Star Trek - DS9 Relaunch 04 - Gateways - 4 of 7 - Demons Of Air And Darkness

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Star Trek - DS9 Relaunch 04 - Gateways - 4 of 7 - Demons Of Air And Darkness Page 18

by Keith R. A. DeCandido


  Turning to Bashir, Vaughn said, "Doctor, I want you to find something that will keep Mr. Fusco se­dated until at least 2530.1 don't want him to wake up until he's back on a planet."

  Understanding, Bashir smiled and nodded. "I'll take care of it, sir."

  "Good. Let's get out of the pod's backwash so the lieutenant can take her up."

  It took a moment for Vaughn to convince the Costa Rocosan police to remand the Fuscos into Starfleet

  custody, but ultimately they didn't want to deal with any more than they already had on their hands. By the time Bashir and Vaughn had gotten the entire Fusco family and the crates of arithrazine onto the Sagan, the evac had resumed under Spillane's watchful eye, the Fusco family pod tucked safely out of the way.

  The Fuscos themselves were abject in their apologies for their patriarch's behavior. Vaughn listened patiently to their complex explanations of his rather simple psy­chosis. Soon enough, they were transported to Lenaris's ship, and Vaughn took the shuttle back home.

  "The arithrazine we recovered can replace the stock Ensign Tenmei brought down from the Defiant," Bashir said.

  Vaughn just nodded as he guided the shuttle into the bay.

  As soon as Vaughn walked onto the Defiant bridge, Nog vacated the command chair and said, "We just received a message from the Gryphon, Commander. The last of the five hundred thousand allowed by the Jarada have been evacuated through the gateway."

  Settling into the chair, Vaughn said, "Were you able to get a clearer message from Colonel Kira?"

  Nog shook his head. "No, sir."

  Vaughn sighed. "Very well. Prepare the tachyon burst."

  "Sir, Colonel Kira—"

  "Colonel Kira," Vaughn interrupted, "specifically said to try the tachyon burst as soon as it was feasible, regardless of whether or not she and Taran'atar had re­turned. Are you questioning her orders, Lieutenant?"

  "No, sir," Nog said reluctantly.

  "Good." Vaughn was grateful that Prynn hadn't yet

  returned from the surface. No doubt she'd have some choice words on the subject of condemning people to their deaths. To the officer who'd replaced her at conn, he said, 'Take up position forty thousand kilo­meters from the mouth of the gateway."

  "Aye, sir," the conn officer said.

  Nog manipulated the controls of his console. "Tachyon burst ready on your orders."

  "Consider the order given, Lieutenant."

  A burst of light shot from the Defiant's deflector array and struck the mouth of the gateway.

  As soon as it did so, the gateway seemed to light up with a rainbow's worth of bright colors. Vaughn had to avert his eyes from the viewscreen.

  Then the gateway went dark.

  "Radiation levels at the gateway's perimeter have reduced to zero percent," Nog said, "and we're no longer reading the Delta Quadrant. Power output of the gateway is zero." He checked another reading. "Power output on the Costa Rocosa gateway is also nil, sir." Turning toward the command chair, Nog smiled. "We did it. The gateways have been shut down."

  16

  THE DELTA QUADRANT

  kira looked down at her tricorder readings. Not good, she thought. The radiation levels were increas­ing dangerously. If she stayed here too much longer, no amount of arithrazine was going to help her.

  She had drained the emergency kit's water supply. The cooling unit in the shelter was at maximum. Kira knew she would have to leave the confines of the shel­ter to get more water from the lake, but just the act of walking would drain her—she had barely been able to get the shelter constructed, as the heat only intensified with the passing of time. Soon it would be midday. Kira wondered how well the cooling unit would hold up.

  She hadn't heard anything from Taran'atar. The Jem'Hadar was far too much a creature of duty—the

  moment he was able, he would contact her to an­nounce his victory. The fact that he hadn't done that yet meant either the fight was still going on—or he had lost.

  Damn you all, she thought at the Hirogen and the owners of the tanker and everyone else in this quad­rant. Didn't the Borg come from this area of space? Damn them, too. Hell, the Iconians also probably came from around here.

  Checking her tricorder again, she saw that the radi­ation would be at fatal levels in two hours. The inten­sity had been rising exponentially, and her arithrazine would be all but useless before those two hours were up. A blister started to form on her hand, and she in­jected another dose of arithrazine, figuring she had nothing to lose.

  Kira then did something that the Vedek Assembly had judged her unworthy to do with other Bajorans: she prayed.

  Or, rather, she tried to.

  On many occasions in her thirty-three years of life, Kira Nerys had been sure she was going to die. From the resistance to the Dominion War, her life had been fraught with danger, and she had long ago made peace with the fact that she was not likely to die of old age in her bed.

  When circumstances permitted, Kira had always prayed on those occasions. She had faith in the Prophets, and in prayer she took comfort hi the idea that her life had some meaning to them, that she had made some contribution to their grand design. And she always believed that if the path they had guided her on had finally come to its end, her death wouldn't

  be a vain one. Those prayers were always heartfelt and came easily to her.

  But this time, the words wouldn't come. She had been a devout follower of the Prophets her whole life. Is this how I'm to have that faith rewarded? Dying on an arid wasteland, alone in a Starfleet shelter tens of thousands of light-years from home, theta radiation chewing up my cells and spitting them out?

  True, her actions might well lead to saving Europa Nova, something she swore she would do no matter what.

  But I don't want to die like this. Not here, not this way—and not Attainted.

  Then her tricorder beeped.

  Worried that it would show her that the levels of ra­diation had increased yet again, she was surprised to discover that it was instead registering a familiar en­ergy signature half a kilometer distant.

  A gateway.

  A gateway here, on the surface of the planet where she'd taken refuge. A gateway that didn't exist a mo­ment ago, suddenly appearing in her hour of need.

  Why? What does it mean?

  Ultimately, it didn't matter. Whether it was dumb luck from the Iconians or deliverance from the Prophets, Kira had a way off this death trap of a planet.

  It took only a minute to compress the shelter into its backpack form, but Kira almost succumbed to heat exhaustion just by performing the act of picking it up and shrugging into it. She walked slowly to the lake and proceeded to refill the kit's water containers. The lake was, of course, warm, but Starfleet built its kits

  well. Within seconds, any water she bottled would be refrigerated to five degrees.

  She then set off in the direction the tricorder had in­dicated, i

  Five minutes later, Kira was ready to collapse. But she soldiered on. The gateway would take her away from here.

  After another five minutes, she did collapse. She only took one moment to compose herself, then gath­ered every muscle in her sun-battered body and hauled herself to her feet.

  Her vision blurry from the sweat that poured into her face, she finally gave up and dropped the shelter from her back, hanging on only to the water.

  Ten minutes later, she collapsed again.

  The Prophets have given you a sign! her mind yelled. They haven't abandoned you! But you have to get to the gateway. So move it!

  Again, she gathered every muscle. Again, she got to her feet.

  She didn't know how long it was before she drained the water supply. Or, for that matter, when the blisters started breaking out all over her skin. She didn't have the wherewithal to check her tricorder to see how bad the radiation was. Every fiber of her being was focused on the overwhelming task of putting one foot in front of the other.

  After what seemed like an eternity, she saw it. />
  It floated in the air over the endless expanse of sand.

  Dimly, in the small part of her mind that was able to focus on something other than moving forward, Kira remembered that the ground-based gateways tended to do one of two things: jump randomly from

  vista to vista every couple of seconds, or, like the one at Costa Rocosa, stay fixed on one location. This one, however, was different: it jumped back and forth be­tween only two destinations.

  The first was ops on Deep Space 9.

  The other was the comforting light that Kira Nerys knew in her heart belonged to the Prophets.

  Each time the vista switched to the light, Kira felt her heart beat faster. This is it. The Prophets are call­ing to me. My road is at an end.

  But when it switched back to DS9, she wavered. You can go back home.

  To what? Pain and hardship? The disdainful stares of most Bajorans? The headaches of running the station? Making life-or-death decisions about everything from attacking Jem'Hadar to Section 31 nonsense to rescue operations? To a life of losing everyone I care about?

  When she was within a meter of the gateway, it lit up with a rainbow's worth of colors. Kira had to avert her eyes from it.

  Then it went away. Kira saw nothing in front of her but the endless sand.

  Her outrage giving her strength that the heat of the planet had drained out of her, she took out her tri­corder and scanned the area in front of her. The gate­way's power reading, according to the tricorder, was nil. The hand that held that tricorder was now covered in cracked skin and red-and-green blisters.

  On many occasions in her thirty-three years of life, Kira Nerys had been sure she was going to die.

  This time, it seemed, she was right.

  17

  FARIUS PRIME

  "APPROACHING THE HOLE."

  Smirking at Ychell's choice of words, Ro said, "It's called a gateway, Sergeant."

  Ychell shrugged. "Whatever. So far, no sign of pur­suit, but that could change at any moment."

  Ro nodded, then looked back at her two passengers. Quark was fidgeting nervously, no doubt still worried about Malic. Ro supposed she shouldn't have said any­thing about the possibility of copies—from all accounts, Malic was the type to keep information to himself as much as possible.

  Treir sat passively, looking surprisingly unconcerned.

  Ychell obviously noticed Ro staring, because she asked, "What're you going to do with that one?"

  Shrugging, Ro said, "Not sure. It's funny, she didn't even flinch when I put the gun to her neck. I mean, she couldn't have known I was bluffing."

  "She's been a slave all her life, Lieutenant. She may not know how to be anything else."

  Ro sighed. "Maybe. For now, let's just go through that gateway and—"

  Suddenly, the gateway lit up with a rainbow's worth of colors. Ro winced.

  Then it went dark.

  "I'm not reading any power signature from the gateway," Ro said, looking down at her instruments.

  Ychell looked at hers. "I'm not picking up the Claras system anymore, either."

  "Dammit."

  "It gets better," Ychell said. "The Orions have found us. Two of their fighter ships are on an intercept course."

  18

  THE DELTA QUADRANT

  the alpha smiled for the first time in a long time. At last, he thought, worthy prey.

  As the alpha worked his way through the corridors of the Malon tanker in search of the Jem'Hadar, he chastised himself for his own carelessness. He had grown overconfident.

  For far too long, he had been on his own. He had had no real choice—everyone with whom he'd crewed had been too weak, too slow. They hadn't been worthy of his hunting skills and made the hunts so much poorer.

  So he had chosen to fly alone. And he had been much more successful.

  There was no sign of the Jem'Hadar on this deck.

  He climbed down the access shaft to the next one, holstering his rifle on his left shoulder.

  After a time, the thrill of the hunt had started to wane. It became too easy. He'd hunted for so long that no prey presented a true challenge. He had grown soft and careless. So careless that he had allowed the cargo of those Malon fools to destroy his ship.

  Everything he had was in that ship: his trophies, his food, his triumphs, his war paint, most of his weapons—his entire life. All he had left was his rifle, his armor, and himself.

  Perhaps this is all I truly need. Perhaps this will allow me to restore my own glory, by reducing the hunt back to its essence.

  He saw a shadow move behind one of the bulkheads. Prey.

  The alpha moved slowly toward the shadow. As he approached, the shadow took on the form of one of the Malon fools.

  / thought I had destroyed all of them, the alpha thought angrily.

  "Please, gods, don't kill me, please don't kill me!" the Malon cried as he stepped into the open. He had blisters on his skin.

  This prey is weak to be susceptible to so minor a thing as theta radiation, the alpha thought with dis­gust. It isn't even worthy of being hunted. This one was as bad as the tanker captain—she had pleaded to the alpha about a mate and offspring, as if the family structure of prey was of any relevance. He had partic­ularly enjoyed slicing her open.

  However, the alpha did not have time to kill this one with his blade as he did the others. With the press

  of a button on its rifle, he blasted the Malon into atoms. The Malon screamed for as long as he could before he discorporated.

  The alpha forgot about the Malon and turned his mind back to thoughts of the Jem'Hadar.

  How long has it been since we hunted one of these magnificent creatures? Engineered by their primitive gods to be the perfect soldiers. They are among the worthiest prey the Hirogen have ever sought.

  They were from a part of the galaxy where few Hi­rogen had traversed. Their presence here was a sur­prise, since the portal that had opened in this star system did not open to the region where the Jem'Hadar came from. Either their empire had ex­panded, or these portals were more widespread than the alpha had thought.

  When the alpha came to the room with the shield generator, he noticed that a component was missing. The prey has been in this room.

  The prey had also been in the next room over. The transporter logs showed that someone had transported one person and one piece of equipment to the prey's vessel. The Malon computer did not recognize the life signs, but the alpha knew that it was not the Jem'Hadar. No doubt the other, less significant prey had taken the shield modulator.

  The alpha cared little for the petty concerns of prey. He no more cared about what it was doing with the shield modulator than what the Malon prey did with their meaningless cargo. All that mattered was the hunt.

  The prey has been here. But the trail is cold now.

  The alpha moved on to the engineering deck. Here,

  he found plenty of the corpses he had left behind on his last trip through this ship.

  But of the Jem'Hadar there was still no sign.

  Soon, the alpha had checked every cranny of the Malon tanker. How has the creature managed to evade me? Not only is there no sign of him, there is no sign he has been anywhere, save the bridge and the transporter.

  It has been too long since we hunted these crea­tures. There is obviously missing intelligence about them that I need for the hunt.

  If he still had his ship, he could check records of previous hunts. But that was lost to him. All he had was his instincts.

  That should be all I need.

  He returned to the bridge. Some of the equipment on this ship still worked. The alpha would make use of it to find his prey and destroy it.

  Taran'atar had followed the Hirogen throughout the ship, watching as the alien hunter tried in vain to track the Jem'Hadar. He had watched as the Hirogen checked every portion of the tanker, pausing only to kill one native who had somehow escaped the preda­tor's prior rampage.

  Remaining shrouded had proven to
be the right course of action. The Hirogen had an extraordinary tracking ability—without any apparent aid from me­chanical devices—but could not detect Taran'atar as long as he remained shrouded.

  What had started as a simple stalking strategy soon became a handy delaying tactic. After all, the impor­tant thing was to keep the Hirogen occupied while Kira installed the shield enhancer onto the Euphrates

  and used it to block the gateway. The only flaw in the plan was that Taran'atar could not contact Kira to keep her apprised of his progress—the Hirogen could easily have had some way of detecting transmissions.

  Still, this was the way that best served Kira. Ulti­mately, that was what mattered.

  His assignment to the Alpha Quadrant had been a difficult thing for Taran'atar to accept, particularly being assigned to the command of Colonel Kira. After all, she had fought hard against the Dominion, and was even instrumental in its defeat. Kira was also like no Vorta Taran'atar had ever served under. Most Vorta were weak fools—self-serving at best, incompetent at worst. Taran'atar had obeyed them only because the Vorta served as the voice of the Founders. But Kira was no one's functionary. She did not just command, she led. She did not react, she acted. She did not di­rect battles, she fought them.

  Taran'atar had fought alongside thousands of Jem'Hadar, and grown to respect many of them, for they had been true soldiers of the Dominion. Kira Nerys was the first alien he had ever met that he could truly call a soldier.

  The Hirogen had gone through the entire ship. Taran'atar could not be completely sure of what the alien's facial expressions signified, but he was fairly sure that the creature was growing frustrated. He headed back up from the engineering section toward the bridge.

  This may require a change in strategy. It was possi­ble that the Hirogen was planning to use the ship's equipment to supplement his own tracking skills. Taran'atar's understanding about this ship's level of technology was still incomplete, but considering that

  it had transporters that could penetrate Starfleet shields, sophisticated tactical equipment was not un­likely.

  Of course, he thought, they also have such primitive warp engines that they still produce antimatter waste. This was why the Dominion's way was so much bet­ter: everyone in the Dominion benefited from the technological advances of all its component parts. Such inefficient disparities as the owners of this tanker had did not exist.

 

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