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    The War of the Prophets

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      Jake tapped his hands on the sides of his food tray. "So humans and Klingons are

      missing?"

      Bashir shrugged and turned off his padd. "There's a lot they aren't telling us

      about what's going on."

      Intriguing to Bashir, Jake immediately dropped his eyes to his collection of

      reconstituted rations and busily began peeling off their clear tops. When he had

      first visited the mess hall, Bashir had been interested to no­tice that what he

      thought were replicator slots lining one wall were actually small transporter

      bays with a di­rect connection to a food-processing facility a few kilo-

      meters away. Replicator circuitry and power converters were considered a

      critical resource and used for only the most important manufacturing needs.

      "So, how's Nog?" Bashir asked, trying to keep his tone innocuous, but wondering

      why Jake had chosen not to react to his statement. He took a sip of the tea he

      had requisitioned. It was too cold, too sweet, and tasted nothing at all like

      tea.

      "Different," Jake said, frowning at the contents of the containers he had

      uncovered. Again, it was not clear to Bashir if the frown was directed at the

      food or at his question.

      'To be expected, don't you think?"

      Jake gingerly dabbed a finger into the red sauce that covered a brownish square

      of... something, then ten­tatively licked his finger. He grimaced. "I actually

      miss the combat rations on the Augustus."

      Bashir smiled in commiseration. Vulcan combat ra­tions were logical and not much

      else. They consisted of tasteless extruded slabs which were mostly vegetable

      pulp compressed to the consistency of soft wax. Ac­companied by packets of

      distilled water and three un­comfortably large supplement pills to compensate

      for the differences between Vulcan and human nutrient re­quirements, 500 grams

      of pulp were sufficient to main­tain a normal adult body for thirty hours.

      Vulcans were proud of the fact that their rations only had to be in­gested once

      a day, and that the process could be com­pleted in less than two minutes. How

      much more efficient could eating become? All of the temporal refugees had lost

      body mass during their voyage on the Augustus.

      It was also possible, though, that Jake's joke might

      have another purpose—to change the subject. Bashir didn't intend to let such a

      ploy go unchallenged.

      "Were you having an argument with Nog?" he asked. "Before we all had dinner at

      the Starbase?"

      He saw the answer in Jake's guilty expression. "Jake, it's bad enough that

      Starfleet is keeping secrets from us. We can't keep them from each other, too."

      Bashir dropped his own voice to a near whisper. "What did he tell you?"

      Jake's shoulders sagged. "It's more what he didn't tell me... tell us."

      "About what?"

      Jake dropped his napkin over his untouched food. "He was lying to us."

      Bashir felt the unwelcome touch of alarm. He had con­sidered that possibility

      himself. "About the Phoenix?"

      "No... I don't think about all that. Like, the Phoenix and going back

      twenty-five thousand years and the deep-time charges in B'hala... I really think

      that's what Starfleet's planning. Or was planning. But... when he told us he had

      no doubt that the mis­sion would succeed ... that was a lie."

      Bashir put down his pad. "Considering the rather au­dacious nature of the

      mission, I'm not really surprised. It's perfectly understandable that Nog might

      harbor some doubts about the possibilities for success."

      But Jake shook his head emphatically. "I'm not talk­ing about doubts. Or being

      nervous. I mean ... look, it's as if Nog already knows the mission can't

      succeed."

      "Did he say that to you? Is that what you were argu­ing about?"

      Jake looked right and left,, obviously concerned about anyone overhearing their

      discussion. "That was part of it. But he didn't have to tell me. Not flat out."

      "I don't understand."

      Jake shifted uncomfortably. "He's been my best friend for... well, we were best

      friends for a long time. And I can tell when he's lying. He does this thing with

      his eyes and... his mouth sort of freezes in position."

      Jake was obviously developing some skill in obser­vation. "They call it a

      'tell.' Or they used to," Bashir corrected himself, "a few centuries ago. In

      gambling and confidence games, some people develop a nervous habit which gives

      away the fact that they're bluffing. You're very observant."

      Jake shrugged. "Not really. Uh, Nog sort of told me himself. His father and

      uncle kept giving him a hard time about it. They, uh, they claimed he had picked

      it up from me... a filthy human habit that would hold him back in business."

      Jake smiled weakly. "He tried to run away from the station a couple of times."

      "I didn't know," Bashir said truthfully.

      "I... talked him out of it. But anyway, he's still doing it. And he was

      definitely lying to us."

      Bashir sat back in the flimsy mess-hall chair and men­tally called up a Vulcan

      behavioral algorithm to try to calculate the odds that Jake was correct in his

      conclusion of Nog's truthfulness. Once the Vulcans had realized the failure of

      their early predictions that any species intelli­gent enough to develop warp

      drive would of course have embraced logic and peaceful exploration as the

      guiding principles of their culture, they had developed complex systems for

      modeling and predicting alien behavior as a form of self-survival. It was a

      difficult set of equations to master, but one could always count on a Vulcan to

      figure the odds for just about any eventuality.

      Bashir completed his calculations. In the limited way

      he had trained himself in the Vulcan technique, he was forced to conclude that

      given the relationship between Jake and Nog, Jake was more likely than not

      correct in his assessment of his friend. Since there was nothing to be gained

      from questioning Jake's conclusion, the only logical course was now to determine

      the underlying reasons for Nog's behavior.

      Bashir began the requisite series of questions. "Did you tell him that you knew

      he was lying?"

      Jake nodded. "That's when he got mad at me."

      "But did he deny lying?"

      "How could he?"

      "Did he say why?"

      Jake appeared to be more profoundly unhappy than Bashir ever recalled seeing him

      before.

      "All he told me was that I should keep my... my ridiculous hew-mon opinions to

      myself. And then, well, he sort of let me know that it was really important that

      I not tell anyone what I thought."

      "With what you know of him, Jake, is there any rea­son you can think of why Nog

      would lie to us about the success of the mission?"

      Now Jake looked positively haunted. "I... I think so."

      Bashir leaned forward to hear Jake's theory about how Captain Nog was really

      going to save the lives of the temporal refugees—and the universe.

      And what he heard was utterly fascinating, and at the same time utterly

      horrifying.

      CHAPTER 14

      "You know how Stardates work," Commander Arla Rees said.

      "Of course." Sisko nodded, distracted, wondering about what was beyond the

      windowless hull of t
    he small travelpod they were riding in. It reminded him of a

      two-person escape module, though he could see no indication that it carried

      emergency supplies or even flight controls. According to Weyoun, transporters

      were not permitted to operate anywhere within the Bajoran system—though he had

      provided no explanation why— and all travel here was carried out by pod,

      runabout, or shuttle. Thus, the survivors from the Defiant had been sent off

      from the Boreth's hangar deck two by two, in these tiny pods with no means by

      which to observe the somehow restored Deep Space 9 as they neared it.

      "Seriously?" Arla persisted. "You've actually looked into how the Stardate

      system was devised?"

      Sisko looked across the cramped pod—or down the pod, or up it. There was no

      artificial gravity field, and no inertial dampeners either. Essentially, he and

      the commander were the only passengers in a gray metal can with two acceleration

      seats with restraint straps, a pressure door, and four blue-white lights, two at

      their feet and two at their heads. Sisko even doubted if the simple vessel had

      its own engines or reaction-control system. He guessed they were being guided

      from the Boreth to DS9 by tractor beam.

      "I've studied timekeeping."

      Arla frowned. "When? They don't tell you a lot in the Academy."

      "Actually, I had reason to take an extension course a few years ago. I even

      built a few different types of me­chanical clocks on my own." Sisko tried to

      lean back in his acceleration seat, but of course there was no gravity field to

      aid his maneuver—only the two chest-crossing straps that kept him from floating

      out of the seat.

      "Did your course deal with how the system got started?"

      "Some of it. As I understand it, Commander, the im­petus behind devising a

      universal—or, at least, a galac­tic—standard time- and date-keeping system was

      primarily religious."

      From her seat beside him, Arla nodded her head in agreement, though Sisko didn't

      understand the reason for the odd smile that accompanied that nod.

      He continued, not knowing what she was looking for in his answer. "There's

      certainly precedent for it. Many of the religious festivals and holy days

      celebrated on Earth are tied to the calendar."

      "More often than not the lunar calendar, I believe," Arla said.

      "That's right," Sisko said. Though he still didn't know why they were having

      this conversation, it seemed harmless enough. He decided to run with it The

      com­mander would give him her reasons when she was ready, and mat was fine with

      him. "Now if my memory serves me right, when the first outposts were set up on

      Earth's moon, since everyone lived underground and the moon is less than a

      light-second from Earth, timekeep­ing wasn't a problem. But when the outposts on

      Mars were established, and it was common for people to spend years mere with

      their families, I recall learning mat it became awkward trying to reconcile

      Martian sols at twenty-four-and-a-half hours with Earth days at just under

      twenty-four. So a council of religious scholars on Mars came up with the first

      Stardate system—Local Planetary Time—based, I believe, on the look-up tables and

      charts the Vulcans had been using to reconcile their starships' calendars with

      their homeworld's."

      "The Vulcan system was based in philosophy," Arla said, as if making some

      important point, "not religion."

      "I... suppose you could say that," Sisko said ami­ably. "Now, for most people,

      once you have a few thou­sand starships and outposts and a few hundred colonies,

      it gets too cumbersome to keep using look-up tables and charts. But," Sisko

      smiled, "not for Vulcans. It's no secret they have no problem keeping forty or

      fifty dif­ferent calendar systems in their heads at the same time. But humans,

      we freely admit, tend to place more cul­tural and religious importance on

      specific days."

      "Just like Bajorans," Arla said as she turned to him, her eyes filled with a

      passion Sisko didn't recall having

      noticed before. She then paused expectantly, as if she had still not heard what

      she needed to hear.

      "Is there some point to this conversation?" Sisko fi­nally asked.

      But Arla's answer merely took the form of another question. "What happened next?

      According to the ex­tension course you took."

      Sisko sighed, tiring of their exercise. He wondered how long it would take for

      the pod to drift over to the station. He was surprising himself with his need to

      touch the metal walls and feel the decks of DS9 beneath his boots again. And

      with his desire to have someone tell him how it was that he could have seen DS9

      destroyed, and yet see it now restored. Weyoun had been of little help. All he

      would answer in reply to Sisko's questions was, 'In time, Benjamin. All will be

      explained in time."

      Only because there was absolutely nothing else to do at the moment, Sisko

      continued to humor Arla. This time his answer came straight out of the Academy's

      first-semester text file. "The underlying principle of the universal Stardate

      system is that of hyperdimensional distance averaging."

      "Which is?"

      Sisko grimaced. The last time he had had this basic a conversation with anyone

      about Stardates, Jake had been five and sitting on his knee, struggling to get

      bis Plotter Forest Diary program to work on the new padd Sisko had given him for

      his birthday.

      "If you insist" Sisko then rattled off the requisite in­formation. "Any two

      points in space can be joined by a straight line. The length of that line,

      divided by two, will yield the midpoint. If the inhabitants of both points

      convert their local time to the hypothetical time at the

      midpoint, then they both have an arbitrary yet univer­sally applicable constant

      time to which they can refer, in order to reconcile their local calendars." He

      paused before continuing. "You know, of course, it's the exact same principle

      developed on Earth when an interna­tional convention chose to run the zero

      meridian through Greenwich, establishing Greenwich Mean Time. It was a

      completely artificial standard, but a stan­dard everyone could use."

      "And...," Arla prompted.

      "And," Sisko sighed. The Bajoran commander's per­sistence was fully up to Vulcan

      standards. "Any two points can be joined by a straight line. Go up a dimen­sion,

      and any three points can be located on a two-dimensional plane. Go up another

      dimension, and any four points in space can be located on the curved sur­face of

      a three-dimensional sphere. Any five points can be found on the surface of a

      four-dimensional hyper-sphere, and so on. The standard relationship is that any

      number of points,«, can be mapped onto the surface of a sphere which exists in n

      minus one dimensions. And that means mat all of those points are exactly the

      same distance from the center of the sphere. So, just after the Romulan War, the

      Starfleet Bureau of Standards and the Vulcan Science Academy arbitrarily chose

      the cen­ter of our galaxy as the center point of a hypersphere with... oh, I

      forget the exact figure... something like five hundred million dimensions, okay?

      So theoreti­cally, every star in our galaxy�
    �along with four hun­dred million and

      some starships and outposts—can be located on the surface of the hypersphere and

      can di­rectly relate their local calendars and clocks to a com­mon standard time

      that's an equal distance from

      everywhere. Just as everyone on Earth used to look to Greenwich." Sisko gripped

      his restraints and pushed himself back into his acceleration couch, trying to

      com­press his spine. The microgravity, not to mention his traveling companion,

      was giving him a pain in the small of his back, as his spine elongated in the

      absence of a strong gravity field. "Is that sufficient?" he asked sharply.

      "What do you think?" Arla replied.

      A sudden shock of pain pulsed through Sisko just above his left kidney. He

      remembered the sensation from his microgravity training decades ago in the

      Academy's zero-G gym. He forced his next words out through gritted teeth. "I

      think it's a damn simple sys­tem. One that works independent of position and

      rela­tivistic velocity. And since it's based on the galactic center it's

      blessedly free of political overtones." Sisko smiled in relief as his back spasm

      ended, as suddenly as it had begun, and as he at the same time relived a sudden

      memory of the one sticking point Jake—like most five-year-olds—had had when it

      came to learning Stardates. "And once a person gets used to the idea that

      Stardates can seem to run backward from place to place, depending on your

      direction and speed of travel, it becomes an exceedingly simple calculation to

      con­vert from local time to Stardate anywhere in the galaxy.

      "So—if you're asking me if I'm in favor of Stardates, Commander, yes, I am. Now

      what does this have to do with anything?"

      Arla's expression was maddeningly enigmatic, and Sisko could read no clues in

      it. "So you consider the system to be completely arbitrary?"

      "Any timekeeping system has to be. Because the uni-

      verse has no absolute time or absolute position. Now would you please answer my

      question."

      "Then how is it—" Arla said, and Sisko's attention was caught by her tone. The

      commander was finally ready to make her point. "—nine days from now, when the

      two wormholes are going to open in the Bajoran system only kilometers apart from

      each other and... and supposedly end the universe, or transform it some­how,

      that that completely arbitrary Stardate system is going to roll over to 7700.0

     


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