CHAPTER TEN
February 21, 2400
Miral and Annie had kept fighting for more than an hour. Drenched in their sweat, covered with bruises, exhausted, they were now sitting in a corner of the holodeck, side by side, each having one arm around the other's shoulders. They were drinking from the same bottle, and sometimes splashing each other.
"So, blondie, you liked the fight?" Miral finally said, still working at getting her breath back.
"Not bad, girlie girl, but I've met Klingons who fought with a lot more brute force. Still, you're quick, and you're spunky. I like you!" Annie answered, tapping Miral's chest with the palm of her hand.
"I like you too. You're not bad for a human! Of course, you've been enhanced, otherwise you could not fight a Klingon!"
"Probably not", Annie acknowledged. "But still I wouldn't be who I am if I hadn't suffered what that damn Cardie did to me."
"Is it true, all of it?"
"All of it, Miral."
"Damn. I don't know if I would have survived."
"I don't know, honey. But I did, and sometimes I'd prefer it if I had died … But not today! Today, I had a good fight, and I found a good sparring partner! Are you staying on the Samurai?"
"Possibly. I'd like to stay with you. You're a nice girl", Miral answered, in turn tapping Annie's chest with the palm of her hand, much more strongly than Annie had tapped hers though.
"We should get out of here now …"
"My quarters are very close", Miral said. "Maybe we could go there, take a sonic shower and get clean uniforms."
"Good plan, Miral. Let's go!"
***
"15,256 in all, Commander."
"That's quite a fleet."
Teroth and Lovok were contemplating the tactical chart in front of them. They had almost missed it. But since they were out of Dominion space, they were trying to find something, anything which could be a clue as to the whereabouts of the Qalans.
And then they had found them.
"They don't seem organized for battle. In fact, they don't seem organized at all."
"Lifesigns?"
"Millions of them. Tens of millions, I'd say."
"But where are they coming from, Lovok?"
"A better question would be: Where are they going? They would not be here if their objective was Khitomer."
"The Qalans, maybe?"
"What an interesting idea! More than fifteen thousand Dominion Dreadnoughts assembled to make war to the very race we seek to recruit as allies … This opens a very interesting new set of possibilities, doesn't it, Commander?"
"Certainly. Especially if the rumors are true …"
***
B'Elanna Torres was not in a good mood.
"I suppose that even with a quarter of Klingon blood, she'll be able to survive longer than her quitter of a mother …"
"Damn you, Tomalak", she was thinking, "you really know how to push my buttons! I really hate you now!"
"Your daughter will be an orphan. But don't worry, I'll take care of her. I'll marry her to one of my great-grandsons, and she'll belong at last to an honorable family."
"You will leave my daughter alone!"
"I'll marry her to Kaol. He's older than you are, but he likes life and he enjoys it to its fullest. I'm sure Miral will be able to give him the children his first three wives couldn't …"
"Damn Romulan! Never, never will any of your damn race touch my daughter! She's mine, mine, mine! I'll choose who she marries, I'll choose who she has sex with! Not you, not your damned son, you damn Green Head!"
Yes, Tomalak had found B'Elanna's Achilles' heel. The woman had one weakness, one terrible weakness: her daughter, her only family, and he had played B'Elanna on it to make her get out of her torpor. Only B'Elanna didn't care why he had acted in such a way. She was mad, and only the fact that he was a war ally had stopped her from tearing his head off his shoulders.
The Klingon woman had not been brought her clothes quickly enough. She had taken a physician's blouse, had wrapped herself in it, and was now roaming barefoot the corridors of the Samurai. Anyone seeing her angry expression just went out of her way. She finally arrived to the door she was looking for.
The door opened, B'Elanna went in. What she saw froze her blood in her veins.
***
After close to an hour of watching Annie and Miral fighting, Sabrina had left. The show was spectacular, very erotic to her in fact, and she was very anxious of spending the night with her lover, who had given her sweet dreams for a long time. But she had to go. Family affair.
"Lieutenant Chekhov?"
"Lieutenant Watson. Follow me, please."
Sabrina followed Julia to the Yorktown's brig. Her heart jumped in her throat when she saw him. Still, bravely, she went inside the cell, and the force field was reestablished behind her.
"Hello, Uncle Jethro."
The giant, sitting on his cot with an empty look, seemed hit by lightning. He jumped on his feet and looked around, until he saw her, so small, so like before and yet so different.
"How are you, uncle?"
Jethro Watson looked again at the little girl. In his heart was nothing for her, just a memory, the memory of the conversation he had had with Benteen and Hertzler when Sabrina was ready to die.
"Mister Watson, your niece could die at any moment, and your presence might make her last days more bearable. The Yorktown will therefore leave for Qo'noS …"
"Excuse me, Captain, with all due respect, I'm not interested in seeing her."
"Trouble in the family, Lieutenant?"
"We are not a family anymore, Sir."
"She's your niece."
"Only by accident, Sir."
Yeah, a damn accident. Nobody knew who the father was. They had raped Sabrina's mother for hours. She had been found three days later, practically dead. With some kind of medical voodoo involving kilometers of technobabble, they had saved the embryo and let the mother die. Now that thing was supposed to be his responsibility. He had hired a nanny and sent it far from him. And now there it was.
"What are you doing here?"
"I've come to visit, uncle. It's been a long time."
They had met once, when Sabrina was twelve. What had happened that day should have made Sabrina hate her uncle-by-accident. But she couldn't. That he had refused to visit her when she was dying should have made her understand once and for all that this guy wanted nothing from her. But she couldn't.
"Not long enough for you yet?"
Sabrina wasn't expecting much. The last time he had touched her wasn't her best memory by far. But this time, the security officer standing by would make sure that she would be safe.
"We're family, Uncle Jethro. Have you nothing to say to your sister's flesh and blood?"
***
"MOTHER!"
Miral was looking at her mother, angry and surprised at the same time. Annie was at attention, Miral was hiding her breasts and crotch.
B'Elanna was looking, stunned, at her daughter and that other girl, both completely naked and sweating profusely. She couldn't believe her eyes. All she could say was, looking at Annie and pointing the door:
"You! Out!"
That didn't please Miral at all!
"NO! You stay! Mother, you have no authority over her! She's a Starfleet officer! You're not! And these are my quarters! Since when do you get in my quarters without … Ah, forget that one! You've never treated me as an adult anyway!"
Annie made a move to her clothes. Miral looked at her in a way that froze her where she stood.
"I don't need to ask permission to enter my daughter's quarters", B'Elanna answered angrily. "What are you doing with her? Was the show beginning or already over? Let me guess!"
"What do you mean?"
"Did you have sex with her?"
Miral looked at her mother, more stunned even than her now. But she'd answer promptly.
"Yes, Mother! I've just had hot, wild sex with her! We're dripping from each other's sweat because we did it for hours, Klingon way and human way alike! She's my lover, Mother! Every night we meet in my quarters and we make love for hours! Satisfied, Mother?"
B'Elanna knew her daughter. If there was one thing Miral couldn't do, it was lying to her.
"The truth, Miral."
"Oh you don't believe me? So I'm a liar now? Well, maybe you'll believe this!"
And suddenly, Miral grabbed Annie by her waist, held her in her arms, one hand on her blade shoulders, the other on her butts, and gave her a long, very long and passionate French kiss, to which Annie happily answered in kind …
***
She knew the place. It seemed like a long time ago, but she had definitely spent time here. The only thing was … it looked smaller.
She was wearing a yellow tunic, black trousers, black boots. A lot of people were wearing similar clothing, although many wore red or blue tunics.
She was walking in a large place full of those people, and others, wearing some other … they had to be some kind of uniforms. So she belonged to an army? Was this a military outpost?
"Lieutenant!"
She kept walking, looking all around her, trying to remember more. That way, she felt, led to her most favorite place in the world. She couldn't remember what it was or why, but she had a feeling of pleasure, rest, safety …
It was associated to some flashes: a man and a woman. The man was somewhat stocky and looked older. The woman was slender and very pretty. And …
There was something else about that man. But for now all she could remember was his face and a general impression of stockiness. It was very strange.
"Lieutenant!"
She felt a hand on her shoulder. She practically jumped out of her skin, struck by a burning pain and frozen by terror. But she wouldn't show it! After all, she was …
"Is there something wrong, Lieutenant?"
She took a look at the man. Young, looking half-suspicious, half-concerned, wearing a yellow uniform too.
"Hmm? No, no, everything's fine," she answered.
"Sir, I'm asking because you look dazed. May I help you?"
"No, no, I'm just … tired or hungry, I guess."
"Oh. Would you like me to escort you to your quarters?"
Think quickly, girl. You don't know that guy, you don't know what he wants.
"I … just arrived. I haven't been assigned quarters yet."
Where the hell did that come from?
"Oh. Well, until you are, may I escort you to the best place for waiting? You'll be able to rest and get a meal there."
She looked at the guy. As long as he wouldn't try to bring her to his quarters …
"OK."
***
B'Elanna had stormed out of Miral's quarters. Now Annie was looking at her new friend with different eyes.
"Was it good for you too, girlie girl?" she asked Miral.
"Not bad, Blondie. Did you feel something?"
"Not in a physical way, except for the lips, but I was still very pleased."
"I still prefer guys."
"What's the deal with your mom?"
"She can't seem to understand that I want my life to be my own. She has recruited me in the damn task Force the Admiral is setting up without even asking me what I thought!"
"Few engineers would object to that, Miral."
"Well, I do! I wouldn't mind if anyone else had recruited me! But she always messes up my life!"
"I wish I still had my mother to mess up mine, Miral."
Miral looked at Annie. Yeah, she knew the tragic circumstances in which Annie had lost her parents, right before the Cardassian butchers started to …
Miral had already forgotten that she had almost lost her mother too, and those few words from the wiser-than-her-age Annie had reminded her that. Yeah, she would have to find her and apologize. Damn!
But before that, a good sonic shower with her new friend was the way to go.
***
"Colonel Torres!"
"WHAT?"
B'Elanna had left in a hurry. Of course she knew that her daughter was not a lesbian. Or was she? Anyway, she was mad, not because of her kissing another girl, but because once again Miral had shown her youthful defiance of her wishes.
And now that little bit of a probably flat-chested girl, probably younger than the last gagh she had eaten on Kubrak V, was looking at her, half-determined, half-scared out of her wits.
"Colonel, Admiral Wilkins has asked me to … take care of you."
"Are you a doctor of some sort, with a gold uniform to make you pass for some fellow engineer?"
"N… No, Ma'am. My name is Greta McClure. I've been affected to your bodyguard team, Ma'am."
B'Elanna had to smile. That little itsy bitsy thing, small enough to be used as a toothpick, her bodyguard? That had to be a joke!
"You're my … bodyguard?"
"One of your bodyguards, yes Ma'am."
Greta had noticed the very ironic tone and had answered as matter-of-factly as she could.
"OK. Guard me then."
"My orders are to escort you to Admiral Wilkins, Sir."
"First, little lady, make up your mind. Is it 'Sir' or 'Ma'am'?"
"As you wish, S… Ma'am?"
"Call me 'Colonel', OK?"
"I don't think it's appropriate, Ma'am."
"Why not?"
"I think the Admiral would rather explain that part himself, Ma'am."
"OK, let's go."
"Would you care to get dressed first, Ma'am? Your quarters are that way."
B'Elanna looked at the blouse and her bare feet.
"Lead the way."
***
Teroth and Lovok were still looking at the screen, as the Mogai, still using her phase cloak, was getting still a little closer to the huge fleet.
"Your intuition was right, Commander."
Teroth had been looking at the charts for a very long time. Lovok knew that when she was doing that, the best — nay, the only policy — was to shut the hell up and wait. After almost an hour, she had finally emerged from her thoughts.
"Yes, but the question remains: Who are they?"
"Their technology is clearly not Dominion, that is certain, although all their ships look like Dominion Dreadnoughts. Their signature looks like they're made out of a mix of several technologies. This one looks …"
The two officers looked at each other, stunned.
"We have to find out. Let's get closer."
***
"What the hell is this, Greta?" B'Elanna asked, looking at the clothes set up for her in her quarters.
"Those are your clothes, Ma'am."
"Not mine!"
"Admiral Wilkins insists that you wear them, Ma'am."
"Quite a sense of humor. Oh, hell. But not THAT!"
***
Jethro and Sabrina Watson were still looking at each other, Jethro with defiance and despise, Sabrina with hope. But that hope was quickly abandoning her wounded heart …
"Family! Your mother was family! Your mother was my sister, your father was a damn bastard who couldn't find himself a girl, so he raped my sister! Then you finished her by being born!"
Tears were beginning to roll on Sabrina's cheeks now.
"Oh yeah! Go ahead and cry! That won't bring her back! That won't give her back to me, damn you! You don't even look like her! Your bastard of a father couldn't even be white!"
"Is that why you never loved me? Because I'm half-white half-black?"
"You killed my sister!"
"Is that why you tried to rape me twelve years ago? Retribution for being born?"
"DAMN YOU!"
The giant hit Sabrina's jaw with his anvil-like fist, so fast that no one had time to react. The security officer drew his weapon, made him stand back, and brought Sabrina out, then called Sick Bay.
"That … won't be … necessary", Sabrina just said.
"But Sir, he …"
Sabrina got up. Truly there was no trace of the hit. Obviously her new skin and skeleton had withstood the giant's fist. She turned toward her assailant.
"You're right, uncle, obviously I have no family. But if I'm a bastard, Sir, so are you, and much more than I am, or even my father was. At least he didn't try to rape his niece."
And Sabrina left without looking behind her.
***
B'Elanna had just entered. She was greeted with a round of applause. But she was not in the mood.
"Cut the crap! What's this?" she yelled, pointing at her uniform.
"That," Wilkins answered, "is the proper uniform of a Starfleet Rear Admiral, B'Elanna, except for the pips that you forgot to …"
"I didn't forget! I'm not Starfleet!"
"You are not in the Klingon Military anymore", Karov answered.
"WHAT?"
"It's for your protection, B'Elanna", Wilkins continued, "and for my commodity."
"Why do you need me here?"
"Why DON'T I need you would be a shorter list. The Deletham Task Force is starting right now, B'Elanna, and we're counting on you to lead it. Admiral O'Brien will keep looking for recruits, but you will organize the work."
"Oh."
She looked at Wilkins, while he took something in a drawer. He came to B'Elanna and gently pinned on her collar the insignia of her new rank.
"Congratulations, Admiral Torres."
"Thank you … I guess", she answered with a smile.
"You know Dvorak and O'Brien, you know Karov, this is Commander T'Rul of the Deletham, and the girl in the back is?"
"Yeah, yeah, I know", B'Elanna answered hurriedly, "and I know that one too", she said, hinting at Tomalak, who had just come in.
"Tomalak!" Wilkins exclaimed, "At last! So, what do you have to tell us?"
"Quite an interesting story, Admiral, quite an interesting story. I suggest we sit down. I wouldn't want your new admiral to tire too soon."
B'Elanna threw him daggers with her eyes, as everyone but O'Brien's escort was taking a seat.
"I believe", Tomalak began, "that a small history lesson is required here …"
***
Sabrina was sitting in the Mess Hall, a piece of cream pie in front of her. When she was little, cream pie always consoled her from any pain, any wound she might have suffered.
Today however, the knot in her throat was too big.
She knew that her uncle didn't love her. He had made that obvious for twenty-four years. But she had hoped that maybe, just maybe, he would have a little something in his heart left for her, a spark, a good word …
Today she felt lonelier than ever.
***
Tomalak was standing. The others were sitting, except that other girl.
"It happened in 2374.
"The Khalid was exploring the Boden Star System, where an important source of trilithium was thought to be available. I'll spare you the details, but it was a military operation."
"What was not?" B'Elanna sneered.
"Indeed, Admiral. I visited the site a few days after the discovery, and what I saw soon appeared to be a way to jump over existing technologies and build a much stronger Warbird.
"It was a ship.
"It took our best engineers four years to study it. They finally reported that they were able to reproduce the technologies they had found onboard. It was therefore decided that the ship would be activated and brought back to Romulus, where it would be dismantled and reproduced at hundreds of copies."
"To defeat your former allies, the Klingons and the Federation, no doubt!" B'Elanna added.
Tomalak looked at her.
"Yes, Admiral, that was the plan. Please remember that at the time, the Dominion war was over, and many senators feared the Federation-Klingon alliance which essentially roamed alone their side of the Alpha Quadrant. But I digress.
"The ship was activated. Everyone was holding their breath as the ship started a long, plaintive sound, like an animal being tortured. Then it moved, slowly, almost painfully, and screeched even louder. As it slowly lift off, it caused a shockwave which shook the Dhival and the Hataki, two ships carrying observers, so strongly that everyone on both ships, fell on the ground.
"Once the commotion passed, and the alien ship had landed, under their wondering eyes, only then did they notice that the Jhimn, which was much closer than them from the mysterious ship in order to take detailed measurements of any atmospheric change, had disappeared. They opened hailing frequencies — without result. The Jhimn was gone.
"Then they made a macabre discovery.
"A routine scan of the planet revealed … nothing.
"There and then, they knew something had gone deadly wrong. More scanning still revealed nothing. Exactly nothing. Of all the high-security installations in close geostationary orbit around Boden VI, nothing, absolutely nothing was left. The planet itself was more burned, more dead than it had ever been. Only the ship was still there, apparently intact.
"That’s when they understood that it would be a waste of time to look for the Jhimn …"
***
She had been escorted by that officer in a yellow uniform, who had brought her to a public place, which reminded her of something.
She was sitting down now, and several people were looking at her. A strange being, bald and with big ears and bad teeth, asked her what she wanted.
"Moba Fruit, please."
Where the hell is that coming from?
After a few minutes, a little woman, dressed in a blue uniform, smiling and looking quite young, came to her. She looked at her like if she knew her.
"What do you want?"
"Molly?"