Star Trek Deep Space 9 Dominion War 1 Behind Enemy Lines

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Star Trek - TNG - Dominion War 1 - Behind Enemy Lines
Chapter One
Ro LAREN LOOKED UP at the yellowing clouds, which rested uneasily upon the jagged teeth of the
olivehued mountains in the distance. She didn't see the beauty of the twilit sky or the flowering land with
harvesting season upon it; all she saw were the vapor trails of shuttlecraft and small transports streaking
away from the planet Gallon. The former Starfleet officer knew that most of those vessels were little more
than junk and had no warp drive. Where did they think they were going?
Her hands paused over the lush sprawl of tomato vines and plump red fruit in her small vegetable patch.
Who would have thought she could have gotten so much pleasure from coaxing food from the ground?
Emotions gripped her throat like the teeth of a vole, and she wanted to lash out with her fists. This isn't
just! No sooner had they found a semblance of peace than another war was engulfing them with its acrid
stink. Ro knew well the stench of war. Burning rubble, bloated bodies, wretched refugee camps--those
were her childhood memories. This war was less her fight than any of those other conflicts, yet it
threatened to dwarf them all.
She heard a door slam inside the corrugated shed that served as their home. Ro took a deep breath and
rose from her muddy knees. Lean, hardened by manual labor, her brown hair cropped short, she was
more striking than beautiful. Her nose ridges were prominent, and she wore the traditional chains and
bands on her right ear, proclaiming her Bajoran heritage in this mostly human Maquis community.
Ro wiped her hands on the apron that covered her frayed jumpsuit, and she listened to his footsteps
creaking on the thin floor of the prefabricated shed.
Derek sounded unusually tense; he was probably working up the nerve to face her.
The door banged open again, and she heard his footsteps on the black volcanic gravel that served as
their soil. Only a combination of hydroponic techniques, chemical fertilization, and constant irrigation had
rendered it fit for growing. Ro wasn't keen on leaving this soil just yetwshe had poured too much sweat
into it.
The human walked around the comer of the shed and stopped when he saw her. She could tell
everything she needed to know from the slouch of his shoulders and his tired blue eyes; even his
mustache drooped wearily. He was gray-haired and many years her senior, but he had a rakish charm
that kept him youthful. Today that charm could not disguise the weathered, worried lines in his face.
Derek had been a freelance smuggler and weapons runner, but she had won him over to the Maquis
cause. He still dealt weapons, but for his people, not profit.
She ran to him, and he wrapped his wiry arms around her slender frame. A strand of his gray hair
brushed her cheek, and Derek lifted her chin and gazed at her. "They didn't take the deal," he said softly.
"We have to go." "Again?" she muttered, pulling away from him.
"I've been forced to run too many times--I'm not sure I can do it again. We stood up to the Cardassians
and the Federation; can't we stand up to them?" He gave her a melancholy smile. "These aren't the
Cardies or the Feds. This is the Dominion. We can't fight them; nobody can. The Federation, the
Klingons--they're getting crushed right and left, and the Jem'Hadar warships look like they're invincible.
Plus they've rebuilt the entire Cardassian fleet, and they're eager for conquest. Believe it or not, our
envoys saw two ships full of Federation prisoners come in while they were docked at Tral Kliban for the
negotiations." Ro snorted derisively. "Some negotiations. What did you expect, trying to convince the
Cardassians that we're neutral? Once an enemy of the Cardassians, always an enemy." "Not so,"
answered Derek softly. "We may have failed, but the Bajorans accepted a nonaggression treaty. They
are neutral." "Bajor?" scoffed Ro. "I don't believe it." He gave her a sad smile that insisted it was true. "I
don't think Bajor had much choice, and the Dominion probably did it just to annoy the Cardassians, to let
them know who's boss. Deep Space Nine fell, and it's all going to fall--the whole Federation. Only the
cloaked mines they stuck in front of the wormhole have saved them so far.
"We're small potatoes, but the Dominion will get around to us. Our spies say they want to clear out this
sector, because they're building something big on the other side of the Badlands, near Sector 283."
"What?" "An artificial wormhole," answered Derek with awe in his voice. "They may be using slave
labor-- Federation prisoners." Ro stared at him, stunned by the implications.
With an artificial wormhole deep in Cardassian space, Dominion forces could travel back and forth
between the Alpha and Gamma quadrants without using the Bajoran wormhole. They could even destroy
it, along with everything the Bajorans held dear.
"Some of our cells have already returned to the Federation," declared Ro. "We've got to swallow our
pride and do the same thing. With the Federation's help, maybe we can defend this system instead of
running." Now it was Derek's turn to snort. "The Federation will be lucky if they can defend Earth. We're
unimportant, forgotten. About all we can do is find some quiet place to hide until it's all over." His attempt
at a smile looked more like a wince.
"So the proud Maquis just run for their lives, giving up years of struggle?" asked Ro disdainfully.
Derek kicked a black pebble. "Our envoys got one promise from the Cardassians--they'11 give us time
to evacuate, as long as we don't try to enter the hostilities." Ro stared at him in disbelief. "Evacuate to
where?
There's no running from a war like this. We can fight, or we can surrender and be at their mercy."
"Bajor's always an option," answered Derek, calmly ignoring her tirade as he often did.
"Remember, Bajor is neutral. In fact, the committee is assembling a crew for you, and you're going to
captain the Orb of Peace and take as many people as we can fit in.
Traveling as Bajorans--with you in command--you stand a good chance of getting through Dominion
space." "I wasn't even at the meeting!" snapped Ro. "Who decided this for me?" He gave her a weary
smile and gripped her shoulders. "Laren, you're the only one who can pull off a mission like this. We've
got to gain control of the evacuation, so we don't just have people scattering to the four winds. We'll
never find each other again. The Maquis are a community, even if we keep getting chased off our land. I'll
feel better knowing you're on Bajor. I'll come as soon as possible." Ro's nose ridges compressed like a
bellows. "You're not coming with me?" "No. Someone has got to move our weapons stores, and I'm the
only one who knows where everything is.
I mean, we're not total pacifists, are we?" For an instant, the roguish grin was back.
She gripped him desperately, and he hugged her, his fingers digging into her flesh. When their lips met, it
was a bittersweet kiss with a taste of tears. In a vegetable patch behind a corrugated shed on a
littleknown planet in what was formerly the Cardassian Demilitarized Zone, now the Dominion, they clung
to each other. They knew it could be the last time.
"How long do we have?" she asked hoarsely.
"An hour, maybe. Your ship is en route." "They may have to wait," said Ro, taking his arm and pulling
him toward the shed.
Ro materialized in the small but elegant transporter chamber of the Orb of Peace. In her gray cap and
jumpsuit, with a duffel bag slung over her shoulder, she looked like a common crew member. But she
was the captain on this ship, as testified to by the importance of her welcoming committee. Crunched into
the dimly lit chamber were three provisional admirals, two of the envoys who had returned
empty-handed, and a cadre of dignitaries that spilled out into the corridor.
I might have known, thought Ro. I'm ferrying the brass to safety, not the common folk.
Although these men and women outranked her in the Maquis hierarchy, they looked upon her with awe.
Ro was a legend to the Maquis--a reclusive figure who had deserted Starfleet to join their hopeless
cause, only to become one of their greatest heroes.
Time and time again, she had distinguished herself in guerrilla attacks against both the Cardassians and
the Federation. Yet when the Cardassian-Klingon War brought them relative peace, she had spurned
Maquis offers of higher rank. A small cell of well-trained fighters was all she had ever commanded, until
now.
Ro knew she was an enigma to these people, an outsider whom they both respected and feared.
"Citizen Ro," said Shin Watanabe, one of the recently returned envoys, "we are pleased that you have
undertaken this mission." Ro stepped off the transporter platform, and the sea of people parted
respectfully for her.
"You know our objective," said one admiral brusquely. "Do you think we can make it to Bajor?" With
her jaw set determinedly, Ro studied the faces confronting her. Most of what she saw was fear,
uncertainty, and anger, emotions she could well understand. These people were close to falling apart, and
she had to make sure they held together.
"I know you're all afraid," she began, "and so am I. But we have to get one thing straight before we start
this journey. I am now Captain Ro--by your choice--and I am in total command of this vessel.
Bajor is a considerable distance, and a lot can happen between here and there. I want your promise that
nobody will overrule my orders and decisions." Watanabe laughed nervously. "Well, naturally, we will
have some input and advice--" Ro jumped back onto the transporter platform, then turned to face them.
"Transport me back. I'd rather take my chances with the Cardassians than have you questioning my
orders." A female admiral charged forward. "Laren, we've known each other a long time. Don't start
playing hierarchical mind games." "We all know a ship can have only one captain," said Ro evenly. "We
have no world, no homeland-- only this vessel flying under a false flag. When you elected me captain,
you chose to put your lives into my hands. It was your decision. If I'm in charge of this ship, then we're
going to be a crew, not a rabble.
It's that simple--take it or leave it." The second admiral, a older man named Shaffer, saluted her. "Aye,
Captain. You have my word on it, and I'll throw anyone into the brig who argues with you." The others
stared at him in shock; then they lowered their heads in resignation, shame, and fear. Ro hadn't meant to
come down on them so harshly, but it was best to settle this matter here and now. The journey would be
difficult enough without endlessly debating every decision. Besides, Ro wasn't in a very charitable mood
today. The good-bye with Derek had been painful.
"Admiral Shaffer," she said, "have I been assigned a first officer?" "Not yet. For the past year, this ship
has only had a maintenance crew. We've staffed it as best we could on short notice." "Then would you
be willing to serve as first officer?" asked Ro.
He nodded solemnly, and the Bajoran jumped off the platform and knifed through the crowd. She
ushered Shaffer out the door into the corridor, ignoring the stares of the others. After walking past a
spiral staircase that led to the lower deck, Ro got her bearings and strode toward the bridge, with the
admiral walking beside her.
"What's the ship's status?" she asked Shaffer.
"As you know, the Orb of Peace was in bad shape when we bought her on the black market. We
refitted her, leaving enough original technology to show a Bajoran warp signature." "So she's slow," said
Ro, "and underarmed." Shaffer smiled. "Well, we boosted her armaments with six photon torpedoes, and
she is capable of warp three--but she's still just a midrange transport." "What's our complement?" "Crew
of twenty, plus eighty passengers." Ro scowled. "They must really be crammed in." "They are. But she
was meant to carry clergy, so it didn't take much to refit her as a troop transport.
There's one good thing--she has a working food replicator." "That makes her a rarity in the Maquis fleet,"
said Ro dryly. "See if the replicatot can make some Bajoran uniforms for the bridge crew. Are there any
other Bajorans on board?" "Only one, a junior engineer named Shon Navo." "He's no longer an engineer.
Promote him to the bridge crew--he's to be on duty every moment when I'm not, which won't be often. If
we get hailed by Dominion ships, they must see a Bajoran in command on the bridge." "Understood,"
said Shaffer.
A door slid open at their approach, and they swept onto the bridge. The small bridge of the Orb of
Peace was more tasteful than practical. It was appointed in red with austere control consoles that looked
like prayer booths, and the main viewscreen was framed with sayings of the Prophets. "The ways of the
Prophets lead to peace" was the first word of advice to catch her eye. Ro hid her scowl, having never
been as religious or aesthetic as most of her people.
The three-person crew, which included a young pilot at the conn, an operations officer, and a tactical
officer, jumped to their feet. "Captain on the bridge!" piped one.
"At ease," she told them. "I'll learn your names as we go. First dim running lights by sixty percent.
That'll help to hide the fact that most of us aren't Bajorans." The young crew sat stiffly in their seats, and
the ops officer dimmed the lights as ordered.
There was no official captain's chair on the Bajoran craft, and Ro took a seat at an auxiliary console. "Set
course for Bajor." "Direct course?" asked the conn. "No evasion?" "Ensign, obey my orders as I give
them," said Ro testily. "We're not going to be evasive--we have nothing to hide. We're a Bajoran trade
delegation to the Dominion, and now we're headed home. I only wish that we had time to surgically alter
everyone to look Bajoran; but we don't--so we'll have to fake it.
Set course for Bajor, maximum warp." "Yes, sir." The young blond woman worked her ornate controls.
"Course laid in." "Take us out of orbit, one-third impulse." "Aye, sir." Admiral Sharfer moved toward the
doorway. "I'll get to work on those uniforms, and I'll have Mr. Shon assigned to the bridge." Ro nodded.
The reality of their departure from Galion had left an unexpected lump in her throat, and she didn't trust
herself to say much.
"We're clear of orbit," reported the conn o~cer.
"Warp engines on-line." Ro pointed her finger exactly as she had seen a certain Starfleet captain do it.
"Engage." Phaser blasts from two Galor-class Cardassian warships crackled across space and rocked
the sleek form of the Enterprise-E. The Sovereign-class vessel shuddered before it veered into a
desperate dive, with the yellow, fish-shaped warships in quick pursuit.
On the bridge, Captain Jean-Luc Picard gripped the armrests of his command chair. "Evasive maneuvers,
pattern Zeta-nine-two!" "Yes, sir," answered Will Riker at the auxiliary conn controls. The regular conn
officer sat dazedly on the deck beside his burned-out console, and Dr.
Beverly Crusher ministered to a wound on his forearm. Everywhere on the bridge was the acrid smell of
burnt and overloaded circuits, caused by high-density electromagnetic pulses sweeping the ship.
"Shields down to forty percent," reported Data at the ops console. The android spoke in a calm,
businesslike tone that belied the urgency of the situation.
"Target aft torpedoes on the lead craft," ordered Picard.
"Targeting quantum torpedoes," reported Ensign Craycroft on tactical. She was a young woman with
nerves of titanium, and she reminded Picard of another young woman who had manned that station ten
years ago on another vessel called the Enterprise.
It seemed like a lifetime since they had grieved the loss of Tasha Yar, because now Starfleet lost a
thousand Tasha Yars every day.
"They're lined up," Riker reported urgently.
"Lower shields," ordered Picard. "Fire!" Ensign Craycroft plied her console. "Torpedoes away!" A brace
of torpedoes shot from the tail of the Enterprise, and they looked like shooting stars as they streaked
across the blackness of space. The torpedoes swerved into the lead Cardassian ship like hungry
piranhas, and it exploded in a blaze of gas, flames, and imploding antimatter which engulfed the second
ship behind it. The second ship veered off, sparkling like a Christmas tree before it went dark and began
to drift. The Enterprise kept going, steady on course.
Riker looked back at Picard and gave him a boyish grin. "Works every time." "It works on Cardassians
in any case," said the captain cautiously. He didn't like being reduced to tricks, but when they were
outnumbered by superior forces, they needed all the help they could get. The Cardassians were arrogant
and eager to make a kill on big game such as the Enterprise. That made them careless, something the
Jem'Hadar were not.
"Damage report," ordered Riker.
"There are energy fluctuations on the starboard nacelle, bridge, and decks fifteen through twenty-six,"
reported Data. "Plasma couplings and EPS conduits on deck seventeen require immediate repair.
Recovery systems are compensating, and repair crews have been dispatched. Shields are holding steady
at forty percent, and I am rerouting power from the main reactor. Five casualties reported, none serious."
Beverly Crusher rose wearily to her feet and brushed back a strand of blonde hair that had escaped from
her hair band. Her lab coat was stained, and her face looked gaunt--a doctor at war. "I'm on my way to
sickbay," she said.
The doctor looked down at her patient and gave him a professional smile. "Ensign Charles is stabilized,
but I want him to sit still for a while. I'll send somebody for him as soon as I can. Just keep him
comfortable." Picard gave her a wan smile. "Still shorthanded down there?" "No, I just come up here in
case both you and Will get knocked out, and I can finally take over. I want to be on hand when it
happens." "Good thinking," said Riker, who appreciated gallows humor more than Picard. "But we could
have the computer notify you." "I'm sure I'll know." The doctor put her head down and walked across
the spacious bridge, past two empty science stations, unused since the war started.
Her shoulders stiflened as she entered the turbolift, but she didn't look back.
Picard swallowed dryly. He was having a hard time adjusting to a war in which they were being
overwhelmed on all fronts, in which every department was shorthanded and shell-shocked. Many of his
most experienced crew members were now chief engineers, doctors, and captains on their own vessels.
Only by calling in personal favors had he managed to hang on to his core staff of officers. Defeats and
surrenders had taken their toll, but Starfleet could build more ships faster than they could build good
crew to fly them.
"What's the fleet situation?" he asked Data.
Theoretically, they were in the middle of a major offensive against Dominion forces, but Starfleet had
stopped massing their ships in close formation. The Dominion fleets simply outgunned them, and they
couldn't stand toe-to-toe against them. Instead the new tactic was to spread the battle in three
dimensions, so that the enemy had to break off and pursue.
With good luck and a good crew, a captain might face only two or three Cardassian warships instead of
one Jem'Hadar battle cruiser, and he might live to fight another hit-and-run skirmish another day.
Data shook his head. "Captain, I cannot make an accurate assessment without breaking subspace
silence, although long-range scans should indicate possible hostilities." The android's fingers swiftly
worked his console.
"Search for distress signals," said Picard, rubbing his eyes. "Let's go to our secondary mission-- rescue."
"Setting predetermined course for secondary mission," reported Riker. "Warp three?" "Full impulse, until
we make repairs," replied the captain. "I want to coddle this ship--she's all we've got." Riker nodded and
tapped his comm badge. "Riker to Engineering. How are we doing, Geordi?" "Fine," came a curt reply. "I
know I owe you a repair crew--they're on their way. Is the war over yet?" "Not quite," said Riker with a
half smile.
Captain Picard settled back into his chair. By all rights, they had destroyed one enemy ship and had
crippled another, and they should be finished for the day. But somebody out there needed help--a great
many somebodies.
On the Orb of Peace, the bridge was not as spacious and as efficiently laid out as the circular bridge of
the Enterprise. The dimly lit chamber reminded Ro of a small Bajoran chapel, facing the viewscreen
instead of the shrine. To complete the impression, there were all those religious homilies decorating the
frame around the viewscreen. However, the elegant Bajoran instrument panels lent a soothing reddish
and turquoise glow to the surroundings.
Ro looked back at Shon Navo, a teenager who ought to be in school instead of fighting a war. The two
of them were wearing the rust-brown uniforms of Bajor, and they were wearing their most ostentatious
ear apparel. As the only Bajorans on this Bajoran ship, they had to play every part. For two hours, their
journey had been totally uneventful, and they were chewing up the parsecs as fast as the transport would
go. Ro felt she could take a few moments to coach the boy in his duties.
"Mr. Shon," she began, "stay close to me." "Yes, Captain," he said eagerly, as he shuffled up to her right
shoulder blade. She judged him to be slightly shorter than herself.
"If anybody hails us for any reason, you are to position yourself in a similar position, very close to me.
We'll go on visual and let them know we're Bajoran." "Yes, sir." "I will address remarks to you as if you
were my first officer, and we will speak in Bajoran. They'll be able to translate it, so keep the remarks
pertinent." He cleared his throat nervously.
"Yes?" "I... I don't speak Bajoran. I used to know it as a kid, I think, but I've forgotten it." "War
orphan?" He nodded. "And my new parents took me with them to the Fellowship Colony. Boy, that was
nice. for a while. Then the Federation betrayed us and handed us over to the Cardassians." "Let's keep
personal opinions to a minimum," said Ro. "We're going to Bajor. Despite being officially neutral,
Bajorans hold the Federation in high regard.
After all, the Emissary is a human." The boy's face hardened. "Thus far, the Cardassians have killed all
four of my parents and have tried to kill me several times. Anyone who appeases them is a coward." "I'm
not telling you you can't hate," said Ro. "Just keep it to yourself." "Yes, sir." "You might be forced to
answer a hail when I'm not here. Don't delayreit looks suspicious. Simply identify yourself as the first
officer and send for me. This isn't a big ship--I'U get here quickly. Time permitting, I'll teach you a few
Bajoran words. You can start with--" "Captain," said the operations officer, his back stiffening, "there's a
fleet of ships passing within four parsecs of us. Two of them have dropped out of warp and are breaking
off. They're headed our way." "Where are the other ones going?" asked Ro urgently. "Plot their course."
"The two Jem'Hadar ships have gone back into warp and will catch up with us in a few minutes!" said the
nervous pilot.
"We'll talk our way out of it," declared Ro. "We're lucky they're Jem'Hadar, not Cardassians. Get
Admiral Sharfer to the bridge. And I want to know where the rest of that fleet is going." "Oh, no,"
groaned the tactical officer. "They're. they're headed toward Galion! What are we going to do?" Ro
could tell she was a Maquis-trained officer, not Starfleet, and she tried to have patience with her.
"First of all, get control of yourself." "Yes, sir," responded the woman, straightening her shoulders.
"Should I arm torpedoes?" "No, don't make any aggressive moves without my command. By the way,
we all have people back on Galion." The woman smiled gratefully at her, then gulped.
"Should we warn them?" "If we send a message right now," said Ro, "we probably won't get to finish it."
Ro turned to gaze at Shon Navo. The fresh-faced Bajoran looked so innocent, even though his life had
been steeped in tragedy and hatred. "Shon, I want you to be the first thing they see. Just identify our
vessel, say we're Bajoran, and that you have sent for the captain. With any luck, they'll be in a hurry."
She paced behind her unfamiliar crew. "Lower the lights another ten percent. Put the ships on screen."
The viewscreen revealed two silvery shapes in the distance, dwarfed by the vastness of space. The
Jem'Hadar attack ships looked unprepossessing-- they were smaller than the Orb of Peace--but Ro
knew they were tremendously swift, maneuverable, and destructive. She had never seen the Jem'Hadar,
but she had heard reports of their single-minded ruthlessness and devotion to their masters, the Founders.
"They're at warp six and gaining on us," said the pilot.
"Steady as she goes," ordered Ro. "Don't come out of warp unless they force us to. Don't change
speed." On the viewscreen, the Dominion ships were larger now--two puglike fighters with twin nacelles,
all spit and chrome. Ro imagined that her ship was being scanned and their warp signature was being
verified.
Even though she was expecting it, the sudden beep of the communications panel made her pulse quicken.
"They're hailing us," said the tactical officer with a quavering voice. "And they're demanding that we come
out of warp." "Answer the hail first." Ro motioned to Shon Navo to step in front of the viewscreen as she
retreated to the shadows at the rear of the bridge.
Spine erect, trying to look like his idea of a first officer, the young Bajoran stepped into the pool of light
in front of the viewscreen. He cleared his throat and nodded.
At once, the frightening aspect of a Jem'Hadar warrior appeared on the screen. His face was gnarled
with prickly ridges like a cactus, and his skin was gray and lifeless. His eyes appeared to be red and
vivid, yet they were darkly hooded like a lizard's eyes. A strange mechanical appendage seemed to grow
out of his collarbone and hover in front of his left eye, and a tube pumped a white liquid into an orifice in
the side of his neck. Behind the Jem'Hadar stood another less imposing figure. Like her, he was hovering
in the shadows.
"We are the Orb of Peace, a Bajoran transport," said the young Bajoran in a confident yet respectful
tone of voice.
"Come out of warp," ordered the Jem'Hadar in a gruff voice. "This is Dominion space." "I'm only the first
officer," answered Shon, his voice cracking. "The captain has been summoned." "This is Dominion
space," repeated the craggy face on the viewscreen.
"And we are friends of the Dominion," replied Ro, marching to the front of the bridge. Shon Navo fell
into line behind her, nearly leaning on her back for support. She could feel him shivering.
"Captain Tilo at your service," she added.
"Come out of warp," ordered the Jem'Hadar.
Ro nodded to the conn and said loudly, "Full impulse. Maintain course for Bajor." On the Dominion
attack ship, the shadowy figure at the rear of the cockpit leaned over the shoulder of the pilot. This one
was a different species than the Jem'Hadar, although he certainly wasn't Cardassian.
He had huge ears, pale violet eyes, and an obsequious expression, like a professional politician. A Vorta,
she thought, the midlevel managers of the Dominion.
"What is your business in this sector?" he asked pleasantly enough.
"We are a Bajoran trade delegation," she answered.
"In the past, we have traded with many worlds in this sector, and we hope that we can continue to do
so." "We're in a state of war," answered the little man with the big ears, "as we aid our allies in their battle
against the unscrupulous practices of the Federation.
You might be wise to continue on your way home without further interruption." "That is our intention,"
answered Ro. "Thanks to the benevolence of the Dominion." The Vorta nodded in appreciation of the
compliment, then he added, "We had noticed a large number of passengers on your vessel--most of them
human." "Carrying passengers is a sideline," answered Ro evenly, "especially on our return voyage. We
are headed straight home." "Make certain of that." The Vorta nodded to the Jem'Hadar pilot, and the
screen went blank as the link ended. A moment later, they watched the two Dominion vessels zoom off
into warp.
Ro scowled. "What's their course?" "The same course we traveled," replied tactical.
"They're headed toward Galion and the Maquis settlements." "Do we resume warp speed for Bajor?"
asked the helmsman, his voice quavering.
Ro gazed from the expectant faces of her young crew members to the wizened face of Admiral Sharfer.
None of them ventured an opinion; none of them offered to make the decision for her. This is what she
had said she wanted--total control over this vessel and the lives of a hundred people--and she had it.
Her eyes rested on the young blond woman at the tactical station: her face was tight with fear, but she
kept her tears at bay. Ro knew the fear wasn't for herself but for those left behind, unaware that an
enemy fleet was streaking toward them. Her moist eyes seemed to say that only an animal flees without
any concern for loved ones left behind. They couldn't beat the Dominion ships to Galion, but they could
try to rescue survivors.
"Alert Gallon Central," she ordered. "Tell them about the Dominion fleet. Reverse course, maximum
warp." "Aye, Captain," said the conn officer with a mixture of awe and apprehension.
The boxy little transport executed a 180-degree turn and elongated into a streak of golden light before
vanishing entirely.
Chapter Two
THE ONCE LUSH PLANET OF GALLON floated in space like a charred tree stump, with only
patches of moss left alive. The great forests and groves of olive trees were blackened swamps, and the
lakes were dark with silt and mud. The cities and towns were nothing but blasted craters, still burning like
hellish volcanoes.
Half a million dead, at the very least. There was open weeping on the bridge of the Orb of Peace, and
Ro said nothing to discourage it. The sight was so horrible that she almost ordered it to be taken off the
viewscreen, but it demanded to be witnessed.
She walked over to the navigation console and asked softly, "Any life signs?" The young man shook his
head. "No, none, sir. although the extreme radiation could be affecting our sensors." "They were so much
faster than us," said Admiral Shaffer in shock. "They got here in minutes, and it took us two hours." Ro
strode behind her crew and admonished them, "Keep scanning for life signsmtarget the cities." In her eyes
and her heart, she knew it was hopeless.
Galion was nothing but a funeral pyre, and Derek was dead, along with scores of friends and comrades.
The bridge continued to fill with passengers and their families, and the anquished cries became too great
for her to bear. Ro turned to face them, holding up her hands to quiet their gasps and sobs. "You are
witnesses. Without provocation, the Dominion has destroyed our homeworld, our last refuge. I submit
that we are no longer innocent bystanders in this war--we're part of it." She strode to the conn and gazed
over the young man's shoulder at the readouts. "It will take four days to reach Bajor, and they could
destroy us anywhere along the way. On Bajor, Shon and I could fit in, but the rest of you would have to
be in hiding, right under the nose of the Cardassians on Deep Space Nine. I don't think you can hide
from this war--I think you have to stand up and be counted." She tapped her finger on the panel. "I say
we cut straight across the DMZ to the Federation lines and offer them our help. We can be there in a few
hours." "Yeah, kill the lying bastards!" cried the envoy who had spent days begging the Dominion to leave
the remnants of the Maquis alone.
"Our safety--" began another man.
"Safety is illusory," answered Admiral Shaffer.
"The enemy has shown us that. We must return to the Federation." "That will mean prison for a lot of us,"
muttered the other admiral. A resolute yet pained shadow played across her face.
"I'm higher on their list than any of you," replied Ro, "but we have to stand by the Federation, no matter
the personal risk. We certainly can't depend upon the mercy of the Dominion. Are there any life signs
down there?" "No, sir," came the answer.
"Set course for Federation space, best guess," she ordered. "And turn up the lights in here." On the
viewscreen of the Enterprise was a heartrending sight--a Federation starship floating in space, dark and
lifeless, with several jagged rifts in her hull. The Gallant was a Nebula-class vessel, more compact than
the Enterprise, with her twin nacelles located directly beneath the saucer section and a large stabilizer
atop the craft. Not a light shone on the derelict vessel, and debris stretched behind it like a trail of blood.
"Life signs?" asked Captain Picard, already dreading the answer.
Data shook his head. "None, sir. There are fourteen separate breaches in the hull, and it is unlikely that
any section of the ship maintained sufficient integrity to support life. The distress signal is on automatic
and is fading in strength." "It looks like they used her for target practice," muttered Riker through
clenched teeth.
"Log her position," ordered Picard glumly.
"Someone can tow her in later. Alert sickbay and the transporter rooms to stand down--there's no one to
save here." Data frowned at his readouts. "I am receiving two new distress signals in the same vicinity at a
distance of six parsecs. One is Starfleet; the other is.
Bajoran." "Set course, maximum warp," ordered Picard.
"With all this killing, it would be nice to save even one life today." Within minutes, the Enterprise was
closing in on another pocket of death and destruction in the unforgiving bleakness of space. Picard could
only hope that this time they would arrive soon enough to help.
"Long-range scans show hostilities in progress," reported Data. "An Ambassador-class starship, the
Aurora, and an unknown Bajoran transport are engaged with a Jem'Hadar cruiser." "Shields up," ordered
Picard. "As soon as we come out of warp, fire phasers and keep firing. Don't give the Jem'Hadar time to
react." "Yes, sir," snapped Ensign Craycroft on tactical.
摘要:

StarTrek-TNG-DominionWar1-BehindEnemyLinesChapterOneRoLARENLOOKEDUPattheyellowingclouds,whichresteduneasilyuponthejaggedteethoftheolivehuedmountainsinthedistance.Shedidn'tseethebeautyofthetwilitskyorthefloweringlandwithharvestingseasonuponit;allshesawwerethevaportrailsofshuttlecraftandsmalltransport...

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