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SKYTREK - CHAPTER 3 (standard:humor, 3893 words) [3/15] show all parts | |||
Author: Danny Miami | Added: May 01 2010 | Views/Reads: 2221/1698 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
Chapter 3 of the Star Trek parody. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story could--” The Guard pointed the laser pistol at him. “Kharg's decoy ship is in its final position,” the old Astronomer blurted quickly, his eyes never leaving the pistol. “The Orion is now approaching it.” The Guard grinned again and squeezed the trigger. A beam shot out, there was a strangled scream from the old Astronomer and he dropped to the path. “Prat,” the Guard sneered and slammed the heavy door shut. “A message for Kharg, eh?” he muttered to himself. “There could be some gold in this for me.” He ran his grubby hands through his greasy hair, brushed at some food stains on his filthy uniform and scraped some mud off his boots. “How do I look?” he asked a prisoner who was chained to the wall. “Immaculate,” replied the prisoner. The Guard grinned, picked up a bucket and threw the stinking, putrid contents over him. “Mmmhh!” muttered the prisoner appreciatively, licking the revolting mess as it dripped from his hair. “Breakfast's early today.” The Guard put his helmet on and strolled up a short corridor to the young Captain's room. After a final attempt to tidy himself up he knocked on the door and entered. “Morning sir,” he said, saluting and knocking his helmet off. The impeccably groomed young Captain was sitting at a table, breakfasting. He put down his silver cutlery and watched contemptuously as the Guard fumbled with his helmet and tried to get it back on. “You disgusting toadball,” he sneered. “You slime coated slug.” “Yes sir. Thank you, sir,” the Guard said. “Sorry to disturb your breakfast, sir. Just on my way to see the Major,” he explained, edging towards the far door. The Captain pulled at a wall sash then rose and strolled over to block the Guard's way. “Why do you wish to see the Major, you walking pile of skunk droppings?” he asked. The Guard scratched at the stubble on his chin and frowned then he suddenly remembered. “Oh yes, there's a fleet of Klinger ships approaching.” The Captain shook his head in disgust. “You lying rat,” he sneered. “You have a message for Kharg, don't you?” The Guard bit his lip. “Well, sort of.” “What is it?” “I'd rather take it myself, sir.” In response to the Captain's earlier sash pull, a servant had appeared carrying a narrow wooden box. He opened it, revealing two silver laser pistols lying on a velvet lining. “Thank you, Willis,” the Captain said, selecting one. Seeing what was happening, the Guard started to sweat and began edging back to the door. “Kharg's decoy ship is in its final position,” he babbled then lost his nerve completely and turned and bolted. “The Orion is now approaching it!” he yelled from the corridor on the run. The Captain took casual aim and fired. The Guard's running stopped and there was a choked cry followed by the sound of a body thudding to the ground. “Toad,” muttered the Captain and handed over the pistol. Willis replaced it in the box, bowed respectfully and withdrew. “A message for Kharg, eh?” the young Captain said to himself as he preened himself in front of a mirror. “The old boy will be delighted with the news. I fancy there could be a spot of promotion in this for me.” He smiled at his handsome reflection then strolled over to the far door. He listened carefully for a few moments then opened it very gently. He peered in but the room was empty so he quickly darted in and took cover behind a large desk. “What is it, Captain?” the Major called brusquely from an adjoining room. “I have to see Kharg rather urgently,” the Captain replied, remaining under cover. “Why?” “There's been an outbreak of leprosy on Dulcodaz.” “Damned bad show. What's the real reason?” The Captain hesitated. “You won't shoot me if I tell you?” “Don't be ridiculous,” scoffed the Major. Still the Captain hesitated. “Promise?” “Yes of course,” snapped the Major. “Good God man what d'you want me to do – pull out my liver and let you keep it as a hostage?” The Captain peered cautiously over the top of the desk. The silver haired Major was standing in the open doorway of his adjoining room. He was wearing a smoking jacket and in one hand he held a cigar and in the other a report he'd been reading. Relieved that a laser pistol wasn't being pointed at him, the Captain smiled and stood up. “Good show,” said the Major. “Now what's this damned message?” “Kharg's decoy ship is in its final position,” the Captain told him. “The Orion is now approaching it.” “Excellent,” said the Major. Suddenly a third hand holding a laser pistol appeared from under his smoking jacket. A beam shot out and zapped the Captain who screamed and fell. “Fool,” said the Major, taking off his smoking jacket which had a padded false arm with a report held in the realistic hand. He brushed at his uniform and ran a finger along his neatly clipped moustache. “A message for Kharg, what?” he muttered. “Jolly good. Should be something interesting in this for me.” He walked through to the desk in his adjoining room, stubbed out his cigar and pressed an intercom. “Yes?” responded Kharg's rasping voice. “Forgive the intrusion, your Majesty,” said the Major, bowing several times to the intercom, “but I have an important message for you.” “Come through,” rasped Kharg. A recessed arched door slid up and the Major walked through to Kharg's quarters. It was a large room with a lot of complicated electronic and communications equipment set up in it, with banks of monitors and screens taking up half of one wall. Kharg turned from a console he'd been working at. He was still wearing his high-collared, long velvet robe and the bright lights in the room seemed to diffuse though his face, giving it a strange, translucent quality. Sitting next to him on a high stool and also still wearing his top hat and tails was Giraffe. He had been playing Grand Theft Auto IV however on seeing the Major coming in he paused the game and gave him his full attention, knowing he could be relied on to provide some entertainment. “What is the message you have for me?” Kharg asked in his slow, rasping voice. The Major bowed deeply before him. “Your serene Majesty,” he intoned. Kharg sighed and waited. Giraffe grinned. “Your most noble and revered Highness,” the Major went on, “without whose presence our lives would be in perpetual darkness.” He dropped to one knee and held out his arms in worship. “Without whose guiding light we would be as worms crawling blindly in the mud.” Giraffe applauded. “Before you I am prostrate,” continued the Major and tried to get down on both knees to illustrate the point but discovered he was too stiff and settled for bowing his head. “I am not worthy to be in your presence. I should not be breathing the--” “The message!” rasped Kharg impatiently. Startled, the Major looked up. “The what? Oh yes, the message,” he said, disappointed that his speech had been cut short now that he was in full flow. “The message...now let me see, what was it?” “Why do I tolerate these damned fools?” Kharg muttered, shaking his head. “It's, ah...” the Major began, frowning and trying to remember. “Oh yes it's...no, it's not that. Hang on just a minute, it'll come back to me I'm sure it will.” Watching from his stool, Giraffe sniggered at the Major's discomfort and Kharg's impatience. “Wait! I have it!” announced the Major, getting to his feet. “The Orion's in its final position and your decoy ship is now approaching it.” He frowned. “No, that doesn't sound right....your decoy ship's in its final position and the Orion is now approaching it. Yes that's it.” Kharg's oval, yellow eyes glittered. “So the Orion draws near and my decoy ship awaits it. Excellent news!” he rasped. “They will be too stupid to resist the bait.” The slit in his lower face opened slightly, revealing thin, pointed teeth as he smiled. “Soon we shall meet again Captain James T. Kork and I shall take what I need from you and your Bulcan friend before I kill both of you.” He drifted over to the centre of the room where there was a pyramid of glowing, brightly coloured cubes. At the top of the pyramid was an intricately patterned ivory casket. A misty blue light floated round it and Kharg snapped his fingers and the mist vanished. Carefully he picked up the casket and opened it. Neatly arranged inside and seeming to glow from within were the Krystals. “The Krystals of Kharg!” he murmured, lovingly stroking them. “They will guide me to the Dark Power and when I possess it I shall destroy Earth and then the Universe will be mine to rule as I please.” He returned the casket to the top of the pyramid then flicked a long bony finger at it. Immediately the misty protective light surrounded it again. Behind him the Major coughed discreetly. “So glad to have been of assistance, your Highness,” he said. “If the news I have brought has pleased you even in the smallest way I am well rewarded.” Kharg looked at him and shook his head. He reached into his robe, brought out a glittering diamond and tossed it to him. The Major caught it expertly. “For me?” he asked, affecting great surprise. “My most humble and sincere thanks, your Divineness.” On his stool, Giraffe applauded. “Ten out of ten for grovelling!” he declared. “Out!” commanded Kharg, tiring of the Major. He began backing off, bowing and scraping as he went. “It's an honour to serve you, my Lord. It fills my heart with joy to--” As soon as he had cleared the room Kharg flicked a button and the arched door slid down, mercifully cutting the Major off. On the other side of the doorway the Major dropped all pretence of grovelling and quickly drew out an eyepiece from his pocket and examined the diamond. “A beauty!” he muttered appreciatively. “Nearly flawless.” He pocketed the eyepiece and held the diamond up. It glittered and sparkled in the light and he grinned as he gazed at it. “It'll be leg over time with that young blonde chamber-maid after she sees this, I reckon!” PART TWO Not far from Dulcodaz a ship drifted along aimlessly in the black wastes of space. It was Kharg's decoy ship and it was still beaming out its distress call. There was no crew on board and it was being moved along slowly by the gravity pull of Dulcodaz, its own Drive lifeless. It was still too far away to appear on the Orion's forward observation screen but it now showed up distinctly on one of Lieutenant Youhoor's monitors. “Scanner reports indicate the ship beaming out the distress call,” she announced. Captain Kork swivelled round in his chair. “Distance?” he asked. “One hundred space miles,” Youhoor replied. The Captain nodded. “Put it on screen, Crackers,” he instructed. “Maximum view.” Crackers pushed his telescopic lever all the way across and the view on the forward observation screen jumped closer. Kharg's decoy ship came on screen but it was still too distant for a detailed visual inspection. The Orion was gaining on it all the time however and the bridge crew were studying it intently – they had come a long way across space to investigate, diverting from their original route and naturally they were all curious. Mr Sprock was back amongst them. His ears had changed again but this time they were normal sized and slightly pointy and hardly warranted a second glance. “Run a thermal scan on the inside of the ship,” the Captain ordered Youhoor then turned to Crackers. “Can we identify it yet?” he asked. Mr Crackers had already anticipated his request. “It's a small warship with significantly less capacity than the Orion,” he replied, reading the information on his monitor. At the mention of the word ‘warship' the Captain initiated standard safety precautions. “Arm Lasers,” he ordered Butch Bradley. “Raise Shields.” “Thermal scan negative,” Lieutenant Youhoor announced. The Captain glanced at his First Officer. “That means there's no crew on board,” he said. “Or no crew alive,” replied Sprock. “There's something else, Captain,” Youhoor said. “Heat generation from the ship is extremely low.” “Which means the Drive is inoperative,” said Sprock. “No crew or a dead crew on a ship drifting along and beaming out a distress call. Very strange, Jim.” By now they had neared sufficiently to get a closer look but it didn't help them any. The small warship was just drifting along in space showing no signs of life. “Return the screen to normal,” the Captain ordered Crackers. “See if there's a response to a direct communication,” he said to Youhoor. She turned back to her console and flicked open her ship-to ship line. “Warship off our starboard bow, this is the Federation ship Orion. We are picking up your distress call. Respond please.” They waited but there was no reply. “Warship this is the Federation ship Orion. Respond please.” They waited again but there was still no reply. “Forget it, Lieutenant,” the Captain said. “It just confirms the thermal scan. There's no-one alive on board.” He studied the screen for a few moments then turned to his First Officer. “Impression, Mr Sprock?” he asked. Sprock stared thoughtfully at the screen. “The ship doesn't appear damaged so that rules out the probability of attack,” he said. “Which leaves two possibilities – either the crew died for some reason after activating the distress call or there was never a crew on board in the first place.” The Captain glanced at him. “You mean the ship's deliberately been left there empty?” Sprock nodded. “Possibly as a decoy.” “Let's blow it out the friggin sky!” suggested Butch. The Captain sighed and turned to him. “Not just at the moment, Mr Bradley,” he said, “but I'll keep your suggestion in mind.” He swivelled back to the screen and stared at the drifting warship. “So somebody has gone to the trouble of bringing us across space to an empty ship,” he mused, stroking his jaw. “Why?” “Perhaps whoever is behind it wants to take us to Dulcodaz for some reason,” Sprock suggested. “Since it's the nearest planet.” “That seems fairly logical, Mr Sprock,” the Captain said, smiling at him. “Do we know anybody there?” “Not to my knowledge, Jim.” “Computer information on the planet Dulcodaz,” the Captain ordered Crackers. Mr Crackers typed in the request on his console and moments later the observation screen changed to a view of Dulcodaz. “The planet Dulcodaz lies at the heart of the Avalon System,” ran the commentary. “It was subject to a study by the Federation during Stardates 75.1 to 75.3. Conclusions : Earth-like in structure, vegetation and temperature. No particular mineral or organic wealth. Populated by human types of average intelligence. Lack of obvious financial incentive rules out any further interest by the Federation.” After several different close-ups of Dulcodaz the screen reverted to its normal view. “Not the most inspiring of planets,” the Captain remarked. “My thoughts exactly,” agreed Sprock. “I can understand why the Federation weren't interested.” “Well somebody appears interested in us,” said the Captain. Sprock nodded then glanced at the warship which was back in view. “Your intentions, Captain?” he asked. Captain Kork stood up. “To beam aboard and investigate,” he replied. Sprock arched an eyebrow. “Is that wise, Jim? It could be a trap.” The Captain smiled at him. “We Earthlings differ in several ways from you Bulcans,” he said. “My reason for beaming across to the warship demonstrates one of them – curiosity!” “In that case, Captain, may I accompany you?” “Of course. I'd appreciate it if you would. Mr Crackers – lock us on to the same course and speed as the warship. Lieutenant Youhoor – stand by to beam us across. Mr Bradley – take charge till I return...and don't blow anything up.” Butch grinned and snapped out a salute with the wrong hand. The Captain and Mr Sprock slipped on their Transporter Bracelets and strolled over to the Platform. When they were ready Youhoor punched in some co-ordinates on her computer and flicked some switches. Instantly the Captain and Mr Sprock were outlined in a shimmering white light which then penetrated their entire bodies. They seemed to fragment into tiny pieces then they vanished. Butch Bradley leapt to his feet as soon as they'd gone. “It's party time!” he yelled. “Get the bar opened!” PART THREE On a monitor inside his room at the palace, Kharg watched the Captain and Mr Sprock as they explored the empty bridge of his warship. His yellow eyes glittered and the slit in his lower face opened in its usual facsimile of a smile. “Soon we shall meet, Captain Kork!” he hissed triumphantly as he looked at the screen. “And I will have my revenge for the past.” With malicious satisfaction he watched their fruitless efforts to try to discover why the ship was empty then he turned to a console and jabbed a button. The Captain and Mr Sprock were thrown to the floor of the bridge as the warship shuddered to life and suddenly increased speed. They scrambled to their feet and the Captain pulled out his Transceiver. “Captain to the Orion,” he said into it. “Yes sir?” Youhoor replied above the loud party music. The Captain frowned. “What's all that noise, Lieutenant?” he asked. “Jocky's doing some repairs in the bridge,” Youhoor lied smoothly. A trusting Captain believed her. “The warship's started moving under its own Drive,” he informed her. “Beam us back.” “Roger Captain - standby,” Youhoor replied. She swivelled round in her seat and yelled to the partiers. “Captain's coming back! Clear the Platform!” Reluctantly, the dancers who had been boogying away on the Transporter Platform stepped off and someone killed the music. The rest of the crew moved smoothly into their practised regime and within a minute the bridge was back to normal. On the warship the Captain and Mr Sprock waited to be beamed back but nothing seemed to be happening. Impatiently the Captain flicked open his Transceiver again. “Captain to the Orion. What's the delay, Lieutenant?” On the bridge a puzzled Youhoor was staring at the empty Transporter Platform. “No delay, Captain,” she replied. “I beamed you back but nothing happened. Is everything all right at your end?” The Captain glanced at Mr Sprock. “Any ideas?” he asked. “It's probably been caused by somebody operating a Trans-Gyrational Anti-Warp Booster,” replied Sprock. “It's very simple really. It's only a matter of estimating the number of atoms available in each body and—“ “Sprock!” the Captain cut in. “I've got the message. Does that mean we're trapped here?” “Affirmative Jim.” “And heading towards Dulcodaz?” “Looks like it.” The Captain held up his Transceiver. “Did you get all that, Youhoor?” “Yes sir,” she replied crisply. “We can't beam you back. What are your orders?” “We'll go on ahead at Warped Speed and bomb the shit out of Dulcodaz in retaliation!” Butch suggested eagerly. Captain Kork sighed wearily. “You'll do no such thing, Mr Bradley,” he ordered. “You will carry out my instructions to the letter – keep the Orion one space mile behind us and increase speed only if we do. Understand?” “Understood,” Butch replied disappointedly. “Friggin liberal,” he muttered to himself. The Captain flicked off his Transceiver and turned to his First Officer. “Somebody seems determined to get us to Dulcodaz,” he remarked. “I wonder why?” Kharg, who had been watching events on a monitor, pointed a bony finger towards the ivory casket sitting on top of the pyramid cube. “Because of the Krystals!” he rasped in reply. “As you will soon discover, Captain James T. Kork!” Tweet
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