B'Elanna had taken Molly from the Hall of the High Council and dropped her back to the Salan shipyards, where she would go back to the Chameleon, on which Mitena Haro had been working for several days now. She was a Bolian like Hars, fifty years old, originally a propulsion specialist, but now the kind of expert in all things Molly loved having at her side — "just like Daddy did".
Then B'Elanna had rushed to the Samurai, where the situation was evolving quicker than anyone would have thought.
"Nice to see you back, Colonel." Wilkins had greeted her.
"Please, Admiral. Just call me B'Elanna. Admiral O'Brien, I dropped your daughter back to Salan. The meeting with the High Council was not entirely productive, I'm afraid."
"Did we really expect anything productive from a bunch of Klingons?" Tomalak sneered.
"I'm under the impression that the Chancellor knows more than he cares to say right now, Admiral", B'Elanna continued, ignoring the Romulan's remark.
"Like what?"
"I don't think this was a first. I also believe that he is not the only one in the know. May I suggest that you address him directly on the subject?"
"I will, Col … B'Elanna. We have other matters at hand, though. Bajor wants us out of DS9."
"What?"
"They say it's for our own protection, that they would have freer hands to maybe serve as intermediaries to a possible peaceful ending to the war, but I don't believe it, and neither do Fox and Kira."
"And certainly you shouldn't, Sir. The Dominion can't be trusted, and if that new guy Jaro wants to talk with them, neither can he."
"Is that the opinion of the High Council or your own?"
"The High Council and I do not agree on several things, Sir, but on this one I don't think we'll have a problem."
"So what should we do?"
"I'd say this is a job for Section 31, Admiral."
Section 31! That officially nonexistent and un-condoned rogue agency within Starfleet Intelligence, claiming to operate in the name of the security of the United Federation of Planets, but theoretically autonomous and not controlled by Starfleet Command or the Federation government, was Wilkins' nightmare. Its existence was in fact now known from all, even if their actions were still stealthier than anything the Tal Shiar, the Obsidian Order or any other equivalent organization had ever done.
"I hate Section 31, B'Elanna."
"They're a necessary evil, Admiral."
"I don't want to use them."
B'Elanna walked to Tomalak, looked at him straight in the eyes and sneered back at him.
"It can't be worse than using the Romulans."
Wilkins smiled. He knew the game those two were playing.
B'Elanna walked back to Wilkins, stopped so close to him their chests almost touched.
"I heard we also had good news?"
"Yes. The Commander of the Deletham has finally produced her final report. She salvaged about eight hundred of our people."
"So Rommies are good for something after all."
"The Deletham has also attacked and destroyed five Cubes."
"We'll really have to tear that little ship open and see what makes her tick."
"Unfortunately", Tomalak interrupted, "all her designers were killed during the invasion."
"I'll tear her open with my own bare hands if I have to", B'Elanna answered, ignoring Tomalak once again.
"Unfortunately, we need the Deletham, B'Elanna, and I need you."
"Let's send Tomalak then", B'Elanna said, smiling once again.
The Proconsul didn't say anything, but he appreciated the joke. O'Brien intervened.
"We were thinking of selecting the very best available engineers, Starfleet, Romulan and Klingon alike, and embark them on the Deletham to study her and find out how to reproduce it."
B'Elanna looked at the old man.
"I bet there already is one name on your list, Admiral."
"I would be honored if you helped me refine it. After all, you are exactly the kind of engineer I would have on it, if you were available."
"Do we really need to include Romulans?" B'Elanna asked, once more looking at Tomalak.
"They built the ship."
"Shucks!"
***
Sabrina had finally been taken out of the tank. Two female nurses were busy cleaning her up, very delicately, as they knew her grafted skin wouldn't hold for long. The young girl was more or less awake, vaguely aware of what was being done to her, much more of the intense cold which had suddenly replaced the 37.5 Celsius in which she had bathed for so long now.
At last she was wrapped in a heat field and brought to the operating room, where they tried and failed anesthetizing her, tried and failed desensitizing her — which was quite an irony, since after the operation, she would have no sense of touch left —, and finally started doing what they so much dreaded they'd have to do: restrain her and start operating on her without anesthesia.
She moaned, a few tears came out of her left eye, but she did not complain as she was essentially being flayed alive, then covered with the gel which eventually would have to be cast on her muscles and bones until her body would look as closely as possible like the body she had lost on the Chameleon.
They came out after fifty-nine hours. Sabrina was now sleeping, monitored by an unheard of battery of medical devices. Fillmore walked to Samantha Dvorak, who had been sent there by Wilkins to get information as soon as it became available.
"How is she, Doctor?"
The man yawned, trying to regain a semblance of composure, and finally answered:
"I don't know, Commander. That skin can take two to three weeks before it stabilizes and integrates to the rest of her body. We installed the new eye, the new lung, the new kidney, the new liver, everything needed. We also prepared her stumps for her new artificial arm and leg. It's gonna take time, lots of it. But on the whole, when I compare notes with the other case we know of, Annie Racicot, I'd say the skin itself, which is by far the iffiest item of all, should take no more than five to seven days to start doing its job properly."
"You replaced every square inch of it?"
"We kept the original lips."
"Is she still suffering?"
Fillmore smiled and shook his head.
"No. That at least is over. I figure she's going to sleep for quite some time now. She'll probably feel completely lost and groggy when she finally wakes up. Has Starfleet found her uncle yet?"
"He won't come."
Fillmore looked at Dvorak in a stunned way.
"He won't?"
"Don't ask. She must have other friends?"
"I'd try that Ensign Fox, who supported her while she walked during her hundred-day ordeal. She came almost every day."
"Good idea. I'll get her."