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Star Trek - TOS - The Tears Of The Singers

Page 27

by Melinda Snodgrass


  "But," Kirk began, then speech became impossible. There was a moment of

  gut-wrenching nausea, and then he found himself floating above his

  collapsed body. He watched with detached interest while McCoy raced from

  his side, to Spock's, and then to Uhura and Maslin. He wanted to call out

  to the doctor, to tell him that all was well, but even though he -formed

  the words and heard himself speaking McCoy took no notice.

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  "Come. We will go now," the matriarch ordered, and Kirk found himself

  traveling through space. Even though he knew intellectually that his fraff,

  physical body was not being exposed to the deadly cold and airlessness of

  space, he still found himself cringing in on himself.

  "Fascinating," Spock's voice came from the glowing entity on his right.

  "Some form of astral projection. But obviously limited in range," the

  Vulcan added when they all came to rest some distance out from Taygeta.

  Kirk found that he could see very clearly and to a much greater distance

  than his human eyes would have permitted. He could see the Enterprise

  orbiting the planet in close formation with Kor's flagship, and he felt his

  chest squeezed tight with emotion as he gazed on her perfect fines. Beyond

  the two ships he could see the second Klmgon ship looking like a toy as it

  hung before the phenomenon. The phenomenon itself shimmered and glowed with

  iridescent fires as it hung like a prismatic curtain across the fabric of

  space. The Taygetian sun was only a faint yellow glow behind the shifting

  colors of the space/tirne rip. Even though Mashn's and Uhura's physical

  bodies were slumped unconscious over the synthesizer there was still music

  swelling and ebbing all about Kirk. He realized that he must be "hearing"

  the music that was in their minds, and he found it more beautiful than any

  earthlyrinusic he had ever heard.

  "So," the matriarch said quietly, and her thoughts fell bleak and hopeless

  upon Kirk's mind. "I behold our doom. 9f

  "But it doesn't have to be!" the captain insisted. "It is your doom, in the

  sense that you created it, but you can also stop it. Just stop the song!"

  He could sense the indecision in the elder Thygetian, and he cast about

  desperately for some other argument, some plea that would reach and

  convince her.

  Suddenly a group of cubs came flying past like a bevy of

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  glittering comets. If they were awkward and ungainly on land here in the

  dark sea of space their astral bodies darted and spun with the grace of

  dancers. They whirled about him and his companions, playing at intricate

  games of tag while the distant stars formed a glittering backdrop for their

  antics.

  Like children of any world, Kirk thought. But what childrenI They can have

  the stars as their playground. Or can they? Once adulthood is reached such

  games are put aside in favor of their duty--a duty that is pointless and

  wastes their potential.

  And it was then that he knew what to do.

  "Lady, if not for yourselves then for the sake of the children. Stop this

  song before it destroys you all. For generations your children have only

  been able to look forward to a life of endless toil and drudgery, and a

  toil to no purpose. Trust us and we can give you the stars. As members of

  the Federation the resources and learning of a thousand worlds will be

  available to your people, and your great powers can be used for the benefit

  of hundreds of races. Lady, I beg you, don't deny your children a future!"

  The music which had been maintaining a quiet counterpoint to his words

  suddenly rose in a joyful crescendo. It mirrored Kirk's sincerity and

  desperate hope, and it seemed that a hundred orchestras overlaid by one

  lone voice wrote a tone poem of a future so beautiful that only the most

  callous of creatures could have ignored its vision.

  There was again a moment of nausea and dislocation, and then Kirk found

  himself rising shakily to his feet. Sand cascaded from his parka, and he

  brushed the last clinging particles from his pants.

  "Jim! Jim! Are you all right? What happened?" McCoy gripped him by the

  shoulders, and there was a babble of confused voices all about him. Then

  the matriarch emitted a 243

  The Tears of the Singers

  long piercing cry that went wailing up and down the tonal scale, and the

  song ceased. Silence fell over the silver-andcrystal world of the Singers.

  Fbr the first time in three thousand years there was quiet. The only

  sounds were the hiss and boom of the waves on the beach, the sigh of the

  wind through the rock cliffs and the sound of a woman crying.

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  Kirk set McCoy aside, and moved to Uhura. She had slid off of the

  synthesizer bench, and was now sitting in the sand with Maslin cradled in

  her arms. The composer's face was a pale waxy white, and the air rattled in

  his throat with each breath he drew.

  McCoy came barreling past Kirk, and ran his tricorder over Maslin's prone

  body. He then looked up at Kirk, and gave a small shake of his head.

  "Can you do anything for him?" the captain asked quietly.

  "Make him comfortable, maybe try a few tricks, but it's doubtful," McCoy

  replied in the same low tone. "Let me get him back to the ship."

  4'No." The single word was very weak, and followed by a paroxysm of

  coughing, but it still held a vestige of Mashn's old command. The composer

  drew back his lips in a travesty of a smile, and looked up at Kirk. "No,"

  he said again. 6.1111is seems a very good place for a musician to die."

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  The Tears of the Singers

  "Guy, no," Uhura whispered, and her face was a mask of agony-

  Kirk suddenly became aware of the curiously watching security team that had

  accompanied him down from the Enterprise. "Tbomas," he snapped to their

  leader. "Take your team, and track down those last Klingon mutineers.

  "Aye, sir."

  "You go with them," Kor said suddenly to his own guards, and waved them

  away.

  "Don't cry, my heart," Guy was saying to Uhura when Kirk returned his

  attention to the couple. "Life is very rarely as we wish it to be."

  "If only you hadn't come," Uhura cried, and her words were like a whip to

  Kirk's already sensitive nerves. He braced himself for Maslin's reply.

  "And if I hadn't come I would never have known you." He took one of her

  hands, and lifted it weakly to his lips. ..Also,9t he paused, and for an

  instant an expression of almost transported joy crossed his face. "I wrote

  my greatest piece here. This time my music really did speak to the

  heavens."

  "Oh, Guy----" The whistle of a communicator cut through her words.

  "Kirk here."

  "Scotty, Captain. Just wanted to report that the phenomenon has vanished,

  as well as the subspace harmonic that was wreckin' the difithium crystals."

  "Very good, Mr. Scott. Secure the ship, and wait for my c

  ca. 19

  "Aye, sir."

  "So, Kirk, we did it," Maslin gasped painfully.

  "I would say rather that you did it."
r />   "What's this? Modesty from the great captain of the Enterprise?" Maslin

  said with a touch of his old raillery. "Come, come, Kirk, don't ruin my

  image of you."

  ne captain dropped down on one knee next to the dying

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  composer. "You ruined my image of you," he said, taking one of Maslin's

  limp hands. "And I want you to know that I'm sorry. I never intended it to

  end this way---'

  "Please, Kirk, don't become maudlin," he said with an impatient gesture.

  He cast the captain an ironic look. "Besides, it is true, what you once

  said Some things are worth more than our own selfish little fives. I

  wouldn't have wanted to miss the Taygetians." The cub who had been Guy's

  constant companion seemed to sense that something was. happening for he

  suddenly flopped forward, and placed his head beneath Guy's hand.

  The composer's lashes fluttered down onto his cheeks, and McCoy once more

  stepped forward. "Come on, Jim, let me take him back to the ship."

  "No." This time it was Uhura who s poke. "Honor his wishes. If he must die

  at least let it be here."

  "That's it, Madam Star Fleet, you tell them," Guy rasped out, and managed

  once more to open his eyes. He studied her face, and slowly smiled. "Did

  I ever tell you how much I love

  you?19

  "Not enough times," Uhura said with a catch in her voice.

  Kali suddenly spread open her arms, and shooed the circle of watchers away

  the way a housewife would herd a flock of recalcitrant chickens.

  "That's our Kali, ever sensitive," Guy murmured faintly, and Uhura saw that

  his green eyes were beginning to wander unfocusedly.

  "Guy, don't leave me."

  "I won't. We've ... learned that much ... haven't we? I'll ... be close ...

  always," he murmured disjointedly. "Best I go. Otherwise ... you might not

  become a ... captain. Show them all how it's done, love ......

  Uhura gently closed his eyes, and then from all around her the cubs began

  a sorrowful, minor-key lament. The small cub who had lain with his head

  beneath Guy's hand suddenly lifted his head and, looking directly at Uhura,

  shed a single

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  The, Tears of the Singers

  sparkling blue tear. Reaching out she caught it on the palm of her hand, but

  instead of spattering in salty rivulets it lay smooth and cool on her skin.

  And now the tears came. Hot and violent they ran down her face as she sat

  bowed over the body of her love.

  "So this is it then," Kor said as be, Kali, Kirk and Spock walked through

  the corridors of the Enterprise toward the transporter room. "Once more we

  are denied our warriors' duel."

  "Now don't blame me for that," Kirk said, holding up a restraining hand.

  "As I see it you're the one who opted not to fight, but rather to work

  together."

  .'And we did pretty well, didn't we?," Kor asked with a grm.

  "Yes, I think we did. So, what do you do now?"

  "Go home and face the music-please forgive the pun."

  "Will it be bad?" -

  "I hope not. After all, Kali and I will have several weeks in which to

  concoct a story that will make it appear that we emerged victorious while

  you slunk away with your tail between your legs.,

  Kirk raised a hand and covered his eyes. "Oh my reputation, my poor

  battered reputation," he moaned.

  "Your damn reputation doesn't need any halher inflation," Kor stated

  bluntly. "You're already a damn living legend." Kirk looked sheepish. "And

  furthermore, I once again have to leave the field to you."

  "Fortunes of war."

  "But this time it wasn't a war. Think about it, Kirk, this time we stopped

  fighting ourselves; it didn't take the Organians to stop us."

  "So, maybe we are all becoming wiser," Kali said.

  "Unfortunately we are only two ships," Spock said dampeningly. "Your Empire

  and our Federation are still standing eye to eye and toe to toe on. many

  fronts.

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  The lbars of dw MnSm

  "Don't be negative, Spock," she said, making a face at the Vulcan. "I am

  not saying we have solved all the problems, but we have at least

  demonstrated that it can happen.

  "Speaking of problems," Kor said with a hesitant clearing of his throat.

  "Once you get the three Thygetian ambassadors back to the ftderation, and

  formal relations are established, I don't suppose we could borrow a few of

  them to improve some of our problem worlds?"

  "You head the trade delegation to Earth, and I'll be there to assure that

  it works out."

  "AD right. It is a deal." They had reached the transporter room, and the

  foursome paused at the base of the platform for their final leave-taking.

  "I won't say good-bye, but rather farewell, for I think we will be meeting

  again," Kor said, gripping Kirk by the upper arms.

  "I hope so, Commander. And about the matter of the Thygetians, you get the

  changes made so that there can be trade between our people, and IT see to

  it that you get what YOU want.'

  "Your hand on it?"

  "MY hand on it."

  "You realize what you are asking me to do, don't you, Kirk," Kor said as

  they shook. You are asking me to take over the halls of power, and redirect

  our Empire."

  "Commander, if there's any man who can do it, I think it's you. I would say

  that you're well on your way to being a living legend too."

  "Captain, please," Kali said, placing her hands in the middle of Kor's back

  , and pushing lurn toward the platform. "He is already vain enough. Please

  don't add to it."

  I'Ah, but my darling, I will always have you there to deflate my ego, so

  all will be well."

  "As if I have ever tried to diminish you!" Kali gasped angrily. "Why

  you---' she began, but Kor picked her up in his arms, and pressed a firm

  kiss on her lips to silence her.

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  The Tears of the Singers.

  "And that is how you handle women," he said with a wink to Kirk as he

  deposited his wife on one of the transporter disks. "And now, farewell

  until the next time."

  "Good-bye, Commander," Kirk said, liffing one hand.

  "You better hope you're still alive by then," Kali said threateningly to

  her husband as the transporter took them.

  "A highly volatile people," Spock remarked when the platform was clear.

  'Yes, Mr. Spock, but I like them."

  "I have also never understood human taste," the Vulcan added dryly as he

  and the captain walked out of the transporter room.

  "I suppose it's a case of like to like."

  "Undoubtedly."

  They walked in silence to the turbolift, and Kirk called for the bridge.

  "Weft, we have quite, a load of passengers for the trip back, what with the

  Thygetians and the hunters."

  "Yes, but it is unfortunate that we could not return with our original

  passenger."

  "Yes," Kirk agreed, and fell into a thoughtful silence as he considered the

  simple burial ceremony that he had conducted for Maslin on the shores of

  that silver sea. "But no man ever had such a requiem mass sung for him."

  "Yes, he would have enjoyedit."
/>
  Kirk stood silent for several more moments then abruptly asked, "Do you

  think Uhura is going to be all right?"

  "Given my lack of understanding of human emotions, Captain, I am perhaps

  not the best person to ask. Dr. McCoy considers himself a delver into the

  secrets of men's souls. You might better direct your question to him."

  Kirk grunted a reply as the doors of the turbo lift whoosed open. The

  bridge was humming with quiet activity, and the captain stood for a moment

  at the top of the steps reveling in the familiar sights and sounds. All of

  his number-one bridge crew was in place, Sulu at the helm, Scotty at the

  engineering console, Uhura on communications and Spock moving

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  The Tears of the SR*m

  smoothly to his place at science. It felt good to have them all back, and

  Kirk realized that he had missed the comfort of their familiar presences. He

  hoped there would never

  be an occasion when he would be left isolated aboard his ship. Senft into his

  command chair, he half turned so he could study Uhura's face. In the days

  since Maslin's death she had been very quiet, frighteningly quiet, and her

  usually serene and gentle expression had been replaced with an mdecipherable

  mask.

  she reached up to adjust the monitor in her ear, and the motion set

  something at her breast to swinging. Kirk looked closer, and saw that she

  was wearing a crystal tear. It spun and sparkled like frozen blue fire on

  the end of its chain. Kirk shivered slightly, and wondered how she could

  wear the thing. He would have thought the memories it roused would have

  been too painful.

  He continued to stare mesmerized at the jewel. How strange, he thought,

  that something so small could have been at the heart of their entire

  mission.

  ,,From out of the greed of men," he murmured to himself.

  "I beg your pardon, sir?" Uhura asked, swinging around in her seat.

  -just thinking aloud, Lieutenant."

  She regarded him thoughtfully for several moments, then said, "I wear it as

  a reminder, sir."

  Kirk started a bit, and wondered if her continuing close contact with the

 

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