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Star Trek - Sarek

Page 42

by A. C. Crispin


  He turned to Sarek incredulously. "A chessboard, Ambassador?"

  "Yes," the Vulcan said, his dark eyes shining with pleasure from solving

  the puzzle. "And I recognize the game.

  Taryn is in command of that vessel. And those moves, those

  coordinates--they are identical to the moves Taryn made in one of our

  recent games." He shook his head, adding, mostly to himself, "A Vulcan

  gambit ... of course he would employ one. A Vulcan gambit ... it makes

  perfect sense. I should have realized it before."

  "But assuming that is Taryn, why would he come here?" Kirk said.

  "Because he wants me. He knows that I have uncovered the Freelan plan. I

  spoke to him while you were gone, and I deliberately baited him, trying

  to lure him into some reckless action ... as I have done many times

  during our

  chess games. Now he is responding to my implicit challenge.

  He is moving his ship in the pattern of the last game we played that he

  won. He employed T'Nedara's gambit, and there"--Sarek swiftly outlined a

  series of moves in red--"it is. The exact pattern of his moves in the

  game we played."

  "How many moves did he make during the entire game?" Spock asked,

  obviously fascinated. As they had been speaking, several more blips had

  appeared on the schematic.

  "It was a long, hard-fought game. Each of us made hundreds of moves."

  "Are you sure, Ambassador?" Kirk asked, wonderingly.

  "Do you have any other evidence that this is Taryn? When he contacted

  you, what did he want?"

  "He demanded a meeting between us in the Freelan system. I told him I

  would be unable to attend. As I said, I baited him. I could tell that he

  was angry, though of course I could not see his features. Now he does

  this," he gestured at the screen, "as his next move."

  "But if he was on Freelan only hours ago--"

  Sarek shook his head. "No. He merely said he was on Freelan. Commander

  Uhura confirmed that the message from Taryn was only rout ed through

  Freelan communications systems. The actual transmission originated

  inside the Romulan Neutral Zone."

  On Kirk's order, Enterprise moved again, and again the unseen vessel

  responded with a series of moves. "The pattern is exact," Sarek said.

  Catching Kirk's still-skeptical glance, he marked a new location on the

  screen in purple.

  "The next move," he said.

  As the Vulcan had predicted, when Enterprise moved again, the blip

  materialized for a second in those exact coordinates. Kirk shook his

  head. "Okay, let's assume you're right, for argument's sake. But why the

  game? What does he want?"

  "The game grid for his ship's maneuvering coordinates is not the main

  point, Captain. Taryn would probably be surprised to realize that I have

  identified the pattern. He is simply amusing himself while he seeks to

  draw us closer to his ship ... and away from the rendezvous point."

  Kirk turned to the monitor that showed Uhura and Scotty, who were

  listening in from the bridge, as ordered.

  "Commander, have you discovered the range of their jamming capability?"

  "Yes, sir," she replied promptly. "It extends for nearly a light-year in

  all directions. We'll definitely have to move to get any kind of message

  out."

  "Great ..." Kirk said, grimly. "Starbase Eight is two full days away,

  and that's the closest help we can expect. And now we can't even get a

  message out."

  "Captain," Scotty put in, "what I dinna understand is why the devil the

  Romulans try to lure you away now, if they're the ones who forced you to

  come out here in the first place? It doesna make sense!"

  "It does if the Romulans wish to begin a war," Sarek said,

  "between the Federation and the Klingon Empire. Iftaryn has gone to this

  trouble to initiate hostilities, he undoubtedly wishes Kamarag and his

  fleet to cross into Federation space unimpeded."

  "Good point," Kirk said. "So, really, Peter's kidnapping was almost

  extraneous to the rest of this situation. The Romulans inflamed

  Kamarag--and this is the form his revenge took. In addition to attacking

  the Federation, he decided he had to get back at me, personally."

  "That would seem the logical deduction, Captain," Spock said.

  Sarek was staring at the growing schematic as if mesmerized.

  "We cannot continue to allow them to jam Enterprise's subspace

  communications. We must be able to send a message to Starfleet Command

  ... and the president."

  "Why?" Kirk demanded. "I mean ... to request reinforcements, yes, that

  I know. But why the president?"

  "Taryn must realize now that I know about their plans.

  He is trying to prevent me from revealing what I know to Ra-ghoratrei or

  your Starfleet Admiral Burton."

  "It is fortunate," Spock observed quietly, "that you sent that

  time-locked message."

  "At your suggestion," Sarek reminded the first officer.

  "However, that message may not activate in time to prevent both a

  Romulan and a Klingon invasion."

  "So ... what's next?" the captain asked, rubbing his forehead.

  "What do you mean, Captain?" Sarek asked.

  "I mean that you've convinced me that that's a Romulan ship, and that

  Taryn is commanding it. But as long as he doesn't cross the Neutral

  Zone, I have no authority to go after him. And I can't go far ...

  Kamarag is on his way, remember, with that fleet. So what do I do now?"

  "Our original goal remains unchanged, Kirk. We must obtain indisputable

  proof of the true nature of Freelan, and of the Romulan plot to

  instigate war ... and to do that, I must transport over to Taryn's ship

  and speak with him personally."

  Kirk regarded Sarek, his eyes narrowing. "Slow down, Ambassador. Why

  would you want to transport aboard that Romulan ship? Assuming I'd allow

  it ... which I won't.

  Beaming aboard a cloaked vessel? Something we can't even get a reliable

  transporter lock on? That could be suicide.

  And even if you survived the beaming, don't forget your destination."

  "I am willing to take the risks, Captain," Sarek said gravely. "In fact,

  I insist upon it."

  "What could you hope to gain from dropping in on Taryn?" Kirk heard the

  exasperation in his own voice.

  "Two things, Kirk," Sarek said. "First, if I can catch Taryn without

  warning, he will not have time to assume his disguise. If I beamed over

  and recorded our interview on some type of scanning device, that would

  constitute the proof we seek. And, secondly, if Taryn knows that their

  plot is known to the Federation, he might be willing to negotiate for

  the lives of the Vulcans on Freelan ... allow us to rescue those who

  wish to leave that world."

  "Why do you think he'd do that?" Kirk asked.

  "Because of something I only now realized about the esteemed liaison ...

  something I should have deduced long ago. Taryn has a vested interest in

  saving those Vulcans."

  Kirk gave Spock a "what the hell is going on?" look. The

  captain sighed. "All right, I grant you your point about getting your

  proof. But why should the Romulans care whether the Federatio
n knows

  about their plan? Won't they simply proceed with it anyway?"

  Spock shook his head. "Unlikely, Captain. The entire Freelan plan was

  dependent on secrecy and surprise ... and on the Klingons attacking the

  Federation, thus diverting troops and resources, forcing Starfleet to

  spread its defenses too thinly. If the fleet were warned, and war with

  the Klingons averted, the Romulans would stand no chance against the

  Federation."

  "Precisely," Sarek said.

  "Okay, I see what you're getting at ... but, Ambassador, I can't allow

  you to beam over to that vessel, proof or no proof, kidnapped Vulcans or

  no kidnapped Vulcans.

  Starfleet would bust me down to yeoman duty for risking a person of your

  reputation on such a stunt."

  "I am willing to take the risk, Kirk," Sarek replied. "Just as you have

  your duty, I have mine ... and it is to do everything in my power to

  prevent a war ... or the probable slaughter of transplanted Vulcan

  citizens."

  Kirk's eyes met Sarek's and held for a long moment.

  Slowly, Jim shook his head. "No," he said. "I'm sorry, Ambassador Sarek,

  but the answer is no. It's too risky. We can't pinpoint the location of

  the ship closely enough."

  "Yes, we can," Spock said, suddenly. "If the ambassador can predict its

  next location, then I can program the transporter to lock on to the

  bridge before it even appears."

  Kirk stared dubiously at the Vulcan officer. "Do you think he can

  accomplish anything over there, Spock?"

  "I do not know," Spock said, quietly. "It depends upon his plan."

  "Kirk," Sarek said, earnestly, "I have known Taryn for more than sixty

  years. I believe I can predict his actions and reactions accurately

  enough to be able to choose the best technique for approaching him."

  "They'll shoot you on sight, Ambassador!" Kirk replied.

  "Not ifi am beamed onto the bridge, where Taryn can see me. He will not

  summarily execute me. He may decide at

  some point that that is what he must do, but he will let me speak,

  first. And if I can speak with him ... I can negotiate.

  If he will not listen, and chooses to kill me ... I am willing to take

  that chance."

  "The ambassador does not have to go alone, Captain," Spock said,

  stiffly. "I am volunteering to accompany him."

  You wouldn't even know they're father and son if you saw them like this,

  Kirk thought, inwardly shaking his head.

  Vulcans!

  "Captain," Spock said, "as soon as you beam us aboard, you must use the

  diversion to warp far enough away to be out of jamming range. Then you

  must transmit the data we will relay."

  Kirk hesitated, wavering. Finally, hearing an invisible clock ticking in

  his head, knowing that Kamarag's fleet was on the way, he nodded curtly.

  "All right."

  The next minutes flew by in a blur as Sarek and Spock prepared the

  transporter coordinates that would place them aboard the Romulan vessel.

  Beaming would indeed be tricky the transporter chief would have barely

  a second to fine-tune the location in order to make sure they arrived on

  the shipmand not in an area of space beside her, or beneath her.

  "This recording device will function automatically," Spock told his

  father in the transporter room, fastening a small instrument into place

  between two of the large cabo-chon gems on the ambassador's formal robe.

  "It will transmit, and the Enterprise will record what it sends. If

  Taryn is indeed aboard, and you can induce him to identify himself,

  while showing his true features, that should constitute the proof we

  need."

  "All right. I pick up your transmission, warp out of here, and then

  message Starfleet and the president," Kirk said.

  "Then what? I've got to come back here and intercept Kamarag. What do

  you want me to do about you two? Try to lock on and beam you back?"

  "As soon as the message is sent, return to the rendezvous point," Sarek

  said. "If my talk with Taryn has been successfully concluded, I will

  contact you to arrange for us to

  return. If not ... there is not much chance that we will be alive to be

  retrieved," he added, matter-of-factly.

  Kirk sighed and nodded. I hope to hell this works ... Spock and Sarek

  stepped up onto the transporter pads.

  The captain nodded at the transporter chief. "Energize."

  Sarek heard the distinctive whine, felt the Enterprise's transporter

  chamber begin to dissolve around him ...

  And then he was materializing again. He saw, with a moment of brief,

  intense relief that he was again surrounded by bulkheads. At his side,

  Spock was re-forming. They had made it. He was aboard Taryn's ship.

  As he had requested, Spock had programmed their coordinates to place

  them on the bridgema logical choice, since it was one of the largest,

  relatively open areas.

  The ambassador heard gasps of shock, startled exclamations as the

  Romulans recognized both of them. Then, all around them, hands drew

  disrupters. In less than a second after they had finished beaming, Sarek

  found himself facing seven drawn weapons.

  If I am wrong, the ambassador thought, and Taryn is not here--or is not

  the man I believe him to be--neither Spock nor I will live another

  minute.

  But no blast of energy tore through him. Slowly, the ambassador pivoted,

  studying his surroundings. The bridge of a bird-of-prey was considerably

  more cramped than that of a Federation starship. All around him,

  uniformed Romulans sat before instrument consoles, their seats swiveled

  to face the intruders, the disrupters in their hands leveled

  unwaveringly.

  Uniformed Romulans? The Ambassador stared around him in surprise. No ...

  not Romulans. At least ... not most of them.

  Sarek was astonished to realize that the individuals surrounding him at

  the various command posts were not Romulans--they were Vulcans. He'd

  been expecting to find at least one Vulcan aboard Taryn's ship--but not

  nine of them!

  But these officers were, indisputably, Vulcans.

  He could tell by the faint mental vibrations they exuded.

  On his own world, Sarek was used to that, and, like most of his species,

  had learned to ignore it, overlook it, tune it out.

  But to encounter it here?

  "What is this?" a voice barked harshly in Romulan.

  Despite the millennia separating their peoples, the languages of Vulcans

  and Romulans still held some of the same cadence and flow, though their

  vocabularies and syntax had mutated greatly over the years. Swiftly, the

  voice changed to English. "What is going on? Who are you?"

  Sarek turned to regard the speaker. "You know who I am, Commander."

  The individual facing him, one of the two present who was not holding a

  drawn weapon, had to be Taryn. Sarek studied him unblinkingly. Yes, this

  was Taryn ... even without the insignia on his uniform, he would have

  known him. Everything fit. The arrogance he'd come to know so well shone

  in this individual's eyes. Those eyes were dark and hooded amid his

  craggy, hawklike features. He wore the uniform of a high
-ranking Romulan

  officer--a wing commander.

  And from him, as from many of the other officers, Sarek sensed now

  unshielded mental activity. It also emanated from the young woman

  standing beside him, her eyes wide and startled. She, alone of the

  bridge crew, was unarmed.

  Sarek nodded at both of them. "Commander Taryn," he said. "And Savel? My

  aide, Soran, has spoken of how much he enjoyed playing chess with you.

  Allow me to present my ... associate, Captain Spock."

  The ambassador had seen something flare in the girl's eyes when he'd

  spoken of Soran. Recalling Soran's expressed interest in her, Sarek

  noted her reaction and silently filed that information away for further

  consideration. It could prove useful ...

  "What are you two doing here?" Taryn demanded, his voice harsh and

  rasping with surprise and anger he did not trouble to conceal. "How dare

  you," he almost sputtered,

  "invade my ship in this manner?"

  "I recognized your game strategy, Taryn," Sarek said, attempting to make

  it clear that the commander was responding to that name. He only hoped

  that Kirk was picking up everything from the tiny recorder. "T'Nedara's

 

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