Star Trek Voyager Flashback
eBook - ePub

Star Trek Voyager Flashback

Diane Carey

  1. 192 pages
  2. English
  3. ePUB (mobile friendly)
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eBook - ePub

Star Trek Voyager Flashback

Diane Carey

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About This Book

A hundred years before the Starship VoyagerTM was transported to the Delta Quadrant, Lieutenant Tuvok served under one of Starfleet's most famous officers: Captain Hikaru Sulu of the Starship ExcelsiorTM. Now those days have come back to haunt him. While traveling through an uncharted nebula, Tuvok is besieged by recurring memories of his time with Captain Sulu -- repressed memories that may well kill him unless their source is determined in time. To save her closest friend, Captain Kathryn Janeway follows Tuvok to the century-old bridge of the Excelsior during a desperate battle. There Tuvok, Captain Janeway, Captain Sulu and Commander Janice Rand must face a menace to galactic life unlike anything known before....

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Information

Year
2012
ISBN
9781471107863

PART
ONE

Images

CHAPTER 1

ā€œANTHRAXIC CITRUS PEEL, ORANGE JUICE, WITH JUST A hint of papalla seed extract. Itā€™s an experimental blend.ā€
ā€œThe success rate of your culinary experiments has not been high.ā€
Lieutenant Commander Tuvok squared his shoulders despite the fact that he was sitting down. He consistently resisted Neelixā€™s offers to find some combination of live growth and replicated fruits and vegetables that a Vulcan would find palatable. Consistently resisted, yet continually returned.
The plume on Neelixā€™s head caught the unforgiving lighting of the starshipā€™s mess hall and virtually flickered its pastel colors, making the Talaxianā€™s mottled skin appear almost yellow as he tilted a bit to one side and poured his brew.
ā€œEnsign Golwat tried some yesterday, and she thought it was delicious. In fact, she had a second glass. And she never has seconds.ā€
ā€œEnsign Golwat is Bolian,ā€ Tuvok pointed out with some irritation at the comparison. ā€œHer tongue has a cartilaginous lining. It would protect her against even the most corrosive acids.ā€
Taking on the attitude of a sad monk, Neelix requested, ā€œAll I ask is that you try it, Mr. Vulcan.ā€
Tuvok eyed him, then eyed the coffee, sniffed it, took a tentative sip, and waited for his tongue to dissolve.
Coffee, with a flavoring of fruit. And a few other added aromas for which there was no complementary flavor.
ā€œImpressive,ā€ Tuvok offered, registering a certain satisfaction through the stoicism of his Vulcan nature.
Neelix rocked on his heels and smiled. ā€œIā€™ll start squeezing that second glass. Breakfast is coming right up. Porakan eggs.ā€
ā€œPorakanā€¦?ā€
ā€œThe most flavorful eggs in the sector!ā€ Neelix threw over his shoulder as he moved off. ā€œScrambled with a little cream cheese, dill weed, and a touch of rengazo. A galactic favorite.ā€
In the galley, he began some orchestration that involved sizzling and popping sounds, and spoke through the portal.
ā€œNow, these eggs were not easy to prepare. After we picked them up on Porakas Four, I had to sterilize them in a cryostatic chamber for three days. And then each and every one of them had to be parboiled inside the shell with aā€”ā€
ā€œNeelix,ā€ Tuvok interrupted, wondering how each and every egg was somehow different in the vernacular from each egg or every egg, ā€œI would prefer not to hear the lifeā€™s story of my breakfast.ā€
ā€œOn Talax,ā€ Neelix went on, unfazed, ā€œitā€™s traditional to share the history of a meal before you begin eating. Itā€™s a way of enhancing the culinary experience. My mother was brilliant! She could make every course, every garnish, come alive like it was a character in a story. My favorite was the one about the crustacean whoā€”ā€
His words were consumed in a tongue of flame that burst from his stove. Neelix jolted backward, arms flailing, then immediately recovered and snatched a towel.
Tuvok pushed out of his chair and hurried there, but by the time he arrived, Neelix had put the fire out.
ā€œWhat happened?ā€ Tuvok asked.
ā€œSome sort of power overload,ā€ the Talaxian said, staring curiously at his stove as if it would explain if they remained patient. ā€œIā€™m afraid it decimated your breakfast. This is what my mother would call a tragic ending.ā€
Tuvok eyed the stove, but saw no other explanation. ā€œEngineering has been making adjustments to the plasma conduits to accommodate a new energy source. It may have created a thermal surge in the galley systems.ā€
ā€œJaneway to Tuvok,ā€ the comm system said with a faint crackle, implying there was indeed some problem in the systems. ā€œPlease report to the bridge. Mr. Neelix, Iā€™d like you to join us as well.ā€
ā€œAye, Captain,ā€ Neelix responded before Tuvok had a chance. He looked up. ā€œWhat do you think is happening? Why would the captain want me to come to the bridge? Do you suppose she couldā€™ve heard about my new coffee?ā€
ā€œPossibly,ā€ Tuvok said, ā€œalthough doubtful.ā€
ā€œThen something exciting must be happening!ā€ Neelix chirped, gasping. ā€œLetā€™s hurry! A new discovery, perhaps! A way to get you and all your crew-mates back to your own people! I do hope that happens for you all someday, Mr. Vulcan, I really do.ā€
ā€œThank you.ā€ Tuvok realized his response was cool and rote, and immediately also realized that emotional beings required more sustenance for their empathy if it were to be nurtured. ā€œYour enthusiasm for our hopes is most appreciated, Mr. Neelix. Of course, if we ever find a way home and you come with us, that will mean that you will then be seventy years at high warp away from your own people.ā€
ā€œMr. Vulcan,ā€ Neelix said as they left the mess hall, ā€œyou are my people now. Letā€™s go see what the captain wants, shall we? Do you think it will be something wonderful?ā€

Images

CHAPTER 2

VOYAGER.
Of all shipā€™s names, in all the oceans of the populated planets in the galaxy, of all fleets in all spacefaring, had there ever been a name so fitted to the vessel bearing it?
Kathryn Janeway had heard the name in her own mind and from her own lips so often that the sounds were part of her, living inside her clothing, as much within her as she was within the ship, and as dependent upon her as she was upon the vessel itself. She and it were symbiotic, islands nourishing each other, with no other land in sight.
And her crewā€™s voyage was a long one, showing little hope of growing shorter. Thrown across the galaxy by some form of scientific magic, they were seventy years from home space. And that was at full warp.
Continually waylayed by searches for energy, for food, for ways to survive, and by the quirks of strange territory burgeoning with its own life, both mild and threatening, their journey grew longer and longer by the day.
Janeway settled back in her command chair and tried not to think about this, but that never worked. Now she was thinking about it even more. Sheā€™d made a vow to keep and pursue the Federation edict for Starfleet personnelā€”ā€ to go boldly where no one had gone before, to seek out new life and new civilizationsā€¦ā€
But every time she did that, giving her crew a short-term goal with a chance for challenge and satisfaction, she set back their long-term goal of just getting home.
That was her dilemma. Let them grow old heading home as fast as possible, without challenge or mission, or give them the missions and the challenges and let them have some form of a life here, in the Delta Quadrant, with their goal of home just a backdrop from which she hoped they could be distracted?
She was on her own personal voyage that way ā€¦ could she captain their lives as well as their duties?
Oh, well.
She tapped her chairā€™s comm panel and forced herself back to business.
ā€œCaptainā€™s log, stardate 50126.4. Long-range sensors have detected a gaseous anomaly that contains sirillium, a highly combustible and versatile energy source. Weā€™ve altered course to investigate.ā€
The last word echoed again and again. Every time they stopped to ā€œinvestigateā€ something, they shaved a little more off their chances of reaching home before dying of old age.
But they had to get halfway there before they could get all the way there. Before the next seventy years would come the next five.
That was what she was looking at on the forward screenā€”an energy source for the next five years.
First Officer Chakotay moved aside as Janeway left her command chair and moved to join her department heads, who were clustered around a couple of monitors.
ā€œSirillium,ā€ Neelix uttered in his modified court-jester tone. Neelix was their resident resident of the Delta Quadrant. Native to this space, no one on board had tried harder to plunge into the daily life of the foreign shipā€™s crew than he had. The crew didnā€™t even take as active an interest in themselves as he took in them and their well-being. Sometimes he was the best thermometer of how they were doing, physically and mentally.
ā€œYes,ā€ Janeway responded. ā€œAnd possibly large amounts of sirillium at that. If so, weā€™re going to need to stockpile as much as we can. Iā€™d like to convert Storage Bay Three into a containment chamber.ā€
Neelix turned the banded pastel colors of his plumed head to her and looked quite like a disturbed chipmunk. ā€œMy pantry?ā€
ā€œIā€™m sorry, Neelix,ā€ the captain told him. ā€œYouā€™re going to have to make other arrangements.ā€
ā€œOf course, Captain.ā€ Clearly disappointed, Neelix complied, but not without mentioning, ā€œYou know, if I injected sirillium gas into my thermal array, it might improve cooking time.ā€
ā€œYeah,ā€ Engineer Bā€™Elanna Torres said with her Klingon rasp barking, ā€œand blow up half your kitchen in the process. Sirillium is far more useful as a warp plasma catalyst.ā€
She brushed back her straight brown hair and seemed to think sheā€™d made the only reasonable case. Just as she was about to preen her technical victory, she was overridden by Lieutenant Tuvokā€™s ever-precise enunciations.
ā€œThe gas can also be used to boost deflector shield efficiency,ā€ the shipā€™s chief of security said, his stiff Vulcan demeanor giving particular substance to his words. Straight as a board, his posture alone insisted that his use of the sirillium would be best.
Amused, Commander Chakotay leaned toward his captain and murmured, ā€œThe vultures are circling ā€¦ā€
Janeway smiled. ā€œWell, thereā€™s certainly no shortage of good ideas.ā€ She turned to Chakotay, and with that movement signaled an end to bridgeside debate. ā€œHave all department heads submit proposals for sirillium usage.ā€
Tuvok responded as his console beeped, then reported, ā€œThe anomaly is within visual range.ā€
Janeway faced the main screen with anticipation. ā€œOn screen,ā€ she said.
A pretty section of space, the Delta Quadrant. Small comfort, but welcome. In her career sheā€™d seen upward of a thousand gaseous formations, nebulae, thermals, clouds, spurts, novae, elephant trunks, and toxic soups, most up close and personal, and found that no two were alike enough to take casually. The privilege of seeing one of those had never been lost on her, until now.
Today she would gladly have traded the haunting blue cloud on the main viewscreen for a picture of Earthā€™s marbled globe. As gas rolled, plasma boiled, and energy crackled within it and vibrant Bahama tide pools surged inside it, the blue of the nebula made her wish to see the blue of an ocean.
A pretty sight, yes, but barren of the life they all needed to see. It would help keep them alive and moving, but that was bare sustenance to a crew so very alone.
She sighed, then hoped no one noticed. To hide it, she glanced at her command crew. Chakotay seemed unimpressed. Torres and Neelix were inwardly fighting for control. That made her glance at Tuvok.
Yes, he too was hooked on that blue mass, staring with uncharacteristic attraction, almost as if held by some magnetic power. She almost commented, then forced herself not to. Vulcans didnā€™t like to have their inner thoughts exposed, or let it be known that they had feelings down deep under the plaque of restraint. No sense embarrassing him just for a chuckle.
Well, not usually.
She looked at the screen again. ā€œAnalysis, Mr. Kim?ā€
Tactical Officer Harry Kim flinched as if sheā€™d asked him to run out there and scratch the cloud with a fingernail to see if anything came off. He pulled his attention from the screen to his console. ā€œItā€™s a class-seventeen nebula. Iā€™m detecting standard amounts of hydrogen and helium ā€¦ and seven thousand parts per million of sirillium.ā€
He seemed relieved to be able to confirm their find, and glanced at Janeway.
She turned away from him so he wouldnā€™t see her accommodating grin, and found herself looking again at Tuvok.
He was looking down at his hand.
She looked there too. Hi...

Table of contents

Citation styles for Star Trek Voyager Flashback

APA 6 Citation

Carey, D. (2012). S/trek Voyager Flashback ([edition unavailable]). Simon & Schuster. Retrieved from https://www.perlego.com/book/782308/strek-voyager-flashback-pdf (Original work published 2012)

Chicago Citation

Carey, Diane. (2012) 2012. S/Trek Voyager Flashback. [Edition unavailable]. Simon & Schuster. https://www.perlego.com/book/782308/strek-voyager-flashback-pdf.

Harvard Citation

Carey, D. (2012) S/trek Voyager Flashback. [edition unavailable]. Simon & Schuster. Available at: https://www.perlego.com/book/782308/strek-voyager-flashback-pdf (Accessed: 14 October 2022).

MLA 7 Citation

Carey, Diane. S/Trek Voyager Flashback. [edition unavailable]. Simon & Schuster, 2012. Web. 14 Oct. 2022.