Double Helix #2
VECTORS
Dean Wesley Smith & Kristine Kathryn Rusch
PART 1:
The Coming of the Plague
Prologue
when he reached the broad windows of his
hotel room, Solomon paused in his security sweep. Fifty meters below, on the
far side of the square, seethed an angry-looking mob of humans. He couldn't
really make out faces in the growing twilight, but he knew their type. Rabble-rousers.
Troublemakers. Fifth- and sixth-generation human settlers on Archaria III,
gone back to a more primitive mindнset. To a man they dressed in simple brown
clothesЧshirts, pants, and boots. All the men sported long bushy beards,
shoulder-length hair, and smug attitudes of cultural and species superiнority.
Solomon snorted. Superior? Hardly. Stubborn, closed-minded,аа andаа
prejudicedаа againstаа non-
humans ... in a word, fools. He never had time for fools.
Still, he continued to watch. The mob continued to grow. He estimated
their number now at more than a hundred. They milled about in the square,
beyond the black marble fountains, and continued their angry posturing. As
water jetted from the mouths of ten larger-than-life Earth lions, as gold and
silver fish darted through the meter-deep series of oval pools, he heard their
voices begin to chant: "Veritas. . . Veritas . . . Veritas!" loud
enough to reach even where he stood.
He swung his gaze around the square, noting how dozens of
shopkeepersЧsmooth-cheeked huнmans, gray-skinned Peladians, and even a couple
of FerengiЧhad already begun to trundle their wares inside to safety. Pottery,
fruits, souvenirs, it didn't matter what they soldЧthey weren't taking chances.
Solomon chuckled. They could read the signs as clearly as he. Another riot was
brewing. As he watched, durasteel shutters snapped shut one by one across the stores'
entrances and windows. He could imagine the merchants inside busily throwнing
bolts, latching latches, and retreating to the safest parts of their buildings.
Poor paranoid fools, he thought. Race riots are the least of your
-worries. From the look of things, in five minutes every building facing
the square would be locked up tighter than a Romulan clam. Not that it would
save any of them in the end.
Still more bearded men streamed into the square from the side streets.
Solomon leaned forward,
searching for a leader, but saw no sign of the elusive man called
"Veritas." The chanting built to a crescendo.
Snorting derisively, Solomon took a step back. / really don't have
time for this nonsense, he thought. It was too easy to get swept up in the
excitement. Business calls.
"Computer, engage privacy mode. Black out the windows. Filter
extraneous noises." Civil unrest always made money for someone. But not
me, not today. He sighed with regret. After all, he had bigger projects to
finish before he even thought about fun.
The windows' glass darkened to the color of charcoal, and the room grew
hushed. Not even the ventilators made a sound. Raising his tricorder, Solomon
continued his security sweep. GoodЧno unexpected EM readings, no bugs, no
monitoring devices. Business as usual on Archaria III; no one suspected him of
being anything more than anothнer buyer for the Interstellar Corn and Grain Comнbine.
ICGC always made a great cover on farming planets like this one. He smiled a
bit wryly. All he'd had to do was flash his business ID at the front desk and
the hotel had rolled out the red-carpet treatment, complete with complimentary
fruit basнket and bottle of wine from a local vineyard. Second-rate stuff, of
course, and he hadn't touched it; the best wines always came from Mother Earth.
Crossing to the bed, he lifted a small silver suitcase and gripped the
handle long enough for the smartlock to scan his DNA. When it beeped ac-
ceptance, he flipped open the latches without trigнgering the small
explosive device embedded in the handle. In fifteen years of illegal
activities, he had never once lost his equipment. . . but the Orion Syndicate
never believed in taking changes. And all due precautions were necessary on
this particular job. The client had paid extra for them.
Nestled inside the case lay the pieces of a narrow-beam long-range
subspace transmitter. He assembled it deftly, then used the tricorder to aim
the short conelike antenna to the proper coordiнnates, about 20 degrees up and
toward the square.
When he activated the device, a flickering holoнgraphic image filled the
air before him: burning red eyes, a shock of long white hair, skin the color of
milk: the General. I hate this part. Solomon blinked, but the General's
features had already begun to change, thanks to the security scrambler: now the
General had the prominent nose, black hair with blue highlights, and upswept
eyebrows of a Vulcan. It would be this way throughout their whole conversation,
as the scrambler shifted the General's features from one race to another. Soloнmon
found it strangely disconcerting. There's nothнing like face-to-face
meetings. Next client. .. .
"Report!" the General barked, voice flat and artificial,
revealing nothing about his species. Unнdoubtedly it had been so crunched and mangled
by computers on his end that no trace of the original spoken words remained.
"Stage One has begun," Solomon said matter-of-factly. Keep
the client happy, the first rule of any
service industry, even terrorism. "All ten bombs are in place.
The plague virus will be released per your timetable."
"Acceptable." The General nodded, the deep red waddles under
his chin shaking to match his three antennae. He began to grow horns and
ivory-colored tusks. "I will transmit the second third of your payment to
your accounts on Ferenginar. The final installment will follow successful
completion of this phase of the plan."
Solomon licked his lips. "General..."
"Speak."
"The vaccineЧyou're sure it will work?" If he was going to
expose himself to some new genetiнcally enhanced plague, he wanted every
assurance that it wouldn't kill him.
"Yes."
"The Orion Syndicate does not tolerate damage to its
membership," he added pointedly.
"I would not risk wasting talent such as yours. I will need it
again." The General waved a puckered yellow tentacle as his gray-green
face grew the cheek gills of an Eshashu. Then, with a brusque-ness that matched
his suddenly Klingon features, he severed the connection.
Solomon sat on the bed and chewed his lip for a second. He felt sweat
trickling down his sides and back. Waiting always made his stomach churn. He
felt control begin to slip away. It was one thing to belong to the Orion
Syndicate, the most successful criminal organization in the Alpha Quadrant. Exнtortion,
arson, blackmail, and even murder had
long been a part of his life. But it was quite another thing to take a
freelance job planting exotic disнeases in unknown aliens and then sit calmly
and wait for a virus to strike.
What if the cure didn't work? What if he wasn't immune? What ifЧ
He drew a deep breath and forced himself to relax. Steady, steady. No
need to panic. I'm safe. Probably the safest man on the planet. He didn't
like invisible dangers, but at least he had been inoculated against them. The
Archarians must have done something to earn this strong a reaction from the
General, he thought grimly. Poor bastards. Then he forced such
thoughts from his mind. He couldn't allow himself to start to feel sympathy.
Business was business, after all, and he was getting paid more than amply.
Even after the Syndicate took its cut, he'd be well ahead for the quarter. Risa
was getting boring; perhaps a well-earned vacation on Lomax or Gentree or one
of the other up-and-coming pleasure worlds would soothe his nerves.
He glanced at the chronometer on the tricorder, still counting down to
the carefully timed release of the plague. Just a few ticks more. .. .
"Nothing personal," he murmured to the million-odd humans and
Peladians on the planet as the counter reached zero. He felt his heart skip as
the moment came and passed, but he heard no sounds, no thunderous explosions,
no vast collecнtion of voices raised in cries of pain or sorrow or anguish as
the invisible virus entered the planetary
atmosphere. In his mind's eye, he saw it riding into the city on soft
breezes, drifting like a fine mist through every street, into every home and
business, into every set of lungs.
"Poor bastards," he whispered again. What had they done
to the General?
Calmly he began to pack up the transmitter. Now, to see to the final
part of the plans ... he had to monitor how quickly the disease spreadЧand how
quickly planetary authorities and the Federaнtion dealt with it.
Let it be fast, he thought.
Chapter One
Stardate: 41211.0 Captain's Log,
Supplemental
The Enterprise continues on its
mission to Archaria III, a planet jointly colonized by humans and Peladians. A
new disease has cropped up, terrifying the inhabitants. So far, more than five
thousand cases have been confirmed.
The only drug at all effective in treating
this disease is a rare compound called Tricillin PDF, which seems to prolong
life, though only for a week at most. The Enterprise will deliver a
supply of the drug, quarantine the planet, then stay to oversee research into
finding a cure.
"Чand render whatever aid the
Archarians reнquire until the emergency is over," Captain Picard said,
leaning forward at the conference table and gazing at each of his senior staff
in turn.
William Riker, Geordi La Forge, and Worf looked uncomfortable at the
mention of the plague,
and he didn't blame them; he had always felt ill at ease when faced with
intangible dangers. Deanna Troi looked deeply concerned, and Dr. Crusher looked
. . . intrigued? She has dealt with plagues before, Picard reminded
himself. She knows how to contain them.
The persistent low rumble of a Starship at maxiнmum warp filled the
room. None of his crew spoke. They feel the tension building already, he
thought.
"Captain," Dr. Crusher finally said, "I may have to bring
samples of this virus aboard the Enterprise for study, and perhaps a few
patients."
"Understood, Doctor. So long as all necessary security precautions
are maintained, I see no probнlem. In the meantime"Чhe slid a data padd
across the conference table to herЧ"the doctors of Archo City Hospital have
prepared a full report, which you may find useful."
"Thank you." She pulled the padd in front of herself and began
skimming the opening remarks.
"Something else is troubling you, sir," Deanna Troi said
softly.
Picard hesitated, then gave a curt nod. Best to get it out in the open.
"What disturbs me most is the thought that this whole problem may be of
our own manufacture ... a biological weapon."
"ImpossibleЧhow could that be?" Riker said, shaking his head
dismissively. "Legalities aside, it's against everything the Federation
stands for!"
"We do have treaties with most sentient races which prevent the
development and use of biologiнcal weapons," Data said. "With all due
respect, sir,
the deployment of a genetically designed plague on a remote agricultural
world such as Archaria III seems highly unlikely."
"Not necessarily," Picard said. He cleared his throat.
"Archaria III is in many ways a throwback to human civilization two or
three hundred years ago. It was settled by religious zealots early in the twenty-second
century, and although they have largely come into the Federation's fold, old
prejuнdices and resentments still bubble to the surface from time to
time." The room was quiet for a moment while Picard allowed his point to
sink in.
Riker finally broke the silence. "Sir, if I may ask, what is it
that leads you to conclude this disease is a weapon?"
"Might be a weapon, Number One. A radical political group
called the Purity League claims the plague is an act of God against
'blasphemous unnatural unions.'"
Riker gave him a blank stare. "Sir?"
Picard cleared his throat. How to phrase this delicately. He
said, "The Purity League is opposed to interspecies matingЧ'mixers' as
they call such people."
Again the rumble of the ship's engines filled the room. They can't
believe it, either, he thought. Humanity is supposed to be beyond such
prejudices.
He noticed that Deanna Troi, half human and half Betazoid herself, hid
her inner feelings behind a mask of professional calm. He would have given a
lot to know her true reaction! Undoubtedly she was even more shocked and
horrified than he had been.
To think that some humans are still capable of such petty resentments. .
. .
He forced himself back to the problem at hand. "MixersЧor anyone
else suspected of adulterating the purity of the human raceЧare treated as
second-class citizens in many places on Archaria III," he continued.
"Officially such prejudices are prohibited, of course, but in the
backwater towns discrimination apparently still runs rampant. Only in the half-dozen
large cities do humans and Pelaнdians work and live together with something apнproaching
harmony. In the country, things have apparently become so bad that most
full-blooded Peladians now live in isolated enclaves surrounded by their own
kind."
Riker said, "That sounds like a ghetto system."
"It is. Those of mixed heritage are even less fortunate, since they
belong fully to neither the human nor the Peladian world. They were reloнcating
to the cities in record numbersЧuntil the plague struck. Now they're fleeing
into the countryнside once more, living like vagabonds in tent camps."
Picard looked down at his clenched, interнlaced fingers resting uneasily on the
table. He didn't bother to feign relaxation. Sometimes it was good for the crew
to see him share their anger.
Deanna Troi asked, "How many people of mixed blood are on the
planet?"
"Nobody is quite sure. Estimates range from between 150,000 and
200,000 people. Obviously, those mixers who most closely resemble humans
hide the truth to avoid conflict with the
Purity League."
Data said, "I am aware of the Purity
League, sir. The Federation has monitored their activities for many years, but
has deemed them a minor nuiнsance with little actual influence."
"Their influence is growing,"
Picard said firmly. The private reports he had read gave alarming statistics;
according to confidential surveys, fully half of the planet's human population
harbored feelings of support for the Purity League, though the League's actual
membership numbers were open to conjecture. It was certainly in the tens of
thousands if not the hundreds of thousands.
He went on. "The Purity League's
leader, Father Veritas, is using the plague as a rallying point for anti-alien
sentiment. Apparently Veritas is responнsible for inciting dozens of race riots
in the last few months. The whole planet is in turmoil. The non-human
populationЧand especially the partly huнman populationЧis running scared. The
plague's growth has only served to make the situation worse." "Veritas,"
indeed, he thought, grimacing. If ever there was a misnomer. .. .
"Sir," said Deanna Troi,
"Archaria III has a long history of interspecies problems, including wars,
assassinations, and racism. Its history is part of several planetary evolution
courses at the Acadeнmy. I believe everyone here has studied it to some
degree."
A general murmur of agreement came from
the
rest of his senior staff. Picard found himself surprisedЧit hadn't been
part of the curriculum when he had studied at the AcademyЧbut he was pleased. They're
keeping up with the times.
"That is correct, sir," said Data. "It was settled in
2102 by a human sect of religious fundamentalнists called the Brotherhood.
Seven years later, these human settlers encountered Peladian settlers, who had
colonized the planet almost simultaneously."
Picard had never seen a Peladian and knew little about them, beyond the
fact that they were humanнoid, militant about privacy, and generally considнered
pacifists .. . except when provoked.
Data went on, "After a series of small wars, as the two sides got
to know each other, peaceful relations and coexistence began. According to the
information I have accessed, with the increasing agricultural importance of
Archaria III their differнences were largely put aside, in favor of economic
cooperation."
"That is the public story," Picard said. He folded his arms
and frowned a bit. "There have always been tensions. Until Father Veritas
and the Purity League burst onto the scene sixteen years ago, the planetary
government managed to contain most of the problems before they escalated. Over
the past few years, though, there has been an increase in terrorism on Archaria
III aimed at Peladians, at humans who have married them, and especially at
their childrenЧall in the name of human racial purity. That's another reason
why the Federation
suspects the plague may be genetically engiнneered."
"I'm sorry, sir," Riker said. "I'm still not quite clear
on what leads you to that conclusion."
Picard looked at Dr. Crusher. "Doctor?"
She looked up from scanning her report. "All the victims are of
mixed genetic origins," she said flatly. "Not just human-Peladian,
but several other genetic mixes have been affected as well. Human-Vulcan,
human-Etrarian, and human-Bajoran crossbreeds are all reported susceptible to
infecнtion. Pure human and pure Peladian genetic stock appear to be immune. I
would strongly suggest that no one of mixed heritage be allowed access to the
planet."
The news cooled the room. Worf glared. Riker folded his arms and frowned
pensively, though he kept glancing almost surreptitiously at Deanna Troi. And
Deanna herself gave the slightest hiss of angerЧshe was the most threatened of
those presнent, Picard knew, since she was half human and half Betazoid.
He looked pointedly in her direction. She reнturned his gaze, but
whatever emotion had escaped her tight control had been suppressed once more
behind that professional, clinical wall.
Counselor, counsel thyself, he
thought.
Dr. Crusher continued, "The symptoms come on very quickly.
Apparently the virus enters the mouth or nasal passages and primary multiplicaнtion
occurs in lymphoid tissues. Small amounts of
virus reach the blood and are carried to
other sites in the reticuloendothelial system, where they mulнtiply quickly.
High fever and severe abdominal cramping are part of the first stage. Then
small white fever blisters begin to cover the body, espeнcially the face, neck,
and under the arms. This second stage lasts from one to three days. Infected
patients lapse into comas by this pointЧand it's probably just as well. The
pain would be extreme as the muscle cramping worsens and fever blisters form in
their mouths, throats, and lungs. Victims begin to suffocate. Next comes stage
three, when blood begins to ooze from the gums, nose, and ears. Rapid cellular
degeneration follows. Total systemic collapse is inevitable and occurs within a
week of infectionЧoften within three to four days."
Picard swallowed. Her matter-of-fact tone
did not mitigate the gruesome truth about the disease. Pain. Unconsciousness.
Suffocation. Cellular degenнeration. Death. He had long harbored a secret
fear of death by disease, by something slow and insidiнous worming its way
through his body millimeter by millimeter. He liked enemies he could see,
touch, and outsmart.
"Could such a
disease be genetically engiнneered?" he asked her. No sense avoiding the
inevitable question.
"Could someone create such a disease?
Yes, I can think of half-a-dozen research labs capable of cobнbling it together
with a few months of hard work. I think the real question is, did someone.
It's much too soon to say whether this disease has been
genetically engineered.... It could just
as easily be a virus which has mutated to attack some previously unknown
weakness in the immune sysнtem of genetic crosses."
"How likely is that?" Riker
asked her.
"I don't know." She hesitated.
"I really can't comment until I get a sample of the virus and break it
down with a microscanner."
"Our mission is to find out,"
Picard said. He looked at each of his senior staff in turn. "If this
plague is a biological weapon, it must be contained, an antidote must be found,
and the designers must be brought to justice before more damage can be
done."
Dr. Crusher nodded. Set her on course, Picard thought, and
she'll work wonders.
"I'll begin work with Archarian
doctors at once," she said, "to try to find a cure. With so many
people infected, that must be my first priority. I'll beam down with my team
and begin work immediнately."
"Agreed," said Picard.
"Unless you have an objection, Doctor, I want an away team to beam down to
investigate the Purity League. If they are responsible, they might already have
a cure."
"That shouldn't be a problem, as long
as no member of the away team is of mixed genetic heritage. And of course
anyone who leaves must be fully decontaminated and possibly even quaranнtined
before resuming normal duties aboard the Enterprise."
"Very good."
"I'd like to head up that away team," Riker said.
"My thoughts exactly, Number One. Take two people with you. Use
native costumes. This will be a strictly undercover mission. No one, not even
the planetary governor, must know about it."
"Understood, sir," said Riker. "With your perнmission,
I'll take Lieutenant Yar and Lieutenant Commander Data."
Picard nodded. "Very well, Number One. Any other questions?"
He glanced around the table one last time, but nobody spoke. They knew their
jobs, just as he knew he could depend on them.
Chapter Two
"Now entering orbit around
Archaria III, Capнtain," Geordi La Forge reported from the helm, his voice
rising above the electronic whirs, beeps, and chirps that signified that all
systems were operating at full efficiency. When the young lieutenant glanced
over his shoulder, Picard saw the bridge lights gleam across the metallic visor
that covered his eyes.
"On the viewscreen." Picard leaned forward, anxious to see
this troubled little world. "Standard orbit, Mr. La Forge."
"Aye, sir."
Archaria III appeared on the main viewscreen at the front of the bridge.
It was a lush planet, half water and half land, with swirls of white clouds
covering the northern hemisphere. The three main
continentsЧcolored in rich browns and greens, dotted with picturesque
lakes and long flowing riversЧlooked like a paradise to him. And what have
they done with it, he thought bitterly. They busy themselves squabbling
over genetic purity.
Sometimes he just wanted to grab planet-bound people by the scruff of
the neck, drag them into orbit, and force them to gaze in wonder at the worlds
they called home. If they could only see the hugeness of the universe, or
realize just how insigнnificant they were in the greater cosmic vastness, it
might well knock some sense into them.
The comm system beeped urgently. Beside Lieuнtenant La Forge, Ensign
Cherbach touched his controls and reported, "We are being hailed, sir.
Governor Sekk wishes to speak with you."
So it begins. With a mental sigh, Picard dragged himself back from
his reverie. Standing, he pulled his uniform straighter and took a step
forward. He wasn't looking forward to this conversation, but it had to be done.
"On screen," he said.
"Aye, sir."
The controls beeped softly in response, and the image of a balding,
stocky man with a chest-length gray beard replaced the splendid view of the
planet. Dark circles lined Governor Sekk's eyes, and deep worry lines creased
his forehead. His ceremonial robes appeared rumpled and unkempt; several slight
but noticeable food stains marked the front. A good man pushed too hard, was
Picard's immediнate reaction. I don't think he's slept in days. Clearly
Sekk took the plague, the Purity League, and all the attendant problems quite
seriously.
As does Starfleet, Picard thought grimly. As do we all.
Even in the midst of crisis, protocol had to be observed. Picard
inclined his head and got the niceties under way: "I am Captain Jean-Luc
Picard of the Enterprise. Governor Sekk, I presume?"
"Yes, Captain." Sekk's voice was hoarse, Picard noticed. Too
many orders over too many hours? Too many speeches to try to keep up morale?
"Thank you for coming so quickly."
"Not at all, Governor. I understand the situation is still quite
dire."
Sekk nodded. "Our morgues and hospitals are overflowing. There are
fifteen thousand reported cases of the plague to date, with more being reнported
by the hour. Officially we now have more than ten thousand dead. Our cities are
being abanнdoned. There are riots in the streets." His voice rose an
octave. "We must have immediate help!"
"Of course, Governor. We have sufficient supнplies of Tricillin PDF
aboard to last your doctors for several weeks. The Constitution is
bringing additional supplies and should arrive shortly. If your people will
provide the necessary coordinates, our transporter rooms will begin beaming the
drug down immediately."
"Of course, Captain." He motioned urgently to someone Picard
couldn't see. "One of my aides will get the information for you."
"My ship's medical staff is standing by to work
with your doctors," Picard went on.
"Any help they can provide will be given immediately. I believe Dr.
Crusher, my chief medical officer, is already in contact with Dr. Tang at Archo
City Hospital. I understand he is in charge of your efforts to find a
cure."
"That's right, Tang is a good man. A
very good man. Our best researcher."
Picard licked his lips. Now came the
delicate part. The part he knew Sekk wouldn't like . . . and which he himself
hated to have to do.
"Governor Sekk," he began,
"as you can well imagine, the virulent nature of this disease has alarmed
many of your neighboring star systems as well as Starfleet. All outbound ships
have been ordered back to Archaria III. I am afraid I must place your planet
under a quarantine, at least for the time being. No one may enter or
leave."
Sekk seemed to shrink a little into
himself. To an agricultural planet like Archaria III, quarantine would be
viewed as nothing short of an economic death sentence; unless their grains and
other foodнstuffs were shipped out to market promptly, Archнaria Ill's economy
would begin to stagger and fail.
But the protests Picard expected never
came. Governor Sekk only nodded wearily, as if he had been expecting it all
along. "Very well, Captain. I will inform our spaceport at once. No more
ships will be allowed to depart without Starfleet's apнproval."
Picard nodded. "Good." Perhaps this won't be so difficult
after all. If this is the level of cooperation I can expect, we should have the
situation well in hand in just a few days.
"Is there anything else you
need?"
"I want to see a log of all outbound
ships for the last three months, Governor, with flight plans. Plus passenger
lists and complete cargo manifests. If any ships have to be chased down, we had
best get started."
"Of course. The information is online
with our spaceport's computers. I will make certain you have immediate access."
"Thank you." Picard hesitated a
second. Sekk clearly was a good man, and his cooperation would
undoubtedly come at a high personal price: after such a series of
disastersЧplague, planetary quarнantine, economic ruinЧhe would stand little
chance of being reelected planetary governor again. At least he could throw the
man one little sop . . . something that might lead to a position within
Starfleet's bureaucracy if Sekk followed up on it.
"I want you to know," Picard
finally said, "that your assistance in this matter will not go unnoнticed.
I will personally see to it that your name is mentioned prominently in my
reports to Starfleet."
Sekk nodded. "Thank you, Captain. But
I would prefer your attentions go where they are most needed. Find a cure for
the plague. Get the quaranнtine lifted. Help my people. That's all I really
need." His smile was that of a kindly, benevolent ruler.
And a dozen red flags went up in Picard's
mind. He's hiding something.
Picard returned that winning smile. "Underнstood, Governor. Thank
you for your assistance. Picard out."
Returning to his command seat, he sat back and crossed his legs. He's
lying to me. Somehow, some way, he thinks he's pulled the wool over my eyes.
He paused and thought, focusing not on the governor but on the people
around him, trying to dredge some unvoiced suspicion from his subconнscious.
Officers hurried from station to station, scanning the planet and the rest of
the system. The doors whooshed open as two more science officers came onto the
bridge. The familiar chirps and beeps of the bridge filled his ears, along with
the softer underlying bass vibration of a ship in orbit.
Picard retraced his conversation word by word, detail by detail. It seemed
straightforward enough. Yet Sekk's all-too-convenient cooperation sudнdenly
smelled wrong. Why?
The answer suddenly came to him: So we won't suspect the data he
provides. Clearly the governor wanted to hide something. But what?
"Any thoughts, Number One?" he asked sudнdenly. He glanced at
his second in command, still seated to his immediate right.
"I think he's playing us for fools, sir."
Picard covered his inner smile. Riker will make a good captain
someday. He's got the instincts for it. "Fools, eh?" he said.
"Would you care to elaboнrate?"
Riker hesitated. "I'm not sure, sir. I can't quite put my finger on
it. .. ."
"Well, I can. I'll wager the governor sent his family off-planet in
a private ship and doesn't want them sent back here. And I will be very surprised
if we find a single reference to it in the spaceport's records."
Riker looked puzzled. "How did you knowЧ"
"No career politician would surrender power so easily, Number One,
and then refuse to take credit for it." He smiled a little grimly,
thinking about the first time he had negotiated with the governor of a planet.
He had been a lieutenant then, and Goverнnor Silas Jones of the Rigel Colony
had eaten him alive. "Sekk made one fatal mistake when he gave that
stirring little speech about putting his people first."
Riker shook his head sadly. "Which is, of course, what a leader is
supposed to do."
"Yes, but it was too easy, as if he would have turned things around
so it looked like he gave us the recordsЧin the best interest of his
people, of course. Instead, he let me do all the work, then distanced himself from
it. This way he hasn't lied or obstructed us in any way if the truth does come
out."
"There's always one bad apple," Riker sighed. "Still,
hopefully there are other people on this planet who can focus on more than
their own interests."
It's nice to have an idealist for a first officer, Picard thought. I
know the Federation's philosophy will always be supported.
"Sir," said La Forge, swiveling in his seat. "I have an
idea of where we can find that extra ship."
"Oh?"
"Yes, sir."
Slowly Picard nodded. He liked initiative, and Geordi La Forge was
another crewman who had the right instincts . . . and almost certainly could
look forward to a long and distinguished career in Starfleet.
"Then it's your baby, Mr. La Forge," he said, settling back in
his seat. "Proceed when ready."
"Thank you, sir."
Picard glanced at Riker again. "And now, Numнber One, don't you
have an away mission to plan?"
Riker said, "It's well in hand, sir. Most of the Purity League's
activities take place under the cover of darkness. We will be beaming down at
dusk, and Lieutenant Yar is currently scouting the most likely spot to
encounter them. I have already ordered native garb for the three of us. We will
be ready on schedule."
"Excellent." Picard took a deep breath. Like clockwork, he
thought with satisfaction. A good ship runs like clockwork.
An ensign appeared at his elbow holding a duty roster. After scanning
the list of names, he signed off on it.
"Sir," said La Forge. "We have the spaceport's departure
records now. Request permission to use the computer station in astrometrics for
my reнsearch."
"Astrometrics?"а Picardаа raisedаа
hisаа eyebrows
slightly. It seemed an odd request. "Is there some reason you need
access to interstellar charting, Mr. La Forge?"
"I have a theory about the governor's secret ship, sir. Call it...
a hunch."
Picard thought it over a heartbeat. Give him a chance. Let him prove
himself.
"Very well," he said. Hunches often had a grain of logic to
them, even if the conscious mind couldn't always pin it down. "Carry on,
Mr. La Forge."
"Thank you, sir." All business, the lieutenant rose and strode
from the bridge with apparent confidence and determination. Ensign Charles
Ehr-hart moved forward to take La Forge's place at the navigator's station.
Like clockwork, Picard thought, leaning back and smiling to himself. Excellent.
Chapter Three
it wasn't dr. tang's appearance that alarmed Dr.
CrusherЧa week's growth of reddish-brown beard, pasty skin, puffy eyes, and
wild unkempt red hair sometimes went with the territory when you where a doctor
or a research scientist working in an emergency. Rather, it was what she could
see behind him: hundreds of patients lying side by side on the floor in the
hospital's lobby.
Plague victims, she knew without having to ask. They must have run
out of beds in the wards. This is the best they can do.
It was a grim image, yet to her it painted a more
. accurate picture of the planet's situation than a
host of dry reports and nameless, faceless statistics.
Things had to be bad indeed if they had resorted to
putting people on floors.
Her call to Dr. Tang had been routed to a public comm stand in the lobby
of the Archo City Hospiнtal. Tang had replied within five minutes of being
paged. And when he answered, he cut through the usual niceties abruptly.
"How soon can we get that Tricillin PDF beamed down here, Doctor?"
"The drugs are being prepared for transport now," she said.
"The first fifty crates should reach your location in less than five
minutes. If you can find a place to put them, that is," she added, peering
over his shoulder. "You do look a little full."
Tang turned and called to someone Dr. Crusher couldn't see: "We
need more room! The Tricillin PDF is here!.. . Right!" He turned back to
her. "It will be taken care of. You can beam it down to these coordinates
as soon as it's ready."
"Good." Dr. Crusher continued to stare at the hundreds of men
and women and children beyond him. Something about them bothered her. They all
lay curiously still despite being mashed in shoulder to shoulder and hip to
hip. Is this the comatose stage? she wondered.
"Is there anything else you need?" She forced herself to focus
on Dr. Tang. Brusque though he might be, he was still in charge of the
hospital.
He snorted. "More doctors. A bigger hospital. A cure for the
plague. Half a dozen tactical nuclear missiles lobbed at this city from orbit.
Any combiнnation of those will do."
Nuclear missiles? Was that an attempt at humor?
If so, she didn't find it particularly
funnyЧand Tang didn't seem to be laughing, either.
"If you need more help, I will be
glad to have some of my people beam down to assistЧ"
"No!" He
almost screamed the word. "Keep your people off this planet! They'll be
infected, too!"
"We have biofilters aboardЧ"
"Don't you understand? Didn't you
read my report? They just don't work!" He sucked in a deep breath.
"This virus isn't like anything you've seen before, Doctor. It... it's smart."
She blinked. Smart? "Thai didn't
make any sense.
"Very well," she said coolly.
"We can work from the Enterprise just as well, with your
assistance."
He turned and paced away, then came back.
His face was red, and he seemed to be struggling to keep his temper in check.
"Is something bothering you,
Doctor?" she deнmanded, letting a professional mask hide her inнtense
distaste for him. His appearance, his manner, his attitudeЧit all rubbed her
the wrong way.
"Let me be blunt, Doctor," Tang
finally said in a low voice. "We're not just losing the battle, we're
losing the war. I have more than six thousand dead in my own hospital. Men,
women, children, babiesЧ" He gave a frustrated wave. "All die within
a week . . . two weeks, with massive doses of Tricillin PDF. We haven't had one
survivor. Not one. Do you know what that means?"
"I am well aware of the mortality
rate." Beyond him, Dr. Crusher watched a dozen men dressed in
white containment suits burst into the
lobby from a side corridor. They began picking up the comaнtose patients and
tossing them aboard a low motorнized cartЧstacking them one on top of another
like so much deadwood.
Bodies, she
thought with growing horror. They haven't run out of beds, they've run out
of slabs in the morgue. A few limbs jutted out grotesquely from the growing
pile on the cart. The big toe on every left foot held an identification tag,
she saw now. They're all dead. Not just dozens, but hunнdreds of them.
As she gave an involuntary shiver, she met
Dr. Tang's gaze again. He grinned at her now, widely, wolfishly, like a
predator closing in on his next meal. He's enjoying this, she
realizedЧand that horrified her almost as much as the bodies.
"Yes, Doctor," he said almost
mockingly. "You start to understand the real situation now, don't you?
It's not pleasant."
"How can you be so cold about
itЧ"
He snapped back, "Don't judge us
unless you've been in the same situation. You don't know how terrible it's been
here. IЧ"
He paused and seemed to be trying to rein
in his anger. Dr. Crusher didn't know what to say. She hadn't been in a
situation like this beforeЧand she hoped she never would be again.
In a calmer voice, Tang went on: "I
know it's not a pretty little sickbay like you have aboard the Enterprise, but
as you can see, we have room for
that Tricillin now. Please get it down here as soon as possible, Doctor.
We still have three thousand living patients who need it."
Dr. Crusher swallowed. "Immediately."
As a doctor, she had seen death many times and in many ways over the
years, but even so, the cold unfeeling way these people were being tossed about
still went against every grain of her moral and medical principles. She
believed a certain dignity ought to come with death. The men in contaminaнtion
suits' might have been janitors cleaning up after a party instead of medical
caregivers.
And Tang's rictus grin bothered her. Maybe it covered up a terrified interior,
or maybe he had been pushed to the breaking point and beyond by the horrible
tragedy unfolding around him, but she couldn't help how she felt.
He hasn't just lost his healing touch,
he's lost his ability to feel empathy. He isn't a doctor, he's a ... a body
processor. The thought left her cold. No matter
how bad things get, I won't let it happen to me.
"Чand here is the access code for our medical computer's
database," Dr. Tang was saying almost cheerfully, as though turning over
the keys to a beach house. "You're going to need it." He entered it
into the comm unit, and Dr. Crusher recorded it more by reflex than conscious
thought. "It contains every scrap of information we have been able to
gather about the virus. Precious little good it's done us. Thankfully, though,
it's your problem now. Starfleet's problem, I mean. Good luck."
"Wait!" she said as he started
to end the transнmission. That's it? He's just going to abandon me to my
research? What kind of a madman is he?
"What is it, Doctor?"
"I will begin reviewing your data at once." She swallowed at
the lump in her throat. "In the meantime, I need a vial of contaminated
blood beamed up. After that, I'll need a patient in the earliest stages of the
disease."
Tang's eyes narrowed only the slightest bit. "I do not recommend
that, Doctor," he said bluntly.
"Why not?" she demanded.
"The plague leaps through biofilters like they weren't there. For
the first week, we kept them up around our quarantine wards, but it didn't
help. Nothing stopped it."
"That's impossible," she said. "Nothing as big as a virus
can get through a biofilter."
He shrugged. "Maybe we made a mistake. Mayнbe the plague virus was
already loose everywhere on the planet simultaneously. Or maybe it's just
smarter than we are. I just don't know anymore." He ran one hand
through his unruly red hair. "But I still wouldn't risk it. Not aboard a
Starship. If it gets loose in a confined space like that, with your ventilator
systemsЧwell, I wouldn't want to be part of your crew. You'll end up spending
the rest of your lives quarantined down here with the rest of us."
"We have air purifiersЧ"
"Not good enough." He shook his head. "Not even close to
good enough. Why don't you listen?"
She sucked in an angry breath. Count to ten. He's not deliberately
trying to provoke you. Count to ten, and don't forget to breathe.
"What do you recommend, then?" she managed to say in
something approaching her normal tone.
He leaned forward, his expression growing even more intent. "I
don't think this plague can be cured." His voice lowered to a
whisper, as though taking her into his confidence. "Archaria III has one
of the finest hospital systems in the Federation. All our equipment is new and
top-of-the-line. Mayнbe not as good as you have aboard the Enterprise, but
damned close. We haven't found an answer, and I've had a hundred people working
on it for the last three weeks. We're not going to find an answer,
Doctor. This is it for us."
"I refuse to accept that," Dr. Crusher said. With such a
negative attitude, no wonder his people hadn't made any progress. "In
human history alone, people have claimed that everything from polio to AIDS to
cancer to Stigman's disease wasn't curable, and each time we've beaten the
odds. There's always an answer. We just have to find it."
Tang leaned forward. "You want to know what I really think,
Doctor? Do you want the best advice I can give?"
"Yes."
"Archaria III must be completely and forever isolated to
keep the plague from spreading. Quarнantine the planet, yes, that's a start.
Post guards in orbit. Hell, mine the whole system! Shoot down
any ship that tries to enter or leave. Cut us off from the galaxy, and
never let anyone set foot here again! And prayЧjust prayЧthat the virus didn't
jump planet with any of the dozens of Starships that have already left."
Starships have been leaving? she thought with alarm. Are they
crazy? Well, Jean-Luc would have to put a stop to that. She'd let him know
as soon as she finished her conference with Dr. Tang.
"We will contain the plague," she said in her most
reassuring tone. "This isn't the first disease Starfleet has faced, and it
won't be the last."
Tang shook his head sadly. "Smug, arrogant StarfleetЧyou people
always know better than the experts. Listen to me. This is the worst disease
humanity has ever faced. It's airborne. There are no survivors. It kills
everyone it infects. If it ever mutates ... if it ever attacks nonmixers . . .
Archнaria will be a graveyard planet within a month."
Dr. Crusher swallowed again. Some bedside manner. Tang certainly
wasn't pulling his punches.
"I must reserve judgment until I've had a chance to study your
reports," she said flatly. "Have that blood sample prepared for
transport. I'll let you know when I'm ready for a patient."
"Very well." He gave her a hopeless shrug. "It's your
funeral. And others'. Check the video I sent. Tang out."
Taking a deep breath, Dr. Crusher sat back in her chair and chewed her
lip thoughtfully. Around her, nurses and doctors bustled about their duties,
setting up equipment, tending to a sprained ankle or a burned arm,
conducting the routine physical exams that Starfleet required of every crew
member.
Dr. Crusher ordered the computer to begin disнplaying the visual record
Dr. Tang had sent. It showed a ten-year-old girl lying next to an older woman
who, from the way she reached out to the little girl despite her own horrifying
condition, could only have been her mother. They were dressed only in thin
white smocks, although proнfuse sweating had turned the young girl's smock
almost transparent and her devastated body showed through clearly. A cure would
be found, and Crusher knew it, but it would come too late for this child and
her mother. She had not even begun her work, but already Crusher felt that she
had failed.
It can't be that bad. Nothing is ever hopeless. We will find a cure. She had to believe in
herself and her people. How could she go on with her work if she didn't think
they would succeed?
For a second, she thought about calling off the away team's trip to the
planet. But no, she knew with 100 percent certainty that the Enterprise's biofilters
could remove anything as large as a virus, despite Dr. Tang's histrionics. He
had made a mistake somewhere. It's a scientific fact. Nothing as large as a
virus can make it through unless we want it to. Commander Riker's mission
could prove the key to unraveling this whole medical mystery and finding a
cure.
She tapped her combadge. "Crusher to Picard." One last duty
to attend to.
"Picard here," he answered immediately.
"Captain, Dr. Tang informs me that Starships have been leaving the
planet since the plague broke out."
"I am aware of it, Doctor. We are using their flight plans to track
them and order them back here."
"Good. Thank you. Crusher out."
Reassured, she accessed the Archo City Hospiнtal's computer, tapped in
the access codes Tang had given her, and found herself in the records section
... looking at thousands upon thousands of recent files, all marked
"Deceased."
On a sudden hunch, she called up Tang's personнal records. I want to
see how well you do your job, she thought. Since you think you're so
goodЧlet's see you prove it!
To her surprise, Ian Tang, M.D., Ph.D, had received dozens of awards,
commendations, and citations for a career filled with exemplary work, community
service, and medical leadership. Not only was he the finest virologist on
Archaria III, he had headed up half-a-dozen ground-breaking studнies on
Plimpton's diseaseЧincluding several she'd read. His name hadn't registered at
first, but now she recognized it.
According to this file, he's just a few ticks short of sainthood, she realized. Maybe
he isn't exaggeratнing after all.
Brilliant researcher or not, the official records
seemed quite a contrast to the man with
whom she had just spoken. If everyone from the planetary governor to
Starfleet's Admiral Zedeker spoke so highly of Dr. Tang's abilities, what could
make him so determinedly pessimistic? It's almost as though he wants us
to abandon the planet, she thought grimly.
A horrible thought came to her. Abandon
it. . . maybe that was the answer. After all the mixers had been
killed off by the plague, why not use the plague as an excuse to cut ties with
the Federation?
It might just work, she thought. If he can perнsuade enough
people that there will never be a cure, the Federation may well post a
permanent quaranнtine around the planet. And then the Purity League would be
free to take over and run things exactly as they want, with their humans-first
philosophy, devil take the Peladians.
She shivered. He was a virologist. He said
they had state-of-the-art facilities. Could Tang be part of the Purity League?
Could he have engineered the virus? What figures did Jean-Luc cite? Wasn't half
the planet supposed to be part of or at least in support of the Purity League?
Why not a doctor, too. Why not Tang? She shook her head violently, as if to
toss away the very thought.
Just because I don't like him doesn't make him a killer, she told herself.
Despite all his dire warnings, Tang proved
true to his word. Within ten minutes the transporter chief hailed Dr. Crusher
on the comm system.
She tapped her badge. "Crusher
here."
"O'Brien in Transport Room One,
ma'am. I have a medical shipment for you from Dr. Tang at the Archo City
Hospital. He told me to leave it in the transporter buffer until you had a
secure facility to hold it."
Dr. Crusher heard a note of hesitation in
the man's voice. He wasn't telling her everything.
"Is there something else?" she
asked.
"Doctor ... is this whatever-it-is
safe? If you want, I can rig up a couple of extra biofilters and run it through
them before we materialize itЧ"
"No! Don't filter it!" she
cried. That was the sort of help she didn't need. She still remembered
one overefficient medical student in her class who tried to cut corners by
beaming medical specimens from the lab to his research station. The biofilters
had automatically filtered out the contaminants he was supposed to study,
leaving him with useless tissue samples.
"Yes, ma'am!" She heard him
jump.
She sighed. Tang really got to me. No need to take it out on O'Brien.
"I'm sorry," she said. "I
didn't mean to snap at you, O'Brien. Just hold everything in the transportнer
buffer for now. Make sure you disable the biofiltersЧthese are medical
specimens, and I need the contaminants. I'll have a secure containнment field
ready for you in about sixty seconds."
"Right, Doctor."
"Crusher out."
She stood. "Computer, create a
level-one con-
tainment field half on top of workbench one. Make it half a meter square
on all sides. Tie in with Transporter Room One. The medical samples presнently
in the transporter's buffer must materialize inside the containment field. Do
not run any biofilters!" She wasn't taking any chances.
"Acknowledged," the computer said. A forcefield
began to shimmer faintly around the workbench. Dr. Crusher knew it would
flicker out of existence just long enough for her samples to beam in, then the
computer would make sure nothing got in or out. "Level-1 containment
field has been activated."
She tapped her badge. "Crusher to Transporter Chief O'Brien."
"O'Brien here," he responded instantly.
"We're ready. Energize."
Lights twinkled around the workbench, and as they faded, she saw the
small rack of a dozen tiny vials. Dark blood filled each one.
Now, my good doctor, she thought, let's take a look
at this plague virus of yours.
Chapter Four
geordi la forge found a skeleton crew on duty
in Astrometrics: three young ensigns, all hard at work updating the ship's
navigation logs and starcharts with new files uploaded from Starbase 40 the day
before. All three snapped to attention as he strode in.
"At ease," he said. It was obvious they were fresh from the
Academy, all spit-and-polish and ready to impress superior officers. "I'm
just borrowing a computer console for a little while. Carry on with your
work."
"Yes, sir," they all said, and they turned back to their tasks
with noticeably stiffer spines.
Geordi knew they felt his presence keenly: they worked with more speed;
precision, and more professional demeanorsЧand far less banterЧ
than was normal for ensigns. He chuckled a bit, thinking back to his own
days as a raw ensign. It felt like an eternity ago . . . and a different
lifetime.
As the ensigns worked, they began calling off the new charts smartly. They're
trying to impress me. Every few seconds, when they thought he wasn't
looking (of course through his visor he saw it all, down to the
3-centimeter-long string that had unнraveled from Ensign Barran's left sleeve),
they glanced in his direction to see if their attention to detail was being
duly noted.
Geordi focused on his own work instead. First things first. ...
He manually logged into the spaceнport's computer system, then ran a quick
search through the list of ships that had departed from the Archo City
Spaceport in the last thirty days. One hundred and seventy-four in all, he
counted, acнcording to official records. He matched ships to ID codes and came
up with a mix of 62 freighters and 112 passenger ships. A quick cross-check
with the Enterprise's records showed all the freighters had already been
contacted and were supposedly en route back to Archaria III. Simple enough. The
Federation moved quickly when a plague threatнened.
Several of the freighters had already landed at the Archo City
spaceport. He chuckled a bit to himself when he checked their status: it seemed
their crews refused to disembark. They preferred the sealed environment of a
Starship to the openЧ and possibly plague-infectedЧair of the planet.
Call it self-imposed quarantine, he thought. Even
so, it wouldn't be good enough for Starfleet. The crews of those
freighters wouldn't be leaving anyнtime soon, not until someone found a cure.
He moved on to the passenger ships. All ran commercially between
Archaria III and a dozen nearby systems. And, as expected, all 112 had already
been turned back to port here. Sixty-two had already landed again, and of those
it appeared that most had also chosen to keep their hatches sealed. More
quarantines. And good luck to them.
All right, the official ships were accounted for. Now came the fun part.
"Computer," he said. "Access service records at Archo
City Spaceport."
"Accessing," the computer said. "Ready."
"How many Starships have been serviced for departure at the Archo
City spaceport within the last thirty days?"
"Two hundred and sixty-three," the computer replied.
He gave a low whistle. So many? He now had eighty-nine Starships
unaccounted for. Obviously quite a few must never have left the spaceportЧ once
the quarantine order came down, they would have been stuck in their berths.
"List all the Starships alphabetically and state their present
location."
"The Alpha Queen, en route back to Archaria III. The Aspen,
parked in Berth 669-B. The Belgrade, parked in Berth 205-A. The Brillman's
Dream, en route back to Archaria IIIЧ"
The computer droned on through the names.
Geordi listened with interest until they reached Zythal's Revenge, a
Klingon freighter.
"End of list," the computer reported.
Geordi frowned. Nothing seemed out of the ordinary. And yet, one ship
had to be missing, if the captain's theory were right. And I know it is, he
thought.
Where would you hide a Starship? Out in the open. You just change the
computer records. If the Archo City spaceport's records listed a ship as
parked in its berth, the spaceport computer would perpetuate the lie when
accessed by the Enterнprise's computer. It was a simple rule as old as
computer programming itself, best known as GIGO: garbage in/garbage out. If you
fed a comнputer faulty information, you got faulty informaнtion out.
Well, you might fool a computer, but you couldn't fool a security
camera. At least not as easily.
"Computer," he said. "Access security cameras at the
Archo City Spaceport. List all ships presently berthed there, and show me a
current security camera image of each one. Begin alphabetically."
"The Aspen, parked in Berth 669-B. The Belнgrade, parked
in Berth 205-AЧ "
Within sixty seconds, he found the missing star-ship: a small
five-passenger planet-hopper called the Event Horizon had vanished from
its berth without tipping off the spaceport computers. His smile grew to a wide
grin.
"Got you!" he said.
"Sir?" called one of the ensigns.
"Nothing." He cleared his throat and tried to sound officious.
"Carry on."
The Event Horizon was originally a Vulcan vesнsel, he saw: a tiny
T'Poy-class Starship, capable of warp 2. The Enterprise's, computer had
a schematic of that model on file, so he accessed it and looked it over quickly
to refresh his memory: yes, warp capabilities . . . five passengers . . . slow
but reliнable. It would be perfect for sneaking off-world.
He could think of half a dozen ways to get such a small Starship
off-planet without leaving a record or setting off the spaceport's alarm
systems. Methнods ranged from the heavy-handed (bribing a clerk at the
spaceport to make fraudulent file entries) to the daring (chasing a larger ship
as it lifted off, and hiding in the shadow of its propulsion wake).
The most likely seemed bribery . . . even though it left one or more
witnesses in place. After all, what Starship pilot would risk colliding with a
larger vessel when a simple bribe or two would do the trick?
Still, he had a little more work to do, just to make sure he had the
right vessel. He hadn't yet established a link from the Event Horizon to
Govнernor Sekk.
"Computer," he said, "where and to whom is the Event
Horizon registered?"
"Accessing. The Event Horizon is registered on
Parvo IV to the Clayton-Dvorak Consortium."
Who? Geordi scratched -his chin in puzzlement. The Clayton-Dvorak
Consortium? Must be a farm-
ers' combine or some sort. Which
meant Governor Sekk's family had hitched a ride with friends . . . or the
Consortium might be a front of some kind for the governor. . . .
"Locate the offices of the
Clayton-Dvorak Conнsortium," he told the computer.
"Records indicate that the Clayton-Dvorak Conнsortium is no longer
in business on Archaria III."
"Then where are they?"
"No information is available."
Could he have made a mistake? He stared at
the empty berth where the Event Horizon should have been. Starships
don't just vanish.
Even though Vulcans weren't known for
building flashy Starships, he knew they produced this particнular model for
export. It could be outfitted so opulently that a Roman emperor would have felt
at home inside. It would have been perfect for a governor. No, Sekk wasn't off
the hook yet.
Hmm. I'll come back to it. Geordi
copied the information on the Event Horizon to a separate file. Maybe
inspiration would strike after he finished looking through the rest of the
records. First things first.
"Proceed with the display," he
said. "Show me the next ship that's supposed to be in its berth."
And ten seconds later, he had his second
match: the Falcon's Talon, a Klingon freighter that was supposed to be
picking up five hundred metric tons of grain. And twenty seconds after that,
the Halibut turned up gone. Followed shortly by its sister ship, the Hemlock,
then the Langley, the Middlemarch,
the Nesfa, the Prushnikov, and
ten more. Geordi logged their absences with growing disbelief. All told,
sixteen ships had disappeared from their berths in the spaceport without
leaving any records of their departure.
Captain Picard is not going to be happy, he thought. At least,
not with the governor or the spaceport's security officers.
He began checking ship's registries. As
the capнtain had anticipated, one had been registered in the name of Armand
Sekk, the planetary governor: the Nesfa.
"Computer," Geordi said,
"locate Captain Piнcard."
"Captain Picard is in his ready room."
Geordi loaded the information on the
missing ships into a data padd, then rose and hurried toward the turbolift. He
had quite a report to make . . . and unless he'd missed his guess, the
fireworks were just about to begin.
Chapter Five
dr. crusher raised her medical tricorder
and took a quick scan of the vials of contaminated blood: yes, her plague
specimens had arrived intact; that overeager transporter chief hadn't run them
through the biofilter after all.
According to the readings, nothingЧliteral vacuumЧnow surrounded the
rack within the containment field. Not a single stray oxygen or hydrogen atom,
let alone any virulent microbes, existed outside of the vials. She planned on
there being no chance of the virus being let loose on the Enterprise.
"Computer, shut down forcefield," she said. It collapsed with
the inevitable sharp snap of air rushing in to fill a suddenly exposed void.
"Actiнvate the microscanner."
"Microscanner ready."
Dr. Crusher picked up the first vial and swirled it slowly. Inside, the
tainted blood looked just the same as any other human's. If only it were so
simple, she thought with a sigh. If only we could see the virus with our
naked eyes, it would be so much easier to defend against it.
She slipped the vial into the microscanner. The machine made the
faintest of whirring sounds asЧ all within its self-contained unitЧit unsealed
the vial, loaded a sample, and initialized its diagnostic computer.
"Show display."
"Display activated."
A holographic image of the sample appeared in front of her: a
three-dimensional pink field swarming with microscopic activity. Normal red and
white blood cells swirled in and out of view, followed by oddly shaped T-cells,
Y-cells, J-cells, and all the other components of a half-human, half-Peladian
blood sample. Fortunately, Dr. Tang's notes had prepared her as to what she
would find in a "normal" mixer's blood.
There! she spotted the invading virus ... an almost triangular gray puff, with
dozens of tiny tendrils radiating from its core. It really did look "like
the Rhulian flu, she thought.
The microscanner focused in on it at once, expanding until the virus
took up the whole projecнtion.
"Virus found."
"Begin comprehensive analysis of virus sample," she said.
"Start with TXA sequencing and proнtein-strand breakdown. I want a
level-one analнysis."
The computer responded: "A level-one analysis will take
approximately fifty-two minutes."
"Proceed. Display tests as they are completed."
"Working."
The image of the virus split down the middle as the microscanner began
to take it apart protein strand by protein strand. Of course Dr. Tang had
already run this test, but true research always began with an independent
analysis.
Dr. Crusher watched the microscanner work for a moment, then stood and
stretched. This is going to be a two-cup job, she thought. She headed for
the replicator unit and the tea Jean-Luc Picard had recently introduced her to,
Double Bergamot Earl Grey.
Captain Jean-Luc Picard kept his face neutral while Lieutenant La Forge
made his report. Inside, though, he seethed with anger. Sixteen missing ships!
This is an outrageЧhow could Sekk possibly think he could get away with it?
It certainly warranted an immediate call to the governor .. . and the
immediate dispatch of alerts to every planet and Starship in the sector. Those
ships would be sent back to Archaria III on the double, and under armed escort,
or they would face the consequences of defying Federation law.
"Very good, Mr. La Forge," he said. "Well done."
"Thank you, sir." La Forge handed him the data padd, and
Picard glanced over the names of the ships once more. Sixteen! He
couldn't beнlieve it.
After downloading the information into his priнvate log, he handed the
data padd back. "Post an immediate alert to all ships, planets, and
Starbases in the sector. Anyone spotting one of these ships is to report it at
onceЧand avoid making direct contact. The nearest Federation ship will provide
armed escort back here. If they ran once, we don't want to risk them running
again."
"Understood, sir." La Forge turned smartly and hurried from
the ready room.
Picard leaned back and rubbed his eyes with the palms of his hands for a
second. He had no choice but to make a second call to the governor, and he
looked forward to this one even less than the first. For a second he wished for
the authority to remove Sekk from his elected job, but then he thought better
of it. He didn't want to bog himself down with the onerous administrative
chores of running a planet if he could possibly avoid it. Bad as he might be,
Sekk at least understood the job.
"Computer," he said. "Get me Governor Sekk."
The computer bleeped, and a second later an even more harried-looking
Governor Sekk apнpeared on the smaller monitor on the captain's
Sekk gave a cursory nod, then asked, "What is the problem,
CaptainЧthis really isn't a good time. I am in the middle of a dozen crises
hereЧ"
"I'm afraid you're going to have to make time, Governor. Have you
ever heard of a ship calledЧ" he consulted the list. "The Nesfa?"
Sekk paled suddenly. He turned and bellowed, "Clear the room!"
to his assistants. "I need to talk to Captain Picard alone! Out! All
of you!"
They scrambled for the doors. The moment he was alone, Sekk turned back
to the comm. Picard saw new lines of worry crease the man's face.
"If I claimed I hadn't heard of the Nesfa, it would be a
lie. You know that. Let's not play games, Captain. You caught me; I confess. I
need to knowЧis there something wrong with the Nesfa? It hasn't. . . met
with an accident, has it?"
"Not that I know of, Governor. But I think it's time you told me
the whole truth about what's going on here. I don't like being lied toЧeven if
it's a lie of omission!"
Sekk sucked in a deep breath. "My wife and children are on board
the Nesfa. My eldest son, Derek, took everyone off-planet the day the
hospiнtal reported the first plague cases. I wanted them safe. Is that a
crime?"
"No, Governor. It's perfectly natural. Unfortuнnately, we're going
to have to bring them back. This system is now under quarantine . . . and that
apнplies to everyone, even your family." "But you don't understand
... my wife, Mira . . .
she's half Peladian. If she comes back here, it's a death sentence for
her. And for our four innocent children, Derek, Robin, Eric, and Denny. Denny
is only two, Captain. Bringing any of them back is nothing short of murder."
Picard swallowed. "Decisions like this one are never easy. But I
can't make exceptions, even for you."
"I realize that, Captain. But you don't have to, at least not in
this case. You see, they are still techniнcally on Archaria III."
"Enough games, Governor. I need to know where they are. Exactly where."
Still Sekk hesitated. "You understand, of course, that I had to
weigh my duties carefully. And this time I'm afraid my family won."
Picard frowned. Sekk certainly wasn't making this easy. "How do you
know your family wasn't exposed to the plague?" he asked. "How do you
know they aren't passing it on to others right now?"
"They left thirty-two days agoЧon the day the first victims began
flooding our hospitals, as I told you. Since the first symptoms appear within a
few hours of exposure, and I talked to them not ten days ago, I know they're
well." Sekk swallowed. "At least, I think so. I just haven't been
able to raise them on the comm since then."
"Where are they?" he asked again.
"On DelosЧour smallest' moon. There's a re-search base there. It's
been deserted for years. I
don't think many people know about it any more . . . but the equipment
is still functioning." He twisted his hands together. "I thought they
would be safe there, Captain. And technically they haven't left Archaria
HI."
Picard frowned. A game of semantics . . . but true, in a manner of
speaking. Starfleet classified moons as part of the planets they orbited.
"Governor ... far be it from me to doubt your word, but I'm going
to have to check your story. If your family is there, then we will be
glad to render whatever assistance they may need, from repairing their comm
systems to an emergency evacuation to the Enterprise. However, if they
are not there .. ." He left the threat hanging.
"Understood, Captain. And if there is something wrong, I need to
know immediately. I... I almost told you about them earlier. But I couldn't
bring myself to do it. I hope you understand."
All too well. You didn't want to
jeopardize your own position. Never mind that your family could be dead or
dying and you wouldn't know about it.
Picard said: "I will keep you up to date. Next, I need you to look
over this list of ships. What can you tell me about them?"
Picard transferred the whole list of missing ships to the comm unit. He
knew Sekk would be seeing it on his end of the channel.
The governor read it over slowly, then shook his head. "I don't
understand. What about them?"
"They are missing. Like the Nesfa, they have disappeared
from their berths at your spaceport
seemingly without a trace. I need to know what happened to them. Where
did they go, Governor? How big is your family?"
Sekk bristled a little at that jab. "I don't know anything about
these ships. But I will find out." From his tone and expression,
Picard actually believed him this time. His security system has as many
holes as a sieve.
He asked, "Is two hours sufficient time?"
"It should be." Sekk paused and licked his lips. "Captain
... let me thank you in advance for not mentioning how my family left the
planet to anyнone else here. The situation is ... delicate right now.
Such news might well tip the scales toward the Purity League and chaos."
"I won't lie about it, Governor, and all the details will be
in my report to Starfleet. But I have no intention of making any public
proclamations, if that's any reassurance."
The new look on Sekk's face spoke more clearly than words: the governor
was hardly satisfied. Even with the information buried in an official
Star-fleet report, dozens of eyes would see it on Archaria III .And some of
those eyes undoubtedly would belong to the governor's political enemies, Picard
knew.
I know how to play this game, too, Picard
thought with a twinge of self-satisfaction. You won't pull the wool over my eyes a second time and get
away with it. Governor.
"Thank you," Sekk finally said, sounding stran-gled.
"You're welcome, of course." Picard gave him the same warm
smile he normally reserved for unsavory diplomatic functions. "Picard
out."
The screen went blank. Taking a deep breath and dropping his phony
expression, Picard rose and strode out onto the bridge again. The low rumble of
the engines and the beeps and whirs of the controls proved a tonic for his
nerves, and he let out his breath with a sigh, starting to relax again. La
Forge had reclaimed the navigator's station and Riker had vanished . . .
probably finalizing preparations for his away mission. Like clockwork, he
thought. The mechanism of the ship continued to run without him.
Yet their problems had only just begun. Fifteen more ships to find..
. and a moon base to uncover, he thought. This job was not getting any
easier.
"Mister Worf," he said, taking his command seat.
"Sir?" came the low Klingon growl. "Please initiate
surface scans of the planet's smaller moon, Delos. According to the governor,
there is a small research base there. I want it found. There should be a
Starship and hopefully five life forms."
"Scanning ... I have it, sir." That was fast. "On
screen." The pock-marked face of the little moon apнpeared. Nestled within
a large crater lay a complex of perhaps a dozen white-domed buildings, all
interconnected by silver tubesЧwalkways of some
sort, Picard assumed. Lights gleamed from all the windows. At least
they still have power.
His gaze drifted to the base's landing padЧ located on the far side of
the crater and presently half masked in shadow. It contained not one, but three
ships. It seemed the governor's family was entertaining at their private
hideout, he thought. He narrowed his eyes. One ship had almost Klingнon lines.
Could it be one of the two missing Klingon freighters?
Klingons might well explain the silence, he
thought. If they decided to move in and take over, I can see them smashing
all the communications equipment.
Unfortunately, he could also see them killing everyone in sight if
sufficiently provoked.
But we mustn't jump to conclusions, he
thought. Nothing is wrong until we prove it wrong.
"Can you identify those ships?" he asked Worf.
"Not yet, sir. They do not respond to hails."
"How many life forms are on the base?"
"Sensors pick up thirty-six," Worf reported. He looked up.
"Ten are Klingon!"
Picard nodded with satisfaction: it had to be the missing freighter.
That meant one less ship to worry about. Possibly two, if the third ship proved
to be one of the missing vessels.
"Hail the base. And hail those ships again."
".. . Still no response, sir."
Blast. Why did everyone on this wretched
planet have to make things more difficult? Picard stood
and began to pace, arms behind his back, thinking. One Starship isn't
enough to police a whole planet. If only the Constitution were here, we
could split up
duties.
"Sir," said La Forge. He had been adjusting the controls for
the viewscreen. "I believe you should take a look at this."
Picard turned. Under extreme magnification, one of the windows of the
research station looked into a room . . . and on the floor of that room lay a
human body ... a man. His face was turned away from the window, but Picard
could just make out the edge of his beard. Could that be Derek Sekk? Or is
it someone else? A dark liquidЧit looked like bloodЧhad pooled around the
man.
That settled things. If violence had broken out on the research station,
he had no choice but to investigate. More lives might be at stake.
"Mr. Worf, coordinate with Lieutenant Yar beнfore she leaves for
her away mission. I want a team assembled from available security
officers." Klingнons are down there. "You will lead them, Mr.
Worf. Heavy weapons, full contamination suits, and all due caution. Please bear
in mind that this is a fact-finding mission, not a military assault."
"Yes, sir!"
Picard thought he detected a note of near glee in Worfs voice.
"Remember," he went on, "we do not know the situation on
that base. I don't want to start a firefight if we can avoid it. But if anyone
there needs medical or other care, we must be prepared to provide it."
Two cups of tea would not be enough, Dr. Crusher thought. She drank; she
paced; she fretted; she stared at the unfolding computer model of the virus,
still being mapped out in all its minuscule glory.
The rest of the medical team began to gather around the workbench. They,
too, stared at the display, mesmerized: the nurses, the doctors, and even the
biologists currently aboard the Enterprise all came in to watch. She had
alerted anyone who might have an insight into the origin, treatment, or cure
for the virus.
The talk around her grew hushed and subdued. They feel it, too, she
thought. We have barely begun work on the virus, and already the strain
shows. No wonder Dr. Tang is at the end of his mental rope.
Still, it was hard to feel sorry for Tang. Under the worst
circumstances, that's when a person's true spirit showed. And here I am,
calmly sipping my tea, waiting for the computer to beep and say my cake is
ready for frosting. Reminded of her drink, Dr. Crusher took another sipЧfeh,
getting cold.
Her thoughts turned back to her conversation with Dr. Tang. What if
he's right and we can't find a cure? What about all those people dying down
there?
An old saying came to her: Time resolves all problems. Not this
problem, she thought.
She drained her tea, rose, and got another cup. Five more minutes. A three-cup solution.
It seemed an eternity, but finally the microscanнner finished and
beeped. She jumped, startled, and
spilled a few drops onto her knees. I should have seen that coming, she
thought. A hush fell over the room.
"Analysis completed," the computer proclaimed.
"Display the report." She leaned forward. Everyнone around her
did, too. She felt them holding their collective breath, just as she held her
own.
"Virus appears to be a previously unknown varнiation of Rhulian
influenza." A model of the trianнgular virus appeared, turning
slowly before them. The computer began its breakdown: "This virus
consists of a single molecule of RNA surrounded by a 27-mm-diameter protein
capsid and a buoyant density in CsCl of l.39g/ml. This molecular breakнdown
shows 36 percent carbon atoms, 21 percent oxygen atoms, 20 percent hydrogen
atoms, 17 percentЧ"
"We already know that," Dr. Crusher muttered to herself.
"We all know what Rhulian flu is made of!" More loudly, she added:
"Show the protein and NXA strands. Compare and contrast to Rhuliнan flu,
type one."
Twisted lines of interlocking RNA strands apнpeared before her, rotating
slightly. The NXA sequences were almost identical. .. though she immediately
spotted several differences in key strands, especially the T-cell inhibitors.
And some of the strands just didn't seem to belong ... as though they had
mutated ... or been grafted on from some other virus, she thought
uneasily.
Assuming it's engineered, she thought, whoever made it did
a good job.
She glanced at Ian McCloud, the ship's microbi-ologist. "What do
you think?" she asked him.
He frowned. "I am a little disappointed," he said in his
slightly lilting accent. "It would appear to be a fairly simple virus. The
Rhulian flu NXA strands were catalogued thirty years agoЧI see only a few minor
differences." He pointed. "Here, here, and here. AndЧhello! What's
this?"
"What?" Dr. Crusher demanded.
McCloud said, "ComputerЧstop the projecнtion. Turn it back three
seconds. There, Doctor!" His finger jabbed at one NXA sequence. "Do
you see it?"
Dr. Crusher leaned forward. She didn't see anything out of the ordinary.
And then it all but leaped out at her ... the virus had a strange little hook
on the very end of one NXA protein strand ... an extra NXA code. She felt a
surge of excitement. She had never seen anything like it before on a virus. This
could be it! The key to the mystery!
"Yes!" she breathed. "What is that?"
"If I recall the Rhulian flu correctly, it's attached to the NXA
strand that controls the shape of the virus." McCloud frowned. "I
would need to look it up to make certain."
"You're right," Dr. Crusher said, disappointed. 7 should
know not to get my hopes up. It's too soon in our research. "I
remember it, too."
"Oddly enough, despite 'that change, the virus looks the same . . .
exactly like type-one Rhulian
flu. I find that odd. Very odd. A mutation large enough to show
up in the NXA strands should be visible."
"That's right." Dr. Crusher sighed. It was puzнzling. A dead
end? Still, anything unusual gave them a starting point.
To the computer, she said: "Run a full developнment sequence on NXA
protein strandЧwhat's its designation?"
"445-J3," McCloud said.
"445-J3. Build it!"
"Working," the computer said. The display went
blank, and then, in extreme closeup, it began to assemble one of the tendrils.
The hook appeared to add a slight texture to the underside, as far as Dr.
Crusher could tell. A new genetic sensor of some kind? Something to detect a
flaw in the cells of a person with mixed human-alien heritage?
The computer finished rendering segment 445-J3. The texture curved down,
then up in a winding, almost snakelike pattern. She had never seen anyнthing
quite like it before.
A shudder went through her as a horrible inspiнration struck. It's
not a random pattern.
"Freeze image," she said. The computer diagram paused. The
textured curves rolled gently down then up, a valley and a hill... or a letter
lying on its side?
She said, "Rotate ninety degrees counterclockнwise."
The tendril turned slowly. The curves suddenly
became the letter "S." No one could have mistaken it. The
texture extended to the right after a slight separation . . . another letter?
The initials of its designer, perhaps?
A hush fell over the room. They see it, too, she realized. I'm
not crazy.
She brushed back her red hair with one hand. One letter could easily
be a fluke of nature, she told herself. It proved nothing. Unless . . .
She didn't want to give the command. Its potenнtial repercussions were
too great. But it had to be given: "Pull back slowly."
More of the tendril began to appear. SЧMЧIЧ
People around her gasped. She felt her heart skip a beat. A message.
It's a message.
Letters continued to appear: LЧEЧYЧOЧ
Dr. Crusher found herself mouthing the sylнlables.
UЧAЧRЧEЧDЧEЧAЧD
Smile. You are dead.
It felt like a knife puncturing her stomach.
That's why it looked so much like Rhulian flu. It was Rhulian
flu, but modified to carry out a very specific and a very deadly attack.
She exchanged a glance with lan McCloud and found an expression of
horror equal to her own on his face ... and on the faces of everyone around
them.
"The bastards..." Nurse Icolah breathed. "Those bastards!"
"Now we know what we're up against," Dr.
Crusher said flatly. "This is actually good news. If someone made
this virus, we can unmake it."
Deep inside, she knew it was the merest accident that she had stumbled
onto the message, one chance in a million. If Ian McCloud hadn't spotted the
odd hook, if she hadn't sequenced it, if the shape hadn't struck her as oddЧif
any of a thouнsand variables hadn't happened to come together just rightЧthe
twisted conceit of whatever bioen-gineer was responsible for the plague never
would have been uncovered.
She regarded the computer model thoughtfully. The letters had been
programmed into the virus on a protein level. That took some doing. And she
wasn't quite sure how it had been done.
At least I'll have something new to tell
Dr. Tang now, she thought with a morbid mental grin. And
it's something sure to wipe that smug look off his face.
The truth hadn't quite sunk in yet. They left a message on the
protein level. Who would want to sign a genetically designed virus? Someone
vain. Someone smart. Someone crazy.
As for who ... Starfleet's research centers could do it. But they
wouldn't. She racked her brain for other possibilities. Vulcans, of course ...
and cerнtainly the Romulans and the Cardassians. But not the Klingons ... they
wouldn't bother, even if they understood the underlying technology. Klingon
medicine had barely advanced beyond leeches, in her opinion. And an attack
on innocent half-breed
humans would be incredibly dishonorable, she reнminded herself.
No, it couldn't be the Klingons.
Who else? Perhaps half-a-dozen other races had the technology, from the
Tholians to the Praxx.
But why bother? Why would anyone bother to create a virus that
only attacked this specific genetнic weakness, then let it loose on Archaria
III?
The Purity League had a motive. After all, they had embraced the plague
as an easy way to rid their planet of the "mixer influence." Why not
push it a little farther? Why not create the plague to do the dirty
work?
Smile. You are dead.
Much as she tried to deny it, those four words spoke volumes. They were
written in standard English. That means humans did it. Or at least one
human.
Dr. Tang? She didn't know. How many other brilliant virologists could
there be on Archaria III? And yet without proof, she wouldn't dare accuse him. So
how do I get proof? Confront him? Beam down and ransack his office? Send in my
spies?
She stared at the virus. Smile. You are dead. The message had to
be a private joke, since no one else could have been expected to find it. A
mocking little tag line, petty as a schoolyard bully's taunting.
So much for the transcendent nature of man, she thought bitterly.
Those four little words kicked the legs out from under her belief system. We
think we've come so far. And yet we are still capable of this.
She stood. Her doctors and nurses all looked stunned. The biologists
looked stricken. McCloud had gotten over his terror and now looked inнtrigued.
Grudgingly, she admitted the person reнsponsible for the virus showed some real
creativity. McCloud wants to know how they did it.
And, she realized, so do I.
And, she realized, the signature gave her more hope. Anything one human
could do another huнman could undo.
First things first, though. Rumors about the virus would sweep the ship
if she didn't put a stop to them now.
"This message is hereby classified top secret," she said,
looking from face to face. Her people began to nod; they understood. Loose
lips sink ships. "I don't want a whisper of what we've found getting
out to anyone," she said firmly. "We don't want to create a panic ...
or a war." The Peladians might well adopt a hard stance if they knew huнmans
had created this plague.
Of course, they would find out eventually, but right now didn't seem
like a particularly good time. Their children are dying, too, she
thought. It's easy to lose control when it's your loved ones whose lives
hang in the balance. She didn't know what she'd do if Wesley came down with
a disease like this plague virus.
One person had to be informed immediately, however. Tapping her
combadge, she said, "Crushнer to Captain Picard."
"Picard here, Doctor," he answered.
"I... think you'd better come to sickbay. I have something for you
to see."
"Doctor, I'm rather occupied right nowЧ"
"Captain, it's important. I need you here now." She
had never used that tone with him before, her Voice of AuthorityЧusually
reserved for Wesley on his bad days. Not that he has many of them anymore.
Captain Picard seemed to pick up on the imporнtance of her request. He
sighed, but said, "On my way, Doctor."
Chapter Six
the door to tasha yar's cabin whisked open at her
command, and Worf poked his head inside. "Lieutenant?" he called.
"I said come in!" She was in the next room. "I'll be
right there."
He stepped inside, already ill at ease. Though he had been raised among
humans, he felt his Klingon heritage most keenly in one-on-one meetнings and
social situations. It happened more and more as he ran up against what he
considered the "human mysteries" . . . the little social nuances he
never quite seemed to pick up on. It should not matter to a warrior, he
thought. But somehow it always did.
What do you do when you are inside a human female's cabin and she isn't
dressed yet? Should he
try to make light conversation? Should he wait in silence? It's
business, he told himself. I'm supposed to be here to discuss a mission.
The captain sent me. If I stick to business, nothing will go wrong.
"Make yourself at home," Tasha called. "I'll be right
out."
At home. He gave a mental snort. His every nerve was on edge. If
only I knew her better. 7... could use a friend here.
Perhaps it was his prickly Klingon nature, but it took him a long time
to warm up to strangers. He could tell the rest of the ship's officers were
trying their best to get to know each other, to form a real team, and
eventually he knew they would all come together. But for now he still felt like
an outsider among them, even when they went out of their way to include him in
their social banter.
Water splashed. Is she bathing? He narrowed his eyes and almost
left. What is she doing in there?
"If this is a bad time," he began, "I can come back
laterЧ"
"No, wait. I'll be right out. Really."
He glanced around her cabin to take his mind off the awkward position he
was in. Tasha Yar had brought very few personal effects with her: a scatнtering
of small holographic picturesЧplanets he didn't recognize, some with Tasha
posing next to people he didn't know. In the far corner sat a small Vulcan
kinetic sculpture, its thin wire strands dipнping faintly in the breeze from
the air vents. There
was nothing here, nothing special and
unique, that proclaimed, "Ian Tasha Yar."
Perhaps she feels as alone as I do, he thought suddenly. PerhapsЧ
"Sorry about that," Tasha said,
emerging from her bedroom and interrupting his thoughts. She wore a slate-gray
robe and had a gray towel wrapped around her head. "I was getting ready
for my away mission . . . I'm having trouble with my hair. What brings you
here?"
"IЧ" Worf began. He stared as
she pulled the towel off her head. Long, straight blond hair spilled out. Hair
that didn't belong on her head. "What happened to youЧ" he burst out.
Instantly he regretted it. It was not an
appropriнate comment.
"Like it?" She made a face.
"It's silly and imнpractical, if you ask me. I prefer it short."
"ButЧhowЧ?"
"I borrowed a follicle stimulator
from Dr. Crusher." She swept her hair back and out of her eyes with one
hand. "Archarian women wear their hair long, unfortunately. Since we're
supposed to be going in disguised as natives, I needed to grow it longer to fit
in. What do you really think?" She turned a quick pirouette and gave an
impish grin. "Stylish?"
"It is... long."
She cocked her head quizzically. "I
guess that's a compliment."
He swallowed and felt too hot suddenly.
"Wait until you see Commander
Riker," she went on with an even broader grin. "Archarнian men wear
beards . . . long, bushy beards. That's something I'm really looking forward to
seeing! He's normally so stiff and formal all the time."
"Unh. Yes. But there is nothing wrong
with formality."
"Almost as bad as you."
"UhЧ"
"That's supposed to be a joke."
She grew more businesslike. "This isn't a social call, is it? What's
wrong?"
"Lieutenant... we have a situation on
the planнet's smaller moon." Taking refuge in duty, he began to fill her
in on the details. "The captain wants me to lead an away team on a recon
misнsion," he concluded. "He thought it best for me to coordinate
with you."
"I see." She nodded somberly.
"Worf, you and I both know you're more than capable of dealing with this
situation on your own. I'm going to leave it up to you. This is a good chance
to impress the captainЧdon't blow it."
"I have no intention ofЧblowing it."
He bristled at the very idea.
"Sorry, sorry, poor choice of
words." She hesiнtated. "Let me suggest a team for you. Take Schultz,
Detek, and Wrenn. They've been pulling a lot of extra duty shifts together
since Farpoint, and they seem to work well as a team."
"I have already assigned them to this missionЧ as well as Ensign
Clarke."
She raised her eyebrows. "Angling for my job, Worf? I couldn't have
picked a better team."
Again he felt the heat rush to his face. "IЧ uhЧ"
"Relax, they're good choices. Go with my blessнing. Bust some
skulls. I know that's what you really want to do."
He gave a curt nod. My people. Yes, I would like to meet more of my
people.. . and bust some skulls! He felt his blood surge at the thought of
combat.
"Thank youЧTasha."
"Don't mention it." She grinned again. "We're all in this
together, right?"
Dr. Crusher had her people carefully stationed at all corners of sickbay
when Captain Picard strode in with all the subtlety of a hurricane. He did not
look pleased at being summoned to sickbay.
"What is so important, Doctor," he said curtly. "We have
a possible combat situation developing. My place is on the bridge right
now."
"Just this." She took his arm and led him to the virus
display. She hadn't changed the image since revealing the hidden message.
"Look."
"Smile ... you are dead?" He frowned. "What is this,
Beverly? A joke?"
"That's exactly what I think it is." She nodded at the
display. "A private joke. That message is writ-
ten on the bottom of every single virus. It's been coded into the NXA
protein strands."
He frowned. "Then it is artificialЧ"
"Created from Rhulian flu, and almost certainly by a human."
"I don't want to believe it. IЧ" He licked his lips. "I
thinkЧ"
It was the first time she had seen him this way in years. Since Jack
died, she thought. Since that awful, awful day when my husband died.
"We don't know who did it. He didn't sign his name. But I have a
suspicion."
"Tell me."
"Dr. Tang, the head of Archo City Hospital. His specialty is
virology, and to all indications he's very, very good . . . cutting-edge
good."
"Do you have evidence of this?"
"No. It's just a feeling I have from talking with himЧa feeling
that he's doing his best to stonewall my research. I think he has some serious
mental instabilities, and judging from his comments, he would fit right in with
the Purity League. He wants the planet quarantined and left on its own permaнnently."
"These are very serious charges."
"I know. And I don't have any proof yet."
He hesitated, staring at the virus, at the letters on its underside.
"Does the technology necessary to create this virus exist anywhere else on
Archaria III besides Dr. Tang's hospital?" '
"I doubt it. You would need a state-of-the-art
research lab ... and advanced knowledge of huнman and nonhuman
virology."
Slowly Picard nodded. "You may be right. It would certainly help explain
why Tang hasn't made any progress toward a cure."
Dr. Crusher nodded. He wants them dead. Why create a cure for your
own plague?
"I'll alert Commander Riker to your suspicionsЧhe may be able to
turn up more inforнmation on Tang during his away mission." He cleared his
throat. "Who else knows about this message?"
"So far, just the people here. I ordered them to keep it to
themselves."
"Good. We don't want a panic on the planet. Are you any closer to a
cure?"
"We're just starting to unravel the NXA protein threads holding the
virus together. There's no telling what nasty little tricks our genetic programнmer
tucked into it."
Captain Picard gave a pensive nod. "Thank you, Doctor. You did the
right thing. Keep me up to date on your progress." He paused. "You can
cure it, can't you?"
"I think so, eventually. It's just a matter of time. Unfortunately,
that's the one thing we're short of."
"Keep at it. Thousands are counting on you." Turning, he
headed for the door.
As if we don't have enough pressure already.
After the doors whisked shut, Dr. Crusher took a deep breath. "All
right," she called to her people. "Gather around. We have a lot of
work to do."
She started handing out assignments: NXA seнquencing, tests with
antiviral compounds, analyses of the protein strands within the virus.
We will get to the bottom of this mess, she told herself. And
it's going to be sooner rather than laterЧDr. Tang and his stonewalling be
damned!
Chapter Seven
fifteen minutes after his conversation with
Tasha Yar, Worf met the four members of his away team in Transporter Room 3.
Like them, he had changed into a full containment suit. The bulky white garment
felt suffocating, but it covered him comнpletely from head to heel. No virus
would get through it. / might as well be in a full spacesuit, he
thought.
He felt an itch starting in the middle of his back and gave a growl of
displeasure. Klingons are not meant for containment suits. And as he
continued to breathe, his faceplate fogged over. What had his instructor at the
Academy told him to do when that happened? Practice your breathingЧkeep it
slow and steady. Hyperventilating caused it.
He nudged the comm bar with his chin. A
channel opened up to the other members of his away team.
"Since we will be beaming into potentially hosнtile
territory," he said, letting a grim note creep into his voice, "you
must be on your guard at all times. Watch your backs, no matter what you
see or hear. And remember . . ." He paused for emphasis. "This is a
good day to die!"
That did it. The ensign swallowed noticeably.
Worf gave a mental snort. Humans. It really was a good day
to die. If you went into combat fearing nothing, you walked the path to glory.
He had already selected their beam-in coordiнnates: an unoccupied dome
on the far edge of the research station. La Forge's last sensor scans had
placed all the humans and Klingons a safe distance away, in the buildings
nearer to the station's landнing pad, so their arrival should go unnoticed. His
plan called for securing the dome, then using it as a base of operations as
they made their way through the complex slowly and methodically, searching for
victims. Their first priority would be reaching the man La Forge had spotted.
"Take your positions for transport!" he barked.
His team scrambled onto the transporter pad. They arranged themselves in
a semicircle, leaving the middle pad open for him. He took it, turned, and
faced the ensign on duty at the transporter controls.
"Energize!" he said, loud enough to be heard even through his
helmet.
As lights began to sparkle around him, the Enter-
prise disappeared . . . and was replaced by a dimly lit room perhaps twenty
meters high and forty meters across. The white ceiling arched overhead in a
huge dome.
Artificial gravity was on; it felt just under Earth normal to Worf. He
dropped to a crouch, phaser rifle up and ready. Scans might show a room empty .
. . but shields had been known to hide ambushes, and he never took unnecessary
chances.
There was no ambush this time. Around him lay jumbles of boxes, huge wooden
packing crates, and discarded machinery. The crates rose in teetering stacks,
some of them nearly reached the ceiling.
No danger. Or nothing that leaped out with fangs bared and claws
ready, he thought. Diseases were far more insidious than that.
"Guard duty." He motioned Schultz to the rear hatch and Clarke
to the front. "Secure the dome," he said. "Shout if anyone tries
to get in. Do not shoot unless fired upon or I give the word."
"Yes, sir!" They hurried to take up their posiнtions. Only
then did Worf relax enough take his finger off his own phaser's firing button.
Wrenn had his tricorder out. Turning slowly, the ensign scanned the
dome.
"No other life forms within thirty meters," he reported over
the open channel. "The nearest life signs are from two humans located
exactly thirty-two meters due northЧthat way." He pointed toward the front
of the dome, just to the right of Clarke's position.
"Are they moving?" Worf asked.
"No, sir. From their life signs, I think they're either asleep or
unconscious."
Or dying from the plague, Worf thought. He sucked in a deep
breath. Do not hyperventilate.
"Keep monitoring them," he said. "Let me know if their
status changes. And keep watch for anyone else moving in our direction."
Perhaps this would be easier than he had first thought. If everyone was
sick, they would not offer resistance to the rescue mission. The Klingons here
would not be affected by the plague, he reminded himself. Nor would any
full-blooded humans.
First, he had to address the problem at hand: securing this dome.
Frowning a little, he regarded the stacks of boxes and crates all around him.
Clearly the people in charge of this base had used this chamber as their
storage area ... or their dump. The crates bore labels like
"Thermoento-gram Modulator B-6" and "Dioxymosis Convertнer
(F)," whatever those were. To the left, a few of the boxes made more
sense: "Vegetable Conнcentrate 64" and "2400 Citric Protein
Bars" sounded almost sensible in comparison, if not exactly appetizing.
Sometimes he thought humans would eat anything, if it came in an attractive
package.
First things first, though. The jumble of crates might conceal anything
from a cloaked Romulan death squad to a the lost treasures of Fret'vok. If
they planned on using this dome as a base of
operations, they were going to have to
search it fullyЧyou couldn't cover your back if you didn't know what was behind
you.
"Look behind the boxes on that side
of the room," he told Detek and Wrenn. "If you see anything unusual,
let me know immediately. Do not investigate yourselves."
"Yes, sir!"
Turning with a sigh, Worf squeezed between
a pair of tall "Emulsion Generator" crates. His conнtainment suit
snagged for a second on a nail, but since the material couldn't be punctured by
anyнthing as soft as mere steel, he pulled sharply and felt himself snap free.
Whoever had packed all this junk into the
dome had left less-than-adequate access corridors beнtween the piles of crates.
He edged down the nearest one and felt himself treading on things that crunched
underfoot.
His phaser rifle had a small but powerful
light mounted on top; he flicked it on, then swept the beam up and down the
floor. Loose cables, disнcarded circuit relays, food wrappers, and other trash
littered the floor here. From the thick layer of dust on everything, he knew no
one had been back here in many years.
He had just turned to go back when Wrenn's
excited voice squealed his name: "Lieutenant Worf!"
"What is it?" he demanded. Had
the Klingons from the freighter detected them and launched at attack?
"Sir!" he heard Wrenn call. "We found someнthing!
BloodЧand according to my tricorder, it's human!"
"Hold your position. I will be right
there."
Somehow he managed to squeeze back out
into the center of the dome without tumbling any of the piles of crates. He
spotted Wrenn about halfway to the front door and sprinted over to join him.
The ensign pointed to dark stains on the
floor. "According to my tricorder, that's human blood," he said.
"It's dry, but freshЧabout twelve hours old!"
Worf bent to examine the blood spatters. A
trail of blood wound off between crates on that side of the dome. He hesitated,
trying to decide how best to handle it.
"Is it fully human?" he finally
asked. "Or is it a human-Peladian mix?" One of the symptoms of the
disease is uncontrollable bleeding, he reminded himself.
Wrenn had to check. "Uh .. . fully
human, sir. Not a trace of Peladian genetic material."
So we have the trail of a wounded human. Hefting
his phaser rifle, Worf eased between crates of "Endochronic Thiotimoline
Pumps" and "Phase Resonance Detectors." His heart began to pound
with growing excitement. Shining his light at the floor, he studied the
footprints and the blood. The drips became noticeably larger, and bloody handнprints
smeared the crates to either side where someone had rested or leaned to steady
himself.
When the passageway opened up a little, he
spotted at least threeЧand possibly as many as fiveЧdifferent sets of
footprints that had disturbed the decades' worth of accumulated dust.. .
whoever had come through here made no effort to conceal the trail. They
could not all be dead or dying, Worf thought with growing unease. His eyes
narrowed. What happened here?
He continued to follow the trail, winding beнtween the crates and boxes.
At last he reached the far wall.
The trail ended with a pool of sticky, half-congealed blood. And lying
in that blood he found the bodies of six adult human males. Acharian settlers,
he decided, noting their chest-length beards. He remembered what Tasha Yar had
told him about the men on Archaria III all wearing long, bushy beards.
These six had been stabbed and cut repeatedly. The blood came from their
wounds. But they had not died hereЧsomeone had carefully arranged the bodies.
Eyes closed, hands neatly folded across their chests, they looked almost
peaceful now. The trail he had followed must have been left by a burial party,
he decided.
Better to die in honorable combat than to sucнcumb to a disease, he thought with a nod.
Unless they had been murdered. ...
He moved closer and began to study the bodies with the dispassionate
attention of a born predator. Death had been sudden, but not unexpected, he
decided. He pulled their shredded tunics open to
study their wounds. Two had numerous stab wounds.
Those cutsЧ
He leaned forward, studying the long, clean sweep of the death blows. A
strong arm had delivнered those cuts. The wounds looked exactly like the marks
left by a mek'leth. Or in this case, several mek'leths.
Only Klingons used that particular type of short sword, he knew, with
its razor-sharp edge and deadly pointЧperfect for slashing and thrusting. He
liked to use one himself. Unlike disruptors, it made combat a personal
experience . . . but it also made for messy corpses. Exactly like these.
Lights wavered behind him as the ensigns folнlowed. Over the open comm
channel he heard gasps of shock from Wrenn and Detek.
"Control yourself," he snarled. "You must have seen death
before."
"Not like this," Wrenn gasped.
"All that blood," Detek said.
"What's going on?" Clarke demanded from his post by
the front hatch. "Do you need assistance? Lieutenant? Anybody?"
"Quiet on the channel." Worf rose and pivoted on the balls of
his feet, furious with the breaches in protocol. This is going in their
personal files, he vowed. Simpering over a little blood!
He found Wrenn, pale-faced, two meters away, just standing there and
staring open-mouthed at the bodies.
"Back to the center of the dome!" he said.
The ensign began to stammer in shock or fear.
"Go on!" Worf grimaced with distaste. No stomнach for a
little blood! He switched off his rifle's light, hiding the gruesome
details. Perhaps that would help. They are only humans, he reminded
himself. They cannot help their weaknesses. Still, he had expected more
from them. After all, he was leading this mission.
"Go back to the center of the dome," he ordered a little more
gently. "Wait there and keep it clear in case we have to return."
Worf clicked his comm bar back to the first setting so that he could
talk to the "survivors" of his mission.
"Detek," he said, voice a low growl.
"Sir!" The ensign's voice quavered noticeably.
"Get the tricorder and medical supplies. You are now our rear
guard."
Turning, he headed for the front hatch without a backward glance. The
other three will pull together and pick up the slack, he thought. He hoped.
Chapter Eight
dr. crusher passed out assignments, and as her people
scrambled to work on unraveling the secrets of the virus, she took a minute to
page Dr. Tang at Archo City Hospital. This should prove interesting, she
thought. Let's see how he reacts to news of that hidden message. Maybe
it would force his hand ... or surprise him into an admission of guilt.
Tang finally answered the page. "What is it?" he growled. Still
practicing Dracula's bedside manner, I see, Dr. Crusher thought. Only
this time I know your real motive.
She said: "Dr. Tang, I have isolated the virus and done a complete
TXA breakdown. In the process, I found something quite disturbingЧnot only is
the virus man-made, but its designer left a message."
"What!" He stared at her, to all
appearances shocked. "What's the message?"
"Smile, you are dead." She gave
him the NXA strand number. "Sequence it yourself. When you pull back the
view, watch the bottom of the tendril. The modified texture spells it out
clearly."
He sucked in a deep breath. "DoctorЧI
can't believe it! The Purity League claimed responsibiliнty for the plague, but
I never thought... I never dreamed . . . they actually had the resources to do
it!"
If he was acting, he deserved a commendation
for it. She hadn't seen a better job since the time she saw Sir Edmund Deere in
Hamlet on Earth.
I should have asked Deanna to join me for this conference, she realized with a pang
of disappointнment. Deanna would have sensed if he told us the truth. She
felt foolish for wasting the call. /'// do it next time, she vowed. Until
I know differently, you are still my prime suspect, Doctor!
"Our captain wants this information
kept strictly confidential," she said.
"Of courseЧI do understand."
He appeared humbled by the revelation, she
thought. But then, if as he claimed he really had been working on the
virus for weeks, he hadn't found that hidden message . . . and she turned it up
within the hour. Don't get too cocky, she told herself. It was luck.
But luck is what you sometimes need.
Tang went on, "I must tell the
governor, though .. . but of course he won't dare release the
information to anyone else. The
repercussions would be disastrous. As your captain must already realize."
She nodded. Riots. Open warfare. And the
pure-blooded Peladians would almost certainly get inнvolved; how could they
not? The next custom-made virus might well target them.
She said, "Getting back to our real
problemЧ curing the plagueЧI'm ready to bring an infected test subject aboard."
"You have a vaccine already?" He
leaned forнward eagerly. "How does it workЧcan I get a sampleЧ"
"No, we don't have a vaccine
yet," she said quickly. She was finding it increasingly difficult to
believe he was guilty. His every response seemed genuine and correct. "We
have some other tests to run first. The virus appears to be a simple variant of
Rhulian flu. We have some antiviral treatments specifically designed for that
disease which might prove effective."
He sighed and shook his head. "The
virus does appear simple at first glance, Doctor." Back to stonewalling
and doomsaying, she thought. How true to form. "However, it
cannot be cured by any traditional meansЧwe tried all the Rhulian flu vaccines
as well as every other antiviral agent known to the Federation. The virus
resisted every treatmentЧit's all in the research notes I sent you. Every time
we thought we had it licked, it flared up again."
"Yes, I read your report. But I have
a clean
environment here, and I have a crew working on modifying the biofilters
in the transporters." At least, I will as soon as this call is done. "An
aggressive program using several different treatнments should prove
successful."
"I hope soЧfor your sake." Tang shook his head. "We had
no luck there, either, Doctor. But perhaps the Enterprise's biofilters
are more adнvanced than our own."
"Undoubtedly." Crusher hoped O'Brien knew what he was doing.
"We have some . . . creative engineers aboard. If they can see the
virus, they can eliminate it. It's that simple."
Tang shrugged helplessly. "I hope so, Doctor," he said.
"I will have that test patient standing by. PleaseЧfor your own sake,
maintain a quarantine field at all times. This virus really does jump the
strongest forcefields."
"Of course," she said. "I intend to use every security
measure at my disposal."
"Then I will await news of your ultimate sucнcess." He
hesitated. "And Doctor . . ."
"Yes?" she said.
"I know how I must seem to you. You must think I'm a crackpot a ...
a medical alarmist, since I keep trying to poke holes in every theory
and plan you come up with. Believe me when I say I do want a cureЧI want
it more desperately than you can possibly imagine! But I don't want to risk the
lives of anyone healthy to get it, and that includes your crew."
"Thank you for your concern," she said. I bet it gets even
more heartfelt every time he tells that story. "I do appreciate your
advice. I have no intention of placing this crew at risk. Now, please get that
patient ready. I'll want to beam him up within the hour."
"You will have him," he said, almost humbly.
"Crusher out."
Now to make sure we live up to our reputation, she thought. She tapped
her combadge.
"Crusher to Transporter Chief O'Brien."
"O'Brien here, ma'am," came his answer.
"About those biofilters you mentioned this morning. How long will
it take you to chain them together?"
She heard a distinct gulp on the other end of the comm channel. Good,
she thought with satisfacнtion.
"No problem, ma'am!" O'Brien said.
"That's the kind of answer I like, O'Brien. Crusher out!"
On the bridge, Captain Picard faced the forward viewscreen and watched
the Constitution enter the solar system with a measure of relief.
Captain van Osterlich's ship had arrived not an hour too soon, he thought. With
a second Galaxy-class Starship to help keep order, he felt a little more
relaxed. We can go chasing after rogue ships now, if we have to, he
thought. There was no longer any need to worry about leaving the planet
unguarded.
"Hail the Constitution,"he said.
"Captain van Osterlich is standing by," La Forge said.
"On screen."
The view of Archaria III disappeared, replaced by the smiling face of
Jules van Osterlich, its captain. Van Osterlich had broad cheekbones and thin
hair so pale it looked almost white.
Picard grinned back. They had known each other the better part of twenty
years. Though their caнreers kept them half a galaxy apart most of the time,
they never passed up an opportunity to get together and talk about the good old
days.
"Jean-Luc!" van Osterlich said. "The new ship suits you.
I always knew you'd end up with one of the big ones. But the Enterprise! Quite
a plum."
"Thank you, Jules. The Constitution's looking pretty good,
too. A fine ship."
"That she is."
"How long has it been ... three years? Four? How are you?"
"I can't complain. So, I hear we have quite a situation developing
below. Why don't you fill me in. My transporter crews are ready to beam mediнcal
supplies down, but we have a few minutes before we enter orbit."
"Dinner tonight? Bring your senior staff."
"Delighted."
"Good." Picard frowned. "We'll talk more then," he
said. "In the meantime, you should know that things below are not quite
what they appear. Governor Sekk has, ah, held out on us. And we
suspect some of the hospital staff may be hindering the development of a
cure for the plague in support of the Purity League. My chief medical officer
is spearheading the research aboard the Enterprise."
"And what is happening with the plague?"
"Latest reports indicate forty thousand victims. Three quarters of
them are already dead. It isn't a pretty situation."
Van Osterlich whistled. "It's a disaster!" He glanced over his
shoulder. "Governor Sekk is hailнing me," he said. "We'll talk
more tonight."
Picard nodded. "I'll break out the Saurian brandy."
Chapter Nine
"secure the area!" Worf barked.
After kicking open the hatch to the next domeЧ it housed a research
station complete with humнming, beeping, chirping weather-monitoring
equipmentЧhe led the charge inside. Detek's triнcorder showed two humans lying
in the center of a cluster of three rooms. Asleep? Unconscious? Lyнing in
ambush? He intended to find out.
He pointed: Schultz left, Clarke right. He went straight up the middle,
treading as softly as a Klingon could.
He reached the door to the next room, pressed up beside it, and reached
out to the handpad, which was unlocked. He pressed lightly, and it zipped to
one side.
Taking a glance in, he spotted two figures lying in
semi darkness .. . both women. He switched on the lights, but neither
one moved.
Plague. White blisters covered their faces. That's one of
the first signs.
"Sir, is itЧ?" Clarke asked over the comm.
"Yes." His voice came as a growl. "They have the plague.
That means the whole base is contamiнnated."
For the first time since beaming down, he was thankful they were inside
containment suits. Like Wrenn, they would have to be beamed out of them when
they were evacuated.
He clicked the comm bar.
"Worf to Dr. Crusher. . . ."
"Crusher here," she replied an instant later. "What
is your situation?"
"The plague is loose in here. We have found two victims so far.
Both women."
"What are their symptoms?"
"White blisters on their faces. Low life signs. They are both
unconscious."
He heard a slight hesitation in her voice. "Mark their
coordinates.аа We are almost ready to try
beaming a patient through the ship's biofilters. We'll try your women if it
works on our first subнject."
"Good." He felt a brief surge of pride. By coming here, they
had already made a differenceЧ these two women would have a chance for survival
now.
"Are there any other plague victims?"
"Not yet," he said. "We will continue to investiнgate the
base."
"Keep me up to date. Crusher out."
Worf turned to Ensign Detek. "Send the coordiнnates for these two
to sickbay," he said. "And scan for more survivors."
"Yes, sir."
Detek raised his tricorder and turned slowly, scanning. "Five more
humans are in the dome immediately to our left," he said. "The
Klingons are still forty meters to the right."
Worf hesitated. Which group to contact first? The humans, he
thought. They are the most threatнened by the plague.
"We will investigate the humans first," he anнnounced.
"Let us go!"
He led the way to the back of the dome, opened the hatch into the
ten-meter-long connective walkнway, and advanced cautiously to the next hatch.
He pressed the handpad, but although it beeped, it stubbornly refused to
open . . . locked from the inside, he decided.
"What is the status of the humans inside?" he asked.
"They are ... alive and moving, sir. I believe they have detected
us. They are taking up positions around the door."
Around the door? Ambush!
"Get down!" he ordered. "Rifles up!"
He clicked the comm bar and called the Enterнprise. "I need
an emergency site-to-site transport!"
he yelled. "Put us inside the dome we're facing! On the farthest
side!"
"Ready, sir," he heard an unfamiliar voice say.
The hatch started to open.
"Energize!"
As the transporter beam picked them up, he saw the flash of energy
weapons being firedЧ
Чand suddenly he and his men were materializнing inside the dome, facing
a curving white wall. He whirled. They hadn't gone farЧtwenty meters at the
mostЧbut they were in a different room now.
He charged the half-shut door. Bursting through, he launched himself
into the main chamber.
Five people stood with their backs to him, and two of them had
disruptors pointed out toward the open hatch. He recognized the corridor where
he and his men had been standing seconds before.
The men with the disruptors started to turn. Too late! Worf
thought with the glee of a predator closing in for the kill. He felt the roar
of his blood. He voiced a wordless battle cry, "A-a-a-a-r-hЧ"
Before they could shoot him, he fired from his hip. Heavy stunЧfirst
the two men with the weapнons, the one on the left, then the one on the right.
Even as they began to crumple, he closed the distance between in a
heartbeat, still yelling, "Чa-a-a-a-hЧ "
The other threeЧtwo men, a womanЧwere not armed. His Starfleet training
took over and Worf dragged himself back from the berserker's abyss. It
would have been easy to let himself go in the fury and passion of the
moment, to kill and kill again while his blood sang the music of violence in
his ears.
Panting, he halted before them. "Arms up!" he bellowed. He
knew his voice carried through his faceplate when he shoutedЧit would be a
little muffled, but clearly audible.
The three standing humans gaped at him, too shocked to move. They did
not seem to be armed.
"Arms up, I said! I will shoot!"
This time they raised their arms.
Bending at the knees, he scooped up the disrupнtors dropped by the two
men. Set to kill, he noticed. His ensigns took guard positions.
"Identify yourselves!" he snapped.
"My name is Newkirk," one of the men snarled. He was an older
human with short gray hair. No beard. Not from Archaria III. "I am
first officer of the Middlemarch. You just killed the captain, you
Klingon bastard!"
Worf glared. "I am Lieutenant Worf of the Fedeнration Starship Enterprise,"
he snapped back. "Your captain is stunned."
"You're a Klingon!" the other man said suspiнciously.
"What kind of trick is this?"
"I am a Starfleet officer. Identify yourself!"
"Macus Onetree," he said flatly, "second officer of the Middlemarch.
About time you got here, Starfleet. We've needed rescue for three days.
Those Klingons have attacked us twice."
"Explain."
Onetree hesitated. "Plague broke out on the planet, so we bugged it
up to orbit. Captain Gorman"Чhe indicated one of the men Worf had
shotЧ"thought we should ride out the problems here. He remembered this
deserted base, so ..." He snorted. "Between Klingons sniping at us,
half our crew dropping dead from the plague, and our warp drive breaking
downЧwhat else can possibly go wrong?"
Worf gave a nod and lowered his phaser rifle. "How many dead from
plague?" he asked.
"All but us five now. The others are in the next dome."
He nudged the comm bar with his chin. That is easy enough to check, he
thought.
"Worf to La Forge."
"La Forge here," came the answer.
"How many life signs are now on this base?"
"Hold on . . . twenty-two."
Ten Klingons, five humans here, two in the other domeЧthat's only
seventeen. The other five must be the governor's family. He gave a nod. That acнcounted
for everyone.
"Have you met anyone else here besides the Klingons?" he
asked.
"There are more humans holed up in one of the domes .. . they
sealed the doors and they won't come out. They threatened to shoot anyone who
came near, so we haven't bothered them. Since the Klingons smashed the base's
comm equipment, we haven't been able to reach them."
They are better off locked in their dome, Worf
thought. These people may be immune
because they are full humans, but they are carrying the virus.
"You will stay here," he told them. "When your captain
wakes up, inform him that he is under house arrest pending an investigation.
Attacking Federation officers is still a crime."
"You're not going to leave us here!" Onetree cried.
Now he wants to be rescued. Worf
snorted.
"You are welcome to come with me," he said. "I am going
to see the Klingons next."
Chapter Ten
only the transporter chief's legs remained visiнble as he
crawled into the transporter's console. Does he know what he's doing? Dr.
Crusher wonнdered, and not for the first time. This seemed a highly irregular
way to adjust the biofilters. As she watched, his knees bent. His feet pointed,
twitched, pointed again. And he crawled another twenty centimeters into the
console.
"Are you sure you should be doing that?" Dr. Crusher asked.
She had always been told to bring power off-line before adjusting relays. It's
got to be dangerous.
"I've done it a thousand times before, ma'am," O'Brien said,
sounding put-upon. "There are so many safety features and redundancies
built in, it's physically impossible for me to get hurtЧOw!"
"Are you all right?"
"YES!" he bellowed. Then she heard him swear under his breath
as something thumped loudly inside the console. "Get in there!"
Dr. Crusher wavered between calling for help and crawling in after him.
She jumped when an electric sizzle sounded and a curl of acrid black
smoke rose from the control pads. She took a step back in alarm. He doesn't
know -what he's doing! she thought. He's crazy!
Another thump came, even louder than the first. The transporter chief
gave another yelp and jerked back, feet spasming, and then he crawled out,
alternately waving his fingers in the air and sucking on them.
"Are you all right?" she asked, one hand reachнing
instinctively for her medical tricorder. "Maybe I should take a look at
thatЧ"
"No need, Doc." He grinned up at her. "My own bloody
stupidity. I touched the wrong relay."
Muttering to himself, he stuck his head under the console again. The
sizzle came again, then disapнpeared as he undid whatever he had done before. A
second plume of black smoke rose. She caught a whin0 of something
burning. / really ought to call for backupЧ
"Just an overloaded circuit," he said, as if that explained
everything. "No need to worry."
"Oh." Dr. Crusher leaned over, trying to see what he was doing
under there. How can he see in there? It's pitch black. If he electrocuted
himselfЧ
"Almost got it." One hand suddenly stuck out toward her.
"Pass me that magnetic lock, will you, ma'am?"
"Coming." It sat on top of the control panel with half a dozen
other tools. She grabbed it and smacked it into his palm like a nurse handing a
doctor a medical instrument. Ten years since I've done that! She raised
her tricorder and tried to scan those burned fingers, but he pulled his hand
back under the console again before she caught more than a glimpse. Probably
a minor flash burn. He may have brushed a live EM conduit, she thought,
trying to dredge up old equipment-maintenance lessons from memory. It's
painful, but not serious. I'll send him some ointment later.
Something creaked alarmingly under the conнsole, like bones about to
break. It sounded worse than anything else O'Brien had yet done.
"Unh ... almost... there!"
The lights on the control panel flickered, then went out.
"Bloody hell!"
"Maybe I should call someone from engineering to assist youЧ"
she began.
He stuck his head out and positively glared at her. "Don't. Ma'am.
Beggin' your pardon, but I'd never hear the end of it! I've got my pride, you
know."
"Lives are at stake hereЧ"
"I know, and the sooner I shut up and get back to work, the sooner
you'll get 'em saved." He disapнpeared into the console again.
Territorial, these engineering types. She sighed. At this
point, it was probably best to let him do his work.
"Why don't they build these things to standard specs?" she
heard O'Brien mutter to himself. "You'd think a Galaxy-class Starship would
use the same C-22a transporter-buffer configuration as the rest of the fleet,
wouldn't you? But no, that's not good enough. Some bright kid decides
it's better to start over from scratch and reinvent the wheel, and we're the
ones who suffer for it. . . ."
Something creaked again. The lights flickered, came on, died, flickered,
and died again. And then they didn't come on at all.
Dr. Crusher signed. Twelve minutes. Three more, then I call
Engineering.
"How's that?" he asked from inside. "Everyнthing look okay?"
"It's completely dead."
"Eh? Still?" he called. Something made a bangнing
sound, like steel on steel. Dr. Crusher winced. He's insane. I'm trusting my
patientЧand the safety of the crewЧto a madman.
"Just a minute more!" he called.
"Are you sure this is going to work?"
"Of course." He grunted again. He pounded on something. He
cursed. But finally the console lights came back on and a familiar hum of power
filled the room.
"That does it." The transporter chief pulled his red-haired
head out and gave her a winning smile.
"Knew I'd get it in the end. I've manually cross-chained two
transporter buffers, so you'll get a double-strength biofilter. No virus is
going to make it through there unless we want it to. Just give the word,
Doc, and I'll start the transport."
"Okay." Something made her hesitate, though. She still had her
doubts about jerry-rigged transнporters. It might do in a true emergency, but
when the safety of the crew lay at stake, when a potenнtially lethal virus
might make it on board, she wanted something extra. Strange creaking noises and
flickering power supplies did not engender confidence, she thought.
That's why we're beaming into a level-1 containнment field, she thought. Even if he
screwed up the biofilters, nothing would get loose on the ship.
"Let's give it a try."
She tapped her badge. "Crusher to Dr. Tang."
"Tang here," he replied almost instantly. He
must have been waiting for my call.
"Do you have that patient ready?"
"Yes. Lock onto the other person at these coordinatesЧ "
Crusher glanced at O'Brien, who nodded.
"Bring him aboard," she said.
"He's in the pattern buffer," Transporter Chief O'Brien said.
"Now . . . applying the first set of biofilter algorhithms . . . now the
second set... done!"
It's too easy, she thought, if this worked, Dr. Tang would have
cured all his patients by now. Unless he
only managed to reinfect them. Unless he saboнtaged his own work to help
the Purity League. No virus can make it through the biofilters, she
thought. It has to work. It's medically impossible for it not to
work.
"Leave him in the pattern buffer until I have the containment field
set up," she said, starting for sickbay. "I'll let you know when
we're ready."
"Got it, ma'am!"
Five minutes later, the hum of a transporter beam filled the sickbay.
Dr. Crusher and her staff gathered around biobed 1 and the forcefield now
shimmering there.
A woman materialized on the bed. She had long, flowing black hair, an
elongated Peladian skull, and white blisters covering her face, neck, and
hands.
Dr. Crusher raised her tricorder and began a quick scan. The virus was
gone. So much for Dr. Tang, she thought. As far as she was concerned,
this proved he had been lying all along. Now, all we have to do is find an
antiviral agent that works, she thought, and begin mass-producing it.
"We have a winner," she announced. "The virus is
gone."
Her staff let loose a cheer.
Smiling, she lowered her tricorder. "All we need is a vaccine and
we'll be set. How is it coming?"
"I think we'll have something in a few hours. We're running
cultures now. All indications are
positiveЧwe'll have that cure by the end of the day. It's only Rhulian
flu, after all."
Dr. Crusher nodded. "Prepare two more bio-beds," she said to
her nurses. "We have patients on the moon to bring across."
It looked like the start of a very busy afternoon.
She continued to monitor her plague patient, listening to the steady
beat of her heart on the biobed's monitor. Within twenty minutes, the woman's
fever was gone. Within an hour, the fever blisters on her face had begun to
shrink noticeably. Blood tests, sensor scans, and every medical instruнment in
sickbay revealed her to be a healthy young adult female in every way.
Too bad we can't beam every patient on the planet through our
biofilters, she thought. But even with all our transporters working around the
clockЧeven if you count the ConstitutionЧwe would barely get one or two
percent of the victims processed. And we would have to start beaming them back
down to the planet because we'd run out of room here . . . and they would be
reinfected immediately.
No, they needed a real cure. That was the only solution.
Even so, Dr. Crusher found it hard to restrain her jubilation. It wasn't
every day she had such immediate and gratifying results from a treatment. So
much for Dr. Tang and all his dire warnings.
"Get back to work on the vaccine," she said.
Deanna Troi strolled in shortly thereafter. "I
heard you have a new patient, Beverly," she said. "I can tell
by the glow on your face that the news is good. Is she awake yet?"
"Not yet ... but soon." Smiling, Dr. Crusher led the way to
biobed 1. The white fever blisters had almost all vanished on the woman's face.
"As you can see, she's still unconscious. I didn't want to administer a
stimulant yet... rest is the best thing for her right now."
Deanna leaned close to the forcefield. "She's dreaming. I sense
some very turbulent emoнtions ... do you have a case history on her? I'd like
to read it before we talk."
"NoЧand I'm sure the Archo City Hospital doesn't have one, either. They've
been overнwhelmed by the thousands of plague victims. They didn't even bother
sending paperwork up with herЧwe don't even know her name."
Deanna sighed, but nodded. "All right. I want to be here when she
wakes up, though. She's going to need counseling to deal with her trauma.
Promise you'll call me?"
"Of course." That was the least they could do for their
patient. Mental as well as physical healthЧa doctor had to worry about both.
Deanna gazed silently at the woman. "Is that forcefield still
necessary?" she asked.
"For now. It's a standard safety
procedure." And I promised Dr. TangЧhe insisted the virus leaped
through biofilters. But when there isn't a virus present, it can't leap through
anything, can it? She
gave a mental snort. All those lies ...
7 wonder how he sleeps at night. First things first. Once the plague is
under control, I'll make sure charges are pressed against him . . . if not on
Archaria III, then on a Federation world in a Federation court.
The Federation took charges of genocide very seriously.
PART 2:
The Plague Escapes
Interlude
sunset over archo city dazzled the eyes with
brilliant fingers of red and pink and gold. Solomon studied the spectacular
colors as he waited impaнtiently for his ground transportation to arrive. No
pollution. No air traffic. Not a person in sight... 7 might be the last
person in this whole world, he thought.
Faint in the distance, a truck rumbled someнwhere behind him, breaking
the spell. He sighed and glanced around impatiently. Where was his car? It should
have been here by now.
I'm a grain buyer. Even in the midst of panic and chaos, they bend over
backwards to serve me. He found a certain irony in the fact that he had
pretty much destroyed the social fabric of their world. Not that it was
particularly worth saving.
"Aren't you afraid of the plague?" the elderly desk clerk had
asked him that afternoon when he came down for an early supper. He saw not
another soul in the lobby, nor were any patrons eating in the hotel restaurant.
Rats leaving a sinking ship, he thought with an inward chuckle. Only
with the planet quarantined, they have no place to go.
"The plague? Not really," Solomon told him matter-of-factly.
"I haven't had a sick day in my life, and I'm not going to start
now."
"We have begun relocating most of our off-world guests to rural
inns. We think they will be safer there, between the plague and the Purity
League unrest. If you'd like, we can have your baggage packed while you're
outЧ"
"No, thank you. I prefer to stay here."
"But the plagueЧ"
"A minor inconvenience, that's all." He gave a dismissive
gesture. "I'm sure either the Federation or your own excellent hospital
system will soon have it sorted out. Besides, I thought only mixers were
affected by it. I'm certainly not half Pelaнdian!"
"Obviously, sir. So far, only those damn mixers have caught it,
lucky for us humans."
"Oh?" / know where your sympathies lie, poor old fool. Feigning
interest, Solomon asked, "Have you heard anything else about the plague?
Like who's really responsible?"
"Not really... just a few rumors." The clerk licked his lips
and leaned forward, voice dropping to a conspiratorial whisper. "They say
the Federa-
tion is terrified that the disease is going to mutate and take us humans
next. The Peladians made it, you know, in their secret laboratories."
Solomon stared at him incredulously. "No!" It was all he could
do to keep from bursting out laughing. The Peladians! Oh, it was too
funny. The Purity League certainly moved swiftly to put its own spin on the
plague virus. Everyone wants to take credit for it but me.
"Yes, sir. It's true. That's exactly what I heard."
"Well, until I catch it myself, I'm not going to believe it. Now,
can you check on my transport? It was supposed to be here by now."
And you really don't want to see me when I'm annoyed, he added
mentally.
"At once, sir." Turning, the clerk hurried to a comm terminal
in the back office.
Solomon leaned on the counter, listening with half an ear as the clerk
yelled at some poor disнpatcher. He hadn't realized how quickly a planet's
infrastructure could collapse. Less than 5 percent of the planet is
susceptible to the virus, and everyone's acting like it's the end of the
universe.
A moment later, the clerk returned. "All the drivers called in sick
today," he reported. "When I explained how important you were, Joshua
Teague himselfЧTeague's the ownerЧpromised to send his son with a vehicle for
you. Best they have, he said. His son, Berke, is a good boy. I've known him for
years. He won't let you down."
"Thank you."
"Best of all," the clerk went on, "they're only
going to charge you the economy rental ratesЧto make up for your
inconvenience, sir."
"It doesn't matter. I'm on an expense account." The General
is paying for it, after all, Solomon thought. "I appreciate the
trouble Mr. Teague is going to on my behalf. Please make sure he bills the full
amount to my room here."
"Of course, sir!" The clerk looked overjoyed. He'll
probably take half of it for his own services, Solomon thought with
amusement. He had never been one to begrudge lowly employees their share of
graft. After all, that's what keeps the universe afloat.
"How long will it take?" he asked. "It's getting dark,
and I am in something of a hurry."
"It will be here momentarily, sir. Would you care for a
complimentary drink while you wait? If you like, I can have it brought out to
the lobby for youЧ"
"No, thank you. I think I'll wait outside."
"If you must, sir." The clerk didn't seem to like that idea,
but Solomon didn't particularly care. After all, what could possibly happen?
He strolled through the deserted lobby and out to the deserted sidewalk
and looked around the deserted square. None of the shops had opened today. But
the black marble fountains burbled happily, and small grayish birdsЧreal Earth
piнgeons, by their lookЧstrutted happily this way and that. He watched, and
studied the magnificent sunset as it colored the west with a brilliant palette.
At last a small luxury aircar settled to the ground in front of the
hotel. It was a Praxx Cruiser, a couple of years old but once the very top of
their line. Ten meters long and three meters high, its body had been elegantly
sculpted along aerodyнnamic lines. Its shiny black paint job gleamed with fresh
polish.
Not bad, Solomon decided, ambling over to inspect it. The last
aircar they'd sent him had been a twenty-year-old Junco Jett. Certainly much
better than I expected. If the Cruiser handled half as well as it looked,
he would be one happy customer.
A bearded young man opened the side doors and climbed out. He did not
look happy, though. He kept glancing around the square as though half
expecting mobs of screaming Peladians to attack at any moment.
"You must be Buck Teague." Solomon smiled cheerfully and
offered his hand. "Thanks for coming."
"It's Berke, sir." Berke shook hands, looking even unhappier. Probably
terrified he's going to catch something from me, Solomon thought with
growing amusement. Everyone deals with a plague differently.
Berke turned and pointed into the driver's comнpartment.
"Autopilot, navigator console, manual controls, computer controls.
Everything checked out this morning. Are you familiar with Praxx aircars?"
"Of course. I own several."
*" Berke nodded. "Just park it in the hotel lot when you're
done. We'll have someone pick it up toнmorrow."
"Thanks."
"No problem, sir. Thank you for using Teague Luxury Aircars, the
best on Archaria III. Enjoy your trip." It sounded like a well-rehearsed
script.
Solomon didn't waste any time. He climbed in, took the controls
manually, and lifted off. The engine purred. The computer came on-line autoнmatically
as soon as he cleared the hotel's roof.
"Destination, sir?" it asked in its richly timbered
Praxx voice.
Solomon released the controls. "Archo City Liнbrary, 5562 Vista
Place." He had stationed the first of his fifty atmospheric monitoring
stations there, on the rooftop.
"Very good, sir." The aircar banked to the left and
began to accelerate. "We will arrive in approxiнmately five
minutes."
Solomon leaned back in his soft padded chair, which began to vibrate faintly,
massaging his musнcles. Ah. Nothing like a Praxx vehicle, he thought.
"Watch for aircars following us. If anyone takes a parallel course,
inform me immediately."
"Of course, sir."
Solomon turned his head to gaze out the winнdow. Nobody had reason to
suspect him of any unlawful activities, of course, but with so few aircars out
and about tonight, he knew he might catch some unwanted attention.
To the far north, he spotted a couple of offcial-
looking troop transports flying quickly toward the spaceport. People
could be so foolish, he thought, shaking his head. In a real plague situation,
the last place you'd find him would be in a crowded public place. And
yet half the planet seemed to be at the Archo City spaceport, trying
desperately to get passage off Archaria III.
That very morning, he had watched a live broadнcast from the spaceport
terminalЧthe vid showed scenes of utter chaos, with flight counters closed,
screaming masses of humans and Peladians fightнing for space in nonexistent
lines, children shriekнing, mothers crying, fathers and brothers and cousins
all on the verge of murder. And all just to escape a plague which couldn't
possibly infect them.
Humans are crazy, he decided, and not for the first time in his life.
The Peladians didn't seem much better.
"Hundreds of mixers trying to flee the planet have been collapsing
in the spaceport terminal," the vid reporter said. "Peace
officers cart them off to a makeshift hospital as fast as they fall Too bad
they can't die at home."
The makeshift hospital turned out to be a requiнsitioned circus tent
erected on the landing pads between two parked Starships. The vid showed a
bright red-and-yellow striped tent as tall as the largest freighter, with
dragon-shaped pennants flutнtering from every peak and pinnacle. It looked
ridiculous.
"That's right, Bob. With so many
full-blooded
humans here, the peace officers have enough probнlems keeping order
without having to bother with mixer trashЧ "
Solomon shook his head. Utter stupidity! He thought. They all,
human and Peladians alike, needed to go home and wait it out. With all
off-world traffic halted by the Federation, nobody would be leaving Archaria
III anytime soon . . . not until the plague ran its course and burned itself
out, or somebody found a cure, whichever came first.
He knew a cure wouldn't be long in coming. The General had a whole
timetable set up around the plague. If events unfolded according to schedule,
the Federation would find a cure for the plague virus within three weeks of
their arrival here . . . but only after 98 percent of the planet's half-breed
population were dead.
Solomon still had no idea why the General wanted to kill off so
many innocent people. Not that it was his problem. But secretly, he half-wished
the Federation would find the cure a little faster. He might be a member of the
largest crimiнnal organization in human space, but he didn't consider himself a
murderer. And that's what this is, he thought. Cold, calculated
murder.
He coughed a bit and fought a half-second of panic. But the General
wouldn't have infected him. He's not done with me yet. Phase Two has just
begun. He still needs my reports.
The aircar circled down toward the roof of a giant building complex: the
Archo City Library. Its
roof held parking spaces for hundreds of vehicles. Now, however, it lay
completely deserted.
"This is your destination, sir," the aircar told him. It
began landing procedures, flashing bright yellow lights and sounding an
insistent beep to alert anyone who might be directly underneath them. "Will
you be staying here long, sir? If so, lean power down and recharge my energy
cells."
"No, not long." He leaned to the side and studied the hundreds
of empty parking spaces on the library's roof. It must be closed for the
emergenнcy, he thought. It was probably just as well. He didn't want anyone
to see him checking his moniнtoring stations. Though that was hardly an illegal
activity, he never liked explaining himself to strangers ... or peace officers.
His aircar landed beside the lift.
"Thank you for using Teague Luxury Aircars, the best on the planet.
Please enjoy your stay."
"I'll be back in just a second," he said. "Keep the
engines fully powered up."
"Of course, sir."
Solomon popped open the side door, hopped out, and hurried to the lift.
It looked like a small square building with double doors. The doors didn't open
for him this time as he approached, not that it matteredЧhe had no intentions
of going inside.
He went around to the back of the structure. A week ago he had installed
an atmospheric monitorнing station here. It was a small innocuous-looking
silver box about the side of a small loaf of
bread. Vents on all three exposed sides allowed air to pass through
freely.
Pulling a small tricorder from his pocket, he snapped it into a data
port on the front of the station. A red light turned green as the tricorder
downloaded all the data.
Easy enough. Tucking the tricorder back into his pocket, he jogged
back to the Praxx aircar. One down, forty-nine more to go, he thought.
He would be lucky to finish by midnight.
He didn't know what atmospheric conditions the General's scientists
needed to monitor, but then he didn't need to. As long as they get their
data and I get my pay, we'll all be happy.
As he slid back into the pilot's seat, the computer said, "Thank
you for using Teague Luxury Aircars, the best on Archaria III!"
Solomon rolled his eyes. Forty-nine more moniнtoring stations . . .
that message is going to get very annoying, he thought.
"What is your next destination, sir?"
"225 Altair Place,
Convent Gardens." He had a monitoring station set up amid the tangle of
purple rosebushes along the Rose Walk.
*
Chapter Eleven
dusk palls below. The magic hour is here.
In his cabin, Commander Riker stroked his long black beard and stared at
himself in the mirror. He had never worn a beard before, and he had to admit he
rather liked the effect. The follicle stimuнlator had given him a bushy growth
in the style on a native Archarian. When he shrugged on a loose-fitting brown
shirt and laced it up the front, then brown pants and soft brown boots, he
barely recogнnized himself.
"Well, let's get going," he told himself.
He strode to the door and out into the corridor. Several crewmen did a
double-take. Grinning, he nodded to them and said, "Carry on!"
"Sir." Data's voice came from behind, and Riker
paused long enough for the android to catch up. Data too wore loose
brown clothing and sported a thick brown beard. Flesh-colored makeup hid the
metallic gold of his face and hands; only his slitted yellow eyes still marked
him as other than human.
"Your eyesЧ"
"I have inserts to change their color and appearнance, sir.
However, since they impair my vision by 1.0037 percent, I have elected not to
wear them until we actually beam down to the planet."
Riker nodded. "Other than that, you look good, Data. Truly human .
. . and ready to rebel."
"Thank you, sir. You also look substantially different."
"I'll take that as a compliment."
"That is how I intended it, sir."
They reached the turbolift, which hissed open promptly. Deanna Troi
stood inside. She stared at them, then broke out in giggles. That better not
be the reaction we get on the planet, Riker thought. He stepped inside,
folded his arms and gave her a long stare. Oddly, her giggles grew louder, but
at least this time she tried to stifle them a bit.
"Transporter Room Three," he said.
"BillЧ" Deanna gasped. "You should see yourнself!"
"I rather liked the effect." He stroked his beard and struck a
new and even more heroic pose, one arm curled up and back with the first against
his forehead. "I am a true planetary pioneer!"
"Sir," said Data, "very few human space pio-
neers actually wore beards. A comprehensive analнysis starting with John
Glenn in the mid-twentieth century showsЧ"
"Uh, that's not really what I meant, Data," said Riker.
"I'll leave you two to sort it out," Deanna said as the
turbolift came to a stop. The doors shushed open and she stepped into the
corridor, probably heading toward sickbay, Riker thought. She added over her
shoulder, "Don't get too carried away, Bill."
"Thanks, DeannaЧI think!" Riker called after her.
"May I ask you a question, sir?" Data said as the turbolift
resumed its ascent.
"Certainly."
"Why does Counselor Troi call you 'Bill' when the rest of your
fellow officers call you 'Will'?"
"I've known Deanna quite a bit longer than anyone else aboard. I
used to go by Bill at the AcademyЧbut then I dated a woman named Bili Seller,
so we mutually decided I'd use Will." That conjured up images of her in
his mindЧtall and slender Bili, with her sea-green eyes, full pouting lips, and
high cheekbones. He sighed and wonнdered what had happened to her.
He found Data staring inquiringly at him, so he cleared his throat and
added, "Bill Riker and Bili Beller doesn't have the proper sound for a
couple, so I went by Will. After we went our separate ways, I decided I liked
Will better."
"The difference between two consonants seems inconsequential.
Surely the measure of a man is determined by his actions, not his
designation."
"YesЧand no. In some situations, the right name can make all
the difference."
"And Will Riker is preferable to Bill Riker?"
"Or Billy-the-Kid Riker, a nickname I was also unfortunate enough
to get stuck with at the Acadeнmy. So I had another reason to change it besides
my girlfriend Bili."
Slowly Data nodded. "I believe I do see, sir. It is the difference
between a shark and spark. Or a joke and a poke. Or a rose and a nose.
OrЧ"
"Yes, exactly, Data."
"Is there a reason why you have not yet told Counselor Troi your
new preference?"
"I, ah, haven't had a chance." How do you tactfully explain
the awkwardness of working with an old lover to an android?
They reached the transporter room. As the doors slid open, Riker was
pleased to find Lieutenant Yar already present. She, too, wore brown pants and
shirt, but with a hooded cape slung almost casually across her shoulders. And
like him, she had used a follicle stimulator; her suddenly long blond hair had
been pulled back into a severe bun that accenнtuated the sharp lines of her
jaw, cheekbones, and nose. She also wore no makeup . . . plain as a
churchmouse, wasn't that the old saying? It fit this throwback racist zealot
planet.
Yar turned to face him with a noticeable stiffenнing of her spine. A
month on board together and she
hasn't relaxed once in my presence, Riker thought. He had never seen
anyone wound up so tight. With the probable exception of Data. And with him
it really is clockwork that's wound so tight.
"Sir," Yar said. "I have your weapon. And Data's."
She held out her left hand, revealing two small, gray, egg-shaped phasers of a
design fit for civilians.
Riker and Data each accepted one. Riker turned his over, noting all the
standard controlsЧ pushbutton trigger, safety switch, and three degree
settingsЧlow, medium, and high. They would correspond to light stun, heavy
stun, and kill, he knew. The lightly indented grips felt slightly differнent
from standard Federation issue, as he wrapped his fingers around them ... oddly
soft and yieldнing, but still comfortable. He knew he could use the weapon with
no difficulty.
The first rule of any away missionЧdrummed into every student at
Starfleet Academy from day oneЧwas to check your equipment personally. The
phaser control had been set on light stun. When he tried to thumb it over to a
higher setting, the switch jumped back. He thumbed it again with the same
result.
"It's defective, Lieutenant," he said, offering it to her.
"No, sir," she said. "It's not unusual for civilians to
bear arms on Archaria III, but local laws stipuнlate that any setting higher
than 'light stun' must be permanently disabled on any weapon in civilian
hands."
Riker nodded. "Have you selected a beamdown site?"
"Yes, sir. It's a small alley near Archo City Hospital. Civilian
news broadcasts show an anti-mixer rally taking place there. It should start
with speeches, chants, and the consumption of a lot of free alcoholic
beverages. After that, it's anyone's guessЧprevious rallies have ended in
everything from riots to lynch mobs chasing down mixers. Of course, a few have
also ended peacefully." She grinned and he saw a little bit of a
mischievous gleam in her eye. It was good to see her loosen up. "But
that's not very likely tonight, from what I hear. Father Veritas wants Archo
City Hospital destroyed, so I think we can pretty much count on some
action."
Riker gave a nod. "Let's get moving," he said. He led the way
onto the transporter platform, and Data and Yar took their positions to either
side.
"Just a second, sir." Yar pulled up her hood and fastened a
small silver chain under her chin. With her face suddenly hidden in shadow,
only the faint glint of her icy blue eyes seemed alive. "It's tradiнtional
for Archarian woman to wear hoods in public," she said as if in reply to
his scrutiny.
Data bent at the waist and pressed something to his face. When he rose,
eyes as blue as Tasha Yar's met Riker's own. Riker blinked in sudden amazeнment.
He would never have been able to pick Data out of a crowd of strangers. Not a
single trace of the android's usual appearance remained.
"You would fool even your own mother, Data,"
he said in surprise. He gave a nod to Ensign Norman.
"Energize!"
"Actually, sir," Data began, "I have no mother.
Nevertheless, I view Dr. SooЧ"
The transporter room shimmered, disappeared, and suddenly Riker found
himself standing in a dark alley. The stench of decaying vegetation, raw
sewage, old smoke, and several other even less savory smells hit him like a
blow. Gagging, he steadied himself against a red-brick wall. Slowly his eyes
grew accustomed to the dimness.
What little light spilled in from the streetlights in the street at the
other end of the alley revealed nothing, more than the vague outlines of abanнdoned
crates and garbage bins around him. Every now and then humans passed the
alley's mouth without so much as a glance in their direction, their silhouettes
giving little clue about who they were and what they were up to. Probably
too busy hurrying away from the alley's stench, Riker thought wryly.
"Yar, take point," he said.
"On it, sir." She glided up the alley as furtively as a
shadow. If she hadn't been silhouetted against the light, he never would have
seen her.
Riker started after her, but slipped on something slick and skated
forward, off balance. Strong hands seized his shoulders and steadied him.
It was Data. "Careful, sir," the android said. "The
ground offers little traction here."
"Thanks, Data."
"Actually, sir, given your thoughts on the matter,
I have been reconsidering my name. It conveys a sense of information
rather than purpose. It is also not a name commonly associated with Archarнians."
"Or humans."
"Precisely. Which is why I thought taking the name Bret might be a
better choiceЧat least for the duration of this mission."
"Bret?" Riker shook his head a little. "How did you pick
that oneЧno, never mind. I'm sure it's a well-researched and thought-out
selection."
Data tilted his head slightly. "Thank you, sir."
"And you had better call me Will from now on, too. First names for
everyone, like we're old friends out for fun at the Purity League rally."
"AcknowledgedЧWill."
Tasha Yar had reached the mouth of the alley. She paused and looked
back, motioning them forward. Riker hurried to join her, with Data at his
heels.
"Sir," she said softly, "there are peace officers posted
at the both intersections to our left and right. I don't think we can get out
without being seen."
Riker peeked out and spotted the two uniformed officers. Both stood
beneath spotlights, looking conspicuous. Probably what they want... an obviнous
authority presence to deter rioters and looters. The planet wasn't under
martial law yet, but the government had to be getting close to station peace
officers so blatantly.
Yar went on, "There is still some pedestrian
trafficЧI spotted a couple of people who looked like they might be
factory workers hurrying home. The peace officers didn't even glance at
them."
Riker said, "I don't think we'll have any trouble getting past them
as long as we act like we belong here. Follow my lead. We'll bluff it
through."
He took a deep breath and stepped out into the street with a little bit
of a swagger, like he owned Archo City. With his beard and native garb, he knew
he more than looked the part. To any casual observer, he was an
Archarian.
Without hesitation Data and Yar joined him and matched his pace. Just
three friends out for an evening's fun at the Purity League rally, Riker
thought as they headed up the broad sidewalk. We belong here. No need to
question us.
Yar said, "If my directions are correct, we need to turn right at
the next intersection. Archo City Hospital is only a few blocks away."
"Excellent," Riker said. More loudly, he went on, "I
think our harvest will be up ten percent this quarter."
"What harvest, Will?" Data said, sounding beнwildered.
"Act like you belong here, Data!" Yar whispered fiercely at
him. "Talk about farm stuff as we walk past the peace officers! Something
innocuous!"
Data nodded woodenly, and suddenly he plasнtered a fake grin across his
face. "Very well, Tasha," he said. "Since we are up to nothing
more than business as usual, this Х seems like the perfect opportunity for me
to practice humorous banter."
"Lucky for us it's dark!" Riker muttered half to himself. Data
stood out like a Cardassian in Starнfleet Headquarters when he tried too hard
to be human.
"Will?" Data paused a millisecond, then went on, "So the
farmer's daughter said to the traveling salesmanЧ"
"Sorry, Bret, I've heard that one," Riker said.
"Bret?" Yar asked. "Did I miss something, sir?"
Riker sighed. "Long story, Tasha. In the alley, Bret here persuaded
me that we should only use first names for the duration of the mission. Bret
blends in better than Data. Proceed with your banter, Bret."
"Thank you, Will." Data paused a millisecond. "How about
the oneЧ"
"Heard it," Tasha said flatly.
Data frowned. "But how can you say you have heard it if I have not
yet had a chance to relate the humorous part of the story?"
"I'll explain later," Riker told him.
They neared the intersection. Like all the other men on this planet, the
peace officer waiting there wore his beard at chest length. He straightened a
bit, looked them up and down, then started toward them at an amble.
Riker felt a jolt of panic and tried not
to show it. He's suspicious. What have we done wrong?
His thoughts raced through the possibilities, and he studied his team
from the corner of his eyes, but both Data and Tasha Yar looked the part of
natives.
Feigning indifference, they kept strolling toward the corner. To all
appearances they were three Archarians out for a walk. So why is he
heading our way?
"Hey!" the peace officer called. "Hold up there. Wait a
second!"
Riker stopped and turned reluctantly to face him. The man wore a black
one-piece uniform with bulging pockets at the hips, thighs, and chest. In one
hand he carried an old-fashioned billy club; clipped to his belt were a phaser,
an old-fashioned communicator, and several other objects which Riker could not
readily identify.
"Yes, officer?" Riker called. He felt a rush of adrenaline. Fight
or flight, he thought, but he shoved those instincts to the back of his
mind. They hadn't done anything wrong; they had no reason to be concerned.
"Do you want me to stun him, sirЧWill?" Yar subvocalized.
Casually she eased one hand toward her concealed phaser. "If we can get
him into the alley before the other officer noticesЧ"
"Let's see what he wants first," Riker replied. "Maybe we
can talk our way through it. Volunteer no information."
"Yes, sir. Will."
Reaching them, the peace officer drew to a halt and said, "Father
Veritas be with you, friends."
Was he a member of the Purity League? Or an overly diligent officer
trying to trap them into a confession? Better to play it cautiously, Riker
thought. Father Veritas hasn't done anything illegal here. At least,
not that we know of. There's no reason not to respond in kind.
"And with you," Riker said. "Are you a member?"
"Of course I belong. Don't let the uniform fool you." He stuck
out his hand. "Kirk Jordan."
"Will Riker." They shook briefly. Riker turned to Yar and Data.
"These are a couple of my friendsЧBret and Tasha."
Jordan gave them both nods. "Going to the rally?" he asked.
"Yes. We got a little held up."
"They've already started." Jordan seemed to be accepting their
story at face value, Riker thought. The peace officer went on, "You're a
bit turned about. Archo City Hospital's that way." He pointed to the
right.
"Really?" Pointedly Riker glanced the way they had been headed
and feigned surprise. "But I thoughtЧ"
"Nope." Jordan turned and pointed to the corнner. "Turn
right and then head straight. You can't miss it. And if you do get lost, just
ask one of us. Peace officers are here to help, after all!"
Riker forced a grin. "Thanks!" he said. No wonder the
planetary government can't get a handle on their Purity League problem, he
thought. The peace officers are part of it.
Jordan grinned back. "Have fun. I only wish I could join you, but I
pulled crowd control tonight."
"That's a shame," Tasha said. "I heard Father Veritas
might actually speak tonight."
"Don't count on it. That's what the rumors always say before a big
rally, but nobody 7 know has ever laid eyes on the Father." With a quick
wave, he jogged back to his post. "Have fun!" he shouted over his
shoulder. "Death to mixers! Huнmans first and always!"
"Humans first!" Riker echoed. If this was the sort of
reception the Purity League gave newcomнers, it looked more and more like they
would have no trouble fitting in. He turned back to Yar and Data. "Let's
go!"
Chapter Twelve
this time, it was
Dr. Tang who called her.
He must be starting to panic, Dr. Crusher thought. I'm getting
close to a cure, and now he's running scared. He knows he's going to be
exposed.
This time, though, she kept him waiting on
the comm channel long enough to call Deanna Troi into the room, too. When she
slid behind her desk and faced Tang, Deanna stood beside her, watching and
evaluating.
"What can I do for you, Doctor?"
she asked, using her best poker face. One hundred percent virus-free! she
thought. Every test on her patient checked out perfectly. We have a cure.
And now we're going to catch you in your lies.
"I had hoped to get a status update
on the patient you sent through the biofilters."
"Well, I have good news. Our patient
is cured."
He raised his eyebrows. "Completely?
Are you sure?"
"It's been four hours since we beamed
her through our modified biofilters, and we have run every test ever devised on
her. She passed them all with flying colors. The virus is gone. She's
well."
Tang nodded. "That is what I feared.
I knew it would appear successful. However, it's too soon to judge."
"Doctor," she said, "this
is getting silly. The virus is gone. The symptoms have disappeared. If
she weren't still sedated, our patient would be up and dancing a jig. I don't
know how much healthier she needs to be to prove she's cured."
Tang folded his arms stubbornly. "We
had the same initial success with our own experiments with biofilters.
Unfortunately, the disease always reнturned within twenty-four hours ... it
returnedЧ and it was nastier than ever."
"It must have been reinfection."
"We thought so at first... but it
happened even in clean rooms set up with level-1 containment fields. The same
containment fields you are using."
"That's not possible. There is no way
for anyнthing as big as that virus to get through a containнment field."
"Nevertheless," Tang insisted,
"you must moniнtor the patient for at least two days before making any
such rash claims of a cure. We don't want to raise false hopes. Check my
reports. I documented everything that happened in my biofilter experi-
ments in excruciating detail. No, Doctor." Tang shook his head
firmly. "As much as I want to believe in your cure, based on my significantly
greater experience with the disease you must mainнtain that quarantine for
at least forty-eight more hours. If the disease does not returned within that
period, I will be the first one to celebrate."
That did it. Dr. Crusher felt her professional resolve melt in a white
hot fury.
"Listen to me!" she snapped. "I don't know what kind of
game you're trying to pull, Tang, but I'm sick of it!"
He blinked in surprise. "What theЧ"
"I know you're behind the virus," she said. "You designed
it for your Purity League friends, didn't you? That's why you're trying to
block everyone else's research. Well, it's not going to work! It's just Rhulian
flu with a few extra kinksЧand not only have we cured our patient, we're
going to have a vaccine within the day!"
"You're mad!" he said, staring at her with a horrified
expression. "HowЧhow can you even think that of me?"
"Then you deny it?"
"YesЧyes, absolutely!" He was almost speechнless.
Dr. Crusher glanced up at Deanna Troi, who hesitated. She's not sure.
I have to push him further.
"Knock it off, Tang," she said coldly. "Do yourнself a
favor and confess. If you turn over your research notes and the cure, maybe the
courts will go easier on you."
"Doctor," he said urgently. "You are wrong. Everything
in my notes is the truth. I would kill myself before taking another
human life!"
"He's telling the truth," Deanna said suddenly.
"What?" Dr. Crusher took a deep breath. She felt as if her
legs had just been kicked out from under her. She would have staked her job on
Tang's guilt.
The sounds of a muffled explosion carried over the connection, and the
room behind Dr. Tang seemed to shake. Dust sifted down from the ceiling and
Tang steadied himself against the comm unit.
"What's going on down there, Doctor?" Deanna demanded.
"Are you under attack? Do you need assistance?"
"The hospital has been under periodic attack for almost two weeks
now. Every few hours someone lobs a grenade at our front door. We have forceнfields
up. Nobody can get inside if we don't want them to."
"That's horrible!"
"The Purity League wants my hospital burned, to 'purify' the
diseased mixers inside. I get dozens of death threats every dayЧI don't dare
leave the hospital anymore. Does that sound like the life of someone working for
the Purity League?"
"No," Dr. Crusher said. She looked at Deanna Troi again.
"Yes, I really am sure," Deanna said in answer to her unasked
question. "He is on the verge of a nervous breakdown. He is under
incredible stress.
And he is innocent of everything you accused him of."
Tang was staring at her. "Who are you?" he demanded.
"I am the ship's counselor," she said. "Deanna Troi. I am
pleased to meet you, sir."
"You're BetazoidЧ"
"Half Betazoid."
He swallowed. "Then you're going to be suscepнtible to the
virus."
"I am . . . prepared to face that possibility."
"Ah." He blinked at them. "Ah, yes, I think I understand
now. You two confronted me deliberнatelyЧyou had to raise the possibility of my
inнvolvement with the Purity League to gauge my reaction, just in case I was
involved."
"That's right," Dr. Crusher said. I really put my foot in
my mouth this time, she thought with embarrassment. At least I've got an
out he can accept. "PleaseЧallow me to extend my apologiesЧ"
"It is not necessary, I assure you. If I had been guilty,
I'm sure I would have confessed!"
Dr. Crusher relaxed. At least he isn't going to hold it against me, she
thought. She said, "About those attacksЧare your patients safe?"
"Fortunately our security measures are more than capable, and the
governor has troops posted at all entrances, so the truly needy can always get
inside." He said it so matter-of-factly Dr. Crusher could scarcely believe
itЧTang accepted a state of siege as the status quo.
"Do you need any assistance at all?" Deanna said.
"I'm sure Captain Picard would beam down security forces to protect a
hospitalЧ"
"Not necessary. Our peace officers will suffice. And I do not wish
to expose any of your crew to the dangers of infection. Now, if you'll excuse
me, Doctor and Counselor, I have to work on finding a real cure."
How swiftly he took control of the conversation again and put her work
down, Dr. Crusher thought. She found her teeth grinding in frustration, as Dr.
Tang severed the link.
Incompetent, arrogant fool! she thought. I have a patient
cured here, and he won't even admit it!
Deanna patted her shoulder. "If it helps, he really does think
he's right. You might want to follow his advice about that womanЧjust in
case."
Chapter Thirteen
jean-luc picard arrived at the transporter room
just in time to see Captain Jules van Osterlich and two of his senior staff
beam aboard. Jules had changed little in the three years since they had last
seen each other . . . hair a little thinner, paunch a little bigger, but
otherwise the same old friend from their days together at the Academy.
"Jules!" Picard said, stepping forward with a grin.
"Jean-Luc! You old spacedog!" Van Osterlich had been calling
him that for the last thirty years.
They clasped arms and pounded each other on the back. It felt good to
see Jules again, Picard thought. Command was often a lonely position, and he
had learned to cherish his old friends all the more because of it.
"I'd like you to meet my senior officers," van Osterlich said.
"This is Solack, my first officerЧ" Solack was a reed-thin Vulcan of
perhaps eighty years ... for a Vulcan, still in the prime of life. Solack
inclined his head slightly in greeting. "Чand Dr. Benjamin Spencer. Benny
is my chief medical officer."
"Solack, Doctor." Picard gave them both polite nods. "I
would like to give you a quick tour of our sickbay first, so Dr. Crusher can
bring you up to date on her research."
"I would appreciate that, Captain," Dr. Spencer said.
Picard led the way out to the turbolift, trying to make polite small
talk along the way. And yet he sensed something bothering his old friend. Jules
seemed . . . distracted somehow. Not his usual self.
As they reached sickbay and the door whooshed open, Solack and Dr.
Spencer went in first. Picard hooked his old friend's arm and held him back.
"What's bothering you?" he asked.
He licked his lips. "Jean-Luc . . . this whole setнup stinks. I
know the plague is man-made. Benny and your Dr. Crusher have been comparing
notes since we reached orbit, and I've seen the message written on it. I have a
theory."
Picard folded his arms. "Let's hear it." Jules had an almost
uncanny knack for putting his finger on the heart of any problem.
"I don't know who created the plague, but I'll
wager it wasn't done here or to the Purity League's order."
"Why not? Dr. Crusher suspects one of the staff at Archo City
Hospital, a virologist named Tang. She's quite adamant about his guilt. He has
been trying to hinder her research."
"I know. And she's wrong."
A pair of crewmen passed them, and Picard gave them a nod. Only when
they were out of earshot did he turn back to his friend.
"Explain."
"I've known Ian Tang almost as long as I've known you. He's a good
man, and he's 100 percent dedicated to his work... to healing. He would never
be a party to mass murder!"
Picard frowned. "If so ... then who is responнsible?"
"I don't know yet. But I have a feeling sooner or later he'll tip
his hand. You don't play games on a planetary scale unless something larger is
at stake."
Picard nodded. "I agree. But until our culprit does reveal himself,
we must proceed as though the virus is our sole concern. Let's see what
progress Dr. Crusher has made."
They are still drinking, Worf thought with growнing
apprehension. From ahead came a new bout of boisterous Klingon songЧa popular
old drinking tune with a rousing chorus:
Comrades in death, in death we live! Drink up my brothers, tomorrow we
give!
Death to the humans! Death to our foe! Death to the Romulans! Strike a
deadly blow!
He knew it well. Legions of Klingon warriors had sung that song for more
than a hundred years, drinking to victory in their wars with Earth and Romulus.
On "blow" they would drain their tanнkards of blood wine, then slam
them down.
From the way they slurred their words, Worf knew the celebration had
been going on a long time ... a very long time indeed. And there was nothing
more dangerous than a drunken Klingon.
He paused and looked back at his three young ensigns. Knowing the dangers,
he couldn't let them face these Klingons. They were too inexperienced. Look at
how Wrenn had handled a few corpses.
"Stay back," he said. "I must face these Klingons
alone."
"Alone, sir? But, Sir ... " Clarke began.
Worf glared. "These are Klingons!" he said. "They are
singing songs about killing humans and Romulans. Do not question my orders
again."
"Yes sir. I mean, no sir," Clarke blushed.
Worf stopped listening.
Taking a deep breath, he turned and strode up to the open hatch, stuck
his head inside, and saw all ten Klingons in various stages of drunkenness.
They were lounging on chairs, benches, and the floor holding tankards aloft,
singing at the top of their lungs. A large keg of blood wine sat before them .
. . and it was more than half gone.
The singing trailed off as they began to notice him. Several fumbled for
mek'leths. OneЧtheir leader?Чstaggered to his feet.
"Put down your weapons," Worf said in Klingon.
"YouЧyou are Klingon!" their leader said, his words slurring.
Worf glared. "And you are a disgrace to our people!"
"I am Krot of the House of Mok! No one insults me!"
Worf took three quick steps forward and backнhanded Krot across the
face. The Klingon crashed back into a weather-monitoring station. The equipнment
sparked and died.
"I am Worf, son of Mogh!" he roared through his helmet,
"and I serve aboard the Starfleet vessel Enterprise! You have
violated Federation law. You have killed humans here. What do you have to say
for yourselves?"
Krot staggered to his feet, grinning. "Worf? I have never heard of
you .. . and a Klingon serving aboard a Federation ship? I spit on you
and your house, you simpering would-be human!"
Worf backhanded him again, but this time Krot was ready. Shrugging off
the blow, he punched Worf in the head with the full strength of a Klingon
warrior.
Worf staggered. His faceplate had cracked a dozen ways, he saw. As he
shook off the blow, Krot reached forward, snagged his helmet, and pulled.
The helmet came off with a tearing sound. The seals hadn't heldЧnot that
it really mattered after the faceplate had shattered.
Roaring in rage, Worf tried a head-butt. He caught Krot by surprise, and
the Klingon leader reeled back, this time laughing like a demon. A thin line of
blood ran from a cut over his left eye. Worf glared his rage.
"Join us, Worf!" Krot shouted. "Maybe you are a real
Klingon!" He picked up a tankard, dipped it into the keg of blood wine,
and held it out. "Drink up! Sing the old songs! Let us know what kind of
warrior you are!"
What have I done? Worf thought. He had exнposed himself to the plague
virus. I cannot return to the Enterprise.
He swallowed. Somehow, the thought did not alarm him. Perhaps that is
what I wanted, he thought. To see my own kind. At least for a day or
two, until Dr. Crusher finds her cure.
He accepted the tankard from Krot and raised it high in the air.
"To the Emperor!" he cried.
"To the Emperor!" the others roared. They chanted as
he raised the tankard to his lips. He drained it in a few deep gulps, and when
he slammed it down and wiped his mouth with the back of his arm, they cheered.
Chapter Fourteen
As captain picard entered
sickbay, he paused in surprise. He had never seen it this busy before.
Strange new equipment beeped or hummed on every workbench. Doctors, nurses, and
scientists hustled around one another, carrying data padds, tricorders, and
other devices. The bustle reminded him more of the training hospital at
Starfleet Academy, with its dozen-interns-to-one-patient raнtio. Dr. Crusher
clearly had everyone working double or triple shifts. Every doctor, every
nurse, and as far as he could tell every biologist aboard had been co-opted
into the research.
And their case at hand ... he took a moment to study the woman lying on
the biobed in the middle of the room, the eye of the storm. A forcefield
shimmered faintly around her. She had curiously
smooth features and a slightly elongated skull, with wide dark eyes and
pale skin. A flood of black hair spilled around her head. Despite being deathly
ill, she had the sort of ethereal beauty of which poets speak.
"Doctor Crusher!" he called when he spotted Beverly on the far
side of sickbay, examining microcellular readouts on the wall scanner. The
machine bleeped as she entered new data. "May we see you for a
minute."
She turned and noticed him. "Captain! And this must be Captain van
Osterlich."
"That's right. I believe you already know Dr. Spencer, and this is
Mr. Solack, the Constitution's first officer. Gentlemen, may I present
my chief medical officer, Dr. Beverly Crusher."
"I'm pleased to meet you." She turned toward the unconscious
woman on the biobed. "We were just about to wake our test subject. She
went through our transporter and a series of modified biofilters about five
hours ago. We have been moniнtoring her condition, and I'm glad to report
things look promising. The virus appears to be gone from her system."
"Do I hear a 'but'?" Picard asked.
"I'm afraid so. On Dr. Tang's advice, I am going to keep the
containment field up and monitor her condition for another day or two to make absoнlutely
sure."
Deanna Troi joined them,1 and once more Picard made the round
of introductions.
"Have you told them yet?" Deanna asked Dr. Crusher.
"Told us what?" Picard demanded.
"Dr. Tang is innocent," Dr. Crusher said with a sigh. "I
confronted him with Deanna present to monitor his reactions, and I'm afraid he
passed. He isn't responsible for the disease."
Picard shot a glance at van Osterlich, who reнturned an I-told-you-so
shrug.
"Go on," Picard told her. "You still don't look happy.
Now that you know you can trust his data, I would think you would find him a
valuable reнsource."
"That's the problemЧhis data are crazy! He insists the virus leaps
level-one containment fields. And we all know that's impossible."
"Is it?" van Osterlich said. He glanced at his own chief
medical officer. "Benny?"
"I'm afraid it sounds crazy to me, too. The containment field keeps
out particulate matter. Its field's screen is set so fine that oxygen gets
through but nothing elseЧno dust, no bacteria, no viri. Dr. Crusher has
isolated the plague virus, and it's clearly a simple variation of Rhulian flu.
It's simply too large to get through any containment fieldЧ you can't
alter the laws of physics just because they're inconvenient!"
Dr. Crusher said, "Let me show you our paнtient." She led the
way toward the biobed. "This is Jenni Dricks. She is one-quarter Peladian.
We beamed her through that modified transporter field
I mentionedЧusing two sets of biofiltersЧand to all appearances it
worked perfectly. Not a trace of the plague virus remains in her body. But
that's only half the problem."
"Why?" Picard asked.
"We eliminated the virus from her body, but she's still going to be
susceptible to it once she beams back down to the planet."
Solack raised one eyebrow. "She cannot go home."
"Not until a real cure is found. Nor can anyone leave the planet
who might be carrying the virus. We haven't found a cure so much as ... a
delaying tactic. Of course, we can beam people up and pass them through
biofilters, such as our away team, but with a planet as large as this one with
a population in the millions, it's a task that will take years. And we still
won't have eliminated the virus in the wild."
"But surely it's a good start," Picard said. As long as they
could contain the disease, that would buy its victims time until a real cure
could be found and they could return to their old lives.
Dr. Crusher shook her head. "Unfortunately, it's going to be a drop
in the bucket, so to speak. There isn't room on the Enterprise to rescue
more than a fraction of the plague victims. The latest estiнmatesЧand that's
all Dr. Tang can give me at this pointЧindicate roughly thirty-five thousand
people have died of the disease. Another twenty thousand are infected. It
would take weeks to beam
them all through our biofilters using both ships and working around the
clock. And we don't have enough room here to house a tenth of that
number, even if we use the shuttlebays and cargo holds."
"I see your point," Picard said. The situation truly was
disastrous, he thought. "But at least we have some good newsЧwith the
biofilters working, we can come and go as necessary."
"But everyone who leaves the planet will still have to go through a
quarantine period," Dr. Crusher said. "Just to make sure. Dr. Tang's
data may be crazy, but I don't want to take any chances."
"Agreed." He turned to van Osterlich. "Are you ready for
dinner? I have some other ideas I wish to discuss with you. And that Saurian
brandy I promнised!"
"Of course," van Osterlich said with a grin. "Lead the way,
Jean-Luc!"
"If you don't mind," Dr. Spencer said, "I would prefer to
remain here and work on the virus."
"And I should return to the Constitution," Soнlack said
in a flat voice.
"Of course," van Osterlich said.
"This way," Picard said, heading for the door.
Deanna Troi crossed to Jenni's biobed and gazed at her through the
shimmering forcefield. "You said you were going to wake her?"
"Yes, I think it's time. I no longer see any medical reason to keep
her unconscious. The worst of the plague symptoms are gone."
Deanna turned to look at the patient on the biobed again. Up close, you
could still see the ravages of the disease in the woman, Deanna thought. Small
white scars covered her face and hands, but those would undoubtedly fade away
in time. For someone who had been at death's door less than twelve hours ago,
the change in her appearance could only be described as miraculous.
She reached out with her mind, feeling the turbulent emotions of a
dreaming mind ... a mix of fear and dread and horror. Nightmares, she
realized.
"What can you tell me about her?"
"According to her file, Jenni is a quarter Peladiнan. Her husband
was half-human, half-Peladian, and they had three children. Due to their
genetic human-Peladian mix, all five proved highly suscepнtible to the
plague."
"You're using the past tense. Is there something I should
know?"
Dr. Crusher shrugged helplessly. "I don't know. I haven't been able
to find out if the rest of her family is still alive. It's highly unlikely,
since she was apparently the last of them to fall ill, and death counts are
still rising rapidly all over the planet."
Deanna regarded the woman on the biobed. "Go ahead," she said.
"I'll do what must be done."
Since Dr. Crusher could not reach through the containment field, she had
the computer adminisнter the stimulant directly through the biobed. In a few
seconds, Jenni took a deep breath, opened her eyes, sat upЧand screamed.
"It's all right," Deanna said soothingly. She felt the terror
surging through their patient.
"Where am I?"
"You're on board the Starship Enterprise. You were fortunate
enough to be a test subjectЧwe are trying to cure the plague. And we think it
worked on you."
"ThenЧI'm well?" She looked from face to face.
"That's right," Deanna said. "This is Dr. Crushнer. She's
the one who cured you."
"Hi, Jenni." Dr. Crusher smiled. "How do you feel?"
"TerribleЧbut much better!"
"Good."
"Jenni," Dr. Crusher said, "I'd like you to meet a
friend. This is Deanna Troi, the ship's counselor. Deanna, this is Jenni
Dricks."
"What about my childrenЧmy husbandЧ" she asked.
"We don't know what happened to them," Deanнna said. "The
hospital record system has comнpletely broken down."
"You have to find themЧcure them, tooЧ"
"We're working on it as fast as we can," Dr. Crusher said.
"We hope to have a vaccine someнtime tomorrow."
Jenni gave a sigh and sank back down, "They're dead," she
said. Deanna felt despair come from her in waves.
"We don't know thatЧ"
"I know it." She stared straight at the ceiling,
and as Deanna watched, a tear rolled down her cheek, then another. Her
emotions turned dark with an almost suicidal undertone.
Deanna drew Dr. Crusher aside. "Are you sure you don't know
anything?" she asked softly.
"I tried to locate them, but I haven't been able to find their
records." Dr. Crusher shook her head. "The support system in the
hospital has completely broken down. It's impossible to get any queries
answered. I would have gotten them all beamed up here if I could have."
"I'll try to find out what happened, then. That's my job, and I
know how busy you are." Deanna never liked being the bearer of tragic
news, but sometimes it could not be helped. At least she could make a few calls
down to the hospital.
She returned to the biobed. Jenni turned and regarded her through dark,
half-closed eyes.
"I'm feeling well enough to get up," the woman said, and she
managed a wan smile. "I'm ready to return home. Can you beam me back down
to the hospital?"
"You're in no condition for that," Deanna said. "I will
try to locate your family. Dr. Crusher says we can beam them up for treatment.
You have to understand that the doctors on your planet are so overwhelmed with
treating the plague that they've stopped keeping accurate recordsЧeverything exнcept
plague research. It's not as simple as looking up their names in the computer's
database anyнmore."
She turned to Dr. Crusher again. "Beverly, can you release the
containment forcefield yet? I feel awkward standing outsideЧespecially since
Jenni is cured."
Dr. Crusher said, "I'm afraid not. We have to keep that two-day
quarantine to make sure you're really well."
Deanna dragged over a chair and sat. "I'm going to need to know the
names of your other family members. I don't know how easy it's going to be, but
I promise you thisЧI will do my best to find out where they are."
"Thank you." She sank back with a little shiver and her large
brown eyes seemed to droop. "My husband is Derek Dricks. My children are
Vera, Thomas, Jason, and David."
She just needed a little reassurance, Deanna thought. She
sensed a rising contentment within Jenni. Someone to take over the
responsibility of finding things out. Now that it's my job, she can rest.
She did not look forward to discovering the truth about Jenni's family. She
had to admit, their chances of survival were slim. Telling someone their
loved ones were gone had to be the hardest task for any ship's counselor. It
was the one part of her job she truly hated.
But I don't really know, she told herself. We delivered
the Tricillin PDF ahead of schedule. They could be holding on. There's a chance
it kept them alive.
At least a slight chance.
She glanced at Dr. Crusher. Beverly thinks they're dead. Beyond
the raw hurt coming from Jenni, she sensed Dr. Crusher's true feelings: reнgret,
remorse, sadness, and a touch of wistful nostalgia for her own lost husband.
"I'll tell you what I'll do," Deanna said sudнdenly, trying to
sound a little more cheerful. "I'll go now and see what I can find out.
With any luck, I'll have word by midnight. Is that acceptable?"
"Yes, thank you." Jenni smiled.
"Try to get some sleep," Deanna said as she stood. She felt a
faint rumble in her stomach. But I just had dinner, she thought.
"I'll take care of everything. If I have news, I promise I'll wake
you."
"You look pale," Jenni said as she sat up. Deanнna could hear
the sudden alarm in her voice. "Are" you all right? Are you all
right?"
"I should be asking you that quesЧ"
Deanna gasped soundlessly. What felt like the blade of a knife turned in
her guts. The pain, as sharp and hot as a real wound, cut through her so fast
she couldn't breathe. Unable to do more than gasp, she half doubled over,
clutching her stomach.
Dr. Crusher steadied her arm. "What is itЧ Deanna?"
And just as suddenly as it started, the pain disappeared. Taking a deep
shuddering breath, Deanna met the doctor's gaze.
"It's the plagueЧ" Jenni wailed. She had a terrified
expression on her face.
"Nonsense," Deanna said firmly. It simply wasn't possible.
"I must have pulled a muscle. I had a strenuous workout on the holodeck
just a couple of hours ago."
"Oh. For a second, I thought you had it, too!" Jenni sank back
with a nervous laugh. Her face looked as white as chalk to Deanna.
"I think I'd better take a look at you, anyway," Dr. Crusher
said. "Hop up on biobed two."
She felt another rumble in her intestines. It's probably
nothingЧsomething I ate. Maybe the repнlicators are acting up . . .
That had to be the solution.
She took a step, and suddenly sickbay wobbled and the deck seemed to
slide out from under her feet. She felt herself falling and grabbed for an
instrument tray. Clattering loudly, medical devices scattered across the floor,
and she pitched after them, coming to rest against biobed 2.
"Ah-h-h-h-h!" she heard herself cry. It sounded
like the death cry of a wounded animal.
New pains blossomed in her stomach. Molten steel burned through her
veins, seared to the lengths of her arms and legs, shot down her spine,
radiated from her bones.
The universe spun around her. The pain grew even worse. Lancets sliced
through her bones. Fires coursed through her limbs. Please, make it stop,
make it stop! She couldn't move, couldn't thinkЧ
Suddenly feet appeared in front of her eyes. Dr. Crusher rolled her onto
her back. She had a medi-
cal tricorder in hand and Deanna heard its low whir.
"DeannaЧDeannaЧcan you hear me?" Dr. Crusher demanded. She
turned Deanna's face toнward her own and skinned back her left eye, then her
right.
She tried to talk but only a raw moan of pain came out.
And then, as suddenly as a door slamming shut, the pain vanished. Deanna
lay there panting and soaked in sweat. What's wrong with me?
Her hands shook when she raised them to her face. Softly she began to
sob. She had never felt anything so horrible, so excruciatingly painful, in her
entire life.
"DeannaЧtalk to me!" Dr. Crusher pried her hands away from her
face. "Tell me what's wrong!"
Deanna forced herself to meet the doctor's gaze. What happened? She
wondered. Was it a seizure? Her teeth began to chatter. Dr. Crusher was
staring at her with a half-terrified, half-worried expression. A cold wind
swept through her body.
"S-so c-colЧc-cold!" She felt her whole body begin to shake,
and she couldn't stop no matter how hard she tried.
"Give me a hand! Get her on a biobed!" Dr. Crusher said to Dr.
Spencer.
Together they seized Deanna's limbs, lifted on the count of three, and
bustled her over to a biobed. Deanna gasped as new pains shot through her chest
and stomach. She had never felt this sick
before in her lifeЧsick and out of control. She felt her eyes rolling
back.
"Ahhhh-nahhh-hhЧ" she heard a distant voice cry. It's me, some
part of her realized. I'm starting to dissociate from my body.
That only happened in severe traumas or in cases where the pain became
too great for a patient to deal with rationally. So the mind starts to float
free, apart from the body, an observer to the terror within.
She tried to relax as the two doctors set her down on the biobed. Her
shaking grew worse. She couldn't breathe, couldn't think. Distantly, she felt
them strapping down her arms and legs. No matter how hard she tried, she
couldn't make her body cooperate. She felt helpless and panicked.
"It's the plague!" she heard Jenni wail from across the room.
"That's how it starts! I saw it in my husband and children!" She
began to weep hysterically.
Deanna tried to sit up as the pain faded again. / ought to comfort
her, some part of her realizedЧ but on second thought, she knew she was in
no condition to do much of anything. She needed someone to comfort her.
"Quiet!" Dr. Crusher barked at Jenni over her shoulder. The
first rule of triage, Deanna thought, is to treat the most critically
wounded. Hysterical but otherwise well patients get shoved to the rear of the
line.
"It can't be the plague!" Dr. Spencer said.
But it is! Deanna thought. Somehow, some way, I have it. She
knew; she had read the reports. There
I
couldn't be any mistaking these symptoms. It leaped the containment
field. Dr. Tang was rightЧ
She pressed her eyes shut as new pains welled up in her belly. And
there's no time for bedside manнners, she thought.
This time as the white-hot irons pierced her innards, she began to
scream, and nothing could make her stop.
Dr. Crusher worked frantically. It can't be the plague, she told
herself over and over, as she reconfigured the biobed for a half-Betazoid,
half-human biology. Her symptoms be damned, it's impossible. Impossible!
Our plague victim is cured. She and Deanna weren't in direct contact. No
virus moves through a containment fieldЧ
Still Deanna screamed. Then her breath came in rapid pantsЧthen suddenly
she went limp, unconнscious from the pain. Best thing for her, Dr. Crushнer
thought with dismay.
"Her fever is still climbing rapidly," Nurse An-ders said
urgently.
That was another one of the plague's first signs. But it can't be, Dr.
Crusher thought. There's no way she could possibly be infected.
"Doctor?" the nurse asked.
"Almost done . . . there!" The biobed was reнconfigured. It
began its automatic scanning proнcess. Charts began to appear: heart,
respiration, blood pressure, white blood cell count.
As Dr. Crusher studied the readouts, her mouth went dry. Viral
infection. Similar to Rhulian flu.
It can't be.
But there couldn't be any doubtЧDeanna was infected with the
plague virus. The green graph that mapped microorganism activity showed it
multiplying at a dizzying rate. From the genetic signature, it couldn't be
anything else but the plague.
But how? It was a medical impossibility.
Nothing can get through a containment field. There must be another answer.
She exchanged a quick glance with Dr. Spencer. From their startled
reaction, she knew he had reached the same conclusion.
"It's crazy. Just like Dr. Tang's report," she growled, her
fists clenched in frustration.
"Maybe not so crazy," he said. "Maybe he missed
something. Maybe we missed something."
"Back to basics. Contain and control."
"Exactly."
She glanced around sickbay. Everyone presentЧ seventeen humans, a
Vulcan, a BolianЧwas of pure genetic heritage. Good. They wouldn't have
anyone else dropping in the middle of their work.
"Staff meeting!" she called. They had all been watching; they
knew what had happened. They all gathered around in record time.
"We must contain this outbreak," she said, meetнing their
gazes one by one. "We have allЧevery one of us in this roomЧbeen exposed to
the plague virus. Chances are good we're carriers; however, it's not going to
affect us. We're going to have to work under strict quarantine restrictions
until we
can assess the damage. Anders, seal the doors. Smith, draw a blood
sample from Counselor Troi. Everyone elseЧkeep working. We need to find that
vaccine!"
Dr. Spencer touched her arm. "Our captainsЧ and Mr. Solack!"
he said with a groan.
She winced. They were loose on the shipЧand Solack had beamed back to
the Constitution. A disaster on all fronts.
"Call Solack," she told him. "Maybe it can still be
contained on your ship. I'll take care of our captains."
"A toastЧ:" Captain Picard said, raising his
goblet. He heard a strange hum and paused. Transнporter beamЧhe realized
as he saw his hand disнsolve in a shimmer of colored light.
And the next thing he knew, he stood in sickbay facing Dr. Crusher. She
had her hands on her hips. Around her, the medical staff scrambled with panнicked
expressions.
"What the hell are you doing?" he demanded.
"Sorry, Captain," she said. "Time was pressing. Deanna
has come down with the plague virus." She pointed to biobed 2.
Picard stared. Her faceЧit had broken out in what looked like
small white pustules.
"That's impossible!" Captain van Osterlich said.
"But it happened. Did you come into contact with anyone on the way
back to your cabin?"
"An ensignЧEnsign Clarke, who wanted to see me about a complaint,
and I put him off until
tomorrow morning. And I introduced Lieutenant La Forge to Captain van
Osterlich."
"And there was the VulcanЧ"
"Yes, Ensign T'Pona. And we shared a turbolift with several
peopleЧthe Praxx whose name I can't pronounce and Ensign Crane."
"Tr'grxl-gn'ta," Crusher said, naming the Praxx. "He's
letting people call him Tray now."
"That's the one." He frowned. "I believe that's
all."
Dr. Crusher shook her head. "Too many. Too damn many. We'll never
get this genie stuffed back in the bottle." She glanced at Dr. Spencer,
who was talking urgently to someone over the comm link in the corner.
"Let's hope Spencer has better luck."
Van Osterlich paled. "SolackЧ"
"Beamed back to the Constitution as soon as you left,"
Dr. Crusher finished.
He sprinted to join Dr. Spencer, and the two of them held an animated
conversation.
Picard began to pace. How many crewmen are going to prove
susceptible? How many people of mixed genetic heritage are actually serving
onboard the Enterprise?
Deanna stirred and moaned a bit. Picard trailed Dr. Crusher to her side
and watched as she adminнistered a sedative hypospray. No need for containнment
fields now, he thought. Small comfort.
"I've already given her a shot of Tricillin PDF," she said.
"That will help."
Deanna settled down and lay quietly. Rest. That's the best thing for
her right now, he thought. Let the doctors do their work. They'll find a
cure.
Picard chewed his lip, thinking through the posнsibilities. He glanced
at his friend.
"Jules?" he called.
Shaking his head, van Osterlich rejoined him. "They had a staff
meeting in my absence," he said. "It seems they were going to hold a
surprise party for one of my lieutenants. It's too late. Half the crew must
have been exposed at this point."
Picard heard sobbing. He turned and found Dr. Crusher's original
patientЧthe beautiful woman who had been asleepЧnow sitting up on her bed.
"What's wrong?" he asked her.
"It's my fault," she said. "I brought the plague
here!"
"Nonsense," he said. "That wasn't your fault. We'll lick
this thing yet."
"Hang on," Dr. Crusher said. She brought her medical tricorder
over and began to run scans on her first patient. "How are you
feeling?"
"Like I just had my stomach kicked." Her lower lip trembled.
"This is very interesting." Dr. Crusher raised her tricorder
and began a second scan. "Very interestнing indeed."
"What?" Picard asked.
"I'm picking up the virus in Jenni's blood ... it's the very first
stage of infection." She shut off the tricorder with a snap. "I don't
think you've
been infected longer than an hour. Which means you didn't infect
DeannaЧshe infected you. Her case is at least eight hours old."
"How is that possible?" Picard demanded. "You were
supposed to have a level-one containment field up around her at all
timesЧ"
"Yes, Captain, we did. We still doЧnobody bothered to take
it down."
Picard turned to look at Jenni. "It's still up ... run a full
diagnostic. It must be malfunctioning!"
"It's not. These events match what Dr. Tang told us. Somehow,
somewhere, our quarantine proceнdure failed."
Think! Picard told himself. That's the problem hereЧwe're being outwitted.
Whoever designed that virus is laughing at us. What have we missed?
This wasn't like any other virus humanity had ever encountered, despite
its resemblance to Rhuliнan flu.
Nurse Anders ran up. "Doctor," she said urнgently. "We
have two more suspected cases of the plague. They're on their way to sickbay
now. Shall we lift the quarantine on sickbay?"
Two more cases. .. that confirmed it, Picard thought. Deanna
Troi had been spreading the virus through the ship all day.
"Yes," he said. "Speed is of necessity here. Have a
site-to-site transport beam them directly here."
"Get them started on Tricillin PDF," Dr. Crushнer said.
"That's about all we can do right now."
"Yes, Doctor."
Turning, Picard studied Deanna's readouts. Her
vital signs appeared to have stabilized, at least for the moment.
"We can't look at this as a tragedy," Dr. Crusher said.
"Three more plague victims means three more test subjects ... and a better
chance of findнing a cure."
"That's the attitude," Picard said. Never mind that the plague
was loose on the Enterprise.
I I
Chapter Fifteen
peace officer jordan's directions proved unnecessaryЧyou
would have had to be blind and deaf to miss the demonstration going on, Riker
thought.
The noise reached deafening levels from three blocks away. As they
followed the chanting, shouting, screaming, and out-and-out war-whoops to their
source, they came to a broad parklike square where five streets came together.
In the center of the square, atop a small grassy knoll, blazed a huge bonfire.
Hundreds had gathered around it chanting "Veritas!. . . Veritas!. . .
Veritas!" Others screamed antimixer slogans, waved angry fists at the
hospital complex on the far side of the bonfire, or just talked, shouted, or
jeered, all at the top of their lungs. The noise
reached deafening levels. Riker began to worry about damage to their
eardrums.
Tasha touched his arm and pointed, mouthing, "The hospital!"
He nodded and began to follow her as she picked her way through the
crowds of revelers. They passed more uniformed peace officers, none of whom
looked happy. They're missing the party, Riker realized. They're all
members of the Purity League, or Purity League sympathizers . . . wolves
watching the sheep. Hopefully whatever oaths they had sworn to do their
duty will keep them in line . . . They would rather join in than keep the
peace. Not that there was much peace to keep in this bedlam.
Men and women gave him friendly nods and waves and pats on the back, and
he reciprocated. Look like you're having fun, he thought. Blend in.
We're all one big family here, united in our fear and paranoia.
Reaching the fringes of the crowd, Lieutenant Yar circled slowly to the
left. A couple of people gave her too-friendly slaps on the back and shoulнder
and rump, and he could tell it took all her restraint to keep from breaking
their arms. Here he could see open kegs of liquorЧpeople were passing cups of
it everywhere.
Yar turned and shouted something he couldn't quite make out over the
thunderous tumult around them. He shrugged helplessly and pointed to his ears.
She nodded, accepted a couple of cups
of liquor from one of the Purity Leaguers, and handed him one. Data,
too, took oneЧThat's right, Riker thought, he's capable of eating and
drinking. Practically human in every way physiнcally. Though of course Data
couldn't metabolize foodЧhe would eject it later.
Following the lead of the men around him, Riker raised one fist in the
air and began to shout. Of course, nobody could hear him. Data and Yar began to
shout, tooЧand to Riker's eye they all looked like dutiful members of the
League.
Slowly they began to work their way around toward the far side of the
bonfire, closer to Archo Hospital. Riker had a feeling, somehow, that when
violence erupted, it would be in that diнrection. He wanted them ... if not in
the middle of it, at least close enough for firsthand observaнtion.
At one point Riker turned to Data and mouthed: "How many people are
here?"
Data used his fingers to flash a quick number: 5-5-0-0. Fifty-five
hundred. Riker had estimated three or four thousand, but Data's number had
to be closer to the truth. The android could count samples and extrapolate far
better than he could.
On the far side of the bonfire they found a crude wooden platform
already set up before the enнtrance of the Archo Hospital complex. A few men
stood on the platform, shouting slogans he
couldn't hear and periodically pointing at the line of six bored-looking
peace officers who stood on the hospital's steps. The peace officers all wore
riot gear, complete with shields, masks, and billy clubs.
"I thought you said this was going to be a riot!" he said
slowly to Tasha, mouthing the words carefully so she could read his lips. It
wasn't so much a riot as a boisterous demonstration, he decided. The six peace
officers could be overнwhelmed in seconds if a crowd this size turned violent.
"Wait!" she answered. "It will get worse!" Riker
turned his attention back to the platнform. It seemed to be the center of
protest acнtivity. In front of it, several dozen men and women passed out
pamphlets, flyers, and even banner signs with antimixer slogans printed on
them:
ARCHARIA IS FOR HUMANS
WE WELCOME THE PLAGUE!
DEATH TO MIXERS
These had to be the demonstration's organizнers ... or at least a step
closer to them. Riker approached, and a girl of perhaps sixteen pressed a flyer
into his hands, smiling broadly at him. A redheaded young man with a full red
beard pressed a banner on himЧ"Better Dead Than Impure!" He motioned
for Riker to wave it.
Riker handed the sign to Data and turned back, but the girl and the
redheaded man had moved on. He started for the platform, hoping to find someнone
in charge . . . when suddenly a bell began to toll.
The clear ringing tone cut through the noise of the demonstration.
Everyone froze for a second, and between peals Riker could hear the crackle and
hiss of the giant bonfire. The whole crowd seemed to be holding its breath in
anticipation. Everyone began to turn toward the platform.
Spotlights went on, illuminating the stage in a soft, warm glow. Slowly,
carefully, an old man in white robes climbed the steps to stand before them. He
had to be seventy or eighty years old, Riker thought, and his steel-gray beard
stretched nearly to his waist. Could this be the mysterious Father Veritas?
Could this really be the secretive leader of the Purity League? Riker felt his
pulse quicken.
A whispering sound came from the multitude: "Father Veritas!"
most of them seemed to be saying.
"Friends." The old man's voice held a slight
quaver, but it still boomed across the squareЧ amplified by some hidden speaker
system, Riker assumed. "Friends, I am Brother Paul, a close friend of
Father Veritas. Tonight I bring you a message from the Father himself. He bids
me to thank you all for your support. The day of human freedom is at hand.
Death to mixers!"
"Freedom is ours!" the crowd shouted back.
So this wasn't Father Veritas, Riker thought, but one of his inner
circle, sent out to speak the gospel to the multitudes.
"Are you with the League?" Brother Paul deнmanded.
"Freedom is ours!" the crowd roared.
"Do you love your freedom?"
"Freedom is ours!" the crowd roared again.
"Will you follow the Father to pure human salvation?"
"Freedom is ours!" the crowd screamed. "Death to
mixers! Death to mixers! Death to mixers!"
Riker thought it sounded like a litanyЧ everyone around them seemed to
expect the quesнtions and know the proper response. The Purity League certainly
had draped itself in the trappings of a religion, he decided . . . complete
with Faнthers and Brothers.
"You know what must be done!" Brother Paul shouted. "Now
is the time for human freedom! Now! Now! Now!"
Cheering, the crowd rushed the hospital's front steps. The peace
officers holding the riot gearЧall smirking with ill-concealed gleeЧsimply
stepped aside for them.
Riker gaped in shock. The mob raced past the peace officers, up the
broad marble steps, between the tall black marble columns, and straight to the
hospital's front door. They began to pound on the glass doors with their fists.
"Death to mixers!" they continued to shout. "Death to
mixers! Death to mixers!"
Riker let one hand fall to his concealed phaser. If the crowd burst into
the hospital and went on a killing spree, the three of them would have no
choice but to reveal themselves and try to stop the riotersЧwithout the help of
the peace officers, if necessary. If only we had real phasers, he
thought with frustration. A single hit on light stun might render a lightly
built man unconscious for a few minutes, but burly men like so many of theseЧ
men with their adrenaline already pumped upЧ would hardly notice it.
Suddenly a forcefield crackled to life. It stretched across the whole
front facade of the hospital. . . and slowly it began to extend outнward,
pushing all the attacking men and women away from the doors and windows, then
down the steps toward the street. Riker let himself relax. It seemed the
hospital had prepared for Father Veritas and his followers after allЧand had a
safe, nonviolent solution to the problem. He couldn't have come up with a
better answer himнself.
Relieved, he turned his attention back to the platform. Several people
with old-fashioned megaнphones had taken Brother Paul's placeЧand Brother Paul
was nowhere to be seen now. Spirited off to Purity League Headquarters, no
doubt, Riker thought with dismay. If only I had a minute to talk to him.
He squinted, but the floodlit glow that had surrounded Brother Paul was
gone, making it
difficult to see. Since the men now on the platform all wore shorter
beards and plain clothes, in the semidarkness he didn't think he was seeing
them well enough to be able to identify them again.
Shouting "A pure race is a good race!" and "Mixers must
never be tolerated," they exhorted the audience to rise up and take back
their planet. But the moment had passed; Brother Paul's magic no longer worked,
at least not for these pedestrian rabble-rousers. The crowds began to disperse,
streaming off down the five convergent streets in knots of ten or twenty at a
time.
"Sir," Data said, "perhaps we should try to follow one of
the groups."
Riker nodded. He had just been thinking the same thing. He turned
slowly, looking at the crowd still around the podium.
The assembled people liked what they were hearing. Some cheered, while
others continued to chant "Veritas!" over and over.
And just as suddenly as the riot had begun, the whole demonstration
seemed to end. Men and women streamed away from the square, heading up the five
streets that led away. The people with the megaphones hopped down and fled.
"Which way, Will?" Data asked.
Riker hesitated, turning slowly. Some of the rioters had begun to smash
windows, throw stones, and try to overturn ground cars along the various
streets. The peace officers had given up their posts and joined in.
But he had a feeling these people were, if
not innocent, at least not clued in to the ringleaders, Cattle, easily
manipulated, sent to do the Purity League's dirty work.
He made his decision: "This
way." And he started up the street after the men with the megaнphones.
Chapter Sixteen
after his third
tankard of blood wine, Worf felt himself getting as plastered
as the rest of his new-found Klingon friends. His tongue kept tripping over
itself, but between bouts of song, fistfights, and bragging matches, he managed
to piece togethнer most of the details of what had brought Captain Krot and his
men to this place.
Captain Krot had realized his ship would
be caught on Archaria III as soon as the plague broke loose if he did not move
quickly. Their cargoЧ fifty thousand tons of grain, destined for the qagh farms
on Kra'togh IVЧhad already been delivнered. They just had a few repairs to make
to their warp drive.
"If we had left one day sooner,"
Krot said, "we
never would have known about the plague. Bah! Bad luck follows me."
After cunningly bribing the docking clerk in charge of their vessel,
they'd lifted off. "Your life will be spared if you delete our departure
record!" Krot had said. He burst out laughing when he tried to describe
the clerk's horrified expression when faced with a mek'leth at his throat!
Unfortunately, their emergency warp-drive reнpairs had not held up. Due
to primary warp-core failure, they had only gotten as far as orbit.
It was then that they picked up a transmission to the Enterprise. Immediately
Krot ordered a landнing on one of the moons ... and they were fortuнnate enough
to spot this old base. It already had two ships parked hereЧthey figured they
would wait out the plague while they made repairs.
"We did not know that Klingons ran the Enterнprise!" Krot
proclaimed. Worf silently congratuнlated himself on discretely returning his
human away team to the Enterprise shortly after his first cup of blood wine.
The captain raised his tankard. "To Klingons everywhere!"
"To Klingons!" Worf echoed.
The rest of Krot's crew began to chant, again, and Worf drained his
blood wine in two long gulps.
The world swam fuzzily before dropping back into focus.
"What will you do now?" Worf asked. "The system is under
quarantine. You may not leave."
"Why should I care about a human quarantine? This plague does not
affect Klingons!"
"It is better to cooperate," Worf said sagely.
"Have another drink!" Krot passed him a tanнkard. "And
tell me more about this great Captain Picard of yours! Perhaps he will listen
to reasonЧ or a mek'leth, eh?"
"You must meet him! He is a great leader. Do not pull a mek'leth on
him, though, or I will have to kill you!"
"Just try!"
Worf struggled to his feet. He couldn't quite get them to work. Too
much blood wine, he realized. MaybeЧmaybe I have said enough.
Krot was laughing.
That was the last thing he remembered.
Chapter Seventeen
AS THEY TRAILED THE MEN AND WOMEN responsible
for organizing the rally at the hospital, Riker tried to get as close to
them as he could without attractнing their attention. Luckily they seemed too
preoccupied . . . they never looked back to see if anyone was following. They
simply assumed they were safe. Amateurs, Riker realized thankfully. They
really have no idea what they're doing, do they?
Perhaps a hundred other rally-goers had taken this street away from the
square. With all their talk and chatterЧmixed in with more chanting and
slogan-shoutingЧRiker had a hard time trying to eavesdrop on the people he was
following.
He caught bits and pieces:
"... mixers must be purged soon,
orЧ"
".. . save our families before the next plagueЧ"
". . . across the bridge, you knowЧ"
None of it made much sense, though a lot of it offered tantalizing
hints. The next plague? What did they know about the virus?
He quickened his pace, closing the gap, straining to hear more.
They left the commercial part of the city, crossed a small bridge, and
entered a residential area. Tall houses now surrounded them, pressing close to
each other.
Unfortunately, they chose that moment to pause in front of one of the
houses. He almost walked into them and had to step around and keep going to
avoid attracting their attention. He cursed his luck, and caught another
fragment of dialog:
". . . can't be trusted tonight. Maybe tomorrow, if-"
Then they all entered the house and the door slammed shut. He heard a
deadbolt slam home. Just when it had started to get interesting! "So much
for thatЧ" he said.
He turned to Yar and Data. "Did you hear any more of what they were
saying than I did?"
"I heard everything, sir," Data replied.
That's rightЧData had far keener hearing than a human, as well as a
photographic memory.
"Summarize," he said. "What did they say? I caught
something about a second plagueЧare they planning to wipe out the Peladians
next?"
"No, sir. They believe the Peladians are responнsible for the first
virus, and that a second one is
coming to finish the job. It is supposed to wipe out all the humans on
the planet."
Riker shook his head. "Then they don't know anything about
it."
"Apparently not."
He had chosen the wrong group to follow.
He turned around and found the street deserted. "And we lost the
rest of the rioters."
"Perhaps we should return to the hospital," Data suggested.
"It might be possible to pick up Brother Paul's trail," Data
suggested. "Someone might have seen which way he went."
"That's our best hope," Riker agreed. "Let's go!"
They set off at a jog, and fifteen minutes later they reached the
hospital complex once more. Most of the people had left, but several hundred
had stayed behind. They all stood around the bonfire, drinking, singing protest
songs, and watchнing the flames. It seemed rather pathetic to Riker.
He searched the faces in the crowd but did not recognize anyone. Another
dead end, he thought bitterly. This mission was not going well.
"Sir." Data pointed to the left, and Riker squinted into the
darkness at several shapes moving along the hospital's wall behind the bushes.
They moved like phantoms, keeping low to the ground.
"What are they doing?" he asked Data softly. "Your eyes
are better than mine."
"They appear to be planting explosive charges. However, from the
looks of the devices they are not powerful enough to do any real damage. The
hospiнtal's forcefield will protect it."
Riker sucked in a deep breath. "Terrorists. . . this is what we've
been waiting for. Keep an eye on themЧwe're going to chase them all the way to
Father Veritas if we have to!"
The shapes suddenly sprinted away from the hospital. A heartbeat later,
a series of brilliant flashes and thunderous explosions sounded. Bushes flew
and clods of dirt started to rain down. The people around the bonfire began to
scream and run for cover.
"Now!" Riker shouted, sprinting. Data and Tasha Yar followed.
Together, they pounded up the street, gaining steadily on the
terrorists. These men had a little more sense than the rally organizersЧthey
kept glancing back, and clearly knew they were being followed.
At a five-way intersection, they split up. Riker picked the middle
terrorist and kept chasing him. From behind, he heard sirens begin to ring. Here
comes the cavalry, he thought, tucking down his head and speeding up his
gait.
The man seemed to know he was about to be caught, since he abruptly
stopped, turned, and raised his arm.
"Phaser!" Riker shouted. He dove to the side a heartbeat ahead
of the beam of brilliant blue light that lashed out at him. He rolled to his
feet and darted into an alley for cover.
The terrorist's weapon had been set on kill, he realized. Its beam
played across the building beнhind him, blowing out part of the second-floor
wall. Bits of bricks and mortar began to thud
to the ground around him.
Riker scrambled for cover. The terrorist
fired again, taking out a shop window. Flames leaped inside the building, and
more alarms began to ring.
Riker ducked into an alley as a third shot
nearly took off his head.
Panting, Riker pulled out his own phaser.
He counted to three, leaned out, and fired. Years of target practice paid
offЧhe caught the man square in the side.
But the terrorist seemed to shrug off the
light stun setting. / knew using local weapons was a mistake, Riker
thought. Next time he'd follow his instincts.
Raising his phaser, the terrorist fired at
Riker again. Riker staggered back as the corner of the building exploded into
debris. When he peeked out again, the man had taken off at a dead run.
Sirens wailed. Stepping out, Riker aimed
his phaser and fired a second time. Once more he hit the markЧbut once more the
weak light-stun setting had little effect.
"Data! Yar!" he shouted.
"Here, sir!" came both voices.
That's one good thing. They're both still alive and safe.
After counting to ten, he peeked around
the corner. Two buildings were on fire and a third had a hole in its second
floor big enough to fly one of the Enterprise's shuttles through. The
peace officers are
not going to be happy, he thought. Not to mention the
shopkeepers.
"I think he's gone!" Riker
shouted. "Join me in the alley!"
Yar dashed over, and a second later Data
folнlowed. Yar was disheveled and out of breath. Data looked a mess. Even by
the dim, flickering light of the fires, Riker could see that Data's human makeнup
had been rubbed off along the whole left side of his face, revealing his golden
skin. And one of his eyepieces had fallen out.
"I hear aircars closing in on our
position," Data said. "I strongly suggest we move away from this
alley, sir, before we are arrested."
"Right. We still have that terrorist
to catch." He stepped out onto the streetЧbut a couple of phaser shots
lashed out at him. He wheeled back as bits of masonry blasted loose, peppering
his face and hands. That wasn't a stun setting, he realized.
"I thought you said they didn't have
kill settings enabled on their weapons!" he said to Yar, rubbing at the
stinging little wounds. He was lucky they hadn't blinded him.
"That's only the civilians, sir. The
peace officers have fully functioning phasers."
"Now you tell me!"
One of the burning buildings suddenly
collapsed with a shower of sparks and an avalanche of duracrete slabs. Dust
rose in a cloudЧthat would provide them with cover for a few minutes, he
thought. They had to get out of here.
He glanced behind him, but the alley dead-ended. There was only one way
outЧthe way they had come in.
"I don't think they saw you two," he said. "I'll draw
their fire, then do an emergency beamout. Get past them and try to catch up
with our terrorist friend."
"Where will we meet up?" Yar demanded.
"Back at the alley where we beamed in. Be there in one hour."
She gave a nod. "Got it."
Riker leaped from hiding with his phaser in hand, blasting at every
figure he saw. Just like target practice, he thought.
Light stun certainly worked better at close range. One man fell, then
another, then a third. Riker rolled, landed behind a pile of duracrete slabs
and paused, listening. Let them think I'm wounded. He felt his heart
pounding like a battering ram. /'// catch them when they least expect it.
On the count of ten, he leaped out againЧbut headed back the way he had
come instead of making for the next natural hiding place. His tactic caught two
more peace officers by surprise. They had been trying to sneak up behind him. A
pair of perfectly executed shots took them down.
That's jive. How many are there?
They would have caught him if he'd behaved like a sensible terrorist and
tried to get away. Too bad I'm neither sensible nor a terrorist. I'm not
interнested in getting awayЧat least, not on foot.
He started counting again. One more volley, then
I'll have the Enterprise beam me to safety, he thought.
Licking his lips, he tensed to springЧbut a sudden intense burst of
phaser fire struck the building directly behind and above him. Bricks blasted
outward, and he felt several strike his back, throwing him to the ground.
Moaning in pain, he reached for his combadgeЧbut it had come off. Where? His
fingers scrabbled in the dirt and debris, searching.
"Riker to Enterprise, "he said urgently, hoping it had
somehow activated. "Emergency beamoutЧ"
Then something struck the back of his head, and he knew no more.
Chapter Eighteen
tasha yar ran until
she thought her lungs would burst, and she still saw no sign of the terrorist
in black. He must have turned off somewhere. They must have lost him.
She drew to a halt. Data paused, looking
back at her. "Tasha?"
"I have to rest," she panted.
She put her hands on her knees and bent over, feeling sick and dizzy.
Since leaving Commander Riker, they hadn't
had any luck. The peace officers had spotted them and given chase, and it
seemed an alert had been raised. Everywhere they went, they spotted uniнformed
men in riot gear.
"This is not the place for a
rest," Data said.
She nodded. "I know. But there's
nothing I can do about it. I can't go any farther!"
A line of peace officers rounded the
corner several blocks up. They wore helmets and carried heavy shields and
phasers in their handsЧand for Tasha Yar, it brought back a flood of terrible
memories. As a fist of panic clutched her heart, she felt herself start to
shake. I'm not home. This isn't a rape gang. If things get bad, all we have
to do is beam back to the Enterprise.
"This way, Tasha," Data said
urgently, grabbing her arm and pulling her up a narrow street.
Her legs felt like deadwood, but Yar
forced them to move. Data had better eyesight than she did; he must have
spotted something, she thoughtЧsome way of escape short of an emergenнcy
beamout.
At least this alley smelled better than
the first; hulking shapes of discarded packing material and machinery blocked
her way, but she darted around them.
Suddenly Data pulled her into a deeply
recessed doorway. "Shh!" he said.
Behind them, she heard footsteps entering
the alley. Bright lights swung up and down the length. Great. We're trapped.
"I have bad news," he told her
in a soft voice.
"It can't get any worse!"
"This appears to be a dead end."
"What!" She turned and looked at
him. "You've got to be kidding! I thought you knew where you were
going!"
"It seemed the logical place to
run."
She bit her lip, then turned and tried the door behind them. It had an
old-style round knob, smooth and hard and cold. And, of course, it was locked.
And, of course, a phaser set on stun wouldn't open it. / should have
insisted we bring live weapons, she thought. What was I thinking? Never
again!
"Data . . . can you force this door open?" she asked.
"That would be an illegal act," he said. "Federaнtion
code 44.1.6 clearly statesЧ"
"Circumstances warrant it! Open the door!"
"Very well." He gripped the knob and turned it sharply. Metal
inside the knob broke. Then he pushed, but the door still didn't move.
"It appears to be bolted from the inside."
"So push!"
Using the flat of his hand, Data gave the door a sharp jab perhaps
twenty centimeters above the knob. The wood splintered.
Yar glanced toward the street. Lights continued to sweep the length of
the alley. The peace officers were making their way through boxes fifteen
meters away.
"Hurry!"
Data rammed his fist through the hole with a loud bang, and as she
watched with growing fear, he felt around inside.
One of the peace officers shouted, "I think they're ahead of
us!"
"Ah. A simple deadbolt," Data said.
He slid it aside, withdrew his arm, and pushed the door open. Finally!
Yar ducked inside, and Data followed, closing the door with a slight
squeak.
Pitch darkness surrounded her. She paused, lisнtening to the pounding of
her heart, waiting for cries of "There they are!" from the
peace officers.
"Shall I brace the door closed in case they try to break it
down?"
"With what?"
"There is sufficient lumber on the floor."
"Then do it!"
Outside, someone tried the doorknob.
"I am holding it," Data whispered. "They will not
pass."
Something heavyЧa pair of shoulders?Ч thumped against the wood.
Evidently Data's strength convinced them that entry wasn't possiнble; they
moved on, talking in low voices.
"How well can you see?" she asked.
"Well enough," said Data. "There is sufficient infrared
radiation for me to navigate the wareнhouse."
She hesitated. "Don't take this the wrong way. But I want you to
take my arm and lead me to another exit."
"I have a better idea, Tasha." Picking her up in his strong
arms, he carried her on a twisting course through the length of the warehouse.
At last he stopped and set her down.
"Where are we?"
"The other side of the warehouse. This door is marked 'Exit.'"
She heard him undo a couple of bolts, then he opened a heavy steel fire
door half a centimeter. A blade of light fell insideЧshe blinked, then realнized
it wasn't that bright, just spillover from the street. They were looking out
onto a small side street.
Tasha put her eye to the crack and peeked out. The peace officers had
moved on, apparently. The street was deserted.
She opened the door and eased out. Pressed up against the building, she
made her way to the main street at the front of the building, peeked around the
corner, and gave a sigh of relief. She saw the peace officers' backsЧthey were
moving up the street quickly.
Then she froze in place. Movement on a nearby rooftop had caught her
eye. A sniper?
"Data," she whispered. "Get up here! Who is that?"
She pointed across and up twenty meters to the roof of another
warehouse. A man stood silhouetнted against the larger moon. He was gazing at
the peace officers. And he held something dark in his hands. A phaser?
"I believe he is taking atmospheric samples," Data said.
"The device he is holding is a Starfleet tricorder of the type used on
planetary surveys. It collects data from monitoring stations."
That puzzled her. "What's he doing out at this hour? It has to be
past midnight!"
"It is 1:07 a.m., according
to the local clock. The man appears to be waiting for the peace officers to
leave. His expression appears nervous."
Interesting. He's doing something illegal. She felt a rising
suspicion. "Something isn't right here," she said.
"I agree. He does not appear to be wearing a Starfleet uniform. Nor
do I recognize him as one of the Enterprise's crew. He should not be
carrying Starfleet equipment."
"I meant he doesn't belong on top of a wareнhouse in the middle of
the night," Yar said. "He's up to something. He might be one of the
terrorнists."
"Unlikely," Data said. "His build does not match that of
any of the three men we chased. However, I agree that his presence and actions
do appear suspicious. What course of action do you suggest?"
"Simple. Let's question him."
"How?"
She drew her phaser and passed it to him. "You're the expert
marksman. If you hit him with both our phasers, it should stun him, even at
this distance. Then it's just a matter of picking him up and interrogating
him."
"What if he has legitimate business?"
"Then we apologize and buy him a drink at the nearest bar."
"Very well." Data accepted her phaser with his left hand, then
pulled out his own with his right.
He stepped forward, raised both arms, and fired both phasers
simultaneously.
Both beams struck the man's chest. Perfect shot! Yar thought.
Without a sound, he collapsed and lay still.
It took them five minutes to get across the street and up to the roof. A
large and rather flashy aircar waited there with its door open and its powerful
engines idling. Yar switched on its lights, and their glow lit up the whole
rooftop.
"It would appear he landed here to watch the peace officers,"
Data said.
"Not with this tricorder." She picked it up and handed it to
him. "What do you make of it?"
"Starfleet issue. A current model. It should not be in civilian
hands."
"Then what was he doing with it?"
Data turned slowly. "ThereЧthat is the atmosнpheric monitoring
station he must have been checking." He crossed to the small silver box
and pulled it off the wall. When he flipped open the top, he read something
inside. "As I expected, it is set to monitor particle content in the air."
"Do you mean dust?"
"Any particulate matterЧdust, pollution, and pollen are three
examples."
"How about... an airborne virus?"
"Like the plague virus?"
"Exactly."
"It would count that, too."
The man began to stir and moan. Tasha regarded him suspiciously. "I
think we've just found the key to the puzzle," she said. "Keep him
covered."
Crossing to where he lay, she began searching through his pockets. Not
one but two phasers, a knife, and three sets of identification cards ... all
very interesting. One ID claimed he was a grain buyer, another an
engineering-supply salesman, and the third a missionary priest. A priest? She
knew they were fake; a grain-buying engineering-sales missionary-priest might
conceivably exist, but each of the three IDs gave different names and home
planets.
He stirred and moaned. He'll be awake
soon. Might as well get it over with.
"Wake up!" she said, giving his shoulder a shake.
He opened his eyes suddenly and gasped. "WhatЧwhereЧ"
"That's what I want to know," she said with an unkind smile.
Phaser stuns left people disoriented; she meant to take advantage of it.
"Who are youЧ reallyЧand what can you tell me about this plague?"
"Let go of me!"
She released him. With Data standing there, he wouldn't get away.
"I work for the Archo City Hospital," he said, sitting up and
rubbing his head. "What hapнpened?"
"Uh-uh. Not with these ID cards, you don't. And you don't have a
beard; you're no Archarian." She
fanned the identification cards out in front of his face. "And I'll
stake my job none of these is you. Care to try again?"
He climbed to his feet, brushed himself off, and adjusted his collar. An
almost mocking smile came over his face. "Not this time."
Lights shimmered, and he began to disappear as a transporter beam
energized around him.
"No you don't!" Yar cried.
She leaped into the beam with himЧand the next thing she knew, they were
standing on a single transporter pad in a small, nearly dark roomЧa spaceship?
She grabbed his shirt and flung him into the bulkhead. He hit with a
bone-jarring crunch and an "oof" of pain.
"Give up," she said.
"You'll die!" he snarled and grabbed for someнthing on the
wall. A phaser?
She leaped forward and kicked him in the stomнach, then gave him a chop
to the back to the neck when he doubled over in pain. He collapsed, shudнdered
once, and didn't move.
"ComputerЧmore light!" she called.
The room brightened. She turned slowly, taking stock of the situation
... she was in a cramped little cabin stuffed to overflowing with equipment.
And a lot of it looked like Starfleet property.
I've hit the jackpot, she
thought. If he isn't involved with the plague, I'm a Vulcan princess.
Three huge metal cylinders, stamped with tiny
print, stood along the back wall. She crossed to examine one. The
pressure gauge read 0.004. Whatever had been inside wasn't there now.
Turning, she looked at the racks of assault rifles, phasers, and other
weapons covering the second wall, the one to which she had him pinned. Shiverнing,
she realized how lucky she had been. If he'd gotten one of those, I would be
toast now.
She folded back the collar of her shirt, revealing her combadge, and
tapped it once. "Yar to Enterнprise, " she said.
"Enterprise. Habbib here," came an ensign's voice.
"Locate Commander Riker and Lieutenant Commander Data and beam them
to these coordiнnates."
"Lieutenant Commander Data has been located . . . Commander Riker
is not wearing his combadge, however."
That didn't sound like Riker. He'll be all right, she told
herself. He's a survivor. Like me.
"Thanks," she said. "If you locate Commander Riker, let
me know."
"Yes, Lieutenant. Enterprise out."
The shimmer of a transporter beam appeared next to her, and Data
materialized an instant later. He turned slowly, looking around the cabin, then
bent to examine the unconscious man.
"He is dead," Data announced.
"What! That's impossible!" She stared increduнlously at his
body. "I didn't hit him that hard!"
"Nevertheless, he is dead."
Quickly she bent and rolled him over. She got a whiff of something
acridЧpentium xolinate. It was a Cardassian drug, invariably fast and
fatal.
"Suicide," she said, frowning. "He took poison. He must
have had it hidden in a tooth."
Data moved to the cylinders. "We need to anaнlyze these," he
said suddenly.
"Could they hold something biological?" she asked.
"Like a virus?" Data asked. "It is a possibility.
Biological agents are usually seeded into the atmosнphere of a planet at least
half a kilometer above the surface, however, to allow a wide dispersal through
wind currents."
"He had a transporter."
Data paused. "It is theoretically possible to beam compressed
gasses; they would expand imнmediately upon transport. That might be a highly
effective method of seeding an atmosphere."
That's how he did it, Yar
thought. / know that's how he did it!
Data continued to examine the cylinders. "They are marked
'Agricultural Prions.' However, a label does not always adequately represent a
container's true contents."
"The expression is 'Don't judge a book by its cover.'"
"I believe that is what I said."
"We have to get them up to the Enterprise." Frowning,
she moved to the front of the ship and
gazed out the viewport at a vast duracrete landing field. The morning
twilight had just begun. In the thin gray predawn light, she saw dozens of
larger Starships surrounding their little ship. We're in the Archo City
Spaceport, she thought.
"Let's fly her up to one of the shuttle bays," she said
suddenly, sliding into the pilot's seat. "We can get a security team
aboard and strip her down to her bulkheads, if necessary. Our friend there must
be involved in the plague, somehow."
"That would seem a logical conclusion," Data said.
The ship's controls hadn't been locked or enнcrypted, Yar saw. With the
hatches dogged, he must have considered his ship secure. He hadn't counted on
her beaming aboard with him.
Powering up the impulse engines, she studied the layout of the controls.
Basic operations appeared straightforward. She knew she wouldn't have any
trouble flying this ship.
An intercom crackled: "This is Archo Spaceport Control. Power down
your engines, Paladium. This planet is quarantinedЧyou may not lift
off."
"Negative, Control," Yar said. "This is Lieutenнant Yar.
I am bringing this vessel up for a rendezнvous with the Enterprise."
"Permission to lift off is expressly denied," the voice insisted.
"Power down, Paladium, or we will be forced to take drastic
action!"
She glanced at Data. "Drastic action? What are they capable of,
putting us on report? They don't
have any pursuit ships or missile
batteries. This is an agricultural planet."
"I believe they are bluffing,"
Data said.
"That's all I need to know."
Tasha Yar brought the engines to full life. A low but powerful vibraнtion
spread through the hull. She initiated the liftoff sequence.
"Paladium!" Control
said. "Power down! Now!"
"Negative," she replied.
"You have our flight plan. We'll see you in orbit."
She lifted off smoothly, and the landing
field began to dwindle away below.
Next she tapped her combadge. "Yar to
Enterнprise, " she said.
"Enterprise. Habbib
here."
"We are aboard a small Starship
called the Palaнdium, " she said. "We are bringing it up now.
Slap a level-one forcefield around this ship as soon as we land in the shuttle
bay."
"No containment field is
necessary," Habbib said. "Restrictions on travel to and from the
planet to the Enterprise have been lifted."
"Then we have a cure for the
plague?" She felt a brief surge of elation.
"Negative, Paladium. The virus
is on the Enterнprise as well. We are now under the same quaranнtine
restrictions as Archaria III."
Yar exchanged a look with Data. HowЧ She
shook her head. Someone was sloppy, she thought.
She said to Habbib, "I want a
security detail standing by when we land. And alert sickbay. We may have the
cause of the plague on board."
"Understood, Paladium," Habbib
said. "Securiнty will be standing by. Enterprise out."
"That's it!" Control
snarled over the intercom. "We are fining your account one hundred
thousand credits, Paladium!"
"Go ahead," Yar replied. She
severed the conнnection and accelerated toward the Enterprise.
Chapter Nineteen
the annoying buzz in the back of Will
Riker's head slowly materialized into the murmur of voices. He opened one eye
to the smallest of slits. Big mistake. Fireworks seemed to go off inside
his skull, flares and starbursts and supernovas all mixed up together. He
groaned despite himself and pressed his eye shut again. Everything hurts. Even
breathing was a chore. He couldn't rememнber feeling this bad since his big
second-year survival drop at the Academy. A week alone on a jungle planet
with only a knife, a compass, and my wits. Why did I ever elect to take
Advanced Surviнval before I was really ready for it? The raw
elementsЧincluding a six-day hurricane to beat anything ever seen on EarthЧhad
defeated him utterly when a tree blew over and pinned him
down. He had lain there in the muck and mud, feeding the alien
equivalent of giant leeches, for three days until rescuers arrived. He had
counted himself lucky to survive.
This time, it had been a building.
At least I am waking up, he thought, trying to feel
optimistic. There was a faint ringing sound in his ears just a few octaves
below the chatter of voices. An outside noise? An
inside noise? Halluнcination? Better hurt than dead. That's what his
instructor, Dr. Neelam, had told him when he limped in to give his oral report
on his failure. Kindly Dr. Neelam. The image of his instructor's beaming
face appeared in his mind, Dr. Neelam saying: "The sloppiest job I've ever
seen, but you lived through it, Bill."
"I'm called Will now," he told Dr. Neelam.
"Hey, pal," a rough voice beside him said. "Ready to try
sitting up?"
"Huh?" Riker opened both eyes, and after the world stopped
moving, he managed to focus on the speakerЧa man about his own age, tall and
broad-shouldered, dressed all in shades of brown right down to a long dark shag
of brown beard. He was grinningЧa friendly grin, Riker decided after a minute's
hesitation.
Archaria HI. Away team. Right.
"The sleeper wakes!" the man went on. Offering his hand, he
said, "Want me to help you sit up, pal? I hear your name is Will."
"Was I talking out loud?"
"Yep. Need a hand?"
"Uh . . . give me a minute. Where am I?"
"Some detention center. I'm not quite sure which one yet. Probably
East Quadrant. That's where they nabbed us."
"Oh." Gingerly he felt his scalp. Assorted lumps, bumps, cuts,
and abrasionsЧperhaps even a mild concussion, from the ringing in his ears.
/'// ask Dr. Neelam to look me over first thing. No, I mean Dr. Crusher.
Wait. That was back on the ship. He paused, frowning. The Enterprise.
Where was he? Under a building. No. In a detention center. He tried
to focus on his newfound friend, the beaming man with the beard. What was the
fellow's name? Had he said?
"WhereЧ" he said again. No, I
already asked that.
"Say, you are fuzzed out, aren't you? Dee-ten-shun Cen-ter. East Quadrant. They got
a hunнdred and twelve of us in the roundup." The man gave a low chuckle
and offered his hand. Riker took it, and the man pulled him to a sitting
position.
That was a mistake. The world swirled like a whirlpool around him.
"You have a family name, Will?"
"Riker."
"Don't know 'em, sorry." He stuck out his hand again.
"Mine is Clarence Darling."
"Clarence Darling?"
"Yes, sweetheart." Clarence rolled his eyes. "Old name.
First settlers, so we're supposed to be proud. Nothing to do about it
now."
At least Clarence had a sense of humor. Riker gave a low chuckle as he
turned his headЧnot too quick!Чto look around. Despite his caution, the room
rolled like a ship on high seas, the floor rising up, the walls moving in. He
tasted bile and gulped hastily. The ringing in his ears grew worse, louder and
more shrill, a perfect bell tone had it come from a bell.
He pressed his eyes shut again. / should
have been a doctor. I could have healed myself.
"Hope you don't mind," Darling said, "but I kind of
appointed myself your watchdog. While you were unconscious, I mean. The pos
picked you clean, but at least our side left you alone."
Pos? Oh . . . PO'sЧpeace officers. He hadn't heard that slang term in
years; it figured that it would still be circulating on a backwater planet like
Archaria III. Picked me clean . . . ? Riker pulled himself up on his
elbowsЧSlowly! Don't rush it!Чand noticed his boots were missing. He
still had his slightly fuzzy brown socks, though. They looked a little silly,
and he wiggled his toes and took a perverse delight in noting they didn't
hurt. They were the only thing in his whole body without their own private
aches and pains.
Then more urgently he felt his pockets. All gone. Phaser, combadge,
everything. He really had been cleaned out. Everything of any potential
value had been removed. Great. Humanity is supposed to be beyond racial
prejudice, let alone petty thievery.
"The pos roll everyone who comes in unconнscious. Must be the
Ferengi in them." Darling frowned suddenly. "You don't look so good
all of a sudden. I think you need a doctor, Will. Better lie down till we can
get out of here." He put one hand on Riker's chest and pushed him gently
back onto the bench where he had been lying. "That's an order, soldier!"
Riker stiffened. Soldier. Does he know I'm from the
Federation? No, can't be, I'm not a soldier, anyway. Never mind that Bili used
to call me that. It had to be just a slang term of affection for a
newfound friend, like "pal." And I need a friend here. No
combadge, no rescue. Dr. Neelam would approve. It's my survival test all over
again.
He focused his eyes on a water stain on the ceiling tiles directly
overhead. The ringing in his head let up a little. The burble of voices rose
around him. What I wouldn't give for a minute of perfect silence. Or a
doctor. Or a combadgeЧ
"I don't think we'll be here much longer," Darнling said
suddenly. "It's nearly dawn."
Riker felt something run down his cheek and
gave a little shudder. Bugs. He hated bugs. But when he touched
the spot, his fingers came away wet. Not bugs. Blood. He stared at the
crimson smear. A doctor. I'd better call Dr. Crusher. Time for the cavalry
to rescue me. So much for Billy-the-Kid Riker, boy hero.
What would Captain Picard do? The captain wouldn't split up or lose
his combadge or let a building fall on his head. This was going to make one
hell of a bad report. One hell of a bad report. At least Data and Yar
got away. Rescue? He could have laughedЧthey wouldn't even know where to
look. He'd have to find them ... if they hadn't already reported him missing to
the Enterнprise.
The alley . . . perhaps they would be waiting for him there.
He levered himself up on his elbows again. And just like before, the
universe began to tilt alarmingly. He felt himself starting to slide off the
world, almost as though gravity weren't workнing quite right here. But that was
ridiculous, wasn't it?
With a "Mph!" he lay back down. "Do I get to make a call,
or am I stuck here?" he asked Darling. He forced the words out slowly.
"What's the, ah, protocol for being arrested these days?"
"You are new to this rabble-rousing stuff, aren't you?"
Darling chuckled. "There are too many of us. The most they're going to do
is charge us with misdemeanors, issue citations, and chuck us out
on our ears. And they probably won't even bother with the citations
because nobody's going to pay them. Most of the pos are members of the League
anyway. If they weren't on duty, they'd all be with us in the streets. After
all, we all want the same thing, right?"
"Yeah." He had definitely gotten the impression that the peace
officers supported the League. Had it only been last night? It seemed an
eternity away. Riker took a deep breath, shuddering a bit at a new stabbing
pain in his left shoulder. What's the first thing you do after a disaster?
Take inventory. No boots, no possessions. Easy enough. He slowly flexed his
muscles. Focus, he told himself. Fingers, hands, arms; feet, legs, neck,
and spine. All exнtremities in place. Lots of small pains, a couple of larger
cuts and abrasions on his hands where he had fallen. Plus the assorted injuries
to his head and that stabbing pain in his shoulder. Bruised but not broken, by
and large, he decided. I'd give anything for those bells to stop ringing. If
only he could think clearly. A plan. I need a plan. What would Dr. Neelam
do? "Survival first," he always said in class. "Worry about the
civilized niceties later."
Darling said, "So, spill the details. What hapнpened to you,
Will?"
"I got in a firefight with the pos and a building fell on me."
He turned his head to look around the room more carefully. This time at least
it stayed on an even keel. "Rather, the pos blasted it down on top of
me."
"They used phasers set on high?" Darling gave a low whistle.
"First I've heard of them using deadly force against us! Well, almost
deadly force. You must have really gotten them angry."
"Afraid so. It was my own damn fault. We didn't want to be arrested
and stunned two of them."
"Ever been picked up before?"
"No."
"I thought so. I tried to fight it my first time, tooЧand got my
skull bashed with a billy for my troubles. This is my fifth time. Peaceful
cooperaнtion, that's the only way, once they've made the pinch."
"But what about . . ." He lost his train of thought for an
instant and floundered. "You know?"
Darling seemed to pick up on it. "If you're in here with us, that
means they didn't write you up. You're just another drunk-and-disorderly
Leaguer they arrested for disturbing the peace. And with things the way they
are . . . they don't have enough prisons to hold us all, even if they wanted
to." He shrugged. "They can't lock up half the planet, after
all!"
"The human half, you mean."
Darling grinned wolfishly. "The human maнjority. "
For a second Riker saw the true nature of the League in his rescuer's
eyes. Not a friend. It was insidious, these racist beliefs. And yet he
knew he needed DarlingЧneeded the decent human in-
side him who would go out of his way to help a stranger.
Doors on the far side of the room banged open, and a short man in a
black uniform strolled in, frowning. Unlike the others, he was clean-shaven and
there was something odd about the shape of his skull. . . too elongated, too
pointy on top.
Hisses, boos, and jeering catcalls greeted him. "Mixer!" Riker
heard Darling snarl under his breath. So that was itЧthis was a Peladian.
"Listen up!" the Peladian peace officer said in a loud voice.
He thumped the data padd he held with one slender finger. "All prisoners
are being released on their own recognizance. Take advanнtage of this little
learning experience and stay indoors tonight. The governor has declared a
curfew, and anyone caught on the streets after dark will face the full force of
the law!"
Darling chuckled. So did most of the others in the room. Riker looked
around in bewilderment. Were they insane as well as predjudiced?
"What's so funny?" he finally whispered.
"That's the same speech he's given every mornнing for the last
week!" Darling replied.
The smooth-cheeked officer glared until the laughter died down.
"That's better," he finally said. "Now, form a line and make
your way outside in an orderly manner. If you cooperate, you'll be home for
breakfast."
Turning, he stalked out the door with the data padd slapping against his
thigh. More mocking
laughter trailed him, and jeering cries of, "Get off the planet,
mixer!"
"Damn arrogant bastard," Darling snarled unнder his breath.
"Thinks he's better than us!"
Riker held his tongue, but couldn't stop the thought: He is better
than all of you. Cordial as Darling seemed, the underpinnings of his Purity
League beliefs left no doubt about his true nature: xenophobe,
human-supremacist, and violent-terrorist. I must not forget that, Riker
told himself. He thinks I'm one of them. That's the only reason he's
behaving so well toward me.
Chapter Twenty
worf woke slowly and groaned. My head!
If felt like a split melon. Sitting up, he looked blearily around the room.
Klingons lay sprawled everywhere around him, snoring.
KrotЧSkallЧKarqqЧall the others . . .
It was the blood wine, he thought with growing horror. He
had forgotten to check in with the Enterprise and make his report. He
knew a human captain wouldn't kill him for such an oversight, but he felt he
deserved execution.
He had lost track of his mission. He had neнglected his duty. ...
Never again, he thought. Even though he had been exposed to the
plague virus and could not return to the Enterprise, he should have made
his report. They could have been depending on him.
Struggling to his feet, he staggered a bit as his center of balance
shifted. He searched for his lost helmet and finally spotted it in the corner,
where Krot had flung it. Picking it up, he fitted it back on his head. Luckily
the comm unit still worked. He clicked it on with his chin.
"Worf to Enterprise," he said.
"Enterprise, Habbib here," came the reply.
"I wish to make a report," he said. "I have been exposed
to the plague virus and will be remaining on this moon until a cure is
found."
"Negative, sir," came the reply. "The whole ship has been
exposed to the plague virus. There is no longer a quarantine situation. Captain
Picard left orders for you to be transported back the minute you report
in."
Worf frowned. That is not good news, he thought. Something
terrible must have happened aboard shipЧa medical disasterЧfor the disease to
be loose on board.
"Energize," he said.
He had a very bad feeling inside.
Dr. Crusher rubbed bleary, burning eyes. Sixteen cases, she
thought. Between the Enterprise and the Constitution, they now
had sixteen confirmed cases of the plague. This is a nightmare.
The medical teams of both ships had combined aboard the Enterprise. And
they still weren't makнing any progress.
And Dr. Tang, whenever they consulted him,
seemed more depressed than ever. He continued to recommend quarantining
the planet forever.
We need luck. And inspiration, Dr. Crusher thought. We're
missing something. . . something obvious.
Not for the first time, she went back to the very core of the problem. We
have a virus that can squeeze through a level-1 containment field. How? She
studied its diagram on the monitor. What are the possibilities?
Teleportation? Impossible!
Changing its shape to something smaller? Possiнble? They had seen
no sign of any metamorphic properties, however, and they had been watching live
samples for hours. Not likely, she finally deнcided. It's a form of
Rhulian flu. It doesn't change shape.
What else? It needs a Trojan horse, she thought. Some way to
sneak through a containment field without being caught or identified. But
it couldn't do that in its present form. It would have to be broken down and
reassembled.
It's modular! Suddenly she had a horrible vision of how it might
work. Two or five or ten smaller parts, all coming together to form a virus.
. . airborne miniparticles, drifting in the air until they meet up, then
uniting to become the plague virus!
She had never heard of any organism working in such a manner. But that
didn't mean it wasn't possible. The added hooks on the NXA protein
strandsЧthose could be assembly instructions.
But it would have to be alive in its component parts, too. What's
alive but smaller than a virus?
Nanotechnology? No, it couldn't possibly be mechanical in origin. Noroids? Sondarian frets? Prions? It could be any of thoseЧor
any of several dozen other obscure but normally innocuous life forms. Things
we don't screen out with biofilters because they're harmless, she thought. Things
small enough to slip through a level-1 containment field.
"Computer," she said. "Begin a new analysis of blood sample
76-B." That was the most recent specimen drawn from Deanna Troi.
"Find and catalog every life form and ever matter particle smaller than a
virus."
The computer spoke. "There are an estimated two hundred thousand
subviral particles. Analysis will take approximately forty-one minutes."
Dr. Crusher sighed. More delays. But she didn't see any alternatives.
They certainly weren't making any progress with standard techniques or
antiviral drugs.
"Begin analysis," she said. This looked like anнother two-cup problem.
She headed for the replicator and made her first cup of tea. Just as she
was about to settle down to wait out the computer report, Captain Picard and
Captain van Osterlich strode into sickbay. Behind them, waiting in the hall,
she saw half a dozen security officers.
She stood. "What's happened?" she asked.
"Yar and Data are on their way up," Picard said.
"They have stolen a Starship. They claim it belongs to the man
responsible for setting the plague loose on Archaria III."
Dr. Crusher felt her breath catch in her throat. This could be the
break we need, she thought.
"What's on board?" she demanded. "Are there any cultures
or samples ... or a cure?"
"They weren't specificЧbut they have someнthing they want analyzed
immediately in xenobi-ology."
"Let's go," she said, grabbing a medical triнcorder.
Yar piloted the Paladium into the Enterprise's shuttle bay
2, then set the little ship down. After she had powered down the impulse
engines, she unsealed the hatches, rose, and hurried into the main compartment.
Data had been busy taking down weapons, she saw. She whistled at the
rack of ten Federation heavy assault phaser rifles he had uncovered.
"I haven't seen any of these since the war with Cardassia,"
she said, taking one down and turning it over in her hands.
"They are probably war surplus," he said. "This
particular model was decommissioned seven years ago."
She turned hers over and examined the handle. The serial number had been
neatly and methodiнcally burned off with a phaser. No way to trace it back to
whoever legally bought or sold it last. Just
another sign our unknown friend was up to no good, she thought.
She put the phaser back into the rack, then glanced down at the man who
had committed suicide rather than get caught. Everything seemed to point to his
involvement in something big. And yet she saw no sign of anything to do with
the virus . . . except those cylinders.
"Status report!" Captain Picard called, as he led Dr. Crusher
and half-a-dozen others aboard.
Yar filled him in while Dr. Crusher hurried to the cylinders and began
taking tricorder scans.
"This is it!" Crusher announced, and excitement made her voice
crack. "These cylinders contain the three different elements that make up
the plague virus! I want them beamed to xenobiologyЧwe've got to start taking
them apart to see how these prions work."
"Prions?" Captain Picard asked, looking puzнzled.
"YesЧI figured it out in sickbay this morning. The virus is a
composite organism. It consists of three prions. When they come together, they
interнlock, rewrite each other's RNA, and a virus cell is born. Individually
the prions are harmless. We have hundreds of different ones in our bodies, and
they don't do anything. Our transporter doesn't filter them out, and they are
small enough when airborne to pass through a level-one containment field!"
"And that's how it got loose on my ship," Picard said,
nodding. "It makes sense."
Data said, "We believe our suspect beamed the prions directly over
the city, seeding the air. That's how it managed to disperse so quickly."
"I've got to get back to sickbay," Dr. Crusher said.
"This is the best development we could have had. I know we'll have a cure
soon."
Chapter Twenty-one
their release went better than Riker could have
hoped. Darling spotted a couple more of his League pals and drafted them into
helping get Riker out the door. They were burly, bearded men, strong as oxen,
and when they draped Riker's arms across their shoulders for support, his feet
barely touched the ground.
Darling signed all their names in an arrest record book, and five
seconds later they were out on the street. The morning thoroughfares bustled
with activity, and Riker sensed at once that something had happenedЧsomething
big. An almost electric undercurrent ran through everyone in sight.
Darling grabbed a bearded man and demanded, "What happened? What's
all the excitement?"
"Haven't you heard? They caught the man re-
sponsible for the plague! And Starfleet says they'll have a cure for it
by nightfall!"
"Who was responsible?" Riker demanded.
"Some crazy off-worlder! Can you believe it? He wasn't even one of us!"
Pulling away, the man hurried down the street.
So much for the Purity League theory, Riker thought. He
exchanged a glance with Darling. I've spent the night chasing phantom
terrorists, having buildings fall on my head, and getting locked up with racist
crackpotsЧfor nothing!
"Well," Darling said, "that's quite a developнment. It wasn't
the Peladians after all."
The man holding Riker's right arm let go. "You take him!" he
said to Darling. "I have to get homeЧI want to see the news!"
"Me, too!" said Darling's other friend. He ducked out from
under Riker's other arm and sprinted up the street.
Riker wobbled a bit, but Darling steadied him. "Hey, I'll still
look out for you, pal," Darling said. "I've come this far. I'll see
you safely home."
"If you can get me to a comm station," Riker said, "I'll
call for transportation."
"Easily done!" Turning, Darling pointed to a public comm unit
on the corner across from them. "Come on!"
He helped Riker hobble across the street, then stood watching while
Riker activated the unit.
"This is William Riker," he said to the computнer. "I
need to talk to the duty officer aboard the Starship Enterprise."
Darling gaped at him. "The Enterprise? Are you crazy? What
do you want with Starfleet scum?"
"Just a second and I'll show you," Riker said.
In ten seconds Geordi La Forge appeared on the screen.
"What happened, sir?" La Forge said. "You look terrible.
We've had half the peace officers in the city searching for you since
midnight!"
"The peace officers arrested me," Riker said. "It's a
long story. I need transportation to sickbay ... I think I have a mild
concussion . . . and maybe a couple of cracked bones."
"Right," La Forge said. "Stay there, sir. I'll trace the
comm signal back to your location."
"Thanks." Riker turned to Darling, who was staring at him
incredulously.
"YouЧyou lied to me!" Darling said.
"No I didn't," Riker said. He grinned. "You made a lot of
assumptions about me based on my appearance. Think about it the next time you
see a mixer ... or a Peladian!"
He hated to go out with a lecture, but somehow it seemed fitting.
Darling certainly needed his myoнpic racist worldview expanded.
A transporter beam began to shimmer around him.
"People aren't always what they seem . . . and if you look, you'll
find new friends in the oddest places!"
Chapter Twenty-two
"this is how the virus works," Dr. Crusher said to the assembled
senior officers of the Enterprise and the Constitution. The
meeting room fell silent.
"The virus begins life as three different prions." A computer
simulation showed the three different microorganisms. "Separately these
prions are harmless. But when they meet upЧin the air or in a human bodyЧthey
join together to form a more complex organism ... a multiprion."
The holographic projection showed all three prions integrating
themselves into one larger cell.
"Their protein strands hook together, and a new multiprion is born.
Its first task is to rewrite its own RNA. In effect, it turns itself into a
virus cell. Now, imagine it happening with thousands of prions at
л
once and you'll see how quickly people can become infected."
Captain Picard stepped forward. "Thanks to Dr. Spencer, Dr. Tang,
and Dr. Crusher, we now have a cureЧa fourth prion, one we designed ourselves.
We have already begun seeding Archaria Ill's atнmosphere with it. This fourth
prion hunts for the other three, attaches itself to them, and disables the
multiprion genetic codes. In short, they are turned back into harmless prions once
more."
"Sir, who is responsible?" Geordi La Forge asked.
"Good question." Picard cleared his throat. "Ofнficially,
Starfleet and the planetary governor are assigning blame to the Purity League.
That organiнzation has been officially outlawed and disbanded, so some good has
come out of this disaster."
"And unofficially?" Worf asked.
Van Osterlich rose. "Unofficially... we don't know. The one suspect
we have is dead, and he doesn't seem to exist in any official Starfleet dataнbases.
His identity cards are fake. His Starship's registration is fake. Nothing
aboard his ship has a serial number or identification mark of any kind. He is
simply a blankЧofficially, he doesn't exist. Whether he worked for himself or
someone else is still open to conjecture. However, I think it's safe to say
that this is the work of some outside party with significant resources .... an
organization that took advantage of the Purity League's racist attiнtudes to
test a new type of weapon."
"The big question is motive," Captain Picard said. He looked
from face to face, and his expresнsion grew even more serious. "It can't
be racial purity. It can't be the Purity Leage. In fact, Starнfleet has only
been able to come up with one possible motive. . . . Practice."
In sickbay, William Riker lay on a biobed next to Deanna Troi, resting
and listening to the almost jubilant hubbub around them. They have their
cure. Everything is going to work out. He smiled.
"A penny for your thoughts," Deanna said.
He turned his head to face her. "You look terrible," he said.
It was the first thing that popped into his mind. The white blisters that had
covered her face were gone, but she still had a deathly white pallor.
"So do you, Bill. I'm just happy to be alive."
He chuckled. "You know I go by 'Will' these days, don't you."
"Yes ... I wondered if you were going to tell me. Don't you feel
comfortable enough with me to just talk anymore?"
He reached out his hand and took hers, then gave it a soft squeeze.
"Of course I do, Deanna. Let down your guard. Listen to my emotions. You
know how I truly feel."
She smiled. "You're naughty!"
He laughed. "You don't have to be an empath to sense that!"
Epilogue
the general sat in the command seat
aboard his palatial ship, hugging his knees and gentнly rocking back and forth.
No, no, no! he thought. All the news today was bad. Solomon dead. The
plague cured. Archaria HI on the verge of racial peace for the first time in
generaнtions. The Federation had turned disaster into triumph.
He snarled. He wanted to smash something. Anything.
Solomon had failed him. His scientists, whose best genetic weapon
fizzled when put to the test, had failed him. All this time, all this money.
And for nothing!
No, not for nothing. It's a learning experience. The speed with
which the Federation had acted to contain his plague was commendable. Clearly
his people would have to modify the disease further.
Two days, he thought. It only took them two days!