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Star Trek: Bounty - 5 - "Once Upon a Time in the Beta Quadrant"

Part Three

The ear-splitting cry of pain filled the room with a haunting sound that sent a shiver cascading down every spine in earshot.

The accompanying crack of bone was enough to make everyone present wince in unison. All except the one person responsible for causing the pain.

“I did advise you to try a sedative,” Natasha smiled apologetically at her latest patient.

The sandblasted nomad stared back at her with fearful wide eyes. But as the pain subsided and the unfamiliar-looking woman stepped back, he awkwardly lifted his left arm back up in astonishment and turned to his similarly dishevelled colleague that had brought him to the infirmary with delight.

Natasha nodded in satisfaction and looked over at Kitaxis, who still looked a little shaken from the noise of the man’s cry.

“There. One dislocated shoulder reset. Another successful treatment.”

Part of her was undeniably enjoying her work in Arcadia Falls’s infirmary. The back to basics approach she was having to take was rewarding experience and invention over simply triaging and treating ailments with a quick wave of a tricorder.

But as soon as she had started to enjoy herself, she was bitten by a pang of remorse.

After all, this was real life for the residents of Nimbus III, and if she started seeing this as a chance to play at being an old school medic, then she was dealing with their plight no better than Jirel and his deluded cowboy fantasies.

So instead, she focused on the concerns of her patient, turning back to the silent nomad and his colleague with her best medical officer’s glare.

“Listen, be more careful operating that drilling rig of yours in future. And I’d strongly advise you to take an analgesic from the nurse before you leave.”

Her mute patient stood and accepted a small vial of pain killing medication from Kitaxis. He offered a simple nod of acknowledgement before the pair of nomads exited the main room of the infirmary.

“You’re welcome,” Natasha shrugged as they left.

“Done that myself a few times,” Kitaxis said as she began to clean down the treatment area, “Doesn’t always work.”

“The trick is to get the patient to relax their muscles before you try to seat the joint back in the socket,” she explained, worrying that she was maybe being a little patronising towards the woman that had apparently worked at the infirmary for some time now.

But Kitaxis didn’t appear patronised. Instead, she nodded in understanding, taking in the impromptu lesson she was getting.

“Course,” she added, “Nomads are lucky if it’s just a dislocation they get from drilling accidents. Had a lot of amputations as well.”

Now it was Natasha’s turn to wince as she pictured the somewhat mediaeval approach to that form of surgery that would be possible in this location.

“But,” Kitaxis continued, “It’s hard work that’s gotta be done. Takes a lot of time, and a lot of nomads to find water out in Prosperity County.”

Any satisfaction Natasha was feeling for the help she’d provided vanished in an instant, and the guilt returned in a flood.

The idea that an inhabited planet in the 24th century would have such an issue with something as simple as their water supply seemed perverse.

When Nimbus III had first been set up, the absence of stable fresh water had always been dismissed as a ‘tomorrow problem’. With three galactic superpowers sending regular supply ships loaded with resources, external sources of food and water were plentiful.

Which meant that by the time everything collapsed, no permanent solution to Nimbus III’s most glaring problem had been established. And the small amount of work that had been done to construct a network of water treatment facilities connected to the few stagnant pools and saltwater lakes on the surface were cannibalised for parts by the marauding bandits that had been left behind.

Since then, every fresh attempt to domesticate the place had featured some proposal for dealing with the water situation on page one of their prospectus.

Some suggested terraforming projects, some wanted to put modern replicators in every home on the planet, with no clear plan for how to power them, one promised an audacious solution using a vast solar sail array to capture and insert a rogue ice moon into orbit which could then be mined for water.

One group had even posited a solution based on a long-forgotten experiment that took place in the Mutara sector a century ago, which they claimed could be modified to deliver a smaller scale habitat on a specific region of a planet’s surface. But the scientists involved in that project disappeared without a trace weeks after it was first announced, with rumours floating around that the Obsidian Order had been responsible.

But whatever solution was suggested, none came to fruition. And with supply runs to Nimbus III now almost non-existent, water remained the sparsest of commodities on a planet renowned for sparsity. And the thought that, in the modern age, people were still losing limbs, or even their lives over something as fundamental as fresh water, made Natasha’s sense of guilt more palpable than ever.

And she decided she had to do something.

“Kitaxis,” she said firmly, “What if I told you that--”

The door burst open suddenly, stopping Natasha in her tracks, and the man she had treated earlier staggered in wearing only his trousers, fully conscious, and even more fully confused about the neat stitching across his gaunt stomach where a stab wound had once been.

“Wh--What the hell happened?” he managed.

Natasha and Kitaxis quickly rushed over and supported the unsteady man over to a chair in the corner of the room.

“Hey, easy,” Natasha offered with concern, “You’ve had a lot of stitches in that wound.”

The man looked up at her, then down at his stomach. It was far from the only scar across his upper body, a patchwork of ugly blemishes dotted across his leathery skin, but it was the neatest.

“You did this?”

“The lady here’s a doctor, Gr’Ash,” Kitaxis nodded, “She’s fixed you up. Good as new.”

Natasha offered the man a guarded smile, not entirely sure how the grizzled Nimbosian barfly was going to take her impromptu surgery.

To her relief, his face creased into an appreciative smile. She was slowly starting to get used to the time delay involved in a resident of Nimbus III processing the concept of kindness.

“Well,” the man called Gr’Ash nodded, “Thank you, miss. When I saw the knife go in, I thought I was a goner there.”

“Just try to steer clear of any more…disagreements,” Natasha offered back.

Gr’Ash nodded, tentatively feeling along the ridge of stitches with his hand as he mulled over his lucky escape.

“Say,” he added suddenly, “What brought a medic to Arcadia Falls anyway?”

Natasha paused before she answered, as she was forced to remember the reality of their mission to the town. Such that it was. With a heavy sigh, she realised that she should probably at least try to help Jirel and the others out on their search.

“Actually,” she admitted, “I came here with my friends. We were looking for a man called Toxis?”

As soon as she had said the name, something visibly changed in the faces of both Gr’Ash and Kitaxis. Something replaced their usual look of sad acceptance at their lot in life on this particular planet. Something that was clear in their eyes.

Fear.

And suddenly Natasha felt herself worrying all over again. Though not for the residents of Nimbus III. But for her friends.

****************************

The door to the storeroom of the Bar of Plenty burst open.

The room itself continued to make a mockery of the bar’s name. Aside from a couple of crates half-filled with dirty liquor bottles and a few pieces of broken furniture, it was entirely empty. There really wasn’t plenty of anything anywhere.

But such issues were not on Jirel or Klath’s mind as they were frogmarched inside by D’Ronn and Sa’Loq, both with their pistols pointed at their backs. Toxis followed behind, dragging Bri’tor along by his skinny arm.

Klath kept his left hand clamped over his right arm, as a trickle of dark pink blood ran down his tunic top. Proof that, when Toxis’s men had pulled their weapons, he had at least attempted to resist, just as he had promised.

Fortunately for the Klingon, his sudden leap at the nearest goon had surprised them enough to throw off their aim. Unfortunately for the Klingon, the pellet they had fired had still managed to graze his arm with enough force to render his resistance brief and ineffective.

“Honestly,” Jirel said, who had opted to raise his hands in defeat and remained unscathed, “I thought we were getting along back there.”

Jirel’s statement was answered by D’Ronn, or possibly Sa’Loq, digging their pistol a little deeper into his back.

“Come here, bartender,” Toxis drawled, shoving Bri’tor over to where the off-worlders stood, “Save my men the trouble and relieve our guests of their weapons.”

Bri’tor looked at the scowling Klingon and the unhappy Trill with an apologetic glance, as he took their pistols from their belts. And then, for a moment, he was standing in the same room as Toxis, with a loaded weapon in both hands. It was a fact that didn’t escape either party.

“Huh. Bet you’re thinking about using those, eh, bartender?” Toxis grunted with a dark leer, “Get some revenge for that brother of yours?”

Toxis’s own men seemed uncertain about this situation, both of his goons switching their attention to Bri’tor momentarily. The bartender forced himself to look up at Toxis, who made absolutely no attempt to defend himself. Instead, he just stared back with the confidence of a man who knew that he was perfectly safe.

Moments later, Bri’tor’s shoulders sagged, confirming that supposition. Jirel looked at the defeated man with sympathy, while Klath was more disappointed. This man was no warrior, that much was clear.

“That’s what I thought,” Toxis scoffed, “Now get rid of those, and bring something to restrain these two gentlemen with.”

Bri’tor nodded and scurried off. As a final humiliation, Toxis didn’t even bother to watch him leave, knowing there was no risk of even being shot in the back.

“Hey,” Jirel tried again, “It doesn’t have to be like this.”

Toxis adjusted his wide-brimmed hat and looked back at the Trill. To Jirel’s surprise, he was sure he saw a slight tinge of regret in the outlaw’s eyes.

“That’s where you’re wrong, stranger,” he replied, “This is the way it always has to be down here in Prosperity County.”

The man clad all in black took a step closer to Jirel, any hint of regret now having vanished.

“See, what you don’t understand is we were never going to be able to negotiate, you and I.”

“I’m sure we could have--”

“Because I’ve seen folks like you before. Off-worlders who come here, join us in the dirt, dress up like this is all a game. Except this ain’t no game for us, stranger. This is life for me and my boys. I know what you got on that little ranch of yours, in that outhouse. And we can’t have the likes of you stopping us from taking something like that.”

He punctuated his speech by sending a glob of tobacco arcing down onto Jirel’s boot and kicking his foot with enough force to make his replicated spurs jangle.

Jirel stifled a grimace. Not only for the reminder of some of the less tactful elements of his outfit, but also because it was now clear that Toxis knew about the water pump at Goodlife Ranch.

And he found that he had exhausted his own reserves of bravado for the time being. He suppressed a gulp.

This never happened in the holosuite.
 
Part Three (Cont'd)

Of all the sharpshooters in Prosperity County, Rutox had long considered himself to be the strongest of all. His trigger finger was his pride and joy, and it had served him well for many years.

But, it turned out, Denella’s was even faster.

She may have been taken by surprise by the half dozen armed men that greeted her as she exited the hut, but it had immediately been clear to her that everything in the ranch was at risk. As indeed was everything in the immediate vicinity of the ranch. And so, her own trigger finger had kicked into action.

Just before she raised her hands in surrender, she had swiftly keyed a simple command into the communicator on her belt. Relaying a pre-programmed message not to any individual, but to the Bounty itself.

It was a command that she had put together some time ago, primarily because they tended to leave the ship parked on a lot of planets, more often than not leaving it unguarded. She considered it a miracle that it hadn’t been stolen already. At least, before she had added in her code.

Now it was less of a miracle. Because with a deft touch of her trigger finger, she had put the Bounty into lockdown.

Which wasn’t impressing Rutox, who had dragged her and Zesh across to their ship, only to find that the rear ramp was retracted, and there was apparently no way onboard.

The Nimbosian outlaw growled in frustration as he turned back to where Denella and Zesh stood, guarded by two of the gang members. The other three had been sent around Goodlife Ranch itself, checking for any other off-worlders still lurking around the place.

He stepped right up to the Orion woman, close enough for her to have to repress a feeling of nausea as she felt his fetid breath on her face, though she kept herself as outwardly stoic as possible.

“Ok, listen here,” he growled, “Toxis is gonna be here soon. And he’s gonna want those weapons you’ve got inside your ship.”

“What weapons?” she replied with an air of innocence, “We’re pacifists.”

Next to her, she heard the somewhat less calm Zesh groan slightly.

“By the Registrar of the Divine Treasury,” the Ferengi muttered unhappily to himself, “Still making jokes. Even now.”

Rutox’s leer grew a little darker. Denella kept her expression as calm as possible.

“Don’t get smart, off-worlder,” he grunted back, “I ain’t kidding around here. Neither are my boys.”

She felt the sensation of an air-powered rifle being dug into her back, but she didn’t flinch.

“I can’t open it,” she offered more seriously, “Not yet. The ship’s been deadlocked. None of us can get in. Not for twenty four hours, anyway.”

It was a lie. The lockdown could be undone at any time with her own personal decryption key, an extra failsafe she’d built in just in case she ever locked everyone out by mistake. But that wasn't something that she was prepared to reveal to the Nimbosian in front of her.

“What the hell kinda ship is that?” the man with his rifle to her back grouched.

“The kind that doesn’t like strangers.”

Rutox’s eyes narrowed. With a growl of rage, he turned and fired his pistol at the Bounty’s left rear landing strut.

Denella felt a choking stab of sympathy pain as the pellet struck the strut with enough power to pierce the metal. After a second, a trickle of lubricating fluid began to ooze out.

Her baby was bleeding.

“L--Listen,” Zesh piped up, “I think we can work this out. If you give me access to a computer terminal, I have a small quantity of latinum that I can transfer to you, or your superiors, within three business days--”

The forceful jab of a rifle into his back stopped his negotiation before it had even got started.

Rutox turned back to Denella with a sudden look of inspiration, and wagged a stumpy dirt-streaked finger at her.

“You’re lying.”

“I’m not--”

Before she could back up her first lie with further untruths, Rutox turned and now pointed his pistol at Zesh’s tender head.

“Lie to me again, and I pull the trigger.”

“A--Actually,” the Ferengi stammered, now finding two weapons were being pointed at various parts of his body, “I think if I pay an extra transaction fee, I can get the transfer completed overnight--!”

“Now,” Rutox continued, ignoring Zesh’s pleas, “Here’s what’s gonna happen. You’re gonna let us into this ship of yours, and you’re gonna fix that water pump you’re hiding back there. And you’re gonna do both before Toxis gets here, otherwise your friend gets a hole in the head. Ok?”

There was a tell-tale hiss from the pistol, indicating that he had cocked the weapon again. On the other end of the weapon, Zesh started to wail quietly.

Denella licked her lips, processing the fact that the outlaws seemed to know about the pump while ignoring the wider psychological implications of how she perhaps felt a touch less concerned about Zesh being shot than she was about the Bounty getting shot again.

Rutox, meanwhile, showed no sign of moving his pistol.

“Ok,” she nodded eventually, “I’ll do what you want. Starting with the pump.”

Rutox’s face darkened still further. “Your ship--”

“Pump first,” Denella insisted, hoping she wasn’t pushing her luck too far, “It’s a way bigger job, so if that boss of yours wants both things done before he gets here, I’d suggest you let me prioritise that. Trust me, I’m an engineer.”

The burly Nimbosian stared at her with an expression that made Denella worry that her final attempt to buy some time wasn’t going to work. But eventually, he retracted his pistol from the Ferengi’s head and nodded, just as the three man search party returned.

“No other folks here,” one of them gruffly reported, “Whole ranch is clear.”

Rutox nodded in satisfaction, then idly gestured to Denella and Zesh with his pistol.

“Take these two back to the pump and get them to work. And keep a close eye on them. They try anything, shoot ‘em.”

He looked down at the quaking Zesh with a cruel smile.

“This one first.”

The men nodded. Two of them grabbed Denella and Zesh by their arms and began to march them back across the baking expanse of Goodlife Ranch.

Denella allowed herself a momentary sigh of relief, glancing at the still-fearful Zesh and offering him a supportive smile and a nod.

It was still a pretty hopeless situation, but they’d bought some time for the others. Not only for Jirel, Klath and Natasha, wherever they were over in the town and whatever they were getting up to. But also for Sunek, who was still hiding out somewhere.

She just prayed that one of them had a plan.

****************************

Sunek didn’t have a plan.

In fact, all he’d really managed to do since he had peered out of the hut through a crack in the door and seen Denella being led away by a group of armed Nimbosians was hide.

He had at least done a good job of hiding, even if Sunek did say so himself.

He’d managed to squeeze through a gap in the metal panelling at the rear of the water pump’s hut moments before three of the men had burst in to conduct their search. And had then continued to flit from cover to cover in the late afternoon sun, staying one step ahead of the search party until they had completed a full lap of the entire ranch.

Finally, as the men had returned to their colleagues, presumably satisfied that their extensive search was complete, Sunek had hidden himself away in one of the ranch’s storage sheds near the outskirts of the habitat.

Here, he was confident that he could remain hidden while he put his plan into operation.

Except, Sunek didn’t have a plan. Which was proving something of a hindrance as far as his plan to put his plan into operation was concerned.

Trying to find some sort of inspiration, he had completed a quick inventory of the shed he had randomly holed himself up in, hoping to find some sort of weapon, or a transporter pad, or some comms equipment with which he could signal the others for help.

But his search had yielded nothing like that at all.

Instead, all he had found was some old, worn out soil reclamators, stripped of most of their useful parts, a few crates of empty seed pods, and a few mostly dried out containers of fertiliser and chemicals. Presumably, a former owner of the ranch had actually attempted to grow something out in the middle of the desert at some point. And presumably they had failed.

But much to the chagrin of Sunek, and the incredibly heroic and cunning plan that he didn’t have, the same former owner hadn’t thought to invest in any weaponry, or a communications console, or even a transporter pad.

Which, as far as Sunek was concerned, was an unforgivable oversight.

The Vulcan sat down cross legged on the warm sandy ground inside the shed and sighed, staring at the meagre supplies he had in front of him.

Inside, he could feel the anger starting to rise again. Born of the frustration he was feeling.

He was roused from his frustrations by a noise from outside. He scampered over to a gap in the metal sheeting of his latest hideout to peer out at the rest of the ranch, worried that he might have to make another swift exit.

But instead, he saw a gaggle of people walking back over to where the water pump was housed. Denella and Zesh were being marched there at gunpoint.

The frustration inside Sunek rose a little further. The anger began to ferment.

He saw his friends in danger. He saw that they were hopelessly outnumbered against the hostile forces that had entirely swamped the ranch. And he saw that he had no chance to get back to the Bounty.

He definitely needed a plan.
 
Part Three (Cont'd)

The sound of the men saddling up outside the Bar of Plenty was enough to attract worried attention from all corners of the town.

Natasha peered out of the window of the infirmary, flanked by Kitaxis and Gr’Ash, who buttoned up his shirt to cover his fresh scar and set his dusty hat back on his head.

The two Nimbosians had been in the middle of telling her about Toxis and his gang when they had been disturbed by the ruckus outside.

They had explained how the gang had ridden into town having already ransacked several other settlements in Prosperity County on their way here. Like a tornado slowly tracking across the desert, they spread destruction and misery as they passed through.

Kitaxis had even opened up about the personal impact that the latest carnage to hit Arcadia Falls had wrought on her, the death of her husband’s brother at Toxis’s own hand.

And as Natasha had listened, the knot of guilt inside of her had grown and grown. As had the palpable sense of worry. That once again the Bounty’s crew were very much in over their heads.

Those worries only grew as she watched the unruly group of men in the street outside. All of them were armed and ready for action, some hooted and hollered as they prepared themselves for whatever they were doing. And most of them kept their attention on one man in particular.

A tall, gaunt man on a sturdy Nimbosian horse who carried himself with a calm, quiet menace and idly chewed a mouthful of tobacco with a satisfied smile.

It didn’t take Natasha long to figure out which one was Toxis.

“Looks like they’re moving out someplace,” Kitaxis muttered from Natasha’s side as she stared out the window.

It was an unnecessary comment, given what they could all see, but it broke the unsettling silence that had descended inside the now otherwise deserted infirmary.

It also didn’t take Natasha long to deduce where the motley crew outside was moving out to.

“The ranch,” she whispered, eliciting looks from the other two.

“Excuse me?” Kitaxis asked, confused.

Natasha snapped back to business mode, her concerns for the others overriding her sense of residual guilt for the time being.

“I’ve got to find my friends,” she explained, “They went into the saloon over there.”

“Lotta people go into that saloon,” Gr’Ash mused with a surprisingly philosophical air, “Not all of ‘em come out.”

That didn’t make Natasha feel any better. She moved over to the exit, only for Kitaxis to call out and stop her in her tracks.

“Be safest if you waited. They’ll be gone soon.”

Natasha turned back to the worried face of the nurse, prepared to argue her case.

“You should listen to her,” Gr’Ash added with a grimace, “You don’t want to get in their way. And if those friends of yours fell foul of Toxis…well, then there’s no hurry.”

This comment unsettled her further, but she couldn’t help but see the logic. So she returned to the window.

But not before checking that the loaded Nimbosian pistol was still safely attached to her belt.

****************************

Out in the street, Toxis checked his own pistols and slid them into his holsters with quiet satisfaction, before turning his attention back to the gaggle of men around him.

It wasn’t exactly an army. But he didn’t exactly need one. Rutox had reported back that he had already claimed the ranch, and the ship that the off-worlders had arrived on.

This wasn’t an invasion. But a victory march.

His gang had been put together over a lifetime spent out on the fringes of what passed for civilisation on Nimbus III. But even though they professed loyalty to him, Toxis knew that if push came to shove, there wasn’t a single man here that he would trust his life with. In fact, he was sure there were already a few of them that were plotting to kill him, now that he had Goodlife Ranch under control.

Trust was a definitely relative term on Nimbus III.

Still, Toxis had lived with that ever-present threat for long enough now, and he was sure he’d see off any challenge that came along. He’d seen off plenty of them before.

And now he had the ranch, and a starship, he’d be almost untouchable. Not just in Prosperity County, but on the whole planet.

So he remained entirely confident as he gently kicked his horse to the head of the group and turned to address his men.

“Well then, boys,” he called out, “What say we go see my ranch, hmm?”

The gathered throng hooted and hollered in further celebration, drawing yet more attention to themselves. One or two even fired a few shots into the air to punctuate their calls.

Toxis himself remained a picture of dark serenity, as he pulled on his reins and turned towards the direction of Goodlife Ranch. But as he prepared to leave, he felt something that interrupted that feeling of calm.

He felt a tell-tale tingling sensation on the back of his neck.

The outlaw whirled his head around in an instant, knowing exactly where to look. He was just about fast enough to catch a glimpse of Bri’tor as he quickly tried to hide from view in the window of the Bar of Plenty.

Toxis stifled a grimace, wondering whether he should solve that particular issue that had been festering for so long once and for all before he rode out to the ranch.

But ultimately he dismissed it. There would be plenty of time for him to deal with the cowed bartender later.

So he turned away from the saloon. And led his army of outlaws out of town, leaving behind nothing but a series of wispy trails of dirt. And a lot of miserable people.

****************************

Bri’tor stared down at the two pistols on the top of the bar in front of him.

They were the same weapons that he had taken from the off-worlders on Toxis’s behalf, without even questioning what he was doing. Like an obedient servant.

He had held those weapons in his hands, right in front of Toxis, and he had done nothing. Because he had been scared.

For all of the rage he felt when he looked at the man who had killed his brother, he could certainly keep it well hidden when he needed to.

He looked up at the empty expanse of the bar, now vacated by Toxis’s men, who had driven out any other regular customers when they had quickly turned on the off-worlders and marched them to the back room. Yet again, as Toxis had driven away his customers, and used the place like his personal play area, Bri’tor had done nothing.

He had heard them talking about the ranch, and the ship that the off-worlders had brought with them, but he had been too focused on carrying out Toxis’s demands to really focus too heavily on what was being said.

Even though the gang had brought him nothing but misery since they had arrived, he had just done what they had asked. Because he was scared. And his fear had trumped any resistance he might have otherwise tried to offer.

And even now, there were two armed members of Toxis’s group in the back, standing guard outside the back room where the off-worlders were restrained. Which Bri’tor had allowed to happen without so much as a passing comment.

He hated Toxis. For what he had done to him, and what he was continuing to do to him.

But as he stared at the weapons in front of him on the dusty counter, apparently as useless to him as if they had been toys made for children, Bri’tor realised that there was someone he hated even more than Toxis.

He hated himself. For allowing it all to happen.

Just as he miserably contemplated his continued inaction, and forced the fresh memories of his brother out of his mind, the door to the saloon burst open. He looked up and immediately felt better as he saw the kind face of his wife walking in.

But he was more guarded when he saw who Kitaxis was with.

On one side of her was a mysterious woman in a dusty brown tunic that Bri’tor had never seen before, and on the other side was Gr’Ash, seemingly entirely recovered from his earlier disagreement in the Bar of Plenty.

Upon seeing the miraculously recovered man, Bri’tor immediately feared the worst. Revenge and recriminations were popular subjects in Arcadia Falls.

“N--Now listen,” Bri’tor managed, taking a step back, “I don’t need any trouble here--”

“Honey, relax,” Kitaxis smiled, as she walked over to him, “It’s not like that.”

She stepped behind the bar and gave him a warm hug. Of the sort that, even after so many years of fetid misery in Arcadia Falls, still filled him with comfort.

Ignoring the touching reunion between the bald bartender and the stout nurse, Natasha’s attention was focused on the familiar pistols on the counter.

She recognised them as the models that Jirel and Klath had taken with them. And that, combined with the absence of the Trill and the Klingon in the bar, was filling her with a sense of dread.

“My friends,” she barked at Bri’tor, “Where are they?”

Bri’tor glanced at Kitaxis, then at the stranger. Any instincts he might have had to help being blocked by his fear.

“I don’t know what you mean--”

“They came in here,” Natasha pressed, not interested in any excuses or lies, “And these are their weapons. So where the hell are they?”

“The lady needs an answer, Bri’tor,” Gr’Ash grunted from Natasha’s side.

Natasha felt a little odd about the backup that she had managed to procure. But having saved his life, Gr’Ash now definitely seemed to be on her side.

As she and the looming Gr’Ash played the bad cops, Kitaxis was proving a natural for the role of the good cop.

“Bri’tor,” she cooed as she held him close, “This lady here has just helped a whole bunch of people in the infirmary. Even saved Gr’Ash from bleeding to death. She’s given so much for us, so we need to do something in return, and help her find her friends.”

Natasha ignored the fresh pang of guilt and kept her focus on Bri’tor. The bartender turned to his wife, his eyes still wide with fear.

“B--But…if Toxis finds out that we--”

“Feels like that’s all we worry about these days,” she smiled sadly, “Afraid of doing anything incase Toxis finds out. And if not him, then some other bandit with a gun who rides on into this godforsaken town.”

He thought about his brother, and he felt himself shrink back slightly.

“There’s a good reason for that,” he countered.

“I know,” she smiled sadly, “But going along with them all this time has brought us nothing, has it? Just a lot of pain and misery. So, maybe we need to stand up to him instead. Maybe it’s time we stopped running scared.”

Bri’tor stared back at Kitaxis, looking into the determined eyes of the woman that he loved. And something sparked in the back of his mind, behind all of the fear and the sorrow. A feeling that he hadn’t felt for a long time.

He turned back to the stranger and nodded, gesturing to the back.

“I know where your friends are.”

Natasha nodded in relief and started out in the direction he had indicated, only for Bri’tor to call her back.

“But,” he added with fresh concern, “There’s two men back there. Two of Toxis’s best.”

“Reckon we can deal with them,” Gr’Ash grunted darkly, reaching for one of the pistols on the counter in front of them.

“No,” Natasha called out, halting him, “No shooting. Not until we have to.”

“What exactly do you have in mind instead?”

Natasha looked around the room, deep in thought. Then she laid her eyes on the meagre collection of bottles behind the bar and smiled, glancing at Kitaxis.

“I’m gonna need you to fetch something from the infirmary.”
 
Part Three (Cont'd)

“I get it. We’re in trouble. But you’ve got to admit, this is still kinda--”

“Do not say it.”

“--Cool.”

Klath grunted deeply unhappily. He had said it.

They were trapped alone in the back room of the Bay of Plenty, having both been firmly tied up to a pair of rickety wooden chairs with the thick lengths of rope that Bri’tor had sourced.

Since Toxis and his goons had left for the ranch, Klath had spent all of his time straining against his restraints in an effort to break free. And he really believed that he was making progress. He may not have actually been making progress, but he believed that he was. And that was enough to keep him going for the time being.

But while the Klingon had been doing that, Jirel seemed uninterested in either attempting or deluding himself into believing he was attempting escape. Despite the Trill’s worried realisation after Toxis had restrained them, he seemed to have lapsed back into being more interested in their surroundings than anything else.

Which, as far as Klath was concerned, was becoming insufferable.

“But, I mean, look at all this, Klath,” he persisted over the Klingon’s growls over exertion, “We’ve been tied up! By a ruthless gang of outlaws! In a saloon! No holding cell, no forcefields, none of that crap. Just good, old-fashioned--”

“Rope,” Klath growled as his restraints dug further into his wrists in his latest attempt to weaken them, “Yes, I am aware. And it appears well constructed. I cannot find a weakness.”

Jirel kicked his feet in the dirt, ignoring any fleeting embarrassment at the sound of his ever-present spurs jangling.

“It’s just all so real, y’know? So visceral. The smells, the look, the feeling of--”

“Jirel,” Klath persisted, “We must focus on escaping and getting back to help the others. Your plan has failed.”

“Well, I wouldn’t say it ‘failed’ as such--”

“It has failed!” the Klingon snapped, “It was a tactically poor decision which put us in a position of weakness. All because you have allowed whatever inexplicable interest you have in this place to cloud your judgement.”

Jirel went to offer another comment, but the Klingon’s frustrations were now boiling over.

“The doctor was correct. This is not a holosuite program. This is a serious situation. And I feel ashamed that I did not point this out more forcefully earlier. A good warrior should always seek to challenge a battle plan when there are signs of weakness.”

With that, the Klingon growled deeply as he again threw all of his strength into breaking his restraints, suppressing a wince at the flare of pain coming from the wound caused by the pellet.

In the other chair, Jirel considered Natasha’s comments from earlier again. The ones that he’d been trying his best to ignore. And he sighed.

“Ok, fine. You’re right. But stop doing that. You’re gonna sprain something.”

“Do you have a better plan?”

“I dunno, maybe? You know how it is when we get captured. Something always turns up for us.”

Klath craned his neck around to the Trill with an unhappy glare and a sarcastic grunt.

“I wish to challenge that battle plan as well.”

“Alright, fine, what do you suggest, hmm? Seeing as how the Incredible Hulk act isn’t working out for you over there?"

The Klingon reluctantly paused in his latest attempt to escape via brute strength alone, and scanned the room as best as he could, the cogs starting to turn in his brain. He gestured behind Jirel with an awkward nod of his head.

“If you can get to that shelf behind you and knock that crate of bottles onto the floor, they should break on the hard floor.”

“And then?”

“Then, I will use my weight to rock myself hard enough to fall to the ground, and if I can grab a shard of glass with one of my hands, I should be able to use that to cut through my bonds. That will allow me to free you as well, then we can use some of the larger shards to overpower the guards outside, take their weapons and fight our way back to--”

Just as Klath was really beginning to believe in his increasingly elaborate plan, they suddenly heard two loud thumping sounds from outside. Although neither of them could be sure, it sounded similar to what you’d expect to hear when two burly Nimbosian guards suddenly collapsed to the floor.

Moments later, there was a different noise. The sound of the stout wooden door’s locking mechanism being deactivated, and the heavy door itself being opened.

The two restrained men watched on as a curious gaggle of individuals entered the room. They recognised the bartender that had tied them up before. They also vaguely recognised the man they had seen exiting the bar earlier with a bloodstained shirt on. Neither of them recognised the cat-like woman in the nurse’s outfit, nor either of her cleavages.

But they both definitely recognised the woman in the middle of it all.

“Would you look at the state of you two idiots,” Natasha sighed.

As Bri’tor rushed over to untie the two prisoners, Jirel and Klath looked back at their colleague with no small amount of surprise.

“The guards?” Klath asked.

Natasha smiled and nodded over at the woman in the nurse’s outfit.

“We brought those fellas a drink,” Kitaxis explained, “With a little something from the medicine cabinet in there. I’m always amazed what boys’ll drink if a girl says the right things to them.”

As Bri’tor finished untying the pair of them, Klath glanced over at Jirel, who offered him a shrug and the slightest of grins.

“See, Klath? Something always turns up for us eventually.”

****************************

“Lissepians!”

Zesh’s frustrated voice reverberated around the hut, even as the taller of the two goons that had been sent to keep an eye on him and Denella kept his pistol pointed at him.

But the weapon had been trained on Zesh for so long that it had almost become part of the scenery, and so despite the continued threat, the Ferengi was at a point where he felt confident enough to pace around on the dusty ground, lamenting their situation.

The goon, for his part, seemed perfectly happy to let him do what he needed to do. He absently chewed on a metal toothpick and watched him rant with ill-concealed amusement.

“I knew I should have hired Lissepians! Lisseppians wouldn’t have come up with some stupid plan, or wanted to ride around on horses. Lisseppians would have just guarded the place, like I was paying them to do! They’re never any trouble!”

Denella paused in her repairs to wipe the sweat from her brow.

“You know,” she offered, with a trace of amusement, “I’m starting to feel a little insulted.”

Zesh wasn’t in the mood for banter. He just continued to pace, stomping his feet into the dirt to underline his point.

“And the jokes!” he snapped, “Lisseppians wouldn’t make so many jokes! They actually take their work seriously.”

The Ferengi paced onwards on his never-ending tour of the hut, gesturing at the amused goon as he began his next lap.

“I mean, this was exactly what I didn’t want to happen! This is precisely the thing I hired you all to help stop from happening!”

“You were on the Bounty for a while, Zesh. You should have known that we’re not very good at any of this.”

The Ferengi paused and fixed her with an unimpressed glare. He really wasn’t in the mood for banter.

Denella shrugged apologetically. Truth be told, she wasn’t much in the mood for it either. But she was starting to get a tad concerned that regardless of how effective a coping mechanism it was for him, Zesh’s constant complaining was going to end up annoying their guards.

Initially, she had tried to buy them some more time by playing dumb, and conducting the remaining repairs as slowly as possible. But despite appearances, the goons assigned to watch them weren’t completely stupid. They saw through that immediately.

And with the threat to Zesh’s life still apparent, she hadn’t had much choice than to speed up to something nearer her normal working speed. Which wasn’t good news, because it meant that she was nearly finished. And then there was nothing standing between her and having to let the gang onto the Bounty.

Seeing that she had momentarily stopped working, the second of the goons stepped forwards and idly brought his own weapon to bear on her.

“Yeah, yeah,” she griped as she grabbed a coil spanner from the ground and ran it over the final set of connections for the replacement filtration system she had just installed.

Frustratingly, even though this was the last big job she had left to do, and she’d been hoping to kill a few hours with it, the unit had nestled perfectly into the housing at the first attempt. For the first time, possibly in the entire history of Nimbus III, it had actually been a completely straightforward repair.

She finished her work with the spanner as slowly as she dared, even as Zesh continued to pace around behind her.

“This is what always happened on the little adventures we used to have,” he whined, “Everything always went wrong because you’d all mess around instead of focusing on the latinum. Rule of Acquisition number--”

Zesh’s audience was spared the reciting of yet another Rule of Acquisition when the door to the hut opened and Rutox stalked in, causing both of the casually slouching goons to immediately jump to attention.

“We done here yet?” he spat.

Denella spied a chance to possibly buy a bit more time. It was a dubious plan, but one that she found had paid off a surprising amount of times over the years.

“Nearly,” she offered, “But I’ve run into a bit of an issue with the secondary pump oscillator. I’ll need to completely recompile the configuration on the hydration capacitors and then check each of the isoneutronic linkages with a phased trimetric scan--”

Her improvised stream of consciousness was halted by the sight of Rutox’s pistol pointing at her head, the pistol’s owner looking decidedly unimpressed.

“Don’t give me the fake engineering mumbo-jumbo, off-worlder,” he grunted without a trace of amusement, “This ain’t my first rodeo.”

She didn’t have much choice but to give a curt nod in return. It had been a very dubious plan.

“So,” Rutox persisted, “I’ll ask you again. We done here yet?”

Denella looked back down at the water pump, now basically entirely repaired, and ran through the remaining options she had as far as stalling tactics were concerned. Which didn’t take long, because she didn’t have many.

“See,” Rutox persisted with an ugly grin, “I just got word that Toxis is on his way. And if you’re not done with this, and done opening up that ship of yours before he gets here, then you’re gonna be in real trouble.”

The Nimbosian’s words unsettled her just as much as his grin did, as he casually showed off his rows of rotting teeth.

“You’re out of time.”

Silently, she couldn’t help but agree with him.

****************************

“I promise, it’ll be easier the second time.”

Klath considered Jirel’s words as he unhappily surveyed the horse, realising that he had no other way of getting back to Goodlife Ranch. Unless he wanted to walk.

With Natasha having treated and bandaged Klath’s arm, they were now hurriedly preparing to leave, after she had told them all about the small army that she had seen riding off towards the ranch.

After he helped Klath back onto his steed, Jirel turned and saw the third member of their party was still staring back down the main street of Arcadia Falls.

“Hey, come on,” he called out, “We’ve gotta get moving.”

“Just one second,” she said, gesturing back into the town, “Kitaxis and Bri’tor said they were going to get something for us.”

Jirel tutted as he looked up at the still-blazing sun, which was starting to creep slowly towards the horizon.

“We don’t have time,” he gestured, “We need to get back before the sun sets.”

“And what then?” she countered knowingly, “What’s the new big clever plan to fix all this? And bear in mind that if you suggest a duel at high noon, I am going to feed your head into the next power relay we see.”

Jirel went to respond, then stopped. He actually didn’t have a great answer to that question.

Apart from the duel at high noon idea, which sounded very cool.

“We are numerically disadvantaged,” Klath offered instead, “But we have the element of surprise. If we can evade Toxis’s men and gain access to the Bounty, we should be able to rescue the others.”

“See?” Jirel added, gesturing to the Klingon, “Would it kill you to have a bit of positivity like that every now and again?”

“Jirel, what exactly do we have to be positive about? We’ve lost the ranch, the ship, our friends, and we’re hopelessly outnumbered.”

“Maybe,” Jirel replied curtly, “But you’re not helping by delaying us like this. Just because you made a few friends down here. I should warn you, your Starfleet’s showing again--”

“Don’t you dare make this about that again, Jirel. Those people just risked their lives to save you back there!”

“I said thank you, didn’t I?”

“I actually don’t remember. Did you?”

From his precarious position on top of his horse, Klath groaned quietly to himself as the latest round of bickering kicked off, wondering if they were going to keep this up all the way back to the ranch again. And then, as he looked up, he saw something surprising. He gestured back into Arcadia Falls, silencing his two colleagues.

Jirel and Natasha followed where the Klingon was pointing, and stared in shock.

Down the main street came a gaggle of Nimbosians on horseback, all trotting in their direction. Many of the men were unknown to them. Some were dressed up with wide-brimmed hats and dusty jackets, others wore nomad cloaks. All carried weapons of some sort.

But they recognised the leaders, as Bri’tor, Kitaxis and Gr’Ash led the unruly gang up to where the three Bounty crewmates stood in shock.

“Told you we had something for you,” Kitaxis smiled at Natasha.

“What the hell?” she managed back.

“You're riding out there to stop Toxis?” Gr’Ash offered, “Figured we couldn’t let you do that alone. Especially after what you’ve done for us here.”

He rubbed the freshly-stitched scar on his stomach over his shirt and managed a thankful smile at Natasha.

“We asked around,” Kitaxis added, “Didn’t take long to find a lot of folks in Arcadia Falls who want rid of Toxis’s gang more than you do.”

“But…this is going to be incredibly dangerous,” Natasha persisted.

It was Bri’tor who brought his horse forwards to answer her, glancing back at Kitaxis before he started speaking.

“My wife told me all about what you did earlier. Don’t think this town’s seen kindness like that in a long time. Matter of fact, I’d forgotten what that sorta thing felt like.”

The constricting guilt in Natasha’s gut wrapped itself around her another notch.

“And even though it scares me,” he continued, “Feels like we’ve gotta do the right thing. There’s still some good people down here on Nimbus III, after all.”

He gestured back to the strange mix of grizzled miners, nomads and townsfolk behind him. Natasha looked over at Jirel again with a knowing stare.

The Trill immediately knew what she was getting at, but he opted to play dumb. The last thing he needed now was to deal with her Starfleet guilt.

And he definitely didn’t want to deal with the ever-growing gnawing sense he was feeling inside about their whole situation down on Nimbus III.

“Still think we’re the good guys?” she asked pointedly.

He wasn’t sure he did. Not any more. But he wasn’t going to say that. So instead, he adjusted his hat to the most heroic angle he could manage, and swung himself up onto his horse.

“More than ever,” he lied with a grin.

And then he turned and kicked his horse onwards. And the cavalry rode off out of town.

End of Part Three
 
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Part Four

Sunek stood on the deck of the ancient Vulcan sailing ship as it gently drifted across the surface of the Voroth Sea.

He exhaled as quietly as he could, as he listened to the calm waves gently lapping against the wooden frame of the hull, and focused on maintaining his balance on the slowly rolling boards underneath his feet.

He couldn’t help but feel faintly ridiculous standing there like that. Mainly because he wasn’t actually standing there like that. He was still back in the sweltering confines of the storage shed he was hiding in back on Goodlife Ranch.

But he needed to focus on his plan. The one that he still didn’t have. And so, with his anger and frustration again threatening to bubble over and ruin his concentration, he had retreated back to this old meditation technique from his youth.

The one that he had found himself returning to since his run-in with Sokar.

Sokar had used the technique for more nefarious means within his followers. He asked those Vulcans in his thrall to see the Voroth Sea as it really was back on their homeworld, a violent and unfettered tumult, which ancient ships had only dared navigate at great risk.

As far as he had been concerned, it was downright hypocritical, not to mention inherently illogical, for Vulcans to teach their children meditation with such an inaccurate view of the Voroth Sea, and a perfect example of the disease at the heart of a Vulcan society that treated emotions as something to be suppressed and purged.

But as Sunek had recovered from his encounter with his former friend, he had come to see that the logic of the scene was in the peace itself. If you could picture serenity in the chaos of the Voroth Sea, you could control anything. Which made sense to Sunek now. More so than it used to when he was a child.

Except now, whenever he pictured himself on the deck of the ship, the scene was never entirely tranquil and peaceful, as it was supposed to be. And he was never entirely in control.

He opened his eyes and stared out across the clear expanse of water. And saw the storm on the horizon. And he sighed. He had pushed it back, forced it to retreat for the time being. But that was all he had done. Sunek chewed his lip, lost in thought for a moment.

Because there it was. In the distance. Where it always was. Feeling like it was waiting to explode into action.

And then he opened his eyes for real, and looked down at the mish-mash of empty seed pods, stripped-down reclamators and the dregs of various industrial fertilisers and chemicals that lay haphazardly on the ground in front of him.

And he allowed himself a quiet but unmistakably Sunek-ian chuckle as he put together the jigsaw puzzle in his mind.

At long last, he had a plan.

Now he just needed to use his Vulcan intellect, the part of his brain that he was usually least interested in using, to figure out the details.

So he went to work, opening up one of the seed pods and examining the bottles for some sort of clue as to what was inside them.

For the time being, as he worked, his anger was forgotten. The storm had almost disappeared. In fact, he was actually happy, because he’d figured it all out. Everything was going to be ok, and it was all thanks to him.

And then, from outside the shed, he heard the gunshot.

****************************

Denella watched on in silent horror as the hefty body slowly slumped to the ground in an undignified heap.

For his part, Toxis felt a slight pang of regret at what had just happened. Despite how quickly he had acted. As he gently reloaded his pistol with a tell-tale hiss of air, he stepped forwards and stared down at the still, unmoving form in the sand. He gently stretched out a dusty boot and prodded it slightly, quietly affirming that his shot had been fatal.

“Shame,” he muttered to himself, as he chewed his tobacco.

Denella stared down at the man’s body, feeling a rush of outrage inside her at the savage and unnecessary death she had just witnessed.

“You didn’t have to do that!” she spat out at the gaunt leader of the gang that had now doubled in number since Toxis’s arrival a few minutes earlier.

Toxis kicked the body again for good measure and shook his head.

“A damn shame.”

He turned back to the Orion engineer, who struggled against the two men standing either side of her and restraining her out in the middle of the ranch.

Next to her, Zesh was whimpering quietly.

The sun was starting to set now, and the shadows around the ranch were lengthening. Though there was no end to the oppressive heat. Toxis seemed at ease with the climate though. More so even than the other Nimbosians. He stepped up to the defiant green-skinned woman and the more fearful Ferengi and leered at them.

“You didn’t have to do that,” Denella repeated more quietly.

“Afraid I did,” Toxis retorted, “And that was all on you, off-worlders.”

Denella scoffed as she looked back down at the unmoving body of Rutox in the dirt. It turned out that it was him that had run out of time.

“See,” Toxis continued, “If you’d have just done what Rutox asked you to do, he wouldn’t have let me down like that. And that was twice he’d let me down.”

He punctuated that comment by glancing around at the other members of his gang that stood around the ranch, making sure they were all taking that comment in.

It had brought him no joy to shoot a man as loyal to him as Rutox. Men like that were a rare commodity in Prosperity County. Nevertheless, he had his rules. And he also knew that an act like that would send a message to the rest of his men. Anyone considering challenging him or defying him now that he had the ranch and the off-worlders under his control.

Nothing could have underlined his ruthlessness more.

For her part, Denella returned her gaze to Toxis, staring at his deep blue eyes underneath the peak of his hat with a look of impotent rage. She balled her fists up and felt herself shaking.

She was perfectly used to death and to killing. A lot more so than she’d like to be. But it was the senselessness of the act she’d just witnessed that had so outraged her.

“Course,” Toxis continued, casually pacing off to one side, “I could always have killed you. After all, you’re the ones that are defying me, aren’t you? But then, I do kinda need you to get into that ship of yours.”

He turned back to Denella and stared darkly at her.

“And I am going to get into that ship of yours. And I’d rather do it without having to kill any other folks, understood?”

“Y--You know,” Zesh stammered, “I have a cousin who runs a supply route in the Badlands, he’s always on the lookout for personal bodyguards. Pays a very handsome salary--”

Not for the first time today, the Ferengi’s improvised attempt at negotiating was silenced by a pistol being pointed at his head.

On the other end of the pistol, Toxis kept his focus on Denella.

“But I’m always willing to kill some more if that’s what it takes to get the message across.”

The Orion woman mentally calculated the likelihood of her being able to surprise the tall Nimbosian and disarm him before any of his cohorts were able to shoot her or Zesh.

Although the others she could see in her peripheral vision didn’t have their weapons ready, she concluded that there was zero chance of that being successful. Even if she did wrest the pistol from Toxis, there would still be plenty of time for his cohorts to shoot them before she’d even had a chance to run for cover.

“Ten…nine…” Toxis began.

Upon hearing the countdown, a bead of nervous sweat dripped down Zesh’s face, past the barrel of the pistol that was still pointed squarely at him.

“Um,” the Ferengi managed, “Denella?”

“...Eight…seven…”

Denella idly wondered whether letting the bandits onto the Bounty would actually prove a tactical advantage, whether she could use the home soil to her benefit.

“...Six…five…”

She quietly cursed herself for not building more failsafes into the ship. Once they were inside, the weapons would be theirs.

“...Four…three…”

“Denella!”

But that couldn’t be helped.

“...Two…”

She grimaced and nodded, ending the countdown in its tracks, to the relief of Zesh. She didn’t need to be a champion Tongo player like him to see when the cards were stacked against her. She’d bought all the time she could.

Which, as it turned out, was just the amount of time that had been needed.

In the sudden silence that followed the end of the countdown, everyone inside the ranch heard a curious clanging sound. A metal object haphazardly hitting a sandy surface.

They all turned as one to see a small cylindrical object rolling gently towards them.

Nobody had seen where it had come from, but based on the trajectory, it had probably been thrown from one of the sheds on the far side of the open ground they were standing on.

But nobody really had any time to contemplate the origins of the object any further than that.

Because then Sunek’s bomb exploded.
 
Part Four (Cont'd)

The cavalry charged on through the desert.

Viewed as a whole, it certainly wasn’t the most imposing sight. A haphazard collection of a couple of dozen individuals racing across the scorching sand in a loose huddle, kicking up the dust as they thundered onwards towards their target.

But what they lacked in organisation, they made up for in a shared sense of determination.

Klath, his earlier unhappiness with the main mode of transport on Nimbus III now forgotten, rode at the head of the improvised militia, eager to get to the impending battle.

To his side, Jirel kept pace. Mainly to keep an eye on the Klingon’s galloping horse, in case it improvised a new destination for its passenger as it had done on their ride to Arcadia Falls.

Further back, Gr’Ash was keeping a tight grip on his Nimbosian rifle, already drawn and loaded with pellets. He suppressed a wince on each heavy landing as it jarred his scarred stomach, making him doubly committed to not getting surprised as he had been earlier in the saloon.

All around, the other grizzled Nimbosians raced along with them, armed with whatever pistols or rifles they had brought with them. Each one equally determined to come back alive.

As they rushed onwards, Natasha deftly brought her own steed up alongside Jirel’s. The wannabe cowboy, spurs still jangling along with the sound of hooves, did his best to ignore her presence. Mainly because he was pretty sure he knew what she was going to say.

“They’re putting everything on the line for us,” she called out, not caring who else heard.

Jirel stifled a grimace. He’d been right.

But despite her latest comment, and his own growing concerns on the same issue, he used the shared sense of determination within the group to keep focused on their objective.

“And they’re getting something in return,” he fired back, “We drive Toxis and his gang away, and they get their town back.”

“Until the next gang of outlaws shows up.”

Jirel failed to stifle the second grimace. He glanced over at the irritatingly benign face of the doctor riding next to him. The face that he really hated to let down. The face that, ever since he had first seen it, seemed to have an unerring ability to cut through whatever facade he attempted to put up, and was somehow able to burrow right down into the deepest recesses of his feelings.

And the face that he was now starting to get seriously annoyed by. Because it was the face of someone that had a point.

“You know what’s really healthy?” he called back, “Suppressing stuff. Trust me. Just take all that pesky guilt and bury it really nice and deep down in that brain of yours, ok?”

“Why, Counsellor, I didn’t recognise you out of uniform.”

“Let’s just…focus on winning our ranch back, ok?”

“Our ranch?”

Before his grimace threatened to permanently take control of his face, Jirel just sighed and kicked his horse on, moving out to lead the pack. He was hoping it looked like the actions of a dashing space cowboy hero, asserting himself at the head of the cavalry.

But in reality, as Natasha watched him move, it just looked like the actions of someone who was fresh out of answers.

She shook her head sadly and eased her own horse back, dropping back into the rest of the pack. Before long, she found Kitaxis and Bri’tor, the couple now risking their lives for the Bounty’s crew, and an awful lot of latinum they were completely unaware of. She felt a familiar gnawing sense of guilt inside, but offered the willing nurse and the meek bartender a supportive smile.

“How are you feeling?” she asked.

“We were just thinking,” Kitaxis offered back, “About when we used to sit up at night and talk about getting away from Prosperity County for good.”

The level of guilt inside her rose by a few more inches.

“Except,” Bri’tor added with a rueful chuckle, “We never really had an idea of where we’d go, even if we could. Been here for so long, it’s our only home. No matter what happened. Guess we both convinced ourselves things’d get better one day.”

“And,” Kitaxis added as she bounced in the saddle of her steed, “Turns out the universe might have had a plan for us this whole time.”

The guilt rose higher. It felt like it was up to her shoulders.

“You don’t have to do this, you know,” she offered, silently hoping that they might just agree and ride back to town.

Bri’tor and Kitaxis looked over at each other from either side of Natasha’s own horse, in unspoken agreement over their potentially futile actions.

“All this time since my brother died, we’ve been trying to stay of trouble,” Bri’tor replied, “Just trying to stay safe. But I guess there’s no such thing as staying safe on Nimbus III. So all that's left is to stand up and be counted.”

“Amen to that,” Kitaxis affirmed.

Natasha felt the level of guilt inside her reach her neck. Her lack of response gave Kitaxis an opening to continue.

“Can I ask you a question, honey?”

She nodded back over the thundering of the hooves in the sand below.

“It’s just,” the nurse continued, “One thing we can’t figure out is why you folks didn’t escape from all this while you could. I mean, we might all be stuck here, but you folks have a ship. You could have left Goodlife Ranch any time you wanted.”

The guilt rose so high that Natasha started to feel like she was drowning, straining to keep her head above it.

“I guess we were just wondering what’s so important about this ranch anyway?”

Natasha pictured the precious water pump, back in the hut on the ranch, and the priceless treasure that it contained.

She recalled the poverty that she had seen back in Arcadia Falls, the constant struggle and sacrifices that the other Nimbosians had to find fresh water of their own. She thought about the sacrifices this group was now making, not realising that it was all merely in aid of the Bounty’s crew making a healthy chunk of latinum.

The guilt no longer felt like a liquid that was drowning her. It felt solid, crystallising all around her and choking her as it did so.

And she decided that, regardless of whether it was Starfleet guilt talking or not, the Nimbosians she was riding into battle with deserved to know everything.

After all, they were supposed to be the good guys.

“Listen,” she began, “The truth is that--”

“Look!”

Natasha had no idea where the cry had come from, but it snapped everyone’s attention back towards their destination.

They had just entered the valley where Goodlife Ranch was located, and from this distance, it was just about possible to make out the small group of ramshackle buildings that made up the unassuming settlement.

But it wasn’t the ranch itself that their attention had been called to. There was a plume of smoke rising up from within the confines of the ranch, slowly disappearing into the ether.

Whatever had caused it, one thing was immediately clear to every member of the cavalry.

The battle had already started.

****************************

Toxis coughed and spluttered to get the dirt and sand out of his mouth as he regained his footing.

The ringing in his ears subsided as he tried to take in what had happened. One second, he had been interrogating the off-worlders, finally about to gain access to their ship, and the next, all hell had broken loose.

All around him, all he could see was smoke and dirt from the explosion. All he could hear were the occasional panicked shout from one of his men, coupled with the occasional gunshot. He had no idea who was shooting, nor at what, but he suspected that they were instinctively firing at shadows, completely disorientated by the situation.

He could no longer see the off-worlders. The green-skinned woman and the bulbous-headed man had entirely disappeared from view.

The grizzled outlaw grimaced and gripped his weapon tightly, blinking through the choking air to try and resolve the scene in front of him.

As the view cleared, he could make out that some of his men had already scattered. The sound of hooves galloping away from them suggested that the explosion had been enough for some of them to immediately cut their losses. Loyalties be damned.

But plenty had remained, and were still standing around the expanse of the ranch, coughing and blinking in confusion.

As they saw Toxis through the smoke, they began to make their way over. It was immediately clear to all of them that their boss wasn’t in a good mood.

“Don’t come this way!” he bellowed, “Get out there, find those goddamned off-worlders, and bring them back to me!”

In an instant, every man stopped in their tracks sprung into action, checking their pistols and fanning out into the ranch, even as the dust cleared further.

Toxis himself gritted his teeth in anger. He had no idea where the bomb had come from. But presumably it had come from a colleague of the off-worlders. Which meant that there had been someone left on the ranch even after his men had seized and searched it.

Which meant that someone had let him down again.

And that made him even angrier. His usually calm and cool demeanour now completely left behind in the dirt.

Just as he prepared to take off and join the hunt, he heard something else over the calls from his men and the residual ringing in his ears. He turned to peer through the smoke, following the sound of clattering hooves, terrified screams from some of his men, and the sound of further gunshots.

The cavalry had arrived.

Toxis prided himself on his eagerness and his willingness to fight. That was what had got him as far as he already had gotten in life.

But something else had gotten him this far as well. A deep sense of pragmatism. He was always willing to fight, so long as the odds were on his side.

So, as his remaining men took on the fresh carnage of an invasion through the chaos left behind by the bomb, and a few more of them took the opportunity to flee from the ranch entirely, Toxis slipped away into the shadows.

****************************

There was one thing that the Ferengi hated more than anything else, and that was loud and unexpected noises.

Their wide, bulbous ears and associated keen sense of hearing were often an advantage in their day to day lives, especially around the negotiating table. But they were also constantly at risk from sudden changes in volume, especially when given no time to really prepare.

And right now, Zesh was cursing his biggest assets, as he hid behind one of the outlying buildings at Goodlife Ranch, desperately trying to quell the ringing in his ears.

One of the more shameful events in Ferengi history was the reign of Grand Nagus Utek in the early 22nd century. A paranoid and cruel ruler who had authorised the use of sonic weapons against perceived enemies of the state.

Having read about the brutality of the pain as a young student, about how subjects had been sent insane from powerful blasts of sound waves, inflicted on them for crimes as minor as underpaying their respects at the Chamber of Opportunity, Zesh had never really understood what they must have gone through.

But now he was getting a pretty good idea.

The ringing seemed to fill his entire skull, the constant buzzing sound leaving him almost entirely cut off from his most precious of senses.

Keeping his hands over his ears in a futile attempt to resolve the situation, he blinked through tear-streaked eyes, caused by the dust kicked up by the explosion, and tried to figure out exactly where he was.

As soon as the bomb had gone off and everyone had scattered in fear and confusion, Zesh had found himself released from the grip of his captors, and had raced off blindly into the ranch until he had found some cover.

He had only made it a few yards before he had tripped and fallen to the ground, seconds before a gunshot had sounded out and a deadly pellet had gone whistling past where he had previously been standing.

After that near miss, he had desperately crawled the rest of the way to cover, operating on his survival instinct alone.

He wasn’t quite sure which building he was behind, but he was pretty sure that he was close to the main homestead. And if he could get there, he at least had a chance to find a weapon and find a way to get to the rest of the Bounty’s crew.

He awkwardly smacked the sides of his head a few times to try and clear the buzzing, which only partly worked. In the distance, he was sure he could just about make out the sound of hooves and further gunshots, but he didn’t have time to contextualise those.

Instead, he crept along, hugging the wall of the building he was behind, finding his way to the corner and feeling glad that the ringing was starting to subside.

He felt less glad of his situation seconds later, when he rounded the corner itself.

And he saw the barrel of the gun.
 
Part Four (Cont'd)

Klath had generally been pretty miserable since they had arrived on Nimbus III. What with the heat, and the horses, and the bemusing rules of their bizarre location.

But at long last, he was finally managing to enjoy himself. The weapons he was wielding may have been uncivilised, but a battle was still a battle.

The Klingon fired his pistol off into the melee, before ducking back behind the cover that he, Jirel and Natasha had found, and turning back to his colleagues.

“This is much more like it,” he growled with satisfaction.

Jirel stifled a smile, even as several projectiles whizzed past their position, and fired in the rough direction they had come from.

Although it was hard to tell in the anarchic tumult that had descended on Goodlife Ranch, it felt like they were inching towards their goal. The cavalry had arrived to find Toxis’s men already in the midst of scattering, as a result of whatever explosion had gone off. Many of them had continued to flee after seeing them arrive, clambering back on their horses and riding off. And the cavalry had let them go.

But despite the pandemonium, plenty more had decided to stay behind and fight.

Klath fired again, then urgently gestured to the next building along.

“Now!”

He raced the short distance across the dusty ground to the next position of cover, with Jirel and Natasha following close behind, both of whom dived the final few feet as another pellet pinged past them and arrived at the fresh cover in a small cloud of sand.

“Any sign of the others?” Natasha called out as she checked her own weapons.

Neither of her colleagues had an immediate answer. They were yet to locate Denella, Sunek or Zesh. And most of the others that they had ridden in with from Arcadia Falls had quickly melted into the ranch to find their own cover.

An agonised scream sounded out from somewhere around them. It wasn’t the first. Natasha once again found herself hoping whoever it was had only been injured.

“We are making progress,” Klath reported as he scanned ahead of them, “More of our enemies have escaped. Those that remain are disoriented. There is little organisation to their attacks.”

He fired around the corner as he ducked his head out for a further check.

“And I believe I may have a route to the Bounty’s position from here. If you provide covering fire--”

He was stopped by a gentle pat on the shoulder from Jirel.

“I’ll do it.”

“Jirel,” Natasha sighed over the melee, “Don’t be stupid.”

“Hey now, I’m always stupid,” he grinned, before looking back at Klath, “Besides, you were right. It was that dumb plan of mine that got us into this mess. Only fair I get us out of it.”

“It will be extremely risky,” the Klingon pointed out.

“True. But I’m faster than you are. Besides, it’s always a lot less risky when you’re the one doing the covering fire.”

Before the Klingon could offer any more resistance, Jirel reloaded his pistols and stepped to the edge of their cover, gesturing ahead.

“Head to the right, around the back of the big outhouse, and I should have a clear path to where we’re parked, right?”

Klath nodded. Natasha drew up to the pair of them, looking distinctly worried.

“Jirel, for the last time, this isn’t a holodeck program.”

A further flurry of pellets whizzed past to underline her point, and for a moment, Jirel’s trademark cocky grin slipped from his face.

“Yeah,” he nodded, “I know that now.”

But before he allowed himself to get too serious, he also couldn’t resist picking his grin up from off the ground and adopting his most elaborate space cowboy pose to date, puffing his chest out to such an extent that it looked like he was about to snap a vertebrae.

“But don’t you worry,” he added with a painfully exaggerated drawl, “I’ll be back before you know it, little lady.”

With that, the Trill turned and raced out from their cover, as Klath fired as precisely as he could in the direction of their enemy’s positions for long enough for Jirel to reach his destination.

Puffs of dirt were kicked up by pellets hitting the ground just behind the wannabe hero’s boots, spurs and all, but he just about made it to cover before any hit home.

Satisfied, Klath ducked back and reloaded his pistols, before glancing at Natasha with confusion.

“‘Little lady’?”

****************************

Denella landed a punch to the side of the Nimbosian goon’s head, causing the taller bald man to stagger back, his hat flopping to the dusty ground.

She followed up with a kick to the man’s standing leg that was strong enough to drop him down and join his headwear, and a second kick that connected with his head with enough force to knock the consciousness clean out of him.

Panting from the exertion, and feeling her lungs ache from the dirt she had inhaled, she relieved the unconscious man of his pistol and dashed for some cover.

She had been separated from Zesh ever since Sunek’s improvised distraction, having managed to break free of her captors in the immediate aftermath of the explosion. Since then, she had been doing her best to find either the Ferengi or the Vulcan. But all she had found were a succession of Nimbosian outlaws.

She peered around the corner of the hut she was now concealed behind and scoured the nearby landscape.

In the distance, several buildings away, she could just about make out what appeared to be a cat-like woman in a nurse’s uniform firing a rifle alongside a cloaked nomad, the two of them fighting side by side from their own position of cover.

She shook her head to try and clear her vision, and after ascertaining that what she had seen hadn’t been a mirage, she decided that it might be best to head the other way.

She raced to the next building, even as gunshots continued to sound out in the distance.

But she arrived at the new cover at exactly the same time as another of Toxis’s men running from the other direction.

The two of them froze as they saw each other, before Denella swiftly brought her newly acquired air pistol to bear on her target, assuming the Nimbosian would do exactly the same to her. All things being equal, he may well have done. But Denella then saw that he wasn’t armed.

“P--Please, miss!” the young man cried out, raising his hands, “Don’t shoot!”

Denella gritted her teeth as she stared back at the terrified Nimbosian.

She had done her fair share of killing just recently. Particularly, a vengeful rampage that had taken her back to the heart of the Orion Syndicate. But at least she had known for a fact that everyone there had deserved it. Looking at the terrified and emaciated man in front of her, she wasn’t so sure that the same was true here.

So, she found that her trigger finger, which had served her so well earlier, refused to budge. Instead, she lowered her weapon and jerked her head towards the exit of Goodlife Ranch.

“Run,” she muttered, “And don’t stop.”

The Nimbosian followed both instructions to the best of his ability.

Denella allowed herself a moment of relief that she still had a charitable side inside her, before she continued to hunt for her friends.

****************************

Jirel had taken a moment to get his breath after sprinting for his life to the cover of the building that Klath had indicated was the best location to get to the Bounty from.

He reloaded his pistols and placed them in his holsters for the time being, trying not to feel too much of a fresh sense of shame as he saw his fancy replicated belt buckle glinting back at him from his waist.

He crept along the side of the building and approached the open space on the other side. Peering around the corner, he saw a reassuringly familiar sight off in the distance. Just beyond the fence that served as the boundary of Goodlife Ranch, the Bounty sat parked in the desert, oblivious to the pitched battle still continuing in its presence.

Behind him, he could hear the gunfire was starting to drop in frequency and intensity, suggesting that while the battle still wasn’t over, the cavalry was winning the day and driving off the outlaws.

Once he was back aboard the Bounty, he could use the transporter to resolve the final few skirmishes. Whatever the rules were about what was and wasn’t allowed on Nimbus III, he was sure he could get away with that.

So it was with a renewed sense of confidence that he stepped out from behind the building and started to make for the ship, with the slowly setting sun shining in his face. Even though there was a lack of cover, the fighting was some distance away now. He felt safe enough to make a move for it.

After a few paces, his spurs gently clinking as he went, he heard the voice.

“That’s far enough, off-worlder.”

Jirel slowly turned around, already recognising who was there. From behind another building, a short distance away, Toxis emerged.

As the Trill furtively scanned the local vicinity with his eyes, worried about having fallen into some sort of ambush, the other man let out a dark laugh.

“No need to check,” he continued, “This time, it’s just you and me, stranger.”

Despite the danger he was clearly now in, and despite knowing he definitely wasn’t on the holodeck, Jirel couldn’t help but feel an excited chill pass down his spine as he stood opposite the outlaw clad all in black.

It was just the two of them, facing off against each other. Both with pistols at their waists.

“...Awesome.”
 
Part Four (Cont'd)

Zesh hadn’t had the pleasure of being formally introduced to Sa’Loq. But he didn’t need to be on first name terms to see which side he was on. The pistol pointed at his stomach rather gave that away.

The Ferengi didn’t have a weapon of his own. So once again, he had to fall back on his ability to negotiate.

“L--Listen,” he stammered, his hands raised up to the heavens, “Before you kill me, and have that unspeakable act on your conscience for the rest of your life, you may want to consider that I was just the victim of a very loud explosion, which has almost certainly caused irreparable damage to my auditory cortex. In fact, I’m positive it ruptured my tympanic artery, which given our remote location means inoperable internal bleeding. So, really, w--when you think about it, I’m already dead.”

His adversary didn’t seem overly sold on the negotiation. Zesh felt his legs turning to jelly.

“You know, off-worlder,” Sa-Loq grunted, “Toxis wants you rounded up and brought back in. But maybe I’ll just tell him this was self-defence…”

Sa-Loq cocked his pistol. Zesh licked his parched lips and opened his mouth again. Both men were surprised to hear the angry roar that emanated out.

Except the sound hadn’t come from Zesh.

Instead, just as Sa’Loq went to pull the trigger, the banshee-like form of a crazed Vulcan in a garish Hawaiian shirt raced in as if from nowhere and tackled the gangly Nimbosian to the ground in a flurry of screams and limbs.

The force of the collision was powerful enough to send the loaded pistol skittering across the dirt, out of reach of both of them. Instead of grabbing the freshly liberated weapon, Zesh found himself watching in shock as Sunek, seemingly powered by some sort of primal rage, grappled with Sa’Loq for dear life.

Even though his opponent had him beaten in terms of height and weight, the Vulcan seemed to be making up for it with sheer energy, and despite the humid early evening conditions on the ranch, he was soon on top.

Sunek, for his part, was barely thinking about what he was doing.

As soon as he had turned the corner and seen Sa’Loq’s weapon pointed at Zesh, he had acted on instinct. An instant flare of passionate anguish had rushed up from deep inside, and the next thing he knew, he was wrestling the man in the choking dirt.

He was still running off that fulminating anger as he fired a couple of punches into the midriff of Sa’Loq with enough force to clear the air from his body.

Sunek would have been the first to admit that he wasn’t a natural fighter. In fact, he was probably the least capable of the entire Bounty crew. Still, right here and now, that didn’t seem to matter.

He managed to sit up in the dirt, straddling his opponent. Sa’Loq’s desperate attempts to parry the blows that rained down from above became weaker and weaker. And each time a punch landed, it was accompanied by a growl of guttural fury from the depths of Sunek’s heart.

So consuming was his anger that it didn’t even register with him when the Nimbosian succumbed to unconsciousness from the force of the beating. That he was now merely thumping his fists down onto the bloodied face of a man who could no longer fight back.

He was still running on frenzied autopilot as he reached into the back pocket of his trousers and withdrew the small whittling knife he’d been working with earlier. The one he had already got a feel for as a weapon during his impromptu melee attack on the wooden handrail of the homestead.

Without a second thought, he thumbed the sharp blade out of the housing and raised it above his head, a murderous glint in his eyes.

“Sunek!”

Zesh’s hand grabbed his arm with enough force to stop him in his tracks.

“I think you got him,” the Ferengi added, the sarcasm in his tone disguising the deeper shock that he was feeling from what he had just witnessed.

And suddenly, the rage subsided inside Sunek. Replaced by a feeling of horror at what he had done.

He dropped the knife and hurriedly clambered off Sa’Loq’s unmoving body, scrambling backwards through the dirt on his hands and knees, trying to get away from the bruised and bloodied face of the man he had just attacked as he took in ragged lungfuls of warm air, panting from exertion.

Zesh awkwardly leaned down and checked the unconscious Sa’Loq for a pulse. Despite the aching in his tired lungs, Sunek suddenly found himself holding his breath.

“Is he--?”

Zesh stood back up and wiped the second-hand blood off his hand with his pocket square, before looking back at the Vulcan in the dirt.

“He’ll live.”

The Ferengi helped Sunek back to his feet, who only now took his eyes off his victim to look down at his bloodied and ragged knuckles, the skin worn raw by the force he had used.

“I thought you Vulcans just did that nerve pinch of yours?” Zesh added as they hastily walked away from the scene of the fight.

It didn’t happen often, but Sunek found that he didn’t have anything to say. He didn’t know what he could say.

Because he wasn’t entirely sure what had just happened.

****************************

“It’s over, Toxis. You lost.”

Jirel tried to keep all traces of cockiness out of his voice as he stared the outlaw down and the shadows grew longer across the ranch.

He was only partially successful.

“But listen,” he continued, “I’m a nice guy. You can leave Prosperity County. And you’ll have my word that nobody’ll follow you.”

Toxis didn’t move. Both of his hands hung down near his holstered pistols. He managed a slight grunt of amusement.

“You really don’t understand how things work here, do you, stranger?” he said, “See, Toxis doesn’t lose.”

Now he did move, taking a step to his right. Jirel matched his movement. The two men slowly circled each other, Jirel doing his best to ignore the embarrassing clink of his spurs with every step he took.

After a few more steps, Toxis stopped. Jirel did the same. It didn’t take the Trill long to see what that little manoeuvre had been for. The setting sun was now in his eyeline, and Toxis had moved around so that his view was unimpeded.

Should have seen that one coming, he thought to himself with a rueful grimace.

Instinctively, he moved his hands a little closer to his own pistols, as he stared through the reddening sky at his adversary.

“Everyone’s got to lose one day,” he quipped back across the distance between them, “Guess today’s that day for you.”

Toxis was unmoved. His only response was to send a familiar glob of tobacco down onto the ground next to his foot, without taking his eyes off the Trill.

A slight gust of wind blew a slither of dust across the expanse between them. But it did little to quell the heat of the moment.

Jirel was sure that Toxis’s hands were now resting on his pistols.

“You know, you’ve been talking pretty smart ever since I met you,” Toxis offered back, “And I’ve really been looking forward to wiping that dumb smile off your face.”

“Bigger men than you have tried,” Jirel called back, entirely truthfully.

In the distance, the sound of gunfire elsewhere in the ranch grew ever more sporadic. Each man ignored it, keeping their focus on each other.

Jirel felt his own hand twitch over his pistols.

He couldn’t help but recall the times he’d practised his quick draw in front of the mirror as a kid. And also a few times in his cabin on the Bounty since they had started their journey to Nimbus III. He was just a tiny bit disappointed that it wasn’t actually high noon.

Unfortunately for Jirel, he had once again entirely confused holosuite programs with reality.

Because, while most of the scene he was in was straight out of the old Westerns he had excitedly watched as a dorky child back on Earth, Toxis wasn’t.

Toxis was no programmed character, or connoisseur of old Earth culture and the rules of the final showdown. He was from the Planet of Galactic Peace. Which meant that, as Jirel continued to soak in the scene, Toxis felt no compulsion to stand on any further ceremony.

Before the Trill in the cowboy hat had time to fully contemplate what was happening, he saw Toxis draw a pistol. And he heard the gunshot.

Jirel had never been shot by a projectile weapon before.

He’d been on the wrong end of just about every other sort of weaponry. He’d been burned by disruptor fire, stunned by phasers, been slashed and stabbed by more bladed weapons than he cared to remember and been punched more times than a Terrellian boxer. But this was new.

So he had no idea what it was supposed to feel like.

Still, he was pretty sure it was supposed to feel like something.

On the other side of the shoot-out, Toxis stood stock-still, outlined by the encroaching sunset, with a serene look on his gaunt face.

A split second before he’d pulled the trigger and finished off the irritating off-worlder for good, he’d felt something. Something he immediately realised he should have picked up on before, but that it was now too late to do anything about.

He’d felt a tingling on the back of his neck.

Now, as the pain from the pellet slowly engulfed his torso, and his eyes began to glaze over, he heard the scratch of footsteps in the sand behind him.

He didn’t bother to turn around.

“Huh,” he grunted, with a slightly weakened voice, “It’s you.”

And with that, he fell to the ground, leaving Jirel staring across at where Bri’tor had emerged from behind one of the nearby buildings, holding a gently hissing pistol.

The Trill watched on as the bartender walked over to where Toxis had fallen and stared down at the man that he had feared for so long.

“Yep,” Bri’tor grunted, “It’s me. And...that was for my brother.”

Toxis didn’t reply. He'd never reply to anything ever again.

Jirel quickly walked over to where Bri’tor stood. The bartender acknowledged him as he approached with a simple nod.

“How the hell did you know we were here?” the Trill asked.

Bri’tor gestured down at Jirel’s feet with the barrel of his gun.

“Heard your boots.”

Jirel looked down at his spurs, and made a mental note to miss out that part of the story when he told the others later. Mustering a smile, he looked back up at Bri’tor.

“Well, thanks. I guess I owe--”

He stopped himself, glancing around at the ranch and smiling ruefully.

“I guess I owe you one.”

****************************

By the time Jirel and Bri’tor made it back to the centre of Goodlife Ranch, the battle was well and truly over.

The remaining stragglers in Toxis’s gang that had made it to the end had found themselves entirely outnumbered and outgunned, and had taken off on their horses even before hearing of their boss’s untimely demise.

And so the two of them returned to find that an atmosphere of quiet celebration had descended on the scene.

After sharing a respectful nod, they parted ways. Bri’tor rushed over to embrace Kitaxis, who was looking over several injured townsfolk as best she could with help from Natasha, while Jirel headed to where Klath, Denella, Sunek and Zesh had gathered, in the shade of the main homestead.

As soon as he got to them, he was accosted by Denella, who gave him a relieved hug.

“You’re an idiot,” she said.

“I know.”

“We were victorious,” Klath added with a hearty tone, entirely unnecessarily.

“I know that as well. Everyone ok?”

For some reason, the only person that didn’t acknowledge him was Sunek, who seemed preoccupied with something else. Before Jirel could enquire any further about what the matter was, Natasha joined them.

“I think we all made it,” she said, gesturing back to the injured townsfolk, “A fair few injuries and wounds, but we’ve patched them all up.”

“Thank you all,” Zesh sighed in relief as he patted his brow with a fresh pocket square, “Now, with Toxis gone and the pump repaired, all we need to do is wait for my buyer. He should be here in another--”

“Nope.”

Zesh was stopped in his tracks by Jirel’s comment. The others looked equally perplexed. Jirel sighed deeply, then continued.

“We can’t do that, Zesh. We can’t go through with the sale.”

His comment was met by a sea of confused faces, and one distinctly miffed Ferengi.

“After all we’ve just been through,” Zesh retorted, “We most certainly can!”

“No,” Jirel shook his head, glancing at the woman standing next to him, “Natasha was right. We can’t just make a profit off these people, Zesh. Not now. They just risked their lives to help us out down here--”

“We all just risked our lives!” the Ferengi fired back, “Do you have any idea how many guns I’ve had pointed at me today?”

But Jirel’s mind was made up. He didn’t exactly like the way that it was made up, but it was made up nevertheless.

“I’m serious,” he persisted, “If we do this, we’re no better than the guys we just drove out of town. We’re just another gang sweeping into Prosperity County, taking what we want, and leaving them with nothing. Can you honestly say that doesn’t bother you?”

“Yes,” Zesh said with an irritated glare.

“Well,” Jirel replied with a defeated shrug, “Turns out it bothers me.”

“Good,” Natasha nodded, “Cos it bothers me as well.”

To the surprise of everyone, Klath stepped over to where the two defiant Bounty crew members stood in opposition to the Ferengi, joining in with their impromptu protest.

“These people fought well,” he boomed, “It would not be honourable for us to take advantage of their courage for our own means.”

Zesh rolled his eyes. He could see where this was going.

“Well, I guess I’m with these guys,” Denella chimed in, as she stepped over to the group, “This isn’t how I wanna make my fortune.”

Everyone, including Zesh, turned their attention to Sunek.

The Vulcan had been entirely passive so far, still troubled by and struggling to process what he had just done during the fight for the ranch. But, seeing that everyone’s attention was on him, Sunek did what he did best, and buried his own troubles deep down inside himself in order to reassert his usual cheeky demeanour.

He allowed a comforting grin to spread across his face.

“I can see my crewmates are being incredibly stupid, even by their own standards,” he said, “And I’m totally onboard with it.”

He bounded over to join the others. Zesh stared at the united group like they’d just trashed his own Attainment Ceremony.

“Come on, Zesh,” Jirel pressed, “You got the place for free. It’s not like you’re losing anything.”

“Except for all the latinum that Markalian was gonna give you,” Sunek added, now entirely back to his old self.

Zesh sighed and shook his head, throwing his hands up in resignation. He was as defeated as Toxis’s gang had been.

“Why,” he said miserably, “Why are you being like this? I mean, you really don’t have to be like this, you know? You’re not Starfleet!”

Jirel adjusted his hat, running his hand across the brim to position it at just the right angle.

“No, we’re not,” he drawled, “We’re the good guys.”

The others rolled their eyes more thoroughly than ever before. Zesh tutted miserably.

“This,” he grumbled at the Trill, “This is why you’ll never make a profit.”

End of Part Four
 
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Part Five

The Bounty remained parked next to Goodlife Ranch as the formalities of Zesh’s revised deal for the place were completed.

It didn’t take long. On Nimbus III, formal ownership rights rarely existed in any strict legal sense. So, instead, one moment Goodlife Ranch belonged to Zesh, and the next it didn’t.

The new owners stood inside the stifling heat of the hut and watched as Denella excitedly talked them through their new treasure. A treasure that, despite the Orion woman having hated it for most of the repair, she had grown to find fascinating.

“See,” she said, pointing at the pump unit as she babbled on, “Actually, it’s using an old fashioned mechanical pump to bring up the water, but there’s a whole isolinear control unit bolted on alongside to control the pressure, flow rate, and everything else. There’s this duranium wiring running between the two, and the way the two systems have been integrated is actually--”

She paused and looked back at the blank faces of Bri’tor and Kitaxis staring back at her, apparently less enthused by the details of the uniquely Nimbosian technology in front of them.

“Well,” she added with a shrug, “I thought it was cool.”

Standing to the side of the new owners of Goodlife Ranch, Natasha offered Denella a smile, while Kitaxis stepped forward and shook the Orion woman’s hand.

“Thank you,” she said, with sincerity, if not with understanding.

Denella nodded and smiled, then stepped over to the exit. Just as she was about to leave, she turned back and gestured to a supply crate on the far side of the hut.

“Oh, yeah, it’ll be fine if you keep up with the maintenance, but just in case, there’s a spare motor in there. Actually, it’s interesting, because I was expecting it to be an old flywheel design, but it’s actually based on a type that the Klingons use in their--”

The blank stares returned. She gestured to the crate again, slightly embarrassed.

“So, yep, spare parts are over there.”

With this, the green-skinned woman left them alone, and Kitaxis and Bri’tor turned back to Natasha, their faces lighting up with thanks.

“You really gonna let us have all this?” Bri’tor asked, still not believing it.

“We really are,” Natasha nodded back.

She walked over to the pump, filling a canteen with fresh water and passing it to them. They drank thirstily and smiled in satisfaction at the crisp, fresh taste of the life-giving liquid inside.

“So,” she continued, “No Toxis, and all the water that Prosperity County should need to keep everyone healthy. Plus, I’ve unpacked a few basic medical supplies for that infirmary of yours.”

“I don’t know how we can ever thank you,” Kitaxis whispered, “Why are you folks doing all of this for us?”

Natasha paused. She didn’t really want to get into her guilt right now. Because the longer she had thought about it, the less she felt it was mere residual Starfleet guilt, and the more she felt it was something else. A deeper, more long-lasting guilt connected to her final act onboard a starship.

No, she definitely didn’t want to get into that right now.

“Just call it a thank you,” she replied instead, “For everything you helped us with.”

The Nimbosian couple smiled thankfully again. Generosity was in even shorter supply than kindness in Prosperity County.

“And you say it’ll never run out?” Bri’tor asked, gesturing to the pump.

“You’ll need to be careful, ration it appropriately,” she explained, “But from what I can tell, no. There’s a reservoir under here that’s being constantly replenished."

The husband and wife nodded again, even as Natasha continued without prompting.

“I mean, I know it almost never rains on Nimbus III. But the mountains around this particular valley seem to be made from an especially porous rock, and while the temperature at the peaks doesn’t allow for ice formation, I believe the atmospheric conditions at night must condense the water vapour into droplets all year round, which then pass down through the rock strata to form a permanent water table in the valley that’s high enough to--”

She stopped as she saw a pair of familiar blank faces.

“Well. I thought it was cool.”

****************************

Whatever the noise was, it was definitely coming from inside the ship.

Denella had returned to the Bounty to find that all was not right. She crept along the ship’s single main corridor with one ear cocked, trying to figure out what the exact problem was.

She prided herself on being able to identify just about any technical or mechanical issue onboard the ship by sound alone. From a loose drive plate to a faulty plasma relay, she was proud to possess a sixth sense in her diagnostic toolkit.

But this sound was new. A harsh and disharmonious rasping sound that she didn’t recognise and was struggling to pin down.

Which was very troubling. Because if the Bounty was making a noise she didn’t recognise, that meant that she didn’t know her ship anywhere near as well as she thought she did.

Just as she reached the end of the corridor, and began to wonder whether she needed to start ripping off wall panels to track the source down before they took off, she realised it was coming from the dining area at the front of the ship.

She walked over to the doors and heard the rasping sound increasing in intensity. Bracing herself for whatever fresh technical malady lay ahead, she stepped inside.

And found Sunek sitting at the table, blowing into a curious metal object.

“Sunek!” she snapped, “What the hell?”

The Vulcan looked up and took the object away from his mouth, ending the teeth-jarring noise for the time being. He waved the object at her and shrugged.

“It’s called a harmonica,” he offered, “Another one of Jirel’s weird old Earth things. Figured it might suit me more than whittling.”

“You’ve definitely given up on that, then?”

Sunek remembered the last thing he’d attempted to use the whittling knife for during his one-sided fight with the Nimbosian goon, and suppressed a shudder.

“Yep,” he said, without expanding on his reasons, “Thought I’d try something musical instead.”

“Is it…supposed to sound like that?”

Sunek looked down at the shiny silver harmonica in his hand and offered another shrug.

“No idea.”

Oblivious to the real reason for his decision to quit whittling, Denella sighed and contemplated the ever-growing list of Sunek’s abandoned hobbies. A list she suspected the harmonica was destined for as well.

“Well, can you maybe practise somewhere more sound-proofed? You had me worried that the ship was falling apart.”

Sunek looked around and took in the ever-sorry state of the Bounty.

“The ship is falling apart--?”

“The ship is fine!”

With a further sigh, she turned back to the door. Sunek called out before she exited.

“Hey, um, Denella?”

She patiently turned back around, wondering what additional pithy remark he had lined up for her about her ship.

But for once, Sunek wasn’t thinking about pithy remarks. Instead, he was awkwardly trying to do something that was very unlike him. But it was something that, after what had happened during the fight in the ranch, he now feared he needed to do.

He needed help.

“You, um, remember earlier? When I--Y’know, when you talked about us maybe, like…meditating? Together?”

“The thing you said sounded ‘kinda really dumb’?”

Sunek suppressed a grimace and shifted uncomfortably in his chair, as Denella tacitly enjoyed watching the Vulcan squirm for once.

“Yeah, well, I say a lot of things you don’t seem to listen to. Like the other week when half the sonic showers were fritzed, and I cleverly suggested that in the interests of shipwide efficiency, you and Natasha should hop in one together and--”

“Sunek.”

“Ok, fine,” he sighed, giving up on his usual jokes and looking at his friend with a slightly pleading look, “What I’m trying to say--I mean, I’m not sure I’m dealing with…what I’m going through as well as I’d like. So, if the offer’s still there, I could find the time to--I mean, I guess we could, maybe--”

“Seven am. Tomorrow. Cargo bay,” she smiled, “Bring your own mat.”

The Vulcan stopped trying to find the right words, and just nodded back. With a look of sincere thanks.

“I do have one condition,” she added.

“Yeah?”

She gestured to the silver instrument in his hand.

“Never play that thing again.”

She turned and walked out. Sunek watched her leave, then turned the harmonica over in his hand with an absent smile. He felt the storm recede a little bit further, and allowed himself to think that everything was going to be fine.

Seconds later, he snapped his head back up to where Denella had been standing.

“Wait, seven am? In the morning?!”

****************************

“I can’t believe I let you talk me into this.”

Zesh stood at the foot of the Bounty’s loading ramp, having accepted their offer of a lift home, squinting through the arid air at the ranch that he had literally just given away. For free.

He shuddered to think what an act like this had done to his chances of ever getting into the Divine Treasury.

Alongside him, Jirel and Klath surveyed the ranch from under the brims of their hats.

“I mean,” the Ferengi continued, “What am I supposed to tell my buyer? He’s travelling a long way for this.”

“Tell the truth,” Jirel shrugged, “You got a better offer.”

Zesh turned and fixed him with an annoyed glare.

“I’m serious,” the Trill persisted, “You can’t judge everything you do in this life on how much latinum it's worth to you.”

“Can and will,” Zesh countered.

Jirel smiled in amusement as the Ferengi kicked his heels in the dust.

The worst part of the whole sorry affair, as far as Zesh was concerned, wasn’t the loss of the latinum, or even the damage this might cause his business relationship with Choth, a Markalian that he had always found had more latinum than sense.

The worst part was that, deep down, he feared that he knew they were doing the right thing.

“Ugh,” he griped as he continued to kick the dirt, “Never let a hew-mon’s conscience get in the way of a sale…”

“That a Rule of Acquisition?” Jirel asked.

“No. But it definitely should be.”

From the direction of the ranch, Natasha wandered over to join them, having said her goodbyes to the bartender and the nurse who were now in charge of Goodlife Ranch for posterity. As she reached them, she smiled broadly at Jirel, who matched it right back.

“Thank you,” she said, “For finally seeing sense.”

“Hey, don’t thank me. Thank the bartender back there that saved the life of this stupid wannabe cowboy. Spent so long replicating myself all the gear, I forgot that these people are living this, every day of their lives.”

Natasha’s eyes narrowed slightly at this ostentatious confession.

“I mean, I’ve literally been saying that to you ever since we first got here--”

“So, yeah, you’re welcome,” Jirel added quickly, ending that moment of gloating with an elaborate tip of his hat.

She shook her head, before gesturing back up the Bounty’s rear ramp.

“We ready to go?”

“Not quite,” Jirel said, looking over at Klath with a widening grin, “Come on, buddy. One ‘yee-haw’ for the road?”

Klath grunted impassively. But Jirel wasn’t giving up.

“I’m serious. I’m not leaving this place until I hear you say it.”

“I see,” the Klingon muttered thoughtfully, “Well, in which case…”

He looked back at the expectant face of the Trill, with a slight twinkle in his eye.

“...I hope you enjoy your new life here.”

With that, he turned and walked up the ramp, back into the ship itself. With an amused shake of his head, Jirel followed, along with Zesh and Natasha.

“Fine, be like that,” he pouted, “But I swear I’m gonna make the rest of you see how cool this planet is if it’s the last thing I do. Starting with a weekly movie night. My pick.”

At the top of the ramp, Zesh turned back and cast one last longing look at the once in a lifetime fortune he had allowed himself to leave behind.

“At least this proved one thing,” Zesh sighed, “I was right to leave your crew behind when I did, Jirel. There’s no fortune for me here.”

“You wanna know something that might make you feel better?” Natasha asked, offering the Ferengi a supportive smile.

“Try me,” Zesh shrugged back.

She gestured out to the dusty confines of Goodlife Ranch, and the wider vista of Prosperity County beyond.

“Well, you might have just succeeded where the Federation, the Klingon Empire, the Romulans and god knows how many other people have failed, and spread a little bit of happiness on the Planet of Galactic Peace.”

Zesh mulled the gravity of this statement over for a long, solemn moment.

“No,” he concluded eventually, with a firm shake of his bulbous head, “That doesn’t make me feel any better.”

Natasha smirked and walked off towards the cockpit with Klath, while Jirel tapped the controls to retract the cargo ramp.

“You know,” Zesh muttered to him after the others had left the cargo bay, “You should watch that hew-mon and her pesky conscience. It’ll be the death of you one day.”

Jirel let out an amused snort, as they followed the others out of the cargo bay. The Trill still clinking with every step.

“I should go change my shoes…”

****************************

A few moments later, the Bounty slowly rose up from the dusty surface of the desert.

As it ascended, it kicked up a great swirling cloud of sand as it did so, enough to sting the eyes of some of the more unfortunate horses grazing back at the ranch.

Not that the horses seemed to care all that much about the sand, or the noise. After a moment, they returned to their grazing.

The Ju’Day-type raider pirouetted around gracefully and slowly ascended into the sky, before blasting away from the ranch and leaving Prosperity County behind.

Riding off into the sunset.

****************************

Bri’tor and Kitaxis sat in each other’s arms and watched the off-worlders depart.

They carried on staring up into the sky for a long time, even as the ship finally disappeared from view above their heads.

After a moment, Bri’tor glanced at his wife and smiled. “Reckon today’s been a pretty good day.”

Kitaxis smiled and nodded back. “Reckon it has.”

Those sorts of days were few and far between around here, and they appreciated the rarity with another moment of contented silence, even as the sand kicked up by the Bounty’s departure drifted back down to the ground.

“Fresh water,” Bri’tor muttered eventually with another smile, “All the fresh water that folks around here’ll ever need.”

Kitaxis looked up into her husband’s eyes and nodded again.

“Feels like everything around here’s finally going right for all of us,” she asserted, “Not a moment too soon as well.”

They allowed themselves to be overwhelmed by another contented silence.

It was true that things were going well for them now. After all, Toxis was gone, Arcadia Falls was free, and they now had the treasures of Goodlife Ranch to enrich and energise the local population on top of that. Enough water to satisfy the thirst of the entire region. Maybe the entire planet.

“You know,” Bri’tor quietly mused as he considered their future, “There’ll be a big demand for all this water.”

“Naturally,” Kitaxis nodded.

“So, I was thinking…we should probably organise some sort of protection. Y’know?”

Kitaxis considered this for a moment.

“What sort of protection?”

Bri’tor shifted awkwardly as he thought things through in his head.

“Well,” he ventured, “I was thinking we’ll need to keep hold of all these weapons. Maybe even get a few extra hands around the place. To keep things nice and secure, right?”

“Like guards, you mean?”

“Sure, like guards. A few loyal guard-type people.”

Kitaxis nodded. It made sense to her. After all, this was a very precious commodity they’d been given.

“Seems like a good idea,” she replied, “Just to be safe, after all. Just a few men. Enough to protect us. And our ranch.”

Their ranch. It was their ranch, after all. They’d been given it.

Another moment of silence descended over the pair. Both of their minds were now quickly turning over.

“Of course,” Kitaxis said eventually, “Those men would need paying…”

“Right,” Bri’tor nodded, “Men ain’t gonna work without a fee. But the bar doesn’t make enough for all that.”

“No, it doesn’t.”

“But, I guess we might make a little extra if we…”

His attention drifted over to the hut containing the water pump. The one that they had been given to spread happiness around Prosperity County.

“Yeah,” Kitaxis nodded, “I mean, we wouldn’t charge a lot. We’d be practically giving it away.”

“Absolutely. But we gotta pay the men somehow. And then there’s maintenance, upkeep, that kinda thing.”

“Oh yeah. Plus…a little for ourselves.”

The husband and wife broke their calming embrace and stood up, their attention now entirely on the hut, and the profit inside.

And they continued to discuss their plans, and how best they could exploit the opportunity that had been presented to them.

And how they would eventually control Arcadia Falls, and Prosperity County in general. And how they would be different from all the others that had controlled Arcadia Falls in the past. Even though, deep down, they knew they probably wouldn’t be all that different.

But that didn’t matter.

It was just the way things were on Nimbus III.

The End
 
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