Cathedral Michael Mangels (free ebook reader for pc .TXT) đ
- Author: Michael Mangels
Book online «Cathedral Michael Mangels (free ebook reader for pc .TXT) đ». Author Michael Mangels
âIn or out, Taranâatar,â Kira heard from behind as the group neared a passageway leading to the guest quarters. It was Quarkâs unmistakable high-pitched voice. Ro half turned at the sound, and Kira thought she saw her cast a fond look in Quarkâs direction.
âIn or out, Taranâatar,â Quark shouted from the end of the bar. He might not even have noticed the JemâHadar, except that he had looked out into the Promenade to see the contingent of dignitaries walk by, along with Kira and Ro. And then, in the midst of a particularly salacious thought about the contours of Roâs uniform, he saw the giant creature standing to the side of the doorway, stock-still like some giant stone slibut staring down at the Sacred Marketplace from its perch atop the Tower of Commerce.
Taranâatar glanced in Quarkâs direction but did not move. Quark walked toward him, more comfortable with the gigantic, pebble-skinned humanoid since the JemâHadar had started buying time in the holosuites for his physical exercise. âCome on, Tarannie, I canât have you just hovering there in the doorway. Youâll scare off the paying customers. Either in or out.â
The JemâHadar lumbered in and took a seat, precariously balancing his body on one of the bar stools. Mornâs stool! Quark rolled his eyes, glad for once that his bestâand most talkativeâcustomer had not yet come in for the day. He hated to think what would happen if Morn and Taranâatar got into a scuffle over the seating arrangements.
âHey, Tarannie, youâve just staked out Mornâs regular stool. He isnât in yet, but you might want to know for future reference.â Taranâatar gave him a blank look.
âI did not see his name on this stool,â Taranâatar said. âI wasnât aware that he owned it. I thought you were the owner of this establishment.â
âI do own the place. Itâs just that Morn doesnât like to sit anywhere else. You know, people have favorites.â Taranâatar continued to stare at him in evident incomprehension, so Quark decided to let the matter drop, at least until Morn arrived. âWhat can I get you?â
âI wish to have the same drink you made for me last time I came here. The brown and white one.â
Quark screwed up his face in distaste. âThe root beer float? Ugh, I canât figure out what hew-mons see in that stuff, much less what you get out of it.â
He nevertheless passed Taranâatar a large tankard of the frothy brown liquid, in which two lumps of vanilla ice cream floated. He watched in both wonderment and revulsion as Taranâatar lifted the noxious potion to his lips and downed it in a single swallow. After a nod from Taranâatar, Quark immediately set about filling a second tankard and handed it over.
Quark usually made it his policy never to question a clientâs tastes. But as Taranâatar started in on his fourth helping, Quark found he could no longer restrain himself. âWouldnât you rather have a nice, slimy Slug-o-Cola instead?â
âNo,â Taranâatar said, in between quaffs, âI would not.â
âHmm. Well, youâre sucking those things down like theyâre the last vials of ketracel-white in the whole quadrant.â
Taranâatar paused, apparently contemplating his rapidly expanding collection of drinking vessels. Then he fixed his hard pale eyes on Quark. âIâm one of the very few of my kind who has never required the white.â
Quark recalled the time, not so very long ago, when Dominion forces had controlled the station. JemâHadar soldiers could get pretty testy when their white didnât arrive on time. But they had never ordered root beer floats. Or anything else for that matter.
âThere you go, then,â Quark said. âJudging from the root beer habit my nephew Nog developed since joining Starfleet, maybe this stuff is just the Federationâs version of the white.â
âIâve found that your root beer floats energize me. Are you telling me that this beverage also creates a chemical dependency?â
Quark wondered if he hadnât tweaked Taranâatarâs nose a little too hard this time. Shaking his head, he said, âIâm only saying that youâre drinking like a man who has a problem.â
Taranâatar downed half of his fifth root beer float in one gulp, then turned to Quark, a foamy white mustache on his upper lip. âPerhaps I do. During my last holosuite exercise, I encountered something unexpected.â
Quark tried not to stare at the ice cream that clung to the JemâHadarâs upper lip. He couldnât imagine what Taranâatar might have encountered during his holo-battles that could possibly have surprised him. Those 331ultraviolent programs he used were pretty straightforward hack-and-slay scenarios.
âWhat do you mean, âunexpectedâ?â Quark said, frowning. âWas there a glitch of some kind?â He hoped that Taranâatar wasnât ramming those sharpened targ-stickers of his into the imaging hardware again. And that another one of those holoprogrammerâs âjack-in-the-boxâ subroutines hadnât popped up in the combat software.
âIâm not certain. During combat, a man appeared. A human. He was dressed in black, and had silver hair. He called me âpallie.ââ
Quark grinned. âOh, thatâs just Vic. Heâs a Las Vegas entertainer.â
âCurious. He told me that the noise from my combat scenario was disturbing others in an adjacent holosuite. I didnât think that was possible.â
Quark chuckled. âItâs not. Unless youâve started jamming pointy things into the mechanisms again, thereâs no way even you could make that much noise.â
Taranâatar looked as baffled as his inexpressive face would permit. âThen why did this Vic ask me to âkeep the noise down to a dull roarâ?â
âVic has probably taken an interest in you, and thinks you need to unwind a bit,â Quark said with a grin.
âUnwind?â
Quark leaned toward the JemâHadar and whispered conspiratorially, âYou probably strike Vic as a bitâŠtense.â
âThen heâs mistaken,â Taranâatar said, a little too quickly. âBut I am curious. I thought that all holographic characters were confined to particular programs or holosuites.â
âNot this one.
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