STAR TREK - TNG - The Genesis Wave, Book 3

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For Martha Lee and her Hospitality
Contents
one.5
two.14
three.22
four28
five.37
six.44
seven.53
eight59
nine.68
ten.75
eleven.83
twelve.90
thirteen.101
fourteen.109
fifteen.118
sixteen.127
seventeen.134
eighteen.143
nineteen.152
twenty.161
twenty-one.170
twenty-two.176
About the e-Book.180
one
She was the only one left of her species, and now they were trying to kill her. They wanted what she
carried, and she knew she could save herself if she left it behind. Like her, it was the only one of its kind
left.
The disrupter beam streaked past her crouching body, charring the corrugated tin wall and burning a
hole in the vacant building. For an instant, the dusty alley was illuminated by blazing beams and molten
metal. She clutched the bulky chrome box to her torso, knowing she could not disguise it fromthem. Her
pursuers knew her true identity, and they were wearing environmental suits to protect themselves from
her spores. No doubt, they were only firing to keep her pinned down. She counted three of them, and
she assumed them to be Romulans, judging by their weapons and their knowledge.
A red fog drifted across the two slivered moons of Torga IV, giving the dingy alley a patina of exotic
mystery. They could have rushed her, but they feared her. Feared what she could do with the box.
It was so strange being known, being exposed, when she had operated for years undercover. She and
the other Seedlings had infiltrated every nook of the Federation, but it was never to cause[2]disruption. It
was always to gather information—to find out how the meat creatures could help them escape their dying
world. Their roots had found nourishment in the garden of Starfleet. With the Genesis technology, they
had discovered a way to prepare new homes and propagate their species at the same time.
All of that had ended three days ago, when their world was invaded and their base destroyed. After
living among the meat creatures—impersonating them—the Seedling could appreciate the irony. The
repository of all data on Genesis had once been a lone human being, and now it was the awkward silver
box in her appendages.
If the Romulans had tracked her down, it meant they had ransacked the home base, deciphering the
records. There was no other way for them to know about her—that she had been entrusted with a
portable device for a new experiment. No matter what, she had to resist giving the emitter to the
Romulans, who were ruthless and unscrupulous. She either had to destroy it or give it to someone who
would do no harm. Genesis could no longer benefit her species, but perhaps it could benefit someone.
The Seedling gazed up into the sky of Torga IV, where the blood-red night clouds had parted to reveal
a sliver of stars. Somewhere up there were worlds full of her kind, but she was sworn never to go to
them. They were new worlds, unsullied by past corruptions. If the meat creatures would allow, her
species could have a fresh start—without the temptation of humanoid hosts.
However, a rebirth was not to be for the Seedling, who knew too much and would corrupt them with
her knowledge. She was doomed to perish no matter what else should happen.
A figure in a black environmental suit darted from an abandoned hovercraft to a dumpster, coming a few
meters closer to her position in the alley. They were careful with their disrupter fire, because they didn’t
want to hit the box; but they wouldn’t hesitate to kill her if they had a clear shot. That’s why they were
getting into position.
If she could draw their fire, decided the fugitive, she had to make[3]them hit her precious box. If she
couldn’t save it from them, she had to destroy it. The alley was open behind her, but it was a long run to
the walkway. The Seedling did act move swiftly, especially carrying the bulky device, which was nearly a
meter tall and half a meter wide on each side.
At that moment, her salvation arrived in the form of a loud and rowdy crew of Bajoran miners and their
consorts. They came weaving down the dusty walkway, toasting, drinking, and singing. The Seedling
instantly called out in her most helpless voice. When they didn’t stop, she screamed again and again until
the unruly party halted on the sidewalk and peered into the dark alley.
There was a chance the miners were all about to be slaughtered, but the Romulans were like her species,
she reasoned. They preferred stealth and guile to brute force and messy scenes.
The Bajorans came stumbling down the alley, and it took them a while to locate her and focus their eyes
upon the pleasing Bajoran shape she had become—at least to those within range of her spores. This
subterfuge was second nature to the Seedling by now, and she instantly roused their concern and
helpfulness.
“What’s wrong with you?” asked one brawny male. His nose ridges rippled, and she sensed that he was
attracted to her.
“Are you injured?” said another, kneeling beside her.I remind him of an instructor he had in the
orphanage. Such a broken, pathetic life he has endured.
The miner took her arm and gingerly helped her sit up. The Seedling feigned dizziness for a moment as
she absorbed more of their thoughts.
“Where didshe come from?” sniffed one of the females to her female friend. Their antagonism was a side
effect she could do nothing about, so she ignored them and concentrated on the males.
“They tried to rob me,” she rasped.
“Who?” snapped several Bajorans at once.
She pointed behind her at the narrow alley, where dim light faded[4]into mist, shadow, and abandoned
machines. The brawny one instantly ran down the thoroughfare, stomping and making his presence
known. Her pursuers had been lurking there, but they were certainly gone now.
“Don’t see them!” he called.
“It’s okay,” said the gentle one. “Let us get you some brestanti ale—that will fix you up.”
“Thank you,” she replied with a smile. “Don’t let me forget my luggage.” She touched the shiny metal
box, and he gallantly picked it up.
As they strode from the alley, the Seedling glanced over her shoulder at the dark passage between the
corrugated buildings. She hadn’t brought herself more than a few minutes of respite, and her pursuers
were probably already on the roofs, planning their next move.
“What’s the matter?” asked the gentle one. “You afraid they’re still out there?”
“Yes.” With a pleasant smile, she enhanced her similarity to the teacher he had loved at the age of ten.
“My name is Wislow. And yours?”
“Arden,” she answered, choosing the identity she had used the most here.
“Pretty name,” said the Bajoran male with a simpering smile.
When they reached the sidewalk, Arden gripped his arm and another male’s, trying to keep herself
surrounded by their flesh. She looked around and saw cheap industrial buildings lit by garish neon and
halogen—an instant city built on a dead planet. At least Torga IV had been dead until the discovery of
cormaline deposits and the importation of thousands of impoverished Bajoran workers.
A string of small two-seater hovercraft swerved down the street, and pedestrians had to scatter. The
majority of residents were Bajoran, but other races loitered on the dusty sidewalks. Down one alley, a
contingent of Klingon miners were fightingtargs, in contradiction to the law. From a low-slung balcony,
females were soliciting males to enter a casino. Torga IV was a brutal, corrupt place, inhabited by[5]the
dregs of the quadrant. It had been a perfect place for Arden’s canceled experiment, and now it would be
a fitting place for her death.
“We’re here!” said the gruff miner, grabbing her by the shoulders and trying to push her into a dimly lit
tavern. She willed him to remember a lecture his grandmother had given him about the treatment of
females, and he instantly released her.
“No. Please, not here.” She appealed to Wislow. “What I want is someplace spiritual—like a temple or
a chapel.”
“We’ve got them,” answered the miner, “but you don’t want to go there. They’ve been slammed with
refugees from the Genesis Wave. Every morning they come to the commissary, looking for food we’re
throwing out.”
“Even the bars are crowded,” said one of the females with a wave of her hand, “and it’s the middle of
the night.”
“We’ve got to celebrate surviving the wave!” said the brawny one, trying to hustle them through the
door.
Arden remained steadfast as she concentrated on the sensitive Bajoran. “Wislow, I could use some help
getting to the nearest temple.”
“All of you go inside,” he ordered confidently. “I’ll escort the lady to the ... which one?”
“The Shrine of the Prophets on Aurora Avenue is the closest,” answered one of the females. “I’ve got
friends working there, and I better hear from them that you showed up!”
The others laughed.An odd reaction, thought the Seedling, considering that billions of their fellow meat
creatures had perished in the last few days, and billions more were homeless. But Torga IV had been
spared, and the sleepy backwater had turned into a bustling city hosting an impromptu festival. Such
were the recuperative powers of the meat creatures, who were to be envied. If she could find the right
one to trust, she would give up her secret. But not to the Romulans, whom she had grown to detest.
Arden thought she saw someone in a black hood and suit moving[6]among the convivial crowd. She
tugged on Wislow’s shoulder and said persuasively, “Let’s go now.”
The bawling and mewling of the children never stopped, and most of them weren’t even Bajorans. Prylar
Yorka recoiled from the noise and the stench and sunk back into the vestibule atop the staircase. His
elegant, richly appointed temple had been turned into a glaring warehouse for humanoid suffering. They
were hungry, disoriented, grief-stricken, and sick ... some very sick. He had called in the auxiliary
volunteers, and Starfleet had contributed food and medical supplies; but they were still overwhelmed.
Plus the wretched smell had returned. They were taxing the sewage system, which was never designed
to support this many residents; nor was it built to last this long. Who knew that the haphazard mining
colony would last a decade and have its population doubled in a matter of hours?
Yorka stroked the wispy gray hair atop his head and considered bolting back to his private chambers,
but he couldn’t hide. This was what he was trained to do—step in where needed and help the poor and
afflicted. He pulled his maroon robes around his stout figure and tried to look officious and unruffled,
when he felt out of his depth. He was nothing more than a prylar, a monk, but this sect respected him as
a former vedek in the assembly. Yorka was their leader in all but name and rank.
He disdained titles now, feeling that ambition had caused the ills of mainstream Bajoran religion; and the
Vedek Assembly disdained him, not recognizing his sect. For food, they had to depend upon local
resources, but all of the replicators in town were churning out ale and appetizers for revelers and
well-funded refugees. When he really needed help from the powers above him, none was forthcoming.
The aging Bajoran tried to put the worries out of his mind; he had[7]to lead his acolytes and volunteers
through this tragedy. The old lion had to muster the confidence needed to inspire them, even though he
felt nothing but dread.Starfleet will return to relieve us, he told himself,just as they promised. Even
so, they were disturbingly vague on when that might be.
I could pray to the Prophets, but they—and the leaders of my faith—have abandoned me here. I have
tried to shine the light of the Orbs, but no one has shown me any grace.
“Prylar!” he heard someone yell.
Yorka broke out of his troubled reverie and glanced down the metal staircase, where Acolyte Bowmyk
came charging toward him, his yellow robes dirty and blood-splattered. “Sir, you’ve got to come,” said
the young Bajoran, twisting his thin hands nervously. “We’ve had another one of those mysterious
deaths—we can’t figure out why.”
“Call the coroner,” said Yorka, stomping down the stairs and brushing past him.
“We have, but they can’t be here until dawn. That won’t be for hours.” The acolyte chased after his
master, a worried look on his pinched face.
“What does the doctor think?” grumbled Yorka.
“The doctor has left for the day.”
“What?” The burly monk stopped in his tracks, surrounded by refugees, overflowing the pews, sitting in
the threshold of the sanctuary. His young assistant stared at him, and he knew he had to be forceful yet
calm. This madness could not go on for long.
“What did the doctor say before he left?” asked Yorka evenly.
“He couldn’t figure out what had killed him, but he said it wasn’t anything contagious. There were some
unusual tricorder readings, but no clear cause of death.”
Yorka nodded sagely and managed a smile. “You see, there’s no reason for concern, if it’s not
contagious. Take the bodies to the storage room.”
“Where the food is?” asked Bowmyk, aghast.
[8]“There’s precious little of that,” muttered Yorka. He pointed to a blood spot on the acolyte’s satin
tunic. “And change your clothes. Put on something more practical, if you’re going to assist the sick.”
“Yes, Master.” The acolyte bowed and hurried off.
Yorka was immediately besieged by Ferengi, and he gritted his teeth. No one was more difficult to
mollify than a suddenly impoverished Ferengi. A middle-aged businessman with three wives, who were
wearing blankets at Yorka’s insistence, shook his fist with such anger that his ear lobes wiggled.
“You’ve got to get us back to Ferenginar!” he demanded. “You don’t know who I am—you don’t
understand! I’ve got to file reports—insurance forms—”
The words were just a babble in Yorka’s ears, because he already knew his reply. “I have no
transportation to furnish, and you’re free to leave or to stay in our house of worship. If you want to
remain in our care, you must behave yourselves and abide by our rules. We’ll do our best to feed and
shelter you.”
“That’s not what they promised us! That’s not what they promised us on the ship!” insisted the Ferengi.
“This isn’t the ship,” answered Yorka calmly. “Normally we’re not a refugee station—we’re a temple
offering outreach to the Bajoran community here. May I suggest that you pray to the Prophets? We’re
having services in half an hour.”
“This is outrageous!” sputtered the Ferengi, stomping on the floor and wiping away real tears with his
knuckles. “I lost my whole fortune—my factories, my latinum ... I losteverything .”
Yorka raised an eyebrow. “You still have your life. And your wives.” Behind him, three females looked
at one another as if that wasn’t a certainty.
“All I need is a few strips of latinum to help us get home,” begged the Ferengi. “Perhapsyou —”
“Look around you, Sir,” snapped Yorka. “Do we look like we are[9]hoarding extra latinum? I recall
two Rules of Acquisition, which I believe a Ferengi in your situation ought to consider deeply.”
The distraught merchant blinked at him with surprise, and even his wives drew closer to hear the words
of the Bajoran religious figure.
“Rule number two-hundred-thirty-six: You can’t buy fate,” began Yorka. “And rule number twenty-two:
A wise man can hear profit in the wind. You call yourself a businessperson? Look out in the streets, and
you will see merchants profiting from this disaster, while you sit here and whine. You’re a disgrace to
your people.”
That stung the Ferengi, and he lowered his head in shame. Yorka went on, “So a strong wind has hit and
destroyed your holdings. Do you ignore the opportunity? I can soothe your soul by quoting you
prophecies—or Rules of Acquisition—but you must find a way to triumph over adversity. What are the
services whichyou need and cannot find? Others must be seeking them, too, and would be willing to pay
once they collect their insurance.”
The stout Ferengi lifted his head, and his droopy face brightened into a smile. “These are times of
confusion—a good time to make money!” he agreed.
In the human fashion, he took the Bajoran’s hand and pumped it. “They told me to come to this temple,
saying that you are a wise man. And they’re right. My name is Chellac, and if you ever need anything,
you just let me know. Whatever it is, you’ll get it wholesale!”
“That will be welcome,” muttered Yorka, pulling away from the beaming Ferengi. Other refugees
bombarded him with questions, and the prylar was forced to raise his arms and plow through the crowd
at an accelerated pace. His destination was the southwest corner of the temple, where they kept the sick.
“I’m sorry! We can’t provide you with transportation, private rooms, things we don’t have,” he
announced, more for the benefit of his workers than the refugees. “But we have more to offer than food
and shelter. Our teachings are free to all who will listen. In the words of our enlightened Kai Opaka, we
cannot control the forces around[10]us—we can only control our reaction to them. Although grief and
confusion are understandable, the Prophets tell us to search for true meaning within our lives.”
He paused, hoping he had their attention, except for the bawling babies. “Remember Shabren’s Fifth
Prophecy—the Golden Age will not come until we defeat the Evil One. I believe that has happened! The
terror which brought you here is over, and now we can rebuild. All of you are frightened, but you’re still
breathing. Yes, your lives have been changed forever, but you must ask yourselveswhy?
“Change is normal, and we believe these cycles have a purpose. This purging process has happened
often in Bajoran history, and we are experts at interpreting the will of the Prophets. We have a service in
about thirty minutes, and I will deliver a talk I gave on this subject at the Vedek Assembly. Find out what
this disaster means for your—”
The front door slammed open, and someone screamed as a shrouded figure staggered into the temple.
The withered, wraithlike visitor was carrying a shiny box that seemed half her size, and people shrunk
away from her. Yorka peered over the top of heads, unsure what he was seeing—the figure was like a
moving blur that became more distinct as she came closer to him.
“Yorka!” croaked the visitor, lurching toward the staircase. The former vedek felt compelled to follow,
although he didn’t know why. The crowd parted for him as he approached the insubstantial figure on the
vestibule stairs. Everyone in the temple seemed to know this was a momentous occasion, but it was hard
to tell why.
“Privacy,” she insisted. He wasn’t sure if she had spoken or merely thought it, but he understood.
He pointed up the stairs. “The vestibule.”
“Take my luggage,” she added, “and hurry. I’m dying.”
He took her box as commanded and escorted her up the metal stairs to the richly appointed vestibule,
where he met with worshipers privately or in small groups. Her arm felt brittle and bony, but there was
something familiar and comforting about her presence.[11]He felt as though he knew her, although he
could not yet see her face because of her hood.
Passing through brocaded curtains, they reached the vestibule, and he motioned to an upholstered
bench. A closed door at the end of the chamber led to his private office and sparse living quarters. If his
visitor was ill, he wouldn’t hesitate to let her lie down in his own bed. Yorka felt that much concern over
her comfort.
She turned around and dropped the hood, and he gasped! It was Kai Opaka, alive and smiling
beatifically at him. The kai was a short woman, but she seemed to expand in her garments, becoming
more regal with each passing second. Despite her calm expression, she was clearly injured, because she
clutched a scorch mark on her side which was seeping dark fluid.
“Let me fetch a doctor!” cried Yorka. “It is a profound honor, but we must treat you and—”
“No,” murmured Kai Opaka. “My time is short, and you must listen to me.”
When she said her time was short, Yorka suddenly remembered that Kai Opaka was dead—had been
for over ten years. Yet here she stood before him, ebbing in and out of his consciousness. He thought
that this was either the sign from the Prophets he had been waiting for, or proof positive that he was too
insane to help anyone.
There came shouting and commotion from the front door of the temple, and Yorka was momentarily
distracted. “What is that?”
“My pursuers. I have less time than I thought.” The Kai affixed him with baleful dark eyes, and her ear
jewelry seemed to vibrate with the force of her presence. “Listen to me, Vedek Yorka, for I bring your
salvation. It’s inside this box that you carried. But you must guard it from the Romulans—they cannot be
trusted with such power. Guard it from all—I am entrusting you with the greatest force in the universe.
May the Prophets guide you in its use.”
With eagerness and fear in equal measure, the monk touched the gleaming box. Before he could even
find the latch, more noise and[12]shouts sounded from below, and he heard Acolyte Bowmyk’s voice
over the others. “Prylar Yorka! You must come! Please!”
He stuck his head out of the curtains of the vestibule and saw Bowmyk struggling up the stairs. “What is
it? I’m very busy.”
“Sir, strangers are looting the temple. They’re in the sanctuary!” The acolyte pointed urgently to multiple
disturbances among the refugees.
Yorka gazed grimly at the bedlam in what had once been his solemn and austere temple. Two figures in
black environmental suits were overturning beds and pews as they ransacked the place, and a third was
interrogating witnesses at the point of a weapon. Still the refugees pressed forward, venting their anger
and frustration at these masked strangers, who dared to make their lives even more miserable. It was
clear from their body language that the intruders feared for their safety in this volatile crowd, which was
turning into a mob.
摘要:

    POCKETBOOKSNewYorkLondonTorontoSydneySingapore Thisbookisaworkoffiction.Names,characters,places,andincidentsareproductsoftheauthor’simaginationorareusedfictitiously.Anyresemblancetoactualeventsorlocalesorpersons,livingordead,isentirelycoincidental.  POCKETBOOKS,adivisionofSimon&Schuster,Inc.1230...

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