Part 3: The Doc, the Cook, his Mousse and their Adventures
Chapter 2: New Life, New Civilisations, and an Iceberg Lettuce...
The kitchens rang out with the sounds of vegetables being
chopped, meat being fricaseed, and the occasional sous-chef
having a strip torn off him for incorrectly arranging a canape.
In the midst of it all, Daniel Jackson unhappily swept the
floor. He'd been working in the Starfleet Academy kitchens for
eighteen months now, ever since he'd been kicked out of the
Academy proper. Matt Stark had found him a job there as partial
recompense for having been the most useless counsel for the
defence ever.
Jackson supposed he should be grateful to at least have a
job. He'd tried for a wide variety of different jobs after the
Academy dispensed with him, but, strangely enough, his record
seemed to preclude him from all of them. Sweeping the floors in
the kitchens was the only job he could now do. However, that
didn't mean he had to like it. For all that it was keeping him
in credits, it was quite possibly the most dull thing Jackson had
ever done. Just for once, he wished for some sort of change.
Possibly he could try again for that security guard's job he'd
seen advertised. Admittedly, they'd turned him down before, but
perseverance, and all that...
In the meantime, he had to get these kitchen floors spotless.
Originally, he hadn't bothered, but then Starfleet Health and
Safety had come in, and the resulting pest-control operation had
cost him several days pay. Apparently, cockroaches weren't a
normal part of kitchen operations. Jackson splashed some more
disinfectant down, and prodded the puddle with his mop. He'd
been promised a few lessons in the art of being a chef by Stark,
but they hadn't materialised yet.
Jackson looked at the collection of chemicals he'd dug out of
the stores cupboard. They were all supposed to be hygiene
related, and, in his current state of boredom, Jackson didn't
really care what the labels said about chemical safety. If they
were all disinfectants, and he applied them to the floor all at
once, then the floor would get really clean. With any luck, he
wouldn't have to clean the floor for a week after this.
Jackson opened a couple of bottles up, and began splashing
them onto the floor. Emptying one, but leaving a little of the
other, purely for the hell of it, he put the first two bottles
back, and opened another couple. In a few minutes, he'd emptied
varying quantities of the different chemicals onto the floor, and
went to pick his mop up again. Interestingly enough, although
Jackson wasn't to know this, the mixture of chemicals on the
floor had never before been produced. Perhaps that explained the
purple glow that began to form in the centre of the pool.
Stark was having to do something he hated. One of the
sous-chefs in his section had made a bit of a blunder, and Stark
was having to reprimand him. Stark, an easy-going sort, didn't
enjoy delivering a bollocking, even in deserving cases. Luckily
for him, the quivering moron before him had made it easy for
him. "Now, I appreciate that there are many forms of cuisine I'm
not familiar with," Stark commented. "After all, with the
Federation as vast as it is, no-one could possibly ever know
every meal ever created." He paused a moment as the sous-chef's
face went blank, not seeing where Stark was going with this. If
truth be told, Stark was in danger of forgetting himself.
His memory returned just as his pause was in danger of leaving
the realms of threatening and arriving in embarrassment
territory. "The thing is, for all that what I've said is true,
I'm pretty certain that nowhere in this universe is an omelette
supposed to do that!" Stark gestured at the offending omelette,
which hulked ominously in a pan.
The sous-chef glanced at it, and said, "I didn't mean for it
to end up like that!"
"I should bloody well hope not! We're going to have phaser it
out of the pan, at this rate!" The omelette was the most
glutinous, viscous, and downright sticky disaster Stark had ever
seen. It weighed in at somewhere over forty kilos, and was
firmly attached to the pan, apparently having some of the
strongest adhesives known to man employed in its construction.
Three of them had turned the pan over and shaken it in an effort
to free it, to no avail. Similarly, attempts to scrape it out
with knives had failed. Stark had called for volunteers to eat
their way through it, but there had been a long enough silence to
confirm the utter futility of such a request.
"I'm sorry. I didn't mean for that to happen."
"You know, I can believe it." Stark looked at the omelette
for a moment, then gestured to a few of the chefs. "Right, you
three, give him a hand dragging it over to the matter reclamation
unit. I guess that'll be the simplest way of getting rid of it.
Guess I'll just have to indent for a new pan."
Jackson was clutching his mop, watching the swirls of colour
in the puddle with fascination. Added to the purple now was a
deep red, and occasional flecks of electric blue sizzled across
the hole that was forming in the centre of the now-smoking
puddle. Jackson leaned forwards slightly, to stare into the
hole. Strange, he thought. By rights, the research labs on the
floor below should be visible, but all he could see was sheer
blackness. Maybe they'd turned the lights off down there.
Suddenly, the hole expanded a little more, and Jackson felt a
tug towards it. The mop began to flex as it was pulled towards
the hole. "Uh, Matt...?"
"What?" Stark was trying to put the omelette disaster out of
his mind and concentrate on the problems of creating lunch for
the Academy faculty.
"I think we might have a problem." As Jackson spoke, he saw a
lettuce suddenly fly off its table and disappear into the hole.
"Yeah, we've got a problem." He backed away from the hole, and
frantically took hold of the nearest solid object, as the hole
grew a little more and the gravitational forces around it
increased.
"What the hell is that?" Stark asked, wondering why Jackson
was clutching onto a stove like that. Particularly when it was
lit. Seemingly unaware of the pain of his fingers, which by now
were smouldering gently, Jackson said, "I dunno. Could be
floor-rot, could be a subspace rip in the space-time continuum,
there's just no way of knowing."
"Well, I have been meaning to get these surfaces changed,"
Stark mused. "I suppose we could have a structural
failure..."
The hole grew a little more, and Stark suddenly felt himself
get tugged towards it. "On the other hand, your subspace rip
theory has possibilities..."
Other members of the kitchen staff were wandering over, trying
to find out what all the fuss was about. Stark, whose feet were
starting to slide towards the hole despite his best efforts to
stop them, called out, "Stay back! There's something bloody odd
happening here!"
The chefs abruptly stopped wandering, and took cover behind
whatever solid objects they could find. Stark forced himself far
enough away from the hole to grab hold of a fridge, and began to
consider his options. Meanwhile, Jackson, who had finally
noticed that the actually rather pleasant smell of cooking meat
was in fact coming from him, had shifted his grip to something a
little less flammable, and was trying to put his fingers out by
blowing on them. Currently, this was only having the effect of
increasing the flames. In between puffs, Jackson said, "I wonder
how this happened?"
That piece of scientific curiosity helped focus Stark's
thoughts wonderfully. "Bollocks to how it happened, I want to
know how to stop it!" He looked at the hole, and an idea was
born.
The sous-chef who earlier had felt the wrath of his chief was
bracing himself against an oven door. In truth, he was actually
rather glad of this emergency, as it meant that Stark had at
least forgotten about him. The boss's next words, then, were to
come as a shock. "Right! Who was the moron with the
omelette?!"
"Uh, me sir," the sous-chef replied.
"Good! Do you think you could perpetrate another one? A
really really big one?"
"Sir?"
"I'm sorry, am I not making myself clear? I want you to
create another gastronomic catastrophe like the previous disaster
currently ruining one of my finest pans! And this time, I'll
help you!"
Stark struggled away from the hole, leaving Jackson trying to
maintain his grip with one hand whilst the other was jammed into
a tureen full of bouillebaisse, from which smoke was now rising.
Jackson's eyes were watering, and occasional high-pitched squeaks
were escaping from between his compressed lips, but at least he
now had one set of fingers extinguished. His feet were now
trailing out behind him, the gravitational pull from the hole
strong enough to counteract Earth's. Very carefully, Jackson
extracted his now soggy hand, and dried it on his trousers. He
then gripped the handle he was clinging on to with both hands,
before extending the burning hand towards the bouillebaisse. As
he struggled, he tried to hum a merry tune, just to keep his
spirits up. Unfortunately, the pain meant that he kept jumping
octaves and the tune was massacred.
Far enough away from the hole that the effects were minimal,
Stark and a group of chefs clustered round the largest shallow
pan that they could find. Stark eyed the sous-chef warily, and
said, "Right. You know how it worked. What were the
ingredients?"
"Erm, eggs. Lots of eggs. And potatoes. And an onion.
And..."
"That's a good enough starting place." Stark looked around at
his team.. "You! Start cracking eggs. You, get some potatoes
cooking. Boiled, I take it?" He asked the sous-chef.
"Yes, sir."
"Lots of hot water, then, and get a move on!"
Stark's team rushed about the kitchen, exhausting all their
stocks in an effort to recreate the killer omelette on a much
larger scale. Meanwhile, Jackson was slowly making his way
around the cooker he was holding on to, in an effort to reach
safe ground. The pain in his hands had fully kicked in now,
making it harder and harder to keep an adequate grip. The
constant pull of the hole, however, reminded him of the
importance of hanging on. That and the fact his feet were no
longer in contact with the ground.
One sous-chef was busy prodding a potato with a knife when
Stark gave him an evil look. "We're not making cuisine here,
we're trying to repair a hole in the space-time continuum! Stop
weakening the ingredients!"
"Er, sorry, sir."
"Now get those damn potatoes into this pan!" The eggs had
been whisked, the onion fried, and a touch of green pepper thrown
in for luck. Now they had to put the potatoes in, and start
cooking the omelette. An entire range of hotpoints on a cooker
had been lit up for the task, and already the heat was palpable.
A lone metal spoon, left hanging above the cooker, was slowly
melting and stretching out of shape in a Picasso-like manner that
probably could have been a prize exhibit at any art gallery had
anyone had the time to save it. As it was, the spoon dribbled
onto the cooker, and where its liquid remains bubbled and smoked
before the pan was slammed down on top of them.
"Any other ingredients?"
"Erm, cayenne pepper, paprika, a spot of oregano..."
"Christ, what were you trying to do? Kill us all?" Stark
asked, before upending a bottle of cayenne pepper into the
omelette, which was bubbling and making ominous 'gloop' noises.
Turning away to sneeze violently for a few seconds, Stark forced
himself to look back and toss in the other herbs and spices.
Giving them a perfunctory stir, Stark let the omelette cook
through slowly. "Fire up that oven! We'll need to brown the
top! You, grate some cheese onto it!" When the sous-chef in
question balked, Stark bawled, "Grate, man! Grate like you've
never grated before!" Thirty seconds later the chef was down to
his knuckles and the omelette had a thick layer of grated cheese
on top of it.
"Are we up to temperature yet?!" Stark yelled.
"Yup!" It took seven of them to carry the pan across to the
oven, which could barely contain the gargantuan mass. Stark
noted that in future he should check the relative sizes of pans
to ovens before ordering supplies from a catalogue.
Jackson, meanwhile, had reached a place of relative safety.
He was now sheltered behind the cooker he'd he'd been clinging on
to, but had just noticed that the floor-mounted cooker was
starting to creak and groan, not to mention buckle. He judged he
had a couple of minutes before the cooker ripped off it's
moorings and disappeared into the rupture. "I really hope you
have a plan!" he shouted at Stark.
"Don't worry!" Stark shouted back. "Rescue is on it's
way!"
"Good! Soon would be nice!"
"This has to be just right, well, just wrong! Give me a
minute!"
Stark was only giving the omelette preparation half of his
thoughts at the moment. The rest of his concentration was
focussed on exactly how he was going to get his omelette over the
hole. His eyes lit on a length of cord Jackson had been using to
cordon off areas he had been cleaning. Stark grabbed the cord,
and, shouldering minions out of the way, tied one end securely to
the panhandle.
"It's browning nicely, sir!"
"Good! We mustn't let it get too dry. We need it nice and
sticky!"
Stark and his team manfully heaved the pan out of the oven, to
discover that the omeltte now overlapped the pan by several
feet. "Dump it on the floor!" Stark cried. "We'll let gravity
do the rest!"
Stark and the chefs slowly paid out the cord, controlling the
pan's increasing speed as the rupture sucked it in.
As the omelette passed Jackson, his eyes bulged and he cried,
"This is your idea of a rescue?"
"Trust me!" Stark called back.
The cooker chose that moment to wrench itself away from the
floor, and Jackson threw himself desperately at the next
available object, which in this case proved to be a shelving
unit. The rupture fluxed again, and the gravitational pull
became inconveniently stronger. Objects on the shelves began to
fly towards the rupture, which was fine as long as they were
spoons and spatulas, but Jackson couldn't help but nervously eye
the block of knives that was starting to shift.
The omelette was a few metres from the hole when Stark
screamed, "Let go!" The chefs, most of whom now have rope burns,
let go thankfully. The omelette accelerated into the hole.
Jackson heard the whirr of blades as the knives shot over his
head. Whimpering involuntarily, he ducked and held on for dear
life.
The pan dipped into the rupture and promptly disappeared from
our reality. The omelette, by now a bubbling monstrosity
measuring several metres in diameter, slid over the hole, dipped
in the middle as the intense gravitational forces caught it...
and stuck fast.
The gravitational forces abruptly died away, and everyone was
thrown to the floor as the forces they were struggling against
were no longer there.
"Bloody hell," Stark commented, "What say we evacuate?"
Some time later, in another room, they watched on monitors as
personnel, wearing gravity boots turned up to high, gingerly
entered the kitchen to secure it.
Jackson had had his burns treated, and was only grumbling
occasionally now. Stark was chatting to a science officer who
had been drafted in to figure out what the hell had happened.
"Yeah, sounds like your disinfectants reacted poorly with one
of the experiments in the research labs downstairs. Who'd have
thought?" the scientist commented.
"Took me by surprise," Stark replied.
"At least it wasn't too dangerous. No official punishments on
this one," the scientist added, with a wry smile.
"Not exactly a Prime Directive violation," Stark chuckled.
It may have interested Stark to know that he was completely
wrong on that last point.
Several dimensions away, the inhabitants Zzrglb@#! watched in
no little surprise as a mysterious green object appeared from
nowhere, bounced a couple of times, then settled to a halt in
front of them. The spontaenious hail of cooking implements was
just as unusual, but by that time their attention was occupied
with the lettuce.
After many months of study, the by-now mouldy lettuce was
determined to be some form of prophetic orb from the Gods, and
venerated accordingly. The inevitable religious wars took their
toll of the planet's population, and, once the dust had settled
and the survivors emerged from their blast shelters, later
scholars were to agree that the mysterious sphere was the worst
thing ever to happen to their civilisation.
Stark and Jackson never knew.