Part 11: July 21, 2465 (Again)

The Frontiere roared through compressed space traveling as fast as it could without entering a temporal warp and going backwards in time. Talox used his exquisitely sensitive fingers on both hands to delicately manipulate the controls of the Frontiere, keeping its speed several thousandths of a percent under the Sanderford limit. He kept a close look on the clock as it ticked down the seconds until the anticipated discharge of the Cusp neutrino weapon, which would usher in their ‘New Dawn’. He was still not sure he would make it in time, but he knew he had to take the chance. He ran diagnostic checks on the nuclear missile waiting in the launching bay of the Frontiere and felt sure it was ready to carry out its lethal task.

Talox knew he had to drop out of compressed space as close to the Cusp emitter site as possible, to ensure the nuclear missile had the shortest possible travel time to its target. Split-second timing was essential, and he knew the moment of truth was upon him.

On a small, rocky planet spinning around a greenish star in the Abell 1478 cluster, on the side of the planet that was perpetually facing away from their sun and in eternal darkness, a huge, spherical structure sat on four support legs on a vast frozen lava plain. Its light gray surface was of uniform smoothness and appearance, having no windows or other feature. The only discernible disruption in the perfect symmetry of its surface was four portals on the bottom. Resting nearby on the hard, brittle surface of the planet were many scores of ships and transport vessels, all with the flattened crescent of the Cusp Foundation obvious on their sides.

Inside the sphere was a gathering of several thousand of the ruling elite of the Cusp Foundation, all dressed in rich, vividly colored robes trimmed in gold and platinum brocades. Many of the assembled followers grouped together in large choirs, and stood on raised terraced platforms surrounding a raised, central platform, which was bathed in spotlights and surrounded by huge bouquets of flowers. A number of Cusp Foundation officials, all wearing robes of the purest white edged in gold, stood on the raised dais in rapt silence, their attention riveted on the single figure which stood on the highest part of the platform, in front of a huge bank of equipment. Dressed in very beautiful golden robes, which sparkled and shimmered in the bright light and surrounded him with an ethereal, surreal glow, stood a young man with dark hair and a small smile on his face. Everything he had worked so hard for in the past four years, in fact his reason for living all these years, was about to be realized. He raised his arms and the choirs ceased their singing. A thick silence descended on the assembled masses and the soft beeping of the control equipment bounced effortlessly around the curved, inner walls.

“Bring in the Messenger of the Dawn,” the young man said calmly. Immediately the throngs of followers parted on the side, and a number of officials in rich purple robes marched toward the platform. In this group of acolytes was an old man with white hair, wearing robes that were alternating shades of orange, magenta and yellow, the colors of dawn.

The purple-robed men stopped at the foot of a small flight of marble stairs, and the old man wearing the dawn colors slowly ascended the stairs. He continued his ascent until he reached the highest part of the platform and stood before the young man in the gold robes.

“Our brother Claude Wendigo,” the young man said slowly and clearly. “Do you bring us the Keys to the Dawn?” The surrounding multitude of worshipers gasped softly in anticipation.

“I do, Messiah,” the old man answered. “You have but to give the word.”

The young man stepped back several paces and motioned to the center console of the control equipment on the platform. “Deliver us the Keys to the Dawn, and let us all be delivered to our new home and our new universe, one without sin or corruption, and lead us into the Gates of Heaven.” The old man walked over to an input device on the main console and removed a small data cartridge from the inside of his robe. He placed the cartridge in the slot reader and pushed a small button next to it. Instantly the entire control console lit up with brilliant, multicolored lights as the assembled followers screamed, hollered and wailed in ecstasy.

Out in space, the Frontiere exited compressed space in an enormous blast of energy. Because it did not have the luxury to slow down before its exit, the reentry into normal space nearly ripped the vessel to shreds. The orange plasma surrounded it and burned into its silvery hull. Inside Talox was thrown forward with extreme force and slammed against the front wall. Struggling to his feet amid the powerful G-forces and avoiding the shower of sparks from short-circuiting equipment, he fought his way to the tactical station and the console that controlled the launching of the Frontiere’s missiles. The tactical screen showed a small planet being centered in the targeting computer arrays.

Inside the emitter sphere, the cheering and screaming were reaching a fever pitch as the control consoles glittered and flashed with frenetic intensity. The activation sequences worked and the enormous power generators were building the tremendous reserves of energy necessary to send the DNA-encoded neutrino streams to every corner of the galaxy. The old man stepped backwards and bowed his head. All attention was focused on the young man in the gold robes. He held up his arms and the microphones amplified his voice to fill the huge curved expanse of the ceiling above.

Our Father, Who Art In Heaven …” he prayed.

The Frontiere continued its desperate, headlong plunge toward the planet and the emitter sphere, still trailing orange plasma streamers from compressed space. Inside, Talox fought with all his might to ensure the Frontiere was on the exact path directly to its target – there was absolutely no room for error. He reached over for the firing control of the missile console.

Hallowed Be Thy Name …” the young man intoned. In the crowd below, several people fainted. The choir was reaching a crescendo of delirious, surreal singing.

Talox activated the launch control and the nuclear missile blasted out of the Frontiere’s launch bay with a very sharp jolt. The relativistic propulsion drive of the missile kicked in and the rocket took off with incredible speed toward its target. Talox looked over to the tactical console and verified that the missile was exactly on target. With a flush of hopeful anticipation, he began to think that the missile would reach its target seconds before the Cuspie emitter discharged. He began to slow down the Frontiere and pull off to starboard, his mission to launch the nuclear missile completed.

Thy Kingdom Come …” The emitter sphere was filled with crashing, soaring music and singing as the young man moved his hand toward the single switch, made of platinum and inlaid with diamonds, which would activate the neutrino emitter and bring the New Dawn.

Talox held his breath as he watched the tactical display closely, and saw the track of the missile drawing close to the target planet. Suddenly he was startled by the most terrible sound he had ever heard. An alarm on the missile control center began a terrible howling noise and the console lit up with several bright red lights as the word “MALFUNCTION” began flashing on the screen in large red letters. His heart nearly stopped as he realized something had gone horribly, terribly wrong with the nuclear missile. More alarms went off on the missile console and he felt his heart sink as he watched the missile veer off course on the tactical screen. Other missile launch indicators showed the nuclear missile automatically entering a safe mode and disengaging its firing mechanism. There would be no nuclear detonation.

Suddenly some other automated alarms on the Frontiere went off. “Proximity alert!” the computer urgently announced. Without warning the Frontiere was strongly jostled as the much larger U.S.S. Hyperion blasted by it at tremendous, astonishing speed. Talox absolutely could not comprehend what the computers were telling him. “The Hyperion???” he gasped.

On the Hyperion the captain and science officer were grimly huddled over the tactical computer console. “Target acquired?” Captain Timberlane asked.

The tactical officer activated some controls on his weapons monitor. “Neutrino emitter targeted and locked in,” he said dispassionately. The captain turned to the science officer. “Is the nuke ready?” he asked. His science officer replied. “Armed and ready to fly,” he said. “But captain ….”

The captain looked at his officer. “Is there a question?” he asked.

“Sir,” the officer said nervously. “I just realized that if we succeed in destroying the Cuspie emitter, it will cause a lot of disruption in the timeline. If the emitter is not fired, then the Archangel will have no reason to initiate our return from three thousand years in the past. We will be returned to our temporal isolation and never have a chance to reunite with our families and loved ones.”

The captain just stood there with his mouth open, along with the science officer and some of the crew. They all knew instantly that what the science officer was saying was absolutely true. By destroying the neutrino emitter, they were dooming themselves to a return to the lonely, solitary life far outside the galaxy they had led for the past twenty-five years.

“And if we don’t destroy the emitter,” the captain said grimly. “Everyone we would hope to reunite with will be dead in five days. We will be back in an empty universe populated only by insane Cuspies. We cannot allow that, even if we have to sacrifice everything all over again.” The other crewmembers on the bridge uncomfortably agreed with the captain. “The only good thing,” the captain said with a tinge of sadness in his voice, “is that we will not remember this little diversion back to our home and our people.”

The singing and chanting inside the sphere were so loud that no one noticed the missile from the Frontiere impacting on the planet in a rocky outcropping several kilometers away, disintegrating into countless small pieces and blasting out a small crater.

Captain Timberlane turned to his tactical officer. “Fire our missile,” he said.

Thy Will Be …” the young man cried out triumphantly. Before he could finish his prayer, the nuclear missile from the Hyperion struck the glowing, spherical neutrino emitter. A huge area of the dark side of the planet was treated to a new dawn, as a gigantic dome of white hot nuclear fire blossomed in the dead frigidity of nighttime. A crater approximately seven kilometers in diameter and two and a half kilometers deep was carved out directly underneath the Cusp Foundation emitter. The emitter and several cubic kilometers of rock and iron were vaporized and blown off into space, where within a few hours it would form a glittering, sparkling system of hot, mottled-orange colored rings around the planet. The Hyperion was no where to be found, having been instantly timeshifted three thousand years into the past as the timeline reset itself.

Back on the Archangel the shuttle Dreamcatcher had returned and its passengers were entering the bridge command area. Everyone turned and looked with bemusement at the ungainly, rattling little robot as it sauntered unselfconsciously around looking at everything. Brisbane joined the captain and Alanna near a computer console.

“Three … two … one … zero,” Alanna counted down. “Mark, scheduled discharge of the Cuspie emitter.” She looked up sadly at the Captain and Brisbane. “Our only hope is that Talox and the Frontiere got there in time to launch their nuke.” They stared for a few seconds at the sensor display panel, which showed all of the Kellurian war vessels staring back at them, but absolutely nothing else.

“Talox is still too far away to communicate his status,” Brisbane offered. “Even moving at the Sanderford limit, the neutrino blast can take twenty or thirty seconds to reach us, if one was even created.”

Everyone on the bridge looked around at each other uncomfortably, waiting for the seconds to slowly tick by. With each passing second, people started to relax a little more. Each passing second without a neutrino burst meant a little more hope that Talox had reached the target in time and destroyed it with an atomic explosion.

Ten more seconds went by in the taut silence of the bridge. Then twenty seconds, then thirty. The wait for the possible neutrino detection was excruciating, but every passing second lifted the weary crew’s spirits a little bit. Finally one minute, two minutes, three minutes went by without a neutrino detection alarm. Captain Twillig turned to his science officer. “Alanna, could it be that the emitter has actually been destroyed?” he asked.

“It’s either been destroyed or somehow the firing has been delayed,” she said nervously. Everyone on the bridge was listening very carefully and speaking in hushed tones, not wanting to interfere with any shred of information about the emitter.

Finally, after nearly ten minutes since the nominal neutrino discharge time, an alarm went off on Alanna’s computer console. “We are receiving a compspace sensor uplink from the Frontiere,” she announced excitedly. The Frontiere was still too far away for normal audio and video communication but could still send detailed information from its sensors through compspace. “What are you seeing, Alanna?” the captain asked as everyone held their breath.

Alanna swiftly manipulated her computers to compile and format the complicated, encoded packets of information from the Frontiere. The data started to appear on her computer monitor and then started pouring out rapidly.

“The Frontiere’s sensors have registered an extremely large nuclear blast in its vicinity,” she reported with great excitement. “Her computers triangulated the blast origin coordinates and we are plotting those coordinates now.” A few seconds passed as the information was restored and adjusted for the current location. At long last, Alanna said, “The blast origin coordinates map exactly to the position of the emitter. The Cusp Foundation neutrino emitter has been destroyed!!”

There was a great pandemonium on the bridge of the Archangel as everyone jumped out of their seats and cheered in joy. It was a most unusual outburst for the disciplined, professional crewmembers but all the tension and anxiety of the past days, weeks and months instantly disappeared and were replaced by laughing, crying and hugging. There was much shaking of hands and slapping of backs as Captain Twillig himself could not resist and participated in the rejoicing. Word spread quickly throughout the entire starship and from one end of that magnificent ship to the other, worry, sadness and despair which had covered everything like a stifling blanket were turned to happiness and celebration.

When the Frontiere finally returned to the Archangel there was a huge welcoming committee at the hangar dock. Captain Twillig, Alanna Kosari, Brisbane, the entire bridge crew and many other crewmembers were waiting for Talox to emerge from the battered Frontiere. When he finally did exit through the Frontiere’s hatch, the cheering and applause started anew and was deafening.

Captain Twillig came up to Talox and shook his hand. “Mr. Talox, your work has been most extraordinary,” he said. “This is truly an historic day for the Galactic Alliance, and in fact every living creature in the galaxy. It would not have happened if it wasn’t for your skill and …”

“Please, sir,” Talox interrupted, surprising for the normally impeccably polite Cyclopean. “I can’t take credit for what has happened.”

“Come on, Talox,” Brisbane said. “This is no time for the legendary Cyclopean modesty. Relax and enjoy it! You’ve saved all our butts today.”

“Lieutenant Richardson is correct,” the captain added. “We will have a welcoming ceremony with the assembled crew in twenty minutes.”

Talox looked down at the floor and did not register any excitement for all the praise being directed his way. He reached into his uniform pocket and pulled out a data cartridge. “Sir, before we do any more celebrating,” he said slowly, “you must take a look at these log files.” Captain Twillig gave Talox a surprised, stunned look.

An hour later the senior staff of the Archangel was in the conference room, sitting silently in their chairs in a state of complete disbelief after viewing the log files from the Frontiere. Nobody seemed to be in the mood for celebration anymore.

“The Hyperion destroyed the neutrino emitter?” Brisbane asked, still unable to believe what he saw. Captain Twillig sat pale in his chair literally unable to speak and Alanna had her hand in front of her face, nearly ready to cry.

“Let’s review the evidence once again,” Talox said. “First, the log files indicate conclusively that the nuclear missile I fired at the emitter from the Frontiere had a catastrophic mechanical failure and did not detonate. The sensors even tracked it as it crashed harmlessly on the planet a considerable distance from the emitter. Would you agree with that, Mr. Moreno?” he asked.

Chief Engineer Tony Moreno looked up and said quietly, “That fact is indisputable.”

“Secondly,” Talox continued, “the proximity sensors on the Frontiere recorded the close passage of a large, Corona-class vessel. The transponder information was captured and it matches completely with the last known transponder code assigned to the Hyperion twenty-four years ago, right before it disappeared in the Rosette Nebula. The sensors were able to do a very brief scan of the vessel and the configuration exactly matches that of the Hyperion to the finest resolvable detail. There was even a brief video record taken of the encounter.” The large view screen at the front of the conference room lit up once again and a grainy, low-resolution video, greatly slowed down, showed a large spacecraft flying past the Frontiere. There was no doubt that it had the exact distinctive shape and configuration of the Hyperion.

“Freeze video,” Talox commanded the computer. The video on the screen stopped its motion. “Enlarge and enhance, frame sector 53,85 by 115,74.” One corner of the image of the vessel expanded and filled the view screen area. As the sharpening algorithms ran their course and brought the image into crisp focus, everyone in the room stared in silence at the screen. There was no doubt at all that the letters on the side of the spacecraft spelled out ‘U.S.S. Hyperion.’

“And lastly,” Talox said, “the atomic explosion which annihilated the neutrino emitter was several orders of magnitude greater than any that could have been produced from the nuclear missile fired from the Frontiere, even if it had exploded on target. The amount of radiation and its specific signature matches exactly the cobalt-iridium fusion missiles that the Hyperion had carried when it disappeared.” Talox looked at his crewmates. “I think it’s clear that the Hyperion somehow destroyed the emitter. How that possibly could have happened, I do not know. But the evidence is incontrovertible.” The silence that consumed the conference room implied agreement.

“The questions now are,” Brisbane said, “how did the Hyperion get to that exact place at that precise time, and where is it now?”

“I cannot answer those questions,” Talox said. “After the nuclear strike, I remained in the area and did as many long range scans I could, even scanned compressed space in that entire vicinity. There was absolutely no evidence that the Hyperion was still anywhere in the area, and in fact no indication that the Hyperion had ever been there. No radiation exhaust trace at all.

“This is most unusual and quite frankly, extremely disquieting,” the captain finally said. “On the one hand the most critical threat to the Alliance that we had ever engaged has been decisively destroyed. On the other hand, we have a deep, intractable mystery as to how it happened. We have irrefutable, undeniable evidence that an Alliance vessel which had been officially declared lost and which has not been heard from in nearly twenty-five years played the pivotal role in neutralizing that danger.” He looked around the room at his officers. “How do we reconcile this enigma?” he asked.

“Do we start believing in ghosts?” Alanna mused quietly.

Ramses was in the room next to Brisbane, carefully listening to everything that we being said. “Maybe it was a joke?” the little robot interjected.

Brisbane leaned over to look at his mechanical companion. “Do you see anyone laughing, Ramses?” he asked pointedly.

“No sir, I do not,” the robot replied. “Therefore, if it is not a ghost and not a joke, then perhaps it is a miracle!”

Everyone in the room opened their eyes quite wide at this statement. No one was more surprised than Brisbane, who said to the robot, “how do you know about miracles, Ramses?”

The robot turned to his human companion and said, “Your son taught me about miracles.” Brisbane sat straight up in his chair when he heard that. “He said he definitely believed in miracles. His mother always told him he inherited that from his father,” the robot said.

“Maybe the smallest among us can teach us something, after all,” Captain Twillig said. “Maybe we should stop believing so much in computers, weapons and technology and start believing more in miracles.”

Part 10: July 23, 2465

The effects of the DNA reprogramming caused by the neutrino blast from the Cusp Foundation emitter became almost immediately obvious. An increasing number of crewmembers on the Archangel started to report to the onboard medical facilities with various illnesses, aches and pains. Dr. Calcagno started doing DNA scans of every new patient but the results were distressingly similar: formerly healthy, strong patients were beginning to show the signs of advancing age and alterations in their blood chemistry. They each showed exactly the same kind of changes to their DNA – markers unmistakably and deliberately changed in exactly the same fashion.

Reports began to flood in from all points in the Galactic Alliance; a massive extinction was starting to occur in species of bacteria and microscopic life, whose life spans were naturally extremely brief. If any good occurred at all from this incident, the confrontation between the Alliance and the Kellurian Empire was quickly defused, and all the military posturing and threatening were curtailed. Both sides discovered they were facing a much more deadly problem.

After the war vessels began backing down from their aggressive position, several of them on both sides turned away to return to their home bases. When they tried to enter compressed space, the space warps did not form properly around their ships and they were nearly destroyed when they activated their compspace engines. One by one, the spacecraft learned that they were no longer able to travel through compressed space and suddenly the galactic quadrant became an incredibly huge, isolated space. The best velocity that any vessel could obtain was just below lightspeed. Travel times to planets which normally would be measured in hours through compressed space, were now decades away.

As the Archangel slowly plodded off through space in an attempt to return to a Galactic star base, another staff meeting was called. The participants glumly filed into the conference room and depression and despair was thick in the air. Everyone sat down in their chairs and didn’t say much to each other. They all knew what was happening to them and everyone else in the quadrant and they all knew what their fate would be.

Captain Twillig walked into the room and assumed his position at the head of the conference table. He had noticeably more grey hair in his head and the lines around his eyes and on his face seemed deeper. With weariness he placed his electronic tablet on the table and looked around the assembled crew. The sadness he saw in their faces and the resignation in their eyes told him everything he had to know about the ship and crew he loved more than life itself.

“What is the current status of the neutrino pulse?” Captain Twillig asked. Brisbane looked at his electronic tablet. “The wavefront has swept through then entire galactic quadrant and is halfway through the next quadrant,” he said. “Calculations have it finally exiting the galaxy in five days.”

“Alanna, any new information on the compspace issue,” he asked.

The science officer checked some last minute information on her monitor tablet. “We have verified that the inability to access compressed space is directly the result of the neutrino flood of a couple of days ago. The problem is the nature of the neutrinos created by the Cuspies. They have a very unusual quality of persistence – they are actually ‘sticky’ neutrinos that remain on any surface they touch, which is everything and anything. Their presence on the outer hulls of spacecraft prevents the space warps from forming properly around the vessel, preventing it from dropping into compressed space. No one can travel through compressed space because no one can get to it.” This statement made everyone miss the presence of Talox, who was still onboard the Frontiere making his way back to the Archangel, also unable to travel in compressed space.

“Is there any way to ‘unstick’ these neutrinos, to get them off the ship?” the captain asked.

“Possibly, sir,” Alanna said, “but it would take months of work to understand the underlying process and devise a way to clean them off the surfaces, and we …” Suddenly she stopped what she was saying, realizing what the implication was.

“And we don’t have that kind of time,” Captain Twillig finished her sentence. “We all know that, Alanna.” He looked sadly around the room at everyone. “And even if we could travel, where would we go, in the time we have left?”

“Are we certain that there are no ships that haven’t been contaminated by the neutrinos?” Brisbane asked. The little robot Ramses, who had become his constant companion, was at his side.

“All reports we have received are the same,” Engineer Tony Moreno interjected. “All spacecraft, whether Alliance, Kellurian or any other entity, all have the issue with the persistent neutrinos and are unable to enter compressed space. There are no exceptions.”

A couple of seconds of dejected silence blanketed the conference room The only noise was the soft clicking of Ramses as his internal computers worked hard to understand the situation. “There is one Galactic Alliance vessel that is uncontaminated,” the robot announced suddenly.

Everyone looked up at the robot in startled surprise. “What are you talking about, Ramses?” Brisbane asked.

“The U.S.S. Hyperion has not been exposed to the neutrino radiation,” the robot stated.

Everyone was shocked at the mention of the Hyperion. Brisbane looked crossly at the robot. “Ramses, are you making some kind of joke with your newly-programmed sense of humor?” he asked.

“I am not making a joke,” the robot asserted firmly. “Jokes are made to make people laugh and laughter was not my intention.”

“Ramses, you know very well the Hyperion was sent back in time three thousand years when Daressencia Laportine was on her destructive rampage with her TMA technology. The vessel has been officially declared lost and it is not appropriate to make a joke about that,” Brisbane said testily. He looked at Captain Twillig in embarrassment, since it was well known that the captain’s brother was serving onboard the Hyperion and was declared missing in action along with the rest of the crew.

“I did not make a joke,” the robot affirmed, “and the Hyperion is not lost. I know exactly where it is.”

By this time everyone’s attention was firmly riveted on the robot. “How can you know where the Hyperion is, Ramses?” Brisbane asked impatiently. “Daressencia Laportine used the TMA technology to send them back in spacetime. No one knows exactly the temporal parameters she used to create the time warps. Without them, it’s impossible to pinpoint the location of the Hyperion.”

“We should begin to plan for the medical issues which are inevitably going to arise in the next couple of days, and we need to …” Captain Twillig began to say.

“I have the spacetime vectors that were used on the Hyperion,” the robot interrupted.

Captain Twillig stood there with his mouth open. “You have what?” he asked incredulously.

“I have the spacetime vectors that Daressencia Laportine used to send the Hyperion back in time. Her son gave me the vector information a long time ago. He told me to keep it secret and only use it in the very worst of circumstances.” The robot looked around the room with his blue video sensors. “I think these are very bad circumstances.”

Everyone in the room could not believe what they were hearing. Brisbane got out of his chair and knelt in front of the little robot. “Ramses, you have to verify with me that what you are saying is the absolute truth,” he said with utmost earnestness. “If you do have the real, authentic spacetime vectors for the Hyperion, it is critically important information we need to have.”

“I can confirm with complete veracity and accuracy that I do possess the actual and authentic spacetime vector information for the U.S.S. Hyperion,” the robot said confidently.

Brisbane turned to Captain Twillig and they both exchanged astonished glances. “Sir,” he said, “obviously being three thousand years in the past, the Hyperion was spared the neutrino stream. If we can use the vector information to return it to the present day, they should still have their compressed space capabilities. Conceivably they could then go back in time two days and destroy the Cuspie emitter, before it has a chance to fire!”

Brisbane’s statement went through the entire room like an electric current. “Is that even possible?” the captain asked in disbelief. Alanna looked up as a realization crossed her face. “Theoretically it is possible,” she said slowly. “The Hyperion is the only vessel that could enter compressed space and exceed the Sanderford limit. It could go back in time to prevent the emitter from discharging.”

Captain Twillig started thinking rapidly. “If they did exactly that,” he said as the sweat started beading up on his forehead, “the destruction of the emitter would cause the timeline to reset itself. The DNA damage will never occur, and everything would be exactly the way it was just before the Cusp foundation emitter fired!” Everyone’s head began to swim as the realization of the incredible option which had suddenly become available to them. “What do we need to do to return the Hyperion to normal time?” he asked.

“We will need to resurrect the TMA technology, which was banned and declared forbidden by the Alliance,” Brisbane responded. “The technology is now under the control of the Alliance central library computer back on Terra. If we could convince them to send us the data, we could recreate the technology on the Archangel and bring the Hyperion back!”

“How long would it take to reconstruct the TMA technology, Alanna?” the captain asked, entering some information on the computer terminal at his chair.

“I don’t know, sir, that would be a problem,” she said nervously. “We would need to convert the radiation emitters on the Archangel and figure out a way to reroute power, and most importantly, interpret a difficult, alien technology …”

“I am completely familiar with the TMA technology,” the robot chirped. “It can be operational approximately six hours after we receive it.”

Everyone in the room stared at the little robot and began to smile. “Ramses,” Brisbane said as he touched the half-dome of dark glass that functioned as the robot’s head, “you have no idea how happy you have made all of us!”

Less than eight hours later, the Archangel came to a complete stop in space. The bank of particle emitters on its sides and underbelly started to glow. In front of the starship appeared a wavering, blurry patch of blue light. The patch began to pulsate and undulate slowly, and very gradually stretched itself out on both sides and curved around, both ends meeting up with each other on the other side of a large, circular band. The band thickened and began to show a series of evenly-spaced bumps, on both the top and bottom. These bumps stretched themselves out to bands, extending up and down, and curving inward so that they met at a point above and below the center of the middle ring. The ring replicated smaller copies of itself up and down until the TMA framework took on the shape of a large globe. For a short time the TMA arrays flickered and wavered as they hung in space. Then slowly, the globe began to shrink. The empty spaces between the fields got closer to each other and gradually merged. The framework globe slowly became a solid globe of ghostly blue light and started to shrink even faster. A couple of tense seconds later, the blue sphere of light collapsed in on itself and disappeared in an enormous flash of white light. In its place, hovering in space was the U.S.S. Hyperion.

The crew on the Archangel bridge just stood in total silence and just could not believe what they were seeing. No one had ever expected to see this particular vessel again. It and its valiant crew were honored and memorialized years ago and while they were not forgotten, they had assumed their place in history along with the legions of other ships and crewmembers who had given their all to the Galactic Alliance. The stunned silence on the bridge was interrupted by a small alarm on the communications console. “The captain of the Hyperion wishes to speak with us,” the communications officer said shakily. “He is requesting we open a channel.”

“Put them on the main screen,” the captain said, suddenly not having any idea of what he should say to them. The view screen flashed some static for a half-second, but then showed a picture of the bridge area of the Hyperion, looking exactly as it did when they were sent back in time twenty-four years ago. Seated in the main chair was Captain Reese Timberlane, his science office and tactical officer by his side. They were staring back at the crew of the Archangel in a similar state of disorientation and surprise.

“Captain Twillig?” the captain of the Hyperion ventured. “Bob – is that you?” he asked incredulously.

“It is Bob Twillig,” the captain said, walking slowly toward the view screen. “I guess I look a little different from the last time we saw each other.”

The science officer of the Hyperion said something quietly to the captain. “Captain Twillig, we have determined that the current date is … July 23, 2465. Is that accurate?” Captain Timberlane asked slowly.

“Indeed it is, Reese,” Captain Twillig said. “You undoubtedly have a couple dozen urgent questions to ask us. Why don’t we arrange for you and some of your staff to come over to the Archangel, so we can have a much-needed talk?”

Captain Timberlane looked over to his right side for a second. “We will do so immediately,” he responded, “but there is someone here who would like to say something to you.” The video camera on the Hyperion panned over to the left and focused on a tall, dark-haired crew member. Captain Twillig felt his heart nearly skip a beat as he saw his younger brother, Samuel J. Twillig IV. “How are you doing, Sam?” he asked in amazement.

His brother looked back at him with a big grin. “Just fine, Bob,” he answered. “How is mom?”

“She’s doing well,” Captain Twillig answered. “She’s doing very well.” He did not have the nerve to tell his brother that their mother passed away thirteen years ago.

Over the next couple of hours the crew of the Hyperion was brought up to speed on the desperate situation that has resulted from the discharge of the Cusp Foundation neutrino emitter. There was precious little time for reunions or catching up on everything that had transpired in the part quarter-century. The Hyperion learned of their mission and assumed it with utmost seriousness and determination. They knew what they had to do, and they knew how much was riding on its successful completion. Sadly, but with great hope, the Archangel watched its sister ship turn slowly away from them and take off into the vastness of space, disappearing into a brilliant flash of white light as it dropped into compressed space.

Roaring through compspace, the navigator on the Hyperion said, “Sanderford limit will be breached in seven seconds.” Everyone knew whenever they passed that velocity they would begin their journey backwards in time. As the time warp developed around the ship, everything on board became suffused with a bright white glow. The screaming sounds of the engines became muffled and indistinct as the crew dropped into the dreamless sleep of time travel.

An unknown amount of time later, Captain Timberlane opened his eyes and groggily looked around. “Science officer,” he said slowly. “Report status.” The science officer had already started to gather information from the ships sensors and computers. “All stations reporting in, sir,” he said. “No casualties or problems. We are still in compressed space, right on course.”

The tactical officer looked at his screens. “Sir, we are coming up on the exit point,” he said urgently. He added, “I can see the Frontiere on the sensors, far up ahead. It is on the verge of exiting compspace.” The captain looked at some information on a side monitor and pressed an intercom button on his console. “All hands, prepare to drop out of compressed space.” He turned to his science officer. “What is the current date?” the captain asked.

The science officer looked down at his computer and said, “July 21, 2465.”

Part 9: July 21, 2465

The Frontiere roared through compressed space traveling as fast as it could without entering a temporal warp and going backwards in time. Talox used his exquisitely sensitive fingers on both hands to delicately manipulate the controls of the Frontiere, keeping its speed several thousandths of a percent under the Sanderford limit. He kept a close look on the clock as it ticked down the seconds until the anticipated discharge of the Cusp neutrino weapon, which would usher in their ‘New Dawn’. He was still not sure he would make it in time, but he knew he had to take the chance. He ran diagnostic checks on the nuclear missile waiting in the launching bay of the Frontiere and felt sure it was ready to carry out its lethal task.

Talox knew he had to drop out of compressed space as close to the Cusp emitter site as possible, to ensure the nuclear missile had the shortest possible travel time to its target. Split-second timing was essential, and he knew the moment of truth was upon him.

On a small, rocky planet spinning around a greenish star in the Abell 1478 cluster, on the side of the planet that was perpetually facing away from their sun and in eternal darkness, a huge, spherical structure sat on four support legs on a vast frozen lava plain. Its light gray surface was of uniform smoothness and appearance, having no windows or other feature. The only discernible disruption in the perfect symmetry of its surface was four portals on the bottom. Resting nearby on the hard, brittle surface of the planet were many scores of ships and transport vessels, all with the flattened crescent of the Cusp Foundation obvious on their sides.

Inside the sphere was a gathering of several thousand of the ruling elite of the Cusp Foundation, all dressed in rich, vividly colored robes trimmed in gold and platinum brocades. Many of the assembled followers grouped together in large choirs, and stood on raised terraced risers surrounding an elevated, multi-leveled central platform, which was bathed in spotlights and surrounded by huge bouquets of flowers. A number of Cusp Foundation officials, all wearing robes of the purest white edged in gold, stood on the raised dais in rapt silence, their attention riveted on the single figure which stood on the highest part of the platform, in front of a huge bank of equipment. Dressed in very beautiful golden robes, which sparkled and shimmered in the bright light and surrounded him with an ethereal, surreal glow, stood a young man with dark hair and a small smile on his face. Everything he had worked so hard for in the past four years, in fact his reason for living all these years, was about to be realized. He raised his arms and the choirs ceased their singing. A thick silence descended on the assembled masses and the soft beeping of the control equipment bounced effortlessly around the curved, inner walls.

“Bring in the Messenger of the Dawn,” the young man said calmly. Immediately the throngs of followers parted on the side, and a number of officials in rich purple robes marched toward the platform. In this group of acolytes was an old man with white hair, wearing robes that were alternating shades of orange, magenta and yellow, the colors of dawn.

The purple-robed men stopped at the foot of a small flight of marble stairs, and the old man wearing the dawn colors slowly ascended the stairs. He continued his ascent until he reached the highest part of the platform and stood before the young man in the gold robes.

“Our brother Claude Wendigo,” the young man said slowly and clearly. “Do you bring us the Keys to the Dawn?” The surrounding multitude of worshipers gasped softly in anticipation.

“I do, Messiah,” the old man answered. “You have but to give the word.”

The young man stepped back several paces and motioned to the center console of the control equipment on the platform. “Deliver us the Keys to the Dawn, and let us all be delivered to our new home and our new universe, one without sin or corruption, which will lead us into the Gates of Heaven.” The old man walked over to an input device on the main console and removed a small data cartridge from the inside of his robe. He placed the cartridge in the slot reader and pushed a small button next to it. Instantly the entire control console lit up with brilliant, multicolored lights as the assembled followers screamed, hollered and wailed in ecstasy.

Out in space, the Frontiere exited compressed space in an enormous blast of energy. Because it did not have the luxury to slow down before its exit, the reentry into normal space nearly ripped the vessel to shreds. The orange plasma surrounded it and burned into its silvery hull. Inside Talox was thrown forward with extreme force and slammed against the front wall. Struggling to his feet amid the powerful G-forces and avoiding the shower of sparks from short-circuiting equipment, he fought his way to the tactical station and the console that controlled the launching of the Frontiere’s missiles. The tactical screen showed a small planet being centered in the targeting computer arrays.

Inside the emitter sphere, the cheering and screaming were reaching a fever pitch as the control consoles glittered and flashed with frenetic intensity. The activation sequences worked and the enormous power generators were building the tremendous reserves of energy necessary to send the DNA-encoded neutrino streams to every corner of the galaxy. The old man stepped backwards and bowed his head. All attention was focused on the young man in the gold robes. He held up his arms and the microphones amplified his voice to fill the huge curved expanse of the ceiling above.

Our Father, Who Art In Heaven …” he prayed.

The Frontiere continued its desperate, headlong plunge toward the planet and the emitter sphere, still trailing orange plasma streamers from compressed space. Inside, Talox fought with all his might to ensure the Frontiere was on the exact path directly to its target – there was absolutely no room for error. He reached over for the firing control of the missile console.

Hallowed Be Thy Name …” the young man intoned. In the crowd below, several people fainted. The choir was reaching a crescendo of delirious, surreal singing.

Talox activated the launch control and the nuclear missile blasted out of the Frontiere’s launch bay with a very sharp jolt. The relativistic propulsion drive of the missile kicked in and the rocket took off with incredible speed toward its target. Talox looked over to the tactical console and verified that the missile was exactly on target. With a flush of hopeful anticipation, he began to think that the missile would reach its target seconds before the Cuspie emitter discharged. He began to slow down the Frontiere and pull off to starboard, his mission to launch the nuclear missile completed.

Thy Kingdom Come …” The emitter sphere was filled with crashing, soaring music and singing as the young man moved his hand toward the single switch, made of platinum and inlaid with diamonds, which would activate the neutrino emitter and bring the New Dawn.

Talox held his breath as he watched the tactical display closely, and saw the track of the missile drawing close to the target planet. Suddenly he was startled by the most terrible sound he had ever heard. An alarm on the missile control center began a terrible howling noise and the console lit up with several bright red lights as the word “MALFUNCTION” began flashing on the screen in large red letters. His heart nearly stopped as he realized something had gone horribly, terribly wrong with the nuclear missile. More alarms went off on the missile console and he felt his heart sink as he watched the missile veer off course on the tactical screen. Other launch indicators showed the nuclear missile automatically entering a safe mode and disengaging its firing mechanism. There would be no nuclear detonation.

The singing and chanting inside the sphere were so loud that no one noticed a missile impacting on the planet in a rocky outcropping several kilometers away, disintegrating into countless small pieces and blasting out a small crater.

Thy Will Be Done!” the young man cried out triumphantly. He pressed the triggering mechanism as a small tear ran down his cheek. Outside, the smooth gray surface of the sphere glowed a ruddy burgundy color, the only outward indication of the generation of the most powerful neutrino burst the universe had ever witnessed.

Back on the Archangel the shuttle Dreamcatcher had returned and its passengers were entering the bridge command area. Everyone turned and looked with bemusement at the ungainly, rattling little robot as it sauntered unselfconsciously around looking at everything. Brisbane joined the captain and Alanna near a computer console.

“Three … two … one … zero,” Alanna counted down. “Mark, scheduled discharge of the Cuspie emitter.” She looked up sadly at the Captain and Brisbane. “Our only hope is that Talox and the Frontiere got there in time to launch their nuke.” They stared for a few seconds at the sensor display panel, which showed all of the Kellurian war vessels staring back at them, but absolutely nothing else.

“Talox is still too far away to communicate his status,” Brisbane offered. “Even moving at the Sanderford limit, the neutrino blast can take twenty or thirty seconds to reach us, if one was even created.”

Everyone on the bridge looked around at each other uncomfortably, waiting for the seconds to slowly tick by. With each passing second, people started to relax a little more. Each passing second without a neutrino burst meant a little more hope that Talox had reached the target in time and destroyed it with an atomic explosion.

Ten more seconds went by in the taut silence of the bridge. Then suddenly, a number of alarms went off on the sensor consoles. Alanna turned quickly around and manipulated some controls. Her face went pale as she read the information. “Sensors have registered an extremely powerful wavefront of neutrinos, too large to measure. Energy readings are off the scale.” She looked at some other information. “It has passed through us and is continuing onward.”

“Can you triangulate the origin?” Captain Twillig asked grimly, although he was just about certain where it came from.

She activated some other controls on her console and let out a sigh. “Computers indicate that the origin of the burst was the Abell 1478 cluster near the Cepheid star-forming region.” Looking up with despair and sadness, Alanna said quietly. “It would seem that Mr. Talox was unable to destroy the Cusp neutrino emitter. It has been discharged.”

Part 8: July 20, 2465

The days following the death of Daressencia Laportine had proven to be some of the most difficult days the Galactic Alliance had ever faced. Ambassador Craethon’s damaged vessel was found by the Kellurian military and word spread with lightspeed that the Galactic Alliance was responsible for his death and those of his entourage. The Kellurian Empire immediately recalled all its diplomats from Alliance planets and expelled all Alliance personnel from its territories and vessels. There were countless impassioned speeches in the Kellurian Governing Council condemning the Alliance in the strongest possible terms and demanding in the most strident tones revenge for the murders of the ambassador and his staff. All cultural and commercial contacts between the Kellurians and the Alliance were severed. Scientific and medical joint efforts, some of which had been going on for years and were bearing extremely fruitful results, were summarily halted.

The border area in space between the two galactic superpowers immediately became a militarized zone, with the tremendous firepower of both sides squaring off against each other, just a hair-trigger away from Armageddon. The tension between them escalated to unheard-of levels and both sides monitored the movements of the other in the most miniscule detail. Both sides knew that one single mistake, even the most innocent, unintentional slip-up, could instantly precipitate a cascade of violence and death which would be extremely difficult to contain, once unleashed. The stress of maintaining such an extreme level of military readiness was exacting a grave price on everyone, as everything took back seat to keeping the war machines running. Both sides knew this and wanted to avoid it at all costs, but both kept their fingers on the triggers, unwilling to blink, and unable to turn away.

The Archangel had been on high alert almost from the day the ambassador’s body was found, and was assigned to patrol a large sector of the Alliance-Kellurian border. It was their job to track and observe every movement of enemy forces in a sixteen cubic light-year swath of space. The crew was starting to suffer fatigue, as the round-the-clock shifts put everyone on edge. Endless streams of status meetings were called, some just hours after the previous one, to go over enemy movements and intelligence data, and conferring with the Galactic Alliance headquarters. As this intense military standoff consumed everything – time, resources, people – there was no time to spend investigating the occurrence on Dreen 7 or the likely involvement of the Cusp Foundation, which was free to do anything they wanted, without fear of being observed or challenged. Their plan to use fear and paranoia to keep the two superpowers paralyzed and unable to interfere was working perfectly.

Captain Twillig sat wearily down at the head of the conference table in the status room, awaiting the arrival of his senior staff for another meeting. Which meeting it was that day, he had no idea; the meetings were starting to blur into one another. He took a look at his electronic notepad and noticed at least fourteen new meeting and update requests from other starship captains, the Alliance headquarters and a number of star bases across the quadrant. He knew they all had to be answered, and he also knew that before he got through half of them, there would be ten new requests waiting for him. He had no idea when he was ever going to get a good night’s sleep again.

Lieutenant Richardson of Special Operations came in, sat down in a chair next to the Captain, and let out a long, audible breath. “Things are really going to hell, Captain,” he said in dismay. “Take a look at these latest Kellurian troop movements.” He put a wireless computer monitor down on the table between them and hit a control button on the top. A map of the immediate area of space came on and several large red arrows demarked an amassing of Kellurian military transports and battle cruisers, moving in the direction of the Archangel.

“Don’t tell me that,” the captain said, discouraged. “The ninth division of the Alliance star forces is two days away from arriving here, too. In a very short time there are going to be two unbelievably large military forces, barely separated by narrow stretch of vacuum, staring each other directly in the eye and waiting for the other one to blink. If anything is going to happen anywhere in the quadrant which will quickly escalate into the biggest war we’ve seen in three centuries, it’s going to be right here,” he said, tapping the Archangel’s position on the monitor.

“And here we are, with a ringside seat,” Brisbane said ironically. “Do you think when everybody starts shooting they’re going to be able to find any remnants of us other than a cloud of debris?”

“For the first time in my career,” Captain Twillig said sadly, “I honestly have no idea what is going to happen to my ship. I don’t know if we are going to survive this, and even if we do, will there be anything left for us to go back to? The future has never seemed so uncertain, nor so bleak.”

Brisbane shifted uncomfortably in his seat; he knew what the captain was saying was true. “What’s worse, all this might be moot in a couple of weeks if the Cuspies fire their super weapon and wipe everything out. We don’t even know if this weapon really exists or how close they are to firing it. We know nothing about what they are doing or what they may soon be doing, and with the war to end all wars bubbling just below the surface, we can’t even make an attempt to check up on them.”

The Captain turned toward his officer and spoke quietly but desperately. “We can’t drop the ball on this, Brisbane. Despite all the military build-up and everything going on out there, we can’t let this slip through the cracks. I want you to keep trying to find out what the Cuspies are up to. I’m sure you realize how incredibly careful you have to be in order to not set the Kellurians off, but it’s absolutely critical you try to find out as much as you can. Because if my feeling about this situation turns out to be true, the potential war with the Kellurians will seem like a day of shore leave compared to what the Cuspies are up to.”

The captain’s words echoed weakly in the empty conference room. “I understand, sir,” Brisbane said. “I hear you.”

The two officers sat in stony silence for a couple of minutes until the other meeting participants joined them. The meeting started immediately thereafter and numerous department heads gave their new information and assessments of the present situation. As the speakers went on and on, Brisbane found his attention wavering from the military updates to the events of four days ago and the passing of Daressencia Laportine. He was still not able to fully comprehend how completely his world changed when that aged, frail woman was brought onboard the starship and demanded to speak to him. Her transformation from the beautiful, if evil nemesis of twenty-four years ago to the nearly-senile, desiccated shell of a woman coming to the end of her days was extremely jarring and almost impossible for him to comprehend. That, coupled with the fact that their son, whom he had never even seen, had become an extremely grave threat to the quadrant and an enemy the likes of which hasn’t been seen for nearly a millennium, left Brisbane with a mix of emotions that made it very difficult for him to function at his normal efficiency.

The meeting ended on its typical grim note, with very little to be happy or hopeful about. The participants filed out of the room not saying much to each other. Brisbane stayed behind, still seated in his chair, lost in thought. Chief Engineer Tony Moreno and an assistant stayed behind, taking care of some last-minute technical discussions.

Tony looked out the corner of his eye and observed Brisbane still in his chair. “You didn’t say much at the meeting, buddy,” Tony said gently to his friend. “Have a lot on your mind?”

“Everybody has a lot on their minds, Tony” Brisbane responded slowly. “It’s hard to get enthused by anything when you see all these storm clouds gathering from every direction, and not even a ray of sunlight to grab hold of.”

“I think everybody feels that way,” Tony said resignedly. “What’s the point of getting excited about anything when it could all be gone in a couple of minutes?”

“You don’t know how right you are,” Brisbane thought silently to himself. The rumor of the Cuspie super weapon had been kept under the tightest secrecy, since knowledge of this looming apocalypse was the last thing in the universe the crew of this starship needed to worry about.

Tony turned toward his assistant as she asked him to review some figures and data. Brisbane slumped in his chair and reached inside one of the pockets of his uniform. He pulled out the necklace Daressencia Laportine gave him moments before she died and absent-mindedly rubbed it between his fingers. The necklace was made up of a thin chain, probably made of platinum, and a large green emerald-like stone in a delicate, detailed gold setting. This was his last link to the woman who bore his son, and even though the circumstances of his conception were singularly repellant and off-putting, Brisbane someone could not deny at least a rudimentary emotional connection to this woman who gave birth to a young man somewhere in the universe who held half of his DNA in his body. How things got to this particular impasse, and where things were going from this point, were only two of the mysteries and enigmas that swirled around him, with no suitable solutions anywhere in sight.

Tony noticed Brisbane idly rolling the necklace between his fingers. “What do you have there, Brisbane? That looks interesting.”

Mildly startled out of the dark depths of his thoughts, Brisbane said, “Oh, this? It’s just a necklace I was given by someone I used to know, right before she passed away.”

“Can I take a closer look at it?” Tony asked. “Sure,” Brisbane said as he passed the necklace over to him. Tony and his assistant Lieutenant Miriam Becker eagerly looked at it.

“What do you make of this, Miriam?” he asked his assistant, showing her the neck piece.

“That is amazing,” Lieutenant Becker said, eagerly looking at the jewelry. “It looks very much like an artifact from one of the ancient civilizations in the Norma-Crux subgalactic region. It’s very typical for them to have a green stone surrounded by delicate gold filigree, symbolizing the eternal regeneration of life. Do you mind if I take a closer look at it?” she asked.

“Sure, go right ahead,” Brisbane said. Tony handed the necklace of to her and she leaned close to it, taking a very detailed look at the stone.

“Amazing, beautiful workmanship,” Miriam said in awe. “The gold setting is exquisite.” She looked a little closer at the edge of the stone. “What does the inscription say?”

Brisbane looked blankly at her. “What inscription?” he asked. “I don’t know anything about an inscription.”

“A common feature of the jewelry of the Norma-Crux region is that there is always something inscribed on the outer edge of the stone. Thousands of years ago when the Beta Crucis planets were occupied by the Rigellians, they used inscriptions on their jewelry to smuggle vital information to and from their underground resistance leaders, right under the Rigellians’ noses. Eventually the liberation of several planetary systems was directly due to this subterfuge, and as a tribute to their ancestors, the custom of inscribing their jewelry continues to this day.”

“And you say there is some sort of inscription on that stone?” Tony asked.

“There certainly is,” Miriam responded. “It’s far too small for me to read, but there is definitely something written on the outside edge. And curiously, the inscription does not look like it has the signs of being timeworn or ancient,” she said. “It looks surprisingly fresh, like the inscription may be of recent origin.” She looked up and handed the necklace back to a surprised Brisbane. “It would be interesting to find out what the inscription says.”

Brisbane put the necklace back into his uniform pocket. “Indeed it would,” he said, thoughtfully. “Indeed it would.”

Several hours later Captain Twillig would receive yet another urgent request for a meeting, this time from his head of Special Operations. Brisbane caught up with the captain as he was heading to an Alliance briefing. “What do you have, Brisbane?” the captain asked, obviously in very much of a hurry but still willing to listen to what his officer had to say.

“Captain,” Brisbane said almost breathlessly, “I think I may have a lead on information relating to the Cuspie situation. Right before she died, Daressencia gave me a necklace she had hanging around her neck. On the stone there was an inscription. I had the inscription magnified and analyzed and it turned out to be some galactic spatial coordinates. I think there’s a good chance that those coordinates lead to the secret star base Daressencia had for many years, which eluded detection from the Alliance or any other authorities. This may contain a lot of information about her ... I mean our son’s involvement with the Cuspies and may have important info about their super weapon and their plans to use it.”

“That’s very interesting, Brisbane,” the captain replied, “but all I’m hearing from you is “may” this and “may” that. Do you have any confirmation at all about this information, or could this be just wishful thinking? I’m sorry to have to question you on this, but you understand that any exploratory mission to this so-called ‘secret star base’ will be noticed by all those foaming-at-the-mouth Kellurians out there and may be just the trigger they need to start something extremely ugly.” The captain’s communicator started beeping for him but he ignored it.

Brisbane thought for a second as they hurried around a corner down a long corridor crowded with people. “No sir, I have no direct confirmation about the existence of this information, and it may turn out to be nothing at all. I understand your deep concern about an exploratory mission – I really do - and I certainly would not want to be the catalyst that sets events into motion that no one will be able to control. But I have a strong feeling about this. Daressencia was dying when she shoved this necklace into my hand, and I don’t think she would have used her last seconds of life and last ounce of strength to do that unless it was gravely important.” Brisbane looked at the captain as if he were pleading for his very life. “I think we really need to check this out, sir,” he said. “I feel it’s really important.”

The captain stopped and appeared to look off into the distance. “Lord knows we don’t really have anything else to go on regarding the Cuspies,” he said a bit glumly. He thought for another couple of seconds. Turning to Brisbane he said in the utmost seriousness. “Go see what you can find, Brisbane. Is this star base far from here?”

“No sir, not at all, it appears to be a tenth of a light year away, in the 57 Triangulum system, on an uncharted moonlet around the sixth planet. I could be there in about six hours in the Frontiere.”

“No, don’t take the Frontiere,” the captain cautioned. “The Kellurians would see that immediately and lose their collective minds. They get extremely nervous and unhappy when they see the Frontiere doing anything, because they know that ship can beat anything they can come up with.”

“Understood, sir,” Brisbane said, getting a little excited. “I can take the shuttle Dreamcatcher. It’s compspace-capable and can go almost as fast as the Frontiere.”

“Don’t drop into compspace until you’re well away from us and close to the Alliance fleet behind us,” the captain ordered. “We don’t want all those trigger-happy Kellurians to get alarmed that something major is going on.” He looked at Brisbane and put his hand on his shoulder. “Do what you need to do, Brisbane. Find out whatever you can. But above all, be careful.”

“Thank you, sir,” Brisbane said with much gratitude. “Thank you for trusting me, and letting me follow my instincts.”

“They’ve never let us down yet,” the captain said. “Let’s try to keep it that way.”

A short time later a small, faster-than-light shuttlecraft exited the rear hatchway of the Archangel and headed directly away from the Kellurians amassed on the other side of the border. The shuttle left under gravity screens, so it was invisible to sensors of any kind, and it was uncertain whether the Kellurians noticed anything at all but since the vessel was heading in the opposite direction from them, there was precious little they could do. Not daring to cut in the compspace engines just yet, Brisbane pushed the transionic engines to their maximum and pulled away with great speed. Within a short time the shuttle neared the massive fleet of Alliance warships and battle cruisers which were heading to the vicinity of the Archangel, to raise the ante of the war effort by matching the Kellurian buildup on the other side. As soon as the shuttle was identified to the other Alliance vessels by the auto-transponders, Brisbane cut in the faster-than-light engines and disappeared in a brilliant flash of white light as the ship entered compressed space.

Some hours later the Dreamcatcher exited compressed space near the 57 Triangulum system, an unremarkable and almost-forgotten collection of planets, asteroids and comets surrounding a small, nondescript orange dwarf star. The central star was too small and weak to provide a lot of heat and light, and only the closest three out of thirteen planets were even remotely capable of sustaining some kind of indigenous life. Brisbane was heading to the sixth planet; a frigid, airless, utterly barren ball of rock, dust and dirt, and its collection of twenty-three moons, one of which might possible contain a star base once occupied by Daressencia Laportine.

Brisbane reached the sixth planet and the tactical computers began mapping the moons and their locations. He looked at the computer monitor with a furrowed brow. How on earth was he supposed to know which of these moons he was looking for? As the orbital information for each moon was plotted and displayed, he noticed one of the moons was a retrograde, that is, it rotated around the planet in the opposite direction from the other moons. If there was one moon that Daressencia would have been automatically attracted to, it would be this one, going in the opposite direction from all the others as if in stubborn, defiant independence.

Brisbane piloted the shuttle towards the retrograde moon, and in minutes he entered a low, shallow orbit around it. About a thousand kilometers in diameter, it had a substantial gravitational field, quite a bit stronger than expected. He surmised that was due to the high amount of dense iron and nickel which made up most of the mass of this moon. This unusually heavy moon would provide a natural gravity which would almost simulate that of a small planet, which would be conducive to long-term habitation of a star base on its crated, ancient surface. He started making fast, low passes above its dark gray surface, running the sensors at full power, trying to scan as much of the surface as he could with each pass, knowing that he did not have a

lot of time to come up with some kind of fruitful result.

Which pass it was that he noticed the tiny collection of domes on the wide, flat floor of an enormous crated he did not know, he had given up counting the orbits he made as he concentrated on monitoring the sensor scans. In fact he did not notice the domes themselves, since they were of the same dark gray metallic material the majority of the moon’s crust seemed to be, but instead noticed their shadows stretching across the smooth crater floor, looking almost like an extended, distorted cluster of grapes. Immediately swinging the shuttle around, he plunged downward to the surface for a closer look. Sure enough, as he drew near the domes they began to differentiate themselves from the pitted, boulder-strewn crater floor and almost magically raise themselves up in sharp, three-dimensional relief. He did a low, slow circle around the domes and ran several intense scans of them – he counted approximately a dozen domes interconnected with passageways and clustered around a trio of towers, with telescopic and communication equipment on top of them. The sensors revealed no humanoid life on board, but a life support system which was providing a minimal amount of air and heat, possibly in anticipation of the return of the original inhabitants some day. There was an internal power generation system running on low power. He noticed there was a standard docking hatch on the side of one of the domes and pulled lower to take a closer look at that. His sensors could not tell him if there were any booby traps or dangers hidden in any of the domes or passageways, but he did take a little comfort at not seeing any of the flattened crescent moons on any of the structures, the symbol of the hated Cusp Foundation.

Eventually Brisbane set the shuttlecraft down right next to the docking port, the maneuvering rockets kicking up a small cloud of dust which in the low gravity settled back down on the moon’s surface in dreamy slow motion. He extended the passenger tunnel from the shuttle to the port, and the protocols were quickly established and verified. The atmospheres were equalized and Brisbane found himself standing at the shuttle’s exit door, leading directly into a star base which he knew absolutely nothing about, and nothing about any dangers that may be waiting for him inside.

He pushed the doorway button and the metal door slid opened, with a slight hiss as the air pressure equalized. A slight musty odor greeted him, as he peered out into the dark passageway in front of him. As he stepped inside some lights in the ceiling above automatically came on as they sensed his presence, startling him. Looking around the dome as he slowly walked toward the other passageway leading to the main structure, he noticed the inside was austere, yet clean and tidy. There was a lot of vivid blue lighting and black floors and walls, Daressencia’s favorite colors. He began to feel her presence more and more as he headed down the tunnel toward the main group of buildings, and he also felt the presence of another being, unknown and strangely familiar to him at the same time.

Seconds later he got to the entranceway to the main buildings and the door noiselessly slid open in front of him. It took a couple of seconds for his eyes to get used to the lighting as it flickered on, but he found himself in a large room with computer equipment everywhere around him. On one side of the room was a long, wide table with a chair on one end of it, looking almost like a conference room but for only one person – there were no chairs at the table for others to sit around. Around the chair were workstations and computer monitors.

Brisbane walked around to the chair at the end of the table and noticed the command and control functions built into the arms of the chair. This would be where Daressencia sat planning out her actions and activities that nearly brought ruin to the Galactic Alliances, when she was in control of the TMA technology which proved nearly unbeatable. On the table he saw something which nearly caused his heart to stop. Amid the monitors, electronic tablets, and computer keypads there was something which was so incongruous, yet so normal, that Brisbane’s hand visibly trembled as he slowly reached for it. He could barely breathe as he picked up a small picture in a frame. Slowly drawing it closer to his eyes, what he saw affected him more deeply and profoundly than anything he had seen in his travels through space in his entire, nearly four-decade career in the Galactic Alliance. The picture was of a smiling, happy Daressencia with her arms around a small male child, possibly six or seven years old, with dark hair and a big, wide smile much like his mother’s. Brisbane looked closely at the image of this child and felt himself crumble inside. Staring at this child, he saw a young Brisbane Richardson staring back at him. The eyes, the smile, the face – it could have been a picture of him when he was that age. Realizing he was seeing a picture of his son for the very first time, he could not tear his eyes away from it. His mind was flooded with many powerful thoughts and emotions. What might have been, had he been able to see his child? Would the galactic quadrant not be teetering on the edge of complete, total disaster if he had just had the opportunity to be a father to this child? Above all, what would he say to this child and what would the child say to him, had he been allowed to hold his son close, and be a part of his life?

Lost in the flood of emotions, the blood in Brisbane’s veins instantly turned to ice when a voice behind him said, “Hello, Lieutenant Richardson.” For a little while, he stood there and did not move a muscle even a little bit. Slowly, very slowly he moved his hand in exquisitely small movements toward the weapon he had in his side holster. The voice behind him did not say anything else. With his hand touching the top of his Plexor weapon, Brisbane started to turn around very slowly to face whoever or whatever it was behind him.

The sweat was starting to pour down Brisbane’s face as he continued to turn around. Out of the corner of his eye he began to see a spindly, silvery mechanical arm. As he continued his turn he began to see a squat, cylindrical robot body, with a front panel in front containing a bank of blinking, flashing lights, and a large plexiglass half-dome on top which had a bright blue streak of light across it, the video sensors that passed as eyes. Finally turning the whole way around, he was amazed and astonished to see a small robot in front of him, just standing there waiting for him to say something.

Brisbane did not have the faintest idea what he should say to this little robot. It looked like it was very old and just thrown together from a bunch of spare parts someone had laying around. But, something inside Brisbane told him he had seen this particular robot somewhere before, but right now his mind was frozen, trying to figure out what was going on and what he should do.

“Do you remember me, Lieutenant Richardson?” the robot asked innocently, almost cheerfully. There was something about the voice that made Brisbane relax a little bit. He thought he had heard this voice somewhere before, a very long time ago, but it was different now. More self-assured, almost confident, somehow different. He kept his hand on his sidearm, ready to pull it out and fire it at the slightest sign of danger.

“How do you know my name?” Brisbane asked the robot in a halting, nervous voice. Without missing a beat, the robot responded. “We met a very long time ago, on an ice planet. You are Brisbane Richardson, and I am Ramses!”

Brisbane let out a small gasp when he heard the name. His hand dropped away from his Plexor weapon. He leaned in closer to take a wide-eyed look at the robot and his dark plexiglass dome on top. Finally, the memories began to come back to him. “Ramses!” he said in awe-struck amazement. “Could it really be you?”

The robot thought about that for a half-second while the CPU lights flickered rapidly on its front panel. “I am the only Ramses I know of,” he said innocently. “I think it really is me!”

Brisbane knelt down in front of the little robot and noted how the seemingly haphazard collection of computers, sensors and servo-units looked slightly clumsy but decidedly elegant at the same time. “It has been a very long time since we last spoke to each other,” he said, “on Augustus Chaplin’s research center on the frozen planet Saiph.”

“Exactly twenty-five years, five months and fourteen days, in Terran time-frame,” said the little robot cheerfully. “It seems like only yesterday!” it threw in nonchalantly.

Brisbane was running his fingers lightly over the upper half dome of the robot when he stopped and looked at its video sensors. “Ramses,” he said with a little surprise, “someone has programmed you for a sense of humor!”

Brisbane programmed me for humor,” Ramses said proudly.

“I don’t remember programming you for humor, Ramses,” Brisbane said.

“You didn’t program me,” the robot said breezily, “your son did.”

The mention of his son made Brisbane freeze and lean back slowly on his haunches. “Let’s take a step back, Ramses,” he said cautiously. “Tell me how it happened that you got from Chaplin’s research center to Daressencia’s star base.”

“I shall be glad to,” the robot said. “After you took your leave of the research center on Saiph, I continued with my work – downloading, decrypting and analyzing the technology information contained in The Creator’s hologram of the Forever Stone. A number of months passed without incident, but then Mistress Daressa returned with a number of others, which I believe you referred to as ‘Kellurians’. They ransacked the research center looking for more technology, and ended up taking some partial memory cores which stored a great deal of information. As they were leaving, the Mistress turned to look at me and began talking to one of the Kellurians, who had made up their mind to destroy me because they felt I was getting in their way and being a nuisance. He even had his weapon drawn upon me and was ready to fire, but she came over and ordered him to desist. She ordered that I be taken away from the research center and taken onto their ship. She said she was going to have a child soon and I would make a good “pet” for him. I did not want to go because my primary mission was to continue the work of The Creator and unlock the secrets of the Forever Stone, but they did something to me and the next time my computers booted up, I was on this star base where we are now.”

“So you were brought here to be a companion for her child,” Brisbane said. “Please continue.”

“After her child came to be,” the robot said, “he and I did become friends. I went everywhere he did and was by his side constantly. He was always asking questions and we explored everything and learned a great deal. I believe he said we were ‘having fun’. He was the one who programmed me for humor; he taught me a great deal when it came to telling jokes and making fun of people. He programmed me to insult the Kellurians and they got pretty upset with me. In fact, after a while they all went away and I never saw any of them here again, so that was a very good thing!”

Brisbane couldn’t help but smile at that, he was amazed that his son sounded so much like him. “Tell me more about Brisbane,” he said. “I want to know more about the child.”

Brisbane was very intelligent and learned things very quickly,” the robot said. “His mother, Mistress Daressa, would occasionally get a little frustrated and exasperated with him, since he would seem to get smarter and more self-aware with each passing day. Mistress took him many different places, to visit many planets and meet many people. He always insisted that I come with them and I got to experience many of the same things he did. As he would always say, we had a great deal of fun!” The robot stopped for a couple of seconds as his CPU lights in front flashed furiously. “He would tell me that he had just about everything a human could want to have, except one thing.”

“What was that, Ramses?” Brisbane asked, still trying to absorb all that was being related to him.

“He said that he always wanted to meet his father,” the robot said in complete innocence.

That statement hit Brisbane like a stun weapon to the head. “He – he wanted to meet his father?” Brisbane stammered.

“Yes he did,” the robot answered. “He said he wanted to meet his father. He said he loved more than anything looking at the video records of his father.”

“What video records?” Brisbane asked in astonishment. “You mean he got to see images of his father.”

“Yes, certainly,” the robot said. “I showed him the video records of the time we spent together on Saiph. I recorded everything we said and did. He made me show him the records over and over again, and in very little time he memorized everything that was said, so he could pretend he was his father, and repeat everything that was said on the video logs.”

Brisbane had to finally sit down on the floor as the meaning of the robot’s story sunk in on him. “So the way he got to know his father was to watch videotapes of him over and over,” he said in a mixture of surprise and sadness.

“256 times,” the robot said. Brisbane looked at it in confusion. “What do you mean?” he asked?

“He watched the videotapes of his father and me a total of 256 times,” Ramses said. There was another couple of seconds as the robot’s internal computers worked at a frantic pace. “He always told me that if I ever came in contact with his father again, I was to give him a message. So, I have a message for you from Brisbane.”

Brisbane sat in shocked silence, staring at the robot. He did not know what to say. Again a couple of seconds of deafening silence were broken by the voice of the little robot.

“He wanted me to tell you he loved you,” the robot said, simply and plainly.

Brisbane just turned his head to the side. He felt a little bit of his heart break. But he had precious little time to dwell on this important information. The threat of the Cusp Foundation and their super weapon would wait for nothing or no one.

“Ramses, I want you to tell me what you tell me what you know about the Cusp Foundation in connection with my son,” he said, his voice taking on an edge of grimness.

“Approximately three Terran years ago, Mistress Daressa became highly agitated when her son started to come under the influence of the Cusp Foundation. He initially met them when he and I were on a research expedition in the Beta Carinae system. The Cusp Foundation personnel almost immediately isolated him from me, and spent many days talking to him and converting him to their way of thinking. The next time I saw him, a month and a half later, he was wearing one of their uniforms and was speaking in terms I had never heard before and which I could not understand. When we returned to this star base with the Cusp people with us, Mistress Daressa became extremely angry and ordered all of them to leave. Her son told her that they would not leave because he had some very important work to do for them, if they were going to see the New Dawn.”

“The New Dawn,” Brisbane said in shock. “You have heard about the New Dawn.”

“Yes I have,” the robot replied. Brisbane told his mother that they had discovered some important technology contained in the Forever Stone that would allow them to carry out their plan to ‘cleanse the universe of all corruption and evil’. This was to be done in their New Dawn project. And when Brisbane said that to his mother she went into a rage and they had a very violent, screaming argument. Mistress Daressa grabbed a laser weapon and killed six of the Cusp people outright in just a second or two. Her son attacked her and knocked the weapon out of her grasp. He told her he was extremely sorry for what he was about to do, and told her he would not allow anything to prevent their New Dawn. He turned a weapon upon her and stunned her into unconsciousness. The remaining Cusp people carried his mother out, and for the next several weeks they continued to extract technology from the stored Forever Stone data and finalize their plans for the ‘New Dawn’.”

Brisbane sat in total disbelief on the floor. He could not believe what he was hearing. His head swam with so many questions, but he had to focus and get to the core of the matter.

“I need you to tell me everything you know about the ‘New Dawn’ technology,” Brisbane said urgently. So very much was riding on the answer to this question, that Brisbane was barely able to comprehend its significance.

“The technology they uncovered is an extremely advanced form of neutrino-based DNA encoding and propagation,” the robot said. “They had discovered a way to encode DNA instructions using neutrinos. These instructions would resequence any biological DNA it came in contact with, encoding new directives which made the organism age very rapidly and change its internal chemistry so that everything it did poisoned it. Since neutrinos are basically weightless, they can penetrate any solid matter and propagate through any medium. Nothing in the universe is safe from neutrinos. They also found a way to propagate neutrinos through compressed space at the Sanderford limit, which is one thousand times the speed of light. So, what they discovered was a way to alter any form of biological DNA in the galaxy and change it so that the organism rapidly ages and dies, and to transmit these instructions at the highest theoretical velocity.”

Brisbane was awe-struck at what he was hearing. “That is in fact their ‘New Dawn’, just as Daressa said,” he thought to himself.

The robot continued. “But they were limited by their inability to propagate the neutrino stream over an entire galactic quadrant, as they intended. The best they could do was to activate their neutrino weapon over a small area. They eventually extended their capability to a small planet, the results of which are visible on Dreen 7. But that has changed recently. I have heard that the Cusp Foundation has used the knowledge extracted from the Forever Stone with the expertise of a criminal by the name of Mr. Claude Wendigo, to develop a way to propagate the neutrino stream over most of the galaxy.”

“I’ve heard of Claude Wendigo,” Brisbane said as he nervously paced around. “He’s been in hiding from the authorities ever since he escaped from a prison transport ship years ago.” He stopped and turned to the robot. “Ramses, do you have any idea when the Cusp Foundation is planning to do another test of their neutrino weapon?” he asked.

“No more tests are planned,” the robot responded curtly. “Mr. Claude Wendigo is en route to the Cusp Foundation emitter site even as we speak, with the enabling keys and final programming to make their emitter fully functional. The Cusp Foundation is planning to fire their neutrino emitter weapon at full power in exactly four hours, twenty-eight minutes and sixteen seconds,” the robot said with a complete lack of emotion.

Brisbane’s head nearly exploded when he heard that. “WHAT??!” he shrieked. “They are going to fire that thing in less than four and a half hours??!” Brisbane nearly fell over when the news struck him. “Ramses, do you have any idea where this emitter is located?”

“I do have a location that I extracted from the Cusp Foundation computers before they left this base,” the robot said. “However it is encoded in several layers of Cusp Foundation encryption technology and I cannot decipher it, either with my internal computers or the main computers here.”

“We can decrypt it on the Archangel!” Brisbane said excitedly. “The question is, can we get back there and get the information in time to use it?” He thought for a second and turned to the robot. “Ramses, it is of the very most critical importance that the emitter location is decrypted. We have to get back in compspace communication range with the Archangel and transmit the data to them. You must accompany me back to the shuttlecraft and so we can begin our return to the Archangel immediately.”

“I will accompany you,” the robot said dispassionately. They quickly exited the dome and returned to the shuttlecraft.

Minutes later Brisbane and the robot were on the Dreamcatcher shuttlecraft, roaring through compressed space at maximum velocity, rushing back to get in communication range with the Archangel. Brisbane was constantly monitoring the controls of the shuttlecraft, pushing the engines well past their recommended safely limitations, in a desperate bid to get the emitter location to the Archangel. Ramses was assisting, and amid all the computer warnings and engine alerts, he announced, “Compspace communication range will be reached in four seconds.”

On the bridge of the Archangel, tension was thick as a heavy fog as the increased movements of the Kellurian military forces were being tracked. The warships and firepower continued to build in a most ominous fashion. Nerves were frayed and everyone on the bridge nearly jumped at the same time when it was announced that a compressed space message was coming in. “Put it on speakers,” the captain ordered, and a crackly, static-filled message came over the communication system.

Amid all the phase-shifting and white noise, a faint but recognizable voice was heard. “Brisbane Richardson to the Archangel,” it started. “Captain, I have uncovered the location of the Cusp Foundation neutrino emitter, the data is heavily encrypted but I believe the Archangel’s computers will be able to break it. I am transmitting it now.”

Captain Twillig motioned to Alanna, and an indicator light lit up on her console. Several seconds later, she said, “Transmission received, starting Cusp Foundation decryption protocols at the highest priority level.”

The captain turned back to the communication console. “Lieutenant Richardson, your transmission has been received and decryption has begun. Do you know what the Cuspies are planning to do?”

“Yes I do,” came the reply. “The Cuspies have devised a way to reprogram biological DNA through a neutrino carrier wave. This DNA change is what induces the rapid aging and septicemia in any life process. Their goal is to extinguish all life in the quadrant and repopulate it with organisms of their own choosing.” Everyone on the bridge stopped what they were doing and looked up in stunned disbelief. Even the looming Kellurian threat amassing outside in space was utterly, completely forgotten in that critical instant in time.

“When is this neutrino discharge going to take place?” the captain asked fearfully.

Again the wavering, shifting, static-filled message came out of the speakers. “Best info to date has the weapon being fired in two hours, fifty-three minutes and nine seconds, mark.”

Captain Twillig’s eyes opened wide as he realized how very little time there was. Nervously he turned to Alanna. “Report decryption progress,” he ordered.

Alanna’s fingers flew over the computer console as she cleared out non-critical programs and shifted computer resources to devote to the decryption. “Decryption is twenty-seven percent complete,” she said, “we are proceeding as rapidly as possible.”

“Let me know the second it is finished, Alanna,” the captain asked. “How can they do something like that over an entire galactic quadrant?”

“Until recently, they could only engage this weapon over a range that was at most, the size of a small planet,” Brisbane replied. “That is why Dreen 7 is now a dead, sterile world. But since then they have obtained technology to propagate their neutrino stream on the scale of a galactic quadrant and also at the speed of the Sanderford limit.” The bridge of the Archangel fell dead silent at this information, unable to comprehend how any of this could be possible.

“A known criminal scientist has provided them with the means to discharge their weapon on a galactic scale. A former prisoner named Claude Wendigo is headed to the emitter location now, with enabling keys and activation sequences which will make the Cuspie weapon completely operational.” Alanna’s face went deathly pale at this revelation. Immediately she thought back to the fateful flight of the prison transport ship Franconia, when she lost her captain, her mentor and friend, and had an opportunity to destroy the shuttlecraft which allowed Claude Wendigo to escape, but instead chose not to. If she had fired upon that shuttlecraft, would the galaxy be on the edge of total destruction it appeared now to be? For several seconds she nearly blacked out, and only snapped out of it when she heard the captain’s voice speaking sharply to her.

“Alanna – ALANNA!” he nearly shouted. “Decryption progress, please!”

“I – I’m sorry, sir,” she responded in confusion. Consulting her computer console, she replied, “Decryption is at fifty-six percent.”

“I don’t understand how they can fire this weapon and condemn all life to extinction,” the captain asked in confusion. “Wouldn’t that fate also include the hundreds of thousands of Cusp Foundation followers living on many planets in the quadrant?”

“Indeed it would, sir,” Brisbane replied, “but the Cusp Foundation followers have been told they will be martyrs for the greater cause, and the sacrifice of their lives will be the basis for the new order of life after the ‘New Dawn’. They are more than happy to give their lives to this madness.”

“But that means that all the Cuspies will die along with everyone else,” stated the captain.

“From the information and plans provided to me, the Cuspies have built a gigantic neutrino emitter in the shape of a sphere at a secret location. The outside surface of this sphere is the emitter, capable of directing the encoded neutrinos outward in all directions at once, but not inward. The inside of this sphere is the only area that will be shielded from the neutrinos. The inner chamber of the sphere is large enough to hold several thousand Cuspie followers, the elite of their organization, who will be the only beings protected from the neutrinos. They will survive because they will be inside the emitter during the discharge. Anyone and anything outside the sphere will be exposed – and contaminated.”

Everyone looked at each other in despair. They knew their fates and the fates of everyone they know and love will be sealed if the Cuspies discharge their weapon, which at this time appears to be inevitable.

A softly beeping alarm from Alanna’s console broke the stifling silence. “Decryption process complete, sir!” she announced. “Plotting galactic coordinates now.”

“On the main view screen,” said the captain. The main bridge screen went blank for a second and a map of a lightly-traveled area of the galaxy appeared, with a red box around a small cluster of stars toward the lower edge.

“Lieutenant, it appears that the emitter is located on a small, uninhabited planet revolving around a Class G star in the Abell 1478 cluster, near the Cepheid star-forming region. The exact location is being pinpointed right now.”

“That is bad news, sir,” Brisbane said ominously. The area is an enormous distance from anything. Any vessels the Alliance, or the Kellurians for that matter, that used to be in the vicinity have been pulled back to fortify the borderlands area, where the Archangel is right now.”

“Time to Cusp weapon discharge,” the captain asked desperately. Alanna punched some commands into her computer. “Two hours, forty-thee minutes, six seconds.”

“I heard that, sir,” Brisbane said dejectedly. “There is no way I or any Alliance vessel would be able to reach the area in time. The distance is just too great.”

Talox sat in stony silence throughout the entire exchange, and suddenly began to enter information in his computer console. “Captain, there may be a possible solution,” he announced.

“What do you have, Subcommander?” the captain said, looking up at him.

“I have performed some calculations, and it appears that we may have a chance to reach the emitter site in time using the Frontiere. If someone leaves immediately and proceeds at the highest possible velocity, there is a sixty percent chance that they would reach the emitter before it discharges. They can then destroy it with a nuclear missile.”

Captain Twillig and everyone on the bridge were shocked to hear that. “Is that possible, Subcommander?” he asked.

“Here are my calculations,” Talox said as he transmitted the data on his monitor screen to general distribution on the bridge. “Please verify my work.”

Alanna took a quick, intense look at the timelines and velocity parameters. “It looks like it might work, sir,” she said, allowing herself a small measure of hope. “We could possibly get there, but the Frontiere has to leave within the next two minutes. But, there is a major problem.”

“What is it, Alanna?” the captain asked.

“There is so little time and the distance so great, the only way the Frontiere can get there in time is to take a direct route, which by necessity will have to cross over into Kellurian territory for a short distance. I have plotted several different trajectories through compressed space, but the only one that will reach the target in the allotted time is the one through Kellurian space.” She transferred her projections to the main view screen and it became obvious to all that what she said was absolutely, unalterably true.

The captain thought carefully for a couple of seconds, knowing full well the enormous responsibility his next decision would carry. If the Kellurians detected the Frontiere crossing into their space, they could instantly misinterpret it as an act of war and begin retaliation, beginning a final conflict which would only be stopped by the discharge of the Cuspie emitter, or complete destruction of both sides. He could not believe the weight that was on his shoulders, but things rapidly became clear to him.

Turning to Talox he said, “Subcommander, you have the Frontiere. Go now. Take out the Cusp Foundation emitter.” Talox stood up and quickly exited the bridge without saying another word. Everyone understood the enormous risks and the enormous stakes involved.

Captain Twillig turned to the communication officer. “Patch me through to Commander Thurin on the Kellurian warship Saureg, emergency channel.” The officer was momentarily surprised at such an unexpected order, but did as he was told. Seconds later the main view screen broke apart into static, but an image of the command area of a Kellurian warship. The captain of the warship whirled around in his chair and looked directly at them. “Twillig!” he bellowed, “what is the meaning of this interference?”

“We’re going to try something a little different this time, Thurin,” Captain Twillig replied sharply. “You’re going to keep your mouth shut for a while and listen to what I have to say!” Thurin’s face registered shock and surprise at Captain Twillig’s forceful demand, as did everyone on the Archangel bridge.

“This is what’s going on, Thurin. We have recently discovered a Cusp Foundation plan to use an enormous neutrino burst to reprogram the biological DNA of every form of life in this quadrant, causing rapid aging and senescence. They will also alter bodily fluid chemistry to induce acute septicemia.”

The Kellurian commander turned purple when he heard that. “You have a lot of nerve, bringing up senescence and blood poisoning to me,” he ranted, “when that is exactly what you jackals did to cause the death of Ambassador Craethon!”

Captain Twillig was taken aback by this news, since this was the first time the Alliance had received any definitive information on how Craethon died, although the Alliance had received the full measure of blame for the incident. “You don’t understand, Thurin. The Alliance didn’t kill Craethon. His murder was caused by the Cusp Foundation neutrino emitter, and now they are mere hours away from dooming every form of life in this quadrant to the same agonizing fate, including you, me and everyone on our ships.”

Thurin’s jaw dropped open when he heard this, but immediately his expression turned to hate. “You are lying!” he exploded. “You are lying to cover up your Alliance’s involvement in Craethon’s death!”

“No I’m not,” Twillig protested earnestly, “and I can prove it. Several days ago, Daressencia Laportine was brought to our medical facility in an advanced state of senility and septicemia. She told us directly the Cusp Foundation had turned its weapon on her. We did a DNA scan on her and found the altered DNA segments. I’m sure your medical personnel have done a DNA scan on Ambassador Craethon. I’m asking you to let us send you Laportine’s DNA scan for your medical people to compare with Craethon’s scan. Of course the two DNA scans will be fundamentally different, but you will be able to see the functionally equivalent reprogramming which would produce the same results in Craethon as it did in Laportine.”

Commander Thurin gave Twillig a very distrustful look but the Captain sensed that he was starting to soften. “How do I know these scans you talk about aren’t faked?” he demanded.

“Your medical personnel will be able to determine if our scans are authentic,” the captain said. He moved around the console and walked up to the main view screen. He looked directly into the image of his Kellurian counterpart. “I’m asking you to review the DNA scans,” he said urgently. “Everything you have ever known depends on you believing us.”

“If we do agree to examine the scans, what’s the point of all this, Twillig?” the commander asked. Twillig turned around and walked back to his command console. “Because in less than two minutes, the Frontiere will be leaving this starship and head to the place we believe is the location of the Cusp neutrino emitter. It is our last and only chance to destroy it before the Cusp Foundation discharges it. To get there on time, it must pass through a small area of Kellurian space. We ask that you let it pass without incident. It will be in your territory for 2.5 minutes. It is absolutely critical that you understand that it is not an offensive action by us; rather, it is the only opportunity we have to stop the Cusp Foundation before it discharges its weapon.”

The Kellurian commander said nothing, and only glared at the captain, but the captain knew he had won. He reached down and touched a communicator. “Captain Twillig to the Medical department,” he said. A second later the reply came, “Dr. Calcagno here.”

“Dr. Calcagno,” Captain Twillig said, “send the complete medical file on Daressencia Laportine to my command console.” Seconds later, the doctor responded with, “Files have been transmitted.” The captain turned around and immediately sent the files to the Kellurian warship. Commander Thurin looked to his side and touched some controls on his side. “We will examine your files, Twillig,” the commander said gruffly.

“You have one minute,” Twillig said. “That’s all the time that can be spared.” The view screen on the bridge went to black and Captain Twillig let out a long sigh. “We’ve done all we can,” he said to the silent crewmembers. “All that’s left now is for them to trust us.”

Two minutes later the Frontiere departed from the hangar area of the Archangel containing a single Cyclopean occupant. It banked sharply to the right and veered off with great speed. Seconds later, it disappeared in a flash of white light as it entered compressed space and began the most important mission of its long, illustrious career. The dozens of warships amassed on both sides, their armaments bristling, all watched the departure of the Frontiere and did nothing.