Chapter 1
Leslie stood at the entrance of her new clinic, watching the first refugees limp through the bay doors. Three days of preparation had led to this moment. She had treatment beds, research equipment, and a plan to stop the black blood disease from spreading across the frontier.
The Starfleet Red Cross Medical Center and Refugee Camp stretched out before her, a massive open-air facility that combined the best of military technology with basic humanitarian care. Solar panels powered diagnostic scanners. Water purifiers hummed next to rows of treatment cots. Leslie had designed every section herself—one wing for infectious cases, another for surgery, and a sealed lab where she could study the black blood samples safely. This wasn't just a hospital. It was her chance to finally perfect cures for the strange diseases that killed colonists on the frontier worlds.
A young girl stumbled through the entrance, dark veins spreading up her arms. Leslie grabbed her medical kit and moved forward. The girl's mother followed close behind, eyes hollow with fear. Leslie guided them to the isolation wing, already running through treatment protocols in her mind. Every patient taught her something new about the disease. Every test brought her closer to a cure. She pressed a scanner against the girl's wrist and watched the readings climb. This was exactly where she needed to be.
The blood work showed something unexpected. The infection didn't match any pattern Leslie had seen before. She pulled up her research files and compared the readings. The disease was changing. Three patients showed one strain, but this girl carried something different. Leslie needed fresh samples from the source. She walked to the communications panel and sent orders to her field team. By morning, the Starfleet High Security Medical Specimen Collection Facility would be operational. The high-tech building would collect specimens from infected wildlife in the area. If animals carried this disease, she needed to know how it spread and why it kept changing. The cure wouldn't come from treating symptoms. She had to understand where the black blood started.
Leslie looked back at the girl, now resting on a treatment bed with medication flowing through an IV line. The facility hummed with activity around them. Refugees filled the cots. Medical staff moved between patients. Outside, construction teams finished the specimen collection building. Leslie pulled off her gloves and made notes on her tablet. This frontier clinic was more than a dream now. It was real, and the work had just begun.
The specimen facility sent its first report two days later. Wildlife in the northern zones carried the infection at higher rates than expected. Leslie studied the data on her screen. She needed samples from areas her ground teams couldn't reach safely. The infection spread faster than anyone could walk. She authorized the deployment of the Planeteer Alpha Cruiser, a mobile medical unit built for hover flight and armed for protection. The sleek Starfleet vehicle could reach remote settlements in hours instead of days. Its medical bay would let her treat patients on site and collect samples from infected zones. Leslie uploaded treatment protocols to the cruiser's computer and assigned a pilot. By dawn, the unit would be airborne.
The mobile unit changed everything. Within a week, Leslie had samples from six different regions. Each one showed a different variation of the disease. She worked late in the sealed lab, comparing genetic sequences and testing treatments. The black blood wasn't one disease—it was a family of them, all connected but constantly shifting. Her fingers moved across the keyboard, building models and running simulations. The cure would need to adapt just like the disease did. She mixed compounds in sterile vials, adjusted formulas, and started new trials. Outside her lab window, the refugee camp spread across the compound. Hundreds of people waited for her to succeed.
Leslie sealed the latest batch of experimental treatment and labeled it carefully. The girl from the first day was showing improvement. Two other patients had responded well to modified versions of the formula. It wasn't a perfect cure yet, but it was progress. She looked around her lab, then out at the medical center beyond. The specimen facility hummed with automated collectors. The mobile cruiser sat ready on its landing pad. Her frontier clinic had everything she needed to continue the work. Leslie pulled on a fresh pair of gloves and headed back to the treatment ward. Every patient she saved taught her more. Every day brought her closer to the cure she'd spent years trying to perfect.
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