Star Trek®: Excelsior: Forged in Fire
Page 2
So the mourning party howled to the memory of the child, whose remains were already ensconced within the vault, remembering him for what he was and for what he represented to Kang’s bloodline. Sulu had never met young DaqS; the boy had been born less than a year after the last time that he had been in the presence of Kang, Koloth, Kor, and Dax. But he could empathize with the loss, had seen it etched in the faces of those in his life whose children had preceded them into death. Despite all his bravado, James Kirk had been indelibly scarred a decade ago when a Klingon soldier had murdered his estranged son David Marcus on the Genesis Planet. Others, on board both the Enterprise and Excelsior, had faced similar traumas, which had changed each of them irrevocably.
And then there had been the time not all that long ago when he’d thought Demora dead.
In the angry skies overhead, Sulu saw a meteor streak by, and he wondered for a moment if it was an omen or just another piece of Praxis that had finally tumbled into Qo’noS’s atmosphere. The tumultuous cries around him continued to resound strongly for another few minutes, until Kang stopped, slashing his bat’leth through the air one-handed to silence all the others as well.
Sulu glanced toward Mara, to see if she would join her husband near the tomb marker, but she stayed where she was, deferential to the male warriors who had assembled around Kang. Sulu had met her only once, very briefly, when they were all much, much younger.
Kang began to sing then, his basso voice hoarse yet strong. Through his universal translator, Sulu understood the basis of the song, even as others joined in. It was part of the traditional Ak’voh rite, a mournful song intended to keep predators both physical and spiritual from devouring young DaqS’s spirit before it could safely reach Sto-Vo-Kor. During the shuttle ride to Qo’noS, Curzon had told Sulu of the ritual song, explaining that if it was performed, which seemed likely, it would have to be modified, since the soul of a child would face a far more perilous journey to the Klingon afterlife than would that of an experienced, blooded warrior; thus, the more strongly the voices of his family and fellow warriors sounded, the easier young DaqS’s passage into Sto-Vo-Kor would be.
The blood on your face is that of your foe,
The fire that burns toward you will temper your blade,
The Halls are Waiting, the Halls are Waiting!
Each carrion-eater that attacks shall lose an eye,
You will wear their teeth around your neck,
Their fur as your cloak, their spines on your boots,
The Halls are Waiting, the Halls are Waiting!
The serpent that bites you with poison will die itself,
Its jaws pried apart as you force the poison from you….
For a moment, Sulu wondered precisely how the song had been altered from its original form for the child, and how much more violent the unexpurgated version could have been. But this was Klingon culture he was experiencing firsthand, and he compared it again to that of his own lineage. Many generations ago, his own clan had included a father and son who were samurai in feudal Japan; unlike Kang, however, their bloodline had survived to succeed them.
The Ak’voh song rose toward a thunderous finish, growing so loud that it seemed as if the Klingons were trying to be heard on the remains of Praxis, or perhaps even on the bridge of Excelsior, which currently orbited Qo’noS. He now heard numerous verses being shouted by numerous people, each layering over the others indecipherably as every mourner and warrior offered their own warnings or protections on behalf of the departed spirit.
Sulu found himself lost in the noise—and the emotions that propelled them—and began to sing himself, a Banka he had learned as a child, for the funeral of his great-grandmother. It was a Shinto blessing for the dead—a decidedly non-Klingon tradition—but it nevertheless seemed fitting to express the vicarious sorrow overflowing from his heart.
Once he was certain that they were alone, Curzon Dax finally decided to say what was on his mind. He suspected that he wasn’t the only one present who harbored these thoughts, what with Captain Sulu here alongside the three Klingon captains. But none of them had spoken as yet of the threat their old adversary had once made.
“Kang, has anything further been learned of the cause of my godson’s illness?”
The elder Klingon regarded Curzon for a moment with an inscrutable scowl before answering. “The physicians still have learned nothing. The disease is unlike anything they have encountered before.”
Sulu cleared his throat. “If you’d permit me, it would honor me to take the medical records to some of the experts who work with me. With our resources, perhaps we can learn something your doctors overlooked.”
Kang squinted, his bushy, upswept eyebrows and beady gaze giving the appearance of two exclamation marks. Curzon understood that Kang knew from bitter experience gained long before the Praxis explosion that there was no honor in declining Federation assistance simply out of pride. “I shall consider it, Hikaru Sulu.”
Curzon waited to see if either Koloth or Kor were going to say something. When they didn’t, he took the plunge. “Could this disease be the realization of the threat that the albino made against us all? He promised to one day avenge himself upon us through our children.”
“That petaQ!” Kor spat out the words. “He does not have the spine to deliver on any such threat.”
Again sparing a glance toward Kang to gauge his mood, Curzon pressed. “We all know he is a coward. And who better for a coward to strike at than those who are still unable to defend themselves?” He chose his words carefully, not wanting to upset Kang, especially after such a moving Ak’voh rite.
“Kang’s son was struck down by an unknown disease that has no known antecedent, and no known cure,” Curzon said. “From what I have heard, the disease’s progression was so fast that it could not have been natural. And the fact that no other Klingon has been diagnosed with this disease leads to one possible conclusion: that this was a specific and targeted bioagent.”
“‘No other Klingon’ is correct,” Koloth said. “If this was an attack on Kang by the craven Qagh, then it should have been an attack on us all. But none of my children—or Kor’s—have shown any signs of this malady, or any other.”
“This tragedy may have arisen from the bite of some insect, crawled up through the ground from the bowels of Gre’thor,” Kor said, his words carrying the embellishments of a storyteller. “Or it might have been the venom of some reptile, as yet undiscovered. The leap between this tragedy and the actions of a genetic throwback who is probably long dead is a far leap to make, Dax.”
Curzon saw Kang wince almost imperceptibly at Kor’s mention of Dax’s symbiont name, which was phonetically identical to that of his deceased son. But he also saw a fire in the warrior’s eyes, stoked by the fuel of Curzon’s suggestion. Whether or not the albino was responsible for DaqS’s death, the idea that he could be the architect of this disaster had obviously given Kang something at which he could focus his anger.
“Captain Sulu, has your Starfleet found any sign of the chalk-skinned Ha’DIbaH?” Kang asked, his voice so even and sharp that it could cut skin.
The human captain’s brow furrowed. “To my knowledge, no one from Starfleet has encountered the albino since we faced him,” he said. He shrugged his shoulders slightly, his crimson ceremonial uniform retaining its form and lines perfectly. “I’ll immediately search our records to find out if there has been any recent news on the subject.”
Koloth regarded Sulu, and Curzon was glad to see that the captain wasn’t backing down at all in the face of the highly charged, angry atmosphere that had begun swirling about the Klingon assemblage.
“And what of your family, Captain Sulu? Have your children faced any unexpected dangers?” Koloth asked.
“I still have only the one daughter, Koloth,” Sulu said. “She is, however, a fully grown woman now, and serves aboard another Starfleet vessel. I have not heard that she’s faced anything other than the usual dangers of Starfleet service, b
ut…” He hesitated a moment, then continued. “We have not spoken for quite some time.”
“Your daughter follows your path, and yet you do not find that honorable?” Kang asked.
“It’s more complicated than that,” Sulu said.
“Family relations always are, Captain,” Kang said gravely. “But I would give all I have to be able to watch my child honor me. Instead…” He didn’t finish, but looked up toward the sky.
Curzon said nothing. Though the others assembled here today probably knew more about Kang than did anyone else in Starfleet or the Klingon Empire combined, they did not know every secret he harbored.
They certainly didn’t know of the decision he had made five years ago, regarding the fleeing albino and his parting threats….
Standing away from the others, Sulu opened his communicator. Its familiar chirping sound had long ago become a part of his workaday environment, and he rarely gave it a second thought. In this windswept and emotional atmosphere, however, it sounded inappropriately bright and cheery.
“Sulu to Excelsior.”
A second passed, and then the voice of his longtime friend, Commander Pavel Chekov, issued from the device. “Excelsior here, Captain. Is everything going…properly?”
Sulu could tell that his executive officer had groped for a second to find the correct word, in case anyone else had happened to be within earshot. He was glad to have his old shipmate at his right hand aboard Excelsior, after the long succession of temporary first officers that had followed the departure of Lieutenant Commander Cutler.
“It’s going as well as can be expected. I anticipate that the ambassador and I will be returning to the ship sometime in the next four to five hours, barring any unforeseen circumstances.”
“Very good, Captain.” Although his Russian accent was almost imperceptible these days, Chekov’s “very” still sounded like “wary,” and his “captain” came out closer to “keptin.”
“Pavel, please ask Commander Rand to set up a remote subspace comlink to the Enterprise.”
“Sir?”
“I need to speak to my daughter, Commander,” Sulu said. Kang’s words had stung him. Whatever had gone wrong between him and Demora, they still had time to fix it.
But just as importantly, he wanted to ascertain that Curzon’s supposition was wrong. Other than Kang—if indeed the death of DaqS had been the work of Qagh—nobody among the quintet had experienced the brutality of the albino in quite the same manner as Sulu had. The memories were decades old, but the terror-stricken cries of Sulu’s parents remained as fresh and loud as those of the mournful Klingons attending today’s ceremonies.
“Captain, I have the Enterprise for you on subspace.” That was the voice of Commander Janice Rand, another old Enterprise shipmate who now served on Excelsior. “Captain Harriman is waiting to speak to you on channel B.”
“Thank you, Commander,” Sulu said. “Please put him through.”
“Hello, Hikaru,” said John Harriman, Jr., his tone subdued. “It sounds like you’re at a very noisy party. Can you talk away from the crowd?”
“Hello, John,” Sulu said. “It’s actually a Klingon funeral.” He walked several more paces away from the noise. “I apologize for the unorthodox communication, but something came up, and I didn’t want to wait until I got back to the ship to contact you. Is my daughter available?”
Harriman took a bit too long to respond, and Sulu immediately knew that something was wrong.
“Hikaru, I’m sorry to—”
No. Don’t say that, Sulu thought.
“—tell you that—”
Please. No. His knees felt weak.
“—Demora fell ill less than an hour ago. Doctor Michaels is doing everything he can, but he’s never encountered anything like this before.”
Not dead. Thank God.
“What are the symptoms, John?”
“It’s not pretty, Hikaru. She’s expelling liquids, her body is in some bizarre kind of twisted rigor. Doctor Michaels is keeping her as sedated as he can. I was going to call you as soon as we knew something definitive, but—”
“It may be a tailored bioweapon of some sort, targeted directly at her.” Sulu nearly shouted into the communicator, interrupting the other man. “I need you to help me find out where and how she might have been exposed to it.”
“A bioweapon?” Harriman sounded alarmed, and rightly so. “What do you mean?”
“I told you I’m at a Klingon funeral,” Sulu said. “The decedent died of the same symptoms. And the one thing the Klingons and I have in common is an old enemy with a taste for biological terrorism.”
He didn’t want to even think it, but the words came into his mind unbidden.
Same results.
He shook his head violently, as if trying to dislodge the thought. She’s not dead. Demora’s. Not. Dead.
“Keep me updated, John,” he said grimly. “And keep my daughter alive.”
Before the other captain could respond, Sulu snapped the communicator shut, then sprinted toward Kor, Koloth, Kang, and Dax.
“Get your surviving children into medical isolation now,” he blurted out to all of them as they looked at him questioningly. “They may be in danger.”
But how could they stop the threat the albino had made half a decade earlier—especially if the threat had already been carried out?
Sulu felt his blood run cold.
PART I:
DEATH AND LIFE
The woe’s to come; the children yet unborn Shall feel this day as sharp to them as thorn.
—William Shakespeare
(1564–1616);
Bishop of Carlisle,
Richard II, Act IV,
Scene I, Line 322
ONE
2218 (the Year of Kahless 844,
early in the month of Merruthj)
Qo’noS
“The Lady Moj’ih grows impatient,” Do’Yoj said brusquely. Her boots drumming an impatient rhythm against the stone floor as she walked, she ushered the two physicians down the dim corridor toward the sprawling villa’s center, where its largest bedchamber lay.
The master bedchamber had become the sole domain of the Lady Moj’ih ever since her husband Ngoj had fallen in battle against the cursed RomuluSngan at Nequencia nearly four months ago. And since that unhappy time, the ornate room’s tapestry-draped walls had come to mark the boundaries of the Lady’s existence. Do’Yoj thought it had become a veritable throne room for her reclusive mistress, who was now the de facto head of the House of Ngoj, one of the few ruling matriarchs among the noble classes of Qo’noS.
And now, as the Lady Moj’ih’s ever more complicated pregnancy advanced inexorably toward term, the chamber had become a prison in all but name.
“My apologies,” said Hurghom, the taller of the two doctors, speaking a bit too obsequiously for Do’Yoj’s taste as he came to a stop behind Do’Yoj just outside the heavy wooden bedchamber door. Was he mocking her? Or was he merely trying to adopt the tone most appropriate for a smooth-headed QuchHa’ such as himself?
Dr. Nej, whose darker countenance contrasted sharply with Hurghom’s owing to its prominent frame of cranial ridges, spoke a good deal more boldly.
“I am sure that the Lady Moj’ih will understand the reason for the delay,” Nej said, raising to eye level the small black valise he clutched in his gnarled right hand, as if to emphasize his point. “The procedure we must undertake this day requires the utmost delicacy if we are to avoid bringing harm to the Lady’s child.”
“We have to be certain that we get this right in every detail,” Hurghom said, his disturbingly smooth head bobbing in agreement with his colleague’s words. “I’m sure you will agree that much is at stake. And what is at stake is nothing less than a male heir to the House of Ngoj.”
A future patriarch of this noble House, Do’Yoj thought with no small amount of resentment. An heir who will doubtless have as much to conceal as his parents did, if he is to maintain this Hous
e’s power and prestige.
Answering Hurghom with only a tart scowl, Do’Yoj turned and pushed on the door with her shoulder, leaning into its superbly balanced bulk so that it began to move smoothly and silently inward on its well-oiled duranium hinges.
The room beyond the threshold was dark, shrouding its sole occupant in gloom. Do’Yoj entered and stepped to the side, allowing the physicians to waste no further time before converging upon the large bed that was mounted on the raised dais in the center of the room. Do’Yoj wasn’t entirely sure that the Lady Moj’ih was actually in the bed until she spoke, her rounded belly moving noticeably beneath the tangle of bedclothes.
“What is the reason for your tardiness?” the Lady said, addressing both physicians in an imperious tone suited to a woman of noble breeding. Do’Yoj thought it was a tone suited to one born to the birthright of the HemQuch, those who, unlike Dr. Hurghom, possessed the cranial ridges that had been the genetic patrimony of every Klingon, from the boldest warrior to the humblest tiller of the soil, since long before the time of the unforgettable Kahless.
Do’Yoj, of course, knew the real truth behind the Lady’s brave façade. As the Lady Moj’ih’s most trusted personal retainer, there was no way that Do’Yoj could ignore the fact that her haughty, proud-visaged mistress was actually just as smooth-browed—and thus every bit as disgracefully QuchHa’—as Dr. Hurghom and his ancestors. Do’Yoj was all too aware that the Lady’s striking brow ridges, scarcely visible in the room’s dim light, were prosthetic fakes. They were biosynthetic implants—which required frequent cosmetic maintenance, despite having been surgically attached to her skull—and had been used covertly by members of the influential House of Ngoj ever since the Great Qu’Vat Plague of 1462, a disaster that lay more than half a century in the past.