Prologue - Klingon Imperial Space:
Yraltril Anishnak swallowed, fighting down his growing anxiety as he stood on the hot, dank, crowded Bridge of his latest clients, and waited to conclude his business and depart as quickly as possible. Despite his fears, he tried not to show it; his clients respected courage and guile.
Not that it would necessarily save him from a clouting, or even a stabbing with one of those ugly crescent swords of theirs. As a general rule, Klingons were as volatile and dangerous to handle as trilithium resin. If you asked his brother Nohtyp, he'd agree... that is, he would, if he hadn't blown himself to shit two years ago attempting to steal trilithium resin from the TannhΓ€user Gate Array.
Stick to trading in information,
Mother always told them.
It's what Yridians were famous for. Information can't kill you.
Still, as he continued to stand there, waiting to get paid and trying not to gag at the stench of these unwashed barbarians squinting at the screens displaying the data he had provided, he reminded himself that while information can't kill you, there were still plenty of ways to die. By stench alone, in some cases.
He sniffed loudly to catch their attention, ignoring their annoyed reactions -
come on, it wasn't as if half of you can even read
- while he stroked the wrinkles of his shrivelled, elongated, hairless face. "Well? Does it satisfy you, My Lord?"
The leader of this pack of animals, a Klingon with a short beard peppered with grey, and sigils carved into the spaces between the cranial ridges on his head, growled at him. "It is incomplete, you
petaQ
rodent! Are you trying to cheat us?"
Yraltril breathed in patiently -
how did your people manage to carve out an interstellar Empire?
- before replying softly, "No, My Lord. What I have provided is but a taster, a demonstration that I have acquired what you seek. The complete information on her whereabouts will be given on receipt of the agreed-upon payment."
Before the older Klingon could respond, one of the younger Klingons bared jagged, yellowed teeth. "You think we would cheat you, cur? I should slice you open for your insults!"
The Yridian ignored him, and the noises of agreement from his comrades, and focused on the head of their House. "No insult is intended, My Lord. Please excuse the habits forged from a lifetime of dealing with races more likely to take what I have worked to provide, and pay me with a blade in the back or a disruptor blast to the skull. Clearly you would never even consider doing something so perfidious." He paused, clarifying, "That means 'treacherous'."
Lord Uklass, Head of the House of Uklass, growled again. "Take care, Broker, or your tongue will dig your grave." But then he reached inside the chest plating of his grey-black armour, withdrawing from it a thick brown leather drawstring pouch, tossing it towards the broker. "The rest of the intelligence, before I change my mind."
Yraltril caught it in one hand, noting the substantial weight and the sound of the gold-pressed latinum strips stuffed into it, and decided not to stop and count it in front of them, while he activated the data transfer unit in his other hand. As new data appeared on the surrounding screens, translated into Klingon script, Yraltril added, "Your daughter is contracted out as a civilian doctor on a Sabre-class Starfleet vessel, the USS
Katana
, in the Salem Sector, under an assumed name."
"And her lover and their...
abomination...
" His lips curled in a disgusted sneer. "Are they with her?"
"They are living on the colony world Krornot, under assumed names as well. This deliberate separation was strategically astute, making it much more difficult to track them both down... at least, for those without my estimable skills."
Uklass glared at the script on the screen, before looking up. "Narrom! Ready to take us to this Salem Sector! We will deal with Gisha first while she hides in shame among the
petaQ
Starfleet, and then we'll find her weakling
HabwI' lover and their
bastard offspring!"
The one called Narrom hesitated, as much as a Klingon could show hesitation without appearing weak. "Father, if Starfleet is involved-"
Uklass spat. "We can deal with one paltry ship of weakling cowards!"
"Ahem," Yraltril coughed.
As they turned to him, shooting proverbial daggers for the interruption, he pocketed his latinum and continued. "I offer this, free of charge: there's more than just one Sabre-class vessel in the Salem Sector. There's six, in fact, and a space station, Salem One, commanded by Commodore Esek Hrelle." At their reactions to the name, he added, "You
have
heard of him, I am certain."
"Hrelle?" Uklass echoed. "The Fat Cat?
Him?
"
"The same, My Lord."
Uklass scowled to himself in thought, before turning back to his son. "Joragh, contact Krurall, remind him... respectfully... of the debt his House owes ours for equipping his ships in time for the Battle of Ozat. And contact our own House, have our other ships catch up with us... but say nothing about what we're doing."
"What? Why not?"
"The walls have ears, and word of this will soon get back to my traitorous brother! Better that we strike now, before Kline hears and warns our quarries!
tlhIngan, quv Salemthta!
" He looked back at Yraltril. "You have been paid. Why are you still here?"
The Yridian regarded him, wondering why he was bothering to linger, recalling some Ferengi Rule of Acquisition about not overstaying your welcome once you have their money. "Oh, I was just curious: what this is all about?"
Uklass rose up, as did several of his relatives, as he declared haughtily, "It is about... Honour."
Yraltril nodded and turned to depart for the Transporter room.
Honour, huh? Well,
there's
a freaking surprise...
*
"USS
Ulyanov
Captain's Log, Stardate 54342.6, Captain Marvin Blum, Recording: we have completed our refit and maintenance of the navigation beacons surrounding the Deertail Cloud in the Salem Sector. All went without incident, and now we return to our base of operations."
"Really, Captain?"
Blum looked up from his logbook to his First Officer, sitting on his right in the centre of the Bridge. He frowned, his pepper-grey beard seemingly moving of its own accord. "Huh?"
Lt Cmdr Edama, in contrast to his stocky grizzled veteran features and demeanour, was a young, slim, clean, soft-looking Betazoid female, her sable hair pinned behind her, her uniform looking like it had been sculpted for her body. She offered a serene, knowing smile, as if she was breaking her oath to not use her telepathy. "You said 'without incident'."
He waited for more, and when it wasn't forthcoming, he shrugged. "And?"
She tilted her head, her grin widening on her dark lips. "That's not entirely true, is it, Captain? The incident with your exosuit-"
He felt himself flush, as the memory returned. "There was no incident."
Edama leaned in, her voice dropping, even as that mischievous gleam in her solid black irises heightened. "Have you forgotten so quickly, Sir? Mr Tabasi said it took almost twenty minutes to-"
"There was no incident," he repeated, looking around, as if checking to see if the rest of the Bridge crew were listening in on this; no one appeared to be, though he just put that down to their being too discreet or polite to join in on the teasing. Blum had joined the crew during one of the beacon refits, needing to fulfil some mandatory extravehicular activity for his certification... then having to spend an interminable amount of time having to be freed from his own exosuit on his return, like he was a Squab on his first spacewalk. "No incident. Is that understood, Lieutenant?"
"That's Lieutenant
Commander
, Sir," she corrected.
"Not if you keep busting my balls like this." He shot her a final smirk, just to show that he wasn't genuinely annoyed with her. He liked Edama. He liked his whole crew, and his ship, and his mission. It was a far cry from the role he held for so long, as Chief Engineer on the USS
Tempest
, a patrol vessel near the Cardassian Border.
He thought he had been content to remain a Gearhead for the rest of his career, keeping the warp core ticking over and managing a small crew, until an incident involving his Captain had forced him to take over temporarily. Ironically, the catalyst for that, the then-Captain Hrelle, was now his Commanding Officer. For which he was grateful; as rewarding as his increased responsibilities were, they remained heavy, and he was glad to have someone like Esek watching over them-
An alert from the Ops station behind him snapped him from his reverie, as his Second Officer reported, "Sir! We're getting a distress signal from a transport ship, the SS
Aquitaine
! They're half a light year away, under attack from a Klingon ship!"
Blum glanced at Edama, whose expression sobered as she ordered, "Red Alert!" As the apple-red alert lighting illuminated the ceiling strip and the klaxon filled the air, she added, "Mr Frederick, warn off that Klingon vessel, and alert Salem One of the situation!"
He allowed himself a second's indulgence of regretting taking this responsibility, before adding, "Lt Dajek, plot an intercept course, Maximum Warp, engage when ready! Lt Ashilehl, ready phasers and photon torpedoes! Lt Tabasi, I want all the power you can muster for shields!"
He tightened his hold on the arms of his chair as the Ulyanov banked sharply to port and jumped to warp speeds that seemed to whine with protest as space twisted and dilated around them, even as his mind shot ahead. The Klingons? They were allies with the Federation against the Dominion only weeks ago! Was this some sort of move against Starfleet, taking advantage of their depleted numbers following the War? There was nothing in any Starfleet Intelligence reports suggesting it.
"Renegades," Edama said, over the noise of Red Alert. When he glanced at her, she elaborated, "Klingon bandit activity is on the increase overall, with their own infrastructure weakened and stretched thin."
"Are you reading my mind?" he asked, half-seriously.
"Don't have to," she assured him. "You're an open book."
"Terrific," he muttered, staring ahead again.
"Don't take it as an insult, Captain," Edama assured him. "It's a strength. People know where they stand with you."