
human didn’t melt into a puddle, he figured it was liquefaction of the soil. Knowing the dissolving sand
was a side effect didn’t make it any less horrifying. Geordi felt as if he were slogging through molasses.
He lunged for the generators and the gel packs, but the heavy equipment was also shifting and sinking
into the muck. La Forge squirmed to his knees and dug a shoulder into a tilting strut to keep it level.
Now panic gripped scores of frightened Bolians in the riverbed, and many of their animals bolted into
oblivion. Shrieking and wailing, the inhabitants lurched past him, hardly caring that they were all going to
die if sand clogged the generators. La Forge grabbed an armful of gel packs and tried to keep them from
sinking out of sight while he strained to hold the rack upright. When a distraught Bolian collided with him,
knocking him into the sand, Geordi felt himself slipping downward. He rolled onto his stomach and swam
over the moist sand to the generators, which he grabbed like a drowning man.
La Forge lifted his head and looked for his fallen comrades—Admiral Nechayev and Dolores
Linton—but he could barely trust his vision. In every direction, there was nothing but turmoil. Despite the
sensory overload, he tried to tell himself that only a few seconds had passed, and the worst of it would
only last a few minutes. He would have to be patient and stay at his post with the generators, now half
sunken into the sand. If the phase-shifting failed, nothing could keep them safe from the staggering forces
reworking the planet.
As he hunkered down, Geordi tried to remember the strange events that had occurred just before the
wave hit. Explosions had ripped through the riverbed, and they hadn’t seemed accidental or part of the
Genesis Effect. Geordi had seen concentrated flashes that had looked like beamed weapons to him. In
the melee, Admiral Nechayev and Dolores Linton had both fallen. He had seen them on the ground, but
he had stayed at his post, ignoring their plight.
Was it self-preservation, a sense of duty, or fear that kept me from helping them?he wondered. A
howling gust of foul-smelling wind forced him to hunker down, and he tried not to be too hard on himself.
He was in the middle of a world that was hemorrhaging and birthing at the same time, and the lives of a
few carbon-based animals seemed to pale beside these momentous changes.
With a groan, the ground shuddered and then seemed to solidify—either that, or he and the equipment
had sunk down to more solid rock. Maybe the effect was beginning to lessen, he thought with hope.
Geordi looked up to see that some of the panicked inhabitants had stopped their mad flight, but many
others had lost their minds entirely. In the distance, one Bolian dashed outside the protective field and
dissolved like a swarm of bees breaking apart.
But most of the survivors realized that there was nowhere to run. They huddled in small groups, curled
protectively over the wounded. He still couldn’t see either Nechayev or Linton, but he mustered some
hope that they would live long enough for him to get help.
Help?he thought derisively.Where? How ? Even if they lived through this initial phase, Myrmidon’s
civilization had been reduced beyond rubble to nonexistence. The churning sludge bore new life writhing
in its depths, but it bore no resemblance to the sacred planet which had existed here before. All of its
people’s efforts paled in comparison with the throes of Myrmidon in its destruction and rebirth. He didn’t
want to watch the carnage, feeling shame and helplessness, but he couldn’t tear his gaze away.
We should have done better for these people than this! he thought miserably.This isn’t
survival—it’s insanity .
After a few moments, he found himself appreciating the fractured kaleidoscope in the sky, but the more
he saw, the sadder he became. Although it looked as if much of the populace would survive, how could