S01 E08: Chronicles of T’Avaya: The Truth of the Raptor’s Children, Part 2
T’Leth kept her eyes closed. Her
facial expression betrayed her deep concentration. With her left hand on the
Betazoid woman and her right hand on a spheroid receptacle, she felt her
physical presence dissipating as two other minds touched her own. One, the
Betazoid, Viadne. The other, the Vulcan/Romulan, S’Task. The disembodied
essence of S’Task had occupied Viadne’s mind for over three months, sometimes
suppressed, sometimes dominant, but never belonging there.
T’Avaya
had been watching the Vulcan master T’Leth for over an hour. The process of
removing the katra, the essence, from a mind and instilling it into a
receptacle was a long and arduous undertaking for any Vulcan master. It was
usually done when a Vulcan was close to death, the Vulcan’s own katra
removed from the body. It was rare that a non-Vulcan body would contain a
Vulcan’s katra. Even though Viadne was a Betazoid, and thereby had
natural psionic abilities beyond many humanoid races, she had spent many years
as a Borg drone, rendering her psionic abilities repressed and weak.
That the
katra of S’Task had survived all this time was amazing. S’Task had been alive
during the Time of Awakening, when Surak had convinced the majority of the
Vulcan people to embrace logic and stoicism and to leave behind their violent
ways. S’Task did not want to follow Surak’s ways, so he led eighty thousand
Vulcans away from their home in search of a new home, one where they would be
free to live their lives by following their passions and their warrior
aggressions. S’Task and his followers were often referred to as “those who
marched beneath the raptor’s wings”, and later as “the Raptor’s Children”, and
even later as “Romulans”. It has been over two thousand years since that Time
of Awakening. And now, somehow, S’Task’s katra had been found aboard a
crashed ship and had been implanted in Viadne’s mind when she had found the
ship as a Borg drone. How surprising that she was freed from the Borg more
easily than she was from the katra, T’Avaya thought.
The
Vulcan master suddenly opened her eyes and folded her hands in front of her.
“It is done,” she said.
T’Avaya
stood and asked, “Do you require assistance?”
“No. I
will rest now,” T’Leth said, as she quietly left the room.
T’Avaya
walked over to the bed. Viadne was still unconscious. She would be so for at
least another two hours. T’Avaya turned to look at the receptacle containing
the soul of S’Task. The white spherical object glowed as if it had a light
inside. The glowing pulsed. She found the rhythmic pulse very soothing. She
lifted the globe with great care. She placed it in a white transluscent
cube-shaped box at the foot of the bed and carried it to her small scout ship.
She would bring the katra with her to Gamma Volantis. There, she would
work with others to examine the crashed Romulan ship where the katra had
been found. She would much rather take it to the Hall of Ancient Thought on
Vulcan, where it would be laid to rest with the other great minds of Vulcan’s
past, but the Romulans had laid a claim on the katra. S’Task had been
the first leader of the Romulans, so the Romulans claimed first rights to the katra,
just as Vulcans claimed first rights as S’Task had been born a Vulcan citizen.
Would the matter even be settled on
Gamma Volantis? Probably not, T’Avaya thought. It would just be a
meeting of Vulcans and Romulans as both studied the ship to try to determine
how it had crashed and how it had come to have S’Task’s katra. S’Task
was presumed to have died on Romulus, and Romulans had never adopted the Vulcan
practice of preserving katras. Indeed, the Romulans had lost their
telepathic abilities in the centuries since the Time of Awakening.
Starfleet Intelligence Mission
Log. Stardate 45125.7.
Agent T’Avaya reporting. I have arrived with Vulcan Master T’Leth on the
uninhabited planet Gamma Volantis on the outskirts of Romulan space. An ancient
Romulan ship, the Ket-Cheleb, crashed here almost two millennia ago. The ship
was discovered four months ago by a crashed Borg scout ship. The only surviving
Borg, a Betazoid, inadvertantly uncovered the katra as it entered her
mind when she connected her Borg nanoprobes to the ship. The Romulan ship and
the Betazoid were later discovered by Romulans. They disconnected her from the
Borg collective, and took her to Romulus for study. A telepathic Reman named
Xiokir discovered that the Betazoid woman’s mind contained the katra, living
soul, of S’Task. The Romulans orderd many invasive tests and procedures on the
Betazoid to have the katra removed and studied, but to no avail. The Romulans
do not possess such technological or telepathic capability. A Romulan nurse
took pity on the Betazoid, Viadne, and helped her escape to a nonalligned world
that was willing to help her. She is now living on that world, while I now have
the katra in a safety receptacle.
T’Leth and I will be working
with the Romulans to examine the Ket-Cheleb while trying to reach an agreement
on what to do with it and the katra.
Commander Darat was tapping a
computer console. It defied her touch by refusing to power on. “No power. No
accessable data banks. No sign of life,” the Romulan declared.
“I saw the engine room,” said
Naluk. “It was totally inoperable. This ship lost all power when it crashed two
thousand years ago.”
“Any idea where the ship was
headed?” Commander Darat asked. Naluk was a Romulan historian and
archaeologist. He explained that the ship was meant to be a long range
transport ship. But Romulans of that time were still getting settled on
Romulus. There were no records of any of them leaving the planet. This ship
also appears to not have had a crew. Its navigation system must have been set
for a particular destination.
Suddenly, Darat and Naluk heard a
strange buzzing sound. They started looking around. The ship still looked dead.
They could not tell where the sound came from.
***
T’Avaya landed her small scout ship
on Gamma Volantis several meters away from the Ket-Cheleb. The Romulan warbird
orbiting the planet was a good sign that the Romulans were probably already
inside the Ket-Cheleb recording their findings.
“Something is happening,” said
T’Leth from behind her.
T’Avaya turned around. T’Leth had
opened the box containing the katra. T’Leth said the orb had started
glowing brightly inside the box. When she had opened the lid, it glowed
continuously, instead of pulsing as it had done before.
“Perhaps it is reacting to a
magnetic resonance field on the planet,” T’Avaya said.
T’Leth agreed it was possible.
Hardly any katras were ever taken off the Vulcan homeworld, so who knew
how they would react on another planet? She closed the lid, and they left the
scout ship.
As the two of them walked toward
the crashed Romulan ship Ket-Cheleb, T’Avaya looked at its outer hull. It had
obviously been built on Romulus. But the design was very similar to that of the
old Vulcan ships of that time. The name “Ket-Cheleb” was painted on the ship’s
port side in the old Vulcan script. It was the name of the Vulcan god of war.
The two women walked inside. They heard a strange buzzing sound. They saw two
Romulans, a male and a female. The male was holding a Romulan tricorder. The
Romulans looked at them as they entered. The female spoke first. “I am
Commander Darat. This is historian Naluk.”
The Vulcan women introduced
themselves. T’Avaya asked what the buzzing sound was. Darat said it had just
started a few minutes ago. Naluk said, “My tricorder readings show microscopic
electromachines in the air, too small to be seen with the eyes. There are
fifty-three of them floating around us. They are making the buzzing sound.”
T’Avaya turned on her tricorder and
confirmed. T’Leth and T’Avaya both said they could sense an intelligence in the
micromachines. T’Avaya’s tricorder showed they were gathering around the other
Vulcan. T’Leth could feel it. She said, “They sense I am the stronger telepath.
They are communicating with me.” She closed her eyes for several seconds.
When she opened her eyes, she said
the machines contained the memory engrams of S’Task’s personal guards. They
were his Arrain, personal Centurians. They had been sent with the katra to
protect it. Two thousand years ago, his most loyal followers had known he was
about to be murdered by one of his enemies on Romulus, and the followers knew
they would not be able to stop it. So they removed his katra right
before he was murdered and secretly put it on the Ket-Cheleb. The ship’s
navigational system was set for Barradas III, the home planet of the Debrune.
They knew the katra would be safe there. Debrune was a planet that had
been colonized by Vulcans who had left the home planet during Surak’s time, but
had not traveled as far as the rest of S’Task’s people.
Naluk said the ship must have been
thrown off course. Gamma Volantis was not on the spatial path from Romulus to
Barradas III. T’Leth said the beings communicated that a spatial anamoly had
thrown the ship off course and caused it to crash on this planet. The Arrain
could sense that S’Task’s katra was nearby, and that it was active. The
Arrain had been unconscious from the time the ship crashed, only becoming
active now that the katra was active and in close range. As T’Leth
communicated this to the others, she left out the fact that the Romulans had
discovered the Arrain four months earlier when they had been aboard this ship.
T’Avaya found it fascinating that the Romulans had the technology to create
these microscopic machines and upload memory engrams into them. Naluk explained
that there was much old technology the ancient Romulans posessed that had been
lost on Romulus. Just trying to survive and tame a new planet had taken up most
of their time and resources back then. But these machines did not contain
actual katras, only memory ingrams and a certain level of artificial
intelligence so they could adapt to some situations long enough to get the ship
to to its destination.
Naluk explained that he himself was
now part of a small group of followers of S’Task. They sought to honor his
memory. So much of Romulan society was spent advancing the military or the
careers of politicians that it was easy to forget the past. Their group had
come here hoping to learn more about S’Task from this ship and from his katra.
The two Vulcans had never heard of such a group existing on Romulus. Naluk said
that “Federation propaganda” only told them what the Romulan military was up
to, never letting them know that there were many civilian citizens who had
other interests. T’Avaya had visited Romulus as a Section 31 operative and knew
first hand that Naluk spoke the truth, though that was not something she could
reveal at this time.
“Nor should your little group get
recognition,” said Darat. “You worship S’Task as a poet and philosopher, like a
weak Vulcan. S’Task’s greatness was his leadership as a soldier. He led us away
from Surark’s pallid philosophy to be our own great race.”
“He was a great leader. But he was
also a great person in his own right,” Naluk countered. “He had a balanced
mind. He not only wanted us to be great warriors, but also great artisans who
could build a solid foundation for an empire.”
“I am a member of the Barel clan,”
Darat proudly proclaimed. “S’Task honored our earliest Romulan forebearer by
entrusting him with his sacred staff. Because of that, my family owes much to
S’Task. THAT is his legacy to the Romulan people. My family has contributed
much to shape the military and the senate.”
Naluk spat at her. “The success of
ONE family is an insult to the great S’Task’s legacy.”
T’Avaya mused that these two had
probably had this debate before and would again. She decided it was time to
change the subject. She said she wanted to study the Arrain to see how
microscopic objects could successfully carry memory engrams. And since they
were micromechanical, she may be able to find a way to help them communicate
more easily with non-telepaths, such as Romulans. T’Leth gave her a
dissatisfied look and said, “You do not trust my communication with them?”
“It is not a matter of
trust,”T’Avaya said. “It would be more efficient if we could communicate with
them without needing one person as a go-between. I am also interested in
studying the technology of their construction. As an engineer, I find it
fascinating.”
T’Leth bowed her head in agreement.
T’Avaya said she would need to build an electric isomietic field generator. The
machines would be able to attach themselves to it harmlessly, and it would
project their thoughts through a speaker. But she would need a molecular
impulse conduit. She did not have one on her ship, and there was no such thing
on the Ket-Cheleb.
Commander Darat said, “You can
build it from my warbird. I will have one of my engineers assist you.”
The Vulcan engineer was surprised
by the Romulan commander’s willingness to help.
When the others beamed up to the
warbird, T’Leth asked to stay behind a few minutes. She wanted a little more
time with the Arrain. She reached out to the Arrain telepathically. As a Vulcan
master, she had great mind control. Still, it required some effort to touch
minds with them without letting them know her true intentions.
“You will not take us,” they said
to her.
She told them they could have a
resting place next to S’Task’s katra in the Hall of Ancient Thought.
“You want to use us. The others
told us. We will not be used to wage wars against your enemies.”
She tried to gain their trust. She
failed. Just like Romulans, she thought, so paranoid.
***
After T’Avaya had spent several
hours working with the Romulan engineer to build the field generator, Naluk
invited her to join the followers of S’Task (the Vrinsuthe, as they were
called) in the Kutasia ritual. He explained that it was a meditation ritual
performed weekly by the Vrinsuthe. T’Avaya found it interesting and, feeling
that she had reached a point where she could use a diversion, said she would
join. T’Leth had been invited, but was feeling fatigued and did not wish to
participate.
T’Avaya changed into the light
green robe she had been asked to wear. She entered the room with the other
Vrinsuthe. They were all dressed the same as she. There were two rows of small
pillows on the floor. Each person sat on a pillow. There was one Romulan
standing at the front of the room. He lit two candles, then read an ancient
poem in Romulan. Then everyone closed their eyes and meditated. After twenty
minutes, the leader rang a bell. Everyone stood up from their pillow. They all
formed a circle along the outer perimeter of the room and started walking
clockwise. They were still very silent, still meditating. After another twenty
minutes, everyone took the pillow they had previously sat on and moved it to
the outer perimeter of the room, forming a circle, and sat back down on the
pillows. Then the leader passed around an ancient tome that was written by
S’Task, and each person read a line from it. Then, another bell, and everyone
was dismissed.
Afterwards, Naluk asked T’Avaya
what she thought of the ritual. She said she found it quite stimulating. She
noticed the tome they read from, Force Will Not Avail You, was one of S’Task’s
works that had been discovered on Vulcan hundreds of years ago by an
archaeologist named T’Pek. How did the Vrinsuthe manage to get a copy of it?
Naluk said it must have been smuggled to Romulus hundreds of years ago.
T’Avaya did not know any Romulans
practiced meditation. It was a common daily exercise with Vulcans. It had only
been started after Surak’s time as a way of calming the mind to keep emotions
in check. So why then, did Romulans do it? Naluk said S’Task had been a student
of Surak for many years before the Time of Awakening, as many knew, and that
Surak had often advocated meditation as a path to calmness and inner peace.
T’Avaya mentioned how this Kutasia ritual was different in some ways from the
Vulcan meditation practice. Vulcans prefered to meditate in private, whereas
the Romulans did it in a group. Naluk admitted that Romulans were clearly more
sociable than Vulcans and that that was neither good nor bad, just a
difference. T’Avaya said she was pleased to see that this was something Vulcans
had in common with their distant brothers. She thought of Ambassador Spock and
his reunification movement that still was ongoing on Romulus.
Mission Log. Supplemental. I
have built an electric isomietic field generator to help the Arrain communicate
more easily. The Arrain will be more comfortable in their own environment, so I
have taken the generator to their ship. I am very impressed by the hospitality
of the Romulans. They all seem amicable and helpful. It almost seems to be a
ploy. But to what end? Perhaps I am being too paranoid.
The Vulcan engineer turned on the
field generator. The dome on its top glowed bright blue. The computer screen on
its side showed ready to receive. T’Leth said she could sense the Arrain were
aware of the generator. They were coming towards it. A voice came from the
generator.
“Who are you?” it said. T’Avaya
explained about the crashed ship and the katra of S’Task.
The voice said, “You will not take
us.” T’Avaya tried to explain that they only wanted to take the katra to
its final resting place on Vulcan.
“You will not take us,” again came
from the voice modulator of the field generator.
Naluk said, “It is a great honor to
meet those who knew the great S’Task in person.”
The Arrain replied, “Who are you?”
“I am a loyal follower who has
studied the teachings of S’Task. There are several like me who honor his
memory.”
The voice said, “It is trickery.
The others told us.”
“What others?” T’Avaya asked.
“The others were here before. They
were our brothers. Romulans. But they sought to use us. Wanted to use us to
build synthetic brain to infiltrate their enemies. Wanted to use us to build
computer virus to infiltrate enemies’ computers.”
Darat said, “Their memories must be
faulty. Most Romulans abhor the idea of synthetics. Or perhaps others have been
here who were not Romulans.”
T’Leth said that she would like to
speak to the Arrain alone. She felt that she could convice them that they were
in no danger. Darat tried to protest, but T’Leth stood her ground. They
reluctantly left the ship.
Once the others were gone, T’Leth
knew she could speak plainly to the Arrain. She heard their plea again.
“You will not take us.”
She told them they could have a
resting place next to S’Task’s katra in the Hall of Ancient Thought.
“You want to use us. The others
told us. We will not be used to wage wars against your enemies.”
T’Leth reached into her pocket and
pulled out a small pyramid-shaped object. She focused her thoughts through the
object. In her mind, she could hear the thoughts of the Arrain. “Yes. The
others were here before,” she told them. “They could not contain you, but I
can.” All she had needed was the field generator that T’Avaya had built. It
made the Arrain just pliable enough for her mind to overwhelm them. She urged
them into the pyramid prison in her hand. They could not resist.
As T’Avaya and Commander Darat met
Naluk outside the Ket-Cheleb, T’Avaya wondered just how far she could trust
them. Or how much she could trust T’Leth. She had sensed something very strange
when they were inside the Ket-Cheleb. The Arrain seemed fearful. And T’Leth
seemed a little too confident in herself, as if she knew something about them.
And she didn’t seem curious about them at all. Perhaps it was her superior
telepathic powers. Still, T’Avaya felt something odd was amiss.
Naluk asked, “Would it be possible
to use the field generator on the katra? I would very much like to speak
with S’Task.”
T’Avaya answered, “No. The
generator only works on the Arrain because they are physical machines that
house engrams. The katra is not a machine and works on different
principles.”
“Ah. Unfortunate.”
T’Leth came out of the ship and
held up her pyramid-shaped object and said, “The Arrain are in here. They will
be safe until we get to Vulcan. They will be put in the Hall of Ancient Thought
next to S’Task.”
Darat drew her pistol and aimed it
at T’Leth. “You will hand them over to us! You can have the katra. But
the Arrain are made of technology the Tal Shiar is very interested in.”
Darat is Tal Shiar? T’Avaya
thought. Then why has she been so cooperative?
Suddenly, T’Leth disappeared in a
dazzling display of light. She had been beamed away. Commander Darat called her
ship. They said their sensors had just picked up the transporter activity. They
could not trace the source. Could it have been a cloaked ship? There was a
sensor blip that had lasted a few seconds and was gone. They detected no
tachyon emissions that would suggest a cloaked ship. And sensors detected no
other life signs on the planet and no other ships in the area.
T’Avaya went back to her scout
ship. The katra was still there. It still had the odd glow that it had
when they landed on the planet, not the natural pulsing she had seen before.
She felt a faint telepathic presence from it, as if the katra was dormant. She
looked around to see if T’Leth had left any personal effects that may give a
clue to her whereabouts. She found nothing. The other Vulcan had not brought
anything with her except an extra robe. She checked the pocket of the robe.
There was a hypospray. It was common for Vulcans of T’Leth’s advanced age to be
on some type of regular medication. She opened it up. When she removed the
middle section, she noticed it had an extra piece. It was a communicator hidden
within the hypospray.
***
T’Avaya checked her ship’s
communication logs. T’Leth had not made any personal communications. She
checked the sensor logs. The hidden communicator had been set for a low epsilon
e-band. She recalibrated her ship’s sensors to scan for that band. If she had
access to the communications array she had built for Space Station Tyrellia,
she would be able to easily track any communications on that band. She sent a
communique to Luruwa, her assistant engineer who was temporarily maintaining
the station array while T’Avaya was away. She told Luruwa to transmit a sensor
signal from the array that would be able to detect epsilon e-band
transmissions. Moments later, Luruwa sent the signal. T’Avaya was able to
detect traces of an epsilon e-band wave that had come from an area of space
above the planet’s south polar region. She decided she would have to trust the
Romulans to help her. She called them from her scout ship and explained what
she had found and asked to go back to their warbird. She took the field generator
with her.
From the warbird, she and the
Romulan engineer found a cloaked ship above the Gamma Volantis’ southern pole,
right where T’Avaya had tracked the wave. Instead of tachyon emissions, the
ship emitted inter-phasic tetryon particles that could be detected using the
same frequencies that were calibrated for e-band waves. Darat ordered the
warbird to move closer to the cloaked ship. As they approached, the other ship
decloaked. That was much too easy, Commander Darat thought. The ship
hailed them.
T’Leth appeared on the screen.
“Clever that you were able to detect this ship. No matter. This ship has a
quantum slipstream drive. I will be leaving this sector in five minutes, and
you will not be able to follow.”
T’Avaya had recognized both
T’Leth’s secret communicator and the design of T’Leth’s ship. “You are Section
31.”
“Not really hard to figure out, was
it?” T’Leth answered.
“What do you want with the Arrain?”
Darat asked.
“They have the potential to be
weaponized in a number of ways. We can reprogram and use them like computer
viruses. We will use them on whatever enemy we deem a threat to Federation
security. They are perfect. Being able to travel through air, and being microscopic,
they can infiltrate beings or computers. And with emotional imprints, we may
also be able to use them for mind control. We may be able to use them as a
model for artificial intelligence that would never become sentient, and
therefore, never become a threat to its creators. Anything that gives us an
advantage over our enemies.”
T’Avaya still wanted to know
something else. “We just discovered these Arrain. How did you know they were
here?”
“They were discovered by Commander
Vemel when his crew found Viadne. But at the time, they could not contain them
or study them. The Reman, Xiokir, could sense their intelligence, but could not
communicate with them. However, they, apparently, could understand Vemel and
Xiokir’s talk about their potential use as weapons. We needed you to come here
with your engineering knowledge to build the field generator. Also, S’Task’s katra
needed to be freed from Viadne’s mind to make the Arrain fully open to communication.”
Darat said, “So they were the
‘others’ that the Arrain spoke of. But there was nothing in Vemel’s report
about finding these Arrain.”
T’Leth said, “Section 31 made sure
that that part of the records was erased. We couldn’t let anyone know before we
could come back and retrieve them.”
On the Romulan ship’s forward view
screen, T’Avaya saw the pyramid that housed the Arrain had been set on a table
behind T’Leth. T’Avaya increased the power on the electric isomietic field
generator. She saw the small pyramid behind T’Leth begin to vibrate. Then, it
started making a loud buzzing noise. T’Leth turned around and saw the pyramid
rise into the air as it kept vibrating and buzzing.
“What is happening?” T’Leth gasped.
T’Avaya said, “I am using the field
generator to destroy the Arrain. They will understand. They said they did not
want to be used. I know they would prefer death to being manipulated.”
T’Leth watched in horror as the
small pyramid began turning somersaults in the air. Then it vibrated violently.
The buzzing got louder. Then it exploded into tiny fragments. The shattered
pieces fell to the deck.
Darat said, “T’Leth, you will
surrender yourself and your ship to us now! Or we will fire on you and destroy
your ship!”
T’Leth broke the transmission.
Commander Darat ordered her weapons officer to lock weapons on the Section 31
ship. Then, everyone on the warbird watched as the Section 31 ship disappeared
in a flash of light. She had used the slipstream drive to get away.
“Kllhe'mnhe!!!”, Darat
yelled.
***
T’Avaya, Commander Darat, and Naluk
were in Darat’s office.
Naluk asked Darat and T’Avaya, “Did
any of you know that T’Leth was Section 31?”
The two women looked at each other.
No. They did not.
“And you, Darat,” T’Avaya said,
“Why is the Tal Shiar here?”
“I was sent here to make sure the katra
got sent to Vulcan and not Romulus. And to retrieve the Arrain for study.”
That was surprising to Naluk. He
said, “Why did the Tal Shiar not want the katra?”
“As I know T’Avaya already found
out from her experience with Viadne,” Darat said, “we cannot let the Romulan
people find out that S’Task did not actually know the my clan, the Barel
family. My family is too important. We have many members in high places in the
government and military.”
Naluk was taken aback. “You did
this to keep your family in power? For some kind of false birthright? There are
so many poor families on Romulus; those who have little to eat, much less power
or prestige. It is another reason I belong to the Vrinsuthe. We believe the
original teachings of S’Task emphasized a more balanced republic.”
Darat just shook her head and
smiled. “I was following orders from the Tal Shiar. It just so happned that my
orders benefitted me and my family.”
“ ‘Just so happened’,” spat Naluk.
“Why did you allow the Vrinsuthe aboard your ship? You knew we would want the katra.”
“You are here in case we needed
someone with more historical knowledge of S’Task and the Arrain. We could
easily dispose of you if you became a problem. But it is a shame the Arrain had
to be destroyed,” Darat said.
Mission Log. Supplemental. I am
on my way to Vulcan with S’Task’s katra. Before I left the Romulan
warbird, I had one more conversation with Naluk. I told him the Arrain were not
destroyed. They are inside my field generator. I had built it to contain
them for their own safety. They were drawn inside the generator before T’Leth
tried to coerce them into her device. I had suspected that T’Leth had some kind
of ulterior motive concerning them. Why else did she insist on speaking with
them in private? The field generator was able to destroy T’Leth’s device
because the device was set to the same modular frequency as the generator. The
Arrain will be put in the Hall of Ancient Thought with the katra. I also
told Naluk there was no need to be jealous of the Barel clan. Success comes in
many forms. His own spiritual enlightenment with the Vrinsuthe is proof of
that. He said he would have liked to have S’Task’s katra on Romulus, but
he knew it would be safer on Vulcan.
I have alerted Starfleet
Intelligence that the Vulcan master T’Leth was a Section 31 operative and that
she fled before she could be captured, but she did not take the Arrain. I must
say that working for Starfleet Intelligence has been a challenging and rewarding
experience. There were many unforeseen events. The Romulans proved much better
allies than the Vulcan master. I remember that one of the writings of S’Task
from “Force Will Not Avail You” was-- We are all connected, despite
being worlds apart. That certainly applies to Vulcans and Romulans.
Though the two races have grown apart, Naluk has shown me how they are still
similar. Perhaps one day we will indeed see Spock’s dream of reunification.
-by the Honorable Kavura
Thank you for reading my Star Trek Adventures: Captain’s
Log mission report. Captain’s Log is a solo roleplaying game by Modiphius
Entertainment.
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