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    Star Trek - TNG - Vendetta

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      dreaded and final visitor.

      Riker was a long-time, seasoned professional.

      He remembered the first time he had beamed down

      into the middle of a disaster area. Orion raiders

      had attacked a Federation outpost. He was fresh

      out of the Academy, confident in his training and

      certain that he could handle whatever he was confronted

      with. When he had materialized on the surface

      of the outpost, he came to the immediate realization that he

      was standing in something warm, with an overwhelming smell.

      He looked down and saw his left boot astride

      some sort of pink tubing. Suddenly, he realized

      that it was, in fact, the lower intestines of a

      disembowled victim of the raiders, the rest of the

      victim lying nearby with a bleak expression on his

      dead face.

      It was Riker's first direct experience with the

      brutality that sentient beings could inflict on each

      other. It was also his first direct experience with

      completely losing control, as he doubled over and

      vomited up his lunch in front of fellow

      crewmembers. He still remembered being bent over,

      his back trembling, staring in humiliation at the

      mute testament to his inexperience. And then he

      felt the reassuring and yet firm pat on the

      shoulders of his commanding officer. "We've all been

      there," said his CO, and Riker felt a little

      better, but not much.

      Since then Riker had developed a veneer of

      detachment. That part of him that was horrified by what

      he witnessed was buried far, far within him, where it

      could not possibly interfere with his ability

      to function as a Starfleet officer. In a way the

      thought that he could just take his emotions and put them

      on hold, and not be affected by what he saw, was a

      frightening one. How easy was it to take that one step

      further and detach oneself from the concerns of humanity

      altogether? were the Borg an inhuman race apart, or

      were they the logical and inevitable destiny of

      humanity?

      Riker promptly decided that he would make

      himself nuts if he allowed his thoughts to continue in that

      direction. "Spread out," he said. "Lend aid

      where you can. All medical personnel are to stay in

      constant touch with Doctor Crusher and, Doctor,

      I want updates from you every half hour." She

      nodded in quick agreement and moved off. Geordi,

      Riker, and Data headed off in another

      direction, accompanied by Selar.

      As they moved through the devastation, they were

      surrounded by cries of "Help me," and moans,

      and words of encouragement and support from the

      Curie teams. Every so often Riker spotted one

      of the Enterprise personnel as well. He

      nodded in approval. Crusher had displayed her

      customary efficiency in deploying her people.

      Geordi was scanning the ground, the buildings,

      the very air around him with his VISOR. Data was

      studying his tricorder readings and then paused a

      moment over one patch of ground. "A Borg

      soldier died here," he announced.

      "Died, or whatever the hell it is they do,"

      said Riker. He had witnessed the phenomenon himself

      enough times A downed Borg soldier lies

      insensate, and then another Borg comes along,

      removes some pieces of his circuitry, and the

      fallen Borg self-destructs into ash.

      Geordi, sensing trace readings through his

      VISOR, commented, "And over there too," and he

      pointed. "These people didn't go down without a

      struggle."

      "I'm detecting life readings from that

      direction," said Selar, studying her medical

      tricorder. The Vulcan medical officer

      pointed just off to the west. "One individual.

      Vital signs are low, and fluctuating."

      The away team moved off in the direction that she

      had indicated. Within moments they were walking down a

      street that was filled with the same sorts of crumbled

      buildings and debris as all the others they had

      passed.

      Geordi's VISOR and Selar's tricorder

      detected him at roughly the same time, and together

      they pointed and said, "There."

      There was a mound of dirt that had been obscuring

      the body and when they got there they found out why. It

      seemed as if someone had been in the process of

      burying this particular member of the Penzatti. A

      very shallow grave, not more than a few inches

      deep, and a couple feet around, had been dug.

      The Penzatti was a male and was lying on his

      stomach, halfway in, face to the side.

      Jammed into the back of his belt were two

      Penzatti blasters. The Penzatti's antenna

      was twitching ever so slightly as Selar ran her

      tricorder over him.

      "Alive. Just barely." She pulled a hypo

      from her medkit and injected it into his upper arm.

      "That should stabilize him. He has a broken

      leg, multiple contusions and

      abrasions."

      Riker started to reach for him to turn him over, and

      Selar said sharply, "Moving him in any way would

      be most unadvisable, Commander."

      Immediately the first officer withdrew, chagrined that he

      had forgotten that most elementary of first aid

      procedures. At that moment, however, the

      Penzatti moaned softly and half lifted his

      head himself.

      The first person he saw was Data.

      He gasped and tried to reach around for his

      blasters, but he had no strength. When he

      realized this, when he realized he had no

      defense, his head dropped back down into the dirt

      and he moaned softly.

      "I am not here to harm you, sir," said Data

      calmly. "I am with Starfleet."

      "You're safe now," affirmed Riker.

      The Penzatti did not lift his head. Instead,

      he said softly, "Safe," and then he started

      to laugh. It was a low and ugly sound, a sound of

      bitterness and derision that grew louder and louder,

      practically a demented cackle.

      "Sir," began Riker, "we're from the

      Enterprise ..."

      He wasn't heard. The Penzatti was laughing

      even more loudly, gasping out, "Safe! Safe!"

      as if it were the funniest thing he'd ever heard. And

      then his laughter began to subside, replaced

      by choking sobs, and he skidded from giddiness to misery

      and hopelessness, all within a few seconds.

      Selar was monitoring his vitals, waiting for

      them to stabilize, and ministering to his leg as she

      did so. She was a cautious medical

      practitioner, and she disliked having to move a

      patient whose lifesigns were fluctuating, if she

      didn't have to. The transporter had an effect

      on the bodily system, that much was certain. For a

      healthy individual, that effect was negligible.

      But for someone in bad shape, it could be a shock that

      could send a patient into critical condition. She

      was certain that with a couple of minute's work, she could

    &n
    bsp; stabilize the patient to ensure a safe trip.

      "What's your name?" asked Riker.

      "I am ..." He seemed to pause to try and

      remember. "I am Dantar. I was Dantar the

      Eighth. Now I am Dantar the Last. All

      I am and will ever be, in that one, useless name."

      "It looked like someone tried to bury you,"

      Geordi said.

      "Dantar the most useless," said Dantar. His

      voice was eerily singsong. "Dantar whose family

      died, a few yards away, and he couldn't help

      them. Couldn't help them."

      "He did that himself," said Selar, in

      response to Geordi's comment. "His

      fingernails are encrusted with dirt and sludge.

      He tried to bury himself."

      "You tried to dig your own grave?" asked

      Riker, horrified and curious at the same time.

      "There is no point in my continuing to live,"

      said Dantar. "I have nothing. It's simply time

      for me to crawl into my grave and rot there. There's

      nothing. Nothing."

      "What did you see?" asked Riker. "Who

      attacked?"

      "Commander, now may not be the best time," began

      Selar.

      But Riker cut her off sharply. "When it comes

      to the Borg, Doctor, we never have any idea just

      how much time we have."

      "The Borg," said Dantar distantly. "Is

      that what they're called? Those pale creatures with

      machines for souls. One went into my house. It

      killed my little girl. It killed my family.

      Borg."

      "Someone stopped them," said Riker urgently.

      "Someone fought them and stopped them and destroyed their

      ship. Did they send down any ground troops?

      Did you see anyone besides the Borg?"

      "Yes. Yes, I did."

      "Who?" asked Riker.

      "I saw Death," said Dantar, as

      distractedly as ever. "She was standing right over there,

      sweeping through my family. Holding the glowing

      orbs of their souls in her hand and then smothering them.

      Then she glided across the street ... she seemed

      to walk, but you couldn't hear her footfall. And

      she went from one person to the next." Tears began

      to roll down his face. "I tried to persuade her

      to take me. Tried to put myself into a grave so that

      she would know. But she ignored me."

      "Dantar," began Riker.

      But Dantar wasn't listening. "You know ...

      our culture has always depicted Death as a

      grim, fearful figure. Dark. Hideous, with a

      skull face. Skeletal."

      "As has ours, frequently," said Geordi.

      "But she wasn't. I was very surprised," said

      Dantar. His voice seemed to be

      fading, exhaustion paralyzing his ability to think.

      As if from far away, he said, "She was a very young

      girl. With a white dress, skipping. And she was

      smiling. You know why that is, I think?"

      "Why?" said Selar. She was preparing to order

      Dantar beamed up to the Enterprise. She was

      satisfied that his lifesigns were stable enough now that he

      could handle the transporter with no danger. "Why

      is that?"

      He looked thoughtful. "I suppose she

      simply likes her work. In such dangerous times,

      that's nice to see. Don't you think?"

      After Dantar and Selar had returned to the

      Enterprise, Riker said thoughtfully, "He said

      a Borg soldier went into his house over there.

      Let's check it out. Perhaps someone even

      survived." He took a step in that direction and

      then paused and removed his phaser. He looked

      significantly at the others. "Just in case

      there's a Borg in there."

      "Couldn't be," said Geordi. "Their ship was

      destroyed. If their ship goes, they go. Their

      link is severed."

      "If there's one thing we shouldn't be doing, it's

      underestimating the Borg," Riker warned him.

      "That's a good way to achieve early and terminal

      unemployment."

      "I catch your drift, sir," said Geordi,

      pulling out his own phaser. Data did

      likewise.

      Slowly they approached the house, noting that the

      roof had caved in, and the chances of anyone

      surviving were nil. There was also an unpleasant

      smell, that same smell that brought back to Riker

      memories of that awful first time he had seen death

      on a large scale. Now he shoved it away,

      determined to ignore it. He was far more than he

      had been that day. And in some ways, he thought, far

      less.

      Geordi peered in through the darkened doorway,

      taking in the carnage. It was times like this that made

      him glad that--despite the dazzling abilities

      of his VISOR'-AUGMENTED sight--he could not

      really "see." He shook his head and said,

      "There's a lot of dead people in here, Commander."

      Riker was checking his tricorder. "Not picking

      up any life." In a way, he was relieved.

      He didn't really want to have to look at them.

      It wasn't going to do the deceased any

      good, and it sure wasn't going to help his peace of

      mind. "Let's go."

      But Geordi put up a hand. "Wait. I'm

      getting something. Not a life form, but ... something."

      Double-checking his tricorder, Riker said,

      "Whatever you're seeing, it's still not picking up.

      Are you sure your VISOR isn't

      malfunctioning?"

      Without glancing back, La Forge said

      calmly, "Are you sure your eyes aren't

      malfunctioning?"

      "Just a suggestion, Mr. La Forge," said

      Riker. Privately he thought it interesting that,

      even after all this time, Geordi La Forge could still

      be a bit sensitive about his eyesight.

      With a sly imitation of Picard's accent,

      Geordi said, "Noted and logged." Then, all

      business, he said firmly, "It's over there."

      He was pointing toward a pile of rubble in a

      corner of the room. The three men immediately went

      over to it, trying not to think about the bodies they were

      stepping over. Riker had to force himself to look

      away from the horrific sight of a small girl,

      her skull clearly crushed, in the arms of her mother

      who had died mere seconds later. They reached the

      pile of rubble and started to pull away, to get

      to whatever the devil it was that Geordi had

      detected.

      Riker lifted off one huge chunk of

      debris, turned back to get another one, and

      jumped back with a start.

      He was staring down the business end of the deadly

      metal appendage of a Borg soldier.

      "La Forge! Data!" he shouted. "Watch

      it!"

      He waited for something to happen--for

      electricity to shoot out, or the pincers to grab

      at him. But nothing occurred.

      Now Data and La Forge were at his side.

      "What is it?" asked Geordi.

      "It's a Borg," said Riker grimly. "A

      Borg that survived its ship being blown up."

      "Just like you said, Commander," admitted Geordi.

      While not allowing the seriousness of the situation

     
    to escape him, Riker permitted a grim smile

      and said, "That's why they pay me the big money,

      Mr. La Forge."

      "I had presumed that a larger salary," said

      Data, "was due to higher rank, seniority

      ..."

      "Not now, Data," sighed Geordi.

      Immediately disposing of the train of thought, Data

      promptly switched gears to the other. "It would

      explain why the tricorders don't read the

      Borg soldier. The Borg do not seem

      to register as individuals. Apparently, that is

      a result of their uniformity of nature."

      "Is it going to attack?" asked Geordi.

      "They have a tendency to ignore most things unless

      directly threatened," said Riker. "But this one

      is buried. I'm not sure how it'll react.

      And I'm not taking any chances." He tapped his

      communicator. "Riker to security."

      "Security," came the deep voice of

      Worf.

      "Worf, you and two security men, down to these

      coordinates, fast," ordered Riker. "We

      may have captured a Borg soldier."

      "Proceed with extreme caution, Commander,"

      Worf warned him.

      "That's why we're calling on you, Mr.

      Worf."

      Data and Geordi were hard at work clearing off

      the debris from the rest of the Borg warrior.

      Data uncovered the soldier's face and stared

      intently into the eyes. "The Borg does indeed

      appear alive, Commander," he said after a moment's

      study, "but would appear to be in some sort of

      "pause" mode, as if awaiting new

      instructions."

      "I just don't get it," La Forge was saying.

      He pulled off a large piece of planking and

      shoved it aside, reaching for another. "How could he

      have survived being severed from the Borg central

      command?"

      "Captain Picard did," pointed out Riker.

      His head snapped around as he heard the familiar

      hum of the transporter that told him Worf and the

      security team had arrived. He nodded

      approvingly to himself. Less than thirty

      seconds. No one could accuse Worf of taking

      his time.

      "Captain Picard had already been separated from

      the Borg at the point of the ship's detonation,"

      Data explained. "As a result, he was able

      to survive. Since we can assume that that was not the

      case with this individual, there must be some other

      reason."

      Geordi was staring intently at the just-uncovered

      other arm. "I think I found it. And

      you're not gonna believe it."

      Worf marched in with the back-up team, Meyer and

      Boyajian. He was all business. "This is the

     


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