STAR TREK: Enterprise - Broken Bow

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STAR TREK: Enterprise - Broken Bow Page 1

by Diane Carey (Novelization)




  POCKET BOOKS

  NEW YORK LONDON TORONTO SYDNEY SINGAPORE

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  Copyright © 2001 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.

  STAR TREK is a Registered Trademark of Paramount Pictures.

  This book is published by Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., under exclusive license from Paramount Pictures.

  All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever. For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020

  ISBN: 0-7434-4862-6

  First Pocket Books hardcover printing October 2001

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2

  POCKET and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.

  For information regarding special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact Simon & Schuster Special Sales at 1-800-456-6798 or [email protected]

  Printed in the U.S.A.

  Parts of this novelization were written aboard

  the topsail schooner Pride of Baltimore II

  during the American Sail Training Association

  Great Lakes Tall Ship Challenge of 2001.

  —D. Carey

  Ship’s Cook

  Contents

  PROLOGUE

  CHAPTER 1

  CHAPTER 2

  CHAPTER 3

  CHAPTER 4

  CHAPTER 5

  CHAPTER 6

  CHAPTER 7

  CHAPTER 8

  CHAPTER 9

  CHAPTER 10

  CHAPTER 11

  CHAPTER 12

  CHAPTER 13

  CHAPTER 14

  CHAPTER 15

  CHAPTER 16

  CHAPTER 17

  CHAPTER 18

  BEHIND THE SCENES OF ENTERPRISE

  About the e-Book

  PROLOGUE

  THERE WAS NO WIND, yet there was a rush. the starship was fast, faster than anything, ever. That was the rule. Just from the speed, the bad guys would be too scared to pick a fight. When they saw it go, then, all of a sudden, just magically couldn’t see it anymore, they’d know to back off.

  Back away, because I’m going. I’m going ...

  “... where no man has gone before.”

  Prrrrsssshoooom!

  Sure, it was just a paintbrush, but it made the perfect sound, the soft whisk of a starship’s superengines, just the way Jonathan heard it in his head, over and over, the way Dad described the sound—the rush of possibilities. Anything could happen! Space—the final frontier!

  “Doctor Cochrane would be proud of you,” Dad said, instead of give me the brush before you paint your own nose.

  “I know the whole speech by heart,” Jonathan said.

  “Watch out! You’re painting over the cockpit windows.”

  Jonathan Archer glanced up at his dad and muttered, “Sorry,” and drew back the paintbrush. Before them on the porch table, where Mom hated them to spill anything, was a good reason to spill. The ship was almost finished—a shipbuilder’s scale model, one of a kind, because Dad was the builder. Jonathan knew he was the only kid on Earth, in the whole universe and even on Mars Colony, who had a model like this. It was only his because Dad didn’t need it anymore, not for planning, anyway.

  Jonathan surveyed the ventral plates and complained in his head that the dove-wing paint didn’t quite match the gunmetal of the nacelle housings.

  But the model wasn’t suffering any, except for maybe a little overshoot from his brush on the starboard side. Jonathan was more embarrassed that he might keep the crew from seeing some important thing in space. And let the captain down. Captains had to be able to see everything and know everything. It was the crew’s job to help him. Someday I’ll be a heck of a crewman, on this ship! I’ll make sure the captain knows everything. He won’t take a step without me.

  The boy pressed his lips together and didn’t say that out loud. He knew what he wanted, and he would get it. Decision made.

  Sunlight poured through the sunporch windows. San Francisco’s skyline glittered and enhanced the light shining on the model of the starship. Jonathan was an important person, because otherwise, why would somebody as famous as his father let him work on the actual builder’s model of the starship?

  Starship ...

  For a few minutes he and his dad were silent as Jonathan put touches of the darker gray on the featureless white nacelles. He saw his dad’s hand twitch, itching to take the brush away and do this himself, but Jonathan leaned closer, signaling that he was determined to be careful and get it right. This was one of those things parents were just croaking to do themselves, but knew they’d be bad kid-raisers if they didn’t let their kid try. So Jonathan was ahead. He was almost ten, and he had parents figured out.

  “When’s it gonna be ready to fly?” he asked his father.

  “Let the paint dry first.”

  “No, I mean your ship.”

  Dad shrugged, but his eyes gleamed. “Not for a while ... it hasn’t even been built yet.”

  “How big will it be?”

  “Pretty big.”

  Jonathan immediately began weighing comparisons in his head. As big as a Starfleet troop transport? As big as the Universe Planetarium?

  “Bigger than Ambassador Pointy’s ship?”

  Dad opened the can of blue paint and Jonathan dipped the brush.

  “His name is Soval,” Dad said, “and he’s been very helpful, and I’ve told you not to call him that. Get the leading edge of the nacelle.”

  Nacelles ... the magic of faster-than-light drive! Zephram Cochrane’s big discovery would take men to the stars—us, on our own, without any help from pointers. We had it before they found us, so we could take credit for getting ourselves into space. That was fair. We were coming, and they would have to live with it.

  “Billy Cook said we’d be flying at warp five by now if the Vulcans hadn’t kept things from us,” he dared.

  He knew he was venturing into sensitive territory now, but an explorer had to gamble.

  “They have their reasons,” Dad said, holding back. Then more slipped out. “God knows what they are. ...”

  Jonathan lowered the paintbrush so fast that the stick hit the edge of the table and spat a blue decoration on the ship’s stand. He turned sharply, bluntly. “What? What reasons? You always say that! You always say, ‘They must have some good reason,’ but you never tell me what. I’m ten, and it’s time!”

  Dad tried not to laugh, then chuckled anyway, and bobbed his brows. “You’re nine.”

  “Nine and three-quarters! If I’m old enough to ask, then I’m old enough to get told something, and not just, ‘Well, it’s mysterious.’ Why won’t they help? We would help them! I would help!”

  Dad’s smile faded to something else. He leaned forward, hunched his shoulders, and gazed directly, in a way that made Jonathan feel important.

  Then, all at once, Dad started talking—but really talking, really saying something, as if he had started speaking to another grown-up all of a sudden.

  “I haven’t been very fair to you, have I?” he considered. “Treating you the way the Vulcans treat humans ... the way they’ve treated me. ... I’ve been assuming that I’d be the one to decide when you were ready to know things, assuming you don’t have anything to offer because you’re ... you’re ..
.”

  Jonathan flared his arms and spat the word. “Primitive?”

  The interruption got just the reaction he wanted. Dad smiled, rolled his eyes, flushed pink in the face, and got embarrassed. For an instant, Jonathan felt as if he looked a lot like his dad—the sun-dipped brown hair, the same brown eyes, pretty good smile that crinkled his eyes, friendly face, not enough of a tan. And the same flicker behind the gaze, like maybe they were both smarter than the next guy about certain things, even if the next guy was each other.

  “Primitive ...” Henry Archer murmured. It was a mocking word, one the Vulcans used a lot, till it was more like a joke.

  The sadness in Dad’s face, though—it hurt them both. Jonathan shrugged a little, not knowing what to say, but his feelings were hurt. His dad had done everything a human could do to prove that we were ready for space, just as good as the Vulcans or whatever slimers were out there, and still the pointers wouldn’t teach the important stuff, like they thought we were just puppies in clothes who couldn’t learn. They knew how to swim, but wouldn’t teach us. They wanted humans to half-drown, like some kind of punishment, then learn to swim on our own, and if we almost drowned, well, then they’d step in, maybe, and be heroes for saving us. What kind of friend is that, to think your friends are less than you in the universe? Some friends. Couldn’t they see, just from working with people like Dad and Zephram Cochrane? When Starfleet came around, didn’t they get it that we were serious? Didn’t they see how much we wanted to go? Couldn’t they learn? Couldn’t they dream?

  So who was primitive, and who wasn’t?

  If I can make a person like Dad be honest with me, then I can do it with other people, too. I’ll think about this later, and figure out what I did right. Then I’m gonna use it on somebody. I’ll make the Vulcans talk!

  And I’ll make them say they’re sorry to you, Bad. Because they should be.

  As if hearing Jonathan’s thoughts, Dad stood up and tapped the lid back on the blue paint. Then he reached for Jonathan’s hand.

  “Come on, son.”

  Jonathan took a leaping step, because he knew. “Where’re we going?”

  “To the Spacedock.” Dad drew a long breath and nodded in agreement with himself. “It’s time for you to see the real thing.”

  CHAPTER 1

  Thirty Years Later ...

  OKL’HMA!

  Failed! I have smashed my craft, and now I flee to live!

  Die here? In rows of weeds and seeds? This is no way to die! Suliban! The savage pawns must not have what I know. Escape is not cowardice! Run!

  Thus he ran from the smelling wreck of a noble craft that had carried him so far, whose flawed intakes he had not been able to mend in time. The wreck would distract them. It was Klingon to its core and it would serve till the end, spewing a curtain of smoke to hide him in the stalks.

  Who was on this planet? Who had made the stalks into rows as tidy as a mOghklyk’s spine plait? What beasts were here who built the land into squares, the buildings into squares, and the fences into squares? Were they also square?

  Klaang ran, ran like a fear-driven child, but with anger also, which kept him leaping harder with each step. The gravity here—he could run faster than on Qo’noS. His bulky body served better here and seemed young again. He knew he was big, even for a Klingon, but here he sensed an advantage. Suliban animals would lose him in this weed field.

  Then the blasts began, and he knew he was wrong. The stalks beside him burst into flame and withered, blackened. A glance over his shoulder told him they were after him even through the smoke and weeds. He saw their mottled faces, heard their weapons, and sensed their insult.

  “Hah!” A burst of new energy, driven by the stink of burning plants, drove him faster toward the square buildings he had seen as his craft rushed overhead to its death. A good death in battle for a good old craft, to go ferociously into the dust and flame with scars of Suliban attack. The future would know about it.

  The Suliban weapons spat bitter fire at Klaang as he ran. The alien countryside lit up in great expanses. Ridiculously, he tilted toward each shot; escape would be preferred, but if there was no escape, he wanted to die boldly. He was running to save the mission, after all, not himself. His conscience and his duty were in conflict.

  But to die with Suliban disruption in the back—who would tell how it really had been for him? Why he died with wounds in his back?

  Could he run backward?

  He was about to try when a port opened in the nearest building and an alien emerged, bright in the face and round in the body, with hairless chin and narrow shoulders and cloth on its head. Shock broke across its expression, and it disappeared back into the swinging port.

  Klaang angled away from that building and went for the silver tower to the side. It was windowless and tall, suggesting an inner confusion and a possibility of darkness in which to conceal himself.

  The door was large enough for him, made of thin metal and bracings. He pushed it shut and slammed the rod that obviously bolted the door.

  Would Suliban be stopped? Klaang stepped back into the darkness and looked at the door. A thin sliver of light around the perimeter proved the door was not tight. Suliban would flatten through it.

  He had seen the disgusting sight before. He began to feel his way around, and found a ladder.

  By the time he heard the Suliban dislocating their skeletal structure to melt under the door—actually, he heard their shuffles as they reassembled, but in his mind he saw the meltdown—he was bursting out another door, high in the silver tower. Another roof!

  Yes, he had seen this nearby small building, and now it was here to help him! He held his breath, and leaped.

  His soles slammed onto the tiny roof, breaking the plated material that warded off weather. In his mind, he endured a quick guess about what kind of weather would come to a place like this.

  Then he was on the ground again. He lost balance for a moment as he spun around and drew his disruptor. Now! He would get a shot at them! They were inside that port he had just come from, trapped in the metal tower! A disruptor shot would charge those metal walls and force the Suliban out the other end, where Klaang would be waiting for them!

  He leveled his disruptor and fired a single salvo at the open portal he had just come from.

  Rather than a simple charge, what came out was a gout of sheer fireball. The tower rumbled at its base, then blew to splinters with a great throbbing roar.

  Explosives! Why would these aliens keep volatiles in a field of stalks?

  Klaang staggered, shocked, blown backward by the unexpected detonation. He stared at the instantly burning wreckage and wondered why a simple tower would get a noble death, just for hiding volatiles.

  But the Suliban would have no more interest in him. Not those two Suliban.

  “Top ryterr!”

  Momentarily confused, Klaang stumbled and turned to see the slope-shouldered alien now standing two steps from him, with a weapon aimed at Klaang’s breastplate.

  “Aymeenut!” the alien cried.

  Klaang tried to make sense of the sounds, which seemed to have some Klingon inflections, but he made much more of the stance. “Rognuh pagh goH! Mang juH!”

  Would the alien understand his warning?

  The alien’s face crinkled. “May’v nodea mityer sning, muttay gerrentee i nowow tuze iss!”

  Why had this creature interfered in the quarrel of others? What kind of people were these? In a rage of insult and irritation, Klaang slapped his thighs and ranted, “HIch ghaH! Oagh DoO!”

  He was about to spit out his further opinion, when the alien proved him completely wrong by opening fire.

  An energy stream bolted from the weapon and caught Klaang in the chest. As he sailed through the light and bright air to the place where he would die in the stalks, he silently thanked the interesting alien for a wound in front. At least future ages would know he hadn’t died running.

  CHAPTER 2

  Starfl
eet Spacedock

  Earth orbit

  SPACEDOCK WAS A TECHNOLOGICAL WONDER. Built in space of geodesic parts assembled on Earth and expanded to full size in space, the shimmering silver dock soared in orbit around a glowing blue planet marbled with white clouds, an image almost religious in its mystical beauty. Within the enormous open structure buzzed a tiny workpod, moving like an insect around the elegant gray-blue body of the planet’s first faster-than-light deep-space cruiser.

  Together, as the pod maneuvered around the orbital inspection pod and under the rim of a gigantic blue-gray saucer, the two men inside watched through a small ceiling portal as a string of hull bolts breezed past in orderly fashion.

  “Well, Trip, ol’ boy, it’s an unwritten law in these parts that every starship’s got to have a country boy on board or it ain’t going to fly right.”

  “You’re making fun of me,” Engineer Charles Tucker noted.

  “Darn right I am, pardner.” Captain Jonathan Archer smiled, completely content in the moment. “If I didn’t take it out on you, I’d probably go ballistic in the face of some Vulcan dignitary or an admiral or a ship’s cook or somebody important.”

  “Are you saying I’m not important!”

  “Why would I say that? You’re the country boy.”

  “Can an engineer tell a captain to shut the heck up?”

  “Sure. ‘Shut the heck up—’ ”

  “Sir!” they finished together. Their laughter rang through the cramped cockpit. Sounded good. They didn’t hurry to stop.

  Archer held his gaze on his younger friend a few moments longer than necessary. Tucker was trying to be nonchalant about the new ship’s imminent launch, but the veil was thin. He was just as excited as Archer, but Archer didn’t feel obliged to hide his near-giddiness at just being here, skimming across this ship, at this time in history. The two weren’t quite nine years apart in age, and between Archer’s boyishness and Tucker’s pretending to be a grown-up at least half the time, Archer figured that put them pretty close. Of all the newly assigned crew, they’d been together the longest, from the design stage to fitting-out of the new warp-speed ship. The new ship hovered above them in Spacedock, as comfortable as an eagle in its aerie, being tended, coddled, and preened by devoted minions in extravehicular suits, none quite as consumed with wonder as the proud captain himself.

 

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