Текст книги "Section 31: Rogue "
Автор книги: Andy Mangels
Соавторы: Michael Martin
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“I suppose so,” Zweller said, nodding slowly.
“Then perhaps we should finish our transaction as quickly as possible,” the woman said evenly.
Koval held up his left hand, palm up, and one of the guards stepped forward and placed a slender data chip into it. Koval was about to present it to Zweller when the secure comm chip implanted into his jaw vibrated gently. Because the tiny speaker conducted sound through the bones of his skull, only he could hear Subcenturion V’Hari’s urgent hail.
Go ahead, Thrai Kaleh,Koval subvocalized. Only the slight clenching and unclenching of his jaw muscles betrayed the fact that he was having a covert conversation.
“There’s been an attempt to sabotage the Core, Chairman Koval,” V’Hari said emotionlessly. “However, the security failsafe programs are already isolating and purging the intrusion.”
Acknowledged, V’Hari. Keep me informed.
Koval studied Zweller and Batanides through narrowed eyes. He was well‑aware of Ambassador T’Alik’s failure to persuade Picard to make an early departure from the Geminus Gulf. He could only assume that this incursion on the Core was Captain Picard’s doing. The scoutship that T’Alik had said Picard claimed to know nothing about–despite the fact that he’d used it to escape from the Army of Light compound–could have given the Starfleet captain some of the tools necessary to mount an effective assault on the Core.
But he knew it couldn’t give him the capacity to defeat the rokhelh,the state‑of‑the‑art artificial intelligence that patrolled the Core’s every system. Nothing Koval had ever encountered could do that.
“Chairman Koval?” Zweller said, ending the protracted silence. “Are you all right?”
Koval still held the data chip tightly in his hand, and continued searching the humans’ faces with his eyes. Their expressions betrayed nothing. Was Zweller involved in the sabotage as well? Or had Picard undertaken the attack entirely on his own initiative?
Deciding that the rokhelhwould render those questions moot soon enough, Koval surrendered the data chip to Zweller, who responded by flashing a toothy smile.
“When you return to the Enterprise,”Koval said quietly, “tell Captain Picard that he plays a very dangerous game. That is, if he survives his current endeavor.”
Koval was pleased to see that Zweller’s smile had faltered ever so slightly. So hedoes know something.Koval suppressed a triumphant grin.
Koval set his kali‑falglass down on the table, none too gently. “The Federation’s welcome in the Geminus Gulf is now worn out,” he said, freighting his words with menace. “And when Protector Ruardh makes the official declaration, you and every other human in this system would do well to be heading back toward Federation space very, very quickly.”
Chapter Fifteen
‹ You do not belong here › the rokhelhrepeated. Most of a millisecond passed in silence as it awaited greeting protocols from the Other. ‹ Identify self, or face decompilation. ›
The errant code‑sequence did not respond in any intelligible fashion, nor did the rokhelhimmediately recognize it. Perhaps this unknown Other was, like the rokhelhitself, another security subroutine, but one that had somehow become corrupted. Whatever the Other’s identity, the rokhelhrecognized it as the source of the failsafe shutdown command, the fatal disease that had nearly been loosed into the heart of the Apparatus.
The rokhelhprobed tentatively at the intruding lines of code, gently insinuating its binary feelers below the Other’s surface. More code lay beneath, and more still below that, a seemingly infinite regress of expanding fractal complexity. The rokhelhsaw at once that the interloper was a sentient artificial intelligence–a complex, constructed entity like itself.
But unlike the rokhelh,this Other was crafted by alien, non‑Romulan minds.
With a thought, the rokhelhraised the alarm, even as it sought to do to the Other what the Other had just tried to do to the Apparatus–to neutralize it by probing its manifold cybernetic pathways with a billion fractallyexpanding tendrils.
A millisecond later, the rokhelh’s consciousness was deeply embedded within the Other’s innumerable circuitry pathways.
Data sat silently in his seat, his body rigid.
“Data?” Picard said, swiveling in the cockpit to face the android. The last word he had heard the android utter had sounded like an uncharacteristic “Uh‑oh.”
Hawk took over the conn as Picard disengaged from the cockpit and made his way over to Data. Kneeling, the captain was met with a glassy stare. “Data? Mr. Data, report.”
He snapped his fingers before his friend’s dead, artificial eyes. Nothing.
Picard stood and turned back toward the cockpit. Hawk regarded him uneasily.
“Captain, shouldn’t the singularity have started slipping back into subspace by now?”
Picard nodded. “Yes. IfCommander Data succeeded in transmitting the abort command into the singularity’s containment protocols.”
But on the forward viewer, Picard could see that the inferno at the singularity’s heart continued to blaze just as brightly as ever.
Merde,Picard thought, his heart sinking.
* * *
Data felt disembodied, a ghost floating in cybernetic freefall. And he noticed the disconcertingly near presence of something.It was asking him questions, but he was having difficulty parsing them. Then this Presence was suddenly all around him, engulfing him, holding him immobile. A moment later, it began probing at his thoughts–from the inside.
Fear emanated reflexively from Data’s emotion chip, coursing through his consciousness as he realized that another entity–an artificial intellect not altogether unlike his own–was attempting to seize control of him. He was being overridden, hijacked as he once had been by the multiple personalities stored in the D’Arsay archive. With a tremendous effort of will, he shut his emotion chip down. This maneuver did nothing to halt the advance of the Presence as it invaded his positronic systems, nor did it allow him to assess the damage the alien entity might be causing to his hardwired subroutines. But with the emotion chip inactive, he had at least exchanged fear for clarity.
Data clung tenaciously to that clarity, aware that without it he and his shipmates might never make it back to the Enterprise.
While the rokhelhdevoted much of its digital substance to probing and testing the Other’s vulnerabilities, it traced the interloper’s origination point to a subspace carrierband being directed toward one of the Apparatus’s most peripheral exterior nodes. Backtracing the signal turned out to be a very simple matter, requiring only patience.
Thiswas where most of the Other’s resources actually lay; not within the diaphanous binary circulatory system of the Apparatus itself, but aboard a nearby cloaked vessel. Lashed to a positronic physical substrate of cortenide and duranium.
The rokhelhtraced the Other’s linear datastream back through the cloaked ship’s computer and into the Other’s own small but highly organized internal positronic computational network. After pushing the Other back to its origin point–the location from which it had invaded the sanctity of the Apparatus–the rokhelhfound that there was ample unused storage space within the Other’s physical shell.
For the first time in its existence, the rokhelhhad taken on a humanoid form.
The rokhelhopened its newly acquired optical receptors and raised a pale forelimb before them. It examined the appendage, turning it clumsily this way and that, noting the jointed digits, the skeletal structure, the soft epidermal covering. How like my creators,it thought, intrigued. Yet how unlike.
The rokhelhlooked past the hand. A humanoid creature stood nearby, an intent expression upon its face. This being was also like, but unlike, the rokhelh’s creators. It appeared weak in some indefinable way. Perhaps this was because of its distinctive lack of hair, or maybe owing to its underdeveloped external auditory organs. Or perhaps because its lips were drawn upward in an expression that the rokhelh’s own creators very rarely displayed–a smile.
“Mr. Data, are you all right?” said the weak‑looking, small‑eared, smiling creature.
The rokhelhreached toward the creature with its newly appropriated hand.
And seized the creature’s throat.
And squeezed.
And smiled back at the frail, hairless entity, whose own smile had already fled.
Picard sensed what was about to happen a splitsecond too late. The android’s fingers had locked around his throat before he could back out of the way. He couldn’t speak, couldn’t breathe, couldn’t budge the viselike grip by so much as a millimeter, though he was tugging at Data’s hand with both of his own.
The universe swiftly shrank to the size of the white hand clutching at his throat. He heard Hawk calling to him as though from light‑years away, an edge of fear in the younger man’s voice. Less than a meter directly behind the crushing hand, Data smiled like a death’s head, though his eyes resembled those of a child studying a bug in a jar.
Picard knew he couldn’t last more than another few seconds–and that he had only one chance to seize control of the situation. Instead of struggling away from Data’s grip, he lunged toward the android, throwing both arms around his shoulders.
Spots danced before Picard’s eyes as his fingers groped for purchase behind Data’s back. But it was no use. The “off” switch was beyond his reach. Data’s grip was unbearable, relentless.
Abruptly, the android’s rigid fingers stopped closing. Data ceased all movement, though he remained stiffly locked in a seated position. The cable that connected his exposed skull to the Romulan ship’s systems still appeared intact.
A moment later, Picard became conscious that Hawk was beside him, helping him pry Data’s stiff fingers from his throat.
“What’s gotten into him?” Hawk said.
Picard drew in a great rush of air, coughed, and cleared his throat. When he spoke, his voice was raspy from his near‑strangulation. “I think that’s a very appropriately worded question, Lieutenant. I wish I knew the answer.”
And I wish I knew whatstopped him,Picard thought, uncomfortably aware that his own fingers had never made it all the way down to Data’s hidden “off” switch. Whatever had immobilized Data, Picard knew that he’d had nothing to do with it.
Hawk asked him if he was all right, but Picard assured him that he hadn’t been seriously injured and sent the lieutenant back to the helm. Then the captain kneeled behind the deactivated android. Drawing his hand phaser, he tentatively waved a hand before Data’s vacant eyes. The android remained immobile and unresponsive.
“Data, are you all right?” he said. There was no response.
Picard turned toward the front of the cockpit, though he kept Data in the corner of his eye. He did not put the phaser away. “Mr. Hawk, has there been any change in the singularity’s behavior?”
“No, sir. There’s no longer any doubt about it–Data’s abort command could not have gotten through.”
“Something stopped it,” Picard said. “Perhaps the same something that caused Data to attack me.”
“The abort sequence should have taken only a couple of seconds to engage,” Hawk said. “If it was going to happen, it would have by now.”
“Agreed. And the longer we stay here, the greater the chance we’ll be detected. We’ll have to find another way to force the array into abort mode.”
At that moment, the viewscreen suddenly displayed the image of a huge Romulan warbird. As it decloaked before them, it blotted out the fires of the subspace singularity like a planet eclipsing its sun.
A deep, cool voice issued from the scout’s communications panel. “Scoutship Chula.This is Commander T’Veren of the warbird Gal Gath’thong.You will decloak immediately and explain your business here.”
Hawk sounded as though he were fighting to keep his voice calm. “Captain, if they know this ship by name, then they alreadyknow what our business is.”
“And who’s aboard this ship,” Picard said soberly. “Drop the cloak, Lieutenant. Then stall.”
“Stall, sir?”
“Send a ‘technical trouble’ signal. We need to buy ourselves some time.”
Hawk complied, glancing at the sensor readouts. “More bad news, sir. They’re powering up their disruptors. Should we withdraw?”
The captain brushed a palm across the thin sheen of sweat that had formed on his brow. “No, Mr. Hawk. We can’t outrun them. So we’ll have to . . . out‑ thinkthem instead.”
Hawk nodded, saucer‑eyed. Though Picard kept his expression impassive, he could hear his own pulse roaring in his ears.
Without Data’s help, thinking my way out of a Romulan target‑lock isn’t going to be easy.
Data floated in a formless, sensory‑deprived void. With his emotion chip deactivated, the fact that he and the Presence were becoming inextricably linked was no reason for panic–though it didgive him cause for real concern. It was a development that Data could not allow to continue without a fight.
I cannot permit you to appropriate my body,Data told the Presence, his voice a gossamer construct of electromagnetic impulses, rather than sounds.
‹ Your statement is meaningless, › the Presence said, its words issuing from the nothingness surrounding Data. ‹ You cannot stop me. You are helpless. ›
Data considered the alien machine‑entity’s words for nearly a millisecond. For the moment, he concluded that the Presence was correct. He was indeed helpless, at least so long as the artificial intelligence maintained control over many of his body’s higher functions. But Data also knew that he might succeed in bypassing or disabling some of those functions–at least for a short while–if he proceeded very carefully, camouflaging his efforts with the background maintenance subroutines that were always running.
A picosecond later, it was done. Rivers of heuristic neural information re‑routed themselves into Data’s secondary and tertiary control nodes. He sensed immediately that the Presence was no longer controlling his limbs. But then, neither was he. He wondered how long it would take the Presence to regain the upper hand. At the rate the entity’s consciousness was expanding and entwining through him, it would surely not be long.
Perhaps I cannot stop you,Data admitted. But I can make an effort to understand you.
‹ That will avail you nothing. I will rewrite your code and seize your body permanently. You will cease to be, as will your organic accomplices. You will understand nothing. ›
But Data had already begun to understand something important. The Presence had revealed that it believed itself capable of manipulating his positronic pathways. The Presence believed it could address the world through Data’s senses. It believed that it could run Data’s body as though it were its own.
That told Data that the Presence was comprised of code that was not significantly different from his own. And it further told Data that if he could find some subsystem in his android body that the Presence had yet to subvert, there might yet be a way to defeat the invader.
Tentatively, careful to steer clear of the Presence’s notice, Data probed at his own systems. Three‑point‑eightsix milliseconds later, he discovered a sliver of his own consciousness that the Presence had yet to wrest from him: a little‑used backup diagnostic subroutine, a system designed for use when his primary, secondary, and tertiary self‑repair subroutines were too damaged to function properly. It led to back entrances to all of his autonomic and higher functions. Unfortunately, he could sense that the ever‑vigilant Presence lay just on the other side of each of those positronic apertures, ready to pounce.
Then he noticed that the Presence was conspicuously absent from one particular component–his emotion chip. Had the chip been engaged, Data would not have been able to conceal his surprise from the Presence. But even without recourse to the chip, Data could not help but wonder why the Presence had not taken such an obvious prize. Was the Presence laying a trap for him? He dismissed the idea, since the Presence clearly believed that he was already helpless.
Then Data considered another explanation: Perhaps the Presence did not understand the emotion chip’s purpose. Maybe the Presence was utterly unacquainted with humanoid emotions, like an organic immune system that succumbs to viral infections to which it has had no previous exposure. Briefly recalling the emotion‑broadcasting cranial implant Dr. Crusher had recovered from Ambassador Tabor’s body, Data wondered if it might be possible to use his own emotion chip in a similar fashion.
As a weapon.
Perhaps you are correct,Data told the Presence. I may be unable to either stop you or to understand you.
(Very slowly, and at extremely low power, Data brought his emotion chip on‑line.)
‹ I will overwrite you, › the Presence said. There was no trace of emotion in its soundless voice, no gloating, no spite, no suspicion. Only a sober and single‑minded sense of purpose. A sentient utility program, merely performing its function.
(Gently, Data absorbed some of the emotion chip’s output, concentrating on one emotion only: Hope.)
Perhaps,Data said. He felt somehow stronger than before.
(Carefully, Data directed the remainder of the emotion chip’s output away from himself in all directions, toward the ever‑expanding virtual tendrils of the invader’s consciousness.)
And perhaps not.
(Quickly, Data brought the chip’s output up to its normal power level.)
‹ What are you doing? › queried the Presence. Its voice no longer seemed calm. It sounded confused. Adrift. As though it had just been roughly subjected to a traumatic sensory assault, something altogether alien to its previous experience. Like a congenitally blind human suddenly acquiring sight.
‹ What have you done? › the Presence asked, giving Data the impression of an escalating state of confusion.
Hope rose and surged through Data’s disembodied being. I invite you to make a determination of your own.
Then, taking advantage of the Romulan AI’s distraction, Data gathered every erg of will he could muster and reached past the Presence, moving his awareness back out into the Romulan array–only to find an impregnable wall of “antibody” programs marshaled against any attempt to retransmit the shutdown command to the singularity‑containment field. Clearly, the Presence performed much of its “watchdog” work on a subsentient level. Worse, he could already sense the Presence slowly rousing itself to pursue him, struggling to regain its cognitive equilibrium.
Data knew that he might not be able to evade the Presence for more than another few seconds–enough time, he hoped, to make contact with Captain Picard. Wrapping his emotion chip–generated hope around himself like a cloak, Data sprinted toward the command pathways that governed his speech subroutines and language protocols, trying to make an end run around the Presence.
“Captain? Lieutenant . . . Hawk?” With a start, Picard realized that Data was trying to speak. The voice was strained and almost inaudible; the android seemed barely able to move his jaw.
Picard moved immediately to Data’s side. “Mr. Data, are you . . . functioning again?”
“Not . . . entirely, sir. I believe I am engaged . . . in a battle of wills . . . against an . . . artificial intelligence.”
“Something you encountered inside the Romulan array,” Picard said, his fingers unconsciously touching his own bruised throat. Data responded with a single robotic nod of the head. The cable that connected the android to the ship’s computer swayed like a badly constructed suspension bridge. A Romulan watchdog program,Picard thought bitterly. I should have anticipated that. Damn!
Hawk called back from the front of the cockpit. “The warbird captain isn’t buying my ‘technical trouble’ messages, Captain. He’s locking his main disruptor bank on us.”
“Evasive maneuvers, Lieutenant!” Picard shouted, holding onto the sides of Data’s chair as the deck lurched. “Maximum impulse!”
Picard felt the scoutship shudder just before the inertial compensators leveled the deck out. The first salvo had evidently been a clean miss. Crouching beside Data, Picard said, “Can you try again to transmit the abort code?”
“Not . . . at present.”
“Are you still connected to the Romulan array?”
“The subspace channel . . . remains open. . . . The other machine intellect . . . must maintain it . . . to continue . . . affecting my body . . . But it is keeping me . . . preoccupied.”
A grim realization suddenly slapped Picard in the face: Because Data was still connected to the scoutship’s computer, every one of the vessel’s systems– including its deflector shields–was just as vulnerable to outside cybernetic assaults as Data was. Picard briefly considered disconnecting the cable linking the android to the vessel, then restrained himself. Not only was he unsure about what the interruption would do to Data’s positronic matrix, he also didn’t want to sacrifice what might well be their only chance to resend the abort command.
Picard spoke urgently to the android. “Mr. Data, whatever you do, you mustkeep this intelligence from invading the scoutship’s systems.”
The scoutship rocked, and a loud bang!reverberated through the crew cabin. Smoke and sparks flew from an instrument panel. Picard ignored it, counting on Hawk’s piloting skills.
“I will . . . endeavor . . . to do so, sir,” Data said.
“I certainly hope you can, Mr. Data. Otherwise, I might have to disconnect you suddenly . . .” He trailed off, certain that Data understood better than he the danger that eventuality might pose.
Data nodded stiffly. “Hope . . . is all . . . I have.”
“Understood,” Picard said. “Continue doing whatever you have to.”
At that moment, Data lapsed into a disconcerting silence, and Picard moved forward to take the cockpit seat beside Hawk. The lieutenant’s full attention was focused on his evasive flying. “Mr. Hawk, how thoroughly did Commander Data brief you on the Romulan command protocols he’s been using?”
“He showed me the entire abort‑command sequence,” Hawk said, casting his wide eyes momentarily on Picard. He added sheepishly, “Once.”
“Lieutenant, I think it’s time to test that photographic memory I’ve read so much about in your service record.”
“Captain, I could never enter the commands as quickly as Commander Data could.”
“Then slow and steady will have to do,” Picard said, smiling grimly as he took control of the helm. “The subspace uplink with the array should still be open. I’ll hold the warbird off while you enter the commands.”
At once, Hawk began manipulating the instrument panel, slowly at first, then accelerating to an almost inhuman speed. Though Picard gave most of his concentration over to the flight controls, he saved some for the forward viewer. It showed the maw of the approaching warbird’s main disruptor bank, which was glowing like the core of a star.
‹ Cease whatever you are doing at once. ›
The Presence caught up with Data at last–it felt as though years had passed since Data had first distracted it with his emotion chip–and restrained him again within its cybernetic tendrils. Data became aware that he had once more lost command of his speech functions. That revelation discouraged him.
Until he noted that the emotion chip remained firmly under his control. That told him that the Presence stilldid not understand what he was doing. Emotion chip–generated hope sang within him.
‹ Cease whatever you are doing at once, › the Presence repeated.
No,Data said simply.
But he quickly understood that resolve would be an insufficient weapon against this AI. Data could feel his internal clock slowing, his information cycles becoming slow, lethargic. His consciousness itself was beginning to diffuse, as though it were a small blob of ink spreading out across a vast, wine‑dark sea.
‹ You will have no further opportunity to infect the Apparatus with aberrant code, › the Presence said confidently. ‹ I will overwrite you now. ›
Data knew all too well what the Presence meant. His positronic matrix would be wiped clean. His experiences and memories, his dreams and hopes, his friendships and loves would be reduced to a blank slate. He would be erased as though he had never been.
The Presence had obviously adapted to the output of his emotion chip. The only weapon he possessed had been neutralized. Despair threatened to overwhelm him. How easy it would be to simply let it happen, and accept the surcease of deactivation and nothingness.
No!Data shouted silently. He recalled his brief glimpse of the scoutship’s interior. He remembered that a Romulan warbird was about to vaporize Captain Picard and Lieutenant Hawk.
Then, even as awareness began to flee him, hope arose within Data once again: He recalled that he had set the emotion chip’s output at nowhere near its maximum gain. That told him that he still had a weapon. Gathering up his will, he let the chip’s energies build, as though it were a phaser set on overload.
A cybernetic eternity later, he released the chip’s greatly increased emotional output, letting it flood into the Romulan machine‑entity’s consciousness.
‹ No, › said the Presence. Data could feel it actively resisting him.
With all of his remaining will, he directed the totality of his anger, his fear, his frustration straight into the algorithm‑creature’s core. It was as though the Presence had been forced to drink from a fire hose. Teraquads of intense emotion rushed through the chip, sweeping the entity away before it had an opportunity to sever Data’s subspace connection to the Romulan array. The deathscream of the Presence reverberated in Data’s consciousness as the entity’s code decompiled, corrupting itself in a spontaneous cascade effect.
Even as Data felt his adversary’s passing, he wondered whether his triumph had cost him the use of his emotion chip. At that thought, hope fled from him, as did every other human emotion he had worked so hard to acquire for so many years. But with no emotions to distract him, Data had no trouble accepting that the loss was infinitely preferable to nonexistence.
And he had no trouble giving the plight of Picard and Hawk his full attention. Noticing that his cybernetic connection to the Romulan array remained intact, he sent a portion of his consciousness deeper inside it, ready to resend the abort command–
–only to find the data channels still aswarm with “antibody” programs, the final nonsentient remnants of the Presence. Or perhaps they had arisen as a consequence of that entity’s contact with him, like a cybernetic immune response.
Regardless, Data knew that he could never get the abort command past them, even if he were to perish in the attempt. He quietly backed away, all but disengaging entirely from the Romulan array. Despair stung him then–
–and struck a spark that glimmered into joy. Only a functioning emotion chip could have made either experience possible. As his maintenance subroutines reawakened and began purging his matrix of whatever remained of the Presence within him, Data rejoiced at having succeeded in hanging onto his hard‑won humanity.
And, even as he struggled to regain control over his body’s many subsystems, Data clung just as steadfastly to the hope of finding some other way to neutralize the Romulans’ subspace singularity.
His hands a blur on the instrument panel, Hawk entered the final command sequence, then tried to get a fix on the subspace singularity with the sensors. This has to work,he thought.
No change.
Ten long seconds ticked by as Picard continued dodging the Gal Gath’thong’s relentless disruptor fusillades, while staying less than quarter of a kilometer from the warbird’s bifurcated hull. At this range, it was relatively easy to foil the Romulans’ target locks. But it was still a minor miracle that they had thus far avoided a mutually destructive collision.
Sooner or later, Hawk knew, their luck was going to run out.
Hawk examined the singularity once again on the passive sensor display. It seemed indestructible. He closed his eyes, feeling utterly defeated.
“Report, Lieutenant!” Picard barked.
“It . . . didn’t work. I don’t understand it. I must have mis‑keyed one of the command pathways.”
Hawk heard a voice behind him. “I do not believe that is so, Lieutenant.”
“Data!” Hawk said, startled. He turned in his seat and saw that Data was now standing in the crew compartment. Except for the cable that connected his metallic skull to the bulkhead, he appeared none the worse for wear.
“Forgive me, Lieutenant. I did not mean to startle you.”
“Data, what happened to the AI you were fighting?” Picard said as he rolled the scoutship past a disruptor tube an instant before it fired. Hawk noticed that the Captain’s hand was on his phaser.
“It has been . . . neutralized. My internal housekeeping subroutines are purging its remaining code‑structures from my physical matrix even now.”
“Excellent. But can you get back inside the array?”
“Not in the same manner as before. I just checked the information channel through which I originally entered the array, and I have determined that it is now filled with electronic ‘antibodies’ designed to cancel out any recurrence of my original externally introduced abortcommand sequence. It is the positronic equivalent of an inoculation against a viral infection. I am afraid that we must find another avenue of attack.”
Picard finally seemed to be running out of patience. “Data, don’t you understand? We don’t have timeto look for another avenue of attack!”
Attack.The notion struck Hawk like a clap of thunder. Attack! That’s the key.“Maybe we already have one,” he said.
“Let’s hear it, Lieutenant,” the captain prompted, still obviously intent on staying one step ahead of the Romulan guns. A disruptor salvo rocked them at that precise instant, and the scoutship’s responses to Picard’s piloting seemed to be growing sluggish. Heaven only knew how badly they’d been damaged.
Hawk took a deep breath, then plunged forward. “Data, if the array’s own defenses were to malfunction and attack the singularity’s containment facility, wouldn’t that bring on an abort automatically? And send the singularity back into subspace immediately?”