Текст книги "Trill and Bajor "
Автор книги: Andy Mangels
Соавторы: J. Kim,Michael Martin
Жанр:
Научная фантастика
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Текущая страница: 12 (всего у книги 27 страниц)
He caught the attention of the highest-ranking person he could find. “Lieutenant, when I give the command—which I’m hoping to do within about two minutes—I want all of our troops to retreat by twenty meters.”
The young female officer looked bewildered. “Twenty meters? Sir, we’ll literally be up against the cave entrance. We’ll be giving up all our maneuvering room.”
“You won’t need it if what we have planned works. If it doesn’t work, I won’t give the signal. Just tell the troops.”
With a worried glance, the lieutenant began relaying the order down the line.
Cyl kept his eye on the runabout, trying to clear his mind of the shouts and shots that rang through the air. The seconds ticked by. One minute.
He realized that he was holding his breath, and exhaled. Two minutes.Another thirty seconds passed.
A beam of pale, bluish light suddenly flashed out of the forward viewport of the spacecraft. “Now, Lieutenant!” Cyl barked.
“Retreat!” the lieutenant yelled, and the embattled soldiers stepped backward.
For a moment, the crowd was unsure what was happening, and then they surged forward en masse—and were just as quickly stopped, their bodies bouncing off an immovable object. Their phaser blasts ricocheted in midair, as did several rocks and other projectiles the protesters threw.
The lieutenant and several of his men looked over at Cyl, puzzled expressions on their faces. Cyl grinned and pointed to the runabout. “Our Guardian friend modified the ship’s force fields to enclose everything from the skirmish line to the cave’s entrance. Nobody is going to get into the caves now.”
The soldiers cheered, some of them pounding each other on the back. Almost all of them, Cyl was pleased to note, remained vigilant.
Then one of the nearby troopers pointed into the crowd, calling to the lieutenant. “Sir! The hostiles are driving a vehicle toward us!”
Cyl turned to see that someone had indeed driven a cargo skimmer into the crowd, which was now stirred well toward panic. The general hoped that common sense would entice the gathering to disperse before anyone was seriously hurt.
“Don’t worry,” Cyl told the lieutenant as he watched the skimmer make its herky-jerky approach through the crowd. “They can’t get that thing through the force field.” He felt reasonably certain that the Starfleet shields would hold easily against such a relatively unsophisticated attack.
But the driver didn’t seem intent on continuing his approach to the shield boundary. Instead, he stopped, exited the skimmer, and scrambled onto the vehicle’s roof.
Cyl couldn’t hear what the driver was shouting, but in a blink, the skimmer exploded with light, forcing him to avert his eyes. Cyl’s dazzled eyes could barely make out the multicolored disturbances in the runabout’s force fields, punctuated by tiny, short-lived conflagrations that resembled thousands of glowing, flame-loving mun’ikabugs stupidly immolating themselves in a fire.
Then his vision went white. Inside his abdomen, the Cyl symbiont spasmed in agony, sending waves of pain through every system in his body.
What have they done?Cyl thought just before a blanket of darkness mercifully replaced the excruciating white light.
His vision still slowly clearing perhaps a minute after the dazzling light-pulse had come and gone, Keru found he had to open the runabout’s hatch manually, since some of the ship’s electrical systems seemed to have failed. Luckily, a backup console confirmed that his improvised force field was continuing to hold. Not that it mattered much at the moment, since everyone outside was either writhing on the ground or not moving at all.
The runabout’s sensors could tell him precious little about the detonation. Though the blast wave had consisted primarily of a fairly standard electromagnetic pulse, it also had apparently carried some unknown type of fast-dissipating radiation. The radiation evidently hadn’t penetrated the runabout’s hull, where its shields were strongest, but might well have pierced the force fields nearest the cave entrance, where the fields would have been at their most attenuated. Fortunately, the readings confirmed that there was little if any danger now of his being exposed to lingering radiation. Hoping no other bombs were present, he opened the force field where it surrounded the hatch and clambered outside.
As he approached the soldiers, Keru was grateful to see that most of them appeared to be either temporarily stunned or dazzled by the flash. None of them seemed to have been hurt nearly as badly as had those on the other side of the force field.
Except for one. Taulin Cyl.
The general lay on his back, and Keru could see that his abdomen was roiling beneath his uniform jacket. His symbiont is going into shock.Keru had only seen this happen twice before during his brief tenure as a Guardian. On both occasions, they had tried to save the symbiont by returning it to the pools; only once had their efforts succeeded.
Keru yelled over to two of the soldiers who seemed the least affected by the blast. “Come help me with General Cyl! We’ve got to get him into the caves!”
Minutes later, they had managed to carry him down from the rocky outcropping that overlooked the plain and up into the cavern’s mountainside entrance, where it seemed that the majority of the Guardians were also mostly unaffected by the blast; only those who had been nearest the entrance during the detonation were partially blinded, and none showed any other ill effects. But as they brought Cyl nearer to the pools, Keru heard a mournful keening issuing from deeper in the caves.
Keru saw several of the Guardians standing near the closest of the pools, watched them screaming and thrusting their hands into the murky water, witnessed the shock and despair etched into their faces as they turned and regarded their equally horrified brethren. And then he saw why they were wailing.
The surfaces of the pools were clotted with floating symbionts, but the only movements they made were either the result of the Guardians trying vainly to assist them, or were caused by other symbionts floating up from below, jostling the small lumpen bodies that bobbed on the surface like so many rotting bogblossoms.
Keru and the others fell to their knees as the enormity of the situation became apparent. They’ve killed the symbionts.The thought came as a scream in Keru’s mind, and he couldn’t be certain that he hadn’t shouted it aloud.
Cyl groaned and reached up to clutch his arm. “Something’s…wrong with…” He seemed too fatigued and distressed to finish his warning.
Knowing that the time to grieve would have to wait until later, Keru stood and dragged Cyl toward the largest of the pools, the one that Dax had dived into just an hour or so earlier. Many of the floating symbionts had already begun to sink again, like balloons that were losing their air.
“We need to extract his symbiont,” Keru shouted to a pair of Guardians who stood nearby, looking stunned. “It’s still alive.” He removed Cyl’s jacket and pushed him into the water, entering the pool with the general. He held Cyl’s arms to keep him from flopping face-first into the water.
And then, miraculously, a silver discharge arced across the water toward Cyl. Moments later, a weaker discharge came from the general’s bloated abdominal pouch, and Keru saw dark, indistinct movement underneath the pool’s gray surface.
“They’re communicating!” one of the Guardians shouted. “They’re not dead, at least not all of them.”
Cyl rolled in the water and looked toward Keru, his eyes ablaze with a light that resembled insanity. “I need to go down there. Dax is in trouble.”
“What?” Keru was unsure he had heard the general correctly.
“Dax is still down in the deep pools. She needs my help. Fal told me. Get me an environmental suit.”
“Sir…”
Cyl’s eyes met his with an imploring look. “Get it now, Mister Keru. Please. We haven’t much time.”
Two Guardians held Cyl in place as Keru climbed from the pool and ran out of the caves into the gathering night. He was out of breath and shivering by the time he reached the runabout to fetch the remaining two environmental suits, but he didn’t allow himself to pause for breath. By the time he got back to the pools, he felt as if his lungs were on fire.
Keru saw that the general was sitting on the rocks at the side of the pool. Though he looked as pale as death, Cyl wore an expression of defiant determination.
“I haven’t been affected by the blast, General,” Keru said. “I ought to go with you.” Or instead of you,he thought.
“I’m perfectly capable of handling this on my own, Mister Keru.” Cyl took one of the suits from Keru’s big hands and started donning it.
Keru scowled, not fooled for a moment by the general’s brave show. He reached for the other suit and began putting it on. Cyl laid an unsteady hand on his shoulder, stopping him.
“No. Stay here, Mister Keru. You have injured friends who need first aid. More importantly, you have to tend to the symbionts. The few who’ve survived are going to need your help badly.”
“You’re…not well, General.”
“That’s not as important at the moment as making certain that Lieutenant Dax fulfills her mission.”
Finally accepting the inevitability of Cyl’s decision, Keru set his own suit down and began to help Cyl finish suiting up. As he worked, Keru heard volitional movement from at least one other symbiont in the pool, a sign that both buoyed his spirits and confirmed that the general was right. The symbionts are going to need my help more than they ever have before.
As he locked the helmet to the environmental suit’s neck ring, Keru noticed that Cyl now seemed calmer, more in command of himself. But intense pain remained evident in the general’s eyes, and was betrayed by the random, spasmodic twitches of his forehead and jawline.
“Thank you for everything you’ve done here today,” the general said, once again placing his gloved hand on Keru’s shoulder. “And neither Cyl nor I blame you for what has happened. Without your help, many more of us would be gone.”
It didn’t escape Keru that the general had referred to the symbiont within him as though it were a separate entity. He wondered if the words the general had spoken hadn’t come entirely from either Taulin or Cyl. His symbiosis is dissolving,he thought, and a profound sadness settled across his soul.
“If you’re not back in two hours, I’m coming after you,” Keru said.
Fully suited, Taulin Cyl stepped into the pool and slipped beneath the murky, corpse-strewn waters. Keru watched him vanish, leaving not even a stream of bubbles in his wake. He wished he’d asked the general if he had any messages he wanted relayed to his loved ones.
And hoped he wouldn’t have to fulfill that same promise for Ezri Dax.
Stardate 53777.6
Bashir rejoined the busy trauma teams mere minutes before a veritable flood of new injured patients entered the already bustling triage center. Except for a few dozen unjoined individuals who had suffered grievous injuries—apparently as a result of hovercar failures and the like caused by the bombs’ radiation pulses—virtually all of the first hundred or so patients to be carried, dragged, or gurneyed into Manev Central Hospital were joined Trills.
Though the sudden influx of ailing and dying joined had stretched the hospital’s already strained resources well past their limits, Bashir knew that he and his medical colleagues had no choice but to soldier on. He tried his best to attend to the unjoined who seemed a secondary priority to the staff. Over the course of the next hour or so, he came to understand clearly that the joined hadto be bumped to the head of the line. The sight of the lifeless body of Dr. Renhol—the woman from the Symbiosis Commission whose desire for Trill secrecy he had accommodated five years earlier—brought that realization home with brutal finality. Her symbiont had been removed and transported either to a symbiont-specific care facility, or back to Mak’ala or one of the other breeding pools. Nobody seemed to know whether or not it had survived.
It occurred to him that Renhol had been the prominent commissioner who’d been gurneyed into the trauma room while he was preoccupied with saving the life of a grievously injured small boy. Though he didn’t regret the choice he’d made, Renhol’s passing pained him nonetheless.
Another thing that bothered him was that nearly all the medical personnel here—joined and unjoined alike, from Dr. Vadel Torvin on down—seemed far too quick to sacrifice the hosts of those injured symbionts. The hosts whom Dr. Torvin had declared beyond saving—despite the fact that most of them had sustained no life-threatening injuries—received about as much regard as had the hospital’s backlog of unjoined casualties.
Which was to say they were being ignored completely.
Now bereft of their symbionts, fourteen former hosts were currently being left untended even as the medics carefully transferred their symbionts into nutrient-rich, hyronalin-saturated mobile symbiont pools in preparation for their transportation to Mak’ala or one of Trill’s other natural symbiont habitats. In this way, the Trill doctors hoped to save the symbionts’ accumulated memories and experiences, though the hosts that had carried the creatures were to be sacrificed to accomplish this.
But Bashir knew that there was no guarantee that the symbiont pools would be of any help to the creatures. Many of them seemed simply too far gone from the radiation their delicate and extraordinarily complex neural tissues had absorbed. And he wasn’t even sure that the very same terrorist weapons that had detonated in central Leran Manev hadn’t also been placed elsewhere. Who was to say that other such devices hadn’t also irradiated the Mak’ala pools?
Still, he had to concede that he could suggest no workable alternative to the removal of the symbionts—at least not yet, though he hadn’t stopped querying the hospital computers about alternative methodologies. And despite the megadoses of isoboramine and other symbiogenic neurotransmitters he had injected into scores of other dying joined people, they were growing progressively weaker, expiring right before his eyes. Their symbioses inevitably grew tenuous, rapidly dissolving as each of the symbionts went into convulsive neuroleptic shock. The joined who had taken the brunt of the neurogenic pulses were experiencing extreme autoimmune reactions, rejecting their symbionts as though the creatures were foreign, invading bodies.
It struck Bashir as ironic that this was precisely how the symbionts were regarded by the neo-Purist radicals, who were the only really likely culprits behind the radiation attacks.
One of the hardest things for a doctor to do was to watch a patient die. But Bashir seemed to have little choice in the matter. He knew all too well that a joining between a compatible host and a symbiont would become permanent after the first several days, after which time the host would be incapable of surviving without the symbiont. After crossing this physiological threshold, the two effectively merged into a single, indissoluble being. To separate symbiont from host past that point was to kill the host, just as surely as a terrestrial human would die following the removal of his or her liver, even though the organ might live on via transplantation to another person’s body.
From the severity of their autoimmune reactions, Bashir expected most of these hosts to take an hour or less to die once their symbionts were extracted. A few expired almost instantly after the removal of their symbionts, despite his best efforts to save them.
Such is the Trill reverence for the preservation of memories,he told himself as yet another host, a middle-aged woman, slipped away from him. He hoped that her radiation-plagued symbiont would somehow find a means of regenerating itself in the network of aqueous subterranean caverns where the unjoined symbionts spawned and recuperated between joinings. At least the dead woman’s experiences would live on in the symbiont, assuming it survived.
As always, he found it difficult to wrap his mind around the alien notion that some sentient beings were valued more highly than others, merely because of their lengthy life spans and backlogs of memories. It was an idea antithetical to his way of thinking, his tolerant and egalitarian Starfleet training notwithstanding. Indeed, he was beginning to find the entire concept repellent, whatever societal necessities might underlie it.
Worst of all, he remained certain that a remedy of some sort existed—if not for the symbionts specifically targeted by the neurogenic weapons, then for the Trill humanoids who were dying because of their dissolving symbioses.
There was no question that a drug possessing the latter property had been developed. Based on what Benjamin Sisko and Jadzia Dax had told him four years earlier, a drug of this sort had been perfected by a now-deceased joined Trill scientist named Bethan Roa, and had in fact been used successfully by the late unjoined Trill malcontent Verad Kalon. Bethan Roa’s serum had enabled Verad to steal Trill Symbiosis Commissioner Duhan Vos’s symbiont without killing its host, and later enabled the removal of both the Roa and Vos symbionts from their respective unauthorized hosts, without bringing significant harm either to humanoid or symbiont.
Unfortunately, Bashir himself had never had an opportunity to make a firsthand appraisal of Bethan Roa’s pharmacological work. When Bashir had asked Dr. Torvin about it, the Trill physician not only had insisted that no such serum existed, but also was adamant that no such thing was even possible.
And if Bashir’s initial cursory search of the official Trill medical database was to be believed, Dr. Roa himself might as well never have existed.
Though Bashir had no way to prove it, he smelled yet another cover-up. Not for the first time, he wished Ezri were here to help him get to the bottom of it. After all, she knew the peculiarities of her own homeworld’s record-keeping systems far better than he did.
As had been his practice ever since the first wave of dying joined patients had arrived at the triage center, Bashir tried to avoid considering what had become of Ezri. Though he hadn’t heard from her—or succeeded in getting a signal through to her—since she had departed for Mak’ala, he had picked up some fragmentary reports of neurogenic blasts in other locales around Trill. Neurogenic attacks had even been reported near some of the symbiont spawning grounds.
Is Ezri even still alive?he wondered yet again before forcibly pushing the thought aside. He had other, more immediate things to consider.
Bashir and Torvin had just finished making the rounds of a cramped, makeshift “joined ward,” where more than sixty joined Trills lay dying, though their symbionts had yet to be extracted. The unconscious had been placed on cots, gurneys, improvised tables, or even the floor. Several of the stricken appeared to be awake, though their eyes were unfocused and staring, the smooth melding of symbiont and host that characterized a healthy joining utterly disrupted. A few issued intermittent but piercing shrieks.
Each of these incoherent madhouse cries made Bashir wonder whether the host or the symbiont was screaming.
“We’ve waited long enough,” Dr. Torvin was saying, shaking his balding head sadly as they moved through the crowded ward, surveying the hapless patients.
Bashir’s stomach went into free fall as he walked beside the tall, gangly Trill physician. “What are you saying, Doctor?”
Torvin scowled as he brought the peripatetic appraisal of the ward to a halt. “I think you know what I’m saying, Doctor Bashir. We have to begin the wholesale extraction of the symbionts carried by these hosts, immediately. If we wait much longer, it may be too late.”
“Doctor Torvin, if we remove the symbionts, these people will die, just like the others. We can’t go on sacrificing people this way.”
“We have no better options,” Torvin said, shaking his head. “You’ve seen that. Sometimes a host must be sacrificed so that a symbiont can live on.”
“But not if an alternative exists. If we could find some record of Bethan Roa’s work on nonlethal symbiosis dissolution, we could at least—”
“Roa again,” Torvin interrupted, his frown taking on more ferocity since the last time Bashir had tried to discuss this subject with him. “I thought we’d been through all this before, Doctor. I’ve already explained to you that no such thing exists.”
Bashir had finally had enough of Trill denial. “Yes. You have. And I don’t doubt that you’re right, at least as far as Roa’s files are concerned.”
“What are you saying?” Torvin asked guardedly.
“I’m saying that Roa’s work appears to have been the subject of yet another whitewash by the Trill Symbiosis Commission.”
Torvin’s frown gave way to an amalgam of pique and bewilderment. “Why would you say that?”
Bashir tried to tamp down his rising anger, with only limited success. “Because your society is at war with itself at this very moment, apparently as a direct result of your government’s rather checkered history with regard to such things. Because your world’s official database contains no references to Roa’s work—work whose results other Starfleet officers can verify independently. And because the Trill Symbiosis Commission’s joining registry does not reveal the current status of the Roa symbiont.
“Let me speak plainly, Doctor Torvin: I believe that the Commission doesn’t want anyone to interview Roa’s new host, assuming there is one, about Bethan Roa’s symbiosis dissolution serum.”
Torvin gestured broadly at the dozens of people who lay suffering all about the small, curtained-off section of the room. His expression took on a desperate cast. “A drug that would allow us to remove symbionts for radiation treatments without killing these people would be a great boon, I should think. We’re not monsters, Doctor Bashir. If such a thing really didexist, then why would anyone want to see it suppressed?”
Based on Torvin’s reaction, Bashir was now willing to bet that the Trill doctor wasn’t a direct participant in any Symbiosis Commission cover-up of the Roa formula. In Bashir’s eyes, Torvin genuinely did not seem to be a political animal.
But that didn’t mean he couldn’t have been duped and manipulated by others who were highly motivated to bury Roa’s work, and keep it buried.
Bashir held up a hand in a gesture of truce. “Doctor Torvin, imagine what might happen if it became known that symbiosis could be undertaken on a temporary basis. That the bond between symbiont and host could be established, then broken, then established again just as easily with a new host. The symbiont population is relatively small as it is, They would become a sought-after black-market commodity if Roa’s drug were to become common knowledge.”
Torvin looked horrified for a long moment, then began nodding slowly. He actually seemed to be considering alternatives to simply letting more hosts die, giving Bashir a surge of renewed hope.
Then the Trill physician sighed, looking downcast and shaking his silver-fringed head yet again. “Unfortunately, when the Commission decides to bury something, it tends to stay buried.”
Bashir thought bitterly of the unrest that had spilled onto the streets of Leran Manev and so many other Trill cities prior to the bombings. And the secrecy that had caused it all in the first place.
Then a sudden inspiration seized Bashir’s imagination. “Not always, Doctor Torvin.” He turned toward the main section of the triage center, intent on finding the nearest computer terminal.
More perplexed than ever, Torvin took a step toward him. “Doctor Bashir! Where are you going?”
Bashir paused at the curtain that separated the makeshift “joined ward” from the rest of the triage center. “Can you keep these hosts and their symbionts joined and alive for, say, another hour without endangering the symbionts?”
“Perhaps, at least with some of them. But the sooner we remove the symbionts, the better their chances for survival.”
Bashir smiled, his mind already racing. “Then please hold off for as long as you can.”
He left the ward at a run.
Bashir focused his attention on the computer terminal before him, tuning out the shrieks and screams of the dying as best he could.
As in his previous round of computer queries, no record remained of any relevant pharmacological work by anyone named Bethan Roa. Reasoning that Roa’s serum would have been present in trace amounts in his symbiont’s neural fluids, Bashir accessed the database of Gheryzan Hospital. He knew that the state-of-the-art facility’s symbiont trauma center had treated the Roa symbiont after Jadzia Dax’s sister Ziranne had rescued it from a ring of symbiont thieves. Working quickly, he searched for the symbiont’s confidential medical records. As he navigated through the database, he began making plans to crack Roa’s files open, recalling a few “hacks” he had learned from his holoprogrammer friend Felix.
Damn.Bashir’s heart sank. Whatever medical records Gheryzon Hospital might have had on the Roa symbiont had apparently been either deleted or sealed. The Commission had been thorough indeed in its cover-up—a whitewash for which he now felt partly responsible. I should have demanded that the Commission allow me to study Roa’s formula five years ago. People are dying because I thought it better to let them keep their damned secrets.
He sat in silence for perhaps a minute, despair threatening to overwhelm him.
Then it occurred to him that Roa’s formula would also have been present in at least one other place.
His hands moving with preternatural speed, he made a second query.
A few moments later, a jubilant grin spread across his face.
Torvin waited as long as he felt he could. But less than twenty minutes after Dr. Bashir had left the room, four of the afflicted joined Trills in Ward C suddenly took an abrupt turn for the worse. With the assistance of a trio of other surgeons and several medical technicians and nurses, Torvin removed a quartet of radiation-injured symbionts from their convulsing, screaming hosts. Although Torvin was trained to maintain an emotional distance from his patients, the sight was almost too horrible to behold.
Two of these hosts, both of them males, died with what Torvin could only regard under the circumstances as almost merciful swiftness. The third, an elderly woman, hung on for nearly ten minutes, shrieking in agony until the very end. Torvin pronounced the fourth host, a comatose young woman who had never regained consciousness, dead not six minutes later.
One of the dying joined patients who lay restrained on a nearby table suddenly screamed. The haggard middle-aged woman’s eyes were wide open, gray-clouded and sightless. Her limbs strained against their restraints as she began to convulse vigorously enough to break her own bones. Torvin took a quick step backward, then directed a pair of med-techs to prepare to remove her symbiont as well.
A scant two minutes later, Torvin held a laser exoscalpel over the struggling woman’s bare abdomen, preparing to begin the extraction process.
“Stop!” barked a voice from behind Torvin. It startled him, almost making him drop the scalpel.
He turned angrily toward the source of the sound, only to be greeted by an incongruously ebullient Dr. Bashir. The human physician was holding up a loaded hypospray as though for inspection.
“I’ve reconstructed Bethan Roa’s formula,” he said.
Torvin felt his eyes narrowing involuntarily. He couldn’t afford to permit himself to believe that it might be true. He realized for the first time that he hadn’t even considered the possibility that Bashir might actually succeed in his quest.
“Where did you find it?” was all Torvin could think of to say.
“Roa wasn’t the only symbiont whose tissues would have carried traces of the formula,” Bashir said quickly, his words tumbling out in a rush. “It was also present in Duhan Vos’s medical records. Apparently, the Commission opted merely to seal the records of his admission to Gheryzan Hospital rather than to delete them altogether.”
Torvin’s eyebrows shot skyward, and he noticed that several nearby nurses and medics had paused to stare. This was not a conversation he wanted to have in front of them. He felt his skin redden with anger at the violation of his fellow commissioner’s confidential records. And though he was curious about exactly howthe Starfleet doctor had managed to do such a thing, he decided the question was moot. The human obviously possessed considerable talent in fields other than medicine, and the deed had already been done.
“You had no right to break into Vos’s files,” Torvin said, suddenly realizing he was gripping his exoscalpel almost tightly enough to shatter it.
The human’s smile gave way to a look of quiet determination. “You may, of course, feel free to file an official protest with Starfleet Command. In the meantime, we have lives to save.” He approached the patient who still lay restrained and convulsing on the table.
Torvin stepped into his path, raising the scalpel in a gesture of warning. It occurred to him only then that its glowing orange blade was still active. “I’m sorry, Doctor. I simply can’t allow you to put this woman’s symbiont at risk with an experimental procedure.”
Bashir took another step forward, as though daring Torvin to use the scalpel as a weapon. The hand that carried the hypospray didn’t waver. But then neither did Torvin’s scalpel.
Torvin began to repeat himself. “Doctor Bashir, I’m afraid I can’t permit you to—”
Moving more quickly than Torvin thought possible, Bashir weaved around him, evading not only the scalpel but also the grasp of a burly male med-tech who had evidently tried to run interference for Torvin.
With a loud hiss, Bashir’s hypo deposited its contents directly into the convulsing woman’s abdominal pouch. Cursing, the med-tech grabbed Bashir in a wrestler’s hold and began dragging him bodily toward the door. Though the human doctor was a good deal smaller than the medic, he was clearly determined not to be moved quickly or easily.