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Star Trek: S.C.E. #32: Buying Time [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader/Adobe]
eBook by Robert Greenberger

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eBook Category: Science Fiction
eBook Description: An investigation into a chroniton disturbance leads the da Vinci to a time-travelling Ferengi named Lant--one who is going to the past in order to "speculate" and make a fortune. Now Commander Gomez, Lt. Commander Tev, Lt. Commander Corsi, and Cultural Specialist Abramowitz of the S.C.E. must follow Lant into the past in order to preserve the timelines--and save the future. But what they find may be more than they can handle, as one Tellarite male and three human females are not as welcome on the Ferenginar of fifteen years ago as they might think...

eBook Publisher: Simon & Schuster, Inc./Star Trek, Published: 2003
Fictionwise Release Date: October 2003


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Available eBook Formats [Secure eReader (recommended)/Mobipocket/Microsoft Reader/Adobe - What's this?]: SECURE MOBIPOCKET FORMAT [198 KB], SECURE MICROSOFT READER FORMAT [256 KB] - Requires Microsoft Reader 2.1.1 for PCs, or Microsoft Reader 2.2.2 on Pocket PC 2002 handheld devices. Some older Pocket PCs can be upgraded. Learn More., SECURE EREADER (RECOMMENDED) FORMAT [89 KB], SECURE ADOBE FORMAT [449 KB]
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Microsoft Reader ISBN, Adobe Acrobat Reader ISBN, MobiPocket Reader ISBN, eReader (recommended) ISBN: 0743476085


Chapter 1

No sooner had Susan Haznedl's head hit her hard pillow than the door to her cabin swooshed open. Dantas Falcão, her roommate and the ship's new medical technician, entered their small cabin, shook her mane of dark brown hair, and began unzipping her duty jacket before she even cleared the frame.

"What a shift." Falcão grinned at her new friend, showing nearly perfect white teeth set against olive skin. Haznedl sighed, since all she wanted was some sleep. Clearly her roommate was too energetic to let that happen. Propping herself on an elbow, she made a face that told Falcão to elaborate on her statement.

"Starfleet may think they're done with the refit," she said, slipping into her nightclothes. "But we're constantly recalibrating the medical sensors, so something's wrong."

The U.S.S. da Vinci had been nearly destroyed a few months previously and had been only recently returned to active duty. Half the crew was lost in the terrifying hours trapped within a gas giant star, and both Falcão and Haznedl were among the replacement crew. Haznedl had had roommates on her previous posting, the U.S.S. Burbank, but none had Falcão's excitability.

"At least I've gotten to meet more of the crew," Falcão continued, brushing her shoulder-length hair. "Dr. Lense insisted on fresh medical workups for everyone, to keep the databases current. We'll be done by tomorrow, I figure. Hey, let me ask you, have you been able to get the story on Bart Faulwell?"

Haznedl blinked. "I've talked to him in the mess a couple of times. Seems like a good guy, very hard-working. Why?"

"I find him very attractive," her roommate replied.

"Songmin tells me that Bart's been in a long-term relationship with an officer on Starbase 92 for quite some time, so you're out of luck." Haznedl was referring to the alpha shift conn officer, Songmin Wong, whom she sat next to on the bridge, and who had been on the ship since the Dominion War. He had proven a useful source of shipboard gossip. "Do you like older men?"

Falcão plopped herself at the foot of Haznedl's bed, causing the ops officer to groan inwardly. She liked Falcão, she did, but wasn't up for a lot of girl talk right now. Sickbay was not the only area experiencing shakedown concerns. She thought ops was acting sluggishly and had spent her entire shift tracing each circuit to find the problem, with little success.

"I like all kinds of people, truth to tell. Well, good for Bart," she said and then seemed thoughtful for a moment. "What about Sabrina Simon?"

Haznedl rolled her eyes and knew it was going to be a long night.

* * *

The following morning, Haznedl was once again concentrating on the operations diagnostic. According to the tricorder, the console was operating within Starfleet specs, but instinctively she knew that something was wrong when they left the Sol system a week ago. She tapped some controls and focused the tricorder on a particular junction grid. A-ha, she thought. There was something amiss -- one of the isolinear chips was in danger of burning out, causing relay signals to intermittently die out before completing their connection.

Tev, their new second officer, was pacing the rear of the bridge, watching the alpha shift go about their business. Tellarites had a reputation for being arrogant and blustery, but Haznedl had served with a few in her time, and none fit that stereotype. Tev, however, more than made up for that. He always seemed to know one thing more than the station officer, and didn't hesitate to share that knowledge. True, those bits of knowledge had come in handy; she just didn't want to acknowledge it to his face. On the one hand, she knew he, like Haznedl and Falcão and the other replacement crew, was just trying to fit in, but on the other, he was too smug for his own good.

At tactical, Anthony Shabalala was frowning at an incoming signal. He toggled a control and beckoned to Tev.

"We have a signal from Starfleet. I've already alerted Captain Gold," he said crisply.

"Very good," Tev said, his voice deep and mellow. He always sounded like that, but managed to slip in a superior tone whenever possible. "He and Commander Gomez should be en route, so he can take it in the ready room."

"I've already routed it there, sir," Shabalala said.

"Of course you have," Tev said. "Carry on."

Shabalala and Haznedl exchanged looks and brief smirks before Tev, now taking the center seat, could see either of them, at which point they put their poker faces back on.

Moments later, Gold and Gomez entered the bridge and immediately went to the ready room together. They were in there for several minutes, and Haznedl went back to focusing on her repairs. The faulty chip had been replaced, and now she was tracing other circuits.

Finally, the captain reentered the bridge. "I'd like to see the S.C.E. staff in the conference room, Tev," Gold said, then turned to the fore of the bridge. "Wong, set course for Ludugia, warp five."

"Yes, sir," Wong said. That got a pleased nod from the captain and then he was gone, headed to the observation lounge.

"That's not far from Ferengi space," Wong said.

"Yeah, it is," Haznedl replied. "Wonder if this is one of their scams."

"Hey, not all Ferengi run scams, you know."

Haznedl grinned. "How would you know?"

"Well, let's just say I've come across a few lately," Wong said, a gleam in his eyes.

* * *

Minutes later, Gold took his place at the head of the curved meeting table. To his right sat Sonya Gomez, to his left, Tev. Dr. Elizabeth Lense, Domenica Corsi, Fabian Stevens, Carol Abramowitz, and Soloman filled out the sides of the table, with P8 Blue in her specially modified chair opposite Gold. To the captain, the odd part was expecting the late Kieran Duffy to be on his left and seeing Tev's porcine features instead. He chastised himself for not moving past Galvan VI where Duffy and half the rest of his crew met their deaths -- it wasn't fair, especially to Tev. Rachel, his loving wife, had told him it would take time. She just never said how much time.

"We've gotten a signal from Starbase 9," the captain said once everyone was settled. "Commander Uthlonicam reports complaints from several trading ships regarding navigational hazards near the asteroid belt in the Ludugia system. According to her long-range sensors, they're chroniton particles."

Gomez's expression immediately deepened into a frown, the lines marking her normally smooth skin. Gold could tell just about everyone around the table stiffened at the mention of chroniton particles. Despite the rise of time-travel incidents over the last century, few seemed comfortable with the problems and paradoxes these opportunities presented. In fact, he had hoped to have nothing to do with time travel during the remainder of his career.

"Based on her readings, Starfleet was able to match their frequency to the waves encountered by the first starship to make contact with the Guardian of Forever. We're being asked to find a way to the chroniton source."

"You do understand what it means if a second Guardian is discovered?" Tev's expression was expectant, his dark, sunken eyes agleam.

All Starfleet personnel knew of the ancient Guardian, found over a century earlier, a device with artificial intelligence that could enable people to travel anywhere in the past. Given the problems it could cause should immoral people make use of the device, it remained one of the most carefully guarded items within the Federation. Unlike that object, this one was in a busy sector of space, near highly traveled spacelanes. Gold could only imagine what would happen should it prove to be true -- the political fallout would be intense as well as the belief that if there were two, there might be more.

Tev interrupted his train of thought. "If I recall, the starship managed to enter orbit despite the temporal waves."

"Yes," Gold replied. "But these seem to be harsher and can pierce standard shielding. It's a navigational nightmare." The captain looked around the table. "We're a day out of the system, so until we learn more, everyone else can relax. I wouldn't stop your tournament, Doctor." To help the crew better integrate given the large percentage of newcomers, Lense had organized a board game tournament that had begun only a week earlier, shortly after their Venus mission.

"Well," Gomez said with a smile, something the captain had seen all too rarely since Duffy died, "I was about to trounce Bart. Permission to make two moves?"

"In your dreams, Commander," Faulwell said with a grin. "I'm just lulling you into a true sense of security."

"Then you're doing a very good job," Gomez dead-panned.

Gold added, "And you know Temporal Investigations has already caught wind of this." There were animated winces indicating the almost universal dislike of that particular division of Starfleet.

"Anything else we need to know?" Corsi asked.

Gomez said, "We won't be that far from the Ferengi Alliance. I'm sure there's a Ferengi or six who'll think this is a great business opportunity."

Copyright © 2003 by Paramount Pictures


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