Anabasis
Posted: 2004-11-04 12:19pm
Anabasis
Chapter One
Across the Distance
The bridge of the USS Jutland was cramped, as on most of the Akira-class vessels operated by Starfleet. Akiras were tough little ships, small but with shields and firepower disproportionate to their size.
Captain Putzkammer would almost have preferred to have remained the first officer of a larger ship. He had been on the Tercio, a Galaxy Class, and everything was much more spacious, and luxurious. For the purposes of the sort of long patrol the Jutland was taking, all the way along the borders with the Klingons and Romulans, things got cramped. The poor Tercio didn't even have a holodeck.
For all the military utility and necessity of his mission, Putzkammer was not a military officer. He was an astronaut, explorer, and adventurer, and he resented to the turn that Starfleet had been taking after the Dominion War. San Francisco was beginning to see space as a frontier, not to be explored but to be defended. So there he was a little pocket cruiser patrolling a border, instead of explored the unknown fringes of space in a long-endurance Galaxy Class.
Now he was feeling his oats and had the sense of a little bit of superiority over those admirals back in 'Frisco. Even if he couldn't go work the unknown fringes, they would come to him. He leaned close to the sensor station, squinting at the faint contacts.
Ensign Pauley tapped at one of them, "The others are just static. I had the gain all the way up to see this one. Notice how the others go in and out and move a bit--"
"--while that one stays still," Putzkammer finished for her, "that's got to be the contact that the border sensors detected. Any idea what it is?"
Pauley shrugged. "From the looks of it, a starship of some kind. It isn't Romulan. If they were trying to sneak across the border they'd just use their cloaking devices. This ship isn't behaving like anything I've ever seen or heard of. I'm not getting a lot of energy or transmission scatter. It's mostly infrared. That ship has a lot of heat to bleed off, otherwise I don't think we would have ever spotted it."
"Hm," the Captain grunted, stepping back from the station and straightening to his full two meters of height. If he wasn't at station in the center of the bridge, Putzkammer had to bend low. Doorways were a bother as well. He missed the Tercio and her high cielings dearly.
"Helm, close the range to 10,000 kilometers, but slowly. I want a better look at this flying saucer," Putzkammer ordered.
----
Lieutenant Hitotsugi oversaw his station with intensity, interpretting the multicolored holographic sphere that floated weightlessly just in front of his face.
"Contact is moving toward the Maikaze, acceleration one-five-zero meters per second. Range 70,000 kilometers and closing," Hitotsugi said, glancing at his other displays.
Captain Saegusa frowned, "They've seen her."
"Unavoidable. She had a great deal of heat to bleed away and we could not risk further damage to her systems," Admiral Yamashita replied, "at any rate it does not appear that they have seen the rest of the task force. We will cover the Maikaze from attack, if they intend to attack."
"If they are even capable of attack," Saegusa pointed out.
Yamashita glanced at the holo-display and the single bright point of red light moving slowly towards the destroyer Maikaze. At least he now knew for certain that these unknown aliens had some method of masking acceleration stress, unless they were somehow accustomed to living under fifteen gravities of acceleration.
The question was whether the contact was actually a warship or not. It was giving off an amount of heat and light that Hitotsugi had likened to the New Year's celebration in Kyoto when he had first spotted it, tearing at faster-than-light speeds on some kind of modified Cochrane drive and dropping out of warp only 70,000 kilometers away. If it was a warship, it felt no need to be stealthy.
The picture from the telescopic cameras was even more confusing. The unidentified vessel was disc-shaped, with two cylinders joined to the main hull with spars. From the copious emmissions it was easy to guess that the cylinders were engines of some sort. It was obvious in any case that it would be impossible for the designers of that vessel to have armored the outriggers in any adequate fashion. This ship looked like no warship Admiral Yamashita had ever seen, but it did behave according to tactics with which he was familiar.
Yamashita stroked the right side of his mustache, then the left. Not even the least pretension of stealth, inadequate sensor searches, and unimaginative direct maneuvers. Yes, he knew those characteristics well. He had not been appointed Admiral merely because he came from an important family.
The unknown vessel had locked onto the Maikaze, because the Maikaze had suffered a minor containment loss of her starboard reactor just a few minutes before the anomaly had interrupted Yamashita's set piece engagement. The emergency fields had snapped on and most of the imperiled antimatter had been safely spaced, but there had been a few seconds of runaway reaction before the safeties cut in. The Maikaze had had to get rid of that excess heat somehow, and after the anomaly it had seemed safe enough. The German and American fleets had disappeared and task force Hiei had found itself deep within the safety of Imperial Territory. There was no guessing what had triggered the wormhole, at least not in any sane terms, so the immediate concern was keeping the destroyer from burning out any delicate electronics or other systems. She had already lost her subspace transceiver, and there was no sense in risking her sensors as well.
But then this new contact had just sprung on them from nowhere, right in the middle of Imperial territory. It was damned peculiar, so peculiar that Yamashita's first and most obvious order of a hail demanding that the vessel identify itself had died in his throat. Something was wrong.
"I want a continuous firing solution on the spar on which their starboard engine is attached," the Admiral ordered.
----
"Image is resolving," Lieutenant Commander Stanley called from the tactical station.
"On screen," Putzkammer ordered.
The tactical screen zoomed from a wide-angle shot showing a tiny point of light to show a closer image of the vessel that had been detected. It was a boxy arrangement two hundred-fifty meters in length, and it's cross-section was eighty by eighty. It wasn't Klingon or Romulan, or any other nation that the Federation had contact with.
"What's that charring on the side there?" the captain asked. "Can you get a better shot of that?"
Stanley pressed a few images on his touchscreen panel, and the screen snapped to a closeup of the area Putzkammer had asked about. There was a crater on one side of the object, surrounded by black scoring on the grey hull.
"Battle damage," he said, a touch nervously.
Putzkammer frowned and said sternly, "Or an asteroid impact. Get me that shot of the whole ship again."
Stanley tapped the appropriate sections of his console, and the whole length of the ship filled the screen again. The captain bit his lower lip and considered the image. There were various lumps and protrusions projecting from the hull of the vessel, and there were no windows that he could see. The little irregularities almost reminded him of a Borg cube, though it was much less extreme.
"Any activity, Ensign Pauley?"
She shook her head. "No sir. I'll need to do an active scan to see anything."
"Well, if it's crewed they must have seen us by now. Lieutenant French, standard hail for identification," Putzkammer ordered, then he raised a hand, "Wait, cancel that. I want you to make it a tight beam transmission. We don't need to tell everyone in the neighborhood that we're in the midst of a first contact situation."
The communications officer got on the subspace transmitter and sent the message as ordered. Then the bridge crew waited.
After a full two minutes, the lieutenant looked up with a shake of his head, "No response, Captain."
Putzkammer bit his lip again. "Ensign Pauley, let's try that active scan."
----
Hitotsugi's eyes shot up from his viewer, "Admiral, they are painting the Maikaze with targetting sensors."
Yamashita nodded with decision to Lieutenant Kawashima at the weapons station.
----
Pauley turned in her seat, suddenly. She had just enough time to blurt out, "Captain!"
Then Putzkammer felt the deck lurch under his feet and his head hit the ceiling above to the sensor station, hard. Then there was a sickening moment of blackness behind his eyes. He heard muffled sounds of chaos that slowly increased in volume until it was back to normal, or as normal as shrieking klaxons could be. He opened his eyes and wiped the blood out of them. He was on his back on the deck. Judging from the bedlam still raging it had only been a second or two. He sat up and ignored the pounding pain coming from his forehead. He looked at the viewscreen and almost fell again.
The starfield was turning crazily as the Jutland engaged in a dizzying spin to starboard. Putzkammer understood in an instant what had happened. He pressed one hand to his head to stop his bleeding and staggered into his seat. He keyed for engineering. The chief engineer was speaking before Putzkammer could even begin, his speech coming rapid and uncontrolled in a Gujarati accent highlighted by alarms. The captain didn't even bother trying to interpret it. He gripped the arms of his chair tightly and bellowed, "Eject the warp core!"
"As ordered!" was the reply.
Half a second later every light on the bridge went out and the klaxons died. Another half second later, the entire ship rocked violently once again. The blackness was chased away for an instant as the helm console exploded in a shower of plasma and liquid metal, and the pilot screamed in th deeper darkness that followed. Then everything was quiet. Putzkammer took a deep breath to calm himself and licked his lips nervously.
"Emergency power," he ordered quietly.
The dim emergency lights came on, together with the flashers for red alert. The spinning starfield reappeared as well.
"Lieutenant Commander Stanley, patch emergency thrusters to your station and stabilize that spin."
Stanley stared at the captain, wild-eyed and with sweat running down his face. "Captain, what about shields--and weapons?"
Putzkammer blinked away the blood that was again threatening to blind his left eye. "I haven't got the damage report yet, but I'm certain that that ship knocked our starboard nacelle clean away. We've ejected the warp core as well, and furthermore it's vapor. We're dead in space."
"It wasn't that ship, sir," Ensign Pauley correct him, "something to starboard hit us, but I can't see what it could have been."
The captain nodded, which set his head to throbbing even more painfully, "Understood. It doesn't seem as though they're looking to finish us off." He keyed for engineering, "Mister Patel, I want a damage report as soon as possible."
"The Chief Engineer fell and broke his arm, sir. This is Chief Petty Officer Graham."
"Mister Graham, you are promoted to Chief Engineer for the duration of Patel's convalescence. Damage report. ASAP." Without waiting for confirmation, Putzkammer clicked over to sickbay. "Two medical officers to the bridge, we've got one man needs treatment for plasma burns and some minor--."
"Sir?" Lieutenant French interrupted him.
The captain looked over.
"We're getting a subspace transmission," French explained.
"Origin?" Putzkammer barked.
Pauley checked her console. "18,000 kilometers to starboard. And closing."
"Put the transmission on screen," the captain ordered, turning his chair to face the main viewscreen.
French hesitated. "Sir."
"What is it?" Putzkammer growled impatiently.
"The transmission. It's in Japanese." French coughed nervously. "And... ah... audio only."
Putzkammer licked his lips. "Let's hear it, then."
The speakers cracked with a burst of static, causing everyone to jump. The subspace receiver had probably been damaged when the warp core let go. But the voice came through in plain English, the universal translator retaining the authority of the deep voice that rumbled through the static.
It said: "Unknown vessel, this is Admiral Ichiro Yamashita of the Imperial Japanese Navy. You are in violation of imperial space. Surrender immediately or be destroyed."
The captain glanced around the bridge as if making sure that he had heard the same message as everyone else. The two medical corpsmen entered through the doors at the far left of the bridge and moved to treat the helmsman's burns.
"Admiral Yamashita, this--this is Captain Leopold Putzkammer of the USS Jutland, United Federation of Planets. We surrender."
Stanley's whirled around and fixed Putzkammer with a glare, "Captain--"
Putzkammer gestured sharply for silence. The comm channel was still open.
The voice came back, sounding slightly different this time, "Acknowledged, Jutland. Stand to and prepare to be boarded."
The comm squawked off, and Stanley spoke instantly. "Captain, we cannot surrender this ship so lightly!"
"Do you suggest we fight them?" the captain asked, "An enemy who sheared the starboard nacelle clean away from the ship with one shot from 18,000 kilometers downrange, without us even having a glimmer of a sensor contact with them? And the Jutland crippled?"
Stanley set his jaw but did not reply.
"French, that last transmission sounded different," Putzkammer said.
The lieutenant nodded, "It didn't go through the UT, the enemy replied in English."
Putzkammer nodded. Why not?
----
"An English speaking German, in command of a 'United States Ship' named after a British battle," Captain Saegusa said suspiciously, "claiming to be from a non-existent nation."
Yamashita stroked his mustache idly, "Nothing seems impossible. The task force fell into a wormhole, did it not?"
"We can't say definitively that it was a wormhole," the captain replied.
Yamashita nodded, "But there is nothing else to explain what happened. Perhaps the same wormhole transported these people here. A lost colony? Order the marines to prepare a prize crew and bring the Hiei to within one thousand kilometers."