And just as Adama was starting to think that perhaps maybe, just maybe, the current crisis was nearly behind them, it all went straight to hell.
“Admiral!” Dualla suddenly called out. “The Bifrost!”
The ship had been up on a monitor, being watched carefully, ever since Adama had sent Starbuck and Helo over there. Now he, Tigh, and everyone else looked up to see what it was that Dualla was alerting them to.
“You gotta be frakking kidding me,” said Tigh.
And just when matters didn’t seem as if they could possibly get worse, space exploded around them.
* * *
D’anna Biers was one of a dozen reporters crowded into the conference room on Colonial One, watching with great interest as Wolf Gunnerson entered. Already seated at a large round conference table were the members of the Quorum of Twelve, with President Roslin at the table’s head.
Biers looked over the faces of the Quorum members when Gunnerson came in. They did not look to be an especially sympathetic bunch. Their expressions could best be described as “hardened disinterest,” although several of them were unable to contain their surprise at Gunnerson’s sheer mass. Even D’anna had to admit that, damn, for a human, he was pretty impressive.
For more ceremonial gatherings the Quorum convened on Cloud Nine, but this was a more “down and dirty” gathering, as Tom Zarek had referred to it. A handful of reporters were being permitted to attend in the interest of full disclosure; on the other hand, subsequent deliberations would likely be held in closed-door sessions. It simply wasn’t Cloud-Nine appropriate, again as Zarek had put it.
The meeting had already been chaired to order, and some preliminary business had been attended to. Now there was nothing on the docket but to deal with the matter of Wolf Gunnerson. Laura Roslin, as president, was charged with overseeing the running of the meeting, and she did so now with her customary brisk efficiency. D’anna ruminated on the fact that Roslin was a non-voting member except in times of a tie vote, at which point she would cast the deciding ballot. That meant that, should the Quorum split on the issue of the Midguardians, then she, Laura Roslin, would be the one who held their fate in her hands. And as far as D’anna was concerned, it was a toss-up as to which way she would fall.
She smiled with the inner amusement of a scientist watching rats hustle through a maze, knowing that in the long run, it was all fruitless because—in the end—they were still just rats, not destined to be long for this world.
She glanced over toward Gunnerson. He did not look back.
“Madame President,” Tom Zarek was saying, rising, from his chair.
“We recognize Tom Zarek, representative of Sagittaron.”
He nodded slightly in acknowledgment of her recognition, fiddled with the lower button of his jacket for a moment, and then said, “Mr. Gunnerson first approached me about the issue of recognition for the Midguardians, so naturally I feel some responsibility in this matter. Consider this my personal request,” and he gave a smile that looked forced, “that the recent unpleasantness regarding the misunderstanding of the stolen religious relic… not color the feelings of this Quorum in considering the request of his people.”
“It is difficult to ignore it, Councilman,” Robin Wenutu of Canceron replied. “It’s a hell of a first impression to make.”
“I can understand your trepidation,” Zarek said. “Because, to be candid, it wasn’t all that long ago that I had to face down the looks of distrust on all of you.”
“Councilman Zarek,” said Eladio Puasha of Scorpia. “I don’t think that’s a fair assessment of our earliest experiences…”
“I think it’s a perfectly fair assessment,” Zarek told her with a fixed expression. “One moment I’m a terrorist; the next I’m a coworker.”
“You underestimate our ability to adapt, Tom,” replied Puasha. “If there’s one thing we’ve become accustomed to in months past… it’s a constantly fluctuating status quo.”
This drew nods of rueful disagreement, and surprisingly, Zarek’s smile turned genuine. “Fair enough, Eladio.” Then he grew serious once more. “I suppose all I’m saying is that, from my point of view—I fully understand the situation that would have driven Wolf Gunnerson to do what he did. And if Council-woman Puasha’s attitude is truly reflective of the rest of you… then I assume I can count on all of you to give him the fair hearing that he deserves.” Zarek paused a moment for what he had said to sink in, and then sat back down in his chair.
During the entire exchange, Wolf Gunnerson had never taken a seat, even though there was an available one near him. Laura Roslin gestured for him to take it, and he calmly shook his head. “I think it more respectful to remain on my feet,” he said.
“Very well,” said Laura. “Then, Mr. Gunnerson, you have the fl—”
She stopped. Stopped and stared, and looked ashen, and she seemed to be whispering something. D’anna looked carefully, and Laura was apparently saying, “Not now… not now…”
Sarah, who was seated at the president’s right hand, leaned forward, looking concerned. “Madame President…?” she said cautiously.
“Headache… just…” Her voice sounded strangled. She looked as if she were having some sort of attack, and was fighting it off with Herculean effort that was only partly succeeding.
“Madame President?” asked Sarah again. And then, with the sort of intuition that only someone who sought religious meaning in every aspect of life could display, Sarah said with greater urgency, “Are you… are you having some sort of vision?”
D’anna leaned forward as well, eyebrow cocked. This was suddenly getting very interesting. She just hoped that it wouldn’t take too long to play out, since time was not something the humans had in abundance.
* * *
She couldn’t believe how smoothly everything was going. Here was Zarek, whose very presence continued to make her feel cold inside (and that had nothing to do with the fact that he was going to be her likeliest competition for the presidency; gods help the colonies if that happened), actually interacting like a grown-up with the other members of the Quorum. Gunnerson was patiently waiting for his moment to speak. When that moment came, Roslin started to tell him that he had the floor…
And Sharon Valerii was there.
She was everywhere.
No longer was she standing at one point in the room, drawing Laura’s attention. Instead every member of the Quorum of Twelve had disappeared, and in their respective places was an identical Sharon Valerii. Each one pregnant, each one with an expression of dispassionate placidity. Each one looking directly at her. They were shaking their heads sadly, and they genuinely looked apologetic.
Laura knew she had to be dreaming. She absolutely had to be. But she felt awake, and this was going beyond the simple hallucinations that she’d experienced earlier. This was borderline dementia, and it was the tipping point. She couldn’t take it anymore. To hell with the rest of the human race, to hell with her responsibilities. Laura Roslin was as much a fighter as any human being left alive, but it was ultimately too much, just… just too much. If Sharon Valerii’s unborn child had somehow insinuated itself into her mind, then… then…
Yes, that was it. That was the problem. All right, fine. I’ll show that unborn saboteur who’s boss. And I wouldn’t leave it to Doc Cottle to do it, because who knows, he might be a Cylon as well. I’ll just… I’ll just go over there myself and cut the child out with a knife, or… or put a bullet in Shawn’s brain, that’s it, that’s all, just done with it, just…
Sharon Valerii was speaking to her. The voice didn’t emerge from her mouth but instead went directly into Roslin’s mind, and what it said was, Now. Now. It’s about to happen now. Do something. Save us. Save us all…
And that was when it all became clear to Laura. Her mind leaped and everything suddenly seemed cast into a stark and new relief…
Gods… I was right the first time… it’s not trying to terrorize me… it’s not trying to drive me
insane… it’s… it’s afraid… it’s afraid…it’s afraid and it wants my help to save it from… from what…? From…?
She heard another voice in her head, and it was Sarah Porter. Laura, feeling as if she were on the brink of something, pushed her way back to reality. Her teeth gritted, she said, “Mister… Mister Gunner son… you may… you may go ahead…”
“Madame President,” Sarah said, still looking concerned. “I asked if you—”
“I heard what you asked,” Laura told her firmly, which was a lie since she was barely holding on to her own surroundings. “Mr. Gunnerson is here… we’re all here… let’s… move along.”
There was a brief, uncomfortable silence, and then Wolf Gunnerson reached into the inside pocket of his jacket and removed a sheaf of papers covered with scribbling. “I had promised Madame President,” he said, “that were I given this opportunity, I would inform you all of the truths of our sacred writings.”
“Your sacred writings,” Sarah Porter reminded him. She was still glancing every so often in Laura’s direction, but she was all-business enough to want to get business matters back on track. “Your truths. Not ours.”
“I would like to think,” Gunnerson said mildly, “that truth is truth.”
Laura knew that everyone at the table was still casting glances in her direction. She closed her eyes, opened them, and they were all still damned Sharon Valerii. Everyone in the room was… with, insanely, the sole exception of D’anna Biers, who was studying her closely as if dissecting her with her eyes. Laura had no idea what to make of that, and didn’t try to figure it out. She closed her eyes firmly, as if battling a headache, and when she opened them, everyone had returned to themselves…
… and the words Sagittarius is bleeding NOW were etched on the table.
Wolf Gunnerson was smoothing the papers, and he began to read aloud:
“The race of humans thus was ended
A blinding final winter done
The sword of demons, hot with flame
Assured no mortals left to run.
The gods were dead, had fought their last
Consumed by snake and wolf and blood
And so their last remains were gone
All swept away, as if by flood.
The rainbow bridge was all destroyed
It crashed and cracked and split apart
And in so doing did away
With humanity’s last soul and heart.
Gods’ worshippers were gone to dust
The last assault, did not survive,
Their final crash, their final burn
There was no human left alive.”
He paused, as if he was going to continue reading and then, sounding like a polite literature professor, said almost apologetically, “It goes on for several more pages, but truthfully, it’s just a reiteration of what’s already been said. The writers of the Edda tended to be repetitive in order to make certain their point was made.”
The Quorum members looked at each other in confusion, as if trying to see if anyone knew what Gunnerson was driving at.
“I can’t say that I understand, Mr. Gunnerson,” said Laura Roslin.
He gave her a vaguely pitying smile. “It’s all right there, Madame President. A blind man could see it: We’re not supposed to be here. We were not destined to survive. The ‘blinding final winter’ is the nuclear winter of the Cylon attack… the signal that our gods are dead. And since our gods are the only ones that truly count, that means there’s really no point in anything else existing. The vast majority of humanity was annihilated by the winter, as was supposed to be the case. We, the Midguardians, survived so as to make sure the final prophecies would be fulfilled, and we came close,” and he brought his thumb and forefinger almost together, “this close. ‘Their final crash, their final burn.’ We were intended to die in the heart of that vast, all-consuming star. But that was thwarted at the last moment by Adama, displaying cleverness that Loki would have envied. But no matter, no matter. It’s being attended to even as we speak.”
Slowly Laura Roslin stood as the rest of the Quorum continued to shift uncomfortably in their seats, clearly not liking the sound of what they were hearing. She whispered, so softly that they had to strain to hear her, “The blood of humanity… on your hands… on the hands of Sagittaron… of Sagittarius…”
“Now wait a minute!” Zarek said. “I didn’t know anything about this!”
“What this?” demanded Sarah Porter. “What’s going on?”
And now the reporters, stirred up, started firing questions. Matters were spiraling completely out of control, and everything snapped into place for Laura Roslin, the final tumblers clicking in her mind. Even though she made no attempt to shout, her voice still rose above the crowd as she said, “Your precious book was never missing. You knew your daughter had it the entire time.”
“Yes,” Gunnerson said, looking mildly impressed.
“You did it to make an impetus for this meeting. You wanted us all together. Now.”
“Yes.”
Now all questioning and back talk had died out, and the silence was heavy as everyone in the room waited for this exchange to come to a conclusion that clearly only Laura Roslin and Wolf Gunnerson knew.
She took a deep breath and said, “You’re planning to wipe out the entire Quorum in one shot.”
He inclined his head slightly. “Yes.”
“What!” Zarek almost exploded out of his chair, and he grabbed Gunnerson by the arm. “What the frak are you talking ab—”
Gunnerson swung his arm casually and Zarek was knocked backwards, sent crashing over his chair. Wolf made no other motion. There even seemed to be, insanely enough, sadness in his eyes.
“Billy,” said Laura, without budging from her place. Billy was standing several feet away, looking shocked, uncomprehending. “Contact Galactica immediately. Tell them an immediate attack is very likely.”
Billy started to back out of the room, but he never took his eyes off Gunnerson. But Wolf made no move toward him and Billy got out with no problem. Instead Gunnerson said calmly, with total conviction, “Call whomever you want. They can’t save you.”
“They can and they will,” Laura Roslin replied, her chin tilted upward in defiance.
“Oh my gods!”
It was Sarah Porter. Something had caught her eye out one of the ports, and she had cried out in shock. Laura looked to see what it was that had provoked the response.
It was the Bifrost.
It was still a good distance away, but the ship had turned away from its customary position in the fleet. Instead it was moving crosswise across the flow, attempting to navigate its way toward Colonial One.
It was on a direct collision course. If its course went unaltered, it would smash Colonial One amidships, rupturing the hull of both vessels, and both of them would explode, fireballs snuffed out within seconds in the airless vacuum of space.
Pandemonium broke out in the conference room, which was instantly transformed into a maelstrom of accusation, fury, and fear.
And in the midst of it all, D’anna Biers—the eye of the storm—smiled wanly to herself and slowly shook her head.
We tried, she thought sadly. We tried so hard. We tried our little booby trap the last time, after I shook Gaeta’s hand during the making of the documentary and inserted that little listening device into it. We tried to herd you into a situation where you would have been so completely overwhelmed by our forces that you would have had no choice but to surrender. We could have extracted Sharon’s baby at that point… perhaps even taken a percentage of you prisoner and turned you into workers. You wouldn’t have been completely exterminated. A handful would have survived to serve us, and wouldn’t that have been appropriate? But you had to be oh-so-clever to avoid the trap. So this time… this time we finish it. Or at the very least, we cripple you by destroying your entire membership and your civilian leaders.
We tried to be generous, but you simply weren’t
willing to allow it to happen. For this one, you have no one to blame but yourself.
We know where you’re going to Jump to. If you try to get away, we’re waiting for you, and we’ll blow what’s left of you to bits.
Too bad about Sharon, though. I bet the baby would have had her eyes.
CHAPTER
23
“Cylon raiders!”
The members of Adama’s command crew had barely had the opportunity to register that Colonial One was in deep trouble when space all around them was alive with Cylon raiders spinning out of subspace and angling toward the fleet. They came out firing, and even though Adama had the pilots scrambling to their vessels, he was certain they were losing out on precious time.
“Vipers away!” called Dualla.
“Gaeta!” said Tigh with growing urgency as he crossed over toward him. “Get those coordinates for the Jump up and ready!” Despite the gravity of the situation, he was wise enough not to say anything beyond that, nor was Gaeta engaging in the standard operating procedure of getting verbal confirmation from other officers in CIC as to the specifics of the coordinates. Instead Gaeta was keeping his big mouth shut as he readied the coordinates and the fleet’s Jump.
Adama’s eyes were riveted, however, on the Bifrost as it approached Colonial One. Neither ship was especially speedy or maneuverable; both were outfitted with FTL drives, but that did nothing for them when they were operating in standard space and moving with the alacrity of a drunken cow.
“Fire a warning shot across their bow,” said Adama. He was furious with himself for being hamstrung. Helo and Starbuck—Starbuck, for frak’s sake—were on the Bifrost along with two of his marines. If the warning shot didn’t take, he was going to have to seriously consider blowing the ship out of space. This would end the Midguardian threat, but it would also be the end of his people. Of Helo, of… of Starbuck…
A single shot from the Galactica’s big cannons hurtled past the Bifrost as it started to approach Colonial One. It seemed frighteningly as if the Galactica was firing upon the civilian fleet, but there was no helping that now.
03 - Sagittarius is Bleeding Page 29