Tomorrow Never Knows - Cover

Tomorrow Never Knows

Copyright© 2024 by The Horse With No Name

Chapter 12: Ends, Odds and Beginnings

Fan Fiction Sex Story: Chapter 12: Ends, Odds and Beginnings - The crew of NX-01 Enterprise had hoped to get back to peaceful exploration, but the universe, and the Romulans in particular, have other plans for them.

Caution: This Fan Fiction Sex Story contains strong sexual content, including Ma/Fa   Heterosexual   Fan Fiction   Science Fiction   Aliens   Space   Time Travel   Anal Sex   Oral Sex   Petting  

“Please come aboard our ship,” T’Pol said, once the initial shock had subsided. She registered the accepting nods of Jannar and Depac and the connection was severed.

Pushing a com button on Hoshi’s console, she ordered: “Bridge to sickbay. Subcommander Soval, join us at airlock 7.”

She left for the turbo-lift and without needing any order to do so Commander Tucker followed her.

“Guess, I have the bridge again,” Malcolm quipped when they were gone.

When she arrived at the airlock, walking side by side with her mate, Soval was already there and he seemed to know already that something important had happened.

“You both appear to be troubled.”

“We might have found them,” T’Pol answered cryptically, knowing that Soval would figure out the rest after so many mind-melds during their rehabilitation.


“You say that there is another ship with exactly the same signature?” Jannar, the council member of the Arboreals, asked.

“If our suspicion is correct and you check their plasma decay rate, you’ll notice a difference,” Trip explained. “After all that ship is more than a century old.”

Seeing the bewildered looks on the faces of the Xindi, Trip knew that he probably made as much sense to them as a hopeless drunkard.

“Is this again a matter of time travel?” Depac asked.

“In a way; it happened when we came to the subspace corridor Degra had told us about. The Kovalaans took exception to our presence,” Trip began and recalled the whole incident that led to the existence of the second Enterprise, the one that might still be out there.


Archer and Shran stood on the bridge of Columbia, both clad in sand-colored uniforms

“Ensign Hartman, you’re driving,” Archer ordered. “Barring, you have the con.”

Archer left the bridge, with Shran and Hartman in tow.

“Are the MACO’s ready?” he asked, once they were inside the turbo-lift.

“They are already waiting in the launch bay,” Shran answered with a nod. “Luggage and weapons have already been stored. We can complete the camouflage on the way down.”

“That’s good. Since you’re the most experienced, you’ll command the operation. Major Talcin has agreed to it.”

“Agreed,” Shran accepted as they entered the launch bay.

“Ladies and Gentlemen, let’s go through some of the things that await us down there,” Archer explained, holding up a pocket-sized leather bag. “Each one of you grabs one of those bags. They contain small metal pellets. If you see a glittering effect on a wall down there – that’s a gallicite deposit. Take a pellet and throw it at the wall to discharge the static electricity or you might end up dead.”

“Won’t that give away our position?” Major Talcin inquired.

“That’s why we’re using small pellets. They make it look like a natural discharge on a small insect or desert bat. What do we have for weapons, Major?”

“We’ve decided to use crossbows. That will give us the advantage of having ranged weapons against their lirpas. My men also carry hira-shuriken.”

“What’s that?” Shran asked.

“Throwing stars,” Talcin answered and handed both Archer and Shran such an object.

“You humans have cruel weapons,” Shran remarked after inspecting the small 4-bladed metal projectile.

“Says the man, who’s carrying an Ushaan-tor,” Archer said with a sarcastic chuckle. “What about melée combat, Major?”

“We’ve left that to each soldiers preference. Some carry nunchaku others have daggers or batons.”

“Ok,” Archer addressed the soldiers. “As you all know, there’s no modern technology that works down there. You probably got that already from the somewhat quaint selection of weaponry. That means we have no scanners whatsoever and have to rely on the good ol’ Mark-II Eyeball. Make sure you all wear your sunglasses; the glare is pretty bad down there. Captain Shran will command this mission. Judging by the sophistication of his camouflage, he’ll be the guy you won’t see down there.”

Amusement spread among the soldiers.

“So let’s go through the quick check list. We’ll be the first to do a military parachute drop in decades and we’re definitely the first to do it on Vulcan. Due to the thinner atmosphere and higher gravity the ‘chutes have to be huge. That’s why we’ll jump in intervals of thirty seconds, while the shuttle circles five-thousand meters above the ground. That’s as low as we can go without hitting the natural dampening field.”

John paced slowly, while delivering his speech. This operation would be the most unusual in recent history, considering that it used methods and weapons which had gone out of style two centuries ago, or – as the Vulcans would call it – last week.

“Due to the long interval between jumps, we’ll land spread out over a large area. We’ll meet one hour after the drop at the given coordinates. The parachutes are to be simply abandoned. The next sand fire will take care of them. Any questions?”

None came.

“Let’s get the show on the road,” Archer ordered and indicated them to board the shuttle.


“Centurio Tavrus, the Praetor will now see you.”

With long steps, Centurio Tavrus, who once was Major Talok, walked into the huge chamber of Romulus’ most powerful leader.

“Jolan tru, Praetor, I come to serve.”

“Jolan tru, Centurio. I see you still haven’t shaken some of the habits you took on during your time on Vulcan.”

Hanging his head in shame, Tavrus asked for forgiveness.

“Do not be concerned Centurio. You served us well on Vulcan for a long time. Such little things won’t take away from your excellence. Tell me, what is the latest information on this ‘Coalition’.”

“They are still squabbling over minute details. I think they will go nowhere for months. The humans, however, keep everything together. If we eliminate them, this whole idea will collapse.”

“Have you made progress on how to eradicate them without ground troops?”

“We have a lead. A century ago the humans used weapons based on a nuclear chain reaction. They could kill by radiation, even after the blast. But use of those is dangerous to us as well. If I may humbly inquire; why is it so important to avoid the use of ground troops? Ours are the best in the quadrant.”

“I do not doubt the excellence and bravery of our troops, Centurio. We must avoid that any of the humans or their allies ever sees one of us. If they learn about our ancestry, they will know that any weapon against a Vulcan is also a weapon against us. The Andorians have these in abundance and the blue veruulae have shown a predilection for helping these humans, even without a formal alliance.”

“I will see to it that we develop those nuclear weapons in all haste.”


Trip’s mind was in turmoil. There they were, preparing for a tricky diplomatic mission, but all he could think of was the ship that – maybe – was still out there.

“We must concentrate on the diplomatic mission,” Depac explained. “But we offer to dispatch ships to find out if the signals are indeed coming from the second Enterprise.”

“We’d be very grateful,” Trip answered, trying to keep his voice neutral. “Last time we saw them, they were in bad shape and if that signal was all over the sector as you say, it looks as if they are running from someone – most likely the Kovalaans. Maybe you could convince the aquatics to send a ship as well, you know, to give them a lift, like they did with us. About the diplomatic side; Maybe Soval can help.”

“Was he not introduced as a medic on this ship?” Jannar asked.

“I am currently serving as a medic,” Soval explained. “It was necessary to aid the recuperation of two crew members. However, before that I have been a diplomat for fifty years and I will return to that service, once this mission is finished.”

“I remember,” Depac replied. “The data that Captain Archer gave us about Earth spoke of an Ambassador Soval.”

“Indeed.”

“We would be honored to have an established diplomat available,” Jannar answered in the slow manner of the Arboreals. “It will make dealings with the Aquatics a lot easier.”

“Indeed,” Depac agreed.


“You sound as if you don’t even try to apprehend him alive,” Shran noted, while he covered the area around his eyes with the ocher-colored paste. Archer’s latest instructions, given while everyone in the shuttle put the finishing touches on their outfit, sounded suspiciously like ‘kill anyone with a lirpa on sight’.

“If the Vulcans would have wanted him alive or for interrogation, they would have gotten him themselves. They didn’t put it in so many words, but his death is exactly the outcome they expect.”

“Strange,” Shran noticed. “Every Andorian they ever captured was interrogated thoroughly – very thoroughly. How come they don’t want to interrogate the man who corrupted their whole government?”

“That’s because they already have,” Archer explained. “They had him stunned, when T’Pau and I brought in the Kir’Shara. Trust me, T’Pau or any of the other melders has picked his brain, while he was out. A mind-meld is much more efficient than any old-fashioned torture.”

“Is that why they let him go?” Shran asked, remembering that he had been very confused when reports reached the Imperial Guard that the new Vulcan government had let a high profile traitor go free.

“I think so,” Archer said with a nod. “I think they had hoped to find more of his co-conspirators, but when that led to nothing, they decided to get rid of him.”

“I’m surprised that Starfleet agreed to this. You humans did not strike me as a race that would kill in cold blood. You have made peace between my people and the Vulcans more than once and now you go on what is technically an assassination mission?”

“It’s pure opportunism on Starfleet’s part. At some point we want something from the Vulcans and if they are reluctant to agree, we just need to mention this mission and they will see the logic in agreeing to our request in a damn hurry.”

“Sneaky,” Shran remarked. Obviously in times of war or when such was looming, the Humans could be just as ruthless as an Andorian warrior.

“War’s a dirty business,” Archer continued. “I’ve had Surak in my head long enough to know that, what we’re about to do may clash with our own values, but by Vulcan standards I’m just following tradition. I’ve learned the hard way in the Expanse that sometimes you must shove your own moral values aside to get the job done.”

“It is Vulcan tradition to assassinate people?”

“In a way. When you got the cultural briefing in the Embassy after you applied for Starfleet service. Did they tell you about medieval laws? About people being outlawed?”

Shran nodded, remembering the texts about people that were sent away from their homes and everyone had the right to kill them.

“In contrast to humanity, Vulcan still has the death penalty,” Archer explained grimly. “Treason, murder, adultery and few select other offences still carry the death-sentence. By Vulcan tradition everyone affected has the right to execute the offender. He murdered one of my best friends and 29 other humans, he nearly destroyed my ship and tried to kill me and my first officer. I think I’m damn well affected.”

Shran looked at the face of his human friend – there he was again, the grim, angry human he had met in the Expanse. The Romulans had no idea what they were up against, should they ever plan to attack.

“Captain Shran,” the pilot announced. “We’ve reached the deployment zone.”

“Make ready for deployment, meet me at the given coordinates in exactly sixty minutes from now ... mark!” Shran ordered and shoved the balaclava over his head.

“Let’s execute some tradition, Jon,” he said and opened the hatch.


Soval looked at the stack of PADDs before him. These mediation talks would challenge all of his diplomatic skills. The 5 Xindi subspecies where as different as if they came from 5 different worlds. The Arboreals and Primates seemed to have a certain common ground, but then there were the unassertive Aquatics, the rash Insectoids, not to mention the unpredictable and volatile Reptilians.

“Have you come to any conclusions,” Depac asked.

“Your political situation is ... difficult,” Soval started carefully. “With the Aquatics’ difficulties to come to decisions and the Insectoids’ intransigence, I do not believe that these negotiations can be completed in the given time-frame.”

“What do you propose?” Jannar asked.

“I shall convene with my superiors to see if it is possible for me to stay on your world until these negotiations have been completed. Since I believe this process to span months, it would be illogical to keep Enterprise here for such a long time, especially since Earth might be on the verge of another war.”

“Have they been attacked again?”

“Not yet,” Soval answered to Depac’s worried question. “As you know, four worlds – Earth, Vulcan, Tellar and Andoria – are building an interplanetary coalition. An aggressive and expansionist race, which is called Romulans by Earth, sees their plans of conquering our worlds in danger by the emergence of such a strong adversary. The danger of a pre-emptive attack is substantial.”

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