What Navigators Do
(Hornblower Was Never A Sailor)
By
Patricia Wright
With a stony face, Chekov stared at the configuration of wood, hemp and fabric moving subtly before him.
“You’ve got to be kidding.
“Sir,” he added, but there was neither deference nor respect in the tone.
“Chekov,” Kirk smiled charmingly, hazel eyes sparkling. “I’m putting you in command.”
“This is not how I pictured my first command assignment from you,” the younger man retorted. Admittedly, he had felt honored when he
was invited along on shore leave with the Enterprise’s senior officers. At first. Now he realized there was far more enticing things for him
to do in the Russian Federation. He hadn’t a clue that his Captain planned to hurl him out onto the vast Pacific Ocean.
Of course, he was also considering the fact that he’d be locked in a deathtrap with these people that he’d only known seven months. He’
d actually imagined he might live through an entire year in Starfleet.
Or at least have the dignity to die somewhere in deep space.
“Frankly, Captain, I think you have a problem with competition,” he blurted out.
“Mr. Chekov!” Kirk proclaimed. “Think of this as a team training exercise. You’re Chief Navigator now: that makes you an essential part
of the ship’s senior command team.”
Brown eyes wide, the younger man stared at him quietly. “Starfleet recommends that Department Heads on starships be at least
Lieutenant grade officers. I don’t recall receiving the final approval for my posting yet.”
The Captain scowled elaborately. “Ensign, are you saying that you have no confidence in my persuasive abilities with Starfleet
Command, or with my judgment of my command personnel?”
“No, Sir. I’m saying I’d rather spend the rest of my life in Kolymar.”
“Soviet nuclear gulag,” Sulu supplied helpfully from his position standing next to the Navigator, arms folded patiently across his chest.
A wry grin split Kirk’s face. “You see, Chekov: you’ve already managed to make great strides in the confidence level you have in
confronting your Commanding Officer with conflicting opinions.”
“You can’t order me to spend my shore leave with you,” the Navigator maintained stoically.
“No,” the Captain agreed, nodding deeply. He gestured at the people assembled around them. “But I can appeal to your sense of loyalty
to the Enterprise. Do you actually want the command team of the Valiant to beat your own ship’s team?”
“Why can’t you just challenge them to war games?” he answered sullenly. “You know: in space.”
Like a normal Captain… Chekov didn’t say it, but James Kirk’s hazel eyes reflected that he had definitely heard it anyway.
“You served in the Russian Navy on a sailing ship before entering the Academy. With you in command, we can win.”
“Who told you that?” the Navigator demanded.
“It’s in your file.”
“Who reads those things?” he muttered.
“I do.”
Chekov jammed his arms across his chest tightly, his dark eyes moving back to the ship docked behind his Captain. “Russia refounded
her Navy as a living history museum, Sir. I never raced anyone.”
“But you know how to sail,” Kirk insisted.
The younger man paced up to the edge of the wharf. “She’s a schooner: I served on a frigate. They’re square rigged.”
The Captain stepped up next to him, folding his hands behind his back. “You served on the Nelzya: her mizzenmast is fore-and-aft
rigged,” he stated without looking at the man. “I own a sailboat. Between the two of us, we’ll be unbeatable.”
Captain Kirk had far too much time to read, Chekov decided darkly.
“I know you’ve had Sulu on the ship you used to serve on,” Kirk revealed. “You’ve already got a trained helmsman.”
“I can’t steer a wooden sailing ship,” the Enterprise’s Helmsman blurted out, himself alarmed now. “I can barely walk on one, Sir!”
“Pavel,” Kirk entreated warmly, using the man’s given name for the first time since they met. “Haven’t you any of the sea left in your
blood? Look at her! Doesn’t she still call to you to tame the wind and the water: to venture out on her in the footsteps of Horatio
Hornblower…”
“Hornblower was NEVER a sailor, Captain!”
Kirk glanced over at him sharply, blinking in mild surprise. “What do you mean?”
“I mean just what I said, Sir. Hornblower was an officer. He never served before the mast: he didn’t actually work the ship. He was an
officer,” Chekov repeated curtly. “You know, like you!”
The Captain straightened, understanding full well that he’d just been insulted by the Navigator’s reasoning.
Besides, Chekov thought morosely. Hornblower and all his adventures were fictional. Could Kirk actually not realize the difference?
“You see that,” Uhura added, moving up behind her young friend and slipping both her arms around his waist. “Haven’t you any sense
of responsibility for keeping your shipmates alive, sweetheart?”
He glanced back at her and she let her long lashes flutter over her dark eyes several times. “They told me I was incorrigible,” he
sneered.
“Besides,” she drawled. “You’re not the only one here who reads Russian, you know.” She patted his chest significantly.
Chekov’s eyes glanced down at her hands and he paled noticeably. In the most casual of civvies, he was dressed in athletic shoes,
jeans and a T-Shirt. They’d all seen the shirt on the Enterprise occasionally: his father had given it to him and it was one of his favorites.
Across a compass, several Cyrillic words were scrawled on it’s front. When asked, he always said ‘it says what I do.’
“That’s blackmail!”
“Whatever yanks your chain, sweetheart.”
“What does it say?” Kirk asked now, craning around to peer at it again. Chekov tightened his arms around his body, color flushing into
his face.
Uhura giggled, undraping her arms and sauntering away. “Oh,” she drawled lovingly to the Captain. “It does describe what he does for a
living.
“I’ll tell him,” she shot back at Chekov, eyes bright. “Unless you help us win this race.”
Sulu smirked and glanced away.
“I think we’re being left out of something,” McCoy rasped.
“I know we’re being left out of something,” Kirk retorted.
The Captain also knew his Chief Navigator had been studying his perspective command while he stood there. “So, you’ll accept this
command assignment?” He gestured to encompass Chekov, Uhura and Sulu. “With the three musketeers, the Doctor and myself, we
can’t lose. You’ve got a winning crew.”
I’ve got a migraine… Chekov corrected mentally.
“We can alter her as necessary?” the Navigator inquired aloud as his eyes continued to move over the schooner.
“Yes,” Kirk responded in victory. “Yes!”
Chekov snorted, turned on his heel, and strode toward the land end of the dock.
“Where are you going?” McCoy demanded in outrage.
“To get scuba gear,” the Navigator retorted. “I’m not getting on that thing without checking her hull.”
* * *
Sulu paused, eyes fixed on the two thin ropes he had stretched vertically on the board he now balanced on his up-turned thighs. Lines
of frustration burrowed their way out from the corners of his eyes. He growled under his breath and began to tear at the horizontal rope
twisted around them.
“What are you doing?” Kirk asked curiously as he paused next to the Helmsman’s seated form.
“I’m making a lanyard,” the Helmsman explained.
McCoy stepped up on the other side of him and eyed the board. “What’s that used for?”
Pausing again, he twisted his head and peered up at the Doctor. “It’s used to make myself look busy,” he smirked. “So Pavel doesn’t
find me any real work.
“Haven’t you ever noticed that our Navigator is always busy? You never see him just sitting around doing nothing.”
“He has a very driven personality,” the Captain agreed.
“Pavel Chekov can be exhausting,” Uhura observed emphatically from where she stood, arms draped leisurely over the ship’s wheel.
“It has nothing to do with his personality,” Sulu elaborated. “It’s training. Sailors are never allowed to just lounge around: they have to
keep busy.” He shot a warning glance at the Communications Officer. “No talking, Nytoya.”
“Why not?”
“I don’t know,” he declared. “It’s just tradition: superstition. The boat steerer isn’t supposed to talk while at the wheel.”
She rolled her dark eyes dramatically. “Well, fiddle-de-dee.”
Kirk spun the roll of adhesive tape he held around his fingers.“It did take me time to get used to my Chief Navigator drumming his fingers
on the console in boredom.”
Chuckling with abandon, Sulu went back to twisting the loose ends of rope around the ones fixed on the board.
The Captain shifted his jaw, eyeing the younger man carefully. “Hikaru?” he prompted knowingly.
“He’s not drumming his fingers,” the Helmsman commented without looking up. “He’s practicing piano pieces.”
“Piano...” Kirk stopped and straightened. “Piano pieces?”
“Yes,” Sulu said. “Spock knows: he’s even corrected Chekov when he’s hit the wrong note.”
The image of his First Officer tapping on the console flitted through his mind. He’d always assumed he was recalling the Navigator to his
duty. “Well,” the Captain commented. “The only down time Chekov does seem to allow himself is while he’s on duty at the Navigation
console.”
An explosive burst of laughter erupted out of the Helmsman and he stopped his knotting as his whole body shook with amusement.
“Jim,” he asked when he’d regained the ability to speak. “You don’t actually still think Chekov’s the fastest Navigator in the Fleet, do
you?”
Kirk’s jaw hardened, realizing full well he was at a disadvantage. “He’s the fastest I’ve ever seen.”
“Jim,” Sulu smiled broadly. “Chekov plots every possible course he can imagine you might ask for when he comes on duty, and at least
one for his own amusement. He refigures them constantly as time goes along. He says it keeps him well trained.
“I don’t know if our Chief Navigator is the fastest in the Fleet,” the Helmsman added, “but he’s certainly the most prepared.”
The Captain sighed, feeling as though he’d been completely removed from his own bridge crew. “Hikaru,” he prodded. “What course
exactly does Chekov plot for his own amusement?”
“Oh, that.” For the first time, Sulu showed hesitancy. He cleared his throat and looked around furtively.
Kirk’s eyes followed the Helmsman’s gaze. He was obviously checking for his friend’s location.
He cleared his throat again. “Let’s just say it wasn’t a teddy bear he slept with as a child.” A smile swept over his face again. “His friend
was of the rodent variety.”
Chuckling in understanding, the Captain shook his head in amazement. “Ah, yet another Russian invention.”
“I don’t get it,” McCoy rasped with obvious irritation.
“Disney,” Uhura supplied light-heartedly. “He plots a course to Planet Disney, Doctor.”
Sulu’s dark eyes shot over to her in surprise.
She smirked and shrugged luxuriously. “I’ve been in his cabin, love. Mickey Mouse is in his closet.”
“Doesn’t he have the two of you doing something?” the Helmsman questioned suddenly, scowling up at Kirk and McCoy.
“What he has us doing is sticking tape all over the ship,” the Doctor rasped, rubbing the back of his neck vigorously.
The Helmsman gestured up at the spiderweb of hemp lines above their heads. “He has you labeling the lines. How else are you
supposed to figure out which rope does what? Haven’t you heard the expression ‘learning the ropes’? You’re pretty useless on this ship
until you know what each of them do.”
“Hikaru, we’ve been up all night and it’s dawn. I’m exhausted and starving,” McCoy complained. “I hereby resign from busy work.”
Sulu ducked his head down, trying to hide the fact that he was laughing again. “Were you in the rec room last week when Riley threw his
latest fit?”
“He was having a problem with Chekov’s supervision style,” Kirk commented with a wry smile.
McCoy scowled in concern. “I was under the impression that our Navigation team liked the Chief Navigator.”
“They only have the same problem with him that Riley has,” the Communication’s Officer elaborated. “Riley screwed up a repair and
Chekov was an utterly patient mentor. They just wish he’d get angry once in awhile, or even dole out some old-fashioned discipline.”
“I’ve never known Ensign Chekov to have a problem expressing his anger,” McCoy observed.
“He’s hot-headed,” Sulu agreed. “He doesn’t get angry.”
The Doctor rolled his eyes. “I’m afraid I don’t understand what their complaint is.”
Sulu’s eyes drifted past the Doctor as he spoke. He hurriedly went back to knotting the ropes in his lap. “You will,” he muttered.
There was a thud as Chekov’s bare feet hit the deck behind them in the bow of the ship.
McCoy twisted around, steel blue eyes narrowing as they shot from the Ensign to the rope ladder he’d just jumped off of. “That’s how
you damaged your hips!” he declared. “You told me you used to jump out of a tree as a child!”
“No, Sir,” Chekov replied, scooping some items off a nearby hatchway and trotting up the short companionway to join his shipmates.
“You came up with that one, Dr. I just didn’t argue with you.”
“Well, stop it!” McCoy protested. “I’m not repairing your hips again.”
Pausing by the Doctor, the younger man was shaking his head. “No one climbs off the shrouds, it takes too long. You jump.”
“I don’t plan to go up them to begin with,” McCoy retorted.
“Well, here,” the Navigator continued, shoving more tape and markers into the Doctor’s hands. “I notice that you and the Captain
seemed to have run out of marking supplies,” he observed, a note of chagrin in his voice. “I’m sorry your work was delayed by my
inefficiency.”
Sulu coughed reflexively.
Scowling, McCoy glared at Chekov. “Why don’t you just say ‘get back to work’?”
Soulful brown eyes stared at him innocently. “You were doing such a good job, I’m sorry you had to stop,” was what Chekov said.
“Forgive me.
“You only made one mistake,” he continued, pulling a piece of yellow tape off a nearby rail. He pointed up. “See? There are no blocks
on this line: it’s standing rigging. It gets labeled with red tape. Yellow tape is for running rigging.”
“I don’t see the difference,” McCoy shrugged.
“The difference,” Chekov said patiently, “is that running rigging is holding the ship together and if you ever untie a line labeled with red, I’
ll kill you.”
The Doctor glanced at Sulu ruefully. “He seems to be working on that discipline problem.”
The Helmsman laughed.
“I don’t see any air between your ass and that deck,” Chekov commented, glaring at Sulu sharply. “Sailors don’t sit.”
Sulu scrambled to his feet, but was relieved from further attention by Uhura’s giggle.
“Luft,” Chekov warned her.
She glanced up at the sails to see the flutter in them that Chekov had only heard. Panicked, she quickly adjusted the wheel she held.
There was a loud crash overhead followed by an endless stream of snaps.
With two quick strides, Chekov reached the wheel and grabbed it. He pulled it toward him until the sails roared again: screaming against
the wind with the strain.
Uhura’s graceful hand touched the base of her neck as she tried to catch her own breath. “Sorry,” she gasped. Her dark eyes looked up
at the stretched canvas, echoing with sound. “I always thought sailing was peaceful and quiet.”
“Everyone does,” the Navigator commented, turning around to open a door on the console in front of the wheel. He studied the machine
it hid.
“What is that?”
“It shows the course we’ve sailed,” Chekov answered. He shifted so that she could see it.
She looked chagrined. “Not very straight.”
“Neither is the wind,” he smiled warmly. “We’re right on course, Nytoya.”
Uhura straightened and regarded him curiously. “I wouldn’t mind having you for a boss.”
“Tell me that in a week,” he commented as he closed the door. “Hikaru, get over here and take the wheel.”
“No,” the Communication’s Officer protested. “I can do this, really.”
“I know: you did,” the Navigator agreed. “You’ve been here two hours, though. A trick at the wheel is only thirty minutes. It’s stressful.
“Besides,” he winked at her knowingly. “Sulu can use a break from talking.”
“I don’t know how to do this,” his helm partner insisted as he stepped up beside them.
“You can learn: Uhura will teach you. ‘He who pilots ships knows all a heart can know of beauty and his eyes may close in death and be
content’,” he quoted eloquently.
“I’m perfectly happy not being prepared for death at the moment.”
“You have no keys: there’s no hurry to finish that keyring you’re making. Go ahead, Nytoya: pass on the skills.”
“It’s a bracelet,” Sulu called after him as he left them.
“I stand corrected,” Chekov drawled, gesturing elaborately without turning back. “You can certainly use the ornamentation.
“Are all the lines labeled?” he asked the Doctor, who was still standing watching his shipmates.
“Why don’t you just call them ropes and sails like normal people?” McCoy rasped irritably.
“There are only seven ropes on a sailing ship and that line you’re holding isn’t one of them. Feel free to label the bell rope as well, if you
care to.”
“Listen,” the older man continued, anger creeping into his tone. “You’ve had us up all night. We had to put that damn wood on top of the
sails...”
“Gaffs,” Kirk interrupted. “He gaffed the sails, Bones. It increases the acreage, makes them handle easier and requires less people to
handle them. It’s a pretty important modification with so many green sailors aboard,” he observed.
“Well, all this other busywork: cleaning the decks...”
“You swabbed them,” Chekov corrected patiently. “It keeps them wet so they don’t shrink and we don’t have to pay...caulk them. If you
were cleaning them, you’d be on your knees with a brick and sand. I’ll show you how to holystone later, if you like. I plan to avoid paying
any of the seams while we’re aboard.”
“Labeling all the ropes?” the Doctor charged.
“What does the line you’re holding do?”
McCoy scowled, his irritation growing visibly. “It controls the peak of the mainsail,” he retorted.
“You didn’t look,” the Navigator commented with bright eyes.
“Fine. Fine,” the Medical Officer retorted. “But I don’t see why we had to do all this in the middle of the night. A sane person would have
left in the morning!”
Chekov stopped, soulful brown eyes widening as he regarded the Doctor. He shifted after a moment, deep lines of concern furrowing
across his brow. “I sorry,” he said with a thick accent. “I make mistake, I think.”
Kirk struggled with himself, but then just let go and outright grinned. His new Chief Navigator had just confirmed what he long suspected.
The breadth of his accent and his command of the English language varied by the situation Chekov was in. The Captain knew now that
it was entirely on purpose. Kirk wondered if he’d ever actually heard the man’s real voice.
“What day this?” Chekov was asking the Doctor.
McCoy shrugged. “Well, it’s Wednesday.”
“Oh,” the Navigator replied, blinking in confusion. “Sorry. I mistake again. What da..” he hesitated. For a moment, he looked almost
panicked, gesturing as if trying to pull words out of the air. “Number,” he finally pronounced. “What number?”
“What?” the Doctor demanded in confusion.
“The twelfth,” Kirk answered. “It’s the twelfth, Pavel.”
“Oh,” the younger man said again. He thought for a moment. “Day race begins, no? In Russia, day starts–at night. Not so in America?”
The Captain laughed out loud. He couldn’t help it. “The day officially starts at 12:01 a.m. everywhere on Earth,” he confirmed. He had
followed Chekov’s lead on the schooner without questioning it as the Doctor had. Now, however, Kirk realized something. Chekov had
given a great deal of thought to his first command, as it were. And he showed skill at it.
“What means... ‘race’?” the young man was asking intently. He didn’t wait for an answer. “I think means...get there first?”
“Of course that’s what it means,” McCoy rasped, shifting in irritation. The Navigator’s contrived voice had long since passed the point of
being cute.
“Ah,” Chekov mused. Dark eyes bright, he smiled brilliantly. “I think who leaves first, gets there first. No?”
McCoy screwed up his face and looked away, rolling his eyes. He shoved his arms across his chest to contain his embarrassment.
The Navigator’s smile twisted into a crooked, wild grin and he laughed. It was a kind laugh, however.
“Doctor,” he explained warmly, his accent fading as he spoke. “This is a sailing vessel. We were only allowed to use the engine to get
out of harbor. We rely on wind and water to move. When we left there was a strong tale wind and the tide carried us out to the current.”
He gestured toward the back of the ship, his eyes taking in the empty expanse of water behind them. “The tide is coming into San
Francisco this morning and they have a head wind. You have to pilot a sailing ship to actually understand what that means to someone
trying to leave harbor and set sail.”
Brown eyes shifted to take in the acres of canvas straining against the wind above their heads. He shrugged: downright cocky. “They’ve
already lost win, Doctor.”
“Well, can we at least eat breakfast now?”
“Of course,” Chekov replied amiably. “Just as soon as you cook it.”
* * *
Kirk stepped back and eyed his handiwork. The brass compass that he’d been polishing gleamed in the sunlight. Satisfied, he turned
and regarded his Helmsman. Although reluctant to accept the responsibility at first, Sulu had quickly slipped into an age-old union with
the helm of the sailing vessel.
“Hikaru,” the Captain drew out, his eyes on man’s feet casually resting on the spokes stretching out of the hub of the wheel. “Should you
be doing that?”
“Sure,” he replied and turned a page in the book on his lap. “I’ll show you pictures of Pavel steering the Nelzya when we get back to the
ship. Besides,” he added, eyes glancing up at the limp canvas stretched above them. “It’s not like we’re going anywhere.”
“True,” Kirk agreed. They hadn’t any wind in hours. His eyes shifted to his Chief Navigator who stood leaning against the main
companionway’s housing. Even though the man was figuring something in a notebook the Captain was edgy to be doing something
constructive about their situation himself. If the other schooner had wind, they were quickly losing ground.
He reluctantly grabbed the brass cleaner and moved over to the hinge on the rail at the gangway.
Uhura took a seat on the housing behind Chekov, draping her long, ebony legs over the edge and allowing them to hang on either side
of him. The Chief Navigator had changed into white cotton pants that clung to his firm hips and thighs but swept loose mid-calf: exposing
his ankles and bare feet. And his upper body.
She took to work kneading the knots out of his neck and upper shoulders. “Has it ever occurred to you that I might have a thing for men
in power?”
He muttered at her in Russian and she laughed light-heartedly.
“Don’t make me hurt you,” Sulu grinned, dark eyes glancing over at Kirk as he supplied the translation.
“I knew you’d been home with him, Hikaru,” the Captain noted with mild surprise. “But I didn’t realize you knew how to speak Russian.”
“Just a few helpful phrases. You know: I can proposition a woman.”
“Like my mother,” the Navigator growled, his eyes closed as he churned his shoulders under Uhura’s helpful hands.
“SULU!” she gasped, pausing in her task. “You made a pass at his mother?!”
“She’s a beautiful woman,” Chekov commented easily.
“I didn’t know what I was saying at the time,” the Helmsman insisted and jabbed a finger at his younger friend. “HE put me up to it!”
The man shot a glare at his helm partner. “I didn’t expect you to do it with my father standing next to her!”
McCoy turned instantly. “What did the man DO?”
“He hit Pavel,” the Helmsman shrugged. “Andrie knew I hadn’t learned that particular combination of slang on my own.”
The laughter swept around the group and Chekov averted his bright eyes as color flushed through his cheeks.
Uhura took to swabbing his exposed back with sun block and came around the front of him, letting her hand trail luxuriously down his
already darkening skin. She let one finger swirl in his glistening chest hair.
“Sweetheart, you’re lucky I’m the only woman on board.”
“I stand relieved,” Chekov assured her. He moved away then, hoping down to the lower deck and moving toward the bow of the ship.
“Nytoya,” Kirk murmured, glancing over at her furtively. “What is your relationship with the other two ‘musketeers’?”
“Oh, please,” she rolled her eyes. “I wouldn’t have a shot if I wanted one. They think I’m their sister.” Uhura hesitated then, curiosity
skirting in gentle lines across her forehead. She turned to Chekov as he grabbed onto a tarred rope and swung himself up into the
rigging.
“Pavel,” she asked. “Are there any women in the Russian Navy?”
“Just my mother.” He balanced on the bottom of the shrouds and flashed her a brilliant smile, his dark eyes shining.
She laughed. “Oh. That explains...” The woman pivoted and cast an amused look at Sulu.
“Yup,” he responded without looking up from his book. “That explains it.”
The Captain stopped, gesturing in confusion. “Explains what?”
“Hikaru has been very helpfully translating American idioms into Russian for our young Navigator,” she elaborated, an edge of sarcasm
in her voice. “Unfortunately, translation between languages is never exact. So ‘Your mother wears Army boots’ becomes...”
“Your mother wears military clothing,” Sulu sighed miserably. He sighed again. “And she does.”
Grinning, Kirk moved over to the brass fixtures near Uhura. “So what’s the tattoo?” he murmured without looking at her.
She shrugged and began smoothing the sun block on her own arms. “A blue X with a nasty looking two-headed bird on it.”
“Imperial Eagle,” Sulu said from where he sat, glancing up at them. “It’s on a St. Andrew’s flag: the Russian Navy symbol.
“Pavel,” he called out louder, baiting the younger man with amusement. “They want to know why you have a tattoo.”
Kirk’s eyes widened in horrific embarrassment, but Chekov continued climbing without hesitation.
“Because fourteen year olds are idiots.”
Sulu grinned and went back to reading. It was obviously the answer he was expecting. “His father told him he didn’t want his son to be
the first sailor with a tattoo,” he drawled in observation. Pausing to glance back up at Kirk, he flashed him a grin. “So he talked his friend
into getting one first.”
“Oh, good God!”
McCoy’s outburst interrupted the Captain’s chuckle. “Bones, are you alright?” he asked with concern. The Doctor was shoving the heel
of his palm against the bridge of his nose.
“I’m praying this will cause me to go blind, Jim,” he declared.
“Wh...” he froze, pivoting around as McCoy shot another horrified glance into the sky behind the Captain. Chekov was casually standing
on the cross trees, the small platform of wood surrounding the foremast near the top. Leaning against the topmast, the Navigator had a
terrestrial telescope and was scanning the horizons surrounding the ship.
Kirk smiled warmly and turned back to his friend. “Bones, it’s okay: he’s in his element. Chekov is probably more comfortable up there
than on land.”
“I can’t watch,” the Doctor insisted.
“He’s coming down,” he assured his friend as the young man grabbed onto a backstay and slid down to the deck.
McCoy growled. “I’m not cut out for this, Jim.”
“Captain,” Chekov intoned as he approached them. “Drop the anchor.”
“Jim,” he corrected. “It’s Jim, Pavel.”
The Navigator sighed and stared at his Commanding Officer a long moment: dark eyes unreadable. “I’m sorry,” he replied bluntly. “It’s
going to take more than seven months and one shore leave.”
The Captain gestured understanding. “Keep trying, Pavel,” he advised. He swung around then, eyes searching the water around them.
Pointing to white caps off to the starboard, he asked: “Can’t we make it there somehow?”
Chekov stared dismally at the spot the older man indicated. “Why?” he questioned dryly, turning back to Kirk. “Did you want to go
fishing?”
The Captain glanced back at the spot. “Isn’t that...”
“Fish.”
“It’s not...”
“No. It’s not wind: it’s fish. There is no wind.” The Navigator moved past him. “It’s bad luck for sailors to fish,” he added, his accent thick.
“Drop the anchor.”
“Where are you going now?” McCoy demanded.
“To my cabin. To sleep.”
* * *
Sulu sighed in thought, carefully moving aside items as he rummaged.
“What’s that?” McCoy asked.
The Helmsman looked up from where he squatted. “It’s the tool chest.”
“What are you looking for?”
Sulu stood up and brandished a large metal tool in the air. “A wrench.”
McCoy’s eyes widened and he straightened, swallowing hard. “Why do you need a wrench?” he asked, his voice strident with alarm.
“Doctor McCoy,” the younger man marveled. “You’ve seemed quite on edge since you came aboard.”
“I’m that way when my life is in immanent danger,” he rasped.
A smirk crossing his lips, Sulu bounced the wrench’s head into his palm several times. “You need to work on your trust issues,” he said
and pointed the wrench at him for emphasis. “Pavel was in the Navy for years: he knows what he’s doing.”
“He doesn’t appear happy about doing it,” McCoy insisted. “Whatever IT is.”
“I’m working on it,” the Helmsman observed. He grinned easily and clutched the wrench’s handle for emphases. “Trust me.”
Eyeing the Lieutenant suspiciously, McCoy followed as he strode over to the unmanned ship’s wheel. “What...what are you doing?!” the
Doctor gasped in horror. “JIM!”
Kirk appeared by his side instantly. “Bones?”
“Jim,” the man rushed, panic in his voice. “There’s something wrong with the steering wheel!”
The Captain moved around the Doctor so that he could see his Sulu. He was, in fact, loosening the main nut at the center of the wheel.
“What’s the matter with the wheel?” he asked, forcing his tone to level through McCoy’s alarm.
“Chekov,” the Helmsman stated.
Kirk straightened. “What’s wrong with the wheel?” he repeated.
“Pavel Chekov. Ask the Doctor,” he advised and pulled the nut off with a flourish.
“He’s lost his mind!” McCoy declared. “Jim: stop him!”
Sulu chuckled, a glint in his dark eyes. “Doctor, you said so yourself. Chekov needs an attitude adjustment. I’m adjusting his attitude.”
He tossed the massive, loose nut at Kirk, who caught it reflexively.
“Nytoya,” he called out to the woman who was standing at the chart table. “Is he still asleep?”
She twisted to peer down the companionway and into the captain’s cabin. “Still asleep,” she confirmed.
The Helmsman hesitated. “Are you sure he’s not just laying there awake?”
Uhura shook her head and shrugged at him. “He looks like a corpse.”
“Asleep,” Sulu confirmed. “From sleeping in Navy bunks all those years,” he explained to the confused Captain standing next to him.
Illumination flashed across Kirk’s face and he rubbed a well-bruised shoulder in sympathy. No damn headroom in the bunks. No room to
turn over or stretch out your arms. “It’s all clear now.”
“I just have to hedge my bets that he’s going to stay asleep a little while longer,” the Enterprise’s helmsman added.
“I don’t understand,” Kirk said, studying the large chunk of metal in his hand.
“The Navy shifts are four hours long: four on, four off. Pavel still can’t sleep longer than four hours at a time,” Sulu explained. “He
catches a couple naps as well. I have to hurry in case this is a nap.”
“I don’t understand what you’re doing with the wheel,” the Captain maintained.
“I told you: attitude adjustment,” he stated, latching onto the upper spokes and yanking. “Watch the master.” Sulu stumbled back as the
wheel broke free and flew off, hovering in mid-air in his hands.
“Oh, good God!” McCoy gasped.
“Sulu!” Kirk exclaimed, this time echoing his friend’s alarm.
“Put the nut back on, Jim,” the Helmsman urged. “Tight: we don’t want it to get lost.”
“Where are you going?” the Doctor demanded, his alarm growing as Sulu hoisted the wheel onto his shoulder and trotted quickly toward
Uhura.
“Hikaru?” the woman questioned, alarm lacing her voice as well now.
“Just make sure he stays in that cabin, Nytoya,” he urged. “I’ll be right back.”
He disappeared down the companionway with the wheel and left the other three officers looking dumbfounded.
Kirk shrugged in acceptance of his confusion and reaffixed the single nut which should have held the wheel on it’s pivot. “I have
confidence in the officers of my command team,” he reassured the Doctor.
“I don’t get it,” Uhura insisted, wrapping her arms around herself.
“You will,” Sulu smiled as he reappeared on deck without the wheel.
“What happened to the wheel?” McCoy demanded. “How are we supposed to get out of here without it? Jim, can we steer without a
wheel?”
“Actually,” the Captain mused as he watched Sulu replace the wrench and close the tool chest. “The wheel is attached to a tiller, which
moves the rudder: like on my sailboat. We could expose the tiller and steer her from below.”
“Relax,” Sulu chuckled in amusement. “We’re not going anywhere yet.”
“But what...”
“Shh!” the Helmsman scolded the Doctor. “Patience!”
Uhura eyed him curiously. “So what are we supposed to do now?”
“Drink coffee,” Sulu declared, sidling up to the constantly warm pot on the main companionway’s housing. “We’re on a break. Believe
me, we won’t get many.
“Here,” he prompted, pushing a cup toward Uhura.
She accepted it, looking satisfied with her utter confusion.
“Jim?” he continued, holding out another cup.
The Captain smiled as he took it. “Far be it for me to question a scholar of the topic.”
“What topic?” McCoy asked, accepting his own cup as he joined them.
“Why, Pavel Chekov, of course. You knew him before he posted to the Enterprise, didn’t you?”
Sulu nodded. “I was assigned as his Big Brother at the Academy: major computer foul-up. I had to live with him the last two years I was
there.”
“And now that he’s Chief Navigator you have to share a bathroom with him,” McCoy observed, pity in his tone.
“I don’t mind: I’m a slob, he cleans up after me.” A grin flashed over his face and he laughed. “Pavel says I’m just ‘organizationally
challenged’.”
“He’s very gracious,” Uhura agreed affectionately.
“What’s he going to do when he finds the wheel gone?” the Doctor demanded.
“Shh,” Sulu scolded. “He’ll be up here any minute.”
McCoy scowled. “I know you two are close friends, but now you’re telepathic?”
“No. The wind has picked up.”
“What difference does that make?”
“The ship is moving again,” Kirk explained knowingly, pointing at the deck beneath his feet. “The movement will wake him up.”
Sulu turned and poured another cup of coffee, holding it out to Chekov as he reemerged on deck as predicted. “We’ve got wind again,”
the Helmsman commented.
“I noticed,” the younger man said, taking a drought of coffee as his eyes glanced up. The canvas above his head was fluttering as the
wind toyed with its limp sheets. He shuddered, his face wrenching in disgust.
“This is foul,” he insisted, handing the back the cup to Sulu.
“I didn’t tell you it was tea.”
“Captain,” Chekov instructed. “Shorten the anchor chain.”
“Alone?”
The Navigator hesitated, glancing over at Kirk. “I don’t know,” he commented. “Do you need help?”
“What do you mean ‘I don’t know’?” McCoy blurted in alarm again. “I thought you were the expert here!”
“The Russian Navy’s ships are living history museums, Doctor. There aren’t any motorized wenches aboard them.”
“You used a capstan,” Kirk concluded.
“Hours of walking in circles,” Chekov agreed. “Can’t beat the exercise.”
“Bones, help me.”
“Belay that!” the Navigator blurted suddenly, his eyes fixed on the stern of the ship.
“Something wrong?” Sulu asked light-heartedly.
The younger man glanced at him sharply, then let his gaze travel over his other shipmates. They all seemed studiously ignorant: except
McCoy, whose face had noticeably grayed.
Chekov paced slowly toward the stern. His gaze fixed on the wheel house, he paused at the side of the binnacle and simply stood there,
staring at where the wheel should have been. He fiercely turned back to level dark eyes at his helm partner.
“Pasha?” the man asked innocently.
A low growl emerged from somewhere deep in the Navigator’s throat as he strode methodically back toward his friend. He stopped only
a foot from the man and they stood there: dark eyes locked in silence.
In a testament to the reaction time the Alpha Helm Team had developed between themselves, Chekov lunged at the exact moment Sulu
bolted. Throwing his cup over the rail, the Helmsman flew toward the bow of the ship, leaping over hatch covers and life boats with the
younger man in close pursuit.
Sulu’s hand grabbed onto the foremast and he spun himself around it. He raced back to the foremost companionway and dropped down
it: disappearing from sight. The Navigator passed it and threw himself down the second companionway. The sound of him tackling the
other man echoed up onto the upper deck.
Only seconds later, the sound of running feet could be heard again as Sulu obviously broke free. He was tackled again moments later.
Kirk buried his face in his coffee cup and laughed as he listened to the sounds of the two young men wrestling in the Great Room just
below them. He had no idea what Chekov was yelling at his friend, but it didn’t sound complimentary.
It was almost a disappointment when the sound stopped and the Helm Team simply dissolved into peals of laughter which filled the
expanse of the Great Room. Chekov was still grinning when he reemerged on the main deck, eyes shining and skin glistening from the
exertion. Sulu followed close behind with the wheel over his shoulder again. He was trying his best to look sheepish, but it wasn’t working.
“Where’d you put it?” Kirk asked curiously as he passed.
The Helmsman winked. “Your bunk.”
Chuckling, the Captain finished his coffee. He and McCoy were each assigned the large bunks in the two cabins at the far end of the
Great Room. They still had no head room and the most distasteful of bathroom facilities, but he realized now it was about the only place
the wheel could have been hidden out of sight without access to the locked bilge.
“Go ahead and weigh the anchor now,” Chekov said easily to the Captain as he passed.
“Aye, Sir,” he responded and gestured to McCoy to follow him. Sulu’s the master, he agreed silently. The Chief Navigator’s irritated,
tense exterior had dissolved completely away.
“Go fishing, Hikaru,” the young man’s voice was saying. “And be quick about it.”
“I thought it was bad luck for sailors to fish,” Uhura commented.
Chekov shook his head as he opened one of the doors in the housing before the wheel. “Not when it’s for the good of the planet.” He
shot at glance at the Helmsman, now leaning over the rail with a net. “We don’t trash the element that gives us life.”
Sulu looked suitably chagrined when he produced the coffee cup he had thrown. “It’s bad luck,” he said.
“Sailors certainly seem superstitious,” Uhura observed.
“They know the nature of the universe,” the Helmsman drawled elaborately, humor tugging at his lips as he replaced the net. A sparkle
in his dark eyes was taunting when he glanced at his younger friend, but he hesitated when they fell on the Navigator’s form.
Chekov had his hands balanced on the edge of the binnacle box and his head was down as soberly he listened to an ear piece that he
had placed in his ear.
“Hik...”
Sulu shot up a hand, silencing Uhura as his eyes stayed frozen on his Helm partner. His face went gray.
Immediately alarmed, the Communications Officer shot her own dark eyes over at the young man. The warm, boyish charm Sulu had
managed to re-install in him had already disappeared. His flesh had become stone and an opaque film covered his dark eyes as he
stared down at the open binnacle box.
“Anchor’s aweigh,” Kirk called out from the bow.
“Get it up!” Chekov yelled, eyes wild and bright as they shot up. “Get it on the cat!! Neatly!
“Man the mainsail NOW!!”
The Captain hesitated, but only momentarily. “Go!” he ordered McCoy. “I’ll finish here,” he declared even as he jammed on the wench
again. The tone in Chekov’s voice did not belong to a man just out of the Academy.
The deep, resounding force of urgency struck immediately and resoundingly into the very soul of everyone around him. It held no panic.
It held no fear.
But it clearly signaled danger.
“Anchor’s apeak,” Kirk declared as he grabbed onto mainsail line and swept it off its wooden cleat.
“Not the braces!” the Navigator bellowed as he scrambled up the mainmast. “Man the peak! Get the sail in!”
The Captain quickly took a turn around the cleat to secure the line and grabbed for the other line without thought. He threw it back to
McCoy.
“Aren’t you going to sing?” asked the Doctor. Every other time they’d worked on the sails the Navigator had shouted out shanties to
coordinate their work.
Chekov jumped up and grabbed the first mast hoop, yanking it down before they’d even begun to pull the sail in. “Fuck you!” he
retorted. “Heave! Smartly! Smartly!”
The Captain pulled so hard and fast, the rope shredded the skin off his palms and he punched the Doctor in the face twice.
“‘Vast peak!” the Navigator yelled.
Taking a single turn around the cleat, Kirk dropped the line and dove for the sail. He threw the gaff rope around the peak of the sail,
quickly securing it tightly to the boom before Sulu and Uhura were even finished hauling in their end. It was down by the time he reached
it and he used a foot against the thick boom to jam home the gaff rope and throw an iron hard knot into it.
“Get the mizzen sail in!” Chekov ordered, running away from them and toward the bow of the ship. He scrambled out along the bowsprit
and yanked down the foresail by himself.
The mizzenmast sail was secured by the time he’d returned and Kirk had set to ballentining the loose ends of line.
“Screw the ballentines,” the Navigator said, grabbing the line and quickly spinning it into a coil. He jammed it down on the cleat. “Batten
down the hatches! Secure the ship!
“Jim, man the wheel!”
Chekov quickly coiled the rest of the loose lines, getting them off the deck and out of the way as the others scurried to follow his orders.
“Pavel,” Kirk said evenly. “The wind is up. We’re not going anywhere unless the sails are set.”
“I QUIT this job!” the Ensign roared, spinning on his Captain with fury blazing in his eyes. “I quit this job!” he yelled again, thrusting his
face within inches of the man who now stood at the wheel. “Do you understand?! I sit on my ass eight hours a day and stare at the
stars! And I LIKE it!”
“Chekov!” Sulu spat out in warning, grabbing onto the other side of the binnacle.
The Captain stared at his Chief Navigator, honestly stunned. And outright amused, he was wont to admit. After all, he had strong armed
Chekov into his current position. Kirk had become so used to the easy camaraderie and friendship of his Alpha command team he had
allowed himself to forget the Chief Navigator didn’t really feel their equal yet. He’d pushed him on the assumption the young man would
push back if he honestly objected: only his absolute deference to his captain was the most blatant fault Chekov had to work on. At least
the Enterprise’s Captain considered it a fault in a command officer.
The man needed to learn to talk back. Kirk fought back a grin. He seemed to making great headway on the skill.
Kirk waited for him to spin away and throw his arms up in frustration. Lacing his fingers, Chekov pressed them into the back of his head
and growled deeply. “Pavel,” he said tolerantly. “We’re not going to win this race unless we take advantage of the wind now to start
making some headway.”
“Race?” the Navigator retorted, spinning back to glare at him. “Race?” he demanded. “There is no race!”
The Captain stilled, his hazel eyes seeking out the man’s dark ones. “What are you talking about?” he asked thinly.
Chekov shook his head violently and threw his arm out at the sea behind Kirk’s back. “They never even left port, Captain. We’re not
racing anyone!”
The older man shot a quick glance backward. “Now why would you think they didn’t even leave port?” he asked with a patient look at his
Ensign.
Shaking his head, the Navigator paced up to Kirk slowly. There was deference in both his brown eyes and movements now. “Because
THEY,” he said quietly. “Weren’t being cocky little shits trying to impress their Captain.
“They checked the WEATHER REPORT!” he roared.
What could have occurred to Kirk was that the other major thing Chekov had to work on was how impossibly hard he was on himself.
Only what his eyes had seen suddenly registered somewhere deep in his brain.
He jerked his head back toward San Francisco, hazel eyes hardening as they saw the horizon. The sea behind them was a monster
churning beneath an opaque ceiling of black rock. The Captain looked back at Chekov’s somber, knowing eyes before they shifted
briefly to the barometer in the binnacle housing with a sense of building doom.
Kirk’s heart stilled as he felt the wind’s icy fingers streak across the back of his neck. It was nearly triple the strength since Chekov’s
reemergence on deck only a short time ago.
“It’s getting cold,” McCoy complained.
“Bones,” he said, glancing at him quickly. “Go below and grab the foul-weather gear. Grab Chekov a shirt and some shoes, too. Hurry.”
The Doctor hesitated, but knew his friend well enough to follow his orders without comment.
“Pavel,” Kirk insisted, turning his attention back to the young man. “You can do this. We can do this.
“How long were you in the Navy? You must have encountered storms like this before, haven’t you?”
The Navigator stared at the Captain in silence a long moment, his dark somber eyes downright eerie. “Yes,” he finally answered in a
thin, quiet voice. “Twice.”
“Than you know you can do this.”
“I wouldn’t say that,” he replied stoically. “I died both times.”
Kirk watched him walk away and sighed quietly, hands twisting around the wheel’s spokes. “At least he always seems able to keep his
sense of humor,” he commented with an edge of admiration in his tone.
Sulu stood up from jamming the locks into the hatch cover next to the wheel house. Dark, unreadable eyes fixed on Chekov at the chart
table a long moment before returning to his Captain.
“He’s not joking, Jim.”
* * *
The rain drove in sheets against him, its icy fingers piercing through his rain gear in volleys of daggers from every direction. Kirk had
never considered the possibility of actually drowning while standing upright. It now seemed not only possible, but downright probable.
His fingers bit fiercely into the wheel he held.
Chekov was bent over the chart table, a sextant in one hand and a flashlight in the other. The Captain didn’t know what he could
accomplish in the dark and in the pouring rain, but if there was anything to be accomplished, it was this young man that could do it.
Chekov was simply the best navigator he had ever met.
While still in the Academy, he had successfully developed a system to navigate a starship with a sextant and Chekov’s paper detailing
the technique was what had intrigued the Captain in the first place. Kirk was determined to learn the skill. The method necessarily
involved bringing the ship to a complete stop, however, and the Captain hadn’t found the opportunity to try it yet. He was now more
determined to do so than ever.
When the Enterprise had recently encountered the worst storm Kirk had ever seen, Chekov had guided them through safely using only
the starcharts burned into his memory and an innate talent that was astounding. He had done his job without bothering the Captain with
the details of how he was doing it, leaving Kirk free to handle the crisis at hand. It was only afterward that the Captain had discovered
how extensive the damage that had killed the Chief Navigator actually was.
The maturity that Chekov had shown in the situation earned him the Department Head posting.
Chekov swept the water off the chart table with his hand. “Haul her to starboard,” he ordered Kirk, glancing briefly into the darkness
behind him. “We’re drifting to port.”
The Captain leaned his weight into the wheel, fighting the pull of the tempestuous water beneath them. Pulled toward what? Frankly, he
didn’t want to know.
A deep crack split the air. Uhura screamed, diving into a ball onto the deck and shielding her head with her arms. McCoy instantly
followed suit.
“Just the flag,” Chekov identified the sound and glanced toward the bow to confirm it. A stunted piece of jagged wood jutted out from the
top of the foremast. “We never took it down.”
Kirk’s gaze followed the Navigator’s and saw that the string of signal flags that had once flown at the bow had been swept away as well.
A quick check of the mainmast told him the house flag that identified the ship’s owner was missing as well. Small losses, he considered.
Another, more ominous sound, followed. The eerie straining, creaking noise built into a deafening crescendo until a sharp snap split the
air.
Chekov’s face went white.
The mainsail’s gaff rope shot outward, whipping into the air with unequaled fury and slicing through the air in a vicious slingshot as it
wrested itself free. Kirk winced as the writhing cable came within a breath of tearing the Navigator’s face open. He wasn’t sure it didn’t
until the man spun around to look at the main boom.
The sail flew upward into the night and threw itself out in the darkness, furiously straining to capture every bit of the raging wind that it
could. The Captain stared in horror at the massive sheet of canvas, luminescent with light reflected off the deluge of rain that pelted the
small ship.
“Thank God,” McCoy said. “Maybe we’ll get out of this storm now.”
“We’re going to die,” Kirk declared.
The mainsail had reset itself.
Tearing off his rain gear, Chekov scrambled up the mainmast and ran out to the center of the gaff. He leapt up into the darkness.
Gravity jammed more than his body weight onto the narrow wood plank and the sail inched downward.
“Bones!” Kirk shouted. “Take the wheel!”
“I can’t steer!”
“Don’t steer!” the Captain declared. “Just hang on!”
Sulu was already at the base of the mast, straining to wrench the mast hoops down as soon as they were in reach.
Kirk swung himself up onto the boom as Chekov continued jumping. The heavy, wet fabric laid open the new callouses on the Captain’s
hands as he struggled to push it into folds so that it would lay as flat as possible on the wood. Uhura instantly climbed up onto the other
end of the boom to do the same.
They worked on for eons. Every minute held an hour of fighting with the struggling beast. With the last hoop finally down, Sulu swung
around, sat on the end of the gaff, and clutched the mast desperately.
“Uhura, get more rope!” Kirk ordered. He lay down on his end of the gaff, hugging it to the boom fiercely to keep the sail down.“Here!”
he called, grabbing the rope from Uhura when she reappeared. He wrapped it around the boom, sail and gaff--wrenching them all
together tightly and knotting it despite his frozen, bleeding fingers.
He quickly shimmied backward then, lashing the sail down as he did so. Chekov jumped off to let him pass before continuing his own
task of rebinding the original gaff rope in the opposite direction.
After securing the other end with another knot, Kirk lay spent and exhausted on the gaff: his cheek pressed against the wet wood as the
rain drove into his back. His heart was pounding so hard he could feel the vibration in the lumber beneath his body. “Pavel,” he growled.
“I’m giving you a medal.”
“Medal, hell,” Chekov retorted as he ran past to take the wheel. “My name is NOT going down in history as the man who killed James
Kirk!”
* * *
Kirk sat in a puddle on the maindeck, legs sprawled out before him and head dropped limply against the wood behind him. For the first
time, inactivity didn’t seem to bother Chekov.
The Captain let his eyes remain shut and he concentrated on the basic act of breathing. It was a wonderful sensation in the gentle
sunshine that warmed him.
“What’s that?” Uhura asked.
Sighing in regret, Kirk reluctantly pulled his eyes open and located the Communication’s Officer. Her drenched clothes made an
altogether alluring sight. It was not so noble a notion, the Captain knew, but he didn’t care.
Following her gesture with his eyes, lines furrowed through his forehead. He climbed to his feet and brushed his rear off. It sent warm
water cascading down the back of his legs. Not an entirely pleasant sensation with the infantile memory it produced.
“Pavel, do you have the glass?”
The young man appeared and handed it to him, his wide eyes glancing toward the water which held Kirk’s attention. “Do you know what
it is?” he asked Chekov, because it was obvious that he did.
“Yes,” he replied. “It’s the flag.”
Lines creased the Captain’s eyes. It could have been from curiosity. Annoyance inspired it however: Chekov had changed back into his
dry jeans and t-shirt. He was bright-eyed and refreshed from a nap taken after the storm had subsided and they’d set the mainsail
again. The rest of them had collapsed, frazzled, and were still soaked through.
“Are you telling me that we’ve been wandering around all morning looking for the flag we lost in the middle of a storm?” McCoy
demanded up through the open window to the galley below.
“Yes,” the Navigator replied without a hint of apology in his voice. “It’s a matter of respect.
“Are you sure about the code flags?” he continued, glancing at Uhura.
“The four signal flags that used to be in the front of the ship,” the woman confirmed again for the uncounted time since the sun rose.
“Yes. They were O, D, M, K: from top to bottom.”
She shrugged when Kirk looked at her in surprise. “I looked it up. I thought they said something: like the name of the ship.”
“They’re the ship’s code,” the Captain explained. “Like it’s license plate. NCC-1701,” he elaborated when she still showed no
understanding. “It’s illegal to be at sea in a ship this size without the code flags flying.”
“Will you grab it?” Chekov asked Kirk as the out of place thrum of the engine shuddered through the wood around them.
Kirk scowled at him, but again there was no apology in the wide brown eyes. “Yes,” he replied without addressing the issue. Although
set, the mainsail was barely fluttering in the breeze the way it was currently braced. They were purposely going slow and they could
have easily changed direction by moving the sail. Without the engines, however, it would have taken all day...maybe two or three, to
actually maneuver the ship over to the drifting flag.
The Captain put down the telescope and pushed his fingers through his hair in an attempt to set it in some semblance of its normal
order. “Two points to starboard,” he advised, eyeing the water.
Cutting the engine when Kirk produced the flag, the Navigator glared at him darkly. Okay, he’s right: it’s disrespectful, the Captain
admitted, but he didn’t stop wringing the torrents of water from the fabric in his hand as Chekov passed.
“Silver-dollar pancakes,” McCoy pronounced as he emerged from the main companionway. “Blueberry.”
Chekov immediately scooped up two, shoved them in his mouth and followed them by his third cup of coffee. That he was drinking
coffee at all betrayed his true weariness.
“We have syrup,” the Doctor rasped, scowling at him like an errant child. “And PLATES!”
“But no sour cream,” the Navigator sighed unhappily. He grabbed another handful and grinned at McCoy.
Only a moment’s hesitation delayed Kirk from following the younger man’s lead. He didn’t need a damn plate. The taste and feeling of
warm food in his mouth and stomach was downright orgasmic at this point.
“Jim!”
Shrugging sheepishly, he pushed another pancake into his mouth and chewed happily.
“You’re all mongrels,” the Doctor muttered as he dropped the plates on the chart table next to the pancakes.
“Found the flag locker,” Sulu announced when he appeared from the lower deck. Holding up his booty of fabric and rope proudly, he still
shook his head in apology. “Sorry, Pavel: I don’t know what the House Flag looked like, but I only found signal flags in the locker.”
“I don’t know either,” the younger man admitted. “We can do without it.
“Ach!” he continued loudly, snatching the flag from Kirk’s hand as he went to lay it on the chart table bedside the food.
“It’s not a walking surface,” the Captain defended his action, withholding the smirk until the Navigator disappeared onto the lower deck at
the bow.
Kirk threw up a hand to stop McCoy from speaking. Chekov was already at the foremast and the flag was sailing up to its repaired peak.
Watching silently until the codeflags were also snatching at the wind, he flashed a smile at the Doctor. “It’s a matter of respect.”
“It’s amazing,” the Helmsman mumbled through a mouthful of food.
McCoy shot the Captain a look of self-righteous triumph. “He’s using a plate and fork. At least someone around here is civilized!”
Dark eyes sparkling as they met Kirk’s hazel ones, Sulu shoved another pancake–whole and dripping with syrup–into his mouth. “How
civilized can you be with these metal prongs instead of chopsticks?” He choked when the coffee cup hit him.
Kirk grinned. “What’s amazing?” he asked the Helmsman.
“The wind,” Sulu answered. “Yesterday it was trying to kill us. Today...well, it’s downright invigorating.”
The Captain nodded agreement, letting his eyes take in the dancing flags at their bow. “Good twelve, fifteen knots: a glorious day for
sailing.”
“I’m kissing the land at the first opportunity I get,” McCoy rasped. “Space travel seems strangely safe at the moment.”
“I always figured you for a mud pie gourmet,” Chekov observed as he approached.
The Doctor straightened indignantly. “And just what do Russian children eat?”
“Potatoes.”
“Pavel,” Kirk interrupted the exchange. Hazel eyes gleaming, he gestured at the ship’s flags and grinned. “With this kind of wind we
could sail right up to the dock.”
Chekov stopped short, eyes darkening as he scowled. “Captain, on Earth it’s been illegal for over three centuries for a ship this size to
enter a harbor under sail.”
“I know,” Kirk grinned. “I just said you could. Perfect conditions like this make you long for the old days of sail.”
“Makes you long,” the younger man corrected. “I quit this job,” Chekov reminded him. Shifting, the Captain shrugged. “Yes, well...there’s
a small tear in our mainsail. We can’t brace it to the wind until it’s repaired: it’ll tear apart.”
“Go ahead and fix it.”
“You’ll have to show me how.”
Hesitating as he moved to turn, Chekov leveled dark eyes at the older man. “You don’t know how?”
“No,” Kirk replied. “But I’m sure you know how to sew a sail. Just give me a canvas needle and...”
“This isn’t a museum,” the Navigator retorted, his scowl deepening. “Use duct tape.
“Wait,” he said. “Hikaru: fix the sail. Jim, can you bring her in?”
It was the first time he’d used the man’s name and Kirk straightened, eyeing him curiously. “If I remember, I put you in command of this
particular ship.”
“Yes,” the Navigator agreed. “And as commanding officer, I’m delegating this task to you. Delegating is an important skill for a
commander, is it not?”
“Yes,” Kirk agreed with a wry grin. “I suppose, if that’s your command decision, I’ll have to abide by it.” A leisurely trip, a beautiful day, an
incredible tale wind, the ship, the sails and her wheel... Of course James Kirk wanted to bring her in.
“Good. I’m going to check the radio.”
“I don’t know who’s worse,” McCoy commented to no one in particular.
“I do,” Sulu replied.
* * *
Pavel Chekov sat in the bow of the schooner, legs stretched out before him as he happily watched the water rush at the hull. The spray
covered his face and hair with a delicious mist.
The boat steerer’s eyes were fixed intently on the harbor they approached. Small water craft, moored against the encroaching tide, were
already dotting the horizon. Kirk shifted uncomfortably and glanced down again at the silent radio in the binnacle box.
This harbor was so familiar, the Captain was sure he could almost navigate it with his eyes closed. The positions of the craft bobbing in
the water were predictable and he knew the feel of the sea as it ebbed easily against the land now hedging it in.
That was with his sailboat, however. A schooner this size required contact and directions from the Harbormaster. Kirk had expected to
hear from them by now as they were well visible. He wondered, not for the first time, if he was supposed to initiate the contact. He was
not entirely versed in the regulations covering larger watercraft.
“Pavel! Chekov!”
The Navigator smiled cryptically and kept staring at the whitecaps that were being thrown up by the wind in the midst of the dark sea.
“Chekov!” While it had been a friendly entreaty before, the tone was a commanding one now. Captains.... He twisted around after a
moment to peer at the man at the wheel.
“We need to start getting these sails in,” the Captain said.
Brown eyes wide and innocent, Chekov flashed a brilliant smile at Kirk. “Wait.”
“Pavel!” Kirk shifted again. “What’s the Harbormaster’s frequency?”
He shook his head and shrugged. Turning back around, he waved a hand in dismissal.
“Pav...! Uhura,” the Captain spat out. “Take the wheel.”
Kirk swept forward, taking the companionway in one leap and jogging up to where the Navigator sat. “Chekov,” he informed him evenly.
“We’re far past the point of needing to be under engine power. Come up and take over the steering. We’ll get the sails in while you deal
with the Harbormaster.”
The Navigator sighed visibly and remained staring out at the water filling the harbor they approached. Finally, he crossed his ankles
leisurely and folded his arms across his chest. “Nyet,” he said broadly. “You go ahead.”
Hazel eyes frozen on him, Chekov made no indication that he knew the man was still standing there. Kirk finally squat down so that he
was eye level with the younger man. “It wasn’t your fault, Pavel.”
“There are storm shields around the land,” the Navigator said without looking at him. “No sane person goes to sea with the same
assumption. Checking the weather report was a priority.”
“‘A man must be mad to venture out upon the seas,’” the Captain quoted. “It’s pretty much inherent in the whole thing. Pavel, I knew you
weren’t the kind of man who was going to lose your ship.”
“Yes,” Chekov agreed thoughtfully. “The ship belongs to the Captain.” He glanced over at Kirk with cryptic gleam in his dark eyes. “But
the lifeboats belong to the crew.”
James Kirk laughed, hazel eyes sparkling. “I never thought of it in those terms. Gives a commanding officer good incentive to save the
ship.”
“Yes,” the Navigator agreed again. He turned his gaze back to the water, but stopped the older man before he spoke. “Captain, I was
the crew. I’ve been out of the Academy less than a year. This trip was a reminder that when the ship is the only thing keeping you safe–
either from the expansive sea or the vacuum of space–even small mistakes by her commander can be life-altering. In the worse way.”
Kirk sighed. “Pavel, you’re so hard on yourself, you pretty much eliminate any requirement for me to discipline you.”
“Anything to make your job easier, Sir.”
The Captain studied the young man’s features. It wasn’t surprising that the Navigator found a kindred spirit in the Enterprise’s First
Officer: Chekov had no tolerance for his own human faults. His heart held boundless understanding for the same in others, however. He
stood up.
“Pavel, you have to come take the wheel.”
“Eventually.”
“Now.”
Dark eyes glanced up at the Captain sharply. “Jim, you have control issues. Exactly who is in command of this ship?”
“You are,” Kirk said. “Which means you are going to be held responsible for bringing this ship in with everything flying. The fines and the
time in the penal colony are going to be all yours.”
“I’ll accept that.”
Lines furrowing his brow, the older man eyed Chekov, disgruntled. What Kirk had just said was a boldfaced lie. There was no way
anyone would hold a newly commissioned Ensign responsible when there was an experienced flag officer aboard. “You do have a
Master’s license?” he asked suddenly as the thought occurred to him.
“Why would you assume I have a Master’s Licence just because I know how to holystone a wooden deck? Hornblower was an officer, I
was a sailor. I’ve still got the scars on my knees to prove it,” he said hotly.
“You don’t have any scars,” Kirk retorted.
Chekov gave him a strange look. “I had no idea you’d taken the time to check out my legs so thoroughly.”
“Of course I checked them out,” the Captain replied. “You won the contest.”
His soulful eyes widened and Kirk smirked. The wholesome, innocent facade the young man carefully perfected had become completely
opaque to him. Chekov was full of shit. “Ensign, you’d be surprised the things a captain knows.
“Now let’s start getting these sails in.”
He was surprised when the younger man still shook his head. “Not yet. Go steer and I’ll let you know when.”
“We’re past the legal limit for a ship this size to be under sail,” Kirk insisted.
Smiling, Chekov’s eyes were warm: a shine in their dark depths. “I’ll take care of the Harbormaster. Trust me, Jim.”
The Navigator’s use of his given name was downright calculating, Kirk thought with as much care. “Pavel,” he drew out after a moment.
“Tell me that you’re not planning to bring her into the harbor under sail.”
Cocking his head, Chekov grinned devilishly. “It was your idea.”
“My... it was a random observation!” the Captain retorted. “Not a suggestion. It is so far beyond legal...”
“And James Kirk would never push a regulation,” the Navigator observed wryly.
Kirk blinked, straightening. Despite the arguement he’d used to talk Chekov into coming, he hadn’t really considered the race a team
building exercise. When they’d left the Enterprise, however, he never would have expected his Chief Navigator to stand toe to toe with
them like he’d been doing. Results came from unexpected sources.
“Face it, you want to sail her in,” the young man said.
“Yes,” the Captain admitted. “I’m not sure it’s worth the time in a penal colony, however.”
A massive pout took over the Navigator’s face as he fell into a sulk. “You don’t trust me.”
Hazel eyes narrowing, Kirk studied the young man thoughtfully. “Pavel, did you already make arrangements to do this?” he demanded
suddenly, glancing briefly toward the unseen Harbormaster’s office.
Chekov laughed: a wild, crooked grin splitting his face. “You’d be surprised at the power behind the Russian Navy,” he drew out. “Go for
it, Jim.”
Kirk hesitated, but only for a moment. He was grinning himself when he took the wheel again. It occurred to him almost immediately that
Chekov wasn’t just lounging in the bow of the boat. As they progressed, the Navigator watched to see that the Captain kept the ship in
the channel and avoided catching any mooring lines.
“Pavel!”
Chekov twisted around, peering up at Sulu who was–in fact–lounging atop the crosstrees.
“Pavel, get up here!” the Helmsman demanded, his voice strident. “Hurry!”
The Navigator immediately swung up onto the shrouds and casually ran up to Sulu’s position. He stood there intently listening to his
friend talk. Kirk wasn’t afraid of heights but he couldn’t pry his eyes from Chekov, whose easy stance gave no suggestion at all that he
was perched some ninety feet from the safety of the deck on a small piece of wood.
The Helmsman’s right arm was wrapped fiercely around the mast, displaying clearly his discomfort in the same position. He was
gesturing frantically toward the Golden Gate Bridge. Chekov glanced back at Kirk and then said something quickly to Sulu before sailing
down the nearest backstay.
Kirk’s body tensed as the Navigator raced backward toward him. “Captain, get to the top of the mainmast,” he ordered sharply. “Nytoya,
take the wheel.”
“You mean to the crosstrees with Sulu?”
“No,” Chekov retorted. “I said to the top of the mainmast: you’re the heaviest. Sulu’s going up the foremast, just follow his lead.
“Doctor,” he continued with urgency in his voice. “Get over here to the rail.”
Kirk could feel his confusion slowing his climb up the shrouds and he forced it away to speed up the tarred rope ladder.
Grabbing the nearest ballentined line, the Navigator began hurriedly lashing McCoy to the starboard rail amidships.
“What, are you making me walk the plank?” the Doctor demanded hotly, slapping at the younger man.
“No,” Chekov retorted. “I’m keeping you on the ship!
“Nytoya,” he continued. “I need you to haul her hard to starboard–get her rail in the water!”
“Wait a minute!” McCoy screamed. “I’m on the rail!”
“Don’t move, Doctor!” Chekov yelled back as he raced up the mizzenmast. “Hard, Nytoya! Get her over now!”
The Captain was standing at the top of th shrouds, hand on the mast, as he watched the young man’s urgent movements. Kirk’s non-
action caught the attention of the ship’s commanding officer. “MOVE, JIM!”
He started. Chekov was scrambling up to the very top of the mizzenmast. It was what he’d instructed Kirk to do on the mainmast.
Grabbing the spire of wood, he shimmied up to the dizzying exposed top of the foremast for reasons he still didn’t understand. Sulu had
shortened his body on the starboard side of the mast and was leaning backward, hanging off of it.
The Captain began to shout something but froze as his eyes caught sight of the bridge they approached. His heart seized in his chest.
Instantly, he followed the Helmsman’s example. Only he understood now: they were not hanging off the masts, they were pulling on them
using every ounce of weight and effort that they could.
Damn it, damn it, DAMN IT!! Kirk thought. He had been too careful. In steering the ship up the channel, he’d kept as close to port as he
could in an effort to keep to the side of the shipping lane. A sailing ship this size couldn’t maneuver out of the way of other approaching
craft. By ancient maritime law, they had the right of way because of this: but getting in the way was considered down right rude.
James Kirk had forgotten about the bridge. The beautiful, graceful, sweeping, Golden Gate Bridge. DAMN IT.
He’d steered them so close to port, their masts weren’t going to clear the bottom of its structure. The ship was about to be torn apart in
sight of safe harbor.
Kirk pulled fiercely and felt a flood of adrenalin from his gut fill his chest. His body sank deeply toward the open water rushing beneath
him at dizzying speeds. Don’t be sick, he ordered his body as his throat closed. For God’s sake...don’t be sick.
Pulling the wheel over with her own weight, Uhura forced the ship to press the stakes on her starboard side into the water.
“Son of a Bitch!” McCoy gasped and pulled frankly at the rope wrapped around his body. Chekov had secured it behind him and he’d no
hope of loosening it.
“Get him wet, Nytoya!” the Navigator shouted from his perch, laughing.
“Bones, lean into it!” Kirk ordered. “We need your weight!”
“I’m already swimming!” he screamed back. “Wait ‘til the next time I get you in sickbay!” the Doctor yelled at Chekov.
The younger man only laughed louder, throwing his head back gleefully and shaking his hair into the rushing wind. “You wouldn’t climb!”
he reminded the Chief Medical Officer.
McCoy screamed as his flailing arms hit water.
Gasping, Kirk held his breath as he watched the foremast pass under the first ancient steel support beam. He waited to see Sulu get
knocked clear but his ability to judge the clearance between the wood and metal was skewed from his perch. The foremast passed the
edge of the bridge without touching.
He yanked on the mast he held. It was higher than the foremast and he wasn’t letting go if it meant getting his head knocked off.
Squeezing his eyes shut, he held his breath again as he felt the cool air from the bridge’s shade hit his body. Sound became an eerie
echo and he actually felt the hard coolness of the metal inches from his hands.
The cold from the open expanse of the bridge’s floor clutched his body and he opened his eyes, knowing he was safely under the first
steel beam. His heart raced as he stared up at the underside of the ancient road stretched across the water. Kirk had sailed under it
before but he had never taken the time to stare up at it’s remarkable engineering.
“Yes!” Sulu yelled in victory as he emerged safely from under the other beam and the sun hit his body again.
Grinning in understanding, the Captain kept his eyes open this time and watched as the metal beam passed before him without touching
the wood he clutched protectively. He couldn’t help ducking in primitive reflex, however.
Chekov cheered in victory when the final mast cleared the structure. The Captain knew this because he saw him do it. He couldn’t hear
him.
The deafening cheers of the people filling the bridge drown out the Navigator’s voice. Kirk stared at them, stunned. He’d been too
preoccupied to notice them before, but the entire length of the bridge was packed with onlookers who had rushed to see the schooner
sail under the structure. It was a sight that hadn’t graced their view for over three hundred years–even without the crew’s acrobatics to
get her under safely.
Grinning wildly, Kirk pulled his body up against the mast again and hung there, panting. It wasn’t the victory that made him grin. It wasn’t
the physical effort that made him pant.
The shoreline on both sides were swollen with a thick, unbroken mob of people cheering wildly and waving. People hung out of the
windows and balconies of the houses behind them. A few brave souls even dotted several rooftops. In his entire career--in his entire
life--James Kirk had never felt such overwhelming, unbridled, hero worship.
The ship gracefully righted herself and when he felt himself upright again he reluctantly let himself down the tarred backstay. “This is
amazing,” he marveled as Sulu approached.
The younger man was grinning still as well. “‘Ships are the nearest things to dreams that human hands have ever made,’” he asserted.
“‘They touch the soul of man.’”
“Robert Rose,” Kirk acknowledged.
“And all this time I thought Chekov made it up,” Sulu commented.
“This is amazing,” the Captain repeated with unashamed astonishment in his tone.
“They’ve never seen a ship come in under sail before.”
“Like a ship was meant to.” The Captain’s eyes swept along the people crowding the shoreline, but his gaze was caught by something
on the ship. He turned hazel eyes curiously toward Chekov.
Standing next to the wheel again, one of the young man’s hands casually clasped a spoke as he guided the ship back into the middle of
the now clear shipping lane. With a shy smile, Chekov acknowledged the crowds with short, almost deferential waves artfully placed as
they sailed. His sheepishness was a perfect union with his boundless natural charm and charisma: every acknowledgment from him
brought enthusiastic roars from the crowd.
“You’d think he was the Prince of Wales,” Kirk marveled to Sulu.
“The Russian Navy,” the Helmsman corrected easily. “They teach maritime history, they march in parades–they’re taught to deal with
crowds.”
“I can see why he quit.” Uhura smiled and gracefully smoothed her hair back into place as she joined them. “This kind of welcome could
become downright depressing.”
“And he’s so bad at it,” the Captain added as he watched the young man. The wholesome, sheepish innocence was glowing on Chekov’
s boyish features and to the strangers that watched it was infectious. Kirk was right: the wholesome facade was practiced. He carefully
stored the information in his mind for future use.
“Excuse me,” he added, moving back to Chekov at the wheel.
The young man flashed him a wild grin. “That was fun.”
With a smile, Kirk nodded agreement. “Reporting to resume my duties,” he informed the ship’s commanding officer deferentially.
Soulful brown eyes regarded the Captain with warmth. “I’ve got it from here, thanks.”
Kirk didn’t move. “Pavel,” he drew out after a moment. “People make mistakes. I want the opportunity to see my responsibilities to their
end.”
“Damn inconvenient place to put a bridge,” the younger man acknowledged, but his smile turned sweet. “Captain,” he said, eyes
surveying the people along the shore. “We know who’s in command of this ship, but they don’t. A captain never steers the ship. Nelzya,”
he outright snarled. “It isn’t done. IT ISN’T DONE.”
Kirk shrugged. “I’m not in command.”
“But you’re a Captain. The people along the shore may not know: but THEY do,” the Navigator insisted, gesturing with his head toward
the bow of the ship.
The Captain turned and let his gaze follow the younger man’s line of eyesight. As they came into the harbor, the masts of the tall ship
moored there were coming into view. He moved over subtly and let his hand slip onto the port rail.
History ran in cycles and so did the human race’s interest in it. Sailing ships had propelled history fiercely along on this blue planet until
early in the twentieth century. Engines had pushed them out of use and out of people’s minds. Frankly, the United States of America’s
bicentennial had been their first savior: generating a surge of interest at a point in time when they may have been lost forever.
As time had meandered along the interest of the human race in their maritime heritage had continued to wax and wane: each time these
noble ships were saved by a simple twist of circumstances. The last period of disinterest had stretched on interminably into a sparse
wasteland of abandoned souls held captive in rotting wooden hulls.
A lone man in the Russian Federation had wrested the traditional ships from the grasp of certain death this last time. A true visionary,
he had refounded the Russian Navy as a history museum: restoring all the surviving vessels in his country and training seamen and
shipsmiths alike. He had then turned his gaze outward to the rest of Earth. Each ship had received the full attention of the Navy,
although his vision was for each country’s natives to eventually take the place of the Russian seamen aboard the ships.
Kirk was sure that vision had not come into completion anywhere yet, so he knew the men he saw on the ship they approached were by
and large from the Russian Federation. The ship was dressed: dozens of signal flags strung from her bow, over her masts, and down to
her stern. The sailors stood on the footropes along every one of her nine yards, as well. Dressed to the nines... he mused. Her officers
stood on the quarterdeck silently.
“Friends of yours?” the Captain asked Chekov.
“Some,” the man commented, eyes on the ship in question. “But no shipmates.” There was a huge difference, anyone familiar with
military service knew. “She’s the Balclutha,” he continued. “She’s three hundred one feet long, with a beam of thirty-eight point six feet.”
Chekov smiled tauntingly at McCoy, who stood at the rail next to Kirk. “HER mainmast is one hundred forty five feet high.”
“And I’ll bet you know her entire history,” Kirk remarked.
The Navigator’s eyes widened. “Frankly, history has never interested me.”
“Must be why you always get it wrong,” McCoy rasped in a mutter. “Are they setting sail?”
“He’s lying,” the Captain asserted, turning his attention back to the Balclutha. “No one accidently gets everything wrong.
“They’re saluting us,” he continued in explanation to the Doctor. “It’s the highest honor one crew can pay to another.” Indeed, as the
schooner passed the Balclutha, they fired their salute cannon.
He took to waving back to the crowds himself, but almost immediately understood the gentile wave that the Windsors–and Chekov–used.
The Captain’s shoulder hurt.
Kirk’s eyes caught sight of and held on the man leaning against a wooden pylon on the Balclutha’s wharf. He didn’t know why. There
was nothing particularly extraordinary about the short, bearded man.
The man had on a Russian peasant blouse that was so discolored that Kirk couldn’t decide where it belonged in the spectrum between
white and tan. His trousers were similarly a faded, worn brown. Back casually resting against the massive wooden pylon, his hands were
tucked behind him casually as well.
The man didn’t have on the startling white Russian Navy uniform with braids of gold garland that would have identified him for who he
was. Kirk knew him anyway and when the huge, soulful brown eyes met his, the Captain’s soul quieted.
“Pavel,” Kirk urged, glancing back at him and gesturing. “Look.”
When he looked back, however, the pylon stood alone. He searched the crowd quickly but it was as if the man had dissipated into thin
air. “It was him,” the Captain insisted. “The Commander in Chief of the Russian Navy was standing there!”
The same Russian eyes the stranger on the wharf had used to meet Kirk’s gaze now stared at the Captain warmly. “Of course he was.
He can’t bring his ship in under sail.”
Kirk stared into the crowd with disappointment. “I’d like to meet him someday.”
“You will,” Chekov commented with confidence. “Eventually. Time to get these sails in, Captain. I can’t dock her without the engine.”
When the ship was secured, Kirk found his Navigator lingering uncomfortably on deck with a canvas bag slung over his shoulder. “Tell
me,” the Captain encouraged. “Did you run home to get your Navy uniform– or do you have it on the Enterprise?”
“The white pants?” Chekov asked. “The Enterprise: I sleep in them. They’re comfortable.”
The young man’s face was entirely too wholesome.
Uhura glanced at her friend, dark eyes sparkling. She grinned at the Captain then. “And women think they’re hot. White sailor suits are
always a sure bet with human females.”
The Navigator could avert his gaze, but he wasn’t able to hide the color that flushed into his cheeks.
Kirk stood silently, watching as the rest of the current crew filtered off the ship. Knowing gazes were cast at the two men locked in a
silent deadlock of wills.
“Admit it,” Kirk goaded the younger man when they were alone. “Being on this ship has made you nostalgic for the Navy.”
“‘Men go to sea before they know the unhappiness of that way of life,’” Chekov commented. “James Powell,” he added in response to
Kirk’s curious look.
“Pavel,” the Captain said with a note of respect. “You’re surprisingly well read.”
Brown eyes remained fixed on Kirk silently, then traveled over the ship in a great show of melodrama.
Kirk understood and he smirked in response. “Not much variety of recreational facilities on these ships.”
“I’m miserably behind on current entertainment and recreation,” the Navigator admitted.
Kirk wasn’t about to argue–even about the definition of ‘current’. No one in their right mind would ever put a bowling ball into Chekov’s
hand again.
The Captain knew why the man was uncomfortable. “You’re in command,” he said finally. “You leave the ship last.” Kirk actually hoped
the Navy’s Commander in Chief was still somewhere in that crowd: he wanted the man to see Chekov leave last. Hornblower may not
have been a sailor, but his Navigator had been. He was now a command officer and Chekov had a unique opportunity to show the
Admiral what he had let slip through his fingers. The silent, gloating statement was entirely within the Navigator’s personality and Kirk
was not above encouraging it.
“You’re the Captain,” Chekov insisted. “You should leave last.”
“It’s not about rank.”
“It is to me,” the younger man said evenly. His dark eyes were unreadable and they remained solidly fixed on Kirk.
The Captain shifted. Maybe making the Navigator more comfortable in standing up to his Commanding Officer had been a bad idea,
after all. He gestured at him. “What does that shirt say, Ensign?”
Chekov squirmed visibly. “Captain,” he said thickly. “There is no regulation that you can use to make me tell you.”
“No,” Kirk retorted, a glint in his hazel eyes. “But there are other people that read Russian on the ship.”
The man’s jaw tightened. “There are, Sir,” he replied before turning and walking away. With clear defiance in his step, Chekov strode
down the gangway: leaving Kirk alone on the ship.
EPILOGUE
Kirk stared at the chessboard in front of him, the pattern of black and white blurring in his vision. Chekov was an excellent chess player
even though he only played traditional chess. The young man would offer a rambling explanation for his preference to anyone who
could bear to sit still through it, but the board he supplied for the purpose was worth the torture.
Carved by a childhood friend that worked with wood, each space on the birch board was raised from the base and hovered elegantly on
its own. Intricate nautical scenes graced all the borders on all four sides and each piece was an enchanting image of sea life. Mermaids,
seahorses and various humans that worked the sea entertained the players.
Kirk had heard rumors that Chekov possessed a similar birch board carved with a space motif, although he had never been able to ply it
into use for their games. Klingons apparently battled Starfleet personnel on that board and the Captain had heard more than one hint at
who the Fleet ‘King’ resembled.
“Captain?”
Kirk blinked back to the present, his eyes refocusing on his opponent.
“You appear distracted this evening.”
“Yes,” he agreed, nodding. “I’m afraid I am, Spock.” He moved a bishop and removed one of the First Officer’s rooks. He rolled the edge
of it on the table thoughtfully.
Kirk grimaced when his queen disappeared off the board instantly.
“Quite distracted, Captain. May I be of assistance?”
“Yes,” Kirk agreed again. He put the rook flat on the table and sat up, leaning forward to peer through the 3-D chessboard. “Do you
recall Chekov’s blue T-shirt that has a compass on it?”
“I believe it is a compass rose.”
“That’s the one. I believe it also has words on it,” the Captain continued absently. “I don’t recall what it says. Do you?”
Spock raised an eyebrow. “Yes,” he replied. “It is your move, Captain.”
“Give me a minute. So what?”
“Sir?”
“What does it say?” Kirk growled with irritation.
“Excuse me?”
“The shirt! What does the Chekov’s shirt say?”
“Oh, yes.”
“Spock!”
Both the man’s eyebrows rose elegantly and he folded his arms across his chest. “If my memory is accurate...”
“It always is,” Kirk encouraged.
“That particular shirt describes Mr. Chekov’s current duties on board the Enterprise,” the Science Officer stated.
The Captain eyed him. “Spock!” he challenged. “Are you being evasive?”
“I do not believe so, Captain.”
“Than what are the exact words on that shirt,” he demanded. “The English translation of the words,” he elaborated, forestalling any
more supposed misunderstandings.
Spock cocked his head in a moment of consideration. “Navigator’s tell their Captain where to go.”
Kirk blinked. He straightened slowly. “What?!”
“Mr. Chekov’s shirt. It says...”
“I HEARD you!”
“The statement is accurate.”
“Move, Spock.”
“It’s your move, Jim.”