Part Four (Cont'd)
The entire holding area was filled with a roar of pure guttural rage, loud enough to make the walls rattle.
Seconds later, it was filled with a different noise. The unmistakable sound of a heavy Klingon body impacting on a powerful security forcefield. There was a fizz and crackle of energy accompanied by a far more pained roar.
Then the fizzing ended, and gave way to the sound of the same heavy Klingon body falling to the floor of the holding cell in an aching heap.
Then there was silence.
“So,” Sunek quipped into the silence, “How’s that working out for you?”
Klath summoned the energy to pick himself up off the deck, but he didn’t acknowledge the Vulcan, who was crouched on the other side of the holding cell, doing his best to tend to Jirel’s broken and unconscious form. That had been the fifth futile attempt that he had made to breach the forcefield with pure strength alone. And it had gone about as well as the previous four.
Klath knew that it was a spectacularly poor plan with no real hope of success. After all, a forcefield running off the power generators of an Orion cruiser could replenish its strength much faster than he could hope to do. But he still felt the need to do something.
“I mean,” Sunek continued behind him, “You know what they say about doing the same thing over and over and expecting different results, right?”
Klath’s sense of impotent anger was even building to the point that he was seriously starting to consider relieving some of that frustration by shutting his annoying Vulcan companion up. But ultimately, he decided against it. For now.
Instead, he turned and walked over to Jirel’s prone body.
“His condition?”
Sunek sighed and looked back up at the Klingon. “I’m not a doctor. But it’s not looking good, buddy. You saw the beating he got. There’s gotta be head trauma, broken bones, Surak knows how much internal bleeding…”
His words tailed off, but the implication was clear. Klath looked down at the swollen and bloodied face of his friend and grimaced.
“If he wanted revenge, he should have fought me,” he growled, “I was just as involved in taking Denella from him as Jirel was.”
“First rule of interstellar bastardry,” Sunek offered with only a fraction of his usual humour, “You don’t get where this guy has by picking too many equal fights.”
Klath grunted unhappily in response, before he turned his attention back to the forcefield, preparing for a sixth assault that would likely go as well as the preceding five.
“Still, Jirel needs medical attention. That is why we must try to break out of here.”
“Yeah, but I’m pretty sure you’re gonna kill yourself before you short out that thing,” Sunek countered as he stood back up and gestured at the shimmering forcefield.
“Then what do you suggest?”
“I dunno. I guess we need to wait here until the guards come back to move us someplace, and then figure something out. We’ve been in plenty of holding cells before, right? Guards are always doing stupid things like that.”
“And how long will that take?”
“I dunno, Klath! Who am I? Head of shift rotation?”
The two bickering friends stood toe to toe with each other as they argued. For a second time, Klath considered taking some more aggressive steps to shut Sunek up.
Whether or not the Vulcan sensed how close he was getting to being slugged in the face by his crewmate, he took a step back and sighed, looking a little less adversarial.
“Ok, so, we definitely need to get out of here one way or another, right?”
“Right,” Klath nodded, not entirely sure why that needed reiterating.
“Right,” Sunek nodded back, “Cos you don’t wanna live out your days down some Orion mine, and although I’m still not entirely clear on what he meant by ‘concubine’, I also really, really, really don’t wanna find out.”
Sunek paused, looking down at Jirel’s unmoving body, and then back up at the forcefield. “So,” he continued, “I’m just gonna say that - hypothetically speaking, you understand - do you think that we’d have a chance of shorting it out if we were to use someone, y’know, more…willing to take the hit?”
Klath’s eyes widened, hoping that the Vulcan wasn’t implying what he thought he was implying.
“You cannot mean--”
“I’m just saying - again, totally hypothetically - what if we were to push, say, something kinda Trill-sized and unconscious into the forcefield. Something that’d, y’know, be less able to jump back when the pain got too much? Would that maybe…short it out?”
Klath grunted unhappily, fixing the Vulcan with a glare that suggested in no uncertain terms exactly what he thought of Sunek’s suggestion. It wasn’t the first time the Bounty’s pilot had seemed willing to sacrifice one of his colleagues for himself. Nor the first time he had played it off as a bit of banter.
“Ok, don’t give me that look. I’m not saying we actually do it, obviously! I’m just--Y’know, we’re brainstorming, thinking big, working with what we’ve got, right? No wrong answers--!”
“That was a wrong answer,” Klath stated flatly, as he focused back on the forcefield and prepared for the pain he was about to endure.
“Come on,” Sunek persisted, “Whatever we’re doing, your plan is definitely not the answer either. I dunno what you think you’re achieving, but I can definitely bet you ten bars of gold-pressed latinum that you’re never gonna just magically run through that forcefield.”
Klath ignored him, and charged. And, to his surprise, magically ran through the forcefield.
Technically, just as he reached the shimmering wall of energy, it had disappeared, and he had continued through the gap left behind at full pelt, only managing to stop himself before he careered into the far wall. He turned around to see the equally surprised Sunek staring back at him, suddenly worried about the wager he’d placed seconds earlier.
“Hey, no, no, no, that doesn’t count,” the Vulcan blurted out, “You didn’t run through anything. It was switched off. That’s cheating!”
“Sunek,” Klath sighed, trying to focus his colleague back onto more pressing matters.
“Seriously, if you think I’m paying out for that--”
“Sunek!” the Klingon snapped with more urgency, gesturing for him to stop rambling on and start utilising the surprising new-found freedom they had been granted.
“Oh, right, yeah,” Sunek nodded, stepping out of the cell, “Also, what the hell just--?”
Before he could finish his question, a sturdy metal grate dropped down from the ceiling, crashing onto the deck in between them. Seconds later, the grate was joined on the deck by a familiar green-skinned woman, who deftly jumped down from the access tunnel above the room.
“Guys, will you get a move on,” she sighed, “This isn’t a party, it’s a jailbreak.”
“Denella!” Klath roared.
Sunek didn’t think he’d ever seen a Klingon hug someone before. Until now. Klath wrapped the Orion woman in a hearty embrace, which she was happy to return in kind.
Then, she saw Jirel’s unconscious body over the burly warrior’s shoulder.
“Oh my god…”
They broke the hug and she rushed over to the Trill’s side, leaning down and brushing his bloodied face with worry.
“He put up impressive resistance,” Klath offered by way of a positive spin, as he stepped over to her side, “But he requires medical attention.”
Denella stifled the pang of guilt at what had happened to Jirel, all because he had loyally followed her, and stood back up.
“Ok, you two get out of here. Take Jirel, get back to the Bounty, and get him whatever treatment you can manage. I still need to find Sarina.”
“We must assist you--”
She shook her head, giving the Klingon an intense stare that he immediately recognised. “You know, more than anyone, I need to do this alone. Just make sure you’re waiting for my signal, ok?”
Klath nodded wordlessly, and stepped over to pick up Jirel and hoist him over his shoulder.
“Um,” Sunek offered as Klath and Denella stepped back out of the holding cell, “Where the hell are you going, exactly?”
Denella checked the phaser on her belt, then mustered a slight smile as she glanced at Klath again.
“I’m heading into a burning house.”
Klath’s mouth curled up into a tight smile of his own, complete with a nod of understanding and a look that displayed no small amount of pride in the warrior in front of him.
“Qapla', Denella,” he grunted.
Sunek, for his part, just looked confused.
****************************
The good news, such that it was, was that after some time, Sarina had finally felt comfortable enough to emerge from behind the cover of the lounge chair.
The bad news was that, rather than helping Natasha muster some sort of escape plan from the lavish boudoir that was serving as their holding cell, she had instead scurried across to one particular area of the room, which was dominated by a full-length wardrobe, and had quickly started to select various outfits from within it. And she seemed to be completely ignoring Natasha’s questions.
“Ok, Sarina, please listen to me, how many guards are we dealing with outside? Just the two that brought me here, or are there more--?”
Before she completed the sentence, Sarina interrupted her.
“You must prepare yourself for the master,” she said, beckoning Natasha over to the wardrobe.
She said it in a voice that was quiet and diligent, chillingly devoid of any sort of emotion. As if she was talking about getting ready for a weekly cadet review.
Natasha reluctantly walked over and glanced over the outfits that Sarina had selected. Though suggesting that any of them were substantial enough to be called an outfit seemed laughable.
“Yeah, I’m good with what I’ve got on,” she managed.
Sarina, still on auto-pilot, looked her up and down, assessing the rather more dignified tunic and trousers that she was wearing.
“The master won’t be happy with that,” she replied.
“Well, I’m hoping to disappoint him for as long as I--”
She stopped herself short, not wanting to finish that sentence out loud. For as long as she could. That, she knew, was the long and short of it. She could do her best to fight, to channel all of her Starfleet training, or even to try and negotiate or bargain her way out of it. But it would likely all just be delaying the inevitable.
Unless she could get through to Sarina.
“Listen,” she persisted, as the other woman dispassionately offered up another outfit for her assessment, “We really are here to save you. But I need you to--”
“No,” the green-skinned woman called out, a tear forming in her eye, “I--In the past, I have tried to--But I know, there is no escape. I serve my master.”
Natasha felt her heart break at the defeated tone to her words. Silence descended as she flopped down into a nearby chair, sensing defeat.
“But…you said,” Sarina whispered as she disappeared back into the wardrobe, “Denella was here?”
It was the first time since they had met that Natasha had heard any emotion other than fear in the other woman’s voice. And it gave her a glimmer of hope.
“That’s right.”
Sarina considered this information, idly toying with a piece of fabric on one of the garments as she did so.
“I remember her,” she said eventually, “If she’s here, then--”
Sarina immediately shut up as the main door to the suite opened. Natasha could see visibly that the woman had retreated back inside herself. As she whirled around to see who had walked in, she suddenly understood why.
Rilen Dar marched over to where the two women stood. The muscular Orion cast a deeply unhappy glare at Natasha as he approached, but he addressed the enfeebled Sarina.
“I thought you would know to prepare this one. Why is she still dressed like that?”
“I am sorry, my master,” she offered quietly.
Natasha ignored the rush of fear she felt inside, and instinctively tried to protect Sarina in the only way she could see that she could, given the situation. By distracting her master’s wrath away from her.
“Yeah, that’s my fault,” she said, idly gesturing to the elaborate wardrobe, “Would you believe you’ve got nothing in my size?”
Dar didn’t smile. His stare chilled her to the bone, but she maintained her front of defiance. It was all she seemed to have left.
“I can see you’re going to require a little more training than the Orion women require,” he scoffed with a dark leer.
“Probably,” she shot back, surprising herself with her front of confidence, “So much effort that it probably isn’t even worth your while--”
The speed of his movement took her by surprise. One moment, she had been standing straight next to Sarina, and holding her ground with defiance, the next Dar was onto her, forcing her backwards. His bodyweight crushed her up against the wall. His face got close enough to hers for her to smell his fetid breath. She stifled a wave of nausea, as she tried and failed to wriggle free. He was too powerful.
“On the contrary,” he hissed at her, “I do like a challenge…”
She felt one of his hands grab her around the throat with a vice-like grip, preventing her from even trying to resist any further. Off to one side, Sarina stared down at the ground, retreating further inside herself.
With no more defiance to offer, Natasha struggled to even gasp for air.
And then the ceiling exploded.
****************************
“Just…explain one thing to me.”
Klath sighed in frustration at the Vulcan’s continued efforts at conversation, and fired twice to fell the two Orion guards charging at them.
He staggered further on down the corridor, as alert sirens blared out all around. He had Jirel’s limp form over his left shoulder, and the stout Orion disruptor pistol he had liberated from the first guard they had run into in his right hand. In his wake, Sunek scurried on behind him, with a disruptor of his own.
As a rule, Klath disliked energy weapons for personal combat. There was nothing especially honourable about simply shooting your enemies, as far as he was concerned. But, all talk of honour aside, Klath was also a pragmatist. And so, in their current situation, a disruptor pistol worked just fine.
The only other thing he needed was some peace, to focus on the task of getting them to a transporter room, and back onboard the Bounty.
Sunek didn’t seem to agree on that point.
“See, we came all the way out here to help Denella, right?” the Vulcan continued, as they reached another intersection and paused while Klath checked around the corner to make sure that the coast was clear.
“Yes,” Klath grunted as a reluctant reply.
“Ok,” Sunek nodded, seemingly oblivious to their perilous situation, “But now we’ve actually caught up with her, we’re just leaving her back there to go off all by herself and do who the hell knows what? While we just run away and hide?”
Klath glanced around the corner again and fired off a succession of disruptor blasts, as a trio of Orions rounded the next intersection and thundered towards him. All of which did nothing to stop Sunek’s train of thought.
“Cos, honestly, if our plan was just to run away and hide the whole time, then I’d really rather we’d have just done that from the start.”
Klath gritted his teeth as he felled the final guard, leaving the coast clear. Still Sunek continued.
“Preferably in a bar that can mix a decent Risan mai-tai--”
Exasperated, Klath whirled around to the Vulcan, Jirel’s unconscious form still propped up on his shoulders.
“Sunek, can you please--!”
He paused in shock as he saw the Vulcan lift his disruptor in his direction and fire.
It took him a second to realise that the shot had actually passed just to one side of him. Behind him, the Orion guard that had just rounded the corner, ready to attack, slumped to the ground.
Sunek looked back at the Klingon with an entirely innocent face.
“What?”
Klath stifled a rueful smile and merely nodded a terse thank you, before leading them off on their continuing journey back to the Bounty.
“You still haven’t answered my question,” Sunek pointed out as they walked, “Why did we leave her back there?”
Klath kept his focus on the route ahead, not wanting to be bailed out by Sunek twice in one day, but he considered his answer as he did so. In the end, Denella answered it for him.
From somewhere far above them, it was impossible to tell how many decks away, they heard the distant but unmistakable sound of an explosion. The entire ship gently rumbled all around them from the aftershock of the tremor.
Klath glanced back at Sunek as the Vulcan tried to narrow down how far away the explosion had been with his more finely attuned hearing.
“Because she can handle this herself from here.”
Sunek raised an eyebrow. And nodded in understanding.