Read Tales from the Captain’s Table Online
Authors: Keith R.A. DeCandido
POCKET BOOKS, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc. 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020 |
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2005 by Paramount Pictures. All Rights Reserved.
STAR TREK is a Registered Trademark of Paramount Pictures. |
This book is published by Pocket Books, a division of Simon & Schuster, Inc., under exclusive license from Paramount Pictures.
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever.
For information address Pocket Books, 1230 Avenue of the Americas, New York, NY 10020
ISBN-13: 978-1-4165-1028-4
ISBN-10: 1-4165-1028-1
First Pocket Books trade paperback edition June 2005
POCKET and colophon are registered trademarks of Simon & Schuster, Inc.
Cover illustration by Mark Gerber
Cover design by John Vairo, Jr.
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Let us raise our glasses to Plato, Geoffrey Chaucer, Lord Dunsany,
L. Sprague de Camp & Fletcher Pratt, Arthur C. Clarke, Larry
Niven, Spider Robinson, John Ostrander, Neil Gaiman, and all those
past, present, and future who know the value of gathering together,
hoisting a few, and telling tales….
Introduction: How We Built the Bar
Dean Wesley Smith
William T. Riker
Improvisations on the Opal Sea:
A Tale of Dubious Credibility
Michael A. Martin & Andy Mangels
Jean-Luc Picard
Darkness
Michael Jan Friedman
Elizabeth Shelby
Pain Management
Peter David
Klag, Son of M’raq
IoDnI’pu’ vavpu’ je
Keith R.A. DeCandido
Kira Nerys
The Officers’ Club
Heather Jarman
Jonathan Archer
Have Beagle, Will Travel: The Legend of Porthos
Louisa M. Swann
Demora Sulu
Iron and Sacrifice
David R. George III
Chakotay
Seduced
Christie Golden
David Gold
An Easy Fast
John J. Ordover
DEAN WESLEY SMITH
B
ack in the mists of history, around 1997, the Captain’s Table was built, to float forever in time and space, allowing only captains of ships through the big wooden front door. If my memory serves, the creation of the Captain’s Table was slow, like any construction process—a labor of love carried out over a number of phone calls between myself and former Pocket Books editor John Ordover.
John and I both loved the tradition of bars in literature, and often talked about the White Hart, one of our favorites. I’m not sure of the exact conversation between us that sent the Captain’s Table into full construction, but I do remember that at one point John suggested I create the bar.
Since I had worked as a bartender and have a degree in architecture that I have seldom used, it was a logical assignment. I took the task very seriously, actually going to my architectural studio and drawing up floor plans. As I would in any good design, I included restrooms, determined the location of stairs, provided for liquor storage, and so on. Every detail, all to scale. Then John and I worked out the characters who would be regulars, who would be there to listen to the captains’ stories.
We developed the rules of the bar, and how it works with captains of ships from any time and any space. We developed the tradition of captains telling tales, and many of the other details that threaded their way into the bar. Then John hired eight of his writers to bring the Captain’s Table to life and write six novels. He assigned each the task of writing in first person, from the captain’s point of view while in the bar.
Since I had designed the bar, I was given first choice and picked Benjamin Sisko, writing with my wife, Kristine Kathryn Rusch. The team of L.A. Graf took Jim Kirk and Hikaru Sulu, Diane Carey wrote about Kathryn Janeway, Michael Jan Friedman got to record Jean-Luc Picard’s story, Jerry Oltion told Christopher Pike’s, and Peter David told Mackenzie Calhoun’s tale.
John kept everyone together in details and timeline, even managing to have the different books linked by last and first chapters, with one captain leaving the bar while another came in. John even had the artist put in the faces of the authors in the crowd scene behind the captains in the cover paintings and on the big poster. Only not always on our own books. (Hint: Kris and I are right behind Captain Janeway.)
As a hard-core
Star Trek
fan, this was all grand fun for me, not only the creation of the bar, but writing the novel. Since then, I have been editing
Strange New Worlds
, the annual-contest anthology that lets the fans into the professional writing side of
Star Trek
. Over the years, my biggest regret has been that the rules of
Strange New Worlds
don’t allow Captain’s Table stories. I’ve really wanted to read more about the bar that floated out there, giving the captains of ships a needed place to relax.
Now Keith R.A. DeCandido has solved that problem with this wonderful book, getting some of the best
Star Trek
writers to drop in to the Captain’s Table and listen to more stories from many varied captains. I feel like I have come home.
So sit back and enjoy great stories in one of the most interesting and strange places in all of time and space. And when you leave, don’t forget to tip the bartender.
Cap was cleaning glasses as the pair entered the bar—both human, both Starfleet. The shorter, bald one, Jean-Luc Picard, had graced the Captain’s Table on several occasions, becoming more gregarious with each visit. The taller, bearded human with him, William T. Riker, was new. Cap smiled, enjoying the ritual of the captain bringing the newly promoted beloved former first officer here for his first drink.
And, of course, for his first story.
Off in a corner, another human Starfleet captain, this a blond-haired woman who was drinking a succession of Orion whiskeys, sat dolefully, ignoring those who entered, even though they were known to her. Cap knew that Elizabeth Shelby’s story was not one for the entire tavern. Another captain was moving to sit with her. She would pay her way soon enough, and the rules only said you had to tell a story, not necessarily tell it to all of the bar’s patrons.
At the bar itself was another doleful captain, a Klingon named Klag, who was attempting to drain Cap’s
warnog
supply. The new arrivals were known to him as well, and nods were exchanged among them.
As Picard and Riker approached the bar, Cap walked over to where they stood, already knowing what they would order….