USS
Surefoot
, the Front, Stardate 52892.56:
"Fifteen minutes to the Border, Sir,"
T'Varik reminded him over the intercom.
Captain Esek Hrelle nodded to the figures on the desk viewscreen, as if they had spoken instead of his First Officer, and replied, "Thank you, Commander. I'll be right out." As the comlink ended, he focused back on the conversation, knowing their time was almost up. "And here we go, Runt of the Litter."
"I guess so, Dad."
Sasha's sober, resolute face filled the screen; she had lost some weight around her cheeks since they had last been together, he noticed, and seemed more balanced, more sober, quite literally in fact, despite their current circumstances.
"You never did get a message back to Cait, did you?"
"No, but they'll know what's happening. Everyone will know. Something like this can't be kept under wraps." He noticed, barely visible from inside her jacket a non-regulation holster under her left arm, where a black ballistic pistol sat, and below it, at her hip, the pommel and grip of her Kaetini sword.
Good,
he thought,
I'd wrap you in neutronium armour as well if I could. Screw that, I'd beam you back to Cait, to have a long, safe life.
He swallowed; there was so much he wanted to say to her. A lifetime's worth, and more. Instead, all he could do was tell her, "I love you, Sasha. Stay safe."
Her face tightened. "
I love you too, Dad. And you'd better stay safe as well."
"I'll do my best. Now let me talk to that little butt pimple alone."
Offscreen, a gruff voice announced,
"Get to the Bridge, Lieutenant."
Sasha nodded, holding up a hand to Hrelle as she departed, quickly replaced by Captain Weynik, his black eyestalks dipping down, the lights reflecting off of his ossified face ridges.
"If you're gonna tell me you love me, too, you fat bastard, I'm gonna vomit."
He grunted.
"Not that I have anything left in my stomach."
Hrelle made a noise. "Same here... believe it or not. I still can't believe how many ships are out there. The battle logistics will be a nightmare."
"As far as I'm concerned, it's not enough. And how many will survive the day?"
"Don't get caught in those thoughts, Little Brother. We focus on our corner of the battle... and keep our ships and crews safe and sound."
"Agreed. I'd better get on the Bridge. You too, Hefty."
But he leaned forward and promised,
"I'll keep her safe. If it comes down to it, she'll be shoved into an escape pod before me. And when this is all over, we'll talk again about retiring from Starfleet and opening up a private detective agency on Royla."
"Forget it; all you little garden gnomes look alike to me. Take care, Brother."
"You too, Brother."
He ended the communication, rose to his feet and adjusted the holster at his side. Everyone onboard the
Surefoot
was sporting a phaser now, even the Horta Ensign Stalac. It wasn't certain that they might be boarded, like they had been during the Battle of Khavak, but it always paid to be careful.
Let's face it, Esek, it was more likely that they'd get blown out of the sky by some Dominion battlecruiser.
He pushed aside such morbid thoughts -- however likely they were -- as he strode out of his Ready Room and back onto the Bridge, looking at the viewscreen... with a starfield outnumbered by the swarm of starships racing as one to their destiny.
It seemed more prosaic, when one looked at the Tactical/Operations station screen shared by his Chief of Security C'Rash Shall, and his Second Officer Sextilis Bellator: just dots on a screen. Countless dots, tightly packed together and moving in the same direction.
Nevertheless, it still astounded him. Once when he was a cub, old enough to go out on the trawlers with his Papa, he bore witness to the largest school of sleekfish he had ever seen or heard of: thousands and thousands of scurrying things, swimming easily around the ship, their scales reflecting the sunlight, a living current stretching for seeming infinity in every direction. He was certain he would never see anything so grand again in his long-legged life.
Until today.
Surrounding them was the Alpha Quadrant Armada, the greatest collection of starships in the history of the Galaxy: Starfleet vessels of all sizes, shapes, ages and conditions, from tiny arrowhead-shaped starfighters, to the behemoth Sovereigns, Excelsiors and Galaxys; the more uniform raptor designs of the Klingon Imperial Fleet, from the small but swift Birds of Prey to the monstrous Vor'chas; and the regal warbirds of the Romulan Star Empire, late to the War but welcome nevertheless.
The
Surefoot
, and the rest of the Thirteenth Fleet, had joined the Armada as they left their initial collection point at Deep Space Nine to head for the Cardassian border, to engage with the Dominion forces that had withdrawn behind the lines to regroup and rebuild their troops and ships. It was inevitable that they would return to their former strength, given time.
But the word had been given: the Enemy would not have that time. They would be pursued. They would be fought. And they would be defeated.
At whatever the cost.
Sitting in her chair adjacent to his, Commander T'Varik checked her display for what seemed to Hrelle like the hundredth time. "Ten minutes to Cardassian Border, Sir."
He breathed in, still staring ahead, as if mesmerised by the ships.
And what a pity, that it always seemed to take a common threat to unite forces, instead of a common dream.
"Captain," T'Varik prompted softly.
He nodded; the scent of fear was thick in the air, had been since word about the upcoming battle was announced. He opened a shipwide channel. "Captain to Crew: the Armada is about to engage the combined forces of the Dominion, the Breen Confederacy and the Cardassian Union..."
*
On every inhabited deck of the ship, everyone was awake, on duty, on alert and attentive to their Captain's words.
In Sickbay 1, Ezekiel Masterson kept his arms crossed, appearing nonchalant, but really not wanting to lower his right arm and let it touch the phaser in the holster on his hip. He was a Sawbones, a doctor, a healer of flesh and mind. He was sick of this War, a seemingly senseless clash of ideologies that triggered a senseless clash of bodies. So much blood had been spilled already, and more was to come.
He looked across to his Chief Nurse, Eydiir Daughter-of-Kaas, remembering the days when the muscular, coffee-skinned woman was still a cadet, her combative Capellan mentality making her a challenge for his usual easy-going nature... but never making him doubt her competency at the job, or her coolness under fire. Literal fire; she wielded a phaser and a throwing blade as easily as a tricorder or autosuture.
He hoped she'd make it through all this, and go on to be everything she could be.
*
"As you are already aware, we will not be performing our usual duties as an ambulance ship... not at first, anyway. We will be fighting, alongside everyone else, and no longer protected by the Articles of War as a noncombat vessel. Everyone has been given sidearms, in case we're boarded..."
In Engineering, Chief Sakai stood alongside his entire Engineering crew, though they looked more like a firing squad with all those phasers. He regarded them: Arad Maf, Nalack, Tori Emoto, Logan Gentry, Loxx Noraha, Suran Kaurril... they all looked so young.
I have a shock for you, Davey Boy,
he told himself.
They
are
so young.
And yet, some of them have been through so much... and he didn't mean his endless supply of practical jokes. He had heard about what had happened to them when the Cardassians and Jem'Hadar had last boarded, killing their Chief and Assistant Chief, threatening the others.
Sakai had served in Starfleet for thirty-two years before he emerged from retirement. And in all that time, he had never killed, never had to kill, never even drew his phaser except during mandatory marksmanship training. Keep a warp core from breaching? No problem. Hold together a Structural Integrity Field generator together with gaffer plastic and profanity? Easy Peasy.
But fighting? Killing? Could he handle it, if it came down to it? And how much of himself, the irrepressible nature that earned him the nickname of Monkey among those who knew him, would be left?
*
"Those of you who served during the Battle of Khavak will remember the Jem'Hadar and Cardassians who invaded us, and the death and destruction they caused.
I can't tell you if the Enemy might board again.
But if they do...
you will show no mercy
. Those are my direct orders. Any one of you is worth a thousand of them. They're willing to die for what they believe in. Let them. You live for what you believe in."
In the Shuttlebay, Ensign Zir Dassene let her free hand rest on the armoured plating of her combat vest as she looked to the Security Team she was commanding. They looked back, nodding, trusting her. She had developed a reputation among them since the Battle of Khavak, where she had killed several of the Enemy in Engineering.
She wished she could be worthy of that reputation. Inside, however, she felt alone, fractured, held together with fraying string. The fear that came to her at Khavak had never really left her. There had been no one onbaord to speak with about it: her friend Peter was back on Earth with his daughter, training to be a Counselor, there was no regular Counselor onboard the
Surefoot