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    The War of the Prophets

    Page 9
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    Nog looked up to meet her gaze. Realizing that what he held in his hands was the

      proof that everything he had struggled for in these past five years on Mars,

      everything he had sacrificed, had been for nothing. Nothing.

      He could barely speak the words. "You are asking me to betray Starfleet, the

      Federation—everything I be­lieve in."

      "No, Captain, I am offering you a chance to save those very things. The only

      chance you have. We came here to put this question to Admiral Picard, but his

      time has passed. So I put it to you, Captain Nog. In all the universe, you are

      the only one who can save it now. Will you join us?"

      It took Nog a long time to make his decision.

      And time was the one thing he no longer had.

      CHAPTER 7

      if sisko closed his eyes, he could almost believe he was on Bajor, in the kai's

      Temple, in his own time. The gentle splash of water on stone in the meditation

      pool. The sharp peppermint-cinnamon smell of the b'nai candles. Even the cool

      breeze that brought with it the rich, loamy scent of the contemplation gardens.

      All these sensations brought back to him the world he had hoped someday would

      become his adopted home.

      But even these sense memories faded when he opened his eyes and looked out

      through the curving viewports of the Boreth's observation deck to see the

      Defiant being pulled through the stars at warp speed, ensnared in the purple web

      of a tractor beam and trail­ing half a kilometer behind the angular engineering

      hull of the advanced-technology Klingon battlecruiser.

      At his right, he saw in Kira a reflection of his own distress at the sight of

      their ship—so distant, so power-

      less. At his left the tall, lean form of Arla Rees stood rigid, tense, though

      Sisko knew the defeat of the Defi­ant could not inflict the same emotional toll

      on her. The Bajoran commander had only served on Deep Space 9 for a few weeks,

      and she had not served on the Defiant before the events of the station's last

      day—or of the last twenty-five years.

      "How do you think it happened?"

      Sisko knew what Kira was really asking him. His conclusion—that the Dominion had

      won its war with the Federation—had been shared by all the others on the Defiant

      once they saw or heard of Weyoun's appearance in Vedek's robes. And now, the

      fact that they had been been transported to Weyoun's Klingon ship and had

      dis­covered a Bajoran meditation chamber reconstructed to the last detail in its

      observation lounge was more proof. There could be no doubt that in this future

      the Domin­ion had won the war, and had assimilated the cultures of the Alpha

      Quadrant as omnivorously as had the Borg.

      "Maybe it was Deep Space 9," Sisko ventured. "Once the station was gone,

      Starfleet had no forward base to guard the wormhole."

      Kira sighed. "So we really were accomplishing some­thing. This isn't the way I'd

      like to find out, though."

      Arla turned away from the Defiant. "I thought the wormhole was no longer an

      issue in the war, because the aliens kept Dominion forces from using it."

      Sisko saw Kira stiffen at the Bajoran commander's casual use of the term

      "aliens" to describe the beings in the wormhole.

      "The Prophets," Kira said emphatically, "chose to stop one fleet of Jem'Hadar

      ships from traveling through their Temple. But if the Bajoran people failed

      in their duty to protect the Temple's doorway, then it is entirely possible that

      the Prophets withdrew their bless­ing—just as they did when the Cardassians

      invaded."

      Arla persisted. "Major, if the wormhole aliens are gods, how could they let the

      Cardassians inflict such evil on our world?"

      Kira's smile was brittle. "I won't pretend to under­stand the Prophets, but I

      know everything they do is for a reason."

      Before Arla could further escalate what was for now merely a discussion, Sisko

      intervened to keep it at that level. This argument could have no end between the

      two Bajorans of such dissimilar background and belief.

      Kira had been bom on occupied Bajor. She had grown up in relocation camps, and

      had fought for the Resistance since she was a child. The only thing mat had

      enabled her—and millions of other Bajorans—to survive the horrors of the

      Cardassian Occupation of their world was a deep and unquestioning faith in their

      gods—the Prophets of the Celestial Temple.

      But Arla Rees, only a few years younger than Kira, had been born to prosperous

      Bajoran traders on the neutral world of New Sydney. She had enjoyed a Me of

      privilege in which the Cardassian Occupation, though an evil to rally against,

      had never been experienced firsthand. For Arla, now a Starfleet officer, as for

      many Bajorans of her upbringing, the Prophets were little more than an outmoded

      superstition perversely clung to by her less sophisticated cousins on the old

      world.

      Sisko knew mat as fervently as Kira believed in the Prophets and their Celestial

      Temple, Arla held an equally strong belief that the Bajoran wormhole was

      in­habited by aliens from a different dimensional realm,

      and that their involvement in the history of Bajor had been more disruptive than

      benevolent.

      He himself had been wondering of late if reconciling these two opposing beliefs

      was one of the tasks that he, hi his ill-defined and unsought role as the

      Emissary to Bajor's Prophets, was supposed to be able to accom­plish. If so,

      then he was still unable to see how one could ever be reconciled with the other.

      "That's enough," Sisko said to both Kira and Arla. 'This debate is nothing we're

      going to resolve here and now."

      "Oh, but we are," Weyoun proclaimed from behind them.

      Sisko and the two Bajorans turned as quickly as if shot by disruptors, to see

      that the Vorta had apparently beamed into the observation deck behind them, just

      be­side the meditation pool. Across the deck, the doors to the corridor were

      still closed, and there was no other obvious way in.

      "Captain Sisko," Weyoun purred, "Major Kira, you have no idea how delighted I am

      to meet you again after so many years. And Commander Arla, it is such a pleasure

      to make your acquaintance." The Vorta smiled ingratiatingly at his guests and

      clasped his hands ea­gerly before him. "I trust you've found your quarters to

      your liking."

      Sisko forced himself to control his initial impulse to angrily demand an

      explanation for everything that had happened to them. Weyoun's irritatingly

      obsequious manner had simply—like everything else about him and his species—been

      genetically programmed by the Founders in order to better serve the Dominion as

      ne­gotiators, strategists, scientists, and diplomats.

      In this sense, this latest version of Weyoun had changed not at all over the

      past twenty-five years. The clone's thick black hair, brushed high above his

      fore­head, showed no trace of gray. His smooth, open face, framed by

      dramatically ribbed ears that ran from his chin halfway up the sides of his

      head, showed no sign of age-related lines or wrinkles. Indeed, the only aspect

      of the cloned Vorta that had changed from the time Sisko had last crossed his

      path was that this Weyoun now wore a Bajoran earring, complete with a
    gleaming

      silver chain.

      But at the moment none of these details was impor­tant to Sisko. There was only

      one thought that claimed his mind. "What happened to my people who were beamed

      off the Defiant?" He did not add mat his son Jake had been among them.

      "Sadly," Weyoun began mournfully, "we must con­sider them dead. The attackers

      are not known for taking prisoners. And those they do take do not live for

      long."

      Kira's outraged question filled the terrible silence that followed the Vorta's

      pronouncement. "What are you doing hi those robes?"

      Weyoun glanced down at his saffron-and-white Vedek's robes, as if to be sure his

      clothing hadn't changed in the last few seconds. "Why, they were a gift. From

      the congregation of the Dahkur Temple. I believe that's in your home province,

      Major."

      Kira's face tightened in disbelief. "None of the monks I know would ever accept

      a Dominion lackey as a vedek."

      Weyoun gazed at Kira in hurt sadness, as if her words had wounded him cruelly.

      "The Dominion," he said, almost wistfully. "A name I have not heard in many

      years."

      Kira's quick glance at Sisko revealed her lack of

      understanding, but he was unable to offer her any of his own.

      "Why not?" Sisko asked Weyoun. "Did the Founders change its name?"

      "Founders," Weyoun repeated, as if that word hadn't crossed his lips for a long

      time either. 'To be honest, I don't know how the Founders reacted to their

      loss."

      "What loss?" Sisko asked. Now he needed enlighten­ment.

      "Of the war, of course," Weyoun answered. "With the Federation."

      Kira shook her head. "Wait a minute. The Dominion lost the war?"

      Weyoun looked troubled. "In ... a manner of speak­ing."

      "And what manner would that be?" Sisko demanded.

      Weyoun nodded thoughtfully. "I understand your confusion, Captain. Twenty-five

      years is a long time. And I will see to it that you have access to briefing

      tapes that recount the thrilling historic events you've missed. But for now,

      simply to put your minds at rest, I will try to... get you up to speed. Isn't

      that what you say?"

      "Just start at the beginning," Sisko said. "Who won the war?"

      The Vorta's smile was vague. "In a technical sense, no one—but the war is over,"

      he hastened to add, as Sisko took a step toward him. "In fact, it ended almost

      one year to the day after the loss of Deep Space 9 and the beginning of your...

      miraculous voyage."

      Sisko was no longer interested in even pretending to be patient. "How did it

      end?"

      The Vorta pursed his lips. "With the destruction of Cardassia Prime, I'm sorry

      to say. A terrible battle. A

      terrible price to pay for peace. But the Cardassians were a proud people. And

      Damar and the Founder he served refused to surrender. Then, when—"

      Arla interrupted suddenly. "What do you mean, the Cardassians 'were' a proud

      people?"

      Weyoun fixed his remarkably clear gray eyes on hers. "I don't play games with my

      words, Commander. At all times, you can be sure I mean exactly what I say.

      Today, the Cardassians as a species are virtually ex­tinct. Cardassia Prime. The

      Hub Colonies. The Union Territories. All destroyed."

      "Destroyed?" Sisko repeated. "We are talking about planets?"

      Weyoun nodded. "Entire worlds, Captain. Laid waste. Uninhabitable. A death toll

      in the tens of bil­lions. ... A mere handful of Cardassians left now. Traders.

      Pirates." He paused, then added with unex­pected anger, "Madmen."

      Kira sounded as shocked as Sisko felt. "But you— you somehow escaped all that

      destruction?"

      Weyoun's facial expressions disconcertingly flick­ered back and forth between an

      overweening smile of pride and an exaggerated frown of sorrow. "No, Major. In a

      sense, / brought about that destruction."

      Now Sisko, Kira, and Arla all began to speak at the same time. But Weyoun

      ignored their questions and protests alike.

      "No, no, no," he said, tucking his hands within the folds of his robes.

      "Whatever you think of me, you're wrong." He stood with his back to the

      observation win­dows and their backdrop of warp-smeared stars. "Cap­tain Sisko,

      you must believe me. I begged Damar to accept the inevitable. I implored the

      Founder to accept

      that it was time she and her kind accepted their fate to be partners in a new

      cause, not the leaders of a dying one. Yet—"

      Sisko regarded him with disbelief. "Are you saying you turned against the

      Founders?! "

      "But... they were your gods," Kira said.

      Weyoun shook his head. "The only reason the Vorta believed the Founders to be

      gods was because that was programmed into the basic structure of our brains. Our

      belief in the Founders was achieved through the same genetic engineering that

      raised us from the forests of our homeworld."

      "But you've always known about your program­ming," Sisko said.

      'True. And our belief, engineered or not, did sustain the Vorta—sustained

      me—through the most difficult times. But then..." Weyoun withdrew his arms from

      his robes and spread them wide, as if to embrace Sisko and the others. "... The

      day came when those difficult times" ended and... and / met the true Gods of all

      creation—­the Prophets." His transformed face shone with bliss.

      Sisko stared at the triumphant Vorta. "You.... met the Bajoran Prophets?"

      Weyoun nodded, his beatific smile never wavering.

      "Through an Orb experience?" Kira asked doubt­fully. "Or—"

      "Face to face," the Vorta said in a humble voice. "In the True Celestial Temple.

      I traveled through it. A des­perate expedition to see if it led to the Gamma

      Quad­rant." He laughed quietly to himself in remembrance. "The Founder herself

      ordered me to go. Two Cardas­sian warships. A wing of Jem'Hadar attack cruisers.

      Yet... I was the only one to return."

      And then, an icy hand gripping his heart, Sisko made sense of Weyoun's

      astounding story. "You traveled through the second wormhole."

      The Vorta held a finger to his lips. "Oh, Captain, I must caution you. I have a

      very devoted, very religious crew. We don't call them... 'wormholes' anymore."

      "Two Temples, then," Sisko said. "Just like the leg­end of the Red Orbs of

      Jalbador."

      Weyoun stared at Sisko, abandoning all traces of the false veneer of a

      genetically engineered negotiator he had always maintained in their previous

      encounters. "In your time," he said seriously, "the legend of Jalbador ex­isted

      in many different forms, distorted by the inevitable accumulation of error over

      the millennia of its retelling. But in essence, Captain, each variation of that

      legend possessed a fraction of the truth. A truth which you helped bring back to

      a universe that had lost its way."

      "And that truth would be?" Kira asked grimly.

      Weyoun's response was uncharacteristically to the point. "The Prophets are the

      Gods of all creation, and the True Celestial Temple is their home."

      Then, pausing as if to compose himself, the Vorta studied his audience of three

      before focusing his atten­tion on Arla. "Now I know this is not what you

      believe, Commander. I overheard what you were saying before I joined you
    . If the

      Prophets are Gods, then how can they let evil exist? That is a valid question.

      And it has a valid answer."

      Weyoun stepped closer to Arla, addressing her as if Sisko and Kira were no

      longer present in this recon­struction of a meditation chamber. "You see,

      Com­mander, the Prophets do not wish their children to be afflicted by evil. But

      uncounted eons ago, when the

      universe was a perfect ideal contained within the Tem­ple, some Prophets

      rebelled. Oh, they believed they had a just cause. They thought that a universe

      within the Temple could only ever be a reflection of perfection, not perfection

      itself. And so they fought to free crea­tion from its timeless realm. And in

      that great and terri­ble battle—beyond the comprehension of any linear being—the

      One Celestial Temple was—" Weyoun clapped his hands together unexpectedly,

      startling his three listeners,"—split asunder!"

      The Vorta smiled apologetically at Arla. "The battle between the two groups of

      Prophets ended men. But the damage had already been done. The stars, the

      galaxies, the planets... everything the Prophets had created in their image of

      timeless perfection spilled out into the void created by the Temple's

      destruction. And in mat void, perfection was unattainable. Evil was loosed upon

      the face of creation. And all because of the pride of one group of Prophets, who

      thought they knew better."

      "The Pah-wraiths," Arla whispered.

      Weyoun brightened at Arla's response. "Ah, so you have had some religious

      instruction, Commander. Yes, of course. But the Pah-wraiths you know from your

      time are those poor beings who spilled from the Temple at the time it was torn

      in two. They could not cany on the fight in the False Temple, neither could they

      join their fellows in the True Temple. Instead, they sought shelter near the

      entrance to both shards of the One Temple, deep in the Fire Caves at die core of

      Bajor, lost and abandoned by both sides."

      "This is all blasphemy!" Kira protested. "There was no battle in the Temple!

      There are no fallen Prophets! There is no second Temple!"

      Undisturbed, Weyoun pointed an accusing finger at the livid major. "Then how do

      you explain your pres­ence here and now, exactly as foretold by Naradim's Third

      Vision as recorded on the tablets of Jalbador?"

      "What do you mean 'our presence' was foretold?" Sisko asked quickly, before Kira

     


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