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STAR TREK: KHITOMER

CHAPTER THIRTY-NINE

May 4, 2401

“Is this seat taken?”

“No, sit down. Aren’t you the gardener?”

“Yes, and you are the Romulan who planned to display the Enterprise’s broken hull in the center of the Romulan capitol as a symbol of victory and to inspire Romulan armies for generations to come.”

Tomalak looked at Boothby. He was smiling in a friendly way.

“I’ve said so many things in my youth, Mister Boothby.”

“Call me Ray, Admiral. You’re old enough to have earned that right. But you weren’t that young at the time.”

“I wasn’t even 120 then, Ray. Call me Maiell.”

“Ishmael?”

“Maiell.”

“Oh. Well, Maiell, what do you think of that fleet surrounding us without even locking weapons on us?”

“They’re waiting for something … or someone. They’re not even making a blockade; they let the Mogai go through.”

“The Mogai is back?”

“Indeed. As we speak, they’re docking at OK1, where I bet the Admiral is going to thoroughly debrief them.”

“I wonder how that little Vulcan managed. I told her to just follow her instincts, and to expect from her Romulan captain mostly what she would expect from me — except the humor of course.”

“Good description. She will survive. But I am more interested in knowing what they learned from the Qalans.”

“Yes, of course, that too.

***

A lot of things had changed on the Enterprise in those two weeks.

They had followed the echoes, which had led them back to Khitomer and a huge Jem’Hadar fleet apparently blockading the whole system. When they had finally succeeded in calling OK1, they had been told to “get the hell to Deep Space Nine!” which they had done promptly.

Before that though, they had reported the size of the Jem’Hadar fleet: 4774 ships exactly, all Dreadnoughts. Sabrina had given OK1 an exact tactical report on their position, and had added her observations. Then they had left.

During the trip, Sabrina had taken time to think about her two, so different visions.

***

"Those are very weak pieces."

"You are of Bajor."

"You are suffering a great pain, my child. It could not be avoided. You need to understand. Look at the horizon, my child. The sandstorm is coming, and with it the locusts. You must endure it alone, for alone you are now."

"It couldn't be avoided."

"It's to prepare you for your task. You have to know. You will find out soon."

"My child, your trials are far from over. What you are enduring today is nothing compared to what awaits you. But you need to understand what was."

"You need more time. Unfortunately, I cannot help you more, and your trial cannot end until you are ready. Your question has been answered."

"So that's not enough, huh? You still won't scream for mercy? You know you won't die until you do, don't you? I won't let you die until you beg for mercy!"

"Do you think I'm tired? You think I'm getting tired? You're the one who will crack! You'll crack! You'll cry and beg! You'll scream! Oh, yeah, you'll scream, you big, fat, ugly cow! You'll scream!"

"You're alone now, little girl. No one will ever come to your help, and I will do with you as I please. And I'll let you live … forever if I want to. We will never let you go, and we will never let you forget that we are your masters."

"What if I popped your eyes out, huh? Maybe you would finally forget your pride, half-breed?"


***

That’s true, the first vision had all been very brutal and very hard to understand, but she had been given time to understand and everything had become so clear …

But now, once again all seemed so strange. Was that second vision right? Had she been tortured and indoctrinated by the Pah-Wraiths? Or had they just tried to seduce her with a naked representation of Taleria?

And that was another thing.

The first time she had met Taleria, she had found her extremely nice, likable, appealing even. So naturally she had opened up a little, and had been very pleased to find out that the young Romulan was quite open to friendship too. And even if she knew that she could not just invite her to frolic naked with her in bed, she always found herself quite cheerful, titillated even, when she exchanged a few words with her.

But now, she felt upset and humiliated that whoever gave her that second vision chose the young naked female as a representation, and portrayed her naked too. Yes, she had had that vivid dream, but it didn’t authorize them to invade her privacy that way …

So now she felt embarrassed in Taleria’s presence.

But she didn’t have time to talk about that. She was now reporting to Colonel Ro, at the time in charge of the station, while Fox and Rashid visited Bajor, more precisely the Council of Ministers, to report on Shudak’s declarations, which already were creating a wedge between Bajorans.

“So the Enterprise has been reassigned to DS9. Good. Admiral Fox asked for a starship because it’s better than any of those we have here. How many people could the Enterprise carry, Commander?”

“You mean besides the crew?”

“Yes.”

“About 500, Colonel, double if they don’t mind very tight accommodations. Do you think you might have to evacuate the station?”

“I don’t know yet, but your replacement seems determined to make it happen.”

“My replacement, Colonel?”

“Nobody told you? There is a new Emissary, a new Destitute. He claims that you are the Great Imposter and that you should be stoned and thrown through an airlock, or quartered, like Kara Grem was.”

“Kara Grem?”

“Prylar Furel. The one who brought the Orb of the Emissary on your ship and had you abducted by whoever talked to you in your vision. It seems I’ll have to update you on what happened to Bajor since you left us after the Kai found you …”

***

As soon as the Mogai had been detected coming out of the fleet, before even Teroth had had time to give the order to hail the Samurai, Outpost Khitomer had ordered them to “haul their asses” to the station, where Starfleet Command was eagerly awaiting their report.

“I’m listening, Captain”, Wilkins said simply. “Have you found the Qalans?”

“The Mogai would not have returned otherwise, Admiral. Yes, we have found the Qalans. We have established contact, and they have listened to us.”

“Will they help us?”

“Not the way you expected, Sir. But they have, and they just might.”

“If I may, Admiral”, Tomalak intervened. “Teroth, say everything you have to say. Do not keep anything hidden. This is not a report to the Tal Shiar.”

“Very well, Sir. The Qalans are a very heteroclite society, at the same time divided in hundreds of small sects — which I believe are absolutely not about religious or political matters — yet united by their deep hate for the Borg and their total distrust of the Dominion. My impression is that they both have done horrible things to them, much worse than just an ancient invasion. That is what keeps them united: the fear of being somewhat infested by them, or by other civilizations.”

“You said they had helped and might help further. How?”

“They gave us weapons, which happen to be particularly efficient against the Borg and the Jem’Hadar, Sir. We had the opportunity to test them against a small fleet of fifteen Jem’Hadar attack cruisers, and we blew them — how do humans say? Oh yes! — to Kingdom come.”

“Really?”

“Yes, Sir. They also assured us that, should the Borg or the Dominion try to violate the integrity of their space, they would welcome them with weapons much more advanced and lethal than what they gave us.”

“A very good thing. I have here engineers who will want to examine those weapons.”

“They are welcome on the Mogai, Admiral.”

“Thank you. Now tell me, Teroth: how did you get through that fleet?”

“No doubt the Admiral has instructed them to let the Mogai through, Sir.”

“The Admiral?”

“Well, Admiral Dalton, Sir.”
 
CHAPTER FORTY

May 4, 2401

Kira was stunned by what Sisko had just told her.

“The Reckoning, Captain? You mean it’s still happening?”

“Yes, Nerys. More than ever now, the Prophets and the Pah-Wraiths must settle their differences, and only that battle will decide once and for all who will occupy the Celestial Temple, and who will be banned forever to the Amoran.”

“But the Pah-Wraiths are all in the Fire Caves, aren’t they?”

“All but one, Nerys. One of them has escaped.”

Kira looked at him, horrified. Sisko continued:

“And that is how we know that the Reckoning has not happened yet.”

“When did that happen?”

“Not too long ago, Nerys. Not too long ago.”

He looked so certain. Kira was surprised. She asked:

“How do you know?”

“She appeared only very recently.”

“She? You don’t mean …”

“Exactly, Nerys.”

“Are you sure?”

“The Imposter is unaware that she is being possessed by the Pah-Wraith, or that she has been taught their lies in the disguise of the sacred truth, Nerys. She is sincere, which makes her even more dangerous. She must be stopped before the Pah-Wraith takes entirely possession of her and commits the Supreme Sacrilege, bringing down with her the Celestial Temple and the entire Bajoran Sector.”

***

Rose McCoy had hesitated for a long while. But she saw the logic of Annie’s reasoning. Of course, they would come for her eventually, and they would treat her the same way they had treated Varel.

She had tried though.

“But if they bring back your body, we’ll be able then to take the circuitry …”

“If they bring me back, Doctor. Maybe they’ll just eat … me themselves. Remember, Varel was a Romulan, maybe it disgusted them to eat her. Once they have skinned me alive and … taken out my skeleton, they won’t have any scruples eating a human.”

“But it … How can you talk so serenely of the most horrible tortures you can imagine?”

“I don’t have to imagine, Doctor. I’ve been through it … already, remember? The skinning alive, the bone extraction and crushing before my eyes … There’s not much horror you can describe to me that can be worse than that, I assure … you.”

“I wish I could protect you from all that …”

“You can’t, Doctor. Nobody can. But you can … help protect and maybe save all the others by doing what I’m telling you to do, before … they come for me.”


McCoy had agreed that it was the logical thing to do, although she deeply hated that Vulcan-like logic at the moment.

“Captain, I have only one way of anesthetizing you. I’ll have to knock you out, or ask a strong girl to do it for me.”

“Unnecessary, Doctor.”

“I hear Molly O’Brien packs a good punch. She’s coming now.”

“No, Doctor. I have to guide you while you take the circuitry … from my arm. I must be awake. But I wouldn’t mind if someone hugged me … hard while you cut me open.”

Molly had arrived. She simply knelt down, put a hand on Annie’s right shoulder.

“I’ll do it.”

“Very well. I have sharpened a rock the best I could, but it’s quite blunt and it will …”

“Just do it, Doctor.”

Molly hugged Annie with all her might, lying on her completely. Annie felt somewhat better, feeling the pressure on her skeleton. Then she felt the rock penetrating her left shoulder and cringed.

“Sorry.”

“It’s nothing, Doctor. The flesh is numb. The only pain I felt came from you hitting … the muscle.”

McCoy, having torn the shoulder open, started looking in the tissues to find the shoulder circuitry. She did find it, and followed Annie’s guidance to take it out. Then she started tearing apart her arm.

It lasted more than two hours. Annie didn’t complain, but her right arm was hugging Molly more and more. Molly didn’t complain either, although she knew that the next day she would be ecchymosed in the ribs and back.

Finally McCoy finished. She then took a paste she had prepared from elements she had extracted from the ground and used it to somewhat repair the torn artificial flesh. She finished the crude repair with her tricorder.

“Your arm’s skin is almost completely repaired already. Still, you have lost lots of blood from there.”

“Can’t … make an omelet without … breaking eggs, Doc. Molly, any idea what you can do with that stuff?”

“I’m not sure, Captain, but certainly we could use this one as the basis for a communicator, although I don’t know who we could contact …”

“Not your … problem, Molly. Make the best … use of it. I trust you completely.”

Having said that, Annie smiled and closed her eyes. She didn’t know how long she could still sleep, and she intended to make good use of it …

“GET UP!!!”

The whip ripped Annie’s chest open. They had come for her. Just in time, it seemed.

She got up, let the Remans shackle her feet, was hit in the arm she couldn’t raise anymore with the butt of a phaser rifle.

“She can’t raise it! An old wound”, McCoy screamed before she was kicked in the belly by another guard. Then one of those close to Annie took the dead arm in his claw and aligned it with the other, and she was cuffed. Then they started pulling on her, pushing with their rifles in her back, and she started walking towards her destiny …

***

Wilkins and the others were now looking wide-eyed at Teroth.

“Dalton? Bob Dalton?”

“Yes, Admiral.”

“That’s impossible! Dalton died a year and a half ago, at the Battle of Palomar!”

“That is what we believed until more than a year ago, Sir, until we met him aboard a ship similar to those.”

“But how?”

“The Admiral did not share that information with us, Sir. He did however tell us the best way to find the Qalans, and he was right about that. We would still be looking without his insight.”

“You’re sure it’s him?”

“The Admiral agreed to a complete checkup, Sir. Either it is him or my Science Officer is totally incompetent, and I vouch for her on that matter.”

Wilkins looked at Teroth again. That woman was clearly not a spring chicken. She was composed, very calm, and spoke in a very cool-headed way.

“So who … Who is manning those ships?”

“Former Borg drones, Sir. My understanding is that most of them come from a place they refer to as Unimatrix Zero, while others come from a group they call the Cooperative.”
 
CHAPTER FORTY-ONE

May 4, 2401

Onara was on the Promenade, which was strangely empty. She was barefoot — again? — and did not remember where exactly she had left her shoes.

She walked around for a while, trying to find anyone. But nothing. And then …

“Onara!”

She turned around. Right in front of her was Sabrina, smiling and opening her arms to her. She was naked, like when she had found her in the Fire Caves. But something was different.

As she came closer, Sabrina’s face became clearer. Onara was stunned. Yes, it was Sabrina, but now she was human.

“Who am I, Onara?” she asked softly.

“ONARA!” yelled an angry voice behind her before she could answer Sabrina.

She turned around, and there was Shudak. In a reflex she turned around …

Sabrina was now wearing her regular Starfleet uniform, and she was a Bajoran again.

“Who am I now, Onara?”

Shudak fired a strange light, extremely powerful, purple in color. Sabrina pushed Onara out of the way, and from her came out a white light. Both lights soon filled the entire Promenade.

“Who am I now, Onara?”

The lights were becoming more intense, the heat was intolerable. Onara was protecting herself the best she could, her head between her knees. She heard the deflagration, she felt the blast destroying Deep Space Nine …

“Doctor, she’s waking up!”

***

The long conversation Sabrina had had with Ro was over. She was petrified. So the Bajorans were now getting divided between her teachings and those of that man, Shudak Ran. He was essentially contradicting everything she had said earlier, and now a religious war was threatening to ravage the almost idyllic planet.

Was he right? Had she been fooled by the Pah-Wraiths, as that naked Taleria had told her? And if she hadn’t been, then who was behind Taleria? The answer was pretty obvious.

“Who are you?”

“What?”

“Who are you? Who gave you the right to speak in our name?”

“Are you the Prophets?”

“Who are you? Why are you now in a Bajoran shape? Why are you trying to fool our people into heresy?”

“Please answer me!”

“You are evil! Leave the Gateway! Never come back to the Temple or you will die!”


“Commander?”

Sabrina jerked.

“Huh? Oh it’s you. It’s you?”

“What happened, Commander? You seem very upset. May I be of assistance?”

“Why are you here, Taleria?”

“I was walking on the Promenade, and I saw you, and I wondered … if maybe we could talk about something personal.”

Sabrina looked at the little Romulan. She was not her usual cheery self. She looked real. But Sabrina would have preferred to keep thinking on her own problems.

“I’m not sure I can help you now.”

“Commander, have I displeased you?”

Huh?

She looked at Taleria again.

“When we met, you were very friendly, and I took … pleasure in spending a few minutes a day with you. Then — I believe it was a little before we came back to Khitomer and were sent here — you started looking at me in a much different way. But you said nothing to me, in fact we almost never talk anymore. I was wondering if I had in some way I cannot fathom displeased you.”

Taleria had evidently needed all her courage to come to her and speak like that. Now, she was looking down.

“It’s not you, it’s me”, she let escape before she realized how ridiculous it sounded, especially if the two of them actually had been lovers. “I mean, I’ve been thinking about so many things recently, and I can’t talk about it because …”

“Is it about your abduction and subsequent ordeal?”

“You heard about it?”

“There are a few details in your record. But most of it I learned by listening all around and asking questions.”

“Why?”

“You were friendly. I like to make new friends. I have found that it was easier when I had some knowledge of who they are.”

“Of course. Well, to answer your question, it’s related to that. I had … contradictory opinions about their significance.”

Taleria looked at Sabrina. One of her eyebrows was higher than the other, and her face was turning to a question mark. Sabrina knew that it wouldn’t work, and the fact was, she wanted to continue the conversation.

“Let’s sit at this table. What will you drink, Taleria?”

“I heard Bajoran spring wine was very good.”

“We’ll find out together, I’ve never tasted it. Waiter! Two spring wines!”

They sat. Sabrina put her hands on the table, followed by Taleria.

“It’s not just that.”

“You seem embarrassed. I assure you there is no reason for you to feel embarrassed with me, Commander — may I call you Sabrina for now?”

Sabrina smiled. Now she felt ready to forget her sinister thoughts for a while. She briefly put her hand on Taleria’s and said:

“Of course.”

The spring wines were served at that moment. Sabrina took hers, so did Taleria, and without giving it another thought, they drank together.

“Very good”, Taleria said. “What do you think, Sabri…?”

She didn’t finish. Sabrina was standing up, holding her belly, like folded by some pain which had just seized her. Then, under Taleria’s horrified eyes, she started vomiting blood on herself and on the floor …

***

“Unimatrix Zero?”

“I met Axum, their leader. They say they have a debt of gratitude towards the Federation, and that’s why they agreed to participate to a somewhat involved plan Admiral Dalton exposed to them. I did not understand every detail, and I am quite certain that the Admiral did not tell me the entire story …”

“He probably didn’t. The day I met him, he was already known as ‘Captain Clam’, and it hasn’t changed with time …”

“That was my impression of the man, Sir. He is quite … Romulan that way.”

“What I don’t understand is how the hell he escaped the battle. The Masada was destroyed, we collected only a few hundred survivors …”

“We were there, Sir.”

“Yes, yes. In fact you saved some of the crew of the Masada, right?”

“Yes, Admiral.”

“Sir!” a voice interrupted the conversation. “A ship is crossing through the fleet and is hailing us.”

“At last! On screen!”

“Hey Leo! Whazzup?”
 
CHAPTER FORTY-TWO

May 8, 2401

When Quark had brought the Dreadnought, the engineers had swarmed through it like a hive of hungry bees. Heading the group was Catherine DeSoto, so eager to study that alien technology that she often forgot to sleep.

Now, after almost six weeks of intensive scavenging, studies and simulations, she finally had compiled all the reports, all the blueprints of the ship she still called “USS Badass”. She was scheduled to present them three days later to Starfleet Command, so she had decided to take a break.

And then …

“Catherine! The Mogai is back! They brought Qalan weapons and technologies!”

She jumped out of her bed, still groggy from extenuation, and promptly got dressed, almost tripping on her own feet while walking to her boots. She stopped for an extra-large, extra-strong, extra-bitter quadruple raktajino and ran to the docking bay where the Mogai was, well, docked.

“Where is the Commander?”

“I don’t know, Miral. I haven’t seen Yirina for a week now.”

“She has really changed.”

“I know. First I thought it was the destruction of the Deletham, but that was four months ago. Anyway, we’ll have to make do without her. You take a look at the weapons. I’ll be on the drive. Sisko, you’re with me!”

“Yes, Lieutenant!”

Miral went right to the depot where the crew had stored the weapons they hadn’t installed yet on the Mogai, either for lack of time or for lack of understanding how the hell they would do that.

“Lieutenant Paris?”

“Yeah”, Miral answered to the Vulcan in front of her.

“I’m T’Shiya, the Science Officer. I’d like to share my observations on those weapons.”

“Sure. What do you think of them?”

“To put it simply, I think they are too dangerous to be left without serious surveillance. Their existence should be kept in the utmost secrecy.”

“And the Admiral seems to want to see them put to the test as quickly as possible.”

“Very unwise. But I will help you to the best of my abilities.”

***

On Tagrak Vor, the morale had plummeted to new lows.

“Four days.”

“I know, Engineer. I worry too. But the only thing we can do is follow her last order and find a way to escape.”

“Unfortunately, there is nothing we can do without a subspace scanner, Doctor.”

“Are you thinking what I’m thinking?”

“Probably.”

“Good. Make it so then. But be discreet. And don’t forget: don’t hurt yourself.”

“Understood, Doctor.”

Molly went back to the small area she laughingly called her desk, really one of the big stones in the camp, one of those rocks twenty girls could not lift to check if there were any worms or insects they could eat. Of course, their collective strength was going down. So was the count: two had died under the heat and humidity, and besides Varel, that now made three funerals: a speech by the senior officer, a burial in the ground, a prayer offered by a member of the same race if available, by the senior officer otherwise.

At the same time, she couldn’t stop thinking about Annie. That girl had been the first to understand what was happening to her, the part she understood anyway, and she had offered to help. She had acted as a true friend, and Molly had little friends, now with the mood shifts and everything …

Of course, what could be expected of her after what had happened to her …

"What did you find on the Ch'Tang that you didn't tell the High Council?"

"O'Brien, Molly, Lieutenant, Serial Number MSO-18931217."


She had been rewarded with a brutal smack on the chin.

"That's not what I asked you, yoq!"

"O'Brien, Molly, Lieutenant, Serial Number MSO-18931217."

"Excellent. I was hoping you would be an obstinate little girl. Let's proceed then."


And then that voice trying to reason with her, to weaken her …

"Miss O'Brien, up to now you explained to me a very interesting theory on a theta wave assembly being able to further analyze communication systems and told me several other little pieces of entertaining yet useless trivia. That is not what I asked of you. Are you keeping something from me?"

"Well, no, of course. I mean, this is not an easy task …"

"Excuse me, Miss O'Brien, but, you see, when you think that you are alone … you really are not. You are taking a lot of notes, that no one can understand, but certainly there is more on those PADDS than what you have told us until now. I think I need to refresh your memory on who is taking decisions here. Tomorrow at the same time, Miss O'Brien, I expect your full cooperation. Otherwise, I will let my men take their own notes on you with their
meqleHs. They are very eager to have a little playmate."

And then that last interrogation with the woman, while she was trying to recuperate, with her broken legs dangling in the air. Ten … twenty … thirty seconds, the painstick right at the worst possible place, she feeling herself explode, losing consciousness … then her awakening on Deep Space Nine.

Damn, was it what was happening to Annie? How do Remans torture their prisoners anyway?

And then that “bodyguard”, there to check up on her day and night, like …

“Give me some room, Savia, or I’ll beat the crap out of you again!”

Savia Rem looked at Molly right in the eyes.

“You beat no crap out of me, Lieutenant. I assure you that if the others hadn’t intervened, I would have subdued you eventually.”

“I don’t think so.”

“Maybe when we get out of here, you will give me a chance to prove myself.”

“When? Not if?”

“I trust your engineering abilities with my life, Lieutenant.”

Molly looked at Savia and her wrath subsided.

“Thank you”, she answered simply.

***

“Ah, my reward! After all those damn tests, a beautiful woman to greet me. You are B’Elanna Torres, right?”

“And you are Robert ‘Bob’ Dalton, self-proclaimed biggest expert on the Borg the Federation ever had. You know I have met some Borg when I was younger. I’ve even been a drone!”

“Yup I know. Tell me, how come that old bastard bagged you? Did he have something on you?”

“Leo … Admiral Wilkins is my husband because we love each other, Admiral. It’s really that simple.”

“Yeah, I knew some good girl would someday feel sorry for him. So B’Elanna, what do you think of my story?”

Obviously Dalton was quite a character. Wilkins had warned B’Elanna that he was a woman’s man, and that he would try to make her angry. So she would deny him his reward. Now he was getting serious — apparently.

“Well?”

B’Elanna smiled.

“Some of it is not that hard to believe since I was there when it all started. But the rest … I can’t imagine how our little trick could bring such a huge change!”

“Obviously someone — whether a drone or not — took advantage of the situation and played his cards well enough.”

“A drone or not?”

“I have no proof, B’Elanna, but I’d bet my yacht against a self-sealing stem bolt that it’s not a drone who did that to the Collective.”
 
CHAPTER FORTY-THREE

May 12, 2401

Kira Nerys was properly devastated.

For two days she had tried to reason with Sisko, tried to understand some hidden meaning behind his resolve to let Shudak preach isolationism while he apparently set himself out of Bajoran religious affairs.

But there was none. Hadn’t he told her and everyone else, some twenty-five years ago, that Bajor would unite with the Federation because it was the will of the Prophets?

And now:

“The Alliance with the Federation has always been seen by the Prophets as a temporary gap, Nerys, a way for Bajor to finally stand up on its feet before it lets that crutch go to accomplish its true destiny. First the Reckoning, then the great plans the Prophets have devised to make Bajor the heart of the whole galaxy. You’ll see!”

Only it made no sense.

Why would the Prophets have made sure that the Sisko would be born, decades earlier, while the Occupation was happening, to create a temporary alliance with the Federation? They could have prevented the Occupation altogether! Why did they let it happen?

Obviously Bajor had to learn something. What was it? Certainly not suffering, they had learned that long ago and didn’t need to be reminded. So the Occupation in itself taught them nothing positive. But having to ask for help taught them that they were not alone, and the Federation was part of the Prophets’ plans for their future. That was logical. But in order to work, it had to keep going, not …!

It made no sense!

Sisko made no sense!

***

Sabrina had spent ten hours in Sickbay, where she had essentially replaced Onara as the VIP of the week. But the internal hemorrhage had stopped as quickly as it had started, leaving her in a state of extreme weakness.

The faithful Taleria had spent all her free time with her, taking the best care of her she knew how, but somewhat afraid to go back to the conversation so abruptly interrupted by the event.

Now, eight days later, Sabrina left her quarters for the first time and started walking again on the Promenade, Taleria at her side.

“What were we talking about when we were … interrupted, Taleria?”

“We were talking about friendship. May I still call you Sabrina?”

“You’ve done it for a week, I think you’ve earned the right. Friendship … Yes, that was the topic at hand. You told me not to feel embarrassed around you. All because I didn’t tell you the whole truth.”

“What is the truth, Sabrina?”

Sabrina looked deeply at her new friend and sighed. She so wanted to tell her everything, and yet she was so afraid of losing her. And yet she felt such a need for companionship …

***

Taleria was now looking at Sabrina, who had just finished opening her heart to her. Sabrina was also looking at her, obviously quite nervous.

“That explains a lot”, she simply said.

“So what do you think of me now?”

“You must be so courageous. Having endured so much to learn so many things, being told that they are all wrong, finally receiving death threats … And that’s without considering your ordeal on the original Chameleon. Maybe you vomited the spring wine because of the stress. Or maybe it is that part of your vision, and it means something.”

“That’s not what I wanted to know.”

Taleria sighed and answered:

“It is easier for me to talk about your spiritual experiences.”

“I understand”, Sabrina answered, lowering her head.

“No you don’t. But that’s OK. According to your first vision, there are those First Ones, of which the Prophets and the Pah-Wraiths both are part, but not the most powerful, in fact a minor part of the ensemble. If this first vision is true, then the contradicting visions come from them.”

“Of course.”

“But if that first vision is a lie, then it must come from the Pah-Wraiths and the other two come from the Prophets. Does it make sense?”

“I think so.”

“What do you think, Sabrina? Which vision seems more real to you?”

Sabrina raised her head.

“The first one lasted so much longer, it penetrated my soul so deeply … There are so many symbols, several of which I do not understand even now …”

“Like what?”

“It’s not important.”

Sabrina put her hand on Taleria’s. She was afraid she’d take it back. But she didn’t.

“Very well then. The first time we met, you were very friendly. I liked that. It’s not easy for us to make friends, even among us. We are taught to raise shields around us, and even when we want to lower them, it’s not easy. But I felt safe with you from the beginning, with your simple way to explain things. I even joked with you, something I almost never do with someone I do not know intimately.”

“The reference to your breasts. I liked it.”

“Yes, I wondered if you would. Imagine my pleasure when you answered in kind.”

“Your pleasure?”

“Romulans are described in Starfleet records as militant, brutal, barbaric, isolationists, xenophobic to the point of racism, and, above all, arrogant. It is interesting to notice that we were taught very young the same thing about humans, not long ago.”

“Really?”

“For some of them it’s true. Commander Sorel told me stories about your uncle. I was very pleased to find out that you were as appealing inside as you are outside.”

Sabrina looked at Taleria and smiled.

“Yes, Sabrina, I find you very attractive. My culture is not very happy about it, but it tolerates physical relationships between people of the same sex.”

“I’m happy to learn that.”

“Still, for now, you will have to dream if you want to see me naked. I feel ready for an intense friendship, but we should be discreet, considering that you are my superior. Just know that you have been in my dreams too.”

Sabrina blushed. This was a good day after all …

***

Onara had agreed to meet Kira at the Dakeen Monastery.

“What you are asking me to do is very unusual, my child.”

In a spiritual-minded conversation like this one, Onara called Kira, almost twenty years her elder, “my child”. That was not her custom though when she spoke with the flamboyant general.

“I understand, Eminence. But someone is wrong, and it’s me or it’s Captain Sisko.”

“We must trust the Prophets.”

“I trust the Prophets, Eminence. But there are now two people claiming to be their Emissary and preaching diametrically opposite teachings. One of them is a liar.”

Onara looked at Kira. She knew she doubted Shudak. Onara trusted him, because of Sisko’s involvement in his retrieval. But she didn’t like what he was teaching anymore than Kira.

“I agree. Let’s say that we do this. Will you comply with the verdict, whatever it is?”

“Will you, Eminence?”

“Of course. My life is to follow the path the Prophets set up for their people.”

“Then it’s agreed?”

“Walk with me, my child.”

Onara dragged Kira along an inextricable labyrinth of pathways, stairs, doors, force fields, etc, down to a small room barely lit. She went to the far end, waved her hands in front of the wall. The holographic wall disappeared and a table appeared.

Together, both women stood in front of the Orb of the Emissary’s box and opened it …
 
CHAPTER FORTY-FOUR

May 12, 2401

They were all present: Wilkins and Dalton for Starfleet, Worf and Karok for the Klingons, Tomalak and T’Rul for the Romulans. B’Elanna, O’Brien and Dvorak were also present.

“So, Bob”, Wilkins asked directly, “what you’re telling us is that we haven’t seen the worst of it?”

“What I’m telling you, Leo, is that the Borg war was already on when they decided to invade our space. I’ll go one step further and tell you that it’s not the Queen who decided that invasion. It’s the other one, that I call the Blue King because I don’t know squat about him or her. From what I know, the Queen is too busy trying to recreate a stronger Collective.”

“The one we crushed.”

“Yes, B’Elanna. The damage you did to the Borg was much more organizational than everything else. Unfortunately, that war brought chaos to the whole Delta Quadrant, not just the Borg. But one day, one of the two sides will win the fight and then, all our Unimatrix Zero and Cooperative friends will be caught in the line of fire. They came to ally with us, but they’re not strong enough to fight a unified, warmonger Borg.”

“And the Dominion?”

“The Dominion currently uses all its forces to fight the Blue Borg. They may even be considered as allies by the Queen. Their mistake was to go after us when the Borg War lost its intensity, when the Blue Borg decided to attack us. When they also decided to go back after the Dominion, the Founders had to withdraw — especially after the massacre of Deep Space Nine. But if the Founders win, they’ll be back, for they have to show that no one can defeat the Dominion for good.”

“So we better get ready.”

“I’d say Project Badass is the top priority.”

“The Klingon Empire agrees.”

“We agree nonetheless”, Tomalak said, looking squarely at Worf and Karok.

“Grrrrr …” answered the Chancellor.

***

Annie had been brutally thrashed by the Remans on her arrival to the building they used for their interrogations.

She had awakened in a soggy, hot, putrid kind of cell, similar to a dungeon, gagged, her wrists and ankles in cuffs, standing up spread-eagled.

The layout of the cell was unusual. It was for the most part normal enough: walls of rock, hot, fetid and gooey stone under her bare feet — what the heck was the goo Annie would learn later —, a ceiling of heavy timbers. In her back was a row of metal bars, securely set in the floor and ceiling. Right behind her, it was open, like some kind of heavy gate. Beyond the bars was something looking like a passage, like a tunnel leading in the depths of the rock.

In front of her were steep wooden steps, leading to a trapdoor in the ceiling. As she noticed the trap, it opened and three Remans came down.

"A more skilled interrogator is on his way", the first said. "In the meantime we’re leaving you with our pet."

He nodded to the passage behind Annie's back, beyond the bars.

"It leads to the home of a ... thing, indigenous to this planet. It’s half-amphibian, half-reptilian, you might say like a dragon, but also like a snake. It’s very big. It’s far too large to fit in here, but it can stretch its neck right through the bars.”

Annie tried to look calm, but she really didn’t like the sound of it.

“It has a forked tongue — very long, and very prehensile. It's slimy and quite cold. It craves the taste of sweat and musk, and since you are naked and quite sweaty already, it will lick you entirely and tirelessly, and leave a thick residue of hot, gooey and quite putrid saliva all over you … also, it will explore your insides with its tongue and make you really enjoy its presence."

He looked at the passage.

“It’s coming. I assure you that it is quite insatiable, and it does seem to prefer licking sweat and other bodily fluids to even resting. Your own sleep might be quite perturbed for the next few days. Sorry about that.”

Annie raised her head, looked at the Reman with a quite frightened look.

“We have to go now. Oh! If you hear strident screaming through the trap, it’s just us entertaining some of your companions.”

They left her. Annie turned around, trying to see the thing, but it was too dark and she was unable to move anyway. She was hearing the hiss though, the terrifying hiss …

The thing slivered out of its hole, its head coming at less than half a meter from Annie. It then started licking her from the sole of her feet up. Damn that tongue was long and so, so sticky and disgusting and foul-smelling …

It kept licking her all along her body. It was intolerable already. Even if she didn’t feel anything, she could imagine what it would feel like if she had the sense of touch. Not that she felt anything — except the stink —, but because she was so deeply disgusted by what the thing could do with her, she was going to scream …

No! She wouldn’t scream! Not for so little! She had learned from the Cardassians the meaning of real torture, that was nothing …

The thing came through her face, which was quite uncomfortable. Then it came down and went behind her legs and …

She screamed behind her gag. All of a sudden it seemed that the beast had penetrated her up to her heart. That was horrible! It wasn’t painful, but inside her body her feelings were intact, and it was so uncomfortable, and she was so … ticklish!

***

The trap opened again after an eternity for the sleepless, extenuated, almost clinically insane Annie now.

“So that’s the crazy naked blonde you want me to interrogate?” the interrogator, easily recognizable to his dark suit, asked.

Who the f… is this moron? Annie thought.

She was untied and brought to a metallic table where she was very tightly spread-eagled — again. There, for the next two days she was drugged with tubes inserted into her arms, more in her legs, more in her chest and yet more in her lower abdomen. Those last ones were excruciatingly painful on the inside and she could hardly sleep more than with the “pet”. She wasn’t fed: the tubes monitored her vital signs She was alone most of the time, shivering with fear and suffocating from the heat and humidity of the surrounding air, sobbing from the pain which made even breathing difficult. But mostly, the tubes injected her with hallucinogen drugs which added the most horrible, terrifying nightmares to her torture regimen.

After two days of that treatment, the interrogator decided that it was time to start asking questions. So he had the gag taken off her mouth, and he came to her with some kind of scalpel.

“I have a question to ask of you”, he said, opening a small cut in her right breast, right above the nipple.

Annie knew that opening her mouth now would weaken her resolve to shut the hell up. So she didn’t answer. After all, as long as the vampire face would only cut her synthetic flesh, she would feel nothing.

The game continued for two hours. Then the Reman started opening her knee.

“Huh?” he exclaimed. “What do we have there?”

***

For five hours now they had tried all combinations.

They had stood together.

Onara had stood alone.

Kira had stood alone.

And yet, the Orb of the Emissary remained inactive. It had never happened to Onara. Usually the Prophets answered her questions promptly. But this time, nothing.

“Maybe it’s the wrong Orb.”

So they had gone to the three others in the monastery: the Orb of Serenity, the Orb of Adversity and the Orb of Vindication.

None of them had given the slightest sign of activity. It was as if those four Orbs were now … dead?

The two women looked at each other.

“It seems the Prophets are telling us to make up our own mind, Eminence.”

“But why? Why would they deny us the answer to such an important question, a question which may make the difference between peace and war, between life and death?”

Onara turned almost white.

“I know.”

“Why then, Eminence.”

“The prophecy clearly states that the Destitute will bring both peace and destruction. Now I understand how.”

“There are two of them?”

“And the Reckoning is …”

“The final battle between them.”
 
CHAPTER FORTY-FIVE

June 26, 2401

From: Starfleet Command
To: Sabrina Helena Watson, Executive Officer, USS Enterprise-A
Stardate: 78366.9

As of this date, you are requested and required to take command of the USS Enterprise-A.

Signed, Fleet Admiral Lionel T. Wilkins, CnC.


The message had arrived May 15th.

“Does that mean you’re a captain now, Sabrina?”

“You would think so, Nicole. But Starfleet has even less captains than it has ships, so we commanders are ‘requested and required’ — meaning essentially that they ask politely first, but they’ll make it an order if you hesitate — to do the captain’s job, without the perks of course …”

“It’s not fair.”

“All is fair in love and war.”

***

From: Starfleet Command
To: Sabrina Helena Watson, Commanding Officer, USS Enterprise-A
Stardate: 78399.7

The USS Enterprise-A is now affected to Outpost Khitomer 1 for refitting.

Signed, Fleet Admiral Lionel T. Wilkins, CnC.


That order had arrived May 27th.

“What’s this, Taleria?” she had asked her new Chief Engineer.

“Good question. I talked with Cathy, and she informed me that the Enterprise was now officially Starfleet’s guinea hog …”

“Pig.”

“Huh?”

“It’s guinea pig.

“Oh. Anyway, they seem very enthusiastic about the Qalan weapons and a few new devices brought back by Admiral Dalton, but they’ll be testing them on the Enterprise. I am particularly intrigued by the temporal shields. As soon as we reach the station, I will be working very closely with my team to learn all about it.”

“Don’t let Cathy take you back, it was hard enough to convince her that you would be more useful on the Enterprise than in her team …”

“I’m sure she has no intention to deprive you of my indispensable services …”

“I’m serious, Taleria. I told you then, I tell you now, my first motivation was your engineering skills.”

“And I told you then, and I tell you now, Sabrina, had I had the tiniest doubt about that, I would not have agreed to the transfer.”

***

From: Starfleet Command
To: Sabrina Helena Watson, Commanding Officer, USS Enterprise-A
Stardate: 78460.7

Commander Watson is requested and required to appear before Starfleet’s High Command this day.

Signed, Fleet Admiral Lionel T. Wilkins, CnC.


That order had arrived June 18th.

“Sit down, Commander.” Wilkins had said to start the meeting.

Sabrina, a little uneasy in front of such a committee, sat down.

“Let’s just make the presentations, Commander. Chancellor Worf, Admirals Dalton, Torres, Karok and Tomalak. We are here to evaluate you. Do you wish to be represented?”

“No, Sir. I will stand alone and answer for what I did or did not do.”

Wilkins smiled.

“Relax, Commander. We’re not here to pass judgment on your personal life, but first and foremost to ask you to clarify some of the facts you have revealed to me during your debriefing after your return from Bajor.”

“Yes, Sir.”

“I can’t say that I understood — or even believed — all that you told me that day, Commander. But what particularly attracted my attention was your declaration to the effect that the First Dominion War was in fact the result of actions undertaken by the enemies of the Prophets, those Pah-Wraiths. Could you explain in simple terms why they would have acted in such a way?”

“In simple terms, Sir?”

“As simple as possible.”

“I’d simply say that if we accept this account as accurate, then the Pah-Wraiths were behind the Dominion War for the same reason they were behind the Occupation, Sir: to counteract the Prophets’ actions.”

“And why would they do that?”

“Because if they are alone in the Celestial Temple when the First Ones come back, they will be able to share their philosophy with the other races, Sir.”

“And that philosophy would be?”

“Let’s just say, Sir, that while the Prophets have demonstrated countless times that they did not share our enthusiasm for the Prime Directive, the Pah-Wraiths would push that lack of interest to the point of total antagonism, with a degree of violence which just might consume the whole galaxy, Sir.”

“So the Pah-Wraiths are bad, and the Prophets are good?”

“If we accept what I learned first as true, Sir, it would be more accurate to say that the Prophets are the lesser evil.”

“And do you accept that first version as true?”

“I believe it to be the most probable, Sir.”

They looked at each other, then at Sabrina again.

“You sure have changed, Commander”, Wilkins told her. “It seems you have matured a lot. Well, let’s get to the second part of that meeting.”

***

From: Starfleet Command
To: Sabrina Helena Watson, Captain, USS Enterprise-A
Stardate: 78481.9

A distress signal has been received from the Tagrak system, in Romulan space. It may be the Chameleon-A. You are ordered to investigate and eventually rescue whoever sent the signal. Complete the new weapons’ installation as you travel there.

Signed, Fleet Admiral Lionel T. Wilkins, CnC.


That order was received this day, June 26th. As soon as it was read, Sabrina called upon her new Executive Officer, Commander Jordan Welles, and her Chief Engineer.

“So those are our orders. If the Chameleon-A is indeed in distress, we will probably encounter the same foe they met. Lieutenant, when can we be ready?”

“Ten days, Captain.”

“No more than two.”

Taleria turned to the man. Jordan Welles looked like a very stern man. He was fifty-three, but his face seemed ravaged by time much more. His grayish skin, gray hair, gray eyes made him look like quite an uninspired and uninspiring man. His lean, almost skinny body made him look even taller than the actual 1.95 meters he towered at. In almost thirty years, no one had seen him smile, and no one knew why.

“If I could do it in two, Commander, I would have said two. I say ten because there is no way in Areinnye to finish adapting that technology to our ship in less than ten days. Our gel packs have to be trained, and it will take ten days at least.”

“Lieutenant Cretak does not follow the Prime Directive of the Starfleet Engineer Corps, Commander. She doesn’t pad her estimates.”

Welles looked at his new commanding officer. It was even worse than he had thought. He knew Sabrina had been promoted to captainship a few days earlier, he knew that she was young, and she didn’t look that older. And that smile, those eyes — he had landed on a ship of children. Worse: a ship of little girls.

“Very well, Captain”, he said in a sigh. “Your orders?”

“Let’s go!”

“Yes, Captain.”
 
CHAPTER FORTY-SIX

July 15, 2401

Things were going bad on Bajor.

Shudak had started teaching isolationism on Deep Space Nine with a mitigated success. All the Bajorans present were meeting Starfleet officers on a daily basis, many of them were in fact Starfleet officers, and Shudak’s teachings had made few disciples. So he had decided to take the fight on Bajor itself. That was May 10.

He was an orator, all right. He knew how to stir the hearts and souls of people. Kind of Shakespearian in his discourse, mastering rhetoric like no one, untiring, he made an apparently flawless argument for Bajor to return to the old, pre-Occupation ways — all the ways, including the d’jarras.

Kira and Onara had gone to meet Sisko together. He wouldn’t help. Jake and Kasidy did not recognize Ben Sisko anymore. He, who had fought against the d’jarras when Laan had tried to restore them, now was approving them. They did not recognize him anymore, and they had shared their puzzlement with Kira and Onara.

He had in fact advised Onara and Kira to withdraw from the debate, for the old ways would be restored whether they approved of it or not, because “It is the will of the Prophets”.

Yes, things were pretty bad on Bajor. Sabrina’s teachings had gone around the whole planet, even if she had spent very little time spreading them. Three days in fact, as the Bajorans had celebrated their new emissary like they did in the past, with children bringing her flowers, petals thrown under her feet as she walked in the Blinding White Ceremonial Robe all the way leading to the Chamber of Ministers, where her speech had been transmitted to the entire planet. She had spent the rest of the time, honored and all dolled up by young girls, explaining the fine details of what she had been taught.

But she was not there anymore to oppose Shudak. And what was worse, he had come back …

***

The Enterprise had taken ten days to reach the Tagrak System. At Sabrina’s big surprise, there had been no sighting of any Reman ship. The message stated very clearly that the crew had been taken by the Remans.

They had found the prisoners and beamed them back. They had also found the Chameleon-A, landed at about three thousand kilometers from the camp. The horde of engineers sent in to repair it had made it space-worthy again.

Strangely, Annie had been found in the building, alone, her left arm torn from her torso, pumped with mild hallucinogen drugs, so close to death that the doctor had almost hesitated bringing her up. But she had done it anyway. Now the emaciated, burnt, mutilated and tortured body seemed to have again clung just enough to life to stand the shadow of a chance.

After sending Welles to the Chameleon, she had ordered Taleria to take “the new drive” online. Taleria had protested, but there was no way Sabrina would let her friend on the Enterprise-A’s Sick Bay for ten days if she could bring her to OK1 in six hours. The old ship had squeaked and groaned all the way, but she was the Enterprise.

“She's got the right name. Remember that.”

“I will, sir.”

“You treat her like a lady, she'll always bring you home ...”


***

“Wake up, Commander! You have a visitor!”

Annie opened her eyes, looked and …

“Admiral Dalton, Sir!”

“At ease, Annie. You’re not out of Sickbay yet.”

“Where am I?”

“At OK1. You did a good job bringing back your crew, at least the 47 survivors of the camp.”

“It wasn’t that hard, Sir, once I had … them fooled.”

“Not that hard? I hear reports of some little girl who took command of the Chameleon — Wilkins had already heard told me a story like that though — just to be stabbed in the back, brought in an abandoned work camp on an oven of a planet and repaired with what the doctor could use — a tricorder and nothing else.”

“She … used minerals of some sort.”

“Then you ordered them to harvest your body for electronic circuitry, and to eat you when your corpse would be brought back from torture. It has been said that you were tortured for months, Annie.”

“That part is not … argh … entirely true, Sir.”

“What is it?”

“My circuitry … is still fooling around, Sir. The docs are discussing … how to repair me.”

“I heard they designed an entire procedure for you. It should be done very soon. What happened, Annie?”

“They found the circuitry in … my knee, Admiral. From then on, they wondered what I was. Someone said maybe I was … a Borg spy. I decided to … play the game.”

“How so?”

“They thought at first that I had been sent … to spy on them. I told them … that I was spying on … the Federation, which had … developed powerful, undetectable weapons and … devices to fight the Borg.”

“And they believed you?”

“You forget how the … Deletham whooped their asses, Sir.”

“The Deletham is no more.”

“They don’t … know that, Sir. Now they think the … Deletham is the prototype on … which several hundreds of warships are built to …”

She winced painfully, more than before, and continued:

“… take our … revenge on our enemies.”

Dalton passed a finger in Annie’s hair. She reminded him so much of the first time they had met.

“Good thing. But that does not explain your return.”

“I told them … I had to return. They were too happy … to oblige an enemy of the Fed …”

She stopped breathing for a second, then continued:

“… the Federation. They kept me with them — I learned … so many things, Sir, I’ll explain … They started taking … better care of the others, and they … stopped dying. I then … suggested the plan which … would allow … Molly to … steal what she … needed.”

“And they took care of you during that time?”

“B … Barely. But … I had to … stay alive … or they might … have changed … t-their m-mind about the o-o-thers. I … Ah!”

Her whole body started shaking, like a seizure of tonic-clonic epilepsy. It didn’t stop.

“Doctor! She’s having a seizure!”

“Damn! Again? I thought those psychotropic herbs would help her balance, but …”

He exposed her chest to take a scan.”

“What’s happening?”

“We must bring her back to the Operating Room at once! Any time it happens, that kind of seizure could collapse her brain for good!”

As Annie was brought back to the Room, Dalton stood there, thinking of what that one had already endured on the Baltimore …

“Hold on, sweetie. I’ll be there for you …”

***

Sabrina had been informed that she could not see Annie now, and had thought of going back to the Enterprise, but she had stopped dead in her tracks when she had seen Taleria looking at her.

“I have the final damage report, Captain. Nothing major, but the ship will need some structural refitting before she tries to go faster than warp again.”

“You did a good job keeping her in one piece.”

“Thank you. May I speak frankly?”

“Always.”

“I don’t think you should have taken that risk.”

“Many would have died in ten days.”

“Many more could have died in six hours. The ship was not ready for transwarp.”

“None of our ships is ready, yet Starfleet Command has made the Enterprise a guinea pig. That means it’s up to us to find out what to do to adapt our ships to those technologies. Surely the Badass won’t have that problem.”

“No it won’t. But, Sabrina, you don’t fool me. That was not your only reason.”

Sabrina noticed the shift from “Captain” to “Sabrina”, and more importantly, the shift from the official tone to a more personal one, with a touch of sadness. She wouldn’t fool that little Romulan.

“You still love her, don’t you?” she continued.

“We’ve been together for … some time.”

“That was not my question, Sabrina.”

“Both of us had lost the sense of touch. We knew that we would nevermore have sexual partners, even guys are not interested in sleeping with dead meat. She gave me her hand to hold. We ended up trying to find how to please each other. Physical and spiritual intimacy followed. She rejected me because she didn’t want my pity, and also to let me have partners who would enjoy having sex with me.”

“She rejected you, and yet you still love her.”

“Yes I do. But not like you.”

“Are you sure, Sabrina?”

“Yes, absolutely.”

“Thank you, Sabrina. It must have been hard to share your feelings that way. I have one last question.”

“Yes?”

Taleria came even closer and murmured:

“Have you found how to please her? And if yes, would you show me?”
 
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN

July 15, 2401

The two men had remained in the background. They were observing the third man, the one who was now getting ready to talk to the people.

“Does he clearly understand what is expected of him?”

“Not entirely. But I prefer that he remains oblivious to the grand scheme.”

“Of course he might not approve. After all he believes he is doing the will of the Prophets.”

“I am not so sure. This man does not care that we are all in the hands of the gods. He wants to be a god himself, and thus he is doing his own will.”

“As long as he believes that his will is done, he won’t bother us.”

“Yes, but he is clever, this one. Clever and underhanded, as all politicians are, and he knows how to conceal his cunningness. This I say to you, my friend, when he finds out what we are really striving to accomplish, he will rebel.”

“Then we’ll just dispose of him. It’s not that hard. You should know.”

“I am afraid that your experience in that matter is more recent than my own. Besides, system-wide genocides are your specialty. I seek my vengeance on only one man.”

“Yes, and I find this strange enough. But to each his own, I know what true hate can make a man do.”

They were looking at the third man. He really seemed to be in his element, ready to address the crowds assembled there to hear him explain the events of the last hours.

He looked at them, like he was searching for a last approval. But in his mind he was already the master of the destiny of his audience, the destiny of his people. So he stepped forward on the balcony, took a deep breath and began:

“My fellow Bajorans …”

***

Sabrina and Taleria had walked together for a while, then the little engineer had returned to her work. Sabrina was now sitting at one of the numerous restaurant areas all around OK1. The glass of water she had ordered from the replimat was still full in front of her. She couldn’t make her mind exactly about being happy — from Taleria’s direct overture to a first sexual relationship — or sad and worried — as no one still knew if Annie was still alive.

She was at that point in her thoughts when someone put a large chocolate sundae in front of her.

“I haven’t ordered that.”

“You should have, little one. You are obviously in need of feeling good, and there is nothing like chocolate to do that. So take your spoon and start eating.”

“I don’t even know where to start.”

“Take the cherry out. You don’t need that. Now spoon the fudge from around the rim. Leave only ice cream in the middle. Then gently spoon the ice cream around the sides, like you're sculpting it.”

Sabrina knew that person. Her eyes, so dark, so … Of course!

“Relish every bite. Make every one an event. And on the last bite, close your eyes ...”

“Madam Chancellor?”

“Oh please, little one, call me Deanna, or I will call you Hom yoHwI'. What exactly makes you feel so down?”

“How do you know?”

“Honey, you broadcast your dismay to anyone with an ounce of sensitivity. To a Betazoid, it’s detectable from the other end of this area. I feel a bit of happiness, heavy concern and sorrow and, above all, the most intense perplexity and guilt.”

“Excuse me, Madam … Deanna, but why do you feel concerned by my mood?”

“You are the Captain of the Enterprise. I am used to care for the Captain of the Enterprise. What is happening, little one? And don’t let your sundae melt.”

Sabrina hesitated for a moment, then finally opened her heart to Picard’s ex-counselor. She told her everything, as she so needed to. She shed a few tears while she talked about Annie, and shuddered while telling a summary account of her trials.

Deanna was stunned.

“I know Klingon poets who would write an opera with your story, little one. Of course, I will keep your confidence. Why do you feel so guilty?”

Sabrina looked wearily at Deanna.

“Guilty? Yeah, I guess that’s my prime feeling right now. Well, between my finding a new partner while Annie is dying and the Civil War I started on Bajor, I guess I have everything I need to feel guilty.”

“So if you became some kind of monk, it would help you be happy?”

“Maybe it would be a fair penance.”

“What for? Did you torture your friend? Did you betray her in any way? Are you responsible for her present health? Didn’t you risk your ship to bring her and the other prisoners as quickly as possible to better medical facilities? Is there anything else you could have done to help her?”

“I don’t think so.”

“If your friend dies, will you honor her by becoming celibate? Would she want that?”

“No, I don’t think so.”

“Now, about the Civil War on Bajor: why is it your fault?”

“I taught things, Shudak taught different things, and now the Bajorans are divided.”

“Were the Bajorans divided after you taught your version of history?”

“A little. It worsened after Shudak …”

“Would it have degenerated into a Civil War if Shudak had not talked?”

“I don’t know.”

“I think not. Bajorans are always talking about religion. They always search for new teachings. You brought them some. You did not start a new religion, you just gave them a different optic on the one they have. You did not deny their gods, their actions or teachings, you just put them in a different perspective and, most of all, you shared what you knew to be the truth with them. Am I wrong?”

“But … how do you know all that?”

“You told me.”

“What?”

“I heard the passion with which you described the first vision to me, little one. It has nothing to do with its length or the horrors you had to endure. In your heart, you feel that it is the truth. But you deny it because you feel that you harmed the Bajoran society.”

“Huh?”

“Come on, tell me that I am wrong!”

***

“Come in.”

Lying on her bed, thinking the way she had been doing it for months now, Yirina looked wearily to the door. It was Dalton.

“Admiral, Sir!” she said, jumping on her feet and at attention.

“At ease, Commander. You’re a very hard to find young lady.”

“I’m very busy with all kinds of projects, Sir.”

“Lieutenant DeSoto told me she hadn’t seen you in quite a while.”

“That is true, Sir. But Catherine is perfectly capable to handle the Task Force, and she is more familiar with Starfleet technology than I will ever be. On the other hand …”

“I don’t want to interrupt you, Commander, but I don’t think Lieutenant DeSoto could have upgraded my yacht the way you did. You saved my life, do you know that?”

“I just did my job, Sir.”

“No, you didn’t. I know you, Commander. You are not happy with just doing your job. You do it by day, and you spend the time you should devote to sleeping on something more. This time, that ‘something more’ is so important that you neglect your day duties. And I want to know what it is.”

“Did Lieutenant DeSoto complain, Sir?”

“No. She follows your example, and sleeps only when she can’t keep her eyes open with toothpicks. I ordered her to sleep. Now, before I do the same with you, you will tell me what preoccupies you so much.”

“Very well, Sir. But you may not believe your ears …”
 
Since I may be without Internet at any time and for any time, here is, four days in advance, the last chapter of Season 4.

CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT

July 15, 2401

The discovery had been made in the morning, but Sisko had left his house two days earlier, promising he’d be back on the 18th at the latest.

Kasidy wasn’t sure about why her husband was leaving Jake and her, but Jake suspected that he was going to try to appease the different parties currently ravaging the Kendra province, where he lived.

The militia, patrolling in the surroundings, had decided to make a pit stop at the Emissary’s home. And there they had found them.

Dead.

They couldn’t believe their eyes. Jake and Kasidy Sisko, the son and wife of the former Emissary, had been massacred in the most savage way, and the house had been ransacked. Everything of value was gone. And, there on the living room wall, were the Bajoran words: “Vengeance for Kara”.

***

“So what happened exactly on Tagrak Vor after they came to take you, Miss O’Brien?”

“It’s all in my report, Admiral.”

Dalton looked at her in a very stern way.

“That may be, Miss, but I know from experience that one always forgets something in a report. I want to know everything.”

“Yes, Sir. Well, they shackled me — actually they almost carried me, because I was so weak — and I entered the building. The first thing I noticed was the pile of crap on the counter at the left of the first room. There they unshackled me and told me to wait. One of the Remans stayed with me.”

“Why did you think they did that at the time?”

“I thought they wanted to intimidate me, to show me the power they had on me. Of course, now I know that I did then exactly what Annie … Commander Racicot expected me to do.”

“You visited her already?”

“Every free hour I had I spent with her, Sir. She’s a real hero.”

“I agree. But so were you in your way, and so were all of you.”

“The Commander endured a hundred times what I did, Sir, and she did it willingly. She wanted me to think she was dead and yet have a plausible reason to have the Remans send me back with the others.”

“So you thought she was dead at the time.”

“Well, if they brought me in, it was obviously to replace her on the torture stake or whatever they were using. But, instinctively, I tried to evaluate the pile of crap. I promptly located the ZZ80 circuit we needed to finish the transmitter.”

“But you didn’t know then what would happen.”

“My father taught me to never neglect any possibility, Sir.”

Dalton smiled. That answered one of his questions.

“A wise man. Then what happened?”

“After a while they brought me in a corridor, then through a trap in the floor. We reached a room with … Let’s just say it looked like some kind of medieval dungeon, Sir.”

“Is it when you … acquired the certitude that Commander Racicot was dead?”

“Yes, Sir. That’s when I saw the skinned arm, rotting up there. The very same arm the Commander had them tear off her shoulder to fool me and the others.”

“Fool you?”

“Her real plan was to fool them, Sir. The Remans would believe she was on their side — of course the Borg would have no difficulty replacing her lost arm — if she helped them fool the prisoners into believing she was dead. With some cosmetic surgery, she would easily pass for another officer — she even suggested Commander Dvorak — and keep trying to find out more about the War Fleet.”

“I guess she must have embellished a few details to convince the Remans of that incredible story.”

“Quite a few, Sir. That’s in my report too. Do you want me …?”

“No, not necessary. What did they do to you?”

“They left me there for a few hours, asking things about Ann… the Commander. I guess they wanted to try to check on her story.”

“Did you meet the … snake?”

“Let’s just say it introduced itself, Sir.”

“Understood. You say a few hours, but you were absent for about three days.”

“Yes, Sir. They transported me to a plateau higher than the fog, where they tied me with leather straps on the neck and wrists to a low branchy log, forcing me to my knees, legs apart. They left me there for two days under the sun, with enough water to survive the sunburns. Finally they untied me, brought me back to the first room with the crap, and after once again asking questions about the Commander — to which I refused to answer — they told me to wait, but without guards this time. I promptly took the ZZ80 and smuggled it back to the camp, Sir.”

“But you were naked. How did you smuggle it? It’s too big for your mouth.”

“A girl can always find a place for a medium-sized, smooth and oblong object, Sir.”

“But where?”

“A girl, Sir …”

Dalton looked at her, then opened his eyes wide.

“Oh.”

At that moment, Dalton’s communicator vibrated.

“One moment please.”

Molly took three steps behind while Dalton listened to the message. When he turned around to Molly again, he was white. Molly guessed.

“May I ask how the Commander is doing, Sir?”

The man looked at her again. There were tears in his eyes, and he was not hiding them.

“Sir?”

“She just died on the table. They couldn’t revive her this time.”

***

“My fellow Bajorans,

“I, Jaro Essa, your new First Minister, now proclaim Bajor to be free and independent again! Nevermore shall Bajor depend on aliens for its peace and security! Let now the Prophets smile benevolently on their people as it now follows the path shown to them by the former Emissary, Benjamin Sisko, who today officially resigned his functions in the infamous Starfleet, and the current Emissary, the honored Shudak Ran, who have agreed to appear at my side!

“Nevermore will Bajor depend on the Federation, that work of the Pah-Wraiths, which tried fruitlessly to corrupt and seduce us! But we are Bajorans, and today we reject their blasphemous yoke! Let them know that they have fifty-two hours to evacuate the Bajoran system and never return, and that their ships will be fired upon, and their citizens incarcerated, if they are found anywhere in Bajoran space after that delay has expired!

BAJOR TO THE BAJORANS!”


“Again?”

“Yes, again.”

Fox and Rashid were not amused.

“Damn moron! He’s really determined to ruin Bajor completely! Who the hell let him come to less than a million light years from here again?”

“NOT ME!” Kira screamed, coming in the room.

“General! I suppose you heard the speech.”

“Yes, I heard the downpour of CRAP that guy dared to utter in front of my people. How can one be that stubborn, that stupid, that … that … DAMN!!!”

“Yeah, don’t worry, we share your opinion. We already received instructions from Admiral Wilkins.”

“I hope he’s telling us to hold the station?”

“No, not this time.”
 
"Oh dear." you say. Well I guess so. Season Four ends badly, doesn't it?

I still don't know if I'll be there next week, but I'll give you this to ponder.

***

PROLOGUE TO SEASON FIVE

One full year had gone by since Bajor had proclaimed its secession from the Federation. Strangely enough, from an observer’s point of view, things seemed to be fine. There had been some repression at the beginning, a lot of executions, but now peace seemed to have returned to the formerly occupied world. Almost everything was fine …

The Bajoran Triumvirate (Jaro, Sisko and Shudak) had tried to take control of Deep Space Nine. But before the sixty-five starships sent to fulfill that mission had arrived, a Dreadnought sent from Khitomer had quietly spewed out a hundred Vipers and left. The Bajorans had been warned. They decided to ignore the warning. Four Vipers went to meet them. Ten minutes later, the Bajoran fleet was completely disabled, as the Vipers returned, unharmed, to their post around the station. The Bajoran government did not repeat the mistake.

***

After Annie’s death, her body had been quickly disposed of on Dalton’s orders. Everybody understood that the Admiral had a weakness for the blonde girl and no one had complained, but Sabrina had asked for an extended leave of absence “to reflect upon her life”. She had to go clandestinely due to the death warrant issued against her by the Triumvirate. She left alone and went back to the Fire Caves, where she took all of her clothes off and started meditating. Shudak, Annie, Taleria, B’Hala …

Speaking of B’Hala, a new relic was found on its site during Sabrina’s meditation. And the very existence of that new relic made many Bajorans start questioning their new leaders …

***

Around Khitomer, since the former Dominion fleet, now incorporated into Starfleet, was around to keep the peace, and since there had been no attack whatsoever, OK2 had been finalized, and OK3 and OK4 had been added to the network.

The USS Badass would soon be ready for her shakedown cruise …
 
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE

July 29, 2402

Samantha Dvorak had been running all around the Khitomer System for a year now. Since the arrival of the huge ex-Dominion/Borg fleet, everything had changed. The precarious position had become a fortress.

Commander Dvorak had been put in charge of organizing the unorganized, and dismantling the over-organized, finally pouring the mix into the Starfleet mold. That had been fun … NOT!

“You look tired, Samantha.” Wilkins simply said while she sat down for her final report.

“That’s because I am, Sir.”

“I know it was a lot of work, but I knew I could only count on you. We have been together for years now, and only you know Starfleet procedures and my thoughts on it enough to reorganize an entire, basically alien fleet in the Starfleet model.”

“The strangest part was to promote officers to the rank of Captain, while I was only a commander …”

“Yes but once again, I trust you implicitly. And I have made it clear to Mister Axum and his collaborators, and to Miss Riley and her collaborators. So, any problem?”

“Only during the first days, Sir, and mostly because of my clumsiness. But once I learned to walk with each foot in its own boot, it went fine.”

“So those five thousand and some ships are now organized for battle?”

“Five thousand four hundred and ninety-five ships, yes sir. Not counting the Reman ships, who have joined the Klingon Fleet.”

“Thanks to Annie Racicot. Bless her in death as she should have been in life.”

“Yes, Sir. Her terrible sacrifice may have saved the galaxy. The Remans may very well do all the difference in the future invasion.”

“You bet. I wonder where Sabrina is … That little girl seems to have been made from the same mold.”

“She’ll be back, Sir. Would you like to see the fleet’s commanding officers roster?”

***

Almost one year ago, day for day, Sabrina had landed the cloaked shuttle in the Janitza Mountains, left in it all her clothes and belongings, including her com link, and sent it back, now piloted by Taleria, the only one who would know where she was.

She spent most of her days and nights sitting down or on her knees, walking once in a while to keep the blood flowing, and lying when she needed to sleep. There was no food, and she was not looking for any.

The very first night, a terrible thunderstorm had soaked Sabrina and the ground all over her, illuminating the skies with frightening strokes of lightning, filling the air with deafening thunder rolls and raising every hair on her body. All she did was open her mouth, close her eyes, raise her head and drink from the falling drops.

From that night on, she did not see the sun. There was not a single hole in the clouds for a whole year. Most of the time, it rained. Heavy thunderstorms at night, just plain, cold rain by day, all with high winds, surrounded Sabrina’s frail, exposed body. Then autumn came, and it was only rain, followed by heavy snowfalls in the winter, always with high winds. But she did not feel it and did not suffer from it. The rain and the snow just seemed to glide over her body now, without touching her. Even the ground around her or under her bare feet was dry now. The water, then the snow, became her only sustenance. The spring came, then the summer again, but no sun appeared in the sky …

***

From the tragic circumstances of her birth to the present, Sabrina’s life now made perfect sense.

Her mother being raped for hours in the ditch by unknown assailants, dying to give her life, being raised by a nanny because her only family left, good old Uncle Jethro, wouldn’t care for her, in fact would probably have strangled her had the clinic given him a chance … All that was such a perfect parallel to the birth of the Bajoran people, brought to existence by the First Ones from the departing life force of dying humans, not knowing where they came from, but eventually hated and persecuted by their brethren, the Cardassians …

Sabrina’s youth was a daze, a complete blank. Oh, some general memories were there, like the house she lived into, on the shores of the Loch Ness, with her nanny, as an only child, and of course her encounter with her dear uncle, who had almost raped her that day, and severely beaten for almost an hour, while she didn’t know what to do, but had refused to beg for mercy … That she remembered! Not a single happy event, but the attempted rape and violent beating she remembered vividly! What a perfect parallel to the destruction of the Bajoran heritage and civilization by the Cardassians!

Starfleet had — literally — saved her life. As she was contemplating suicide, the online library had published a long, detailed document on the life of Jean-Luc Picard, who had just died. Sabrina watched it tirelessly for weeks, and emerged finally, determined to follow his footsteps. She too would be a Starfleet captain, she too would someday command the Starship Enterprise, she too would make a difference … The same Picard who had fought for the Bajorans, so they would get the Federation’s help, had also saved her life and brought her to Starfleet.

It was as if Picard had saved her life so she could live. Just like dying humans had given life to the Bajorans, just like her dying mother had given her life, had Picard died to give her his life force? What if she had received the spirit of Picard? Would he be happy with what she did with it until now?

But still she had had to learn what suffering really means, just like the Bajorans did. Being almost roasted alive on the Chameleon, tortured in nightmarish visions … That seemed only some recapitulation of her life now, a confirmation of what her life was all about, with at the top of the mountain, her transformation — or was it a blooming? — into a Bajoran girl, shaped through pain, suffering, and knowledge, a knowledge which now did not crush her shoulders anymore, but rather filled her heart and her mind. Yes, she was the one, the only, the chosen new Emissary. Only she was not the Emissary of the Prophets. She had been forged in steel and fire, in blood and horror, in life and death, by the First Ones. And it was their message they had seared on her soul forever …

***

The faithful Taleria had waited and waited and waited. Sabrina had insisted that she not come for her unless something very important had happened or Starfleet recalled her to duty. Starfleet was quite ready to wait much longer. Wilkins himself had granted the diminutive, grief-stricken girl an indefinite leave of absence.

Taleria had navigated the cloaked shuttle inside the huge storm. The girl would have rather been a pilot than an engineer, but the Romulan Academy had decided otherwise. Still, she was quite a pilot, and she maneuvered the shuttle better than most shuttle pilots would have done. She landed close to the point where Sabrina was sitting and stopped the drive.

Outside, the weather was intolerable. She didn’t see ten steps in front of her, so dark it was in the middle of the day. There was no lightning, but the rain formed a veritable curtain through which even her infrared viewer couldn’t see squat. And then she noticed some heat in front of her. She came closer.

“Sabrina?”

No sound, except the deafening winds and the rain pouring on her helmet. She screamed louder:

“Sabrina? Is it you?”

The shape moved. The rain stopped, the wind calmed down.

“I am so happy to see you, Taleria!” Sabrina answered simply.

***

The Kai had traveled to B’Hala for the occasion. No one in the Triumvirate had dared object to her presence on Bajor, despite the statute of persona non grata she endured since their ascension to power.

She had examined the cavity, right there in the bantaca spire in the centre of the plaza. It was almost invisible, but a zealous cleric had noticed the ancient Bajoran word for “light” and had looked around, touched it, until a mechanism had opened it. She had left everything as it was and called Vedek Monas. Monas in turn had contacted Onara. Onara had called Jaro and had had no trouble reminding him that despite the current conditions on Bajor, the people was still quite attached to the teachings of the Prophets. Of course, the fact that Monas had “mysteriously failed to keep the information private” had more or less forced Jaro’s hand.

And now she was looking at the relic itself.

The large blade, almost thirty centimeters long by ten wide, very sharp, was held through a handle long enough for her two hands, all made in a wood she had never seen before, jay black and extremely dense, almost like a rock, and very heavy. The whole weapon in fact was deceptively heavy. It was obviously one of those ancient sacrificial knives used by the Bajorans of the past, who sacrificed people as well as animals.

And then there was the scroll wrapping it all around. The clerics had just decrypted the first part, and there it was for her to read:

“Kosst Amojan, the Murderer, the Renegade,
Killed the Progeny, Closed the Curtain.
Heavens are Dark, Birds Sing No More,
The Curse Bares the Land.

The Light Bearer, the Alien, the Child,
Back from Afar, Takes the Dagger,
Tears the Curtain, Ignites Heavens,
Brings the Curse to Its End.”


“What the …?” Onara thought.
 
CHAPTER FIFTY

July 29, 2402

Taleria could not believe her eyes. There Sabrina was, her best friend, her lover, to whom she had remained completely faithful during that year, despite a few propositions she had received from other females, her age and slightly older and a lot younger. But Taleria had said no every time, stating that she belonged to someone else. And there was the object of her devotion, naked, appallingly thin, her belly so sunken inside her rib cage, her rib cage so obvious, her breasts practically gone … It was frightening.

“Sabrina, what happened to you?”

“I’ve thought a lot about my life, Taleria. And now I believe I have all the answers I need to take it in the right direction.”

“I meant your body!”

Sabrina took a look at herself, touching her ribs, her belly, her arms and thighs. She looked surprised, almost shocked for an instant. But she did not lose her calm.

“How long have I been here? A month?”

“A year, Sabrina.”

The young captain looked deeply into Taleria’s eyes. She was shocked. A year? She had spent a full year here, not doing anything but think, meditate? She started quivering violently.

The weather was getting beautiful. Still no sun, but light was coming through the clouds, and the temperature had risen from twelve to twenty-one Celsius in a matter of minutes. Taleria had taken the protective suit off, and was now standing in her tank top. Delicately she put her hand on Sabrina’s shoulder. She was so cold, she still trembled violently.

Taleria had waited for that moment since the minute she had left Sabrina, but it was not happening the way she had envisioned it. She had to somehow stop the shaking and warm up her lover. So she stripped to the waist and hugged her with all her strength.

Sabrina kept shaking for several minutes, but Taleria kept on hugging. Finally, the shaking started weakening, and eventually stopped. Sabrina’s torso was warming up, not enough, but significantly. As she emerged from her shaking, she locked her lips on Taleria’s and started kissing her very tenderly. The young Romulan answered in kind, massaging her lover’s back, the way she really loved it …

***

Four hours later, the two girls, now both completely naked, emerged from their torrid lovemaking and looked at each other.

“Wow, that was good …” Taleria sighed, still shaking with pleasure from her last orgasm.

“I missed you too, but I didn’t know it had lasted so long …”

“How come you are so thin?”

“I haven’t eaten in a year, honey.”

“Nothing?”

“All I had was the rain and the snow.”

“And you were able to … make love for all that time?”

“I guess you have that effect on me. In fact, I don’t feel that tired.”

“I am.”

“Good. Because I may not be tired, I would still rather keep lying for a while. So, Taleria, what happened this last year?”

“You first.”

“OK. I thought about everything that has happened in my life, I asked myself a thousand different questions, and the answers helped me figure out why I was born, what my reason for living was, even what the future has in store for me.”

“Is it good?”

“Let’s just say, I have no more long term plans.”

“What?”

Taleria felt her heart freeze. She looked at her friend, in panic.

“I’m not going today, honey. I don’t know when. But we won’t grow old together. I shall die alone, and not from old age. I have no further information.”

“I want to be with you.”

“What of your career in Starfleet?”

“I will quit.”

“Have I been fired?”

“No, but when you know what has happened during your ‘absence’, you may think about it.”

“I know that Bajor is no longer part of the Federation, and that Shudak, Sisko and Jaro are now governing. I know that there is a death warrant on my head, and that since I arrived, there hasn’t been a single day of sun anywhere on Bajor. I know that Shudak and Sisko are not who they appear to be. And, most importantly, I know that they have found the Dagger of Morena, and there is a scroll around it. What does the prophecy say, Taleria?”

Taleria looked at Sabrina, stunned and a little scared.

“Do not fear, my love. The wind told me all that. It began because I needed protection, and I knew that only you would be foolish enough to come in the mountains with such a horrible weather.”

“You started it?”

“Not exactly. I needed it, so it happened. And when you arrived, I realized that I could control it locally. So I stopped it — around here. But obviously it is not my power. Someone is watching over me.”

“The Prophets?”

“No. Not the Prophets. Neither they nor the Pah-Wraiths want me to stay alive. The message I received does not come from them.”

“The First Ones then?”

“You remember. Yes, the First Ones are behind all this, from my birth to my abduction to now. When they take their hands from over my head I shall die. That I am certain of.”

“But why would they do that?”

“They will need to when my mission is accomplished or if I falter in its execution.”

“What mission?”

“That is what the prophecy of Kai Morena will tell me. Please, Taleria, what does it say?”

Taleria looked at her lover with tears in her eyes.

“Something about Kosst Amojan bringing curse to heaven and land, and a light bearer lifting it. I’m not sure.”

“Yes, it makes sense. Where is the Dagger now?”

“The Kai has it. She is still in B’Hala.”

“Then that is where I am going first. Did you bring me clothes?”

“Well … your uniform.”

“Bad idea. The time has not yet come for me to rejoin the ranks of Starfleet. I will need a monk robe, the antique kind, in unshaven hemp. No shoes. The Light Bearer leads a simple life and worries not about material things or comfort. Her only possessions are the Truth for those who listen and the Dagger for those who do not.”

Taleria’s eyes opened even bigger in incredulity.

“You think I have become mad, my sister? Do not worry, I know perfectly what I am doing. You must go now. First your replicator will make the robe for me, then we will go our separate ways. But I shall return sooner than you think, because my mission will end in fire and brimstone, as the skies are set in fire by the Truth, and me with them. Let’s go now.”
 
CHAPTER FIFTY-ONE

July 30, 2402

Taleria had followed Sabrina’s instructions and returned to Khitomer. Once there, she had asked to speak with Wilkins.

“So, let me recapitulate: you have met her, and she is not ready yet to come back?”

“Yes, Admiral.”

“And you will not tell me where she is, what she is doing, and when she intends to return?”

“I gave my word, Sir. Nonetheless, I am under the impression that she was referring to a matter of weeks rather than days or months.”

Wilkins raised his voice.

“Not enough, dammit! Lieutenant, I am giving you a direct order: Tell me where she is and what she’s doing, and tell me NOW!”

Taleria jerked, her stomach felt funny for a second. She nonetheless looked squarely at the towering man and answered:

“With all due respect, Sir, that would be betraying the word I gave to my friend and commanding officer. I cannot do that.”

“I’ll have your commission for this!”

“Yes, Sir.”

Wilkins looked at Taleria. She wouldn’t move.

“Very well. Pack your things and leave this instant. Find a civilian transport to carry you out of Starfleet installations.”

“Very well, Sir.”

“Dismissed!”

***

August 6, 2402

Sabrina had walked for eight days, avoiding the cities and even the isolated homes, not knowing who would denounce her as the Most Wanted Kill-on-Sight Person in the Bajoran system. Several times she had had to hide from the patrols, but no one had detected her.

The rocks were sharp under her feet, but she didn’t care. The rain, falling less often now, had provided her with the liquids she needed. Berries and nuts she had sometimes nibbled on, more by curiosity than actual requirement for food. She needed nothing more, expected nothing more. She had slept a few hours at night, wrapped as much as she could in her frock.

Now there she was: at the entrance of what had been renamed the B’Hala Caves, heavily guarded of course. But she had to get in.

“Ah! There you are!”

Sabrina turned around and saw a very old Vedek with sparkling dark eyes. The man had obviously lived decades and decades more than she had, she had never met him, and yet she found him vaguely familiar.

“Come in, come in, you’re not here to daydream! We still have a lot of work to do!”

“Sir?”

“Shh!” he said, looking at her severely. “Call me Chief.”

“But …”

“Do it, Captain!”

Sabrina looked at the old man and decided to trust him. They came to the checking point.

“You know me, son. I’m just bringing this little rebel back to work.”

“I’ll need to see her ID, Vedek.”

“I’m her ID, son! Do you really think our workers carry their IDs with them when they work? This one even less, I don’t know where she left her brain!”

And, without adding a word, the old man took Sabrina under the armpit and pulled her beyond the checkpoint, inside the tunnels leading to the cave.

After a long walk, where all her attempts at initiating conversation were met with the most authoritarian silencing look, Sabrina arrived to what was actually the Sacred City of B’Hala. At the base of the spire were waiting two figures: one she remembered, and another in a hemp frock just like hers, head covered by the hood.

“Kai Onara?”

“Welcome home, Emissary.”

***

"Welcome to B'hala, my child."

"You are suffering a great pain, my child. It could not be avoided. You need to understand."

The beam turned around. Sabrina now had her back facing the spire. The Kai came around and faced her.

"Look at the horizon, my child. The sandstorm is coming, and with it the locusts. You must endure it alone, for alone you are now."

The Kai simply disappeared, as the extraordinarily strong, hot, dry winds brought the horror of the sandstorm, accompanied by extremely strong thunder and lightning, and the torture of locusts on Sabrina, whose flesh and bleeding wounds were still exposed. The sand incrusted itself deeply in the lacerations ravaging her flesh, hitting her face, her feet, tearing her pants off and incrusting her legs like thousands of whips lashing her at the same time. And then came the locusts, which hit her even harder, like being caned. It lasted several piercing, agonizing minutes, and then …

The scenery changed again.


***

That part of her vision had come back to her, like an all-encompassing nightmare. She understood now, even better than before, how she was going to live through it again.

“Thank you, Eminence. May I ask …?”

“How we knew you were coming? How Vedek Monas found and recognized you? You are not the only one to bear the hemp robe of the initiate of the Order of Morena, Emissary.”

She made a gesture and the monk, who had remained behind, came forward and took the hood off her head, the robe now uncovering her shoulders, just like Sabrina’s.

“Taleria?”

“Hello, Sabrina.”

“What …?”

She went to her friend, strongly hugged her, didn’t let her go even as the small metal pins embedded in the rough hemp were starting to draw blood from her breast, and finally looked at her.

“But how?”

“I am not in Starfleet anymore, so I will walk with you.”

“Not in Starfleet?”

***

B’Elanna was not quite happy with her husband.

“Why did you do it, Leo?”

“Don’t you see?”

“I see that I’ve lost one of my better engineers, the Enterprise’s Chief Engineer, no less! I was counting on her to document the new trials. You know that Welles may be a good commanding officer, he’s not a captain. He needs a top-notch Chief Engineer to tell him when …”

“Your daughter will be fine.”

“I agree, but that’s not the point and you know it. I wouldn’t have betrayed a confidence either.”

“Neither would I.”

“Then why?”

“Because, quite simply, she wouldn’t have been able to perform anymore. Her mind wouldn’t have been on her work. Her mind would have been with Sabrina.”

“You don’t know that.”

“She’ll do a much better job helping Sabrina than working on the new transwarp drive.”

“Oh I see.”

“Yup. I don’t want her to be alone. She’ll need the comfort of a friend. I fired the girl so there was no more record of her travels in our database. If Sabrina comes back, she’ll plea for her friend, no doubt, and I will let her convince me — after a fierce fight of course.”

“Teacher’s pet.”

“Hey, Bob has his, I have mine!”
 
NOTE: The story turns up having a damn new twist I did not find out about until a few weeks ago. This new twist is in bold for clarity reasons.



CHAPTER FIFTY-TWO

August 10, 2402

The day had finally arrived.

The young engineers had worked their butts off designing, fitting, refitting, retrofitting, redesigning, scrapping, starting again and again. Finally they had presented the blueprint, which had been approved by overcautious admirals and senior engineers.

Then the Mogai had come back with new devices and weapons, and the former Borg-Dominion fleet had arrived, and everything had gone the way of the dodo bird. They had started again, redesigning, rethinking, reexamining, recalculating everything, again and again and again. And again the admirals and senior engineers had bombarded them with hundreds of questions before approving the plan.

And then the Remans had opened talks, and once again they had been told to start again from scratch, once again incorporating every damn bit of technology their new allies had brought to the table. Many times Catherine DeSoto had been found lying on the floor, exhausted. But she had no choice: she had to go on, because she was now the leader of the Task Force.

But this was the day.

The plans had been approved, the monster had been built. She looked sleek all right. But she was the mother of all war machines. That’s why she had been built after all: to be fast, sleek and invincible.

Newly appointed Starfleet Captain Samantha Dvorak would take her out for her first dance. All she needed now was a better name than “USS Badass”.

***

QeH'duQ, daughter of K'laas, had spent three weeks on Boreth. There she had hunted wild targs of the most dangerous kind, the qa'targ, thus named because, although it was about as big as a small elephant, it was so fast that it appeared only as it was ready to strike, hence the prefix qa', "spirit".

QeH'duQ had sworn on her honor that she would not come back before she had killed one hundred qa'targs with nothing to protect her — not even clothes — but her faithful meqleH. Today she was coming back with a hundred and six of them, ready for the cold winter coming to Qo'noS.

During the feast celebrating her return, she had been informed of the presence of a Federation ship orbiting around the home world.

"What else do they know?"

"The Captain has identified herself as a human named Sabrina Watson, Mistress. She claims to be a member of — Starfleet."

“Sabrina Watson? I don't know that name.”

QeH'duQ stopped talking and started thinking.

"Mistress?"

QeH'duQ turned to the wretch who had dared interrupt her thoughts and gave him the angry look all had learned to fear in her House.

"Tomorrow morning, I will visit the Chancellor."


***

“Kosst Amojan, the Murderer, the Renegade,
Killed the Progeny, Closed the Curtain.
Heavens are Dark, Birds Sing No More,
The Curse Bares the Land.

The Light Bearer, the Alien, the Child,
Back from Afar, Takes the Dagger,
Tears the Curtain, Ignites Heavens,
Brings the Curse to Its End.”


Sabrina had read and studied the prophecy for ten days now. Food had been brought to her three times a day, but except for water, she had not consumed anything. She had not spoken either, and even Taleria had been stopped at the door.

And then …

“Come in, honey. I want to share this with you first.”

Taleria came in, bearing a hasperat soufflé which she hoped her lover would eat of.

“Have you eaten, Sabrina?”

“I’m not hungry, sweetie.”

“Have you eaten since we met in the mountains?”

“Not much. I’m really not hungry. Please put that somewhere and join me on the couch.”

Taleria put the soufflé on the desk and joined her friend.

“This prophecy — it looks straightforward, but it’s not. I’m sure of it. It’s related to me. I’m supposed to accomplish this.”

“You call THAT straightforward?”

“Yes. In the primary sense, Kosst Amojan killed the Emissary’s — Captain Sisko — family, and closed the way through which the Bajorans could reach the Prophets. Since that time, the skies are dark, the birds sing no more, and nothing much grows on Bajor. But this is only the primary meaning of the first part.”

“And what does it mean really?”

‘Kosst Amojan, the Murderer, the Renegade’ refers, I believe, not to one, but to three different persons. That is the meaning of the cell vision.”

“All now were in some kind of large jail cell. Around the walls were suspended all kinds of tools, leather and metal alike. In the corner was someone, whom Sabrina couldn't identify, for he was wearing some kind of monk outfit, with a large hood covering his face.

The Cardassian, who was playing with the black pieces, moved first.

"You may not do that, Dukat."

As Sisko was saying that, Sabrina felt the multiple bites of a cat o' nine tails tearing her back. But she didn't scream. Somehow she couldn't. Yet the pain was excruciating.”


“You mean Sisko, Dukat and the monk?”

“You remember, my sister. Yes, that one. Surely the First Ones have not selected them at random, or they would have shown me who the monk was. But the monk is not important. Sisko and Dukat are represented in that description: Kosst Amojan, the Murderer and the Renegade.”

“And Sisko is in the Triumvirate.”

“Exactly.”

Sabrina looked at Taleria with an expression the young Romulan would never be able to erase from her memory.

"This means that what I shall do now I shall do alone …"

***

"QeH'duQ, you cannot be serious."

"You know why I am interested, Chancellor. All I plan to do, with your permission, is invite that little Captain to my House. I know humans. I know when they lie."

"She will."

"Then I will torture her."

"I know."

“I will nail her naked close to a red ant hill, and I will skin her alive until she tells me the truth. And she will, or I’ll leave her flayed carcass there to be devoured by the ants, just enough to understand what is awaiting her if she still refuses to renounce her lies!”

The Chancellor looked at QeH’duQ. She was not kidding. He knew her past, what she had endured at the hands of the Cardassians, how she had arrived to the headship of her father’s House …

He was truly scared. Him, the Chancellor of the Klingon High Council, a huge man who weighed probably about three times as much as QeH’duQ, all in muscles and bones, was petrified when he thought what this female could do if given the chance …
 
CHAPTER FIFTY-THREE

August 11, 2402

"Captain, we're getting a message from Qo'noS!"

Sabrina and Jordan were now on the Bridge. A huge Klingon woman appeared on the viewscreen.

"Federation ship, I am Tulia, from the House of K'laas. I speak for the Head of my House."

"Salutations, Tulia. I am Sabrina Watson, Captain of the Enterprise."

"There is no Enterprise. There is no more Starfleet."

"And yet, here we are, trying to find out a few things about what …"

"Keep your lies for someone else, veQ. I am not here to listen to you, but to deliver instructions."

"I'm listening."

"QeH'duQ, Daughter of K'laas, has agreed to meet with you."

"Wonderful!"

"Do not rejoice prematurely. QeH'duQ has no patience for liars and cheaters without honor."

Sabrina knew this was a test. She stood up, took a mean attitude and answered:

"Are you calling me an honor-less liar and cheater, Tulia?"

The huge Klingon seemed surprised.

"That is what Federation officers are!"

"Put me to the test then!"

Tulia smiled, showing all of her crooked teeth.

"Excellent! That is exactly what QeH'duQ intends to do. She knows humans. Particularly, she knows how to extract the truth from puny human females …"

"I am ready to show her that we Starfleet officers are worthy of her trust."

"I have known only one Starfleet officer worthy of a Klingon's trust. You are not that one. Tomorrow, a shuttle will come for you. You will take place aboard it, alone and without weapons. It will lead you to QeH'duQ. If you lie to her, you will die! Tulia out!"


***

"Arrested? How? When?"

"This afternoon, Sir. Captain Watson entered the capital on foot and started telling her side of Bajoran history to the people when she was arrested by the militia. It is believed that she has been brought directly to the Interrogation Center."

Wilkins was mad. Why had that little twerp just surrendered in the hands of her deadly foes? What was he to do?

"Contact Deep Space Nine and get me Kira."

***

Sabrina had been brought quite brutally to the Main Interrogation Room, where she had been tied to the biobed. Truth serum had had no result, and the Romulan mind probes had not given the interrogators any clue about the whereabouts of her "accomplices".

Her interrogators had therefore decided to fall back on more classical methods of persuasion. She had been stripped to the waist and tied, standing up, arms at a right angle with her torso. Then they had start punching her face and belly. She fainted once, twice, up to six times. Finally, her face more black, blue and red than any other color, and her belly ecchymosed on most of its surface, she was left moaning alone for the night, not having betrayed her friends.

***

August 12, 2402

Tulia had greeted Sabrina aboard the shuttle. She was an impressive 2.10-meter high very large and muscular female. Sabrina was even more dwarfed than usual.

"Take off your clothes", the huge woman had told her.

"I beg your pardon?"

"I will search your clothes and body."

"I have no weapons."

"Take off your clothes NOW! Everything!"

Sabrina had no choice. She submitted to the uncomfortable procedure.

"Stand there!"

Sabrina stood up and reached the point indicated to her, placing her hands in front of her crotch. She felt herself go away … and reappeared in a vast hall, surrounded by dozens of sneering, threatening Klingon warriors …


***

"Everything is fine, Admiral."

Taleria, in her initiate robe, was standing in front of Kira, trying to make her understand what had happened.

"What do you mean, fine? Has she been captured, yes or not?"

"It was her choice, Admiral."

"How so?"

"Sabrina … Captain Watson believes that she has to confront and destroy the Triumvirate in order to accomplish her destiny. It will start a chain reaction which will free Bajor once and for all from the Pah-Wraiths and the Prophets, to finally bring the Golden Age."

"They'll kill her!"

"First they will want to know her accomplices, Admiral, and she will never tell them. They will keep her alive until they realize that. During that time, she will initiate the Reckoning."

"But they will kill her!"

Taleria looked at Kira, trying to keep her tears inside. But she couldn't anymore. As the first tears rolled down her cheeks, she lowered her head and said in a small, broken voice, almost as a little girl:

"Don't you think I know that?"

***

For a full hour now, the Ferengi plasma whip had torn Sabrina's back to the bone. She had whimpered a couple of times, but nothing more. The Bajoran interrogators were baffled.

"Aren't you tired of torture? Wouldn't you rather rest comfortably, awaiting your trial?"

Sabrina raised her head and answered weakly:

"I will … speak only … to … the Triumvirate …"

"I have received my orders directly from Minister Shudak. You will be interrogated and kept alive until you answer all of our questions."

"I have … nothing to … say to you …"

The man looked at the swollen, black and blue face of what was yesterday such a pretty girl. He was impressed by her courage, her steadfastness, her loyalty to her friends. He would gladly have freed her and consoled her in his arms.

But he had orders, and he had a family, including two daughters about the same age as this one. He could not fail in his mission.

"As you wish. But be it today, tomorrow or in one week from now, you will talk. And you will talk to me."

"No."

He looked at Sabrina again.

"Very well. I'll give you one hour to think about it. After that …"

He turned to one of the guards, a giant who made Good Old Uncle Jethro look like a flyweight facing a Hirogen weightlifter.

"… she's yours. Start by whipping her on the breasts, then have fun with her."

"Yes, Sir", the giant sneered.
 
CHAPTER FIFTY-FOUR

August 12, 2402

It was about 1500, QST.

Sabrina had been dragged by her arm in another room. That one looked like some kind of vast warehouse, with all kinds of contraptions looking like instruments of torture all along the walls.

She had been told not to do anything. But when she saw what was happening, it was hard to just stay there.

There they were: three huge male Klingon warriors were fighting a small blonde human female. The woman was wearing nothing but a loincloth, and they all had meqleHs in both of their hands. What struck Sabrina was that the little woman was in no way trying to run from her opponents. On the contrary, she was fiercely attacking them — and winning!

The fight continued for several minutes until one of her opponents fell to the ground, unable to hold his own any longer. A few more minutes and, by the way of an incredible triple flip which made her look like a pretzel for a fraction of a second, she opened her second opponent's chest with both weapons at the same time. The Klingon fell to the floor.

The little human stopped moving and sighed. Then she took a look at Sabrina and turned her back on her.

"That's it, Bok. Take them both to the dispensary. I'll deal with the stranger."

"Yes, Mistress."

The third large Klingon took his two companions out while the human came slowly closer to Sabrina.

She was small, but built like an athlete. She had some fat, but her chest was small, looking very firm, yet more protruded than a male athlete's pectorals. Firm stomach, assured walk. Short hair, almost like a human male. She was profusely sweating, and small wounds let flow a little blood. More ancient scars were streaking her face, shoulders, arms, chest, stomach and legs.

All that was impressive already. But what Sabrina was mostly looking at now was her face. The woman had to be young. Her expression was hard, harsh, but in no way mean. She looked like she had forgotten how to smile or look anything but angry. That face …
"You're human!"

The young woman looked at her, surprised.

"What of it?"

Sabrina knew there and then that she had made a mistake. The young woman came even closer, at thirty centimeters from her.

"Do you believe that will save you?"

"I just noticed."

The young woman made a gesture with her hand. She fiercely answered in a tone betraying her pride:

"I am QeH'duQ, Daughter of K'laas, Founder of this House! I am a Klingon! Never insult me again by calling me that or I will KILL you!"

"I am Sabrina, from the House of Watson, Captain of the Enterprise."

"You are from the Federation ship. That’s all I need to know. Are you ashamed of your sex?”

“What?”

QeH’duQ dropped her loincloth, now appearing completely naked. Sabrina understood and put her hands on her sides. QeH’duQ looked her up and down slowly, very slowly, trying to embarrass Sabrina, who did not waver. QeH’duQ almost smiled.

“Very well. First we fight. Then we tell stories."

"We fight?"

"Defend yourself!" she said, handing her one of the two meqleHs she had brought with her and taking a defensive position.

Sabrina looked at the weapon, looked at the woman ready to fight again, in spite of her obvious fatigue.

Now was the moment of truth. The ordeal would begin now.

She dropped the weapon to the floor.

"I really do not know how to use one of those weapons. But I'll fight you in hand to hand combat, if you wish."

QeH'duQ was very surprised — and quite pleased.

"You wish to fight the Daughter of K'laas hand to hand?"

Sabrina knew she had to be defiant right now or lose her interest. She also knew that she was going to be trampled under QeH'duQ's feet, because nothing had ever prepared her to fight a true Klingon Warrior.

She was going to get thrashed so hard that they might have to return her to the Enterprise in small packages. But she also knew that she would have to take everything coming at her without even hinting at quitting. If needed, she would have to defy her again, make her madder than ever. And she now knew how to proceed.

So she threw her chest out and replied:

"Unless you're scared and you need a weapon to feel brave. I prefer to fight using my body, and my body only."

QeH'duQ looked at her again with a surprised yet pleased expression.

"As you wish. Since you already have followed my House’s customs, I will grant your request. But I know of a place more worthy of such a foolish fighter. Come."

QeH'duQ and Sabrina walked for some time, crossing room after room after room. In some there was nobody, in others there were males and females. But no one made the slightest remark. Sabrina was walking with the Mistress of the House, and they seemed used to her nudity.

They both finally arrived to some kind of large yard, completely surrounded by the House. There was no one in there. It was more or less designed like a park, but with many contraptions obviously designed for some kind of intensive gymnastics, probably combat-oriented.

The rain was heavy. It was almost impossible to see further than a few meters. The skies were streaked by huge bolts of lightning, and the thunder was almost deafening. Clearly the storm was raging right over them, and the total absence of light in the sky, except for the light bolts, was proof enough that it would last probably all afternoon and all night.

"Now we fight!" QeH'duQ announced.


***

The huge man had followed his instructions to the letter, savagely whipping Sabrina until his arm couldn't take more, to the great pleasure of the other guards, who obviously liked to see the young woman suffer.

Then they had taken off the rest of her clothes and, one by one, raped her. To Sabrina that was the worst part. No male had ever penetrated her private sanctuary, as she called it. And besides Annie and Taleria, she had had very few lesbian partners.

While she was repeatedly ravaged by her aggressors, she was thinking of the two loves of her life.

Annie — who had saved her life after the Chameleon disaster. She had visited her to the field hospital, she had remained with her countless hours, countless days, she had shown her that she could live and be happy without physical feelings, as long as someone made her heart beat stronger, faster, more secure …

"You're a woman, Sabrina. Beautiful, young, vibrant."

"But cold."

"Not to me."


After Annie had left her, she and Taleria had come together. The beautiful little Romulan had almost healed her heart, and then …

Well, she knew her life would be short now. She had lied to her lover, telling her that she didn't know how long she would live. She knew.

Soon, very soon now …
 
CHAPTER FIFTY-FIVE

August 13, 2402

Taleria had returned to Bajor to transmit to the Kai a message from Kira: they would use only the diplomatic way to try to free Sabrina. Those were Wilkins' orders. Originally, he had been thinking about a show of force, but his allies had reminded him that Starfleet had been built on a policy of non-interference in the internal affairs of a sovereign people. And since Sabrina was a Bajoran, and she was detained for actions not sanctioned by Starfleet Command, they could not threaten to use force.

But they could still annoy the fuck out of Jaro.

So they sent Quark and Tomalak. Quark would act as a neutral participant, a moderator. He would "facilitate" the communication between Jaro and Tomalak. Yeah. He would.

***

It was about 1900 when Sabrina woke up. She instantly knew that she was not back to the Enterprise. That was good news. She also felt the numerous cushions under her. She looked at herself: naked, no wounds, clean as a whistle. She tried to move her arms: they were working.

"So, the valiant Sabrina of the House of Watson finally wakes up."

QeH'duQ was looking at her, naked also, all cleaned up, and holding a Federation medical tricorder. Still not smiling, but the anger had been replaced with some respect.

"You're a mean fighter, QeH'duQ."

"And you have courage. That, plus you understand us Klingons."

"But you're not …"

QeH'duQ stared at her and she shut up instantly.

"Look at my scars, Sabrina. Look at them and touch them."

Sabrina brought her hand close to QeH'duQ's shoulder, touched the scar going from her left clavicle, through her shoulder, down to the arm.

"Again."

Sabrina started from the right shoulder. That scar was longer, crossing her throat all down to the top of her left breast. Then she touched the scar on the left side of her stomach. Then the scar on her right breast. Finally the scar going across her left eye, almost down to her nose.

"All those scars I received defending the life of my Father against the renegades of the House of Duras. They show to everyone that even if my body is human, my heart is Klingon! You too have scars, in your back. Have you run away from your adversaries? They must have been mighty, because you showed courage outside, coming back at me the way you did, even after I had broken your right arm."

"I received those under torture, QeH’duQ. Those and many more, but for some reason, those never healed."

“I do not understand a warrior who lets his scars disappear. I am proud of every one I earned in combat.”

"I'd like to hear how you earned them."

QeH'duQ looked at Sabrina. For the first time, the shadow of a smile appeared on her face. She put her hand on Sabrina's shoulder and answered:

"Tell me how you earned yours, and I will tell you how I earned mine. Then I will answer your questions."

"My questions?"

"You came here to ask me questions. First your story, then mine, then I answer. But before all that, we must eat, drink, sing and sleep!"


***

The first conversation between Jaro and Tomalak, "moderated" by the impartial observer Quark, had ended in a draw. Jaro would not release Sabrina, but he had a major headache.

Now he was reporting to Shudak and Sisko.

"There is no way we will release this little barefoot tramp!" Sisko had screamed. "She will talk, then she will die! And if those interrogators do not obtain results today, tomorrow I will interrogate her personally! I know of a few tricks that you Bajorans should know too, but obviously you …"

He stopped. His anger had almost made him say too much. He would be more careful from now on.

"We what?" Jaro inquired.

"Not important. Surely there are better ways to interrogate that girl!"

"I once heard of a creature which has interesting properties on the cerebral cortex", Shudak answered. "They are indigenous to only one planet that I know of, but it is not that far from here."

"We will send for them."

"In the meantime, I'll replicate the necessary hardware. Tomorrow, she's mine!"

***

Sabrina had sung to QeH'duQ each and every of the War Songs her nanny had taught her in her youth. Somehow she was grateful to her unworthy uncle for giving her to the old woman, who had taught her a few things she could use today. Of course, she would have had an attack, seeing her naked with another girl, each with an arm around the other's neck, singing in chorus a few of the songs Sabrina remembered from her human youth, and a few Klingon chants QeH'duQ was trying to teach Sabrina, while profusely tapping her new friend's throat to mark the rhythm and remind her to use a much more guttural tone.

It was 0330 now. But, as QeH'duQ had told her, "the feast was far from over!"

"Now we sleep. Kish!"

"Mistress?" said the little Vulcan, who had been waiting in the shadows, knowing that the time was coming.

"Kish, this is my sister Sabrina. I want you to please her, or tomorrow it's the painsticks!"

"Yes, Mistress."

My sister? Sabrina thought.

"Go in that corner with him, my sister. Take your pleasure and sleep. Keep him afterwards if you wish — if you can bear that smell!"

QeH’duQ noticed Sabrina’s hesitation and came close to her “sister”, again putting her arm on her shoulders.

“Did he displease you? I’ll have him quartered.”

“No, it’s not that.”

“What then? Tell me, my sister. Anyone you want, I will give you.”

“I was hoping to remain alone with you.”

QeH’duQ looked at Sabrina and softly caressed her belly.

“Granted, my sister. Kish! Get out before I make you sing two octaves higher!”


***

"So, Kilar, what results did you obtain today?"

The interrogator looked at Jaro, then down.

"She refuses to talk unless you and the two other lords are present, First Minister."

"Again."

"Yes, First Minister."

Jaro knew Kilar. He was a hard man, merciless although not that qualified. But he was trustworthy. How could that feeble little girl resist him?

"Tomorrow, Minister Sisko will interrogate her personally. You know what that would mean for you."

Kilar looked scared. Yes, he knew what it meant, and how far it could go.

"I will interrogate her all night, First Minister."

"Don't be afraid to mutilate her. Maybe that will save your life if she still hasn't talked by the morning."

"I will, First Minister."
 
CHAPTER FIFTY-SIX

August 14, 2402

Kilar was indeed afraid for his life. If he couldn't find the way to make Sabrina talk, he would at least make sure that his zeal would not be questioned.

So first he whipped her — again — on every square inch of her bloody, sore, emaciated body. But Sabrina was almost not reacting anymore, just looking at him with sweet, forgiving, almost loving eyes. That made him so mad, he did what any mad man in his situation would have done.

He punctured and gouged her eyes.

In the morning, Sisko, as he had promised, came to the interrogation room and found the man, alone, and his victim now with empty orbits.

"What happened?"

"I tried to make her talk, Sir."

Sisko winced. That Bajoran clown was definitely not the kind of artist he would have assigned to the task. But all the great artists had died, and now he would have to rely on what he had learned long ago from the greatest of them all.

"Wake her up!"

Kilar took the whip and hit Sabrina on the buttocks, then in the back of her thighs. She emerged from her torpor, found herself in total darkness, and remembered what had happened the night before. Then she sensed another presence.

"Knife!" the voice said in an unemotional tone.

Kilar gave Sisko the dagger he kept at his side. Sisko then plunged it deep into Sabrina's chest.

***

It was about 0900 when they woke up. In the closed, semi-dark, hot room, it was as if it was still night, and the thunderstorm could still be heard raging outside.

QeH'duQ came to Sabrina, lied at her side, as close as the night before.

"Did you sleep well, my sister?"

"Very well."

QeH'duQ kissed Sabrina on the mouth.

"It pleases me that you chose me as your companion, my sister! Now let's run! Then we eat, then you tell me your tale of glory and I tell you mine. Then I answer your questions!"

"Run? Where?"

"Outside, of course! Let the morning rain wash our bodies and the cold pump our blood out of our hearts!"

***

When they came back, they dried and fluffed each other, while Kish remained to serve them a breakfast heavy on Gagh and bloodwine. Then he went out, leaving the two women together.

"You are really afraid of nothing, QeH'duQ!"

"I may die young, but I will die with honor, my sister!"

Like the day before, they were sitting so close to each other that Sabrina could feel the heat of QeH'duQ's body. They emptied the plate, drank the bloodwine and rested down on their backs, still as close to each other as ever.

"Now tell me your tale of glory, my sister!"


***

Tomalak was doing his best to obtain Sabrina's release. But Jaro too was an old politician, and he could be just as sneaky as — well, a Romulan. Besides, he had been informed of Sabrina's current state, and he knew that he would never be able to satisfy the Federation by returning her like that. He had to find a way to keep her without infuriating his almighty neighbors.

"What do you think, Quark?"

Quark slowly shook his head.

"You offered him much more than he could ever hope to obtain, even if he sold the girl to the Orion Syndicate, who would pay a fortune for a female Starfleet Captain these days. That he rejected your offer leaves me very pessimistic."

"You think she is dead already?"

"No. I bet they want a public execution. The Bajorans consider her as the new Emissary of the Prophets. Jaro and his gang must convince them that Shudak is. The only way is to execute the Captain publicly. They can't afford to have her released, because then they would lose all power, all authority."

"I offered secrecy."

"And he didn't believe you, because he can't afford to take the chance that she would come back in public. They couldn't shut down the public outcry this time."

"Hmm. Of course."

"I am however convinced that she is not quietly resting in a cell."

"That goes without saying."

***

Sabrina had told her story. Now it was QeH'duQ's turn.

"My human name was Annie Racicot. My parents died when the Cardassians attacked the Baltimore, on which we were traveling. I was kept alive for the pleasure of the spoonheads, who stripped me naked, tied me to a table and started to invent new ways to make me beg for mercy. I was fourteen then, and deeply ashamed of my weakness already then. They were starting to open my body when the Baltimore was rescued by the Klingons. Remember, those were Gowron’s last months as a Chancellor, after the Federation's half-defeat against the Dominion and the Gorn. We were — not quite at war with the Cardassians, but in what humans call a guerilla. My tormentors left me alone to fight. The first who came in was Tulla — you have met her."

Sabrina was listening, her heart struck by the terrible tale. As for QeH'duQ, the rage with which she was now talking betrayed her feelings even more than her expression.

“She tried to scare me. But there was no way to scare a girl who knew she was going to die anyway. That impressed her, and she brought me back in her arms to her ship. K’Laas saw me, and he too was impressed by my tale. Since I was an orphan, he took me as a slave. I told K’Laas that I would be a worthy slave to him, but I wanted to be trained as a Warrior. First they laughed at me, but soon I was training under Tulia, who had seen the fire in my eyes and my breast!"

Sabrina was fascinated.

"She told me that she would make me die very slowly, in the cruelest tortures, if I gave her the impression that she was wasting her time with me. But she quickly saw that my breast was being consumed by the desire of revenge! My training was fast, because I worked day and night studying, practicing, fighting. Soon I was deemed worthy of belonging to K'laas's personal guard, and K'laas started training me personally, taking me in his targ hunts and other worthy ventures. It is at about that time that the Last Klingon Civil War happened. Troops supposedly commanded by the Houses of Kang, Kor and Koloth, but which were shown to really be mercenaries hired by the treacherous house of Duras, started attacking all Houses faithful to Korbok. The House of K'laas was one of the first to be attacked."

"And you defended it bravely, no doubt, my beautiful sister!"

The bloodwine they both had kept drinking all this time was having its effect, but also Sabrina more and more found QeH'duQ at least as beautiful as any other girl she had ever slept with.

"Yes! We fought hard, but the mercenaries were too numerous, even if their valor was not the tenth of ours! The floor was strewn with the blood of our valiant dead or dying comrades in arms! K'laas and I were the only two left, already scarred many times, back to back, fighting with honor against the honor-less, when troops from the House of Martok intervened and helped us win the day!"

"And those are the scars you earned during this glorious battle, my sister?"

"Yes. The day after, K'laas made me come to this very place where, in front of all the members left of his household and despite the wounds which would take him to Sto-Vo-Kor the day after, he made me his Daughter and Mistress of the House of K'laas. Those scars I chose to keep, and not only that, when I am in my house, I proudly show them for everyone to see: male, female, servants, everyone! And yesterday, to you, my sister! Now come and lie down beside me, and let's eat, drink and be merry again! Then I will answer your questions, and before you leave I will honor you as you deserve to be."
 
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