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meanwhile7000lyaway.p1
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1995-08-20
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Path: tivoli.tivoli.com!geraldo.cc.utexas.edu!cs.utexas.edu!howland.reston.ans.net!news.sprintlink.net!sun.cais.com!news.cais.com!tigger.cais.com!user
From: tigger@cais.com (Paul & Michelle)
Newsgroups: alt.startrek.creative
Subject: Meanwhile, 70,000 Light Years Away
Date: Wed, 08 Feb 1995 23:41:10 -0500
Organization: Capital Area Internet Service info@cais.com 703-448-4470
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Dax was trouncing Sisko; she had just taken his queen for her third
check when a buzz summoned them away from the game. ³Message from
Starfleet headquarters,² Kira¹s voice reported from Ops.
³Patch it through here,² Sisko requested, waving Dax back into her seat
as she started to rise. ³We¹ll finish this, or I should say YOU¹LL finish
this, in a minute.² He leaned over his desk as the viewer activated and
the face of a senior officer came into view.
³Admiral Paris?² Sisko knew the older man slightly, in fact had seen
him not long before, when his officers traveled to San Francisco aboard
the Defiant. He¹d been under the impression that Paris had retired from
active duty.
³Commander, I¹m contacting you to ask you about the Voyager,² Paris
stated. ³I¹ve already asked your chief of operations whether an alternate
flight plan was filed when the vessel docked at DS9. Now, I need to know
whether any of your officers spoke to Captain Janeway while she was on the
station, or whether you¹ve had any contact with the ship since she
departed for the Badlands.²
Sisko glanced at Dax, who had met Janeway as both Curzon and Jadzia;
she shook her head slightly. ³I¹m not sure Captain Janeway ever left the
ship when it was docked,² he puzzled, turning back to Paris. ³And no one
reported any communication from the Voyager to me. Is there a problem?²
Paris suddenly looked much older than he was. ³Yes. Voyager is...missing.²
Sisko sat up straighter. ³You mean they haven¹t checked in?²
³I mean they¹ve disappeared, same as the ship they were sent to search
for. The Murasaki was sent to investigate--they¹ve already left the
Badlands, they¹re on their way now to you. But the captain has already
reported in to us, and there¹s no sign of the Voyager. No debris, no
resonance trace from the warp core, no ion trail. There are some very
unusual energy readings, similar in some ways to tractor emissions, and
what appears to be a rupture in subspace similar to that of a wormhole.
But there¹s no wormhole in the vicinity, and nothing resembling any
cloaking technology we know of. The Voyager has vanished without a
trace.²
Sisko did not need to word his next utterance as a question: ³You
think it might not have been some kind of accident.²
³Commander, a Maquis ship went into the Badlands and never reappeared,²
Paris reiterated icily. ³We sent a Starfleet vessel in after it, and that
ship disappeared as well. If the Maquis have some sort of hidden base, or
a passage to another part of the galaxy, we need to know about it fast.²
³And you suspect the Voyager may be with the Maquis.² Sisko lowered his
eyebrows into a scowl, trying to make sense of what the admiral was
saying.
³I don¹t suspect anything yet. But Lieutenant Tuvok, Janeway¹s chief
of security, was undercover with the Maquis on their ship, which was
helmed by a former Starfleet commander, Chakotay. It¹s possible the two
knew each other before Tuvok joined Chakotay¹s crew. And Janeway, well,
she¹s known Tuvok for years.²
³Are you suggesting that Captain Janeway is somehow involved with the
rebels?² Sisko¹s eyes widened. Janeway¹s reputation held her to be more
interested in scientific exploration than politics; he found it hard to
think of her as harboring a serious grudge against the Federation, let
alone allying herself with dissidents.
³Commander, Kathryn Janeway was my science officer during the Arias
Expedition. She¹s one of the finest people I ever served with. But then
again, Commander Chakotay was one of Starfleet¹s best pilots until he
threw it all away over the situation in the Demilitarized Zone.² The
bitterness in the admiral¹s voice came through clearly over the comm
channel. ³There¹s something else. The Voyager was carrying
an...informer, a former Starfleet officer who joined the Maquis and was
captured. Our reports indicated that the officer had simply made mistakes
when we caught him, he has a poor record in crisis situations. But we
must consider the possibility that the ³informer¹s² capture might have
been part of an elaborate plan by the Maquis. They might have planned to
capture a Starfleet vessel all along. If they suspected that someone
might come looking for Tuvok, they would have anticipated that this agent
would point them right into the path of the Maquis.²
Sisko had been having trouble following the admiral¹s train of thought;
now he held up his hand. ³It sounds like a very elaborate scheme, with a
lot of variables. The Maquis could have found easier ways to lure a
Federation ship into the Badlands.²
³To lure one Federation ship, yes,² Paris agreed. ³But not just ANY
Federation ship. Commander, I think we must acknowledge the possibility
that Tuvok, and possibly Janeway, are involved in ways we hadn¹t
considered. And we must consider, alternately, that the Voyager was
infiltrated by Maquis agents who wrested control of the ship from its
Starfleet crew.²
³That would take a lot of people,² Sisko insisted. ³This informer you
mentioned, the former Maquis who was on Voyager. How much Starfleet
clearance did he...²
³That man,² Paris stared at Sisko hard, ³was my son. Tom Paris. He
was courtmartialed out of Starfleet, joined the Maquis. Captured very
shortly afterwards and sent to a penal colony. Janeway got him out.² The
admiral¹s eyes blazed with betrayal. ³She didn¹t tell me she was planning
to use Tom for this mission,² he emphasized. ³Nobody told me where he was
until after the Voyager disappeared.²
Two hours later, Sisko sat around a conference table with his senior
officers. ³That¹s what the admiral told me,² he sighed. ³A half hour
later, Admiral Necheyev contacted me. She wants reconnaisance handled
from here; we¹re the closest base to the Badlands. Opinions on where we
start?²
O¹Brien spoke first. ³With all due respect to Admiral Paris, I don¹t
see how the Maquis could have the technology to build a cloak we can¹t
penetrate or an artificial wormhole. However those ships disappeared, if
there¹s no warp signature or trail into the subspace fracture, then it was
either a natural phenomenon unlike any we¹ve ever seen, or a technology
that¹s ahead of the Federation.²
Kira looked uncomfortable, but dove in. ³If I can extrapolate from
what you¹ve been saying, Commander, Admiral Paris has a very personal
stake in this. His son, whom he already sees as, well, a traitor, is
missing, along with someone he served beside for many years. I understand
why he senses a conspiracy, but I¹m not sure there¹s any real evidence to
back it.²
³I agree,² Sisko nodded. ³But the fact remains that two ships have
vanished. Whatever¹s going on, we need to find out...and before the
Cardassians do. Suggestions?²
TO BE CONTINUED, if anyone wants...
--
tigger@cais.com