Hera Syndulla (
for_everyone) wrote2018-07-13 11:26 pm
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The advantage of Hera's typical technique is that it's controlled, and understated. She draws as little attention as possible to the act while she's carrying it out, giving her time to plant evidence and leave the area before most have even realized what has happened. But, once in a while, a particular job calls for a little more showmanship than this. Her work is never supposed to leave any uncertainty as to what it means, and who is behind it. But sometimes, there can also be value in sheer brazenness.
Which means that Hera's most recent target, Captain Orfanidis, was stabbed in the chest in his own quarters aboard the ISS Laran. At least the follow-up requires slightly less work – Hera doesn't even bother hiding her weapon. She hopes they find it. She hopes they find her DNA on it. She hopes they know exactly who did this, and that they walk in fear of when she'll do it again.
But if she plans to do it again, it also means she has to get away. Which is why she waits just long enough to ensure Orfanidis is dead before she drops her blade, and checks her time, before she steps back out into the hall. The moment she does is just as the ship's assigned cleaning "staff" is passing through. They're all wearing shock collars, so that they don't need a monitor, and are dutifully keeping their eyes down. Already disguised accordingly, it's easy enough for Hera to step in among them, and walk with them as they pass through the staff quarters.
Which means that Hera's most recent target, Captain Orfanidis, was stabbed in the chest in his own quarters aboard the ISS Laran. At least the follow-up requires slightly less work – Hera doesn't even bother hiding her weapon. She hopes they find it. She hopes they find her DNA on it. She hopes they know exactly who did this, and that they walk in fear of when she'll do it again.
But if she plans to do it again, it also means she has to get away. Which is why she waits just long enough to ensure Orfanidis is dead before she drops her blade, and checks her time, before she steps back out into the hall. The moment she does is just as the ship's assigned cleaning "staff" is passing through. They're all wearing shock collars, so that they don't need a monitor, and are dutifully keeping their eyes down. Already disguised accordingly, it's easy enough for Hera to step in among them, and walk with them as they pass through the staff quarters.

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His reaction doesn't seem to bother her. "Where were you born?"
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But now that he thinks about it, that seems wildly unlikely, doesn't it?
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She'd guess, since he doesn't seem to know for sure.
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"No. My father was stationed on the ISS Acheron, and so was I."
Stationed. Raised. They're the same thing in the end, in Starfleet.
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"And your mother was Betazoid?"
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He works hard not to look away from her at that. It would be a weakness, and --
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"Like you've cut her out of your words."
Or more than that, really.
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Betazoids are honest, pathologically so. That's a fatal flaw in the Terran empire, particularly for a half-breed boy. Forgetting was the only way.
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"You don't have to do it now."
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How can he believe that, not just here, but anywhere?
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"Being half-Betazoid saved your life today."
After a beat, she adds, "And not running like a coward did, too."
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"Remind me again how your side punishes failure?"
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"We can't afford to waste the way Terrans do."
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"No."
That's impossible. No one could ever --
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"The Terrans have made this part of the galaxy cruel. We have to find ways to survive that. But we have no reason to carry that out on each other now."
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Ambition, cruelty, torture, murder. They're all the same word.
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"We all have ambition. But the Terrans won't allow that. And how would it help us to harm our allies?"
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"The Empire seems to have gotten far enough without that kind of softness."
Just look at it, the sheer scope of it. Isn't that winning?
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"And what, Lieutenant Jarrus, has that meant for you? What about your ambition?"
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It's a rote recitation, but at the same time it's true.
(His only ambition is not to die.)
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Her voice is mild, and faintly curious.
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He tries to inject scorn into his tone, but the genuine curiosity wins through, regardless.
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This comes out bitterly, and perhaps that is no surprise.
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Hera reaches up to toward her neck. She's no longer wearing one of the collars used on the Laran, she was ready to have that disguise off her as soon as possible. But she tugs aside her neckline, revealing the scar where her implant had been as a child.
As she covers it again, "But you've proved they don't always need such measures, do they?
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