********************************************************************
Central Bazaar
Kooval III
Occupied Cardassian Space
“Feel right at home I bet T’Jol?” Captain Elizabeth Shelby asked cheerily.
“I do not,” Security Chief T’Jol’s cold response was almost welcome in the blazing heat that permeated the environs of the bazaar.
“Captain Shelby didn’t mean that literally,” Lt. Sito Jaxa explained, “The captain only was making a reference to Vulcan being a desert world like Kooval III.”
“Thank you Jaxa,” Shelby said, smothering a chuckle. The informal mentorship program she had set up to familiarize the new officers to life aboard Sutherland was at least paying off with these two; but not so much with Django and Auguste. She thought it was cute that the Bajoran had taken the new Security Chief under her wing, though T’Jol hadn’t asked her to, and didn’t seem all that sanguine with the prospect, most of the time. Sito needed all the friends she could get, and T’Jol needed someone to help show her the ropes.
“My apologies Captain.” T’Jol replied quickly.
“I’ll let this one pass,” Shelby remarked, “Let’s chalk it up to nerves.”
“But I am not nervous,” T’Jol answered soberly. Shelby rolled her eyes.
“Yes, being nervous or anxious would be showing emotion,” the captain replied.
“Correct,” T’Jol responded.
“Fine, you don’t have to admit it,” Shelby teased. “I’ll be nervous enough for all four of us.”
“Captain, do you believe this to be a trap?” Lt. Sito asked, her brow crinkling. She had argued for the captain to remain aboard the Sutherland and Shelby had repeatedly assured the skeptical Bajoran tactical officer that the situation wasn’t as dangerous as it appeared. They were meeting an informant with information about the Crimson Shadow, a new insurgent group making a blood soaked name for itself in the Allied occupation zones. The informant, a member of the Valerian cartel, had supplied information to Starfleet in the past. The Valerians had been one of the major weapons suppliers to Cardassian insurgents.
The long running extremist group the True Way, and splinters from Legate Damar’s Cardassian Liberation Front had initially been the leaders of the violent opposition to the Allied occupation. But recently a new rightist veterans’ group, the Crimson Order, and its military wing, the Crimson Shadow, had forced themselves onto Starfleet’s radar. The Shadows seemed to have a different benefactor than the Valerians and had eschewed their business offers. For the right price, and the appropriate discretion, some cartel members weren’t opposed to selling the Shadows down the river.
Starfleet Intelligence had learned that one of the Shadows, a Gul Tresca, was operating in the Kooval System, using it as a haven to strike at aid convoys heading to Cardassia Prime. According to SI, Tresca had a violent reputation stemming back from the Bajoran Occupation. Shelby was anxious to take him down, even if her stomach roiled a bit at the method to bring it about. Lt. Rudd had the bars of latinum slung across his broad chest, bandolier style. Shelby didn’t know if the large man was breathing heavy because of the weight of the bars or from the heat.
“Are you okay Mr. Rudd?” Shelby asked.
“Yes ma’am,” he replied, straightening. “Just a little hot under the collar as it were.”
“I guess my physical conditioning programs haven’t been strenuous enough?” Lt. Sito asked. Shelby couldn’t tell if the Bajoran was joking or not, and from the stammering reply of the younger Rudd, she was definitely sure that he didn’t think she was.
“You can discuss the revisions aboard the ship,” Shelby replied. She turned to T’Jol. “Detecting any Valerian life signs yet?”
“No,” T’Jol said, the tricorder clipped to her belt, beneath her robes. Shelby knew the woman’s keen hearing could detect the beep on a low setting that wouldn’t alert the informant or anyone else. Shelby was certain all the eyes watching them weren’t benign. Though the Shadows or other potential adversaries had yet to make a move.
They rounded a corner and ran into Lavelle’s party. “Anything,” Shelby asked. Lavelle’s eyebrows beetled, giving the captain the answer she knew, but didn’t want to hear.
“Back to square one?” Lavelle asked.
“We’ve already searched every inch of this dump,” Django remarked. “There just aren’t any Valerians here.”
“So, this was a wild goose chase then?” Lavelle replied, clearly not pleased.
“It appears so,” Shelby said, the heat suffusing her skin had nothing to do with the weather. “Someone has been jerking our chain.”
“Not quite,” a voice said from the air, “Though there is something I would like to jerk on you captain.”
Both away teams brandished weapons and looked around them wildly, trying to pinpoint the direction the voice had come from. “How about you show yourself, and maybe we can talk,” Shelby offered.
“Such an assignation might be worth more than the latinum in your possession, if the rumors are true,” the air shimmered before Shelby. A smallish figure, decked in an orange blind suit appeared before them. The mystery person pulled off their helmet, revealing the leering bulbous face of a Ferengi. Rows of earrings dangled from both of his large tattooed ears. “DaiMon Drux at your service.”
“Drux?” Shelby asked, surprised. She remembered the name from several years ago. He had been a big time pirate and smuggler until he had ran afoul of the Klingons and been sentenced to Rura Penthe. Somehow the Ferengi had survived the infamous prison planet and appeared to be trying to rebuild his fortunes.
“So, you know of me? A fan no less?” The leer morphed into a grateful smile.
“Not quite,” Shelby replied, regretting the dimming of the smile’s wattage. “Though I am familiar with some of your exploits.”
“Well, that’s something I suppose.”
“How did you escape Rura Penthe?” The Ferengi perked back up.
“That’s a long story, a thrilling tale that can best be told in the private quarters aboard my vessel,” the leer had returned.
“We didn’t detect any Ferengi vessels in orbit,” Lt. Auguste said.
“I’ve taken great lengths to not draw attention to myself,” Drux patted the bright orange suit. “Why would I park my own vessel in orbit around this dustbowl?”
“Good point,” Auguste replied. Shelby noticed Django smiling at the man’s perturbed expression. Auguste was book smart, but not too street smart. He had spent a good chunk of the war planetside, using his formidable intellect to help keep the Federation’s war machine from breaking down. The need for experienced officers had compelled him back into service aboard a Starfleet vessel and Shelby had thought he would be a good fit for Sutherland. Though she thought he was a bit uptight, his intellect and organization skills were top notch. She was sure that someone aboard the Suthy would loosen him up before long. She was pleased that the man had the hide of rhinoceros because Maria had been riding him hard ever since he came aboard.
“Do you have the information we need?” Lavelle asked.
“The latinum?” Drux asked, wiggling his fingers. Shelby gestured to Lt. Rudd. The big man slid the bandolier off his chest and placed it before the Ferengi’s feet. Glancing down at the row of bars the pirate almost danced a jig. He reached down to golden ingots.
“Not so fast,” Shelby said, waving her phaser, “The information first.”
“Oh, that,” Drux smiled. “Here you go,” he unzipped a pocket on the breast of the suit and threw a data rod at Shelby. She snatched it neatly out the air.
She gave it a once over. “This rod is empty.”
“Yeah, I know,” Drux said. The air shimmered all around them and the two away teams found themselves surrounded by armed Ferengi. “The cartel learned about my side business, and being the gracious gents that they are, they decided not to kill me. They used their information on me to secure deals with the Shadows. And the down payment on my life is securing you. The Shadows want you.”
“No,” Lt. Sito shook her head. “I won’t be a prisoner again.”
“Cool it Jax,” Django muttered.
“It’s okay Jaxa,” Shelby said. “I’m sure we can come to some type of arrangement, offer the good DaiMon a counter proposal.”
“I wish that were true,” Drux said. “But I have no wish to cross the Valerians again, in addition to the Shadows. I just wish that you had accepted my original offer captain. At least your last few hours of freedom could’ve been more…pleasurable.”
“And yours could’ve been less painful,” Shelby said. The Ferengi guffawed.
“Perhaps I can make a side deal for you,” Drux said, “After they are finished interrogating you.”
“Not gonna happen,” Lavelle replied, through gritted teeth.
“You’re right about that,” Django quipped.
“We’re not going to go quietly,” Shelby said. “And you can’t subdue us all.”
“We have the advantage. We have you surrounded. It would be nonsense to resist us.”
“Oh yeah, like being prisoners to a bunch of anti-Federation terrorist sounds better than instant death,” Django replied snappily.
“All right,” Drux sighed. “Stun them.”
“No,” Sito snarled. She threw her weapon at the Ferengi nearest her. The phaser cracked against the man’s nose. He stumbled back. By then the Bajoran had pulled a serrated knife from the folds of her robes. She sprang at the Ferengi, the blade slicing the man’s neck. A geyser of blood spurted from the wound.
“Go,” Shelby commanded, jolting everyone out of the shock of Sito’s horrific attack. Lavelle and Django charged their gunmen, the skittish Ferengi hesitating long enough to receive a tackle from Sam and a roundhouse kick from Maria. T’Jol felled a Ferengi with a neck pinch, and Amax’s furious hissing made one Ferengi toss their weapon and run off towards the dunes. Rudd and Auguste weren’t having as much good luck. Rudd’s Ferengi had pulled an electric whip and had lashed it around the man. The smell of cooking flesh and the man’s screams were short lived. Sito took her knife and threw it into the attacking Ferengi’s skull.
Auguste rolled on the ground with the Ferengi, the alien biting into the meat of Pierre’s shoulder. The man screamed, and the Ferengi bit deeper, blood seeping onto the ground.
“I got this,” Django replied. She moved quick and low, hitting the Ferengi hunched over Auguste with full force. The Ferengi crashed into the ground. Maria pounded the man’s skull until he stopped moving.
Shelby had watched it all, the emitter cone of her phaser pressed into the flesh of Drux’s neck. “You guys forgot the stun setting on your weapons,” she asked with a smile. The away team stood up, some shakily, and Rudd leaning on Lavelle. They gazed in amazement at the carnage they had wrought. The only one that didn’t seem to be fazed was Sito.
The young woman had been through a lot, had suffered tortures and violations that Shelby couldn’t even fathom, and had endured them. But she had been changed, and the things they all had to do in the war hadn’t allowed her to properly heal. It had perhaps made her problems worse. In fact, the captain pondered if the wars against the Klingons and Dominion had made worsened them all. At least she could take some small joy from what came next, “DaiMon Drux, you’re arrest.”
********************************************************************
USS Sutherland
Captain’s Personal Quarters
Captain Elizabeth Shelby toweled off her face. Though the sonic shower had been refreshing and necessary, she still liked the feel of warm water on her skin. Even after the shower she still didn’t feel she had gotten all the sand off her skin or out of her hair. Being nearly covered from head to toe had provided little defense against the pernicious grains.
She glanced at herself in the mirror above the sink and ran her hand threw her damp, hanging blonde strands. She knew she should celebrate tonight, even though they hadn’t gotten the information they came for, Drux was already proving to be fount of information about the criminal organizations preying on post-war misery in the former Cardassian Union.
Now, whether the information could be believed, was another story. Though the Ferengi did have a bevy of holodeck programs that he offered free of charge after Sutherland had impounded his vehicle. She pursed her lips while gazing at her reflection. “Should I play the Vulcan love slave or her liberator tonight?” She pondered.
The squawk from the intercom system embedded in an overhead bulkhead put her ruminations on hold. “What’s up?” She asked.
“Captain Shelby, you have a priority message from Admiral Glover,” Lt. Auguste replied.
“Pipe it down here,” Shelby replied, now all business.
“Acknowledged.”
“Shelby out,” she said, rushing to throw on her sky blue Tholian silk robe, hanging beside the door to her bathroom. She glided to her desk and activated the desktop computer. Admiral Samson Glover nodded tersely at her seconds later. Her old friend looked uncharacteristically grumpy. This wasn’t going to be a good meeting. “Admiral,” Shelby nodded in greeting. “What can I do you for?” Her levity fell on deaf ears.
“I need your help…off the books,” the man replied.
“I’m all ears,” the captain said, leaning forward. “Tell me what you need me to do.”
********************************************************************