Constellations (22 page)

Read Constellations Online

Authors: Marco Palmieri

Spock looks up, knowing what he will see. The hedges have turned brown, gnarled—dying. As he watches, they stir, come to a sick semblance of life. They reach out toward him, like thorned claws.

“Spock!”

Then the maze is upon them, pricking their skin and coiling around their throats. McCoy grabs at the branches, his eyes wide. As Spock watches, they cut into the doctor's hands. McCoy winces, crying out in pain.

Spock stands stiff, still, trying to evoke Chaotic Response techniques.

“This is illogical,” he says quietly to himself. “I will push it aside; I will not be distracted. Phase One—”

McCoy struggles to speak. “Of course it's…illogical, Spock.” He pulls free of a branch. “Humans are illogical beings, right? But need I remind you—you are half human.”

And Spock hears Salak's voice, taunting, echoing:
Mr. Spock is part human. Therefore…Mr. Spock is an illogical being.

The branches pull them into the hedge, gathering and squeezing them tight, smothering them against the brown, dying mass of vegetation. Steel-like vines tighten around McCoy's throat, stronger than ever, and he makes a strangled sound. But Spock barely hears. His suppression techniques have failed; his mind is closed off. He cannot help himself. He cannot help his friends. Beyond any doubt, beyond any logical calculation, he knows: He will die here.

Then, just ahead of him, a section of the hedge begins to glow. It burns red-hot, sprouts tiny flames, and incinerates from the center outward. And in its wake—

“Spock! Bones!” Kirk yells. His phaser is still raised, ready to fire again.

“Jim.” The word comes oddly to Spock's lips. It sounds strange, like a language he has not spoken for a long, long time.

Kirk wades through the snaking, coiling vegetation, firing off short bursts at the errant branches. Then he holsters his phaser and reaches out one hand each to Spock and McCoy, pulling the vines from their throats. McCoy gasps, staggers a bit.

Then Kirk fixes Spock with a steely gaze. “Mr. Spock. You have to break free of this. We need you.” He pauses. “You must return to duty.”

Spock recalls the Teacher's voice:
Logic is your duty.

Kirk's eyes are like lasers…like alien snake-machines, crawling and snaking into his brain. Like manifestations of chaos itself.

“Chaotic…Response…”

Spock closes his eyes, willing the snakes, the vines, the bloody thorns away. He pushes them aside. The pain, he tells himself, is a foreign object, a snapshot in another man's album. An
other.

His shipmates fade away; the garden fades away. All is pure, white light. And he is alone, with his failure and his fear and his pain and his logic.

Alone.

 

“Is he comin' around, Doc?”

“Yes, Mr. Scott. They both are.”

Kirk's eyes snapped open. He took in, first, the bright lights of sickbay, then the concerned faces of Scotty and Dr. M'Benga, peering at him. M'Benga leaned down, placed a hand on his shoulder.

“Easy, Captain. Take it slow.”

Kirk leaned back, turned his head to the left. There, on the next bed, lay Spock…completely unconscious. No signs of life beyond the steady thrumming of the diagnostic instruments above his head. And past Spock: the device. Black and silver, a mass of coiled, glowing metal and thick, barely insulated wiring.

The mind-ripper.

“Your vitals were fluctuating dangerously.” M'Benga reached down and gently disconnected the leads from Kirk's forehead. “I took a chance…waited till you hit normal levels, briefly, then pulled you out. I had no choice.”

Scotty turned to the ripper, shook his head. “Blasted Klingon engineering. It's a miracle that thing didn't rip your head apart, sir.”

Kirk sat up slowly. “Feels like it did.”

To his right, McCoy groaned, sat up. He ripped the leads off his own head.

“Bones,” Kirk said softly.

“We blew it, Jim,” McCoy said. “And you took a damn-fool chance going in there after me.”

“I wasn't about to lose
two
of my senior officers.” He pointed to Spock's prone body. “Any change?”

M'Benga consulted the diagnostic bed readings. “None,” he said. “His brain activity spiked, a minute or two before we brought you out. Now it's dropped back down again.”

Nurse Chapel hurried in. “Doctor.” She stopped, glanced at McCoy. “Doctors. The casualties from the attack are stable. They're all resting quietly.”

“Thank you, Nurse.” McCoy grimaced, lurched to his feet. He staggered over to Spock's bed, studied the indicators. “Those are the same readings we got when we first rescued him.”

“Yes,” M'Benga agreed. He was an expert in Vulcan physiology, Kirk recalled. “Under normal circumstances, I'd say he was engaged in some kind of internal healing procedure. But the damage to Mr. Spock's brain is severe—I'm worried about the lack of progress.”

Nurse Chapel cast a quick, worried glance over at Spock's unmoving body. “I'd better tend to the…wounded…” And she left hurriedly.

“Scotty,” Kirk said. “What are you doing here?”

“I came to report, sir,” the engineer replied. “Repairs are well under way—my lads are on the case. We'll be ready to leave the area in approximately thirty minutes.”

“But.”

“But. Mr. Chekov has picked up strong long-range energy signals from the Klingon ships. He suspects they may be back before then.”

Kirk frowned.

“Sir,” Scotty continued. “We need you on the bridge.”

Kirk looked down at Spock. The Vulcan's body was completely still: no blinking, no muscle twitches, no facial movements. He barely breathed.

“I need
him
on the bridge,” Kirk replied. “And you'll forgive me if I don't take Mr. Chekov's judgments as gospel.”

Scotty hesitated. “He's a sharp lad, Chekov.”

“But inexperienced.”

A sharp pulse came from Spock's diagnostic bed. Kirk turned in alarm.

Shakily, McCoy crossed back to Kirk's bed. “Jim, Spock's readings are starting to deteriorate. I'm goin' back in there.”

“No.” Kirk reached for the mind-ripper's connecting leads. “I'll go.”

McCoy glared at him. “That's not appropriate.”

“It's necessary.”

“You are the captain of a starship in an ongoing combat situation. It's not merely foolish for you to risk your life like this—it's irresponsible to those around you.”

Scott stepped forward. “I must agree, Captain. The Klingons outnumber us, and there's no other Federation ships in the sector. We barely escaped with our lives before.”

“And those Klingons are still pretty mad about us stealing their little toy here,” McCoy continued. “What was it you said to Spock? ‘You have duties.'”

Kirk put a hand on McCoy's shoulder. He turned to the others. “Gentlemen…give us a moment?”

Frowning, Scotty and M'Benga moved to the far corner of the room.

“I've got to save him, Bones.”

McCoy grimaced. “Jim, he's my friend, too. I—”

“No—you don't understand.” Kirk looked down. “Scotty's right—we barely beat the Klingons before. They have us outnumbered and outgunned. I managed to slap them down once, but they'll be back. And you've got wounded down here who shouldn't
be
wounded.”

McCoy cocked his head. “You said yourself they outnumber us.”

“That's not the point. If Spock had been up there, we'd have gotten out of that battle clean.”

“You don't know that. And we've had scrapes that turned out much worse.”

“I'm not kicking myself, Bones. I did my job. But next time…the Klingons are going to be better prepared.”

McCoy frowned.

“Scotty's right—Chekov's a good junior officer. But he's not Spock.” Kirk frowned, remembering. “During combat, there are a dozen voices chattering away all the time, on the bridge. The communications officer relays damage reports. Scotty provides updates on engine status. The helmsman monitors phasers and ship movements. The navigator handles shield strength. They're all background noise to me—because one man always feeds me the exact information I need at the exact moment I need it.”

“Spock,” McCoy said tonelessly.

“Normally, I can compensate for his absence. But the Klingons have us at a severe disadvantage. I'm a good captain, but I don't have Spock's ability to filter through a thousand bits of information, screen out superfluous data, and zero in on the most crucial point—all in a millisecond.”

McCoy smiled wryly. “I suppose part of being ‘a good captain' is knowing one's own limitations.”

“Exactly. That's why it's not irresponsible for me to try and rescue Spock. It's actually the only responsible thing to do.” Kirk paused. “It might mean life or death for the entire crew.”

McCoy crossed to the mind-ripper, and together he and Kirk stared at it for a moment. It was an unknown, alien device; M'Benga barely understood its controls, and they all knew its use could prove fatal at any time. Kirk recalled the feel of its electric probes, reaching tendrils into his brain. He shivered.

“All right,” McCoy said. “But I'm going back in with you.”

Kirk frowned. “There's no sense in both of us—”

“I screwed up in there, Jim.” McCoy turned to him, and there was honest pain in his face. “I tried to prod Spock out of his stupor—I reminded him he was half human. And it backfired. That's when his mind—garden, whatever it was—went all haywire.”

Kirk glanced over at Spock's bed. M'Benga stood before it now, looking at the diagnostic readouts and shaking his head slowly.

“It's my fault he's dying,” McCoy said.

“That's ridiculous.”

“It's what I know.” He sat back on his bed, looked distastefully at the machine's leads. “I've got to make this right. Understand that, Jim.”

Kirk locked eyes with McCoy for just a moment. Then he nodded.

“Scotty. Come here a minute.”

Scott walked over to him.

“Dr. McCoy and I are going in again. If all goes well, we shouldn't be long.”

Scott frowned. “Sir.”

“Here's what you need to do. Get that warp drive fixed as quick as you can. The second you do, get us out of here. If the Klingons attack, don't try to be a hero. Hide behind the moon, slingshot around the sun, do whatever you have to do to get away.”

“Aye, sir.”

“If you think you can negotiate with the Klingons, by all means try it. But I don't hold out much hope there.”

McCoy raised an eyebrow. “They don't seem too big on the Organian Peace Treaty.”

“We're a long way out, Doctor.” Kirk turned back to Scotty. “Get the crew home safe.”

“I'll do my best, sir.”

“I know you will.”

Kirk turned to look at Spock. In all the time Kirk had been awake, the Vulcan hadn't moved an inch. He looked paler than usual, like a corpse prepared for viewing. Not a comforting thought.

Kirk glanced at McCoy, who flashed him a tight smile. Then he looked over at the alien device that held all their lives in its cold, metal grasp.

“Dr. M'Benga,” Kirk said. “Send us back in.”

 

Kirk's first impression is of a rush of bright red and blue, hazy yet familiar. Then the fog clears, and he and McCoy are standing on the bridge of the
Enterprise.

But not,
he realizes quickly,
my
Enterprise.

The alert tones sound different: longer, less sharp, more dissonant. The bridge stations sport an older, gooseneck style of personal comm screens. Star charts display an entirely different sector of the galaxy.

And in the center chair…

McCoy nudges Kirk. “Is that—”

“Yes. Chris Pike.”

Not only is it Christopher Pike, Kirk's predecessor, but a younger Pike than Kirk has ever seen before. Younger even than in the Talos IV record-tapes. Pike sits, frowning at a padd, oblivious to Kirk and McCoy's presence.

Kirk looks around. The bridge is fully staffed—and no one else seems to notice him or McCoy, either. A young helmsman turns to Captain Pike.

“Space warp engaged, Captain. On course to Delta Aurigae III.”

“Mmm.” Pike doesn't look up.

“Jim. Look.”

Kirk follows McCoy's gaze to the science station. A young Spock—again, younger than Kirk has ever seen him—is engaged in deep-voiced conversation with a handsome, dark-haired woman.

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