Having just finished an inventory, Ylva Falk hardly needed to think before answering. “Is that a trick question? Of course I do. The question is what do you want, and how fast do you want it to work? Do you want a virus? a bacteria? Gas? I have a good selection of it all, though if you want to strike the whole ship at once, you had better give me time to produce more.” She thought for a bit. “What sort of crew is on board? Jaffa? Humans? Is the target shielded? Are there many on board? Are they scattered or grouped up? Give me those answers, and I can give you a proper agent. Mind you, most of my toy stockpile takes a day or so to fully deal with its target. The truly fun tools I produce right before use. You [i]really[/i] don’t want to have a stockpile of weapons capable of killing the entire crew of this ship instantly. Trust me.” "I'm looking at possible salvage of a disabled Ha'tak, most systems including shields are down. Crew unknown, assume both. We'll need to get a closer look first, there might be no one on board at all, but in case they are, something that can rid me of them within a few hours would be lovely." she thought of the time cost for a moment, "Would proper delivery speed things up? If the life support is up we can attempt beaming a container straight into ventilation. If they have jammers up all we really have are the rings. Still it's preferable to sending marines on board." “So you want a gas. Not my specialty, but still fun.” Ylva did not speak for about a minute, thinking through the options. “With both Jaffa and Humans possible, symbiote poison is out… If life support is running, then yes, that would work for hastening distribution… Hmm.. Anthrax is good, but its hard to remove afterwards. Ricin is too slow. Saxitoxin would be very useful, but it decays too quickly for practical aerosol deployment. Tetrodotoxin might work, but I would need to produce more, unless you have some marines willing to go in with a strike team. Most of these toxins are far more effective when deployed by injection. Botulinum is a particularly nasty one, but I can’t say for sure how fast it would decay. Still, while its not as effective as some others, I think the ideal toxin would be Sarin. Its tested and proven effective time and again. And I’ve got a bit set by for a rainy day.” “If you deploy it directly into the life support system, Sarin ought to deal with any crew effectively and quickly. And if you’re just grabbing the ship for salvage, simply vent the atmosphere before entering. Any remaining gas pockets will be irrelevant then. Not even a Goa’uld should be able to stand up to that, let alone a Jaffa.” Having said hers, Ylva simply waited to see if he still wanted to use it. [i]’Some Tau’ri are nauseatingly squeamish about using these weapons, don’t you agree, Ylva?’[/i] Vanja whispered in their mind. ‘Yes. Its sad really. Thankfully the commander appears not to be one of them.’ She thought back, smiling. If at any time she had been one to dislike the possibility of collateral damage, that time was long past. As one of the Tok’ra, she knew that sometimes you had to sacrifice much to achieve a goal. Captain was drumming her fingers on the map table as Ylva thought, very nearly counting the seconds it took the navigation officer to plot the jump, all the while the pilot being alone out there with six squads of gliders. Fortunately the R-302 was faster than the gliders, and so if the pilot had any brain, he’d run even without her telling him to do so. It was but a minute, but one of the longer ones in her life. Halfway through Ylva’s listing of various evil things, they finally made the jump. “Good get to it. I’m not saying it’ll come to use but lets leave the option open. Black out.” she finished with the [i]Langford[/i] emerging from the brief hyperspace trek. “Very well. I will prepare a suitable dosage, so long as you can ensure the delivery system is functional.” Ylva answered right before the channel closed. She would probably ask for the sensor readings afterwards, so that she could be able to see how well it worked, and what might be improved upon in the future. With the shipboard lab, she had already seen many possibilities for future projects.