Diplomatic Overtures
"Captain's Log, Stardate 5123421.3232. T' Psycho is on her
way to Melinar VI to mediate in a local dispute o' some kind. I
don't have a bluidy clue about the details and I don't really
care. These damn things are all t' same, dull, pointless and
annoying. End log entry."
Lieutenant-Commander Barfoot hummed merrily to himself as he
swabbed down Main Engineering, cheerfully oblivious to the stares
of those around him. He had developed this habit of starting his
duty shift with a mop and bucket in recent times, and, although
the Psycho engineering staff thought he was crazy, no-one had
dared tell the deputy engineer that in this day and age it wasn't
strictly necessary to wash the decks. Even aboard the Psycho,
some people were considered crazier than others, and Barfoot
belonged in that elite category.
Stark watched his number two whistle his way past the main
status console, and shook his head in disbelief. It was time,
Stark thought, that Barfoot took some shore leave. Maybe even an
away mission or two. Stark had strongly suspected that too much
time in Engineering was bad for you, a suspicion that to his mind
perfectly explained away most of the quirks and foibles he saw
demonstrated on a daily basis. Sighing, Stark returned to the
ratatouille gently simmering on the stove in his office, whilst
with one hand sending the Captain a request that Barfoot be
assigned to the next away team.
Up on the bridge, Captain Olding was playing solitaire in his
ready room, the Counsellor had the bridge, and
Lieutenant-Commander Damerell was frantically trying to discover
if he had, in fact crashed the entire LCARS network.
Federation-wide. His struggles were made ever more farcical by
the fact that he was trying to cover his tracks as he went, and
also by the fact he kept glancing round to give the rest of the
bridge crew hunted looks. Next to him at the helm Ensign Ingram
had long since given up the pretence of monitoring his own
console and was watching the hapless Ops officer with a kind of
horrified fascination.
Occasionally, Damerell would swear under his breath, before
frantically tapping away at his console in a seemingly random
fashion. Ingram, still young and fresh to Starfleet, was unaware
that his senior officer, a man he looked up to not simply because
Damerell was taller than him, was in fact tapping away randomly
and ever more quickly. Ingram instinctively leaned away from the
Lieutenant-Commander, waiting for the inevitable explosion.
In the centre seat, the Counsellor smiled to herself, then
said, "Mr Damerell."
Damerell jumped in his seat before spinning round and
quavering., "Ye-es?"
"You haven't crashed LCARS. Try resetting your terminal."
"But how did you..."
The Counsellor tapped her forehead. "Empathic, remember? With
a tendency towards telepathy when someone's really broadcasting.
And you, Mr Damerell, have been really broadcasting."
"Oops."
"Indeed," the Counsellor said, rising an eyebrow at the
flustered Ops officer. Before she could continue with what she
was certain would become a pleasing exercise in applied sarcasm,
the comm chimes sounded and Olding's voice said, "Are we there
yet?"
"Not yet, Captain. Twenty-two point five minutes until
arrival," the Counsellor replied quickly as Damerell turned back
to his post.
In his ready room, Olding stopped playing patience and
sighed. He had a diplomatic mission to complete in just under
half an hour, and Olding hated diplomacy with a passion. A
plain-speaking man (distressingly so at times), Olding loathed
the prettifying of meaningless phrases which accompanied every
diplomatic meeting he'd ever been involved in. Since taking
command of the Psycho, he hadn't had that many to do, thankfully,
possibly because Starfleet realised that he and his ship were the
best representatives of the Federation to send to a tricky
situation requiring tact and diplomacy. But now there was a war
on and, in the fine balancing of resources being carried out by
Starbase One, it had been decided that it was marginally less
dangerous to have Olding et al negotiating than in the firing
line.
Olding harrumphed to himself, and started to think about who
he would have to take with him to the planet for the deathly
tedious round of discussions, meetings, badly-prepared meals and
cold coffee that lay ahead of him. Right there on his screen was
the request from Stark to take Barfoot along on the next away
mission. Actually, the request read: 'Get this fruitcake out of
my engine room before more people get damp!' Olding pondered the
cryptic message, considered calling down to engineering for an
explanation, then decided it was probably safest he didn't know.
For lack of any other options, he added Barfoot to the list, then
picked Ensigns Ingram and Jethro. Olding remembered that, as an
Ensign, he'd been on many a diplomatic trip relegated to the role
of fetching and carrying, and decided it was time to pass on the
misery. Sending out alerts to the relevant members of the crew,
Olding decided he had just enough time to get in a nap before
they arrived. Closing his eyes, he dozed off.
Down in Engineering, Barfoot put aside his mop and bucket as a
junior crewmember handed him a padd. Glancing at it, Barfoot
realised he had been assigned to the diplomatic away team heading
down to the planet. He grinned excitedly and said, "Thanks,
Crewman."
"No problems sir, I... Aaargh!" The crewman had taken a step
back, slipped on a slick piece of deck that Barfoot had just
washed, and toppled over. As Barfoot watched bemused, the
crewman slid along the sopping wet deck, under the safety
railings, and plummeted down past the warp core.
"Unusual," he said, returning his attention to the padd.
Time passed, during which Barfoot wondered why the engineering
staff seemed to be upset about something, Damerell slowly
returned to normal, and Olding drooled uncontrollably before
falling off the couch in his ready room. Just as he was picking
himself up and dusting himself down, the comm. chimes sounded and
the Counsellor said, "Bridge to Captain, we've arrived at Melinar
VI."
"On my way," Olding said distractedly, frantically trying to
dry his uniform jacket. Giving up, he hurriedly shrugged off the
jacket, straightened the jerkin underneath, and stalked out onto
the bridge as if nothing was the matter.
"Uh, Captain," the Counsellor said as she surrendered her
chair, "You appear to be suffering from a bad hair day."
Olding reached up to discover that his hair was standing on
end. He hurriedly tried to push it back into place, but the
moment he'd finished, his hair sprang back up into its previous
unruly position. He gave up, hoping that the inhabitants of
Melinar VI were sufficiently alien as to not know about human
fashion norms.
"Bleep... wzrtfgl... Mind the gap... We are being hailed from
the surface, Captain."
"Bluidy marvellous. Right, put 'em on."
"Captain, I am Eminence Zhnfrgin, welcome to... What happened
to you?"
"Nothing, Eminence, I assure you I'm fine," Olding said, arms
clasped firmly behind his back in a fight to avoid the temptation
to try and press his hair down again. The Eminence didn't look
convinced and her eyes kept flicking upwards to the top of his
head.
"If you say so. We are glad you are here, Captain. The
situation with the Krzngngfn is getting ever more serious."
"Indeed," Olding said in a tone of voice that completely
disguised his ignorance of just who the Krzngngfn actually were.
It was occurring to him that, given the hair and his lack of
preparation, the nap wasn't nearly as clever an idea as it had
seemed earlier. But then, as his previous experience in these
matters had taught him, it would be explained to him exactly who
was who and what the problem was. Over and over and over again,
usually.
"Captain, your help will be most appreciated. How soon can
you beam down?"
Olding blinked at that one. This was a little quicker and
more business-like than he was expecting. Still, had to be a
good thing. "Right away."
"We look forwards to meeting with you." The Eminence signed
off, and Olding said, "Counsellor, t' ship is yours."
Barfoot arrived in the transporter room shortly before Olding,
quite looking forwards to his excursion on the planet. Olding
had made it clear in his note that this mission was a cakewalk
and Barfoot's role, as defined by the Captain, was to "Sit there,
say nowt and try to look intelligent." This was a challenge
Barfoot intended to rise to. Joining Ensigns Ingram and Jethro
on the transporter pad, Barfoot was surprised to see the Captain
arrive white-faced and ashen. He was reading from a padd and
shaking his head occasionally.
"Problem, sir?" Barfoot asked cheerfully.
"Yes, Mr Barfoot. We have a serious bluidy problem," Olding
responded, thrusting the padd at him. "Read that."
Barfoot had just enough time to read the heading and realise
it was a briefing on the situation they were beaming into before
Olding called, "Energise," and the Psycho disappeared in the
whirl of the transporter beam.
They arrived in a courtyard, although Barfoot didn't see much
of it as he was busy reading his padd. He could now see why
Olding was looking concerned, as the situation seemed far from
rosy. The planet was on the verge of a rather unpleasant civil
war, and the government wanted Federation intervention to try and
calm the rebels down.
"Captain, I welcome you and your people to Melinar."
"Eminence," Olding said, "It is a pleasure to be here."
Not bad, Barfoot thought, pleasantly surprised by the
Captain's use of Starfleet Diplomacy Tone #5 - Sincere
Fawning.
"I wish there was time to show you something of our fair
planet, but unfortunately these are perilous times."
Even more impressive, Barfoot noted, the Eminence had
obviously had her fair share of training. That was Professional
Strained Concern, with the Impending Calamity quaver, if ever
he'd heard it.
"Of course. I hope we may be able to provide some
assistance." Barfoot sneaked a look at the Captain, now
utilising Starfleet Provision Of Succour And Assistance voice
#2.2. Almost a picture of the perfect diplomat. Shame about the
hair...
"As do we all, Captain." Ah yes, Grave Acceptance With Hope
Foremost. Barfoot nodded to himself much in the way a
connoisseur would over a fine wine. This trip could actually be
quite fun, he decided.
They were shown into one of the government buildings, and
ushered into a conference room. Barfoot thoroughly approved of
the setup. In the centre of the room was a triangular table, with
seats laid out for the government, the rebels and the Starfleet
crew. There was one breach of established diplomatic protocol in
that water glasses had already been laid out in defiance of the
tradition that said the first day of any negotiations should be
spent discussing the precise shape, colour and carrying capacity
of the glasses to be used during proceedings. Barfoot took this
to be a sign of the urgency of their situation.
"Eminence, I hope that we can get started as soon as
possible," Olding said, taking his seat in the centre of the
Starfleet wing of the table.
"Of course, Captain," Zhngrfin replied, taking her own seat.
Barfoot sat down next to his Captain, leaving Ingram and Jethro
to take the last two seats on either side of the senior
officers. Whilst the Eminence was busy consulting with her
advisors, Olding leaned across to Barfoot and said, "We're in
trouble, tha knows."
"Sir?"
"Did you read t'file?"
"Yes, sir."
"Well then. These people want to start a war. We're just
here as an excuse to get t'whole thing kicked off."
"You think?"
Olding chose to respond to that one with a stare that, Barfoot
realised, owed absolutely nothing to Starfleet diplomatic
protocol. "Yes, sorry sir," he muttered.
Before Olding could say anything more, the doors were flung
open and the rebels arrived. The Eminence and her staff seemed
unimpressed, but the Starfleet crew let their jaws drop open in
shock. The rebels hadn't made any attempt to surrender their
weapons, or indeed dress smartly for the occasion, having chosen
instead to arrive with bandoliers of ammunition, nasty-looking
plasma rifles and knives everywhere.
Their leader threw himself into a seat and gave Olding a
contemptuous glance, before directing his attention to the
Eminence. "Right, fascist, let's get this sham going."
The Eminence, who previously had been the model of politeness,
glared at the rebel leader, and said, "Very well, rebel scum, let
us commence the end of your foolhardy attempt to cease
power."
"Okay," Olding said loudly. "Let's start t'session by
establishin' some common ground, shall we?"
"We have no common ground, Starfleet stooge," the rebel leader
responded. "Why else are we at war?"
"You're not at war yet," Olding pointed out. Barfoot gave his
C.O. a worried glance. The Professional Civility voice was
slipping to be replaced by Pissed-Off Olding In A Strop
voice.
"Our brave soldiers have been fighting and dying for months!"
the rebel leader snarled.
"Your terrorists have been committing crimes and attacking our
police officers for months," the Eminence retorted.
"Fascist!"
"Scum!"
"Right!" Olding thumped his hands on the table, and glared
down the table at both sides. "You are supposed to be here to be
negotiating a truce!"
"Uh, Captain..." Barfoot tapped his Captain on the arm,
trying to attract his attention, or at least distract him.
"We are here to negotiate a truce, Captain," the Eminence
said, her warm tones turning icy. "Under your expert
guidance."
"Really? What's the bluidy point in me helpin' you negotiate
a truce? You've obviously already made your minds up to start
killin' each other!"
Barfoot kicked Olding sharply under the table, in out and out
desperation, but by then the damage had been done. "What the
Captain means to say is..." he began hopefully, but was cut off
by the Eminence. "What the Captain means to say is that we are
primitive savages more interested in war than dialogue!"
"Exactly," the rebel leader growled.
"Well, at least we've found some common ground," Barfoot said
brightly. All the parties stared at him, and Olding,
surreptitiously rubbing his ankle, glared at the engineer.
Barfoot, knowing full well he was in a serious amount of trouble
as it was, decided to take the plunge. "We've made progress
already. You can agree with each other on some things. I'm sure
we can find more commonalities through our future dialogues."
The Melinarians continued to stare at him, but Olding's glare
began to change into more of an expression of surprise.
"Do you see hope for us, Lieutenant?" the Eminence asked. No,
Barfoot thought, but he nodded emphatically. "There's always
hope, Eminence," he said, grinning cheesily.
"Can I speak to you in private, Mr Barfoot?" Olding asked
through gritted teeth.
"Is this break strictly necessary, Captain?" the Eminence
asked.
"Oh, yes," Olding responded, before standing up and grasping
Barfoot by the ear. "Ow!"
"Shurrup!"
Olding dragged Barfoot out of the conference room and into the
corridor beyond. "What the bluidy hell do you think you're
doin'?"
"Well, Captain, things were getting a little tense in
there..."
"They were bluidy tense before we arrived! You're only here
as decoration, Mr Barfoot. For better or for worse, I'm the one
wi' t'diplomacy trainin'. Let me handle it."
"I have done Introduction to Diplomacy, Captain," Barfoot
offered.
"What we're goin' to do is get back in there, wait for all
this to be over then get out before we get in real... What did
you say?"
"I did Intro to Diplomacy, sir. At the Academy."
"What t' hell were you doing taking Diplomacy classes?"
"Extra credit, sir. I wanted to take Pottery but that was
booked out so I took Intro to Diplomacy instead."
Olding's eyes bulged for a second as he assimilated this new
information. "Fine. Good. But we still play this my way,
understood?"
"Yes, sir."
"These people have already made their minds up to fight. I
just want to get my ship and crew out o' here before they start
blowin' things up!"
"Understood, Captain." Barfoot nodded, this time
wholeheartedly. He had no wish to be usurping the Captain, and,
although this diplomatic assignment had promised to be a pleasant
break from Engineering, now that things were getting tetchy he
was glad he wasn't the officer in charge down here.
They re-entered the conference room to find both the Eminence
and the rebel leader standing to face them. "Captain Olding, you
are hereby declared persona non grata on Melinar VI," the
Eminence said. "We find your attitude to be unacceptable."
"Now wait just a damn minute!" Olding began, but the rebel
leader cut him off.
"We still require a Starfleet presence here so we are
instructing your officer to remain here."
Barfoot gaped. "You are?"
"We are," the rebel leader glared at him, and Barfoot grinned
nervously back. "Just so I know."
"You can't PNG me!" Olding stormed.
"We just did, Captain," the Eminence responded. "Please
leave."
"Fine. Bluidy 'ell," Olding muttered, then tapped his
commbadge and said, "Olding to Psycho. One to beam up." Glaring
at Barfoot, he vanished in the transporter effect.
Back onboard the ship, Olding stomped up to the bridge, much
to the carefully concealed surprise of the Counsellor, who
hurriedly vacated the centre seat. Olding flung himself into the
seat and fumed for several long moments, as the bridge crew
exchanged glances and the Counsellor sat down in her own chair.
Finally, and with a bravery equal to that of taking on a Borg
cube single-handedly with only a cucumber sandwich for a weapon,
she asked, "How are the negotiations going, sir?"
Olding's initial reply was a drawn out growl, which took
everybody aback. Before the Counsellor could come up with a plan
to get a nurse up here with a sedative, however, the Captain
decided to speak. "They kicked me out."
"Oh. Any reason?"
"Said my attitude wasn't right."
"I see." And that wasn't a lie, the Counsellor reflected.
Olding had never been the most diplomatic of officers, and, much
as she respected her C.O., Hill hadn't thought he was right for
this mission when she first heard about it. "Are we leaving,
then, Captain?"
"No. They want... Barfoot... to negotiate."
"Holy shit!"
"Indeed, Counsellor."
"Bleep... wzrtfgl... Mind the gap... Is Lieutenant-Commander
Barfoot qualifed for such a task, Captain?"
"He took Intro to Diplomacy at t'Academy."
"Bleep... wzrtfgl... Mind the gap... Under Starfleet
regulations, that is insufficient experience to run a diplomatic
mission, Captain."
"I know, Bleep. But t' Melinarians want him, and they don't
want me. Not a lot else we can do now. Counsellor, you have
t'bridge." With that, Olding stomped into his ready room. From
inside there was the sound of muffled thumping as he kicked hell
out of the panelling.
The Counsellor retook the centre seat, crossed her legs and
remarked to no-one in particular, "We're all doomed."
"Well, Mr Barfoot, what are your recommendations?" The
Eminence's frown had evaporated and both she and the rebel leader
were waiting expectantly for him to speak. Barfoot squirmed
uncomfortably. He had no idea what to do. Granted, he'd been
politer than the Captain, but politeness wasn't the only tool of
a diplomat and Olding probably had a better idea of how to
negotiate a peaceful settlement than Barfoot did. The engineer
considered that for a moment. The nearest he'd ever come to
negotiating anything was to settle some dispute in engineering,
and something told him this would be a little more complicated.
Barfoot began to panic.
"Mr Barfoot?"
"Uh... What seems to be the problem?"
"Our present difficulties began fourteen months before when
the fascists opposite passed a law banning our rightful freedom
of expression," the rebel leader began.
"We prevented you from blowing things up to make a point!" The
Eminence retorted.
"Wait, hang on. Blowing things up was legal here?" Barfoot
felt that point needed to be clarified a bit.
"Of course," the rebel leader responded. "Legitimate
political protest."
Barfoot exchanged glances with Ingram and Jethro. Ingram
looked surprised, and Jethro just shrugged. "We not be from
round here, zur. They be doin' things different, loike."
"Yeah, looks like it," Barfoot replied, before turning his
attention back to the feuding parties. "So that was what
triggered this off?"
"In a manner of speaking," the Eminence replied
reluctantly.
"Ookay," Barfoot said. "Tell me more..."
In the hours to come, Barfoot came to regret asking for all
the details, as both the Eminence and the rebel leader went on
and on, pausing only for a blazing row over what appeared to be
some very minor detail, before continuing with their exhaustive
account of exactly what was wrong with their planet. There
certainly wasn't any common ground Barfoot could see, and he was
coming to realise that Intro to Diplomacy, detailed though it
might be on subjects such as diplomacy-speak and how to arrange a
table, hadn't been quite so hot on how to actually conduct
negotiations. In fact, "establish a common ground" was the only
thing Barfoot could remember being mentioned on that subject.
Next to him, Ingram was industriously taking notes of
everything that was being said, and Jethro would occasionally
supply him with entirely pointless 'translations' of the finer
points of diplomacy. After one particularly dense piece of
exposition by the Eminence, Jethro leant across and muttered, "Oi
reckon she means that the rebels blowin' up her home was a
croime, zur." To be fair to the Ensign, he had just compressed
two minutes worth of longwinded explanation down to one sentence,
but the banality of it impressed Barfoot, who thought that the
Psycho engineers had said it all.
When the rebel leader and the Eminence had drawn breath during
one of their interminable arguments, Barfoot, who could feel his
will to live slipping away, quickly interjected, "Well, this has
been productive, hasn't it? Shall we call it a day there and
come back to it tomorrow?"
"Of course, Mr Barfoot." The Eminence nodded gravely. Barfoot
nodded back, collected his thoughts and his junior officers, and
scuttled off.
"Oi'm impressed, zur," Jethro said.
"Why's that?"
"Arr, well, you be interruptin' them back there in mid-flow,
loike, and they didn't care at all."
Barfoot's eyes widened as he realised that Jethro had a
point. He hadn't really been paying attention for the last hour
or so, but that wasn't the point, was it? He had cut things off
at a totally unnatural point, and no-one had minded. Now what
did that mean?
First things first, Barfoot thought. Time to get off this
planet, at least for a night. "Barfoot to Psycho. Three to beam
up."
Later that evening, in Fred's Bar, Barfoot found himself sat
with the Counsellor, Stark and Damerell. Whilst Fred kept the
drinks flowing, the senior officers griped, grumbled and whinged
in the finest tradition of colleagues talking shop
everywhere.
"I'm telling you," Stark said, "There's some kind of
collective psychosis going round Engineering right now."
"I've never noticed," Barfoot said, sipping his drink
reflectively.
"Exactly!" Stark exclaimed, waving his pint in Barfoot's
direction. "You're as psychotic as the rest of them!"
"Am I?"
"You are!"
"Boys, boys, play nicely," the Counsellor said, grinning. "And
anyway, we need our diplomat to stay unruffled."
"Too late," Barfoot said morosely. "I'm in way over my
head."
"Really?" The Counsellor said, managing to inject a note of
surprise into her voice.
"Yeah," Barfoot replied, before telling them the story of what
had happened during the negotiations. Stark carried on drinking,
and Damerell appeared more and more confused, but the
Counsellor's amiable expression darkened. When Barfoot had
finished, and was lamenting the strange way in which the session
ended, the Counsellor said quietly, "I don't suppose you
considered that it might have been deliberate?"
"Eh?"
"Well, it sounds to me like the Captain's right. They don't
care about negotiating a truce. They're just using you to make
it look like they tried to negotiate properly."
"Then why'd they kick out the Captain?" Barfoot asked
plaintively.
"Makes it easier to blame the failure of the negotiations on
Starfleet, then, doesn't it?" The Counsellor pointed out. "You
are what they used to call a patsy, Mr Barfoot."
"I am?"
"You are," the Counsellor nodded sagely, whilst Barfoot
pondered his situation for a moment. Then, he kicked back his
chair, stood up, and said, "Bugger that."
As Barfoot strode purposefully away, the Counsellor said, "I
think I may have created a monster."
"Huh?"
"Never mind, Mr Damerell."
Barfoot returned to his quarters, feeling the curious
combination of anger and confusion. He still didn't quite
understand why the Melinarians had picked on him for their little
game, but he was damned if he was going to let them get away with
it. And the only way he could do that was to successfully
negotiate a truce. Barfoot accessed the library computer, called
up all the files linked to diplomacy he could, and settled down
to read.
The following morning, Barfoot awoke in front of his computer
terminal, still fully dressed and with a padd stuck to his face.
And with five minutes before he was due to beam down.
Hurriedly, Barfoot unstuck the padd, tried to brush some of
the creases out of his uniform, and scuttled out of his quarters,
anxious to put at least some of the things he'd learnt before
dozing off to good use.
Jethro and Ingram were waiting for him in the transporter
room, both looking much more presentable than Barfoot was ever
going to be that day. There was no time to sort himself out,
though, so Barfoot tugged his jacket straight, nodded at the
transporter operator and, in his best Olding impersonation, said,
"Energise."
They arrived on the planet at the same location as they had
previously., except this time they were met a minor flunky and
shown into the conference room with much less ceremony than
before.
Barfoot found the Eminence and the rebel leader already
seated, and glaring theatrically at each other. He wasn't buying
any of it this time.
"Good morning, Mr Barfoot. I trust you had a pleasant
night?"
"Thank you, I did." Barfoot paused for a moment, as he
decided on his strategy. Ah yes...
"I believe yesterday we were discussing the events that led us
up to this point. Would you care for us to continue?"
"No, thank you, Eminence," Barfoot said, flashing a reasonable
attempt at Ingratiating Friendliness #7b in her direction. "I
took the liberty of reading the reports last night. What I was
hoping to accomplish today was a discussion of your overall aims
and goals, so that I could highlight several common points I
noticed during my studies." Barfoot steepled his fingers and
waited expectantly.
The Eminence and the rebel leader exchanged disbelieving
looks, whilst Jethro muttered, "Bugger Oi." Barfoot's grin
slipped momentarily into Classic Smugness, before he recovered
himself, and said, "Who would like to start?"
Four hours later, Barfoot's grin had once more vanished. For a
while he had been convinced that he had the Melinarians beaten.
Despite the fact he'd invented his story about having found some
common points, as the dialogue progressed it turned out there
were indeed some commonalities between the two sides. At one
point, he'd got them to outright agree on something. However,
just as Barfoot was beginning to savour the possibility of
victory, the rebel leader had passionately denounced some minor
point and the whole thing reverted back to square one.
They were on a break for lunch, and Barfoot was half-heartedly
picking at some finger foods from the buffet, whilst Ingram and
Jethro, with the traditional hunger of junior officers
everywhere, demolished plate after plate of sandwiches, meat on
sticks and assorted things sealed in breadcrumbs.
"I fear that the chasm between our two sides may be too much
to conquer, Mr Barfoot," the Eminence said, sidling up to him.
Barfoot was about to agree when he remembered his vow to pull off
a treaty, and instead smiled again and said, "On the contrary, I
think we've made some remarkable progress here today."
"We have?"
"Oh, absolutely! I look forwards to another session along the
same lines this afternoon."
The Eminence gave him a funny look and wandered off again.
That evening, as the delegates packed up for the day, Barfoot
ruefully reflected on his lunchtime conversation. He'd wished
for the same again, and, sure as hell he'd got it. He'd managed
to keep tempers down for the first half of the afternoon, but,
once again, as soon as it looked like they were in danger of
making progress, someone threw a wobbler and the session
deteriorated into name-calling and insults.
Obviously, conventional diplomacy wasn't working. But Olding
had tried the short sharp shock method, and that hadn't got
anywhere. Barfoot was at a loss as to what to try next. He
beamed back up to the ship deep in thought.
Olding was waiting for him in the transporter room, arms
folded. Barfoot got the sense that it was only by a major effort
of will that the Captain wasn't tapping his foot impatiently.
"Well?" Olding asked.
"Sir?"
"What's goin' on down there?"
"They are successfully resisting all my attempts to be
diplomatic," Barfoot complained. "Honestly, sir, I'm being as
professional as all get out, and we're still getting
nowhere."
"Looks like you were right, Counsellor," Olding said. The
Counsellor, who was leaning against the transporter console and
generally looking much more relaxed than Olding.
"Seems so, Captain," the Counsellor agreed. "Still hell bent
on wreaking peace, Mr Barfoot?"
"Yes sir."
"Do I look like a sir to you?"
"Ma'am?"
"Ugh!"
"Counsellor?"
"Impersonal, but it'll do for the moment."
"Once you two are quite finished," Olding interrupted.
"Counsellor, do you have anythin' useful to add?"
"Not really, sir. Maybe you could try being
unprofessional?"
"So, nothing useful at all, then," Olding grumbled, but
Barfoot began to think about it, and the germ of an idea formed
at the back of his mind.
"If you'll excuse me, sir," he said, "I've got some more
research to do."
"Go on then, for all the good it'll do you," Olding said. "I
think we should just break orbit now and leave t'buggers to
it."
"Let me have one last try, please, sir?"
"Go," Olding said, stalking out of the transporter room. The
Counsellor followed Barfoot.
"Do you have a plan, Mr Barfoot?"
"Not yet," Barfoot admitted. "I'd say it's more of a pl at
the moment."
"A what?"
"A pl. Like, half a plan."
The Counsellor gave him a long, searching look, and Barfoot
wilted under her gaze. "Sorry."
"Hmm. Well, good luck with finding the an."
That night, Barfoot once more hit the library computer, but
this time he was researching some very different topics. Once
his research was complete, he then requisitioned two heavy
replicators and set them to reproducing some specialised
equipment for him.
As morning broke, Barfoot requested a meeting with both the
Counsellor and Olding. He explained his plan to a pair of
increasingly incredulous senior officers. As Barfoot finished,
Olding gave him a long hard look, and said, "Do you honestly
expect me to let you get anywhere near a warp core ever
again?"
"Hang on, sir," the Counsellor interjected. "This idea might
not be as crazy as it sounds."
"It's every bit as crazy as it sounds!"
"Not necessarily. And besides, what's the worst that can
happen?"
"He starts a war!"
The Counsellor nodded and said, "True. But if he does nothing
then that war starts anyway."
Olding paused before responding, "Okay. Mr Barfoot, you have
permission to continue with this crew's tradition of inventin'
bonkers solutions to serious crises. We'll be ready for your
signal."
"Thank you, sir."
Barfoot beamed down to the planet, feeling much more upbeat
than he had done previously. So much so, in fact, that Jethro
looked at him askance and said, "Excuse Oi, zur, but do you be
alright?"
"I'm fine, Ensign. Why?"
"Well, zur, you be bouncin' from foot to foot loike that, I be
wonderin' if you be needin' the toilet or suchloike."
"No, Ensign, I'll hang on for a while yet. I'm just looking
forwards to the day's negotiations."
Jethro allowed that comment to hang in the air for a long
moment, then, muttering something in Cornish under his breath,
followed Barfoot and Ingram into the conference room.
"Good morning, Mr Barfoot," the Eminence said. "What are your
plans for us today?"
"Well, Eminence," Barfoot said, suddenly feeling his throat go
painfully dry, "I was doing some research last night, and I
believe I have a method to complete the final breakthrough we are
all looking for."
The Eminence and the rebel leader exchanged glances, before
the rebel leader responded, "We are all very pleased to hear
that, Mr Barfoot. How is this hoped-for miracle to be
achieved?"
Barfoot slapped an expression of Straightforward Cheerfulness
on his face as he said, "A pop concert."
Ingram laughed nervously, Jethro rumbled something under his
breath that sounded quite obscene, and the two opposing leaders
couldn't quite decide whether to laugh, cry, or kick Barfoot
out. Barfoot just sat there, grinning cheerily, until the
Eminence recovered enough self-control to say, "How exactly will
this help our situation?"
"It's what the people of Earth used to do when they were
facing a great crisis," Barfoot explained. "They would organise
a pop concert featuring world-famous musical acts, and highlight
the problem through music. It was a great way of bringing people
together. I believe it will help your peoples to put aside their
differences, and come together in song!"
As Barfoot cringed internally over that last phrase, the
Eminence was still struggling with her own internal monologue.
It was the rebel leader who stepped in to say, "But Mr Barfoot,
this is not Earth and we cannot just stage a concert at a
moment's notice."
"Oh, we can. The Psycho can provide the equipment, and the
technical know-how to broadcast it planetwide."
"Very well," The Eminence said. "But what part would we play
in all this?"
"Oh, that's easy," Barfoot said. "You're going to be one of
the acts!"
The rebel leader, who had been sipping his water, promptly
spat it across the desk, saturating one of the Eminence's aides.
For one nasty second, Barfoot thought that the war was going to
start there and then, but the moment passed and, as the rebel
leader mopped himself up, Barfoot pressed home his advantage.
"It's the perfect symbol of your determination to unify. At the
end of the concert, after the other acts have gone on, a special
beat combo made up of yourselves with some of the Psycho crew to
show Federation involvement will perform a number of, er, numbers
that will show your world how united they can be if they put
their minds to it."
Desperately seeking a safe subject, the Eminence said, "And
which of your crew would be involved?"
"Well, Ensign Jethro here is a demon on the skins..."
"Arr, that be so," Jethro concurred, glad to find something he
actually understood. Barfoot continued smoothly, "I can play a
mean bass, and I know our first officer can sing. I'm sure that
you have your own unique talents we can utilise in the interests
of peace."
Both sides looked at him with expressions not to be found in
any diplomatic textbook, but that could safely be identified as
Completely Gobsmacked, and Barfoot knew that he had won this
round. Where directness and diplomacy had failed, a tide of
insanity would carry the day. All he had to do was keep the pace
up.
For the next few hours, Barfoot did exactly that, chivvying
both sides into finding musical acts that were politically
acceptable to them, booking them, and choosing a venue. From
orbit, the Psycho began broadcasting adverts for the concert to
the planet as a whole, so that nobody could escape hearing about
it. That nearly caused a scene, when the Eminence made a move to
limit the publicity for the concert only to discover that the
planet already knew. Fortunately, Barfoot's complete refusal to
display any form of cunning got him through, and the planning
continued.
The more complicated part began when Barfoot began to assemble
his own scratch band. As it turned out, the rebel leader could
play guitar, and the Eminence could sing, which was convenient,
but persuading them to work together would be a little more
complicated. Fortunately, he'd secured permission to increase his
diplomatic party by one, and so the official Federation presence
on the planet now contained the unusual job title of Backing
Vocals (Cmdr D Hill, Starfleet).
With the Counsellor backing him up, rehearsals began. After a
few standoffs it was decided that the final act would perform
three numbers, one with the rebel leader taking centre stage, one
with the Eminence singing, and then a duet between them to close
the night off. The Counsellor rather neatly got around the
problem of choosing politically acceptable songs by making her
own selection, although Barfoot was a little dubious about her
choices.
The Psycho had beamed down the equipment Barfoot had requested
the previous night, namely amplifiers, microphones, and a smoke
machine was Barfoot insisted was important for rehearsing, and
once all was in place, and with Ingram allotted the role of
roadie (although Olding flatly refused to let him grow a beard,
gain twenty kilos in weight, or start smoking interesting herbal
substances) the newly formed, but as yet unnamed band began to
rehearse.
Meanwhile, aboard the Psycho, Olding, Damerell, Stark and
Jackson were clustered around a map of Melinar in the briefing
room. The location of the concert, a vast sporting arena on the
planet's southern continent, was clearly marked, as were various
other sites. "It's tricky," Stark was saying. "I don't know if
we can do it."
"Why not?"
"I have no idea how. I usually let Barfoot take care of the
technical stuff."
Olding gave up on his Chief Engineer and turned to Jackson.
"Doctor, you and Mr Damerell will be handlin' t' planetside
operation. Any questions?"
"One. Why me?"
"I'm runnin' out of senior officers, Doctor. Unless you think
Bleep can handle this...?"
"Fair enough."
"Mr Damerell?"
Damerell squirmed under the attention, before squeaking,
"Can't I stay here?"
"NO!"
"Oh." Damerell shuffled his feet whilst Olding glared at
him. Then, the Captain widened his glare to encompass the whole
senior staff, only to discover that apparently feet-shuffling was
contagious. Slowly but surely, the three officers' feet were
sliding leftwards. Olding was about to comment, but instead kept
up the glare until Jackson, who was on the end, collided with a
bulkhead. A moment later, Stark and Damerell joined the pileup
and the three of them collapsed into a heap on the floor.
As they hurriedly picked themselves up, Olding slapped a hand
across his eyes and tapped one foot impatiently. "Have we got
that out of our systems? Good. Dismissed. And be ready for t'
signal!"
During downtime in their rehearsals, Barfoot remarked to the
Counsellor, "You know, even though I say it myself, we're really
rather good."
"We are?"
"Yeah. Well, we're keen. Well, Jethro's keen. Well,
Jethro's noisy..." Barfoot thought for a moment, then said,
"We're awful, aren't we?"
"Afraid so, Mr Barfoot. The good news is, we don't have to be
awful, we just have to be there." The Counsellor slapped him on
his shoulder, then picked up her songsheet and, in a fair
approximation of an operatic solo, began practicing again.
Barfoot shrugged and plucked away on his bass.
The day of the concert dawned, and the Psycho crewmembers
beamed down to the stadium. All were out of uniform and had
chosen garments appropriate for their new role as rock stars.
Jethro had turned in wearing a lot of black leather, and was
squeaking about behind his drum kit. Ingram, after consulting
with the library computer, was selfconsciously wearing the dirty
black t-shirt, ripped blue jeans and multicoloured headband that
had been roadie standard uniform for four hundred years, and was
busy carrying cables across the stage.
The Counsellor had asked why, in the isolinear age, they
needed cables, to which Barfoot's only reply had been, "It's
traditional."
The Counsellor and the Eminence, on the Counsellor's
insistence, were wearing matching long black dresses, and Barfoot
had gone with his own ideas of what rock cool was. Turning down
Damerell's offer to borrow his leather jacket, Barfoot had found
himself some black trousers, a white t-shirt and a black jacket.
He was also wearing sunglasses. Constantly. Even whilst
indoors. That, in addition to his outfit, had generated a few
funny looks, but Barfoot was enjoying himself. Despite the
insanity of what he was about to try, despite the stakes
involved, this was going to be fun.
Around them, dozens of other acts were tuning up and making
the monosyllabic conversations traditional to rock bands across
the Federation. Barfoot was struck by just how relaxed they all
seemed. Other than normal pre-gig nerves, no-one seemed all that
fazed by what they were trying to achieve. When he remarked as
much to the Counsellor, she responded, "I don't think that many
people on this planet actually want a war. That's why your
scheme is going to work."
"I hope so."
"Relax, it'll be fine." The Counsellor straightened her
dress, did a few breathing exercises and wandered off to find the
Eminence with a view to doing just one last practice of one of
the more tricky harmonies. Barfoot did a few breathing exercises
of his own, although to the disinterested observer they would
have appeared to be more like hyperventilating.
In orbit, the Psycho was broadcasting a live feed of the
concert to the entire planet. Stark's engineers and Bleep had
worked constantly to refit the ship's shuttles as relay stations
to ensure they could achieve planetary coverage, and right now
Stark was sat in the Lecter monitoring the feed to the northern
hemisphere. Bleep had been carefully squeezed into the von
Bulow, on the opposite side of the planet, and the Bates, the
Krueger and the van Helsing were scattered around in varying
orbits.
On the bridge, Olding was in the centre seat, completely
surrounded by unknowns manning the bridge positions. With the
entire senior staff off the bridge, he'd had to call on the crew
he mentally termed 'ensigns of the week' to come and take over,
and he was damned if he knew the names of any of them. Hopefully
they'd be able to do their jobs, although given the average level
of competence of this crew nothing was certain.
Down in the transporter room, Damerell and Jackson were
waiting for the signal. Jackson was reading an autopsy report,
whilst Damerell was shivering nervously. The transporter
operator, after having watched Damerell for a while, decided the
room must be cool, and was steadily advancing the temperature in
an attempt to make the Ops officer feel warmer.
Jackson mopped the first beads of sweat from his forehead, and
asked, "Is it warm in here?"
"Eh?" Damerell looked at him blankly, his mind off in its own
miserable world.
"Nothing." Jackson returned to his report.
Finally, with a roar from the capacity crowd and a triumphant
fanfare, the concert began. Safely backstage, Barfoot watched
the first act with approval. They were maybe a little folksy for
his tastes, but they had a definite beat and there was no denying
they could play. And, he was pleased to note, both the rebel
leader and the Eminence were swaying in time to the music and
tapping their feet.
"Not bad," the Counsellor said. "Relax. We'll do fine."
"I'm not worried about the diplomacy any more," Barfoot
admitted.
"Really?"
"No. It's the playing that's scaring the hell out of me
now."
As the concert went on, Barfoot relaxed a little. Act after
act came and went, and the crowd seemed to be loving the show.
Viewing figures gathered from the Psycho suggested that a large
proportion of Melinar's population were watching from home, a
fact which Barfoot had carefully concealed from the two leaders.
He needed that to spring his surprise at the end of the
concert.
Finally, though, it was time for their scratch band to take
the stage. Barfoot picked up his bass, played a quick
experimental riff, and waited for the MC to give them their
introductions.
At the front of the stage, the rebel leader was stood legs
akimbo, guitar round his neck, in a traditional rock pose.
Barfoot was off to one side, with a local playing rhythm guitar.
Opposite him were the Eminence and the Counsellor standing behind
two microphones, ready to provide backing singing, and at the
back of the stage Jethro was almost completely concealed behind a
mammoth drumkit. They were ready.
"Ladies and gentlemen," the MC boomed, "We now present the
highlight of our Concert for Peace. A special, one off
performance by a specially assembled band, to highlight unity for
our world. Please put your hands together and give a big Melinar
welcome to... Peace and Harmony!"
Once again, Barfoot winced at the unnecessarily cheesy title
he'd given his band, but it was too late now. The rebel leader's
hand crashed down in a noisy power chord, Jethro began pounding
his drums, and the first chords of Queen's 'Crazy Little Thing
Called Love' echoed out across the stadium.
The concert was playing on the main viewer on the Psycho
bridge. Whilst the rest of the bridge crew was listening to the
music, Olding was waiting for the signal. It came the moment the
Eminence and Hill began their "Oohs" for the background vocals.
Barfoot lifted his guitar neck high in the air, then jumped up,
his hand plunging down across the strings simultaneously as he
came back down onto the stage. As covert signals went, Olding
considered, this one was certainly different.
"Olding to transporter rooms, start the operation."
Jackson and Damerell took their places in Transporter Room
Three, and the transporter chief, who was down to her undershirt
now and sweating profusely, began the energising sequence. As
they beamed down, in every other transporter room on the ship the
reverse procedure was taking place.
Back on the bridge, Olding gave the order, "Yellow Alert. Keep
t'shields down, but full standby power to phasers and photon
torpedoes. If this turns nasty, I want to be ready to
respond."
The Queen number came to an end, and Barfoot glanced anxiously
towards the back of the stage where the rebel leader's followers
and the Eminence's aides were clustered. If they'd heard
anything, he could expect them to rush the stage any second now.
So far, though, they weren't moving.
The Eminence took her place at the front of the stage to sing
her song, a cover of the Earth classic 'Hit Me Baby One More
Time', and Barfoot tried to cross his fingers, a manoeuvre he
discovered didn't sit well with playing bass.
Jackson and Damerell appeared in the control room that was
their target, phasers drawn. Around them, startled Melinarians
jumped out of their seats and began a move towards the doors, but
were stopped by Damerell's phaser rifle, which swung to cover
them. Although Damerell was still shaking, he looked menacing
enough to halt them in their tracks.
"Drop the shields, please," Jackson said, waving his own rifle
at a likely-looking technician.
"Okay," the technician quavered, moving to a console.
"And no funny business," Jackson snarled, "Or there will be
trouble."
"Shields dropping, Captain," a random ensign at Bleep's
station reported.
"Bluidy hell, it's working," Olding muttered. "Cargo
Transporters, lock on and energise."
Barfoot was playing hard, whilst the Eminence was doing her
best to hit the high notes over the top of Jethro's very
enthusiastic drumming. The Counsellor had just revealed hitherto
unsuspected talents at hitting spectacularly high notes for the
backing vocals, and the rebel leader was giving it all he had on
guitar. It certainly looked like he was enjoying himself, and
Barfoot prayed his good mood would last beyond the final
song.
"Transport operations complete, sir," another ensign said.
Olding allowed himself a moment of shock that they'd got this
far. "Transporter rooms, re-energise, maximum dispersion."
The moment for the final song, the duet, had come. Barfoot
checked the aides, and they still weren't doing anything.
Obviously the message hadn't come through yet.
The rebel leader came to join the Eminence at the front of the
stage, and the Counsellor unobtrusively moved back to join
Ingram, who had picked up the padd he needed and was waiting
expectantly.
Jethro gave a lavish drum roll, the rhythm guitarist started
to play, and the Melinarian version of Elton John and Kiki Dee's
duet 'Don't Go Breaking My Heart' swept out across the
auditorium.
"Olding to Jackson, your job's done. Get back here."
"Acknowledged. Energise," Jackson said, and he and Damerell
disappeared in the transporter beams. The Melinarian technicians
watched them go, then scuttled back to their positions. The duty
controller, who hadn't been the one threatened by Jackson, and
had somewhat unheroically failed to identify himself to the
intruders, said, "Get the shields back up now!"
"Too late," another technician said. "They're all gone."
"All of them?"
"Yes, sir. They got everything."
"Notify the Eminence immediately!"
An aide lifted a communicator to her ear, frowned, then her
eyes widened in shock. She started forwards to the stage, where
the Eminence was doing a good job of showing affection towards
the rebel leader. However, her progress was interrupted by the
Counsellor, flanked by Ingram.
"Problem?" the Counsellor enquired sweetly.
"I have to notify the Eminence! The rebels have attacked us!
The... wait a second," the aide looked suspiciously at the
Counsellor, who nodded.
"Yup. Not the rebels." A type II phaser appeared from
apparently nowhere, and the Counsellor pointed it at the aide.
"You wouldn't want to interrupt the final number, would you?"
Olding strode into Transporter Room Three, before stopping
dead in his tracks in the doorway. "Bluidy hell, it's hot in
here," he said, and looked across at the transporter operator.
She was down to her underwear now, and was leaning weakly against
the console. Jackson and Damerell, although better dressed, were
lying on the transporter pads, the sweat running free. Olding's
eyes blazed.
"What the hell is goin' on here?!" he demanded.
"I turned... the heat up, sir... Can't get it back down
again." The transporter operator said faintly.
"Oh for cryin' out aloud," Olding said to himself. "Just get
ready to beam us down there. And will you two pick yourselves
up!"
Jackson and Damerell reluctantly hauled themselves upright and
took their positions on the pads. Olding checked his phaser
charge and stood at the front of the group, arms clasped behind
his back, fighting the urge to mop his brow and undo his collar a
bit.
The song came to an end, and the crowd went wild. The
applause swept across the auditorium, getting louder as it went.
There was cheering. Underwear in many unfamiliar configurations
was flung at the stage. Shouts of "Encore" could be heard over
the general din. Completely impulsively, the Eminence flung her
arms around the rebel leader, who punched the air in triumph.
Now, Barfoot thought. He signalled to Ingram, who scuttled
forward to join him. Taking the padd Ingram was clutching,
Barfoot walked forwards to the front of the stage, and took the
microphone. "Ladies and Gentlemen," he began, but was drowned
out by the noise of the crowd. He tried again. "Ladies and
Gentlemen, did you enjoy that?"
"YEEEESSS!!" the crowd roared back.
"Do you want to give peace a chance?"
"YEEEESSS!!" the crowd yelled. Barfoot felt the adrenalin
pumping. He had them on a roll now. Behind him the Eminence and
the rebel leader exchanged glances and began to move towards
him. Barfoot carried on desperately.
"I have here in my hand," he waved the padd above his head, "A
guarantee of peace in our time! This concert has been the
culmination of many hours of patient negotiation which has
resulted in... PEACE!"
The crowd went wild. The Eminence lunged forwards, but was
interrupted by a transporter beam. Olding appeared right in her
path. "Don't even think about it, lass," he warned.
Barfoot kept going. "Your leaders have agreed to disarm, and
work together for the betterment of your society. This day will
become a great one in Melinarian history!"
Anything more he may have tried to say was lost as the crowd
went utterly berserk. Barfoot gave up on the diplomat-speak, and
thrust his fist in the air, first and last fingers pointing
upwards. "Rock on!" he yelled, deliriously happy.
"That's enough, Mr Barfoot," Olding growled from behind him,
and Barfoot dropped his hand guiltily. He turned round, and
said, "Sorry, sir."
"You can't make us disarm," the rebel leader said, and the
Eminence nodded. Behind them, the aide arrived with the
Counsellor. "Eminence, these Starfleeters have confiscated our
weapons!"
"What?!" the Eminence exclaimed, and Olding said, "We've
already made you disarm."
"Where are our weapons?" the rebel leader said.
"Their molecules are floatin' in orbit of this planet," Olding
replied. "We beamed 'em out o' their warehouses."
"You can't have got all of them," the rebel leader said.
"No, probably not," the Counsellor agreed. "But we've got more
than enough. We've been scanning your planet for them since we
arrived here."
"We have hidden caches, up in the hills!"
"Not any more," the Counsellor said, a tad smugly. "You
couldn't fight now if you tried."
"Then what are we supposed to do?!" The Eminence wailed.
"You could try this treaty," Barfoot said, and proffered her
the padd. The Eminence gave him a long, searching look, then
reluctantly took the padd. "It seems we don't have a choice, do
we?"
"Nope," Barfoot agreed. "Gotta love diplomacy."
The Eminence stepped forwards to the microphone, with the
rebel leader next to her, and addressed the cheering crowd.
"Right," Olding said. "That's that. Time we left. Mr
Barfoot, collect your gear and get ready to beam up. I want to
be away from here in less than an hour."
"Sir," Barfoot nodded and began to pack up his kit. Olding
tapped his commbadge and said, "Olding to Psycho, one to beam
up." He vanished in the transporter effect.
Jackson and Damerell gave the erstwhile rock band a helping
hand in dismantling their equipment and assembling it for
transport. Whilst they were working, the Eminence approached
Barfoot, and said, "Can I ask you something?"
"Sure?"
"How did you get this to work? It's insane?"
Barfoot put down the amplifier he was holding, and said, "Do
you really want to know?"
"Yes," the Eminence nodded.
"Okay," Barfoot began. "It's simple really. We worked out
that you wanted to fight, but neither of you wanted to lose
Federation support. So, whilst you were going to do your
damndest to scupper the negotiations, you wouldn't do anything to
harm your relations. Kicking out Captain Olding was one thing,
but as long as I was polite and diplomatic you couldn't touch me,
and you had to agree to everything I suggested."
"And this was your educated diplomatic technique?"
"Worked, didn't it?" Barfoot gave her a lopsided smile, and
the Eminence considered him for a moment. "Return to your ship,
Mr Barfoot. You are a dangerous man."
"Thanks," Barfoot responded, and picked up his amplifier.
"Captain's Log, Stardate 512351.736. T'Psycho has left
Melinar, and our diplomat has returned to moppin' t' floor in
Engineerin'. We have been ordered to make a transport run to the
New Canberra colony. A nice, routine mission. Shift some
colonists from one planet to another. Much better than bluidy
diplomacy. End log entry."