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ten_fwd_ooc2014-11-16 07:46 am
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TEST DRIVE #6 - The Bridge and Ten Forward

Option 01. Ten Forward: The first thing you see is a bar. A large, lively bar filled with many different faces and many different smells, sights and sounds. This is Ten Forward, the Enterprise's off-duty lounge; feel free to get acquainted with your fellow travelers and try to find somebody who's in charge: this is your new home now, after all...

Option 02. The Bridge: Well, aren't you a lucky duck? You've found yourself in hallowed quarters. Wherever you were before, you're not there anymore. Now you're in a room that could be some kind of command center or control room; there's a captain's chair flanked by seats for his chief officers, computer panels and stations at each interior wall, and before you a broad viewscreen that shows the wide expanse of space rushing towards you. Have you ever wanted to be a starship captain for a day? Well, here's your chance. Feel free to roam around, but try not to touch anything shiny.
[OOC: The Bridge isn't usually available for in-game posts, so if you've ever wanted to play there, here's your chance!]
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"How are you with history?" he asks, gaze still scanning their surroundings. It's not quite as off-handed a question as it sounds - he wants to know what he's missed. How far has the Federation's reach spread, these past hundred years?
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It was, perhaps, not quite accurate. He remembered anything and everything he'd ever read or learned, history included, and could call the knowledge up if needed. But he'd already played enough cards right now, he needed to hold some of them back.
Sickbay is quiet--this is Starfleet at its finest, exploring and engaging in peaceful diplomacy, there's not much to do aside from research, and a few nurses and assistants are about, engaging in it. Only a few people come in, trading words with them--observations about experiments in the adjacent science lab, mainly, with a few scattered questions about plans for after shift ends.
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It's... odd, now. The lull of the Sickbay, the faint threads of conversation and the quiet, ever-present hum of a starship is almost soothing against his careworn nerves. But fury had kept his grief at bay - without it, he can feel the loss, as deep as his bones.
He's lost friends before. Family. But he's never been alone, not even when Marcus had held his crew hostage for his obedience. They had still been alive. Now he has nothing, and this new Enterprise has nothing to offer him.
Eventually, he realizes the silent has drawn on too long. ""I'll need a PADD, then," he says. He needs to do something, even if it's just research.
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But he feels like perhaps the comparison that's always made him feel bitter and saddened--that there were few ways that people like him could be, either righteous all the time or hateful and full of rage and violence--was not quite as it should be.
He wasn't about to say that Khan wasn't dangerous. But he was capable of being reasoned with, and quiet contemplation, and obvious sadness. He was human too. Not just the vicious tyrant he'd been remembered as.
"I'll see what I can do."
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They were more. They were better. But their genetic stock was still human, and in another life, another time? They could have been more than just the specter of genetic experimentation gone wrong.
But that is, perhaps, a conversation for another time. Khan merely nods, suddenly beginning to feel the bone-deep weariness that sometimes accompanies his rapid healing. "Thank you."
For more than just the medical care.
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But that is certainly a conversation for another time, if he breeches it at all.
"I'd ask how you'd gotten hurt in the first place, but I don't think I'd like the answer."
It's open-ended, if Khan would like to volunteer the information. Judging from his violent reaction to anyone wearing a uniform, his comment that the Enterprise had been severely damaged (if not outright destroyed, but he hadn't sounded certain of Captain Kirk's death, so he couldn't discount it being merely crippled), Julian was of the mind they had an impending explosion on their hands. He'd been against the Enterprise crew, Julian was sure of it--just as had happened in this timeline, eventually. He didn't know if Doctor McCoy was from before or after that point.
He just continues working, healing the fractured arm next. His job is not to judge--though admittedly he was sometimes rather bad about that--his job is to keep everyone in one piece.
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"You wouldn't." Because he can see now that Julian is a healer first. The loss of life that no doubt resulted from Khan's actions would appall him. "My ship was too damaged to sustain orbit. I was disinclined to attempt to save it."
Which is, perhaps, the most delicate way of putting 'I crashed my starship into a planet in a fit of suicidal vengeance' ever.
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But his mind is working, and he knows what's being held back there is who he was fighting with. Nevermind where he crashed. He realizes he's more than likely providing medical assistance to someone who was, nominally, an enemy. He'd probably end up in the brig before too long, simply for the attack on one of Captain Picard's crew. But he still would be treated at some point--may as well be now.
"In a battle against the Enterprise," he says calmly, a slight tone of questioning in his voice. He doesn't want to assume. But he's fairly sure he's right. "What about your crew?"
Even a ship the size of the Defiant needed crew, and it was so much smaller than most others. He didn't know how large the ship Khan was on had been, but he could assume it was larger than the escort ship.
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But it doesn't matter, because as soon as the question is out of the doctor's mouth, Khan is abruptly stilling, posture ramrod-straight and fists clenched. "My crew is dead," he says, words slower and diction crisper for all the plain grief and fury behind them. "They were murdered in their sleep by Commander Spock."
And here, now, he feels more hatred for Spock than he ever did Marcus. The Admiral was a despicable creature, low enough to exploit Khan by using his family against him, but ultimately still afraid of the augments - too afraid to go through with killing them, as he had threatened so many times. Spock, however, had done just that, beamed over the bodies of Khan's sleeping family and let them explode in the belly of his ship.
He'd wanted to kill him. But with the Vengeance crippled, he'd taken the next best option - destroy the institution that had enabled their deaths. Go down with his ship, and be with his family at last.
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Julian knows he's about to step on a landmine the moment the words are out of his mouth, he can feel the tension in the air rising. He'd meant the crew of the starship--but Khan had taken it to mean the other Augments who'd been aboard the Botany Bay. He doesn't protest that Spock would have done no such thing--he never met the man personally, but he knows that his strength of character wouldn't have allowed it. Certainly would have allowed for tricking him, though that seemed cruel. But in the heat of a battle, if it had been the only option...Julian knows he'd have done something just as drastic to protect his own people.
It was really no wonder that Khan had been so furious. Ready to tear through all of them. Julian would have felt similarly. But if it's his first reaction, he's going to be in the brig for his entire time here, and Julian wouldn't say it would be uncalled for.
There was the promise of violence in his shoulders and hands, if anyone said the wrong thing just then. Julian moves to the replicator, instead of opening his mouth, and orders two cups of tea, coming back and offering one before sitting on the opposite biobed with the second.
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He's expecting a phaser, or a hypospray, or worse - something to render him docile while the good doctor realizes his mistake and calls security. What he's not expecting is tea, and there's obvious suspicion on his face when it's placed in his hands.
Caution keeps him from drinking first, though he doubts Bashir's ethics would allow him to stoop to drugging his drink. "What are you doing?"
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"Offering you tea." Obviously. He's British, it's just about standard protocol for any situation, especially ones where he has not the foggiest idea what to say. He's not going to let you out of here until cooler heads prevail, and so you might as well make yourself comfortable.
He sips at his cup first, as if to say 'see? No sedatives.' He'd need something strong enough to down a mammoth to even make you drowsy anyway, anything strong enough is going to taste awful.
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(It would explain why he's been healing so sluggishly - he needs to fuel the process somehow, and stolen Starfleet rations don't last forever.)
Still, he takes a sip with reservation, still watching. It's not drugged, but he's still wondering what the doctor actually hopes to accomplish - or is it simply a case of good manners? Has it really been so long since he felt civilized that he'd forgotten the customs?
"Obviously. Why?"
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"Do you really need a reason?"
He'll give you one if you insist, but it's sort of sad you can't take the kindness at face value. After a moment, eyes searching, he gives the most innocuous one that comes to mind with a bit of a self-depricating smile.
"I'm British. Tea in uncomfortable situations is something of a hallmark of our interpersonal relationships."
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"I'm familiar with the concept of British sensibilities." He was, after all, raised in India - for a given definition of 'raised' - and had spent a not-insignificant amount of time London. The customs were not entirely dissimilar.
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"I imagine you would be, living in India as long as you did." He had already stated that he'd researched them. Though he didn't think it might be a bit much to reveal just how much he remembered, which was truly everything he'd read. He retained information like it had been carved into his mind.
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It's a well-known fact, but it still prompts Khan to raise an eyebrow - it's not often that people acknowledge that, while he had control over a full quarter of the planet, India had been his home. His seat of power. "Correct," he allows with a nod. "Though it is much different now."
It's to be expected - things had changed rapidly even in the few short years he held power. Over the course of three, four hundred years? It was recognizable, yes, but only just.
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"How long did you spend in Britain?" Because that accent was so very similar to his own, and he was curious. He hadn't recalled anything from his reading that indicated Khan had spent any significant time in the part Earth Julian called home.
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"After I was awoken, over a year." His words are chilly, but his grip on his cup is still carefully modulated, even gentle - he's bitter, but calm.
After had been a parade of endless tests and measurements and threats, followed by the never-ending dreariness of London. He hadn't been allowed to travel out of the country - he wasn't allowed that much leash.
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"I see." He adds the information to the mental sub-folder he's created for this new Khan, because he's well and confirmed that he's different than the one in the history books here.
It was harder than it looked, carrying on idle conversation with someone who was both emotionally unstable and capable of snapping you in half.
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"And what of yourself, doctor?" He lets his gaze rest, deceptively mild, on the other man. "You know quite a bit about me; reciprocity is only fair."
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He's the picture of an average Starfleet officer, average Human. Nothing suspicious about him at all. Really.
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Hope you didn't think he'd forgotten, Julian. Anyone who professes to have read all of the history texts on Khan is of immediate interest - humanity, he's discovered, rarely likes to be reminded of those years. Odd, considering it was their victory, not his, but he suspected they couldn't bear to be reminded that they'd brought it all on themselves.
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"Curiosity, mainly. Genetic augmentation is banned by Earth law, and I began researching to find out exactly why that was. We were told in school, about the Eugenics Wars--not much, mind, but enough to put a seed there. I continued reading on my own up until I went to the Academy and Starfleet Medical." A grain of truth, without exactly going into the deeper whys. He could even say that gene therapy was something of a specialty of his, but that would be giving a bit much away, he thought.