Agents of Influence
eBook - ePub

Agents of Influence

  1. 368 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  4. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

Agents of Influence

About this book

An epic new Star Trek saga by New York Times bestselling author Dayton Ward set during the original Five-Year Mission!

For years, Starfleet Intelligence agents have carried out undercover assignments deep within the Klingon Empire. Surgically altered and rigorously trained in Klingon culture, they operate in plain sight and without any direct support, while collecting information and infiltrating the highest levels of imperial power. Their actions have given Starfleet valuable insight into the inner workings of Klingon government and its relentless military apparatus.

After three of Starfleet’s longest serving agents fear exposure, they initiate emergency extraction procedures. Their planned rendezvous with the USS Endeavour goes awry, threatening to reveal their activities and the damaging intelligence they’ve collected during their mission. Tasked by Starfleet to salvage the botched rescue attempt, Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the USS Enterprise must discover the truth behind a secret weapons experiment while avoiding an interstellar incident with the potential to ignite a new war between the Federation and one of its oldest adversaries.

Frequently asked questions

Yes, you can cancel anytime from the Subscription tab in your account settings on the Perlego website. Your subscription will stay active until the end of your current billing period. Learn how to cancel your subscription.
At the moment all of our mobile-responsive ePub books are available to download via the app. Most of our PDFs are also available to download and we're working on making the final remaining ones downloadable now. Learn more here.
Perlego offers two plans: Essential and Complete
  • Essential is ideal for learners and professionals who enjoy exploring a wide range of subjects. Access the Essential Library with 800,000+ trusted titles and best-sellers across business, personal growth, and the humanities. Includes unlimited reading time and Standard Read Aloud voice.
  • Complete: Perfect for advanced learners and researchers needing full, unrestricted access. Unlock 1.4M+ books across hundreds of subjects, including academic and specialized titles. The Complete Plan also includes advanced features like Premium Read Aloud and Research Assistant.
Both plans are available with monthly, semester, or annual billing cycles.
We are an online textbook subscription service, where you can get access to an entire online library for less than the price of a single book per month. With over 1 million books across 1000+ topics, we’ve got you covered! Learn more here.
Look out for the read-aloud symbol on your next book to see if you can listen to it. The read-aloud tool reads text aloud for you, highlighting the text as it is being read. You can pause it, speed it up and slow it down. Learn more here.
Yes! You can use the Perlego app on both iOS or Android devices to read anytime, anywhere — even offline. Perfect for commutes or when you’re on the go.
Please note we cannot support devices running on iOS 13 and Android 7 or earlier. Learn more about using the app.
Yes, you can access Agents of Influence by Dayton Ward in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in Literature & Science Fiction. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

One

“We need to go, Morgan. Now.”
The statement, tinged with anxiety and warning, was not what startled Morgan Binnix, but instead the simple fact that it was delivered in Federation Standard and not tlhIngan Hol. Speaking in anything other than the Klingon language was something to be avoided at all costs. That her companion, Phillip Watson, had done so was a clear indicator of his growing worry. It also served to emphasize the precarious nature of their present situation and that it likely was deteriorating by the second.
“Careful, Kvaal,” she said, barking her reply in the native language and stressing the name serving as Watson’s cover identity. “Remember your bearing.”
Her junior officer, Watson offered a chastened nod. “You are right, Liska,” he said, reverting to spoken Klingon and her own cover name. “But we cannot stay here. If you are correct and they have discovered us, it will not matter what language we use.”
“Perhaps not,” replied Binnix, “but until that happens, we do not break our cover.”
It was one of the bedrock principles underlying the training inflicted upon her, Watson, and David Horst while preparing for their present mission, and it was one of the very few defenses against exposure. Every waking moment of the last three years had been spent talking, writing, and thinking like a Klingon, to the point that it now was ingrained into nearly every fiber of Binnix’s being and every errant thought she carried in her head. The slightest lapse could prove costly not just for the three of them but also fellow operatives embedded in sensitive positions elsewhere in the Klingon Empire as well as other Federation adversaries such as the Romulan Star Empire and even the Orion Syndicate. Of course, Binnix knew—or at least was very confident—that the same could be said for enemy actors working within Starfleet and the Federation government. That the Klingons exploited such tactics was well known within the intelligence community if not the public at large, but there was only suspicion about similar activities on the part of the Romulans or anyone else. One could only speculate, but it was the job of Starfleet Intelligence to be on constant guard for such eventualities, and to Binnix it made perfect sense based on her own past knowledge and experience for the Romulans in particular to dispatch spies. After all, it would be difficult if not impossible to name even a single government entity that had not played the espionage game.
It’s not a game, she thought. Even if it had been, it’s not anymore.
That much was obvious just by looking at her reflection in the nearby window. The face staring back at her was not that of a human but instead a Klingon. Black hair instead of bright red, dark complexion instead of the fair skin she remembered from what seemed like a lifetime ago, and her blue eyes turned brown. Like Watson and Horst, she had been surgically altered to appear as a QuchHa’, a descendant of those who a century earlier fell victim to the Qu’Vat genetic mutation virus, which had affected, among other things, the cranial bone structure in many Klingons. Altering the agents in this manner was an easier proposition than the far more involved surgery required to make them resemble members of the HemQuch caste. The deception was enhanced by the addition of a collection of ten subcutaneous implants beneath the skin of their torso and limbs, which worked together to present a false reading to sensors, medical monitors, and other scanning techniques capable of revealing their human heritage. Additionally, the implant at the base of their necks also contained a transponder capable of sending an encrypted signal only the three of them could scan and decipher in order to locate one another anywhere within a radius of one hundred kilometers. Intended for emergencies like the one the agents currently faced, they could be used only once. After activation, the transponders emitted their signals for forty-eight hours. Binnix and her companions activated their respective implants less than an hour earlier, but she was unable to pick up Horst’s signal. That meant he was outside scanning range, which she hoped was a good thing.
One way or the other, we’re liable to find out.
Watson, formerly blond and tanned as one might expect from a native of California on Earth, ran a hand through his own dark hair as he paced the width of the small, unassuming apartment that was Binnix’s residence. Located on the outskirts of the wejDIch Quarter of the First City, the capital not just of Qo’noS but the entire Klingon Empire, her dwelling offered what under normal circumstances would be a relaxing view of the Qam-Chee River, which served as the city’s southern boundary. None of that appealed to Watson, who kept shooting anxious glances at her as he continued stalking back and forth across her main room’s large bay windows.
“How much longer?” he asked.
“Another minute or so,” Binnix replied without looking up from the computer interface she had positioned atop the apartment’s small dining table. On the unit’s compact, crimson-tinged display screen, a series of counters and status indicators flashed in rapid succession. Copying the most updated version of her protected data archive and transferring it to a pair of portable storage crystals was taking longer than she had anticipated. Despite planning for this day while at the same time anticipating and fearing the circumstances under which it might become necessary, she found herself growing more concerned with every extra second she perceived this process was taking.
The lag just by itself was enough to spark concern. Over the past three years, she had executed this type of data transfer more times than she could easily count. While there was always new information collected and added to the master repository maintained by Binnix and her companions, she had factored that into her planning in the event she needed to carry out a hurried move of data to the storage crystals. It was just one component of the team’s larger emergency protocol to be carried out in the event they needed to flee, either because the nature of their mission and their true identities had been revealed, or they were facing imminent exposure.
Like right now, she thought, willing the computer to move her data faster. So far as she could tell, the computer gave no notice of her mental entreaties.
“It is taking too long,” said Watson, his voice gruff as he continued speaking in tlhIngan Hol. “Something is wrong. Is it possible they have found your link to their central computer system?”
Binnix shook her head before replying in the Klingon language, “No. I have three different subroutines monitoring the connection even as it masks my activity. None of those have triggered any of the alerts I set up.” Still, Watson’s question gave her pause. “On the other hand, they may have enabled extra security software if they suspect illegal access. If that is true, then it is only a matter of time before they find my link, but I only need a few more seconds and then it will no longer matter.”
At long last the counters and status icons provided the information she wanted to see, signaling the data transfer was complete. Retrieving the crystals from the computer’s bank of access ports, Binnix dropped them into a leather satchel she had already slung over her left shoulder before pushing her chair away from the dining table and rising to her feet. From the satchel she extracted a small civilian disruptor pistol, a modest weapon possessing far less power than those used by Klingon soldiers, or even standard-issue Starfleet phasers. Adjusting its power setting, she aimed the disruptor at the computer terminal and fired. A single harsh red burst of energy erupted from the weapon’s muzzle and enveloped the tabletop unit, reducing it to a puddle of liquefied metal and other composites.
“That’s it,” she said, returning the disruptor to the satchel. “Let’s get out of here.” Glancing at the chronometer on the wall of the apartment’s small kitchen, she noted the time. “We need to get moving if we are to make the rendezvous with Horst.”
If they were not already together when the decision was made to run, the team’s evacuation plan called for them to meet at one of three designated rally points around the city. The primary location was an open-air bazaar near the Riverfront Enclave, one of several ancient monasteries scattered around the First City. The Enclave overlooked the Qam-Chee River, and from there it would be easy for Binnix and her companions to make their way to any of a dozen routes out of the city. While they each had personal communication devices that were encrypted, their signals could still be tracked by some savvy individual. Therefore, they would not be used unless absolutely necessary.
Their walking route to the Enclave would take them near the Federation Embassy. It would be so easy to just present themselves at the gate and—sticking with their Klingon cover identities—request asylum. Any regular citizen doing so would provoke all manner of protests from the Klingon government, but now? With the possibility of law enforcement and the military aware of spies who might be looking for a means of escape? Binnix suspected she and the team would be arrested the moment they tried to approach the embassy grounds, assuming they were not simply shot on sight.
Let’s try to avoid that, shall we?
“Time to go,” she said.
Watson nodded. “No argument from me.”
Like her, he was traveling light, carrying only a thin, black leather bag slung across his back. While their mission and their very survival disallowed them from possessing any sort of personal keepsakes or other items that might provide clues to their real identities, Watson along with Binnix and Horst had still acquired a few items here on Qo’noS while working under cover. For her part, Binnix was taking with her a trio of books she had purchased over the course of the past three years, while Watson had taken a liking to bladed weapons of various design. Everything else he owned he had left in his apartment in the city’s Old Quarter. Horst had collected a few knickknacks and other small items to decorate his own dwelling, and Binnix knew that he had left all of that behind once the team’s evacuation protocols were activated. All he had to his name was a disruptor pistol like hers and a d’k tagh knife he wore on his belt. If they were stopped for some reason by law enforcement officers who had no clue of their real identities, carrying large travel bags or other bulky items might arouse suspicion. Better to present the part of two people just walking along the streets of the city.
Using a portable computer terminal, Binnix activated her connection to the apartment building’s security system, giving her access to the internal network’s camera feeds and computer interactions with other systems. No outside alerts or other message traffic out of the ordinary had been transmitted to the system. So far as she could tell, no one was monitoring the building with an eye toward watching her or Watson. It was just the usual sort of passive monitoring one might expect from a middle-income residential space where occupants paid slightly more in rent for additional safety and security measures. The system was easily exploitable, and Binnix saw nothing taking place to warrant concern.
Satisfied they weren’t being set up for an ambush, she exited her apartment building with Watson following her. They both tried to affect the air that had become instinctive over the course of the past three years, acting as nothing more than a pair of citizens who had every right to be here. She had made similar walks through this, the proverbial pulsing heart of the Klingon Empire itself, uncounted times during this assignment. Like everything else, it was a routine she had developed as a survival mechanism, teaching herself to react to any sort of stimuli or distraction as a Klingon would. This meant breaking old habits like making unnecessary eye contact with or offering greetings to passersby, or striking up conversations with those she might encounter in a store or restaurant. The trick was not to avoid such things, but to react in Klingon fashion to those situations when they occurred. Her training had incorporated hours of classes and practical exercises on these subjects, drilling her to the point that when she arrived on Qo’noS, she along with her team could carry out their charade without thinking about it.
Of course, the real tests came when she assumed her duties as a midlevel employee on the administrative staff working for Maroq, a member of the Klingon High Council. Using that unassuming role as cover, Binnix spent most of her first year here working to identify for exploitation Maroq’s list of contacts as well as take advantage of the classified information to which he was privy. Some of that was simplified by the fact that her work required her to have access to some of the same materials, while others required her to be more inventive. Another part of her training for this assignment involved learning how to operate and interact with Klingon computer systems. Despite holding an A6 computer specialist’s rating in Starfleet, a holdover from her prior career as a science officer, she was still required to essentially learn how to write and reconfigure software in a manner not always compatible with her existing knowledge. Her experience working with Vulcan, Andorian, and Tellarite systems helped her in this regard, along with the fact that when it came down to it, there were only so many ways to tell a machine what to do or how to do it, and most of them were universal. One only had to account for the idiosyncrasies of the language being employed.
An additional, less pleasant aspect of her task called for her to tolerate Maroq’s seemingly unending advances. A widower, the elder council member had never remarried and instead embraced a lifestyle of carousing with women on a frequent basis. It was Binnix’s special hell that she maintained his schedule, including a calendar tracking his various rendezvous. Maroq’s attempts to see her added to what she called “the rotation” were as annoying as they were frequent. Most of the time, she was able to keep his interests directed elsewhere, as there seemed to be no shortage of prospective partners waiting for an invitation to dinner or other activities on which she preferred not to dwell. Instead, she used the time he was away from his office to gain access to his protected files.
Improvise. Adapt. Overcome.
Binnix and Watson walked in silence for several moments, moving from the residential section of her neighborhood to an area populated more by commercial establishments. Without being obvious, she scanned the windows and doorways leading into shops, taverns, restaurants, and other businesses. It was early enough in the evening that many of them were still open, and the bars and eateries in particular were well trafficked. She checked faces, looked to see if eyes might be following her movements, but aside from the sort of brazen leers to which she long ago had become accustomed, no one seemed to take any undue notice of her or Watson.
Just because you’re paranoid doesn’t mean the entire Klingon Empire isn’t out to get you.

Two

“Want to stop for a drink?”
It was the first time Watson had spoken since leaving her apartment. They had walked for nearly fifteen minutes in silence broken only by Binnix confirming their path through the city to the rendezvous point. She turned to look at him, noting he was not looking at her but instead at someone or something farther up the street. Her stomach tightened in sudden anxiety, and it required physical effort not to follow his gaze.
“This really isn’t the best time for that sort of thing, Kvaal. Don’t you think?”
“Liska, you look like you could use a drink.”
Nudging her arm, Watson directed her toward a tavern occupying the corner space of a building at the end of the block. Glancing through the establishment’s lone window, she saw that perhaps a third of its tables and stools were claimed by patrons. It was still early, and she knew from experience places like these would become more active as the evening wore on. As they moved to the entrance, Binnix used the opportunity to glance up the street, but did not see whatever it was that had spooked her friend. At first, she considered Watson was just worried and therefore even more alert than she was, and might be overreacting to something that would prove innocuous. On the other hand, the junior agent had always displayed sound instincts. If something had his attention, it could not be ignored. Not now.
The tavern’s doors parted, releasing a cloud of smoke and the sounds of numerous conversations, raucous laughter, and music from at least two different sources. The small crowd of male and female Klingons was making up for its lack of numbers with enthusiasm, and while Binnix and Watson earned a few cursory glances upon entering the room, their arrival provoked no reaction.
Binnix found a table near the back of the room that allowed them to sit together while keeping watch on the front entrance as well as the hallway leading to where she knew from previous visits the kitchen, storage, and lavatories were located. Another door on the room’s far side led to stairs and, she guessed, either office or living space for the tavern’s proprietor. The bar itself was dimly lit, with recessed lighting playing off the worn wood floor, stone walls, and the haphazard collection of tables, chairs, and stools scattered around the room. All manner of bladed weapons, family crests, and the skulls and hides of various game animals festooned the walls. A large stain discolored the floorboards near their table, and Binnix decided from its shape and size that it likely was caused by a patron meeting some form of unfortunate demise. A fight provoked by a perceived dishonoring of one’s self or family? Perhaps a squabble over a mutual love interest.
Binnix slid into one of the chairs that provided her a good vantage point, glancing to the bar and seeing Watson waiting for the bartender to fill his order. She heard him ask for two tankards of bl...

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Title Page
  3. Dedication
  4. Historian’s Note
  5. Chapter One
  6. Chapter Two
  7. Chapter Three
  8. Chapter Four
  9. Chapter Five
  10. Chapter Six
  11. Chapter Seven
  12. Chapter Eight
  13. Chapter Nine
  14. Chapter Ten
  15. Chapter Eleven
  16. Chapter Twelve
  17. Chapter Thirteen
  18. Chapter Fourteen
  19. Chapter Fifteen
  20. Chapter Sixteen
  21. Chapter Seventeen
  22. Chapter Eighteen
  23. Chapter Nineteen
  24. Chapter Twenty
  25. Chapter Twenty-One
  26. Chapter Twenty-Two
  27. Chapter Twenty-Three
  28. Chapter Twenty-Four
  29. Chapter Twenty-Five
  30. Chapter Twenty-Six
  31. Chapter Twenty-Seven
  32. Chapter Twenty-Eight
  33. Chapter Twenty-Nine
  34. Chapter Thirty
  35. Chapter Thirty-One
  36. Chapter Thirty-Two
  37. Chapter Thirty-Three
  38. Chapter Thirty-Four
  39. Chapter Thirty-Five
  40. Chapter Thirty-Six
  41. Chapter Thirty-Seven
  42. Chapter Thirty-Eight
  43. Chapter Thirty-Nine
  44. Chapter Forty
  45. Acknowledgments
  46. About the Author
  47. Copyright