Part 11 (1/2)
”Ready?” Riker asked O'Brien.
”Ready, sir.” With efficiency and speed even in such tight quarters, O'Brien set up a portable force field generator to create an invisible wall blocking off an area eight meters in diameter and four meters high. The force field secured their portion of the tunnel and extended into the adjoining security office, preventing Carda.s.sian reinforcements from pouring into the office and grabbing the away team as they exited one by one from the tunnel. Their Starfleet combadges contained receivers keyed to the force field generator, so they could move freely in or out of the field. Anyone else would be trapped either inside or outside the force field. Riker doubted, however, that they'd be lucky enough to find the security section unguarded.
”Commander,” La Forge whispered, ”the access panel into the security office is directly behind me.” He wiggled into position in the cramped s.p.a.ce, removed a device from his belt, then pressed it against the panel.
Riker motioned for half the security detail and O'Brien to retreat down the access tube and around a corner, just in case armed resistance awaited them on the other side.
La Forge slowly popped open the panel. Those around Riker held their breaths. An angry squad of Carda.s.sians could be trapped inside the force field with them, waiting on the other side of that panel. Or Riker's group might find no one in the office at all. The team members would be most vulnerable during their exit from the tunnel, since the small opening forced them to enter the office one at a time.
His phaser set on stun, Riker took the point, diving and rolling through the panel's opening into the tiny office and surprising two armed Carda.s.sians. The soldiers fired, but Riker kept moving, and the weapons blasted holes in the spot he'd just vacated, fortunately nowhere close to where the rest of his team waited.
Smoke from the burning metal stung Riker's nostrils. Adrenaline surged into his system and added power to his movements. His diving lunge knocked one of the thick-necked Carda.s.sians off his feet and awkwardly tumbled him to the deck, giving Riker time to confront the second man. From the office floor, Riker sidekicked his foe's wrist, sweeping the Carda.s.sian's phase disruptor rifle to the floor with a loud clatter.
The Carda.s.sian sprang for the rifle.
Riker knocked it across the room. The Carda.s.sian's hands came up empty, and he swore and turned his fury on Riker. The soldier charged, his large hands grasping for Riker's throat. Riker s.h.i.+fted and rammed an elbow into his opponent's jaw, heard it crunch as bones broke. The commander followed up with a damaging knee to the groin.
With a soft gurgle, the Carda.s.sian collapsed, and his unconscious weight pinned Riker to the deck. Shoving the fallen man aside, Riker started to level his phaser at the other Carda.s.sian, but his foe had regained his feet. He loomed over Riker, his weapon aimed, ready to fire.
”Don't move,” La Forge ordered, his phaser pointed at the Carda.s.sian's chest.
The Carda.s.sian froze in surprise. Riker shoved to his feet, careful not to block La Forge's aim. ”Thanks for the a.s.sist.”
”I wasn't going to let you have all the fun,” La Forge replied, never taking the focus of his ocular implants off the Carda.s.sian. ”Drop your weapon.”
The Carda.s.sian's finger flexed. La Forge reacted faster and fired his phaser. The second Carda.s.sian hit the deck with a thud, and the engineer shook his head. ”They never learn when to give up.”
Riker wondered briefly how the Enterprise was faring. He had limitless faith in Captain Picard, but they'd transported away from a tactical nightmare-one Picard had deliberately taken the s.h.i.+p into so Riker's team could insert.
Then there was Deanna, who, along with two of his closest friends and one arrogant, inscrutable old man, might even now be fighting for her life trying to break a sociopath out of prison on an enemy-occupied planet- Enough! Snap out of it, Will! Stay focused!
At Riker's signal, O'Brien and the rest of the team poured through the access panel. Riker ordered security to restrain and gag the wounded Carda.s.sians and move them out of sight into one of the brig's holding cells.
O'Brien reached into his tool kit and took out a Starfleet tricorder and a Carda.s.sian padd. The padd was specifically loaded, he'd claimed, with the root patterns of every decryption program the Carda.s.sian military had in use until the Carda.s.sians withdrew from Bajor. There was, of course, a very good chance a lot of them would no longer work. But a few still would. The trick was going to be finding the right one so they could hack in. O'Brien placed the padd on the desk, then set up an interface between the padd, the tricorder, and the security console.
Riker eyed the unlikely arrangement of devices warily. ”I hope this works.”
”So do I, Commander,” O'Brien said without looking up.
Riker nodded toward the padd. ”Who'd you say you got those codes from again?”
”Fellow I know on DS9,” O'Brien said absently. ”The guy who fixes my pants.”
Standing before the door Director Lanolan's housekeeper had just slammed in their faces, Deanna Troi prepared to reach for her phaser. With their cover blown and the Jem'Hadar at their backs, the Daronan away team would have to fight their way to the prison.
”I'll take the leader,” Vaughn whispered quickly. ”On my signal ...”
Before Vaughn could complete his instructions, the door swept open and Director Lanolan stepped onto the porch. ”You must forgive Adana. The soldiers frightened her. Please, come in.”
The director, tall and thin as Deanna remembered but with his dark hair now completely gray, stood aside for them to enter. Crusher a.s.sisted Vaughn, who continued his senile old man disguise, across the threshold. To maintain her character in the family charade, Deanna gave Data an impatient shove, then followed him inside.
We told the Jem'Hadar we're a family who work for you, Deanna advised Lanolan as she pa.s.sed. Please don't give us away.
I'll do my best.
Once his visitors were inside, Lanolan descended the steps toward the patrol leader. Deanna and the others moved out of sight of the open door and, on Vaughn's signal, drew their phaser rifles.
”If Lanolan can't convince them we're his domestics,” Vaughn whispered, ”we attack first to gain the advantage. Understood?”
Deanna nodded with the others, but she feared for her mentor. The director stood directly in the line of fire between them and the Jem'Hadar.
”Is there a problem with my staff?” Lanolan's loud, clear voice carried easily and echoed off the limestone floor of the foyer where the away team hovered in the shadows.
”They have been wandering the countryside without proper credentials,” the patrol leader said.
”Idiots,” the director said heatedly. ”I've told them repeatedly, but they're not very bright, I'm afraid. Shall I send them for their ID chips now?”
The patrol leader hesitated, as if considering Lanolan's offer.
”Set phasers to maximum,” Vaughn ordered in a soft but steely voice.
Deanna held her breath and checked her weapon, dreading the prospect of taking life but ready to carry out her orders.
”We've already wasted enough time,” the Jem'Hadar said. ”Be warned that if they're abroad again without ID chips, we'll kill them.”
”Understood,” Lanolan said in a conciliatory tone. ”They are a trial to my patience as well, but with the war, domestics are hard to find, even poor ones.”
Without another word, the Jem'Hadar patrol marched down the walkway and onto the road. A moment later, Lanolan stepped inside, closed the heavy outer door and locked it. He turned to Deanna, a thin sheen of perspiration glistening on his upper lip.
”That was close. Come.” With three long strides, he crossed the foyer to what appeared simply another of the wooden panels that lined the walls, but with a flick of his hand along the top molding, the panel swung inward. ”You'll be safe in here, in case the Jem'Hadar return.”
Data stepped into the hidden pa.s.sageway first, followed by Beverly, then Deanna. Vaughn brought up the rear with Lanolan, who closed and secured the panel from the inside before following them down a spiral staircase to an underground room. They entered through a utilitarian t.i.tanium-alloy door with an intricate locking system, but the room's interior, by contrast, was lavish in its furnis.h.i.+ngs. Comfortable chairs and sofas, lush tropical plants, and a state-of-the-art replicator provided the well-lighted area with a pleasing ambience. A cozy grouping of chairs around a table filled the corner nearest the food replicator.
”A bolt-hole,” Lanolan announced, ”one I built primarily for the safety of my wife in case any of our more dangerous prisoners escaped. Until today, I've never needed it, thank the G.o.ds.”
He turned to Troi. ”It's good to see you, Deanna, though I must admit, your visit has taken me quite by surprise. Please tell me you're here on behalf of the Federation, and that Betazed and Darona are about to be liberated.”
Vaughn spoke up. ”That's why we're here, sir. I'm Commander Elias Vaughn of Starfleet. This is Dr. Crusher, and Lieutenant Commander Data. We're part of a mission to help the Betazoid resistance drive the Dominion from your system. The situation is a bit complicated, but what it comes down to is that we need your help. Commander Troi can explain.”
”My help?” Lanolan frowned. ”I don't understand. What can I do? Wait, forgive me. Can I offer you refreshment? Are you hungry?”
Vaughn shook his head. ”We haven't time to eat, but we'll take water if you have it.”
Lanolan went to the replicator and quickly handed out bulbs of chilled Daronan spring water, which Data alone politely declined. Deanna's first sip of the distinctive sweet liquid brought memories of her months of interns.h.i.+p tumbling back, triggering nostalgia for a simpler, gentler time when the universe had been a safer place.
Once his guests had been served and seated, Lanolan took a chair and turned to Deanna. ”Now, will you tell me what this visit is about?”