Episode Number: 4×09
Written by: Fred Love
Directed by: Jon Crew
Transmission: 29th June 2024
It’s been four hours since the last report from our away team inside the Pinicon Belt, and I’m forced to conclude that something has gone wrong with the mission. I’ve ordered the ship to yellow alert, and we’ve trained our sensors on the asteroid field in search of any sign of the runabout. The sheer density of the asteroids prevents the ship from delving deeper into the Pinicon Belt, and I’m hesitant to send in another away team, for fear it may run into whatever hazards may have befallen the first. For now, I see little choice but to keep waiting.
Captain’s Log: Stardate, 30354.1, supplemental
Plot: While exploring an unusual asteroid belt, Zepht, Azonan and Quinn come face to face with their counterparts from a much less fortunate universe.
The ‘A’ Plot: Zepht and Azonan manage to broker a truce with their alternates. The others explain that in their universe, the Borg have assimilated most of the galaxy, and that they are looking for a weapon with which to defeat them. A legendary culture is reputed to have built a device in this asteroid belt that can alter reality, and the alternate away team intends to find it.
The alt-team proposes that the two groups should work together. They are willing to share an algorithm that has improved their sensors, so that they can see through the quantum interference in the belt, making the dimensional fissures visible, and transporter use safe. The Lexington party agrees, but Azonan analyses the algorithm in detail to ensure there are no “backdoors” or other booby-traps, before installing it.
With the sensor upgrades, the mysterious device is soon located, in a large space station in the centre of the Pinicon Belt. The two runabouts approach the structure, their occupants noting its three spherical modules and that sensors are picking up no power or life support. The Trave heads for one of the end modules, which sports a large hole, while the alt-Trave approaches the surface of the central sphere. After checking that the approach is safe, Quinn steers the ship through the opening into the station proper. Within, a variety of massive machinery clusters around a large crystal, and as they get closer, sensors indicate that their counterparts have beamed into the central section of the station.
Azonan studies the machinery, coming to the conclusion that it is a power generation, storage and distribution system. A complex device produces an immense amount of energy that is then channeled into and stored in the crystal before being distributed to other systems, including those sustaining the power generator. While the whole system is currently powered down, he thinks an infusion of energy to the crystal will restart the generator, allowing them to energise the rest of the station.
They decide to go ahead, transmitting energy directly from the runabout’s deflector into the crystal. As predicted, the power generator soon starts up, and Zepht descends to the deck in an environment suit to investigate what appears to be a control console. The interface is very simple, containing only a number of symbols which appear to depict various systems, such as life support and force field generators, as well as two he cannot figure out.
Warning Quinn and the alt-away team to be ready for any disturbance, he activates the gravity generator, an emergency force field to cover the gap in the hull, and life support, then waits as the station begins to warm and fill with a breathable atmosphere. He realises one of the unidentified symbols represents a computer system, but cannot figure out the other, a cluster of seven interlocking circles. He turns them both on anyway.
After checking the rest of the chamber for anything else of interest, the team heads into the corridor connecting it to the next module. This chamber contains a peculiar structure made up of huge glowing crystal rings encircling a central console, which their counterparts are investigating. They are hailed by alt-Zepht as they approach, asking if they were responsible for turning the power on. Unfortunately, he explains, they still cannot access the controls. The console appears to be very simple, but is attached by cables to a metal helmet, sized for a humanoid skull. Azonan theorises that it is a neural interface, but when Zepht tries it on he detects nothing out of the ordinary.
Leaving the other team with the system, they head on to the final module, where they find another huge crystal, surrounded by some kind of computer system. The floor is covered in what appear to be four-fingered handprints. After some discussion, Azonan touches one of the prints, and finds himself transported to a virtual environment, surrounded by small representations of galaxies. He is greeted by a reptilian humanoid with four-fingered hands who introduuces himself as the Custodian, the artificial intelligence acting as an advisor to the station’s operators.
Azonan asks who built the station, and the Custodian responds by describing the unfortunate history of the Sculptors, who built the station to enable their obsession with creating and exploring new quantum realities, before its overuse destroyed them and their counterparts in all realities. He explains that the Apparatus in the central module can make minor or major adjustments to any quantum reality, if the user is strong and clear-minded enough to control it. He also points out that using it without care could wreak havoc across the universe. In the meantime, it seems simply talking to the Custodian has attuned them to be able to use the system.
Zepht realises that this is what their counterparts are looking for, a device that could destroy the Borg, but that the side-effects of such an action would be unpredictable. None of them are convinced that the other party has enough self-control to restrain themselves. After debating the pros and cons of doing anything with the system, they decide that they cannot give the others direct access to this power.
Returning to the Apparatus in the central sphere, Zepht explains that while he has learned how to use the system, he feels that the trauma they have suffered will affect their chances of bringing about their aim: so he offers to do it instead. There’s quite an argument about this, but eventually, the others agree to Zepht’s terms. They explain that their aim is to eradicate the Borg completely, but he opts to undo the event which brought Starfleet into contact with them: Q’s intervention. He says that this will give the alternate Starfleet a chance to develop their technology more, before they do meet the Borg in the course of their normal expansion. Alt-Quinn loses his temper, firing his disruptor rifle in random directions before Azonan stuns him.
Zepht goes on to create a fissure to allow the other crew to return to their reality, then seals it off completely from the Hub’s own dimension, to ensure they can never come back. They briefly debate whether they should destroy the Apparatus, but none of them can bring themselves to obliterate such a creation. They leave it intact as they return to their own reality, hoping that the next people to discover it will have the wisdom to use it properly.
The Arc: While there appears to have been some contact between between the Sculptors and the Tilikaal, it appears they were not directly connected. The Custodian dismisses the Tilikaal as “limited thinkers, with no artistic ambition”.
Observations: The Sculptors were an advanced reptilian species, who reached their peak around 10 millennia ago. Rather than create warp drives and explore space, they focussed their attention on quantum dimensional mechanics. In one quantum reality, they used this knowledge to build the Hub. The Apparatus within enabed them to create new quantum realities, or alternate dimensions, fine-tuning them to their specifications, then exploring them. The Custodian indicates that they viewed this as their highest art form. Their use of this technology, however, brought about their doom, as it weakened the fabric of this region of space across all dimensions, leading to its collapse into a mass of tangled quantum fissures and destroying both their world and their species, across all of reality. The result was the Pinicon Belt, with the Hub at its centre.
The Hub is the only remaining artefact of the Sculptors, a space station about 3 km long, made up of three spherical modules mounted on a central spindle. One sphere has a large hole in it, with machinery visible within. Each of the spheres is hollow, with vast machines located at the centres of the two end modules, and the outer shell making up the floor. A central corridor of circular cross-section connects the spheres through the spindle, requiring a right-angled “flip” to enter. One of the end spheres contains the Custodian, an artificial intelligence able to scan its immense data store to advise on the best way to use the Apparatus.
The Apparatus is located in the central sphere, and consists of huge concentric rings located around the outer shell, with a basic console at the centre, equipped with a single human-sized interface helmet. When activated in the correct manner, it is capable of a vast range of manipulations, from making fine adjustments to a quantum reality, to creating new realities in their entirety. The only limitation seems to be the capacity of the controller’s mind.
Dialogue: Zepht tries to find a clear way to contact his counterpart: “Lt Cdr Zepht from a different reality, this is Lt Cdr Zepht from my reality.”
References: Alt-Quinn, alt-Azonan and alt-Zepht are from a reality where the Borg have assimilated most of the galaxy. It seems likely that this is the timeline briefly seen in the Star Trek: the Next Generation episode “Parallels”.
Zepht’s change to the alternate timeline takes place at the point when Q transported the U.S.S. Enterprise to Borg space in “Q Who”.
Questions: The Hub remains out there, and may be used again. Will there be any serious repercussions from Zepht’s manipulation?