“They have come to take away our homes, to enslave our people and mine our world bare. They have killed thousands of our own in their tireless effort to dominate us in every way. Robbing us of our home has not been enough for them. They seek us out wherever we may be, trying to spread their terror, violence and subjugation onto every Bajoran soul in the galaxy.”
Orta’s voice carried undeniable passion and flair, which even the artificial synthesizer wasn’t able to mask entirely.
But the crowd that had gathered around him and the five kneeling Cardassians looked on mostly with indifference. Only a few of the younger ones were roused by his rhetoric most others seemed more fearful of possible Cardassian retribution for what was about to happen here.
Orta paid no attention to their lack of enthusiasm and made up for it with his own. “But they will learn that we will not sit by quietly to watch the destruction of our race. They will learn that they will have to pay a bloody price for their arrogance, for we will kill as many of their people as they have taken from us. Mark my words, every single life will be repaid in full until the Cardassians return to their own worlds,” he said and leveled his phaser rifle at the first of the kneeling soldiers who, like the others, had his hands tied behind his back while his head hung low.
“And the repayment begins here,” he cried just before he pulled the trigger.
The man’s lifeless body sagged to the ground instantly.
Orta moved to his next prisoner who was met by the same exact fate.
The crowd hardly reacted to the executions. There were those who turned away and even a few who left the scene entirely, not wanting to be any part of this. There were also a small number of bystanders who appeared to enjoy the gruesome scene but for the most part the audience remained mum and unexcited.
“Glory to Cardassia!” the fourth solider was able to scream from the top of his lungs just before he was cut down like his compatriots before him.
That left only Rovat.
Orta took his time to look over his handiwork, four dead Cardassians, lying face down in the dirt, before he moved on to their leader.
Laas had been watching the entire spectacle from only a few short meters away, leaning casually against a prefab wall and keeping her hand close to her blade. She had looked on quietly while the rebel leader had executed his prisoners one by one even while the feeling in the pit of her stomach was threatening to make her sick.
It wasn’t an entirely new sensation for her. She wasn’t quite sure what it was, but the same feeling had plagued her for a long time now and most often when it came to killing Cardassians. She herself had hardly done any killings at all since she had left Bajor but that didn’t mean that she hadn’t been witness to a number of very similar public displays on half a dozen different worlds.
It was impossible to tell any of this by judging the unreadable facial expression she maintained throughout the spectacle.
Orta leveled his rifle so that the emitter cone pushed into the back of the Cardassian’s head. “How does it feel to be the one on your knees for once, Rovat? Don’t worry, that sense of shame and defeat won’t last much longer. I promise.”
The glinn appeared to try hard to remain stoic but he wasn’t completely successful and the telltale sounds of sobbing could be heard as he was nearing his own death.
Orta found this amusing. He turned to look at the young Bajoran woman to see if she was taking similar pleasure from this. He found her seemingly disengaged. “Laas, you are missing out on all the fun over there,” he said. “After all we have you to thank for these prisoners. Why don’t you take the honor of finishing off this bag of scum yourself? I’m sure you could think of plenty of entertaining methods to bring this show to an end. Use that handy knife of yours.”
Laas stared back at him but didn’t speak.
“How about it?”
With Orta distracted, Rovat saw his one and only chance to live.
He jumped onto he feet and immediately kicked backwards, hitting the rebel leader square in the right knee and causing him to stumble to the ground.
Rovat understood that he didn’t have time for a follow-up strike, not if he wanted any chance of getting out of this alive. So instead he made a run for it. Straight into the crowd.
Furious, Orta picked himself up to take aim at the Cardassian but before he could fire, Laas had stepped up next to him and pushed down his rifle.
“By the Prophets, what do you think you’re doing,” Orta screamed, his modulated voice heavily distorted, the synthesizer not being able to handle the volume. “He’s escaping.”
She gestured towards the fleeing glinn who was pushing himself through the crowd which did little to further help or hinder his escape. “And how many of your own people are you willing to kill to stop him?”
“I’m not going to let him get away.”
“He won’t,” she said and took off. But not after Rovat. Instead she was heading into a different direction and towards one of the lower shacks. She easily jumped onto a tall crate and from there leaped onto the roof of the building. She instantly changed direction, jumping from roof to roof like a wild animal getting itself into position to strike. Within moments she was on his tail.
It didn’t take a great amount of effort. Even after the Cardassian had cleared the crowd, he still stumbled more than he ran, his hands still bound behind his back never allowed him to properly set his balance. He was also not nearly as familiar with the many narrow alleyways of the settlement as she was.
Within just a few minutes of pursuit, she had him exactly where she wanted him.
She took a dive from the roof and landed directly on top of him, dragging them both to the ground. Rovat’s fall was multiple times less graceful than hers and she managed to pull herself up again easily, quickly drawing her blade and then putting all her weight on top of him to keep him pinned, her razor-sharp weapon mere inches from his throat.
When she heard the familiar sounds of transporter beams she immediately knew she was in trouble. But when she looked up she didn’t see the amber-colored Cardassian pillars of light she had expected. These ones were blue and they gave away to the coalescing forms of Starfleet officers.
The very same she had encountered the day before. And once again they were being led by Krystine Leone. Her security officers had their phasers out in an instant.
It wasn’t because of her, Laas quickly realized.
Orta and his men had caught up with her and were now approaching from the opposite direction and all of them were armed with phaser rifles, which they pointed squarely at the newcomers.
“Go home, you’re not wanted here, Starfleet,” Orta spat as he took a step closer.
“Not a problem,” said Leone with a little smirk. The woman was the only one in the team who didn’t hold a phaser rifle in her hand. Laas thought that to be either extremely foolish or extremely confident. “As soon as we have taken Glinn Rovat here into custody for the crimes he has committed we’ll be on our way.”
“You’re not taking anyone.”
“A Bajoran freedom fighter trying to protect a Cardassian solider?” said Lieutenant Elannis. “That doesn’t seem to make a whole lot of sense.”
“Trust me, protecting him is the last thing on my mind,” said Orta, eliciting chuckles from his men. “But I’m not letting you have him.”
“Haven’t you killed enough Cardassians for one day?” Leone said.
“No such thing.”
Krystine focused on the angered resistance fighter. “I may not agree with your blood lust but I understand it. But think about this. What will you achieve by killing Rovat? More Cardassians coming and looking for him? And once they realize what you’ve done, they’ll want revenge and if they can’t find you and your people do you really think they won’t hesitate to exact their vengeance on the settlers? Let us take him. That will send a clear message to the Cardassians that they will not be able to harass this sector without repercussions.”
Orta seemed to consider Leone’s words for a moment. “Nice speech, Starfleet. But that’s all it is. And that’s all you Federation people seem to be good at. Making pretty speeches. But a speech has never stopped anyone. And it won’t this time. We’re not afraid of the Cardassians. Let them come here and try and claim more victims. All they will find is blood. Theirs.”
“If you don’t care about your own fate at least think of that of your people,” Leone said.
“I am,” he said and then looked at Laas who was still positioned in-between the Starfleet away team and Orta’s men. Still with her dagger hovering over Rovat’s throat. “Laas, finish this. Kill him.”
She brought the blade closer until it began to draw blood.
Krystine Leone took a step towards the young Bajoran causing both her own people and Orta’s men to flinch nervously. “Laas? Are you sure you want to do that?”
The Bajoran looked up and into Leone’s sparkling eyes.
“Step away from her,” Orta said and pointed his rifle at the Starfleet commander, immediately aware that this caused every single weapon of the away team drawing a bead on him.
Krystine ignored the man. “I’m not going to pretend to know what you’ve been through but I can tell from looking at you that it wasn’t pretty. That you had to fight for your right to exist from a very early age. But you left that life behind you, didn’t you? You wanted something better for yourself. Or maybe it wasn’t you. Maybe your parents were lucky enough to get you off Bajor so that you didn’t have to live that life anymore. They must have loved you very much in order to have the strength to see you go.”
Laas looked at her but had no words to offer.
“Don’t listen to her. Do what you do best. Kill him,” said Orta.
“You told me that you didn’t care about revenge anymore,” said Leone. “But that’s exactly what you’re doing by killing this man. And you’ll perpetuate a cycle which will lead only to more bloodshed and death.”
“What happens …” Nora Laas began but lost her voice for a moment. “What happens if I don’t kill him? What will you do with him?”
“He’ll stand trial in a Federation court for the crimes he has committed both to Federation citizens and property and also to the Bajorans living in this system.”
Orta spat. “A trial? What a joke. This man is guilty and he deserves to die. Right here and now. You put him into one of your courts and they probably let him go on a technicality. Maybe he’ll spend a week in a low-security prison not worthy of the name.”
“There is solid evidence against Rovat,” said Dawkins. “He’s looking at a minimum sentence of thirty years.”
“I’d rather see him dead. Cut his throat, Laas. Do it already.”
“Sure,” said Elannis. “You’d be doing him a favor, sparing him the humiliation of being a prisoner to the Federation.”
The Bajoran teenager didn’t move either way.
Orta couldn’t believe it. “There is nothing to think about here, Laas. There is no choice to be had. Kill him or I’ll do it myself. But if you don’t, if you betray me, you’ll betray your entire people. Your life will be forfeit.”
“Nice friends, you’ve got here,” said Ariel, which garnered her a frosty glare from Orta. “Should I be scared? You think this is the first time I’ve gotten that kind of look, big boy?”
“You always have a choice, Laas. Always. I can tell you’ve been looking for a purpose. Let me help you find one.”
At that Orta uttered an ugly, distorted laugh. “And do what? Join your Starfleet? How about it, Laas? Feel like prancing around in those bright little outfits like those whores,” he said, starring right at the well-endowed half-Orion woman.
“
You are criticizing what
I’m wearing?” said Ariel with a bemused smile while taking in his wardrobe, which mostly consisted of layers of scrappy, mismatching fabrics. “Because I gotta tell you, if this was a competition –“
Elannis was cut off by a stern look from her CO. She shrugged in response and held on tighter to her phaser rifle still pointed at the Bajorans.
Leone focused in on Nora Laas again who had said very little since the Starfleet team had shown up. She had listened to all parties patiently and yet her focus on the Cardassian at the edge of her blade had never wavered.
Krystine took another tentative step towards her, ignoring the increasingly nervous Bajorans who continued to have their weapons trained on her. “Laas, look at me.”
And very slowly the young woman did, unable to miss the motherly warmth in her eyes.
“All I’m saying is that you do have a choice here. And I don’t think it’s about whether Rovat lives or dies. This is about who you are and what you can be. You can continue your life here amongst your people and take your cues from men like Orta who will spend the rest of their lives looking for vengeance. Or you can try to become more than that. Stand for something you can truly believe in.”
For just a moment the Starfleet commander a few feet in front of Laas vanished only to be replaced by a smiling Nora Leena and that smile was as gentle and loving as she remembered it. She didn’t speak but she didn’t have to. It was perfectly clear what she had wanted for her. What she had always wanted for her. What she had given her life to try and give to her.
“Slit his Prophet’s forsaken throat!” Orta roared, spittle flying, his voice barely recognizable.
And yet Laas didn’t hear him anymore. He had already become part of a life she knew she was leaving behind.
She threw the dagger away, the blade burying itself into the ground right in front of the resistance fighter’s feet.
Leone reached out a hand toward the young Bajoran and Laas took it to let the Starfleet officer help her back onto her feet.
The rest of the away team quickly surrounded the two women to secure the prisoner and shield them from the furious Bajorans.
“I’m going to snap your little treacherous neck,” Orta screamed but didn’t make a move, apparently not liking his chances while faced with the heavily armed Starfleet away team.
Krystine looked at Laas. “Ready to go?”
The Bajoran took in the settlement one last time. A crowd of Bajorans had gathered around them by now but they looked as defeated and passive as they always had. An entire people who had given up on the galaxy itself. She looked towards Orta’s hate filled eyes but found that she cared little for his anger. Then she finally looked back at Krystine and nodded.
The commander tapped her combadge. “Leone to
Potemkin. Beam up away team and prisoner. Plus one.”
_______________________________
Stay tuned for 'Logic/Heart' featuring characters from Dnoth's Star Trek: Independence.