"Bring in Captain Hrelle!"
Sasha was dragged, manacled and bloodied, across the stained, cracked stone floor of the ancient hall, to the jeers of the armoured warriors on the sidelines, ready for the spectacle of the imminent duel.
When they released their hold on her, she struggled back to her feet, her chin raised defiantly at the Klingon who stood on the raised dais before the banner of his House. He was a young male with a patch bolted over where his right eye used to sit, and the sneer he offered her revealed crooked, yellowed teeth. "So here she is, at last, the
petaQ
Starfleet captain responsible for the death of my honoured father!" His men roared loudly, boisterously, as his hand rested on the hilt of the
mek'leth
blade on his belt. "Well, Captain? Have you nothing to say for yourself?"
Sasha wiped the blood from her mouth onto her sleeve, and held up her bound wrists. "I say... release me, Khlaris. Release my hands and let me face you like a warrior, rather than like some animal. Or do you fear me so much that you need me chained up in your presence?"
The Klingon grunted at the taunt, and nodded to his men, who approached her again and removed the restraints - stepping back quickly, in case she tried to fight them again. But she ignored them, keeping focused on Khlaris. "And I will also say to you that your father Athagh... was my greatest opponent. No one has ever come as close to killing me as he had. How close, you might ask?"
She reached up and peeled back the collar of her Starfleet uniform as much as the sturdy material would allow, revealing an ugly scar running from her collarbone to the back of her ear. "He nearly took my head off. I'll carry this with honour, and drink a toast to him every year on the anniversary of our deal."
A rumbling sound of surprise ran like a tremor through the assembled as she adjusted her uniform again, and Khlaris reacted to the unexpected praise for his father, before spitting and sneering, "You think mere words and promises will assuage my thirst for vengeance, Hrelle?"
She shrugged. "Probably not. It didn't for me. When I was half your age, a group of cowardly, criminal
petaQs
murdered my mother. They shot her in the back, never even giving her a chance to die with honour. And years later, when the opportunity came to witness the execution of the man who led those scum... I gladly claimed it."
She took a step forward. "But... I won't fight you today, Khlaris. I think that honour must fall to my son. He was with me when your men abducted me, and he stands ready to face you."
That provoked another rumble among the Klingons, and a greedy smile from Khlaris. "Yes... YES! I accept the challenge! Bring forth your bastard son!"
"Okay." She turned her head and called behind her, "Shalom! Come here, sweetie!"
The Klingons behind her parted, allowing a waist-high, six-year-old Caitian male cub with auburn fur, sharp-pointed ears, a blunt muzzle and a thin, excited tail to step forward. He wore shoes, jeans and a black T-shirt emblazoned with the Starfleet logo, and as he faced Khlaris, he bared his tiny teeth and claws and gave a minikin roar of challenge.
"Computer," came a voice from an unseen source, "Pause Program."
Khlaris, the other Klingons and the Caitian cub all froze, and silence blanketed the room as Sasha turned to see a dozen young Starfleet officers emerge from a seemingly-empty corner of the Hall, led by an older, dark-skinned Vulcan male with Commander's pips on his uniform, a strong broad face that was, unusually for his people, framed with a trimmed moustache and beard flecked with grey, and bright blue eyes that showed more animation than one might expect from one of his people - unless, like Sasha, one had experience living and working with them. "Lt T'Shul, why did you interrupt Lt Hrelle's exercise?"
T'Shul was a gaunt Vulcan female Sasha's age, with sable hair and a narrow chin, like Sasha newly graduated from Starfleet Academy, only from the Academy Annex here on Vulcan rather than on Earth. She adopted a formal pose, hands behind her back. "Commander Haluk, I wish to formally protest Lt Hrelle's response."
In the group, someone - Sasha recognised it as Lt Luckinbill - muttered, "Here we go again."
Sasha echoed that sentiment, folding her arms across her chest and facing T'Shul; since Sasha's arrival on Vulcan to participate in the elite Advanced Command Training course, T'Shul had become an almighty pain in Sasha's
toches
, constantly challenging her responses, her attitude, her
everything
, to the point where Sasha was beginning to suspect the young Vulcan was a plant designed to test her resolve. "I haven't even finished, T'Shul. What can you possibly have to protest about?"
"Much. This exercise was designed to test our responses to critical situations. Your response is both facetious and ethically questionable."
"Oh, is that right, Bubulah?"
"Yes. You have fashioned a false scar for yourself, and false stories regarding its origin and your witnessing the execution of your mother's murderer, all in order to ingratiate yourself towards Khlaris. Lying is not considered a virtue among Starfleet officers. Even human ones-"
"The scar is real, T'Shul," Sasha informed her. "As is the story of seeing my mother's killer executed."
The group went silent at the revelation - as Sasha expected. She had just wanted to come here, take the course, and learn everything she could from it before moving onto her first assignment. As it happened, she found herself enjoying the experience and making new friends among her fellow participants. But she would have much preferred to keep certain aspects of her past to herself, and not be That Girl, the one that people talk about when she's not around.
In the group, Lt Russ, a tall, blonde beanpole of a man who loved to smile, now frowned. "Seriously? What- How did you-"
"The details aren't important," she added quickly. "But I
did
amend the origin of the scar for Khlaris. I thought, since it was there already, I could make good use of it to build a connection with him." She looked to Haluk. "Would that be considered wrong, Sir?"
The instructor folded his own hands behind his back. "Deception for a higher moral gain, such as the preservation of oneself or others,
is
considered ethically acceptable."
But T'Shul remained undeterred. "With respect, Sir, it is not acceptable to intentionally endanger civilian minors, such as Lt Hrelle's alleged child."
"Alleged?" Sasha moved to stand behind the still-frozen hologram, bending down and wrapping her arms around him protectively. "He's not 'alleged'! I went through fourteen hours of labour to push this cub out!"
That provoked chuckles among some of the other participants, as T'Shul turned back to Haluk. "As she continues to demonstrate even now, Sir, she is not taking her opportunity here seriously."
Their instructor raised an eyebrow. "And yet, her scores consistently exceed yours. Perhaps you are in fact questioning
my
competency in administering this course?"
T'Shul stiffened. "That is certainly