"I thought you were supposed to be taking a break?"
Svetlana looked up at the dark-skinned Trill woman who had stopped her on her way to the Endeavour's forward lounge. Ledzia seemed more puzzled than accusatory, but even so, Svetlana found the question odd.
"I am," she replied, "two days, while we stop over here."
"I thought you'd be down on the planet by now?"
"Oh, I see," replied the Czech woman, understanding dawning. "No, Risa didn't seem very interesting, so I thought I'd take the time to catch up on some of the latest astrophysical research papers," she held up her PADD as evidence, a slightly nervous smile on her face.
"I'm not sure that was quite the idea."
Svetlana recalled that Lt. Ral had said something about her getting away from work for a while, and the unexpected award of leave indicated that he had persuaded the Chief Science Officer accordingly. Now that she thought about it, he had probably been hinting that she should get away from the ship altogether, and actually take some time on Risa's famous beaches. That would have been so dull... although, in fairness, he could have hardly have stopped her taking the PADD and its backlog of papers with her.
"Oh, well..." she said, "perhaps tomorrow. It is two days. And I was going to the lounge. I'm not officially working."
"Yes, that's probably a good idea," agreed Ledzia.
Before they could say anything further, though, they had to stand aside as a couple of security officers passed them in the corridor, heading for the transporter room. Even Svetlana could see that they looked to be on business, rather than heading down to the planet for leave. She raised an eyebrow.
Ledzia shrugged, "I know as much as you do. The Endeavour wasn't originally stopping at Risa so that we could take leave... rumour is we have a rendezvous with some other ship, but it all seems a bit hush hush."
"Strange place for a rendezvous, isn't it?"
"Unless somebody else was already on leave..." agreed the Trill.
They waited for a moment, glancing towards the door that the two security officers had passed through. Perhaps the reason for the unexpected stopover was about to be revealed.
In fact, it took less time than she had expected. For, just moments later, the door hissed open and a woman Svetlana had never seen before strode through.
The first thing that she noticed was that the woman was tall - over 180 cm by Svetlana's guess, easily towering over the human ensign, and even over Ledzia, who wasn't exactly short. The next thing, however, was that the woman was evidently a Romulan.
She had almost no trace of the usual eyebrow ridges that normally distinguished Romulans from Vulcans, but her race was clear enough from her demeanour. The woman appeared haughty and determined, her long legs setting a rapid pace as she walked down the corridor. The security officers, who must have had to turn around as soon as they entered the room, looked a little flustered, and were actually struggling to keep up with her pace.
Svetlana had to suppress a grin at that; she was always having to walk quickly to keep up with taller colleagues, and it was amusing to see someone else having to do it for a change.
The Romulan was, she had to admit, striking, if far from classically beautiful. She had a long face with high cheekbones, accentuating her slender frame, but strong-looking shoulders and an athletically toned body. Her reddish-brown hair was cut to perhaps five or six centimetres in length, showing off her slender pointed ears.
She was also, judging from her clothing, a civilian. Svetlana didn't think that she had ever seen a picture of a Romulan out of uniform before, and she had certainly never met one in the flesh. But this woman, already passing her down the corridor, was wearing a light wrap-around dress that looked ideally suited for Risan weather. She had some sort of insignia on a shoulder brooch that could have been a communicator, but it wasn't the usual Romulan eagle.
She also, it had to be said, had legs to die for.
"Could you just...?" began one of the security officers, but the Romulan woman cut him off.
"Do keep up," she told him, in a tone that suggested she was used to being obeyed, even by Starfleet officers, "we don't have all day."
Svetlana and Ledzia looked at one another, the Trill shrugging as if to say she was equally confused. At that moment, though, the door to the transporter room hissed open, and looking towards it, the human woman's heart leapt into her throat.
Two more Romulans were just exiting the room, forcing the security officers to split up as one stayed behind to watch them and the other one disappeared down the corridor after the woman who had to be their leader. One of the newcomers was a man, pale skinned for a Romulan, albeit with the usual dark hair. He was evidently an engineer, dressed in brown overalls festooned with pockets and pouches over a light coloured T-shirt, and looked as if he had forgotten to shave for the last couple of days.
But it was his companion that had caught Svetlana's attention. She was, in a word, gorgeous. Her face was pleasant and heart-shaped, with wide brown eyes, a slightly prominent, rounded nose, and lustrous black hair braided to accentuate her ears. She was also not that much taller than Svetlana herself, certainly no more than 150 cm, and dressed in tight trousers and top that showed off a perfect hourglass figure. A green velvet waistcoat strained to contain her bust.
Svetlana looked down, not wanting to be caught staring, and soon enough she and Ledzia were alone in the corridor again.
"I wonder what this is about?" wondered the Trill.
Svetlana did not reply. Her mind was filled with the vision of a stunning alien woman. It even made her forget the paper she had been going to read on the photosphere of Wolf-Rayet stars, at least for a while.
--***--
But only for a while; it was not much later that Svetlana was ensconced at a small table in the ship's main lounge, scrolling through the paper, annotating the equations and the data on spectral lines. This was a large part of why she had signed up for Starfleet, the thrill of seeing the universe in all its richness, the dance of mathematics made physical reality. Isotopic composition, nuclear fusion reactions, resistive magneto-hydrodynamics at finite electron diffusivities... everything was so much more beautiful when you knew how it worked, when you could admire not just the view, but the symmetry and complexity of the processes underlying it.
It was a shame that so few people seemed able to truly grasp that.
Of course, there had been other options. She could have taken the regular postgraduate track and found a post on a ship run by one of the science academies. But Starfleet offered so much more, and were more often the first into uncharted areas of space. There was a galaxy out there, and if she suspected that she wasn't really cut out for command at the highest levels, there was much to be done on a Starfleet science vessel, especially one with the prestige and size of the Endeavour.
"Do you mind if I join you?"
Svetlana looked up, not having even noticed anyone approaching, so engrossed was she in her work. It was the Romulan woman - the younger, prettier one, in the tight green top. Glancing about the lounge, she saw that the other two Romulans had just sat down at another table, half way across the room, and weren't even looking in her direction. Confused, as much as anything else, it was all the human woman could do to nod her assent, unable to think of anything sensible to say.
The Romulan had a cup of something in her hand, a brown liquid that steamed gently. Some alien drink, perhaps? She knew about Romulan ale, and this certainly wasn't that, but presumably a planet-wide species had managed to come up with more than one tipple.
The other woman caught her glance, and a slight smile twitched on her green lips (lipstick? had to be; their lips weren't normally that colour, were they?)
"Tea," she offered, "Russian Caravan, apparently. I don't think your replicator does the Romulan variety."
"Uh... Romulans drink tea?" It seemed as good a start to the conversation as any.
"It's made from the leaves of a different plant, obviously. But, yes, it's the same idea. And the taste is... similar."
"Oh. Good." She wanted to say 'what are you doing here?' but was worried that it might come across as rude. As it turned out, she need not have worried.
"We're traders," offered the alien woman, in reply to the unspoken question, "or at least we are now. I have had plenty of opportunity to try human drinks before. Among those of many other races. But you're the astrophysicist, right? Ensign Nemesek? Am I pronouncing that right?"