Online Read Free Novel
  • Home
  • Romance & Love
  • Fantasy
  • Science Fiction
  • Mystery & Detective
  • Thrillers & Crime
  • Actions & Adventure
  • History & Fiction
  • Horror
  • Western
  • Humor

    The War of the Prophets

    Page 30
    Prev Next


      unex­pected direction, and at transwarp speeds even a two-minute lead could

      translate into a ten-light-year advantage.

      Karon looked up from her holographic display as Bashir stopped beside her.

      "Any sign of pursuit?" Bashir asked her.

      "The alarms would have sounded," Karon said crisply. "In transwarp, we are

      virtually undetectable, just as the Borg are."

      Bashir nodded and looked around, hands still behind his back.

      "There is something else?" Karon asked, appearing a touch more impatient,

      exactly as Bashir and the others had hoped.

      "Well, it will be four days till we reach our objective..."

      "Correct."

      "... and I'd like to fill the time with something worthwhile."

      "I suggest meditation."

      "I was thinking more along the lines of medical re­search."

      Karon stared at him, waiting for him to continue.

      "No one's ever traveled through time in this ship," Bashir explained. "There is

      a slight possibility that mere could be some... novel physical disruptions in

      bodily processes. Indigestion. Gas. Diarrhea. Vomiting."

      "I am aware of bodily processes," Karon said coldly.

      "Well, in order for me to treat these symptoms—if they occur—I'd like to have a

      baseline medical file on

      all crew members. So I can compare their readings be­fore and after the—"

      "I am also aware of the purpose of baseline readings, Doctor. Get to the point."

      "I want to give physicals to your crew."

      Karon considered Bashir, her dark eyes unblinking.

      Bashir did his best to look innocent, then puzzled, then alarmed.

      "Have I said something wrong, Centurion?"

      "You really don't expect me to let you take my crew, one by one, into sickbay,

      where you will be free to in­ject them with drugs, neural implants, who knows

      what."

      Bashir let his mouth drop open, as in shock. "Centu­rion, no! I just want to—"

      "I know what you want to do, Doctor. This truce be­tween us is strained enough

      as it is. Don't make it worse by attempting to gain the upper hand."

      Bashir affected an air of disappointment and defeat. "If that's what you think,

      I apologize. It wasn't at all what I was—"

      "Is there anything else, Doctor?"

      Bashir acted perplexed, then spoke as if he had just had a thought. "Would it be

      all right if I ran baseline tests on just the humans and Bajorans?"

      "You may vivisect them, if it will keep you off my bridge."

      "It... won't be that drastic—but thank you." Bashir looked back at the other

      crew chairs. There were five temporal refugees among the Romulans. "I'll start

      with them, may I?"

      "Just leave."

      Bashir gave a deliberately calculated half-bow, then

      gestured to the humans and Bajorans to accompany him to sickbay.

      The Romulan standing guard at the turbolift alcove immediately questioned the

      fact that the refugees were leaving, but Centurion Karon instructed him to let

      the doctor proceed with his patients.

      Bashir and his party entered the lift Bashir nodded at the guard and smiled

      warmly. The guard turned away with a grunt of disapproval.

      Then Bashir completed the final, most important act of his deception. As the

      lift doors began to close, he reached out his hand to make them open again,

      stepped out into the alcove, and firmly grasped the edges of the ship's

      dedication plaque and pulled.

      He felt as if he had sliced open half his fingers, but Nog had been right. The

      metal plaque released from its mag connectors with a pop.

      The Romulan guard turned in time to see Bashir step back into the lift with the

      gleaming metal plate.

      "We're going to make you a new one," Bashir said. "So it says Alth'Indor."

      The guard frowned but made no move to stop them as the lift doors closed a

      second time.

      Bashir kept his smile in place until he felt the jolt of the lift car beginning

      to move. He was no longer star­tled by it, now that Nog had explained why the

      damp­ening fields had been tuned to a slow response time.

      When they had descended four decks, Bashir tapped his commbadge. "We're on our

      way to sickbay. I have all the patients."

      A moment later, Worf's voice said, "Acknowledged."

      Bashir grinned, and this time he meant it.

      When the lift stopped on deck 8, Bashir rushed out,

      heading for engineering, leaving his confused patients to follow on their own.

      One of them even called out that this wasn't the deck for sickbay.

      Bashir burst into engineering, hoping he was in time.

      He was. Just.

      On the systems wall a large display showed a schematic of the Phoenix, all three

      kilometers of her, a sleek shape most resembling a pumpkin seed bristling with

      transwarp pods on its aft hulls, ventral and dorsal.

      "Here goes," Nog said, with a tense nod at Bashir.

      He tapped some controls on the main engineering table. Instantly, a set of

      system displays turned red and the computer voice said, "Warning: Initiating

      multivec-tor attack mode while in—" Nog silenced the voice with a sharp jab at

      the controls.

      Also at the main engineering table, Jadzia looked up in alarm. "Would they hear

      that on the bridge?"

      "Doesn't matter," Nog said quickly as his fingers flew over the controls.

      "They're not going anywhere."

      On the schematic, Bashir saw all the turbolift shafts turn red.

      Then a communications screen opened on the table and a holographic image of

      Centurion Karon took shape. "Captain Nog!" she shouted. "You will cease your

      attempts to override bridge authority and return the ship's dedication plaque at

      once!"

      "Actually," Nog muttered, "that's exactly what I'm not going to do." He held a

      finger over one final, flash­ing red control. "Hold on to your lobes, everyone,"

      he said, then pressed it.

      Instantly the engineering workroom filled with sirens and flashing lights and on

      the main schematic Bashir

      watched as a small section of the forward ventral hull become outlined in red.

      "Partial multivector mode established," the computer reported. "Prepare for

      bridge-segment jettison."

      The deck shuddered, as the red-outlined section of the schematic suddenly

      vanished from the board.

      "All control transferred to battle bridge," the com­puter said.

      The computer was immediately followed by Worf's triumphant voice. "We are the

      Phoenix once again."

      Bashir cheered along with Jadzia. Jake pounded Nog on the back.

      Then Worf asked over the comm link, "What are your orders, Captain Nog?"

      The doctor heard the passion in the Ferengi's swift reply. "We're going to

      Bajor."

      Bashir relaxed.

      The universe had one last chance.

      CHAPTER 24

      weyoun stepped our onto the balcony of the temple in the center of B'hala and

      held out his arms as if to show off his new robes of intense, saturated red.

      "The blood of innocents?" Sisko asked.

      "The flame of faith," Weyoun answered.

      Sisko turned back to B'hala, concentrating on the heat of the morning sun, the

      dry scent of dust, and the silence.

      The silence was absolute.

      This last day of existence, as reports of
    riots on other worlds spread across

      the subspace channels, Bajor was still. Its population had long since been

      winnowed by expulsion and execution until it was only a home for believers. And

      this day, even the believers had been sent home, to pray and to wait for their

      Ascension.

      Sisko wondered how many Bajorans were huddled in the stone buildings within his

      view. He wondered how many were whispering the prayers of the Pah-wraiths

      and how many were clinging fearfully to the prayers of the Prophets, trusting

      without trust in one last miracle, one last tear as the Prophets wept for their

      people.

      "Still hoping there might be a bomb or two hidden down there?" Weyoun asked, as

      he came to stand by Sisko's side as if, somehow, they were equals.

      "It would be a nice surprise," Sisko said.

      "Ah, but if Starfleet's brave chrononauts had man­aged to plant them and fool

      our sensors, they would have gone off by now, don't you think?"

      "Maybe Starfleet sank a planet buster near the core," Sisko said, baring his

      teeth in a facsimile of a smile. "Take out the whole planet any time now."

      "Benjamin, you know that's not Starfleet's style. De­stroy an entire world, just

      to stop one man?"

      "You're not a man, Weyoun. But I am glad to hear the lies have stopped.

      Starfleet wouldn't destroy a world. Wouldn't start a war. Wouldn't spread lies."

      "I wouldn't advise you to take that as a sign of moral rectitude. You should

      look at it as I do: as a sign of their weakness. Your weakness, Benjamin."

      "Starfleet's not weak," Sisko said. "There's still time to stop you."

      Weyoun's laugh was derisive. "In twenty hours? No. Every attempt has failed—and

      failed miserably. Oper­ation Looking Glass? That pathetic attempt to attack us

      in the Mirror Universe—a fiasco. Operation Phoenix? It literally fell apart—a

      Grigari ship found the bridge of the Phoenix adrift near the Vulcan fron­tier,

      filled with a crew of terrified Romulans. Don't you see, Benjamin? You people

      wasted too much en­ergy fighting each other. That is your greatest weak­ness. No

      self-control."

      Sisko refused to be provoked. "Twenty hours. Twenty seconds. I won't give up."

      "And that's your weakness, too—refusing to accept the inevitable."

      Sisko concentrated on the smooth texture of the worn rock that formed the

      balcony's edge. This couldn't end. This wouldn't end. "You will be stopped,

      Weyoun."

      "Did I mention Operation Guardian?" Weyoun asked.

      Sisko shrugged, uninterested.

      "Fascinating plan. A sure sign of the sheer despera­tion rampant in what was

      left of the Federation." Wey­oun leaned forward to be sure Sisko could both see

      and hear him. "It called for a combined force of Starfleet vessels and Borg

      cubeships! Can you imagine? The Federation and the Borg acting together?"

      Sisko was dismissive of Weyoun and his gloating. "What of it? It's our way to

      make our enemies our al­lies. Always has been. Always will be."

      "The combined force—fifty, sixty ships at least— were trying to regain a small

      planetoid with a strange alien device built into it. Have you ever heard of the

      Guardian of Forever?"

      Surprised, Sisko studied Weyoun. That might work, he thought.

      Weyoun smiled. "But they failed, of course. The Gri­gari were ready for them. To

      Starfleet's credit, or perhaps it was the Borg's—it doesn't really matter which"

      the Vorta said, "the battle lasted for days. And then, when that noble Admiral

      Janeway finally managed to get her troops on the ground and within sight of the

      device—"

      Sisko closed his eyes, willing Weyoun to vanish. Will­ing Bajor to be consumed

      by a bomb planted a billion years ago. Anything to end Weyoun's vicious

      prattling.

      "—You really should pay attention to this, Ben­jamin ... I assure you it is

      quite amusing. Just at that moment when Janeway thought she had won—knew she had

      won—the Grigari activated a singularity bomb." Weyoun snapped his fingers.

      "Instant black hole. Borg. Starfleet. The Guardian. Even the Grigari. Sucked out

      of the universe just like that. A taste of what's to come for all of us, hmm?"

      "I could throw myself off this balcony," Sisko said, looking down on the silent

      city far below.

      "You could," Weyoun agreed. "In fact, I'm a little surprised you haven't tried

      it by now. Don't let me stop you."

      "If I fall and die, would you just bring me back to life? Or would I just not

      fall?"

      "Why not try it? And I'll surprise you."

      Sisko turned around, his back to the city, leaned against the balcony wall.

      'Tell me, Weyoun. Do you re­ally need me here to ... to accomplish something? Or

      are you just desperate for an audience?"

      Red sparks danced in Weyoun's eyes. "Oh, I do need you, Benjamin. Two Temples.

      Two groups of Prophets. Two Emissaries. It all has to be brought into balance."

      "How?" The question Sisko had wanted answered for so long hung in the air

      between them.

      Weyoun looked up at the brilliant blue sky and to Sisko, it was almost as if the

      Vorta were staring directly into Bajor's sun. "Oh, the Temples are easy. And

      when they come together, the Prophets will know what to do. But the role of the

      Emissaries... you know, that's a puzzle."

      Sisko tensed, alert to the first admission from Wey­oun that his power and

      knowledge were not absolute.

      "There's something that's not written in your texts?" Sisko asked carefully.

      Weyoun shook his head. "That's what's so intrigu­ing, Benjamin. Everything is in

      the texts. Even your name—the Sisko. Your discovery of B'hala. The False

      Reckoning on your old station. The fall of the Gateway. Your return in time for

      the joining of the Temples.

      "The texts make it very clear that whoever wrote them knew about you. And that

      you are an absolute re­quirement for the Ascension to take place as prophe­sied.

      But... just before the end... the text stops—not as if there's a missing

      page—the narrative simply ends, as if whoever saw this future didn't see its end

      either."

      "Then maybe it doesn't," Sisko said.

      Weyoun waved a hand in the air. "Admittedly there are a few theological loose

      ends. But, really, physics is physics. Whatever you mink about what might be in

      them, when those two wormholes come together these eleven dimensions of

      space-time around us will unravel instantaneously and irretrievably."

      "What kind of god would want that fate for cre­ation?" Sisko asked.

      As if in answer to Sisko's question, an intense red glow flared and then faded

      hi Weyoun's eyes. Then the Vorta reached out to take his arm.

      "What do you want of me?" Sisko demanded, draw­ing back.

      Weyoun smiled and shook his head. Then firmly holding on to Sisko, he tapped his

      chest as if something were hidden beneath his robes.

      "Two to beam up," he said.

      B'hala dissolved into light as once again, Sisko was transported.

      CHAPTER 25

      the phoenix ripped through a realm of space not even Zefram Cochrane had

      imagined.

      Her engines had the power to change the course of stars and turn planets into

      glittering nebulae of atomic gas just by passing too close to
    them. But that

      power was contained and channeled by technol­ogy—technology assimilated from a

      thousand differ­ent cultures, from trillions of different individuals,

      representing as it did the sum total of Borg knowl­edge.

      But now, only seventeen beings rode within the Phoenix as she began her final

      run. Fifteen of her pas­sengers were already displaced in time. Two others were

      willing to face the same risks.

      The ship's destination was fifty light-years away. But with the incomprehensible

      power she controlled, she would reach it within the hour.

      I

      And that hour might be the last the beings within her would ever know.

      "Come with us," Jake said.

      But Nog shook his head, his attention riveted on the main viewer of the battle

      bridge. "The Phoenix has to end up on Syladdo, fourth moon of Ba'Syladon," he

      said.

      Without taking his eyes from the viewer, Nog bran­dished the gleaming dedication

      plaque he was holding. "Along with this."

      "Nog, you can't do this!" Jake said, alarmed by his friend's intentions. "The

      wreckage wasn't found until after we disappeared. You won't be changing the

      time­line."

      Nog stared straight ahead, undeterred. "If the wreck­age isn't there, the

      timeline will be changed. I've gone over it with Jadzia and Dr. Bashir."

      "Then..." Jake struggled to find the right words, Ae right argument. "Then

      program the computer to crash the damn thing!"

      "No, Jake. There's no guarantee the computers will function after the slingshot

      maneuver. If they need any significant time to reset themselves, the Phoenix

      could crash somewhere else in the meantime. Maybe even on Bajor. Wipe out a

      city."

      "Come on, Nog. You can't kill yourself!"

      "I don't plan to. The Romulans' charts of the crash site were very detailed. And

      as I told you before, they only found forty percent of the ship." Nog flashed a

      quick grin at Jake over his shoulder, before turning back to the viewer.

      "Remember, the Phoenix is a multi-vector ship. Not counting the bridge we

      jettisoned, that

      means two segments didn't crash. I'll be able to go anywhere. Even Erelyn IV."

      "Anywhere except home," Jake said. Because that was Nog's plan for the rest of

      them. Starfleet Intelli­gence knew that Ascendancy starships would be keep­ing

      station at the coordinates where the wormholes would open and merge. Nog was

     


    Prev Next
Online Read Free Novel Copyright 2016 - 2026