The desperate cry forced everybody’s attention towards the building. Somebody was running out of the doors and directly towards them. Somebody else, still left inside, had unsuccessfully tried to stop that person from doing just that.
Nora and the Marines had their weapons back up instantly.
It was then that Star realized that the person running towards them was a little girl, no older than seven or eight, she guessed. And she wasn’t running towards them, she was heading straight for the young woman who had been shot during the attack.
“Hold you fire,” she instructed.
Gunshots rang out.
One of the Marines jerked back as he took a bullet to his upper right arm.
“Sniper!” yelled Wasco instantly dropped into a crouch and then grabbed his fallen man by the back of his black uniform and pulled him behind a cement embankment for cover.
Everyone else followed quickly even while the gunman continued to fire seemingly random rounds onto the square.
Star and two Marines took up position behind the safety of the bulky cargo truck.
“Keep your eyes on our friends over there,” she told them and indicated towards the row of still kneeling rebels some of which had tried to use the diversion to stand and try to get away. “Any of them move, shoot them,” she added loudly enough to be overheard by each one of them.
The Marines acknowledged and leveled their rifles. There was no further attempt to escape.
The Trill could spot the rest of the team having taken cover all over the square. Wasco, Nora and the majority of the Marines were behind the cement embankment. “Major, how’s your man?”
“Flesh wound,” Wasco’s voice responded. “Nothing serious.”
Star nodded and then moved closer to the edge of the vehicle to get a better look at the building from which they were under attack. She spotted the sharpshooter almost immediately. He wasn’t doing a particularly good job at keeping himself hidden. He was also not a very good shot and wasted his ammunition thoughtlessly by firing without taking proper aim. Star quickly realized why. He was just a boy, the rifle impossibly too large for him to handle.
Then she spotted the girl who had run out of the building. She was upset, crying and sobbing uncontrollably. She had found the woman and was hunched over her now, shaking and pulling her in a desperate attempt to wake her. She mumbled something incoherent, Star couldn’t understand.
Some of the Marines behind the embankment were moving in order to get into a better position to return fire. The boy noticed began firing, trying to hit one of them without success. “You’re going to pay for what you’ve done, you Tia bastards,” he screamed with a croaking voice which kept breaking up and betraying his young years. But his finger continued to squeeze the trigger of his automatic rifle.
“Listen kid, we’re not trying to hurt anyone, we’re just here to find some friends of ours,” Star said. “That woman down there is not dead, she’s just sleeping.”
One of the windows in the truck above her exploded in a thousand shards of glass as it was struck by a rifle round. Star figured that the boy had tried to hit her but the window was as close as he had managed to get.
“Your lying,” he screamed. “You black devil’s are all murderers.”
Star looked back towards the Marines. “It’s the uniforms,” she said quietly as she realized what he meant.
Indeed their black outfits were very similar to the ones worn by the government soldiers. They didn’t have the helmets and there were obvious differences in the material and the style but the boy was unlikely to be able to distinguish them.
She tapped her combadge. “Star to Major Wasco, have your men fall back and out of sight.”
“Understood,” replied Wasco, his voice slightly distorted due to the interference prevalent in this part of the Tiaitan desert.
“Keep your head down and do not take any aggressive actions. Do not return fire. Star out,” she said and closed the link by tapping the badge again. Then she quickly removed her phaser, sat aside the rifle and took off her black and gray uniform jacket. The red shirt she wore underneath would make her a much easier target but that was chance she was willing to take.
“Alright kid, I’ll prove to you that she’s just fine, ok? I’m going to come out slowly and I’m going to be unarmed,” she said and then noticed that he had stopped firing. She wasn’t sure if that was because she had gained his trust or simply because he had been caught off guard by her suggestion.
She took the silence as his agreement and stepped out in the open with her hands held out in front of her, palms facing forward. “See, I’ve got no weapons,” she said. She could make him out clearly now. He stood on a crumbled balcony on the second floor and he was noticeably shaking which was probably helping to throw off his aim.
She took a small step forward and towards the young woman lying on the ground some fifteen meters ahead. Ignoring all the noise and commotion around her, the little girl had refused to leave her side.
Nora Laas and the Marines had since moved into a nearby building and out of the sharpshooter’s field of vision but close enough to strike again if necessary. Kneeling by the window and watching as Star exposed herself, the Bajoran shook her head. “What the hell does she think she’s doing?”
Wasco also observed the scene. “We could move somebody in position to take him down fairly easily,” he said and then looked at the security chief. “Of course I don’t know how a phaser blast would effect a young child like that.”
“Have somebody move into position but tell them not to engage,” Nora replied. “If he should manage to hit her, take him down, otherwise hold your fire.”
Wasco frowned, apparently not happy with that plan.
Nora noticed. “Those were
her orders, Major, remember? Don’t take any aggressive actions. If she wants to go and get herself killed than that’s her business.”
“Don’t come any closer,” the boy screamed at the alien woman below.
But Star ignored him as she took small steps forward. “Look at me. Do I look like one of those black devil’s to you?” She turned her head slightly to show him her spots. “You ever seen theses on government soldiers?”
“You killed her. You killed our mother!”
Another step. “No, we haven’t. Let me show you,” she said and took yet another step forward. Just a few more and she would be right by the woman’s side and once she was close to the girl–probably his younger sister–he wouldn’t dare to try shoot, or so she hoped.
“I said don’t come any closer!” he screamed and squeezed the trigger again.
Star froze as she heard the gunshot. For a moment she thought she had been hit but then realized that the bullet had struck the vehicle behind her again.
She took another step and there was another shot. This one hitting the ground some four feet to her left. She was certain that hadn’t been his target. He was trying to hit her and he was getting closer by the second.
Star took a deep breath, trying to pay no heed to the growing fear that each step could be her last and then moved forward quickly. In no time she had reached the young woman. The girl looked up at her with wide, teary eyes, not sure yet if she was supposed to run away or stay with her apparently dead mother.
“Get away from her!”
But the Trill knelt down next to the frightened girl instead. She gave her a large, friendly smile. “Hi there, my name is Taz. What’s yours?”
The girl looked at her but wasn’t quite able to form words.
“He called you Amika earlier, didn’t he? Is that your name?”
She nodded her head fractionally.
“And this is your mother?”
Another nod.
“Give me your hand,” Star said and held out her palm.
Amika hesitated.
“It’s alright. I’m going to show you that your mother is alright, ok?”
The prospect of seeing her mother alive again ultimately convinced the young girl and she stuck out her little hand. Star guided it towards the woman’s neck. “Do you feel that?” she asked. “The steady throbbing right by her neck.”
“Y .. yes,” she said and her face began to lighten up slightly.
“That means her heart is still pumping blood through her veins. It means she is alive. Just sleeping, ok?”
“Okay,” said the girl with a small smile.
“Do you think you could tell your brother up there so he’ll stop trying to hurt us?”
The girl wiped away her tears with one hand while the other remained at her mother’s neck as if removing it might also end the pulse of life she had found there. She didn’t immediately react to Star’s suggestion.
“Amika, do you think you can do that?”
The girl nodded. “Yeah,” she said, stood up and looked at her brother above. “It’s okay, Reht, she’s okay, she’s just sleeping. I can feel it with my hand.”
Reht didn’t look quite convinced. “Stay where you are,” he told Star. “Don’t move,” he added and then disappeared from the balcony.
“Amika, I’m going to try and wake her up for you but I need the help of my friends to do that.”
She nodded again.
Star turned around and towards the cargo truck behind which she knew two of the Marines were waiting. “Corporal.”
Within moments one Marine carefully stuck his head out. “Sir?”
“Toss me a hypo with a stimulant package.”
He nodded and did as he was instructed.
Star caught it easily but before she could apply it, Reht appeared by the door, his rifle still in hand and pointed at the Trill. “What are you doing? I said don’t move.”
“I’m going to wake up your mother, don’t you want that?”
But the boy was still too confused to understand what was happening here. He stepped closer and Star took careful notice that at this range he would have little difficulties finding his target. She also noticed for the first time that she was quite familiar with the weapon he carried. It was one she herself had provided and she knew it was more than adequate to kill her a few times over. It would be the irony of ironies if she were to be ended by it, she mused darkly.
“Reht, please, she’s trying to help,” pleaded the girl.
Star used the distraction to press the hypo spray against the unconscious woman’s neck and inject her with the stimulant. The sudden move infuriated Reht, panicking, he rushed towards them and jumped Star. “Don’t touch her!”
The Trill commander didn’t quite see it coming and the boy’s clumsily thrown up fist somehow managed to hit her square in the jaw. She tumbled backwards as he pressed his entire weight against her and then found his rifle again. He brought it up surprisingly fast in order to shoot her at point blank range.
“Reht!”
The boy froze and turned around to see his excited sister watching their mother come back around.
“She’s alright, Reht. Look, she alright,” she said, her words practically pouring out of her mouth now.
“Mother?” Reht said and all of a sudden Star was forgotten as he dropped the rifle and rushed to her side.
“Amika, Reht,” the young woman whispered weakly as she tried to get up. “What happened?”
Star recovered quickly. She took the rifle and removed the magazine and the bullet in the chamber. Then she dusted off her uniform and stood, fully aware–and maybe even a bit embarrassed–that she had nearly been killed by a ten-year-old.
The woman regained her strength and quickly proceeded to embrace her children, astounded herself that she was still alive. Then she found Star. “You,” she said as her face revealed a flash of recognition. “I’ve seen you before.”
“I don’t think so.”
“No,” she said as she stood up slowly. “No, I know I have. You’ve come here before. You’re the one who met with Balik and Deite. You’ve helped us get weapons and equipment for the cause.”
Star looked around and to her relief found that nobody besides her and the children were close enough to overhear the woman. But that was going to change quickly. Wasco and Nora were heading her way, now that the threat had been neutralized.
Star took a step closer to woman. “You are mistaken. You don’t know me and you’ve never seen me before in your life. Now as long as we are perfectly clear on that I’ll let you and the rest of your people get into your vehicle and get out of here before the government’s troops show up. Do you understand me?”
The woman looked momentarily confused.
Star glanced back to see that Nora and Wasco had almost reached them. She shot another, urgent look at the woman. “Do you understand?” she whispered as loudly as she could without making herself heard by the approaching officers.
She nodded hesitantly.
“Commander, are you alright?” asked Wasco as he stepped up to the Trill.
“I’m fine, Major,” she said and kept her eyes on the still puzzled woman. “Instruct your men to help these people board their vehicle so that they can be on their way.”
Nora shook her head. “That’s a mistake. We should keep them restraint until we have what we came for.”
“Your objection is noted, Lieutenant. Now follow my order. The sooner you do, the sooner we can get back to our own business. We’ve already lost enough time here.”
But the Bajoran didn’t move, instead she had suddenly become quite interested in the young woman who stood close to Star. She was giving the commander a most curious look which the Bajoran couldn’t quite place.
Major Wasco followed Star’s order and his men quickly untied the rebels and then stood back as they cautiously entered the cargo truck, not entirely convinced yet that they were being let go.
Star handed the rifle back to the young woman. “Here, you might need this. Now get going.”
“Thank you,” she said and rushed towards the vehicle with her children in tow.
Nora looked on with a noticeably disapproving expression on her face. “I’ll be putting into my report that you are actively assisting a criminal element on this world, Commander. I don’t think the captain will be pleased.”
“The captain will want us to try and save lives, not risk them. But you are free to put into your report whatever you like, Lieutenant,” she said and began to collect the gear she had discarded earlier.
Sergeant Shin-Ja Moon approached the commander while he studied his tricorder. “Sir, I think I have managed to pinpoint the teteron source. We’re close. No more than four hundred meters, maybe less.”
“Good,” said Star and then addressed the entire team. “Let’s move, people, we’re almost there.”
Tazla Star, Nora Laas and the Marines reached what was left of what had once been a vehicle garage just shortly after McBride and his team which had apparently run into some problems of their own. Two of the Border Service crewmembers had been lightly wounded in a fire fight with retreating rebels.
The teteron radiation they were all looking for was concentrated in this destroyed building which was a bad sign as Star immediately recognized that nobody seemed to have survived the collapse of the roof.
Of course this didn’t stop them to start turning every single piece of rock and rubble to find any hint of the Starfleet officer’s they were looking for.
“Over here,” said Solly Brin, causing McBride to nearly leap to his side. Star and Nora also converged.
The Orion was on his knees and had just cleared some rubble when he had discovered something lying on the ground. It was however not a body.
Brin consulted his tricoder. “This is our source,” he said.
McBride picked up something shiny which at first glance looked like a medallion of sorts. Star couldn’t quite make it out because he quickly closed his fist over it. His knuckles were beginning to turn white and his facial expressions were unreadable, as if he was trying hard not to let it show how exactly this find was making him feel.
But Star began to understand for the first time that Dale McBride had a much more personal stake in this search than she had previously believed. “What is it, Commander?”
When he looked at her she could see the pain in his eyes. “Lieutenant T’Ser wore this,” he said without revealing the object. “It’s what we used to track her.”
“Her body is not here and neither is Doctor Wenera’s,” said Major Wasco. “That’s good news, I suppose, because everyone else here is dead.”
Star agreed. “They must’ve gotten out just in time.”
“Sir, I’ve got a live one over here,” shouted Bralus from across the building. He was hovering over the body of a Tiaitan man.
McBride took off in a dash. The man was barely conscious, bleeding from his nose and his mouth he probably suffered from severe organ damage and internal bleeding. The Texan took no notice of any of that. “Where is T’Ser?”
The man looked up at the tall officer but didn’t seem to understand the question.
McBride knelt next to him and dangled the necklace in front of the man’s eyes. “The woman who wore this. Your prisoner! The woman you abducted, damn it, what did you do to her?”
The man slowly shook his head but didn’t speak.
It wasn’t good enough for
Bluefin’s first officer and he grabbed the man by his collar, lifting him a few inches off the ground. “Is she dead? Tell me!”
“Deite took her,” he croaked. “I don’t know where.”
Star, who had followed McBride, moved closer. “What about the other prisoner? The doctor?”
“I … I don’t know. She ran. Maybe Balik picked her up. There was a fight. Deite and Balik turned on each other,” he said with fading strength. He coughed up more blood.
“Where is this Deite! Where can I find her?” said McBride, still holding the man by his collar, shaking him, encouraging him to speak faster.
But it was little use. McBride was holding on to a dead man.
Frustrated he dropped the lifeless body. “Damn it,” he said and turned to look around. “Did you find anybody else still alive in here? Anyone else who could talk to us?”
But nobody had.
Star could see McBride’s shoulders visibly sag like those of a man deflated. A man who didn’t know what else to do. He had come here confident that he would be able to find his crewmember and bring her back. Instead he had come up empty handed and with no viable leads whatsoever to dictate his next move.
They had reached a dead end.
________________________
Author's Note:
This concludes Chapter 10 of
All The Sinners, Saints. It’s also, roughly speaking, the end of the second act with one more to go. Sorry, if you thought we’re almost done. Trust me, I kinda wish we were.
The story will go on a short hiatus while I’m trying to figure out a few things about the direction of this thing which has given me some serious headaches lately. I also have some real life distractions I need to focus on.
At this point I’d also like to thank all my readers and especially those who have provided all the great feedback which is always appreciated and a great fun for me to read.