Of course, Toqel realized. Drawing herself up, she nodded. “I understand, my Praetor.” Duty demanded no other response.
Rather than appearing grateful for her reply, Vrax instead released a small, sad sigh. “Hubris, Toqel, was your undoing. You were warned not to misjudge the Klingons. Make no mistake: while you certainly were not alone in that regard, the Senate is not so eager to stand up and accept responsibility for their failure of imagination.”
I suppose it was foolish to expect anything else from that herd of simpering opportunists, Toqel mused, though she forced her expression and body language to reveal none of her disapproval. She had known from the beginning that her plan carried with it significant risks were it to be exposed to any degree—risks not only to her career but also to political relations with both the Klingons and the Federation.
“What is to happen now, my Praetor?” Ditrius asked, and though Toqel was not certain, she thought she sensed just a hint of anticipation in the vice proconsul’s voice. That was only natural, she supposed, seeing as how her assistant likely would enjoy a promotion if she was removed from her position. There was no quelling the younger officer’s determination, it seemed.
Vrax cleared his throat, suppressing a congested cough before replying, “As we speak, our diplomats are once again engaged with their human counterparts, attempting to mitigate the situation. The Federation is requesting your extradition to stand trial, which they promise will be fair, in keeping with their rather quaint, broad-minded concepts of justice. As disagreeable as I find that notion, there are those in the Senate who see it as necessary for the long-term diplomatic relations between our two peoples. If such an offer is to be tendered, I would rather it be genuine, rather than a ruse designed to elicit temporary trust while we pursue some other agenda.” He paused, his gaze softening a bit as he studied her, his expression taking on an almost paternal quality. “You are like one of my own children, Toqel. Your family has served the Empire for generations, and your father was a trusted adviser to me from a time before you were born. Nevertheless, I must put first the interests of the Romulan people.”
“I have no desire for my fate to be decided by humans,” Toqel replied, her voice firm and steady, “or the Senate, for that matter. Still, I will face whatever punishment you deem appropriate.” Even before being summoned to the Praetor’s office, she had made the decision not to shirk from whatever pronouncement Vrax ordered. While she all but recoiled at the thought of being offered up as a sacrifice to protect the cowardly fools occupying seats in the Senate chamber, her loyalty to the Praetor was and remained absolute. She also was fueled by the example put forth by her beloved Sarith, who had honored her oath and her service to the Romulan people until the very last moment of her life. Toqel vowed she would do no less, if for nothing else than to honor her daughter’s memory.
Vrax nodded. “I know you will.” Looking past her, the Praetor said to Ditrius, “Vice Proconsul, you are hereby promoted to proconsul, and you will immediately assume Toqel’s duties. Your first task will be to return her to security confinement until such time as I have made my final decision.” He returned his attention to her. “It is unfortunate that events have brought us to this point, Toqel. I truly wish it were otherwise.” Releasing a tired sigh, he stepped away from her and headed to the door leading from the office to his private study. Toqel watched him until the door closed behind him, leaving her alone with Ditrius and the security officer. Turning to face Ditrius, she offered him a formal nod.
“Congratulations, Proconsul.”
Ditrius replied, “Thank you.”
As she studied his face, Toqel noted that the younger officer was unable to keep a slight hint of satisfaction from creeping onto his features. “It seems your efforts have finally been rewarded. If you are open to some unsolicited advice, I would caution against letting that ambition allow you to lose focus of the greater responsibilities you now carry. You owe that much to the Praetor, as well as the people of the Empire.”
Drawing himself to his full height, the newly installed proconsul looked upon her with a barely disguised expression of disdain. “Much like your own overconfidence blinded you as you pursued your goals. Did you truly believe the Klingons would allow themselves to be manipulated? They are not simply warmongering animals, contrary to what the Senate and the Tal Shiar would have the public believe. They are an enemy to be feared, they have spies here on Romulus, and their military strength, along with their audacity, will only grow now that they have obtained cloaking technology. Quite an impressive legacy you’ve crafted for yourself, Toqel. Your daughter would be proud.”
Toqel stepped forward, her anger rising. “You pathetic veruul.” She stopped when the security guard moved toward her, his hand reaching for the holstered weapon on his right hip. Ignoring him, she instead leveled her gaze on Ditrius. “If ever you manage to trap a mate long enough to bear your child, then you’ll understand why I want to kill you just now. Pray I never have the opportunity.”
In response to her threat, Ditrius merely shrugged. “I welcome the challenge, but I suspect it will never come.” Looking to the guard, he said, “Centurion, take her into custody.”
Still fuming as she glared at Ditrius, Toqel did not move as the centurion stepped toward her. His left hand retrieved the pair of prisoner restraints at his belt, which he had removed from her wrists at the Praetor’s order upon their arrival. As he moved to stand behind her, a high-pitched whine echoed in the room and the guard’s body stiffened, his face twisting into an expression of shock and pain as he collapsed to the floor. Stepping back, Toqel could not contain her own confusion and disbelief as her eyes moved from the smoking hole in the guard’s back to the disruptor pistol Ditrius held in his hand.
“What have you done?” Toqel asked, still reeling from the sight before her.
Ditrius moved to stand over the fallen guard. “He was a traitor, working for an undercover Klingon agent. He had received orders to kill you, thereby preventing any chance of your revealing to Starfleet our alliance to the Klingons, should the Praetor opt to surrender you to the Federation.”
Shaking her head, Toqel could not believe what she was hearing. “How could you know this?”
“Actually, I don’t,” Ditrius replied. “I simply require a cover story so that I can carry out my orders.”
Fury and betrayal boiled within Toqel as she realized just how much her own arrogance and single-minded drive had prevented her from seeing Ditrius for the traitor he was. No, not a traitor; a Klingon spy, now serving at the Praetor’s side.
She had no time to reflect on the severity of her failure, for the last thing Toqel saw was the muzzle of the disruptor pistol Ditrius pointed at her face.
Greed
Reservoir Ferengi
David A. McIntee
Historian’s Note
This story takes place in 2377 (ACE) during the admistration of the Grand Nagus Rom (“Dogs of War” DS9).
For the late Mursya,
one of the Cat Collective
who inspired my previous story, “On the Spot”
Today
War between the planets of the Urwyzden system didn’t show in the vast field of empty black between them. The vacuum wasn’t deformed by warfare; there were no craters and no trenches. There was only the occasional quick flare of hard radiation, or the brief flash of oxygen-rich atmosphere igniting and being snuffed out as a starship split open and died.
Missiles were too small to be visible to the naked eye as they clawed their way up from the surfaces of Urwyzden Alpha and Beta, looping in long arcs from one planet to the other. Lunar and asteroid facilities crumbled and erupted into dust that dispersed gently across the heavens.
The turquoise-and-white face of Urwyzden Alpha was blotched and streaked, as mushrooming clouds wept fallout across half the southern hemisphere. Small shuttles and winged craft tore through those filthy tears, stabbing out phaser and disruptor beams and depleted-uranium slugs at
each other. They dodged and darted, jinking in and out of sullen storms, and cutting contrail scars into the blue where the clouds hadn’t reached yet.
The losing aerial duelists tumbled haphazardly from the skies. Some plummeted like meteorites into the forests and the fields, gouging craters into the earth. Other pilots tried to avoid the remaining inhabited residential areas of burnt-out towns. Occasionally one would burst through the layers of smoke and rip into buildings, spraying startling eruptions of dust and concrete.
People on the ground, be they soldiers, or civilians huddling in their shelters, flinched at any sound from the sky. Some flinched because they expected death to fall, and others because they feared that no more refugee launches would follow, and they and their families would be trapped in this hell for the duration of the war.
In the quiet hours, when the fighting had moved on, the refugees emerged, choking on the dust and smoke as they clambered through the rubble-strewn avenues. The capital, at least, still had a functional spaceport, and every approach to it was thronged with people trying to get out on one of the vessels that were leaving soon.
There weren’t enough mass-scale transporters to beam people to the few neutral or private ships in orbit, so there was a ragged schedule of shuttles and smaller vessels ferrying large groups back and forth. Most of the Urwyzden who were backed up all around the entrances were poor, since the rich and powerful had been able to arrange to be beamed up in ones or twos. Other species, who were still waiting for transport, towered over the wrinkled and gnarly natives, wishing they had never come to this planet. The ships picking people up belonged either to worlds with citizens living in or visiting the system, or to the United Federation of Planets, which was doing its best to provide evacuation for those with no other recourse, as well as for its own citizens.
Even at the fringes of the capital’s spaceport, the sounds of phaser and disruptor fire were audible, carrying across the flat expanses in between the cracks and rumbles of photon grenades going off.
Fighting still raged throughout the squat pyramid at the heart of the spaceport. Soldiers scrambled across the ruined VIP departure lounge’s floor, trying to dodge streams of agitated particles fired by the enemy while also shooting at shadows and smudges that could easily be camouflaged enemy soldiers. It was nightmarish, and any soldier involved in the room-by-room clearance on either side would have been glad that their adaptive camouflage armor included faceplates that hid their fear and confusion.
At first it was just like training in a holosuite: acquire targets, get the job done, and watch your mates’ backs. But once people got hit, it became a different matter. Modern warfare was usually conducted at a distance, and since Urwyzden had been left alone during the war with the Dominion, most of the soldiers had never seen a dead body before. The last Alphan soldier to enter had been watching for any attempts to outflank them, and belatedly dashed across the rubble-strewn floor as his confederates gave covering fire. A phaser blast cut him down, and he fell forward into cover behind a shattered wall. His body slammed into one of the troopers who had been covering him and knocked him down.
That soldier had the wind knocked out of him by the impact. He put a hand up to wipe the seared blood from his face before he realized that the blood was on the faceplate of his armor, and not on his skin. The soldier could tell that the straggler was dead, no tricorder needed. All the troops were shaking with every breath they took, but there was nothing from the fallen body. The soldier shuffled as far away from the corpse as he could without breaking cover. He didn’t want a dead body touching him.
Glass walls and plaster partitions exploded into dust. Monitors burst with big enough pops to make them dance on their desks. Soldiers ducked and leapt, slid and ran, all the while releasing hell from their hands.
Suddenly, a stout figure, larger than any Urwyzden native, appeared, running the gauntlet of flying plasma and phased energy. He ran in a crouch, heading for a breach in the wall through which the gentle slope of the pyramid was accessible. His clothes were once fine and multicolored, his frame round and unfit. His large ears, almost as big as an entire Urwyzden head, were torn and bloodied.
He turned and aimed a hand phaser at a doorway just in time for a second figure to charge out. The second was a little taller and fitter, but was clearly a member of the same race, and just as battered. He froze, eyes wide, as he realized his nose was about three inches from the phaser muzzle, and he let out a little yelp. For a moment, both of them stood there, and then the stouter gunman paled and looked at the phaser. He shook it. “Oh . . .” The leaner one roared in anger and lunged forward, propelling them both across the floor.
Troops on both sides paused, watching this strange fight, as the pair wrestled each other for control of the phaser. The phaser wasn’t working, but each man tried to smack the other in the head with it.
Whispers were transmitted across the comm frequencies of both groups of soldiers. “Isn’t that—”
“Yes, I think it is.”
“They’re not with you?”
“We thought they were with you!”
The pair reached the lip of a hole that had been blown in the terminal wall by a photon grenade, and tumbled through it with startled cries.
Outside, the aliens—two Ferengi—rolled down the slope of the pyramidal terminal while hanging desperately on to each other’s throats and lapels. Jagged chunks of rubble thumped repeatedly and randomly into bone and flesh, always in the least expected and most painful places.
Black fingernails tore at skin, and bruised knuckles bruised themselves some more against jaws and cheeks. The two combatants butted up against a handful of Urwyzden corpses; soldiers lay sprawled around, with blood-slicked weapons lying on the tarmac.
The stouter Ferengi leapt on top of his enemy and started to throttle him, while trying to keep his face out of range of the fists that were coming up in an attempt to dislodge him. He jerked his head back away from one punch, and that was when he saw the most beautiful sight on this miserable slime-hole of a planet: a warp-capable shuttle, impulse drive idling, with its hatch open and a fully powered but mercifully uninhabited cockpit inside.
Pieces of rubble clattered down from farther up the sloping wall of the terminal, and both Ferengi looked up to see armored Urwyzden soldiers scrambling down in pursuit. Both then looked back to the shuttle.
The distraction was just enough to allow the leaner Ferengi to roll, throwing the other off. They broke apart on all fours, scrambling for the weapons lying near the hands of the fallen soldiers. Then they were on their feet again, both trying to get the business end of a hand phaser into the other’s face first.
Neither won.
Beaten and bloody, their eyes blackened, their clothes torn and bloodstained, each found himself pressing a phaser to the other’s lobes at arm’s length. The pursuing soldiers were gathering around them, weapons raised, cutting them off from the shuttle. “Gaila,” the leaner Ferengi said smugly. “Oh, if only you were Quark … that’s the only way this moment could possibly be any more delicious. Or profitable.”
Gaila tried to look less bowel-looseningly terrified than he felt, consoled only by the thought that he couldn’t look more terrified. “You’re finished too, Brunt! It’s a mutual loss scenario!”
Brunt, formerly of the FCA, just sighed as the troops closed in. “How did my life come to this?” he asked.
One Year Ago
This looks like the beginning of a beautiful friendship.” Brunt nursed a bottle in his own home.
He wasn’t actually sure what it was a bottle of, beyond that it was strongly alcoholic. The label had long since smeared away, but he had preferred to drink here rather than go to a properly licensed establishment. Bars reminded him too much of Quark’s continued … Not success, he thought, but mere existence. His visitor also reminded him of Quark’s infuriating existence, by dint of being a member of Quark’s infuriating family.
“That’s what I said,” Gail
a agreed.
“It’s not a Rule of Acquisition I’m familiar with,” Brunt said pointedly. “In fact, as I’m given to understand the term, it’s a hew-mon expression. What do hew-mons know about profit? Hew-mons are the kind of people who would secure a speculation against a debt instead of an asset!”
“Can any Ferengi really have a friendship with an FCA Liquidator?”
“No,” Gaila admitted, “but you’re not ’Brunt, FCA’ anymore.”
Brunt glowered, his beady eyes focusing on some future vengeance. “Liquidator for the FCA is who I am, Gaila, not just a job I did.”
“The Economic Congress thought differently when they expelled you.”
“They took away my job,” Brunt corrected him, “but not who I am.”
“And that’s why there’s such an opportunity for profit in a business alliance between us,” Gaila said. “Your ruthlessness and drive, coupled with my lobes for tracking down good opportunities … Failure is impossible. Liquidator Brunt, the most driven man on Ferenginar, and not a man for whom any chance to earn a slip of latinum will be an improvement on where you are now.” Brunt didn’t respond; he didn’t want Gaila to think he was a charity case or, indeed, that Brunt might owe him a favor. Favors were always more expensive things to owe than mere currency, and repaying them always ate more into one’s profits than paying money did. “You know I work in the steadiest market in the galaxy.”
Star Trek: Seven Deadly Sins Page 8