Star Trek - DS9 - Heart Of The Warrior - Book 17

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Star Trek - DS9 - Heart Of The Warrior - Book 17 Page 2

by John Gregory Betancourt


  Security Chief Odo both looked on with bored,

  slightly put-upon expressions. Worf sighed audibly

  and shifted from foot to foot. I'm losing them, Bashir

  thought.

  Nevertheless, he continued to keep his expression a

  careful neutral as he examined the delicate micro-

  connections inside the scanner. It should be working,

  he thought. Why wasn't it? He simply didn't under-

  stand the problem.

  "Doctor..." Sisko began.

  "One second more." His training at Starfleet Acad-

  emy hadn't just covered biology and medicine.

  Bedside--in this case, tableside--manners were just

  as important, he knew. Like they said at Starfleet, as

  long as you look like you know what you're doing,

  your patients will have faith in you. Of course, he'd

  have to make sure that faith wasn't misplaced.

  He sucked in a deep breath. The scanner had to

  work. Everything from the schematics to the pro-

  gramming parameters had checked out perfectly dur-

  ing computer-simulated tests. So why wouldn't it

  power up now?

  Then he spotted the problem. It was so simple, he

  could have slapped himself. One power coupling had

  worked its way loose. He must have failed to lock it

  into position when he was assembling it, he realized.

  Carefully he reached in with two fingers, fitted it into

  the proper position, and pushed gently. He felt the

  two pieces lock together with a faint snap.

  That should do it, he thought with a mental sigh of

  relief. He hoped.

  "Well?" Sisko prompted.

  Bashir smiled with new confidence as he stood up

  again. It would work, he told himself. You didn't

  graduate second in your class from Starfleet Academy

  without learning a thing or two about machines.

  "Ready," he said.

  He closed the DNA analyzer's back panel. Running

  one hand nervously through his short brown hair, he

  took a deep breath, then for the second time touched

  the activation button. Now work, damn it, he mentally

  instructed the machine. He willed it to start with

  every fiber of his being.

  A low hum spread through the medical bay. Bashir

  slowly let out the breath he hadn't realized he'd been

  holding. It had powered up, he thought triumphantly.

  It was working. The power coupling hadn't been quite

  in place, that was all. It had been his own fault, not

  the machine's... simple human error.

  "That fixed it," he said. "Sorry about the delay.

  Commander, if you wouldn't mind?"

  Worf stepped forward. "What exactly do you want

  me to do?" the tall Klingon asked, his voice a low

  growl. He sounded a little nervous, Bashir thought.

  Klingons were just like human patients in that

  respect. They all had to be coddled and encouraged

  when it came to visiting sickbay. Sometimes he

  thought every intelligent life-form in the galaxy had

  an inborn distrust of the medical profession.

  "Simply place your hand on top," he said. He

  pushed the gray box toward Worf, giving him a

  reassuring smile. Best tableside manner and all that.

  "The scanner will do the rest."

  Worf hesitated a second, glancing first at Captain

  Sisko, then at Odo. Slowly, tentatively, he reached

  out.

  "You won't feel a thing," Bashir said encouragingly.

  At this rate it was going to take all afternoon.

  "I am not afraid of pain," Worf said sharply. He

  slapped his hand down hard on top of the DNA

  scanner. The slap made a sharp crack loud enough to

  make a few of the nurses on the other side of the room

  jump.

  Bashir winced a bit. Luckily the DNA scanner

  didn't seem to have been injured; it continued to hum

  along smoothly.

  "Sorry," Worf said a little more meekly.

  "No harm done," Bashir said. "I didn't mean to

  imply that you were afraid of pain," he added. One

  difference between Klingon and human patients, he

  realized, was that most human patients couldn't

  break you in half if you got them angry. "I simply

  meant that the process is painless."

  The display panel on the side of the DNA scanner

  flashed twice. "Reading," it said, its computer voice

  faint and tinny. "Subject DNA passed. Subject is

  Klingon."

  Worf withdrew his hand. Slowly he flexed his fin-

  gers, staring at them as though he thought they might

  have been changed. No chance of that, though, Bashir

  thought. It had removed a single skin cell with a

  microlaser.

  "Very impressive, Doctor," Sisko said. "Now let's

  try a human."

  "Shall I?" Bashir asked, starting to pull up his right

  sleeve.

  "No. I'd like to try it myself."

  Sisko placed his own hand on the scanner. After a

  second's analysis, the computer announced, "Subject

  DNA passed. Subject is human."

  Sisko nodded. "Now it's your turn, Doctor," he

  said, stepping back and fold ing his arms.

  Bashir stepped forward. The captain undoubtedly

  wanted to confirm that none of the command staff

  had been replaced by changelings, and he was happy

  to oblige. Bashir g DNA Scanner to the rescue, he

  thought. When he published a paper on the device, he

  was certain it would rapidly become the de facto

  standard in testing for changeling infiltration. A work

  of near genius, if I do say so myself he thought with

  satisfaction.

  He put his own hand on the scanner, and after a

  second it announced that he, too, was human. Of

  course.

  That just left Odo. Bashir glanced at the station's

  changeling security officer. This, he thought, would be

  the real test.

  "Your turn, Constable," Sisko said.

  Without a moment's hesitation, Odo stepped for-

  ward and put his hand on top of the box just as the

  others had done.

  "Reading," the device said.

  Bashir leaned forward expectantly. Anyone could

  detect DNA in carbon-based life-forms. But detecting

  a changeling...

  "Subject has no DNA," his DNA analyzer an-

  nounced. "Subject is not a carbon-based life-form."

  "Quite true," Odo said. "But what if they try to

  sneak aboard by impersonating a life-form that

  doesn't use DNA? Wouldn't that fool your device'?"

  "Some variant of DNA appears to be a universal

  constant in all carbon-based life-forms," Bashir said.

  "The Federation has only encountered a handful of

  silicon-based life-forms, like the Hortas, and none of

  them are likely to be on the station during these peace

  negotiations. Valtusians, Cardassians, Bajorans, all

  the races making up the Maquis, and in fact every

  carbon-based race that belongs to the Federation has a

  DNA signature on file with Starfleet Medical." He

  patted the top of the DNA analyzer proudly. "If

  changelings have replaced one or more of them, we'll

  know it, believe me."<
br />
  "And since we're pulling this test as a surprise, they

  won't have any chance to prepare any sort of counter-

  measure," Sisko said.

  "I doubt that's possible--" Bashir began, but Odo

  interrupted.

  "Don't underestimate my people," he said. "Re-

  member what they did on Earth."

  Bashir nodded, then swallowed. They had indeed

  infiltrated Starfleet Command and the Federation

  headquarters, even going so far as blowing up a

  conference with the Romulans. Starfleet had lost

  many key personnel. The changelings were crafty and

  resourceful. In time, they might indeed find some way

  around his device... but hopefully not before he

  smoked out any spies aboard DS9.

  The captain's badge chirped. "Sisko here," he said.

  "Benjamin," Lieutenant Jadzia Dax's voice said,

  "the Valtusian ambassadors have arrived. I'm routing

  them to Docking Pylon Three. I thought you might

  want to welcome them aboard."

  "Thank you, Dax," he said. "I'm on my way." He

  glanced at Bashir and said, "Doctor, I believe it's time

  to field test your DNA scanner."

  "Right," Bashir said with a grin. This was what

  he'd been waiting for, after all.

  "And, Constable," Sisko went on, "I think you

  should join us as well. And you too, Mr. Worf, if

  you're willing."

  "Certainly," Odo said.

  "Agreed," Worf said.

  Bashir picked up his DNA analyzer and tucked it

  under his arm. He'd never met a Valtusian before,

  though of course he knew their reputation as a race of

  tinkerers and philosophers. Few of them left Valtusia,

  preferring to live in their own communal villages,

  pondering the universe, writing poetry, tinkering with

  intricate clockwork mechanisms, and devoting them-

  selves to the mysteries of their kind. This should

  prove most interesting, he thought.

  CHAPTER

  3

  As SOON AS Kira and O'Brien were out of sight, Quark

  rubbed his hands together with satisfaction. They

  were going to buy his ship. He had that tingling

  sensation in his lobes that meant a deal was going

  perfectly. He smiled, thinking of the latinum to come.

  First the ship, then the peace conference. He could

  look forward to record profits this month. He chuck-

  led. Yes, things were certainly going well.

  "I don't understand--" Rom began.

  "That's why I'm in charge," Quark replied smugly.

  "Remember the one hundred and third Rule of Ac-

  quisition."

  "'Fill a desperate need with your most expensive

  product, then mark it up five hundred percent?'"

  Rom's brow furrowed. "I still don't understand,

  brother."

  Quark sighed. His brother might be a mechanical

  genius, but he still needed someone to hold his hand

  during complicated business deals. "You may recall

  some pilgrims from Aryanus Six who ended up

  stranded here six months ago," he began. "They

  came--"

  "In a Delphi-class starship!" Rom finished. Quark

  saw the realization in his brother's eyes. "It's still

  there, on the seventh Bajoran moon!"

  "If I remembered that fact, I knew Chief O'Brien

  would, too," Quark said smugly. "The pilgrims' ship

  doesn't have working warp engines, but the passenger

  compartment should be fine. It shouldn't take

  O'Brien and his men long to assemble one working

  ship out of the two. Because it's such a perfect match,

  I quadrupled my original asking price for the Galactic

  Queen." He patted the airlock affectionately. "A

  small fortune, Rom, and it's all mine!"

  "Brilliant," Rom breathed. "But I believe you're

  forgetting something." "What?"

  "My cut, brother! In exchange for my technical

  help, you promised--"

  "A fortune less five percent is still a fortune,"

  Quark said, waving one hand dismissively. Rom nev-

  er seemed to grasp such fundamentals of business.

  "Come on, let's get back to the bar before the Dabo

  girls rob me blind."

  In Ops, Major Kira leaned against one of the

  consoles and watched as Chief O'Brien fed a series of

  queries into the computer. Maybe humans weren't

  crazy after all, she thought, as the information began

  to trickle back out.

  The first thing O'Brien looked at was the station's

  recording of the Galactic Queen's warp signature as it

  entered Bajoran space. It appeared completely nor-

  mal, which meant the ship's warp engines worked

  within acceptable parameters. It seemed almost mi-

  raculous, considering the otherwise deplorable condi-

  tion of the Galactic Queen.

  "All right," Kira said, "the engines work. But what

  about everything else? What about the hull--that

  stench is enough to smother anyone!"

  "I'm getting to that." He punched up a series of

  salvage records and began scanning them. Kira shook

  her head in bewilderment. They weren't even the

  Galactic Queen's records--they belonged to another

  ship, this one called the Progress. Crazy, indeed.

  "Just as I thought," O'Brien said suddenly.

  "There's still a Delphi-class ship sitting on the sev-

  enth Bajoran moon. It hasn't been picked up for

  salvage yet."

  "The pilgrims..." Kira said, suddenly remember-

  ing the problems that had left them stranded on DS9

  with no way back to Arvanus VI six months previ-

  ously. That had been one logistical nightmare, all

  right. Luckily Captain Sisko had been able to arrange

  transport home for them aboard a freighter. She

  frowned, thinking back to the incident. What had

  been wrong with their ship? It had been their warp

  engines, she recalled. They had damaged their warp

  core and fried both nacelles.

  She snapped her fingers, suddenly putting two and

  two together. "Quark's ship has working engines,"

  she said.

  "That's right." O'Brien leaned back in his chair and

  laced his fingers behind his head, grinning widely.

  "Still think I'm crazy, Major?"

  She could have laughed with relief. "No. But can

  you assemble one working ship out of the pair?"

  "If the engines are in decent shape aboard Quark's

  ship--and I suspect they are from the warp

  signature--I can have them out and fitted aboard the

  pilgrims Progress in six hours. The Delphi-class is

  modular. I've done it before."

  "Then our only problem," Kira said, sliding into

  the seat next to O'Brien, "will be acquiring salvage

  rights to the pilgrims' ship." She transferred the

  salvage claim he'd been studying to her terminal.

  "Loran Devys Salvage," she read aloud, "owns the

  hull."

  The name sounded familiar. Where did she know

  Loran from? Suddenly it came to her. There had been

  a fellow named Loran Devys in another cell during

  the resistance. She'd worked with him at least once. If

  this was the same man, p
erhaps he'd remember her

  and cut her a deal. It was worth a try, anyway.

  "Do you think you can get the rights to it?" O'Brien

  was saying.

  "There's only one way to find out." She opened a

  link to Bajor and called the number on the salvage

  claim.

  A Bajoran woman in a gold and silver one-piece

  suit answered. An intricate earring dangled from her

  right ear. "Loran Devys Salvage," she said, then her

  eyes widened. "Nerys!" she said in surprise.

  Kira forced a smile. "That's right," she said. Who

  was this woman? She didn't look familiar.

  "You don't remember me, of course," the woman

  said. "I'm Jael--Koratta Jael, from Devys's cell? We

  only met once, and it was many years ago. But I've

  seen you quite a few times lately on the news reports.

  You're making quite a name for yourself. Are you still

  stationed on DS9?"

  "Yes," Kira said. Koratta Jael... that name did

  sound vaguely familiar, even if her face wasn't. It had

  been quite a few years, she reminded herself. People

  could change a lot in all that time. She tried to think

  back to the others in Devys's cell. "Didn't you used to

  have your hair..." she began, sketching vaguely with

  her hands.

  Koratta was nodding. "Yes, much longer. You do

  remember. It's wonderful to talk to you again, Nerys,

  but is this a social call?"

  "I'm afraid it's business," Kira said. "Devys owns

  salvage rights to a Delphi-class transport ship on the

  seventh Bajoran moon. Perhaps you know the one I'm

  talking about."

  "We own a lot of salvage . Wait a second." Jael

  punched something up on her computer terminal.

  "Yes, I see the one you mean. The Progress, a Delphi-

  class transport. We picked it up at auction six weeks

  ago. It's scheduled for retrieval next month."

  "I'd like to buy it," Kira said.

  Jael stared at her in surprise. "It's a dead hull," she

  said. "No power--"

  "I know," Kira said, and quickly she explained that

  they hoped to assemble one whole ship out of two.

  "Do you think Devys might be willing to sell it to

  me?"

  "I'm sure he would," Koratta said, studying the

  records before her. "We have the estimated salvage

  value as scrap duranium at twenty-two bars of gold-

  pressed latinum. If you'd like to buy it, that would be

  the price. Frankly, I'm sure he'd jump at the offer--it

  would save us a lot of work."

  "Thanks, Jael," Kira said with a smile she truly felt

 

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