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REP/REV DS9 Telling, (Post-Valiant), PG, (Jake, Nog, Cast)

Dax’s gaze was that of a formidable Academy professor (was there any other kind?) Sisko had encountered as a very raw Cadet, but her tone had shifted just a bit downward, becoming not gentle but at least not harsh, either.

"The first mistake the leader in a conspiracy usually makes is to assume that what they're plotting is completely their own idea. Now, by that, I don't mean you were brainwashed, given a vision, or anything like that. But getting the Romulans into the war by any and all means was not your independent notion."

"Of course not. It was the goal of all the leaders of the Federation, and likely the Klingons as well. And yes, I was pressed to find an argument or other means to persuade the Romulans to join the Alliance. But surely sanction alone can't make my actions sanctified?"

Jadzia Dax shook her head.

"Nothing can do that, Ben. The blood on the hands of all those named Dax is still on mine. The choices they should never have made, still on my conscience."

"Yet you'd do it all again."

Dax didn't answer this. Instead, she moved on.

"Two people plotted your conspiracy. Only two of them are still alive, and both have kept silent on it in every detail."

"No. Obviously, Garak told someone."

"Really? Are you assuming that, for someone outside to know, either of you had to speak to anyone else?"

Sisko didn't like the implications of that one bit.

"Am I under that kind of surveillance? Is that what you're telling me? Did Kirk say something to you?"

"Well, I can't speak for Starfleet Intelligence, and I certainly can't speak for any of the other allied services. At least not as concerns you, Ben. But my best guess is that I doubt it. Your movements are so public, any spies would be better off catching a daily news recap than attempting to plant bugging equipment that could be found out. But I can speak for all concerned, enemy and ally both, about the certainty of the second party to your conspiracy always being under the closest possible scrutiny."

Sisko felt momentary confusion.

"But Garak was out of the Obsidian Order long before the Dominion even showed up."

Dax counted off.

"Elim Garak is : A former spy, a profession not known for ever truly leaving one's life. He was the publicly known heir and privately known son of the Cardassian Empire's greatest--if slightly overrated--spymaster. Even before the Dominion, he was one of twelve Cardassians known to legally live in or around Federation territory. He was there when almost the entire Obsidian Order and the Alpha Team of the Tal Shayar went down to dust. Ben, do I need to go on? You plotted in secret with the most watched man in three quadrants, and for all we know, the Borg keep an eye on him, to boot!"

Ben remembered a secret rendezvous with Jennifer in Starfleet Headquarters’ famed Clear Tower. They were on its utmost top floor, and well out of sight, so they did as a young couple did. Only later did they realize that, despite its height, the hills of San Francisco conspired with shifting sunlight to make them the snickering talk of everyone who boarded a trolley shuttle that afternoon.

"I might as well have handed my secret logs to Jake."

Who, it should be noted, was conceived that same afternoon, as the embarrassed passionate couple hurriedly ended their lovemaking. But Sisko had another question.

"Old Man, you said the Alpha Team of the Tal Shayar. I don't understand."

She chuckled.

"You want understanding? Our visiting Kirk is married to a half-Romulan, Ben, and even Saavik has no clue about them at times. So here's something to help you understand. Six months or less after Tain's debacle in the Gamma Quadrant, Cardassia had the Detapa Council. So given that Tal Shayar losses were equally ferocious, why wasn't there a similar shift in Romulan society?"

"I--I never really thought about it. I guess I thought it was that Romulans have a much longer history of repression of personal freedoms. Elderly Cardassians alive today may still remember pre-military rule, before the economic disasters that struck them in the 2290's."

"True enough. But remember, Romulans always use a layered approach. When those Tal Shayar agents went out to kill the Founders, they already had their perfectly trained replacements lined up, all the same ages, from the same intelligence academies, and given the same assignments to work on. Romulans always use a layered approach. Like when they tricked you into getting them into this war."

To say that Ben's eyes went wide at these words was a huge understatement.

---

Nog found his reconciliation with Jake at a standstill. The words spoken were simply too odd to be taken in easily.

“What do you mean, resenting you? I thought this was about you forgiving me for all that went on, during and after the Valiant.”

Jake had thought all this out, and was prepared to stand his ground.

“No. Obviously, this all goes a lot deeper. After the Dominion warship went down, I realized that how you went at me couldn’t just be about some high-strung cadets, our views on dating, or even personal discipline. I’m really surprised it took me as long as it did to catch on.”

“Oh? And just what quasi-mystical insight did you stumble into?”

“Nog, I always thought it was all on me. That I was so thrown by the fact you chose the career path I didn’t, that maybe I was seeing conflict where none existed. But while the conflict was real, I wasn’t the one pushing it. I still couldn’t figure out what you resented, though, till I finally put my ego aside once again, and realized the truth.”

“Which is?”

“I dealt pretty early on with the fact that you weren’t going to do like I did, in not joining Starfleet. I dealt with it with so completely, it never once hit me that the inverse was true. Nog, you resent me for not joining Starfleet when you did. You thought somehow that I would reconsider my choice based on yours.”

Nog took this in for a moment.

“Is that it? That’s your big revelation? That’s what you agonized over, and by extension had me agonizing over? Jake, that’s stupid! That sounds like something a writer would come up with.”

“I am a writer.”

“Then come up with a better one, because that little plot twist stinks. Just how is it that I resent you for not joining Starfleet, yet have never once mentioned it?”

Jake folded his arms.

“Until just today, how much of your history with your mother did I know? Huh? Ten percent? Maybe twenty-five? Until you wanted to join Starfleet, how much did any of us know about you wanting to not end up like Rom did, endlessly trying to please a society that already had you labeled? You’re not always the most open person, Nog.”

“It’s still the most preposterous single theory I’ve ever heard. And don’t fold your arms and glare at me, Jake Sisko. You look and sound like a caricature super-female from those absurd early 21st century hu-mon sitcoms. The ones where all the males act like a poor man’s Zek.”

Jake wondered for a moment why everyone he knew was so focused on Earth’s 20th and 21st Centuries, but then let it go.

“Are you saying that I’m wrong?”

“Who needs to say it? You’re so obviously wrong, it’s pathetic. Just like your argument.”

“Then you’re good with my not joining Starfleet?”

Nog shrugged.

“It was your choice.”

“That wasn’t what I asked.”

“Well...what does it really matter what I think?”

“Because you’re my best friend.”

Nog realized he had made a slight, inadvertent concession, and tried to back out.

“Ok. Do I think that you might in fact do very well in Starfleet? Yes. But I don’t see where you get this resentment nonsense from.”

“Keep going.”

Nog did, telling himself he was listing facts against Jake’s wild theory.

“You have a lack of discipline, but so do half the cadets that go in there. No one is ever prepared for what they ask. You have a brilliant, creative mind. You can create scenarios that a good Captain could make use of, and you think on your feet. Where you saw yourself blindly running from Doctor Bashir and then the Klingons, I see a man who survived and did manage to trick out a victory. You can’t judge your courage by that first taste of combat. No one knows what it will be like. I sure didn’t.”

Jake held off refuting a single word.

“I’m still listening.”

“I’ll bet you are. Well, listen to this : You’d make a great officer. You may not think so, but it’s in you. You’d be out there–we’d be out there–and you’d be breaking all the puzzles that space has to offer us. You’d be an explorer, finding life and living it, instead of....instead of...”

“Instead of what, Nog?”

Nog was now seething, the success of his friend’s trap all too apparent.

“Writers don’t live life. They observe it. Because they’re afraid of it. And I am sick and tired of facing and dealing with what’s out there alone, all because my supposed best friend was so fearful of the unknown he himself doesn’t create, he has to hide behind a stylus and a PADD. Would it kill you to join me, and see what life is like when you can’t control the outcome?!”

There are words that, once said, can never be taken back. Nog had just spoken such words.

---
 
McCoy’s message continued.

“The odd thing is, Petey did not use his vast network of spy contacts, or like that. He just used simple detective work. I swear, that Vulcan was a bad influence on the boy. Your daddy had covered his tracks after y’all relocated. Problem is, when you cover your tracks, unless you’re careful about it–you leave more tracks behind. In short, your daddy wasn’t as clever as he thought.”

Julian chuckled.

“There’s a shock and surprise.”

“Now, of course, there were no records saying ‘Julian got enhanced.’ But what the boy did was, once he found out where you used to live, he found the one thing no computer virus or bribed official on the school board’s computer network could erase–paper records. We still keep em on occasion, ya know.”

Bashir shook his head.

“Well, I know that 31 didn’t recruit me based on my father’s stealth prowess. Paper records, Dad. You couldn’t think to get those?”

It had all been so easy, for Kirk to put Bashir’s past together. All it took was a similar secret plus a detective’s eye. His facade, so practiced and kept up even during events like the virtual invasion of his mind by the one assassin, now looked in retrospect fragile and almost waiting for the Zimmermans of creation to undo it.

“Should he have turned you in? That’s what the rules say, and despite what you might hear about it, Kirks don’t go around the rules just for no reason. But back in the god-awful world of covert this and covert that, Petey had been forced to play judge for a lot of people. Bein’ in command is one thing. But I guess judgin whether a young man’s career should end wasn’t in him anymore, so he turned to me. I know somethin bout doctors and would-be doctors, as you might imagine.”

---
“How? How did I play into the Romulans’ hands? They didn’t want to be part of this war. They did everything in their power to stay neutral. It was only my actions that finally brought them in.”

Ben Sisko felt like had been weaned on puzzles for five years, and he was growing sick of it.

“Think, Ben. Don’t rise suddenly from your desk and emote. Think. The Romulans never have merely one motive in doing anything, and it is very rarely the most obvious one, and its damned near never the one they state. Now, what would you label the Romulans’ decision to seek neutrality from the Dominion?”

Sisko said what he had felt about this choice all along.

“Narrow short-term self-interest and fear, blinding them to the big picture. The Dominion would never tolerate even a weakened, contained Romulus, if it could rule them instead. Even a quasi-independent power could plot against them.”

“Fine, Ben. Now take it to the next step. Why would the Romulans, deep plotters nonpareil, take so short-term an approach to their security and safety, as it concerned the Dominion?”

Sisko shook his head.

“I just said it. Fear motivated that choice.”

Dax waved a hand in the air.

“Yes, fear. But why would the Romulans’ specifically fear the Dominion, more than any of the other powers?”

This one at least, seemed to have a clear and easy answer for the Captain.

“They feared retaliation for throwing in with Tain’s scheme to annihilate the Founders.”

“True, Ben. But the Romulans had a lot more to fear from the Dominion than that. For what are the Romulans? Where do they stand in relation to their neighbors? Secretive. Massive and multiple concurrent schemes and plans, all deeply thought out. In short, the Romulan generically is a master thinker, a super-tough combatant, and a deceptive opponent who is known to use disguised agents, perhaps more than any other great power. Our late friend Mister Darvin, back in the day, was operated on by a Klingon surgeon named Mokrha. The man was greatly skilled–and he also wasn’t born a Klingon.”

Sisko saw it then.

“So the Romulans feared a power that was more like them than they themselves were. Truly uncaring about its combatants. Thinkers truly bred for no other purpose. True masters of instant disguise. Infiltration capabilities beyond anything we’ve ever guessed at. And–very well armed.”

“Exactly. What could the Romulans do? They knew that, in a Dominion takeover, the Klingons could be made to give oaths that bound the worst of them to servitude. Humans could be manipulated any number of ways. Vulcans could be forced to remain insular without too much effort, relatively speaking. But Romulans? They, their people, and their culture would be wiped away on levels unimaginable.”

“Because the Founders would never allow a power with like capabilities, even at a lower level, to continue existing.”

Dax nodded.

“Why do you think this war turned around as far as it did when they joined? The Romulans don’t merely bring ships and personnel. They bring a compact Dominion with them. But they had locked themselves in. The attempt to destroy the Founders was going to provide the Dominion the excuse they needed to be rid of their junior doppelganger, as it were. The neutrality agreement, I’m willing to bet, surprised the Female Founder and Weyoun as much as anyone. And while I don’t have intelligence on this, I’m willing to go further and say that the Romulans had calculated that the Dominion was looking for an early declaration of neutrality from some power. As it turns out, they needed it so much, they shelved what could have been some major plans for a punitive strike.”

“So the Romulans bought themselves some time. Time that they may well have needed more than any of us did. But in doing so, they had to know that the Dominion would never violate that neutrality agreement until their hold on the Alpha Quadrant was total. Then they’d still be facing the same sort of annihilation.”

When the older being remained silent, Ben kept on.

“So they needed someone to trick them into declaring war on the Dominion. An outsider, driven to desperation. A man known to go around the rules. Jadzia, how deeply were their fingers in my back?”

“They weren’t guiding you, Ben. But make no mistake, they were poking you.”
“So I gave them the excuse they needed to fight the war they always wanted to fight. That they knew full well they would always need to fight. And if I were found out? Federation treachery would be a useful shield against reprisals. All so they can survive as a power.”

Dax corrected him.

“And as a culture, Ben. You’d be surprised how many Romulan officials more greatly fear the erasure of their culture, than the deaths of all their worlds and people. They knew that in most scenarios, the Vulcans would provide a record of their lost cousins, should the worst occur. Even the Borg would keep the information in some fashion. But the Dominion just might fulfill their very worst fear. To die unmourned, and unremembered. To die–alone.”

Sisko took in this new information.

“They are that fearful of just being forgotten?”

“So much so, that despite the Selas and Tomalaks of their creation, the decision has already been reached in some powerful quarters to let Spock roam unchecked. They know they have to open up. They just want it to be on their timetable, and with some semblance of their present power. Oh, they’d love to do galactic takeover, and they may well try six or seven more times before Reunification finally takes hold. But their odds-makers have told them to get on the right side of history. No matter how low they have to sink to do it.”

“And what about me? What about how low I had to sink? They could poke me all they want, but short of the sort of mind-control they used aboard Enterprise some years ago, I still bear responsibility for the deaths I willed, and the deaths in the war that result from my plans. What do I do, Old Man? Tell me, just what the HELL do I do about that?”

His old friend laid a hand on Sisko’s shoulder. Dax gave what she had, which wasn’t much in this case.

“Ben–you’re gonna carry that weight.”

----
 
“All right. We think we have something.”

The usual back-and-forth between the O’Briens, a gentle form of Terran gender play that Kira had noticed over the years, was gone. There were times when neither a man’s simple determination nor a woman’s simple understanding would bulldoze through a problem. That was when the phrase ‘union of souls’ became more than mere hopeful words in an oath.

“You have to understand, Nerys. Keiko and I aren’t strategists. She’s never really encountered Dukat up-close and personal, and I can’t say my experiences with him have approached anything like those of yourself and Captain Sisko.”
“Miles and I can hate the man for all he is, and the hurt he’s placed upon the lives of people we care about. But we can never get at the ill feeling that drives him, or how it must twist inside you in turn.”

“All I can say to that is : Thank the Prophets, Your God, and all your ancestors in that regard. I hope you two never truly have someone that you can only define as an enemy. It’s not a good thing to have, on any level.”

She gestured broadly at the two of them.

“But you two have such a diversity of experience. So many challenges that fall flat when up against your love for each other. With that love as a part of you, you can only prevail. Plots and possessions aside, you are no one’s pawns.”

Kira pointed to herself, almost contemptuously.

“Right now, I’m feeling a lot like something that Dukat created by violating time. He reached back and touched my very childhood. I may not even be the same person I was when...”

“Enough of that. Stop it.”

“You’re better than this.”

They had spoken so closely, one after the other, that Kira briefly thought of how her own parents might have been, had there ever been a ‘normal’ day under the Occupation.

“But what do I do?”

Miles spoke with authority.

“First thing is, you cast off this professional victim nonsense. You’re just who Dukat glommed onto in his madness, and yeah, his feelings of inadequacy.”

Keiko spoke with a supreme matter of factness.

“Maybe the Prophets allowed this because you are strong enough to survive him. I’m sorry, Nerys. But he doesn’t impress me. He thinks he’s acting like a demon, but the truth is, his wicked satisfaction seems less like the devil, and more like Yoshi and Molly’s, after they would soil diapers I had *just* changed.”

“They liked to think we didn’t know they did that on purpose.”

Miles’ smile seemed to help her, just a little.

“You can’t compare the violation of my history to soiled diapers. I don’t think whatever solution you used with the kids can aid me against a scheming lunatic.”

Keiko grinned.

“Actually, that solution was our suggestion. See, we would ask and ask, in an exasperated voice, how could they do such a thing right after we had just cleaned them up?”

“Ummm..Isn’t that errr function, mostly involuntary at that age?”

Miles nodded.

“You would think. But while infants may not know bladder control, they know games. And they know when they’ve won the game. It’s a primal satisfaction. They initiated an action, and got a reaction. It’s something they can’t control at most times, but something if, they’re on the borderline, they can make happen. Yeah, Julian insists we’re wrong on this as well. But he’s not a parent, either.”

Keiko folded her hands together before speaking.

“Dukat is being claimed by his madness. He knows he can’t stop it, any more than an infant with a full bladder could stop that. They know that eventually the choice won’t be theirs, so they act in certain ways to release at a time of their choosing. It gives the infant and the madman the thing they both really want. Attention.”

Kira was not hearing what she needed, or at least not yet.

“I’m sorry. Dukat wants a lot more than attention. Power. Reverence. Maybe even immortality, omniscience and for all I know, God-Hood.”

Miles guided her back.

“Don’t you see? What is power without those to hold it over, and bray about it? What is reverence if no one is looking in your direction? Or godhood, if no one sees you ascend and no one notices what a godly stud you are?”

Keiko started the solution.

“The next time you deal with Dukat, ignore him.”

“Easier said than done.”

“No. Not on whatever he’s doing then. If I’ve listened to you and Miles correctly, he’ll be onto his next plot or plan by then. No. When he asks you about Admiral Kirk’s visit, just tell him you two never had time to chat.”

Kira thought she saw the hole in this.

“He’ll know I’m lying. He’s a past master at the art. I can fool him to save a life or something serious, but not well enough to protect my own pride and ego.”

“Nerys, I’ve seen you do it plenty of times at Ops.”

“In fun, Miles. But dealing with Dukat’s a far cry from deflating Julian or Quark.”

“Nonsense. You’re assigning that failed office-seeker god-hood, all on your own. And make no mistake, that’s all any villain, even to the Devil himself, ever is. A failed office-seeker, spreading misery, because misery loves company. He’s not omniscient, Nerys. He’ll only know if you tell him. He may be able to tell you’re lying. But he won’t know for certain, and that will kill him. Once we started treating even the sudden extra diapering as just another chore and shut out exasperation or hints of exhaustion, the kids went on to other games. They lived and did fine. But Dukat? You will have ruined the grand finale to one of his most brilliant schemes. All because you denied him his certainty. Then, instead of his own ego-stroking inner voice, maybe he’ll hear the disapproving voice of his father.”

“So that’s it? Deny him his certainty and I’ve won?”

Miles looked at his wife, and got a loving nod before touching his throat in an odd way.

“Tell me, Major. How is my father’s old friend, Admiral Kirk? Is his large family doing well? I’d heard his youngest son had a mild case of Rigellian fever.”

Kira started openly. The voice was not that of her enemy. But the tone and delivery had been absolutely spot-on. It provoked her. It made her want to tell him how slimy he was. How he could only get satisfaction by using time-travel to corrupt an innocent woman. But she said none of this.

“Admiral Kirk? Well, he really only spoke to Doctor Bashir, and they seemed to have some sort of argument. Why? Do you have the minutes of their chat, Dukat? Because I’m really not interested.”

Miles got up, looking quite satisfied. Kira’s delivery and faked sincerity would both get a little needed polishing. But she had gotten the basic point.

“Strange. I can’t even really do that voice, but it still hurts my throat. Green Tea, ladies? I need either that or a lozenge.”

As he went to fetch the beverages, Kira watched her friend with eyes she hadn’t possessed since her pregnancy. Keiko saw this, and so dropped a bit of a bombshell.

“Planning on any trips together?”

Kira gulped.

“You knew?”

“I was–furious–at first. But then I realized that nothing had happened. Besides, after five pillows and a vase met their end, I decided that I couldn’t really blame you for contemplating trying to steal the best.”

Kira added on to that.

“From the best.”

----


After a silence that was only three minutes but seemed hours instead, Jake looked at Nog, who had sat down after making his declaration.

“C’mon. You’re not going to follow up on that?”

“Jake, let me alone.”

The young Ferengi had the look of someone who had tried to coordinate something extraordinary, be it a surprise party, practical joke, or romantic encounter, only to have it all fall back on him, an idiot who made his plans for no reason at all.

“Now what’s wrong?”

“What’s wrong? You ask me what’s wrong? I just found out that I am exactly what some people have dismissed me as. An absurd, grasping little man who’d turn on the best friend he ever had, for no other reason than he chose to take his life on a different path.”

Jake tried to pull back from the punch of what he’d said.

“Look, I can’t say for certain how correct my theory is. It obviously has some truth, just in seeing how it’s hit you. But don’t let it dominate your thoughts. Nog, I do think that you have resented me for not changing my mind about a Starfleet career. But I don’t think it’s poisoned us beyond our ability to be friends.”

Nog looked up at him, a bit of skepticism in his eyes.

“This from the man who felt our back-and-forth had become too costly to maintain anymore.”

“Well, maybe I was a coward at that point. I didn’t want to be hurt anymore, or hurt you. I don’t know. The end of the trial seemed like a time to maybe make a clean break. It wasn’t. Whether I’m a slob or not, our friendship isn’t a neat and tidy thing. Maybe it wasn’t meant to be.”

“The friendship?!”

Jake nervously shook his hands and head.

“No. No! The-the neat and tidy part.”

Nog smiled, just a bit.

“Writer, Edit Thyself.”

Jake chuckled. The frost was beginning to thaw.

“Always. Nog, I need to be a reporter. A writer. I’m not afraid of life. I am deathly afraid of seeing it go unrecorded, or unrecorded by an independent eye. I know all these incredible people, and I feel like, if I don’t let everyone else know how really incredible they are, then I have failed in my duty. I can’t figure out why else I was given this ability, and sent to live in and around people like Kira and all of you at a time in history like this one, if it wasn’t to observe and record it all. And what I can’t or won’t deal with directly in my reporting, I can speak of in my fiction.”

“Just so long as you ditch that one story about the son of the Saratoga’s Captain. I mean, a vengeance-seeking Vulcan? What *were* you thinking?”

Jake turned this one right around.

“Sometimes, even the best of us get lost in what seemed like a good idea at the time.”

“So where do we go from here?”

“Wherever we happen to end up. Together or separated, so long as we’re always friends. I’ve accepted now that our lives are gonna pivot on each other, in some way, shape, or form, as long as we live. But it’s not a bad thing. I honestly have no idea what I would have done, if I hadn’t found you here, six years back.”

Nog found this an acceptable statement/compliment.

“So where do you go from here?”

“Me? Well, despite certain lobed critics, I am still going to try and complete my story about Captain Esau Kidd and his feud with the unbalanced Vulcan Setek, son of Kidd’s Vulcan captain aboard the Antietam, lost to the Mysterian attack at Dragon 460. Only now, Setek’s quiet sabotage will be watched over by two young amateur detectives. Numegt, an atypical Ferengi youth, and Joel Kidd, Esau’s son. Nobody believes them at first, but then they catch wind of Setek’s plotting with a Bajoran renegade named Meena, who has duped veteran engineer Liam MacBoru...”

Nog broke into the effort at narrative.

“Keep digging. You and that plot are sure to reach Hell any time now.”

Knowing well that it needed work, Jake nodded.

“But mostly, I plan to try and interview the families of the Valiant crew.”

Nog looked very surprised to hear this.

“I take it all back. You do like to live. Dangerously. Suggestion, friend? Bring an armed escort.”

“So where do you go from here, Ensign?”

“Chief O’Brien says that maybe they can re-establish the wormhole mine-field. In any event, if something happens to keep the wormhole from being a factor, the war will shift for a time. I intend to use that time, if it emerges, to take a month on Earth and record those holo vids for the Academy archive, concerning the Valiant. Admiral Kirk offered me a berth at his home–in exchange for babysitting duties.”

“Back at the Academy–you’ll be something of a celebrity, Mister Nog. Not just to the cadets, either. People are gonna wanna talk to the great hero.”

Jake was not being sarcastic, and Nog’s ego needed the much-appreciated stroking. But he had truly learned several harsh lessons.

“I’ll just remind them of Brecht’s Galileo : Unhappy is the land that needs a hero. Especially one like myself.”

“Isn’t there an ROA somewhere that says almost the same thing? Why quote a Terran like Brecht?”

“I like Brecht. He’s deep. Plus, he created that ‘Mack The Knife’ character that Vic sings about.”

Despite all pleas for solitude, the chime for their quarters sounded.

“An intervention?”

“Well, what have we got to fear? We’ve reconciled, right?”

“Right.”

Having said that, Jake opened the door. It was Dorian Collins, holding a temp-sealed box that indicated pizza.

“I am sick and tired of being sick and tired. I’ve been as guilt-ridden and torn-up as I’m ever going to be. I want to have some unregulated dinner with friends, while I figure out whether or not to stay in Starfleet. Gentlemen, this pie is a dietary obscenity. Who’s with me?”

The three survivors set up the table and began to eat way too much pizza and drink way too much root beer. The lost cadet crew of the USS Valiant remained the lost, for then and there.

Dorian.

“To taking responsibility and stepping up when and only when you are at least somewhat ready.”

Nog.

“To not knowing everything, being over-eager, and disgustingly optimistic in the face of all-out war.”

Jake.

“Here’s–to being a kid.”

That final toast was repeated, and three lives slowly moved out of the orbit of the ambitions of well-meaning but decidedly unprepared young officers who sought a tunic made of gold, only to find shrouds of red. They set out to be the subjects of one of the great stories, while forgetting that you never get to choose which of the great stories you’re in, or the exact role you’ll play in it. The greatest crisis of the evening occurred when the last slice with an appreciable amount of pepperoni was up for grabs.

Here’s to being a kid. It only happens once, and its over far, far too soon. For most though, that once is more than enough.

---
 
The deceased legend’s recording continued.

“Now, what Petey asked me to help him with was a real dilemma. On the one hand, I’ve never been of the school that only the best should become doctors. This here is a profession needs all hands, so long as they’re willing to work and know their limitations. If they don’t know their limitations, they’re not fit to be doctors—“

Julian completed the joke with McCoy.

“...so we send them to Command School. God, that’s a classic.”

The old man grew very serious.

“But on the other hand, I had two nasty run-ins with mankind’s great effort to improve its genes. One of them very nearly cost me a man like my own brother. Ornery, obnoxious, stuck-up, pretentious and exasperating–but still a brother. I love that man, on those occasions I don’t feel like strangling off the oxygen to his copper-based blood. Ah aided and abetted what I hope was their final destruction, and about this, I have almost no regrets.”

“Nor should you, sir.”

Bashir found that he was responding to his hero, as though he was really there. If only, he wished. If only.


“Where is that line, Doctah Bashir? Were my fears about Project Genesis that it would turn out to be the kind of unworkable disaster it did prove to be in the end? Or were they that the damned thing would work all too well, strung together as it was by the son of a lady super-genius and the most dangerous man that ever lived? Petey’s a lot more capable than he let’s on, but he ain’t got hardly none of Jim’s luck, and he got absolutely none of poor David’s brains. Mind you, these brains was come by naturally. Though knowin’ Jim as I do, the conception position was prolly decidedly unnatural.”

The old man almost made Julian smile, but the part about super-brains that were not enhanced kept that from happening.

“Well, no one ever said I was being made omniscient. Oh, I’m glad Miles didn’t hear me say that.”

“Why do we fear a man like Julian Bashir? Do we think that every over-man, woman, and child is looking to rule the roost? ‘Course they’re not! Most folks is just folks, when you come right down to it. Some logs Uhura sneak-downloaded from Reliant fore she went up had one of Khan’s men begging him to just find a better place than Ceti Alpha. Had the man been Marla McGivers, he mighta stood a chance in bringing Khan around. In any event, I don’t worry about the next Khan coming out of those quacks’ boilerplates. I worry that the fella or gal in question will be perfectly nice and perfectly content to help others, and maybe just plain perfect. But once we’re all perfect, what’s on top of perfect? If we keep running back to the Eugenics well, just who the hell are we really? Overnight is too quick for evolution, and I think the Good Lord and Lord Darwin would have no trouble agreeing on that point. Point to all that is, when I did my consideration, I feared not Julian the genetic conspirator, but rather Doctor Julian Bashir himself, the acceptable face of an unacceptable technology. Should I allow the exception to overrule the subject? If I do, and you are one day found out, do people now look to those hateful boiler-labs to remake their destinies? Was I going to unleash another Khan one or two hundred years from then, all to get one more really good doctor? I can tell ya right now–the sawbones who remade you mighta been competent, but he didn’t ask no questions like these!”

Bashir was not offended by these questions. Indeed, he could not possibly be offended by them, for they were questions he had asked of himself, nearly every day since he was first able to fully comprehend what he had become, and what that could come to mean. A quick read of the atrocities of one of Khan’s rival over-men had been enough to deliver that message home.
“A lesser monster showed me the way. Now, please. Let a better doctor do the same.”

The old man did just that.

“I was so torn up, I was almost goin’ to do what some would say I shoulda done at the start. Tell Petey to go to Hell and solve his own damn moral dilemmas. Then, just as though that old android wannabe Vulcan was standing right ovah my shoulder, I realized that all I was doing was looking at mechanical things. A doctor versus a tyrant. Old fool is what I was. Neither of those terms told me a single damn thing I needed to know.”

“The only people in a position to give me that sort o’ information were the people training you in the fine and noble arts of healing sentient life. They would know the man you were, and the man you might become. There’s people out there who can fool The Archangels, The Devil and Ole Spock, but when we’re thinkin’ clearly, there ain’t no one born that can fool a doctor. Not about what matters. Problem was, you can’t exactly go wanderin’ up and broaching the subject of whether a student has gotten genetic enhancements. That’d be the same as reporting you. But this old Georgia hound-dog is cleverer than some. So I thought of somethin’ else I know about doctors. We make up our minds really quick, and we have a contempt for hard-and-fast rules that would even make Jim mad, on occasion, and you know he didn’t have no legs to stand on in that arena.”

A fact, Julian briefly mused bitterly, that seemed to have kept on through the man’s nephew.

“So I spoke to one and all, under the pretext that a diplomatically connected fellow cadet with a possible axe to grind had accused some of his peers of cheating. I said to them that it was the kind of situation needed a quiet touch, and they believed me. Lord, it’s just like the man said. Once you can fake sincerity, you’ve got it made. I didn’t name no names on either end. I just asked them about stand-out students who might arouse jealousy enough to bring about false charges. Yes, son. Your name came up every single time, with every single instructor, even those of them that didn’t particularly care for you.”

Bashir felt he knew who was who on that list, though many grudges from that period had been settled. One instructor actually seemed relieved about his exposure by Zimmerman. The instructor explained that it reduced Julian’s ‘mad skills’ to the comprehensible, and that whatever problems he’d had with Bashir, he’d liked Louis Zimmerman even less. Some rumors had it that even his most famous creation, the EMH lost in the Delta Quadrant, had used less than glowing terms to describe him during his trans-quadrant program transmission.

“What if I had become the holographic template? I do fancy redheads....”

McCoy continued.

“I still wasn’t learning anything. You had the skills, but that’s mechanics. You had the knowledge, but then so does the damned computer, and half the time, that Christine Chapel wannabe is ‘unable to comply.’ I swear that monstrosity must regard that message as its primary function! Ehh–sorry. Point being, skills and knowledge are dry. They need lubricant to mean anything, and for us, that lubricant is a little thing people call compassion. Skills are something that’s burned into you. Knowledge is something you learn. Compassion–the sense of just plain giving a damn about your patients before anything else? Well, that can elevate even a mediocre physician, and the lack of it can drag down a full-blown impresario, an undisputed genius. I helped destroy Apollo, Julian. But I also took an oath by him. So did you. And it’s how deep the main gist of that oath gets us in the gut that says who we will be as doctors. You know those words.”

Indeed, he did.

“First, Do No Harm.”

“So I went back again and asked if the attitudes of any one cadet would cause problems. Damned if you weren’t all over the map, same as before. Bashir is obsessive, they would tell me. Everything has to be perfect. Patient has to be comfortable, patient has to have quality and dignity while treated, and patient has to have confidence that they can be made well. They said you drove them so crazy, they couldn’t wait to unleash you on the galaxy. Then I took time to read your sophomore paper, ‘Understanding The Anti-Fluoridation Movement in Ancient America’. Dry as the Gobi, my dear boy. A Vulcan woulda put it down to grab a brewski, or at least they would have seriously thought about it.”

Bashir winced.

“Miles, meet Leonard. Leonard, Miles.”

McCoy smiled onscreen.

“But after I got the cotton out of my mouth, I knew I had what I needed. Because in that dry text I found words like ‘what is good for the patient must be explained to the patient’, ‘simple assurances are given by salespeople, not doctors’, and best of all, ‘we must never fight potential ignorance of medical knowledge with our ignorance of the care-recipients wishes and concerns. If the cure for death itself is delivered with a lecture about how foolish people were to have died, then people will continue dying, for we as physicians will have failed to make that cure real to those who most need it.’ Mister Bashir, I became responsible for you in that moment, for I told Petey that the crime in question was not Eugenics, but anything that kept a man with your healing powers from joining our ranks. I didn’t father you, and I didn’t remake you. I never even instructed you. We have never met, and likely never will. But young Mister Kirk would have followed my lead, no matter what I said. So I suppose you can say, for whatever it may be worth, that the career of Doctor Julian Bashir enjoys the blessing of Doctor Leonard McCoy. And with that blessing also comes that ultimate price : Unwanted advice.”

Which couldn’t be farther from the truth, so far as Bashir was concerned. He was listening intently.

“There will come a moment from which you must go on, Julian. That moment will be when you realize that you have deliberately violated your Healer’s Oath. If it hasn’t come yet, it will come. We don’t live in an ideal world. And I don’t mean no little violation. I mean great big, you had one choice and you made the one that ended a life, and you realize that you did it, knowing that there was another, more moral way. My time came when Gorkon lay dying before me, and I realized that, out of spite, I had never bothered to even really glance at all the available material on Klingon physiology. My patient died in part because I was a racist. I can’t even begin to let you know what that means to a man of my heritage. Your time may not be as clear cut, or it may be so zero-one, your horror may be even greater than mine. But I in the end judged myself to be of a caliber of doctor that owed the galaxy my continued service, flawed though it was. If you respect me, sir, then you will go past your moment, no matter what. You owe me that, Julian Bashir. I could have shut you down before you ever touched a bedpan. And even though my choice is made for my own reasons, you still owe me. So whatever that dark night happens to include, get over it and get to the morning. Things always look better then.”

Bashir couldn’t imagine such a time. But he felt the arguable debt in his core, so he silently assented to obey McCoy’s wishes.

“Well, that’s it. Another one of the fine points in my life put paid to. I figure on checking out soon, Doctor. I figure I waited eighty years for Jim to come back, and as you likely heard, he just recently did that. Man was literally late for his own funeral. He never will change. But I’m going to be on time for mine. Otherwise, Spock would never let me hear the end of it. God Bless You, Doctor Julian Bashir. That is, if your beliefs run that way. That is the last word.”

A wholly awestruck Bashir replayed the message seven times that evening, and only after the final replay did he have a response.

“I don’t know that I believe in God, Leonard. But I do believe that from time to time, there are angels among us. One just gave me his blessing.”

Feeling a heartening he had not felt since delivering a people from a Dominion-created plague, Doctor Julian Bashir contemplated what was essentially the blessing of the greatest practitioner of his craft.

He then contacted a man in transit back to Earth who, whatever his origins, seemed a bit like an eerie mirror of where a man simultaneously accepted, respected, feared and mercurial might go, given time.

“Thank You, Admiral Kirk. For keeping your silence in the past, and for delivering that message in the present. To know that my life was touched in some way by Leonard McCoy’s is the fulfillment of a Starfleet doctor’s dream.”

“A spy may have to be a good liar, Doctor. But exposing you would have also made me a hypocrite, and that goes a lot deeper.”

Onscreen, Kirk then took on a sullen look.

“I do have one more piece of advice, Julian.”

“That being, Admiral?”

“Avoid Luther Sloane. You see, I trained him. Taught him everything he knows, and every method he uses. I also tried to teach my students some measure of moral restraint.”

“I see, sir. Well, you can’t fault yourself for failing with Sloane.”

“You don’t understand, Doctor. Luther is among the very few I managed to succeed with. The others in 31 are far, far worse than he could ever hope to be. Section 31 is full of liars, and it is a lie itself. No joke, there. The shadows it uses to hide don’t need light to exist.”

“I–will keep all that in mind, Admiral.”

Indeed, he always would. Not because of Peter Kirk, though. Because of Luther Sloane.


To most members of the DS9 staff, the end of this series of events meant that life could resume. Keiko O’Brien had departed for Bajor, Molly and Yoshi in tow, to survey lands that Captain Sisko had optioned for possible purchase, to check them against the possibility of disrupting any rare plant life. Quark and Garak were in their shops, and whatever business they were engaged in beyond their public ones would not be known this day. Odo was likely as not engaged in trying to see what Quark’s unknown business was about, and talking with Garak about almost anything.

Chief Miles O’Brien was able to hear some welcome words of contrition.

“Chief? About my raising my voice to you a while back?”

“Yes, Ensign?”

Nog breathed in.

“I checked regulations. I am a commissioned officer. You are an NCO. Technically, I outrank you and can do things like raising my voice to you without consequence, so long as it remains within some sort of decorum. In other words, I was fully within my rights to do so.”

O’Brien nodded.

“And?”

“And–CHIEF–“

Nog smiled.

“I’ll never ever do it again–sir.”

O’Brien seemed to like hearing this.

“Good lad.”


Benjamin Sisko then heard an idea as ambitious and as ridiculous as anything Timothy Watters had ever come up with.

“Interview the Valiant crew’s parents? Borrow the Defiant, Jake. You’re not their favorite person. More like their favorite target. At least now that Nog’s been cleared.”

“You mean that, don’t you? How can every single one of them be so angry as to not see the truth of it all?”

At a slight remove, Sisko looked at his son with near-pity as to not see the power of anger to consume a life and shape choices, when at that very moment in time, in the heavens beyond the station, the Dominion War continued.
 
Part Ten


“Life–Goes On Day After Day. Hearts Torn- In Every Way.”

Gerry Marsden And The Pacemakers, ‘Ferry Cross The Mersey’


The truth is, we never get to see the real start or the real end of any story. Such is the case of Space Station Deep Space Nine. So we won’t try for something so ambitious. Since glimpses are all we ever really get, than these are all we shall really seek.


EMPOK NOR, EARLY 2376


“I believe the question was a simple and straightforward one, Colonel.”

At least to appearances, Colonel Kira Nerys was in the worst position possible. She was trapped on a broken down station that was a duplicate of her own, possessing none of the soul Deep Space Nine had been lent by its inhabitants over the course of almost seven years. The people tending and guarding her were Bajorans, people she was both sympathetic to and disgusted by. Led in part by a man she would have once sworn by, they had abandoned their faith in fear and panic, and were planning to ritually spurn the Prophets’ greatest gift, their own lives, seeking to curry the favor of the pure hatred that was embodied in the Pagh Wraiths.

“I had no idea you even knew how to ask that kind of question, Dukat.”

The true coordinator of the insanity was no surprise to her. He was no longer able to shock or sadden her with his actions. Kira could not keep herself from getting angry, though. The monster still knew how to accomplish that. She could, however, hold that anger off for a time.

“If the question makes you uncomfortable, or if you simply don’t want to answer it, I will of course completely understand.”

Almost everything could be twisted as a victory for him. Her silence certainly would give him that impression.

“Uncomfortable? Dukat, Admiral Kirk acquitted Ensign Nog of certain charges, lectured him on avoiding being in that position again, and then left the station to give what little support he could as the Defiant went on a mission that is now very publicly known to have involved destroying the same Dominion battle cruiser that destroyed the Valiant. He was a nice old man who bored us to tears with heroic tales of his glorious uncle.”

“Heh. In that, he’s hardly changed at all.”

“Perhaps he feels he can’t measure up to the great legend.”

Cut him, she thought. Cut him deeply. Cut him the only way he truly ever could be cut. With doubt. Take this avatar of anti-faith, and infect his cocky certainty with vagueness.

“A nice try, Colonel. But some of our dear believers have conveyed to me how you and the Admiral spoke for nearly an hour, very much alone.”

“Well, you’ve found us out. The old man seduced me, and we’re running off together at war’s end. Just don’t tell his wife, alright?”

“Vulgar and unworthy of you, my dear Colonel.”

“Fine. I spoke to the Admiral about finally accepting the Bajora Peace Medal. He was reluctant to do so, based on his past withdrawal of Starfleet forces.”

Her level of success was revealed in his next question.

“But what of your mother, Colonel?”

She would yell at him, and call him a loathsome murderer. But she would not do it just then, and never over the subject of Kira Meru.

“Unlike you, the Admiral didn’t claim to have had an affair with her.”

The true victory was achieved then. She didn’t have to be the best actress in the universe. She only had to make her enemy believe that it was possible his plan had failed. Not that it had failed. But that it could have.

“Someday, Maj–Colonel, we will have to have a talk about all that. For now, though, enjoy our hospitality.”

In short, whatever he had hoped to get from this game, he hadn’t. Kira would never see Dukat again, after that day. Her Captain and her gods would end the madman’s reign

But by simply refusing to confirm that she had been touched or hurt by his actions, Kira hurt Dukat where he lived. Sometimes, she knew, that was all you could hope for.

---

SECTOR 001, TERRA

THAT DREADFUL DAY, COME ROUND AT LAST

“Dorian, where’s Annalith?”

Dorian Collins was very near to finally being mustered forward. Her steadfast refusal to take either praise or garbage for her role in the Valiant incident had earned her the respect her addled shipmates had never really given her.

“Split in two. They were tractor-beaming a cable from the Golden Gate. Dragging it across the city. A fragment broke off, and she–she just stood there.”

“This isn’t supposed to happen. This is Earth!”

Dorian saw Admiralty Tower fall onto Cadet Hall. The casualty potential, even if both structures had been fully evacuated, staggered her mind.

“Tell that to the Breen.”

Collins and her friend moved in two separate directions, for rumors abounded that there were Breen and Jem’Hadar on the ground as well. As she moved for one of the many shelters that now seemed not so safe as they had mere hours ago, Dorian spotted a silver-haired man trying to access a stubborn door.

“Sir? Come with me. The shelter’s over this way.”

The old man turned, looking both frail and made of iron, all at the same time.

“Cadet, help me access this door! There’s a hidden phaser battery in here, dating from the near-war after Gorkon’s assassination. If it still works, we can take out some of those bastards.”

Despite all the great and interesting people she had so recently met, Collins was directly thrown by the identity of the elderly Asian man.

“You’re Admiral Sulu.”

Sulu had no patience for her awe.

“Yes, and those are the Breen. Are you capable of following orders, Cadet?”

“Sir!”

“Good. Then get this door open. Together, we can operate this battery.”

“Sir, I don’t have any experience with a stationary battery, and begging the Admiral’s pardon, your hands are shaking.”

“You be the hands, Cadet. I’ll be the experience. You up for this, Cadet–?”

“Collins, sir. Dorian Collins.”

Dorian considered that her career record would include Acting CMO aboard a Defiant-Class, not to mention service under Sisko, Kirk, and now Sulu. Well, sort-of. Whatever the circumstances that had brought all that about, she could have no complaints about a dull ride.

“I am ready, Admiral.”

Together, they breached the battery’s interior, took control of it, and made at least some of the invaders regret their brazenness. One by one, some of the smaller attack craft meant to sow chaos in San Francisco fell and were no more. This heroic stand continued for two full hours, youthful zeal tempered by primal experience.

Then the Breen lead-ship targeted their position.



POSTHUMOUS SERVICE MEDALS AWARDED TO :

COLLINS, DORIAN ALICE, SENIOR CADET, 2356-2376

SULU, HIKARU, ADMIRAL, RETIRED, 2234-2376

--------------

Today was not the day for secrets, the old man reasoned. He had gotten as many of his cadets – his children – to safety as he could before the structure just collapsed around him. He was moving a chunk of stone three times his size off his leg when Sloane found him.

“Sir, you should be in a shelter!”

Peter Kirk brushed some dust from his moustache.

“Good to see you too, Luther. How’s the family?”

The covert man threw up his arms in a very open gesture of frustration.

“Well, I worry about having to bury a man like my own father. Admiral—I need you to call Demora on Cestus Three. I can’t. She hauled my butt out of Cardie space, back when.”

Kirk closed his eyes. *Hikaru. Good passage, Onii-Chan.*

“I imagine there’ll be quite a few calls to be made, after today. Were the attacks wide-ranging?”

“We don’t even know that they’re done yet. But 75% of what we know of it occurred right here. This place will never be the same.”

Sloane glanced at a dead Jem’Hadar. The soldier had a stunned look on his face.

“You take a lot of chances, old man.”

“He surprised me. What are you planning, Luther?”
The agent provocateur smiled.

“It’s been in the works since Leyton. It’ll go active soon. It will end this, once and for all.”

Kirk knew better than to ask more on that subject.

“I need to call home, then get to Alynna and Ed Jellico.”

Sloane’s smile vanished.

“The attackers never came near Seattle, sir. Your wife and children are safe.”

Kirk took the grim inference, and after calling a logically frantic spouse, placed a call to Deep Space Nine.

“Pete?”

“Ben. I thought you should know, in case it affects operations. Admiralty Tower was struck through by a Breen suicide attack. Even to the bunkers. You have a better chance of reaching Enterprise in your sector. I ask that you inform Picard as soon as possible. Before the newsfeeds get this.”

Sisko put his head in his hands. The pair had been difficult, but now every last disagreement seemed petty indeed.

“A full decap-strike. Pete, they’ll be calling for trilithium warfare.”

“They won’t get it. My daughter Garrette—Rachel’s daughter, left with us before the Enterprise-C vanished—is acting CIC for the duration. She’ll hear her folks. Ross will have outright charge over frontline operations, till some things get cleared up. Try not to boss him around too much, Ben.”

“I will try, sir.”

There was no more time to chat, and barely time to mourn.


ARCHER LIFETIME ACHIEVEMENT AWARDS ISSUED IN THE MEMORY OF :

JELLICO, EDWARD, ADMIRAL

NECHAYEV, ALYNNA, ADMIRAL


The day would only grow longer, and a bitterly-won victory, though only a few months away, seemed to take a lifetime to come.





---
DESOLATE CARDASSIA


Martok’s stomach did somersaults.

“Did NO ONE think to keep the blood-wine fresh?!!!”

Such was his nausea that he did not brush off Worf’s helping hand.

“Sisko and Ross have no honor! They should be sick with me! They should have kept to their oath, to toast over our foes’ corpses.”

Worf shook his head.

“Better that Humans keep to being what they are. I despise all those would-be Klingons except the very most committed.”

Martok sought a chair, and nodded.

“As do I. But I will demand that Sisko drink hearty, once we have word of Dukat’s capture or execution. On that, I will not relent, and if he tries to...ohhhaaagghhhhhhrr!!”

Worf gained knowledge of the full measure of Martok’s discomfort by his next question.

“Where is Bashir?”

But this was an answer Worf did not have. And Martok was not the only commanding officer having fits as to where to find the Doctor.

--

“You should be fine, now.”

Wandering a landscape as blasted as his own soul, Julian helped who he could, where he could. As had many a patient in this shattered place, the Cardassian woman asked him a favor.

“Tell them we’re sorry. Please. Will you tell them that for me? Ask them to forgive us.”

He later mused, that, had his brainpower been natural or earned, it might have taken him less time to figure out that these pleadings were aimed not at the Bajorans, but at The Prophets.

“Hardly matters. Whether I believed in them or not, I won’t be dwelling with them.”

Julian still later realized that he didn’t know any such thing about the Prophets, and their possible view of his recent actions. A Bajoran lover. A dear friend with whom he’d seen the dark side of existence, and who he had helped deliver a child with. Clerics haughty and humble, laity mob-like and intellectual, and interns who learned to fear him before the Pagh Wraiths. Yet for all that, Bashir knew almost nothing of these people’s central beliefs, outside the rudiments.

“Miles is right. I am stuck-up.”

If he weren’t, he knew Sisko would be willing to stick him up above the Promenade for taking this very unauthorized excursion. But one of the amazing handful of people now credited with ending the war couldn’t have cared less. Because Cardassian faces, unlike Humans, were very hard for even an overtired mind to morph into the face of the late Luther Sloane.

“Fear of us spurred the Founders to immoral acts. Fear of the Founders spurred us to an immoral act. I undid the one immoral act, in order to save a friend. I did this by pushing a man to his death. My friend was cured, and saved his people, ending the war. Doctor Julian Bashir saves creation, and all it cost him was that small thing they mention in holy books. Billions will not die in a hideous and pointless final battle. Yet all I care about is a dead oath sworn by the name of a forgotten Greek deity. That–and the need to stop talking to myself.”

“I don’t know about that, Doctor. You’ve always been good company, and that is so very hard to find.”

Bashir looked over at the shadowed figure.

“You were right, Garak. I had not the slightest clue about the true devastation of your world. I don’t know how you kept from slitting my throat as I made my optimistic chit-chat.”

Garak grabbed the physician before his final collapse occurred.

“I had seven years to acclimate to you, Julian. I actually resent myself, more than you. I let this hell-field get to me. Truth be told, I honestly never expected to return to an intact Cardassia. I knew that if I were to truly come back, it would have to be after devastation.”

It was clear on the Cardassian’s tired face that knowing something like this beforehand had been of no comfort, when the hypothetical became the actual.

“I’m not sorry I went out there.”

“I am. You gave hope to the hopeless, Doctor. A dangerous thing. Especially when any more hope is at least several hard weeks away. On the other hand, you have no idea how much I hope that the Bajorans know about the history of your world’s German Weimar Republic. That kind of perspective is really our only hope for aid from a near neighbor. Especially when we’ve been such horrid ones.”

Arriving at the house a woman like his own mother had lived and died in, Elim Garak sat his meal companion of many years down.
“I actually had occasion to talk with Chief O’Brien.”

Bashir drank some much needed water.

“And after you two discussed how annoying I can be?”

“Well, that always does come first. But he had also some practical advice. Amazing man, the Chief. He reminded me that, given how transitory our lives can be, letting things end between us the way they did was probably not very wise.”

Bashir took on a bit of O’Brien.

“If you try and hug me, I swear that I will slug you.”

“He also told me that, in order to obtain the cure for the good Constable’s degenerative disorder, you were forced to kill a man.”

Julian nodded, and said two words.

“Sloane. Thirty-One.”

Garak looked almost impressed by this.

“That does make sense. My father wouldn’t have approved, though. Viruses are so impersonal.”


Garak at last became fully serious again.

“Julian, you had to kill a man, quite deliberately. Don’t sit there with that Healer’s conscience and tell me you’re all right with it. Even experienced field agents have trouble girding themselves for the inflicting of a slow death.”

Bashir found the chair had grown roots, and would not let him up.

“If I had moved faster to do what I had to do to get the cure, then Odo could have gotten the Female Founder to surrender that much quicker, and more of your people would be alive.”

“Nice try, Doctor. But wars are rarely messier than right before they end. If Odo had cured her too soon, she might have reconsidered surrendering. Then maybe all of my people would have died. I won’t allow you the luxury of what-if. You undertook as harsh an action as the core of Julian Bashir would ever allow. For that, you have my admiration.”

Garak leaned forward in his own chair.

“You also have my worry. I would really prefer not to hear of your suicide by guilt.”

Bashir chuckled.

“I’ve had some interesting nightmares. The worst involved my entire life from the enhancement on being another Thirty-One simulation. The strangest involved a remote ancestor of mine trying to enlist me in some sort of dimension-shattering fighting tournament. My brilliant solution to all this was to avoid sleep.”

“So what will you do, Doctor?”

Bashir finally managed to get up, and signal a furious Sisko as to his whereabouts. He then looked at Garak.

“I made a promise to keep on going, even through a crisis such as this. The man I promised told me that the best thing to do was to get through this night, and into the morning. Whether things are truly better then, they always tend to look better.”

“Interesting theory. Who was this man? A philosopher? A Vedek? A poet?”

Bashir considered an alternate life, one where people occasionally spoke of that odd little man named Jules who cleaned the bio-beds in Sickbay. It had no appeal, even for the value of avoiding his shame.

“None of the above. No, this man was, in the end, simply an old country doctor. And I should be so lucky to ever stand in his shadow.”

With things no longer as they were, yet far from being completely repaired between them, the doctor and the spy parted ways, both needing healing whose art was written in no text and which could not be speeded up by any known science.

The Dominion War was over, but it would be many generations before its raw taste left the mouths of any of its survivors.
 
Epilogue

“I Can’t Understand–How Life Goes On The Way It Does”

- Skeeter Davis, ‘The End Of The World’


A DAY AS ANY OTHER, Late 2375

Kai Yarka Faitos held up the document, signed by the Federation President and First Minister Shakaar.

“Behold, we are one of many. Our identity not subsumed, but contributing to a living thing. Not held in static fear, like our recent foes, nor serving a hive mind. But part of a challenge to all we know, and a challenge to all that our new siblings in the cosmos presume. The Vulcans call it IDIC. A lesser mind, trapped by a narrow view of the Prophets’ Will, would call this the diminishment of Bajor. But those who have studied the Federation know that it is the members who shape it, not the other way around.”

Colonel Kira, who had begged off the ceremony for fear of being a distraction, watched with Lieutenant Nog in her office. The young Ferengi had been studying the politics of the Federation membership debate, but was as surprised as anyone by the early entry of Bajor, so close to the war’s end.

“So does this mean happily ever after, Colonel?”

“Nog, I trust happily ever after about as far as I can throw it. Something will come up. It won’t be as blatant as the Dominion. It may not even be an enemy, or have a true face. But mark my cynic’s soul, it will show up.”


Nog was about to say something vaguely optimistic, but his leg took that moment to be off its calibration by approximately a quarter second. It was not enough to trip him up. But it was enough to reinforce the notion that perhaps a little cynicism was a healthy thing.

“Still, Colonel. It’s hard to believe that a moderate like Yarka got the nod.”

Kira agreed, but was perhaps less surprised by this.

“I had heard that some descendants and hangers-on of the Circle conspiracy held a major meeting about their plans for the shape of post-war Bajor on one of the outer colonies. Just like the Terrans, they somehow thought the Dominion would never attack them. I don’t like labeling people. But if that group of reactionaries had lived, especially in light of Winn Adami’s unholy acts, then post-war Bajor would be a very, very different place right now. And yet, they were also some of the most committed.”

“I don’t follow you.”
“Nog, sometimes the zealot is needed. Bajor may find that, without these people shrilly urging us to stay on the strictly held path of the Prophets, a kind of moral drift may set in. Yarka says he wants his office purified by shedding most of its powers of state. But the other Vedeks, far from following his example, are moving to take the power he’s not using.”

“A coup?”

“No–I believe Miles called it Pork Barrel. Vedek Onnam pointed out to the UFP negotiators that the Dominion spent resources on Bajor’s public works that the Federation had never even approached. The Federation President met that challenge, and a lot of money will be flowing into Bajor’s coffers. But as for Starfleet’s Admirals, so for the Vedeks, Intercessors, and Senior Mass Clerics. Everyone has ideas about how that money should be spent–and by who.”

Nog shook his head.

“It’s always about money, isn’t it?”

He shook his head again.

“I didn’t really just say that, did I?”

Kira raised her glass of root beer.

“To Bajor’s entry–and those infectious Terrans.”

Nog raised his glass.

“To two of those Terrans–both missing since war’s end.”

Kira shut off the concluding broadcast, and got up from the desk she was now determined to replace. The office and title she would make her own. But that desk was his. Not the desk of a nascent god, no matter her beliefs, and these were strong. But the desk of her captain. With Kassidy Yates now living with family in the former DMZ (the poor woman was tired of having her pregnant stomach revered), Kira planned to stock the house Benjamin Sisko bought with his things. A museum, were he gone too long. A house, if he were not.

“I know how you feel. I was standing with him, looking out at the wormhole, when he turned and said he heard his father call him. Nog–have you considered that he, too, is of the bloodline of the Prophets?”

“Colonel, all respect. But my stepmother is Bajoran, and the thought of having to offer reverent thanks to my slob of a roommate? There just isn’t enough latinum for that.”

Nerys might well have called him on this comment, however politely Nog phrased it. But the idea of praying to Jake gave her borderline blasphemous thoughts, as well.
“His work was getting better. Did he show you his final draft for ‘Time’s Visitor’?”

“He did. It pulls the heart-strings, sure. But I hate temporal reset stories. They’re almost as cheap as my Unc—.”


*ALL HANDS, ALL HANDS! TEMPORAL RED ALERT! INCURSION IN AND AROUND OPS. COLONEL KIRA, REPORT.*

“Kira here, Nicenz. On my way out.”

“Colonel, could it be the Captain?”

Kira didn’t respond, but she almost hoped not. The Emissary’s re-emergence on this day could cause some on the Vedek Council to reconsider their vote, signatures aside.

“Well, it’s not Captain Sisko, anyway.”

The lanky young man looked around as the last of the trans-temporal energies faded.

“I’m back. Nog–Nerys–hits me–its Jake!”

Both Nog and Kira seemed confused by this.

“Jake, we’ll get you something from Uncle’s.”

“Jake, why did you just identify yourself?”

The younger Sisko shrugged.

“Well, my hairstyle, my beard, a few lines. Come on, it’s not like I look...”

Jake caught his reflection in a panel. He gasped to see a man who had none of the things mentioned..

“Dad, what did you do?”

Nog grew impatient.

“Jake, where have you been these past twelve weeks?”

Jake’s eyes truly went wide, now.

“Twelve weeks? Nog, I was gone twelve years!”

---

Agent Duller of Temporal Affairs did not look like a happy man.

“You were on Earth in the 20th Century from when to when?”

Jake Sisko kept looking in the mirror. His face appeared perfectly normal, yet this seemed to disturb him.

“For the third time, I was there from June of 1962 until September of 1974. I stayed with my ancestors from that era in a place called River Bend, Missouri. They never knew.”

“You’re certain? No unconscious attempts to change things? Let’s face it, those twelve years are to ancient America what the past seven have been to Bajor, in many respects. Lots of room for slip-ups.”

Jake breathed in, clearly impatient with all this.

“You got me, alright? I spilled the beans, and for some reason, they all wanted to know about J. Edgar Hoover’s final fate. I didn’t know enough about it to say anything. Time-space saved!”

The sarcasm was utterly lost on its target.

“Did you bequeath any knowledge of 24th Century technology?”

“No.”

“Are you certain? Any little leak—“

Jake turned from the mirror.

“This conversation is over.”

“I still have questions, Mister Sisko.”

“I’m sure. But see, I’m not Starfleet. My father, who sent me to stay in the 20th Century, is. He’s required to answer your questions. I’m not. So whatever millennium he happens to come back in, have your people talk to him then. Myself, I’m not speaking with him right now.”

Both Dumler and his partner Lucsly, there to receive Kira’s report about Dukat’s travels through time, soon departed the station. Kira attempted to talk with Jake.

“Did your visit end badly?”

“Sort of. A woman I came to call Grandma died in March.”

“Jake, I’m sorry. I’m sure she was a nice person.”

“Thanks. But it wasn’t that, Nerys. By and large, the whole visit was great. I loved almost every bit of it. By the time I was done, townsfolk who’d warned me not to look at their daughters were as happy to see me as anyone on this station. I have ideas for stories and articles you just wouldn’t believe.”

“But?”

Jake looked as tired as she had ever seen him.

“I love you, Nerys. You are the kind of friend I would never want to even risk losing or offending. But my feelings about how I was sent there are not positive ones, and they involve the Prophets. Maybe not fairly. But they do. If I promise not to stew for too long, will you let me work this out alone?”

She took his hand, nodded and smiled.

“You know, sometimes it’s the truest believers that say the harshest things. I might be harder to offend than you think.”

“ ‘Granpa’ was that way about the US Army. But in this case, let me have something coherent to say before we talk, okay?”

“Okay. But if you can’t trust in them, Jake–at least trust in *him*.”

“That’s just it, Nerys. I think I have less trouble trusting the them than I do the him.”

With those somewhat ominous words, they parted company. Kira had to make a choice about joining Starfleet, and Jake had to rejoin life in his native century.

Both would be a long while in doing this.

-----

Two Years Later---One Of Those Days

“Just tell me you’ll forgive him, eventually.”

Jake shrugged at his on-screen stepmother.

“Kassidy, you know it’s not as simple as all that. He took away twelve years of my life, without debate or discussion. I don’t even have him here to yell at, or to try and explain it to me.”

In the quarters he and his father once shared, Jake tried to not seem dismissive of her concerns.

“But he forgave me, and I betrayed him.”

“Yeah, but you’re prettier than he is.”

“Young man–do not try and compliment your way out of this. I’ll let it go for now, because your brother wants to see you next month. But Jake, please try and forgive him.”

“When he asks for it, Mom. Not before.”

Kassidy looked stunned at the simple title. Jake nodded.

“I figured it was time I stopped confusing my little brother with calling you by name. And please–let me forgive him at my own pace.”

“Agreed—Sonny.”

As she signed off, Nog nudged his roommate yet again.

“Took you long enough. The poor lady’s only been trying like crazy to have your approval.”

“I never once withheld it. But Mom was something I wanted to save for a special occasion. That she earned it isn’t even in dispute to me.”

Nog sighed.

“You still make people work for it, Jake. I’m glad our friendship is free from latinum. I could never afford you, otherwise. That’s at least partly a compliment, by the way.”

“And now, you’ll want me to forgive my father.”

“What did he really do that was so bad?”

Jake tried yet again, knowing there were other tries ahead.

“The fact that he sent me to the 20th Century without debate annoys me. The fact that he brought me back and erased my ageing while there gets to me, because that face was mine. I earned it. But what I can’t forgive is, he won’t even take two seconds out of eternity to talk with me and say why he did it all.”

“Yeah. Well, I’ve thought about that. And I think I may have something.”

“Nog–don’t.”

The young Ferengi shook his head.

“It’s not an excuse. Its why I think Captain Sisko did what he did.”

Jake was at least intrigued.

“Let’s hear it.”

Nog looked over at a framed latinum engraving of the Grand Nagus. The man couldn’t help but look goofy, even so enthroned.

“I love my father. But I’ve never once had the illusion that he was perfect. You have. Maybe not the way you once did, but you once saw your father in that light. Maybe he needed to do something dismissive and incomprehensible to you so that you could learn once again that whatever we all thought of him, he was still just a man. I dunno after that. Maybe he’s trying to adjust you to his never coming back. Or maybe there’s something we don’t know yet. Something you’ll find out someday while doing some research, maybe. Am I making any sense?”

Jake felt a chill, as though Nog had stepped on his grave.

“I kind of think you do.”
 
------

DS9 was now a different place. Its doctor and counselor, so much a part of its emotional maelstrom these past years, had departed to do rehab work on shattered Betazed.

“Good luck, Julian. Maybe that outspoken mouth will actually play there.”

As for its current Commanding Officer, she was allowed to use her outspoken mouth to say that bittersweet goodbye and then again a much happier one.

“Assistant Security Chief aboard the Titan, sir?”

Nog stood stunned. His own father’s elevation to the throne of his people hadn’t thrown him half as much.

“Admiral Kirk knows some people there, Lieutenant. Captain Riker will be expecting your best. There’s just one condition. One thing that you must always remember.”

“What is it, Colonel?”

“You must always remember what became of the man who suddenly got everything he ever wanted.”

“Why? What happened to him?”

Kira smiled.

“He lived happily ever after.”

After about a minute, Nog gave in and shook his head.

“Is...is there any reason why he wouldn’t? I mean, he did have everything he ever wanted.”

Kira sighed.

“Admiral Saavik had it right. Humor. A most difficult concept.”

As Nog began a long, long series of goodbyes and messages spreading word of his good fortune, Kira recorded her life-altering choice in an official log. Much as she had loved and admired her Emissary, she could not bring herself to join Starfleet. The Bajoran Militia no longer existed, except as local and provincial constabulary. She said the only words she could and remain true to herself..

“Pending the arrival of my replacement, I stand relieved. This post has been all my honor.”

The Captain. Herself. The O’Briens. Julian. Ezri. Worf. Nog. The place they’d all called home was about to change forever. Onscreen, the good-naturedly inquisitive Kirk smiled to hear that Nog had accepted his help once again.

“Pushing an old man’s overspent luck, Colonel, where will you go?”

The urge to tell him to go sit on his thumb was easy to shut off. The old man was just too damned nice about his intrusiveness.

“I’ve been in contact with Legate Ghemor’s family on Cardassia. With at least some stability restored, he can now be buried without fear of grave violation, on a free Cardassia. Its time I kept that promise.”

When Kirk had congratulated her and signed off, she took time to call Cardassia.

“We await the return of my uncle’s body, Colonel. Tell me, do you do this as his daughter?”

“Just like I’ve always promised, Keten.”

Keten Ghemor nodded onscreen.

“Then I must ask you to do one more thing.”

“What is it?”

“Colonel Kira Nerys, daughter by heart of Tekeny Ghemor, will you stand in our people’s first free election as our clan’s candidate for President of the Legatorium?”

Kira of course refused to give an answer right away, bizarre though the request was. Once the call was done, she had to fight the urge to laugh out loud.

*With my luck, I’ll be running against Garak...*

-------------------------

With all the departures, it was fair to say that Jake Sisko had expected a full rich day. What he had truly not expected, though, was a visit from the dead.

“Jadzia?”

Onscreen, the image of Dax’s last - and, apologies to Ezri, the one he would always remember-incarnation spoke in a hurried voice, as though she knew her time was short.

“It’s a story, Jake. One told to you, and one you may or may not choose to tell.”

“A story?”

He almost cursed himself for reacting to her, as though she were truly there. Then he saw it, on the wall behind her in the recording. A plaque, given to her for bravery in combat, from a mission that occurred only a month before her death. The plaque had been given to her only a week before, and he knew she had not immediately mounted it, complaining of its odd shape.

“You can call it a truncated fairy tale, if you like. Once upon a time, there was a boy who had to save the galaxy, and that’s just what he did. Problem was–he began to feel like he could stumble through cold actions that had to be thought through. One of these actions would forever haunt his soul.”


Jake felt that touch of the grave once again. Dax would not have sent such a thing if the ‘boy’ in the story were Curzon, or one of the other male Dax incarnations. It had to mean only one person, and odds were this message was only to be sent if most thought that person was dead or otherwise gone.

.
“Jake, fathers sometimes make mistakes. They also sometimes make harsh decisions, and speak harsh truths. Truths we may not be prepared to hear.”

Jake thought the message-file was somehow emitting cold.

“Contained in a package sent along with this message is a data-chip. Benjamin asked that it be given to you if he went missing for an extended period after war’s end. He gave it to me precisely because I’m outside what for most is the normal cycle of life, and have some perspective that a Miles, a Julian, or a Kira might not. They might not honor his wish, once they knew what was on that disc. All their loyalties are so fierce for the two of you. They might not be able to see that sometimes loyalty means honoring the truth, and not just the legend. Then again, I recorded this message precisely because, wherever I am when you get this, I wasn’t entirely sure I could tell you myself. So it’s all on auto, with a law firm Curzon knew. Be strong, Jake. As strong as I know you are, and have always been.”

Jake thought the room must have somehow achieved absolute zero.

“This is bad.”

Jake knew from discussions with all three Daxes he had known, that select memories could be ‘fudged’ deliberately so that the next incarnation would only know that there was a memory, and maybe who it was about, but nothing else. That might explain why Ezri had never mentioned this. But at that moment, such explanations were background noise, buzzings and static from the world of order, where things made sense. He felt certain he was about to leave that realm.


The young man played the contents of the chip.

A middle-aged man, now vanished, told of a secret once deleted.

The young man’s personal cosmos fell off its axis.

Unable to sleep, Jake Sisko constructed a rough draft to submit to his editor, based on the information that had taken him apart. He studied this draft.

“How could you?”

*No, Jake. How could I not? I could not allow the Dominion to win. I could not take the chance that their mania for order might turn genocidal, should their fears not be calmed by victory.*

“You lied. You killed.”

*And yet when those ships joined the war effort, lives were saved, and the ability of people like you to report the truth was protected.*

“You can’t purchase clean goods with dirty money.”

*I was looking to win the dirtiest war in our memory.*

“You made some questionable choices.”

*And now you must make a choice as well. I know you’ll do the right thing.*

“Will I? I used to base the right thing on what you would do. Now I have no idea what that might be. Was Jadzia lying?”

*You’ve verified the message on several levels already. Your editor will insist on several more. I chose a good messenger, Jake. Not Bashir, O’Brien, or even the Colonel. They could never have told you, unless they had no choice. But Jadzia told me she always saw some of Curzon in you-in his wiser moments. She said that I sometimes reminded her of his less-than-wise moments. Only someone forced to deal with the damages of the last generation could know the burden of delivering my message.*

“I think she understood what this would do to me. Why couldn’t you? What value is there in truth and honesty, when the person who taught it to you flushed it out the airlock, the first time the going got rough?!”

This time, no voice, real or imagined, was heard in response.

Jake spoke with Nog and Kira, and all three said too-quick goodbyes while leaving the station.

“Nog, will you always be my friend?”

“Haven’t we been through that enough?”

“Trust me. We may have to go through it again.”

“Jake, what are you saying?”

“Nerys, you may hear things in the next few months. When you do, please believe that I am telling the truth.”

“Always.”

“No. Not always. You’re both the best, but if you somehow didn’t have five seconds of doubt, you wouldn’t be mortal. We’re all of us mortal, and fallible. Even if some of us think otherwise.”

One headed for the Federation’s flagship. One headed for the world she once declared the center of evil in the universe. One headed for Earth, and the possible scorn of a quadrant.

Jake informed the new commanding officer that, the wishes of the Bajoran people aside, his father’s quarters were now hers. He knew that soon, merely upsetting Bajorans’ wishes would be the least of his worries. There was the possibility of a ban from the sector itself. Some of his father’s friends–and some of his own, he realized–might choose to simply not believe the story. Others would ask why he went forward with a story like this, why he couldn’t simply have buried it. Romulus, at least, would be bound by its own role in the deceptions, and only make some small noise.

He hoped.

In his cabin aboard the departing space-liner, he looked not at the receding image of Deep Space Nine, but at the words he had written.

“....and while I will always love my father, I now must speak of grim wartime choices he made. Not merely the choice to send young people to their deaths in battle. But the choice he made, and the conspiracy he undertook to bring the Romulan Empire into the war against The Dominion on the side of the Alliance. My source is my father’s own recorded confession in this matter....”

It needed work, and several meetings with his editor. The reporter said a few words before going to his last sleep in the world he knew.

“Message 74205. Article : Telling By Jake Sisko.”

He breathed in. He realized anew that his father’s name and reputation were in his hands. He did what he believed his father would have wanted him to do, which is to do what he believed in. The ball would roll, now, beyond the ability of Captains, Admirals, Angels, Prophets or Saviors to stop. The final words came out more easily than he would have thought.

“Transmit all files.”


THE END
 
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