Where Evil
Was Defeated
As a junior
member of the Federation's diplomatic service, Gail Armstrong was frequently
called upon to escort alien dignitaries who wished to visit Earth's landmark
sites. She had taken Klingons to see ancient battlefields, shown medieval
universities to Vulcans, and arranged for Ferengi diplomats to tour bustling
commercial plazas.
She
expected that Bajor's newly appointed Ambassador Cymra would ask to be shown
historic cathedrals and mosques, given the Bajorans' intense spirituality, and
perhaps the birthplace of the Emissary. As to this, however, she was
mistaken. The ambassador, a diminutive elderly woman whose intricately
patterned earring dangled below her close-cropped white hair, wanted only to
see one New York building not often visited by extraterrestrial tourists.
The twin
towers of the Galactic Trade Center, rising nearly two hundred stories above
Manhattan, had dominated the New York skyline for over three centuries. It no
longer came close to being the tallest skyscraper on Earth, however, and other
sites held more interest for those fascinated with commerce. The Ferengi, who
accorded no value to history, hadn't even bothered to look at it.
But then,
Gail thought, unusual requests from aliens were nothing new, and this one
seemed simple enough. She promptly scheduled a tour of the building and
accompanied the ambassador, who had seemed quite anxious to make the trip, to
New York the next morning.
Despite
Ambassador Cymra's evident interest in the site, though, it was plain that her
attention had begun to wander as a voluble Andorian tour guide expounded at
great length on various facets of Earth's economy. When the ambassador,
staring fixedly at a blank wall behind the Andorian's left shoulder, made no
response to a direct question from the tour guide, Gail tentatively ventured,
"Ambassador?"
"I can
hear them." The older woman's voice was soft, almost inaudible.
"The voices of the spirits who dwell here."
Gail, who
knew that Bajorans often professed to hear otherworldly voices, wasn't
particularly surprised. A bit of an inconvenience, perhaps; but after all,
every species had quirks of one sort or another. She gave the ambassador a
polite smile and replied, "I understand."
"No, I
don't believe you do." Ambassador Cymra's voice grew sharp as she gave
the Andorian a curt nod and abruptly turned to leave. Gail, trailing along
behind, wondered what she might have said wrong.
"I'm
sorry, Ambassador, I didn't mean to give offense."
The
exasperated sigh seemed out of all proportion to such a small woman.
"Young people. It's the same from one world to the next. None of you
know your history."
"I've
taken several courses . . ."
"Courses."
The Bajoran snorted in contempt. "It's sadly obvious that you have no
idea of what happened here. I'm going to fill in a gap in your woeful
education by explaining it to you. First of all, has anyone ever told you why
Bajor's prophets chose Earth as the birthplace of the Emissary?"
"No,
ma'am," Gail answered meekly, not about to hazard a guess at that.
"The
Emissary's purpose was to defeat the pah-wraiths, the spirits of evil, in the
last battle." The ambassador's tone deepened, taking on the sing-song
quality of a storyteller reciting an ancient saga. "Now, the pah-wraiths
weren't unique to Bajor. Their kind can be found throughout the galaxy,
wherever wars are fought, for they draw sustenance from hatred and other
negative energies. In the ancient tales of Earth, they have long been known as
demons."
Although
she'd never believed in such things, Gail listened politely to the ambassador.
A faint hum of machinery could be heard as the lift descended.
"For
most of Earth's history, its soil was fertile ground for the pah-wraiths, with
endless wars, slavery, and other abominations. By the turn of the third
millennium, however, the planet was largely at peace. So the pah-wraiths
devised what they thought was a clever plan to start a global war. They
possessed the leaders of a small band of zealots, perverted their religion into
an ideology of destruction, and incited them to destroy a civilian office tower
on this very site in a vile act of terrorism. In so doing, the pah-wraiths
hoped to provoke atrocities in retaliation such as would plunge Earth into a
Third World War from which civilization would never recover."
The doors
opened silently, and Gail walked out into the lobby, still following the older
woman.
"But
they failed. Earth's Third World War became a campaign in which all nations
came together to put an end to the terror, to ensure that evil would never
again have a place to hide. And eventually the pah-wraiths, deprived of the
hatred and violence on which they fed, simply withered away and perished. The
Galactic Trade Center was built on this once-stained ground as a proud symbol
of the world's resolve to conquer evil."
The crisp
September air touched Gail's face as she stepped out of the building and, for
the first time, really saw the memorial that she'd just walked past earlier,
without even noticing.
"And
that is why the Emissary had to be human. Because your race had already proven
that it could vanquish its demons." The Bajoran ambassador was weeping
openly now, her tears falling beside the memorial. "You can't understand
what it meant to us, during all those years in the Cardassian labor camps, to
know that this building, this symbol, still stood, this place where evil was
defeated. To know that it could be done."
The
ambassador brushed the back of a wrinkled hand across her damp eyes and whispered,
"Thank you," as she gazed into the pale stone face of the statue in
the center of the memorial. She reached up to touch the firefighter's smooth
cheek, still immaculately preserved and maintained after almost four hundred
years.
"Rest
in peace."