The
Prosecution's Evidence
(Author's note: This story is set during Part 2 of "Farpoint Station." It was written in December 2001, before US military analysts determined that Osama bin Laden was not killed in Afghanistan at that time. Because Q would not necessarily have acted any differently, I decided not to make any changes to the story.)
Q snapped
his fingers, and the scene changed abruptly.
A rocky,
snow-covered mountain range loomed just below thick clouds of a uniformly drab
gray. A biting wind howled along the slopes. From somewhere not far away,
explosions thundered. Shrieks and war cries could be heard, very faintly.
A coatless
Captain Jean-Luc Picard kept his arms at his sides instead of crossing them
over his chest, unwilling to give his abductor the satisfaction of seeing him
flinch before the weather -- even if he felt like a block of ice already. This
planet, whatever it was, certainly didn't have much to recommend it.
"What
is this place?"
Q, looking
quite pleased with himself, fluffed the white curls of his barrister's wig.
"Don't you recognize your home planet, mon capitan? This is Earth. To be
precise, Afghanistan, December 2001. It's the final exhibit in the prosecution
of you and your crew for the crimes and depravity of your species."
While
Picard was trying to recall just what he'd learned in a long-ago Earth History
class about that particular location and date, Q shook his head pityingly, the
white curls bobbing.
"What's
the matter, have there been too many wars on this pathetic chunk of rock for
your puny brain to remember them all? Or has the cold wind frozen your
cranium? We are witnessing the last stand of the most notorious gang of
terrorists in the planet's history."
Picard
turned his head to follow Q's pointing finger and saw a group of men, with long
beards and turbans, squatting in a trench with various assorted firearms all
around them. The terrorists saw Picard and Q at about the same time, and they
began shouting as the barrels of several automatic weapons swung immediately in
the captain's direction.
"Beardless
and godless infidels, servants of Satan! Die and meet your damnation, enemies
of the true faith!"
Rapid fire
rang out. Much to Picard's surprise, the bullets visibly slowed down as they
approached, breaking harmlessly apart into multicolored bursts of light just as
they were about to strike him. Almost like a historical combat simulation on
the holodeck with the safeties engaged, he thought.
"I
assure you that this is, despite a few minor alterations, what your limited
mind would perceive as reality," Q informed him. "I'm being mindful
of courtroom protocol. It would be entirely unacceptable for the prosecution's
exhibit to shoot the defense's advocate."
The
terrorists gave up on their guns and began to hurl grenades instead, which also
exploded in mid-air with an impressive light show.
"Sorcery!
Demons!"
An
unusually tall figure burst forward, wielding a long and very wicked-looking
knife. The others made as if to follow, but as they left the trench, they
suddenly found themselves frozen in statue-like poses, completely immobilized
in mid-step.
The
knife-wielder lunged to within a few meters of Picard before Q stopped him just
as effectively, with his bearded face twisted into a fiendish snarl.
"Jean-Luc
Picard, meet Osama bin Laden, the ringleader and chief sociopath of these fine
specimens of humanity. If you'd care for a brief explanation of what he calls
his heroic deeds, I'm sure he can provide one."
Q gave the
immobile figure a sharp nudge with his foot. "Confess your crimes."
Bin Laden,
his mouth now freed from the paralysis that still gripped the rest of his body,
began to shout furiously. "Curses upon you, demon-spawn! O mighty Allah,
I implore You to intervene, to defend Your true believers everywhere! Smite
the blasphemers, the evildoers, and all those whose acts harm Islam!"
The whine
of an incoming missile could be heard, just an instant before it struck the
motionless group of terrorists beside the trench. Body parts and blood
spattered everywhere, staining the snow in a gruesome tableau.
"Let
it never be said," Q proclaimed with a grand gesture, "that Allah
does not answer prayers appropriately."
Another
gesture silenced Osama bin Laden again, halfway through an elaborate curse
involving Q's mother and a leprous camel.
"I don't
think we're going to get much information out of this berserker, Jean-Luc, do
you? Fortunately, his crimes are sufficiently described in Earth's history to
permit the court to take judicial notice of them. To put it briefly, his
glorious accomplishments include hijacking civilian airplanes and using them as
missiles to strike office towers, also filled with innocent civilians."
Q pointed
in the direction of a clump of rocks not far away. Bin Laden suddenly appeared
next to the rocks, seconds before another bomb struck the ground about twenty
meters from him. The shock of the blast threw the terrorist to his knees, but
he appeared unhurt.
"Tsk,
tsk. My aim seems to be a bit off today," Q observed.
With
another gesture, Q transported Osama bin Laden to yet another rocky ridge just
as a bomb hit that exact spot, vaporizing him instantly.
"Dead
solid perfect," Q crowed.
Picard's
lips tightened, but he said nothing.
"I
know what you're thinking, mon capitan. That instead of summarily executing
this sack of dung, I ought to have turned him over to the authorities for a
proper trial, in accordance with your lofty principles of justice." Q
smirked. "But you see, history records that his body was never found, and
it wouldn't do to change the timeline, after all. Terrible things start to
happen when you change the timeline, as you will no doubt discover if your
pitiful species survives long enough."
Q paused
for a moment as if reconsidering. "Of course, I did commit a slight error
in courtroom procedure by not allowing cross-examination of that witness. If
you wish to question him, I can resurrect him temporarily."
The scene
was already ghoulish enough, Picard thought, even without an attempt to
question the uncooperative corpse of a resurrected terrorist. "That won't
be necessary."
"Very
well," Q said. "The prosecution rests."
He vanished
and, now garbed in a judge's black robes, reappeared almost instantly, seated
on a nearby rock formation resembling a bench.
"The
defense may present its case."
Picard
considered his next move. He could demonstrate the extent to which humans had
evolved from savagery to civilization. He could show Q examples of truly
heroic deeds, as well as of the myriad small acts of kindness and trust from
which the fabric of human society was woven. But he had his doubts as to
whether that would make much of an impression upon his self-appointed judge.
"I
believe, Your Honor, that when the prosecution's evidence is insufficient, the
customary procedure is for the defense to request a judgment of acquittal at
the close of the prosecution's case."
Whatever Q
might have been anticipating, that wasn't it. The smirk left his face as he
replied, "The court will entertain a motion for acquittal."
"Your
Honor," Picard continued, "is it not true that Osama bin Laden was
responsible for the hijacking of travelers who had done him no harm, with
hundreds of innocent civilian passengers aboard their craft, including
children? For no reason other than his disagreement with their moral
values?"
"As
previously mentioned." Q sounded impatient. "Surely you won't try
to argue that such acts are not among the most heinous of crimes?"
"I
wouldn't even think about arguing that." Picard paused for dramatic
effect. "However, it seems ironic that this is precisely what the Q
Continuum has done to the Enterprise."
Q shifted
uncomfortably on the improvised bench, the robes rustling around him as if he
were a large hen disturbed while brooding on its nest.
"The
court will take the defense's motion under advisement," he huffed.
*****
Later in
sickbay, as Beverly Crusher treated the captain for a mild case of frostbite,
she shook her head. "Osama bin Laden, huh? I remember writing a report
on his crimes for history class. How did you ever manage to convince Q that
the human race wasn't deserving of destruction?"
"Let's
just say it had to do with the definition of terrorism."