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The Enterprise and her crew are snared in a wizard's magic!"Sceptre of the Sun" was a comic, the 10th issue of the Gold Key Comics TOS series. Published in May 1971, the story was the second Star Trek story written by Len Wein and the eighth drawn by Alberto Giolitti.

Description[]

Sorcery — black magic — mystic forces from a time long dead — what will happen when Captain James T. Kirk and the crew of the ultra-scientific starship, Enterprise, come to grips with these forces ... while the fate of the Enterprise — and an entire planet hang in the balance?

Summary[]

Part I[]

In a rocky canyon, Kirk, Spock, McCoy and Scotty are set upon by rock giants with huge clubs, on whom phasers have no effect...

Captain's log, star date 12:48.6
We are proceeding through sector Vega 6 toward a rendezvous with Space Ambassador Mason at Star-Base 10 — nothing unusual to report…

Sulu picks up a "nebulous mass" on the viewscreen. The object transforms itself into a gigantic genie, which grasps the Enterprise by its starboard nacelle. Spock's sensors indicate that the genie is merely an illusion. At that moment, however, clouds of smoke appear on the bridge, enveloping Kirk, Spock, McCoy and Scotty, who disappear.

The four men find themselves in the castle of a robed figure named Chang, who claims to have brought them there by sorcery. When Scotty charges Chang, the sorcerer immobilizes him with a wave of his hand. Kirk demands that Chang release Scotty and the others, but Chang says he has much to demand of Kirk. Chang tells the Enterprise officers of the Sceptre of the Sun, a fabled device of great mystic power lying at the foot of a mountain many miles away. Chang claims to be losing a war with a sorcerer named Xandu, who has suspended a gigantic flaming sword over Chang's city. If Kirk and the others do not bring the Sceptre to Chang, the genie will destroy the Enterprise. Chang provides them with a guide, a woman named Marla.

As the five travelers walk through a canyon, Spock senses that the area is too quiet. Suddenly, the canyon walls reform themselves into two stone giants wielding enormous clubs. The five humanoids climb a cliff and take shelter in a crevice, but discover that phasers have no effect on the giants. Kirk and Spock run back out into the open and trick the giants into crashing into each other, destroying them. As night falls the travelers make camp. Marla tells Kirk that Chang came from the northern mountains; her people were peaceful before he used his sorcery to make himself king. The camp is attacked by a band of warriors. A red-bearded man, his arm around Kirk's neck, waves a sword above his head and tells them to stop, or the captain dies...

Part II[]

Captain's log, star date 12:48.9
Officers Spock, Scott, McCoy and I have been mysteriously transported to a planet still in its dark ages to do the bidding of the black wizard called Chang! While seeking the secret sanctuary of the mystical Sceptre of the Sun, we have been attacked and overpowered by a band of barbarians who have threatened us with surrender or death…

Kirk surrenders, and the red-bearded warrior, Brand, apologizes for the violence. Brand, his followers and Chang come from Earth in the year 1997. They belonged to a peace movement during the Eugenics War. Accepting their defeat, they left Earth in a spaceship and traveled in suspended animation until their ship's sensors discovered this planet. The humans dismantled their rocket and mingled with the planet's primitive people, but Chang traveled to the mountains in search of adventure. Months later, Chang returned in royal robes, carried by slaves on a sedan chair, and used his newfound mystic powers to force Brand and the others to obey him. One of Chang's guards is a spy for Brand's group and told them of Kirk's quest for the Sceptre. Brand believes his people can use the Sceptre to overthrow Chang. Outnumbered, Kirk has no choice but to take Brand and his followers along.

Miles later, the travelers find the Sceptre of the Sun, standing upright in a niche between statues. When Kirk takes the Sceptre, a giant robot appears to defend it. The Sceptre has no effect on the robot, confirming Spock's concerns. The Vulcan asks the others to distract the robot for him while he climbs a hill and jumps onto the robot's back. He rips out a set of wires and jumps off as the robot electrocutes itself. Kirk is still puzzled that the Sceptre did not work.

As they return to Chang's castle through a lightning storm, Scotty points out a beam of light rising from the building; Kirk is afraid he knows what it is. They defeat the guards and enter the castle, where Chang is standing in front of a screen showing the Enterprise trapped in the beam of light, a tractor beam dragging it down to the planet, where Chang can take control of it. Kirk warns Chang that the ship is not designed to land on a planet and will burn up in the atmosphere. Chang does not believe him, and makes a giant baboon-like creature appear to attack Spock… who walks through the creature. He reveals that Chang is a fraud: everything they have seen — the war with "Xandu," the flaming sword, the stone giants, the robot – were illusions. Chang's real plan was to keep the command officers off the Enterprise long enough to take it over with his powers of illusion.

Chang orders his guards to kill Kirk and the others, then tries to escape. Kirk pursues him onto the castle ramparts, where Chang raises his sword above his head to strike Kirk down; a lightning bolt strikes the sword and kills Chang. Spock and Scotty are unable to destroy Chang's tractor beam device. Kirk evacuates the castle, contacts Sulu and orders him to use the ship's phaser banks to destroy the castle, saving the Enterprise. Back on the bridge, Spock points out that, had Chang been more patient, he could have built his own spaceship and conquered the galaxy. Kirk expresses the hope that Chang's secrets have truly died with him.

References[]

Characters[]

BrandChangJames T. KirkMarlaLeonard McCoyMontgomery ScottSpockHikaru SuluRock giantsRobot guardian
Referenced only
MasonTillieXandu

Starships and vehicles[]

USS Enterprise (Constitution-class heavy cruiser) • unnamed sleeper ship (077)

Locations[]

sector Vega 6unnamed planetEarth
Referenced only
Star-Base 10

Races and cultures[]

HumanVulcan

Science and classification[]

communicatorcomputermechanoidphaserphaser bankrobotrocketsensorspaceshipstarshipsuspended animationtractor beamviewscreen

Ranks and titles[]

captainofficerscience officerSpace Ambassador

Other references[]

1997asteroidatmospherecastleclubelectricityempireEugenics WargalaxygenieGoliathillusionlightningmagicmountainplanetSceptre of the SunsciencesorcerystarStar Dateswordtoadwarriorwizard

Appendices[]

Background[]

  • This story was originally intended to feature Khan Noonien Singh. Author Len Wein said that he was not allowed to use non-regular characters at Gold Key Comics, so he altered the story and redeveloped its villain into the new character of Chang. (The Monster Times #2, "Writing Star Trek For Fun and Profit", by Len Wein)
  • Due to artists unfamiliar with the Star Trek series, this issue features Dr. McCoy wearing a command division green-gold Starfleet uniform, rather than his proper sciences division blue uniform. Scotty is also shown, with reddish-brown hair, wearing such a command uniform, although in his case the uniform is explainable – as second officer, he can properly wear command colors as an alternative to his regular operations division uniforms. Scotty makes switches between command and operations uniforms in his last few movie appearances.
  • This story has been released 11 times in English and has been translated 16 times into other languages: Portuguese (3x), Italian (3x), Dutch (2x), French (2x), German (2x), Finnish, Serbian, Spanish and Turkish.
  • While George Wilson's painted cover depicted a genie grabbing the Enterprise, several publishers of foreign translations based their cover artwork on the splash page image of the stone giants.
  • The previous nine Gold Key Star Trek stories were 26 pages long. This was the first of 24 stories to be produced 25 pages long.

Images[]

Connections[]

Gold Key Comics stories and publications
Issues "The Planet of No Return" • "The Devil's Isle of Space" • "Invasion of the City Builders" • "The Peril of Planet Quick Change" • "The Ghost Planet" • "When Planets Collide" • "The Voodoo Planet" • "The Youth Trap" • "The Legacy of Lazarus" • "Sceptre of the Sun" • "The Brain Shockers" • "The Flight of the Buccaneer" • "Dark Traveler" • "The Enterprise Mutiny" • "Museum at the End of Time" • "Day of the Inquisitors" • "The Cosmic Cavemen" • "The Hijacked Planet" • "The Haunted Asteroid" • "A World Gone Mad" • "The Mummies of Heitius VII" • "Siege in Superspace" • "Child's Play" • "The Trial of Captain Kirk" • "Dwarf Planet" • "The Perfect Dream" • "Ice Journey" • "The Mimicking Menace" • "Death of a Star" • "The Final Truth" • "The Animal People" • "The Choice" • "The PsychoCrystals" • "A Bomb in Time" • "One of Our Captains Is Missing!" • "Prophet of Peace" • "Furlough to Fury" • "The Evictors" • "World Against Time" • "The World Beneath the Waves" • "Prince Traitor" • "Mr. Oracle" • "This Tree Bears Bitter Fruit" • "Murder on the Enterprise" • "A Warp in Space" • "Planet of No Life" • "Destination... Annihilation!" • "And a Child Shall Lead Them" • "What Fools These Mortals Be.." • "Sport of Knaves" • "A World Against Itself" • "No Time Like the Past" • "Spore of the Devil" • "The Brain-Damaged Planet" • "To Err Is Vulcan" • "The Empire Man!" • "Operation Con Game"
Additional stories "James T. Kirk: Psycho-File" • "A Page From Scotty's Diary" • "Spock: Psycho-File" • "From Sputnik to Warp Drive"
Games "Voyage of Discovery" • "The Tunnel of Death" • "... Wild Goose Chase!" • "A Hint of Life" • "Space Chase" • "Escape from the Clinging Dags"
Collections Star Trek Annuals (1969197019721973197419751976197719781979198019831986) • The Enterprise Logs (Volumes 1234) • The Key Collection (Volumes 12345) • Gold Key Archives (Volumes 12345) • Gold Key 100-Page Spectacular
Related media "The Exile" • "The Red Hour" • "Colouring Book" • "Eye of the Beholder" • "The Menace of the Mechanitrons" • "Trial by Fire!"

Timeline[]

Published Order
Previous comic:
#9: The Legacy of Lazarus
TOS comics (Gold Key) Next comic:
#11: The Brain Shockers
Previous story:
The Legacy of Lazarus
Stories by:
Len Wein
Next story:
The Brain Shockers
Chronological Order
Previous adventure:
The Brain Shockers
Memory Beta Chronology Next adventure:
Strangers from the Sky
Book 2: Chapters 1-2, and 11
Previous comic:
The Brain Shockers
Voyages of the USS Enterprise (NCC-1701), Year One Next comic:
Strangers from the Sky
Book 2: Chapters 1-2, and 11
Production history[]
May 1971
First published by Gold Key Comics
1971
Printed in oversize hardcover in Star Trek Television Picture Story Book (PBS Limited)
1975
Printed b/w in Australia in Star Trek #25096 (Rosnock Publications)
1975
Printed b/w in Hong Kong and the Philippines in Star Trek #25096 (South Pacific Publications)
1976
Printed in hardcover in Star Trek Annual 1977 (World Distributors Limited)
August 1976
Printed in the omnibus The Enterprise Logs, Volume 2 (Golden Press)
June 1982
Printed b/w in Australia in Star Trek #R1256 (Rosnock Publications)
June 2004
Printed in the omnibus The Key Collection, Volume 2 (Checker Book Publishing Group)
September 2008
Included on The Complete Comic Book Collection DVD (Graphic Imaging Technologies)
August 2014
Remastered in hardcover in the omnibus Gold Key Archives, Volume 2 (IDW)
25 May 2017
Remastered in hardcover in the omnibus Graphic Novel Collection #11 (Eaglemoss)
Translations[]
July 1972
Portuguese: As "O Cetro Solar" in b/w in Jornada Nas Estrelas #8 (1st series) (Ebal)
April 1973
French: As "Le Sceptre du Soleil" in Star Trek #4 (1st series) (Remparts)
April 1973
Italian: As "Lo Scettro del Sole" in Star Trek Albi Spada #10 (Edizioni Fratelli Spada)
1973
French: In the omnibus Star Trek Album #3 (Remparts)
1973
Spanish: In TV Mundial #261 Viaje a las Estrellas (Editorial Novaro)
1974
Dutch: As "De Scepter van de Zon" in b/w in Star Trek #4 (De Vrijbuiter)
1974
Finnish: As "Auringon Valtikka" in Avaruusmatka Star Trek #6 (Apulehti)
1974
German: As "Das Zepter der Sonne" in Zack Comic Box #13: Enterprise (Koralle)
1974
Italian: As "Lo Scettro del Sole" in Raccolta Superspada #5 (Edizioni Fratelli Spada)
June 1976
Portuguese: As "O Cetro Solar" in Jornada Nas Estrelas #4 (2nd Series) (Abril)
13 April 1977
Serbian: In Denis #48
30 May 1978
Portuguese: In b/w in O Caminho das Estrelas #11 (Aguiar)
1978
German: Abridged as "Das Zepter der Sonne" in Raumschiff Enterprise Comic Album #2 (Condor)
1979
Dutch: As "De Zonnescepter" in Ruimteschip Enterprise Strip-Album #2 (De Vrijbuiter)
1981
Turkish: In b/w digest-size in Uzay Yolu #4 (Alfa)
2005
Italian: In the omnibus The Gold Key Collection, Volume 3 (Free Books)

External links[]

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