by Peter David
“Really? Then why am I going to all this trouble if it’s so certain that I’ll be caught?”
She turned and looked at him with her ebony eyes. “You are afraid. You are afraid of whatever actions might be taken against you by Starfleet. Afraid of giving up some measure of your freedom. So afraid, in fact, that you would much rather live a handful of days fighting for survival, but free…than you would live many days, or months or even years, in captivity or under the supervision of the Federation.”
His eyes narrowed, but he said nothing.
After one more brief pass of the water over her face, she rose and pointed to the water. “All yours.”
He nodded and gestured for her to step away from the water. “You know, I was just tired of you before. But now I’m really, really sick of you. All you’re doing is slowing me down.” He crouched in front of the water and scooped some up. He was able to bring it to his mouth and continue to converse at the same time. “You yammer at me. You analyze me. You try to make me feel like some sort of coward. I’m starting to think that whatever minimal use you might have had as a hostage would pale next to the sheer, selfish pleasure I’d feel at blasting the top right off of your pretty little—”
She kicked him in the small of the back.
With a yell, Maror stumbled forward, wet soil slipping beneath him, and he fell headfirst into the water. He floundered around and was about to pull his upper body out when some inquisitive water snakes, which Deanna had sensed were in the area, came to investigate and did so by wrapping themselves around Maror’s throat.
Deanna, for her part, bolted.
For a moment she had considered the idea of making a grab for the gun, but a tentative step she had taken toward it quickly dissuaded her of that notion. Maror’s hand was firmly on the grip, and she had a feeling that if she’d pulled at the gun, it would simply have told him, without any shadow of doubt, precisely where his target was located.
And right now she did not want to be a target. That was why she had chosen that moment to make a bid for freedom. For she had sensed, beyond any doubt, that Maror really had had enough. That he was beginning to realize that his flight was hopeless and was becoming angry enough and frustrated enough to take that realization out on anyone who happened to be near.
In other words, he was genuinely ready to kill her as the likelihood for her serving any purpose faded.
So she ran.
Maror sputtered in indignation as he lurched to his feet, pulling at the snakes. The snakes, for their part, were uniformly startled to be removed so unceremoniously from their natural watery habitat. The shock caused them to lose their grip on Maror, and he was able to yank them free. He threw them back down into the water with loud splashes, spun, and roared Deanna’s name in a frenzy. He even fired blindly into the jungle with his weapon and by blind luck came within two feet of blasting Deanna’s head off.
There was no rational reason for him to pursue her at that point. Dashing pell-mell through the jungle the way she was, the odds were that she was just going to get even more lost and maybe even run headlong into something that was lethal. Whatever pleasure that knowledge might have brought him, however, was diluted by the fact that she had royally embarrassed him. And that was something that he was simply not going to tolerate.
With a howl of vexation he lashed his weapon around himself and took off after her.
It wasn’t difficult to track her. Her rush through the jungle left a series of broken branches and crushed shrubbery in her wake. He could have followed the trail if he were blindfolded.
Deanna hadn’t been sure if he would try to chase her, or whether he would be happy just to be rid of her. She was banking to some degree on the latter. When she heard the crashing of the jungle underbrush behind her, her heart sank.
She looked around desperately, trying to find some sort of weapon, or perhaps some place to hide so that he would run past her. But no place seemed to be sufficient shelter.
She dodged to the right and stumbled on an outstretched root. She fell forward, catching herself by hitting her palms against the ground, and she felt pain stab through her forearms. She lifted her right hand and found a small, pointed rock, which she wrapped her fingers around for reasons she didn’t even fully understand. Then she scrambled to her feet and kept going.
She heard his pursuit getting closer and closer. Between the noise of shoving shrubbery aside, and his loud and constant string of profanity, it was hard to miss him.
His blaster roared behind her and she could feel the heat. He must have used it, she realized, to clear away some underbrush so that he could make better time. She would have given anything to have some sort of weapon or tool like that.
For one insane moment, she envisioned Will Riker coming to her rescue. Striding forward like some great hero, showing up out of nowhere at the penultimate moment, drawn there by fate, happenstance, and that incredible timing that always seemed to accompany such last-minute saves. She wanted it more than anything, to believe that such things could occur in real life. Because it would mean that in real life people really could be drawn together not because it was the intelligent or smart thing to do, but simply because not to be together would be completely wrong. It would mean that in real life there were greater things than that which her mind could grasp, analyze, and study.
She wanted him. Gods, she knew that, had known that all along, and she had been such an idiot to fight it for all sorts of reasons that had made sense then but now seemed pointless. If only she had that time back. If only she could see him again.
But she knew, in her heart, that that wasn’t going to happen. It was up to her; live or die, it was up to her, and there would be no rescue, and the chances were extremely good that in a few minutes, there would be no Deanna Troi either.
Abruptly the ground in front of her angled upward sharply. She’d come to the base of some sort of small slope. It would take her more time to make her way up it, but backtracking wasn’t possible. She took a deep breath and started upward. Roots and small outcroppings of rock provided her with handholds that sped her on her way.
But they did not speed her nearly enough, and suddenly she heard a triumphant yell from behind her. She tried to climb higher, but a hand wrapped around her foot.
“Got you, you Betazoid bitch!” growled Maror.
She screamed, her fingers clawing for purchase, but he dragged her down toward him and spun her around so that his face was mere inches from hers. “You have been far more trouble than you could possibly be worth,” he snarled, “and I’m going to…”
In her palm she felt the hardness and sharpness of the rock she’d grabbed mere moments before. She didn’t hesitate as she brought the pointed end around and slammed it squarely into Maror’s forehead.
The Sindareen raider shrieked, a high-pitched sound emanating from the sides of his throat, as blood trickled down his face. Deanna, animalistic, fighting for her life, twisted the rock around and tried to drive it farther into his forehead. But the Sindareen was far too strong. With a roar he shoved Deanna back, but she maintained her grip on the rock as she fell and it tore loose from his forehead. More blood poured freely down his face.
He shoved one hand against it to staunch the wound as he approached her, his gun trembling because of the sheer fury filling him. “You—!” And his rage was beyond his ability to articulate, so he stammered out again, “You—!”
He dropped down on top of her, pressing his full body weight against her. She squirmed under him but couldn’t dislodge him as he pressed the gun squarely against her stomach and snarled, “Belly wound. Very slow, very painful, and you’ll die anyway. It’s what you deserve. You’ve ruined everything—”
“I didn’t—”
“Shut up! You never shut up! But I’m going to shut you up! I’m going to blow a hole in your—”
And from above them, a voice spoke in a tone that was deliberately cool and controlled. “Back away from her.”
&nb
sp; Maror looked up and his already pale face went one shade lighter. Deanna twisted her head around, her eyes wanting to confirm what her ears and her mind had already told her but she still couldn’t quite believe.
Riker was standing about ten feet higher up on the slope. He held a phaser, aimed squarely at Maror. He was dressed in survival gear, with a utility jacket, and a supply belt strapped around his middle containing food rations, a patch holster for the phaser, and other miscellanea in small pouches.
His emotions flooded over Deanna, he being open to her in a way that no one outside of her closest friends or her mother ever was. Relief mixed with fear, all carefully bottled up so that he could present an image of utter composure to the frazzled and desperate Sindareen.
“I said back away from her.” Riker’s phaser wasn’t wavering. “Put your hands over your head.”
“No, Federation man!” snapped Maror. He twisted his body around, his legs wrapped around Deanna’s middle and exposing no part of himself to a clear shot. “No, you’re going to put your phaser down! You’re going to put your hands over your head! You got that? Just do it! Or I swear I’ll kill her. I swear!”
Don’t listen to him, Will, he heard in his head. Don’t do what he wants. He’ll kill you.
“Kill her,” said Riker evenly, “and you’ll have nothing to bargain with.”
“I don’t care whether she lives or dies!” shot back Maror. “If you don’t care either, then that’s that. So I kill her, put my hands over my head, and surrender. You won’t be able to do a damned thing except turn me over to the authorities. And she’ll be dead. Now if that little scenario doesn’t bother you, then fine! Or maybe you just want to take a whack at shooting the both of us. But I don’t stun easy, Lieutenant! You’ll probably fry her while you’re trying to knock me out. And if you fail to stun me, then I’ll kill her anyway. From where I sit, you don’t have a hell of a lot of choices!”
“I have plenty of choices.”
“No, you don’t! I know that and you know that!” His voice went up in register, his barely restrained panic starting to overwhelm him. “Now throw down the weapon! Come on! Do it! Throw it down or I’ll kill her, I swear I will, now do it, throw it down, throw it down now or she’s dead right now!”
“All right!” And Riker tossed the phaser to one side. It clattered away, out of sight.
Deanna sagged against Maror, her thoughts black.
“The jacket, too! You might have some weapons hidden. And the belt! Slowly! Keep your hands in sight! So much as one twitch and she’s dead. Her life’s in your hands now, Lieutenant. Yours!”
Carefully, making no sudden moves, Riker slid the jacket off. Then he reached around and undid the fastening on the belt. He ran it slowly through his hands, saying, “See? Nothing on it. I don’t have any other weapons.” Then he dropped the belt to the ground.
Grinning, Maror raised his weapon and took dead aim at Riker. But to Maror’s surprise, Riker remained as calm as if he had the upper hand and said, “Now lay down your weapon and no one will hurt you.”
“You’ve got to be kidding me.”
“No, I’m not kidding you. You see…you’re surrounded.”
For the briefest of moments, Maror seemed confused. Then, firming up his convictions, he said defiantly, “You’re lying! This is just some…some pathetic bluff!”
“No bluff. There are Starfleet people on either side of you. And although they’re trained to give innocents priorities, they’re also trained to protect ranking officers. Put down your weapon now, and you won’t be injured. But if you take any offensive action against me, my men will shoot. Even if it means injuring or killing your hostage. They will endeavor to save my life over hers.”
“You can’t fool me. That’s against Starfleet policy,” Maror snarled.
“True. But security men sometimes follow their own dictates. And frankly, you’re not in a position right now to question their priorities.”
Maror was silent for a long moment. Then he stood and hauled Deanna to her feet, shoving the blaster against her.
“I think,” he said slowly, “that you are bluffing. I think that all of you split up in order to cover more ground. This is a very, very big jungle. Oh, you may be in communication with them, but there’s no way that they can possibly be close enough to make any sort of difference. In fact, it’d probably take you a couple of days to rendezvous with them, seeing how much time has gone by. And so I’m calling your bluff, Lieutenant. Tell them to shoot. Go ahead.”
“This is your last warning,” said Riker sternly.
“I know. I’ll chance it.”
Riker looked bleakly at Deanna and said, “I’m sorry.” And then, suddenly, he spread his hands wide and shouted, “All right, men! Fire!”
For a second there was nothing, and then, to his shock, Maror caught movement out of the corner of his eye, to his right. He snapped his weapon around and fired, and then he saw something over to his left. He spun, not sure where to look first. He had been so certain that Riker was alone, and now there was movement behind—
The distraction was all that Riker had wanted, all that he had time for. Without hesitation he took two quick steps and leaped off the slope, arms outstretched, directly toward Maror.
Maror looked up in alarm, realized his error, swung his blaster around, and fired. Deanna chose that moment to shove upward and back, and the sudden movement sent Maror’s shot wide, just missing the fast-moving Riker.
Riker plowed into Maror, pushing Deanna clear with one hand while grabbing at Maror with his other. The two of them went down, rolling and shoving, struggling desperately, each of them trying to get leverage.
“Will!” shouted Deanna, for Maror had temporarily gotten the upper hand and was now trying to bring his weapon to bear on the Starfleet officer.
She ran toward them and grabbed at Maror, trying to yank him off Riker. Maror rammed the stock of his blaster back, slamming Deanna in the stomach. She went down, gasping and retching, the agony threatening to overwhelm her.
It was all the delay Riker needed. He swung his hands up and boxed Maror on either side of the throat, at the base of the nictating membranes that served as his vocal apparatus. It was the equivalent of slamming a punch to the Adam’s apple in a humanoid.
Maror gagged, his breath momentarily cut off, but his strength was still far superior to Riker’s. So when Riker got his hands on the blaster, Maror was still able to hold on to it as his injured membranes fought to regain their equilibrium.
The combatants shoved against one another, pitting their full weight and strength, grunting and growling low and incomprehensible noises. A twist, a turn, jockeying for position, and Riker managed to get his feet planted. With a quick twist of his hip he slammed Maror up against a tree with a bone-jarring jolt.
Maror lost his grip on his blaster, and it clattered to the ground at his feet. Riker had a split instant to make a decision. He released his grip on Maror, gambling on his speed and the damage he’d inflicted on the Sindareen thus far, and lunged for the blaster.
It was the wrong move. Maror’s foot lashed out, kicking the blaster away into the underbrush. Riker was off-balance, and Maror drove his foot up into Riker’s face.
Riker went down, rolling, tasting his blood welling up in his mouth. Maror came after him, kicking furiously, Riker just barely staying ahead of him.
Riker managed to scramble to his feet, and Maror came in fast. Riker braced to meet the charge, his back against a tree, and only at the last moment did he see the knife flashing in Maror’s hand. Where he’d pulled it from, Riker hadn’t a clue…probably he’d kept it secreted up his sleeve.
Riker immediately switched tactics, twisting and just barely avoiding the slashing attack. The blade sank into the tree trunk. Riker’s hands swept up and he slammed his head forward, his forehead cracking against Maror’s face.
Maror fell back toward some brush…
And his questing hand came up with the blaster that
had been knocked over there.
Riker dove for cover as the blaster bolt sizzled over his head. Maror pivoted, dodging to the right to try to get a clear shot at Riker.
And Riker saw where Maror was heading.
“Wait!” shouted Riker. “Stop! Don’t go there! Don’t move!”
Maror, his voice returning, cackled, “Why not, Federation man? Because this will give me the best angle to turn you into a sack of boneless skin? Or maybe security men lie in wait for me? I’m tired of your bluffs, Lieutenant! I’m tired of you!”
Maror leaped to his right, landing with an odd squishing noise, and aimed his blaster at Riker, whose hiding place was now fully exposed.
Incredibly, Riker had not given up the apparent pretense that he somehow had the upper hand. In what seemed a masterpiece of acting, Riker shouted, “Move! Before it’s too late!” and he waved his hands wildly.
“The one who it’s too late for is—”
And that was when Maror realized that he was getting shorter.
He looked down.
He was standing squarely in one of the infamous Jalara Jungle mud pits.
He knew what they looked like. Yesterday a small animal he’d been chasing for food ran headlong into one and had sunk from sight in a little under two seconds.
From the speed with which Maror was vanishing into the dark, pasty nonsoil, it appeared that larger creatures, such as humanoids, took a bit longer. Like, five seconds.
He looked back up and finished the sentence with slow realization. “Is me,” he said as the mud crept up to his shoulders.
Riker scurried forward, arm outstretched, watching for the edges of the mud pit so that he didn’t slip in. “Hold on!” he shouted.
Maror actually seemed amused. “To what?”
That was the last thing he was able to say as the mud covered his throat. Riker got to the edge of the pit, which he could discern by the dark rim, and reached out, trying to grab at Maror’s hair. But Maror was just beyond Riker’s grasp, and then five seconds were gone…and so was Maror. He vanished beneath the surface of the mud pit without a trace.