Tag: Star Trek: Enterprise

  • Edge of Heaven – Epilogue: Paths

    When she woke, he was still asleep. The sun was just coming up. She carefully sat up and left the bed, not wanting to wake him. She thought he would remain asleep as she dressed, but he stirred, and his eyes fluttered open as she was pulling on her shoes.

    “Good morning,” he said.

    She timidly turned to him. “Good morning,” she said. “I didn’t want to wake you, you looked to be sleeping so well.”

    “Fair enough.” He pushed himself to a sitting position and leaned back against the headboard. “I’m glad I woke up. I would have hated it if I’d missed you. I probably wouldn’t have gotten the opportunity to say goodbye. And you would have left, and then I would have never seen you again, I suppose.”

    “I don’t know if you could say that,” she said. “We’re both in Starfleet. There’s a chance our paths could cross again.”

    He nodded. “Possibly.”

    “Possibly.” She sat on the bed beside him. “We happened to find each other this time,” she added.

    Chakotay stroked Kathryn Janeway’s face and kissed her one last time. She rose from the bed, gathered the last of her things and left him.

    xxx

    Thirteen years later, Evan Danielle Janeway met her father for the first time. She was sitting in her mother’s quarters aboard the USS Voyager and had already been attempting to come to terms with everything that had happened during the past week. On top of being stranded in the Delta Quadrant, 70,000 light years away from home, she’d just learned that Chakotay, a Maquis rebel leader, was her father. At least she would have plenty of time to get to know him.

    xxx

    Kyle Hicks turned away from the large timeline display and looked at Daniels. “So this is they way it was supposed to be for her?” he asked. “It seems like her childhood was so much happier in the other line.”

    Daniels nodded. “Maybe,” he said, “but it was never supposed to happen that way. The other line was completely wrong: Chakotay was never supposed to start out as Kathryn Janeway’s first officer. Dani wasn’t supposed to have a romantic relationship with Will Riker and definitely not with Marac Dukat, gods no.”

    Daniels stepped up to Kyle’s side. “You’re going to have to separate yourself from what you’ve come to think of as your reality,” he said. “Working for the Temporal Police is hard, even more for you since you’re not from this century. Your life as you lived it didn’t happen. Neither did your friendship with Dani.”

    Kyle nodded. It would be difficult, be he would need to begin this separation process if he wanted to succeed.

    “Do you want to see what happened in her life for the correct timeline?” Daniels asked.

    Kyle looked at Daniels, his interest rising, and Daniels gestured to another large timeline panel next to them.

  • Edge of Heaven – Chapter 17. We’ll Always Have Risa (or Will We?)

    Archer and Dani emerged from his ready room.

    “I’ve taken the liberty of asking Commander Tucker to join us,” Reed said.

    “What’s the problem?” Archer asked, walking over to Reed’s station.

    “We’re having trouble balancing the warp field,” Reed said.

    Archer studied Reed’s computer monitor. “Looks fine to me.”

    “It’s odd,” Reed said. “It’ll be stable one moment, and then, for no reason, it’ll go slightly out of alignment.”

    “What are you guys doing to my engines?” Tucker asked, stepping from the turbolift onto the bridge.

    “The auto-stabilizers aren’t functioning properly,” T’Pol said.

    “The computer ran its last diagnostic on them less than 10 minutes ago,” Tucker said. “They look fine.”

    “Well they’re not,” Reed said. “We’ve had to realign the field a dozen times over the last hour.”

    “Load torpedoes, and stand by all weapons,” Archer said, alarm rising in his voice. “Deploy the beacons, Travis. Modify the viewscreen, and aim the beacons aft.”

    The viewscreen displayed six green blobs in formation just beyond the nacelles.

    “Swing them down slowly,” Archer instructed. Another six blobs came into view on the screen.

    “It looks like we’re in a swarm of cloaked bees,” Trip observed.

    “Charge the phase cannons,” Archer said.

    “We’re being hailed,” Hoshi announced.

    “Put it through,” Archer said.

    Silik’s bumpy face appeared on the viewscreen. “I wouldn’t advise using your weapons, Jonathan,” Silik warned. “Perhaps if we decloak, you’ll understand why.” Silik cut the transmission from his end. The image that replaced him was a view of Enterprise’s hull surrounded by dozens of pods.

    On Archer’s order, Hoshi suspended the transmission with Silik. Archer turned to Reed. “Malcolm?” he said, seeking confirmation.

    “They’re all armed with high-yield particle weapons, sir,” Reed reported.

    “How many could you take out?” Archer asked.

    “Before they could open fire?” Malcolm asked. “Not enough sir.”

    Archer nodded at Hoshi, who resumed the transmission with Silik.

    “One of my ships is approaching your starboard docking port,” Silik said. “I’d like Danielle Janeway to board it immediately.”

    Archer and Dani looked at each other before turning back to the viewscreen. Of all the things they’d anticipated coming out of Silik’s mouth, that hadn’t been one of them. “What do you want with her?” Archer demanded.

    Silik ignored Archer’s question. “You have five minutes,” he said. “If you don’t comply, I have permission to destroy Enterprise.”

    “How do I know you won’t destroy Enterprise either way?” Archer asked.

    “You have my word, Captain,” Silik said. “And you also have four and a half minutes left.” He ended the transmission.

    Dani looked at Archer briefly before turning and walking toward the turbo lift. She hadn’t said a word, but Archer, knowing the kind of person she was, already knew what she had in mind.

    “Dani—where are you going?” he asked, following her.

    “You heard what he said,” Dani said. “If I don’t go over there, he destroys Enterprise.”

    “So it’s as simple as that?” Archer asked. “You’re just going to go over there, and everything will be made perfect.”

    “That’s the plan,” Dani said. The lift doors opened , and she stepped in. Archer was right behind her.

    “You don’t know what he wants with you,” Archer said as the turbolift doors closed behind him.

    “I have an idea,” Dani said.

    “He could kill you,” Archer said.

    “I’m not supposed to be here anyway, Jon,” Dani said. “If I die, it’s not going to make a difference.”

    “Damn it, it’ll make a difference to me!” Archer said. “I can’t just let you go over there and commit what basically amounts to suicide.”

    “Jon, it’s imperative that your mission continue,” Dani said. “I can’t tell you why – one day, it’ll make sense. But you can’t die, and Enterprise can’t be destroyed without serious ramifications to the future of Starfleet. Everything makes so much sense now.” Her eyes welled with tears. “It was never going to be my time to go back home.”

    Archer shook his head. “Don’t say that.”

    “It’s my destiny, Jon.”

    “No!”

    The turbolift came to a halt, and the doors opened. “What if you go over there, and he kills us anyway?” Archer asked. “Have you thought of that? Then you will have sacrificed yourself for nothing.”

    Dani paused to consider Archer’s point, but only briefly. “If I don’t go over, then it’s certain death for you, Enterprise, and everything I’ve ever known,” she said. “If that happens, I won’t have anything to go back to anyway.”

    Dani stepped out of the turbo lift and into the corridor. Archer stepped out with her.

    “There’s another way,” Archer insisted. “There has to be.”

    “Tell Kyle to tell my parents what happened,” Dani said.

    “I will.” It was Kyle who spoke. Archer and Dani turned to see him rushing toward them. “Trip commed me and told me what was happening.”

    “Don’t try to talk me out of this, Kyle,” Dani said. “It feels like it’s something I have to do.”

    “I know,” Kyle said. “When Trip told me Silik wanted you, I figured it had to have something to do with your original mission from the 24th Century. And it makes sense to try to do whatever you can to save Enterprise.”

    After a brief pause, he said, “I’m sorry. I’m so sorry, Dani…for Dukat.”

    “No, Kyle, don’t apologize,” Dani said. “You had no way of knowing. You were trying to protect me.”

    She pulled him to her and hugged him. “Good luck,” he told her as he let her go.

    When Dani turned to Archer, he quickly pulled her into his arms and crushed his lips against hers.

    “We’ll always have Risa,” Dani whispered to him before turning and walking toward the airlock. It took every ounce of will that she could muster to raise her hand to the panel on the wall and open the door leading to the airlock. It was like opening the door to her own casket, intending to climb in.

    The door opened, and Dani resisted the urge to look back at Archer and Kyle before stepping through. Once she was inside the airlock chamber, she could see the Suliban pod that had been sent for her just beyond the outer airlock doors. She hesitated momentarily as she contemplated what she was about to do. Then, she shut off her thoughts, opened the outer airlock, and stepped into her destiny, waiting for her in the form of the Suliban pod.

    In the Suliban pod, Dani found that the vehicle was unmanned and pre-programmed to fly to Silik’s ship. The controls had been locked down, but Dani had had time to study Suliban technology after she’d first arrived on Enterprise. That knowledge she’d gleaned, combined with what information she knew from studying them in the 24th Century, enabled her to hack into the computer.

    Once she actually had access to the computer, it didn’t take her long to see that the system wasn’t very sophisticated at all. She had access to weapons, communications, engines…she was faced with three courses of action.

    She could try to run, but then Enterprise would be left to deal with the Suliban, and they would likely be destroyed.

    She could also try fighting the Suliban herself. It wasn’t a particularly attractive notion, but it certainly sounded better than delivering herself into certain death at the hands of the Suliban. Her sacrifice would ultimately be in vain, though. After she was dead, Suliban would surely destroy Enterprise in this scenario, too.

    Trying to communicate with the Suliban likely wouldn’t get her far, so that left her with one viable and effective option. Dani worked quickly as the pod continued to pilot itself towards Silik’s ship.On Enterprise, Kyle and Archer returned to the bridge.

    “Travis,” Archer began, “what’s the status of the Suliban shuttle?”

    “Still on course for Silik’s ship, Captain,” Travis reported.

    Archer desperately scoured his brain for something – anything – that he could do to stop this. But his mind couldn’t produce a solution.

    Kyle stepped up beside Archer. “It’s okay, Captain,” he began. “There’s nothing that any of us can do. There’s nothing we’re supposed to do. This is supposed to happen.”

    Archer turned to Kyle. “How can you say that?” he asked. “Right now, your friend is marching to her death.”

    “Captain, Silik is hailing us,” Hoshi announced.

    “Onscreen,” Archer immediately responded.

    Silik’s face instantly filled the viewscreen at the front of the bridge. Something seemed…off about him.

    “Just what do you think you’re trying to accomplish, Jonathan?” Silk demanded. He was not happy at all.

    Archer shook his head. “I don’t understand.”

    “I’m getting reports from all of our ships that their crews are suddenly becoming violently ill,” Silik seethed. “They’re dying!”

    “I assure you, I have no idea what you’re talking about,” Archer insisted. “We haven’t done anything other than what you’ve demanded.”

    “Captain, the Suliban ships are falling out of warp,” Reed reported.

    Archer, astonished at the incredible turn of luck, looked at Reed. Then he turned to Silik on the viewscreen. Archer didn’t know a whole lot about Suliban physiology, but Silik didn’t look well. The skin on his face looked like it was shriveling up.

    “Silik?” Archer asked.

    Silik looked as if he were about to respond, but instead, he keeled over and fell out of view. The comm line was disrupted, and the image of Silik’s empty seat was replaced by the starfield.

    Archer turned to Kyle, not believing what he’d just witnessed but beginning to comprehend what it all meant. “What happened?” Archer asked.

    “I can’t be totally certain,” Kyle began, “but if I had to guess, I’d say that this is Dani’s work. Maybe she triggered the release of some kind of toxic agent on the Suliban ships. She must’ve somehow sent a command to all the ships.”

    Archer looked to Hoshi. “Can you get her on the comm?”

    “I’ll try,” Hoshi responded.

    Archer turned back to Kyle only to find that he was no longer standing there. His brow knitted in confusion, and he looked around. “What happened to Lt. Hicks?” he asked.

    “Who, sir?” Malcolm asked.

    “Lt. Hicks,” Archer repeated. “Kyle Hicks. He was just standing right here.”

    The bridge crew, confused, looked at one another, wondering why the captain was acting so strangely.

    “Captain, we are the only individuals who have been on the bridge for the last 20 minutes,” T’Pol said. “A ‘Lt. Hicks’ has not entered nor left the bridge.”

    “You’re telling me that you didn’t just see Kyle Hicks standing here beside me not more than five minutes ago?” Archer asked skeptically.

    “Captain, I do not know anyone by the name of Kyle Hicks,” T’Pol said. “Further, I’m not aware of any member of this crew by that name.”

    Archer couldn’t conjure any words. He’d thought that he knew what was going on, but now it was very apparent that he didn’t. Unless…

    “You’re not losing your mind, Captain.”

    Archer whirled around. Daniels was standing behind him. Meanwhile, everyone else around him was frozen in place.

    “Daniels,” Archer said. “Why am I not more surprised to find you standing on my bridge?”

    “You know me too well by now, Captain,” Daniels said with a small grin.

    “What’s going on?” Archer asked. “What happened to Dani?”

    “Let’s just say she completed her mission?” Daniels said.

    “Completed her mission?” Archer repeated. “What the hell does that mean?” He didn’t have the patience for Daniels’s riddles today.

    “She’s safe.”

    Archer watched as Daniels approached. “She went back to her own time,” Archer guessed.

    “What she accomplished here has made a significant impact on your time and hers,” Daniels said. “She’s set the course of history straight.”

    “I’m never going to see her again, am I?” Archer asked.

    “No,” Daniels said, “but it’s not going to matter to you in a few minutes.”

    “Why is that?”

    “Because you won’t remember her.”

    Before Archer could say another word, Daniels disappeared. Archer stood for a moment staring at the the blank space in front of him. Had someone just been standing there? It seemed like someone had been standing there, but there was no one now, and he couldn’t think of anyone who would’ve been standing there or any reason why they would’ve been.

    “Captain?” T’Pol asked, walking towards him. His strange behavior was beginning to concern her. Archer turned to her. “Are you well?”

    Archer nodded cautiously. “I believe so,” he answered. “It’s just that…I could have sworn someone was just standing here.”

    “You just mentioned that you believed a Lt. Hicks was standing beside you moments ago,” T’Pol said.

    “Lt. Hicks?” Archer repeated. “The name sounds familiar, but I don’t believe I know anyone by that name.”

    “Perhaps you were mistaken,” T’Pol offered.

    Archer thought for a moment, then nodded. “I-I guess so.” He walked over to Reed’s work station. “Any sign of any Suliban ships, Mr. Reed?” he asked. They had any encounters with the Suliban in weeks, but Archer couldn’t shake the uneasy feeling he had about them at the moment, like he was expecting them to randomly pop up on their scanners.

    “No, sir,” Reed answered.

    Archer lingered at Malcolm’s station a few moments longer before he was finally satisfied to some degree that they weren’t about to be ambushed by Silik and his troops. He nodded at Reed and returned to the center of his bridge, near his chair. T’Pol continued to watch him closely.

    “Travis, maintain heading and speed…” Archer ordered. Reluctantly, he lowered himself into his chair. His uneasiness was receding, but he still wanted to know what had caused it in the first place. Maybe he would never know. Sometimes, feelings could out of no where for no reason.

  • Edge of Heaven – Chapter 16. She’s All Yours, Captain

    “Reed to Shuttlepod Two,” Reed commed from the bridge.

    Archer here,” said the captain, who was inside Shuttlepod 2 with Dani and Kyle.

    “She’s all yours, Captain,” Reed said. “Good luck.”

    Archer handed phase pistols to Dani and Kyle. “If Daniels is right, there shouldn’t be more than 20 Suliban for us to deal with,” he said.

    “I’ve heard that one before,” Dani said.

    The shuttle pod launched from Enterprise and flew toward the Suliban cruiser to dock with it. Once the shuttle pod docked, Archer used his scanner to open the doors to the Suliban cruiser.

    “The stun grenade’s on a three-second delay,” Kyle said. He threw it through the opening and into the Suliban cruiser. Five Suliban fell from the corridor ceiling. Kyle, Archer, and Dani climbed out of the shuttle pod and headed down the corridors. It was a running firefight as the group made its way along the corridor. Kyle threw another stun grenade to stop anyone from following them as they entered a control room. Inside the room, the team was confronted with several control panels.

    “Which one?” Dani asked. This all seemed so familiar, yet she knew it wasn’t deja vu that was responsible. She’d been confronted with a similar situation during the mission that had initially landed her on Archer’s ship.

    Archer crossed the room and sat down in front of a set of panels. “Here,” he said. He opened one of the panels and removed the discs. “Go.”

    The team returned to the corridor and found Suliban moving along the floor and ceiling toward them.

    “They’re all around us,” Dani said.

    “Archer to Reed.”

    “Go ahead,” Reed said through the comm.

    “We need some help here,” Archer said.

    “I see them,” Reed said. “You’d better take cover.”

    Dani, Kyle, and Archer ducked behind a corner and braced themselves for whatever it was that Reed was about to throw at the Suliban cruiser. The cruiser rocked with the attack from Enterprise, and an resulting explosion momentarily knocked the Suliban out.

    “Go,” Archer ordered. The team scrambled and made it back inside the shuttle pod just as more Suliban got into the airlock.

    “What’s the problem?” Archer asked.

    “I can’t release the docking clamps,” Kyle said. Everyone looked up at the shuttle pod airlock door. On the other side,Suliban were trying to force their way in.

    “Ignite the thrusters,” Archer instructed. Kyle did as instructed. The shuttle pod trembled but still didn’t break free of the Suliban cruiser. “Go to full power,” Archer said. Kyle increased the thrusters to full power, and after a slight rumble, the shuttle pod finally ripped free.

    “Archer to Mayweather,” Archer said to the comm.

    “We see you, Captain,” Mayweather said over the comm.

    “Set a course backward to the Vulcan ship,” Archer said. “Go to warp four as soon as we’re aboard.”

    “Yes, sir,” Mayweather said.

    xxx

    “It was 10 months ago. He brought me back 10 months,” Archer said. He sat at the desk in his ready room, and T’Pol stood, listening to him convey his experience with Daniels. “But I knew everything I know now. How is that possible?”

    “As I’ve told you,” T’Pol began, “the Vulcan science directorate has concluded that time travel is impossible.”

    “Well good for the Vulcan Science Directorate,” Archer said, rising to his feet and take a few steps toward T’Pol. “Maybe they can tell me how I woke up yesterday knowing exactly where that Suliban ship was or how I suddenly had the ability to construct a quantum beacon to see through its cloak. And while they’re at it, they might as well tell me how I knew where to find those discs.”

    “All valid questions,” T’Pol conceded. “But to conclude that the only answer is that you acquired this information from a dead crewman who transported you back through time is illogical.”

    “Why don’t you give me another explanation?” Archer suggested.

    “I can’t,” T’Pol said.

    “Because there isn’t one. I got a call from Trip, something about inspection pods. It was the exact same call I got the day before they found Klaang. Word for word.”

    “Perhaps you were dreaming.”

    “Possibly, but it certainly is odd that Dani was in my dream and that she remembers experiencing exactly what I experienced without any variation,” Archer said. “Listen – I never thought this was possible, either, but I traveled through time, and I need you to believe me.”

    “Why?” T’Pol asked.

    “Because it’s hard enough trying to fathom all this without having my science officer, a colleague who I trust and rely on, accusing me of being an hallucinating mad man.”

    “I don’t remember accusing you of anything.”

    The chime to the ready room door sounded. “Come in,” Archer beckoned.

    The door slid open, revealing Dani on the other side.

    “I didn’t know you were in a meeting,” Dani said. “l’ll come back later.”

    “That won’t be necessary, Commander,” T’Pol said, making her way to the door. “I was just leaving.” She bid farewell to Archer as she left him alone with Dani, who took T’Pol’s place inside the room.

    As the doors closed behind T’Pol, Archer walked over to Dani.

    “You did it,” Dani said.

    We did it,” Archer corrected her.

    “I feel like I can’t enjoy it because I’m waiting for Daniels to show up at any moment and tell me it’s over for us.”

    “Don’t think like that,” Archer implored. He kissed her.

    “Bridge to Archer,” Reed commed.

    Archer reluctantly parted from Dani and took a few steps over to the comm panel on the wall. “Yes?”

    “We’re getting some strange readings, sir,” Reed reported. “It might not be a bad idea for you to come out here.”

  • Edge of Heaven – Chapter 15. These Dreams

    Dani didn’t remember going to sleep, but when she woke up, she was in her quarters onboard Enterprise again. Had what she’d just experienced in Archer’s bedroom – his bedroom in San Francisco – been real? Or had it only been a dream?

    Archer to Janeway.

    Dani rose from her bed and walked over to the comm unit on the wall. “I’m here, Jon,” she said.

    “This may sound a little strange,” Archer began.

    “I bet it won’t,” Dani said. “I just had a really strange dream, and you were in it…but I don’t think it was a dream.”

    “It wasn’t,” Archer said. “It really happened.”

    Dani looked at the chronometer on the desk. Any minute now, Kyle would be setting their plan in motion to steal the temporal transporter. But after her and Jon’s visit with Daniels, she knew that couldn’t happen. She must prevent Kyle from going through with the plan.

    “Jon, I’ve got to go,” Dani said. “I’ve got to stop Kyle from doing something.”

    “What?”

    “I don’t have time to explain right now. I’ll fill you in as soon as I can.”

    xxx

    “Don’t do it,” Dani said. She’d caught up with Kyle just as he was about to walk into Engineering.

    “Why not?” Kyle asked, turning around to face her. “You can’t tell me you don’t want to go home?”

    “You know I do,” Dani said. “But this isn’t the way to get there.” She stepped closer to him and lowered her voice. “There have been some developments that I think you should know about.”

    Archer had wasted no time summoning his senior officers to the bridge and setting his own plan into motion.

    “The circuitry in there isn’t compatible with our technology,” Archer said. “We’ll have to create an interface.”

    “What for?” Hoshi asked.

    “We’re going to be retrieving some Suliban data discs,” Archer said. “I have no doubt you’ll be able to handle the content, but before you can do that, we’ll have to find a way to access the data.”

    “And Daniels claims this is Suliban technology?” T’Pol asked.

    “Everything he’s told me has checked out so far,” Archer said. “I have no reason to doubt him about this.”

    “We’ll do our best, Captain,” Hoshi said. Archer began to head to the turbolift.

    “Captain,” T’Pol began, “the Vulcan ship we were headed for, it’s no doubt detected we’ve altered course.”

    Archer stopped walking and turned to Hoshi. “Have they tried to hail us?” he asked.

    Hoshi shrugged with mock innocence. “I wouldn’t know, sir. Our comm is on the fritz.”

    Dani and Kyle followed Archer into the turbo lift. “I think Kyle and I should be the ones to retrieve the discs from the Suliban,” Dani proposed once the doors closed behind them. “We have experience with their ships – I do, at least. I can’t speak for Kyle.”

    Kyle nodded. “I’m more than qualified,” he confirmed. “We’ll leave it at that.”

    Dani looked at Archer. “We’re not even supposed to be here,” she said. “So it would be minimal risk.”

    “It would not be a minimal risk,” Archer countered.

    Dani’s brow knitted in confusion. “Sir?”

    The turbo lift came to a stop, and the doors slid open. Archer looked at Kyle. “Could you give us a moment, please?” he requested.

    Kyle nodded. “Of course,” he said. He stepped out of the lift, leaving Dani and Archer alone as the lift doors closed again.

    “I don’t understand,” Dani said. “What is it about my plan that doesn’t make sense? I honestly can’t see how this doesn’t mitigate the risk for you.”

    “I think there’s one hell of a risk to you,” Archer said. “These people are serious. If they catch you…there’s no telling what they’ll do to you.”

    “This isn’t my first mission like this,” Dani said.

    “I realize that,” Archer said. “I know that’s how you ended up here. But I wouldn’t be able to live with myself if anything happened to you, especially because of me.”

    “It wouldn’t be because of you,” Dani said. “I’m volunteering.”

    “Dani,” Archer said, “I don’t want anything to happen to you.”

    Dani leaned back against the turbolift wall. “Let’s say something happens to me,” she proposed. “Wouldn’t that make some of your problems go away? You wouldn’t have to worry about trying to send me back to my own time. And that would be one less thing to distract you from your duties.”

    Archer closed his eyes. “I was wrong,” he said. “I was upset, and I didn’t mean it. I regret saying it.” He stepped toward Dani. “What I don’t regret is any moment I’ve spent with you. I’ve cherished them.”

    Neither Dani nor Archer noticed that the turbolift had begun to move again after Kyle had gotten off, and they were surprised when the doors opened and someone almost stepped into the turbolift with them. Archer and Dani both flashed the young man a look that told him he’d better not step onto the turbolift. The man, a crewman, seemed to understand and nodded. He took a step back and let the turbolift doors close.

    Archer turned his attention back to Dani and stroked her face. “I may not get another chance to say this,” he said. “I love you, Dani.”

    “Don’t say that,” Dani said.

    “Why not?”

    “You’ve only known me for a few months. How could you possibly know that?”

    “When you know something, and you feel it, you don’t need a lot of time to figure it out,” Archer said. “You don’t feel the same way?”

    “I do. But it’s not fair because I’m going to have to leave you – one way or another,” Dani said. She pressed a button on the wall, halting the turbolift at the current level, and she stepped out.

  • Edge of Heaven – Chapter 13. Fate

    The next morning when Dani woke up, Archer was dressing. “Good morning,” she said.

    Archer, whose back had been turned to her while he’d been pulling a shirt over his head, turned to the bed. “I hope I didn’t wake you,” he said, walking over to the bed.

    “You did,” Dani said. “But I don’t mind. I wish you’d woken me earlier, when you got up.”

    “I wanted to let you sleep.” He sat down in front of Dani on the bed. “You were up late last night because of me, and honestly, I was hoping to surprise you with breakfast in bed.”

    “I don’t want to spend any more time sleeping than I have to,” Dani said. “I don’t want to miss out on our last hours.”

    Archer nodded. “I wish I didn’t have to go down to Paragan,” Archer said. “It doesn’t seem right to spend time on that when you’ll be gone in a few hours.”

    “You have your duties,” Dani said matter-of-factly, “and I have mine. Yours, in this case, require you to visit the Paragan colony – mine is to get back to the 24th Century so that I can be debriefed. I guess it is what it is.”

    Archer, surprised by her words and her attitude, blinked. “You seem to be taking it pretty well,” he said. “How can you be so accepting of the situation?”

    “It’s not that – it’s just that I’m resigned to our fate,” Dani corrected. “There’s no point in fighting what we can’t change.”

    “But we can change it,” Archer said. He held Dani’s gaze. He knew that she knew what he was suggesting.

    “We could, but we probably wouldn’t like the consequences,” Dani said. “If Command found out that the transporter works and that I didn’t go through, think of the consequences it could have for you. They might strip you of your command or even court martial you. And that cannot happen. Your mission is way too important…Even if it didn’t happen that way, do you honestly think that the Temporal Police would let me stay here?” Dani shook her head, resigned to their apparent fate. “We might as well enjoy the time left and accept it for what it is.” She peeled back the covers and rose from the bed.

    xxx

    Dani was in the mess hall for her morning coffee break when she saw the initial bursts of orange appear in Paragan’s upper atmosphere. One burst turned into two, then three. Within a minute, it seemed like the entire atmosphere glowed orange. Her coffee and bagel unfinished, Dani abandoned her table and the mess hall and headed directly for the shuttlebay. She didn’t say anything to anyone along the way, but she didn’t need confirmation from anyone to recognize that something had gone horribly wrong on Paragan II.

    xxx

    Kyle was already standing outside the entrance to the shuttle bay when Dani arrived.

    “Did you see what happened on the surface?” asked Dani as she approached.

    Before Dani could reply, the doors slid back, and Archer, T’Pol, Trip, and Malcolm stepped out of the shuttle bay and into the corridor.

    “Lt. Hicks, Commander Janeway,” Archer greeted.

    “Captain, I saw the planet,” Kyle said. “What happened down there?”

    “We’re not exactly sure, yet,” Archer said. “Right now, we’ve got to get Commander Tucker to sickbay for treatment. I’ll have to brief you later.”

    Kyle nodded. For the first time, Kyle and Dani noticed that Trip had been injured somehow during the mission. He and Dani watched as Archer and the rest of his team continued down the corridor.

    xxx

    Dani was waiting when Archer emerged from Sickbay. She reached out to him as he passed.

    “Jon, what is going on?” she asked him. The look on his face told her that the answer was bad, but she wanted details.

    “There was an accident,” Archer began. “Somehow, the planet’s atmosphere was ignited.”

    “What about the colonists?”

    Archer closed his eyes and shook his head. “They’re gone.”

    “All of them?”

    “We’re trying to figure out what went wrong. Lt. Reed insists that everything was within the required parameters with regard to our shuttle. But somehow the tetrazine particles in the atmosphere were ignited.”

    Dani knitted her brows. Something wasn’t right here. Why didn’t she remember reading about this? Surely, an event this catastrophic would have surfaced during her research on NX-01 and Archer.

    “I don’t remember reading about this event,” Dani said. “And it seems like too significant of an occurrence to just go unnoticed by history.”

    “I’ll have to brief you later,” Archer said. “Before you and Kyle go back.”

    He moved away to go to the bridge. Dani was left wondering whether any of this could have occurred due to her and Kyle’s presence here. If that was the case, maybe she and Kyle weren’t going back to the 24th Century so soon, after all. They had to figure out what went wrong and why history never recorded this event.

    xxx

    Dani met Kyle in their quarters. He had been waiting there for her to return with news of what had happened to Paragan II. She still wasn’t over his involvement with the Cardassia Prime incident, but there were more immediate matters that needed to be attended to right now.

    Dani already knew what Kyle was waiting to hear, and she wasted no time obliging. “Something really bad happened down there,” she said.

    “What happened?” Kyle asked.

    “All the colonists have been wiped out,” Dani said.

    What?

    “Somehow, the tetrazine in their atmosphere was ignited, which caused a shockwave. Everything down there is gone.”

    “But…I don’t understand,” Kyle said. “I’ve never heard of that happening to Paragan II. It’s a thriving colony in the 24th Century.”

    “I know. Shouldn’t we try to find out what went wrong?” Dani asked.

    “I have a feeling that Captain Archer has every intention of doing just that,” Kyle said.

    xxx

    Dani pressed the chime on the door to Archer’s quarters. “Come in,” she heard him call from inside. The door slid open and she stepped into the room. Archer was at his desk with Porthos in his arms, scrolling through a long list of images on his computer terminal. Dani assumed they were the images of the lost colonists. Archer seemed entranced. He didn’t even acknowledge her entrance into the room.

    “Jon?” Dani said.

    Without turning to her, he said, “If it isn’t anything urgent, I’d really rather be alone right now.”

    “I know you don’t have a counselor on this ship, but talking can be a big help in situations like this,” Dani said.

    “Talking isn’t going to bring those colonists back,” Archer said.

    “No, but it might help,” Dani said. She took a few steps closer to him. “You don’t feel guilty about any of this, do you?”

    Archer finally turned to her. “My guilt is warranted.”

    “You did everything you could,” Dani said. “You followed all the protocols. There’s no way it could be your fault.”

    “Well, somehow, I must have missed something somewhere,” Archer insisted. “I have been…distracted lately.”

    “By what?” Dani asked, taken aback by the words. She couldn’t miss the underlying insinuation. She shifted her weight, fighting the urge to become defensive. “By me?”

    “The truth is I haven’t been paying as much attention to my duties ever since we got back from Risa. Maybe my preoccupation with you has caused me to miss something, something crucial, apparently.”

    Dani stood silently, unable to generate a response to Archer’s statement. She couldn’t believe she was hearing these words come out of his mouth. Obviously, she didn’t know him as well as she’d hoped she did if he could turn on her and blame her for this. Instead of responding, she merely turned around and walked out of his quarters.