Book Read Free

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

Page 18

by John Gregory Betancourt


  she'd seen appeared. Probably a local official, she

  thought.

  He took one look at Odo and saluted. "Founder!"

  he said.

  Odo leveled his gaze at the officer. "I want clear-

  ance to land," he said in his most authoritative voice.

  Kira glanced sideways at him. She'd heard that same

  overbearing tone in the changeling whom they'd

  stranded on Skovar IV.

  "Immediately." The officer punched something

  into his console, then gave landing coordinates.

  Odo nodded, then severed the connection.

  "That was easy," Kira said.

  "Too easy," Worf said. He had come up behind

  them while they were getting landing clearance. Now

  he glowered a bit at Odo. "Almost as if they were

  expecting us."

  "Are you implying that this is a trap?" Odo de-

  manded.

  "I am not implying anything," Worf said. "It

  seemed too easy to me."

  Kira sighed and leaned back in her seat. Odo and

  Worf had been working at odds with one another

  almost since they'd met, it sometimes seemed. The

  Klingon didn't know Odo as well as she knew him,

  she told herself. At first he always seemed a little off-

  putting, but now that she knew his quirks, she would

  have trusted him with her life. On this mission, in

  fact, she already had.

  "I'm willing to take this at face value," she said to

  Worf.

  "Thank you, Major," Odo said.

  "Now let's get back to business at hand, shall we?"

  She turned back to the controls and locked in the

  landing coordinates she'd been given, activating the

  autopilot. The ship nosed down and began its descent.

  A bit of turbulence shook the ship suddenly. It was

  always a little bumpy when you entered a planer's

  atmosphere, she knew, so that didn't worry her. Odo

  steadied himself against the back of her chair, and

  Worf slid into the copilot's seat.

  The planet grew before them. Kira stared at the

  huge landing field now appearing through the clouds

  below. It was immense, she realized, easily twice the

  size of the largest city on Bajor. Hundreds if not

  thousands of ships were parked here, ranging in size

  from tiny starships like their own to behemoths nearly

  as big as the Enterprise had been.

  A series of bleeps greeted them.

  "We're being hailed," Worf said beside her. "It's

  ground control. They want us to slave the controls

  over to them. Major?"

  "I'm taking care of it." She didn't like losing

  control of the ship, but she didn't see any alternative.

  She didn't want to attract attention to herself by

  refusing what might well be a routine landing proce-

  dure here. As she activated the automatic landing

  sequencers, the ship's controls suddenly locked her

  out.

  She slid from her chair as the turbulence eased,

  using the break to check her phaser and personal

  cloaker. You could never be too careful, she thought.

  Everything seemed in working order. Now that they'd

  reached Daborat V and the end was in sight, they'd

  have to move quickly to make up for lost time. Worf

  too was checking his weapons, she noted. Odo merely

  stood with his arms folded, watching out the front

  viewport as they passed over hundreds of parked

  ships.

  Snoct began making a happy chittering sound from

  the passenger cabin. At least one of us is home, she

  thought.

  They angled down toward a less crowded area of

  the landing field, approaching an open spot between

  two small Jem'Hadar fighter ships. The shuttle

  slowed, moved to one side, then settled to the ground.

  Kira felt a slight bump when they touched down, then

  the engines powered down. The sudden silence was

  deafening.

  Odo strode to the hatch. Kira drew here weapon

  and followed him. After a second's hesitation, Worf

  did the same. The hatch popped open, admitting a

  stale, dry breeze scented with machine oils, exhaust

  fumes, and sun-baked duracrete, and the ramp tele-

  scoped down to the pavement.

  Kira went first, then Odo, then Worf. The landing

  field looked deserted no signs of people at all, just

  parked ships in all directions. Everyone had probably

  gone to the city proper on leave. She clipped the

  phaser back onto her belt.

  Worf turned in a complete circle as he reached the

  pavement, taking everything in, then put away his

  own phaser. He seemed almost disappointed in their

  reception, Kira thought.

  "A hundred million thanks," Snoct said, bounding

  out the open hatch excitedly. "I am home! I am

  home!"

  Kira told him, "We're glad to have helped."

  "If I can ever be of service, let me know," he

  promised. "Just ask any of the maintenance people at

  the spaceport for Snoct Sneyd. They all know me!"

  "There is one more small thing you can do right

  now," Odo said.

  "Name it!" Snoct said.

  "We need directions."

  That's right, Kira thought. Leave it to Odo to

  remember.

  "We're looking for a bar called the Empty Coffin,"

  she said. "Do you know it?"

  Snoct shuddered. "A horrible place," he said. "It's

  in Old Town. The scum of Daborat V go there. Stay

  away, stay away!"

  "We cannot," Worf said. "We need to meet some-

  one there."

  Snoct shuddered again. "Then yes, I know how to

  get there." He pointed down a row of shuttlecraft.

  "Go that way. When the landing field ends, you will

  see the city. Look for a small, filthy street named

  Jork's End. That's where you will find the Empty

  Coffin."

  "How will we know it?"

  "It's the only bar there."

  "Thank you," Kira said.

  "Happy to help!" Snoct said. Then, dropping to all

  fours, he dashed in the opposite direction.

  At least some good had come of the mission so far,

  Kira thought. They'd rescued one small alien and

  brought him home. She drew herself up and took a

  deep breath. Now to see about rescuing Orvor and

  retrieving the retrovirus.

  They set out down the row of spaceships. Once a

  pair of ground vehicles glided silently past, suspended

  a few centimeters off the ground by antigravity skids,

  and though a few Jem'Hadar troops sat aboard, they

  didn't slow down for a second. Kira forced herself to

  untense. It really did seem as though Odo's presence

  guaranteed them free passage throughout the Domin-

  ion, she reflected.

  Still they walked, and it began to grow dark. Fi-

  nally, as dusk swept across the spaceport, huge lights

  came on, flooding the duracrete pavement with a

  harsh white illumination.

  Fifteen minutes later they came to the edge of the

  spaceport. The duracrete simply ended and the city

  itself began. Here, this close to the landing field, the

  b
uildings appeared small, dark, and run-down look-

  ing. The street lamps had all been smashed, and the

  only illumination was a grayish glow spilling over

  from the spaceport. Empty doors and windows gaped

  like the eye sockets of alien skulls, Kira thought

  with a shiver.

  This couldn't be the best neighborhood, she real-

  ized, glancing around uneasily. It was exactly the sort

  of place she'd expect to find a dive called the Empty

  Coffin. No wonder Snoct Sneyd had warned them to

  stay away.

  Sudden scuttling movement caught her eye. She

  whirled, phaser ready.

  "Worf..." she began.

  "I saw it." He drew his own phaser, squinting into

  the dark. "A figure--"

  "Just a homeless scavenger of some kind, I'm sure,"

  Odo said. "This way." He started up the street, taking

  the lead, and Kira followed. Now, as they walked, she

  saw furtive movements all around them in the dark.

  She longed for a torch of some sort. Light would have

  made her feel safer.

  The buildings began to grow larger and better kept.

  A few now had doors and windows, she noticed, and

  finally they came to a series of working street lamps.

  A scattering of humanoidsmsome with tall, narrow

  skulls, some with broad lumpy faces, all dressed in

  what looked like worn black animal leathermlounged

  beneath the lights, watching them. Their eyes were

  hungry, she thought. Ahead, a scattering of buildings

  glowed with light.

  Odo strode up to one of the aliens without a

  moment's hesitation. "I'm looking for the Empty

  Coffin," he announced.

  The atien--bipedal, humanoid, but with a head

  that was almost completely flat on top--grunted

  once, then pulled a knife. "Money," he said.

  Odo's left arm suddenly extended an extra meter,

  wrapping around the alien's knife hand. Odo

  squeezed, and Kira heard the pop of joints dislocat-

  ing. The knife clattered on the ground, and the alien

  began to whimper.

  "I'm looking for the Empty Coffin," Odo repeated.

  With its one good hand, the alien pointed up the

  street.

  "Thank you," Odo said, and he continued on.

  Kira caught up with him. "Why did you do that?"

  she demanded.

  "To show we weren't afraid of them," he said. "We

  are being followed--no, don't look back--and I want

  them to know we're not going to be easy prey."

  Kira swallowed. She'd been watching everything

  around them carefully, but couldn't see anyone fol-

  lowing them. Odo had keener senses than she did, she

  reminded herself, plus he had security training. Drop-

  ping back half a meter, she matched Worf's stride.

  "Do you see them?" she said.

  "Yes," he said warily. "I counted fifteen."

  Then, ahead, she spotted a building that glowed

  with soft pastel lights. There were flickering neon

  signs in front, she saw, written in the local dialect.

  Unfortunately, she couldn't read them, but she recog-

  nized the blinking coffin shape over the door. This

  had to be the bar they were looking for.

  Odo held back, looking into the darkness, as she

  went up the worn steps to the front door. It slid aside

  soundlessly for her. Taking a deep breath, she stepped

  in and surveyed the room.

  A long bar stretched across the back, and aliens of

  various sizes and descriptions lounged there sipping

  drinks. Booths lined the walls to her left and right,

  and a handful of tables sat in the middle of the room.

  Weird atonal music came from hidden speakers in the

  corners. As she'd expected, there were no Jem'Hadar

  present.

  Every eye in the place had focused on her. The

  people standing at the bar turned to face her. Several

  of them began picking their teeth with long, rapierlike

  knives.

  Worf and Odo entered behind her. As they stepped

  in, every being in the room suddenly whipped out

  disruptors. She surveyed the alien faces and found

  emotions ranging from anger to outrage to disgust.

  "Hands up!" the bartender sneered, coming out

  from around the bar. His piggish gray snout curled

  back to reveal a mouth full of needle-sharp teeth. He

  held a huge disruptor rifle in his four arms.

  "Better do as he says," Odo murmured.

  Dismayed, Kira raised her arms over her head.

  Behind her, she sensed Odo and Worf doing the same.

  This rescue, she thought, was not going very well.

  CHAPTER

  22

  GLANCING AT WERRON, Bashir, and the four security

  guards, Sisko stepped up to the conference room

  door. This wasn't going to be pretty, he knew.

  He punched his access code into the hand pad. All

  the ambassadors had given them so much trouble

  over the initial DNA scans, he could only imagine

  their reaction when he asked for actual blood sam-

  ples.

  Bashit looked as nervous as Sisko felt. The doctor

  had his arms full with the DNA scanner, medical

  tricorder, hypo, and a small case of glass vials. Each of

  the eleven ambassadors would have his or her own

  sample neatly taken, labeled, and set in the center of

  the conference room table. This time there would be

  no mistakes, no possibilities of an error, and no

  question of changeling subterfuge.

  "Ready, Doctor?" he asked, keying in the final

  digit.

  Bashir nodded, all business now. It was nice to see

  how he had matured into his post, Sisko reflected.

  Three years ago, he thought, Bashir would have

  giggled nervously and made a joke. "Then let's do it," Sisko said.

  The door whisked open. He'd timed their arrival

  perfectly, and sure enough everyone else already sat

  in their seats. His gaze swept across the round table,

  taking in the Valtusians, the Federation negotiators,

  the Cardassians, and lastly the two Maquis.

  Their argument had broken off the second the door

  whisked open. They stared in surprise at him.

  "May I have your attention, please," he began in a

  loud voice. "Thanks to Vedek Werron, we have reason

  to believe that the changelings have indeed managed

  to infiltrate this conference."

  "We already passed your screening tests," Gul

  Mekkar said in a gravely voice.

  "For security reasons, we must administer new

  tests. To make sure there is no question of faking the

  results, we will also draw blood samples. No one will

  be exempted, including myself. Doctor?"

  "Put your hand here," Bashir said, offering his

  scanner.

  Sisko did so. It promptly announced he was human.

  "Now the blood test, Doctor," Sisko said. Keeping

  his gaze locked with Mekkar's, he rolled up his sleeve

  and offered his arm to Bashir. He felt a brief cold

  prickling sensation, then a second later Bashir re-

  leased him.

  "We'll know in a second," Bashir said.

  Sisko glanc
ed over. The doctor held a small vial up

  to the light, swirling it gently in a counterclockwise

  direction. The deep crimson blood in the container

  remained unchanged.

  "He's human," Bashir announced.

  "The process," Sisko went on, "only requires a few

  seconds. I trust you will all cooperate so we may

  proceed with the more important business at hand."

  "If not...?" Mekkar demanded.

  "You will be detained in a cell for the next twenty-

  four hours, under close observation. Periodically,

  changelings must revert to a liquid state. If you

  remain unchanged after twenty-four hours, you will

  be released to resume your negotiations. However,"

  and Sisko let his voice drop an octave, "I trust that

  detention will not be necessary."

  "This is preposterous--" Mekkar began.

  "We will begin," Sisko went on, ignoring him,

  "with the Federation negotiators."

  DuQuesne leaped to his feet. "Absurd!" he cried.

  "You can't do this! It violates every civil right we've

  won over the last six centuries!"

  "Be quiet," T'Pao said. She rose and circled the

  table to where Bashir waited. "I will go first. In

  matters of security, there can be no politics. Remem-

  ber the conference on Earth with the Romulans."

  She placed her hand on the DNA scanner.

  "Subject is Vulcan," it announced.

  Next T'Pao bared her arm. Bashir drew a sample of

  her green blood, swirled it, held it up to the light.

  "She's Vulcan," he said.

  "Logically," she said, "we are all interested in

  peace. Why not permit this painless examination,

  which will then allow us to continue with our work,

  rather than waste more precious time?" Leave it to a

  Vulcan to cut through the red tape, Sisko thought.

  T'Pao reclaimed her seat. "You are next, Ambassa-

  dor," she said to DuQuesne.

  His face revealed his anger. "Very well," he said

  with ill-concealed fury. He circled the table, rolling up

  his sleeve for Dr. Bas hir.

  "Human," both the DNA scanner and Bashir said.

  "Hah," DuQuesne said to Sisko. Sulkily, he sat

  next to T'Pao again, folding his arms and glaring.

  Strockman went next. Bashir quickly pronounced

  him human as well.

  "As we already knew," DuQuesne said. "This is a

  waste of time, and I promise you," he said pointedly

  to Sisko, "that formal complaints will be lodged

  against you for this outrage. We didn't come here for

  daily blood tests, and you've interrupted our negotia-

  tions at a critical juncture."

 

‹ Prev