Last little bit. Hope you enjoy it.
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Bates walked forward, his hands up. The hill wasn’t really high, but his perceptions made each step stretch in length. He knew, logically, that perceptions were affected by emotions, but he’d never spent much time thinking about it. He’d have to discuss the phenomenon with the ship’s doctor.
The ground grew steeper, turning slowly from grass to bare dirt and rock. The hill wasn’t really a hill, Bates realized; probably what was left of an exposed batholith that’d been eroded over the centuries. About halfway up the giant block of granite was the criminal and his hostages. Bates was frightened of the man, though to his surprise he was more worried for the captives. Captain Sambrano had made the search team leaders watch the tape of the attempted hijacking. The three Menalvagorians had been fast, efficient, and brutal. A young clerk had sounded the alarm. The act had led to her unpleasant death. It had also led to the chase, the death of three Makin IV militiamen and the wounding of two of the three hijackers. When the wounded suggested surrender, the third man, the healthy man, had executed them.
Bates doubted a creature like that would have any mercy toward his captives, and he wondered why he was willingly walking up a hill to meet the fellow.
The ground was becoming quite treacherous. The Lieutenant abandoned his efforts to keep his hands up and pulled himself over the rough spots. The sun had almost set, and he had trouble picking out the best places to climb. He managed not to stumble.
Halfway up the hill he found a wide ledge. It ran diagonally up the face of the hill. He was near where the weapon’s fire had come from, he realized. He began walking up the ledge.
He caught a hint of motion ahead. He stopped.
“I’m here.” He said.
“Keep on coming, Starfleet.” A voice answered. Bates eyes looked for its source; he found the man, or rather his head and one shoulder. The fugitive was mostly concealed behind a small outcropping. His weapon was aimed at Bates.
The Lieutenant nodded and stepped forward. He’d raised his hands again.
The Menalvagorian edged away from the rock face, careful not to stray too far out on the ledge. He stepped backwards, his pulser carefully aimed. Bates followed. Just up the ledge, there was a vertical depression in the cliff face. The fugitive stepped toward it.
Bates stopped walking. The Menalvagorian, physically identical to a human, sneered. Behind him, at the rear of the cave, were the hostages. They were quite still.
"All right." The fugitive growled. He wasn't a particularly big man, but his eyes were cold. He still wore his body armor, which was scuffed up and as abused as the man wearing it. "You wanted to see 'em, you've seen 'em. Take out that communicator and tell your Captain."
The Lieutenant glanced at the prisoners.
"Put a light on them. Want to see that they're okay."
"Oh f*ck you, Starfleet." The criminal snarled.
Bates shrugged. He kept his hands up and his communicator stayed on his belt.
The Menalvagorian chuckled.
"All right. Guess that's fair enough." He plucked a flashlight off his belt, directed it towards the hostages. Two women, one man. One of the females was an Andorian. All three were bruised and abraded, their clothes askew. They squinted under the flashlight's scrutiny, but there was still fear in their eyes. "Satisfied."
The Lieutenant nodded.
"I'm reaching for my comm." He said, slowly lowering one hand to his belt. The fugitive had kept his pulser on Bates while illuminating his captives; he certainly didn't divert his aim now. Bates found the device, flipped it open.
"Bates to
Krassin." He spoke into it.
"Krassin
here." The voice was Sambrano's. "
Status of the hostages?"
"Alive." Bates responded.
"I want a warpshuttle." The fugitive demanded. "And twenty-four hours."
"He wants a warpshuttle and a day’s head-start, sir." Bates relayed.
"
Inform him that it'll take time to..." The Captain began.
"Uh-uh! None of that bullsh*t." The criminal muttered. "He gives me what I want now."
The Menalvagorian swung his weapon toward a hostage. The human girl's eyes went wide as she stared down the barrel; the fugitive kept his eyes on Bates.
"Now." The killer emphasized.
"His weapon is trained on one of the hostages, Commander." Bates reported. "I believe he'll shoot."
"Damn right I'll shoot." The man growled.
"
All right, Lieutenant. He gets what he wants. Tell him that."
Bates nodded. "He says you have your shuttlecraft."
The gunman sneered. "Thought he might. There's a nice flat spot farther up the rise. It can land there. I'm taking all of you up there with me."
Bates relayed the message. His mouth had gone dry. He knew Sambrano was not going to give the Menalvagorian his head start. If the shuttle came down, it'd conceal a ruse of some kind. He kept his eyes glued to the gunman. The fugitive knew his situation was hopeless as well as Bates did. Why was he playing along?
A cold tingle passed down the Lieutenant's spine. The gunman was gambling, he realized. Sambrano would try something, but could the Commander or the men he sent stomach the death of a hostage? The man would shoot; Bates knew that instinctively. He'd shoot the human girl first. She was the smallest, the least threatening. Starfleet officers often had great resolve, but could young Security men stomach the girl's death? Bates knew he wouldn't be able to. Her death would cow him into submission. The Menalvagorian would take his remaining hostages and load them into the shuttle. It wouldn't be fully fueled, of course; Sambrano would have safeguards in place. They'd probably catch him minutes after lift-off. He'd have plenty of time to kill the other hostages. He'd gain a small, spiteful victory.
The fugitive hadn't reasoned all that out, the Lieutenant decided. He was betting that Sambrano would take no risks with the hostage’s lives. He didn't know the Commander. Bates did.
"I understand." He said to the gunman, who chuckled. The fugitive took a step back, crouched down to take the male hostage by the arm. The boy tried to twist away, but the Menalvagorian growled, sunk his fingers into his captive's arm and pulled him to his feet. For a half-second the gunman's weapon was not on Bates or one of his hostages, and his attention was fully on the boy.
Bates dropped his communicator, reached behind his back, and awkwardly drew his phaser. The gunman noticed, tried to bring his weapon around. Bates weapon was trained on him already. The gunman froze.
The two men stared at each other. To Bates it felt like a very long time.
There was a hint of motion. Bates pulled the trigger.
The azure flash lit up the cave. Bates heard a scream--the human girl, he thought--and blinked rapidly. The weapon discharge had blinded him. It took a moment for his eyes to readjust. There was no one standing in the cave. The human girl was yelling and twisting as her fellow captives implored her to calm down. The Menalvagorian lay next to his prisoners with an ugly hole burned into his abdomen. He did not move.
Carefully, Bates moved toward him. The gunman's eyes were glassy and stared unflinchingly at the roof of the cave. The Lieutenant checked for a pulse, or breath. There was none.
He took the fugitive's weapons, then turned to the hostages. The human girl was hysterical, and threw her arms around him the second she was untied. It took the better part of a minute to free himself, after which the girl crept into the corner of the cave and sat down sobbing. The man was jittery, but when released he merely walked to his crying friend and attempted to comfort her. The Andorian did the same, but not before a thankful nod to Bates.
His communicator was chirping wildly, and had been for a while. He hadn't really noticed.
"Bates here." He spoke into the device. His voice was raw, but he didn't realize it. "Hostages are secure."
"
Acknowledged, Lieutenant. Report status of fugitive."
"He's dead, sir."
The communicator was silent for a moment.
"
Understood." came the response. "
Hauser and a medical team are en route."
Bates put the communicator away. He realized he still held his weapon. He holstered it. It wasn't long till he heard footsteps; Hauser and three blue-shirted medics trotted into the cave. He gave his report automatically. As the medics tended the hostages, Bates drifted out of the cave.
The Lieutenant stood quietly. Hauser walked up next to him.
"You all right, Lieutenant?"
Bates considered.
"I don't know." He responded. He glanced back into the cave. The medics had already covered his victim's corpse. He tried to dredge up a violent emotion; rage, despair, or regret would've worked equally well. He found nothing, and that made his insides freeze.
"Like this for everyone, Chief?" He asked.
Hauser shrugged. "Different for different people, I'd guess."
"Chief..." The Lieutenant spoke quietly. "...not sure he was trying to shoot."
"Did what you thought was best, Lieutenant." Said Hauser. "Those kids are alive."
Bates could hear the Andorian girl comforting her friends. The man was softly and repeatedly saying he wanted to go home.
"They are." He agreed, softly.
End