Star Trek: A Choice of Catastrophes
By Steve Mollmann and Michael Schuster
4.5/5
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About this ebook
Steve Mollmann
STEVE MOLLMANN is studying for a Ph.D. in English at an unknown university at an unknown location in the United States. He is not being coy; at the time this was written, he simply had no idea where he would be by the time you read this. He obtained his M.A. in English at the University of Connecticut, and hopes to pursue a career as a scholar, specializing in British literature, especially its intersection with science and technology. Also in that gap of time, he will have gotten married to his then-fiancée, Hayley. He has met Michael Schuster on more than one occasion.
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4 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Riveting! Pacing is a bit slow for me, but I am glad to read it through the wonderful ending.
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Star Trek - Steve Mollmann
PROLOGUE
Stardate 4747.6 (1437 hours, ship time)
You can’t be serious!
Leonard McCoy didn’t care one bit whether his reaction was appropriate. Captain, tell me you’re joking.
James Kirk shook his head. He was occupying his usual seat at the table in the Enterprise’s primary briefing room, leaning back in his chair and taking in the reactions of the senior staff members he’d summoned. Do I look like I am, Doctor?
McCoy couldn’t—wouldn’t—believe it. Anyone with a medical degree could do this. Hell, anyone who’s ever held an anabolic protoplaser in their hands could do this. You don’t need me.
Spock cut in. According to Starfleet regulations, transfers of medical supplies rated class-3 or above must be supervised by the chief medical officers of both locations. Your presence is required to facilitate the transfer.
McCoy had to keep himself from reaching across the table and throttling the Vulcan.
The others in the room—Sulu, Scotty, and Giotto—looked astonished at the doctor’s reaction. They could afford to; after all, they didn’t have to personally oversee the transfer of two hundred forty containers of medical supplies to Deep Space Station C-15. They didn’t have to stand there inspecting every damn one, then witnessing its dematerialization on the pad of Enterprise’s cargo transporter. It was a tedious job, and McCoy didn’t want to do it.
Why did the people on C-15 have to come down with the anatid flu right now? Why did it have to spread to the nearby settlement of Tomogren? The station had exhausted its med supplies, requiring the Federation to arrange for a replacement shipment. This being a relatively uncharted and unsettled region of space, the Enterprise was the only ship in the sector. The crew was interrupting their mapping mission to pick up the supplies from the automated production facility on Phi Kappa.
The Enterprise had only six more weeks to explore this sector, with one week allotted to Mu Arigulon V, a planet so far surveyed solely via automated probe. This medical detour reduced the week to three days. As a result, the Enterprise crew needed to rework their plans, much to McCoy’s annoyance.
Spock was clearly intrigued by indications that Mu Arigulon V had been abandoned by its inhabitants. He’d quickly come up with a plan: drop off two shuttles, fully crewed, on the Enterprise’s way from Phi Kappa to C-15. The shuttles were uprated models, equipped with warp drives and phasers. After delivering the supplies, the Enterprise would rendezvous at the planet, reaching it two days after the shuttles. They’d then have three more days to finish the survey.
The problem was that McCoy had been looking forward to the mission to Mu Arigulon. The first two weeks in this sector had mostly been tedious charting of stars with only barren rocks for company. There had been nothing interesting, and now that there was, he was being kept away from it.
Doctor,
Kirk said, what Spock means is that we don’t have any leeway. Regulations. Besides,
he added, making an effort to appear conciliatory, it’s not as if there’s anything on the planet that won’t be there when you join us. The ruins won’t disappear.
The captain grinned. We’ll just be scrambling through dirt all week. Mister Sulu, since Spock, Scott, and myself will be on the shuttles, you’ll be in command for the duration.
Yes, sir!
said Sulu.
Mister Spock and I will release a full roster for the landing party within the next day. Is there anything else, gentlemen?
Giotto leaned forward. Sir, I’d like to be in the landing party.
McCoy could see Kirk’s surprise. Giotto was the Enterprise’s chief of security, but he rarely served in landing parties. Any reason, Commander? Can’t your people handle it?
Of course they can,
said Giotto, but under normal circumstances I can beam down if things get hairy. That won’t be an option on this mission—I want to be there from the start.
Kirk nodded. Understood. I want two security personnel per shuttle; send Mister Spock your picks for the other three.
He looked around at the crew. If that’s all, dismissed.
McCoy couldn’t remember a mission in which Giotto had participated and he hadn’t. The doctor just wanted to be busy. Today was his third anniversary as chief medical officer of the Enterprise, and he needed to get his mind off that fact. He’d gone into space to get away from his thoughts, and now he was being left alone with them. Since joining Starfleet, he had never held a post this long, and it unsettled him. He needed to be moving, otherwise he began thinking, began wallowing.
As the others filed out of the briefing room, Kirk and McCoy remained seated. The doors closed behind Sulu, the last to leave. Immediately, Kirk leaned forward and rested his arms on the tabletop. What’s gotten into you, Bones? You’re tearing into me for something I can’t do anything about. It’s not like you. What’s going on?
The doctor thought about it for a moment. But would Jim understand? This was a man for whom space was a passion—for McCoy it was an escape. How could Kirk understand that McCoy felt he didn’t belong here and never had? Nothing,
he said.
Stop being so pigheaded,
Kirk said. You always get me to tell you what’s eating me. Let me do the same for you.
Jim, I’m fine. Stop projecting.
Bones.
Kirk shook his head. Whenever you’re this prickly, there’s something gnawing at you. I can’t help you if you don’t tell me.
McCoy opened his mouth to reply but found he didn’t know what to say. He just wanted to go, to plunge into the depths of space and leave everything behind. But that wasn’t healthy.
So he said nothing, but stood up and walked toward the door. He was out of the room before Jim had a chance to add anything further.
The last time McCoy had felt like this, he’d signed up for a six-month survey mission on a primitive planet near the Klingon border to get his mind off things. Where would he have to go this time?
Ten Days Later
Stardate 4757.2 (0452 hours, ship time)
James Kirk loved the first sight of a new world. No matter how many planets he’d seen, each one was different from the one before it. There was no substitute for that moment when the ship came out of warp and there, suspended before him in the infinite darkness, was a small bastion of life.
The feeling was more intimate right now in a shuttlecraft—just him, the six others, and the unknown. With a crew this small, the captain took the controls.
ETA to Mu Arigulon, Ensign?
Kirk asked the woman sitting next to him at the navigation controls of the shuttle-craft Columbus.
Two minutes, Captain.
Karen Seven Deers was older than Kirk, having elected to join Starfleet after a successful career as a mechanical engineer on Centaurus. She had only recently completed training and been posted to the Enterprise. Kirk remembered being a green ensign nervously following Captain Bannock’s orders on his first landing party. Seven Deers, by contrast, was positively blasé.
Stand by for warp deceleration.
Kirk’s hands ran across the console in front of him, setting the engines. He could feel the power of the craft humming beneath his hands. "Signal the Hofstadter for verification."
Seven Deers tapped a control. "Hofstadter signals ready, Captain."
Not wanting to miss his first sight of Mu Arigulon, Kirk looked up to check that all three of the viewport covers at the front of the Columbus were open.
Is everyone ready?
Kirk spun his chair around to take a quick look at the remainder of the Columbus’s crew. Lieutenant Commander Giotto was sitting right behind his captain, of course. The silver-haired security chief—also older than Kirk—gave the captain a curt nod. Next to him was one of his security team, Crewman Y Tra, a male Arkenite with the distinctive large cranium typical of his species. He nodded even more curtly.
The two scientists, Rawlins and Yüksel, offered quick ayes,
but Kirk heard nothing from the shuttle’s seventh and final occupant. Mister Chekov? Are you ready?
The young Russian looked up from the data slate he’d been engrossed in. Aye, Captain! I have been refreshing my knowledge of the history of this sector. Did you know that Station C-15—
Thank you, Mister Chekov,
said Kirk with a smile. That’ll be all for now.
The ensign was serving as the Columbus’s science officer for this mission. Spock had personally selected him, and Chekov had perhaps been overdoing it to live up to the Vulcan’s standards.
The captain noticed Giotto studying the ensign. During the long journey to Mu Arigulon, the security chief’s attitude toward Chekov had seemed to waver between amusement and frustration. Kirk chalked it up to boredom, but he knew they’d all be able to do something soon, which should improve everybody’s mood. The four-day flight had seemed even longer, since the crew had spent the time gradually transitioning to the planet’s long day/night cycle, disrupting everyone’s sleep patterns.
Kirk checked the spatial plot, in the console between him and Seven Deers. They had just cleared the outskirts of the Mu Arigulon system and were rapidly approaching the fifth planet. Point of deceleration in five,
announced Seven Deers, four… three… two… one.
Kirk throttled down, and with a gentle hum the Columbus dropped to sublight.
All of a sudden, right in front of him, he could see it: Mu Arigulon V. It looked vaguely Earth-like—blue ocean and green continents—but the clouds, which covered the planet in large, rapid swirls, had a dusky gray tinge. There she is,
he said. It truly was a glorious view.
"Captain, we should signal the Enterprise now," Seven Deers said.
Kirk nodded. He knew that, of course, but he was pleased to see that the ensign was already becoming familiar with ship’s procedure. "Take care of it, Ensign. Bring the Hofstadter into the linkup, too." According to his instruments, the other shuttlecraft had also safely decelerated from warp and was already settling into standard orbit. Spock hadn’t wasted any time. Kirk set the Columbus’s controls to do the same.
Link established,
Seven Deers reported. Bringing it up now.
Enterprise,
Kirk said, "Columbus is in position and ready to begin landing procedures."
"Hofstadter is also in position," said Commander Spock on the other shuttle. We are preparing to begin our orbital survey.
Acknowledged,
Lieutenant Sulu said from the bridge of the Enterprise. Captain, you have fifty-four hours on your own before we join you. I’m sure you’ll make the best of it.
Kirk knew from previous communications that the Enterprise had transferred the supplies from Phi Kappa to C-15 without incident.
We will, Lieutenant, we will,
Kirk said. Mister Spock is already getting antsy. He can’t wait to set foot on the planet.
Spock spoke up. I must correct you, Captain. I am not getting ‘antsy.’ That peculiar adjective implies impatience, something I do not experience. However, I must admit to considerable scientific curiosity as to the fate of the inhabitants of Mu Arigulon V.
I withdraw my remark,
Kirk said, grinning. "Everything all right on the Enterprise?"
Absolutely, sir,
came Sulu’s immediate reply. Mister DeSalle assures me that the engines are in perfect order.
They’d better be,
said a new voice that Kirk immediately recognized as belonging to Commander Scott, who was with Spock on the Hofstadter. I dinna want to come back and find my wee bairns fried.
Don’t worry, Mister Scott, I’ll make sure that doesn’t happen,
Sulu said. Captain, I hope the planet’s as interesting as it looks.
So do I,
Kirk said. Sixteen planets charted so far in this sector, and every one of them has been completely unsurprising. I’m hoping for something different this time.
I’m sure you’ll find it, sir,
Sulu said. Kirk thought that the young helmsman sounded at home in the big chair.
Still, he could do with a little ribbing. Thanks for your confidence. We’ll contact you again in a few hours. Try not to miss us too much.
Sulu chuckled. "We’ll do our best, sir. Enterprise out."
Mister Spock, are you ready to proceed?
said Kirk.
Affirmative, Captain. Initial orbital surveys have already revealed that the planetary ruins are relatively intact. I estimate that this planet has been abandoned for a period of one hundred to one hundred and fifty years.
The first probes of the Mu Arigulon system had shown that this planet had metal alloys and other traces of technological and industrial development—but no active energy signatures or life signs. Whoever had lived there was long gone. Any clues as to what happened to the inhabitants?
I hesitate to indulge in wild speculation, Captain. I need more data before I can begin to formulate a reasonable hypothesis.
Of course, Mister Spock. I wouldn’t want to rush the scientific method.
Very admirable, Captain. I take it that you will be landing soon?
As long you don’t mind being left behind.
"Sir, we did agree on this at the mission briefing. However, if you would prefer for Columbus to wait while Hofstadter makes the orbital survey, that can be arranged."
Kirk smiled. His sense of humor was frequently lost on Spock—or so it appeared. The captain had never been able to solve the mystery of whether Spock merely pretended to misunderstand. If he did, were his retorts attempts at wit?
Never fear, Mister Spock. I won’t disrupt your careful plan.
A smile tugged at the corners of his mouth. We’ll land just as soon as you tell me where.
Transmitting coordinates now, Captain.
Kirk looked at Seven Deers, who nodded. We’ve got them, Spock. See you on the surface when you’re done up here.
"Yes, Captain. Hofstadter out."
Course laid in, Ensign?
Seven Deers checked her controls. Aye, Captain. The landing site is outside the largest metropolitan area in the northern hemisphere.
Well,
said Kirk, looking around at the crew of the shuttle, what are we waiting for? Let’s go.
ONE
Stardate 4757.4 (0848 hours)
Two days after leaving C-15, McCoy was still restless. Together with Christine Chapel, the Enterprise’s head nurse, he was organizing the medical supplies that they’d gotten from Phi Kappa. Tedious but necessary work. They’d been at it for a while, and just as the doctor had feared, it was allowing his mind to wander.
Maybe it was time for him to move on. He’d heard that Starfleet was beginning to put together crews for the next generation of ships to succeed the Constitution class. If he managed to finagle himself onto one of their duty rosters, he’d be able to go really far out, blazing new trails in frontier medicine.
The problem was, he’d be disappointing his captain and his friend. Not only would Jim have to search for his third CMO in four years, he would take McCoy’s desertion personally. Either way, McCoy would be miserable, but it was a feeling he was already intimately accustomed to.
He and Chapel were interrupted in their work by the arrival of Lieutenant Kelowitz. He claimed to be a patient, but insisted that he would talk only to McCoy. That’s never a good sign,
McCoy whispered to Chapel. He took the young man into his office, sitting down behind his desk while Kelowitz stood, his hands flapping around uselessly. Kelowitz was a little shorter than the doctor, and his hair a little lighter. They’d been on a couple of landing parties together, but McCoy knew virtually nothing about him apart from the fact that he was a tactical officer.
McCoy nodded toward the chair, and the other man sat down, though he still didn’t know what to do with his hands, folding and unfolding them repeatedly.
Now, tell me what’s the matter, son.
Whatever Kelowitz might reveal, it would be hard to embarrass McCoy after twenty years of medical practice, so he used his most reassuring tone.
Doctor, I was wondering if you could give me some advice.
Advice?
You’ve, um, helped out others before, and I was hoping you could do the same for me.
You’ll have to tell me what this is about first.
Kelowitz avoided looking directly at him. It’s personal. You see, I’ve been working with Mister DeSalle recently, and—He’s kind of—
McCoy was beginning to get a pretty clear idea of what the young man was really here for. Lieutenant, I’m just the ship’s doctor…
Um… sorry, sir. But Demick told me that Brent told her that you told him that when he—
McCoy breathed in deeply. Clifford Brent, one of his med techs, had landed a secondary assignment on the bridge, and the doctor had given him advice on how to handle the senior staff, especially Spock. The thought that his advice was a sought-after commodity evaporated his bad mood. McCoy stood up and sat on the desk, adopting a casual air. Okay, tell me what the problem is.
Ten minutes later, McCoy had sent Kelowitz on his way, no longer fidgeting. Chapel gave him an amused look as he emerged from his office. What was that about?
McCoy shook his head. Just a young man needing some advice.
He looked at the tray of tri-ox cartridges in front of him, waiting to be sorted, and just like that, his bad mood was back. He could use some advice.
Hoping to keep his mind from lingering on painful thoughts, he started counting off cartridges, but lost track in the low twenties. He grumbled, "Why do I have to be stuck here while Kirk and Spock are having fun? M’Benga should be here, and I should be there."
Chapel had put up with his complaining the past few days, but this time she surprised him. So you’ve said repeatedly, Doctor.
Her gentle tone didn’t quite cover her annoyance.
McCoy snorted and restarted his counting.
What’s the matter, Doctor?
asked Chapel at last.
He lost track in the upper fifties this time. Dammit, Christine! I was almost done!
Sorry, Doctor.
She turned her attention back to her slate.
Nothing’s the matter.
He was unable to stop himself. "Why should something be the matter? I like counting tri-ox capsules and supervising cargo transfers and being trapped on a boring starship on a boring mission while Kirk and Spock gallivant around the galaxy."
Chapel didn’t look up, but even so, McCoy realized that maybe he was going a little too far. His volatile nature was sometimes difficult to manage, especially when he felt he was doing work that didn’t make use of his experience. Well, Chapel had taken worse from him before; she was certainly used to his occasional dark moods.
McCoy reached for the first tri-ox capsule, to start yet again, when the deck under his feet moved abruptly and he was knocked forward. In an instant, the lights went out and all the displays shut off. His hand hit something large and flat, which shot away and crashed onto the floor—it must’ve been the tray.
What—
Chapel began, but she cut herself off when the lights all whirred back to life. No sooner had McCoy regained his bearings than he felt the deck shift again. Nowhere near as badly as the first time, but longer. What in blazes was going on?
I’ll check the situation monitor,
he said, heading back to his office. The deck moved underneath him yet again. The doctor almost fell, but he made it to his computer. Nothing. Even intraship was down.
He returned to Chapel, who was preparing for casualties. Their first one came in barely a minute after the mysterious incident: Jacobs, a security guard, whose limp indicated to the doctor that he’d twisted his ankle.
McCoy hated being left in the dark. With Jim in command, he was accustomed to barging up onto the bridge whether he was needed or not, but with Lieutenant Sulu?
To hell with it. Can you handle things, Nurse?
She already had the hobbling Jacobs on one of the beds, and she nodded at McCoy, who headed out. Even though she’d never admit it, Christine was probably glad to get rid of him.
When Pavel Chekov was a teenager, he had been fascinated by the massive raised highways that crisscrossed Russia. Built in the twentieth century to support wheeled vehicles, they had become redundant with the invention of the hovercar and then the transporter. Yet no one had ever torn them down, and Chekov had hiked through the reclaimed countryside on six lanes of concrete no vehicle would drive again.
It made human endeavors seem pointless. The structures had outlasted the needs they were designed to fill. He doubted the inhabitants of Mu Arigulon V had designed this complex array of metal frameworks and roadbeds to support a diverse panoply of plant life.
What do you think this is, sir?
asked Fatih Yüksel. The Turkish exobotanist was older than Chekov by several years. Chekov felt uncomfortable giving orders to someone who’d already been in Starfleet when he was still in elementary school.
It looks like a support structure for a launch facility,
said Chekov. He gestured back behind them as they pushed their way through the bushes. It reminds me of the old Plesetsk Cosmodrome. I am picking up tanks that must have once held some kind of fuel or reactant.
No spaceships.
Yüksel was scanning the area with his tricorder. When the Columbus landing party had split up, he had requested this part of the city, pointing out that it had the highest concentration of plant life. Chekov had been assigned to go with him.
But was there ever a spaceship?
Chekov knew that for every planet that made it into space and made contact with the interstellar community, there was another whose space program had collapsed, preventing the inhabitants from discovering warp drive. I want to get a closer look at the launch pad. Maybe the locals left the planet.
Well,
Yüksel said, what I really want to get a look at is the flora ahead.
He pointed to where the bushes gave way to thick vines descending from the gantries above.
Chekov checked his tricorder. They were supposed to stay together, but the two locations were within a kilometer of one another. If anything happened, each would be able to come to the other’s aid. Okay,
he said. We will split up.
As the senior officer, it was his call to make.
The botanist smiled. Good move, sir,
he said. We’ll have this planet surveyed in no time.
Good luck, Mister Yüksel.
Chekov pushed off into the bushes. When he glanced over his shoulder, he saw the petty officer vanishing into the green draping vines. Shortly, the only sign of him was the rustling noise that was slowly fading away as they parted from one another.
Petty Officer Fatih Yüksel continued to push his way through the dull green flora. Bits of machinery he couldn’t identify lay unused and rusting, covered in what seemed like a moss. Let Chekov and the others try to figure out what had happened to the inhabitants; he was interested in what had taken their place. The plants in this area would have adapted to an urban environment over the past century, and would make a remarkable study.
The complex had been open once, but was now a tangled mass of plants. Yüksel was trying to reach its center, where his tricorder indicated a tree—the largest one in this area. He wanted to take a core sample that could be analyzed, revealing past climates and possibly indicating what had caused this planet to be abandoned.
He pushed his way through an overhanging set of vines and came upon a small building in the middle of the complex, about ten meters tall and four meters wide. This structure, like all the ones they’d seen from the Columbus, possessed no flat surfaces. With its irregular but continuous walls, it looked like something that had been grown. There were no obvious windows, and no door that he could recognize. But it was inside the building that his tricorder was picking up the tree’s signature, so he began to circle it. As he reached the other side, he discovered that a wall had crumbled in.
Or rather, had crumbled out. Within the building grew an enormous tree, similar to a Terran one but a dull green. It had no leaves, but sported fat, bulging buds all over its branches. One of its branches had extended past the confines of the building, knocking out part of the wall, through which Yüksel could barely make out the trunk.
Yüksel scrambled eagerly over the bits of wall between him and the alien tree and stepped inside. Everything was bathed in a light green glow. The roof had collapsed, allowing light to stream in. He had no idea what the structure had been designed for; now it was entirely occupied by this tree, which was two meters thick and taller than the building.
Yüksel realized that its base wasn’t on this level—the floor had a hole in it, through which the tree had grown. The standard site for taking a core sample was 1.3 meters up from the base, so he would need to get down into the lower area. There was a small gap between where the floor ended, torn and crumbled, and