A wildness raged within Captain Mackenzie Calhoun, one that
was often absent from the other officers of Starfleet. But, as he walked the bridge
of his command, the USS Excalibur, he felt grateful for its presence inside him,
burning away at the fear he felt at facing down the cloaked Romulan Bird of Prey
that followed them out there in the void of space.
Whist the Excalibur had gotten the drop on their Romulan friends
and had achieved a glancing blow on one of their warp nacelles, their opponents
had managed to cloak before any damage that might have disabled their vessel
could be dealt. Now Calhoun and his crew were on red alert, looking for any
sign of the Romulans, and whatever it was that they were so desperate to defend.
Calhoun was used to knowing where an enemy was. In his
youth, when he’d fought the Danteri for the control of his homeworld of Xenex, knowing
the movements of his enemies had been almost second nature to him. Now, after
being cooped up for so long in the walls of Starfleet Headquarters on Earth, Calhoun’s
senses had dulled, leaving him with only the sensors of the Ambassador Class he
captained to find his cloaked opponent.
But Mackenzie Calhoun had a plan.
“Lieutenant MacHenry” Calhoun called to the man slumped in
the seat by the navigation console, “figure out which direction those Romulan...”
He glanced quickly over to his science officer Solleta before refocusing his
attention onto MacHenry “individuals might have vectored in from.” MacHenry sat
straight up in his chair and started his calculations as soon as the last words
left Calhoun’s mouth, hands dancing across the controls almost too fast for his
human physiology to handle.
He turned back to his science officer “Lieutenant Soletta,
scan for any ion leaks and filter by the length of particle decay.”
“Aye captain!” Soletta turned to her console so quickly her
knifelike ears seemed to cut lines out of the air around them.
Finally, Calhoun turned around to take in the sight of the
veritable living mountain stationed behind him “Lieutenant Kebron, reload
photon torpedoes, recharge phaser banks and prepare to fire on my mark.”
“Yes, captain” came the rumble of Zack Kebron’s voice and
his stone fingers could soon be heard crashing against the control panel, carrying
out Calhoun’s commands.
Now waiting for results was all Calhoun and his crew had
left. His hand’s grip tightened on the armrests of his chair as the time
dragged on, watching each speck of starlight for any hint of movement across their
surfaces. But the bridge’s viewscreen remained empty, aside from the few pieces
of debris left over from the wound they’d already dealt the bird of prey, and
Calhoun’s anxieties over the Romulan’s movements only grew.
A beep of conformation came from Machenry’s console as his
final calculations came in and the entire bridge crew, aside from Lieutenant’s
Soletta and Kebron, turned expectantly towards him.
“Most probable vector 90˚ to starboard, 220˚ to keel.”
MacHenry started to slide back into his chair, task completed.
“Good work Lieutenant, take us to the those coordinates and follow
their trajectory, one-quarter impulse.” Barked Calhoun and MacHenry sprang back
into action in a way that might have seemed comical in safer circumstances.
As soon as the Excalibur began to move Soletta’s console leapt to
life “Captain, detecting faint readings of an ion trail coming from about 180˚ to
port.”
Calhoun smiled “Good work Lieutenant. Kebron, take aim a couple of
degrees above the coordinates that Lieutenant Solleta has so kindly provided
for us.”
“Yes, sir.” Zack said, “targeting now in place.”
“Then fire away.” Calhoun gave the order and watched on as the
phaser fire lit up the outline of the cloaked Romulan ship, giving him and his
crew the perfect view as the photon torpedo smashed its way through the vessel’s
already damaged warp nacelle.
“Good work people” called Calhoun, smile widening at the now very full
view screen, “Comms, send a message to Starfleet command about our little Romulan
friends here, MacHenry, keep us on course, let’s find whatever it was they were
so keen to keep us away from.”