Hi everyone, my computer problems are on the mend. So I've decided to get back into the game. It's been several months since I last posted on the stories I was working on and in the interim I have some new thoughts and ideas about the stories. So I thought it was best to just revise this story, cutting some stuff and adding or changing other things. I'm starting with "Hero of the Federation". I hope this makes for a tighter, better story than the first offering.
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DARK TERRITORY:
HERO OF THE FEDERATION
PROLOGUE
Jalana City Memorial Hospital
Bajor
October 2376
She stood quietly over the bed, watching the slow rise and fall of the patient’s chest. She was heartened that the woman no longer required a ventilator to breathe. Though the medics couldn’t tell her how long it would take for the woman to wake from her coma.
Even now she could see gray hairs growing like vines along the woman’s roots. And it had only been about six months. Shaking her head, she traced a finger down the woman’s dry cheek. The unconscious woman seemed so shrunken, so emptied of life, not the bold personage she had watched and studied for weeks, learning to imitate her perfectly.
The current disguise she wore now even bore a resemblance. Despite the fairer hair, the resemblance was unmistakable. She saw it in the widened eyes of the medical staff, heard it in the whispers of several nurses, “I thought the colonel didn’t have any family.”
The colonel didn’t. The woman shook her head. No, that’s not true, she realized. The woman did have family. Her own father had claimed her, and in a way that made them sisters. Growing up on Cardassia, programmed by the Obsidian Order, she never thought there could ever come a day when she would consider a Bajoran nothing more than a terrorist or slave.
She laughed coldly, “Guess I was wrong,” she remarked, stroking the colonel’s still face again. “I’m sorry Kira.”
The woman’s breath caught as she felt the wind shift as the door opened. Her hand went for the disruptor under her robes. “Why am I not surprised to find you here?” The voice behind her was breezy, conversational. She kept her hand on the grip of her weapon. “You’re so predictable.”
“Is that what you think?”
“You’re here aren’t you?” The man’s voice was smug, insufferable, but she couldn’t deny that he was right, and that annoyed her the most.
“What do you want?”
“It’s time,” he said. The woman’s hand eased off her weapon and she gulped. She glanced down at Colonel Kira Nerys once more, for the last time.
“Okay,” Illiana Ghemor turned around slowly, to gaze into the shining eyes of Elim Garak. “Let’s go.”
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Deep Space Nine
Promenade
October 2376
Dr. Julian Bashir put his arm around Ezri Dax’s shoulders, drawing her closer. The gesture didn’t bring him the warmth he needed, nor made him feel safer. In fact it made him feel the opposite. And he knew he was exposing Ezri to danger as well, showing such affection to her in the open.
Perhaps he was being silly. His relationship with the Trill counselor was no secret, but at the same time, maybe he was tempting fate, holding her so close in public, making her even more of an inviting target to all those that might want to use her to get to him.
But he couldn’t find any logical reason to resist Ezri’s insistence on touring the new shops that proliferated on the station’s main thoroughfare like tribbles. It was a renaissance of sorts for the station, which has undergone some bad months in the wake of Cardassian Premier Natima Lang’s assassination in June.
A dreariness had swept over the station and its denizens, which was not helped by the political tensions the assassination caused on Bajor. Reactionary forces had used the incident to blame the Federation for the tragedy. They had swept into power in last month’s referendum, even replacing First Minister Shakaar.
It was almost like the rebirth of the Promenade, with its cosmopolitan flair was in defiance of the austere, fundamentalist mood sweeping over the planet the station orbited. And the doctor knew how important it was for the station’s Federation citizens and Starfleet officers to be out front and public, sending a signal that the bond between Federation and the Bajorans remained strong. Also, that the Federation still had every intention of one day making Bajor a member.
“Julian, off in outer space again?” Ezri asked as she leaned into his chest and wrapped the hand hanging over her shoulder in hers.
“Excuse me?”
“You haven’t heard a word I said, have you?” The medic looked contrite, but he knew it would do him no good to lie.
“I’m sorry,” he sheepishly admitted.
“You’ve been really quiet lately, introspective,” Ezri probed gently, “Anything you wish to discuss?”
He looked down, giving her an apologetic smile, “I’m sorry, it’s just…”
“I know,” she said, her eyes clouding a bit, “It’s personal.”
“Come on Ezri, don’t be that way,” Bashir said, falling back into a familiar pattern, though the frayed tone of his voice was more put on that usual. He preferred a well trod argument than to tell her what was really on his mind.
Garak had come back and plucked Illiana Ghemor, the woman who had almost killed Kira, from the safe house he had asked the doctor to hide her in. The action meant that the wily Cardassian’s plans to avenge Natima Lang’s murder were in full motion, and he was worried about what the consequences of Garak’s vengeance would be.
And he was feeling regret about what role he might have played in whatever destruction the Cardassian would wreak. But he very well couldn’t tell Ezri any of that. He loved her too much. So it was easier to stone wall and bicker. It was comforting in a way, normal. Something he hadn’t really been since he had agreed to join Section 31 and had the wool ripped from over his eyes about a great many things.
“Listen Julian, I know there have been a lot of changes over the last few months,” Ezri began, thinking as always that she knew what was deviling him. “And I know how frustrated you’ve been at not finding a magic solution to Kira’s ailments, but you’ve done good work, and she is progressing.”
He sighed. Though she thankfully knew nothing about his hidden life, she could read his emotions over Kira and his disappointment with their present situation pretty well. “As long as Kira is in a coma, there hasn’t been much ‘progress’ as far as I’m concerned.”
“You can’t beat yourself up about it,” Ezri chided gently, “These things take time.”
“I guess I should leave it in the hands of the Prophets?” He scoffed.
“Maybe you should,” she said, quite seriously. “They have interacted in the lives of Bajor and Bajorans before,” she pointed out. “And they do seem to have a plan for the planet. Not to mention Ben.”
Ben had ascended to the Celestial Temple nearly a year ago yet his absence remained a gaping void on the station. The fact that Miles, Odo, and now Kira were gone too just didn’t make it feel like home anymore. Not to mention the rapid succession of officers that had come and gone in their wake, it added to Julian’s growing rootlessness.
“What brought on that sigh?” Ezri asked.
“Oh,” he said with a start, not realizing he had vocalized his disappointment. “Just thinking about all of the changes on the station.”
“I know,” the Trill wrinkled her nose as she gazed at the phalanx of Bajoran on the Promenade, giving the thoroughfare a martial air. “There weren’t even this many troops on the station during the Dominion War.”
“Perhaps because they were too busy actually fighting to stand around and intimidate people,” Bashir chimed in. Admiral Covey was still had several months to go before her next assignment but the incoming station commander, a Bajoran general, had already began making her influence felt. The new leaders on Bajor had promised that an incident like Lang’s assassination would never happen again, and it appeared that they had found the right woman for the job.
Bashir scoffed at the idea that General Pire, of all people, would bring a feeling of security to the station, or the planet below, for that matter. She had been a supporter of the Alliance to Restore Global Unity, also known as the Circle. Early in Bashir’s stay at the station, the Circle had seized DS9, in an attempt to force the Federation to vacate the sector.
Amazing how fast things turned in politics, especially when people were scared. At one time the doctor had naively hoped that the end of the conflict with the Dominion would usher in a new age of peace and hope across the quadrant. Instead it had unleashed pent up demons. Everyone seemed to be retreating to their little corners, believing it best to go along.
This isolationist mindset had even infected the Federation, with the surprisingly strong presidential candidacy of the once disgraced Admiral Norah Satie. He shook his head again, worried not just for the fate of Bajor but of the Federation too.
Ezri’s restrained squeal brought him thankfully out of the doldrums. He looked up, blinking several times. “We’re here,” the Trill happily proclaimed.
A large centaur-like alien waved them forward, toward the throng of people already jamming into the store. The Chakuun merchant had the hottest store on the Promenade lately, selling affordable Tholian fabric.
Ezri tugged on his hand. “Are you ready?”
“Not quite,” he answered truthfully, easing his hand out of hers. “How about you brave the crowds, and I’ll just stand out here.”
The counselor looked momentarily disappointed, but her desire to explore the store quickly won out. “All right, but you won’t know what you’re missing.”
Bashir nodded, “Oh I’ve got a good inclination.” They both shared a welcome, and much needed laugh, before she dived into the masses.
The doctor made his way to the nearest railing and contented himself with watching the various denizens milling about. It didn’t take long before he someone brushed against him lightly.
“Garak was on Bajor and you knew about it,” his new Section 31 contact charged. Bashir didn’t even look at the woman as he answered. Any observer could reasonably guess that these two people were just waiting on their significant others who were tearing through the fabrics store.
The new operative had replaced Minister Tenva, the Bajoran that had been swept out of power during the recent elections. The agent was human, a sign that even the clandestine organizations’ reach hadn’t penetrated the new government…yet.
“I don’t know what you are talking about,” he said, with a shrug.
“Just like you don’t know why you went to Rokat, a Cardassian colony last month,” the woman’s voice was peppered with accusation. “Perhaps I should ask young Mr. Sisko.”
Julian tensed, giving the woman the reaction he was expecting. But he couldn’t help it. Jake had followed him to Rokat and gotten entangled in some very dangerous business. Bashir had tried to keep him in the dark about a great deal of it, though Jake had pieced much of it together on his own. Now the section knew that Jake could be a bargaining chip they could use to put Bashir even more under their thumb.
“I’ve already told you,” the doctor added some very honest weariness into his voice, “I was investigating a suspected mysterious outbreak on the colony. Jake was going to write an accompanying piece. It turned out to just be a mild case of dysentery.”
“Of course there were no reported outbreaks of any kind, dysentery otherwise,” the woman pointed out, as Julian knew he would. “But that’s your story and you’re still sticking to it, I suppose.”
“It’s the truth,” Bashir said, amazed at how easily it had become for him to lie. The agent chuckled.
“What is true is that I’m not going to coddle you like Tenva,” she said. “And you will make good on your oath. Its best you realize that trying to subvert us, to do an end run around us is counterproductive. Once you realize that we all want the same thing, things will go much more smoothly between us.”
“So you say,” both the doctor’s voice and expression hardened. He turned to the woman. “But perhaps things would go more ‘smoothly’ if you didn’t threaten my friends.”
The swarthy woman shrugged, “I’m just discussing possibilities is all. Idle chat among colleagues.” Bashir shuddered at the thought.
“The idea that a person, like you, or Sloan, or any of you wear the uniform,” he couldn’t even finish the thought he was so disgusted.
“Add yourself to that list now Doctor,” the woman smiled, her almond-shaped eyes crinkling. “Well, it appears I must be going,” he said, stepping away from the railing. Ezri, with another Starfleet officer in tow, were exiting the store, arm in arm, both with bags brimming with colorful cloth. The counselor had made fast friends with Lt. Commander Diega Cruz, the newest commanding officer of the Defiant. The Section 31 agent held out her arms and folded Cruz into her arms.
“Alisanda,” Diega smiled, “Glad to see you are finally making friends. You stay too cooped up in your office.”
“Well it’s a lot of work, taking over for Admiral Covey,” she replied.
“And we’ll all work to make the transition as smooth as possible Commander Cruz,” Dax promised. “Right Julian?”
“Of course,” he said, burying his distaste as he smiled at the vulpine woman, “We will do all that we can to make Deep Space Nine your most memorable posting.”
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DARK TERRITORY:
HERO OF THE FEDERATION
PROLOGUE
Jalana City Memorial Hospital
Bajor
October 2376
She stood quietly over the bed, watching the slow rise and fall of the patient’s chest. She was heartened that the woman no longer required a ventilator to breathe. Though the medics couldn’t tell her how long it would take for the woman to wake from her coma.
Even now she could see gray hairs growing like vines along the woman’s roots. And it had only been about six months. Shaking her head, she traced a finger down the woman’s dry cheek. The unconscious woman seemed so shrunken, so emptied of life, not the bold personage she had watched and studied for weeks, learning to imitate her perfectly.
The current disguise she wore now even bore a resemblance. Despite the fairer hair, the resemblance was unmistakable. She saw it in the widened eyes of the medical staff, heard it in the whispers of several nurses, “I thought the colonel didn’t have any family.”
The colonel didn’t. The woman shook her head. No, that’s not true, she realized. The woman did have family. Her own father had claimed her, and in a way that made them sisters. Growing up on Cardassia, programmed by the Obsidian Order, she never thought there could ever come a day when she would consider a Bajoran nothing more than a terrorist or slave.
She laughed coldly, “Guess I was wrong,” she remarked, stroking the colonel’s still face again. “I’m sorry Kira.”
The woman’s breath caught as she felt the wind shift as the door opened. Her hand went for the disruptor under her robes. “Why am I not surprised to find you here?” The voice behind her was breezy, conversational. She kept her hand on the grip of her weapon. “You’re so predictable.”
“Is that what you think?”
“You’re here aren’t you?” The man’s voice was smug, insufferable, but she couldn’t deny that he was right, and that annoyed her the most.
“What do you want?”
“It’s time,” he said. The woman’s hand eased off her weapon and she gulped. She glanced down at Colonel Kira Nerys once more, for the last time.
“Okay,” Illiana Ghemor turned around slowly, to gaze into the shining eyes of Elim Garak. “Let’s go.”
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Deep Space Nine
Promenade
October 2376
Dr. Julian Bashir put his arm around Ezri Dax’s shoulders, drawing her closer. The gesture didn’t bring him the warmth he needed, nor made him feel safer. In fact it made him feel the opposite. And he knew he was exposing Ezri to danger as well, showing such affection to her in the open.
Perhaps he was being silly. His relationship with the Trill counselor was no secret, but at the same time, maybe he was tempting fate, holding her so close in public, making her even more of an inviting target to all those that might want to use her to get to him.
But he couldn’t find any logical reason to resist Ezri’s insistence on touring the new shops that proliferated on the station’s main thoroughfare like tribbles. It was a renaissance of sorts for the station, which has undergone some bad months in the wake of Cardassian Premier Natima Lang’s assassination in June.
A dreariness had swept over the station and its denizens, which was not helped by the political tensions the assassination caused on Bajor. Reactionary forces had used the incident to blame the Federation for the tragedy. They had swept into power in last month’s referendum, even replacing First Minister Shakaar.
It was almost like the rebirth of the Promenade, with its cosmopolitan flair was in defiance of the austere, fundamentalist mood sweeping over the planet the station orbited. And the doctor knew how important it was for the station’s Federation citizens and Starfleet officers to be out front and public, sending a signal that the bond between Federation and the Bajorans remained strong. Also, that the Federation still had every intention of one day making Bajor a member.
“Julian, off in outer space again?” Ezri asked as she leaned into his chest and wrapped the hand hanging over her shoulder in hers.
“Excuse me?”
“You haven’t heard a word I said, have you?” The medic looked contrite, but he knew it would do him no good to lie.
“I’m sorry,” he sheepishly admitted.
“You’ve been really quiet lately, introspective,” Ezri probed gently, “Anything you wish to discuss?”
He looked down, giving her an apologetic smile, “I’m sorry, it’s just…”
“I know,” she said, her eyes clouding a bit, “It’s personal.”
“Come on Ezri, don’t be that way,” Bashir said, falling back into a familiar pattern, though the frayed tone of his voice was more put on that usual. He preferred a well trod argument than to tell her what was really on his mind.
Garak had come back and plucked Illiana Ghemor, the woman who had almost killed Kira, from the safe house he had asked the doctor to hide her in. The action meant that the wily Cardassian’s plans to avenge Natima Lang’s murder were in full motion, and he was worried about what the consequences of Garak’s vengeance would be.
And he was feeling regret about what role he might have played in whatever destruction the Cardassian would wreak. But he very well couldn’t tell Ezri any of that. He loved her too much. So it was easier to stone wall and bicker. It was comforting in a way, normal. Something he hadn’t really been since he had agreed to join Section 31 and had the wool ripped from over his eyes about a great many things.
“Listen Julian, I know there have been a lot of changes over the last few months,” Ezri began, thinking as always that she knew what was deviling him. “And I know how frustrated you’ve been at not finding a magic solution to Kira’s ailments, but you’ve done good work, and she is progressing.”
He sighed. Though she thankfully knew nothing about his hidden life, she could read his emotions over Kira and his disappointment with their present situation pretty well. “As long as Kira is in a coma, there hasn’t been much ‘progress’ as far as I’m concerned.”
“You can’t beat yourself up about it,” Ezri chided gently, “These things take time.”
“I guess I should leave it in the hands of the Prophets?” He scoffed.
“Maybe you should,” she said, quite seriously. “They have interacted in the lives of Bajor and Bajorans before,” she pointed out. “And they do seem to have a plan for the planet. Not to mention Ben.”
Ben had ascended to the Celestial Temple nearly a year ago yet his absence remained a gaping void on the station. The fact that Miles, Odo, and now Kira were gone too just didn’t make it feel like home anymore. Not to mention the rapid succession of officers that had come and gone in their wake, it added to Julian’s growing rootlessness.
“What brought on that sigh?” Ezri asked.
“Oh,” he said with a start, not realizing he had vocalized his disappointment. “Just thinking about all of the changes on the station.”
“I know,” the Trill wrinkled her nose as she gazed at the phalanx of Bajoran on the Promenade, giving the thoroughfare a martial air. “There weren’t even this many troops on the station during the Dominion War.”
“Perhaps because they were too busy actually fighting to stand around and intimidate people,” Bashir chimed in. Admiral Covey was still had several months to go before her next assignment but the incoming station commander, a Bajoran general, had already began making her influence felt. The new leaders on Bajor had promised that an incident like Lang’s assassination would never happen again, and it appeared that they had found the right woman for the job.
Bashir scoffed at the idea that General Pire, of all people, would bring a feeling of security to the station, or the planet below, for that matter. She had been a supporter of the Alliance to Restore Global Unity, also known as the Circle. Early in Bashir’s stay at the station, the Circle had seized DS9, in an attempt to force the Federation to vacate the sector.
Amazing how fast things turned in politics, especially when people were scared. At one time the doctor had naively hoped that the end of the conflict with the Dominion would usher in a new age of peace and hope across the quadrant. Instead it had unleashed pent up demons. Everyone seemed to be retreating to their little corners, believing it best to go along.
This isolationist mindset had even infected the Federation, with the surprisingly strong presidential candidacy of the once disgraced Admiral Norah Satie. He shook his head again, worried not just for the fate of Bajor but of the Federation too.
Ezri’s restrained squeal brought him thankfully out of the doldrums. He looked up, blinking several times. “We’re here,” the Trill happily proclaimed.
A large centaur-like alien waved them forward, toward the throng of people already jamming into the store. The Chakuun merchant had the hottest store on the Promenade lately, selling affordable Tholian fabric.
Ezri tugged on his hand. “Are you ready?”
“Not quite,” he answered truthfully, easing his hand out of hers. “How about you brave the crowds, and I’ll just stand out here.”
The counselor looked momentarily disappointed, but her desire to explore the store quickly won out. “All right, but you won’t know what you’re missing.”
Bashir nodded, “Oh I’ve got a good inclination.” They both shared a welcome, and much needed laugh, before she dived into the masses.
The doctor made his way to the nearest railing and contented himself with watching the various denizens milling about. It didn’t take long before he someone brushed against him lightly.
“Garak was on Bajor and you knew about it,” his new Section 31 contact charged. Bashir didn’t even look at the woman as he answered. Any observer could reasonably guess that these two people were just waiting on their significant others who were tearing through the fabrics store.
The new operative had replaced Minister Tenva, the Bajoran that had been swept out of power during the recent elections. The agent was human, a sign that even the clandestine organizations’ reach hadn’t penetrated the new government…yet.
“I don’t know what you are talking about,” he said, with a shrug.
“Just like you don’t know why you went to Rokat, a Cardassian colony last month,” the woman’s voice was peppered with accusation. “Perhaps I should ask young Mr. Sisko.”
Julian tensed, giving the woman the reaction he was expecting. But he couldn’t help it. Jake had followed him to Rokat and gotten entangled in some very dangerous business. Bashir had tried to keep him in the dark about a great deal of it, though Jake had pieced much of it together on his own. Now the section knew that Jake could be a bargaining chip they could use to put Bashir even more under their thumb.
“I’ve already told you,” the doctor added some very honest weariness into his voice, “I was investigating a suspected mysterious outbreak on the colony. Jake was going to write an accompanying piece. It turned out to just be a mild case of dysentery.”
“Of course there were no reported outbreaks of any kind, dysentery otherwise,” the woman pointed out, as Julian knew he would. “But that’s your story and you’re still sticking to it, I suppose.”
“It’s the truth,” Bashir said, amazed at how easily it had become for him to lie. The agent chuckled.
“What is true is that I’m not going to coddle you like Tenva,” she said. “And you will make good on your oath. Its best you realize that trying to subvert us, to do an end run around us is counterproductive. Once you realize that we all want the same thing, things will go much more smoothly between us.”
“So you say,” both the doctor’s voice and expression hardened. He turned to the woman. “But perhaps things would go more ‘smoothly’ if you didn’t threaten my friends.”
The swarthy woman shrugged, “I’m just discussing possibilities is all. Idle chat among colleagues.” Bashir shuddered at the thought.
“The idea that a person, like you, or Sloan, or any of you wear the uniform,” he couldn’t even finish the thought he was so disgusted.
“Add yourself to that list now Doctor,” the woman smiled, her almond-shaped eyes crinkling. “Well, it appears I must be going,” he said, stepping away from the railing. Ezri, with another Starfleet officer in tow, were exiting the store, arm in arm, both with bags brimming with colorful cloth. The counselor had made fast friends with Lt. Commander Diega Cruz, the newest commanding officer of the Defiant. The Section 31 agent held out her arms and folded Cruz into her arms.
“Alisanda,” Diega smiled, “Glad to see you are finally making friends. You stay too cooped up in your office.”
“Well it’s a lot of work, taking over for Admiral Covey,” she replied.
“And we’ll all work to make the transition as smooth as possible Commander Cruz,” Dax promised. “Right Julian?”
“Of course,” he said, burying his distaste as he smiled at the vulpine woman, “We will do all that we can to make Deep Space Nine your most memorable posting.”
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