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Star Trek-TOS-027-Mindshadow

Page 3

by Kevin Underwood


  a half hours at most, and I'm willing to give

  them a

  little leeway. In the meantime, I won't risk

  having

  crewmembers down there if any trapped

  pirates decide

  on another surprise attack."

  Scott sighed tiredly. "Aye, Captain.

  We'll be

  beamin' up, then."

  Captain's Log, Stardate 7003.4:

  After being called to Aritani to investigate

  pirate

  attacks upon the population, we have discovered

  that the planet is a veritable storehouse of

  precious metals and fuel sources. My

  guess is that

  the attackers wish to subdue the population in

  order to set up some permanent mining operation.

  Unfortunately, we have not yet located the

  pirate base nor any ships, and we assume

  they are

  using cloaking devices. Engineer Scott and

  Ensign

  Lanz have installed a protective

  shield

  around the planet, which will prevent other ships

  from entering Aritani's atmosphere and which will

  trap any ships in the atmosphere at the time the

  shield was erected. According to Mr. Spock, the

  fuel for the type of ship used by the pirates could

  last no more than seven and a half hours, assuming

  they are using a standard type of cloaking

  MINDSHADOW

  device. At that time, their shields will no longer

  be

  operable and our scanners will pick them up. I

  expect we will be able to capture and question at

  least one of the attackers.

  Once the planet surface has been secured,

  we

  will begin beaming down our personnel for shore

  leave.

  Commander Spock was seriously injured during

  the performance of his duty on the planet surface;

  I am hereby submitting his name for commendation.

  Kirk yawned and ran a hand across his face as if

  to

  clear away the gathering cobwebs; it'd

  been some time

  since he'd last pulled a double shift, and his

  body was

  no longer accustomed to it. There was still no point in

  going to his quarters yet, however; he would be

  unable

  to slow his mind enough to sleep.

  The bridge had been too quiet over the past

  several

  hours, the only disturbance being a shift change of

  personnel. On the viewscreen, Aritani still

  turned

  lazily, revealing no sign of the destruction that

  had

  occurred on its surface. But it was the silence from

  sick bay that Kirk found the most unbearable.

  He snapped a toggle on the arm of the con

  decisively.

  "Kirk to sick bay."

  McCoy's voice sounded as haggard as Kirk

  felt.

  "McCoy here. What is it, Jim?"

  "How's Spock? Any change?"

  "Not really..."

  The hesitation in McCoy's voice

  made Kirk sit up

  straight in his chair. "Define "not really,"

  Doctor. Is he

  conscious?"

  "Well, uh, yes and no. He's very groggy from

  the

  medication---"

  "He's conscious, and you didn't call me?"

  Kirk's

  voice betrayed his anger. "That was an order,

  Doctor,

  whether you realized it or not."

  It was McCoy's turn to sound insulted.

  "Wait just a

  minute, there, Captain---"

  "No, you wait a minute, Doctor, because I'm

  on my

  way. Kirk out."

  He cut off the communication before McCoy could

  protest.

  McCoy was waiting outside the intensive care

  section

  of sick bay, his arms folded tightly against his

  chest and his chin jutting out in his best defiant

  pose.

  He began to speak before Kirk had a chance.

  "I admit," he said, struggling to keep the

  irritability

  from his voice, "that neither one of us has had much

  sleep and we're walking around like a couple of

  exposed

  raw nerves. But I am not going to let you walk

  in

  there before you listen to what I have to say, not for

  the sake of my professional pride, but for the

  sake of

  that patient in there. In my medical judgment, there

  was no point in calling you. Spock is only

  semiconscious

  and unable to respond---"

  "My order did not include any leeway for

  medical

  judgment," Kirk interrupted coldly. "Is

  he still

  awake?"

  "Yes, dammit, but you won't be able to get any

  information from him right now--"

  "We'll see." Kirk brushed past him;

  McCoy followed,

  seething.

  At the sight of Spock, the coldness left

  Kirk's features

  instantly. The Vulcan lay in the shadows of the

  dimly lit room, his breathing irregular,

  labored as Kirk

  had never seen it, for Spock was in pain. His dark

  eyes

  fastened on Jim's face, but they were clouded,

  unseeing.

  Kirk felt a chill of fear.

  MINDSHADOW

  "What happened down there, Spock?"

  Spock closed his eyes slowly, but when he

  opened

  them again at Kirk, there was no recognition in

  them.

  "He can't speak, Captain." McCoy's words

  stung.

  "And I doubt he even knows you. There's no

  point in

  agitating him."

  Kirk ignored him. "Spock, can you hear me?

  Blink

  if you can hear me."

  Spock hesitated for an awful moment,

  then lowered

  his eyelids and raised them again.

  Kirk shot a triumphant I-told-you-so

  glance at McCoy.

  "Spock, blink if you know who I am."

  There was a long silence filled only with the sound of

  tortured breathing as Spock fought the effects of

  his

  injuries and McCoy's painkillers and struggled

  to remember.

  "Don't you know me, Spock?"

  "Stop it, Jim! That's enough." McCoy moved

  toward

  Kirk as if to pull him from Spock's side, but

  the

  look on the captain's face stopped him.

  You must know me, Kirk directed the thought toward

  the Vulcan desperately. You know me better

  than

  anyone else; you've touched my mind a hundred

  times. How can I touch yours now?

  But it was useless; he was no telepath, and even

  if

  he could touch Spock's mind, he doubted that the

  Vulcan would be able to respond. He

  began to turn

  away.

  And then Spock blinked once, slowly, and

  closed

  his eyes as though the effort had exhausted him.

  Kirk

  felt a sense of absolute victory.

  "When he makes any improvement, or if he

  says

  anything, contact me," he said to McCoy, but his
/>
  eyes

  were still on Spock. As he walked toward the door

  to

  leave, something made him turn and face

  McCoy.

  "And that's an order."

  He left McCoy turning behind him.

  Kirk stepped off the turbolift to the sight of

  Aritani

  on the screen, a sight that was rapidly becoming more

  of an affront than a pleasure.

  Sulu rose from the con. "Any change?"

  Kirk asked.

  The helmsman watched as his captain

  attempted

  unsuccessfully to stifle a yawn. At present

  the captain

  had been on duty for close to twenty-four

  hours, and

  Sulu seriously doubted his ability to stay

  awake in the

  comfortable command chair. He toyed with the idea of

  suggesting that the captain repair to his quarters for

  some rest, but in light of Kirk's recent mood,

  decided

  it would be best not to mention it. Sulu did not need

  to

  call sick bay to find out Mr. Spock's

  condition; the

  look on Kirk's face when he'd first come

  back from

  sick bay had told Sulu just how serious the first

  officer's injuries were.

  "No, sir," he replied simply. "All

  quiet. We haven't

  picked up the first sign of pirates, or any

  other vessels, for that matter. Apparently this is

  usually a very quiet neighborhood."

  Kirk seemed keenly disappointed. "No

  pirate vessels?"

  "Captain," Uhura called from her station,

  "Mr.

  Scott just called to let you know it's been eight

  hours."

  "Eight hours..." Kirk was momentarily lost.

  "Oh,

  yes. Already? Let me talk to him."

  "Yes, sir." Scott's voice came from the

  engineering

  deck.

  "Scotty, what are the chances that one of the pirate

  vessels could go longer than eight hours with their

  cloaks up?"

  "Impossible, sir. Of course, I'm not the

  expert.

  MINDSHADOW

  Spock would be the one to ask--except I guess

  he's

  not up to answering questions right now."

  Kirk did not answer.

  "Of course, he did say

  seven-point-four-two hours,

  sir, and I'm sure his answer would be just

  the same

  now. You've allowed more than another half hour

  to

  be on the safe side. There's no ship I've

  ever heard of

  that could keep a cloakin' device operating that

  long."

  Kirk sighed. "I'd hoped to catch at least one

  of the

  ships beneath our shield. It would have made it a lot

  easier to locate their base."

  "Aye, that it would."

  "Guess I'll have to tell the transporter

  room to start

  beaming down shore parties."

  The sound of a muffled hoot came from the other

  end of the intercom. Kirk frowned.

  "What was that, Engineer?"

  "Nothing, sir," Scott replied meekly.

  "One of the

  men down here overheard you mentioning shore

  leave."

  Kirk's expression softened. "It has been a

  long

  time, hasn't it? The crew has

  certainly earned a little R

  and R."

  "You have, too, sir."

  Kirk could not disagree with Scott's statement, but

  his reaction to being selected by the computer to be in

  the first shore party of one hundred to go down to the

  surface was something less than gleeful. He

  offered to

  let Scott take his place, a proposition that

  Scott accepted

  rather quickly, as Ensign Lanz happened to be

  in the first beamdown group.

  The door to McCoy's cabin opened quickly in

  response

  to the buzzer; Kirk had guessed that the doctor,

  too, would not be sleeping. Instead, McCoy was

  sitting at his desk with a bottle of bourbon and a

  shot

  glass, pouring himself a drink--and not the first one,

  by the looks of things.

  His bleary red-rimmed eyes did not look up from

  the

  glass. "I suppose you came here for an

  update on

  Spock."

  Kirk stood uncertainly in the doorway.

  "I've already

  checked with sick bay. That's how I knew to

  find you here."

  McCoy scowled. "I told them I was going on

  shore

  leave---"

  "Christine said you'd probably be here . . . either

  sleeping or drinking."

  "Remind me to have that woman fired. She's

  getting

  to know me too damn well. If you've been

  to sick bay,

  then you've also discovered that Spock is in the

  capable

  hands of Dr. M'Benga, who has sworn to me

  that

  he will contact you the instant Spock utters a

  peep."

  "Bones," Kirk said suddenly. "Bones, I'm

  sorry."

  McCoy tried at first to shrug off the apology,

  but he

  sighed and shook his head. "It's not your fault,

  Jim.

  Do you realize that neither of us has slept for more

  than two shifts now? It's no wonder we're

  a little

  temperamental. Especially after what happened to

  Spock--" He lowered his head for an instant;

  when he

  raised it again, his voice was tinged with exasperation.

  "But Jim, you've got to realize that there may be

  some

  things I just can't fix. I'm a surgeon, damn

  it, not a

  magician.. 2'

  "I know," Kirk soothed. "And I was out of line

  today. I'm sorry. You did a fine job on

  Spock. Thank

  you for saving his life."

  "Well," McCoy said, more than mollified.

  "You're

  under a little stress, Captain. Apology

  accepted." He

  nodded at the bottle tucked under Kirk's arm.

  "I can

  see you're using the same prescription I am.

  Have a

  seat and I'll get you a glass."

  MINDSHADOW

  Kirk sat gratefully. "Now, Doctor,

  tell me how I can

  get some sleep."

  "What's that you brought--some of that Saurian

  stuff?. Drink a sizable portion of that, Jim

  boy, and

  your old country doctor promises you'll get

  to sleep

  tonight. In fact, why don't you try some of my

  brand?

  Kentucky bourbon, aged in the cask and twelve

  years

  old if it's a day--"

  "I'll stick with my usual poison, thanks."

  "It's your liver." McCoy handed the glass

  to him.

  "Look, Jim, when was the last time you took

  shore

  leave?"

  "I dunno. Same time you did."

  "Then it's definitely been too damn long.

  And with

  everything else that's been happening around here

  lately, it's no wonder yo
u've felt like blowing

  off some

  steam. So cheers. Doctor's orders."

  McCoy raised his

  glass.

  "Thanks." Kirk lifted the glass to his

  lips and

  stopped. "I'm not sure I can remember my

  last shore

  leave."

  McCoy grinned devilishly and leaned across the

  desk in his best dirty old man imitation. "I

  can. Rigley's planet, remember? That little bar

  where they do the most outrageous form of dancing. The

  kind that could

  knock your eyes right out of your head..."

  Kirk snickered, "I remember, of course...

  a native

  dance, based on an ancient religion--"

  McCoy rolled his eyes. "They don't make

  religious

  dances like that back home. Seems to me you also

  succeeded in getting rather friendly with their

  dancer, too--what was her name?"

  Kirk's teeth were showing. "Lolama.

  Lolama.

  can't remember her last name."

  "Wasn't important anyway. You were doing

  fine I recall, until that boyfriend of hers

  showedffment

  "Thank God for transporters." Kirk

  swallowed

  more of the brandy and was almost beginning to feel

  good. "I'm afraid though, that this time I'll be

  spending

  my shore leave here."

  "As your personal physician, I'd advise

  you to

  reconsider. You said it yourself. you need to be

  someplace

  where you can be near animals, trees, birds...

  After a while, the insides of this ship can begin

  to get

  to you."

  Kirk's lips tightened. "I'd rather stay here.

  Come to

  think of it, I don't see you rushing off to enjoy

  your

  liberty."

  McCoy's lascivious grin faded

  entirely. "I thought I

  might be needed here."

  "You mean you don't want to leave Spock.

  Maybe

  he's why I don't particularly feel like taking

  shore

  leave down there."

  "Because he was injured down there?" McCoy

  asked quietly.

  Kirk didn't answer.

  "That's why we're so angry," McCoy

  continued.

  "Because it was such a stupid accident... so

  unfair,

  especially to someone like Spock."

  "Explain." Kirk felt the knot in his stomach

  beginning

  to tighten again.

  "To have such an incredibly logical mind... and

  to

  receive damage to the left hemisphere."

  Kirk looked at him vacantly.

  "You do remember from your academy days which

  functions are controlled by the left hemisphere

  of the

  brain?"

  Anatomy had not been Kirk's favorite

  subject.

  "Language?"

  "Yes, and some memory, mathematics,

 

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