Cathedral by Michael Mangels (ebook reader color screen txt) š
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- Author: Michael Mangels
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Taranāatar had already dispatched four of them, but at least six more still crawled in the shadowy canyon, and he wasnāt sure that there werenāt more lurking nearby that he hadnāt seen yet. He had to use additional caution because of the creaturesā acidic blood; his hide was tough, but healing from extensive burns was not how he wanted to spend the next several days.
Standing, Taranāatar feinted to the right with his arm club, and as the creature dove to that side, the JemāHadar soldier scissored his leg out, sweeping it into the feet of one of the aliens. It toppled, off balance, and he grabbed a rock, smashing its skull in one brutal blow. Its death screech reverberated through the canyon.
Suddenly the din became overwhelming as the shadows uncurled themselves and the creatures screamed down at him. His count had been wrong. There were at least a dozen of them left, and they were angry. Skittering and bounding down the rock walls, they came at him.
Roaring his own rage, Taranāatar met their attack, forcing two of them into each other so that their snapping jaws ripped into each otherās heads, green ichor spewing about the canyon. He ducked from underneath their dying bodies to find another alien in midair, about to land atop him. He thrust the arm club upward with all his strength, punching through the creatureās thorax and spine, impaling it. The move may have eviscerated the beast, but its weight drove it down onto Taranāatarās hand, the blood burning through his gray scales and down to softer flesh beneath.
The creature opened its jaws, snapping at Taranāatarās face. The JemāHadar then saw a disconcertingly sharp set of inner jaws shoot out toward him. With both hands occupied holding the beastās scrabbling claws and ravening mouth at bay, Taranāatar had little choice. He opened his mouth wider than the width of the alienās inner jaws, and bit down on the creatureās extrusion. He felt it crunch inside his teeth, and caustic ichor sprayed onto his face. He tossed the alien to the side, pulling the severed limb from its chest and spitting out the vile appendage he had just bitten off.
The other creatures prowled on the walls, skittering upside down like spiders, wary of the fearless JemāHadar. He let out a bellowing roar that echoed through the canyon.
āHey, pallie!ā
Taranāatar looked around for the voice that called to him. Finally he saw a manāa gray-haired human dressed in black and whiteāstanding on one of the ledges up the canyon wall. Light spilled from behind him, and the sounds of other humans and music echoed from the light.
āWould you mind terribly keeping the noise down to a dull roar, please? Youāre drowning out the band. And truth to tell, youāre spooking some of the high rollers.ā
Taranāatar was about to respond, when one of the aliens jumped him from behind, its claws raking around his chest. Reaching up, he grabbed the creatureās elongated head, using its forward momentum to flip it over his head. As it hit the dirt, the JemāHadar smashed his hand down in a chopping motion, severing his attackerās neck and allowing its head to roll into the canyon.
Looking back up toward the human, Taranāatar saw him exiting through what appeared to be a doorway set into the illuminated area. He wasnāt certain, but he thought he heard the departing human say something that sounded like, āSheesh, and I used to think Worf had a problem with holosuite violence.ā
At times such as these the task with which Odo had entrusted himāto live among Alpha Quadrant humanoids in an effort to understand their often incomprehensible waysāseemed utterly unachievable.
4
Chief medical officerās personal log, stardate 53574.7
Itās good to get off the ship from time to time, even if only to take part in a routine survey mission of a solar systemās frozen hinterlands, where the most interesting sights are icy boulders and planetesimals which receive so little illumination that many of them canāt actually be seen. But Chief Engineer Nog finds the region fascinating for professional reasons, as does Ezri, whose scientific curiosityāthe legacy of Tobin and Jadziaāhas been coming to the fore quite a bit ever since the Defiant first embarked on its current explorations of the Gamma Quadrant.
Ezri will be in charge of the mission, and she seems extraordinarily comfortable with the mantle of command that comes with being the Defiantās first officer. I have to admit that her increased confidence in recent months has taken some getting used to. The Ezri Dax I fell in love with, after all, could have been a poster child for disorganization and personal chaos.
But Iāve concluded that I donāt mind the change one bit.
The universe sang to the shuttlecraft Sagan.
In a manner of speaking.
If, Julian Bashir thought, one was willing to apply a rather liberal dollop of imagination to the cacophonous sounds reverberating through the cabin.
āItās beautiful,ā Nog said, leaning forward in the copilotās chair, smiling into the faint glow of the cometary cloud visible through the viewports. Something, gods only knew what, was causing the crystalline ices of the regionās various frozen bodies to resonate like tuning forks at various shifting frequencies. Of course, those vibrations couldnāt generate actual sounds in the vacuum of System GQ-12475ās Oort cloud, but the Saganā s sensors were capable of measuring the vibrations and rendering them in the shuttleās cabin as something audibleāif not entirely enjoyable.
Unless, Julian thought, one happened to share Nogās sometimes rather outrĆ© musical tastes.
āAbsolutely beautiful,ā the young Ferengi engineer repeated, indicating a visual display of an icy ten-kilometer-wide body that suddenly glissaded back and forth through an entire series of overtone pitches. The timbre was an eerie mating of glass harmonica and chainsaw.
From the portside seat, Lieutenant Ezri Dax fixed Nog with a good-natured scowl. āāBeautifulā isnāt the first adjective that
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