USS
Triton
, Thirteenth Fleet Headquarters
Stardate 51183.45:
Tattok sat behind his desk, staring hard at the image on his desk monitor, grateful that the one on the other side wasn't here in the flesh. "And that's it, Admiral? No apologies, no regrets, no excuses?"
The image of Admiral Ian Trenagen was sitting in his own office in the London annex of Starfleet Intelligence, sipping tea from a delicate-looking china cup, as if he was visiting one of his nation's former royalty. His swept-back, snow-white hair was immaculate, and a raised eyebrow shifted his normally-impassive hangdog expression. "
Would any of that bring back the dead, Admiral?"
Nearby, Tattok's son, Captain Weynik, stood up, his already-angry expression at being present for this meeting deepening. "No, but maybe they still deserve an explanation for your office's piss-poor performance, Trenagen."
Tattok made the minimum amount of effort to silently cut off Weynik's rebuke of a superior officer, keeping his gaze fixed on the screen. "Admiral, every commander in Starfleet relies on your office for accurate intelligence, especially prior to a combat engagement. The intelligence you provided us before Khavak came nowhere close to being accurate. I believe the living deserve that explanation, if not the dead."
Trenagen sipped from his cup again, setting it down at his leisure before responding. "
Since the annexation of the Cardassian Union into the Dominion, the latter has been brutally effective in identifying my office's operatives and informants in their territory, and in some instances feeding them misinformation."
He sighed as he reached for a biscuit. "
I realise that you and I have hardly seen eye-to-eye over the years, Tattok. But you must believe that the loss of so many lives has affected me as much as you."
Tattok nodded; privately he wouldn't trust Trenagen to tell him that water was wet, but he chose not to antagonise matters further at this time. "Shall we proceed to the reason for this communication? The
Surefoot
is still missing behind enemy lines, incommunicado. My son is preparing to launch the
Ajax
to search for her along the most probable route. This involves two entire sectors of space, over fourteen systems. From a previous briefing you informed me of a Klingon Task Force in one of those systems preparing to attack. Any information you can provide us now, from the Klingons or any other sources, on that sector, would be valuable."
Beside him, Weynik made a noise, but otherwise offered no other comment.
Trenagen leaned back in his chair. "
I will examine our latest intelligence. However, we lost contact with the Klingon Task Force two days ago, and the sector in question has no inhabited worlds, no colonies or outposts or facilities of any kind. In the meantime, I offer your stalwart son my very best wishes on a successful location and rescue of the intrepid Captain Hrelle."
Weynik crossed his arms and replied, "Stick your very best wishes up your ass."
Tattok tensed, sparing Weynik a dirty glance, before looking back at Trenagen. "Please excuse Captain Weynik, Admiral. He's worried about the fate of the
Surefoot
, and the hundreds of survivors it is carrying."
Trenagen nodded, folding his hands before him... and his contempt clear on his aged face "
A worry we all share, Admiral, I can assure you. Captain Hrelle is very fortunate to have someone like Captain Weynik watching out for him... just as Captain Weynik is very fortunate to have someone like you watching out for
him
."
Tattok leaned forward. "What do you mean by that, Ian?"
The Englishman raised an eyebrow. "
Merely that youth carries with it many positive qualities... but prudence is rarely one of them. But with good fortune, they do develop such traits... before they reach a position in their lives when no amount of influential patronage from their parents will protect them from the consequences of their actions."
Tattok gripped the edge of his desk. "Ian... I hope for your sake that you haven't just threatened my son. I really hope for your sake."
Trenagen remained unmoved, however. "
And Tattok, I really hope for
your
sake that you understand what an effect this War will have on the dynamics of Starfleet and all who serve in it. Even one with your position and influence. Especially after Khavak. It is a poor workman who blames his tools... and frankly, I fear for your continued role with the Thirteenth Fleet."
He terminated the communication without further ado.
Weynik uncrossed his arms. "Charming prick."
"Shut up." Tattok forced himself to calm down, before turning in his chair to face his son. "Are you determined to ruin your career by antagonising him? Have I not made it clear how much power he actually holds, however unofficially? He has connections!"
Weynik grunted. "How many connections? 31?"
Tattok stood up. "Section 31 doesn't exist; you know it, I know it."
"And?"
"And why would you want to antagonise the bloody head of it? I won't be around forever."
Weynik continued to stare at the darkened screen. "Neither will he, at least to judge from what I've seen between him and Ma'Sala Shall."
"Ma'Sala? When did you meet her?"
"I haven't yet, in the flesh, just communicated with her and Trenagen after that business with Sasha and the Ferasans." He straightened up. "Right, we've wasted enough time! The
Ajax
is ready to head out and find the Fat Cat! What other Fleet ships are coming?"
"None."
"Excuse me?"
"None." He paused as a message appeared on his PADD; he read it, and rose to his feet. "Oh, I've received many volunteers: the
Minotaur
, the
Argonaut
, the
Essex
, and others. But I can't spare them; they're needed here to protect the Fleet vessels still under repair and recovery."
"Fine, I'll go alone!"
"No." He walked to the windows of his Ready Room. "You're not. The aforementioned Fleet Captain Shall is imminent, to assist with her own vessel, the
Mother's Fury
."
Weynik was taken aback as he joined his father. "The Caitian Planetary Navy's own flagship is coming here?"
"No. It
is
here." He nodded outwards.
Weynik's jaw dropped at the sight of the
Mother's Fury
: a cobalt-blue vessel, more resembling some ancient sea-faring battleship than a starship, longer than a Galaxy- or even a Sovereign-class Starfleet ship, and sporting sharp, swept-forward radiator and atmospheric fins and multiple banks of wicked-looking disruptor cannons and missile launchers, came into view... passing the Fleet completely and heading in the direction of the Khavak Sector.
Bloody Hemra, that monster looks almost as tough as the woman commanding it...
He knew that the many member worlds of the Federation all had their own local defence organisations to varying degrees depending upon their cultures and histories, from the, well, the non-existent forces of the pacifist Halkans, to the tough, scrappy Andorian Guard ships. But this? The Caitians really knew how to pack heat, as they used to say in the old Terran gangster videos. "She's not wasting time."
"If it were my family out there, I wouldn't either," Tattok suggested. "Get going, Son. Get them home."
*
"USS
Surefoot-A
, Personal Log, Cadet -- sorry, I mean, Ensign -- Zir Dassene, Stardate 51183.45: We remain behind enemy lines, hiding as best we can, moving as best we can... surviving as best we can. We have shortages of food and other resources, there have malfunctions, fights among the survivors as well as between them and our crew, and we're working shorter shifts to avoid burnout. But we'll survive.
I'm... I'm waiting to feel horrible.
I'm mean, just a couple of days ago, I killed a couple of Cardassians. I killed with a phaser and a knife. I had their blood on me. It wasn't the first time I've killed. Years ago, I had to kill the Orion shipmaster I had hired to get me into Federation space, but who'd betrayed me... who'd brutalised me. But that was purely in self-defence, before I had even dreamed of entering Starfleet Academy. I fought, I killed, as a member of Starfleet, a citizen of the Federation, in defence of my shipmates, my... people.
I had a talk with Counselor Hrelle. She warned me the impact will hit me. Or it won't, she added. As enigmatic as ever, at least at the time. But I'm understanding it more now. I'm hoping that, when it does hit me, we won't be in the middle of a clusterfrick..."
*
Deck 3 Fore -- Officers' Mess Hall:
As she stood in line with her squadmates, Zir realised that now, at the time when they had earned the right to come here for food instead of going to the Enlisted/Cadets' Mess, everyone was coming here, including those survivors scheduled now for their morning meals.
Ahead of her, the massive frame of their Security Officer, Urad Kaldron, blocked the view of the replicators, until he turned around, the grey pachydermoid appearing unusually apprehensive. "Please, Comrades, I will only attract resentment among the survivors if others see how much I am consuming at this time compared to everyone else. I should go-"
Beside him, their Medical Officer Peter Boone grabbed him by his huge arm, though the tall, thin blonde human male had no real chance of stopping him if Urad wanted to leave. "Hold it, buddy! It's not like you're being greedy! Your Hroch physiology needs more food, more often, than most humanoids. You can't just cut down! Remember what happened in Sickbay 3 yesterday?"