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    The War of the Prophets

    Page 7
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      realized that if he looked slightly away from the two officers, he could just

      make out a pattern of glowing lights on their visors' surfaces, as if the

      vi­sors were generating some sort of holographic display for their wearer. On

      the officer nearest him Jake also

      noticed a narrow black wire that ran from the arm of the visor and hooked over

      the Vulcan's pointed ear. The wire disappeared into the collar of the officer's

      uni­form.

      Not bad, Jake thought. A phaser that doesn't require anyone having to waste time

      to draw and aim it. He had no idea how the odd silver phaser beam could have

      been generated in such a thin device, but he decided it was reasonable to assume

      that twenty-five years could have led to at least a few technological

      breakthroughs. He reminded himself to be on the alert for other hidden marvels

      of the day. They'd make for interesting details in the novel he planned to write

      after he returned to his own time. Because, just as he had not been ready to

      be­lieve he was going to die, he was somehow sure that eventually he would

      return. All he needed to do was work out the details—or be sure that Dr. Bashir,

      Jadzia, and Worf worked them out.

      For now, the doctor and the Trill were helping Vash to her feet. From what Jake

      could see of her, the ar­chaeologist was unharmed, though the way she stag­gered

      made it clear she was still suffering from the effects of the stun.

      Captain T'len continued coolly as if nothing unusual had just happened. "As I

      explained, your identities have been confirmed by DNA analysis. But do not think

      mat changes your status on this ship."

      "Just what is our status?" Bashir asked. He had his arm firmly around Vash's

      shoulders to support her.

      "Refugees," T'len answered. "But that can change."

      "How?"

      "The decision is not up to me." The Vulcan captain then went on to explain mat

      they would be taken from

      the hangar deck and given quarters, to which they'd be confined until their

      arrival at Starbase 53. During their confinement they would be provided with

      limited com­puter access in order to familiarize themselves with their new time

      period. "Make no mistake," T'len con­cluded. "This time period will be your new

      home."

      As the refugees fell silent in the face of that blunt statement, Jake took

      advantage of the moment to shout out, "What happened to the Defiant? "

      Captain T'len's dark eyes immediately sought him out, and Jake surprised himself

      as he held her intense gaze. "Your ship was captured by the Ascendancy. To

      answer the rest of your questions which must logically follow: So far as we

      know, the Defiant was captured in­tact. Though we do not have definitive

      knowledge, it is logical to assume that the crew has been captured. Whether or

      not they are subsequently harmed will de­pend on the degree of resistance they

      offer."

      "Then we should attempt to rescue them," Worf said bluntly. "It is unacceptable

      to retreat."

      T'len's gaze shifted from Jake to Worf, but her next words had the teenager's

      full attention. "I can assure you that a rescue attempt will be made. Starfleet

      has no intention of letting the Ascendancy keep Benjamin Sisko in custody."

      Jake experienced a huge upswell of relief upon hear­ing the captain state

      Starfleet's objective so authorita­tively, though he couldn't help also

      wondering why his father would have such importance in this time. But be­fore he

      could get up his nerve to ask for clarification, one of the Bajorans changed the

      subject.

      "Who are the Grigari?"

      The captain's enigmatic response was ominous.

      "You'll find out." She gestured to the open door, and Jake followed the rest of

      T'len's prisoners as they began their long march.

      To Jake, T'len's ship, the Augustus, seemed half-fin­ished. The dull-gray floors

      of the cramped corridors had no carpet—the decks were simply bare composite

      plates. And no attempt had been made to bide the ship's mechanical components.

      The cluttered ceilings were lined with so many differently colored pipes and

      con­duits that Jake doubted there was a single Jefferies tube on the vessel. ODN

      conduits were everywhere, running along bulkheads and punching through decks and

      ceil­ings almost at random. At least, Jake assumed they were ODN conduits. Who

      knew if optical data net­works were still being used hi this future?

      The ship appeared to have no turbolifts either. He and the other fourteen

      prisoners from the Defiant had to change decks by using steep and narrow metal

      staircases mat tattled alarmingly as so many pairs of feet pounded down them.

      For a ship of the future, the Augustus was re­minding Jake more of the old

      walk-through exhibit of the U.S.S. Discovery, a Daedalus-class ship more than

      200 years old, at the Starfleet Museum in San Francisco. But even that old

      veteran, one of the first ships commissioned by the newly formed Starfleet, had

      had more room.

      The environmental controls also seemed to be less precise than the ones Jake was

      used to. The hangar deck had been cool, but the first corridors the refugees had

      been led through were uncomfortably hot. On their enforced march they had

      already encountered a few more of T'len's crew, and they had all, without

      excep­tion, been Vulcan. That made the heat make sense to

      Jake: It reflected the crew's normal and preferred ambi­ent temperature.

      But then, trudging along in the line of captives, Jake stepped off a stairway

      into a corridor that was so cold its gray metal walls were rimed with frost.

      With a shiver, he abandoned his earlier theory of acclimation for a Vulcan crew,

      and decided that the unsettling changes in temperature merely meant that the

      ship's en­vironmental controls were faulty.

      Finally they reached the end of their march, and their destination turned out to

      be a series of personnel cab­ins—they certainly didn't deserve to be called

      quarters. Jake was assigned to one that was little bigger than his bedroom on

      DS9 but which was crowded with two bunks, a fold-down desktop, what seemed to be

      a lim­ited-capacity food replicator, and—crammed into one corner with no privacy

      screen—a small toilet-and-sink unit that appeared to be able to double as a

      sonic shower enclosure. Everything was in the same depress­ing shade of muddy

      gray.

      Jake's roommate was Ensign Ryle Simons, a young human from Alpha Centauri with

      an almost pure white complexion topped by a startlingly bright-red crewcut.

      Simons was fresh from the Academy and had been on Deep Space 9 for only two

      days, waiting to join the crew of his first ship, the Destiny. After taking less

      than a second to assess the cramped nature of their room, both Jake and Simons

      peppered the Vulcan lieutenant who stood in their doorway with questions.

      "How long will it take to get to the Starbase?' Si­mons asked.

      "And where's the computer terminal?" Jake added.

      The Vulcan stepped past the two young men and

      folded down the desktop so that it blocked the doors of the storage lockers that

      took up one bulkhead. "Our transit time is classified," she said, then busied

      herself with the desktop.


      The surface of it was a large control surface, and the Vulcan swiftly tapped in

      a series of commands that quickly created what Jake recognized as a Starfleet

      computer input tablet not too different from the ones he was familiar with. What

      was different, though, was that the computer had no physical display. Instead, a

      holo­graphic screen appeared a few centimeters above the desktop. For now, the

      modified Starfleet emblem ap­peared in the center of it.

      No time like the present, Jake thought. "Lieutenant, why did the ship from the

      Bajoran Ascendancy also have a Starfleet emblem?"

      The Vulcan frowned as she assessed him, shaking her head once. "The explanation

      is in the history briefings that will be made available to you."

      "Then the explanation isn't classified?"

      "No."

      Jake refrained from showing amusement at the Vul­can's poorly disguised

      impatience. "So there's no rea­son why you can't tell us, is there? It would be

      more efficient."

      "Then the efficient answer is: propaganda." The Vul­can abruptly stood up and

      moved toward the open door.

      "I don't know what you mean by that," Jake said truthfully.

      The Vulcan hesitated on the threshold, men looked back at Jake and Simons.

      Apparently she made some sort of decision, for she then delivered her

      explanation rapidly, without pause. "At the time the Ascendancy

      was formed, it initially sought new members from those worlds waiting to accept

      admission to the Federa­tion, just as Bajor had been. One of the chief

      advan­tages to Federation membership is the opportunity to take part in

      Starfleet operations and to benefit from its defensive forces. Thus, in its

      attempt to sway the gov­ernments of the nonaligned worlds, the Ascendancy

      claimed to be the new political master of Starfleet. Since many Ascendancy

      vessels had been pirated from our fleet over the years, in a limited sense the

      claim was correct."

      "Now I really don't understand," Jake said seriously. "How could any group

      simply say they're the ones re­sponsible for Starfleet?"

      "Following the destruction of Earth," the Vulcan said, her expression remaining

      completely neutral, "Starfleet's lines of command and control took several weeks

      to be reestablished. In some regions where polit­ical turmoil further

      complicated communications, some task forces and battle groups were cut off from

      com­mand for months."

      Jake couldn't speak, let alone think of any new ques­tion. Which was just as

      well, because the Vulcan had no intention of answering further inquiries.

      "Use your computer," she said. "All your questions will be answered." Then she

      stepped back into the cor­ridor, and the narrow door slipped shut and locked.

      Jake looked at his roommate. The Centaurian en­sign's white cheeks were

      splotched with red, while the rest of his face was almost luminescent in its

      paleness. "That... that can't be true," Simons said faintly.

      But Jake knew better. The Vulcan had had no prob­lem refusing to answer a

      question when the answer

      was classified. Thus, she had no motive for lying to them. "Let's check the

      computer," he said. He went to the desktop and placed his hand on the flashing

      yellow panel labelled user identification. At once the panel turned green, and

      the holographic display switched from a static image of the Starfleet emblem to

      that of a Bolian in the new version of the Starfleet uniform. Jake checked the

      square tabs on the Bolian's rank badge and saw that the blue-skinned alien was

      an ad­miral.

      'This briefing," the Bolian admiral began, "has been prepared for the refugees

      rescued from the Starship De­fiant. It consists of a twenty-two-minute

      presentation of the key events that have occurred since the destruction of Deep

      Space 9 and the loss of your ship until the pres­ent day, focusing on those

      events which have led to what is commonly known as the War of the Prophets. At

      the end of this briefing, you will be given an oppor­tunity to examine files

      detailing the current status of any relatives you may have in this time period.

      The briefing will commence on your verbal request."

      Jake stared at the image. "I don't get it," he said, turning to Simons. "We only

      showed up here less than two hours ago. How did they have enough time to make a

      briefing tape for us?"

      Simons shook his head, puzzled. "Their computers are faster?"

      Jake wasn't convinced. But he folded his arms across his chest and prepared

      himself for the worst. "Com­puter: Start the briefing."

      The image of the Bolian admiral disappeared, re­placed by that of a Starfleet

      sensor-log identification screen announcing that whatever images were about to

      be shown had been recorded by the U.S.S. Garneau on Stardate 51889.4, in the

      Bajoran sector.

      Jake felt his chest tighten even before the sensor log began.

      He recognized the date.

      He was about to see the events that, according to his­tory, had led to his

      death.

      CHAPTER 6

      "what's wrong with him?" Centurion Karon de­manded.

      Nog awoke with a start. He instantly moved his hand to the side of his head in

      response to a dull pain in his temple. Then he reacted to the shock of

      realization that the little finger of his right hand was broken. And then to the

      fact that he could move at all. Until he remem­bered where he was and how he had

      come here.

      The Romulan centurion's voice was insistent. "Ad­miral Picard. Has he been

      injured?"

      Nog pushed himself up on the medical bed. He rubbed at his head again, this time

      careful to keep all pressure off his broken finger. "Irumodic Syndrome," he

      said. His throat was painfully dry. He started to cough.

      But Karon wasn't interested in his discomfort. "Tosh!" she snarled.

      Nog didn't know what that word meant, but from the

      way the sharp-featured Romulan had said it, he could guess. And he could also

      guess that it meant she knew very well what Irumodic Syndrome was.

      "Does that mean Starfleet's not serious about Project Phoenix?' Karon asked.

      "I am not answering any questions until I see Admi­ral Picard."

      Karen's dark eyes considered him. Their highlights seemed to shine out at him

      from the shadows of her deep brow and precisely-cut black bangs. "Who are you?"

      she asked.

      Nog hesitated. Considering his present circum­stances, he could be a prisoner of

      war, which meant he should say nothing, even though he knew his eventual fate

      would be to become a bion. Then again, it was pos­sible that Karon had been

      truthful when she said the crew of this ship no longer supported the Ascendancy.

      Romulans had been the Federation's allies in the war against the Dominion. Was

      it possible they could be al­lies again? More to the point, Nog wondered, this

      close to the end, was there really anything to lose?

      "I'm the Integrated Systems Manager for Project Phoenix," he said. "Captain

      Nog."

      Karon looked gratifyingly impressed. "So you're in charge," she said with a

      slight incline of her head.

      "I manage the project," Nog replied. "The Admiral is in charge."

      Karon pursed her lips and nodded. "I understand per­sonal loyalt
    y. Odd to see it

      in a Ferengi, though. Per­haps our mission hasn't been wasted after all."

      "What mission?" Nog said, deliberately ignoring her insult It was the fate of

      the Ferengi to be misunder­stood by all but their own kind.

      Karon's cool gaze swept over him. "Perhaps you'd prefer getting dressed."

      Nog looked down and felt his ears flush. He was still in his sleep shorts. His

      pressure suit had apparently been removed as he slept. "Yes, I would," he said

      stiffly. "But more than that, I would appreciate having someone look at this."

      He held up his little ringer, trying not to gri­mace as he saw the strange angle

      it took from his hand.

      It required an agonizing twenty minutes to get his finger straightened and set

      in a magnetic splint, and Karon apologized for the Altanex carrying no tissue

      stimulators suitable for Ferengi biology. Her explana­tion for his injuries

      seemed quite reasonable—that he'd broken his finger and bruised his temple when

      he fell to the deck after being paralyzed.

      Once he'd been treated, Karon offered him a change of clothing, and Nog quickly

      pulled on a Romulan util­ity uniform—gray trousers, a tunic unfortunately

      in­tended for a taller person, and black boots that were, surprisingly, the

      perfect size. Then the Romulan centu­rion escorted him to Admiral Picard's guest

      quarters.

      To Nog's relief, the Old Man was asleep, not in a coma or dead. And in response

      to his pointed question­ing, Karon assured him that Picard's interrogators had

      not used any force or psychological pressure, espe­cially—here Karon paused and

      fixed Nog with a mea­suring look—when it had become so quickly apparent that the

      admiral was not in full command of his leg­endary faculties.

      With the Old Man's condition confirmed, Nog al­lowed Karon to lead him to a

      situation room three decks up. As he followed the Romulan, Nog studied what few

      details the short passage revealed about the

      vessel he was in. He wasn't certain what class of ship the Altanex was, but it

      was obviously cramped and con­fined, and the paltry number of crew members they

      passed suggested that it was also extremely small.

      Lacking any other ready source of information, Nog had no reservations about

      directly asking his escort about her ship.

      "We're a listening post," she explained, as she ad­justed the replicator in the

     


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