to happen.
     Salatrel brushed her lips against his. He felt the electricity
of her contact even as he heard her fingers tap on her padd.
 "Tell me about the Klingon," she said.
    "Klingon bastard!" Kirk spat. "You killed my son!" He
gasped and stepped back, trying to lose the distraction of
Salatrel's presence. Where had that thought come from?
Those words?
 "No," Salatrel corrected him, sharply. "Picard killed your
               105




son. And your wife and daughter. The Klingon was his chief
of security."
    Kirk thought back to the forest. To the Klingon. Klingons
were the enemy. At least, he thought, they had been. Once.
And he had had a son. Who had died. Because of...
 A wave of sudden pain and anxiety shot through him.
 "The Klingon," Salatrel repeated. "Tell me."
    "But I already have," Kirk said. He forced the pain from
his body. He knew what battle injuries felt like. But this ache
throughout his entire body was different. He didn't know
where it came from.
 "I need to hear it again. What did he tell you?"
 The pain increased.
 "Nothing," Kirk said, wincing.
 Not in words, he thought.
    Salatrel grabbed his chin. Forced him to look at her. "You
can't hide anything from me," she said.
    "Why would IT' Kirk answered. The words felt pro-
grammed into him. He said them, but he resisted them, trying
to find the web that connected all the turmoil in his mind.
  He knew Picard.
    He knew Klingons and Romulans. Starfleet and the hated
Federation.
  He knew the torment of the death of his son.
      But Salatrel? And holodecks? And a wife dying when a
colony fleet was destroyed by the Enterprise?
 Where were the connections?
 He held Salatrers gaze.
 Where was the truth?
    The only thing he was certain of was that he did not see it in
Salatrel's eyes.
  But he had seen it in the Klingon's.
  There was a pattern here, maddeningly out of reach.
  If only he could speak with...
  An image came to him. A tall man, strong features. Pointed
                106

 ears. But not a Romulan. A Vulcan. And at his side. An
 older man. Hands behind his back. An easy smile. A human
 from...
  "What is it? Tell me," Salatrel demanded.
    Kirk frowned. If he was a Romulan patriot, a human
dedicated to Romulan peace, had married a Romulan wom-
an, had two children with her, had become a hero of the
revolution against the evil domination of the Federation...
    Why did he remember a Vulcan and a human as his...
friends?
    Where was his wife in his memories? And where was
Salatrel, this woman who had been his lover for the past three
years, fighting at his side?
    Salatrel studied the padd she held. "You must tell me what
you're thinking. You know I've always been here for you."
    "I know," Kirk said. And even as the words formed on his
lips, he knew they were false.
    But Salatrel did not seem to recognize that. As if, despite all
she had said, he did have some secrets that could be hidden
from her.
 "Would you like to know how we met?" she asked.
 Kirk nodded.
    Salatrel stepped away from him, back to the arch in the
wall. Kirk followed. Watched as she tapped in commands on
the controls. It seemed like a simple enough system.
    "Computer," she said. "Run program Salatrel four." She
turned to Kirk. "We arrive at Trilex in six hours," she said.
She held up her padd. "Keep trying to remember... me."
    Kirk held out his hand to touch her but she vanished from
view, even as she touched another padd control.
    He heard birds singing. Felt a warm breeze. Smelled the
rich growth of a forest all around him.
    He turned to see an Iowa vista. Gentle hills. Old trees
towering into the summer sky, dappling the ground with the
interplay of leaf shadow and sunbeams.

               107


    Kirk knew this place. It fit perfectly into the gaps, the
cracks of his memories. His eyes widened at the wonder of it.
The security of it.
 Then he heard hoofbeats.
 He wheeled, truly remembering the moment.
    She rode for him, on a glorious mare, its coat gleaming in
the sun and mane alive in the breeze.
    He looked up at her, to see her smile. Antonia's smile as
she...
 No. Not Antonia.
 Salatrel smiled back at him as she rode closer.
 An automatic wave of pleasure coursed through him.
 Even as he knew something was wrong.
    Salatrel slipped from the horse's side, smiled at him, held
out her hand.
    "I'm with the peace mission," she said. "Salatrel, of
Romulus."
 "I don't remember this," Kirk said.
     Salatrel moved into his arms, pressed herself against his
body, held him tightly in the sunlight and the forest.
 "It's all right," she said. "I do."
 Then she kissed him.
    For a moment, Kirk hesitated. Some of what he was
experiencing was merely unknown. Some, he felt certain, was
false. But somewhere at the core of this experience, he sensed
elements of the truth.
 All he had to do was sort one from the other.
     But for now, the desire he felt as he held Salatrei in his arms ,
again made rational thought almost impossible. So he returned her kiss.
    And surrendered--if not to her, then to the heat of the
Iowa sunshine.

FOURTEEN

In the deepening twilight, Picard and Beverly crept across the
broken ground toward the barracks wall.
    The wall was a landmark in the ruined starbase, because,
apart from the Borg cube a hundred meters distant, it was the
largest structure remainingma fractured plane of extruded
silicon, less than two meters high at its tallest, running no
more than ten meters side to side.
    On the far side of the wall, closer to the cube, barracks beds
and lockers were fused together, melted by whatever tool the
Borg had used to extract the optical data network circuitry
from the recreational computer system. The body of a young
ensign in a duty uniform was half-buried in the rubble of
another wall which had fallen completely.
    From the pattern of damage the commando team had
catalogued, Weinlein had concluded that the Borg had struck
at night, spent at least four days "convincing" base personnel
to willingly join the collective, and then had forcibly assimi-
lated any who remained at large.
    Picard tried not to think of what those four days had been
like for the personnel of Starbase 804. He and Beverly had
already been in transit, expecting to be stationed here during
Starfieet's investigation of the outpost raids in this part of the
frontier. What if they had arrived a week earlier? Or if the
Borg had arrived a week later? It could all have been over by
now, and he would have been back among--
                109




 "Get down!" Weinlein ordered.
    Picard and Beverly dropped to the ground behind the wall.
Weinlein, Krul, and Beyer were already crouched in position.
Krul and Beyer looked as if they had just returned from
Wrigley's Pleasure Planet, rested and calm. Weinlein was her
usual, crisp self. Picard was irritated at his own frayed state.
After three days of field rations and sleeping in armor, he felt
anything but at his peak.
    Weinlein jerked a finger at the trioorder mounted on her
forearm. "Still no movement." She gave Picard a cold grin.
"Fish in a barrel."
    "You know my objections." Picard's tone matched
Weinlein's own.
    "Noted and logged," she confirmed. "But even if they're
expecting some kind of mother ship to come for them, what
are the odds that will happen in the next twenty minutes?"
    "Why twenty minutes?" Picard asked. The idea of a
timetable after all these days of waiting was unexpected ....
    Weinlein pulled on her battle helmet. "Because that's how
long this is going to take."
    Beside her, Krul and Beyer snapped fresh power supplies
into their phaser rifles.
    "How many Borg are in there?" Beverly asked. As if it
mattered.
    "Forty-two humanoids," Weinlein said as she sealed the
rim of her helmet to her armor. "Three of the multilimbed
construction units. One scuttier."
    "And two canines," Krul added. His smile looked almost
feral.
    "We only need ten of the humanoids," Weinlein went on,
ignoring Krul. "Shelby's people say that's double the mini-
mum required to maintain a groupmind when they're cut off
from their branch of the collective."
    "I know the theory," Picard said. He pulled his own helmet
from his back harness. "But what does Shelby say the rest of
the Borg will do as we... make off with their fellows?"
                110

    "The commander says that once they see you, they'll be
trying to make contact with Locutus. That's why you'll be
front and center. You'll be verbally activating all their inter-
nal diagnostic subroutines, while we collect our ten."
    Picard shrugged away from Beverly's touch. Concern again
flared in him that Weinlein's tactics might prove too simplis-
tic. "You saw what happened when I attempted that with the
unfortunate woman who stopped me on our first day here, I
only delayed her for a few minutes at best."
    Weinlein ignored his protest as she checked her tricorder.
"The Monitor will be overhead in seven minutes, thirty
seconds." She held up an emergency transporter beacon
armband. "While you delay the Borg response, my people and
I will slap these on our ten targets, then the Monitor beams us
all out. The Borg will stay in stasis till we hit Starbase 324 and
Commander Shelby takes them off our hands."
    Picard tugged his helmet on. He looked forward to taking
action at last, though he knew he also was reaching the point
of invoking the authority Starfleet had given him to take
control over the mission. "You obviously don't think the Borg
will activate their shields."
    Weinlein put her gloved hand on her visor. "Not if Locutus
tells them not to." She snapped the opaque visor down and
her face disappeared. Now she and Krul and Beyer were little
more than machines themselves.
    "We start forward in one minute," Weinlein said. This time
Picard heard her on the speaker in his helmet. "Krul and
Beyer go first and take up position by the main airlock. Then
Picard and I sweep in."
    "What about me?" Beverly asked. She tugged her own
helmet into position, sealing it to her armor.
    "After all four of us are inside, you take up position
immediately outside the airlock. If all goes well, you just sit
tight till the Monitor locks on."
 "And if all doesn't go well?" Beverly asked.
                111




 "Whatever else happens, Picard has to come out."
 Beverly snapped her own visor down.
    Picard stared at the four dark apparitions before him. One
lone starship to stand up against a Borg vessel? Three
commandos to go after more than forty Borg? What was
Starfleet thinking? What was Shelby thinking?
Or was it not thought on Starfleet's part, but desperation?
Picard put his hand on his own visor. It was dark enough
now that he would need night vision to make the run to the
Borg cube. "Permit me one last word of caution," he said.
"Once we're inside, no fast movements until we're certain the
Borg have identified us as a threat."
    Weinlein's helmet angled in amusement. "Captain, if we
move fast enough, they won't have time to identify us. Fifteen
seconds." She held her finger over a forearm control. "Micro-
burst signal to the Monitor in three... two... one...
mark!"
    She pressed the control, sending an untraceable coded
message to the starship, setting it in motion to be in position
for the emergency beam-out.
 "Stand by, Captain. We go in eight... seven..."
 Picard began to pull down his visor.
 A double flash of blue light flickered at his side.
 "Resistance is futile," said the Borg.
    Picard pulled Beverly away, behind him, as he turned to
face the two Borg that had materialized two meters away with
all the suddenness the Borg transporter was known for.
    Both cybernetic creatures had arms that ended in the
glowing discharge nodes of antimatter streamers. At fine
focus, the devices were good for careful dissection of scrap
and salvage. At wide beam, they were more destructive than
phasers.
    The nodes swung to Krul and Beyer, whose phaser rifles
were already trained on the Borg.
 And even as Weinlein yelled at Picard to take off his
                112

 helmet, Picard stepped forward to confront the enemy, hel-
 met in hand. "No!" he commanded.
  The Borg instantly looked at him, instantly froze.
  Their red sensor lasers converged on his face.
  "Locutus?" one said.
  Then both Borg dissolved in a slow pulse of quantum mist.
    "Frequency one used," Beyer barked over the comm cir-
cuit.
"Engaging random frequency selection," Krul responded.
The individual force fields that protected combat-ready
Borg constantly adapted to whatever weaponry was trained
against them. No one phaser frequency could be used more
than once, because the force fields around every other Borg in
the collective would immediately change to repel that fre-
quency.
    Weinlein grabbed Picard's arm. "Let's move it! We need
those prisoners?
But Picard pulled back. "They know we're here."
Weinlein snapped up her visor. Picard could just make out
her lean features in the soft glow of the status lights on her in-
helmet display screen. "They'll be confused. We still have
time!"
    "No!" Picard said forcefully. This time he had to make
Weinlein understand. "They've always known we were here!
Think! They didn't beam to get us until we sent the micro-
burst to bring the Monitor out of hiding."
    Picard felt the adrenaline of battle sharpen, then slow his
senses to a hyperacute state. The mission would succeed or
fail in the next few seconds.
    "You're saying this is a trap?" Weinlein asked incredu-
lously.
 "What else would it be?"
    "Then where are the rest of them?" Weinlein demanded.
"Why aren't they coming after us?"
 Picard felt an incongruous bubble of laughter rise up in
               113


him. It was so obvious. "They don't want us. They don't care
about us. They want the Monitor."
    Weinlein stared over the wall at the dark cube towering
over the devastated starbase. "But they have no weaponry
installed in that thing. No propulsion systems."
    "Because they're the bait/" Picard said. "That's all they
are!" It was perfectly clear now. "That's why they didn't
assimilate the base in seconds. They needed to draw out the
process, to draw us in."
    Weinlein muttered in an ancient Vulcan dialect. She reset
controls on her forearm padd, then jabbed the communicator
contact at her neck.
     "Archangel! This is red leader! Override alpha alpha one
alpha! You are heading into an ambush! Confirm!"
 Picard heard all the confirmation he needed.
 Subspace static.
    A glance at his own tricorder told him all communications
channels were being jammed. The source was the cube.
    Beverly looked up from her own tricorder. "We are now
within a Borg force field," she announced softly. "No beam-
out possible."
    Weinlein looked stricken. Beside her, Krul and Beyer kept
their phaser rifles in firing position, constantly scanning the
immediate area.
    Picard recognized the expression in Weinlein's eyes, dark
and shadowed as they were.
 The look of a commander who has run out of options.
    In contrast, Picard felt his own control increase. "Lieuten-
ant Weinlein, we are trapped in enemy territory, out of
contact with command. As Captain, Starfleet, I am counter-
manding all of Commander Shelby's orders." He reached
forward and pulled Weinlein's duty phaser, type-5, from her
harness. "I am now in command of this mission."
    In that moment, Picard saw Krul and Beyer swing their
phaser rifles onto him. Beverly stepped into their line of fire,
but Picard gently pushed her back.
                114

     "I'm not the enemy," Picard said. He pointed over the wall
 toward the cube. "That is."
     Weinlein hesitated, as Picard knew she must. But in the
 end, she waved to her soldiers. "Stand down. The captain's in
 command."
  The rifles lowered slowly. But they were lowered.
    Picard didn't stop to acknowledge his victory. "Listen
carefully. There is a working transporter in that cube, as well
as a force-field generator and whatever equipment they're
using to jam subspace. Our objective is to take control of all
three systems."
    Weinlein frowned. "If you don't want us to take prisoners,
why not just blow it up?"
    "Because somewhere up there is a Borg ship waiting for the
Monitor. That is our target. The mission's primary objective
is once again within our reach."
    "But there's only one way you can take control," Weinlein
said.
    "I know," Picard answered, aware that somehow he had
moved beyond fear, beyond anxiety. As if, somehow, this
moment had always been waiting for him and he could no
longer avoid its arrival.
     He reached out to Beverly, handed her the phaser, and
pulled the small carryall pod from her belt. The interface.
    He ran his hand around his armor's neck seal, then pulled
his helmet off.
    "We go back to the original plan," he said as he popped the
carryali's seal.
    Even in the near darkness he could see the alien, convex
shape of the neuromolecular attachment plate inside.
    It was cold to the touch as he pulled it out. A thick cable
came out with it, designed to be plugged into the plate and the
power cell already in place beneath his armor.
 Momentarily, he was surprised by how little he was affected
                115




by the sight of it--its same outward size, shape, and appear-
ance the same as the one the Borg had attached to his skull.
 And then he understood why.
 Above him, a starship was in danger.
    Around him, Starfleet personnel looked to him for leader-
ship.
    And on the thousand worlds of the Federation, an interstel-
lar civilization unmatched in history teetered on the brink of
extinction, to be saved or destroyed by what a single individu-
al would accomplish in the next few minutes and hours.
     In the middle of action, there was no room for doubt. He
could not afford it or allow it. He was a starship captain.
 It was time to make a difference.

FIFTEEN

The steady pulse of the Tomed's singularity generators
throbbed in the corridors of the ship. To Salatrel, the com-
forting sound was as much a part of her life as her own
heartbeat. Even now, with her mind focused on the next stage
of her plan, she was aware of the power of the ship which she
commanded, and she took strength from it.
    She stood in the corridor outside the Starfleet holodeck
which the Borg had helpfully assimilated from one of the
Starfleet vessels they had defeated since arriving in this
quadrant. She had not been lying when she had told Kirk it
116

 was one of the few useful contributions the Federation had
 made to the galaxy--and to this mission.
    Romulan holographic simulators would never have been
able to re-create an Earth environment with as much con-
vincing detail as this unit could. And judging from the way
Kirk was reacting to meeting her holographic duplicate in a
re-creation of his home region of Iowa, the illusion was
perfect.
    Salatrel watched, as emotionless as her distant Vulcan
cousins, as Kirk embraced her own duplicate on the observa-
tion screen. Vox stood beside her. To her left, his cranial
implants and sensor eye were what she saw. She preferred it
that way. There was no chance then of confusing him with
what he once was. And could never be again. "Kirk is lying," Vox stated.
    Salatrel folded her arms. "The collective's thinking is too
binary. My medical scans show he is merely confused. That is
to be expected at this stage of his conditioning."
    "Our analysis of the regeneration device indicated that his
memories should have returned intact."
    On screen, Salatrel's duplicate and Kirk took a red and
black patterned blanket, and some type of food container
made of stiff, woven plant tendrils, from the storage units on
the sides of the equinoid's rider's seat. Once again, Salatrel
congratulated herself on her decision to make use of the
Starfleet holodeck. No Romulan programmer could have
dreamed of such an unlikely combination of artifacts and
creatures. "Obviously, the regeneration device was flawed. It
self-destructed before the process was completed. There is
nothing sinister in that."
    Vox turned to her. She glanced up at him and again suffered
and banished the automatic pang of anguish. Anger was
clearly, and familiarly, expressed on the half of her former
lover's face that still remained Romulan.
 "At your request, the collective provided the technology
                117




you required to return Kirk to functional status. He is not
functional. This project should be terminated."
    "You still don't understand the elegance of this," Salatrel
said sharply.
    "Elegance is not a useful quality. Efficiency is useful.
Reduction of effort leading to increase in resources is the
ideal. Life is improved when all contribute to the good of the
whole."
    "That is what we are doing here," Salatrel said in a more
conciliatory tone. "Consider. Who is the greatest villain ever
to subvert the will of the Romulan people?"
    Salatrel watched as Vox's stern expression seemed to sof-
ten, as if that part of him which was still Romulan were being
released from that which was Borg. "The Butcher of Icarus
IV," he said by rote. "James Tiberius Kirk."
    "Exactly," Salatrel said. "Just as our people were prepared
to throw off the yoke of the Federation, to stand against the
injustices forced upon us by the Treaty of Algeron, James
Tiberius Kirk murdered the patriots who were to lead the first
wave of our redemption."
    The tragic story of the Battle of Icarus IV was known to
every Romulan child: How the first cloaked Romulan vessel
had set out to probe the Earth outposts belligerently arrayed
at the boundaries of the Neutral Zone. And how, after her
successful mission, but before her triumphant return, Kirk
and his ship had defeated her commander by dishonorable
tactics--feigning helplessness near the tail of the Icarus
comet to lure the Romulan vessel to her destruction.
    To Romulans, if Kirk had fired upon women and children
who had raised their arms in surrender, it could be no greater
crime.
    But Borg severity had already returned to Vox. He no
longer seemed touched by the story.
    "James Tiberius Kirk was a soldier. He did his duty to
defend his territory. We could expect no less."
                118

     "He defended a monstrous violation of our sovereignty and
 our dignity. His butchery set back our people's aspirations for
 generations, as the appeasers held on to power." Salatrel's
 voice rose in its intensity.
    Vox gazed at Salatrel as if he didn't care what she said or
thought. But Salatrel could read another expression on Vox's
face, as well. The one that came with assimilation. It was the
way the Borg had of reducing everything, and everyone, to
raw material. As if they constantly calculated the return they
could expect against the exertion of instantly consuming what
they saw.
    "These are the facts," Vox stated, and Salatrel waited for
what he would say next. It was what Vox always said when
they had this argument. "Your grandfather was the com-
mander of the first Neutral Zone penetration mission to test
the Cloaking Device. James Tiberius Kirk killed your grand-
father. Therefore, your involvement in this procedure is
suspect."
    "Kirk's name is reviled throughout the Star Empire,"
Salatrel retorted automatically, as she always did. "My in-
volvement in this procedure is fortunate."
    Vox brought their argument back to the present. "Where is
the elegance in chance?"
    Salatrel turned away as if to study the display screen, no
longer trusting herself to retain self-control if she continued
looking at Vox's disfigured face, with all that its ruin repre-
sented.
    In the hoiodeck simulation, Kirk and her duplicate sat on
the patterned blanket in a sheltered area beneath a tree.
Despite her assurances to Vox, Salatrel frowned. It was
unusual that Kirk was still involved in conversation. Accord-
ing to her psychographic projections, he should have initiated
lovemaking by now. But an analysis of that anomaly would
have to wait. She marshaled her energy to defeat Vox, if only
in words.




    "In regard to the assimilation of the Federation, who is the
greatest threat to the will of the collective?" Salatrel asked,
still watching the screen and Kirk's atypical behavior.
  "Jean-Luc Picard," Vox answered.
    "Once again," Salatrel said, "exactly. You sucked all the
information you needed about the Federation and Starfleet
from his mind when he was assimilated. And the other half of
that equation is that all the information Starfleet needs to
defeat you a second time is buried somewhere in Picard's
mind. Can't you see the... logic of the situation? You and I
will turn our two greatest enemies against each other. The
Romulan people at last will have their revenge against Kirk,
while the Borg will be able to remove the last barrier to their
successful assimilation of the Federation."
    "Only if Kirk accomplishes his mission in the seven days
remaining to him," Vox said.
    "We are working on a way to remove the nanRes. He might
last longer."
      "No," Vox said. "The neuronic implant will kill him long
before the nanRes fatally reconfigure his body."  Salatrel whirled to face Vox. "What?"
    "To construct these holographic simulations, to create a
cover story he would accept and believe, we required infor-
mation beyond that which was contained in available files."
Vox continued as if oblivious to her stunned reaction. To
understand Kirk's personality in the time we have available,
it was necessary to install a neuronic interface in order to
make his thoughts available to us. It was not necessary to
inform you of our action."
     Salatrel's body was rigid with fury and fear. What else
 might Vox have done without her knowledge? Her plan
 depended on Kirk acting as he had in the past, not slowed
 down by a subspace interface with a Borg hive of unimagina-
 tive drones. "You made Kirk a Borg?"
  "No," Vox said. "At this stage, that would be counterpro-
                         120

 ductive to the task he must perform. He must function as a
 human in order to move among others of his kind. The
 collective is not in contact with him."
     Salatrel forced herself to relax. Kirk was still hers to
 command. But Vox was not finished with his surprising
 revelations.
     "Elements of his emotional makeup were downloaded for
 analysis." A small smile appeared on Vox's taciturn features.
 "He is not as easy to control as you imagine. That is why I say
 he is lying."
    Salatrel weighed her position. As she had told her centuri-
on, Tracius, the only possible result of her actions was
victory. Any other would result in her not being alive to
witness it.
    And victory depended on her retaining control, not the
Borg.
  She decided to call Vox's bluff.
  The collective's bluff.
    "Then why don't you assimilate him? Why don't you
assimilate all of us?" Her hand dramatically swept the
corridor, her ship, the entire fleet of dissidents that fought at
her side.
    Whatever Vox thought was not apparent in his expression.
"We have a treaty," he answered calmly. "The Borg and the
Romulan dissidents. You assist the collective in assimilating
the Federation, and we allow the Star Empire to exist
unassimilated. As a... curiosity. Long-term study of an
unassimilated culture will allow us to be more proficient in
welcoming other cultures to the collective. It is an efficient use
of our resources."
    Salatrel searched Vox's Romulan eye for the truth. "Do you
honestly expect me to believe that?"
    Vox's expression remained unchanged. "If you wish to
survive, you have no choice. Resistance is futile."
 Salatrel's pulse quickened at the Speakefts last statement.
                121




Her dissidents had not resisted the Borg. The Romulan
Warbird crew who were assimilated at the time Vox became
Speaker for the Borg retained enough of their Romulan
dignity and fervor to actually suggest the treaty to the
collective. And why would the Borg waste resources on the
relatively small Empire when the Federation hung behind the
Neutral Zone, ready for plucking?
 Resistance had never been an option, or even a strategy.
 So why had Vox mentioned it?
 Unless it had been a signal.
From somewhere deep inside the Romulan Vox used to be.
Unsettled, Salatrel checked the display screen again. On it,
Kirk gently removed her duplicate's hand from his leg. What
was wrong with him? That wasn't typical of Kirk, either.
    "Why is he doing that?" she asked crossly. "Resisting her
seduction?"
  Vox studied the screen. "He knows she is an illusion."
  "Indistinguishable from reality."
    "He is a man of the moment," Vox said. "Steeped in
reality. He does not belong in that device, any more than he
belongs in this time." Vox turned to Salatrel. For a moment, it
seemed to her that his Romulan voice spoke to her. "You do
not understand what you have unleashed."
    For the sake of her plan, Salatrel would not, could not
accept that verdict. Not from the collective. And not from
Vox. Too much depended on it, and on her.
    "Watch," she s:iid to the Speaker. "I'll show you what I
understand. Kirk is only a puppet to be manipulated. And I
am his master."
 Salatrel strode to the arched entrance to the holodeck.
 "What do you intend to do?" Vox asked. Against reason,
 Salatrel hoped his question betrayed an interest in any answer
 she might make.
     "Take my duplicate's place," she said. "Remove the illu-
 sion."
                122

     If she could, she would torture whatever remained of her
 lover in Vox.
  "And I want you to observe every moment."
     The Speaker looked at her blankly. But Salatrel was sure
 that some part of him was alive to pain. She longed for that
 surety.
"That is not an efficient use of my time," Vox said.
"What if Kirk and I will be plotting revenge against the
collective?" Salatrel said. "If he was wired into the collective
the way Picard was, then wasn't there the same sort of
exchange of data? Doesn't he have the same secrets locked in
his mind? Isn't he just as big a threat to you as Picard?"
    "Kirk will be dead in seven days. Picard is missing. Perhaps
Starfleet has imprisoned him for losing his ship at Veridian."
    "The Federation is not the Star Empire," Salatrel persisted.
"Those cowards probably patted him on the hand and
apologized for giving him a substandard vessel. He's out
there, Vox. Ready to work against you. Unless Kirk stops
him." She turned the knife. "And you know it. Otherwise,
you never would have expended the resources you already
have."
 For once, Vox had no response.
 Salatrel put her hand on the entrance control.
    "Observe carefully," she said. "We'll see if I can bring back
any more memories for James Tiberius Kirk. Or for you."
    Then the door slipped open with a gentle hiss of machin-
ery, and Salatrel stepped through.

    Vox watched the observation screen impassively, the holo-
graphic duplicate fading as the real Salatrel stepped up to
Kirk.
    Embraced by the welcoming comfort of the groupmind,
Vox noted that Kirk did not react with surprise to the
duplicate's disappearance. The reconstructed human was
more in control than Salatrel imagined.

                123




    Vox's consciousness floated among the thousands of eyes
and hands engaged in the work of the collective in this sector,
sharing all that he thought and felt with so many others that a
blanketing numbness was its end result. At some level, no
more important than that of one small processor in a mas-
sively parallel neural network, Vox watched Kirk as Salatrel
switched off the closure on her tunic, allowing it to fall from
her shoulders, so she stood before Kirk, naked.
    And Vox continued to watch as Kirk embraced the woman
who had been his lover. But whatever discomfort the tiny
spark of individual volition still left within him felt, it was
insignificant compared to the bliss of the collective.
  In seven days, Kirk would be dead.
  Shortly after, the Federation would fall.
    And then, despite their bargain, the Romulan Star Empire
would also become fulfilled as it, too, received the gift of bliss.
    The Borg had recently learned that lying was an excellent
way to preserve resources. And this branch of the collective
especially had become quite practiced at it.
     Certain in his knowledge that Salatrel would join him
 again, Vox observed what happened on the black and red
 patterned blanket beneath the tree.
  His sensor eye was unwavering in its concentration.
  His organic eye was bathed in a distorting veil of moisture.
  Emotions were futile.
  The collective was all.

124

SIXTEEN

 The Borg cube loomed in the darkness, surrounded by the
 glow from its blue and red power conduits, illuminating the
 broken ground around it.
  It was implacable, impenetrable.
  But Picard didn't care.
  He had committed himself to action without doubt.
  Others depended on him.
  He ran for the cube, leading his team.
    In a flash of blue radiation, two Borg materialized ten
meters before him, weapons already trained on him. But
before they could fire, they were already shimmering in
quantum disintegration.
"Random frequency selection engaged{" Beyer called out.
Beverly was at Picard's side. Beyer and Krul behind them.
Weinlein covered their flank, between the team and the cube's
secondary airlock.
    Twenty meters from the main airlock, Picard knew the only
reason the Borg hadn't already attacked was that the collec-
tive's groupmind was analyzing the loss of its first two teams
of soldiers. The next response would be overwhelming, but it
was still several seconds off.
    Picard yanked out a handtorch from his harness and put his
thumb on its activator. He didn't want to depend on the red
and blue glow of the power conduits. He had to be ready.
 He was ten meters from the main airlock. It was sealed, but
                125




the phaser rifles still had fourteen more frequencies to cycle
through. Enough to get his team through the door.
    A blinding blue flash came from the side opposite
Weinlein's approach. Picard faltered, momentarily startled
by what he saw. The Borg response was overwhelming. A
configuration unlike any Borg Picard had ever encountered.
    It was bipedal, but three meters tall, with piston-like legs
and thick crushing disks for footpads, digging into the soil.
Propellant gases hissed from its leg joints as it began to stalk
forward. Two pairs of arms swung forward, searchingly,
manipulators opening and closing with molecularly sharp
carbon cutters and whirling blades. Their target: raw ma-
terials.
    Phaser beams streaked past Picard and flared in a blinding
halo around the Borg giant. The beams resolved into facets
like a jewel carved out of energy. Disconcertingly, the sudden
light revealed a small, impassive, humanoid head centered
protectively in the Borg's immense shoulder plates. It was the
only biological component visible. Picard saw Beverly recoil
at the sight.
    The phaser beams cut out. The Borg colossus advanced.
Untouched.
    "They've adapted to the base phaser pattern!" Beyer
shouted.
    "Discard phasers!" Weinlein commanded. "Krul, you're
go!"
  The powerful Klingon lunged past Picard.
    The Borg's arms swung down on him, intent on dismem-
bering its attacker.
  But Krul fired a Klingon thrustergun first.
    An antique, Picard knew, hand-tooled with intricate en-
gravings of Kahless battling Molor. He had examined it when
they had shared a meal two nights ago. It fired simple
projectiles of explosive-packed metal, propelled by a
centuries-old chemical-reaction technology.
  The Borg's forcefield had been set for phaser harmonics.
                126

    Undetected, the metal projectile traversed the force field's
perimeter and punched into the creature's implanted breast-
plate before the collective could reconfigure its defenses.
    Sparks arced from the Borg's immense chest, along with a
spray of dark liquid. One arm snapped back, flailing out of
control.
    Picard saw the shock on the face so cruelly embedded in the
appalling construction.
    Four more projectiles pockmarked the Borg's armored
body. The last one caused a defensive force-field flare, but the
collective had not been fast enough to save this unit. It began to topple.
    From Krul's throat rose a Klingon victory cry, as he drove
his fists into the air.
    Just as an antimatter stream spurted from the glowing node
of one falling Borg arm.
    The incandescent beam sliced neatly through Krul's legs,
mid-thigh.
 The Klingon fell.
    Then the massive Borg construct struck the ground before
him, thrown onto its back as its one good arm still sprayed a
continuous stream of antiprotons so that the arc of the beam
hit the side of the Borg cube.
 Picard staggered back with the force of the explosion.
    A particle cannon turret instantly swung out from the
cube's side and returned fire at the fallen Borg giant.
    Its chest exploded and its arm fell back, useless and
impotent.
    Then the cannon turret swung sharply, toward Picard and
his team.
    Picard charged forward and threw a smart grenade, catch-
ing a glimpse of it spiraling around the cannon turret, heading
for the contact point where the cannon joined the cube.
    And just as he dove for cover in the dirt, he felt himself
lifted up, thrown back, hitting the dirt on his back, lungs
without air.




 Another explosion flared above him.
 His ears rang. His chest heaved.
 Then Beverly was at his side, pulling on his arm.
 He was aware of smoke rising from his chestplate.
    He gasped, coughed. "Was I hit?" he asked. But he felt so
detached, it was as if her answer were unimportant.
    "Your armor was hit," Beverly said. "Good thing they went
for your chest, not your head."
    Picard felt stabbing pain in his lungs as he drew a breath to
respond.
 Beverly frowned at her medical tricorder.
    Something else exploded nearby. The air was dense with
sound and smoke.
 "Three cracked ribs," she told him. "Here."
 A hypospray tingled against his neck.
 The pain melted.
 Another explosion.
 "Can you stand?" Beverly asked urgently.
    Picard knew he had no choice. He got to his feet. His chest
was numb.
 "Krul?" he asked.
    "His armor's life-support will cut off the bleeding and
deliver stimulants," Beverly promised. "He can hold on till
it's safe to get him." Then she pulled Pieard's arm over her
shoulder and guided him forward, into a pit carved by an
earlier explosion.
    Weinlein was there, setting up a photon mortar with sure,
practiced movements. She glanced at him. "Are you ready?"
      Picard felt around for his torch. He had dropped it.
Weinlein saw what he was doing, then tossed him hers.
 "Yes," he said.
    "We've got one more cannon to take out, then you can get
to the main airlock."
  "What about you?"
  Weinlein nodded into the distance.
                128

  Picard looked.
    Krul scrabbled in the dirt next to the body of the Borg
construct. He was roaring threats in Klingon. Battle cries. No
sense of giving up.
    Another explosion went off at the side of the cube. Picard
heard thudding, then Beyer leapt down into the pit.
    "That's the last cannon," he said roughly. 'Tm going for
Krul."
    Picard pulled himself up and switched on his handtorch.
"And I'm going for the airlock."
  "Jean-Luc!" Beverly said behind him.
    He glanced back for an instant. Read the worry in her face,
and the faith, and knew what she was about to say. He
nodded.
 "I will," he told her.
    Beyer took off toward Krul. Picard sprinted for the airlock.
He held the torch under his face, making his features distinct.
    The cube looked badly damaged. The antimatter stream
from the giant Borg had cut a large hole through its side.
     Large enough that Picard changed his strategy and ran for
it instead of the airlock. It was the better entrance.
 Behind him, Beyer shouted a warning.
 Picard spun, then stumbled as he saw--
    --the thorax of the fallen Borg construct opening like a
metal flower.
    Next to the construct, Krul still screamed out his chal-
lenges, unaware. Beyer struggled to wrap his arm around
Krul's writhing form while he aimed a hand disruptor at the
opening in the construct.
    But the beam dissipated against the Borg force field.
Behind it, eight gleaming metal spider legs unfurled from the
thorax, as if testing the air.
    Then the legs braced themselves on the fallen construct and
slowly straightened to lift up the central, disk-shaped body
slung between them.
                129




 A Borg scuttier had emerged.
    Picard and the commandos had seen it darting through the
ruined Starbase at speeds no human or Klingon could match
and suspected it was a wholly mechanical device. But now
that it was still, Picard could see a single organic shape resting
in the center of its body--the braincasing of whatever once-
living organic being had been built into the unthinkable
device.
    Beyer yelled at Picard to keep running as the cybernetic
insect raised four of its legs, then angled down toward Beyer,
metal legs flashing, as it picked up speed.
    Picard groaned as Beyer dropped his disruptor and un-
loaded a full charge from his Vulcan pulse wand. But this
branch of the collective must have faced that weapon before,
and the battle was over instantly.
    A green nimbus flared around the scuttier as it launched
itself into the air, drew its forward legs together, and sank
into Beyer like a living javelin.
    Beyer flew backward, with the creature now a part of his
chest.
    The scuttier used its rear legs to brace itself against the
fallen, limp body, then yanked its forelegs from Beyer's
bloodied chest.
 Picard saw Beyer's legs spasm once, then fall still.
 The scuttier turned in a blur to Krul.
    Krul bellowed at the creature--the machine--as it stood
over him.
    Picard could see the Klingon's fists strike out to pummel
the scuttler's cybernetic shell. Heard the clang of armored
fists on metal. The dull thud of armored fists against whatever
ghastly remnant of the creature was organic.
    But the scuttier was not preparing to impale Krul as it had
Beyer. Two metal legs had folded up against his body and
moved inside an access panel.
  There was a chance for Krul.
                t30

  Picard took it.
  He started to run toward Krul.
     "No!" Weinlein shouted. She struck him from behind, hit
 his legs. Dragged him down.
  An instant later, the ground erupted in front of him.
     Together, they rolled behind a mound of earth and silicon
 bricks. Beverly ran to join them.
    "There's another cannon," Weinlein gasped. "The mortar
can't get past the new shields they've thrown up."
    Picard pushed her away. He knew the debris they hid
behind wouldn't protect them for long. And Krul needed his
help. He crawled to the edge of the mound to peer into the
blue and red landscape.
  A Klingon shriek of defiance cut the night.
    Beverly moved up beside Picard. The scuttier still crouched
obscenely over Krul. Two of its legs seemed to be attached to
the Klingon's helmet.
 "What's it doing?" Beverly asked.
    Weinlein joined them, with an ancient Romulan curse. She
slammed down her visor, activating her telescopic sensors.
Another curse. "It's attaching an implant." Picard froze. "They'll know our plans."
    Then he grimaced as a sharp feedback whine cut through
the open communicator circuit.
 "Red leader one, this is Archangel--"
    The Monitor had arrived and her more powerful equip-
ment had managed to punch through the Borg jamming. But
because her commander was breaking the communications
blackout, it could only mean one thing.
    "--a cubeship has just dropped from transwarp. It is
closing in to engage." Picard could picture Captain Lewinski
of the Monitor secure in his command chair, ready to fulfill
his duty, as well as to test the design specifications of his ship.
 But Starfleet couldn't take the chance.
 Picard slammed his fist against his communicator contact.

                131




"Negative, Captain. Do not engage the Borg! Repeatredo not
engage the Borg! They are ready for you!"
    Static and feedback whine warbled over the circuit. Borg
countermeasures. Krul shrieked defiance again. And again. A
particle blast hit the ground nearby, scattering some of::the
cover shielding Picard and his depleted team.         ~?'?
  Lewinski's voice came back online. "Say again, Picard.,
  "You must withdraw, Captain! Pull back at maximum
  warp. Allow the cubeship time to recover their assimilation
  crew down here." Picard gambled that the Borg had not yet
  broken the constant cycling of Starfleet encryption schemes.
  "It will be the only chance we have to get aboard."
    Picard heard the disappointment in Lewinski's voice, tem-
pered by imperceptible relief. "Acknowledged, Captain. God-
speed."
 "Aboard?" Weinlein said.
    Picard turned to her. "The collective will not abandon this
team. They will not abandon--" Another particle blast
sprayed them with dirt and stinging silicon fragments. The
sensor ghosts constantly transmitted by their armor were still
confusing the Borg's scanners, but the Borg were getting
closer each minute.
    "They will not abandon these resources," Picard continued
fiercely. "Especially if they think there are secrets to be
gained from the Starfleet computers that were here."
    Weinlein lifted her visor. Her eyes bore into Picard's. "If
that scuttier implarits Krul, the Borg won't come near this
place." She broke the seal on her helmet and tugged it off. It
was the first time Picard had seen her out of her full battle
gear. Her ears were pointed. Half-human, half....
    Weinlein reached inside her armor and pulled out a small
medallion. She pressed it into Picard's hand.
    It was a Vulcan IDIC. The triangle receding into the whole
and expanding from it at one and the same time. Infinite
diversity in infinite combinations.
                132

     "For my parents," she said. "My mother's Vulcan. They'll
 need to take it to Mount Selaya."
 Kru!'s voice rose once more. This time it was weak.
 Weinlein squeezed the IDIC in Picard's palm. "Live long
 and prosper, Captain Picard. Now get the hell into that
 cube!"
     Then she jumped up and swung her helmet arcing into the
 air behind her. The instant it left her hand, she charged
 forward, shouting Krul's name.
    Picard knew exactly what she was doing. Exactly why she
was doing it. He wanted there to be another way but there was
no time. He and Beverly ran, too--straight for the Borg cube.
    To one side, particle blasts chewed up the ground as the
cannon closed in on Weinlein's helmet, the source of the
sensor ghosts.
    To the other side, Weinlein attacked the scuttier even as its
legs trembled over Krul's exposed skull, as if weaving a
metallic cocoon for its prey.
     Picard and Beverly reached the shattered opening into the
cube. There were no Borg to meet them. "No," Beverly whispered.
 Picard looked back. Saw what she saw.
 The scuttler with three legs raised.
 Weinlein dodged, but not quickly enough.
    Picard heard her cry of protest, as powerful as Krul's
defiance had been.
    But as it lifted two more legs to try to impale her again,
Weinlein struck it and it toppled from Krul's body, its wires
still connected to the Klingon's skull.
    Another particle blast lit the night. The cannon was still
aimed at Weinlein's helmet.
    As the rumble of the explosion died down, Picard heard the
telltale whine of an overload building in a phaser prefire cell.
Picard could see Weinlein. The commando leader stood tall.
Her arms were not raised to deflect the scuttler's next blow.
                133




 Picard knew why. She was holding her phaser.
    The scuttier brought its second pair of legs down, and this
time it didn't miss.
    Weinlein's legs buckled, but she did not release her grip on
the phaser.
 It was the only way.
    "Don't look," Picard said as the overload whine reached its
crescendo.
    He held Beverly's face against his chest. But he watched
until it was over.
    White light blazed into the depths of the Borg cube
stretching before them, followed by the crack of the explo-
sion.
 Picard blinked.
 Only a smoking crater remained.
    Weinlein and Krul were gone. The scuttier was gone. But
Picard's chance to fulfill the mission still remained. Because
of Weinlein's sacrifice. Beyer's and Krul's sacrifice. "You will be assimilated."
    Picard turned, ready to face the Borg standing beside him,
weapon held ready.
 "Resistance is futile," the Borg said.
    Automatically, Picard accepted the challenge. It was his
turn to act now.
    "Are you defective?" Picard began. He shoved Beverly
behind him.
    The Borg stepped forward. "You are not qualified to assess
my operational status."
  Picard held the torch to his face. "Are you certain?"
  "Locutus?" the Borg said.
  It lowered its weapon.
  "Are you defective?" Picard repeated.
    The Borg's sensor eye flashed as it was compelled into a
diagnostic subroutine. Picard motioned urgently to Beverly.
  She approached the Borg, placed a hypospray against a
                134

small patch of exposed flesh at the base of its jaw, then pulled
its cerebral cables free as it collapsed to the deck.
    Beverly smiled shakily at Picard. "What do you know? It
worked." She reset her hypospray, began to place it back on
her harness, then thought better of it. She kept it in her hand.
"What now?"
    Picard looked for a way deeper into the cube. There was no
way to know which--
    As if a bomb concussion had moved past him, he lurched
forward, slamming into a bulkhead made of mismatched
pipes and metal patches.
 Beverly staggered back at the same instant.
 "What was that?" she asked.
 All around them, the cube creaked and groaned.
 Picard felt the deck angle beneath him.
 He glanced back outside, past the jagged opening.
    The smoking crater beside the fallen Borg construct was
still there. But beyond, about fifty meters distant, there was a
sharp dark line, like a horizon on an asteroid.
    Picard leaned forward, looked outside the creaking cube.
Beverly was beside him. Her breath drew in sharply.
    The ground in a fifty-meter circle around the cube was
moving skyward. In the light of the concentrated stars of the
New Titan sky, Picard could see the rest of the planet's
surface rush away.
 They were in the grip of a Borg tractor beam.
    And Picard knew it was drawing them up to the waiting
cubeship, which had anticipated their every move.
 "We're being retrieved," Picard said.




SEVENTEEN

The stripped-down, single-level bridge of the Monitor
was cramped, but only because of the extra shielding that
surrounded it.
    Captain John Lewinski liked that about his ship. As far as
her specs were concerned, she was virtually indestructible.
    "Any more signals from the surface?" he asked his commu-
nications officer.
    Ardev turned from his station, blue hearing stalks twisting
to remain pointed at the speakers in his control console. "The
Borg have completely jammed all frequencies," he whispered
in his Andorian rasp.
    Lewinski angled his chair toward his science officer. "Sen-
sors?"
    Science Officer T'per remained serene, as always. "The
Borg are generating a sensor blanket, sir. At the time it was
initiated, full life signs came from Picard, Crusher, and
Weinlein. Krul's battle suit had activated emergency medical
life-support routines. There were no readings from Beyer."
    Lewinski chewed his lip, thinking the situation through.
Two casualties before the main Borg vessel had arrived. That
was not a good sign.
 "What is the cubeship up to, Mr. Land?"
    The navigator didn't take his eyes off the main viewscreen.
The Monitor was operating with sensors at theirlowest power
setting to avoid Borg detection, resulting in a low-resolution
                136

image. Though Lewinski had followed Picard's suggestion to
withdraw at maximum warp, he had taken the Monitor
behind the New Titan system's gas giant, cloaked, and
returned to a geostationary orbit above whatever was left of
Starbase 804.
    The Borg cubeship was also holding a geostationary posi-
tion, though only five hundred kilometers from the planet's
surface. The power expenditure for such a maneuver must
have been stupendous, though so far sensors could not pick
up any sign of what kind of system the Borg were using.
    "Hard to tell, Captain," Land replied. The ship's navigator
had a clipped, Anglo accent. Though fully half the Monitor's
crew was human, apart from Lewinski, Land was the only
native of Earth aboard. The Federation had become that
diverse. "The ship is bleeding sensor ghosts on every frequen-
cy. I am picking up strong indications of a tractor beam,
though."
    Lewinski glanced over at T'Per. The young Vulcan met his
gaze without expression. "T'Per, which option provides the
least risk? Increasing sensor gain from this position, or
moving closer and maintaining low power?"
    T'Per raised an eyebrow in thought. "For the least risk, we
should withdraw."
    Lewinski smiled at her, but drew no response. "That wasn't
an option."
    "Then you should have stated which option provided the
lesser risk," T'Per noted, unsmiling.
    Vulcans, Lewinski thought. Couldn't live with them.
Couldn't live without them.
 "The lesser risk, Mr. T'Per."
 "Moving closer, but only by a factor of less than one half."
    Lewinski turned his chair to face the screen. "Take us in,
Mr. Land. I want to look up their tailpipe."
    "Wherever that is," Land muttered. The Monitor
surged forward at quarter impulse and was in visual contact
with the Borg cubeship within seconds.
                137




    "Definitely a tractor beam," Lewinski said softly, fingering
his goatee.
    The increased-resolution image of the main screen showed
a telltale purple beam emanating from the surface of the
cubeship closest to the planet. It stretched down to the
surface of New Titan.
    Lewinski quickly polled his crew for power levels, sensor
readings, and any indication that the Borg had sensed their
cloaked presence.
    But the cloaking device was working perfectly. Lewinski
thought the Romulan science team at Starbase 324 would be
pleased to hear that. That is, after they had gotten over their
outrage that Starfleet had operated the device aboard a
Defiant-class ship without a Romulan observer.
    Land adjusted the viewscreen's image, angling it away from
the Borg cubeship, toward New Titan. There was an object at
the base of the tractor beam, increasing in size as it drew
nearer. "We've got a mass coming up from the surface,
Captain."
    "It's got to be the starbase," Lewinski said. If Picard had
been right in his transmission, then they were watching the
Borg retrieve the bait.
    "Life signs on the tractored mass," T'Per announced.
"Forty-two Borg... no... forty Borg, two assimilated
animals... small..."
    Lewinski scratched his fingers through his beard. "Bottom
line, Mister. Any of the red team on that?"
    T'Per's fingers flew skillfully over her science panel. "Medi-
cal telemetry from armor belonging to... Picard and ...
Crusher, sir. No injuries."
 Lewinski exhaled slowly. Some of his crew joined him ....
    If none of the red team had made it to the cubeship, the
Monitor had orders to attack. But now, all he could do was
observe.
                138

 "Intriguing," T'Per said beside him.
    Before them, a half hemisphere of soil, one hundred meters
across, fifty meters deep, and topped by a thirty-foot-tall Borg
cube, was rising up beneath the cubeship.
    Lewinski got the specs from the screen on the arm of his
chair. On the screen, the tractored chunk of planet was
nothing more than a dark smear against the bulk of the Borg
vessel.
    "Contact," Land announced when the tractored soil van-
ished inside the ship.
    "Any idea what they're using for a power source?" Lewin-
ski asked anyone.
 "No change in energy consumption," T'Per said.
 Lewinski shook his head. He was glad he wasn't attacking.
 On the screen, the Borg ship began to rotate.
    "Keep your eye on weapons sensors," Lewinski cautioned.
He leaned forward in his chair.
    T'Per's voice was clear and strong. "I am definitely detect-
ing a power surge, Captain."
 "Stand by on shields, Mr. Land."
    "Captain," T'Per said, "may I remind you that if we do
raise our shields, the Borg will detect us."
     Lewinski kept his eyes on the screen. "What if they've
detected us already, and they're powering up their weapons?"
 "Logically," T'Per said, "we would have been scanned."
 "Those aren't logical Vulcans, Mr. T'Per. They're Borg."
 T'Per's voice cooled noticeably. "There were Vulcans
 stationed at the starbase, Captain. Therefore, there could be
 some Vulcans now aboard the recovered cube, contributing
 their intellect, and logic, to the collective."
    "I for one," Lewinski said, still keeping his concentration
locked on the screen, "do not even want to contemplate what
a Borg Vulcan might be like."
    Land glanced over his shoulder with a grin. "There'd be a
difference?"
                139




  "At ease, Mr. Land," the captain warned.
  "Shields on full standby," Land confirmed.
    On the screen, the Borg ship had rotated until it had
changed its orientation to New Titan by one hundred eighty
degrees.
    "I'd like an explanation for what we're seeing," Lewinski
said to his bridge crew.
    "They're getting ready to do something, Captain," Land
volunteered. "But I just don't know--what?"
 On the screen, the Borg ship disappeared in a flash of light.
 "Sensors!" Lewinski demanded.
    "The Borg vessel generated and then entered a transwarp
conduit," T'Per reported.
    Lewinski sat back in his chair, amazed. "That quickly?" He
hadn't even seen the multi-dimensional opening form. Only a
flash of light.
 "Playing it back at slow speed," Land said.
    On the screen, the disappearance of the Borg cubeship
played out again, this time slowed by a factor of one hundred.
Sure enough, a transwarp conduit opened. The Borg ship
didn't vanish; it appeared to dissolve into a spray of light,
then was lost as the conduit opening collapsed around it.
    In Starfleet's first encounter with Borg transwarp conduits,
the crew of the U.S.S. Enterprise had determined that the
secret to entering them had been the transmission of an
encoded, high-energy tachyon pulse. However, once the En-
terprise had used that technique several times, the conduits
no longer responded to it. As if the transwarp network, like
the Borg themselves, had adapted.
    Lewinski rubbed his hands over his face. He had had four
hours sleep in the past three days. "Go to full power sensors
and stand down from cloaked running," he said. "Lieutenant
Ardev, contact Commander Shelby at Starbase 324. Tell her
Picard and Crusher are aboard a Borg vessel. But that vessel
is now in transwarp, and we are unable to pursue."
                140

    Land twisted around in his chair to look at his captain.
"Can't we try to search for them, sir? We have a heading from
the sensor logs."
    Lewinski sighed, deeply grateful he wasn't Picard. "The
way those conduits move through other-dimensional space,
Mr. Land, their heading at entry wouldn't tell us anything.
I'm afraid that Captain Picard and Dr. Crusher have just
gone... where no one has gone before."
    Lewinski suddenly felt the full weight of deferred exhaus-
tion. T'Per stepped up to the side of his chair, hands behind
her back.
    "Then it is most unlikely they will ever be able to deter-
mine a way to return," the science officer said.
    Lewinski stretched back in his chair, thinking dark
thoughts of Vulcans and logic.

EIGHTEEN

"Shit," Data said. "Damn, hell .... sal'tasnon?'
    La Forge sighed, and the visor of his helmet fogged up. The
local temperature on Trilex was hovering around fifty Kelvin,
and despite the heating elements built into his well-insulated
environmental suit, he felt the chill. It didn't put him in the
mood to waste time.
    "Data," La Forge said, feeling the vibrations from his
helmet's exterior speaker, "exactly who taught you how to
curse like that?"
 "Counselor Troi," Data answered. The android looked
                141




across the small excavation site from where he knelt in the
ice, and smiled. Behind him in the dim red light of Trilex
Prime, the eerie, corroded spires of the frozen city could be
seen emerging from the ice field like fingers from a grave.
"She has told me that I must feel free to express my
emotions." Data's innocent grin grew larger "Damn, damn,
damn."
    La Forge decided it was time for a break The ruins of the
Trilex civilization had been frozen for hundreds of thousands
of years, ever since the planet's sun had gone nova. A few
more minutes' delay in this library structure wouldn't make
any difference. He stepped cautiously over the grid of red
string that defined the excavation area to see what Data was
up to. "So what's wrong ~this time?" he asked, though he
dreaded the answer.
    Data, who did not need an environmental suit to withstand
the cold of the planet, wore his standard duty uniform. He
brushed ice crystals from his knees as he stood up, holding
out an environmentally sealed tricorder. "This patak piece of
flax is no damn good," he explained.
    Then he angled his head as he studied La Forge's expres-
sion inside the engineer's helmet. "In case you are not fluent
in the Klingon vernacular, I was stating that this tricorder,
due to bad design, was no longer functioning."
    La Forge took the tricorder from Data's hand. "I get the
picture, Data. But why didn't you just say that in the first
place?"
    Data looked confused. "I did." Then he smiled. Mercurial
changes in his mood and expression were the norm these
days, La Forge knew.
    "Ah," Data said, "I see from where your confusion might
originate. My original statement was infused with an emo-
tional content indicating my annoyance with the tricorder's
malfunction. Perhaps you have not yet become used to me as
an emotional being."
  La Forge took a deep breath, then flipped open the trans-
                         142

parent covering that protected the tricorder's surface from
extreme conditions. "Data, I admit, ever since you installed
that emotion chip, you have... taken some getting used to."
 "Do I disappoint you, Geordi?"
    La Forge rolled his eyes. "You're my friend, Data. You can't
disappoint me. But it would be nice if we could go back to
having a conversation without you sounding like your
mouth's a sewer."
    Data looked off to the side, an indication that he was
accessing his deepest databanks. He frowned, even appeared
to shudder. "That is a most unpleasant image, Geordi. But I
do not know what you intend by it."
    La Forge scraped the tip of his gloved thumb along the
inside of the tricorder's container. "Just stop cursing, Data"
    "But would that not mean I was denying my emotions?"
Now Data looked troubled. "Geordi, from my sessions with
Counselor Troi, which I have enjoyed very much, I have
learned that such a course of action could endanger my
emotional health."
    La Forge snapped shut the tricorder's case. He grabbed
Data's hand, then slapped the tricorder into it. "You had an
ice buildup inside the cover that was interfering with the
control surfaces. If you had stopped cursing for a second to
examine the problem, you wouldn't have had to waste our
time here."
    Data narrowed his eyes as he squinted at the tricorder. He
pressed a few controls and smiled happily as he read the
results. "Geordi, you're a kreldanni genius!" "Data!"
    "Geordi, do you believe I am not expressing my emotions
appropriately?"
 "Not all the time, Data. But... sometimes, yeah."
    Data's mouth twisted down in a horrible grimace. "I feel so
.. so bad."
    La Forge suddenly saw what was going to happen. And he
didn't want to deal with it. "No, Data. Don't say that!"
                143




"B-but I do," the android sobbed. "I've hurt your feelings."
"No, Data! No, you haven't! I feel great! I feel happy!" La
Forge grabbed Data by the shoulders. "Data, whatever you
do--don't cryf'
  But he was too late.
    The emotional mimetic systems designed into Data's an-
droid body were both subtle and robust. Data was still
discovering all the complex ways in which they could interact.
Tears were one of their many functions But not at fifty degrees Kelvin.
    Puffs of water vapor billowed from Data's eyes as molecu-
lar micropumps excreted saline solution through Data's tear-
ducts. Unfortunately, the liquid promptly sublimated in the
intensely cold and thin atmosphere of Trilex.
    La Forge groaned as Data reached out blindly with his
hands. Two patches of ice crystals glittered on his face, one
beneath each eyebrow
    "Geordi," the android said plaintively "I have frozen my
eyelids together."
 "Oh, Data," La Forge sighed. "Not again"
    Data stumbled over to an equipment locker and sat down
as if his artificial muscles had buckled. "I am such a failure,"
he said.
    La Forge shook his head and glanced down at his in-helmet
status displays. He still had oxygen for four more hours. The
Bozeman would be back overhead in less than two. He had no
excuse for not indulging his friend.
    "It's okay, Data," La Forge said as he sat down beside the
android It was an awkward maneuver in his suit, but he
managed to put a supportive arm around Data's shoulders.
    Data slumped, going into one of his depressions He
seemed to have them at least every other day by La Forge's
reckoning. The only positive thing about them was that they
seldom lasted more than a few minutes Data might have
emotions now, but his internal processoffs clock still ran a
thousand times faster than the human brain.

144

    "No, it is not, Geordi. We must face the facts that my
emotional skills do not measure up to the rest of my abili-
ties." Data turned his face to La Forge. His eyes were still
frozen over. "I am an emotional cripple. And my eyes are still
frozen over." Then he slumped forward again, and sobbed.
 La Forge had had enough.
    "Data, so help me, if you don't pull yourself together, I'll
.. I'll turn you off until we're back on the Bozeman."
Data instantly sat up again. "You would do that? Really?"
La Forge made no effort to hold back his own feelings.
"Data, I gave up my leave time to come here with you.
Between us, we used up every favor anybody in Starfleet ever
owed us to get passage here and permission to dig. And after
all that effort, and sacrifice, you're costing us the chance of
doing any work at all by constantly having these emotional
breakdowns. If you don't stop, I'll turn you off in a Klingon
minute."
    Ignoring the ice crystals glittering on his face, Data took on
an expression of stoic resignation "I understand, Geordi.
You hate me."
    "That's it!" La Forge stood up and began reaching around
for Data's hidden function switch. "You're going to take a
nap."
    Data was up and backing away at once. "But I am not
tired."
    La Forge moved slowly to avoid slipping on the slick frozen
surface of the ice. "You're an android. You never get tired.
But I do!"
    Data stopped trying to get away. "Geordi. Now that I have
emotions, I can understand them better in others. I can hear
the anger in your voice. It's directed at me."
    "I am angry, Data. But not at you. I'm... angry at how
... self-indulgent you've become. Emotions aren't helping
you develop your humanity. You're so caught up in yourself,
you're driving everyone else away."
 Again Data's mood changed. His expression became one of
                145




delight. "In other words, I am behaving like an adolescent.
Geordi, I am happy now."
    La Forge sighed again. He'd pay good credits to see how
Deanna Troi would handle the emotional gravity whip Data
was riding. La Forge could barely keep up. But he had to try.
"Why's that, Data?"
    "Plotting my emotional growth against a timeline extend-
ing from the moment I installed the emotion chip, if I have
now reached the adolescent stage, marked by mood swings
and intense, antisocial, emotional self-involvement, then I
can extrapolate that, in approximately fourteen days, I shall
have reached full adult emotional maturity."  "Do me a favor?" La Forge asked.
  "It shall be my pleasure," Data said grandly.
    "See if you can make it through the next fourteen days
without a single curse word?"
  Data shrugged. "Why the hell not?"
  La Forge sighed again. Heavily.
  "I heard that," Data said.
    "Well, hear this then. I'm going back to work." La Forge
returned to his corner of the excavation. So far he had melted
through eight squares of ice, going down a meter to the floor
of the ancient structure. It was easier than the digging he had
once done with Captain Picard, when the captain had eagerly
tried to introduce the engineer to his hobby. At least in
conducting a dig on an ice planet, there was no dirt to shovel
away. A type-1 phaser on low power simply melted the years
away.
"It is very nice of you to help me like this," Data said.
"I'm not being nice," La Forge said as he checked the
power level on his phaser. "I'm interested in finding out what
happened here, too."
    He glanced up as Data aimed his own excavation phaser at
his face. Ever since the emotion chip, going anywhere with
Data was like being with a five-year-old. Disaster loomed at
every moment.

t46

    "Tell me you're not going to do something stupid," La
Forge said.
    "I may be an emotional cripple, Geordi, but I have ensured
the phaser is set to its lowest power level. I am not crazy."
    Data fired a weak beam at his face and the clumps of ice
covering his eyes vaporized. He blinked rapidly.
    "So far," La Forge muttered. Then he located a new square
to melt away and positioned himself over it.
    As the millennia-old ice vaporized away from the secrets it
covered, Data walked over to stand close by La Forge's side.
    "Be careful you do not let the beam touch the keys
themselves," Data said.
    La Forge kept his temper. "I know, Data." The tricorder
had shown that the floor of the structure was littered with
hundreds of cylindrical pieces of metal which other archaeol-
ogists had identified as data keys, designed to be placed into
Trilex computer stations. Unfortunately, when Trilex Prime
had gone nova, apparently without warning, all the computer
systems on the planet had been wiped clean. Since the Trilex
civilization had been pervasively computer-based, with artifi-
cially intelligent machines even achieving equality under the
planet's laws, much of its culture had been lost beyond hope
of recovery.
    But the data keys had encoded information in a different
way, which left them unaffected by the radiation surge of the
nova. Though each held little information, Data had hoped
that recovering enough of them might make it possible to
place them together like a jigsaw puzzle to obtain a fuller
picture of the Trilex culture.
    That was important to Data, and to La Forge, because most
archaeologists, including Captain Picard, had concluded that
when its sun had gone nova, Trilex had been embroiled in a
war between its organic inhabitants and its artificial,
machine-based life-forms.
    Some scholars had taken that to mean that organic life and
synthetic life could never live in peace.
                147




    Since La Forge had first met Data, the android had always
had an interest in the "Trilex Question," as it was known. But
upon receiving his emotion chip, it had become an obsession
with him.
  La Forge could understand that.
    To be really human, as Data desired, meant more than just
having the capacity to feel. It meant having the capacity to
stare up at the stars and ask the hardest questions of them all:
Who am I? What is my purpose here?
    La Forge knew those questions were in Data. And if they
were to have meaningful answers for him, it was important
for Data to know that he was more than just a mechanical
oddity built by an eccentric scientist. It was important to
know that he had a place in this universe. And for him to
truly know that, it was critical that whatever had happened
on Trilex had had nothing to do with the impossibility of
organic and synthetic life-forms coexisting.
    Finding emotions had only been the first step in Data's long
voyage of self-discovery. Now he had to do what every other
human must--find himself, and define himself, in his own
terms.
    Thus La Forge had been happy to help his friend. Espe-
cially since they had been ordered to take their accumulated
leave while waiting for reassignment. To a new Enterprise, La
Forge hoped.
 "I think you have almost reached them," Data said.
    "I know, Data," La Forge answered, keeping his beam
moving slowly over the opening he had melted in the ice, now
half a meter deep. "I've done this before, remember."
    "It is just that it is very important that I know if organic life
and synthetic life can coexist in peace."
    [.a Forge spoke through clenched teeth. "Not if synthetic
life keeps making a pest of itself."
    La Forge stopped firing the phaser. Billows of water vapor
filled the area, coalescing into clouds of sparkling ice crystals.
                148

It was almost like a slow-motion replay of the transporter
effect.
    He checked his tricorder to see if the data keys had been
exposed. He had to scrape his helmet visor to get rid of the
frost that had formed there.
    "Pretty good," he said to Data. "Looks like we've got
another eleven keys down there to add to the collection. Do
you want to pick them out while I--"
    La Forge stopped talking as he saw a sudden energy spike
on his tricorder's display.
 "What the hell was that?"
    "Geordi, I do not believe it is fair that you require me not
to curse, while you continue to do so."
    "Not now, Data." La Forge changed the settings on the
tricorder. "That almost looked like a beam-in nearby. But the
Bozeman is hours away." "Geordim"
 "Not now, Data. I'm trying to concentrate."
 "You do not have to. It was a beam-in. Look."
 La Forge slowly raised his helmet.
    Data was pointing straight ahead, across the excavation
site, to where the spires of the city rose from the ice, against
the dying sun of Trilex.
    But for now, the ancient ruins were hidden by the swirling
billows of ice crystals. Slowly settling. Not to reveal the ruins.
But to reveal the shape of a stranger in an environmental suit
that was not Starfleet-issue.
 "Can I help you?" La Forge said.
    He carefully placed his tricorder back on his belt and began
to move his hand to his phaser.
    Trilex was a protected historical site, administered by the
Vulcan Science Academy.
    If there had been any other expeditions to this world
planned when Starfleet had submitted their proposal for a
dig, he and Data would have been informed.
                149




     "First, move your hand away from your phaser," the
 stranger said.
    La Forge noted that his universal translator had not
switched on. The stranger spoke English.
  "This is a restricted site," La Forge said.
    He peered through the thinning ice cloud as the stranger
stepped forward. There were two large devices clipped to his
belt. One was a hand weapon. La Forge took as a good sign
that it had not yet been drawn.
    "I won't be here long," the stranger said. "I just want to ask
a question."
  "Are you an archaeologist?" Data asked.
    La Forge waited for the answer. As far as he could tell, the
stranger was humanoid, but his features were obscured by the
reflective visor on his helmet.
"No," the stranger said. Then his hand went for his belt.
La Forge was ready to draw against him. But the stranger
removed a flattened green cylinder about half a meter long,
not his weapon.
  "Who are you?" La Forge asked.
    "I said I had the question," the stranger answered. Then he
aimed the cylinder at La Forge and Data.
    Instantly La Forge drew his phaser, reflexively resetting its
power level to stun.
 "Whatever that is, put it down," La Forge commanded.
    But the stranger did not move the cylinder. "Where is Jean-
Luc Picard?" he asked.
    Of all the reasons La Forge had been prepared to hear to
explain the stranger's presence, that was the least likely.
    "That is a question more suited for Starfleet Command,"
Data volunteered. "Because of the chain of command we
operate under, it is not appropriate to ask us."
    The stranger's helmet angled until the visor was pointed
directly at Data. "I'm surprised your ears aren't pointed," he
said. Then he began to raise the cylinder.

                150

 La Forge pressed the firing stud on his phaser.
 The blue beam shot out to the stranger.
 Then evaporated in a blue nimbus around him.
    La Forge felt his mouth open in astonishment. The stranger
had a personal force field. But where was its power generator?
Not even Starfleet had perfected such a device. "Now it's my turn," the stranger said.
    A puffof vapor blew out of the end of the cylinder. La Forge
shoved Data aside as he sensed more than saw a dark streak
rush past him.
    For a moment, nothing happened. Then La Forge glanced
behind him, expecting to see the impact of whatever the
stranger had shot at him.
    Instead, he saw a smart projectile hovering two meters
beyond.
    Then it was gone and La Forge felt a giant's hand crush his
chest.
    He fell back into the excavation grid, tangled up in the red
grid string as he tried to right himself.
 But he couldn't breathe, let alone move.
    Data spoke with a voice of rage. "I will not let you hurt my
friend!"
"Then answer my question. Where is Jean-Luc Picard?"
Through a red haze of pain, La Forge saw Data step past
him. La Forge gasped as he felt the sudden bite of intense
cold. He realized his suit must have been punctured. Though
he could see only what was directly in front of his visor--
nothing but the icy cliffs of the ruins they worked in, looming
up all around himmLa Forge could still hear Data and the
stranger on his helmet speaker.
    "Your weapon will not work on me," Data said. "I have no
need of an environmental suit. Also, my strength and reflexes
are many times greater than any organic being's. You will not
succeed in fighting me." It was Data's idea of a threat, La
Forge supposed bleakly.
                151




 "I have no intention of fighting you," the stranger said.
 La Forge heard an electric crackle.
 Heard Data moan.
    Then saw Data fall beside him, his limbs rigid in the stance
he had taken to face the stranger.
    The stranger came to stand over the fallen friends. La Forge
began to shiver uncontrollably as the stranger knelt beside
them. He glanced down at La Forge's suit.
    "I estimate you'll freeze to death in less than fifteen
minutes," the stranger said.
    "Th-the Bozeman will b-be here b-before that," La Forge
bluffed.
    The stranger didn't bother to reply. Instead he removed a
series of cables from a pod on the side of his belt. Each ended
in a universal induction sensor. "These are dataprobes," he
said. "I can use them to download the contents of the robot's
processors."
 "H-he's an android," La Forge said.
    "But if I download the contents of his processors, he will be
wiped clean." The stranger gestured to include all of Trilex.
"He'll be like these computers. Empty. Dead. Just like you."
    La Forge saw the power overload light flashing on his in-
helmet display. He didn't expect to last even fifteen minutes.
    "So," the stranger continued, "tell me what I want to know,
and I'll seal your suit and leave the robot--the android--
intact. Your choice."
 "G-go t-to Hell," La Forge said through shivering lips.
    The stranger pulled his hand weapon from his belt, aimed
it at La Forge.
    "Didn't anyone ever tell you you shouldn't curse?" the
stranger said.
    Then La Forge saw a blinding blue light flash from the
emitter node of the stranger's weapon.
    His last thought was of all that was left when a star
explodes...
  Cold. And darkness. And death.
                152

NINETEEN

Shit, Data thought.
    Whatever the stranger had fired at him from his flattened
cylindrical weapon, he felt each of his muscles and joints
freeze in place. Not from the temperature of Trilex. But from
an interruption in his movement subroutines.
    As Data fell backward beside Geordi's prone body, he
formulated a hypothesis to account for the effect the
stranger's weapon had had on him. The most likely explana-
tion was that he had been hit with a precisely focused
subspace-radiation pulse. The pulse that had been created by
Trilex's exploding sun had been strong enough to wipe all
local computer circuitry clean of information. But the
stranger's pulse had obviously been specifically modulated to
interrupt only those subroutines in Data that governed physi-
cal functions.
    After creating and comparing several equations which
could be applied to constructing the stranger's device, Data
decided it had most likely been developed as a covert device
to access secured computer networks. He felt it was extremely
improbable that the device had been constructed just to
iramobilize him. Though, he concluded, it was certainly
effective in that regard.
                153




    By the time Data had hit the ice beside Geordi, his
positronic brain had had enough processing time to review
the contents of the last four standard years of the journal,
Subspace Multiphysics B, and the Cochrane Institute's ab-
stract index from 2355 to the present. As the stranger spoke
to Geordi and prepared his dataprobes, Data had correlated
enough information to hazard a guess as to the origin of the
device.
    But then Data had seen the flash of a disruptor discharge
and was filled with the certain knowledge that Geordi had
been killed.
    For long nanoseconds, Data waited for the emotional
response to that knowledge to flood through his positronic
pathways.
 But nothing happened.
 He felt... empty.
    He began formulating another theory to account for the
lack of connection between his movement subroutines and
his emotions. Could it be that true emotions were possible
only when the intellect was contained within a functioning
body, subjected to the stresses of daily survival? He found
that a fascinating proposition. And though he did not feel sad
about Geordi's death, he did regret he would not be able to
discuss his new theory with his dead friend.
    "What about you?" the stranger asked. The dataprobes
dangled on their cables from his hand. His weapon was back
on his belt.
    "What about me?" Data replied. Once again he was
impressed with the selectivity of the weapon. His facial
muscle analogs were still able to function, permitting speech.
    "Are you going to tell me where Picard is?" He held out the
probes. "Or do I wipe your mind clean of everything?"
    "There is no need to do that," Data said promptly. "I am in
possession of no information regarding the whereabouts of
Captain Picard. Furthermore, if I did, I am fully capable of
                154

erasing that information from my own datastorage so that it
would be unretrievable by you."
    The stranger began examining Data's head. "You won't
mind if I don't take your word for it?"
    "I do not mind in the sense that you mean," Data said as he
heard one of his cranial access panels swing open. "Though I
do regret that your nature is such that you will effectively be
ending my existence for no reason."
    The stranger stopped his investigation of Data's head and
moved so that his visor was looking down at Data's face like a
baleful cyclopean eye. "What do you know about my na-
ture?" he asked.
    Data studied his own reflection in the stranger's visor. It
might be the last thing that he saw. But still, he felt nothing.
    "I do not 'know' anything about your nature, as I do not
know who you are. However, based on my analysis of
scientific papers published over the past decade in the area of
subspace multiphysics on which your weapon appears to be
based, I have concluded that you are a Romulan. And I know
how thorough and precise the Romulans are in their investi-
gative work."
    The stranger put his hand to his visor and pressed a
control. The reflectivity faded away, leaving a clear covering
in its place.
    Data blinked several times to ensure his optical sensors
were working properly, especially since the unfortunate freez-
ing incident might have damaged his lenses.
 "Do you still think I'm a Romulan?" the stranger asked.
    "No," Data said. "But I do not believe you are who you
appear to be, either."
    The stranger's brow furrowed in his helmet. "And who do I
appear to be?"
    Data studied the stranger's pupils for the telltale contrac-
tion that might indicate he was lying. But there was no sign of
it. Neither had the stress levels in his voice changed.
 "Do you not know who you appear to be?" Data asked.
               155




    The stranger hesitated. Data could see that he seemed to be
having an argument within himself. Something emotional.
But Data no longer had access to his emotions. Whatever the
stranger was feeling, it was a mystery to them both.
 "Tell me," the stranger said.
 "No," Data answered.
 "Why not?"
    "If I am to answer your question, you must do something
for me."
     The stranger tried, but could not restrain a small smile.
"I'm supposed to negotiate with a robot?"
 "An android," Data corrected.
 "An android. What do you want?"
 "Is Geordi still alive?"
    "If you mean the human beside you, no. I killed him. And I
will kill you, too."
 Data heard the stress levels go up. Saw the pupils dilate.
     "There is a strong probability that you are lying," Data
said. "I can tell from your physiological reactions."
 The stranger's face clouded.
 "Where is Jean-Luc Picard?"
 "You are under stress," Data said calmly. "Let me help."
    The stranger's eyes lost focus, as if staring kilometers away.
"Let me help..." he whispered.
    "An old starship which has been assigned to scientific
support duty will be returning to this location in one hour,
thirty-seven minutes," Data said helpfully. "There is a medi-
cal o~cer on board who could--" Data stopped talking as
the stranger suddenly slammed a dataprobe lead against his
open cranial circuits. "That is neither necessary nor useful,"
he reminded the stranger.
 "I don't have time for this," the stranger said.
    "Strange, you are very much like Geordi," Data observed.
Then he heard a high-pitched buzzing in his auditory recogni-
                156

tion circuits. The stranger's face and everything around him
broke up into coarse pixels that swirled like a closing worm-
hole, collapsing into a starless void from which there could be
no return.

TWENTY

Against the void, a single blazing point of blue luminescence
shone forth. Hyperdimensional flares suddenly bloomed
from it, their elevenfold symmetries scintillating in dynamic
protest as they were forced to conform to the rigid confines of
normal, four-dimensional space-time. Then the quantum-
gravitational pressure between the two realities could no
longer be contained and space itself was torn apart, twisting
open like the mouth of a mythical sea monster.
    From the center of that majestic explosion of forces which
humans still could not measure, control, nor define, a single
Galaxy-class starship flew, for all its might as fragile as a
windblown seed before the awesome power of the passageway
it had just traversed between the stars.
    Once again, the Celestial Temple of the Prophets had
allowed its mysteries to be glimpsed, and the Bajoran worm-
hole had been opened.
    The starship, Challenger, banked gracefully in the solar
wind, then made its way to the strange, intriguing object that
glittered like a dark jewel before it.
               :157




The Cardassian mining station once called Terek Nor.
Now known throughout the Federation as Deep Space 9.

 "And that's it?" Riker asked.
    Data stepped around the frozen holographic recreations of
his body, Geordi's, and the stranger's, as he joined Riker and
Troi by the opening to the library structure. Except for the
temperature, they were in an exact simulation of conditions
on Trilex.
    "Yes," Data said. "That is the extent of my memory of the
incident. Obviously, the stranger connected his dataprobes at
that point, canceling out my higher brain functions as he
attempted to extract information from me."
    Riker scratched at his beard, staring hard at the holograph-
ic stranger. "Attempted?"
    "My mind was not erased as he had threatened, and my
emotional routines have returned to operational status, so I
must assume he was not successful in his efforts."
    But Troi shook her head, unconvinced. "No, Data.
Geordi's environmental suit was patched when the away
team from the Bozeman found you. You didn't do it. Geordi
couldn't do it. Therefore, the stranger must have. And since
he took action to prevent Geordi from dying, it's fair to
conclude that the stranger took similar action not to harm
you, as well."
    Spock's voice echoed around them. "A most logical evalua-
tion, Counselor."'
 Troi smiled. "Thank you, Ambassador."
 Riker sighed. "End program."
    Data watched as the simulation of the Trilex archaeological
dig faded away around him. It was remarkable how detailed
the illusion had been, considering it had been created within
a relatively cramped holosuite installed over the Quark's bar
in DS9's Promenade, and not in a full holodeck.
 Ambassador Spock stepped from the corner of the suite,
                158

hands behind his back. "However, I believe it is time we
accept the facts as they have been presented and stop refer-
ring to the assailant as 'the stranger.'"
    Riker regarded Spook with polite forbearance. "Ambassa-
dor, with all due respect, the assailant cannot be James Kirk."
    Spock continued, appearing not to hear the commander.
"Computer, re-create the visitor to the Trilex site."
    A three-dimensional projection of the stranger appeared in
the center of the room, complete with environmental suit,
equipment, and helmet.
    "Now access the visual records downloaded from
Lieutenant-Commander Data's memory banks, and remove
the visitor's helmet to show us his face."
    The helmet faded out, revealing a three-dimensional image
of what was, in Data's judgment at least, a striking reproduc-
tion of the stranger's face as he had directly observed it. His
features were most sharply defined in the area that had been
visible through the helmet's visor, then eerily melted into
lower-resolution detail toward the sides, ending in a basic,
polygonal wire-frame extrapolation of the back of his head.
    "Computer," Spoek continued, "access the personal mem-
ory archives which I uploaded to the library system from my
quarters. Run from code sequence 294-07."
    A holographic viewscreen formed beside the reconstruc-
tion of the visitor. On the screen, Data recognized old update
footage--a recording of an actual event instead of a mere
holographic simulation.
    "How does is feel to be back on the Enterprise bridge?" a
disembodied voice asked. On the screen, the subject of the
question blinked in the glare of the old-fashioned spotlights
that had been trained on him.
 "Freeze image," Spock said.
    The Vulcan ambassador walked up between the holoscreen
and the reconstruction. He gestured to the screen. "This is
update footage of Captain Kirk, taken hours before he...
               159




disappeared on the maiden flight of the Enterprise-B. Com-
puter, isolate Captain Kirk's face from the update image,
dimensionally enhance, and overlay onto the reconstruc-
tion."
    Data observed with interest as everything on the holo-
screen, except for Kirk's face, faded out. A moment later, the
two-dimensional image expanded as it was enhanced to
become a semitransparent, three-dimensional portrait of the
famous and infamous captain. The portrait moved past
Spock and settled like a ghostly cloud over the head of the
,reconstructed figure of the stranger.
    Then the two images merged. Detail came to the low-
resolution areas at the side of the head. Detail came to the
anresolved areas at the back of the head. But in the face,
nothing changed.
 The images were a perfect match.
    "Computer, quantify degree of fractal correlation," Spock
asked.
 "Ninety-nine, point nine nine nine nine--"
    "That's enough," Riker interrupted. He gestured implor-
ingly at Spock. "Mr. Ambassador, I have never denied that
the assailant looks like James Kirk. Nor have I questioned
Worf's account that the same individual is responsible for the
attack on him. But... sir, James Kirk is dead. He gave his
life to save Captain Picard, the crew of the Enterprise, and
millions of beings on Veridian IV." Riker moved closer to the
implacable Vulcan. "I'm very familiar with your... early
exploits and adventures with your captain and your equally
illustrious crew. But the fact remains, Picard buried your
friend himself."
    Spock's expression didn't change. "And those remains were
then transported away by a group unknown."
    "Remains, sir. Not a body in frozen stasis. Or transporter
storage. A lifeless shell." Data saw that Riker was uncomfort-
able with being so blunt with the ambassador. "I'm sorry. But
                160

 surely you of all people can understand that the dead cannot
 return to life."
     Spock raised an eyebrow at Riker. "There appear to be
 some of my 'exploits and adventures' with which you are not
 familiar."
    Riker looked confused. Spock did not deign to enlighten
him.
    Then Data heard footsteps in the corridor outside. A
moment later, everyone else turned to the door as the
entrance chime sounded.  "Enter," Riker said.
    The door slipped open to reveal DS9's head of medicine,
Dr. Julian Bashir. Ducking and bobbing behind him, trying
to peer past the slender human into the holosuite, was the
eponymous Ferengi who owned the establishment, Quark.
    Bashir held up a medical padd as he entered. "Mr. Ambas-
sador, I have the results of the tests you requested. I thought
you'd want to see them personally."
    But Spock declined the offer. "Thank you, doctor, but I
already know what the results are. I believe Commander
Riker would be more interested in reviewing them."
    Bashir didn't question Spock's direction. He handed the
padd to Riker. "Commander."
    Meanwhile, Quark was studying the reconstructed figure in
the center of the holosuite.
 "So what's the story on this hew-man?" he asked.
 "Nothing you need to worry about," Riker said.
    Quark looked around with an expression of wide-eyed
interest. "I understand. Is there a reward?"
    Riker didn't bother looking up as he adjusted the padd's
controls. "Quark, not now."
    "I just don't get it," the Ferengi complained. "Starfleet
commandeers my finest holosuite--"
    Troi crossed her arms. "Every OHD panel was dirty,
Quark. We had to wipe them off ourselves to get a clear
simulation."




    Quark looked mortally offended. "Did you bother to ask
me for cleaning services? For a very small, additional fee, I
could have--"
 "Quiet, Quark," Riker said as he studied the padd.
    The Ferengi sidled closer to Riker, peering indignantly up
at him. "You'd better not be using that thing to copy my
holosuite programs."
    Riker looked over at Data. "Data, could you do something
about him?"
    Data went to Quark and put his hand on the Ferengi's
shoulder. "Quark, we have paid for a full hour of use in this
holosuite. That time is not yet up."
    Data tried to steer the Ferengi toward the door, but Quark
didn't want to go. "And that's another thing. It was Com-
mander Riker and the Betazoid who booked the holosuite."
Quark's burgundy-rimmed eyes narrowed in what even Data
could see was a lascivious leer. His voice dropped to match
his expression. "So I gave them the honeymoon special rate,
if you know what I mean."
    Data began to push the Ferengi toward the door more
forcefully, gathering a fistful of Quark's lurid jacket for a
better grip.
    "But now," Quark went on more quickly, talking back over
his shoulder as he was propelled forward, "now that I see
you've turned my most sacred honeymoon program--the
Mists of the Poconos--into a common orgy for four... for
five of you--" Data firmly pushed Quark outside the door.
The Ferengi spun around and fussily straightened his crooked
lapel. "Well, I'm going to have to charge you extra!"
    Data put his finger on the Cardassian door control. "If you
recall, we provided our own program."
    "I know," Quark muttered. "I've never seen copy protec-
tion like it."
  Data pressed the control. The door began to slide shut.
  "Not that I tried to copy it, you under--"
                162

    The door closed and sealed. Data was the only one in the
holosuite whose ears could continue to hear what the Fercngi
was saying, and he was impressed. It would add to his rapidly
increasing store of curse words. When Geordi allowed him to
use them again.
    Data turned back to the others, just as Riker returned the
medical padd to Bashir.
    "I will confess," the commander said, "that some of this is
beyond me."
    "Well," Bashir replied, "for your purposes, the conclusions
are all you need to be concerned with."
 "Any your conclusions are... ?" Riker prompted.
    "There're not my conclusions, Commander. DNA is
DNA."
 "And DNA can be cloned."
    "Oh, without question. It can be cloned. It can be engi-
neered. It can even be reproduced by transporter duplication.
But each of those techniques leaves a telltale signature on the
reproduced DNA helices. With cloning, even a single genera-
tion will result in measurable replicative fading. Genetic
engineering shows unmistakable traces of amino acid pad-
ding at cojoined sequences. And transporter duplication
always results in a slight quantum mass imbalance. A bit
more tricky to detect, but the samples obtained from Worf's
fingernails were large enough to yield unquestionable re-
suits."
 Riker's frown deepened,
 Bashir looked even more contrite.
    "Commander Riker, I have cross-checked my results with
the tissue profile I obtained from Starfleet Medical Archives.
The person who attacked Worf on Qo'noS was, without
question, James Tiberius Kirk."




TWENTY-ONE

There were long moments of silence in the hOlosuite, broken
only by the muted confirmation tones coming from Bashit's
medical padd. Data watched as the doctor brought up a small
display to show to Riker.
    "It's all right here, Commander," Bashir said. "An absolute
match to Kirk, James T. Born, Earth, 2233. Not a clone. Not
a reconstruction. And not a transporter duplicate."
    "Therefore," Spock added, "logic demands that the assail-
ant on Trilex is also the captain." He looked at Riker, as if
challenging the commander to argue with him.
    Riker was up to the task. "No, Mr. Ambassador. Logic
demands that Dr. Bashir made an error in his tests. Logic
demands that... whoever stole Kirk's remains controls a
cloning or replication technology unknown to Federation
science. Logic demands that we exhaust every possible alter-
nate explanation before we accept the... absurdity that
James Kirk has come back to life and for some reason is
searching for Captain Picard."
    Spock remained unmoved by Riker's outburst, but said
nothing, until Troi approached him, studying the holographic
image of Kirk.
    "Mr. Ambassador," she began, "is it possible that your
logic is perhaps being influenced by... other considera-
tions?"
 "By my emotions, you mean?"
                164

    Troi paused, obviously hesitant to be speaking about emo-
tions with a Vulcan.
    "Do not be embarrassed, Counselor. I am aware that you
have the ability to sense emotions. I have no doubt that you
are sensing mine now. Which is why you have raised your
concerns."
 "Well, yes, sir."
    Spock thought the matter over for a few moments. "I can
see the irony in the situation. It does appear that because of
my lifelong emotional connection to the captain, I am the
only one present who can readily accept the apparently
illogical premise that he is still alive."
"Then you admit it is an illogical premise?" Riker asked.
"Upon cursory examination," Spook answered. "But con-
sider this, Commander. If some technologically advanced
group did seek to create a duplicate of Captain Kirk, then
why create a duplicate with no knowledge of his identity?"
"The duplication procedure was flawed," Riker suggested.
Spock gave Riker a pitying glance. "Enough is published
about the captain's life to enable the most rudimentary of
psychological programmers to create a convincing personali-
ty simulation. Through a combination of drugs, pain and
pleasure stimuli, and exposure to holographic simulations of
false memories, it is possible to make almost anyone falsely
believe he is another person for a given period of time. Only
the strongest personalities would be able to resist contempo-
rary techniques."
    Spock steepled his hands, as if announcing an unshakeable
conclusion.
    "Therefore, I submit that Captain Kirk's body has been
reanimated by a technology unknown to us. I submit that
what would be called, in a Vulcan, his katra has been
retrieved by means of a temporal displacement, created by a
technology unknown to us. I stand before you as a living
example that the successful refusion of mind and body is
               165




possible. This much is known and must be accepted. Our only
question is: Why has this been undertaken?"
    Riker still wasn't convinced. "My question is: Who would
undertake this... deception?"
    Spook betrayed a slight, Vulcan hint of surprise. "Whoever
they are, they are undoubtedly connected to the Romulan
Star Empire."
    Data was amused as Troi, Riker, and Bashir each said at the
same time, "Romulans?"
    Spock turned to the reproduction of Kirk as he had
appeared on Trilex. "I apologize. I had thought it was
obvious." He pointed to the flattened green cylinder hanging
from Kirk's belt. "This is a device of Romulan design and
manufacture. Developed by the intelligence service to over-
come computer security systems by transmission of precisely
timed micropulses of subspace radiation."
     Data felt a moment of exhilaration. "Ambassador, that was
exactly my conclusion." "Indeed."
    Data began talking faster. "Yes. When he used it against
me, I cross-correlated ten years of scientific research papers
and detected a noticeable Romulan absence in the field,
implying they had made significant advances which they
wished to keep secret."
 "Very enterprising, Mr. Data."
    Data nodded. "I cannot tell you how... happy this makes
me feel. That my logic yielded the same conclusion as yours."
    "Actually, Mr. Data, logic had little to do with my identifi-
cation of the device. I have seen it before." Spock turned back
to contemplate Kirk's image.  "Oh," Data said.
    "On Romulus," Spock continued, almost as an after-
thought, "it is a popular item in demand by illegal arms
dealers. But I do commend you on your efforts."
    Riker broke in testily. "So it's a Romulan device. That still
doesn't explain why the Romulans would be behind this."
                166

    "If I may," Dr. Bashir interrupted. "We are working with
Romulans here at DS9. They've provided a cloaking device
for the Defiant, and the ship has actually operated with a
Romulan observer on the bridge."
 Riker stared silently at the doctor.
 Bashir looked confused for a few moments, then alarmed.
    "Oh, yes," he added, "I suppose I should mention that
what I just said is, uh, classified."
He gazed down at the yellow grid pattern on the dark floor.
"I believe that all of these events should be considered
classified," Spock agreed, returning his attention to the
discussion at hand.
    "Classified or not," Riker said, "you still haven't explained
a Romulan connection to these events."
    Because his emotion chip now allowed him to see beneath
the surface of most people's reactions, Data could tell Spock
was untroubled by Riker's continued resistance.
    "No doubt," Spock explained, "in regard to Captain Kirk's
involvement, there is a personal connection linked to some-
thing in his past. As for Captain Picard's connection, i am not
able to provide a hypothesis without knowing where Captain
Picard is."
    Data noted how quickly Riker tensed. He restrained his
sudden impulse to add additional processing power to his
visual and auditory senses in order to examine Riker's next
words for signs of dishonesty. He had long ago decided that it
was best never to do so with his friends and coworkers, unless
there was a compelling reason.
    "Are you now asking the same question this Kirk-clone was
asking?" Riker said.
    Data saw Spock tense as well, though the subtle signs of a
Vulcan were far harder to discern. Some type of confronta-
tion was building between the two, as each sought to some-
how protect his own captain. But from what, Data didn't
know.
 "To be sure," Spock said, "this matter might be solved
                167




more quickly if all pertinent information were made avail-
able."
    Riker obviously heard something in Spock's words which
Data had been unable to decode.
    "I'm afraid I can't tell you what you want to know,
Ambassador."
 "Cannot?" Spock asked. "Or will not?"
    Troi stepped between them. "Gentlemen, I can sense where
this is going. It might be a good time to remind ourselves that
we're all on the same side."
    Data saw Riker adopt the same expression he did when
playing poker. "Mr. Ambassador, is it possible the people
who stole Kirk's remains on Veridian III were Romulans?"
  "It is likely," Spock confirmed.
    "And this Kirk-clone looking for Captain Picard, he's using
a RomUlan weapon?"
    "You are identifying the pattern I have seen," Spock
agreed.
    "And exactly how many years have you spent working with
Romulans, sir?"
Troi looked at Riker with alarm. "Will! That is out of line."
Spock's eyes narrowed. To Data, it was a most disconcert-
ingly human expression. "Are you suggesting that I am
somehow involved in these attacks against former members
of Captain Picard's crew?"
    Riker smiled coldly. "You have pointed out a Romulan
connection. You, yourself, are connected to the Romulans.
And you were by Kirk's grave when the remains were stolen."
    Spock drew himself up with an almost regal air. "Com-
mander, though I am a Vulcan, it would be wrong of you to
believe that what you have suggested does not cause me
considerable offense."
    "I'm just trying to do my job, sir. You have been out of
Starfleet for many years. Perhaps you've forgotten that part of
it."
 Data watched Spock's fingers tightly grip the edge of his
                168

robe as he pulled it tightly closed, as if he were trying to hide
his visceral response to Riker's challenge.
    "Are you blind to the real pattern being developed here?"
Spock asked. "Worf, Data, La Forge. You could be next,
Commander."
 "Is that a threat, Mr. Ambassador?"
    Julian Bashir's mouth dropped open at the belligerence in
Riker's tone.
 Troi looked away from Riker in dismay.
 Data watched with utter fascination.
    Commander Riker had actually managed to enrage Ambas-
sador Spock. Data could tell by the slight twitch at the corner
of the ambassador's mouth. And Data could not help but feel
that Riker had done this deliberately.
    The ambassador spoke in slow and measured tones. "Vul-
cans never threaten, Commander. We only state our inten-
tions. Good day."
     Spock swept past Riker toward the door. He faltered when
it did not open before him until he had pressed the control.
 Then he was gone.
 Troi was incensed. "I can't believe you did that, Will."
 Riker looked shaken himself. "Neither can I."
    "But why?" Bashir asked. He gazed at the closed door.
"That man... he's... he's a legend."
    Riker looked apologetically at Bashir. "I'm sorry, doctor.
I'm going to have to ask you to leave. And to not talk about
this with anyone. Understand?"
    Bashir looked pained, as if he were given those orders every
day. "I understand, Commander," he said formally. Then he
left as well.
    Troi folded her arms and looked at Riker. "You know, you
were moving back and forth so quickly between truth and
lies, I couldn't keep up."
    "It was a most distressing conversation," Data added. "For
all concerned."
 But Riker remained silent, at a loss for words.
               169


 "You know what this is about, don't you?" Troi said.
    "No," Riker answered, "I do not have the slightest idea
what this is about."
    Data put it together, his emotion chip at work again. "If I
may be permitted an emotional insight, I believe it is appar-
ent that you do, however, know the whereabouts of Captain
Picard."
    "This is not a conversation we should be having," Riker
said stiffly.
    Troi reached out to touch Riker's arm. "Will, is the captain
all right? Are we in danger?"
    "There are steps we can take, and will take," Riker said.
"But we shouldn't discuss them here."
    "You mean, where Ambassador Spook might overhear us?"
Data asked.
    For the first time, a smile came to Riker's face. "I mean,
where Quark might hear us. If I know him, he's close to
getting computer access to everything we're doing in here."
    Troi gave Riker a questioning look. "Even if you don't
know what we're doing."
    But Riker did not respond to Troi's attempt at lightening
the situation.
    "Deanna, I know what I'm doing here. It's Spock's involve-
ment I don't Understand."
    "Will, Kirk was his friend. They served together for dec-
ades. What we're seeing is nothing more than loyalty. The
same loyalty yofi would show to Captain Picard in the same
situation."
    But Riker disagreed. "If Captain Picard has taught me
anything, it's the need for teamwork. The strength of the
whole crew acting together. If I were in the same situa-
tion Spock is in, you can bet I wouldn't be trying to run
the investigation on my own. I'd listen to the experts at
my disposal. I'd..." Riker shook his head, too upset to
continue.
                170

    Troi remained calm. "Perhaps they did things differently
back then."
    "That's not my concern. Spock's involvement is. There's
something... not right about it."
"Do you mean the Romulan connection?" Data asked.
Riker Shrugged. "Spock has spent more time working for
Vulcan-Romulan unification than he ever did serving with
Kirk. But it's more than that." Riker looked at Troi. "The way
he was acting on Veridian. Going back into the Enterprise to
call up Kirk's service record. Always so caught up in the
past."
    Troi looked as if she couldn't believe the conversation were
taking place. "His friend died. It's a natural time to become
introspective and look to the past."
    "Unfortunately, Deanna, there's nothing natural about this
at all."
    Not even Data's emotion chip could help him gain addi-
tional insight into whatever information Riker was refusing
to share. But Data decided that under the circumstances, that
was to be expected. After all, he reminded himself, as an
android, he was not natural himself.

TWENTY-TWO

The Avatar of Tomed blazed among the stars, leaving no wake
of rainbow light, nor any other sign of her passing.
 She was fully cloaked.
 In Federation space.

               171




Which could be construed by some as an act of war.
Which it was.
Though declaration of that war was still five days away.

    On the starboard hangar deck, Kirk circled the battered
shuttle parked in the forward service bay. He ran his fingers
along its duranium hull, feeling the micropits and grooves of
years of interstellar erosion and outgassing. "I don't recognize it," he said at last.
    Beside him, Salatrel consulted her padd. "You shouldn't
expect to. It's an old Montreal-class shuttle. You've never
flown one."
    Kirk considered the shuttle's ungainly lines. Asymmetrical
landing legs balanced the craft over its single warp engine,
which extended behind the flight deck and cargo cabin as if it
were a last-minute minute addition of a handle.
    'Tve never flown one," Kirk agreed. "And I've never seen
one." Shuttles should be blocky and solid in appearance,
though he couldn't recall why he knew that.
    "The controls have been altered," Salatrel said. "But you'll
know how to fly it."
    Kirk turned to her. The outfit he was wearing bothered
him. It felt awkward. Improper. The quartermaster had
explained it was a civilian outfit, popular with humans. Kirk
was haunted by the feeling that he should be wearing a
uniform of some kind. Salatrel, however, had been adamant
that he had never worn one, because he had never been an
official part of the Romulan forces. Only a volunteer, a
freedom fighter against the Federation's injustices.
 "So flying a shuttle is another of my forgotten skills."
 Salatrel nodded.
    "I seem to have quite a number of them." Kirk was still
intrigued that he had been able to fight the Klingon with such
confidence and skill. Where had he learned such moves? And
why?
 And meeting with the human and the robot--android, he
                172

corrected himself--on Trilex. He had felt comfortable in the
environmental suit. Why? He had known how to operate the
weapons Salatrel had given him, except for the subspace
device he had used against the android. How? "Are you all right?" Salatrel asked.
    She looked at him, but kept glancing back at the padd she
held.
 "Isn't that what that thing is for?" Kirk asked in return.
 Salatrel didn't answer.
     "What does it do?" Kirk persisted. "Show you my vital
signs? Let you know if I'm about to remember something?"
 "It is a medical monitor," Salatrel said.
    Kirk studied her, knew she was keeping something from
him.
 "What's my name again?" he asked, testing her.
    Salatrel held up the padd. "This tells me you already know
the answer."
    "Yar," Kirk said. "A fine and honorable human name."
That's what Salatrel had told him.
    "Yar," Salatrel repeated. As if the alien name held meaning
and honor for her.
    Kirk smiled, not convinced that it held meaning for him.
"It's growing on me."
    Salatrel checked the padd. Kirk saw she wasn't convinced
either. He could understand why she might want to keep a
medical monitor on him. But why did she find it necessary to
use it as a lie detector?
    "Perhaps we should go back to the holodeck," Salatrel said,
frowning at the padd.
    "No," Kirk said. He didn't need any more treatments.
Salatrel kept showing him scenes from his past, trying to
provoke a return of his memories. Some he had seen often
enough that they were becoming familiar. His Romulan wife, Kalinara.
 His children with her, Lora and Tranalak.
               173




 The colony ship they'd been on, the Talon of Peace.
    He was beginning to get a sense of himself in that life. Or
was he?
 Had he really commanded a colony ship?
    Been an explorer on the deck of a starship. Lost his wife to
a brutal mid? Witnessed a childmhis child--butchered by a
Klingon bastard whom
 Kirk gasped and pressed his hand against his temple.
     No, not "child"--children. And it hadn't been a Klingon, it
had been that monster Picard who had slaughtered them.
 Hadn't it?
 "I will find him," he said.
    Salatrel looked at him with concern, but she had already
put the medical padd away.
     Kirk stretched out a hand, to lightly trace the smooth skin
on her neck. "Did you know my wife? Kalinara?" "Yes."
 "And would she approve?"
 "Of what?"
    Kirk drew her to him. Kissed her. Felt her stiffen just for an
instant like an actor caught without lines, then melt against
him, kissing back.
  "Yes," she said against his cheek. "I think so."
  Kirk released her then and stepped back. "So do I."
    Salatrel's communicator chimed. Her bridge informed her
they were nearing the launch area.
    Kirk picked up the small civilian bag the quartermaster had
packed for him and headed toward the shuttle's open hatch.
      He put his hand on the frame, about to pull himself up.
Then he stopped, turned back to Salatrel.  "What happens after?" he asked her.
  She blinked at him, not understanding. "After what?"
  "After I kill Picard."
    Kirk suddenly knew that whatever she would say next
would be a lie.
                174

    Salatrel smiled without any hesitation and reached up to
caress his face.
  "Life begins again," she said.
    Kirk kept his face absolutely still, suppressing his true
reaction. Another forgotten skill he vaguely remembered
having been taught by... The name and face wouldn't come
to him. "Won't the Federation want revenge? Won't someone
have to come after me?"
    "I'll protect you," she said. She gave his hand a squeeze of
farewell.
    Kirk did not question her further, letting her take his
silence as acquiescence.
    He entered the shuttle. He turned and held her gaze until
the hatch slid shut.
    Then he performed as he knew he was expected to--
waiting for the Totned to drop from warp. AllOwing a tractor
beam to position his shuttle outside her cloaking field.
Remaining adrift as the Totned departed without communi-
cation, undetectable by Federation sensors.
    Only when Salatrel and her ship were light-years away, did
Kirk permit himself to consider her final words to him.
    He knew he could not have any locator beacons or micro-
communicators implanted in him. The risks would be far too
great that signals from any communications device could be
detected. Perhaps not on a remote planet such as Trilex. But
certainly on the Klingon homeworld, and where Kirk was
traveling next.
    Thus he could be confident that however his thoughts
affected his physical life signs, Salatrel would be unable to
monitor him unless standing beside him with her medical
padd.
     Kirk watched the stars slowly pass the viewport of his
drifting shuttle. At last reflecting on her final words. Life begins again, she had lied.
 Kirk felt certain that when he killed Picard, as he knew he
                175




must and would, his usefulness to Salatrel would end. From
her actions and her tone, it was obvious she did not expect
him to survive beyond the successful completion of his
mission.
 And how would his end come?
 I'll protect you, she had lied again.
    Kirk also felt certain that Salatrel saw herself as the agent of
his death.
 But what of now? What of his life?
    His name was not Yar. Yet he had lost a wife, children... a
child, at least, a family, absolutely.
But to what? To an enemy? To fate? Or by his own choice?
Kirk looked at his hands on the shuttle controls. They had
fought a Klingon. Outdrawn a young man with a phaser.
Rewired leads into a positronic brain. And he knew they
could move over this shuttle's controls with equally practiced
skill.
    So what kind of life had he led before his memories had
been taken from him, that he could do these things?
    And what kind of man had he been, that heretoadrift in
space, set into motion on a plan of which he had no
understanding, knowing he faced impossible odds that
brought death from all sides, he felt so... . .. alive.
    A time display flashed on the control surface. Kirk's right
hand moved automatically to activate the shuttle's warp
engine. With his left, he fired the attitude thrusters to .place
the small ship on its proper heading. The action comforted him.
    Perhaps he would never be able to answer all the questions
that faced him in this new life.
    But as long as he could still take action, he knew he could
survive.
  The engines came online. Kirk set his course.
    For a place called Deep Space 9 and a man named Will
Riker.
                176

TWENTY-THREE

Romulus was a gray world. Ravaged by the constant tectonic
stress of orbiting a double sun.
    But to the first pilgrims who had landed here, refugees from
the Vulcan Reformation, this bleak world had become home.
And as the generations had passed, they were Vulcans no
longer, but Romulans--reveling in the raw passions that had
marked their ancestral race so early in its history. Using that
instinctual fury to conquer this planet, instead of controlling
it and themselves within the cooler paths of logic.
    Spock understood what it was that had drawn those first
Romulans to this world. The need to give vent to emotions
too powerful to be suppressed, just as the world's fiery core
released its terrifying pressures in displays of blazing, molten
rock.
    Sometimes Spock felt he was the only Vulcan who could
understand the Romulan psyche. Which is why he had been
trying to unify the two peoples for nearly eighty years.
    But that very part of his unique nature that propelled him
to such a pivotal role in galactic history was the same which
now compelled him to risk all that he had worked for since he
had retired from Starfleet and had last seen James Kirk.
 His action was not logical.
 But Spock had long ago come to terms with logic.
 It was a valuable tool. Perhaps the most valuable tool.
 But it was not the only one.

               177




    Spock had returned to Romulus because it was the human
thing to do.
 For his captain, for his friend, he could do no less.

"What does a Vulcan want with Romulan weapons?" Tiral
asked with a sneer.
    Spock glanced around the dinglh, a small Romulan eating
establishment with a partial view of the Firefalls of Gath
Gal'thong. Most of the other customers were gathered at the
small tables near the grimy windows that overlooked the
continually erupting fields of fire. Spock and his guests were
well isolated in a shadowed corner, free to conduct their
business, bothered only by the constant tremors that rumbled
deep beneath the floor.
    Spock leaned forward conspiratorially and lowered his
voice, forcing Tiral and her companion to listen more closely.
"Technically, the micropulsers are not weapons," Spock said.
"They are military devices."
    Tiral snorted, letting him know she recognized an attempt
to change the subject and that she had no intention of
accepting it.
    But Spock merely steepled his fingers and waited. In any
prolonged negotiation, victory invariably came to those who
could afford to act last. And he knew he had elevated patience
to an art form of meditative beauty. Even for a Vulcan.
    An ancient, grizzled server with a limp approached their
corner with three glass tankards of greel. Sloppily, he
thumped down a tankard before each person at the table.
Their server wore a veteran's ribbon over his heart, on the far
right of his chest.
    Spock lifted his tankard and made a show of holding the
pale yellow liquid to the light. When he replaced the tankard
on the table, he took care his fingers did not smear the surface
of the glass. He was determined to make this easy for
everyone involved.
 "I prefer water," Spock informed the old Romulan. Then
                178

he directed his gaze toward the windows and the great spouts
of lava that glowed on the horizon. The server and Tiral had
proven so inept at their wordless communication that Spock
wanted them to be free to signal each other without fearing he
could see them.
    When Spock returned his attention to the table, his tankard
was gone. He calculated he had three minutes, fifteen seconds
before the server would be able to confirm the fingerprints
and DNA residue he had left on the tankard. He had the same
amount of time to present to Tiral the pertinent information
she would need to devise an appropriate plan once she
learned his identity.
    As Spock watched, the young Romulan woman took a swift
swallow from her tankard ofgreel. The yellow foam clung to
the corner of her mouth, alarmingly bright against the black
lipcoating she wore.
    Spock enjoyed the silence and studied her calmly. In
appearance, she was intriguingly unlike the others of her race
he had dealt with. Except for a wild tuft of hair springing
from her left temple, her scalp was shaved, the faint bristles
giving the effect of a pale blue cap. In the bar's hazy green
light, a metal disk gleamed silver against her right temple.
The lewd pictogram on it identified it as a limbic transducer
to which various devices could be attached to heighten sexual
pleasure. It was a common enough device on Romulus, and
on hundreds of other worlds. But for the young woman to
wear it so brazenly in public signaled her desire to shock her
elders.
 Spock could understand that desire.
    In his own way, he supposed, he had been just as rebellious
as a youth. Though he doubted this child of Romulus would
see the similarity between her choice of dress and his decision
to enter Starfleet Academy against his father's wishes.
    Tiral wiped the foam from her mouth, then wiped her hand
on the erx-skin leggings she wore. The yellow foam was just as
bright against their shiny black surface as against her lips.
                179




    Then she turned to Snell, her accomplice. He was a
heavyset Romulan, at least ten years older than Tiral, in a
wrinkled business suit. The stiff, upright brown collar he wore
was a style that had gone out of fashion years ago, and Spock
noted the almost invisible gleam of a limbic transducer
beneath his black hair as well.
    Even before Spock had sat down at this table, he had
concluded Tiral and Snell were both transducer addictsin
precisely the type of petty criminal he had sought. In any
negotiation, knowing what the other side truly needed was an
invaluable bargaining chip.
 "So what do you think?" Tiral asked.
    Snell sucked on his teeth. He rubbed his thumb and index
finger together lightly, but constantly. Spock understood the
significance. Snell needed to be transduced. It would be a
short negotiation.
 "Why?" Snell asked Spock.
    With complete equanimity, Spock gave him the explana-
tion he had chosen. "I wish to use the micropulsers to lay
waste to the central hall of records, and, in the resulting social
upheaval, establish myself as a dominant crime figure in the
Romulan Star Empire."
 Both Tiral and Snell gasped.
 "You're joking,'~ Snell sputtered.
 "I am a Vulcan," Spock replied.
     Tiral rubbed at her cheek, then extended her hand, moving
it up and down as' if trying to pull words from the air.
 "Why tell us this?" she finally said.
 "You asked me."
    Tiral regarded Spock for a few tense moments, then leaned
back in her chair, and threw an arm over its back.
    Spock was pleased. Her posture told him she had accepted
his story and judged him insane. She no longer saw him as a
threat.
 "So you want ten subspace micropulsers?" she said.
                180

  "To start," Spock said.
"How... how will you pay for them?" Snell asked.
"How do you wish to be paid? Federation credits? Starfleet
requisition chits? Gold-pressed latinurn? Interstellar letters of
credit? Merchandise?" Spock watched the look of amazement
that spread over both their faces.
    He was having the required effect. To two transduction
addicts such as they, a wealthy, delusional Vulcan would be a
dream come true. As far as they knew, Spock was merely an
aide to one of the ceremonial cultural exchange missions that
periodically traveled between Romulus and Vulcan. But that
would change, Spock knew. In less than ninety seconds. And
then he would become even more valuable to them.
    "My organization is quite well funded," Spock added
needlessly.
    "You know we could get a reward for turning you in to the
security forces," Snell said, as if trying out the possibility of a
threat.
    "Undoubtedly," Spock agreed. "However, the reward
would not be as great as the profit you could make by selling
me the micropulsers. Additionally, the security forces would
torture me to learn why I had approached you in the first
place. This would place knowledge of your criminal activities
in government hands. And in the event you escaped execu-
tion by Romulan security forces, my well-funded business
associates would be compelled to hunt you clown and kill you
in a most objectionable manner as a lesson to others who
might want to betray us."
    "Latinum," Tiral said. She narrowed her eyes. "Five hun-
dred bars... for each micropulser."
    Spock pretended to think it over. It was an atrociously
exorbitant price. To make his ruse look good, he would have
to barter. Spock doubted that Tiral and Snell would be
familiar with Vulcan customs concerning bartermall based
in logic, of course.




    "Thank you for your time," Spock said. He stood up from
the table.
    "Wait!" Tiral said. She reached out, about to touch Spock's
arm.
 Spock stopped her with a withering gaze.
    A primary rule of interstellar etiquette was that Vulcans
must never be touched without invitation. Their low-level psi
powers made direct physical contact uncomfortable and
unwanted. There were few races in the Federation unfamiliar
with this rule. Tiral's action had been deliberate. She wished
to unsettle him.
    But it appeared she had judged that the threat of her touch
made enough of a point. She drew her hand back, as if not
wishing to cause further offense.
    "That was just our opening offer. It's customary for the
buyer to make a counteroffer."
    Spock straightened his robe. He adopted his most logical-
appearing attitude. "That is a most inefficient method of
transacting business. I know how much you must pay for the
stolen micropulsers. I know the risks you face in procuring
them. I know the time it will take you to do so. Factoring in
cost, risk, and time, in addition to a profit within the
traditional range of illegal operations on Romulus, leads me
to a price, converted into latinum, of eighty-three bars per
micropulser."
    Tiral and Snell tried not to look at each other. Spock did
not need to mind-meld with them to know their reaction. He
had quoted a price at least twenty-five percent higher than
what they would have settled for. Right now, they would be
gleefully anticipating telling their friends how they had man-
aged to outbargain a Vulcan.
    But Snell couldn't let well enough alone. Even as Tiral
opened her mouth to accept Spock's inflated offer, Snell
raised the price.
     "You've miscalculated, friend. We need another five bars
 per micropulser, or there's simply no profit in it."
                182

    Tiral shifted unhappily in her seat. Spock knew she did not
want to lose this incredible opportunity to her associate's
greed.
    Spock waited a few moments, to build their tension. "My
apologies." Snell and Tiral held their breaths. "I have miscal-
culated. My new offer is eighty bars. Would you care to have
me check my figures an additional time?"
    Snell quickly stuck out his hand as if to shake Spock's.
"Eighty bars each--sold."
    His hand waited in empty space until Tiral kicked him
beneath the table.
    Snell clumsily changed his offer to shake hands into a
gesture to sit.
 Spock sat down again at the table with the two Romulans.
 "I think this calls for a drink," Tiral said grandly.
 "I am still waiting for my water," Spock reminded them.
 Tiral waved over the server.
    The server brought three more tankards ofgreel and a large
access padd. Spock saw it was not the menu padd which the
server had first carried, but the old veteran offered it to Tiral
as if it were.
    Three minutes, eight seconds, Spock thought. He had been
off by seven seconds. An acceptable margin considering
whose actions he had predicted.
    As Tiral read the padd's display, Spock saw by her crudely
controlled expression of elation that she now knew the
Vulcan sitting across from her was not a second-level cultural
attach6.
 The server limped off.
Tiral looked up at Spock. Her grin was that of a predator.
Spock relaxed. Everything was unfolding as it should.
"So, tell us," Tiral said with a tone of condescension. "How
long have you been working for the cultural exchange
commission... Ambassador $pock?"
    Spock made both eyebrows rise to be sure even Snell could
detect his feigned reaction of surprise.

               183


    Snell's reaction was even more excessive. He spit out a
mouthful of gree! as he sputtered Spock's name.
Tiral kicked him again and slid the padd over to him.
Then she reached under her tunic and brought out a
battered palm disruptor. Judging from its condition, Spock
calculated the odds of it exploding rather than firing at fifty-
fifty.
    "What does your famed Vulcan logic tell you now, Spock?
Who's going to pay the most to get you back in one piece? The
Federation? Vulcan? Or our own security forces?"
    "That is not a judgment I am qualified to make," Spock
said. "All three entities would likely be interested in relieving
you of me. However, it could be that at my age, the Federa-
tion and Vulcan would rather disavow me than risk an
interplanetary incident by negotiating with Romulan street
criminals. Then again, any contact you had with your own
security forces could... put you at a disadvantage."
    Spock calmly folded his hands on the table. Tiral and Snell
stared at him, transfixed by their situation. It became obvious
to Spock that the pair was incapable of concluding what their
next step should be. It was clear to Spock he was going to have
to help with his own kidnapping and ransom even more than
he had anticipated.
    "Speaking as an interested participant," Spock said gently,
"might I suggest that the logical approach at this juncture
would be to contact your superiors for further instructions."
 Snell spat on the table. "We have no superiors."
    Spock shifted his attention to Tiral. Evidently her trans-
ducer addiction had not yet resulted in permanent brain
damage.
    "From whom were you going to acquire the micropulsers?"
Spock went on smoothly. No hint of tension in his voice
revealed that the answer to his question was the point of this
tedious exercise. Kirk had used a micropulser against Data on
Trilex. If Spock could identify the source of the micropulser,
he would be one step closer to whoever had retrieved Kirk's
                184

remains and had somehow brought him back from death.
"Would not they be considered your superiors in this
matter?"
    Tiral kept her palm disruptor aimed at Spock as she sought
reaction from Snell. "He makes sense to me."
    "He's a Vulcan." Snell glared at Spock. "Why should we
trust him? How do we know he's not just setting us up?" He
restlessly scratched the skin at the edges of his transducer
implant.
    Tiral fixed her eyes on Spock's. "What about it, Vulcan?
Are you setting us up?"
    Inwardly, Spock sighed. "Tiral, what possible logical rea-
son could I have to deliberately deliver myself into your
hands?"
    Tiral chewed the inside of her cheek. Then she shrugged
and turned to Snell. "I say we pass him on to Tr'akul and let
his organization handle the negotiations for turning him over
to... whoever pays the most."
    Snell stared at Spock. "Spock, how much are you worth,
anyway? Factoring in risk, effort, profit..."
    "I will endeavor to calculate a fair ransom," Spock said
helpfully. He glanced over to the main entrance. Uniformed
security officers were entering, most likely for a meal, though
they could check identity papers at any time. "In the mean-
time, if you do wish to continue with this kidnapping, I
suggest we leave the dinglh at once." He nodded at the
uniformed officers.
    Tiral stood and motioned to Snell to do the same. "Okay--
but don't try anything. Otherwise, you're going back to
Vulcan as a smudge on the floorboards."
    Spock looked at Tiral's disruptor, still trained in his
direction. How could these two even walk the streets?
    "Please be careful with that," Spock said. "Your finger is
covering the emitter node. If you fire, you will lose your
hand."
 Tiral moved her finger into a safe position.
                185




    Snell frowned with sudden suspicion. "If I didn't know
better, I'd say you wanted us to kidnap you."
    "Such a desire would be so illogical, I believe only a human
could think of it."
    Tiral and Snell both snickered. Romulans had no respect
for humans, either.
     "Humans," Snell sneered. "They're even worse than Vul-
cans. At least you're not one of them." "Indeed," Spock said.
    Then he suggested taking the back way out of the dinglh
and allowed his two kidnappers to lead him to it, thinking
that the sooner Romulus established ties with Vulcan, the
better. If Tiral and her like were their culture's brave new
generation, Spock calculated the Romulan Star Empire
wouldn't last another century.

TWENTY-FOUR

After only two days, .they no longer thought of themselves as
stowaways, but as parasites in a living body.
Because there was no other way to think of the Borg ship.
For all the machinery it was composed of, for all the pipes
and conduits, the power mesh and waveguides, there was
another component buried beneath the duranium and the
plasteel ....
 Flesh.
 Engineered and transfigured.
 Ripped from whatever worlds and forms that had first
                186

given it life. Now woven into the mechanistic nightmare of
Borg technology.
    The stink of it was everywhere. Fetid fluids dripping on the
metallic decks. Soft shapes glistening and pulsing at the end
of darkened corridors or twisting overhead as they propelled
whatever moved inside them, all to serve the collective.
    Beverly Crusher had never seen a ship like it. Had never
been briefed about any Borg ship like it.
    But each fresh atrocity that Picard saw, each wave of
revulsion that sickened his heartmeach was accompanied by
what he imagined was the whisper of the collective, deep in
his mind, telling him that this was right, that this was good,
that this was the way all should be and would he.
 The ultimate union of flesh and machine.
 The destiny of all forms.
 To join the oneness in which all could merge.
 To return to the oneness which called to them all.
 Including Jean-Luc Picard.

    Near the end of their first day aboard the Borg vessel, they
discovered a blind corridor that Picard had concluded served
no purpose. Thus, they could rest there without fear of Borg
work crews disturbing them.
    "Why would the Borg create something with no purpose?"
Beverly had asked.
    Picard didn't know. The blind corridor ran to an exterior
bulkhead. Perhaps it was some sort of aifiock mechanism
that would have a purpose if the ship ever docked. But for
now, it was simply empty space, ignored by the collective, so
it was safe. As far as that word had any meaning on a Borg
vessel.
 The end wall also had a viewport.
 But they kept their backs to it.
    Less than a minute of staring into the infinite ripples of the
transwarp dimension was enough to induce nausea.
 Beverly rationalized that they were looking at distortions in
                187




more than three dimensions--phenomena the human eye
had not evolved to see, and thus a vista of which they could
make no sense. Picard dared look into his memories of the
collective, but it was clear his mind had not evolved to hold
the mysteries of transwarp, either. Nothing he remembered
on the subject made sense. And as he and Beverly rested, all
he could think of was withdrawing. From everything. But Beverly remained strong. For him.
    Now, two days after they had come aboard, Beverly
checked a readout on her wrist-mounted tricorder. They still
wore their armor. The solid dark coverings helped them
blend into their surroundings. At a distance, they might be
Borg themselves. Picard quickly banished that image. It felt
closer to the truth than he liked.
 "We're coming up on seventy hours, Jean-Luc."
    Picard nodded. He knew what she meant. They had already
discussed it.
    Given what Starfleet knew about the transwarp conduits
the Borg used, seventy hours of travel would take them far
enough away from Federation space that they could not
expect to return in their lifetimes.
    Picard was ready to take over the Borg vessel. He and
Starfleet felt he did have a chance at taking control by using
the neural interface. But Starfleet had specifically warned him
not to attempt such a takeover during transwarp travel. They
had doubted if he could maintain the proper functioning of a
ship that moved according to physics which the Federation's
greatest minds had yet to comprehend. And a ship that
dropped out of transwarp uncontrolled might find itself
stretched into a single-dimensional string of degenerate mat-
ter more than a light-year long.
    That type of takeover had not seemed worth the risk. Not
to Starfleet. And not to Picard.
 At least, not near Federation space.
 But at the distance Beverly and Picard had traveled now,
                188

death was already assured. All they had to do was choose the
method.
 Picard held the neural interface in his hand.
 Nothing more to lose.
 Beverly didn't even question his decision.
    Picard rose to his feet. He stood with his back to the
bulkhead and the viewport as Beverly unfolded the cranial
inducer from Picard's kit. It had been fabricated by Shelby's
R & D team to look identical to the implant plate the Borg
had given him when he had been transformed into Locutus.
Shelby hoped the similarity of its appearance would aid in
confusing the Borg.
    But unlike the actual Borg plate, only the center connector,
just above Picard's right ear, contained working components.
That was where the neural interface would be inserted,
drawing power and broadcast signals from the energy cell and
subspace transmitter Picard wore beneath his armor.
 Picard ran his fingers along the cranial plate.
 "It doesn't feel the same," he said.
    "It's not supposed to," Beverly said. "The one the Borg
grafted to you connected to your facial nerves, to increase the
bandwidth of the signals your brain could transmit and
receive." Beverly held up the slender connector of the inter-
face. "This is designed only for limited transmission through
the skin and skull. It's not even a direct connection."
    That was the saving grace of the plan, Commander Shelby
had explained to Picard. Over such a limited channel, he
would be able to communicate directly with the Borg, but he
could not be drawn fully into the collective. At least, in theory.
    Beverly plugged the power-cell end of the interface into the
socket on Picard's armor. For a moment she paused, holding
the other end free, still disconnected.
    Picard looked at it. Inthe dull light of the Borg ship, it was
indistinguishable from a snake, dark and glistening. He
looked up and saw an organic tube pulse slowly overhead.
                189




The ultimate fate of flesh and machine. Beverly had done
enough. He had to face the next step on his own. "I'11 do it," Picard said.
    He took the interface from Beverly and rotated the metal
tip in his fingers, feeling for the guide slots. All he had to do
was slip it into place. Then he would hear the thoughts of the
collective.
 And the collective would hear his.
    Picard straightened his shoulders, preparing himself. This
was his duty and nothing could be more important than that.
There was no turning back.
 He began to lift the interface to his cranial plate.
 Beverly took his hand.
 "Jean-Luc... I ..."
Everything she had to say was already in her eyes.
"Yes," Picard said and gently took her hand from his.
Beverly looked away. He moved the connector to its socket.
Beverly held her hand to her mouth. Picard wanted to
reassure her again. Reached out for her. But saw she was
looking at something behind him. He turned.
 And slowly lowered the interface because of what he saw.
 "We're docking," Beverly whispered.
 "But we're still in transwarp," Picard said.
 Together, they moved to the viewport.
    Their ship was moving toward what could only be a station
of some sort. A Box:g station.
    But it was in transwarp, unmoving against the multidimen-
sional.folds that rippled behind it.
 "How is that possible?" Beverly marvelled.
    Picard didn't know if she referred to the impossible reality
that the Borg had constructed an unmoving station in anoth-
er dimension, which no stretch of Federation science had ever
predicted. Or the impossible shape of the station itself.
 If Picard closed his eyes, he could see an image of a central
                190

Borg cube to which six other cubes were attached, one to each
face. That is the sense his brain tried to make out of what lay
before them. With open eyes, if Picard concentrated on just
one cube, it remained unremarkable, each surface ornate with
typical Borg texture. However, he could conceive of no
explanation for the source of the light that played over the
station in a realm where photons could not exist because they
moved too slowly.
    But if Picard let his eyes drift from one cube section to
another, the entire station seemed to balloon in a disorienting
way that blurred his vision. Taken as a whole, each cube
appeared to be connected to the next not by a single face, but
by five. Yet every angle still appeared to be ninety degrees. At
least, when he tried to focus on each angle.
    Picard rubbed his eyes. For an instant, the cubes appeared
to be hollow and he was gazing inside them. Then they rushed
at him, constantly whiplashing back and forth as his senses
struggled to deal with--
    "It's a hypercube," Picard exclaimed, at last understand-
ing. "A shape that can only exist in five-dimensional space-
time."
 "But... how could the Borg build such a thing?"
    "More to the point, Beverly, how can they keep it at rest
here?"
    The writhing form of the hypercube station slowly rotated
before them. The backdrop of transwarp discontinuities
shifted as well, making Picard guess that it was actually their
ship that moved, if indeed such relativistic concepts had any
currency here.
 "Jean-Luc--over there!"
    Picard felt himself begin to spiral as if he were in micro-
gravity. But he fought the vertigo to look where Beverly
pointed.
    On the outermost face of the nearest cube, the even texture
of power conduits was broken by an irregular collection of
                191




shapes. By force of will alone, Picard willed his eyes to
perceive the face as a solid, unmoving object, stopping its
wild oscillation.
 "They're ships... "he whispered in shock.
    He identified the white saucer of a Miranda-class Starfleet
vessel, docked in line with an old Klingon cruiser, a dozen
other vessels he couldn't recognize, and off to the outer edge,
where the forced illusion of stability melted into the distor-
tions of other dimensions, ten D'deridex-class Romulan War-
birds.
    Beverly shook her head and looked away from the view-
port, bracing herself against its raised ledge. Picard did the
same. He felt bile rise in his throat.
    "Could this be where the Borg originate?" Beverly asked
weakly.
    "I... don't think so," Picard said. "It doesn't seem large
enough. And the Borg are three-dimensional beings like
ourselves."
    Picard closed his eyes tO try and stop the corridor from
spinning around him. Locating the Borg homeworld, the
putative central node of the collective, had become Starfleet's
top priority. But after years of analyzing all reports of the
Borg's patterns of attack and every scavenged scrap of Borg
debris, Starfleet knew only that the Borg homeworld--if
[here were a homeworld--was somewhere in the Delta Quad-
rant. Given current warp technology, that region of the galaxy
was more than seventy years away at top speed. Completely
inaccessible.
    When Picard felt his equilibrium return, he opened his eyes
again and risked another glance out the viewport. Their ship
was closing in on that single face of the nearest cube. It
appeared to bulge toward them like a huge dome, but the
transformation of a two-dimensional shape into a three-
dimensional shape was one with which Picard's senses could
cope.
                192

 Beverly joined him again at the viewport.
 "That's where we'll dock," he said.
 Beverly touched the interface in his hand.
    "There could be a great many Borg on that station," she
told him. "We have no way of knowing how strong the
influence of the collective mind might be in these condi-
tions."
 Picard understood doctor's orders when he heard them.
 "Perhaps we should explore the station first," he said.
    Beverly reached up and disconnected the power-cell plug
from his armor. "That would be wise."
    The snap of the connector triggered a wave of relief in
Picard.
    Still, he took the interface from Beverly and slipped it into
a storage pouch on his own armor. "But we'll keep this near."
He touched the cranial plate still in position on the right side
of his face and head. "And I'll keep this on." Beverly nodded.
 Together they looked out the viewport again.
    They were close enough that the vista of Borg machinery
looked almost normal. They were coming in near the collec-
tion of captured starships.
    Picard studied the Miranda-class vessel. The U.S.S. Hoag-
land had been a Miranda-class vessel lost at the Battle of Wolf
359, with no wreckage ever found. Was it possible that the
Borg had somehow assimilated it even as the battle raged,
transferring it through a transwarp corridor to this improba-
ble station?
    Picard concentrated on the distant white disk, trying to
pick out the vessel's name or registration. But as they drew
nearer, he could see that the ship had been partially disassem-
bled, with dark conduits and braces connecting it to the
surface of the Borg cube like filaments of mold. The Klingon
vessel beside it was little more than a collection of Borg pipes
and panels arranged in the shape of a battle cruiser. It
                193




appeared he was looking at some type of spare-parts reposi-
tory.
    Their ship now travelled over the hulks, moving in toward
a circular docking pad. Picard wondered how the Warbirds
were faring. If he could get a sense of the state of their
disassembly, he might be able to estimate how long they had
been captured. He glanced off to the side, looking for the
Romulan craft.
 But Beverly found them first.
 "Jean-Lue... those Warbirds. They're intact."
    As their ship rotated to line up with the docking ring,
Picard had a few seconds to confirm Beverly's sighting.
    Ten double-hulled ships, each almost twice the length of a
Galaxy-class vessel, were connected to the Borg station only
by standard docking tunnels and mooring clamps. Each still
had operational running lights. Almost all of them had the
characteristic green glow between their hulls that signified
their singularity drives were operational.
    "They must have just been captured," Picard said as the
Borg ship's rotation carried them out of sight of the Warbirds.
He focused on fixing the Warbirds' location in his memory.
"That means there could be thousands of Romulans held
captive here."
 Beverly's voice tightened. "Being assimilated."
    "Not all at once," Picard said. "The process takes time. It
could mean there are thousands of able-bodied Romulan
prisoners here ready to fight back against the Borg."
    Beverly actually laughed. For the first time in weeks. "You
mean, you and I could lead a revolt, here in a Borg station?"
    "I have always thought the Romutans could be a valuable
resource in a galactic civilization," he said with a smile. "An
alliance with the Romulans, however formed, could be a very
positive development indeed."
    No longer laughing, Beverly fixed Picard with a curious
expression.
                194

 "You've always thought that?" she asked.
 Picard nodded, not seeing her point.
    "Well, let's just hope you didn't give the collective any
ideas."
    The Borg ship echoed with the dull clang of docking rings
joining.
 Picard's stomach tightened with more than vertigo.
 But there was no turning back.

TWENTY-FIVE

Riker downed a shot of replicator whiskey, grimaced, then
followed it with a swig of synthale. It didn't help.
    As a round of groans broke out around Quark's Dabo table,
Riker turned back to Morn beside him at the bar and
repeated the punch line, "Change is the ultimate solution?"
    The bulky alien, with a chinless, wrinkled face that looked
as if he had been partially melted, nodded. And waited.
Expectantly.
    Riker considered his options. He had just spent ten min-
utes listening to a rambling monologue which Morn had
assured him was the funniest joke in the universe. But Riker
didn't get it. Option one was to tell Morn this, and possibly
endure another twenty minutes of explanation. Riker chose
option two.
 He roared with laughter.
                195




    Morn blinked at him questioningly, but then joined in,
clapping Riker jarringly on the shoulder before sliding off the
barstool and wandering off to the waste-extraction facilities.
    Quark stepped up behind the bar and deftly removed
Riker's almost empty glasses.
 "I never get tired of hearing that one," the Ferengi said.
 Riker stared at Quark until the Ferengi shrugged.
    "All right," Quark admitted in low tones, "I wish I could
figure out some way to shut him up. He just never stops."
Quark leaned closer. "Has he ever told you about his seven-
teen brothers?"
     Riker shuddered at the thought of it. Then he noticed that
Quark had set up another synthale and whiskey. "I didn't order those," Riker said.
    Quark smiled winningly with a mouthful of teeth, each
tooth determined to grow in its own unique direction. 'Tll
put it on your tab."
    "No, you won't," Riker said, returning the smile. "I don't
have a tab. You're the one who owes me, remember?"
     Quark put on a face of genuine surprise. "I thought I paid
that back to you long ago." Riker didn't say a word.
 Quark couldn't handle the silence.
    "You know, my brother, Rom, handles the accounts. I'll
have him look into it."
"You do that," Riker said. He stood up.
"Commandersyou're not going already?" Quark asked.
"The night is young!" He dropped his voice again, giving
Riker a lascivious wink. "And the Dabo girls are oh, so
pretty."
    "If you're suggesting what I think you're suggesting, I'm
sure Odo's looking for a good excuse to have Commander
Sisko cancel your permit." Riker returned the wink.
    The Ferengi sighed. "I've missed you," he said, making
sure each undertone of insincerity remained unhidden.
                196

    "I'm sure you have." Riker straightened his tunic. "Deduct
the first round from what you owe me. You can upload the
rest to my account with the purser on the Challenger."
    Quark's eyes widened. "You mean the ship that just came
back through the wormhole?"
 Riker waited for Quark to continue.
    "But you came here on the Alex Raymond," Quark said.
His eyes narrowed again. "Is the Challenger your new
posting?"
 "What possible business is that of yours?"
    Quark shrugged. "What can I say?" Quark tapped the lobe
of one of his ears, each the size of a fully spread hand. "I like
to keep my ears open."
 Riker grinned. "Do you have a choice?"
    Before Quark could reply, Riker stepped away from the bar
and made his way to the Promenade entrance.
    Quark had been right. The night, according to DS9's duty
clock, was young, and Quark's Place was crowded. Riker
counted at least twenty crew members from the Challenger,
one of the newest Galaxy-class starships to be commissioned
by Starfleet.
    It would be a fine posting. And many of his former
crewmates from the Enterprise would undoubtedly find their
way to it. Especially after news of its recent exploits in the
Gamma Quadrant began to circulate.
    But Riker's stars did not follow a ship. They followed his
captain. And it was for her captain's sake that he walked
slowly along the Promenade, gazing in the shop windows,
sampling ajumja stick, taking his time as he made his way to
the turbolift.
    A Cardassian, the only one Riker had seen aboard the
station, stood outside a tailor shop, hands behind his back.
He gave Riker a friendly smile. Riker nodded, but kept
walking, avoiding the temptation to glance behind.
 He already knew what he would see.
                197




    There had been a Bajoran monk studying the Promenade
directory when Riker had entered Quark's, face shrouded by
a large hood. The same monk had stepped up to study the
same directory when Riker had left the bar a half hour later.
    Riker didn't have to look back to know he was being
followed.
    The turbolift provided a swift, if rough, ride to the habitat
ring. Riker stepped into the claustrophobic corridor and
wondered once again what the Cardassian designers of the
station had been thinking of when they had built it. With the
support beams running across the floors as well as the
ceilings, it was almost as if they had gone out of their way to
make movement through the station difficult.
    But then, the Cardassians excelled at overcoming their
difficulties, so perhaps their culture encouraged erecting
barriers as much as human cultures encouraged removing
them. Riker looked forward to discussing that insight with
Commander Sisko. Any officer who had lasted as long as
Sisko had, caught in the middle of the still-simmering
Bajoran-Cardassian conflict, had to understand both sides.
    Riker heard the turbolift hum behind him. Another car was
arriving. He hesitated at his intersection until he heard the
doors just start to open, then he turned the corner and waited.
    But after ten seconds, he still was unable to hear footsteps
in the corridor. Had the monk missed him?
    Riker decided to act as if he had forgotten something. He
walked back around the corner, head down at first, heading
back to the turbolift.
     After a few steps, he looked up, ready to nod in acknowl-
edgment of the monk he knew was in the corridor. But the corridor was empty.
    Riker paused. There were no other intersections between
him and the turbolift.
    He decided he had been mistaken. Perhaps the monk had
been a monk after all. He started to turn back the way he had
come.

198

    Then DS9 exploded around him as the monk's fist hit his
jaw.
    Riker had no recollection of falling. All he knew was that he
was lying on his back, staring up into the shadowed hood of
the Bajoran holy man who had just decked him.
    "What the devil do you think you're doing?" Riker de-
manded, giving the monk his opening.
    But the monk folded his arms, making his hands disappear
into his wide sleeves. He stepped back, giving Riker room to
get to his feet.
    Riker did, moving his jaw back and forth beneath his
fingers. "Helluva right cross for a holy man," Riker said,
frowning.
 The monk remained still.
 Riker feinted to the left.
 The monk didn't move, his posture rigid as that of a statue.
    Riker smiled. He enjoyed a challenge. But the effort of
smiling hurt his jaw, and he frowned again.
 "There are two way we can do this," Riker began.
 "No," the monk said. "There is only one."
    The monk leapt at him, robes billowing, giving Riker no
clear target beneath them.
    He felt stiff fingers expertly jab in beneath his ribs, knock-
ing the air from his lungs, even as he partially deflected the
hand aimed at his throat.
  Riker fell back again as the monk flipped over him.
     When Riker regained his footing, their positions were
reversed. Now the monk had his back to the turbolift.
 Riker spun around and raced off.
    This time, he could hear the clanging of the monk's boots
on the metal floor of the corridor.
    Riker charged past the next two intersections, then hit the
long corridor that led along one of the station's outer spokes
to a docking pylon on the outer ring.  He glanced behind him.
  The monk's fluttering robes made him look like an attack-
                199




 ing sea creature--no sign of any structure beneath the dark
 shape pursuing him, only the embodied action of pursuit.
     For an instant, Riker wondered if there such things as
 ghosts.
  He picked up his pace.
    By the time he reached the next intersection, the station's
habitat sections had been left behind. Now he was in the
industrial areas of the docking ring--machine shops, cargo
holds, thruster control rooms.
    He ran to the right, heading for one of the cargo bays
assigned to Starfleet.
  The monk followed in close pursuit.
    Finally Riker stumbled to a stop by cargo-bay doors
marked by the Starfleet delta. He bent over, hands on his
knees, urgently drawing breath. He heard the monk closing
in. Riker looked around, as if searching for a way out, then
slapped the Cardassian wall pad and squeezed through the
cargo-bay doors before they had finished opening.
    Riker stepped back between two stacks of hexagonal pack-
ing modules and kept his eyes riveted on the open door.
    He was relieved when the monk appeared and cast a long
shadow into the bay.
    Whatever the monk was, he was physical. Though Riker
once again checked his jaw, thinking that should have been
proof enough.
     "There's nowhere to run on this station," the monk called
out. He paused as if he expected an answer. Riker said nothing.
    The advantage of this section of DS9 was that it was
completely under Starfleet control. The security monitors
could be turned off at their source, so that any events that
transpired here would not be recorded in Odo's office or
tapped into by Quark.
    The monk stepped through the cargo-bay doors. The in-
stant he was clear, they slid shut behind him.
 The monk didn't even bother to examine them.
                20O

 "Come out, Commander Riker."
    Riker stepped into a pool of light in the clear, central
section of the cargo bay.
 The monk moved toward him.
 "You still haven't told me what you want," Riker said.
 "I think you know."
 "Try me."
    The monk stopped in front of Riker. "All right... have
you ever heard of.__,,
 The monk's hand flew out for Riker's neck.
 This time Riker was ready for him.
    He parried the hand, then kicked up, caught the monk in
the chest, then whirled around and with his other leg threw
him off balance.
    The monk hit the decking on his back as Riker completed
his spin. But before Riker could recover his balance, the
monk kicked out, catching R~ker's legs. Riker fell to the deck.
    The monk dove for him, driving his elbow into the side of
Riker's head with bone-jarring impact. Gasping in pain,
Riker instinctively used the monk's momentum to roll him
over, flipping on top of him. The monk's legs pushed up,
sending Riker rolling over his head.
    When the fighters leapt to their feet, both rocked, their
exertions catching up with them. Riker shook his head.
Tasted blood in his mouth.
    "Why don't you ask me what you came here to ask me?"
Riker wheezed.
 The monk's hands reached into his robes.
     Riker froze. The Promenade had weapons detectors. He
had counted on the monk being unarmed. So had Riker's backup.
 The cargo bay flooded with light. Riker winced.
    "Do not move," Data's voice announced. "Two phasers are
trained on your position."
                201'




    The monk slowly straightened up. "That's a roundabout
way of saying you've got me covered," he said.
      Data stepped out from behind one stack of crates, To the
other side of Riker, La Forge appeared. Both held phasers.
 "I want to see hands," La Forge said.
    Riker was startled as the monk suddenly pulled down on
his robe and the fabric tore away from him.
    Though Riker had been expecting what he would find since
he set up this ambush, actually standing face to face with
someone who looked so much like James T. Kirk was like
taking a direct hit.  Again.
    Picard had described to Riker his reaction to having met
Kirk in the Nexus. The visceral impact of seeing someone in
the flesh who up to that moment had only ever been an image
on a viewscreen.
    Riker knew the man before him was a fraud, a creation of
an unknown science. Still, for just a moment, a sense of
fleeting wonder touched him as he dared think that the
person he saw, the legend he saw, might be real.
    The impostor glanced at Data and La Forge, betraying no
surprise at seeing either of them. Then he turned his full
attention to Riker.
 "You recognize me, too, don't you?" the impostor said.
    Riker stared intently at the false James Kirk. "Let's just say
I recognize who you're supposed to be."
    There was a stror/g attitude of competence and control in
the impostor's bearing, exactly what Riker would have ex-
pected from the historical Kirk. But just for a moment,
something else flashed behind those eyes. An unexpressed
sense of pain... of loss... Riker wished Deanna were here
now. Though she would have her chance with this...
whatever he was, soon enough.
    "Tell me," the impostor said. "Who am I... supposed to
be?"

 "You really do not know?" Data asked.
    The impostor turned to the android, smiling ruefully. "Do
you think I'd let myself step into this trap if I didn't have a
good reason?"
    Riker started. He had seen that smile before, heard that
tone of voice in so many captain's log recordings that it was
as if he recognized the voice of someone in his own family.
It was one thing to duplicate a biological body... but
to reproduce so exactly the tone and nature of a per-
sonality?
    "What about the other question?" Riker said sharply.
"What you asked La Forge, and Data, and Worf. Why do you
want to find Captain Picard?"
    As if a live wire had been touched to the impostor, Riker
saw the false Kirk's body stiffen as a hate-filled grimace took
over his face.
    "Picard," the impostor spat. "He must die! I have to kill
him?'
    Then with an enraged snarl, the impostor threw himself at
Riker, hands like claws, in response to some elemental fury
Riker could never hope to understand.
    Data's reflexes were faster than La Forge's, and it was the
android's phaser that dropped the impostor.
    His hands tightened reflexively on Riker's tunic, but his
eyes rolled up and he began to slump, whispering one final
word before Riker caught him and gently, almost respectfully,
lowered him to the floor.
     The three officers stood over their remarkable prisoner for
a moment, one unspoken question shared among them.
 Riker touched his communicator.
 "Riker to Ops... four to beam to the infirmary."
    And even as the transporter locked onto them, the whis-
pered word still hung in the silence.
    The last word the impostor had gasped as the phaser had
claimed him...
                203




A word, a plea, that only James T. Kirk would use...
... Spock. . .
Riker felt a chili move through him.
And it wasn't the transporter.

TWENTY-SIX

The truck came to a stop approximately fifty-two kilometers
southwest of Dartha, the capital city of Romulus. Normally,
Spock would have been more precise in his estimate, but Tiral
and Snell had placed a cloth bag over his head, forcing him to
rely on physical sensations of speed and heading changes
alone.
    Fortunately, the truck was a wheeled variety, less expensive
to operate than an antigray floater in the loose shale of the
southern regions around Dartha. For Tiral and Snell, the cost
of energy was of utmost importance, second only to their
episodes of transduction.
    Spock had already endured many such episodes during his
short captivity. Typically, Tiral and Snell would confine him
someplace, once even in the cargo compartment of the truck,
and then retire to a location where his acute ears couldn't
avoid relaying every detail of their addiction.
    He concluded his kidnappers were energetic, if not overly
imaginative. The seven-year cycle of Pon farr gave Vulcan's
greatest minds ample opportunity to anticipate and then
experience their pleasures, and the detailed records of that
anticipation and experience were still banned on more than
204

half the worlds of the Federation. No doubt when full
relations were established between Vulcan and Romulus,
entire Vulcan libraries would become available throughout
the Star Empire, and Spock anticipated the shock waves that
would result when Romulans experienced the exquisite dis-
coveries of suppression and discipline.
    But for the last hour, Tiral and Snell had remained silent
and celibate, directing the truck on a circuitous route which
Spock guessed was intended to avoid security checkpoints as
well as to confuse him.
At least they had been successful in their first intent.
Spock braced himself against the door of the passenger
cabin as the truck swerved to a stop. They had driven off the
main transport route fifteen minutes earlier, and the thunder
of rocks and gravel against the underside of the vehicle had
been continuous since then.
    Spock felt the door beside him swing up on its hydraulic
hinges. He tensed, waiting for Snell's hand to grab his arm
and drag him from the truck's cabin. But instead he scented
Tiral's perfume. She, at least, was cultured enough to contin-
ue to avoid touching him.
    Spock had felt a sense of missed potential as he had
contemplated Tiral during his captivity. However she had
come to this life of petty criminal pursuits, he knew she had
not been born to it. What tragedies there had been in her past
he did not know. Given the hardening her present life
promoted, it was quite likely he never would.
    "Ambassador," Tiral said formally, "if you would step out
please."
    Spoek swung his legs around and made certain his feet had
solid purchase before he attempted to stand. His hands were
tied behind his back. The shale made finding one's balance a
precarious proposition.
    He felt his head brush Tiral's hand as he stood. She was
protecting him from hitting his head on the overhead door.
 "How old are you?" Spock asked.
                205




  "Step away from the door," Tiral said.
    Spock tested the ground ahead with his boot, found a
secure footing, and stepped forward. He could smell the night
air through the cloth over his face. There was a tang of sulfur
to it. A water reclamation plant must be nearby. A billion
years of almost constant volcanic eruptions had made fresh
water on Romulus rarer than dilithium.
    "Have you ever considered leaving your... line of work?"
Spock asked.
    He sensed a change in Tiral's movements that indicated he
had caught her attention. And even her gruff tone of bravado
could not hide the bitterness that underlay her words.
"Who'd have me, Ambassador?"
    "There are those on Romulus who study Vulcan history.
They require secrecy and stealth in their pursuits, and it
could be you would have skills to offer them." But then,
before Tiral could even begin to reply to him, Spook relaxed
his muscles and began to fall forward.
    By the time it made contact with the back of his knees,
Spock was already twisting to more efficiently absorb the
impact of his fall.
 "What did you do that for?" Tiral shouted at Snell.
 "The last thing I need is you turning into a Vulcan on me!"
    Spock heard more scrabbling against the rock, a grunt of
surprise and exertion from Tiral, the sound of a body falling.
    Then the sharp slap of flesh on flesh. A shrill cry. A guttural
torrent of Romulafi epithets.
And then... something else. Far off. Coming closer.
Spock felt Snell's hands grab his arms roughly as he was
pulled to his feet. Spock slipped, almost fell again, caught
himself.
    He felt his head forced back by pressure on the bag over his
face.
    "Careful," Tiral said faintly. Her voice was thick with
liquid. Blood, Spock knew. Snell's blows had hurt her.

                206

 "Why?" Snell challenged.
 "Cause he's not worth anything to us dead!"
    Snell's hand struck the side of Spock's head. Next, Spock
felt the cloth slide up and off his face. It was night, but he
blinked under an onslaught of sudden light, so bright his
inner eyelid slid shut to ward off blindness.
    The air trembled around him. A craft was approaching.
Blazing its way with powerful searchlights which spread
across the bleak landscape, as if looking for any others who
might be hidden nearby.
    Spock stared upward, eyes slits as the beam played across
him.
    He saw it pick out Tiral and Snell. In the harsh blue cast of
it, the green blood on Tiral's face was dark, almost black.
    A wind picked up. Small stinging bits of stone danced
through the night, stirred up by the craft's backwash.
    It was some kind of civilian runabout, Spock noted,
aerodynamically sleek for atmospheric travel, large enough
for four or five passengers. But even his heightened eyesight
could not penetrate the glare of its searchlights to identify the
actual model.
    It set down twenty meters away. The shale crunched
beneath it. Its pilot kept its engine operating on standby.
Then the access hatch opened and a set of steps folded
down.
    Spock's hair streamed in the wind. Tiral and Snell stood to
either side, equally mesmerized by the searchlight beam that
targeted them.
    The shadows of the three people from the craft rippled in
that light as they approached, as dark as wraiths, as ill-defined
as smoke.
    But Spock did not need to see the features of those who
approached to know that one was Tr'akul, one of the most
notorious smugglers in the Romulan Empire, with few peers
in many other crimes.
                207




    As two of the figures hung back, one alone approached. He
pulled back the hood of his black robe, and Spock saw a
Romulan with a cadaverously lean face, accentuated by a scar
that ran from cheekbone to chin, dimpling the bone beneath
it.
  "Greetings, Tr'akul," Spock said.
    The Romulan crime lord glanced at him as if he were only a
commodity. He reached out, took Spock's jaw, and pushed
the Vulcan's head back and forth as if inspecting livestock. As
with Snell, Spock set aside Tr'akul's casual, violating touch.
    Tr'akul smiled as he flicked his hand like a sleight-of-hand
magician and a knife materialized in it. Spock remained
silent as the knife scored his cheek.
    The hot green blood that trickled from his wound cooled
rapidly in the rising wind.
    Tr'akul, still smiling, gestured again and the knife was gone.
In its place, a small medical sensor. With a flourish, he
touched it to Spock's cheek, to Spock's blood. After a few seconds, the sensor chimed.
 Another flick of Tr'akul's hand and the sensor was gone.
    Without looking back at his companions, Tr'akul raised his
hand and snapped his fingers twice. Then he stepped back.
    One companion, also concealed in a fluttering black robe,
approached Tiral. He handed her a small case. Opened it for
her. Still nothing was said.
 Spock shifted his gaze to see what his price had been.
 A limbic accelerator.
    He mourned Tiral's death, even more so because she could
not see its approach.
    Tiral fumbled eagerly with the accelerator. Its contact point
reflected the light of the searchlight so powerfully that it was
like looking at a chemical flare.
    Snell took it from her as she struggled to unfasten the
second contact. Tiral wrested it back from him.
 Spock watched with fascinated despair.
                208

    What had Romulus become to give birth to people who had
so little sense of history, so little hope?
    Tiral looked at Spoek. She held the accelerator tightly
against her chest.
 "Tiral, don't," Spock said quickly. "It will--"
    Snell hit him so quickly and so hard in his solar plexus that
he saw flashes of light in the corner of his vision.
    Felled by primal shock, Spock dropped to his knees, unable
to keep his face from failing forward and slamming into the
shale.
    A small gasp escaped him before he achieved the state of
n'kolinahra and banished the pain of the assault.
    He lifted his head and peered up through the blowing dust
and dirt in time to see Tiral and Snell both connected to the
accelerator through their transducer implants.
    "Just a taste," Tiral warned Snell. "We've got a long drive
back."
 Spock tried to speak, but there was no air in his lungs.
    I grieve for thee, he thought. It was all he could do. A
century ago, he could have slipped from his bonds, dropped
Tr'akul and his thugs, saved Tiral and Snell, and still learned
what he needed to know. And at Kirk's side, there would
have been nothing that could have stopped them from going
on to...
    Snell switched on the accelerator. Tiral and Snell em-
braced.
 For the briefest of instants, pure joy lit their faces.
     Then they clawed frantically at the transducer contacts on
their scalps. Their mouths yawned open without sound.
 Green blood exploded from their noses and lips.
    Their limbs trembled in a terrible rictus of agony, then
went limp as Tiral and Snell slid to the shale, still bound
together.
    The background whine of the waiting craft swallowed
whatever death rattles escaped them. The ending of their lives
               209




no more than a troublesome detail, easily dealt with by
Spock's buyers.
    Spock forced himself to his feet before anyone could touch
him again.
    He stood before Tr'akul, tasting the copper of the blood
that ran from his own nose across his lips.
    Tr'akul brought the knife to his hand again, reached around
Spock as if to embrace him, and cut the ropes that bound his
wrists.
     And just before he stepped away, Spook felt the Romulan
whisper in his earrathe first words he'd spoken.
  "T'raylya ohm Fair ras."
 Spock fought to maintain his neutral expression.
    The words were a form of Ancient Vulcan, a spoken tongue
unknown to all but scholars. From a lament that dated
thousands of years before the teachings of Surak. Forgive me, my brother ....
    Tr'akul stared deep into Spock's eyes, then dropped his
gaze.
    Tr'akul's cryptic phrase told Spock that the notorious
smuggler was no longer in charge of what would happen next.
He was not even in favor of it.
    For the first time since developing this plan, Spock con-
ceded to himself that he might have miscalculated.
    Spock had expected to find himself ransomed by Tiral and
Snell, and he had been. To a logical choice, Tr'akul. But Spock
had expected that Whichever party bought him would be the
same that had supplied the micropulser to Kirk. And that
whoever bought him, in turn, from the supplier would be the
group that had restored Kirk.
 So if not Tr'akul, then who was in control?
     Tr'akul gestured to the third member of his party still
silhouetted by the searchlight's concealing glare. The third figure walked forward.
 And he drew a disruptor and fired it in one fluid motion so
                210:

seamless that Spock barely had time to register it before the
orange beam crackled through the night and reduced the
person who had carried the transducer to a cloud of disrupted
radiation.
 The disruptor turned toward Spock.
    Spock had no concern for his own safety. There would be
no logic in killing him in this way at this time.
 But the third figure swung his arm out with the precision of
a machine and fired again.
     "T'air ras!" Spock shouted, "brai/"
    But before Tr'akul could run, orange fire flickered over the
shale and the smuggler was consumed.
 The third figure put the disruptor away.
 "You will come with us," the figure said to Spock.
    Spock calculated the odds of his surviving a trip with the
figure. They were not in his favor.
    In a heartbeat, he brought his hand to the base of the
figure's neck, positioned his fingers, and pinched the nerves
beneath them.
    The figure did not react or try tO defend himself. And the
nerve pinch did nothing.
 To test his hypothesis, Spock pinched again.
 Still nothing.
    Spock raised an eyebrow. "Fascinating," he said. He re-
moved his hand.
    The figure moved, pulling back his hood to reveal the
cranial implant plates that cruelly puckered the flesh of his
Romulan features.
 Spock recognized their origin.
 "Resistance is futile," Vox said.
 "Indeed."




TWENTY-SEVEN

In Deep Space 9's infirmary, Dr. Julian Bashir folded his
arms and waited impatiently, as if everyone in the infirmary
could interpret the Cardassian medical display as easily as he
could.
    But Riker wasn't interested in the doctor or the display. His
attention remained fixed on the patient on the diagnostic bed,
kept asleep by means of the small somnetic inducer on his
forehead.
    Deanna touched Riker's arm. "You believe now, don't
you?"
    AS unhappy as it made Riker feel, he couldn't argue with
Deanna.
  "Yes," he said.
    Dr. Bashir shrugged. "That is what I've been telling you,
Commander,"
    Riker rubbed at his sore jaw. For a dead man, Captain
James T. Kirk still packed one hell of a wallop.
    "Is this some aftereffect of being in the Nexus?" Riker
asked. Kirk had been swallowed by the energy-ribbon phe-
nomenon when he had vanished seventy-eight years ago on
the maiden voyage of the Enterprise-B. Somehow, Kirk had
continued to exist in a dream state until Picard had also
entered its realm. Picard had been successful in convincing
Kirk to reenter the physical world, to help him stop a
madman from destroying the Veridian sun.

                212

 Their joint effort had been successful, but fatal for Kirk.
 Yet here he was. Again.
    Surely the only explanation possible involved some kind of
alien metaphysics.
    But Bashir had said, "No." Politely. Riker had first met the
young doctor three years earlier, when Starfleet had taken
over the administration of Deep Space 9. At the time, he had
thought Julian Bashir one of the most annoyingly arrogant
youngsters he had ever met. But life on the frontier had
obviously had a positive effect. Bashir was maturing well.
    "I tracked down the EI-Aurian who used to run the
recreational facilities on the Enterprise," Bashir now ex-
plained. He leaned back against one of the infirmary con-
soles, a disarmingly informal posture. But Riker had learned
that Bashir's casual mien hid a keen and disciplined mind
worthy of Starfleet's best officer material. "Guinan," Riker said.
    "Exactly. She experienced the Nexus at the time of the
Lakul disaster, and she is quite adamant that if Kirk left the
Nexus of his own volition, unlike her and the others who were
forcibly removed, there can be no... echo of him left within
it. He came out as he went in, flesh and blood and all it is heir
to."
 "Then how... ?" Riker said.
    Bashir crossed over to a second display above Kirk's
diagnostic bed. He touched the imcomprehensible Cardas-
sian controls and the screen changed to display a quantum-
phase interior view of Kirk's skull and brain.
    "Two possibilities," Bashir said, "both of them unusual.
This .... "The display zoomed in to show a dense structure
the size of a pen snaking around Kirk's medulla. It branched
into a fractal network of smaller structures, absolutely impen-
etrable to the medical sensors. "And these .... "Bashir
concluded. The screen shifted to what Riker recognized as an
interior view of an artery. Mixed in with the blood cells that
surged rhythmically by, there were smaller objects, no larger
               213




than single pixel dots compared to the relatively huge blood
cells.
  "Those dots?" Riker asked.
  "Computer, enlarge current view by two factors."
    Now Riker recognized the dots, but he still didn't under-
stand. "Nanites?"
    "Of a type," Bashir confirmed. "I've never seen this precise
configuration before, but they are clearly nanotechnology
intended for medical treatment. In this case, repairing the
extensive damage to the patient's tissue."
    Riker fixed Bashir with a skeptical look. "With respect,
Doctor. The patient wasn't 'extensively damaged.' The pa-
tient was dead. I would think that what has happened to Kirk
is a bit more complicated than a medical treatment."
    Bashir grinned. "Perhaps that was an understatement. But
take another look at the device in his brain stem."
     The display over Kirk returned to the image of his skull and
the object within it. "What is it?"
    "According to the scans I can make, perhaps the most
sophisticated neural implant known to medical science."
    Riker's senses went on alert. He saw Deanna give him a
quizzical look, responding to the sudden change in his
emotional state.
    "What's its purpose?" Riker asked. It was too much of a
coincidence that just as one Starfleet captain disappeared on
a mission with a neural interface, another from the past came
looking for him. Also with an interface.
    Bashit frowned. "All I know for certain is that it's killing
him." The doctor moved his finger over the outer fraetal
tendrils of the device. "These contact points are being modi-
fied by the nanRes to extend further into the patient's cortex.
It's like a cancerous tumor. At the rate it's growing, I give him
no more than a week."
    Riker gave the doctor a sharp look. Most cancers were as
easy to treat as contact dermatitis. "Remove it."
                214

    "I can't, Commander. What's required is far beyond my
skill as a surgeon."
    "Can't you use the transporter to filter out the extraneous
material?" Deanna asked.
    "That is a valid treatment, Counselor. But to carry it out,
we'd have to create a complete cellular map of the patient's
nervous system in order to ensure he would be correctly
reassembled. And that, I'm afraid, would take months. Which
we don't have."
    Riker went back to what the doctor had stated earlier. "You
said you couldn't remove the device by surgical means. Does
that mean someone else could?"
    Bashir nodded. "Possibly. I've made another enquiry into
Starfleet's medical archives." He grinned again. "They're
getting to know me there after everything I put them through
just to get Kirk's old records. But there are a handful of
devices as complex as this that have been encountered before
... and have been successfully removed by Starfleet doe-
to rs."
 "Are any of those doctors available to us7"
    "Only one is on active duty," Bashir said. "Beverly
Crusher."
     Riker understood at once. "She removed the Borg implants
from Captain Picard." Bashir nodded.
    Riker's chest tightened. "Are you saying the device in Kirk
is a Borg device?"
    "I can't even venture an opinion on that, Commander. All
neural interfaces share similar design features simply because
of what they're designed to do. Does this device resemble a
Borg implant7 Certainly. Is it identical to Captain Picard's
implants as recorded in Starfleet's archives? No. Could it
therefore be of Borg manufacture7 Perhaps."
    Riker thought over his options. "This is an obvious ques-
tion, but does Kirk know where the implant came from?"
 "I only spoke with him briefly, but he has no idea who he is.
               215




And any questions I ask him about his activities in the past
few days, or his reported compulsion to kill your Captain
Picard, simply trigger a violent response. That's why I'm
keeping him under the somnetic inducer. It's preferable to
modifying his aberrant behavior through drugs, until we
know what's causing his behavior."
    Deanna made the connection. "Has he been pro-
grammed?"
 "Conditioned," Bashir said. "Yes."
 "The implant?" Riker asked.
Bashir was emphatic. "Yes. Of that, at least, I am certain."
"So the only way we're going to get past whatever blocks
have been put on Kirk's memories is by removing that
implant. And unless that implant is removed within a week,
at most, Kirk will die."
    Bashir's next question was what Riker had been waiting
for. "Commander, where is Dr. Crusher? According to Medi-
cal, she's on extended leave. But no one will tell me where."
    There was no more time to waste. If Picard had taught him
anything, Riker thought, it was that not only must a good
leader make correct decisions, he must make fast decisions.
    He drew himself up, understanding that there would be no
stepping back from what he was about to do. Shelby be
damned.
    "Dr. Bashir, Counselor Troi, under Starfleet General Order
Three, I am now invoking the official secrets regulations of
stardate 7500, as amended, stardate 42799."
    "But... those orders have to do with... invasion,"
Bashir said hesitantly.
    Riker pressed on. He was speaking for the record now.
"Starfleet has reason to believe the Federation is facing
imminent attack. Captain Picard and Dr. Crusher are on
special assignment to prevent that attack. It is my opinion
that James T. Kirk is in some way involved with these events,
and I am taking it upon myself to transfer him to the last
known location of Dr. Crusher. I am taking this action in
                216

order to facilitate the removal of the implant which is
preventing me from questioning him."
    "You are both hereby seconded to my command aboard the
U.S.S. Challenger and ordered to prepare for immediate
departure to Starbase 804."
    Deanna headed for the infirmary door without a single
question. Riker had expected no less from her. But Bashir was
another matter.
    "Commander Riker, this ultrasecret business is all very
interesting, but since everything we say from now on is
ultrasecret, may I ask just who Starfleet thinks is about to
invade us?"
    Riker had no time for junior officers who questioned orders
in a crisis, no matter how personable. But just this once, he
would make an exception. If only to see the color drain from
the young doctor's face. "The Borg," he said.
 Bashir's expression was worth the exception.

TWENTY-EIGHT

The Starship Challenger eased back from the upper docking
pylon which had been its berth at Deep Space 9.
    Her Vulcan captain, Simm, a twenty-year veteran of
Starfleet command, exchanged polite farewells with the sta-
tion's traffic controller, then had the helm bank the ship away,
setting course for Starbase 804.
               217




    As the Challenger came about, the Bajoran wormhole irised
open again to admit a Klingon mining survey vessel. In the
flood of exotic radiation that the wormhole itself emitted, a
single directed pulse of tetryons was easily and understanda-
bly overlooked.
    The faster-than-light particles could exist only in subspace
and were an expected, if not regular, phenomenon of any
wormhole.
    But in this case, the directed beam did not come from the
Celestial Temple itself, but from a point four light-years
distant from Deep Space 9.

    Aboard the Avatar of Tomed, Salatrel leaned to the side in
her command chair, nervously stroking its arm.
    "We're receiving a passive return from the tetryon pulse,"
Subcommander Tran reported. He turned from his helm
board to face her. "He is being moved." "On the station?" Salatrel asked.
"On the Challenger," Tran answered, smiling coldly.
Salatrel wouldn't give the upstart the satisfaction of seeing
her fear. She had not been able to risk outfitting Kirk with a
transmitter or a locator beacon, for fear his signal would be
detected. But so close to a wormhole with its constant fluxes
of broad-spectrum radiation, it had been a simple matter to
realign her Warbird's sensors to use tetryons to search for and
detect Kirk's impl.ant each time the wormhole opened.
 "Heading?" Salatrel asked.
    Tran checked his board. "The only port of call that makes
sense is Starbase 804."
    Salatrel turned in her chair to face her white-haired centu-
rion, Tracius.
 "Is Starbase 804 of any particular significance?"
    The grim-faced Romulan looked up at the ceiling of the
bridge, accessing memories he was too old and too stubborn
to commit to a computer. "Another bastion of the Federa-
                        218

tion's intent to plant her flag and fascist rule on free space. A
small frontier outpost. A Klingon contingent of scientists."
He returned his attention to her. "It is of no special value or
importance."
 "Then why is Kirk going there?"
    Subcommander Tran rose to his feet. "I submit Kirk is
being taken there. Unless you wish us to believe he has
successfully taken over a Galaxy-class starship."
    Salatrel bit her lip. If anyone could, Kirk could. "Regard-
less of whether he's in control or a captive, the question
remains, Tracius. Why take him there?"
    The centurion's brow furrowed as he put all his years of
experience and knowledge about the hated Federation to use.
"If they have identified Kirk's implant as a Borg device, they
would be taking him to Starbase 324 for study, as they do all
Borg technology. If they have executed him, they either would
not be taking him anywherewthey'd disintegrate his body
and eject the molecular dust into spacetor, they'd be
continuing with their plans to return him to his home planet
for burial."
    Salatrel struggled to be patient with the old soldier. "I need
a third possibility, my friend."
 "He is going to meet with Picard."
 Salatrel sat up on alert.
Tran took a step toward the centurion. "Impossible!"
Tracius held his hands behind his back. Salatrel recognized
the pose. It was an unconscious affectation from his days of
study of Vulcan, in an effort to understand the enemy of the
Romulan people. In such a pose, the centurion would not be
moved.
    "These are the facts," he reminded Tran. "Picard's wherea-
bouts has disappeared from all available Starfleet computer
networks. Our spies cannot find reference to him anywhere. It
is proper to assume that he is in some manner connected to
Starfleet's efforts to build defenses against the Borg." Tracius
               219




looked meaningfully at Salatrel. "And where better to hide an
ongoing and, perhaps, illegal weapons research program than
at a remote starbase of no particular importance?"
    Tran would not be moved, either. "Starbase 324 is where
Borg defenses are being developed."
    The centurion stood his ground. "With the cooperation of
the Klingons and a Romulan team of cloaking specialists.
From the Federation's viewpoint, it cannot be a secure
location. Especially when some of the weapons they wish to
develop could be used against the Star Empire." Tran and Tracius both turned to Salatrel.
    Her decision was swift. "Lay in a course to Starbase
804. Remain cloaked, but stay in the Challenger's sensor
shadow."
    Tran made no move to return to the helm. "I believe Vox
should be informed of... our new course of action."
    Salatrel held his gaze, daring him to defy her leadership.
"Vox has other matters to attend to. I will send word back to
the Dante Base."
    "Other matters!" Tran protested. "You don't even know
where he is. You don't even know what he's doing. You're as
much a puppet as Kirk is."
    Salatrel leapt to her feet. Tran didn't back away. So in full
view of her bridge crew, she struck him with the back of her
hand, crashing him back to the deck.
    Then she placed a boot on his chest and ground its toe into
his throat.
    "If this were a Klingon ship, you would be food for the
captain's targ. If this were a Federation ship, they would be
performing medical experiments on you before you were
dragged off the bridge. But this is my ship. And we are
Romulans. The only way we will crush our enemies is if we
learn to do it together." She pressed harder on Tran's larynx
to be sure she had his attention, as well as her crew's. "DO you
understand, Subcommander?!"
 Tran grunted. Salatrel took that for a yes.
                220

    She lifted her boot from his chest and returned to stand
beside her chair.
    Tran stumbled back to the helm and laid in a course to
pursue the Challenger.
Tracius leaned close to Salatrel as she sat back in her chair.
"To keep your crew and ship, you will have to provide a
clear example of the cost of defying you," her centurion said.
"And soon."
    Salatrel knew Tracius was right, but for now, all she cared
about was tracking Kirk.
    She had no idea why he was being taken--or taking
others--to Starbase 804.
    But if the history of the Federation held any lessons, it was
that where Kirk was concerned, things were never as they
seemed.
    After working so long with the Borg, she almost found that
lack of clarity... enticing.

TWENTY-NINE

Picard ducked low behind a sharply angled cube of mechani-
cal components that jutted upward from the deck of the Borg
corridor, like a forgotten protrusion from some long-ago
collision. Beside him, Beverly set her medical tricorder for
distance.
    The dark corridor in the hypercube station echoed with the
monotonous clanking of the Borg work crew marching past.
They were a species Picard had never seen. A meter and a half
221




tall, gray-skinned, one enormous and almond-shaped dark
eye set below a swollen cranium. If the other eye matched,
Picard didn't know. Borg implants obscured the other half of
each creature's face.
    Beverly passed him her tricorder. The readings told Picard
that not only did he not recognize the creatures, Starfleet's
xenobiology records didn't either. But the Borg were deafly
established and taking victims in sectors other than those
known to the Federation.
    When the work crew filed by, Picard once again resumed
moving along the corridor, Beverly at his side.
    Far ahead, the hallway seemed to twist off into a corkscrew,
but Beverly and he had already determined that the illusion
of distance aboard the Borg station was just thatman illusion
caused by whatever dimension the hypercuhe station existed
within. For the most part, they were trying to keep their eyes
focused only on what was nearby.
    They came to an intersection. Passageways curved off like
the vanes of a pinwheel in six different directions. Picard
studied his tricorder. The section of the hypercube station
under the Romulan ships they had seen prior to docking was
to the right.
    They hurried on. And the closer they came to the sector
that Picard believed held the captive crews of the Romulan
ships, the worse the cloying scent of rotting flesh became.
    Another intersection brought them to an enormous railed
walkway that skirted the edges of an open reservoir, at least a
kilometer across.
    Picard looked over the railing and immediately swayed
back in horror.
    The reservoir was a lake of what appeared to be writhing
entrails. The squelching, sucking sounds that rose from it
were enough to make Picard gag.
    Beverly scanned the hellish scene with her tricorder. Her
voice was low and unsteady. "It's a recycling tank, Jean-Luc.
222

The atmosphere is being cleansed, and waste products are
being removed from the water."
    Picard understood the concept. But most colonies relied on
plant-based systems to recycle air and water. It was most
unnerving to see the same process undertaken by reclaimed
animal flesh.
    They moved on, carefully following the path laid out by
their tricorder, ignoring all else, hiding from the work crews,
breathing through their mouths to escape the ubiquitous
stench.
    Until they rounded a corner and halted as they saw a ten-
meter-long section of burnished green metal corridor which
could only have been lifted intact from a Romulan ship.
    Picard ran his fingers over that wall. Even though it was
Romulan, the fact that it was smoothly finished and recogniz-
able made it a welcome relief from the nightmare of flesh-
enrobed rods and pipes and conduits they had come through.
    Beverly rapidly scanned the area. "I'm getting a strong life-
sign reading in that direction. In excess of a thousand. Most
likely Romulan." She pointed down the corridor.
    They started forward again. But Picard stopped suddenly,
when they encountered the Romulan bulkhead.
    "Jean-Luc?" Beverly said anxiously, turning back to join
him as soon as she realized she had gone on alone.
    Picard stood in front of a Romulan display screen. Beneath
it was a control hoard. Its virtual configuration of oommand
keys glowed, indicating the board was still active.
    "The Borg are very efficient in their assimilation process,"
Picard murmured, staring at the screen.
    "You think that computer terminal is operational?" Bev-
erly whispered.
    "We won't know until we try." Picard pulled off his
armored gloves and tucked them up under one arm. Then he
took a moment to reacquaint himself with the fat squiggles of
Romulan script and pressed the activate control.
                223




    The screen came to life above the board. Picard mouthed
the script written across it, which identified the ship whose
computer network this terminal had once accessed.
    "This is from the ship named Claw That Rends Our
Enemies' Flesh," Picard told Beverly.
    "Sounds like a Warbird to me." Beverly tried to smile, but
failed.
    Picard knew he had to avoid any request which might
prompt the system to ask for his crew member I.D. or
password. He thought for a moment, then began by asking for
a display of the day's general orders. On the Enterprise, that
type of inquiry would have generated a menu providing
access to the day's shift assignments, entertainment and
education options, and notable eventsmbirthdays, special
meetings, and all the other milestones of a community of one
thousand individuals.
    Picard had no idea what the request would turn up on a
Romulan vessel, but it was a reasonable first choice.
 He began to read the menu that appeared on the screen.
 And he gasped.
    "Beverly... this terminal isn't connected to the Romulan
ship's system... it's connected to the station ~ system!"
    Beverly pushed closer to look over his shoulder. "But
why?"
    Picard lifted an armored panel from his forearm sleeves
and, on his tricorder, quickly called up a programming screen
for his universal translator.
    "My best guess is that when the Borg incorporated this
deck unit into tl~e station, they connected the air-supply
conduits to their own air-supply conduits, the power cables to
their own power cables, and the computer's ODN network to
.. whatever computer system they use."
    He could hear the real smile in Beverly's voice. And the
relief. "How efficient of them."
 Picard set his trioorder for field transmit, then held his
                224

breath. If the Romulan computer system had an intelligence
file that contained standard translation protocols... It did.
    The virtual keyboard shimmered and was replaced by a
Starfleet standard configuration. The onscreen Romulan text
melted into Federation Standard.
    "Jean-Luc," Beverly said in awe. "It's like... opening a
window into the Borg collective."
    But Picard shook his head. "The collective isn't computer
based. It's a shared neural network that's distributed among
the Borg's organic components. But this is the mechanical
heart of it."
    Adrenaline surged within him. He typed in a request for the
current docking schedule.
    The Borg system did not request an identifier code. After
all, who else but a Borg could access it?
    Then Picard smiled grimly as the station's docking sched-
ule began to scroll across the screen. At least half the lines
were composed of square bracketed tags reading [TRANSt~T~ON
UNAV^ILABLE]. Traffic from systems as yet unknown to the
Federation, Picard guessed.
    But here and there, he saw names he could recognize. From
their belligerent tone, Romulan Warbirds. Picard could
barely contain his excitement.
    "Beverly, this is astounding Those Warbirds we saw...
they've all docked here within the past thirty hours."
    "The Borg captured ten intact Warbirds in less than two
days?"
 Even Picard knew that couldn't be right.
     Fingers shaking, he typed in a request to ask for the status
of the crews. The screen shifted to a visual display. Of barracks.
    Picard pored over the images intently. He recognized the
Romulan style of asymmetrical bunks. He saw food replica-
tors, entertainment screens, exercise simulators. The crews of
                225




the Romulan vessels hadn't been removed to the hypercube
station; they were still onboard their vessels.
  "They aren't prisoners, are they?" Beverly said slowly.
  Picard shook his head. He pursed his lips.
  He asked for the flight plans of the Warbirds.
    They were to depart in one hundred hours, towed through
the [TRANSLATION UNAVAILABLE] conduit to Sector 3-0.
    "Sector 3-0?" Beverly said. "Isn't that near the Romulan
Neutral Zone?"
    Picard nodded. "It's also the location of the Borg's first
attacks in our region of space."
    Beverly looked at Picard. "The Neutral Zone isn't well
defended these days, is it?"
    "No," Picard said, seeing the first broad strokes of the Borg
strategy. At the moment, he knew, there was a slowly building
rapprochement with the Romulan Empire. Starfleet had
welcomed the opportunity to demilitarize the Neutral Zone.
Such action meant Starfleet vessels were freed for duty near
the Cardassian sectors that were threatened by the Gamma
Quadrant's Dominion. So what better place from which
to launch an invasion than the poorly defended Neutral
Zone?
    Still, ten Warbirds, however formidable, weren't enough to
invade the entire Federation.
    Picard asked the computer to list any other vessels that
would be departing at the same time as the Warbirds.
 The screen scrolled with a seemingly endless row of:
 [TRANSLATION UNAVAILABLE]
 "Ships that have no name," Beverly said.
 Picard knew what she meant. "Borg ships."
    "Then Starfleet was right," Beverly said. "The Borg are
going to invade."
    "But not by themselves. They've somehow... allied
themselves with the Romulans. They're going to come at us
from the Neutral Zone, where we have no defenses, and
where the Romulan outposts won't lift a finger to help us."
                226

    "But how can the Borg... cooperate with an unassimi-
lated race? That isn't possible. Is it?"
    Picard contemplated the unthinkable. "Perhaps the Borg
decided it was the only way to defeat the Federation."
    His own words suddenly came back to him, hideous in
their new context.
    Or perhaps they thought the Romulans couM be a valuable
resource in a galactic civilization.
    Picard felt cold. "Beverly, is it possible that the Borg did
get the idea from me, when I was part of the collective?"
    Beverly immediately sought out Picard's hand. "No, Jean-
Luc. If they had, they would have acted faster."
 But Beverly sounded no more convinced that Picard felt.
    He held his fingers over the keyboard, poised to enter
another request.
    "I have to know," he said. "I'm going to ask it to show me
the unit responsible for this plan."
 Beverly nodded, making no move to dissuade him.
    Picard typed in his request. He prepared himself to see an
image of himself as Locutus.
    But when the screen cleared again, it displayed a different
visual.
    "Dear God," Beverly said. Her face mirrored the shock
that both of them felt.
 Picard could say nothing.
    In response to his enquiry, the screen showed two individu-
als, walking in a corridor somewhere in the hypercube
station.
 One was a Borg-Romulan of no particular importance.
 The second was Ambassador Spock.




THIRTY

Spock paused at the intersection of four passageways leading
from the Borg docking chamber which had just received him.
All about him, the maintenance crew of the Warbird which
had conveyed him here strode off into the depths of the
hypercube station, as confidently as if they were on shore
leave on their homeworld.
     It was a disturbing scene, given all it implied about the state
of affairs between the Borg and the Romulans. But not unexpected.
    Spock had already accepted that nothing he could see
would match the shock he had felt, though not expressed,
when he had realized his investigation into what he had
thought was a criminal enterprise had delivered him into the
hands of the Borg.
 In retrospect, the logic of it was irrefutable.
    It required no. heroic leaps of faith to accept that Borg
technology had reanimated James T. Kirk.
    And the purpose of that reanimation was elementary. Kirk
had stated it himself.
 His mission was to kill Jean-Luc Picard.
    Most likely, Spock concluded, to keep Starfleet from acces-
sing some Borg secret still contained in Picard's mind. Some
secret, thus far unsuspected, that could lead to the Borg's
eventual defeat.
 The only question remaining unanswered was why, of all
                228

the hunters who might have been set into motion against
Picard, had Kirk been chosen?
    Since there was no logical answer, Spock felt certain that
emotions would provide a key. The captain had had many
run-ins with Romulans during his career. Somewhere in the
web of circumstance that had brought Kirk back again was
the one Romulan who hated Kirk enough to create the irony
of one great hero of Starfleet pitted against another.
    A Vulcan would have simply dispatched a trained assassin
to eliminate Picard. But then, a Vulcan would never have
knowingly allied himself with the Borg. Which is, Spock
decided, exactly what logic dictated was under way at this
hypercube station.
 A Borg-Romulan alliance.
 "You will continue walking," Vox stated.
    Before responding as ordered, Spock took a final moment
to analyze the curves of the passageways stretching into the
distance. Once more matching Vox's pace, he continued to
organize his thoughts about the Borg-Romulan alliance, while
at the same time his mind pursued the more concrete
challenge of the station's existence.
    "This station is constructed in a Thorne subset of eleven-
dimensional transpace, is it not?" Spook asked.
    Vox did not look at him as they moved along the corridor.
"That is correct," the Borg-Romulan said.
    "The power requirement for entering such a subset is
generally calculated to be greater than infinity," Spock ob-
served.
 "The general calculations are wrong."
    Spock thought that over for a few steps. He had made some
of those calculations himself, when he had still been an active
worker in scientific pursuits. He regretted he would not have
time to review his earlier work to look for his mistakes.
    But on their voyage here from Romulus, Vox had made it
clear what Spock's fate would be, and it would not leave room
for pure research.
                229




    Just as Vox was Speaker for the Borg in the collective's
relationship with the Romulan Star Empire, Spock was to be
assimilated to become Speaker to the worlds of Vulcan.
    Spock was without question prepared to fight assimilation.
He was prepared to die to prevent the collective from
accessing the secrets contained in his mind. But he much
preferred the option of escaping. And he had not yet come to
the moment at which he believed escape was no longer
possible.
    Another intersection loomed, and Vox stepped to the side
tO let a work crew pass.
    Spock was intrigued by the work crew. What he had
thought was a single-file line of humanolds was in fact a single
organism somewhat like a terrestrial centipede. Each bipedal
segment was linked by its thorax to the one ahead and behind.
Each segment's head was little more than a vestigial knob of
flesh. Only the more developed segment at the head of the
creature appeared to have multiple functioning eyes and
sensory inputs, though most of them now were covered by
implant plates.
    Since there was no logical advantage for such an inefficient
shape to have arisen by self-organization or natural selection,
Spock deduced that the life-form had been engineered.
 "What is the purpose of that entity?" Spock asked.
 "It feeds the tubes," Vox said.
    Spock chose not to ask for clarification. He had other things
to consider.
 "When will I be assimilated?" Spock asked.
"By standard Federation units, within eight minutes."
They had come to an open turbolift. Spock recognized its
awkward design as having originated on a Pakled vessel. Vox
and Spock stepped into it. Vox spoke his command to it, and
the turbolift dropped.
    Spock decided it was time to see how robust Borg program-
ming was. He began his first line of defense.
                230

  "I do not wish to be assimilated."
  "That will be corrected."
      Spock tried another tack, looking for any logical opening.
"Do you enjoy being assimilated?"  "That is irrelevant."
 "Why is the crew of the Warbird not being assimilated?"
 "It is not yet their time."
    Spock found that interesting. Everything he had read about
the Borg indicated they had voracious appetites. In the
material he had reviewed, there had never been any such idea
as "later." Yet the idea of an alliance implied that the
Romulans expected some benefit from their relationship with
the Borg, other than assimilation.
    Spock had read Jean-Luc Picard's reports on being part of
the collective. Supposedly, there were no secrets among them.
Thus Spock determined it was likely that, this close to his
own impending assimilation, Vox would consider him as
almost a Borg himself, and be just as candid as he would be to
one of his own.
    "Do the Romulan crew members know they are to be
assimilated?" Spook asked.
    The steadily descending turbolift afforded Spock a view of
an endless series of metal panels encrusted with tortured
mazes of pipes and conduits. None hinted at what lay beyond
the levels they shielded, yet Spock knew that whatever the
activities, they would all share in one purpose: advancement
of the collective.
    "No," Vox answered. "They are an experiment. They are
not to be assimilated until they aid us in assimilating the
Federation. Many resources have been expended on correct-
ing the misunderstandings the Federation has of the collec-
tive.
    "It appears you wish to take advantage of the Romulans'
emotional dislike of the Federation."
 "Precisely," Vox agreed.
               231




    "Do you not find it a contradiction to acknowledge that
emotions confer an advantage?"
  Vox didn't hesitate. "That is irrelevant."
    "You argue like a physician I once knew," Spock said. "You
discount all data except those which support your thesis. It is
most illogical."
  "Logic is irrelevant."
  Spock abandoned that approach.
    "What will happen to your alliance with the Romulans
once the Federation has been assimilated?"
"The Romulan Star Empire will be assimilated as well."
Even without knowing who was involved, Spock instantly
understood how this alliance had come about, and he had no
doubt that the Romulan government was fully ignorant of
what was being promulgated in the Empire's name.
    "In other words," Spock said, "you will betray the Romu-
lans when your goals have been accomplished."
    "We will not betray them," Vox said. "We will correct their
misperception of the collective."
 "I do not believe they will find that reassuring."
 "Their beliefs are irrelevant."
    The turbolift stopped and its safety gate swung open onto
yet another Borg passageway.
    "Vox, in that part of you which is still Romulan, do you at
least understand the concept of betrayal?"
    Vox hesitated. He did not step out of the turbolift. For
once, he appeared to be thinking about his response to
Spock's questions.
    "Yes," Vox finally said. "That is my function as Speaker to
the Borg. To bridge between that which is known and that
which is unknown. Between the collective and the Romulan
people."
    "Do you also understand that the Romulan people will feel
you have betrayed them?"
 Spock was fascinated to see a muscle tremble at the corner
                232

of Vox's mouth. He recalled that Picard's reports had indi-
cated that assimilation did not lead to the total extinction of
personality. Perhaps there was a spark within Vox which
could still be reached.
    "They will feel betrayed," Vox agreed. "But that will pass."
Surprisingly, Vox still made no move to leave the turbolift.
Spock quickly continued his attack ....
    "But if they suspect you will betray them, what will be their
response?"
    Vox cocked his head as if caught by Spock's argument. He
turned to Spock, who ignored the Borg laser scanner and
concentrated on the dark, living, Romulan eye. The only
window to what was left of Vox's true self. "The Romulans
will attempt to betray the collective," he said.
    Spock struck another blow. "Then, since the Romulan
government would never agree to such a joint undertaking,
logic dictates the Borg have entered into an alliance with a
group of disaffected officers. Knowing Romulans as I do,
these renegade officers will have developed two plans, both
leading to a different victory. If your Borg-Romulan alliance
defeats the Federation, the Romulan Armada will attack you
without mercy, while the Borg forces are still weakened by the
conflict. In turn, if the Federation once again defeats the
Borg, the victorious but badly weakened Starfleet forces will
be set upon by the Romulan Armada."
 Vox seemed unimpressed. "That is an illogical scenario."
 Spock lifted an eyebrow. "Explain."
    "The Federation cannot win. The Borg fleet will not be
weakened."
    The flaw, to Spock, was obvious. How could the Borg fleet
win a conflict with the Federation without sustaining heavy
damage? The Federation, after all, had already gathered
considerable information about the Borg.
    "The Federation will not fall in battle. It will be betrayed,"
Vox said. "By a highly placed member of Starfleet."
                233




  Spock was startled.
    "Who is that individual?" he asked, although he suspected
the question was futile.
 Vox stepped out of the turbolift and gestured to the side.
 "You will be assimilated now."
    Spock decided that dying here was no longer a useful
alternative course of action. He must return to the Federation
with his knowledge of a highly placed traitor. But how?
    Spock chose the obvious. "Turbolift," he saicl firmly, "re-
turn to the hangar level."
 The safety gates began to close.
    But just as quickly, the floor of the turbolift car lurched and
Spock stumbled against the wall.
    "The collective is in control of all functions on this
station," Vox said. "Resistance is futile." The Speaker for the
Romulans had not moved from his position outside the
turbolift.
 "You have stated that before," Spock pointed out.
    Vox lifted his arm graft and a blue spark leapt out to encase
Spock in a halo of radiant energy. Spock collapsed to the floor
without sensation below his neck. Yet he remained conscious.
    Vox's weapon had been some type of neural blocker. The
effects were likely to be short-term, otherwise interference
with his breathing, heart function, and endocrine system
could be expected.
    But even in the short term, Spock realized, his potential
range of actions had been severely limited.
    Four Borg stepped up to him and lifted him, one Borg for
each of his limbs. They carried him along the corridor and
into a nearby chamber.
    Spock heard another spark discharge, and at once sensation
returned to him.
 The Borg released him, and he stood by himself.
 "Sit down," Vox said.
 Spock glanced behind himself. He saw an unusual chair
                234

frame that appeared to be fused with a medical examination
table. He looked up. Surgical equipment hung from the
ceiling.
    "That would not be a wise decision for me to make," Spock
said;
 "Sit," Vox said and fired his neural blocker.
    Helplessly paralyzed, Spock fell back into the assimilation
frame, as the other Borg adjusted his position. Above him,
the surgical equipment whirred into life.
    An incision arm snaked down, exposing a circular blade
and three laser cauterization tubes.
    Neural waveguides sprang forth from a cranial drill, like
silver threads held apart by a static charge.
    Excavation scoops connected to suction tubes dropped in
incremental jerks until they were poised millimeters above
Spock's chest.
    A head brace clamped down and tightened around his
skull, leaving his temples exposed. He heard multiple drills
moving in from either side. A pool of bright light surrounded
him.
 Though he felt no fear, he allowed himself regret.
 There was still so much he had wanted to do.
 For Romulus.
 For Vulcan.
 And for Kirk.
     As Vox watched impassively, Spock heard the hum of a
surveillance lens as it zoomed out at him from the far wall.
 Spock had one last strategy to try.
    It had little chance of success. But he long ago had learned
that desperation had a logic of its own.
 "Starfleet knows about Kirk," Spook said.
    Vox's hand rose into the air and the machinery of assimila-
tion stopped.
 "What do they know?" Vox asked.
 Spock pushed his bluff to the next level. He knew both his
                235




father and Kirk would say this was not the ideal time to bluff.
But Spock had nothing more with which to wager. Except his
wits.
    "Kirk is the highly placed member of Starfleet who will
betray the Federation. His murder of Picard will deprive
Starfleet of the knowledge which can save it. Because Starfleet
is aware of this, they will anticipate any action Kirk might
make. Therefore, Starfleet will protect Picard and be able to
fight the Borg-Romulan attack. You must withdraw, or be
defeated. All else is an inefficient expenditure of resources."
    Vox studied Spock for long moments. "What you say is
relevant."
 Spock allowed himself to experience a moment of hope.
     Then Vox continued. "When your implants have been
attached, we will know if you are telling the truth." He lowered his hand.
 The equipment began moving, whining, racheting closer.
 Spock composed himself, waiting.
 Not just for death, but for something worse.
 The conscious annihilation of his identity and his volition.
    Logically, he knew he should accept defeat and prepare
himself for the loss of his existence.
    But in a final act of will, he refused. Even as the first slender
waveguides punched through his skin and the drills sang as
they readied to pierce him.
 Jim Kirk had never accepted defeat.
 And for his sake, neither would Spock.

THIRTY-ONE

Picard and Beverly jogged endlessly through the dimension-
ally distorted passageways of the Borg station. The Romulan
computer terminal had shown them Spock's location, but the
layout of the corridors did not match the map it had
displayed, as if the station were in a constant state of growth
and change.
    "Jean-Luc, stop!" Beverly panted beside him. "We're going
in circles."
    Together, they halted to rest against a wall of metal mesh.
Its etnaplex weave of optical wire flashed with intermittent
light sigsaals. Beverly checked her tricorder, reset it, checked it
again. $hook her head with a sigh.
    "The deeper we go into the station, the less sense these
readings make."
    "Spock was being assimilated," Picard said. The frustra-
tion he felt, the maddening helplessness, made him tremble
with rage.
    It was one thing to have experienced such a violation on his
own. But to see it about to happen to another, especially
someone whom Picard knew and respected.
 He had to do something.
 He had to save Spock.
    "According to the map on the Romulan screen, the assimi-
lation chamber should be right here," Beverly said. "But
everything's twisted up."
               237




     Picard heard the clang of heavy boots on the Borg deck. He
 didn't have to think about what to do. He touched the side of
 his face to make certain his neural plate was still in place,
 then stepped out into the middle of the corridor before
 Beverly could protest.
  The Borg who was approaching stopped.
  His laser sensor scanned Picard's face.
    "Locutus," the Borg said, "you are malfunctioning. We
cannot detect you within the collective."
    Picard felt himself slip into his alternate persona far too
readily. But there was no time to consider what that meant.
    "There is no malfunction. Some units are being suppressed
in order to avoid detection by Federation forces when the
attack begins."
    The Borg remained motionless, giving no clue to whether
or not it accepted Picard's lie.
  "Where is the closest assimilation chamber?"
    The Borg's mechanical arm shifted in its socket. "That
information is available in the collective. You are wasting
time by asking meaningless questions. You are wasting re-
sources."
    The Borg glanced down at Picard. The laser played over
Picard's right arm.
    "You have been modified," the Borg said. "That is why you
are malfunctioning." His arm swung up. "You must be
repaired."
    "That assessment is correct," Picard said quickly. "You
will escort me to the nearest assimilation chamber for re-
pair."
    The Borg's arm lowered, and it changed direction as if it
were on a turntable.
 "You will follow us."
    The Borg began marching down the corridor. Picard
matched its stride. He heard Beverly's light footsteps behind
him as she hurried to catch up.

                238

 The Borg heard them as well. It stopped and faced Beverly.
    "What is this?" the Borg asked Picard as it scanned her.
The Borg's arm began to rise.
    "This is a prisoner with information about the Federation.
It will be assimilated after repairs have been made."
    The Borg lowered its arm, satisfied by the answer. "That is
relevant."
    Picard felt Beverly's hand brush his as they marched. He
glanced down. She carried a photon grenade.
    He nodded his understanding. If he had placed them into a
no-win situation, they would not allow themselves to be
assimilated. It was that simple.
    The Borg turned a corner in the passageway and appeared
to begin walking up a steep slope without leaning forward.
Following directly behind, Picard tensed, expecting to feel the
stomach-wrenching sensation of stepping between two differ-
ent artificial gravity fields. But he felt nothing. The gravita-
tional gradient itself was curved.
    Picard marvelled at and cursed the Borg's ingenuity. How
could the Federation ever hope to withstand beings with
control of such technology?
    Through knowledge, he answered himself. The knowledge
that he and Beverly could bring back. And the knowledge
Spock might have.
 If he could be rescued in time.
    The Borg turned sharply into yet another corridor. The
walls appeared to stretch into infinity.
    "The assimilation chamber is ahead," the Borg announced.
He continued walking purposely forward.
    Picard walked past an open turbolift which he recognized
as a characteristically ungainly Pakled design.
 The lift platform was rising, and a familiar figure was on it.
    Picard's pace faltered and Beverly stumbled into him from
behind.
 The figure looked their way. For the moment before the
                239




 platform disappeared into the next higher level their eyes
 made direct connection.  Spock.
  But his flesh was unmarked.
  His skull bore no neural plates.
  All his limbs were intact.
     Beverly plucked at his arm. "Did you see him?" she asked
 urgently.
  Picard's silence was answer enough.
  "Jean-Luc... he wasn't assimilated."
     The Borg ahead of them stopped. He gestured to an
 opening in the corridor wall.
  "The repairs will be done here," it said.
     Picard stood in the entrance to the chamber. He saw the
 assimilation frame. Beside him, Beverly shuddered.
    Picard's heart raced. He had to get away. He had to go after
Spook. But if they ran from this Borg, he knew an alert would
flash through the collective. Every Borg on the station would
be searching for them.
  He decided to go to the source.
    "This assimilation chamber has malfunctioned," Picard
said.
    The Borg took on the faraway gaze that indicated it was
communing with the collective.
    "This assimilation chamber is operational," the Borg re-
plied. "You are in need of repair."
    "No," Picard said, daring to argue although the Borg never
did. "A Vulcan was here. He was placed in the frame. He was
not assimilated. Explain."
    For the moment it took the Borg to access the collective,
Picard stood on the brink of an exceptional discovery.
Perhaps Spock had found some way of defeating the assimila-
tion process. Perhaps some trick of Vulcan mind control
could--
    "The Vulcan was not assimilated because the effort would
have been a waste of resources," the Borg said unexpectedly.

                240

    The Borg's statement was mystifying. "Explain," Picard
said again.
    "The neural waveguides identified the presence of the
collective in the Vulcan's mind. Conclusion: The Vulcan is
already part of the collective. To assimilate him would be
redundant."
    Beverly gasped. Picard felt as if he had stepped into free
fall.
 Spock was already a Borg?
    And then the awful, hidden pattern instantly became clear
to both of them.
 A Borg-Romulan alliance.
 Spock spending eighty years working with Romulans.
    A new era of peace dawning between Romulus and the
Federation, leading to a reduction of the forces defending the
Neutral Zone.
    Making the Neutral Zone the perfect place from which to
launch an invasion.
 Could it be possible?
    With all the new behaviors the Borg had learned, had one
of their branches discovered a new way to assimilate an
individual's mind? Without the telltale neural plates and
bioneuronic implants that made Borg so instantly identifi-
able?
    Or was Spock's incredible treachery the result of some
perverse application of Vulcan logic, by which Romulans and
Vulcans would be spared the ravages of assimilation by
betraying the Federation?
  Either way, the answer was the same.
    It was why the Borg computer had shown him Spock when
he had asked who was responsible for the Borg-Romulan
alliance.
    "He's one of them," Picard said softly, overwhelmed by the
enormity of that knowledge. Starfleet would have to be
warned.
  "It just can't be true," Beverly said.
                241




"Delay is a waste of resources," the Borg said ominously.
"We certainly don't want to do that," Picard replied as the
anger built in him. Then he lunged out and snapped the
Borg's interface cable free.
    The Borg arced in a spasmodic dance of misfiring muscles.
Sparks sputtered from its neural implant plate and the power
connections on his chest and shoulder.
    Its high-pitched scream was piercing. Agonized, inconsola-
ble, appalling. Because it was alone.
    With instant pity, Picard swung the unresisting creature by
its shoulders and pushed it into the assimilation frame
beyond.
    The Borg thrashed and struggled there, without control. Its
laser scanner pulsed erratically.
  Above the frame, the surgical arms began to descend.
    The multiple drills and blades spun and flashed in the
light.
    With one swift motion, Picard took the photon grenade
from Beverly, twisted the activator, and threw it at the
keening Borg.
 Then he grabbed Beverly's hand and he ran.
    The explosion erupted into the corridor behind them like a
solar flare. The searing heat was intense.
 Three more Borg appeared in the corridor.
    "There's been a malfunction!" Picard told them. "The
collective is in danger. Communications are breaking
down!"
    The Borg pushed past them to the burning assimilation
chamber. They ignored Picard.
    Picard sprinted ahead of Beverly to the Pakled turbolift, hit
the wall command-panel to call a new platform. From some-
where below, he heard a platform whine to life.
 "Where to now?" Beverly asked gamely.
 Picard felt flushed with purpose.
 "Spock," Picard said. At last, he had a clear direction to
                242

follow. "If we want to save the Federation, we have to stop
him."
 Beverly regarded him with incomprehension. "How?"
 Picard drew his phaser.
 "By whatever means possible."

THIRTY-TWO

As Spock waited for the Pakled turbolift to stop, he dabbed a
corner of his robe against the pinpricks of green blood on his
temple. Despite the fact that the Borg were a life-form
dedicated to efficiency and logic, he had rarely been sub-
jected to more unanticipated developments in any of his
journeys.
    If he were merely human, he might say he was astounded,
astonished, and bewildered.
 If he were merely human.
    But as a human and a Vulcan, he would admit only to a
mild sense of unease.
     The worst of it had begun with the withdrawal of the Borg's
neural waveguides from his flesh. He had read Picard's reports.
 He knew what assimilation by the Borg entailed.
 Yet, none of it had happened.
    The wires had entered his skin. He had felt them press
through the layers of his temporal fascia to make contact with
his skull.
 And then...
                243




  Nothing.
     After less than a minute, the surgical devices had returned
 to their storage positions on the ceiling. His restraints had
 opened. And Vox and the other Borg attendants had left.
     As Spock slowly sat up from the frame, he had wanted to
 ask questions of Vox. But with logic having little to do with
 his situation, he decided not to draw attention to himself.
     If the Borg collective had for some reason forgotten him, or
 lost interest in him, he was not inclined to encourage it to
 change its groupmind.
  Still the problem remained.
  Why had he not been assimilated?
  And what was Picard doing in the heart of the collective?
    Or more accurately, why was Locutus back among the
Borg?
    When Spook had seen Locutus from the Pakled turbolift, in
the company of another Borg, so much of the mystery he had
been faced with had suddenly been revealed.
    Picard's current situation did much to explain why Com-
mander Riker had been so uncommunicative on Deep Space
9. The commander must have been aware that Picard was
missing. Perhaps he had known that his captain had returned
to the Borg.
    Spock accepted that the Borg had continued to advance
their knowledge in the time that had passed since their first
encounters with the Federation. It was quite probable they
had perfected a new. means by which to assimilate an individ-
ual's mind. Without the use of neural plates or other bioneur-
onic implants.
    It was also possible that Starfleet by now might be riddled
with such assimilated individuals.
    Indeed, if, according to Vox, an act of treason was going to
set the stage for the Borg-Romulan attack on the Federation,
who better than Picard to be that individual?
    Spock reflected on the consequences of this line of reason-
ing. IfPicard had remained assimilated since his first encoun-

                244

ter with the Borg, then everything Starfleet had accomplished
since that time, each new defensive tactic and each new
weapon, had been passed on to the Borg.
    In the face ofa Borg-Romulan attack, the Federation would
not stand a chance of surviving.
    The Pakled turbolift stopped on the hangar bay level.
Spock paused. Locutus was somewhere below in the station.
Logically, Spock understood it made no sense to try to go
after him. All that Picard knew would already be part of the
collective, so killing him would serve no purpose. Also,
assuming that Spock could even find Locutus again, he
doubted he would survive for long after attacking him.
    Thus, Spock could see only one logical course of action
available to him.
    He must return to Federation space and warn Starfleet of
Picard's treason.
    Spock stepped off the lift platform and began walking
toward the hangar bay. The immediate problem he faced was
to find a way to return to the Federation.
    The Warbirds docked with the Borg hypercube station
might be useful. Somehow, they had traversed a transwarp
conduit to arrive here. Logically, there must be some way to
reverse their course.
    Spock paused at the entrance to the hangar. Unassimilated
Romulans worked side by side with Borg-Romulans, as well
as Borg of other races and configurations.
    With less than a moment of serious consideration, Spock
ruled out a physical confrontation. Even a century ago, such a
proposition would have been foolhardy.
 Thus, the only weapon remaining to Spock was logic.
 He felt his was up to the task.
    Spock assumed the efficient attitude of the Borg. It was not
difficult for a Vulcan. Then he chose a single Borg attending
to a repair in a floor access panel. The Borg had been a
humanoid once, but its race was now impossible to identify.
                245




     Spock stepped up to it. The Borg looked up at him, no
 expression in its one organic eye.
     "Are your optical sensors intact?" Spock asked. He knew
 the risk he was taking, but there had to be some reason why he
 had not been assimilated. This was the perfect time to find
 out
      The Borg withdrew its manipulator arm from the floor
opening. A welding tube glowed on the tip of it.  "Yes," it replied.
  "Can you identify me?" Spock asked.
    "You are Borg," the Borg answered. "Are you in need of
repair?"
    For a moment, Spock wondered if he had uncovered a joke
of cosmic proportions. Could it be possible that to the Borg,
the emotionless, disciplined, and logical mind of the Vulcan
was indistinguishable from their own? But he quickly dis-
missed the idea. The Borg groupmind was based as much in
technological implants as in brain matter. If the Borg had
misidentified him as one of them, it must be for another
reason.
    "I am not in need of repair," Spock said. "I am in need of
transportation."
 The Borg stood up. "Where do you need to go?"
    Spock thought for a moment. Could it really be this
straightforward?
 "Locutus is aboard this station," Spock said.
    "That is correct," the Borg answered. "He cannot be found
in the collective because..." The Borg hesitated, taking on a
distant look, as if listening to voices only it could hear.
"Because some units are being suppressed in order to avoid
detection by Federation forces when the attack begins."
    With this confirmation of what he had already concluded,
Spock felt a new urgency to his mission. He had to trace
Picard'smLocutusttmtreachery to the source. Starfleet had
to know if there were others like him.
 "I require transportation to the point at which Locutus
                246

began his journey to this station," Spock said. "Speed is of
the essence."
 "Resources must not be wasted."
 Spock's counterargument was prompt.
    "The Federation might be tracing the route Locutus has
taken. We must inspect that route at once if the invasion is to
succeed."
 He sensed the hesitation in the Borg.
 He spoke to it in its own language.
 "Resistance is futile."
    The Borg cocked its head, then turned like a soldier on
parade.
    "A scoutship is available," the Borg said. He began to
march away.
    Spock looked around, saw that his exchange had not
attracted any attention, and followed the Borg.
    Logic appeared to have won the day. However, he couldn't
help wondering if the same rigid logic which had made the
Borg so easy to manipulate could, in the same way, someday
bring ruin to Vulcan.
    Perhaps Vulcan had been fortunate to meet the emotional
humans. Each race tempered the other with the quality most
needed, both becoming stronger.
Spock decided he shouldn't be surprised by that.
Somehow, his need to answer Kirk's call and his subse-
quent search for his lost captain had led to the discovery of an
imminent Borg invasion of the Federation, made possible by
Locutus.
    What connection any of this had to Kirk's as yet unex-
plained return was beyond even Spock's ability to surmise.
    But he did know that a connection existed. And when he
discovered it, knowing all that he knew of Jim Kirk's remark-
able life, he knew it would have its own logic. Sometimes,
beyond reason. But successful in spite of that.
    From his captain and his friend, Spock would expect no
less.
                247





THIRTY-THREE

Captain Lewinski tapped the arm of his chair as he regarded
the static backdrop of stars that filled the Monitor% view-
screen.
    His ship was among the fastest and most powerful in
Starfleet. Being forced to remain in orbit of New Titan for the
past three days, doing absolutely nothing, had been his most
difficult duty assignment in years. As far as he was concerned,
there was nothing he disliked more thar. waiting. But then, he
shared that dislike with most other starship captains. It was
probably what made them starship captains in the first place.
    Land's Earth-born accent cut abruptly through the back-
ground hum of the bridge. "Here she comes, Captain. And is
she fast!"
    The viewscreen image shifted, making the stars swim past,
until a rainbow thread of light shimmered in the upper
corner. And as quickly as that, the U.S.S. Challenger ap-
peared dead ahead, smoothly dropping from warp no more
than five hundred kilometers away.
    The massive vessel banked as it came about, adjusting its
orbit, its gleaming white hull glowing in the combined
radiance of the clustered core stars.
    "And she's beautiful," Lewinski said. Then, because he
couldn't resist engaging his Vulcan science officer in a teasing
debate, he added: "Wouldn't you agree, Mr. T'Per?"

                248

    But T'Per did not respond with a comment about the
illogic of applying a relative term like "beauty" to an artificial
device whose shape was derived from the mathematical
realities of warp velocities. Instead, she said: "Captain, we
should run a full diagnostic on our cloaking device."
    Without prompting, Ardev opened hailing frequencies to
the Challenger.
    "You've had three days to do that," the captain complained
to T'Per. "Why now?"
    T'Per was unperturbed. "When the Challenger dropped
from warp, I recorded a tachyon surge. Our cloaking field
might have reacted to the Challenger's subspace backwash. If
so, it must be recalibrated in order to remain functional at
warp speeds."
    Lewinski sighed. "Any other source possible for a tachyon
surge out here?"
    T'Per considered the question for a moment. "Only if the
Challenger were operating a cloaking device. Other than that,
we're the only source."
    "Do it," Lewinski said, then turned back to face the main
screen and Captain Simm of the Challenger.
 Except that the old Vulcan wasn't on the screen.
 It was Will Riker.
 "Will, it's good to see you again."
    "I wish it were under other circumstances, Captain. And I
don't mean to be so abrupt. But we are now operating under
General Order Three. Commander Shelby will have provided
you with encrypted orders to open at this time. Please do so,
then report to the Challenger with your science officer in
thirty minutes. Riker out."
    Riker disappeared from the screen, replaced again by the
Challenger poised against unchanging stars.
    Mr. Land turned around from his helm position. "What
was all that about?"
 Lewinski stood up and stretched, as if Will Riker's request
                249




were unremarkable. "I guess we're about to find out. Take us
in to match orbits, drop the cloak, and ... I'll be in my
quarters reviewing our orders."
    Lewinski left the bridge, feeling the eyes of his crew upon
him. General Order Three or not, it was a strange experience
to have a captain being told what to do by a commander.
    But then, this entire mission had been strange. And what-
ever was to happen next, it had to be better than just waiting.

    High above New Titan, the space-black disk of the Monitor
rippled out of nothingness, less than half the size of the
Challenger's command saucer alone. It appeared against the
larger vessel's full-spectrum gleam like the featureless shadow
of a moon passing over its planet.
    Together, these two sides of Starfleet--exploration and
defense--kept station over the desolate world beneath them.
And they did not go unnoticed.

    On the bridge of the Avatar of Tomed, Tran turned to
Salatrel in surprise.
    "Commander, a vessel has alecloaked beside the Chal-
lenger!"
    "Onscreen." Salatrel left her command chair and went to
the helm to confirm the readings herself.
    The blocky Starfleet vessel they had followed from Deep
Space 9 fluttered into focus on the main viewscreen. It was no
match for a Bird-ofrprey, let alone a Warbird, and Salatrel felt
no concern about facing it in battle.
    But the ship that had appeared beside the Challenger was a
different matter.
    Salatrel recognized it at once as a Defiant-class vessel,
specifically designed, built, and equipped to fight the Borg.
From the intercepted data which had been transmitted from
the spies among the Romulan cloaking team working with
Starfleet on that class of vessel, it was well suited for its task.
 "Identification?" Salatrel asked Tran.
                250

    Tran's screens flickered with Starfleet ship identity charts,
but the main window remained blank.
    "It has not been encountered before," Tran said. He
paused. "And it does possess a functioning cloaking device."
    Salatrel was well aware of the dilemma that placed her in.
Starfleet had clearly gone beyond the limits of the Treaty of
Algeron and was deploying cloaking technology on its war-
ships.
    Fortunately, the Borg had not determined the weaknesses
of the latest generation of Romulan cloaking devices. They
had yet to assimilate a Romulan with that knowledge. But
unfortunately, that meant a fleet of cloaked Defiant-class
vessels could be an effective force against Borg ships.
    It would be simple enough to provide the Borg with the
specific tachyon patterns to scan for, which would reveal the
presence of cloaked Starfleet vessels. But then, when the Star
Empire moved against the Borg, as was inevitable, the
greatest advantage of the Romulan fleet would have been
negated.
    Salatrel turned to her centurion, who had remained at his
post behind her chair. "Tracius, can you offer any explanation
for that ship's presence?"
    She was surprised by the tone of contempt in the centur-
ion's voice. "Look at the scans of the planer's surface."
    Salatrel called them up on Tran's board. The radiation
signature of a Borg tractor beam flared brilliant white at the
coordinates of Starbase 804.
    Salatrel's temper flared just as brilliantly. "The Borg took
the starbase!" She whirled to face Tracius. "Why?"
    His face was clouded with anger. "How can you be sur-
prised that the collective doesn't tell us everything?"
"Because they need us to conquer the Federation!"
Tracius shook his head, shifting from contempt to sorrow
in that moment. "Have you learned nothing from me? Before
you can defeat your enemy, you must understand your
enemy."
                251




    "I understand the Federation," Salatrel hissed. The old
centurion was presuming on the ties between their families
and would continue to do so at his own risk.  "And what of the Borg?"
    "What is to understand?" Salatrel flung the words at him.
"They are consumers. Single-minded accumulators of tech-
nology and living flesh. Ferengj without subtlety. Vulcans
without remorse."
    Tracius looked tired, as if all the years of living on the run
with his former student, the child of lifelong friends, had
caught up with him in the seven days since Kirk's return.
    "You understand nothing about the Borg," he said. "If they
were that direct, then they would not deal with us at all. They
would be a school of trasanara come to strip our flesh from
our bones. And when was the last time a single trasanarit
emerged from the water and tried to negotiate with its
victim?"
    Salatrel felt the mood of her bridge change. This was not
the Imperial Armada. There were no misconduct tribunals. A
breach of the chain of command could be dealt with as
quickly as the time it took to fire a disruptor. She could not
allow Tracius's challenge to go unmet.
    "If you have a point, make it quickly, old one," she warned,
trying to undercut any authority Tracius might have among
her bridge crew.
    Tracius lapsed into the singsong cadence of a tutor. "Why
do the Borg prepare a .Speaker for each race they contact?"
    Salatrel said nothing. She knew from experience that once
in teaching mode her centurion would answer his own
question.
    "To make the assimilation process easier. More efficient.
Less wasteful." He raised a weathered hand of sinew and
bone to point an accusing finger at her. "And what could be
more efficient than becoming our ally, then striking at our
heart when our guard is down?"
 Is that all? Salatrel thought, feeling relieved.
                252

             IHI~ KE, I URN

"Of course I expect the Borg to try and betray us," she said.
"Not try/" Tracius insisted. "Do you think they are stand-
ing still, waiting for the war with the Federation to conclude?
Salatrel, they are betraying us already! This assimilation of
the starbase, it's just one action that they've taken without
informing us. How many others do you suppose there to be?"
 "None," Salatrel said. "Vox told me--"
 "Vox is one of them/"
 Salatrel tightened her fists at her side. "?ox tom me--"
 "Your lover told you only what you wanted to hear!"
    Without thought, Salatrel drew her disruptor and aimed it
at Tracius.
    But it was as if her former mentor didn't notice. As if he
were sitting on the porch of her father's estate, debating the
duty of the individual to the state versus the duty of the state
to the individual.
    "Can't you see what you've done?" Tracius argued. "The
entire movement to overthrow the cowardly appeasers on
Romulus has been set aside in order for you to pursue your
revenge against one human. The Borg have never truly been
committed to our joint venture--to attacking the Federation
with such devastating force that the Empire would have no
choice but to join in the war. If they had been, do you think
Vox would have permitted you to subvert the entire plan?"
     Salatrel's hand tightened on her weapon. "The Borg
brought us the device which returned Kirk to life!" "To disfract you from everything else they do!"
    Salatrel's teeth clenched. "The Borg want Picard dead.
Kirk can do that."
    "Are there no other assassins in our movement who could
have done the same?"
 "It would not be the same thing!"
    "For history--of course it would be the same. Only for you
would it be different."
    Some of the bridge crew had stood up from their posts.
Salatrel glanced at them. Saw their expressions. She had seen
                253




their like before, on the crew of this same Warbird when she
had killed the admiral in command and joined the movement
to restore pride and purpose to the Star Empire. "Leave the bridge, Centurion."
    But Tracius pointed to the screen, instead. "The Borg are
playing their own game against you, moves within moves,
intrigue on top of intrigue. And what better diversion to
throw you than one you chose yourself?." "Tracius... leave the bridge now."
    The old centurion returned his hand to the edge of his cloak
and stood proudly, like an orator in Dartha's court.
    "You have abandoned the movement, Salatrel. You have
become exactly what our Vulcan cousins accuse us of being--
emotional, headstrong, swimming in blood, trapped in the
past, and unable to grasp the future."
 Salatrel closed her eyes. Heard the whine of her disruptor.
 Felt the heat of its discharge as Tracius fell.
     When she opened her eyes again, a single spike of green
light flickered by her chair, then faded, and was gone. She looked around her bridge again.
 All crew members, even Tran, were back at their posts.
 Order had been maintained.
 She couldn't stop to think about the price.
    Salatrel returned to her chair. "Is the Challenger in stan-
dard orbit?" she asked.
 "Affirmative, Commander."
    Salatrel hadn't heard that respectful tone in Tran's voice
for months. Ironically, Tracius's death had restored discipline
to her ship.
    "Very good," she said. "Each time it crosses the terminator
and comes into line of sight with the local sun, send a tetryon
pulse to confirm the location of Kirk."
    Tran did not look up from his board. She saw his hands
hesitate on the controls. "Commander, they will be able to
detect that pulse. We have no wormhole to hide it."
 "They'll worry about it until they see it happens each time
                254

they come out of New Titan's shadow. Then they'll catalogue
it for later study." She smiled tightly. "Know your enemy,
Tram"
 "Yes, Commander."
    Salatrel settled back in her chair. She realized she still had
her disruptor drawn and in her hand. The barrel of it was
warm where it lay across her leg.
    Her old friend had defied her, she told herself. He deserved
to go quickly. As did anyone and anything else that would
dare deny her her revenge.
 And that included the collective.

THIRTY-FOUR

Everywhere he went on the Challenger, Riker faced the ghost
of the Enterprise. There were subtle differences in the wall
coverings between his old ship and this newest one. The
computer systems had been updated to incorporate the latest
neural gel pack circuitry, replacing the supposedly antiquated
isolinear chips of the past. The bridge module was yet another
generation beyond that to which the Enterprise had been
upgraded, prior to its mission to Veridian. And the recrea-
tional facility called Ten-Forward on the Enterprise was here
known as Shuttlebay Four, probably because most Galaxy.
class ships had only three.
    But sickbay was virtually unchanged. And as Riker entered,
he half expected Beverly Crusher to step out of her office.
But instead he saw Julian Bashir at Kirk's bedside. And
255




that scene once again viscerally reminded him that the past
was gone and irretrievable.
    Bashit looked up from a complex medical scanner as Riker
approached.
    Kirk was still in induced sleep. En route to New Titan,
Bashir had confirmed that reducing the reanimated patient's
metabolic rate slowed the nanites as well. Each hour Kirk
remained unconscious was an hour longer he would live.
 But he still had no more than a handful of days left.
 "I'm due in a briefing in ten minutes," Riker said. In
 present circumstances, there was no time for pleasantries,
 and fortunately Bashir didn't take offense. "What couldn't
 you tell me over the comm system?"
    Bashir frowned. "Under General Order Three, I can't tell
you anything over the comm system. Enemy interception and
all that."
 Riker sighed. 'Tm here. Tell me."
    Bashit pointed to the scanner. Riker recognized some of
the technical schematics on its display--Starfleet's reverse
engineering of the Borg implants that had been recovered
from Captain Picard.
    "I've been going through the classified files you provided,"
Bashit explained. "They have far more detail than the papers
that were published in--"
    "Doctor, I've got a missing starbase I have to deal with. The
Borg could return .at any second. And I just don't have the
time for lengthy explanations."
    Bashir gestured with Open hands, indicating his helpless-
ness. "Bottom line, Commander--the implant in the
patient's brain is a Borg device."
     Riker put out a hand to the scanner to steady himself.
"Why would the Borg reanimate James T. Kirk?" "I don't know if it was the Borg who did this."
 Riker blinked at Bashir. "You said it was a Borg implant."
 "But the nanites aren't. And the nanites are what restored
                256

him... physically, at least. Whatever brought his..."
Bashir looked uncomfortable as he pronounced the Vulcan
term. "Whatever brought his katra back to his body is beyond
any science I know. And not within the realm of what. either
the implant or the nanites could have accomplished."
"Any idea where the nanites came from?" Riker asked.
Bashit looked weary. "It took some time, but I've been able
to isolate and disassemble some of them. If anything, I'd say
they're based on an original model designed by the Daystrom
Institute, then modified for a different manufacturing
process."
     Riker forced a smile. "So someone stole a design and
figured out a different way to build them?" "Essentially."
 "Are they of Borg manufacture?"
    "That's just it," Bashit said. "According to these classified
files, all Borg computer circuits encountered up to now
universally contain traces of a distinctive tridithalifane dop-
ing agent in their subprocessors. The implant has it, but the
subprocessors in these nanites do not."
    Riker felt a sudden wave of apprehension. Even if the Borg
had assimilated the technology behind the nanites intact, the
modifications arising from assimilation would have laced
them with tridithalifane. The fact that the tridithalifane
wasn't present could mean only one thing. "Do I understand
what you're saying here? Two different technologies are
present in Kirk?"
     Bashir nodded glumly. Riker could see the doctor had
reached the same conclusion he just had.
 "Someone's working with the Borg."
 "It would appear so," Bashir said.
    Riker felt as if the Challenger's artificial gravity was fluctu-
ating. The only characteristic of the Borg which gave Starfleet
any hope of defeating them was that at a certain base level,
the collective was absolutely predictable.
               257




That was why Picard had been chosen for his mission.
Starfleet already knew how the Borg reacted to Locutus.
Everything Picard hoped to accomplish was predicated on
the Borg reacting exactly the same way again.
    But what if the Borg were no longer operating on their own?
If, in some unfathomable fashion, the Borg had learned the
behavior of cooperation, then a most unwelcome unpredicta-
bility had just been added to the equation.
    "Doctor, with the additional information in the classified
files, do you feel it is possible for you to remove the implant
from Kirk?"
 "What about Dr. Crusher?"
    "Dr. Crusher is missing. We have no idea where she is, or
when she might return."
 Bashit looked at his patient.
But Riker didn't have time for thoughtful consideration.
"Dr. Bashir--if the Borg have allied themselves with
another race, then all of Starfleet's efforts to develop adequate
defenses are at risk. It is imperative that we release Kirk from
his programming, so we will be able to interrogate him about
who did this to him, and why." Riker held Bashir's gaze with
an intent stare. "Now, I ask you again. Can you remove the
implant?"
    Bashir lowered his voice, as if afraid his patient could hear
him.
    "There is no question that I can remove it, Commander. I
just don't know if the patient will survive the attempt."
    Riker closed his eyes for a moment. There was no time to
weigh pros and cons. No time to calculate the odds.
    He looked at Bashir, daring the doctor to question him.
"Do it."
    "You're asking me to perform a procedure which might kill
him."
 "You may consider it an order, doctor."
  Bashir hit the main control on the scanner, shutting it off.
                258

"With respect, I feel compelled to file a formal protest with
Starfleet Medical."
 "By all means," Riker said. "After the procedure."
    Riker saw the moment of decision in Bashir's eyes. He
would do it, against his better judgment.
     "I'll need an hour to familiarize myself with Dr. Crusher's
notes and to have the necessary instruments replicated."
 "The full facilities of the Challenger are yours."
 "You'll pardon me if I'm not thrilled at the prospect."
     Riker left without replying. It was surprising how much he
liked the doctor. Lots of attitude, but he could follow orders.
 He decided young Dr. Bashir would go far in Starfleet.
 Provided Starfleet survived.

THIRTY-FIVE

Data had participated in many medical procedures in the
past, though they had usually involved emergency care. The
extraction of the Borg implant from James T. Kirk was one of
the few times he had actually assisted in a surgical bay, and
part of him looked forward to the experience. He found it
brought anticipation of enjoyment.
    However, another part of him recognized the seriousness of
the procedure, because the outcome could have a direct
bearing on the survival of the Federation. That brought
anticipation of a different type.
 Data decided that having emotions was indeed making it
                       259




easier for him to understand why humans so often seemed
confused. The experience of both wanting and dreading
something at the same time was akin to contemplating the
wave and particle nature of light. Unfortunately, there existed
no quantum equations to describe the duality of conflicting
emotions.
  Yet, Data thought.
    But then he wondered if that question had ever been
addressed on Trilex. And whether the answer had somehow
contributed to that society's destruction.
    "Mr. Data," Bashit said, interrupting his musings, "if you
would please inspect the primary branch of the implant's
main core."
 Data immediately concentrated on the task at hand.
    Dr. Bashir had requested Data's assistance in this proce-
dure because of the android's ability to remain in direct
contact with the Challenger~ computers. Thus, all Starfleet's
information about the Borg, as well as Beverly Crusher's
analysis of the implants she had removed from Captain
Picard, would be instantly available.
    Data did regret that even though he had the medicai
knowledge to guide Bashir's surgery, he did not have the
motor skills to perform it himself. After observing Bashir
once, Data would, of course, always be able to re-create the
identical operation, in the same way he could re-create great
musical performances, note for note. But since human bodies
were so varied, ifiside and out, the ability to exactly repro-
duce certain movements would not guarantee the next pa-
tient to receive the exact same operation would survive
Data's ministrations. A successful surgeon's fluid skill de-
pended on being able to adapt to constantly changing
conditions--and bodies.
    However, Data could still contribute to Bashit's success,
and he began his work.
 Before him, in the glow of the sterilization field surround-
                260

ing the surgical table, Dr. Bashir had reflected a flap of Kirk's
scalp to expose the occipital bone at the base of the skull. A
small, rectangular opening, two centimeters by three centime-
ters, now punctured the skull. The excised bone fragment was
floating in a nutrient bath, to be replaced at the procedure's
end.
    Within the opening, the dull yellow dura mater had been
peeled back to expose the occipital gyrus of the cerebrum,
sitting atop the cerebellum. A computer display screen was
suspended from the ceiling, over the patient's head. On it was
displayed an enlarged, three-dimensional sensor model of the
skull's interior, in which the main branch of the Borg implant
could be seen at the boundary between the two components
of the brain.
    Bashir had threaded eight molecular wires through the
brain tissue and made contact with the implant at eight key
points. The wires would draw off any power-discharge the
implant might make in response to being disassembled.
    Data verified that the placement of the molecular wires
matched that described by Dr. Crusher as those least likely to
cause harm to the patient. "The implant's power source has
been correctly isolated," Data said.
    "Thank you," Bashir replied. He rubbed the back of his
gloved hand against the red cap he wore, then held the small
cylinder of a number two tractor scalpel near the exposed
brain tissue. With deft movements of his fingers, he began to
use the miniature force field projected by the scalpel to gently
ease apart a path through the brain tissue along the wires.
    Data and Bashit both watched the progress of the pathway
on the sensor screen. Neurons were being disconnected with
each pulse of the scalpel. But the disruption was so minor, no
permanent damage would result. At least, if the patient
survived.
    As Bashir continued with the procedure, Data multitasked
his observations among the display screen, Kirk's skull, and
261




Dr. Bashir, while constantly reviewing Crusher's notes, con-
firming each step Bashir took, and suggesting refinements
when Bashir requested:.
    Data was constantly impressed by Bashir's calm and profi-
ciency. However, one hour into the procedure, he began to
wonder when the young human would realize he was facing a
hopeless task.
    An hour and a half into the procedure, Data took it upon
himself to inform the doctor of his conclusions.
    "Dr. BasMr, it is clear by now that what you are attempting
to do is hopeless."
    Bashir responded by glaring at him. "What is the condition
of the implant?" he demanded.
    "Eighty percent of the implant has been separated from the
brain tissue," Data confirmed. "Bleeding is minimal. The
patient's vitals are stable."
"Then that means only twenty percent to go," BasMr said.
Data was puzzled by the challenge in the doctor's voice.
Data was not questioning his expertise, only commenting on
the inescapable facts.
    "Dr. Bashir, the remaining twenty percent of the implant
cannot be removed by the procedures Dr. Crusher used on
Captain Picard. Please recall that many of the Borg implants
in the captain were connected to secondary nerves located
outside of the brain. In those instances, Dr. Crusher was able
to sever and remove nerve sections for later replacement and
regrowth. That is not possible with the brain. That is, if you
are hoping to retain the integrity of the personality currently
inhabiting it."
    "Is there anything you can tell me in ten words or less?"
Bashir snapped.
    "If you continue using the tractor scalpel on the remaining
sections of the implant, you will also cause irreparable harm
to the patient's cerebellum. You have reached the point where
the implant's fractal tendrils are too tightly entwined to
262

remove from either the blood supply or the brain matter
itself."
 "That wasn't ten words or less."
    Data was prepared to go on for an hour, citing all the
pertinent passages in Dr. Crusher's notes. But given Bashir's
mood, he simply said: "If you continue, Kirk will be dead in
twenty minutes. Ten words exactly." Data wondered if he had
been understood correctly. "Except for those words at the
end. And these words."
 "That will be enough, Mr. Data."
    Bashir looked down at the exposed brain of his patient.
Data used a sterile pad to draw away the blood that collected
in it.
    "I've gone too far," Bashir said. Data sensed Bashir wasn't
directing his words to anyone. He was thinking aloud. "A
partially functioning implant will completely paralyze his
brain-wave activity. He'll never wake up."
    "My cursory examination of the Challenger's medical
library suggests that other techniques are available," Data
volunteered.
 Bashir looked up at him with hope. "Well...?"
    Data felt contrite. "Unfortunately, they would require
extensive study and experimentation before they could be
applied in this case."
    Data saw Bashir's shoulders sag beneath his surgical gown.
"Then I have no choice, do IT'
 "You could place the patient in stasis," Data suggested.
    "Check the literature," Bashir said with a sigh. "Stasis
won't slow down the type of nanite he's filled with."
    Data gazed down at the bleeding opening into the patient's
body. He was suddenly struck by the terrible certainty that he
was going to witness a human being die. And there was
nothing he could do about it.
    He looked at Bashir, wondering if the doctor had reached
the same realization.
                263




    But Bashir kept his eyes on the patient. He picked up a
more powerful tractor scalpel.
Data supposed that was the difference between them.
Bashir still thought there was something he could do.
Data did not look forward to the next twenty minutes.
After drawing a deep breath, Bashir held the tractor scalpel
close to the opening. Data saw the gentle pressure he used to
activate the force field. Despite the urgency the doctor felt, he
was still proceeding methodically.
 Until the Challenger's collision alarm sounded.
    Data's subsystems accelerated to critical speed as he antici-
pated a spray of blood erupting from the opening. No human
he knew could have suppressed a reflexive response to the
sirens that warbled throughout the ship, and Data fully
expected the scalpel force field to have torn a hole through the
patient's brain. Death wouldn't take twenty minutes. It would
take twenty seconds.
    But against all of Data's expectations, the opening did not
disappear in a spray of blood.
    Data looked across at Bashir. The doctor's eyes were
clenched shut.
 Data felt astonishment.
    The doctor had actually held his hand steady. His skill and
self-awareness had been that great.
    "Bashir to bridge," the doctor growled, barely containing
his fury. "What the hell was that?!"
    "Sorry, doctor," Riker's voice replied from the overhead
speakers. "We just had a ship drop out of warp nine point
nine five, two kilometers off our bow. The computer re-
sponded on automatic."
    Bashir slowly drew his hand away from the patient's head.
"I don't care what it was," he said in low and angry tones. "If
you don't want me to decapitate my patient, shut off all alarm
systems to sickbay now!"
 In the silence that followed, Data couldn't help himself. He
                264

was designed to acquire knowledge. "Commander Riker,
what kind of vessel can travel at that speed? Are we being
attacked by the Borg?"
    But the tension of battle wasn't detectable in Riker's voice.
"It's an experimental Starfleet transport, Data. Two big warp
nacelles and not much else. From Earth."
    Bashir gazed up in exasperation at the sickbay ceiling and
the speakers there. "Does any of this have a point, Com-
mander?"
    From his tone of voice, Data could almost picture Riker
smiling. "It seems you were premature in concluding there
was only one doctor in Starfleet who could deal with Kirk's
neural implant."
 Data saw the immense confusion on Bashir's face.
    "That wasn't my conclusion, Commander. Starfleet Medi-
cal said Beverly Crusher was the only physician on active
duty with experience in--"
    Bashit and Data both turned to look into the center of
sickbay as they heard a transporter harmonic begin.
    "We're beaming a consulting physician directly to sick-
bay, doctor. He's been fully briefed. And should be able
to help."
    Data watched as the transporter cloud took on the shape of
a squat pyramid. For a moment, he thought a Medusan might
have been beamed on board, though that ephemeral race was
hardly known for its physical skills.
    But then he saw the cloud resolve into a humanoid sitting
in a mobility chair.
    Data felt his emotion chip accelerate as he realized he
recognized the figure,
    The mobility chair spun around on its treads and then
bounced slightly as it headed for the surgical table, motor
humming.
    The figure it carried was thin and stooped, his hair a dull
gray, his admiral's uniform so loose it appeared to be two
                265




sizes too large. Deep creases crosshatched his face, except
where a sparse white beard mottled his cheeks and chin.
    But there was an intelligence and a quickness in his eyes
that belied the age that hung around him like a cloud.
Whatever shape his body was in, a much younger person
dwelt within it.
  "Admiral McCoy?" Data asked.
  "Leonard H. McCoy?" Bashir croaked.
    The admiral ignored Data to squint in disdain at the young
doctor. "Who were you expecting? Dancing girls?"
    Data was surprised to see Bashir actually tremble and
blush. The young doctor had held his scalpel steady when the
collision alarm had sounded, but this visitation by the
greatest doctor to have served Starfleet had apparently trig-
gered a loss of control.
    Data saw the admiral look over at him. "You I know,"
McCoy said. His voice was low and hoarse. "Bet you're not
surprised, are you?"
 "Actually, I am, sir."
    McCoy narrowed his eyes. "Thought you were an an-
droid."
 "I now have an emotion chip, sir."
    McCoy rolled his eyes. "What they won't build these days.
Mind you, I could've put one of those chips to good use in an
old friend way back when .... "McCoy turned his attention
back to Bashir. "Correct me if I'm mistaken, doctor, but
don't you have a patient on that table?"
    Bashir nodded, quickly checking Kirk's vital signs on the
display screen.
    McCoy rolled up beside Bashir at the head of the surgical
table. "Well, pull back the sheet. Let me see."
    Bashir understood what McCoy meant. He lifted the sheet
covering Kirk's face.
    Instantly McCoy's eyes filled with tears. Data saw his jaw
wobble. "Ah, Jim," he sighed, almost inaudibly. "Scotty was
right after all."

     Then McCoy abruptly sat up straight in his chair, all sign of
emotion dropping from his face. He looked up at Bashir.
 "Julian Bashir?"
 Bashir nodded.
     "You're the one who's been pestering Starfleet Medical for
all the old records on Jim Kirk?" "Yes, sir."
 "Anyone think of calling his personal physician?"
    Bashir's eyes were wide. "Uh, sir, to be honest... we
thought... well, I thought you were dead .... "
    "Well, I'm not!" McCoy barked. He thumped his chest.
"One hundred and forty-four next month. On my third heart,
if you can believe it. Grow a new set of lungs every year. And
I've got ten new meters of cloned intestines writhing in my
guts. And you know why?" Bashir shook his head.
    "Neither do I, son." He slapped the arms of his mobility
chair. Then his hand went to a small box at his waist. Data
heard microservos whine, and the ancient admiral rose easily
from his chair and stepped forward with the characteristic
deliberate motion of someone wearing an exoskeleton.
    McCoy braced himself on the edge of the surgical table,
studying the display screen. "Neural implant. Fractal tendril
growth. You've isolated the power supply, but that's not
enough. Too entwined in the vascular supply, artificial den-
drite entanglement--"
    "Artificial dendrites? Is that what it is?" Bashir asked
excitedly.
    "I've seen it before," McCoy said. "Sigma Draconis VI. Or
was it VII? Anyway, had to disconnect a complete cerebellum
by pass and then reconnect an entire brain. Had some help,
mind you. But the de~ails aren't important. Don't remember
them anyway. This new Borg rubbish, it's just a variation. Lot
simpler, too."
 Bashir held out his scalpel.
                267




 McCoy looked at him and, from somewhere in those craggy
 features, found a warm smile.
     "Why, thank you, son. But those days are long gone." He
 held up his hands. Once they had worked miracles, Data
 knew, but now they were skeletal and shaking.
    McCoy tapped one thin finger against his temple. "But I've
still got it up here. You listen to what I tell you, and we're
going to do just fine."
    Data could see the wonder in Bashit's eyes. But the young
doctor stared at McCoy just a moment too long.
    "Well .... "the admiral said with annoyance, "get a move
on. You're a doctor, not a Horta."
    Bashir nodded and brought his tractor scalpel back to
Kirk's skull.
    But McCoy laid a gentle hand on the young doctor's arm.
"Tell you what, son. First you want to trade that scalpel in for
a number eight. We're going to forget about Jim's gray matter
for a bit, concentrate on shunting some of his arteries, then
we're going to use a laser... an honest-to-God laser beam
like we were some kind of witch doctors. And once we get in
there, we're going to section a path on the other side of the
implant."
    As McCoy began explaining the techniques they would use,
Data stepped back from the surgical table, knowing that his
assistance was no longer required. He was content to watch
the effortless blending of raw talent and seasoned experience
that unfolded before him.
    Riker and Deanna Troi arrived a few minutes after the
doctors began working together. La Forge and Worf followed
shortly after. Together they watched as the hands of Starfleet's
youngest generation, guided by the wisdom of Starfieet's
oldest, worked a new miracle that neither could have per-
formed without the other.
    As the final section of the implant was removed, and Bashir
quickly closed the wound, pronouncing the procedure a
268

success, Data watched as a teardrop escaped McCoy's glitter-
ing eyes.
 A teardrop of happiness, Data knew.
 And he wondered who, in eighty years, might cry for him.

THIRTY-SIX

Kirk heard the metallic shriek of the bridge hit the rocks of
Veildian IIl, and he opened his eyes.
    He smelled dust. Felt the heat of the Veildian sun. Heard
the twisted struts creak as they settled.
 As something groaned and moved within them.
    Kirk stepped closer. His boots crunched on small rocks and
gravel, each sound crisp and pure. He peered into the tangle
of twisted metal. There was someone trapped inside. Oh, yes, Kirk thought, I'm there.
    The duality of his existence in this place did not trouble
him. It seemed the way things should be.
    The desert wind picked up, and he felt it like the hot breath
of a pursuing predator.
    "It is getting closer," a voice told him, confirming what he
felt.
    Kirk turned away from the sight of himself feebly struggling
in the wreckage of the bridge.
 Someone else was approaching, the sun behind him.
    Kirk held his hand up to protect his eyes from the glare of
the light. Dimly he realized that the sun was in a different
                269




part of the sky and that he had no idea what was shining so
brightly behind this... .. Vulcan?
 Kirk recognized the jewels and script on the robes.
    The Vulcan raised his hand, exposing his palm, separating
his fingers in a gesture of both greeting and farewell. Duality
again.
    From somewhere on top of the rocks towering over him,
something exploded. A band of energy tippled through the
sky, sparking and crackling. And then it was gone.
 But the Vulcan remained.
 "Spook?" Kirk asked
    "He is not among us," the Vulcan explained. Then he
stepped closer.
 Kirk smiled as he recognized him.
 "Ambassador Sarek!"
    Spock's father inclined his head, as if he had not heard his
name spoken for a long time.
    Kirk felt he had to make some apology for the condition he
was in. If not for himself, then for his other self, lying in the
wreckage.
 Dying, Kirk thought.
"I'm afraid things are... a bit of a mess," Kirk said.
The ambassador studied him, as if he were about to speak.
To impart great wisdom. He did. "There is no need to
concern yourself, Captain."
    Kirk knew, then. The reason that both he and Sarek must
meet like this. He heard scrabbling on the rocks. Someone
else was climbing down. Sarek waited, the breeze stirring his
robes.
 "You're dead and I'm dying, aren't I?" Kirk asked.
    Sarek looked up at the sky, stating at something Kirk
couldn't see. "Have you had this dream before?"
    Kirk looked down at his hands. Flexed them. Watched the
muscles and sinews move beneath his skin. Everything was in
                270

exquisite focus. Each movement perfect. Far too real. "Is this
a dream?"
     Sarek turned back to him. "That is not the question.
Logically, you should ask yourself: Is this the dream?"
 "You mean, the dream where I die."
 "You have had it all your life, have you not?"
    "When we melded minds," Kirk said with sudden under-
standing. "When you came to me so long ago, looking for
your son .... You saw my dreams?" "It is the way of things"
 "ls that why you're here now?"
 "What do you think?"
    Kirk smiled. "Ah, then this is my dream. And I'm the one
who makes the rules."
    Sarek looked at Kirk with a skeptical expression that only a
Vulcan could make. "I do not believe rules are what you are
noted for."
    Kirk stepped aside as Picard rushed past him, hurrying to
the other Kirk, beneath the wreckage.
 "He thinks I'm dying. The other captain of the Enterprise."
 "I have melded minds with him as well."
     Kirk was intrigued. "Is that what brought you here? Be-
cause there's something we've all shared?" "Or will share," Sarek replied.
    Kirk was growing impatient with this dream. "I don't like
riddles."
 "There are none here."
Kirk watched as Picard lowered his head in sorrow.
"That's wrong, isn't it? Picard thinking I've died. Be-
cause... "Kirk held out his hand, struggling to complete his
thought, trying to remember something he knew he should
know. "I didn't die here."
    Sarek folded his robes closer to him. Kirk was surprised by
how frail the elder Vulcan suddenly seemed.
 "Ask yourself this question, Captain. You have always
               271





known how you will die." Sarek's eyes seemed to burn into
him like phasers. "Is this the dream?"
    Kirk didn't even have to think about the answer. "No. You
know that."
 Sarek nodded once. "As do you."
    Then a light shone out from behind the Vulcan once again.
He turned toward it, robe fluttering, as if the light blew
against him like wind. "Sarek, wait!"
 The Vulcan hesitated.
 "If not here... then where? When?"
    To Kirk, it seemed as if Sarek's eyes were as bright as the
light which engulfed them both.
 "You know, Captain. You have always known."
 "Then the dream I've always had is real?"
    Sarek smiled then, the first time Kirk had ever seen his face
express anything other than a stern stoicism.
    "You taught my son a song once, Captain." The years
melted from Sarek. He was young, strong, and his smile was
dazzling. "Life is but a dream .... "
    Kirk held his hand up to block the brilliance that came for
Sarek. All of Veildian dissolved around him. His voice, their
voices, became something else, as they became something
else. What they had always been.
 Live long and prosper, Captain ....
 But.for how long... ?
    Look to the stars, James T. Kirk... second on the right...
straight on till morning ....

    Kirk squinted at the blinding light that shone past his hand
and clenched eyes. He tried to turn his head but felt a sudden
pain, as if someone had punched a hole clear through it.
 "Turn it off," he said. His throat hurt. He coughed.
    The light vanished. He watched the silhouette of a lamp on
the end of a folded armature move away.
 There was someone leaning over him.
                272

 "Sarek... ?"
    "Seventy-eight damn years floating around in God knows
where. Then you come back from the dead, and the first thing
you do is insult me."
 Kirk's eyes opened wide.
 "Bones? Bones?'
 He ignored the pain and sat up, grabbing his friend's arm.
 But it felt so thin and...
 Kirk saw McCoy's face.
 "What happened? You look... so old."
 McCoy grimaced. "Good to see you, too, Captain."
    Kirk looked around. He was in some kind of sickbay.
Different from what he was used to. Larger area. Smaller
equipment.
 There were other people by his diagnostic bed.
 He recognized them.
 And why not? He had tried to kill some of them.
    Geordi La Forge. The android, Data. Woff, the Klingon
who was no longer an enemy. A woman he didn't recognize,
with solid black pupils. And...
    Kirk stared at the tall man with the dark beard. "Com-
mander Will Riker?"
 Riker stepped forward. Held out his hand.
 Kirk shook it.
 "Captain Kirk. It is a pleasure, sir."
    Kirk took a breath, hardly knowing where to begin. "My
first impression is that I've been dreaming. But... I haven't
been, have IT'
 Riker smiled. "No, sir."
 "This is the twenty-fourth century?"
    Riker nodded. "Then you do remember what happened on
Veridian?"
    Kirk rubbed the back of his head. Felt something covering
his skin there. It was where the pain came from. "Is that
where 1 was? Someone was going to launch a missile, I recall.
We stopped him."
               273




 "Yes, sir. You and Captain Picard."
 Kirk stiflened as he heard that name.
 "Are you all right, Captain?"
    McCoy clanked around by Kirk. Kirk didn't know what
made the noise. It sounded as if McCoy had something
mechanical strapped to his legs, beneath his clothes.
    "Of course, he's all right," McCoy muttered. "He's just had
his head opened up and his brain cut into. Why wouldn't he
be all right? It's not as if he's ever used it."
    Kirk looked at McCoy with narrowed eyes. "Bones...
how old are you?"
 "Don't start with me. I'm still your doctor."
    "Captain Kirk," Riker began. "I'm going to leave you with
Admiral McCoy to get you caught up on... present condi-
tions. But, I have to know, sir. Do you remember what
happened to you after you assisted Captain Picard on Veri.
dian?"
    Kirk felt every muscle in his body tense at the second
mention of that name. And he suddenly knew what he had to
do. "I remember falling," he said. "Someone spoke to me...
and then I woke up here."
    Riker nodded glumly. "I see. Well, if anything comes back
to you, it's of critical importance for us to know how you
came to be here."
    "Believe me, Commander. I've got some questions I'd like
answered, myself." He turned to McCoy. Stared at him in
disbelief. "Admiral McCoy?"
 McCoy waved a frail hand. "It's a long story."
 Kirk didn't smile. "How about... Spock?"
     McCoy sighed. "Let's start at the beginning." He leaned
forward. "With the wake Scotty threw for you." "A wake?"
    McCoy grinned. "You should have been there, Jim. We had
ourselves a time."
    Kirk glanced at Riker and shrugged. Then he settled back
in his diagnostic bed and let his history lesson begin.
                274

    Once the sickbay doors had closed behind them, Riker
stopped in the corridor. He had to know.
    "You heard what he said," he told Deanna. "He remem-
bered Veridian, then waking up here. And nothing in be-
tween."
"Yet he knew your name, Commander," Data said.
"He's very confused," Deanna offered. "His feelings are in
great turmoil. Especially in his reaction to seeing Admiral
McCoy. Kirk remembers him as a much younger man."
    "But is he lying about not remembering anything?" Riker
asked.
 "Yes," Deanna said. "I believe so."
 "You believe so. But you're not sure?"
     "Will, he's suddenly jumped almost eighty years into his
future. We should expect his feelings to be erratic."
 "Erratic. In what way?"
    Deanna looked embarrassed. "Both times when you men-
tioned Captain Picard's name... I felt such... hatred com-
ing from Kirk."
    Riker polled Data, La Forge, and Worf to see if they had
any similar observations to offer. "Is it possible Kirk blames
Picard for his death on Veridian?"
    "It wasn't a focused impression, Will." Deanna thought for
a moment. "It was similar to the impressions I get from
Bajorans when they think about the Cardassian occupation of
their world. How they feel when they think about the atroci-
ties the Cardassians committed. That was Kirk's reaction to
Captain Picard."
 "There's no reason why Kirk should feel that way."
     "Unless," Deanna said, "he is still under the influence of
whatever programming he was subjected to."
 "Even with the Borg implant removed?"
 Deanna nodded.
 Riker turned to Worf. "Mr. Worf, I want Kirk under
               275


constant surveillance. But don't let him know. He's not
familiar with our techniques. If he doesn't know he's being
observed, maybe he'll slip up."
    "Sir," Worf said, "since my encounter with Kirk on
Qo'noS, I have studied his historical record quite extensively.
He does not seem the type of individual to 'slip up.'"
    "We had better hope someone does," Riker said. "Because
if we don't find out who's working with the Borg soon, we're
all going to be programmed. Just like Kirk."
    The rest of his crewmates remained silent as Riker looked
back at the doors to sickbay,
    The man behind that door had once been one of Starfleet's
greatest heroes.
 Now he might be its greatest enemy.
    And to save the Federation, Riker knew that if the moment
came, he could and would deliver Kirk to his final death,
without a moment's hesitation.
    He saw Deanna sense those dark thoughts within him and
turn away.
 Riker felt the sting of isolation.
 He wondered how Kirk felt.

THIRTY-SEVEN

In an instant, blazing like a sudden sun, the Challenger
moved from the shadow of New Titan, into the light.
    A tetryon pulse accompanied the moment of transition, as
it had for every orbit the great ship had made of this planet.
    In the Challenger's astrophysics and astronomy labs, the
anomalous radiation spike was noted, commented upon, but
set aside in deference to other, more pressing concerns.
Specifically, the analysis of the transwarp conduit opening
which had been recorded by the Monitor's sensors.
    Thus the tetryon pulse came and a small part of it returned
to its source, after interacting with and reflecting from the
tridithalifane in what was left of Kirk's implant.

276

    On the bridge of the Tomed, cloaked one hundred thousand
kilometers from New Titan and the Challenger and her
companion ship, Tran read the sensor return on the tetryon
pulse he had sent. It wasn't good news.
    "Commander," he said, not daring to look up. "The
implant has been removed from Kirk." He prepared to die,
anticipating the first shock of the disruptor beam that would
disassemble him.
    Instead, he became aware of Salatrel standing behind him,
studying his screens over his shoulder.
 "I was told that would be impossible," she said.
 There was a flat tone in her voice. It had been there since
               277




she had killed her centurion. To Tran, it reminded him of
Vox.
 "Do you want me to send a finer pulse, Commander?"
 "Would it be detected?"
 "t believe so," Tran said;
    "And if it were detected, how long before the Starfleet
vessels would suspect that a cloaked ship was nearby?"
    Tran knew there was no answer he could give which would
please her.
    "Starfleet has more experience with cloaking devices than
we suspected, Commander. I believe they would detect our
presence within minutes."
    Salatrel walked forward until she was a shadow against the
main viewscreen. She held her hands behind her back. Tran
saw she still carried her disruptor. She had not reholstered it
since she had fired it last.
    "I was told the implant would be impossible to remove,"
she repeated. Speaking to herself, Tran knew. "I was told that
even if it realfunctioned, Kirk's programming would hold."
Salatrel turned to face Tran and the rest of her bridge crew.
"It appears I was lied to, does it not?" No one said anything.
    "There is only one chance we have to succeed," Salatrel
said. She paced back and forth in front of the image of the
Challenger and the smaller, dark ship at its side. "And that is
for Kirk to kill Picard. Only then can honor be restored to my
family. Does anyone disagree?"
 No one did. No one even breathed.
    "Picard must die. The Borg and Federation must destroy
themselves. And then the wings of the Romulan Empire will
embrace all the stars of all the galaxy."
 Salatrel turned to face the Challenger.
    "Take us in, Subcommander. Full impulse. Flood both
ships with high-resolution sensors, then take an evasive
course behind the sun." She glanced back over her shoulder.
"They'll look for us. But they won't find us."
                278

    Tran braced himself for what he must do. "With respect,
Commander. What shall I set the sensors for? What, exactly,
are we looking for?"
     "I want to know Kirk's position and location. Other than
that, I want to know if any other Borg are on that ship."
 "Borg?" Tran said. "On a Federation vessel?"
    "The Borg have lied to us, Subcommander, by claiming to
be our allies. What if they've played the same game with the
Federation? What if another Speaker is there on that ship,
helping to prepare Starfleet for a sneak attack on our Em-
pire?"
    Tran was appalled by the possibility. By working with the
Borg, the Romulan dissidents had revealed almost all the
military secrets of the Star Empire to the collective. If the
Borg did decide to move against the Empire with the com-
bined might of the Federation .... "We would have no
defense," Tran said. "We would have... nothing."
    "Except honor," Salatrel replied. "Tracius and I agreed on
that lesson, at least. Honor is the one possession which no
enemy can take from you, unless you allow it to be taken."
Her eyes grew dark. "And I will not allow mine to be taken.
No matter what the price."
 Tran thought over his commander's words.
 Perhaps she was right.
    Even if all the dreams of the dissidents were lost, even if the
appeasers in power had led the Empire to its doom, at least
Tran could still claim an honorable death.
    Or, he thought pragmatically, he could assassinate Salatrel
and take command of the Tomed himself.
    He set a flyby course to intercept the Challenger. The war
against the Federation wasn't scheduled to begin for another
two days.
 There was still time to make a decision.
 Tran was certain it would be the right one.
 His honor depended upon it.




THIRTY-EIGHT

Kirk stood in front of a mirror in an alcove of sickbay,
examining himself in his uniform--white sweater, burgundy
jacket, black trousers with their pinstripe. He turned around
once, then looked back in the mirror. After a moment, he saw
his reflection turn, on a three-second delay. The uniform was
a perfect fit. All that was missing was his Starfleet insignia.
    He looked again at the tiny badge he had been given instead
to pin onto his jacket--the Starfleet delta set on an angled
rectangle. Supposedly, it functioned as a communicator, as
well as allowing the ship's computer to track his every move.
Kirk decided he missed the old handheld model. Getting set
in his ways, he supposed.
    He slipped out of the patient alcove and found McCoy back
in his mobility chair, nodding off in front of a desktop
computer terminal. The chair was a considerable improve-
ment over the .one Chris Pike had been confined to. But
McCoy was in better shape than Pike had been. And the
exoskeleton support frame he wore beneath his clothes gave
him the ability to move around as if he were still under his
own power.
    The old doctor jerked awake as Kirk came near. It was still
a shock for Kirk to see his friend in such frail condition. But
then, his own condition wasn't much better. Before the
selective painkillers Dr. Bashir had given him, the pains in his
joints from the nanites had been almost unbearable.
                280

 "Bones... you say they... 'replicated' this uniform?"
    McCoy blinked at him, as he were still unused to seeing
Kirk. "Fancy new name for synthesizers, far as I can tell."
    Kirk gently probed the incision on the back of his head.
McCoy said that with the latest advancements in medical
science, the bone and skin would heal scarfree in less than five
days.
 But Kirk didn't have five days.
 "You give any more thought to what I said?" McCoy asked.
 "You think they'd go for it?"
    McCoy smiled. "Don't ask me how it happened, but you're
a hero to these people. Hell, all of us fossils from the
Enterprise are."
 Kirk shrugged. "We were just doing our jobs."
    "The point is, Jim, these people would do anything in their
power if they thought it would help you."
    Kirk thought it over. McCoy wanted him to take a modified
shuttle, switch off all the artificial gravity and inertial damp-
ening, then accelerate up to near light-speed and let relativity
take its course. Einsteinian time dilation wasn't a factor in
faster-than-light warp travel, but it still existed at slower-
than-light velocities. And McCoy believed that if Kirk went
off on a one-week flight, in the three years that would pass
during his absence, Starfleet Medical might have developed a
way of removing the nanites from his body.
    "The point is, Bones, you have no guarantee I'll even live a
week with these nanites inside me."
 "It's worth taking the risk, isn't it?"
    Kirk shrugged. "There has to be an end to it sometime,
Bones."
    "I didn't get to be one hundred and forty-four with a
defeatist attitude like that."
 "What's the record?" Kirk asked.
    McCoy grinned. "You're looking at it. And I've got my one
hundred-and-fiftieth birthday party all planned."
 Kirk looked around the sickbay again. So much to digest.
               281




Almost eighty years of history had passed him by. This ship,
what he could see of it, looked like it would put both his own
Enterprises to shame. And the new friends, the new enemies.
  Especially the Borg.
    Though he couldn't remember much of what McCoy had
told him about the Borg. Almost as if he wasn't supposed to
remember...
    "What happened to everyone, Bones? You still get together
for reunions. Curse the old captain?"
    McCoy managed to smile and look sad at the same time.
"Sit down, Jim," he said.
    Kirk sat on the edge of the table as McCoy once again
slipped into his memories.
 And what memories they were.
    Admiral Pavel Chekov, commander in chief of Starfleet.
The books he had written after his retirement, detailing his
adventures on the Enterprise, the Potemkin, and the Cydonia,
had made household names of all his crewmates.
    Hikaru Sulu, president of the Federation Council for an
unprecedented three terms. Kirk had known his helmsman
had always had a fondness for politics, and it pleased him to
think of Sutu continuing his work, steering the ship of state.
    And Dr. Uhura, two-time winner of the Nobel and Zee-
Magnees Peace Prize. After her retirement, she had devoted
herself to recruiting the best and the brightest for the Acade-
my, tirelessly traveling the worlds of the Federation to make
sure the promise of the stars and the challenge of humanity's
adventure would be available to all.
    And Scotty, who had been trapped in a machine--which
seemed all too fitting a fate for him--so that he, too, had
survived to meet this next generation of bold explorers and
was somewhere out among the stars, still doing what he
loved. Flying between the stars, too busy to ever think of
actually retiring as he had so often threatened.
 Then there were Rand and Chapel, Kyle, M'Benga, Carol
                282

Marcus, and Ruth. On his journey here, McCoy had even
called up the old computer records of Kirk's nephews, his
admirals, his lost loves, friends, distant relations.
    All passed before Kirk like the tail of a comet, bright and
sparkling one moment, a memory the next.
 "It is quite a lot to take in in one sitting," McCoy said.
     "All those lives," Kirk said. "I was part of them... but
sometimes it feels like I didn't know them at all." "You won't get an argument from me."
    Kirk smiled. "That's a first." Then he looked at McCoy to
let the doctor know he couldn't avoid what he had been trying
to avoid since the moment Kirk awoke here. "Spoek," Kirk said.
    "Still alive and kicking," McCoy answered. "And...
could be he's part of the problem that's got everyone so
worked up."
 "I'm listening," Kirk said.
    But before McCoy could say anything more~ red alert
sounded, and Riker's voice reverberated from the speakers
ordering all crew to battle stations.

THIRTY-NINE

Riker sat beside Captain Simm on the bridge of the Challeng-
er. Every sensor display was lit up, flashing its warnings.
    Simm sat with steepled hands. He was a black Vulcan from
his world's Regar district. The severe features of his face
               283




remained placid amidst the noise and appearance of confu-
sion. Nothing surprised him. But whether that was because he
was a Vulcan, or because he had spent twenty years as a
starship captain, no one could be certain.
    "Report," Simm said. And though his voice was neither
raised nor strained, it cut through the cacophony of alerts and
warning chimes as if he had spoken in the ear of every
member of the bridge crew. And some of those crew members
were very familiar to Riker. He had taken great pleasure in
reassembling them to share his duty on the Challenger.
    Worf's voice thundered from his security station at the rear
of the bridge. "We have been subjected to a full sensor sweep,
Captain."
     Data reported from his ops board. "I am recording an
anomalous tachyon surge, consistent with a cloaking device."
 "Is it from the Monitor?" Simm asked calmly.
 "Negative, sir," Data replied.
 Simm turned to Riker. "Your analysis, Commander."
 "Flyby of a cloaked vessel, sir."
    "That much is obvious," the Vulcan said. "What was its
purpose?"
 "It was... looking for something," Riker guessed.
 "And that would be... ?"
Riker hated the Socratic method. "I have no idea, sir."
Simm stood up, acknowledging that the lesson was over.
"Three possibilit!es, Commander. In arriving at them, we
must assume that we have been under passive observation
for a given period of time, since the probability that a cloaked
ship encountered us and decided to scan us at the same
instant is remote." Simm folded his hands behind his back.
"We must also assume that the decision by the commander of
the cloaked ship to scan us was triggered by a precipitating
action, and not a random event." Simm glanced back at
Riker. "A precipitating action implies that conditions have
changed from those which did not require a scan, to
                284

             11-1~ Ki~l I.)KN

those which did. What conditions have changed upon this
vessel in the past thirty minutes?"
     Riker thought frantically. The Vulcan captain was making
him feel like a first-year Academy student. He had no answer.
 "James T. Kirk became conscious."
    Riker wasn't convinced. "How could anyone know that,
sir?"
    "Precisely," Simm said. "Hence, in increasing order of
probability, we have been under observation by a cloaked
ship operating with a telepathic crew. Or we have a spy on
board, who has reported on Kirk's condition to the cloaked
ship. Or the cloaked ship's actions were not triggered by the
act of Kirk becoming conscious, but by another, related act."
 Now Riker understood. "The removal of the implant."
 "Very good, Commander." Simm looked up at Worf. "Mr.
 Worf, earlier there were reports oftetryon pulses accompany-
 ing our emergence from the terminator. Was a pulse recorded
 on our most recent orbit?"
 Worf accessed his security displays. "Yes, sir."
    Simm wheeled around to face Data. "Mr. Data, Kirk's
implant was of Borg manufacture. Therefore, it contained
traces of tridithalifane. Will tridithalifane reflect a properly
tuned tetryon beam?"
    Data angled his head as he accessed the Challenger's main
computers. "Yes, sir. It appears possible."
    Simm turned back to Riker and raised a finger. "Hence,
logic dictates we have been under surveillance by a cloaked
ship that knows Kirk is aboard, knows Kirk has an implant of
Borg manufacture, and knows that the implant has been
removed. That ship is our enemy. Its commander has infor-
mation that is valuable to the Federation. Hence...
Commander?,
    Riker could feel himself getting caught up in the intellectu-
al game Simm had made out of the encounter. "Hence, we
should try to capture that vessel."
 "But before we capture it, we must find it." Simm angled
               285




an eyebrow as he studied Riker. "As commander of the
cloaked vessel, where would you go after scanning us?"
    "If I had seen the Monitor decloak, I would assume the
Challenger had the capabilities of detecting the tachyon surge
common to cloaking devices. I would set a course at maxi-
mum warp leading out of the system, then angle back and
come in from another direction on impulse."
    "You're forgetting the enemy has been influenced by the
Borg. That maneuver would be a waste of resources." Simm
turned back to the viewscreen. "The enemy is hiding on the
other side of the sun, out of sensor range. Mr. Worf, hail the
Monitor."
    Riker and Worf exchanged a look of grudging appreciation
for Simm's analysis as the captain of the Challenger ordered
Lewinski to cloak the Monitor, leave the system, then double
back to the other side of the sun.
    If possible, he was to identify the ship which Simm had
concluded was lying in wait there, then return. If necessary,
he was to engage it.
 "Any idea what kind of ship it is?" Lewinski asked.
    "A Romulan Warbird, D'deridex class or better." Simm
glanced back at Riker. "Its commander knew we would detect
the scan, but proceeded anyway. Romulan cloaking devices
are the best, hence the ship is Romulan. And only the
commander of a D'deridex Warbird would feel confident
enough to risk exposing his ship to an encounter with the
Challenger."
    Riker remained sitting in his place on the command
bench--unlike the Enterprise, the Challenger did not have
individual seats for its senior bridge officers. With Simm as
her captain, he wondered, why had Starfleet even bothered to
install computers on the ship?
    Lewinski signed off and the port scanners showed the
peculiar sight of the Monitor rippling like liquid, then vanish-
ing from view.
 "Monitor away," Data reported.
                286

    Simm sat back in the center section of the command bench.
"I believe you should now check on the condition of Kirk. We
cannot rule out the possibility of two-way communication
with the cloaked vessel."
    Riker stood up. The captain was correct. But the captain
also read the hesitation in him.
 "You have a question, Commander?"
    "Sir, we came here to bring Kirk close to Dr. Crusher, if Dr.
Crusher had returned in time to help him. But now, with the
implant removed, it might be better to take Kirk back to
Starbase 324 for study."
     Simm looked amused, in his limited Vulcan way. "Are you
asking me, or ordering me, Commander?" Riker remained silent.
    "Under General Order Three," Simm continued, "Shelby's
orders do give you authority over this ship in regard to any
action involving the Borg."
    "It is a suggestion, sir. We are not yet in contact with the
Borg."
    Another alarm chimed on the bridge. Riker and Simm both
looked up at Wolf.
    "Sir," the Klingon announced, "a transwarp conduit has
just opened before us and a Borg scoutship has emerged." He
looked up, eyes wide with surprise. "And sir, it is requesting
clearance to land .... "
 Simm turned to Riker. "You were saying, Commander?"

    Riker checked the power setting on his phaser for the tenth
time. Worf noticed. In the cold air of the Challenger's main
shuttlebay, Riker could see the Klingon's breath cloud with
vapor as he whispered, "The shuttlebay is sealed, Command-
er. Nothing will happen."
    Riker knew Worf was correct. But he checked the power
setting one last time. It wasn't every day that Starfleet invited
a Borg vessel to board one of its starships.
 Riker, Worf, La Forge, Deanna, and Data waited by the
                       287




cleared landing platform as the main bay doors opened onto
empty space. The ship's atmosphere was contained by the
annular force field that remained in place. Riker could see the
curve of New Titan to the side. Then he saw the dark smudge
that was the Borg scoutship, heading closer.
    Deanna broke the silence. "Do you realize that there is not
one person on this deck who feels this is the right thing to
do?"
    Riker smiled at her. "Captain Simm is standing by to
decompress the bay if anything goes wrong."
    "I feel so reassured," Deanna said. Then grimly added,
"We should be talking to them with at least a light-year
between us."
    Worf cleared his throat. "I was able to communicate with
the scoutship only through Linguacode," he explained. "It is
not equipped with audio or visual communications chan-
nels."
    Riker realized that made sense. Why wouM a groupmind
based on a subspace link require any other type of communi-
cations device?
    The scoutship glided in between the Challenger's nacelles,
then slipped through the atmospheric force field.
    Instantly, the hard walls and deck of the shuttlebay reverbe-
rated with the hum of the scoutship's engines, and Riker felt
the blast of heat from its exhaust ports. Then the scoutship
became silent as it switched over to antigrav maneuvering
units and floated to a perfect touchdown in the center of the
platform.
    Riker led the others to the hatch opening in the patched-
together ship.
    A Borg stepped out and methodically scanned them with
his laser as a second figure came out behind him.
    "Should I be surprised?" Riker muttered to Deanna as he
recognized the second figure. Then he stepped forward.
"Ambassador Spock. Welcome to the Challenger."
                288

    Spock raised his hand and gave the traditional salute.
"Peace and long life, Commander. May I introduce my
pilot"--Spock gestured to the Borg beside himre"Six of
Twelve."
    "You will be assimilated," the Borg said by way of greeting.
"Resistance is futile."
    Spock stepped in front of the Borg. "You will guard the
scoutship. I will make arrangements for the efficient assimila-
tion of this ship and her crew."
    The Borg lowered its manipulator arm. "That is relevant."
He returned to the scoutship and the hatch hissed shut
behind him.
    Spock joined his surprised welcoming committee. "Six of
Twelve is an extremely literal-minded entity, and I doubt he
will have any independent thoughts while I am away from
him. However, in the best interests of everyone, I suggest you
commence jamming all communications channels to prevent
him from signaling his presence to any other members of the
collective who may be in this region of space."
     But no one facing Spock moved to act on his suggestion.
Spock studied them all, then pursed his lips. "Is there a problem, Commander?"
 "The last I heard, you had returned to Romulus."
    "l did. While there, I attempted to infiltrate a criminal
organization which I believed would lead me to whoever
supplied James Kirk with his micropulser weapon. Instead, I
uncovered a Borg-Romulus alliance which intends to attack
the Federation from the Neutral Zone, following an act of
treachery by a high-ranking member of Starfleet."
    Riker felt momentarily overwhelmed. "And that would
be?"
 "Jean-Luc Picard."
    Riker smiled coldly. "Nice try. But Captain Picard and
Beverly Crusher are on special assignment tofight the Borg."
 "Then I regret to inform you that they have lost their fight.
               289


I encountered Captain Picard on a Borg transwarp station.
He is Picard no longer. He is Locutus. Indeed, it is possible
that he has always been Locutus."  "No..." Riker said.
    "Six of Twelve was in full contact with the collective until
we left the Borg station," Spock said. "He will confirm all that
I have told you."
    Riker glanced at Deanna. She gave him an apologetic look,
As far as she could tell, Spock was telling the truth. But
whether it was the actual truth, or simply a story that had
been programmed into his consciousness by the Borg, Riker
knew that not even a Betazoid could tell.
    "If your story can be confirmed, what do you propose we
do?" Riker asked.
    "I am not a tactician, Commander. And as you pointed out
earlier, I have been away from Starfleet for many decades.
However, I would surmise that the first step would be to mass
a defensive fleet at the Neutral Zone."
    "I'm sure the Romulans would enjoy seeing that," Riker
said.
    "And," Worf added, "it would leave the entire frontier
undefended."
    "So that's our dilemma, Ambassador. Are you telling the
truth, or are you diverting our attention from the real
attack?"
    "I am telling the truth," Spook said. "But I do appreciate
your position. Unfortunately, since you must suspect that I
have been the victim of Borg programming, I am not aware of
any procedure which can be used to prove my veracity to
you."
    Data stepped forward. "Ambassador, if I may, how did you
manage to escape from the Borg station where you say you
saw Captain Picard?"
    As he heard Spock's answer, Riker was surprised that the
ambassador could keep a straight face.
                290

    "I asked Six of Twelve to transport me to the place from
which Locutus had arrived."
 "And he brought you here? As simply as that?"
    Spock looked pained. "Commander, I cannot explain why,
but the Borg somehow believe that I am already one of them.
They took me to the station with the intent of assimilating me
and making me Speaker to the worlds of Vulcan. But in the
midst of the assimilation process... they stopped."
 "Stopped?"
 "As I have said, I have no explanation."
    Riker turned to Worf. "Mr. Worf, escort Ambassador
Spock to sickbay. I'll want Dr. Bashit to scan him for
implants and nanites. And I want you to be in attendance the
entire time."
 Deanna interrupted. "Will, what about Captain Kirk?"
    Spock instantly turned to her, the facade of his Vulcan
reserve momentarily disturbed.
    Riker watched Spock carefully. "Ambassador, you should
know. Kirk is here. In sickbay. With another old friend--
Admiral McCoy."
    For an instant, Riker could have sworn that he saw Spock
smile.
    "I must see them at once," Spock said. "Please, make
whatever medical tests you feel appropriate."
    Worf stepped to Spock's side. "If you will follow me,
Ambassador."
 "What is Kirk's condition?" Spock asked.
    "Not well," Deanna said. "He is infested with nanires that
are reconfiguring his body at a molecular level. We have no
way of stopping the process in time to save him." "How much time?" Spock asked.
 "A few days," Deanna said. "I'm sorry."
    Spock nodded, then turned his attention to Worf. "I am
ready, Mr. Worf. Please--"
 Riker's corembadge chirped. Riker tapped it. "Riker here."
               291




    It was Simm. "Commander, I thought you would be
interested to know that another Borg scoutship has emerged
from a conduit and requested permission to dock."
    Everyone looked at Spock. Spock lifted an eyebrow. "It is
possible I was followed, but I have no knowledge of it."
    Riker touched his commbadge again. "Captain Simm, I
want a constant update sent to Starbase 324, starting now. l
want the Challenger brought up to full standby on maximum
warp, and I want the Monitor standing by to come to our
assistance."
    "You are expecting another Borg vessel to emerge from a
conduit?" Simm's disembodied voice asked.
    "Put it this way," Riker said as be looked over at Spock's
unreadable expression. "Given what's happening here, I'm
expecting the worst."

FORTY

Captain John Lewinski tapped out the rhythm to an old blues
tune on the side of his command chair. If there was anything
better than two-hundred-year-old Andorian blues, he had yet
to hear it. Unfortunately, his crew had taken a poll, and he
had been asked to no longer pipe it onto the bridge.
 "How are we doing, Mr. Land?"
    The navigator studied his controls. "Still no sign of any-
thing, Captain. No tachyon surge, no massless sources of
heat, no intercepted communications."
                292

 Lewinski sighed. He was back to waiting.
    Ahead of him, on the main screen, the New Titan sun
pulsed, a roiling sphere of superheated gases. Somewhere
within a tenth of an Aid of its surface, a cloaked vessel was
hiding.
But it wasn't doing anything to make finding it any easier.
Ardev spoke up in his Artdorian rasp. Even he thought the
captain's choice in music was hopelessly out of date. "Sir,
we're receiving a microburst transmission from the Challeng-
er. We're to go to battle stations and prepare to render
immediate assistance to the Challenger when called."
 Lewinski sat forward. "Is she under attack?"
    Ardev's blue hearing stalks twisted forward, disturbing his
perfect cap of shiny white hair. "Not yet, sir." He frowned.
"Though apparently two Borg scoutships have landed in her
shuttlebay."
    Lewinski smiled and smoothed his goatee. "Good. Maybe
they'll cause some excitement. What are our immediate
orders?"
    "To continue our search for the cloaked ship, while main-
taining our own cloaked status."
 Lewinski's smile faded. "In other words, keep waiting."
    "Yes, sir," Ardev replied, then turned back to his commu-
nications board.
    Lewinski leaned back in his chair, tapped out another few
bars of "Aladevto's Infirmary." "Anyone feel like some
music?" he asked.
    As if they had rehearsed, the answering chorus came back
without a moment's delay. "No, sir."
    Lew[nski frowned. He hated waiting. But with the Borg
nearby, he doubted he would have to wait for long.

    The scoutship in which Spock had arrived had been hidden
from view by several pallets of modular crates, a common-
enough sight on a busy shuttlebay deck.
               293




    In addition to the defensive precaution of standing by to
explosively decompress the shuttlebay, Worf had arranged for
a Type-6 personnel shuttle to be locked down, with its
attitude thrusters rigged to fire at the landing platform
cleared for the second scoutship's landing. In addition, trans-
porter control was keeping a real-time coordinate update on
every commbadge, ready for an emergency beam-out at any
second, should any of the extraordinary defenses be required.
    The Borg were not known for asking for anything, and
Riker felt he was now prepared for the moment they decided
to start taking what they wanted.
    Once again, a Borg scoutship, slightly different in configu-
ration from the first, eased in through the shuttlebay door
force field. Once again, it switched over from thrusters to
antigrays and touched down perfectly.
    Once again, Riker kept his hand on his phaser as he,
Deanna, Data, and La Forge waited for the hatch to open.
    For a moment, Riker didn't recognize the configurations of
the two Borg who tumbled out of the craft. They seemed
exhausted, hurt. The third Borg, which remained in the
hatchway, stoically watching the others leave, was more
typical.
    But Data ran forward at once. "Captain Picard! Dr.
Crusher!"
 "Data!" Riker shouted. "Get back here!"
    Data turned, halfway to his captain. "But they require
help."
 "They'll get it," Riker said. "When it's safe."
    Data reluctantly turned back to join the others. "I was just
happy to see them, that is all."
La Forge clapped him on the back. "It'll be okay, Data."
Picard and Crusher approached Riker cautiously, as
though both were attuned to the tension in the air. They wore
space-black battle armor. Riker recognized the gear as belong-
ing to the intelligence units established by Shelby.
                294

    "Will," Picard said. "Geordi, Data, it's so good to see you
again!"
    Riker noted that Data had been right. The captain did
sound exhausted.
    Perhaps the neural implant plate attached to his face and
head had something to do with it.
    Picard faltered, realizing where Riker had focused his
attention. Then he dug his fingers beneath the edge of the
plate and began to pull.

    On the Monitor, Lewinski jumped to his feet as he heard
the sensor chime.
 "What do we have, Mr. Land?"
"Tachyon surge at search coordinates alpha mary bravo."
The image on the viewscreen expanded to show a section of
the New Titan sun. The surface seemed pebbled and pitted
with dark granules--each large enough to swallow the Earth,
Lewinski knew.
 "Mark it, Mr. Land."
    An overlay grid flashed onto the screen at the point from
which the tachyon surge had originated.
    Science Officer T'Per spoke from her station. "I have
isolated an anomalous heat reading, Captain. There is a
cloaked object at those coordinates."
    Lewinski leaned over Land's board, looking past him at the
screen. "Is it on the move?"
    "Negative, sir. It's in a standard near-solar orbit. I think we
caught an engine purge that streamed outside the cloaking
field." Land grinned up at the captain. "They weren't expect-
ing us."
    Lewinski felt all his senses heighten. The hunt had finally
begun. "Take us in, easy, Mr. Land. If you need to purge the
engines, do it now. I want to get close enough to clean their
windshields."
 Land's fingers danced over his board as he lay in the
                295




Monitor's new course. Then he looked back at the captain. "Is
a windshield anything like a tailpipe, sir?" "Eyes ahead, Mr. Land."
 The Monitor eased forward, closing in on its enemy.

    In the Challenger's main shuttlebay, Riker went on alert,
half-expecting to see raw flesh laced with a filigree of neural
implant wires, as Picard ripped the plate from his face.
    But instead he saw innocuous threads of surgical glue and
unmarked skin.
    The Borg plate was the duplicate which had been made by
Shelby's researchers.
  Riker lowered his phaser.
    Picard gave him a questioning look. "Will, did you think
.. I had been assimilated again?"
    It was Spock's voice which answered. "Not again, Captain
Picard."
    Everyone turned to see Spook emerge from behind a pallet
of modular crates, Worf at his side with a phaser drawn.
    "Very good," Picard said. "You've apprehended the traitor
responsible for the Borg-Romulan alliance. Ambassador
Spock."
    Spock and Picard faced each other, almost within reach of
each other.
    "Captain Picard is the traitor who has betrayed the Federa-
tion," Spook said.
    Crusher broke the impasse. "Will, we were on a Borg
station in transwarp. We saw Spook put into an assimilation
frame. But he wasn't assimilated because he is already part of
the collective!"
    Spock turned to Riker. "As I told you, Commander, I was
not assimilated. And though I do not have an explanation for
the Borg's failure to act, I assure you I am not one of them."
 "Neither am I," Picard said.
    Riker turned to Deanna. Her face was a mask of confusion.
"They're all telling the truth."

                296

"Or they've all been programmed," Riker said angrily.
Picard stepped toward Riker. "Will, I understand your
predicament. But surely you can't believe after all we've been
through together since... since that first time, that I'm still
part of them."
    Spock also stepped toward Riker. "But there is no logic in
what you're suggesting is my contact with the collective,
Commander The Borg and the Romulans are within days, if
not hours, of attacking the Federation."
    Spock and Picard turned to face each other at the same
time. Both spoke at the same time. Their words were identi-
cal. "And he is the one responsible."

    On the bridge of the Tomed, Salatrel leapt to her feet as she
heard the communications chime.
    "Commander," Tran called out. "We are receiving a coded
signal!"
 "What's the message?"
    Tran turned to his commander with a smile of disbelief.
"Picard is on the Challenger."
    Salatrel felt a thrill of hope run through her. "What is the
signal's soume?" Could it be possible that Vox had returned?
That Vox had told the truth?
 But this truth was even better.
    "The signal is coming from the Challenger herself," Tran
said. "Commander Salatrel... it's a signal from Kirk!"
    "Yes!" Salatrel exclaimed. Without thinking, she holstered
her disruptor. "Battle stations!" she cried out. "For the glory
of the Empire and the House of Chironsala--battle stations.r'

 "She's powering up her engines!" Land called out.
    T'Per added, "Picking up Bell discontinuities in subspace,
sir. She's got an artificial singularity."
    Lewinski pounded his fist into his hand. "She's a Romulan!
Distance, Mr. Land?"
 "Five thousand kilometers, sir!"
               297




    "Lock on all passive target systems. We're going to keep a
low profile till--"
 "She's moving out!"
 "Then so are we .... "

    With only an almost-imperceptible flickering in the
charged plasma flares that leapt from the surface of the dying
star to show its path, the Avatar of Tomed slipped from orbit
and banked away in a course that would return it to New
Titan
    But she was not the swift and silent raptor of vengeance her
commander believed her to be.
    The Monitor moved through space behind her, not even
disturbing the light of the stars it crossed, as it came about to
match its course to the Romulan's.
 Braced for battle, both ships flew for the Challenger.

    Riker tightened his grip on his phaser. "You're both going
to sickbay for analysis. Captain Picard, what's the status of
the Borg on your scoutship?"
"He thinks I'm Locutus. He piloted the scoutship here."
Spock gazed indignantly at Picard. "How is it possible for a
Borg to think you are Locutus unless your mind is among the
collective?"
    Riker gestured with his phaser. "Ambassador, as I recall, a
Borg piloted your scoutship here as well. Is your mind among
the collective?"
 Spock glanced away. "The Borg appear to think so."
    A tremor rumbled through the deck. Warning lights flashed
as the shuttlebay doors began to slide shut.
    Then the red alert sirens warbled and warning lights
flashed.
 "Will, what's happening?" Picard asked.
    "We seem to be in the middle of a Borg expressway," Riker
said. He hit his commbadge. "Riker to bridge. Is there
another Borg ship in transit?"
                298

    Captain Simm answered. "Negative, Commander. The
Monitor has just informed us we are about to be attacked by a
Romulan vessel."
Riker frowned at Spock. "Friends of yours, Ambassador?"
"Commander Riker, it is evident your emotions are being
heightened by the danger we are in," Spock answered. "It
would be wise for you to consider all your actions in a more
dispassionate manner to avoid saying anything which you
might later regret."
 "Tell it to Kirk in sickbay," Riker said.
 Then he saw Pieard's shocked expression.
 "What did you say?"
    Riker didn't know where to begin. "It's Captain Kirk, sir.
He ... didn't die."
 Picard seemed stunned. "Will, I buried him."
"He was... brought back somehow. By the Borg."
Picard faced Spock. "Is that why you have done this?
Betrayed the Federation so the Borg would give you back your
captain?"
     Spock's arm moved back. If Spock had been human, Riker
would have expected him to make a fist. But then Spock relaxed again.
    "Do you know nothing about me?" Spook said, with
absolutely no pretense of hiding his emotions, as if he let
loose a lifetime of buried resentment. "We have melded
minds, Captain. Has my work, my life, meant so little to you
that you can you even consider that I would be capable of
such an act?"
    Even Picard was taken aback by the cold fury in Spock's
tone.
    Beverly Crusher put her hand on Picard's shoulder. "That
didn't sound like a Borg speaking, did it?"
    A profound silence lasted until Riker asked Worf to have
the Borg in the scoutships beamed to the brig, making sure to
deactivate any built-in weapons systems they might have.
                299




    "And for the rest of you," Riker said, "sickbay." He turned
to the personnel airlock leading back into the ship.
    A shadow moved there, as if the airlock had already been
opened. Even though Captain Simm had ordered it sealed
until any potential Borg threat had been dealt with.
    Riker was momentarily confused. Then his confusion be-
came action as he saw the glowing tip of a phaser node swing
out from the edge of the airlock.
"Deanna!" he shouted as the blue wave seared his vision.
But there was no time to know if she had heard his
warning. Riker didn't even have time to feel the hard metal
plates that rushed up to meet him as he fell.

FORTY-ONE

Picard heard Riker shout, "Deanna!" and then he felt a
sudden wave of heat and static charge pass around him.
    He shook his head to clear it, then looked around in
amazement. Beverly and Data were still standing beside him,
Beverly dazed, but they were surrounded by unmoving bodies
that littered the hangar bay deck.
 "Have we been hit?" Beverly asked.
    "I believe we have been shot with a wide-beam phaser
discharge set to stun," Data said. "Your armor appears to
have protected you."
 Picard touched Data's shoulder. "What about you, Data?"
    "I require a higher power setting to be immobilized," Data
answered.
                3OO

    "Thanks," a voice said from the airlock behind them.
"That's good to know."
    Picard's hand jerked back, burning, as an orange beam
blasted Data from his grasp. The android skidded across the
deck like a broken doll.
     Picard and Beverly turned to face their attacker as he
emerged from the shelter of the airlock frame.
 "Kirk...?" Picard said.
    The captain of the first Enterprise smiled. "What did I tell
you on Veridian? Call me Jim." Then he raised his phaser
again and fired.
    Ihe phaser beam struck Beverly, and she crumpled, moan-
ing, to the deck.
 "Beverly!" Picard exclaimed.
    "As long as she stays there, she'll be fine," Kirk said. "And
you step back from her." He pointed the phaser at Picard and
adjusted the power setting. Picard could see his finger work
the firing stud.
    Picard clenched his fists in frustrated rage. "You're not
Kirk!" Picard said. "You're a monster!"
    The shuttlebay deck suddenly lurched as the Challenger's
impulse engines came online. The shuttlebay rang with the
discharge of photon torpedoes.
    "Perhaps I am," Kirk said. He glanced down at the phaser
he held, adjusted its setting again. "I keep setting this to kill,"
he complained, "but then I can't fire it. Why is that?"
    Picard eyed Kirk incredulously. "The ship's security field
prevents unauthorized personnel from discharging phasers
onboard."
    Kirk glanced at the bodies that littered the hangar deck.
"Then how was I able to shoot them?"
    "The field must have been modified in here, in case there
were trouble with the Borg." Picard felt dizzy. The scene and
discussion were surreal. Kirk was dead.
    "The Borg were the ones who brought me back," Kirk said,
almost conversationally. "So I'm told."
               301




    Picard looked at the monster before him. At Kirk. He knew
that if he had faced this moment a year ago, he would never
have accepted that a dead man could return to life. But since
then, he had met a dead man in the Nexus, fought at his side
on Veridian. He knew he could no longer doubt the evidence
of his own eyes, nor his knowledge of the Borg.
    "Do you have any idea why they brought you back?" Picard
asked. His only option was to keep Kirk talking, not acting,
until he had help.
    The Challenger's deck heaved as the great ship shuddered
beneath her wildly fluctuating defensive shields. Picard's ears
were perfectly attuned to each specific sound a Galaxy. class
ship could make. He tried not to imagine what sort of
maneuvers the Challenger was being forced to perform to
account for what he heard now.
 "As a matter of fact, I do," Kirk said.
    "You see," he said, each word a greater struggle than the
one before, "if I'm to have any peace... I... must... kill
you."
    "Captain, you know that's not right. The Borg have some-
how made you believe that. But--"
    The inertial dampeners roared as everything not locked
down was suddenly thrust to starboard. Picard and Kirk
stumbled, but kept their footing.
    Kirk threw his phaser aside. "Nobody makes me do
anything!" he shouted.
    Kirk looked at him wildly, as a series of conflicting expres-
sions washed over his face--frustration, rage, anguish, finally
sorrow.
    Picard regarded him with the sympathy that could only
come from shared pain and memories.
    "The Borg can. I know. They've made me do terrible
things, too." Those images would never leave his own mind.
The Battle of Wolf 359. Eleven thousand deaths. Because of
him.
                302

 What would Kirk do to be free of that pain?
 Picard held out his hand to his fellow captain.
 "I can help," he said.
 "I know," Kirk answered. "By dyingq."
    Then Kirk leapt at Picard and smashed him to the deck,
striking out with unthinking rage and hate and...
    The Challenger twisted, engines screaming. Light channels
exploded with flares of sparks from an uncontrolled power
surge.
    Picard and Kirk rolled across the shifting deck, knees
digging, fists pummelling, two bodies locked together in the
strobing lights and shadows. Picard heard the screech of
duranium against duranium as unsecured shuttles began to
slide free along the deck.
    He looked up just as Kirk was about to land one last, telling
blow. He swung up his armored forearm and heard the solid
trunk of Kirk's fist against it. Heard Kirk's cry.
    The Challenger bucked. Kirk flew forward, jarred by the
impact. The shuttlebay went dark.
    Picard scrambled to his feet as the emergency lights flick-
ered on, but Kirk had already vanished in the shadows.
    Picard paused, looked at his crew, still lying helpless on the
deck. If he went to them, Kirk would have him and the useless
fight would begin again.
    He needed assistance. But his armor's communicator was
not functioning, overloaded by the phaser hit he had taken.
He sprinted to the airlock. Hit the corempanel there.
    "Picard to bridge!" He heard only static. "Picard to Securi-
ty!" The communications system was out. "Picard to Emer-
gency Transporter Control!"
    The whistle of a polysonic crowbar sang in his ears as it
swung toward him and he ducked. The commpanel erupted
in sparks, torn apart by the impact of the tool Kirk had
swung.
 Picard pivoted on his left foot and rammed his elbow into
               303




Kirk's chest as, with the face of a madman, Kirk raised the
polybar to strike again.
    The polybar spun from Kirk's hands as he stumbled
backward.
    Picard had no choice. He charged through the airlock,
turned to the left, and ran toward the shadows beyond the
flickering corridor lights, hesitating just long enough to be
certain Kirk followed.
 And Kirk did, face distorted by rage.
    Picard rushed on into the darkness, enticing his attacker to
pursue him. Setting his trap in place.

 High above New Titan, the Challenger hung dead in space.
    "It is a trick," Tran said. "They are lying in wait for us to
attack again."
    Salatrel bit her knuckle, considering her strategy as she
paced in front of her command chair. "The captain is a
Vulcan," she pointed out. "And Vulcans don't bluff."
 "Our victory was too easy," Tran persisted.
    "It was a sneak attack," Salatrel said, monitoring her
bridge crew's reaction to her subcommander's opposition.
"Remember the Farragut at Veridian." She knew she would
have to quickly determine if Tran was arguing with her
because he was a coward, afraid of death, or because he really
did have some valuable insight to share with her.
    Tran pointed to his. sensor boards. "Look at the damage
0attern!" he urged. "There! There! And there!"
    Salatrel checked each point he indicated on the Challenger
schematic he had called up.
    "There is no structural damage to account for her loss of
propulsion," Tran said. "No environmental overload to ac-
count for the crew death figures we're reading. Commander, I
don't believe we've caused a single casualty. I submit the
captain knew we were coming and has been transmitting false
sensor returns."
                304

    Salatrel looked at the main screen. The Challenger spun
slowly, off-axis. Its propulsion lights were out. Only a few
running lights still flashed.
    "Then how do you explain that?" She regarded the other
ship with scorn. "Only a fool would leave his ship in such a
vulnerable condition."
    "I say the captain of that ship has taken every hit we've
thrown at his screens, and he's diverted the power into his
generators to create the power surges we detected. The real
damage is meaningless. He can have his primary generators
repaired in an hour."
    "Look at the shields, Tran." Salatrel gestured at the power
readouts on the screen. "They're at less than thirty percent.
Two more good hits, and the ship is ours."
    Tran stood up to face her. "I promise you he has more
power offiine than our sensors can pick up. Commander, he is
baiting us. Remember the Battle of Icarus IV. It has been a
Starfleet tactic for a century."
    The reminder of Icarus IV drove rational thought from
Salatrel. She made her decision. "Then we will see him power
up his weapons when we make our approach, and you will be
able to break off our attack in time."
"It is not his weapons we must be concerned about."
Salatrel snarled a warning at Tran. Nothing would stop her
from achieving her goal this close to victory. "The other ship
is gone, Subcommander." She returned to her command
chair.
 "The other ship is cloaked."
    Salatrel stiffened. She could feel her bridge crew tense,
wondering if Tran would follow Tracius. "Can you detect its
tachyon signature?"
    Tran regarded her steadily. "No. Which could mean
Starfleet has modified it."
    Salatrel had had enough talk. She was ready for action.
"Think, Tran! If the other ship is here, cloaked, watching us,
               305





what is its purpose? Any commander would have come in
behind us on our first run when the Challenger fired her
torpedoes back at us. The other ship is not here."
    Tran sat back at his board, jaw set. "Then, for the glory of
the Empire," he said in the formal tongue of obedience, "I
embrace my death."
    Salatrel smiled. Tran would live for the battle. He wasn't a
coward. Only impetuous.
    "Prepare for final approach," she said. "Target the support
pylons to break her apart. Set sensors to scan for life-support
suits and escape pods." She leaned forward in her chair. "No
survivors. No prisoners. Proceed."
    Tran turned back to her, one last question for his leader.
"Commander... what if the other ship held back because
they do not wish to destroy us? What if they wish to capture
us?"
    "Starfleet takes no prisoners, Tran. They are murderers,
plain and simple."
    Tran turned back to his controls. The Avatar of Tomed
began her final run.

 "We've got her!" Lewinski said.
 The mood on his bridge was electric.
    Captain Simm of the Challenger had played his ship like
the magnificent instrument it was. Absorbing incredible
energies by diverting the Warbird's power to the areas where
it would do the least damage.
 And the commander of the Romulan ship had fallen for it.
    "Put us on intercept," Lewinski said. The time for waiting
was finally over.
    But T'Per stepped up beside him. "If I may, Captain, the
Romulan vessel clearly has capabilities we have not seen
before. Her disruptors for one. They are not standard."
    Lewinski gave T'Per a long-suffering look. "If that thing
were a standard Romulan vessel, do you think it would be
attacking a Starfleet ship?"
                306

 T'per returned to her station in silence.
 Lewinski beat out a drum solo on the arm of his chair.
    "All I want you to do is fuse its disruptor cannons, tear
apart its torpedo tubes, then target its exhaust ports," he said.
    "l thought you wanted us to do something hard," Land
replied.
    "Decloak at your discretion, Mr. Land. As my noble
ancestors once said--Yee-hah!"

    The Avatar of Tomed dropped her cloak in preparation for
firing, her Borg disruptors powered and locked on each key
structural component of the Challenger.

    Simm sat patiently on his command bench. Captain Lewin-
ski was a brilliant tactician. The Challenger would not absorb
another erg of Romulan energy.

The Warbird rippled against the stars, taking on its solid,
visible, threatening form.
    But just before Salatrel could give the command to fire, an
all-too-familiar sensor disturbance obscured her forward
scanners as she heard a savage, alien battle cry flooding
subspace on all frequencies.
    Her shields flared with a sudden overload, allowing
Starfleet phasers from the decloaked ship to pierce her
defenses and fuse her weapons ports.
    Then, before Tran could alter course, the decloaked
vessel--the vessel Salatrel had sworn had abandoned the
Challenger--performed a spinning loop over the top of the
Warbird to target her exhaust ports.
    The bridge of the Tomed echoed with the warning sirens
that filled it.
    Tran gave her a running commentary on what had hap-
pened.
    Thirty seconds more, Salatrel knew, and her ship would be
dead.


 And Kirk would survive her.
 This was no longer a battle she could win by herself.
 "Engage transwarp," she ordered.
"In front of the enemy?" Tran's shock was apparent.
"The knowledge of our capabilities will give them no
advantage," Salatrel said. The real war was that close to
beginning.
 "Take us out of here, Subcommander."
 Salatrel's fingers closed over the handle of her disruptor.
 "Transwarp engaged," Tran confirmed.
     On the main screen, the Challenger diminished, until it was
no more than a single point of light, no larger than a star.
 Salatrel held up her thumb and blotted that light out.
 She would return for Kirk.
    And when she did, the full force of the collective would be
with her.

    Lewinski's mouth dropped open as the Warbird dissolved
into light before him, outlined by the faint glow of what he
now recognized as a microdurational transwarp conduit,
which put the ship completely beyond pursuit.
    "Whew... how long have the Romulans had that?" he
asked.
    "I do not believe it is part of the Empire's traditional
armada," T'Per said. "Coupled with its nonstandard weapon-
ry, it is logical to assume that the Warbird has been exten-
sively retrofitted by the Borg."
    Lewinski thought about the ramifications of that, then
dismissed them. "Just tell me they didn't know we were here
until we dropped out of cloak," he said.
    Mr. Land confirmed it. "The cloak modifications worked,
sir. They had no idea we were here at all. Otherwise, they
wouldn't have fallen for Captain Simm's ambush."
    Lewinski patted the side of his chair. "Then there's still
hope for the Federation, after all. Right, Mr. T'Per?"
 T'Per remained silent.
                308

FORTY-TWO

Kirk paid no attention to the starship that appeared to be
tearing itself apart around him.
    All he saw was his prey, farther along up the corridor,
almost within his grasp.
 Nothing else mattered.
 Except killing Picard.
    He tried not to think why that was so. He tried not to think
at all. Locking McCoy in a stateroom, disconnecting the
controls to his exoskeleton, taking away his old friend's
communicator pin... it all felt wrong. Wrong but still neces-
sary.
    Manipulating McCoy's communicator to send out the
coded alert signal, though--that he had almost enjoyed,
because of the technical challenge it had given him. And he
had correctly deduced the workings of his own communicator
pin. First by using it to listen in on the ship's internal security
channels to learn that Picard had arrived in the shuttlebay,
then by simply leaving it behind in sickbay so that the ship's
computer would not be able to keep track of his movements
throughout this vast ship.
    And just as Kirk had anticipated, no one person and no
automated system had detected his presence in the shuttlebay
as he had arrived to take care of Picard. It appeared the
twenty-fourth century held no especially great challenges for
him.
               309




 Except for the phaser-suppression system.
    One quick burst could have taken care of Picard once and
for all. It had been a disappointment to learn that this future
Starfleet had taken safeguards against such actions. Kirk
realized that as long as Picard remained on this starship, he
would have to deal with his target by hand. Which was fine.
He'd always preferred the personal touch.
    Up ahead, Kirk saw Picard pause near a large entryway that
looked like an airlock. Kirk wondered if the ship had more
than one shuttlebay, if Picard were thinking of escaping.
     But Picard couldn't escape. Kirk knew that. As certainly as
if it had been engraved on his waking mind.
 Picard must die. Picard wouM die.
 Picard ducked through the large door.
 Kirk chased after him.
    But when he reached the entranceway, he stopped, suspect-
ing the worse. The door was still open. Sloppy on Picard's
part? Or a deliberate prelude to a trap?
    Beyond lay another corridor. Except its traction carpet was
a different color, and it did not exhibit any of the signs of
battle damage that Kirk had seen in the darkened corridors
he had just been through.
    Picard appeared for an instant at the end of the new
corridor. His presence was enough to spur Kirk on, again
without thought.
' He ran along the new corridor until he came to the
intersection where. he had seen Picard. No sign of him now.
    Kirk looked behind him. Turned, stopped. There was no
sign of the large doorway through which he had entered,
either.
    He leaned against the corridor wall, head throbbing. He
touched the sterile covering at the back of his head. Felt it
thick and sticky with blood. The surgery, he remembered.
But what had it been for? And what was it McCoy had said?
Only days remaining? Why was he spending them this way?
Why did he want... need to kill-                310

    The mere thought of Picard's name spurred him to action
again. But the corridors he was in were unfamiliar. He needed
a plan. He needed to know where to run.
    Kirk looked around. Saw a computer access panel. Remem-
bered seeing Picard try to use a communicator in the armored
suit he wore. Would the new captain of the Enterprise be
foolish enough to let the computer know where he was at all
times while he was being hunted?
 Kirk went to the computer panel.
 "Computer, tell me the location of Captain Picard."
 "Captain Picard is on the bridge."
    The computer spoke to him in almost the same voice he
remembered from his first Enterprise. Once again, Kirk felt
unsettled that with all that had changed in this future, some
things remained the same.
 "Where is the bridge?" he asked the voice from his past.
    "Follow the light path on the wall panels to the turbolift,"
the computer explained.
    A dark panel along the corridor wall suddenly came to life
with a pulsing pattern of light. The twenty-fourth century was
making it all too easy.
    Kirk ran to the turbolift. The light speeded up to keep just
ahead of him.
 The turbolift had no controls.
    "Bridge," Kirk said, then rocked gently as the lift car
moved sideways, then up.
    When the turbolift doors slipped open again, Kirk stepped
forward into an alcove, then paused as he swiftly took in the
sweep of this new bridge.
    There were no steps. The outer support-station ring sloped
up from the ops level to a raised area at the back, marked by a
dramatically curved railing of what appeared to be real wood.
    Superficially, the design remained the same as those
bridges with which Kirk was familiar--the circular arrange-
ment, the forward screen.
 But he noted that instead of one captain's chair, raised in
               311




the center, there were three seats, five if he counted the
smaller, backless seats to either side. Kirk was puzzled by
what that implied. Could it be the captain wasn't as impor-
tant to a ship in this time?
    Kirk stepped out of the turbolift alcove, scanning the
bridge for any sign of his enemy.
    But it was deserted. Odd. Especially since the ship had just
been under attack. What if there were an emergency bridge
elsewhere in the ship? He decided he should have asked the
computer to distinguish between the two.
    As he looked for a computer access panel, Kirk saw a
dedication panel to his right. He recognized a faint familiari-
ty in the silhouette of the vessel depicted on it.
 Then he read the name on the plaque.
 U.S.S. Enterprise.
  He stopped. He read the next line, the smaller type.
  Galaxy Class. Starfleet Registry NCC-1701-D.
    But this ship was dead. McCoy had told him. It had been
destroyed above Veridian as he and Picard had--
    Waves of agony pulsed through Kirk. Picard must die. Kirk
gasped for breath. Was this another dream? Was there any
other way to explain his presence on a ghost ship?
    Another set of doors opened. Picard stepped out and to the
wooden rail. "We have to talk," he said.
    As quickly as that, Kirk's conflict was gone again. Instantly,
he decided on his.strategy. "I know. You're right." He sagged
against the wall. Touched his wound again. Held out his
blood-coated fingers. "I need... help."
Picard came down the slope of the bridge. Trusting.
"Captain Simm appears to have his hands full," Picard
said. "All secondary services are offiine. But perhaps I can do
something about that."
    He went to a padded drawer-front on the wall. Opened it.
Withdrew an oddly shaped case marked with the Starfleet
caduceus.

 First aid, Kirk thought. Perfect...
    "Come over here," Picard said. He opened the medikit on
one of the chairs in front of a ridiculously small operations
console. "Let me see if I can stop the bleeding."
    Kirk smiled, nodded, got within arm's length of Picard.
Began to stumble, as if trying to brace himself against the
chair.
    And when Picard reached out to steady him, Kirk rammed
his forehead against Picard's face, amazed that a captain of
the Enterprise would fall for such a trap.
 Picard fell backward, catching himself on the other chair.
    He straightened up, straightened the chest piece of his
armor, raised his hands as if to surrender.
    "Captain Kirk, I think there's something you should know
before you carry this any further."
    Kirk rubbed his face, as his compulsion to simply jump on
Picard and begin swinging became unbearable.
    "I believe we can reach a consensus here," Picard said. He
glanced up at another set of doors on the bridge. Kirk
followed his gaze, recognizing Picard's trap in the same
instant Picard leapt forward, fist swinging, catching Kirk on
the jaw to flip him over the console.
    By the time Kirk pushed himself to his feet, Picard had
already run into the turbolift.
    Kirk followed and stopped by the closed doors. He had no
doubt he could defeat his enemy, but the trick was going to be
finding him. And how could he find a captain on his own
ship? A ship that Kirk knew nothing about, other than it had
crashed in... Kirk gasped.
     This ship couldn't be Picard's Enterprise. Which meant,
there was only one thing that it could be. Kirk smiled.
 He turned to face the empty bridge.
 "Arch," he said.
    A standard Starfleet holodeck control arch appeared before
the command chairs.
               313




    Kirk rushed to it, now clearly understanding Picard's
strategy.
    He hadn't wanted to let Kirk remain loose on the Challeng-
er. So he had lured his attacker into a holodeck in order to
keep him occupied until the real ship returned to normal
operations. And what better maze to place Kirk in than that
of a state-of-the-art, twenty-fourth-century vessel of which he
had no knowledge?
    "Very clever," Kirk said, as he accessed the arch controls.
They were exactly like those he had seen Salatrel use on her
ship. He was pleased he had paid such close attention.
 "Computer, prepare to change simulation programs."
    "Holodeck systems, standing by," the familiar voice con-
firmed.
 Kirk grinned with anticipation.
    Captain Picard had been good enough to show him the
future.
 Now it was Captain Kirk's turn to show him the past.

FORTY-THREE

Picard burst out of the turbolift and skidded to a stop.
    He had been heading to his Enterprise 's battle bridge. It
could be completely sealed off from the rest of the ship--even
in this holodeck simulation. Kirk would be free to roam the
endless corridors until Picard could once again make contact
with the Challenger's bridge and have Simm beam Kirk to a
detention cell.
                314

 Except... this wasn't the battle bridge.
    Picard looked around, breathing hard in his armor, until he
suddenly realized that somehow Kirk had succeeded in
changing the rules. Somehow, the legendary captain had
worked out how to alter the holodeck's program.
    Picard was on the bridge of a hundred-year-old relic--a
Constitution-class starship, one of the greatest series ever
built.
    Knowing what he would find there, Picard turned to the
dedication plaque by the turbolift. He smiled in spite of what
the inscription meant to his odds of survival.
 U.S.S. Enterprise.
 Starship class.
 San Francisco, Calif.
 Kirk had gone home, and he had brought Picard with him.
 But that was all the time Picard had for sentimentality.
 "Computer," he announced.
    "Working." The familiar voice was somehow cooler, more
mechanistic. Not quite the response Picard had been ex-
pecting.
 "Arch," Picard ordered.
 "Unable to comply," the computer answered.
 Picard sighed.
 "Computer, identify your make and model."
"This unit is a D-6 duotronic computer comprising--"
"That's enough," Picard said. Kirk had even called up a
simulation of the original Enterprise 's limited computer,
effectively blocking access to the Challenger's system and the
holodeck controls. How had he had time to become so
proficient?
 "Do you like it?" Kirk asked.
    Picard turned around slowly as Kirk rose from a chair at
some kind of operational station with an antique holographic
imager. One that actually required the user to peer in through
a narrow blue slot, rather than seeing results on a screen.
 "I remember seeing one in a museum," Picard said.
                315




    He placed his hand on the red railing and began to ease
backward, even as Kirk approached.
    "This is the way exploration was meant to be," Kirk said as
he looked around the recreation of his first bridge.
    "No carpet. No replicators. None of the comforts of
home." Kirk stepped down to the center deck, rapped his fist
against the back of the command chair. "This was a ma-
chine, "he said, almost as if Picard weren't present. "You felt
it back then. That you were actually going somewhere. The
way the deck pitched when the inertial dampeners couldn't
keep up."
 "They still can't," Picard said dryly.
    His mind raced, trying to remember whatever he could
abo,ut the safety features in these antique bridges. They must
have had fire-suppression systems. Emergency egress panels.
But all he could see was the single pair of turbolift doors he
had entered through. How many bridge crews had been
trapped because that single access route had been blocked?
    'Tm going to die in your time," Kirk said as he stood in
front of the command chair. "So I thought it only fitting that
you die in mine. Or at least, a simulation of mine."
    "I'm sure you're aware twenty-fourth-century medical sci-
ence has made fantastic strides," Picard said.
    Kirk looked off to the side with a frown. "Twenty-fourth-
century medical science is what brought me here." Then he
stepped away from the command chair. Picard calculated
how many seconds it would take Kirk to circle the combined
ops and navigational console in the center of the bridge. He
wondered how long it would be before Simm realized that
Picard and Kirk were both missing. With Worf unconscious
on the shuttlebay deck, Picard worried that it might take too
long.
    "Kirk," Picard began, "you don't know what you're
doing."
    Kirk shrugged, almost in resignation. "I used to think that
every day of my first five-year mission. Each crew member
                316

who died. Each opportunity missed. I'd ask myself, why?
Who was I to make those decisions?"
     "Those were the risks of the job," Picard said, knowing
what the other captain meant all too well. "They still are."
 "You mean the twenty-fourth-century isn't perfect?"
    "No age is. It's our hope for the future that drives us on,
inspired by the accomplishments of the past."
     Kirk walked slowly around the console, idly running his
hand over one of the two chairs there. "But this is my future."
 "You're seeing it through distorted eyes."
    "Am IT' Kirk asked. He looked around his bridge again.
"Who's the observer here? Who's the visitor out of time?" He
glanced back at the turbolift. "If I step through those doors,
who's to say I won't find Spock in the recreation room,
waiting by a chessboard? Or McCoy, complaining that I
haven't been in for my checkup?"
 "Is that what you want to find? The past?"
    Kirk stared at Picard. Shook his head. "A tempting offer.
But the past is the past, never to be lived again. I don't belong
there." He glanced behind at the waiting command chair.
"No one who sits in that chair does."
    Picard had the sudden, heartfelt realization that despite the
years between them, he was looking into a mirror.
    "Then join us in the future. Fight what they've done to
you," Picard said.
 Kirk swallowed hard. 'Tve tried. I can't."
    "You've come so far, accomplished so much. Don't let it
end here."
 Kirk took a step forward.
    "It has to end sometime." He spread his arms to encom-
pass the bridge. "Why not here... where it all began?"
    Picard prepared himself for Kirk's attack. He frowned.
"Captain... if I have to, I will kill you .... "
 Kirk grinned. "You can try .... "And then he attacked.
    He ducked under the railing, grabbing Picard's legs and
pulling them forward, sending Picard down on his back.
                317




            W/ ILL, I/4,|?1 ~.3F1/4.1 l~l~l~

    Before Picard could roll to his side, Kirk pulled him off the
raised platform and swung him into the console.
 Picard kicked to flip Kirk away before he could lunge again.
 He pulled himself to his feet.
 Saw Kirk crouching, ready to--
    Picard ducked to take the force of Kirk's attack on his
shoulder.
 Kirk brought both elbows down on Picard's back.
    The armor saved Picard from the worst of the impact, then
Kirk brought his knee up to hit Picard's jaw. However, before
Kirk's knee could connect, Picard threw himself back, to roll
over the console, landing on his feet.
    His movements must have activated some control, because
an old-fashioned targeting sight unfolded from the console
surface.
    He could see that Kirk had now gone beyond reasoning.
Blood trickled from the comer of his mouth. His breath came
like the panting of a lion on the hunt.
    Picard felt the same. Tasted blood in his own mouth.
Brought his hands up, ready to gouge, to tear, to defeat this
enemy.
 With a roar, Kirk attacked again.
 This time Picard did not attempt to deflect him.
 The captains met head on.
    The impact of their collision carried them back to the
command chair. They struggled against each other, neither
giving thought to' defense. Their hands found each other's
throats. Their eyes were mere centimeters from each other.
    Picard heard the pounding of his heart. His vision was
narrowing, dark stars flickering in from the sides. But he
would not let go. He saw the same loss of focus coming to
Kirk's eyes.
    Bound forever in a death grip to Kirk, neither captain
willing nor able to yield, Picard was astounded to feel the old
bridge swirl away from him. Together with Kirk, he was
plunged into an endless black hole from which there could be
                318

             1 HIP., KIC. 1 UKIN

no escape, trapped in a titanic struggle that would last
through all time.
    And then the command chair disappeared beneath them
and both captains dropped to the floor of the holodeck,
gasping with surprise.

FORTY-FOUR

"That is enough?' Riker said.
    He pushed past Dr. Bashir and kept his phaser aimed at
the impossible sight of Kirk and Picard locked in mortal
combat.
    The two captains looked up at him, then looked around in a
daze, as if they had forgotten they had been in a holodeck.
Slowly, almost reluctantly, their hands fell away from each
other's throats.
    "The next one who moves gets a force three stun," Riker
said.
    But Ambassador Spock stepped forward, into Riker's line
of fire. "1 do not believe that will be necessary."
 "Ambassador, believe me, it goes for you, too."
 "Oh, calm down," McCoy grumbled.
    Riker heard the whine of the old admiral's exoskeleton as
he rose from his mobility chair and walked forward, one sure
step after another, until he stood at Spock's side. "No one's
shooting anyone," he said.
    Riker was tempted to stun everyone, but Deanna put a
hand on his arm and shook her head in silence.




    Riker lowered his phaser so it was aimed at the deck.
Deanna was right. Something beyond what they could see was
at work here. He could almost sense it himself. Behind him,
even La Forge, Worf, Data, and Dr. Crusher maintained a
respectful silence. All had recovered from Kirk's attack in the
shuttlebay. But Riker had no impression that any of them
desired revenge. They only seemed spellbound by the scene
before them.
    Kirk and Picard stood side by side, spent, breathless. But
where Picard silently acknowledged the presence of his old
command crew, Riker noted that Kirk's attention was abso-
lutely riveted on Spock and McCoy.
 "Spock...?" Kirk said, his voice a low and raspy whisper.
    "I am... most pleased to see you again, Captain," Spock
formally replied.
    McCoy shook his head in disgust. "Oh, for crying out loud,
Spock. It's been eighty years!"
 "Seventy eight point four years, Doctor."
 "Can you help me?" Kirk asked.
 "Yes," Spock said.
    Riker saw the look of relief on Kirk~s face. Then Kirk
glanced at Picard beside him. "Good. Because I don't think l
can kill him by myself." Riker raised his phaser again and
aimed it at Kirk.
    Spock moved quickly to stand between Kirk and Picard.
"That is not what I meant, Captain."
    Kirk lifted his hands to push Spock aside. "But, Spock...
I have to..."
    "No," Spock said, glancing back at Riker. "You are under
the influence of Borg programming. The implant responsible
has been removed, but the patterns it laid clown are still
affecting your thoughts and your actions."
    Spock raised his own hand, but not in the traditional
Vulcan salute.
 "A mind-meld?" Kirk asked.
                320

    Spock nodded. "You will be able to draw strength from me,
until the Borg patterns have faded."
    But Picard protested. "Willwyou can't allow this. If
they're both under Borg control, this could be a way to cover
their tracks."
 Spock turned to look back at Riker.
    "There is another way," he said. There was silence in the
holodeck after Spock's explanation. Even Data had nothing
to say.
 Riker had no idea what to think, it was so audacious.
 "Has it ever been done before?" he asked Spock.
 "Not to my knowledge," Spock said.
    Riker saw Kirk look past Spock to Picard. He saw the raw
need in Kirk's eyes, the desire to attack Picard once more.
The pressure he was fighting to retain some self-control.
    "Remember what it says on the plaque?" Kirk asked
Picard, hoarsely, even trying to smile.
    Picard nodded, the same tired expression coming to his
face. "To boldly go..." he said.
    And Kirk finished the thought, with the words that had
defined both their lives. "... where no man has gone
before .... "
    Spock took a moment to compose himself, then reached
out to Kirk. The fingers of his right hand sought the katra
points of Kirk's face, establishing the connection that would
allow their minds to merge.
    Kirk stared at his friend, wide-eyed. His struggle to clear
his mind for Spock to enter safely obvious to all who
witnessed it.
 "My mind to yours, Captain Kirk," Spock said.
 Then Spock turned to Picard.
    With his left hand, Spook sought the same connection with
the second captain.
 Riker caught his breath.
 "My mind to yours, Captain Picard."

               321




           WILLIAM ~I'-IAI NLR

    And with that, the two generations joined. Mixed and
merged in the one mind that knew both, could contain both.
The only mind that could bring them together.
    Spock's mind reached deep into the experiences and em0-
tions of both captains, seeking the commonality of their
drive, their dreams, their experiences.
    He absorbed the urgency of Kirk's run through the
Enterprise-B... the shock of his being claimed by the Nexus
and the bliss of its embrace... and the stirring promise of
Picard's arrival to free him from the stagnation of eternal
perfection within it.
    He absorbed Picard's agony of assimilation as the biochips
of the Borg grew into his tissues... the detached horror of
instructing a fleet of machines to destroy all that he believed
in, in a war against the Federation... the guilt for those
deaths ....
    He shuddered as in both minds he experienced that same
sterile, absolute joy... and the revulsion and strength of will
that had enabled both to resist it.
 And still he went deeper ....
 To Veridian III...
 To the death of Kirk through his own eyes and Picard's.
 Picard's fear as Shelby laid out the interface.
    Kirk's fear as he rose, unprepared, from the liquid of the
alien ark.
    Then the torture of Kirk's programming... the lies Sala-
trel wove to entrap him... twisting the truth of his grief for
his murdered son and lost loves... to create an automaton
with but one, perverted purpose ....
     Spock touched the deadening, frightful power of the Borg
in both minds. Took its measure. Met its challenge.
 He reached out to them both.
 Giving each his strength...
 His wisdom...
 His logic ....
 Three minds joined. No barriers among them.

    Until a dark shadow rose from the depths of their ex-
change.
 A shadow of the Borg, not from Kirk nor from Picard...
 But from Spock ....
    He gasped in pain as the impact of that lost memory seared
his conscious mind.
    Overwhelmed, he sank to his knees and Kirk and Picard
knelt with him. They held his hands to their faces, maintain-
ing connection. As one, they reached out to Spock, to heal
and save him, as he had healed and saved them.
 "I have seen them ...."Spock whispered. "I have...
walked with them ...."His body shuddered with the impact
of the truth revealed as his voice lowered and took on the
eerie harmonics of the collective.
  "We are Borg," Spock intoned.
  "We are... V'Ger?'

FORTY-FIVE

Except for the almost subliminal hum of the air circulators,
Captain Simm's austere ready room was silent. Kirk was
already there when Picard stepped in. He held his hands
behind his back, gazing out an observation window at the
stars.
    Picard hesitated, not wanting to disturb him. But Kirk
turned, his serious expression fading in a welcoming grin.
    "It's all right, Captain," Kirk said. "I don't want to kill you
anymore."
                323




    Picard smiled and went to Kirk, to shake his outstretched
hand. They each had been examined and treated separately
by their respective physicians after Spock had been taken to
sickbay. This was their first chance to talk alone. And the
opportunity would remain for only a few minutes more
before the briefing session began.
    "I cannot even begin to imagine what you must be think-
ing," Picard said.
    Picard saw a flicker pass through Kirk's expression and
knew he was masking the pain the nanites must still cause.
Dr. Bashir had told Picard that he had reached the limit of
what neural blockers could do without degrading Kirk's
awareness. And Kirk had steadfastly refused to go to that next
step.
    Kirk narrowed his eyes for a moment. "Do you ever ask
yourself why you're out here?"
    Picard hesitated. It was unusual for him to feel so comfort-
able with someone he really barely knew. But what secrets
could there be between them? What had one done that the
other had not? "Sometimes," Picard admitted. "When I
think of other paths I might have taken. Or those I've left
behind."
 "Family?" Kirk asked.
    But Picard did not have to answer. He could see that Kirk
sensed the loss he endured. Of his nephew and his brother in
the fire that had claimed them.
    Kirk looked at the stars again. "All the worlds we've seen,
all the beings we've known, and it still comes down to that,"
he said. "Being alone." He glanced back at Picard. "When
you lost your ship, Captain, how'd that make you feel?"
  Picard wasn't sure how to answer.
    A flicker of mischief played in Kirk's eyes, as if he shared a
scandalous secret no one else could ever know. "Not as badly
as you thought you should. Right?"
    Picard waited for Kirk to continue, as he knew the other
captain would.

                324

    "When I lost my first ship," Kirk said, "I was numb. I kept
waiting for some uncontrollable sense of loss to...
overwhelm me. It never came. You know why?"
    Picard felt as if a burden had been taken from him. Kirk
knew. He had gone through the exact same experience~
"Because, in the end, it's not the ship that matters." Kirk nodded. "It's the mission."
    Picard looked out at the same stars, for the first time
allowing himself to ask a question he had never voiced aloud.
    "Has it been worth it for you?" Picard heard Kirk sigh, as if
it were a question he had often confronted, yet never voiced.
"The lack of roots. Of family."
    "When I was... hunting you," Kirk said, "I thought that
if I could just find you, I could... find myself."
    "You mean, you could find yourself by completing the
mission."
 The two captains turned from the stars to face each other.
 "But the mission never ends, does it," Picard said.
    "This one will," Kirk said. And whatever was in his eyes
now, even Picard could not decipher.
    Two minutes later, James Kirk stood at the head of the
conference table, in the observation lounge off the Chal-
lenger's bridge.
    Behind him, on the viewscreen, was an image he had hoped
never to see again.
    "V'Ger," he said. "A corruption of Voyager, the name
given a space probe launched from Earth at the end of the
1900's. Earth lost contact with the probe a few years after it
passed outside the boundaries of the solar system."
    Kirk nodded at Data, who sat in the first seat on the right,
yellow hands folded on the tabletop. "According to Mr. Data,
later findings indicated the probe had been trapped by what
was believed to have been a black hole. Though Data says the
phenomenon could very well have been a transwarp
conduit."
               325




    The image on the screen changed and Kirk took a moment
to admire the sleek lines of his refit Enterprise. It was hard to
believe such a magnificent ship could be considered an
antique in this time. "Nearly three hundred years later, the
space probe Voyager returned to Earth--searching for, it
said, its creator."
    Riker interrupted. He sat at the back of the table, between
Julian Bashir and Deanna Troi. "It said? I didn't think
twentieth-century science could construct a self-aware ma-
chine."
    "It couldn't," Kirk replied. "Somehow, the Voyager probe
encountered... something which attempted to repair it.
Those repairs gave it self-awareness."
    McCoy's gravelly voice spoke up. His mobility chair didn't
fit beneath the conference table, so he sat to the side, behind
Dr. Crusher. "And you're guessing that 'something' was the
Borg? That's a helluva theory, Jim."
    Kirk didn't have to defend his theory. Spock did. He sat
beside Picard, subdued, recovered from his ordeal in the
holodeck. For a moment, Kirk could almost believe he and
Spock were back on his old ship, as if time had stood still.
    Spock's voice sounded as dry as it always had when he had
tangled with McCoy. "There is no guesswork involved,
Doctor. I mind-melded with V'Ger. I saw where it had been, a
planet filled with living machines. At the time, I had no
context for that knowledge, and it was so alien it faded from
my mind. But when I joined with Captain Kirk and Captain
Picard, whose minds both held strong and recent impressions
of the Borg, the connection between V'Ger and the Borg
became clear and self-evident to me."
    "Looks like you're rewriting history here, Ambassador," La
Forge said. "Our Enterprise wasn't the first to contact the
Borg--yours was."
    But Spock shook his head. "V'Ger was reconfigured by the
Borg, or more correctly, by a different branch of the
326

collective--that assimilated by direct conversion to pat-
terned energy. The Borg we know in this time assimilate by
physical means. But V'Ger clearly possessed the same Borg
root-command structure that derived from whatever original
groupmind that linked them all."
    Kirk looked around the room. "What Spock's trying to say
is that V'Ger was part of the collective."
    Spock looked at Riker. "And because I mind-melded with
V'Ger, the tendrils of that collective remained within me."
    Picard took over. "Which explains why the Borg would not
assimilate Spock on the hypercube station." Picard paused.
"I don't know how I can apologize to you, Ambassador ...."
He looked up at Kirk. "Or to you, Captain."
    Kirk waved the apology aside. "No need, Captain. We were
each put in play by a different aspect of the Borg." There was
a stir in the room. Kirk knew he had their attention now.
"Though Mr. Spock..." Kirk stopped to correct himselfi He
must remain up to date. "Ambassador Spock could put it
more eloquently: What better way to defeat the Federation
than by internal dissension? What better way to save it than
by the sharing of knowledge? And what better way to defeat
the Borg?"
    Riker was the first to bite. "Excuse me, Captain Kirk. Are
you saying the Borg can be defeated?"
    Kirk grinned. "Never underestimate the power of a Vulcan.
Each of us had a piece of the greatest puzzle facing Starfleet.
My contact gave me background data on transwarp conduits
and the hypercube station that somehow maintains them.
Captain Picard had all the technical information about their
ships--which was necessary for him to lead them into battle.
And Ambassador Spock has seen their homeworld."
    The room filled with excited and confused conversation.
Kirk turned back to the viewscreen as the final image
appeared. A starchart, with one star marked in red. Kirk
pointed to it.
                327




    "This, gentlemen, is the Central Node of the Borg group-
mind. Destroy it, and each branch of the collective will be cut
off and alone."
    La Forge voiced an objection. "Captain Kirk... that's a
chart of the Delta Quadrant. To get that far would take more
than century at maximum warp."
    Kirk walked over to Picard and put a hand on his shoulder.
"Fortunately, while we were all playing cat and mouse,
Captain Picard and Dr. Crusher were performing their duty.
In the shuttlebay of this ship are two Borg scoutships with
functioning transwarp engines."
    Captain Lewinski stepped away from the rear wall of the
conference room to complete Kirk's explanation.
    "And the Defiant-class ships were specifically designed to
accept transwarp drives, should any ever be recovered or
developed."
    Captain Picard stood up beside Captain Kirk, poised on
the brink of the Starfleet's greatest mission. "In ten hours, the
conversion of the Monitor into a transwarp vessel will be
complete. And then..." Picard smiled at Kirk.
    "And then," Kirk said, "we're going to kick the Borg clear
into the next galaxy."
    As one, every individual in the conference room, even
McCoy, stood to immediately ask to be part of that mission.
    "Look at them," Kirk said to Picard. "When it comes to
people, nothing's changed between our times."
 "The best things never do," Picard said.

FORTY-SIX

The four captains stood on the bridge of the Challenger as the
viewscreen showed the Monitor coming about--Kirk, Picard,
Simm, and Lewinski.
    Lewinski observed his ship with a pang of regret. Because it
was his ship no longer. Shelby had sent his new orders by
subspace. The second transwarp engine had to be transported
to Starbase 324 at once. He was in charge of that operation.
In his absence, by order of Starfleet Command, the Monitor
would be turned over to Picard.
 But Lewinski wasn't one to hold grudges.
 He touched his commbadge.
 "Lewinski to Monitor. Come in, Mr. Land."
    Land acknowledged and Lewinski told him to angle the
Monitor seventeen degrees off the Challenger's horizontal
axis. "We want to get some glare from the sun," Lewinski
explained.
    Kirk and Picard looked at Lewinski without understanding
what he meant. But after a few seconds, Captain Simm said,
"Of course."
    Lewinski gestured to the screen as the black disk of the
Monitor slowly eased forward to fill it, angling gently so that a
dull band of reflected sunlight moved over her upper hull,
revealing the details of her duranium skin.
 "In an operation such as this," Lewinski explained, "when
                329




a ship receives a substantial refit and is sent on such a
noteworthy mission, it's not unheard of for it to receive a new
code designation for the duration."
    He saw the band of sunlight hit the first of the new pattern
that he had had his refit crew etch into the ship's black
microcoating. He turned his attention to Kirk and Picard
beside him.
    "It'll never turn up in the record books that way, gentle.
men," Lewinski said. "But I wanted to give you both a good
send-off"
    Both captains' gazes were fixed on the viewscreen as they
saw what Lewinski had done.
    The fabled name flashed across the hull of the starship, as 
ephemeral as a ghost, but never to be erased from the minds
and hearts of those who saw it. U.S.S. Enterprise.
 "Least I could do," Lewinski said.

FORTY-SEVEN

Spock turned from the new Enterprise's science station as he
heard the bridge doors slide open behind him.
    Without hesitation, he stood as Captains Kirk and Picard
stepped onto the bridge.
 He noted that Worf, Riker, Troi, and Data did the same.
 It seemed the appropriate thing to do.
    As Kirk and Picard surveyed their new bridge, Spock's
acute hearing picked up Picard's whispered words to Kirk.
                330

    "Captain, once again, you mustn't feel you have to do this.
Julian Bashir is a fine--" Picard was cut off by Kirk.
    "You're still asking me if I want to spend what might be the
last few days of my life in a diagnostic bed? Waiting for a
miracle that might not happen, instead of being out here,
doing something useful?"
 "Or foolish," Picard said.
    "Captain Picard, I've done a great many foolish things in
my day already. What would you do?"
 Picard smiled. "Welcome aboard, Captain."
    Spock looked ahead at the viewscreen as Commander Data
moved the Enterprise away from New Titan and the Challeng-
er. The android turned in his chair. "We are ready for
transwarp injection at..." Spock saw a look of consterna-
tion cross the android's face. "Uh... at the captain's discre-
tion."
 Everyone on the small bridge looked to Kirk and Picard.
 Kirk and Picard looked at each other.
 They stood on either side of the starship's command chair.
 Its empty command chair.
     Spock raised an eyebrow. Knowing what he did about both
captains, he expected the next few moments to be fascinating.
 Kirk was the first to offer Picard the chair.
 "Captain, please."
    But Picard shook his head graciously, returning the gesture
with a flourish.
 "No, Captain, I insist."
 "Really, Starfleet turned over this mission to you."
    "But you were the first to defeat a branch of the collective.
The mission is yours."
    For an instant, both captains were frozen in place. Then
Spock saw the surreptitious movement both made as each
began to slip into the chair, stopping at once when they
realized the other was about to do the same.
    "How long do you two intend to keep this up?" Riker
asked.
                331




    Picard and Kirk both looked embarrassed, but just as
neither was going to be the first to sit in the chair, neither was
going to be the first to step away.
 Then Kirk saw Spock watching him.
 He smiled.
    "Mr. Spock!" He patted the back of the command chair. "I
believe your seat is over here."
 Spock was startled. "Captain, I am no longer in Starfleet."
    "Retirees are always subject to caU-up in time of war." He
patted the seat again.
 "Sir, I have never sought command."
    "Then who better to lead?" Picard said, seeing the same
end to the impasse.
    Riker looked meaningfully at Spock. "Someone had better
get us on our way."
 Spock rose reluctantly, smoothing his robes.
    "I shall have to rely on you both for guidance," he said
diplomatically.
    Picard angled the chair around to meet him. "That's what
we're here for. Please, Ambassador, take command."
    With great reluctance, Spock took the chair, Kirk on his
right, Picard on his left.
 Only Data looked relieved.
 "Captain?" the android said. "We are ready for injection."
    The response sounded like a confused choral reading as
everyone replied at once.
 "Take us out," Kirk said.
 "Proceed," Spock ordered.
 "Make it so," Picard pronounced.
 "Yes... sirs," Data said.
    Then he turned back to face the viewscreen, and Spock
watched with interest as he saw a ripple shimmer among the
stars, making it appear as if the depths of space had been
painted on a canvas that was suddenly split apart and folded
back.
 Inside, a pool of multicolored light expanded, as Spock felt
                332

             I Ill:, KJ~ 1 UKIN

himself rocked back in his seat with a kick of acceleration
even the battle-hardened systems of this new Enterprise could
not compensate for.
"We have achieved transwarp," Data announced.
"Decrease the resolution of the forward viewscreen,"
Spock said. "The effects of observing the transwarp dimen-
sion can be disturbing for those who have not experienced it
before."
    The viewscreen abruptly changed to a undulating wire-
frame model of energy densities.
 "Speed, Mr. Data?" Spock asked.
    "We have exceeded the speed of subspace radio and are
continuing to accelerate."
    Spock looked to the ceiling. "Bridge to engineering. What is
the status of the Borg engine?"
    La Forge answered in a voice tinged with awe. "Sir, I
couldn't begin to tell you how this thing's working, but it's
drawing less power than one-quarter impulse."
    "Is there any indication of an operational limit being met,
Mr. La Forge?"
    "No, sir," the engineer replied. "Diagnostics show we're
running at twenty percent of capacity."
    "Bridge out," Spock said. "Mr. Data, assuming we contin-
ue to accelerate through this medium until the Borg engine
reaches eighty percent of its capacity, what is our estimated
arrival at the Borg homeworld?" "Six point two hours, sir."
    Spock stood up and faced Kirk and Picard. "Gentlemen, I
will be in my cabin. I suggest you take this opportunity to
rest."
 "Very well done, Ambassador," Picard said.
 "Taught him everything he knows," Kirk said with a grin.
    Spock left the bridge, wondering if he had done the right
thing by healing the rift between Kirk and Picard.
    One starship captain was still quite enough as far as he was
concerned.
               333




FORTY-EIGHT

The Borg world orbited a sun long dead, a white dwarf star
little more than a core of degenerate matter, spinning rapidly,
accomplishing nothing except serving as the center of gravity
for a paltry system of three planets.
 Untold ages ago there had been more.
 But some of those planets had been consumed.
    One that remained in the dark and sunless system was the
Borg world. Whether it was the world on which the Borg had
first arisen, or whether it was simply a planet they had chosen
near the beginning of their march across the galaxy, no one
would ever know.
    All that mattered was that, here and now, it was the center.
The node to which all branches reported. The wellspring
from which all branches emerged.
    There were no natural life-forms left on it. No free water.
No stones or soil. Everything was engineered--the results of
millennia of work and reconfiguration. Each molecule now
had a function, each shape a purpose. So that now even the
world itself was living, if only in the sense that Borg them-
selves were alive.
    The surface of the solitary planet was banded by rings of
light, flickering with the thought processes of a computer that
encompassed a sphere larger than the Earth. What thoughts it
held were unfathomable except to others who might share its
size and structure.
                334

             1 H~ KIt, 1 UKiN

    But whether others like it existed was unknown even to its
great mind. And so it sent out its children to remake the
galaxy, to remake the universe itself if need be.
 Anything to escape being alone.

    In standard orbit above that world, the Avatar of Tomed
coasted in space one hundred thousand light-years from
home. If not for the Borg-built transwarp engine tied into her
warp drive, it would take her almost three and a half centuries
to return to Romulus, instead of a mere ten hours. But that
great distance was what made this Borg system the perfect
staging arena for the invasion that was within hours of
beginning.
    Spread out before Salatrel, secure from attack, was a vast
Romulan armadamnot the Empire's, but hers.
    Eighteen D'deriderex Warbirds were among it, their where-
abouts a constant embarrassment to the Empire, which
publicly declared them as missing on voyages of exploration,
while privately acknowledging that never before had they
faced such numerous incidents of mutiny.
    Forty additional single-hulled Warbirds of older classes
hovered at their sides. Five classes of Bird-of-Prey. One
hundred seven vessels in all, all outfitted with Borg transwarp
capability and self-modulating Borg disruptors, all their
controls and functions tied together in the Borg collective.
    And assembling with them, joining the spread-wing forma-
tion of Romulan victory, was the key to absolute victorym
eleven Borg cubeships. Soon to be more.
    Because even as Salatrel watched her fleet assemble in the
viewscreen of her bridge, swift Borg scoutships converged on
the assembly coordinates, showing the reason why the cube
was the Borg's most common shape of choice.
    Salatrel changed the focus of the viewscreen to watch as
four scoutships met, docking inner face to inner face until a
single larger cube was formed, the generalized control mecha-
               335




nisms of each scoutship now combining so that the task of
controlling of the entire larger cube would be distributed
among four accumulation points.
    Then those four scoutships moved as one to join another
combination of four, and two more.
 The new cubeship comprised sixteen vessels.
 And they would combine again.
 And again.
    Until another single, mammoth cubeship had emerged to
serve the collective.
    The first time Salatrel had seen the impressive, but so
simple, assembly of the Borg vessels, she had instantly
understood why they were so difficult to destroy. It was like
scratching a holographic plate. Since every element on the
hologram was encoded with the whole image, a single point of
damage could not do any harm. On a cubeship that had
experienced minor damage, every other undamaged part
contained information enough to continue every function.
 That was the power of the collective.
 Groupmind.
 Group function.
 Destined to conquer all.
 Except the Romulan people.
     "Victory," Salatrel pledged as she watched the mighty
cubeships slip in to join the spread-wing formation.
 "Perhaps," Vox said beside her.
    "How can you doubt the triumph of the collective?"
Salatrel asked.
    "We do not," Vox said. "We doubt the victory of the
Romulan Armada. Picard and Spock escaped from the trans-
warp station. You were unable to detect the new class of
Starfleet vessel. You were unable to destroy Picard. You are
weak."
 "I took a chance," Salatrel said.
 "Chance implies risk. There is no risk. There is only
Success."
                336

     Salatrel felt a chill. Hadn't she said the same to Tracius?
The day Kirk had been reborn? "There will be success."
    She felt Vox turn to her, and she forced herself to look up at
him.
Surprisingly, his scanner eye was dim. He looked at her only
with his real eye. The one she was certain still connected
somehow to his Romulan heart.
 "Run," he whispered.
 'Tm sorry?"
 "Nothing can stop them."
 "Vox?"
     The Borg-Romulan reached out to her with his organic
hand, took hers, squeezed. Gently. Just as he had before.
 "Leave while you can," he said.
    Salatrel stared at her former lover. She had no understand-
ing of how he might be able to defeat the influence of the
collective for the length of time it had taken for him to say
those words, in the unaltered voice of the warrior she had
loved.
 "Tell me what I must do," she asked quickly.
    But the scanner eye rekindled and painted her with its
inquisitive red beam.
    "Do not fight us," Vox said, with the harmonic of the
collective once again underscoring his words. "Resistance is
futile."
    Salatrel turned away from him, assailed by old doubts
about her future and the future of her people. But her course
had been set long ago, when James T. Kirk had entered into
the tail of the comet Icarus IV and murdered her grandfather.
Everything that had happened since was the responsibility of
the Butcher of Icarus. Even the Borg-Romulan invasion of his
brutal Federation.
    A warning chime sounded. Tran looked away from his
board.
 "Commanderma transwarp conduit is opening."
               337




    Salatrel leaned forward, puzzled. "Aren't all ships ac-
counted for?"
 "Yes, Commander."
 "Then what is it?"
    "That's just it, Commander. The transwarp conduit
opened, then it closed. But sensors didn't show that anything
came through it."
 "That is not possible," Vox stated.
    "Did you scan for a cloak?" Salatrel asked as she rose to her
feet.
 "Yes, Commander... but I found nothing."
 Salatrel turned to Vox. "It must be an anomaly."
 Vox stared at her coldly. "Or James T. Kirk."

    On the bridge of the new Enterprise, McCoy was the first to
speak as they emerged from transwarp. Kirk thought it was
typical. McCoy was always the first to react to a situation.
Spock was always the first to think a situation through. And
Kirk was always the first to put the two extremes together and
come up with the winning plan. Or, at least, a plan.
    He still hadn't figured out Picard's crew, other than that
they worked as a team--and as a team, they seemed unbeat-
able.
    "One ship..." McCoy sputtered. "Against all of them?!
You've got to be kidding, Spock."
    "May I remind.you I did not request your presence on this
journey, Dr. McCoy."
    "You needed ballast. And these days I'm the next best
thing." Mceoy looked up from his mobility chair at Kirk.
"What do you think, Jim?"
    Kirk shrugged. He had spent the past six hours digesting
the specs on this ship. From his twenty-third century perspec-
tive, its capabilities were mindboggling. He smiled at McCoy.
"I've read what this ship can do, Bones. That fleet out there
doesn't have a chance."
                338

McCoy frowned, never one to appreciate Kirk's hyperbole.
"Is there any sign we have been detected?" Spock asked. He
was back in the center chair, behaving as if he had always
been in command of the ship.
    "No, sir," Data said. "I am picking up an increase in
intership communication, though. Obviously, they saw our
conduit open and are trying to determine why."
    Kirk saw Spock check the displays on the arm of his chair.
"Helm, take us in to the second planet. I believe it is the one I
saw when I melded with V'Ger."
     But Picard stepped up to Spock. "You said you would
depend on our guidance, Mr. Spock." "I am listening, Captain."
    "Save your analysis of that planet for later. Right now, we
owe it to the Federation to inflict as much damage as possible
on these ships." He pointed at the screen. "That's a Romulan
spread-wing formation. They're on the brink of launching
into battle."
    "How do you propose this one vessel take on such a fleet?"
Spock asked, with no trace of rancor.
    "These Romulan vessels are clearly working with the Borg
ships," Picard said. "Therefore, they are tied into the Borg
communications system."
    Spock understood. "Ah, and this vessel's deflector array is
configured to deliver a subspace pulse to effectively blank out
all operative subspace transmitters."
 "Will that destroy them?" Kirk asked.
    "No," Picard said. "But best-guess estimates say it will be
fifteen minutes before the Borg are able to reform the
collective enough to coordinate their attack. In the meantime,
we would be able to proceed, unhindered."
    "If you don't mind me asking," Kirk said. "If you have the
ability to blank Borg communications, why didn't you do that
on New Titan?"
    "Because individual Borg recover within seconds. Each
ship will reestablish its own internal systems within a minute.
               339




It is the sheer complexity of reestablishing the intership
subspace network that will slow the Borg down."
    Spock nodded. "It is a logical decision. Mr. Data, prepare
to fire the deflector pulse."
    Data glanced back at the captains with an expression of
surprise. "Captain Picard, I have just realized that it was
precisely this kind of pulse which could account for the
erasure of all computer records on the world of Trilex."
    "I will be quite fascinated to discuss archaeology with you
later, Data. Now, proceed with Ambassador Spock's order."
"At once, sir."
    Kirk looked down at McCoy as the doctor shifted uncom-
fortably in his mobility chair. "Talking archaeology when
we're facing the biggest fleet this side of Utopia Planitia,"
McCoy muttered. "I still say he has pointed ears."
    Spock glanced back at McCoy. "l am sure you intend Mr.
Data to consider that a compliment, Doctor."
    Kirk grinned. It was good to be back in action, even if he
were little more than an observer.
    He flinched as a searing pain shot through his legs. The
inexorable nanites, still at work. Kirk took a breath to steady
himself. Given present circumstances, he reminded himself,
it was good to be anywhere.

    Salatrel sat beside Tran, double checking all her subcom-
mander's sensor readings. "The ship has to be somewhere in
the system," she said.
    "Most logically, it will attempt to map the Borg world,"
Vox said. "You should concentrate your search there."
    "Why don't you concentrate a search there?" Salatrel
snapped.
    "You remain ignorant of the resources that this armada has
consumed for the collective," Vox said. "We are limited in
what we can do here."
    At one level, Salatrel was pleased by that admission. It was
the first time she had heard any Borg admit there were limits
                340

to what they could accomplish. If the Federation were able to
withstand this armada, the Borg might be defenseless, exactly
as Salatrel had hoped.
    "Tran--order all Birds-of-Prey into tight orbit of the Borg
world. They are to scan for tachyons and fire on any sources."
    "But that will break the attack formation," Vox said. "The
formation must be maintained to balance its entry into the
transwarp dimension."
    "We've come this far," Salatrel said. "A few more minutes
won't hurt. Unless you want to risk a Federation ship's
dropping a few quantum torpedoes on the Borg home-
world."
    Salatrel watched Vox carefully for a reaction. The Romulan
Speaker for the Borg wasn't pleased. She took that to mean
that the homeworld was vulnerable to attack.
    Perhaps the Borg had become too complacent here, never
expecting that anyone could do to them what they did to the
galaxy.
 "Tran, send the order."
 "At once, Commander."
    Tran began to change the configuration of his control panel
to bring up the subspace radio link that united the armada.
"Attention all Birds-of-Prey. For the glory of the Empire, you
are ordered to--"
     The Warbird rocked as every ODN circuit lining the bridge
arced with a power discharge. Collision alerts sounded.
 "Tran! Report!" Salatrel demanded.
    How could the Starfleet vessel know enough to target her
ship?
    "That was an extremely powerful subspace pulse," Tran
reported. "A useless gesture, if it was the Starfleet vessel. All
of our circuits are shielded. No damage."
 Salatrel was puzzled. "Then what was the point of... ?"
    She stopped as she saw Vox bent over, clutching his head
and circuitry.
 "Vox?"




  The Borg-Romulan looked up in agony.
  "The collective is gone from our mind ....We are alone."
    Tran shouted, near panic. "Commander! He's right! The
entire Borg communications system has been overloaded.
The whole fleet is out of contact."
Salatrel lurched toward Tran. "Then reestablish contact!"
Tran shrugged helplessly. "I can't. Every Borg system will
respond by moving to a new method of communications. By
the time we all match frequencies... it'll be too late."
 Salatrel spun to the screen. Clenched her fist.
 "Kirk," she said.
  It was the only answer.

FORTY-NINE

Silent, unseen, the Enterprise sped toward the Borg home-
world.
    On her bridge, Spock still held the center chair, with Kirk
and Picard still beside him, and McCoy to the side. Riker
served as science officer, Worf as communications, Data at
the helm. Beverly Crusher and Deanna Troi both arrived
from the ship's spartan sickbay to witness the historic voyage
firsthand. La Forge labored in engineering, guiding the intri-
cate meshing of Borg technology with Starfleet's latest won-
ders.
    And a crew of Starfleet's finest, trained by Shelby and
Lewinski for the worst the Borg could throw at them, held
their stations throughout the sleek and deadly ship.
                342

    The Federation had never faced a more menacing threat
than the Borg collective. But if this ship proved worthy of her
namesakes, that threat might end, here and forever.
 "That is the world I saw," Spock said. "Without question."
    "I wonder why V'Ger didn't return with a crew of Borg,"
Riker asked.
    "Who knows? V'Ger was here a long time ago," Kirk said.
"Maybe the collective followed different strategies then. May-
be there were no Borg as you know them now." He paused
and regarded the new crew of the new Enterprise. "What we
need to remember is, if this world is a single, living creature,
then it's doing what all living things do--evolving, growing,
learning."
    Picard frowned. "Which means that somewhere down
below could be the start of something even more deadly and
relentless than what we've faced already."
    "Destroy it," McCoy said. "While that damn fleet is
immobilized, burn away its surface. Sterilize the place."
     "If it is a living creature, doctor," Spock said, "that would
be a crime against everything the Federation stands for."
 "Then we cut it off," Kirk said.
    "I agree," Picard added. "The power of the collective is in
its organization. If we can make this interruption of its
communications system permanent, then we deprive it of its
ability to organize its conquest of the galaxy."
     "Who knows?" Kirk said. "If we slow it down enough,
maybe we can even try to reason with it." "Reason with the Borg?" Riker asked.
      Picard made the argument. "Destroying them will always
be an option, Will. But an option we can never go back on."
 "Are you sure, sir?" Riker asked.
    Picard looked at Kirk. "After what I've been through
recently, yes. I am."
    "The problem still remains," Spock said, "how do we make
this interruption of their communications permanent?"
  Picard stepped forward to better see the viewscreen and the
                343




world of light upon it. "From my time with them, I now know
that somewhere down there is the Central Node of the entire
collective. We must find it. And we must... destroy it.
Beyond any chance of them reconstructing it."
    Picard turned to face Spock. "If you agree, sir. This ship
does have that power."
    Kirk thought Spock's response was noticeably grim.
"Provided we utilize it within the next ten minutes, Com-
mander. If we attempt to act once the Borg and Romulan fleet
are functional as a united force, I estimate our useful lifetime
in the system at less than two minutes."
    Picard turned to Data and Riker. "Gentlemen, I suggest
you begin a full sensor sweep of the Borg homeworld at
once."
    Kirk raised a finger. "Um, I'm not an expert on this ship,
but won't our sensors reveal our location to the Borg?"
    "Only if they're looking for us this close to the planet,"
Picard said.
 "I would be," Kirk replied.
    Placard smiled. "Then I would suggest you take the weapons
console."
    Kirk moved there directly and found the layout familiar
enough to hope he'd have a chance to use it.
    Spock addressed the helm. "Mr. Data--estimated time to
scan the Borg planet?"
 "Eighteen minutes, sir."
    "Full Borg communications will be restored in eight min-
utes."
 Data turned to Spock. "Sir, may I try an experiment?"
    Even from his position at the weapons console, Kirk could
hear McCoy groan.
     "Do you believe it will decrease the time necessary to
search for the Central Node?" Spock asked. "I believe so, sir."
 "Will you just get on with it!" McCoy snapped. Then he
                344

started coughing uncontrollably, and Kirk smiled as he saw
both Dr. Crusher and Deanna Troi rush to McCoy's side.
    On the viewscreen, a schematic of the Borg homeworld
appeared to one side. On the other side, the schematic of
another planet Kirk did not recognize. Though he did find it
familiar.
Picard recognized it, though. "Data, that's Trilex, isn't it?"
"Yes, sir. A reconstruction of its landmasses, seas, and
population centers, prior to the disaster which claimed its
sun."
    "Very interesting," Picard said. "But what does it have to
do with the situation at hand?"
    "Sir, I submit that the organic and machine intelligences of
Trilex did not perish in a war against each other. I believe that
they were involved in a war against the Borg. Or, at least, the
Borg as they existed at that time." "Go on, Mr. Data."
    "The damage that was done to the Trilex computer infra-
structure was the result of a subspace pulse similar to what we
have just used to temporarily incapacitate the Borg fleet. If we
accept that our technique is one which can be independently
developed by any who fight the Borg, then the ruins of Trilex
could indicate that the inhabitants of that world used a
massive subspace pulse to incapacitate a Borg invasion force
in their system."
    "Mr. Data, are you saying that the people of Trilex, organic
and artificial, deliberately triggered the deadly explosion of
their sun."
    "Yes, sir. They might have thought there was a chance some
of the population might survive. But if the Borg were not
stopped, then none would survive."
     "It would be an act of terrible desperation for a people to
gamble the existence of their world," Picard said.
 "I find it is an act of hope, sir."
 "In what way?"
                345




    "What better indication could there be that organic and
artificial beings can live together, than by their decision to
fight and die together, for what they believe in? Surely that
shows they were united in a common purpose."
    Kirk had watched and listened to the lengthy exchange
between Picard and the android. He felt certain that on his
bridge, he and Spock had rarely indulged in such introspec-
tion. He wondered if things had moved faster in his day. No
one else on the bridge seemed as impatient as he felt with the
inaction. He checked the time readout. Six minutes remained
before they would come under fire.
    "You may have answered the Trilex Question, Mr. Data,"
Picard continued. "But how does it apply here?"
    "The Borg are not imaginative, sir. They follow preset
patterns. If we overlay the pattern of destruction on Trilex--"
On the viewscreen, the two schematics merged. "--on top of
the Borg homeworld, I believe that since the people of Trilex
were intending to destroy the Borg center of communication
on their world, the area of the worst destruction should line
up with the location of the Central Node on this world.
Assuming that the Borg followed the same pattern, that is."
    Spock turned to Riker. "Commander Riker, if you would
scan those coordinates, please."
    Kirk watched Riker work with intense concentration. Then
Riker looked up, almost in surprise. "Ambassador Spock, we
have located the Central Node." Perhaps, Kirk thought, there
was a place for introspection on a captain's bridge.
 Picard pounded Data on the back. "Well done, Data."
    Data smiled. Kirk found it disturbing to see an android
exhibit emotions. But when in the twenty-fourth century...
    "Thank you," Data said. "But we must really thank the
people of Trilex, both organic and synthetic."
    Spock nodded at Kirk. "Captain, if you would target the
Central Node."
 With relief at the call to action, Kirk checked the coordi-
                346

nate readouts. With a few commands, he successfully locked
the Enterprise's phasers on the center of the target and laid in
a torpedo barrage to encircle any backup connections that
might be linked into it.
 "Target locked," he confirmed.
    "Four minutes to reacquisition of communications," Worf
announced.
    'TII be damned," McCoy said, slapping his leg. "It's not
even close. We're going to make it after all."
    And then the Enterprise shook as the first barrage hit,
sending half the crew to the deck as the ship began to dive.

 Tran shook his fist in the air in triumph.
 "Direct hit, Commander!"
    "Stay on it," Salatrel said. Alone of all the armada she had
brought her ship in close to the homeworld. And her suspi-
cions had been correct.
    On the bridge viewscreen, she saw the rippling effect of a
cloaking field dispersing and knew she had caused consider-
able damage to the Starfleet vessel, whatever it was. She turned to Vox.
 "See? A single ship is of no concern."
     "Did you not read its sensor returns?" Vox said. "It had
located the Central Node. The collective could not hold."
 "What about the famed Borg redundancy?"
 "There can be only one collective," Vox said.
    Salatrel smiled in fierce satisfaction. At last, she knew. The
Borg had a fatal weakness after all.
    "Fire at will," Salatrel commanded. Then she sat back in
her chair and dreamed of victory.

 "Where the hell did that come from?!" Riker shouted.
    La Forge answered over the bridge speakers. "It's this
transwarp drive, Commander. It interferes with our tachyon
detection modes."
               347




    Worf confirmed La Forge's analysis The cloaked ship that
had attacked them would remain undetectable as long as the
transwarp drive was engaged.
    "Disengage the transwarp drive," Spock ordered matter-of-
factly.
 "And pull up," Picard suggested.
    Data was already involved in doing just that, leveling out
the Enterprise% path so she would not repeat the ignominious
end of her predecessor by crash-landing on the Borg world.
    "As soon as we have a fix," Kirk said, "torpedoes are ready
for launching."
    Everyone on the bridge worked in perfect balance. The
instant the transwarp drive was offline, Riker reconfigured the
sensors for maximum tachyon sensitivity. The instant the
sensors picked up the tachyon signature of the cloaked ship
trailing them, Data transferred the coordinates to Kirk's
weapons controls. Kirk launched the torpedoes less than an
instant after that.

     The Avatar of Tomed spun twice on its vertical axis as a
quantum torpedo struck its outer starboard hull support.
 Only its structural integrity field kept it together.
    Only its artificial gravity and inertial dampeners kept its
crew from being crushed.
    Tran brought the Warbird back into trim and continued its
pursuit. But its cloak dissipated as quickly as had the Enter-
prise 's.

    "It's a Warbird," Data announced as the image of the
pursuing vessel appeared on the screen.
    "l know that ship," Kirk said. "Can you get a closer image?
Give me a name?"
 The viewscreen fluttered as magnification was enhanced.
 Data read the Romulan script on its raptor prow.
    "The Avatar of Torned. A poetic reference to the battle in
which--"

 "That's her!" Kirk said "Salatrel."
    "Fascinating," Spock commended. "She is the one who set
all of this in motion."
 Kirk punched the controls and fired more torpedoes
 The Warbird swerved to avoid them.
    But the moment her port side was exposed, the Enterprise's
phaser dug into that hull support as well.
    "Excellent shooting, sir," Data said as the Warbird wob-
bled erratically "Without hull integrity on both supports, it
will be unable to withstand the compression of its defensive
shields"
 The Enterprise shook as the Avatar struck out again.
 "We're going into overload!" La Forge shouted
 "I thought this ship was shielded!" Riker shouted back.
    "Not with this damn transwarp drive! All our power curves
are off."
    Kirk targeted the Warbird's rear hull support, planning to
put a shot through the gap between her upper and lower hulls
the next time she swerved
 He fired two more torpedoes.
 The Warbird swerved as he had anticipated, and he fired.
 Plasma streamed out from behind the Tomed.
    "Direct hit!" Data cheered. "Her shields are fluctuating
.. fluctuating... gone?'
    Spock sat forward in his chair "Mr. Worf, open a hailing
frequency to the Romulan ship"
 "They are refusing to answer," Worf said.
 "Can they hear us?"
 "Yes, sir."
    Spock spoke loudly "Attention, Romulan vessel Your
shields are disabled If you withdraw, we will not destroy
you." Spock looked over at Worf. "Is there any answer,
Mr.--"
    Spock's answer came as the bridge filled with streamers of
power sparks.
 "Direct hit on us," Data said in disbelief.
                349




    Kirk watched as his control board shut down. "The phaser
banks are offline!"
    "Good work," McCoy said. "They don't have any shields.
We don't have any weapons. What are we supposed to do?
Ram them?"
 Picard turned to McCoy. "Actually, I have--"
 The collision alarms wailed.
 On the screen, the Warbird accelerated forward.
    "They are attempting to ram us!" Data exclaimed. He
jabbed his fingers on his controls. "The helm is not respond-
ing! We have stationkeeping thrusters only! Too close for
torpedoes?
 "All hands, brace for impact? Riker ordered.
    But Kirk left his station to seek out Data. "Data--do you
trust me?"
 "That is a curious question to ask at this--"
    "Then move over!" Kirk said, and slid in beside the
android. "Now get me La Forge in engineering and stand by
on the cloak."
    Data blinked. "Sir, in twenty-eight seconds, we will be
spinning debris."
 "Trust me," Kirk said.
    Then he turned to the board and did the only thing he
could.
 He changed the rules.

    Moments before impact, the Enterprise rippled within its
cloak and disappeared.
 "They've cloaked," Tran reported.
    "A meaningless act of desperation," Salatrel said. "They
can't go anywhere. Stand by for impact."
    "Five..." Tran counted, "four... three... two... one
... impact!"
 The Warbird moved smoothly on course.
    Salatrel was out of her chair and by Tran in a second.
"Where did they go?"
                350

    Tran looked at his board in helpless confusion. "Nowhere,
Commander. They're so badly damaged, we would have
picked up any attempt to leave their position."
 "Activate all external scanners," Salatrel said.
    Vex stepped up beside her. "We told you James Kirk was
not to be underestimated."
 "You don't know Kirk is on that ship!"
 "Then how does it keep evading us?"
 "Luck," Salatrel muttered.
 "Luck is irrelevant."
    The viewscreen flickered with rapid views of the volume of
space surrounding the Warbird. There were no sensor traces
anywhere.
    "That is impossible!" Salatrel said. "It's not as if we
swallowed him whole and..."
 She stopped talking as the horrible truth hit her.
 Tran turned to her in disbelief.
 And Vex, through his implants, even seemed to smile.

    On the bridge of the Enterprise, Picard shook his head as he
watched the viewscreen. On it was the back hull of the
Warbird's raptor prow.
    Kirk had slipped the Enterprise between the Romulan
vessel's double hull.
 "I'm seeing it," Picard said, "but I'm not believing it."
    "What's the matter?" Kirk asked. "You don't tell the story
of the Trojan Horse anymore?"
    "Captain Picard, Captain Kirkathe Warbird is activating
its internal sensors," Riker said. "They must have guessed
our strategy."
The captains turned to Speck. "It's up to you," Kirk said.
Speck nodded. "Mr. Data... on my mark, you will use
stationkeeping thrusters to initiate a three-hundred-and-
sixty-degree lateral rotation. Drop the cloak to put full
strength into the structural integrity field."
                351




"Yes, sir."
Kirk smiled as Spock shifted in his command chair.
"Mark," the reluctant commander of the Enterprise said.

    Salatrel grabbed the helm as she saw the Starfleet vessel
shimmer into view between the 7bmed~ hulls. She knew that
in seconds it would begin to rotate and gut them. There was
nothing left for her to do.
  "This is your fault!" she screamed at Vox.
    And this time, Vox did smile. "No. this is all the fault of
James T. Kirk. And since you are the one who brought him to
us..." Vox stopped speaking as he saw something to the
side.
 Salatrel turned to see Tran aim a disruptor at her.
     "You did this," the subcommander raged. "All you old
people making wars... you make me--" The bridge groaned.
    On the viewscreen, just before the image winked out in a
flurry of static, Salatrel saw the starfleet vessel begin its
rotation.
 The bridge shook.
 Salatrel heard the hiss of escaping air.
    And with an endless cry of denial, she was sucked out
through the rent in the hull, knowing she fell through stars
that still shone on Kirk, but which would never shine on her
again.

    Nestled in between the double hulls of the Romulan
Warbird, Starfleet's newest Enterprise slowly continued her
lateral, lethal roll.
    Her streamlined profile and reduced size had made it
possible for her to ease inside the Warbird, skirting her prow,
to take up stationkeeping above the ventral and below the
dorsal hulls.
 By rotating within that enclosed space, without having to
                352

fight the force of the Warbird's shields, the Enterprise opened
the ship like a hatchling splitting an egg.
    The shell of the Warbird spun away in a glittering cloud of
tumbling wreckage, fogged by a frozen, sublimating cloud of
escaping atmosphere.
    And from that cloud, like a phoenix reborn, the Enterprise
broke free and continued on her mission.

FIFTY

"One minute to acquisition of communications," Riker an-
nounced. "But we have no weapons left to destroy the Central
Node."
 "Unless we ram it ourselves," Spook said bluntly.
    There was a moment of silence on the bridge. To save the
Federation from the Borg, there was no one on board who
would not agree to such a drastic sacrifice. But was it the only
way?
    Kirk left his weapons station. "Send me down, Spock.
There has to be a self-destruct mechanism... or a power
generator I can put on overload .... "
 "You will be sacrificing your life," Spock said.
     Kirk grinned. "You're the one suggesting a suicide dive.
Beam me down. I'll take my chances with the Borg."
 Picard stepped up beside him. "I'll go with you."
    Kirk shook his head. "Don't forget, I'm the one with the
nanites eating through me. You have a life ahead of you."
 "Not if the Borg are allowed to continue unopposed."
               353




Picard matched Kirk's grin. "Besides, with what you know
about the Borg, you're liable to help them fix their Central
Node and not destroy it."
    Kirk studied him in silence, then nodded, sealing their
pact.
    Picard sought out Crusher at the back of the bridge, still
with Troi and McCoy. "Beverly. I'll need the interface in the
transporter room. At once."

    Kirk stepped out of the armorefts storage room laden with
phasers and photon grenades.
  Spock and McCoy were waiting for him.
    A hundred glib remarks came to Kirk. Light things. Easy
jokes. Anything to ease the burden of these last precious
seconds. But somehow he knew the time for that had passed.
Decades ago.
    So instead, he reached out to them, gripping one of their
hands in each of his.
    "It's all right," Kirk said. "I had a second chance. Not a lot
of people can say that."
    Even after all their years together, Spock's expression was
unreadable. But McCoy's eyes glistened.
    "The way I figure it, you're working on your fiftieth chance
by now," the doctor croaked. His old-man's voice trembled
with unexpressed emotion.
    "A second chance," Kirk said softly, realizing the enormity
of the gift he had been given: to see his two friends again, even
for these brief hours. "And there's still not enough time.
Never has been."
 "I am..." Spock began, then faltered.
Kirk understood. "And always will be... your friend."
Then he let go of them, stepped back, fixing them both in
his mind's eye to hold them there for the rest of his life.
"Look after each other. Never give up." Then he turned and
hurried to the transporter room, unable to look back.

    In the transporter room, Kirk found Picard burdened by
the same array of weaponry on his own equipment harness.
He also held a black carryall pouch which Crusher had given
him.
 Crusher watched as Kirk stepped up on the platform.
    "I can do this myself, you know," Kirk said. "You can tell
Starfleet what we've found here."
 Picard shook his head. "I have faith in my crew."
    Then Kirk saw Dr. Crusher staring at Picard. Suddenly, she
ran over to him, hugged him, hard. He eased her away, gently.
    The deck rumbled underfoot. A weapons impact. Spock's
voice came from the speakers. He was back on the bridge.
"We have been engaged by a Bird-of-Prey. Communications
capability is returning to the enemy fleet. Please transport at
once. We will loop back in precisely eight hundred seconds
for an emergency beam-out."
 "Energize," Picard ordered.
    The cramped transporter room dissolved around Kirk,
then reformed as a dark warren of ugly black metal struts and
walkways. He tested his footing in the gravity of the Borg
world. It was lighter than he had expected.
    "Is the whole planet like this?" Kirk asked. The metal
framework seemed to stretch to the horizon, lit only by
glowing and pulsing emanations from below.
    "If we're lucky," Picard said, "we won't have to find out."
He glanced around to get his bearings, then headed off to the
right. "This way."
 "Why not?" Kirk said and followed him.

    Above the Borg homeworld, the Enterprise went to full
impulse, deliberately directing itself toward the densest accu-
mulation of Borg and Romulan ships. Spock had concluded
that that was where they would find those few ships which
had not yet rejoined the newly restored Borg communications
network, and where those that had would be least likely to use
their weapons, for fear of hitting allies.
               355




    The Enterprise flew on toward that mass of ships, swerving
as closely as Data dared take them to Borg cubeships and
Romulan formations. And because Data navigated with the
precise control of a machine, his maneuvers were dating
enough to alarm even Spock.

    On the homeworld, Kirk and Picard stood outside a
massive metal door, at least ten meters tall. It was covered in
intricate scrollwork. Writing of some kind, Kirk decided.
Faintly reminiscent of old circuit designs. Picard checked his
tricotder. "The Central Node is through here. According to
the tricorder, the door hasn't been opened for at least two
hundred thousand years."
     "Good," Kirk said as he drew his phaser. "Then you've
come far enough. Wait here for the beam-out. Let me go on."
  "And let you have all the fun?"
    Picard drew his own phaser and blasted the door's locking
device.
 It swung open with a gust of foul air.
    Picard waved to the dark passageway beyond. With a smile
he said, "After you..."
    Kirk returned the gesture, and the grin. "Oh, no... after
you .... "
    With shared laughter, the two captains stepped through
together:

    The Enterprise streaked through space, avoiding those few
ships that fired on her. Her restored shields protecting her
from the shots that didn't miss.
    "The enemy fleet still appears to be in confusion," Riker
said. Spock had already deduced that the subspace pulse from
the deflector array had been more destructive than Starfleet
had anticipated.
    Data amended Riker's assessment. "Except for the Borg
vessels directly ahead."
 Spock called for them to go onscreen.
                356

 It was not an encouraging image.
    Once again the cubeships were reassembling themselves,
not into larger cubes, but into other, more ominous shapes--
some long and bristling with disruptor cannons, some resem-
bling vessels with twin nacelles formed as if from a child's set
of building blocks.
 "They are adapting to us," Worf marvelled.
    Spock had no need to check a time readout. "As long as
they take more than six hundred seconds to do so, Mr. Worf,
we will have a chance to recover Captains Kirk and Picard."
    The Enterprise flew on. But now the reconfigured Borg
ships took up the chase. And the distance between hunter and
prey grew smaller.

    The dark passageway beyond the ancient door smelled
worse the deeper Kirk and Picard penetrated. But at last, no
more than two hundred meters later, the passageway opened
up into a vast interior space that made Kirk think of the
Grand Canyon turned upside down.
A Grand Canyon of black metal and endless pipelines.
But that oppressive technological mass was above them, lit
only by gouts of flame, as if oil wells were being vented. Below
them, on a lower plaza ten stories deep, a sunken dome
stretched away, kilometers wide, its surface pulsing with
flashing traces of cold blue light.
    The patterns of that light were the same as those Kirk had
seen on the ancient door.
    There was order here, and purpose, Though Kirk doubted
even a Vulcan could appreciate or comprehend it.
 Picard folded his tricotaler shut. "That's it," he said.
    "Now why don't you go back?" Kirk asked. "Now that
we've found it, I can deal with it."
 "But can you deal with them?" Picard said.
    Kirk turned to look in the direction Picard looked, along
the wide deck that ran from the passageway in a sweeping
circle around the glowing dome and sunken plaza.
               357




He saw what Picard saw.
Borg.
Thousands of them.
Marching toward them.

 "Coming up on course change," Data announced,
    Spock steepled his fingers as the Enterprise shook beneath
the onslaught of disruptor fire it was taking from the Borg
ship in pursuit.
    "Commander Riker," Spock said, "have you noticed the
delay in the Borg's response to our course changes?"
    "Yes, sir," Riker said. "Their ship is more massive, less
responsive to sudden vector changes."
 "I calculate a three-second discrepancy."
 "I concur."
    Spock put his hands on the arms of his command chair and
held on tightly. "Mr. Data, put us on a collision course with
the Borg ship, bearing forty-three, twenty-seven, mark eight. I
would like you to pull out at two seconds before collision."
 "Yes, sir," Data said. "I believe I would like that as well."

    Kirk and Picard crouched behind a power conduit more
than five meters thick. It ran down from the wall of the
immense interior space, across the wide circular deck, then
down the ten stories where it snaked into the side of the dome
of flashing light traces.
 Picard pointed to a switching lever on the side of the
 stained and mineral-encrusted metal that formed the pipe.
    "This lever will do it," Picard said, confirming his guess
with his tricorder. "It will cut the power to the Central Node's
core and trigger a feedback surge that will burn out all its
circuits." He looked around. "This facility was constructed
long before the Borg developed redundancy to the extent they
practice it today."
 "How can you know all this?" Kirk asked.
 "I don't," Picard answered. "But Locutus does."

    The mass of approaching Borg was coming closer. Not all
of them marched. Some rolled, some crawled, some floated as
if on antigravs. But the sound of their approach hammered on
the metal plates of the deck, making Kirk think of rolling
thunder on a planet which could have no more weather.
    "Do you think they're going to let us cut the power to the
Central Node?"
 "That is not within the realm of possibility," Picard said.
 "Then we should cut the power now."
    "No," Picard said. "We have to time it for the Enterprise's
return. That way there's still a chance for us to get out."
     "The Enterprise is still eight minutes away," Kirk said.
"How do we hold them back till then?" "You don't," Picard said. "1 do."
     Picard opened the black carryall pouch that Dr. Crusher
had given him. Kirk glanced inside. Saw the Borg interface.
 Knew what it meant.
    To destroy the Borg homeworld, Picard had to truly be-
come Locutus again.

 "Collision in ten seconds," Data said calmly.
    Spock made a cutting motion with his hand. "Shut off the
collision alarms, please, Mr. Worf."
 The bridge of the Enterprise fell silent.
    The screen filled with the chaotic mass of metal pipes and
tubes that would collide with the Enterprise in a matter of
seconds. Directly before them, submodular cubeships formed
themselves into a shape that looked like a spear--a spear
aimed at the Enterprise.
    In contrast, the Borg ship that pursued them was spiked
and blazed with disruptor fire that converged from three
emitters into a single, central, stabbing beam.
    Spock had Data hold his course, absorbing hit after hit
from that beam.
    Data continued his countdown. "... four... three...
course change!"
                359




    The Enterprise sidestepped the spear-shaped Borg vessel by
fewer than three hundred meters.
    And as Spock had anticipated, the pursuing Borg ship
didn't miss it at all.
    The two Borg ships met, blazing like a new sun, shedding
thick golden shafts of light on the tumbling cubeships that
spiraled away and dissolved into storms of debris as the
power of the explosion reached out to them.
    The Enterprise banked in that firestorm of plasma. Her
shields took all the energy of the dying Borg without fail or
complaint.
    She had been in transit for four hundred seconds when
Spock gave the order to return from where she had started.
 His captain awaited him.

    Picard drew his hand away from the neural plate now
attached to his face. The power cell and subspace transmitter
were already strapped to his chest. "Are you sure?" Kirk asked.
 "Is there a choice?" Picard answered.
    Kirk pointed out the phasers and the photon grenades laid
out before them behind the power conduit.
 "These could keep them busy for a while."
    "And what if one of that horde gets off a lucky shot? And
we miss being able to pull on the lever? And the Node isn't
destroyed?"
    Kirk put his hand on Picard's shoulder. "Captain--I've
seen Locutus. Spock took me in there, inside your mind. I
know what it means to you... put that thing back on."
    "Spock showed me things, too," Picard said. "As did you."
He held up the interface cord, felt for the slots that would
guide it into place. "Some of the courage in here is yours.
Some is Spock's. The truth is, I'm not any less afraid of the
collective, or of Locutus. But it's been so long since I even
allowed myself to feel fear, I unwittingly gave it power over
me." Picard held the input jack to the neural plate. "You've
                360

shown me how to face fear, Captain. And I will return from
that encounter--just as you did."
    Picard jabbed the jack home. A faint blue crackle of energy
leapt along the input cable to the power cell on his shoulder.
His hand fell back. His eyes rolled back in his head until only
white remained.
 Beyond the conduit, the Borg horde advanced.
    Picard rose to his feet beside Kirk, facing the enemy as it
approached.
 Kirk stood as well. "Is it working?"
    Picard stared at him as if he were nothing more than the
metallic debris that littered this world.
 "We are Locutus," Picard said. "We are... Borg."

FIFTY-ONE

Kirk grabbed Picard by the shoulders. Shook him. "Fight it!" he shouted.
    Picard's eyes cleared, but just for an instant. "It wasn't...
supposed to... be like this .... It's too strong."
    Picard's hand scrabbled for the interface cable. Kirk pulled
the hand away. "Not yet! You have to send them away!" He
twisted Picard around to face the advancing Borg.
    Kirk could hear the whine of their servomotors. The awful
raspy wheeze of their assisted breathing.
 "Tell them to stop or I'll cut off the power now!"
    Picard lurched forward, bracing himself against the power
conduit. Mouth open. Gasping.
                361




    "Resistance... resistance... resistance is futile/" he
screamed and swung at Kirk.
  Kirk grabbed his arms, held him.
  "Picard! You are a starship captain! Act like one.t"
  And Kirk slapped him. Slapped him again.
    Slapped him until Picard brought up his hand and caught
Kirk's arm in midswing. "I think," he gasped, "you've
convinced me .... "
    Picard faced the Borg, now no more than a handful of
meters away.
    "Go back," he said. "We are Borg... the collective is safe
.. return... return to your functions .... "
    Kirk tensed as he watched the Borg hesitate, swaying back
and forth, motors whining.
 And then, as one, they turned and moved away.
 "It is working," Kirk said.
    Picard's eyes followed the retreating Borg. "They want me
back. And this time they're not asking. They're demanding."
    Kirk looked intently at Picard, trying to read his emotions
beneath the implant plate.
    Picard's answering gaze was firm, unwavering "And I'm
saying... no."
    "Then go deeper into the collective," Kirk urged in relief.
"Find out what we need to know about the power cut-off.
How long do we have after we throw it?"
    "We don't," Picard said. He held his hands to his head.
"The feedback is immediate. The instant we throw the lever,
the Node is... the Node is .... "
    Kirk pulled Picard around to face him. "Concentrate,
Captain. Look into the collective. Is there any way to pull that
lever and still get out?"
    Picard shook his head. "Whoever pulls that lever will die."
His eyes cleared again. "Resistance is futile."
    His eyes began to drift away again. His head turned in the
direction the Borg had marched away.
 Kirk had heard enough.
                362

 He grabbed the interface cable and pulled it free.
 Picard cried out.
 Gasped as if struck.
 Then stared at Kirk.
 "How long?" he asked.
    Kirk checked his tricorder. "We've got sixty seconds till the
Enterprise does her flyby."
 "I can take it from here," Picard said.
    "No, you can't," Kirk argued. "In case you don't remem-
ber, whoever pulls that lever and destroys the Node gets
trapped in the power surge."
 "1 do remember. It is my job to do it. You've done enough."
 "Jean-Luc, I'm dying."
 "Who isn't?"
    Spock's voice crackled out of Kirk's commbadge. "Enter-
prise to away team. We are at thirty seconds to emergency
beam-out. What is your status?"
    Picard locked eyes with Kirk. Touched his own comm-
badge. "This is Picard, Enterprise. Break off your approach.
Repeat --"
    Kirk pushed Picard's hand away from his commbadge, hit
his own.
 "Ignore that last order, Spock. Bring that ship in."
 "I am not leaving!" Picard said.
    Kirk was about to shout back, when he suddenly stood
down.
    "Did you ever try to save the Kobayashi Maru at the
Academy?"
    Picard watched Kirk with deep suspicion. "Yesss .... But
it can't be done. It's a no-win scenario designed for cadets."
    Kirk smiled. "That's what they'd like you to believe. But
there is one strategy that can win it. It's just that nobody in
your time seems to do it anymore. Spock tells me it's a lost art
now."
 "Are you suggesting a compromise?"
 Kirk thought it over. "You could call it that."
                363




    Well," Picard said. "Go ahead. I'm always open to sugges-
tions."
 Kirk nodded. "Good."
 Then he slugged Picard in the jaw as hard as he could.
 Picard dropped like deadweight.
    Kirk dragged Picard away by his collar, until he was well
away from the power conduit.
    He pulled off his own commbadge, touched the front to
activate.
 "Kirk to Enterprise," he said.
 "Spock here."
 Kirk smiled.
 He felt better already.
    "Keep the ship out of danger, Mr. Spock." He studied the
Starfleet delta in his hand. Remembered when it had be-
longed only to the Enterprise. But some things had to change.
It was the way of the world. Of the universe. He was glad to have been part of it.
    "Lock onto my signal," Kirk said. "One to beam up." Then
he tossed his eommbadge onto Picard's chest and stepped
back.
    Picard reacted to the impact of the badge. His eyes opened.
He looked up. Started to speak.
    Then dissolved in the transporter as the Enterprise once
more claimed her own.
    Kirk turned back to the power conduit. Grabbed the lever
in both hands. Tested it once to see how much force he might
need. Felt it move easily.
 "A second chance," he said aloud.
 Then he closed his eyes.
 Squeezed his hands tight.
 Pulled.
    Heard a sudden, deafening roar of thunder coming from
the dome.
 Then a scrape as quiet as a footstep behind him.
 Kirk turned.

Opened his eyes.
Saw the--

 "Dear God," McCoy said.
    On the bridge of the Enterprise. to which he had been
directly beamed, Picard shielded his eyes against the sudden
glare from the viewscreen. On it, a blinding column of light
shot up from the Borg homeworld, directly from what had
been the Central Node.
    In the intensity of that destructive light, every surface on
the bridge that faced the viewscreen was too bright to look at.
Every surface that was in shadow was too dark to reveal
detail.
    But Picard watched with grim fascination as ripples of
explosions began to spread across the homeworld's surface,
following the strict lines and angles of circuitry.
    Beside him, Beverly Crusher took his hand. Riker stood
beside her. Data and La Forge sat together at the helm. At his
station, Worf made no effort to hide his eyes from the light.
And Picard saw tears roll down Troi's cheeks. He knew the
counselor was overwhelmed by the emotions of all who
surrounded her, their joy and their grief. For one crew had been reunited.
 While another had at last been torn asunder.
    McCoy stepped forward, held up only by his exoskeleton,
to stand by Spock's side.
    In the flickering of that light, Picard saw the Vulcan rise
from the command chair to place his hand on the old man's
shoulder. And through it all, Data counted off the uncounta-
bte Borg and Romulan ships colliding throughout the system,
with no more subspace signals from the collective to link or
guide them.
    The explosions spread out in a web of fire, encompassing a
third of the homeworld as a thousand other cubeships broke
from its surface and jumped to transwarp, fleeing the death of
whatever this planet had been.
                365




    There would still be Borg, somewhere, Picard knew. But
not the Borg they had known. Not the Borg that had threat-
ened them in the past.
    For today, and with luck tomorrow, the Federation had
been preserved.
 Because of one man.
    Picard rubbed his jaw as he watched the flaming destruc-
tion spread over the planet before them. "Perhaps this is a
more fitting memorial," he said, "than a simple cairn of
stones."
 Riker nodded. "A great man died today."
    Then Picard saw Spock turn to look at Riker. To Picard, the
Vulcan's expression was disturbingly both unfathomable and
familiar.
    "Captain Picard," Spock said, "Now, I believe, the bridge
is yours."
    Picard watched in silence as Spock and McCoy slowly left
the bridge, Spock supporting his friend, again with no regard
for the normal Vulcan aversion to touching and being
touched.
 When they were gone, Riker turned to his captain.
    "Did you see the look on Spock's face?" he asked, aston-
ished.
    A flame leapt into life within Picard as he waited for his
first officer to continue.
    "I've seen it before," Riker said. "At the salvage camp.
Spock still doesn't believe that Kirk is dead."
 Picard looked at the commbadge in his hand.
    He remembered fleeting images of what he had seen in
Kirk's mind. What Spock had shown him there.
    He remembered Kirk's dream. The dream that had always
haunted Kirk. Always shown him how he would die.
 "There are always possibilities," he said.

    The Borg homeworld was a blazing pyre, bringing light to a
system that had been dark for a time too long to be measured.
                366

    Against that light, a tiny craft came about, its space-black
hull catching just a glimmer of that fire, so that all the
universe could know its name.
 A name which had lived on other ships.
 A name which would live on ships still to come.
     Triumphant, victorious, in the new dawn's light, Starship
Enterprise set course for home. One voyage at an end.
 The continuing mission far from over.




EPILOGUE

He fell.-... .
 But this time, not alone.
 The rocky face of El Capitan blurred past him.
    The brilliant sun of Yosemite blazed down on him through
the pure blue of Earth ~ own sky.
    He shouted out his challenge to the world that raced to meet
him.
 He would not die today.
    And then, as he knew it must, Spock's hand took his ankle in
a grip of duranium and held the world--and death--at bay.
    That night, by the campfire, three friends sharing shore leave
together, McCoy had railed at him. "Human life is far too
precious to risk on crazy stunts. Maybe it didn't cross that
macho mind of yours, but you shouM have been killed when
you fell off that mountain."
  "It crossed my mind."
  "And... ?"
    "And... even as I fell, I knew I wouldn't die. Because the
two of you were with me."
 "I do not understand," Spock had said.
 So the falling man had looked into his heart and spoken a
                369




truth he had never shared. '7're always known... that I'll die
alone."
    That night, he stares up at the stars, knowing all their
names, but still wanting to know more.
    He hears the crackle of the dying fire. Breathes deeply of its
fragrant smoke mingled with the green scent of pine and the
richness of earth.
    In this moment, the falling man once more is immersed in
hfe, content to drift beneath those stars, on the planet of his
birth, knowing that his ship waits above him for his return.
That there are still many voyages left before the dream that
haunts him becomes his final reality.
      But then, from the shadows of the trees, a figure robed in
white approaches and stands over him.
 It is thefigure from his dream.
 The dream.
  The figure from whom he has run all his life.
      The falling man is troubled, knowing that in some way this
is the time in which his hunter will claim him.  "Must I go?" he asks.
    For the first time, the figure turns back his hood and holds
out his hand.
    "There will be time enough for rest, later, "Sarek says. "But
not here. Not now."
  The falling man looks back at the campfire, at three friends
resting peacefully beside it.
     Spock and McCoy and... himself.
"You must leave them behind, "Sarek says. "They cannot be
with you."
    "Why?" the falling man asks, bewildered that he does not
remember how he came to this place in his past, though he has
always known that it would be to this place and to this moment
he would return. The moment when he first spoke of his dream
with his friends.
    "Sarek . . . why has it always been you in my dreams? Even
before we met. Before I met your son. Before I left Earth... it
370

has always been you who comes to take me from my friends
and to my death."
  "Because of what we share, "Sarek answers. "Or will share."
  "My dream? Or my death?"
      "As long as a single mind remembers, as long as a single
heart still beats with passion, how can a dream die?"  "But what of the dreamer?"
    Sarek smiles. "Look to the stars, James Kirk. "He takes the
.falling man's hand as he has always taken his hand in this
dream. Sarek's smile fades. "avenge me."
    And then, for the first time, the dream continued. Beyond the
shadows.
    There would be one last journey for him. One last voyage.
One last mission.
    And as he had always known he must, James T. Kirk turned
his back on the past and rushed to embrace his future.

