STAR TREK - VOY - Homecoming, Book Two - The Farther Shore

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TORRES STOOD AND LOOKED
AT THE CREATURE FOR
A LONG TIME.
Doubtless, had a full-blooded Klingon killed it, he or she would be whooping and dancing in triumph.
She felt no sense of giddy pleasure. She actually felt sick to her stomach at what she had just done, even
though she had been fighting for her life. Still and harmless in death, thegrikshak looked beautiful to
her. It was only doing what instinct told it to do—find food and stay alive, just as she was.
Slowly, she walked up to the creature and, on impulse, dropped down beside it and placed a hand on its
bloody head.
“I thank the spirit of thegrikshak ,” she said aloud, feeling that what she was doing was both
foolish and appropriate. “I will use its flesh for sustenance, and its hide as protection from the
elements.”
She would need a sharp stone to cut it open. ...
Based upon STAR TREK®
created by Gene Roddenberry
and STAR TREK: VOYAGER
created by Rick Berman & MichaelPiller
& Teri Taylor
POCKET BOOKS
New York London Toronto Sydney Singapore
The sale of this book without its cover is unauthorized. If you purchased this book without a cover, you
should be aware that it was reported to the publisher as “unsold and destroyed.” Neither the author nor
the publisher has received payment for the sale of this “stripped book.”
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author’s
imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons living or dead
is entirely coincidental.
AnOriginal Publication of POCKET BOOKS
POCKETBOOKS,a divisionofSimon& Schuster, Inc. 1230Avenueof the Americas, New York,
NY 10020
Copyright © 2003 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
STAR TREK is a Registered Trademark of Paramount Pictures.
This book is published by Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., under exclusive license
from Paramount Pictures.
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
ISBN: 0-7434-6755-8
First Pocket Books paperback edition July 2003
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
POCKET and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Manufactured in the United States of America
For information regarding special discounts for bulk purchases, please contact Simon & Schuster
Special Sales at 1-800-456-6798 orbusiness@simonandschuster.com .
This book is humbly dedicated
to theColumbiaSeven:
Rick Husband
William McCool
ttan Ramon
David Brown
Laurel Clark
Michael Anderson
Kalpana Chawla
We mourn you and salute you.
May your spirits dance with the stars.
Now the laborer’s day is o’er;
Now the battle day is past;
Now upon the farther shore
Lands the voyager at last.
HYMN,” JOHN ELLERTON
Contents
Prologue.7
Chapter 1.8
Chapter 2.11
Chapter 3.16
Chapter 4.20
Chapter 5.25
Chapter 6.30
Chapter 7.33
Chapter 8.38
Chapter 9.42
Chapter 10.46
Chapter 11.50
Chapter 12.53
Chapter 13.57
Chapter 14.61
Chapter 15.64
Chapter 16.67
Chapter 17.71
Chapter 18.74
Chapter 19.77
Chapter 20.80
Chapter 21.84
Chapter 22.87
Chapter 23.91
Chapter 24.95
About the Author99
About the e-Book.100
Prologue
Age Twenty-one
She graduates at the top of her class, and she has learned more from the Academy than anyone
could have suspected.
She has learned how to feign, to imitate the behavior of others, to blend in. She has been elected head of
her class, and students and teachers alike often express their admiration for her intelligence, her
leadership. She has learned when to laugh and when to express sympathy, who to cultivate and who to
avoid, and what exactly to do to get ahead with every person who crosses her path. She is a master at
finding and exploiting weakness, at uncovering secrets, at telling people what they want to hear and
getting them to do what she wants them to do.
Her father is killed a few years later, by a Borg[2]attack at Wolf 359. She and her mother appear
stoic at the funeral, but she knows that inside, her mother burns with the same fierce, hot joy that
the girl does. At one point, she turns to her mother, and recognizes the glee, swiftly hidden, in her
mother’s blue eyes.
She understands that the massacre is a tragedy, that many are suffering from the loss of people they
loved. But she cannot feel anything but relief and savage pleasure. That, and rage and hatred, are her
limited palette of emotions, and the pictures she can paint with them are dark and clear.
At this moment, celebrating her father’s death while wearing a mask of sorrow, she experiences another
emotion: gratitude toward the cybernetic monsters who have finally done what she has longed to do all
her life.
Chapter 1
THE WATER WAS hardly inviting. Its surface was coated with some kind of algae and it smelled faintly
of decay. Nonetheless, B’Elanna Torres scooped up the water with her hands and drank deeply.
It had been almost a week since she had first stepped out on trembling legs into the wilderness of
Boreth. Her first instinct had been to wash off the sticky, foul-smelling combination of ash and blood that
coated her body. However, it had taken her some time to find water, and by then, she had changed her
mind.
The coating that the priestesses had smeared all over her naked body as part of her ordeal had distinct
and important advantages as well as disadvantages. The vile stuff prevented insects from bothering her,
and in this tropical climate, they were thick as, well, flies. It also helped protect her skin from the
merciless rays of the[4]sun, and even provided a sort of insulation during the chillier night. And when she
walked right past a grazingmaasklak , an unexpected encounter that had startled them both, she realized
that it helped mask her scent as well.
She imagined rolling in feces would produce a similar effect, and frankly, she wasn’t sure that she
wouldn’t prefer the latter. It had taken nearly two days before her nose had become inured to her own
reek. But here in this place, she realized she needed every edge she could find.
B’Elanna hadn’t been overly worried at first. Starfleet was quite thorough in training its cadets to handle
emergency situations, and she had certainly had enough experience thinking on her feet in the seven years
she’d spent onVoyager. But Starfleet had also tended to assume that when one crash-landed on an
inhospitable planet, one would usually have one’s emergency medical kit, phasers, and so on. At the very
least, they’d assumed one would have clothes.
B’Elanna had nothing but her own two hands and her wit.
One of the first things she had done was to find water. She dimly remembered something about a few of
Boreth’s plants that weren’t deadly, and began to forage berries, fruits, and edible tubers and roots.
After about day two, she’d overcome her repugnance sufficiently to add insects to her diet. Making fire
was easy—she’d always had a knack for it and teased Chakotay about it mercilessly.
She had two goals that were occasionally in conflict with one another. The first was to simply stay alive
and[5]as healthy as was possible given the circumstances. The second was to keep moving in the
direction her mother had indicated on the map. Both were challenging, but the latter more so. With no
compass and a complete un-familiarity with the terrain and even the stars that speckled the sky that
arched over this world, Torres had very little frame of reference.
The map had indicated thatMiralwould be waiting for her somewhere to the northeast of the temple.
Torres had wasted two precious days traveling in the wrong direction before she remembered that
Boreth’s sun rose in the south and traveled north during the day. Upon realizing her mistake, B’Elanna
Torres raged with a fury that would have impressed Logt, had she been witness to it.
Her redundant organs were serving her well during this time of extreme physical duress. She recalled the
conversation she had with the Doctor, when he had argued as persuasively as he was capable of doing in
favor of the extra lung and other organs littleMiralwould have. Humans would have had a very difficult
time of this, and even she, half-human as she was, fell into exhausted slumber at the end of every day.
Her feet started to blister at the end of the second day. She rubbed them with mud to soothe them and
started to think about what she could use to create makeshift shoes. Her first try, wrapping large leaves
around them, was a complete failure. A half-hour’s worth of walking on not-very-rough terrain shredded
them. She realized that she was going to need something sturdier than plants.
She was also going to need something more substantial to eat than roots and grubs. Torres began
walking at[6]first light and didn’t stop until dusk, when she would search for shelter and make a fire. She
was burning calories like mad and was starting to feel weak and shaky.
Reluctantly, she came to the conclusion that she would need to make a weapon. Boreth was rich with all
kinds of wildlife. A singlemaasklak would provide both food and clothing. It was a logical deduction, but
the thought made her feel even sicker. Torres took no pleasure in killing. She fought when she had to,
and had killed in self-defense more than once, but that was a long way from deliberately setting out to
take a life, even an animal’s life. She imagined that for most Klingons who undertook the Challenge of
Spirit, coming to grips with killing an animal was probably the least of their worries. But it disturbed her
greatly.
She’d talked to Chakotay once about hunting, back in the early days when she was first getting to know
him. He was, as she ought to have expected, quite philosophical about the whole thing. He seemed to
have no qualms about it in theory or in practice, if there was a need.
“But you’re a vegetarian,” she had pointed out.
“I have access to a replicator,” he had countered. “I don’t need to go out and hunt my meals.”
“But you would if you had to?”
“Absolutely.”
“Without batting an eye.”
He’d smiled then, indulgently. “Hardly. My people have elaborate rituals to prepare for hunting. We
make ourselves worthy of success in the hunt by purifying our minds and body through meditation and
bathing.[7]We call on the spirits of the animals we are about to kill, asking permission to take what we
need. And when we do make a kill, we thank the creature’s spirit. Nothing is wasted, not bone or sinew
or flesh or horn or hide. It is all viewed as a gift from the animal, and it is part of the cycle. But in today’s
world, there’s no need to take a life when we can program the replicator for everything from stuffed
mushrooms to chocolate cake.”
She supposed he had a point, and had thought no more about it, even as she often asked the replicator
for a thick T-bone steak, extra rare. Tom liked his steaks medium, with a baked potato and—
Just that quickly, Torres was crying. She had deliberately pushed thoughts of her husband and child to
the back of her mind when they arose, because she instinctively knew she couldn’t spare the energy of
missing Tom andMiral.There had only been a handful of days over the last seven years when she had not
seen Tom. He was a fixture in her life even before they had gotten married, and she had carriedMiral
within her, brought her forth into this universe, and now keenly missed feeling the child nursing in her
arms. By her count,Miralwas nine weeks old today. Nine weeks. Torres suddenly realized she had been
away for two-thirds of her daughter’s entire life.
She had really had no choice but to leave them behind and embark on the Challenge. Intellectually she
knew that, and even in her heart, she knew that. But a part of her, the part that was wife and mother,
deeply mourned the abrupt severance. The tears were hot as they trickled down her face, and B’Elanna
knew they[8]were making pale furrows in the gray ash that was her mask.
At least they were safe. Tom was probably with Harry Kim right now, relaxing and joking, whileMiral
slept peacefully in her nursery. The Doctor, no doubt, would be making a sarcastic comment or two, but
she knew better than most the depth of tenderness of which the hologram was capable. He adoredMiral,
and no child could have a better godfather.
She cursed. She was wasting precious water on these stupid tears. Torres gulped and wiped at her eyes,
then cursed again as the motion got dirt in them and they stung.
It was only then that she heard thegrikshak.
Its growl was low, soft, and as menacing as anything she had ever heard. Her thoughts focused to
laser-sharp clarity. All distracting images of husband and child fled before the more urgent need to be
alert and stay alive.
She froze, remembering just in time that movement antagonized the creature. Only her eyes darted
rapidly about, trying to locate it. There—in the tall blue grasses. Its azure coat was the perfect
camouflage, but its constant low growl revealed where it had hidden itself.
She had only been permitted a few hours to read up on the flora and fauna of Boreth, but one thing had
stuck in her mind. Thegrikshak was the most dangerous predator on the planet. It had little fear of
humanoids, it had more teeth than any self-respecting creature ought to, and it was really, really big.
They faced each other, the animal and the[9]half-Klingon. Torres mentally kicked herself. She knew
there weregrikshaks on this continent. She ought to have fabricated weapons on day one. Instead, she’d
almost been killed because she’d succumbed to maudlin recollection. At once, she amended that thought.
She might yet be killed.
She had caught a break in that thisgrikshak was a juvenile. Its coat was still bright blue, not the
silver-blue of a mature female, and it was barely the size of Earth’s grizzly. Its teeth, bared in challenge,
were only as large as her hand. A black, wet nose moved as it snuffled the air. It seemed confused that it
couldn’t scent her. Torres figured that her lack of smell was the only reason she was still alive; the thing
was still trying to determine what she was.
Her gaze flickered to the earth. By her foot were stones a little bigger than her hand. They would make
pathetic weapons, but they were the only ones she had. She’d have to time it just right. Torres fixed in
her mind the exact position of each stone, even as she returned her gaze to meet that of the creature.
It crooned and cocked its head, still trying to figure out what this scentless, still thing in its path was.
At that moment, Torres squatted, grabbed three stones, and dove for a nearby tree. She scrambled up
the rough trunk as fast as her feet and hands would take her. Her movement broke the spell that had kept
thegrikshak immobile and it charged, its roar nearly shattering her eardrums. Long blue-black claws tore
the earth where she had been standing a fraction of a second earlier, and it whirled with shocking speed
to charge the tree.
[10]Hanging on determinedly to the shaking branches, Torres took aim and threw the first stone. It was
a perfect blow, catching the creature between its large eyes. She heard a crunch. The animal staggered,
but did not fall. Torres saw a welt begin to rise and knew she’d managed to fracture the skull. Again she
threw with all her strength, willing the stone to strike home. This one struck thegrikshak’s right eye. It
shrieked in agony, bringing a forepaw up to its face in a very human gesture.
She had only one stone left. She had to make it count. The animal was bellowing, its sharp-toothed
mouth wide open. Torres summoned all her courage, dropped from the branches to the earth, and ran
toward the creature. She shoved the stone deep into its open gullet and snatched her hand back before
those dreadful teeth could clamp down and sever her arm.
She wasn’t quick enough to avoid a glancing blow from thegrikshak’s huge forepaw, though, and cried
out as she felt the white-hot pain of claws scraping her back. She began to run as fast as her legs would
carry her through the tall grass, feeling blood trickle down her back and legs, knowing that the scent was
enraging the beast.
It gave chase, but in silence. The only sound was the crashing of the vegetation it trampled in its path.
Torres wasn’t stupid enough to slow down and look over her shoulder. She ran for all she was worth,
pumping her legs faster than she had ever done before, willing her feet to find sure footholds and not slip.
Three lungs gulping air filled her blood with oxygen, and adrenaline lent extra speed.
After a couple of minutes she realized she no longer[11]heard any sound at all behind her. She kept
running for another moment or two, then decided to risk a backward glance.
There was no sign of thegrikshak.
Torres slowed and gasped for breath, glancing around for any trace of it circling to approach from
another direction. She saw nothing.
Her breathing slowed. Carefully, grabbing up more stones as she saw them, she retraced her steps. She
tensed as she heard a thrashing sound up ahead, but kept moving.
Thegrikshak flailed frantically on the earth, churning up huge clumps of bushes and grass in its death
throes. Its mouth was open and its forepaws clawed its own face to ribbons as it tried futilely to extricate
the stone Torres had shoved deep into its trachea. The struggle reached a crescendo and then the
massive animal lay on the earth, shuddering only slightly, until with one final twitch, it lay still. Blood and
saliva slowly trickled from its sharp-toothed mouth.
Torres stood and looked at it for a long time. Doubtless had a full-blooded Klingon killed the creature,
he or she would be whooping and dancing in triumph. She felt no sense of giddy pleasure. She actually
felt sick to her stomach at what she had just done, even though she had been fighting for her life. Still and
harmless in death, thegrikshak looked beautiful to her. It was only doing what instinct told it to do—find
food and stay alive, just as she was.
Slowly, she walked up to the creature, and on impulse, dropped down beside it and placed a hand on its
bloody head.
[12]“I thank the spirit of thegrikshak,” she said aloud, feeling that what she was doing was both foolish
and appropriate. “I will use its flesh for sustenance, and its hide as protection from the elements.”
She would need a sharp stone to cut it open.
Chapter 2
LIBBY WEBBER was beginning to think her plan wouldn’t work.
It had seemed so easy, so foolproof. Each step would lead naturally to the next, and the final step would
get her what she wanted. Except it just wasn’t working out that way.
She’d done her research on Trevor Blake. The first thing she noticed while perusing his file was how
ordinary he looked. There was almost nothing at all distinctive about him. He was Caucasian, age
thirty-seven, of average height and weight. His features weren’t homely, but neither were they handsome.
His profile stated that his eyes were hazel, but she couldn’t really name the color even though she’d
intently scrutinized the image. His hair was ... brown. Not dark brown, or light brown, or walnut or
mahogany or even mousy[14]brown. Just plain brown. He wore nondescript civilian clothing. He was
completely, utterly overlookable. Which, she mused, would ironically make him the perfect spy, had his
temperament been suitable.
But it was clear from the moment she began reading his bio that he was destined for science. He
suddenly seemed much less ordinary to her as she read his list of accomplishments. He’d been breaking
摘要:

TORRESSTOODANDLOOKEDATTHECREATUREFORALONGTIME. Doubtless,hadafull-bloodedKlingonkilledit,heorshewouldbewhoopinganddancingintriumph.Shefeltnosenseofgiddypleasure.Sheactuallyfeltsicktoherstomachatwhatshehadjustdone,eventhoughshehadbeenfightingforherlife.Stillandharmlessindeath,thegrikshaklookedbeautif...

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