Silence of the Q
Captain's Log, Stardate 24601.5
What a bluidy cock-up. We're meant t'be running
sensor sweeps of the Kamin system, which is apparently on the
verge of going nova so is of 'interest' to Federation
scientists. Why there isn't a bluidy science vessel in
'ere taking the readings I don't know, but someone
back home decided we were the vessel to enter an unstable system
and play chicken with an exploding star, so here we are.
Lieutenant Barfoot strolled into Engineering whistling
cheerfully through his teeth, idly tossing an induction-driver
into the air and catching it again. Shimmying past the
diagnostics table he fumbled a catch, dropping the multipurpose
tool. For some reason his right foot instinctively lashed out,
possibly in some insane attempt to halt the descent of the metal
object. In this the action achieved its goal with unparalleled
success; not only did the tool halt its downwards progress, it
altered direction completely and launched with considerable speed
towards the warp core.
"Oh bugger," was all Barfoot had time to say
before it struck and a crackling array of energy surges exploded
from the core, blasting a poor unsuspecting engineering crewman
across the room, over the diagnostics table, past Barfoot and out
of the remarkably quick off the mark opening main doors.
Stark ran out of his office as all the lights flickered. They
both struggled to keep their footing as the ship dropped
violently out of warp.
"What the hell was that?!" Stark shouted as
engineers began their usual headless chicken routines in the
background.
"Um," Barfoot thought quickly, "probably
some kind of energy spike interfering with the flux chamber. You
know how unstable that thing can be!" He grinned manically
as if tremendously pleased about it, earning himself a suspicious
look from the chief engineer.
"Hmm. Can you fix it?" Stark demanded. Barfoot
shrugged.
"Probably," he hazarded. "I haven't
looked at it yet, though."
"Well sort it out!!" Stark shouted, drawing
attention to them. "I've got a sponge in the oven
and if the power keeps flickering like this it's going to
be ruined!"
Barfoot glanced at the core, which was still arcing energy in
a variety of pretty colours and occasionally forcibly expelling a
crewman from its immediate vicinity with a flash and a smell of
bacon, and wondered briefly about his chief's priorities.
As Stark stormed back into his office-cum-kitchen Barfoot rubbed
his hands briskly together and strode towards the core.
"Right! Let's get this-"
He was interrupted by a crackle of pink energy that missed its
apparent intended target - Crewman Harding, who was now
cowering on the floor - and instead earthed itself directly
into Barfoot's chest.
"Crap!" he shouted, and reflected as he lost
consciousness that he had started swearing a lot more since
joining the Psycho crew. If he thought about it hard enough,
there was probably a connection. Unfortunately he never got the
chance as all conscious thought slipped away and he was left with
his usual post-concussion dream of being chased across a field of
spanners by a giant sponge cake.
"What the bluidy hell is it this time?" Olding
shouted over the horrendous caterwauling of most of the alert
sirens going off at once and the inertial dampeners squealing as
they fought to compensate for the gut-wrenching deceleration.
"Unknown!" the Counsellor called back, making the
mistake of standing up before the ship had stopped rumbling. A
final muffled thump indicted that Ensign Ingram had finally
managed to convince the massive vessel to stop, throwing
Counsellor Hill into Damerell, who screamed like a girl and
passed out. Sighing she pushing him unceremoniously out of his
seat so he could assume his standard mid-emergency foetal
position and took control of the Ops console herself.
"Readings indicate either an energy spike disrupting the
plasma flux chamber, or someone managed to make contact between
the main intermix chamber and an active energy inducer,"
she said, consulting the very detailed list of error messages the
crew of the Psycho had accumulated over the years.
"We're dead in space."
"Bluidy engineers," Olding grumbled, hitting the
comm. panel on the arm of his chair. "Olding to
Engineering."
There was a longer than normal pause before a voice came on
the channel.
"En- Engineering here, Ca- Captain,"
the owner of the voice sounded terrified.
"Who's this?" Olding asked sharply.
"Where are Stark and Barfoot?"
"Cr- Crewman Harding, sir," the voice
replied. "Lieutenant Barfoot's a bit unconscious at
the moment, and we can't find Commander Stark
anywhere."
"Have you got t'situation under control?"
Olding asked simply.
"Uh, if you like, I suppose," Harding replied
doubtfully.
"Good enough. I want my engines back, pronto!" He
angrily smacked the panel and shut off the communication.
Counsellor Hill spun around in her chair to look at him.
"What?" he demanded.
"The crewman said that Stark was missing," she
pointed out, and he sighed.
"I was tryin' not to think about that." He
glanced up at the ceiling. "Computer, locate Chief Engineer
Stark."
"Chief Engineer Stark is in the port
turbolift."
Olding and Hill exchanged startled glances. In any crisis
situation, it was usually a given that any crewmember who
disappeared was going to have left the confines of the ship.
Olding stood and walked to the turbolift, closely followed by the
Counsellor. As they approached the doors opened, revealing the
occupants. Olding stared in resigned disbelief. Stark waved at
him, embarrassed, dressed in civilian clothes. Beside him
stood-
"Q?!"
The near-omnipotent being grinned at Olding.
"Hello Christopher!" he said cheerfully striding
out onto the bridge, brushing past Olding as he did so. Stark
hurried out, giving Olding an apologetic look before retreating
to the rear of the bridge. Olding turned to glare at Q.
"I know you remember what 'appened the last time
you tried to mess around wi' us," he said in a low,
threatening voice, and was rewarded by a slight tic under
Q's right eye.
"Yes, well," Q bustled on, "fortunately for
you, retribution for that event is not the purpose of my
visit." He tried to hide a small, malevolent smile as he
said that, which Olding picked up on.
"Then why are you here?" he asked.
Q sauntered across the bridge and seated himself comfortably
in the captain's chair. The counsellor watched with
interest as Olding's face turned red and his fists
clenched.
"I have a proposition for you," Q told him,
apparently oblivious to Olding's rising ire and blood
pressure.
"Ngh!" Olding managed.
"I want my son to experience what it is to be mortal,
and in exchange I will allow one of your officers to experience
life within the Q Continuum." Hill glanced at the back of
the Bridge, where Stark was trying to make himself
inconspicuous. Apparently the decision of who would be going
with Q had already been made, so-
"Wait a minute," she blurted out, "your
SON?!"
That particular revelation had defused even Olding's
anger, and the entire Bridge crew was staring at Q open-mouthed.
He smirked and waved a hand at the still-open turbolift.
"Come out here."
A figure with shoulder length hair hanging over its face and
dressed in baggy, dark clothing stomped out onto the Bridge. It
- he, Olding assumed - stood with his arms folded
beside Q, scowling out from under the straggly curtains of hair.
His stance had that odd, awkwardly gangling look only achievable
by those in their mid-teens whose hormones were running
rampant.
"Everyone, I would like to introduce my
son-" he was interrupted by a surprisingly deep voice
from the figure beside him.
"Grunge."
Q stopped and looked at him. "Grunge?"
The boy looked to one side and rolled his eyes, making a
disgusted expression. Q stared at him disbelievingly.
"You really want people to call you
'Grunge'?"
'Grunge' shrugged noncommittally.
"Honestly," Q sighed, giving Olding a helpless
look. "He's at that age when everything your parents
do is wrong, and you hate the name they've given you. Tell
me, what's wrong with 'Q'?" He held his
hands out almost beseechingly, and all Olding could do was stare
and shrug.
Q sighed melodramatically. "Ah well. We must all
endure these little trials, I suppose. Now, I'll just
borrow your engineer and if you could show my son what it means
to be mortal-"
"Wait just one bluidy second!!" Olding boomed,
"you really expect us to help you?"
"My dear Captain," Q gave a small laugh, as if it
was all beyond his control, "after what you did to me last
time I visited, I'd imagine it would be the least you could
do!"
"Daaad!" Grunge whined, "do I have to do
this?"
Q rounded on him. "We've been through all this.
I did it when I was your age, your mother did it, even your Uncle
Q did it. It's tradition, and it's important. So
yes, you do."
Glaring angrily at his father Grunge reached up with his right
hand and clicked his fingers, looking rather surprised when
nothing happened. Q tried to hide the look of smugness on his
face.
"For the duration your powers will be limited. No
teleporting, and no playing with the ship. I'll leave you
to work out what you're allowed to do on your own."
He turned to Olding with a mildly pleading look on his face.
"Please, Olding, Just do this for me. Picard's
already sent me packing and Janeway won't return my
calls."
"Oh, so we're your third choice are we?"
Olding said scornfully. Q moved closer, the pleading look
intensifying.
"I'll owe you, Christopher, think about
that- you have to do this for me, if you
don't-" he lowered his voice, "my wife is
going to kill me!"
Olding looked at him with a certain amount of sympathy.
"Oh hell. Alright. But only for a couple of
days."
"Done!" Q exclaimed happily. "Come along
Matthew!" he flashed away, taking Stark with him.
Counsellor Hill stood from the Ops console, allowing a slowly
recovering Damerell to retake his seat, and she and Olding
approached the teenaged Q.
"Counsellor, would you please show our guest to his
quarters," Olding said briskly, ignoring the scything glare
Hill directed at him. He faced Grunge. "I hope you enjoy
your stay, I doubt the rest o' us will."
With that he returned to his chair, ostensibly assessing the
reports coming in from over the ship and checking up on things in
engineering. Hill turned a businesslike smile on her charge, who
was openly staring at her chest.
"Follow me," she said curtly, striding for the
turbolift.
"Gladly," Grunge replied, eyes travelling downward
as he walked behind her.
A short turbolift ride and a swift crack on the back of the
head later, Grunge was following her meekly through the
ship's corridors rubbing his head and staring at her
reproachfully.
"You didn't have to do that!" he whined.
She stopped and whirled around, making him skid to a stop.
"If you try to touch me again I'll do far worse
than that, understand?" He nodded forlornly, messy hair
swaying, and he looked so miserable that she relented slightly.
"Look, your father told us to show you what it's like
to be human, and you just can't do that sort of
thing."
He nodded again and she started off back down the corridor.
He hurried to catch up.
"What about looking?" he asked, "can I
look?"
The Counsellor smiled a little. "If you're subtle
about it," she allowed. "Blatant staring isn't
good."
They arrived at the guest quarters, and she keyed the door
open. "I'll leave you to settle in, get used to it,
that sort of thing. I'll be back in a little while to see
how you are, ok?"
He nodded and kept his eyes relatively level with hers, so she
allowed him a smile before she tapped the button to close the
door and walked away, sighing to herself. The kid seemed
alright, if a little unschooled in social graces. How difficult
could looking after him for a few days be?
"So Matthew, you have the unlimited powers of the Q at
your disposal!" Q sat back in his high-backed, leather
upholstered armchair. "What would you like to do?"
Stark was sat in a similar chair positioned opposite Q, both of
them turned slightly to face a massive fireplace. He looked
around wide-eyed.
"This is the Q Continuum?" he asked, and Q smiled
benignly.
"My little corner of it," he admitted. "Do
you like it?"
Stark took a good look around the room, which seemed to
stretch of somewhere into the middle distance.
"It's- interesting," he hazarded.
"Is that the best you can do?" Q huffed.
"I mean, it's nice, just not really my
style," Stark added quickly, "I tend to like things a
little more- um- culinary." Q looked at him
blankly. "You know, kitchens and things."
"Then why don't you rearrange things to suit
yourself?" Q suggested, smirking, "After all,
you're partaking of the power of the Q now. Just picture
what you want and-" he mimed clicking his
fingers.
"Um-" Stark frowned in concentration, trying
to picture his idea kitchen. He kept finding that when he had
certain details in his head, others tended to slip out. Q
tutted.
"Don't work so hard. All you need to do it think
'kitchen' and a kitchen will appear."
Regarding him suspiciously Stark did as he suggested, and
almost immediately the world around him began to reform. In just
a few seconds they were seated across from each other at a large
farmhouse kitchen table, surrounded by an even larger farmhouse
kitchen. Stark jumped up and ran over to the cooker.
"An Aga!! An actual Aga!! I've never actually seen
one of these!"
Q smiled benevolently. "It's a hard life, being a
Q," said smugly.
Captain's Log, Supplemental
We've been hampered in our data gathering efforts by
a few problems: our engines are currently offline, and
we're slightly lacking in conscious engineering staff of
sufficient command rank to make proper decisions. With any luck,
Barfoot will be back on his feet soon.
To make matters worse, a certain deity with a bastard poor
reputation within Starfleet has foisted his teenage son off on us
for an unspecified amount of time to 'experience what it is
to be mortal' - whatever the 'ell that means.
I hope my Chief Engineer's enjoyin' himself!
Having tasked the Counsellor with the job of keeping Grunge
occupied for the duration of his visit, Olding turned his
attention back to the more pressing matter of them being stuck
adrift in a system whose sun was liable to go nova at any
second. His initial instinct was to let the engineering staff
get on with it. It was a policy that had served him well up
until now, but the fact that both his senior engineers were
currently incapacitated was giving him cause for concern. As a
result, after leaving the Bridge in the incapable hands of
Lieutenant-Commander Damerell, he made one of his infrequent
trips down to the lower decks, just to see how things were
getting on.
There was a group of engineers clustered around the centre
table, all pointing firmly at different parts of the diagram
loaded on the screen. As he approached, one of them looked up,
eyes widening when he realised who was standing next to him.
"Hello Captain," he squeaked. Olding recognised
his voice from the intercom.
"Alright Crewman Harding," he sighed,
"let's 'ave it."
"Err- what?" Harding asked, confused. The
other engineers started to slowly shuffle away from their
comrade.
"Report on the situation!" Olding snapped, and
Harding jumped to attention.
"Yessir! The warp core is currently shutdown due to a
spark of induced energy flashing through it, causing an overload
of both the primary and secondary matter pods."
Olding ignored the technobabble. "What about impulse
engines? Why can't we even get the ship moving out of the
system at lower speeds?"
Harding gave a little, uncertain laugh. "Ah, yes, well,
one of our attempts to fix the core burnt out the impulse
coils."
Olding closed his eyes and took a deep breath. "Right.
I don't care about any of that. If that star out there
goes nova we're all toast, so I want this solved as soon as
bleedin' possible, got it?" As Harding nodded
frantically Olding glanced to one side, seeing the sprawled body
of an unconscious Barfoot propped up against a bulkhead.
"Shouldn't he be in sickbay?" he asked.
A surprised expression crossed Harding's face. "I
knew we'd forgotten to do something!"
Shaking his head in despair, Olding left engineering as
quickly as he could.
"This is Fred's Bar, where the crew comes to
relax," Counsellor Hill said as she led Grunge into the
western themed room and up to the bar. They had spent a little
time getting Grunge settled into his quarters, at which point she
had decided a tour of the ship was in order to waste some time.
She gestured for him to take a seat as she sat and Fred wandered
over, cleaning a glass out with a cloth.
"Howdy there, Miss," he said politely, tipping his
had towards her. "What will you and the young gentleman be
having?"
Opening her mouth to order soft drinks due to Grunge's
apparent age, Hill hesitated. She glanced over at the young man,
who was watching the crew move about the room with a look of
disinterest on his face, then back at Fred with an evil grin on
her face. "Two Deltan BrainBlasters, Fred," she
said. Fred raised his eyebrows but complied, mixing the drinks
in front of them. Grunge turned to her, watching the drinks
curiously.
"What's that?" he asked. Hill turned to him
with a sweet smile.
"I'm going to show you just what it's like
to be human," she said. He turned a distrustful look on
her, causing her smile to widen. "You'll love
it."
The Psycho drifted silently through the system, passing
relatively close to the seventh planet, a massive gas giant with
an extensive ring system. Olding used the opportunity to take
detailed readings of the planet's structure, which was of
some interest due to the unusually high levels of rho particles
in the violent, stormy upper atmosphere.
Olding waited in his ready room, taking the time to catch up
on the crew evaluation reports he had been supposed to be
reading. Much to his intense relief, before he was forced to
pick up Jackson's and assess the casualty count, his
intercom beeped.
"Olding here."
"Err- it's Crewman Harding here, sir.
We're ready to try a test on the impulse
engines."
"Sodding finally," Olding muttered, switching off
his terminal and heading out onto the bridge where the Counsellor
was conspicuous by her absence. He briefly wondered how she was
getting on before sitting in the command chair and touching the
panel on his chair.
"Olding to engineering, begin test on your
mark."
There was a heavy pause on the other end before
Harding's voice replied hesitantly. "Uh, right,
Bridge. Err- what?" There was the almost inaudible
sound of someone muttering in the crewman's ear.
"No, the transducer, you idiot, not the inducer-
Okay, test begins in three- two- one-
mark!"
Ensign Ingram watched his display carefully as the power
levels on the impulse engines started to rise and the indicator
lights on his panel turned green one by one. "We are
regaining control of our engines," he said, just before one
of the green lights abruptly went red. "Wait, uh-
what the-?"
Olding stood and turned to Bleep, who responded to the
unspoken demand. "The starboard governor is
malfunctioning. Engine coils normally regulated by that device
are overheating. Attempting override."
"Engineering!" Olding shouted, "gi'me
a bluidy clue as to what's goin' on!"
"Err- miscalculation, sir," Harding
replied. "We put in the new coils but- well-
it looks like they're the old fifty-six standard rather
than the newer seventy-eight- we calibrated the arrays
wrong, so-"
"I don't give a bugger about the details!"
Olding shouted, "sort it out!"
"Aye, Capta-"
Harding's cowed response was cut off by the ship
suddenly whirling wildly out of control, sending everyone not
seated crashing to the floor, Olding included.
"By 'eck, feels just like Mister Wall's back
on board," he muttered as he pulled himself into his chair,
listening to the inertial dampeners still straining against the
change in direction. "Report!"
"The starboard engine's blown out," Ingram
reported, ignoring Damerell who was gibbering quietly to
himself. "The port one is overcompensating and we're
in a spin, heading straight for the planet!"
Olding's gaze turned to the viewscreen, which showed the
planet approaching rapidly. "Can we stop?" he asked,
hopefully.
Ingram tapped a few controls, then shook his head. "The
portside relays have been burnt out by the rapid
overcompensation."
Olding fought off a feeling of despair. "Engineering!
Fix those bloody relays!" Without waiting for a response
he turned to Bleep again. "Why did they overcompensate so
badly?" he asked.
"Unknown," Bleep answered him. "The
suspected cause is badly-calibrated coils."
"God help me, I never thought I'd say this but
bring back Barfoot!" Olding muttered to himself.
"Even Stark would have a better handle on things than
this!"
All they could do was wait as the planet in the viewscreen
grew larger and larger. Damerell had long since given up
pretending to be in control of himself and had mercifully passed
out on the floor, the relief ops officer taking his place. After
a little while, the ship began to rock as it was buffeted by the
gasses in the upper atmosphere of the planet.
The intercom beeped.
"We have partial power to the starboard engine,"
Harding reported, "and helm should have control of
both."
Ingram's hands flew across his controls.
"Confirmed. Bringing us into a- uh- incredibly
low orbit of the planet."
Olding gave a heavy sigh of relief as the ship steadied itself
and they began to rise out of the atmosphere. He was about to
order Ingram to get them away from the planet when a klaxon
started to sound and the lights on the bridge went dim.
"What the bluidy hell is it this time?!" he
shouted into the darkness.
Down in Fred's Bar, the Counsellor picked herself up
from off the floor, where she had been thrown by the sudden
movement of the ship. As she had expected, never having
experienced alcohol before and with most of his powers stripped,
Grunge was a complete lightweight and was still slumped on the
floor where the violent pitching had thrown him.
"Come on," she said, dragging him upright,
"we'd better go and see what the fuss is
about."
His bleary gaze focussed on her. "Y'hknow
whas?" he slurred, breathing alcohol fumes into her face
and collapsing on unstable legs before she caught him.
"What's that?" she asked as she slung him
over her shoulder in a fireman's lift.
"I luv you," he said, addressing her back.
"Y're my besht friend!"
"That's nice," she muttered, heading for the
turbolift. They rode up to the bridge in silence, except for the
occasional muttered inaudible comment from Grunge, who was
starting to feel a little worse for wear, especially being hung
upside down. As she stepped out Olding turned from where he was
leant over the Ops console, eyebrows going up as she crossed the
Bridge and deposited an unconscious Grunge into the
counsellor's chair.
"What's going on?" she asked, quickly
distracting Olding from her companion, a flick of his eyebrows
telling her that she would have some explaining to do later.
"When we started to pull out of the atmosphere the rho
particles reacted badly with the engine output," the ops
officer told her. "We had to shut the engines down before
the build-up of energy caused an explosion that would have
destroyed the ship."
Hill crossed the Bridge to stand next to Olding, watching the
viewscreen.
"We were in the planet's atmosphere?" she
asked.
"Aye," Olding said, "and now we're
stuck in a decaying orbit with no engines. Engineering are
working on the problem."
"This really hasn't been a good day, has
it?" she asked, drawing a 'hmmm' from Olding.
They were interrupted by a small voice from behind them.
"S- 'scuse me?"
They turned to find Grunge standing unsteadily, blinking
against the dim lights in the room. His odd metabolism had
apparently already brought him to the hangover stage. He was
holding out a single red rose to the Counsellor.
"F- for you," he said as she took it from
his hand. He reached up to rub his temples.
"Ow."
"That's- very sweet," Hill told him,
ignoring Olding's glare. "Why don't you go and
sit down while we sort things out?"
He nodded miserably and collapsed back into the
counsellor's chair, holding his head in his hands. The
Counsellor took one look at him and walked to the captain's
ready room, Olding following her.
"Got yourself a fan, I see," he said sarcastically
as she went to the replicator and ordered a strong, black
coffee.
"He's actually kind of-nice," she
admitted. "Not anywhere near as arrogant as Q, and
he's got this sort of- puppy-dog quality about
him." She once again carefully ignored Olding's
raised eyebrow. The captain let silence reign for a few moments
before speaking.
"Where did he get t'rose from, anyway?"
Hill shrugged. "Q didn't take all his powers
away, just limited them. I don't think he's up to
much except parlour tricks."
"Hmm." Olding considered that. "How about a
bit of particle dissipation?" he suggested. Hill met his
look, nodded and returned to the Bridge.
Kneeling beside Grunge, who was hunched over in his chair, she
held out the coffee. "Here you go," she told him,
"this'll make it all better."
"Really?" he asked plaintively, taking hold of the
hot cup.
Unable to lie, she shrugged. "It might help."
He eyed the black liquid suspiciously before downing most of
it in one long gulp. Hill waited a moment before speaking.
"Look, Grunge, we've got a bit of a problem and we
think you might be able to help us out."
"I want to die," he told her.
"Well, we don't always get what we want,"
she told him sharply, then softened her tone. "All we need
you to do it make the level of rho particles outside the ship go
down, so we can start our engines and get out of here. Do you
think you can do that?"
He shrugged. "I have no idea what rho particles are but
I can try, I guess. For you."
Trying to suppress a blush Hill watched as he closed his
eyes.
"Wow, how did you end up here?" he asked.
"Uh, hold on-"
His brow furrowed as he concentrated, and sweat started to
bead on his forehead. He started to clench his fists, and Hill
quickly removed the cup before he broke it. Feeling her hands,
Grunge grabbed one of them, holding it tightly. All she could do
was grip back, willing him to succeed. It was several tense
minutes before Bleep spoke up.
"The level of rho particles is dissipating. Beginning
impulse engine restart sequence."
The subtle hum of the engines filled the room as Grunge opened
his eyes.
"My head hurts," he moaned. The Counsellor waited
a moment until Ingram was slowly piloting the ship out of the
atmosphere on minimum impulse before leaning over and kissing the
teenage Q on the forehead.
"Thanks," she said, smiling at him. He reached up
to touch his forehead, eyes wide, before a huge grin spread over
his face. She stood up and moved across to sit in the first
officer's chair as Olding sat down in the centre seat.
"Crisis over," he said, looking over at Grunge,
who was still staring at the Counsellor, "thanks to our
young friend here. I-"
"Captain," Bleep interrupted him, "radiation
levels from the star have started to increase exponentially,
surface flare rate is also increasing. I estimate the star will
go nova within ten minutes."
Olding's hand slammed down on his comm panel.
"Olding to engineering."
"Barfoot here."
"Oh thank God," Olding muttered.
"We've got a bit o' a problem here, Mister
Barfoot. We have no warp engines and we're less than ten
minutes away from a star going nova in our immediate vicinity.
Any suggestions?"
"Get out and push?" Barfoot suggested, adding
hastily before Olding could shout at him, "I'll get
on it."
"Mister Ingram, set course to leave the system and give
us best speed until the warp core is repaired," Olding
ordered, and Ingram hurried to comply. Olding became
uncomfortably aware of Grunge staring past him at the
Counsellor. He cleared his throat and tried to think of a way to
pass the time.
"So, eh, Grunge, how's your stay been?" he
asked. Grunge blinked as if coming out of a daze and glanced at
the Captain.
"It's been great," he said enthusiastically,
apparently already having forgotten the after effects of the
alcohol.
"Ah, grand," Olding said, already having run out
of conversational topics with a teenager. They sat in more
uncomfortable silence with Bleep calling out each minute as they
passed. Just as the android was declaring one minute remaining,
the intercom beeped.
"Barfoot to bridge, I've jerry-rigged a bypass to
the damaged equipment. Put the pedal to the metal!" the
engineer called up.
"Emergency warp!" Olding called out, standing up
as Ingram's hands danced over his console, sending the ship
catapulting out of the system. Behind them the star began to
collapse in on itself, exploding violently outwards once a
certain density had been reached and sending out an energy wave
that consumed everything in the system.
Olding once more seated himself in his command chair,
adrenaline levels slowly returning to normal. Gently, he touched
the intercom button.
"Olding to engineering, well done Mister
Barfoot."
"What the hell's been going on down here while
I've been gone? There's burnt out junctions and
patching like you wouldn't believe all over the
place!"
"Your crew was trying to get the warp engines working
again," Olding told him.
"All they needed to do was attach the emergency matter
pod! Bunch of amateurs! I don't know, you get knocked
unconscious for five minutes and the whole place just-"
Olding cut off the intercom. He opened his mouth to speak but
got no further when a brilliant white light filled the room and Q
appeared, stark beside him. The bridge went silent at the sight
of them. Stark was grinning, apron covered in food, holding what
had to be the biggest souffle; Olding had ever seen. Q, on
the other hand, was scowling, covered head-to-toe in-
something.
"I should've learnt my lesson the first
time," Q raged, "but no, I had to give you a second
chance!" He shoved Stark away and glared at Olding.
"Your engineer has made a mess of the Continuum! His
efforts to create the perfect souffle; have caused untold
damage!"
Olding shrugged, standing up. "You invited him,"
he pointed out.
"I thought he was the normal one!" Q shouted
before regaining his composure and brushing some goop off his
shoulder to splat on the floor. "Come, Grunge, we're
leaving. I'm sure you've experienced enough
mortality by now." He snapped his fingers, and Grunge
raised his hand to look at it, feeling the return of his
powers.
"But Daaaad!" he whined, "I don't
wanna go!"
"You're coming with me, boy, now!" Q
snapped his fingers, but Grunge quickly raised his hand and
snapped his own fingers, smirking cheekily at Q's angry
expression as he disappeared. Grunge turned to Counsellor Hill,
taking hold of one of her hands.
"He'll come after me, I've got to go,"
he said, snapping his fingers and producing a massive bunch of
flowers, handing them to her. "I'll be back as soon
as I can," he told her, before disappearing. There was
utter silence on the bridge as everyone stared at the
Counsellor. Finally Damerell, who had only just regained his
senses long enough to witness the events of the last few minutes,
broke the mood.
"The Counsellor and Grunge, sitting in a tree," he
sang, "K-"
"Finish that sentence, Mister Damerell," Hill said
sweetly, "and you'll be eating through a
straw."
As Damerell hastily shut up, Hill sniffed the flowers. An
omnipotent admirer. She liked the sound of that.