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That evening, Kirk and [[Edith Keeler|Keeler]] share dinner but Kirk's sombre mood is unable to be ignored. Though Edith cannot grasp the full picture, she can tell Kirk is going away and it has to do with the "Chinese fellow". As Edith professes to losing faith that things will ever get better, Kirk reassures her that things will get better, that her philosophy will eventually win the argument and that..he loves her.
 
That evening, Kirk and [[Edith Keeler|Keeler]] share dinner but Kirk's sombre mood is unable to be ignored. Though Edith cannot grasp the full picture, she can tell Kirk is going away and it has to do with the "Chinese fellow". As Edith professes to losing faith that things will ever get better, Kirk reassures her that things will get better, that her philosophy will eventually win the argument and that..he loves her.
   
Spock then arrives and silently departs with Kirk. Leading him to the Verdun veteran, Kirk offers the man further financial compensation before the two officers stalk into the alley. As they search, a trashcan falls on Spock, the noise alerting Beckwith who targets Kirk with the phaser. Seeing this, the veteran lunges at Kirk, knocking him clear of the beam but winding up disintegrated as a result. Spock uses everyone's collective shock to throw the trashcan at Beckwith, scaring him off for now. As Kirk picks himself up, the two ponder what effects the cripple's death may have before Spock wonders why a man would perform such an act for someone he barely knew. A downtrodden Kirk knows. Because they were nice to him.
+
[[Spock]] then arrives and silently departs with Kirk. Leading him to the Verdun veteran, Kirk offers the man further financial compensation before the two officers stalk into the alley. As they search, a trashcan falls on Spock, the noise alerting Beckwith who targets Kirk with the [[phaser]]. Seeing this, the veteran lunges at Kirk, knocking him clear of the beam but winding up disintegrated as a result. Spock uses everyone's collective shock to throw the trashcan at Beckwith, scaring him off for now. As Kirk picks himself up, the two ponder what effects the cripple's death may have before Spock wonders why a man would perform such an act for someone he barely knew. A downtrodden Kirk knows. Because they were nice to him.
   
 
As the two set a sad course home, they pass by another of Edith's sermons. And even Spock has to admit, she is a remarkable women with ideas far ahead of her time. Spying Kirk across the street, Edith cross to him, unaware of an approaching truck. Seeing the imminent disaster, Beckwith lunges at her only to be tackled away by Spock. With only a second to look at the vehicle, Edith Keeler unceremoniously dies.
 
As the two set a sad course home, they pass by another of Edith's sermons. And even Spock has to admit, she is a remarkable women with ideas far ahead of her time. Spying Kirk across the street, Edith cross to him, unaware of an approaching truck. Seeing the imminent disaster, Beckwith lunges at her only to be tackled away by Spock. With only a second to look at the vehicle, Edith Keeler unceremoniously dies.
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As he mourns, Kirk is whisked across time and space back to [[Gateway (planet)|Gateway]] while everything reverts to what it was.
 
As he mourns, Kirk is whisked across time and space back to [[Gateway (planet)|Gateway]] while everything reverts to what it was.
   
With Kirk too sad to speak, Spock confers with the Guardians who confirm that all is as it was, despite the cripple's death. He counted...just not enough. With that, Beckwith wrestles himself free of Spock's grasp and jumps back into the vortex, the portal sealing itself. Though Spock believes it was all for nothing, the Guardians inform him that the vortex cannot be set for the same space/time coordinates twice. But Beckwith has not escaped. He is now forever trapped in the heart of an exploding star, doomed to remain trapped in a single second. Like the Möbius, he has no beginning or end. He wanted forever and he got it.
+
With Kirk too sad to speak, Spock confers with the [[Guardian of Forever|Guardians]] who confirm that all is as it was, despite the cripple's death. He counted...just not enough. With that, Beckwith wrestles himself free of Spock's grasp and jumps back into the vortex, the portal sealing itself. Though Spock believes it was all for nothing, the Guardians inform him that the vortex cannot be set for the same space/time coordinates twice. But Beckwith has not escaped. He is now forever trapped in the heart of an exploding star, doomed to remain trapped in a single second. Like the Möbius strip, he has no beginning or end. He wanted forever and he got it.
   
Back aboard the {{uSS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}}, Spock manages to break though Kirk's melancholic shell by calling him "Jim". After a philosophical discussion, Spock asks if Kirk can explain why Beckwith, a man so blatantly corrupt and self-serving, felt the urge to save Keeler's life even if it might have potentially cost him his own. Well Kirk can't explain it but he knows the pattern of behaviour. So often has the [[human]] race looked at itself and despaired over its infinite capacity for cruelty, welcoming [[extinction]] so someone better could have a go at it. But then, those who seem beyond help demonstrate an infinite capacity for good by doing something so wonderfully noble and selfless. And if that's the case, then perhaps humanity can wither a bit more suffering if it means [[utopia]]. But even that does little to soothe the blow of the cripple's death. A veteran of [[World War I]] and he was "negligible". But Keeler was not. The woman who had more love to give than perhaps anyone in the universe. But who lived at the wrong time for love.
+
Back aboard the {{uSS|Enterprise|NCC-1701}}, Spock manages to break though Kirk's melancholic shell by calling him "Jim". After a brief philosophical discussion, Spock asks if Kirk can explain why Beckwith, a man so blatantly corrupt and self-serving, felt the urge to save Keeler's life even if it might have potentially cost him his own. Well Kirk can't explain it but he knows the pattern of behaviour. So often has the [[human]] race looked at itself and despaired over its infinite capacity for cruelty, welcoming [[extinction]] so someone better could have a go at it. But then, those who seem beyond help demonstrate an infinite capacity for good by doing something so wonderfully noble and selfless. And if that's the case, then perhaps humanity can wither a bit more suffering if it means [[utopia]]. But even that does little to soothe the blow of the cripple's death. A veteran of [[World War I]] and he was "negligible". But Keeler was not. The woman who had more love to give than perhaps anyone in the universe. But who lived at the wrong time for love.
   
 
With that, Spock takes his leave. With a sad gaze, Kirk watches the stars streak by at warp speed. Now powerfully humbled regarding his place in the universe. That he is ultimately one "negligible" man, in one tiny room, in an insignificant starship, streaking through the ever expanding void.
 
With that, Spock takes his leave. With a sad gaze, Kirk watches the stars streak by at warp speed. Now powerfully humbled regarding his place in the universe. That he is ultimately one "negligible" man, in one tiny room, in an insignificant starship, streaking through the ever expanding void.

Revision as of 11:52, 8 August 2018

Summary

Seeking information on Beckwith, Kirk seeks out a crippled veteran of the Battle of Verdun and buys his services as a lookout for $2, even paying him all the money upfront.

That evening, Kirk and Keeler share dinner but Kirk's sombre mood is unable to be ignored. Though Edith cannot grasp the full picture, she can tell Kirk is going away and it has to do with the "Chinese fellow". As Edith professes to losing faith that things will ever get better, Kirk reassures her that things will get better, that her philosophy will eventually win the argument and that..he loves her.

Spock then arrives and silently departs with Kirk. Leading him to the Verdun veteran, Kirk offers the man further financial compensation before the two officers stalk into the alley. As they search, a trashcan falls on Spock, the noise alerting Beckwith who targets Kirk with the phaser. Seeing this, the veteran lunges at Kirk, knocking him clear of the beam but winding up disintegrated as a result. Spock uses everyone's collective shock to throw the trashcan at Beckwith, scaring him off for now. As Kirk picks himself up, the two ponder what effects the cripple's death may have before Spock wonders why a man would perform such an act for someone he barely knew. A downtrodden Kirk knows. Because they were nice to him.

As the two set a sad course home, they pass by another of Edith's sermons. And even Spock has to admit, she is a remarkable women with ideas far ahead of her time. Spying Kirk across the street, Edith cross to him, unaware of an approaching truck. Seeing the imminent disaster, Beckwith lunges at her only to be tackled away by Spock. With only a second to look at the vehicle, Edith Keeler unceremoniously dies.

As he mourns, Kirk is whisked across time and space back to Gateway while everything reverts to what it was.

With Kirk too sad to speak, Spock confers with the Guardians who confirm that all is as it was, despite the cripple's death. He counted...just not enough. With that, Beckwith wrestles himself free of Spock's grasp and jumps back into the vortex, the portal sealing itself. Though Spock believes it was all for nothing, the Guardians inform him that the vortex cannot be set for the same space/time coordinates twice. But Beckwith has not escaped. He is now forever trapped in the heart of an exploding star, doomed to remain trapped in a single second. Like the Möbius strip, he has no beginning or end. He wanted forever and he got it.

Back aboard the USS Enterprise, Spock manages to break though Kirk's melancholic shell by calling him "Jim". After a brief philosophical discussion, Spock asks if Kirk can explain why Beckwith, a man so blatantly corrupt and self-serving, felt the urge to save Keeler's life even if it might have potentially cost him his own. Well Kirk can't explain it but he knows the pattern of behaviour. So often has the human race looked at itself and despaired over its infinite capacity for cruelty, welcoming extinction so someone better could have a go at it. But then, those who seem beyond help demonstrate an infinite capacity for good by doing something so wonderfully noble and selfless. And if that's the case, then perhaps humanity can wither a bit more suffering if it means utopia. But even that does little to soothe the blow of the cripple's death. A veteran of World War I and he was "negligible". But Keeler was not. The woman who had more love to give than perhaps anyone in the universe. But who lived at the wrong time for love.

With that, Spock takes his leave. With a sad gaze, Kirk watches the stars streak by at warp speed. Now powerfully humbled regarding his place in the universe. That he is ultimately one "negligible" man, in one tiny room, in an insignificant starship, streaking through the ever expanding void.

Alone.

References

Characters

James T. KirkEdith KeelerSpockBeckwithGuardians of Forever

Starships and vehicles

USS Enterprise

Locations

New York CityGateway (planet)

Races and cultures

HumanVulcan

States and organizations

StarfleetUnited Federation of Planets

Technology and weapons

Other references

Appendices

Connections

published order
Previous comic:
Harlan Ellison's The City on the Edge of Forever, Issue 4
TOS comics
IDW Publishing
Next comic:
Final Issue
chronological order

External link