Enigma Ship J. York (rainbow fish read aloud TXT) đ
- Author: J. York
Book online «Enigma Ship J. York (rainbow fish read aloud TXT) đ». Author J. York
âLike, say, by running into one,â added Duffy.
âSo what we need, sir, is the missing link between the magnetic probe and shields. That we donât find in the books.â
Scotty considered the problem, idly stroking his mustache with a fingertip as he did. âTell me, did you ever hear of the Nelscott flip?â
Gomez blinked. âSir?â
âWhen I was on the asteroid freight run at Deneva, the lads there pulled a wee trick on me. They used a magnetic probe to invert the phase of the gravity generator under my cabin.â
Duffy chuckled.
âAye,â said Scott, âit plastered me to the ceiling until they switched it back again. Some engineer named Nelscott stumbled on the trick, and they pulled it on every new officer aboard.â
âThat makes sense,â said Duffy. âYou canât have shields without gravitron generation, and if you flip the phase, the local fields would repel each other, creating our doorway. Weâve got the âcan openerâ we were looking for, and now we have a pretty good idea how it works.â
Gomez nodded. âThank you, Captain. We couldnât have figured it out without you.â
âAny time, lass. Anything else I can do, let me know. Also, since this concerns holograms, thereâs a lad you might want to look up. Top man in the field, or so they tell me.â
âBroccoli!â Duffy said suddenly.
âI beg your pardon?â
âYou mean Reg Barclay, right?â
âAye, thatâs the one. Heâs at Project Voyager on Jupiter Station.â
Gomez smiled. âWe served with him on the Enterprise, Captain. Heâs actually quite a skilled diagnostic engineerâholographyâs just what he, ah, established his reputation with. Weâll definitely get in touch with him, though.â
âMeanwhile,â said Scotty with a dramatic sigh, âIâm due in another blasted meeting. Admirals.â His image flickered out, to be replaced by the Starfleet logo.
Duffy shook his head. âHavenât talked to old Broccoli in years. Been meaning to get in touch with him ever since he tracked Voyager down in the Delta Quadrant.â
âIf I remember correctly,â Gomez said with a smile, âCaptain Picard gave a cease-and-desist order on that nickname.â
Laughing, Duffy said, âLike that was gonna stop me. Câmon, letâs put a call in to Jupiter Station. Fabe should talk to him, too. He may have some ideas how to see inside that holographic shell.â He sighed. âWhich would help us on our biggest unknown on a list of many. Our can opener should get us in, and in theory, out as well. So if our freighter pilot had the same can opener too, why did he go in, and never come out?â
* * *
Abramowitz sat at her cabinâs small workstation, reviewing reports from the other Enigma teams. It seemed as though everyone was making progress but her. The latest development was from Stevens, who, thanks to his consultation with holographic expert Reginald Barclay, thought he had a way of scanning Enigma for life signs. The technique didnât promise a great deal of accuracy or detail, but it might tell them something about what they were dealing with.
She pushed her chair back, and stared at Stevensâs report glumly. Just good enough to prove me wrong.
A movement in the corner of her eye made her look up at her cabinâs open door. She liked working with the door open, a habit sheâd developed as a student. Dr. Lense stood in the corridor just outside. Abramowitz could see her lips moving. Lense was clearly unaware Abramowitz couldnât hear her.
Abramowitz waved her inside. Lense looked puzzled, stepped through the door, and immediately jammed her index fingers into her ears.
âSorry,â said Abramowitz, raising her voice to be heard over the music. âComputer, mute audio!â She hadnât even been conscious of the music until it was gone. âThereâs an audio damping field across the door. Ensign Conlon rigged it up. Probably something to do with her cabin being across the hall.â
Lense glanced at the door. âImagine that.â She shook her head as though clearing her ears. âWas that drad music?â
âNausicaan tusk opera. It doesnât sound a thing like drad music.â
âSorry, Iâm not a connoisseur of pain. Itâs all pretty much âouchâ to me.â She took a deep breath, and shifted nervously from one foot to another. âLook, this isnât starting out well. I just wanted toâand donât get used to this, because I donât plan to make it a habitâbut I wanted to apologize, both for walking out on you earlier, and for being less than helpful on this assignment.â
Abramowitz shrugged. âYouâve got other work. I assumed you were getting sickbay ready for possible casualties.â
Lense shook her head. âNot that much to do really, until we know more. Iâve got Wetzel, Copper, and Emmett,â the last being the shipâs Emergency Medical Hologram, âreplicating and stockpiling extra medical supplies, but theyâre more than capable of handling it.â
She glanced at the nestlike pod where Abramowitzâs roommate, P8 Blue, slept. The cabin was small, like all the others on da Vinci, and the alien pod made it feel even more cramped. Without waiting for an invitation, Lense sat down on the bunk. âFact is, I saw things during the Dominion War that nobody should ever see. I thought I had gotten over it, and in a way, I have. Iâm ready to handle the obvious nightmares lurking out there: the wreckage, the casualties, the bodies beyond help, the scattered remains that donât even resemble bodies any more. All that Iâm ready for. I can take it. What I canât take is the nervous laughter of people about to brush shoulders with death.â
Abramowitz turned to face her. It never occurred to her that the doctor would feel that wayâespecially after how she handled herself on Shermanâs Planet. âI didnât meanââ
Lense waved her off. âYou didnât do anything. Itâs me. Maybe one day youâll understand, but for your sake, I hope you never do.â
They were quiet for a while. Then Lense raised her chin and looked up at Abramowitz. âIâve been thinking about our question, and I think youâre right. This thing is artificial. A probe, a ship, a robot, something like that.
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