[Bridge]
(Everyone on the Bridge is staring at Spock's
back, as he analyses some sensor data.)
SPOCK: No doubt about it, Captain. The space debris comes from the
survey vessel SS Beagle.
KIRK: Missing for six years, and now this junk in space.
SPOCK: Portions of the antimatter nacelles, personal belongings.
Captain, no signs of bodies whatsoever.
KIRK: Then whatever destroyed the ship, the crew was able to get off
safely. Navigator, compute the present drift of the wreckage.
CHEKOV: Computed and on the board, sir.
KIRK: Mister Spock, assuming that the wreckage drifted at the same
speed and direction for the past six years?
SPOCK: It would have come from planet four, star system eight nine two,
directly ahead.
CHEKOV: Only one sixteenth parsec away, Captain. We should be there in
seconds.
KIRK: Standard orbit around the planet. There may be survivors there.
SPOCK: SS Beagle. Small class four stardrive vessel. Crew of forty
seven, commanded by. Jim, I believe you knew him. Captain R M Merik.
KIRK: Yes, at the academy. He was dropped in his fifth year. He went
into the merchant service.
CHEKOV: Coming up on the planet, captain.
(A planet with lots of water, some land masses and just s few wispy
white clouds.)
KIRK: Put it on the screen.
CHEKOV: Definitely class M, somewhat similar to Earth.
KIRK: Yes, similar. But the land masses and oceans are quite different,
however.
SPOCK: Different in shape only, Captain. The proportion of land to
water is exactly as on your Earth. Density five point five, diameter
seven nine one seven at the equator, atmosphere seventy eight percent
nitrogen, twenty one percent oxygen. Again, exactly like Earth.
KIRK: Exactly in some ways, different in others.
SPOCK: I also picked up indications of large cities.
KIRK: What era?
SPOCK: No sign of atomic power as yet, but far enough along for radio
communications, power transportation, an excellent road system.
UHURA: Captain, both amplitude and frequency modulation being used. I
think I can pick up something visual. It's a news broadcast using a
system I think they once called video.
SPOCK: Television was the colloquial term.
KIRK: Put it on the screen.
UHURA: Aye.
(A black and white image of people watching as police in crash helmets
arrest someone. There is a car in the foreground. Very 1950s or 60s.)
VOICE [OC]: Today police rounded up still another group of dissidents.
Authorities are as yet unable to explain these fresh outbreaks of
treasonable disobedience by well-treated, well-protected, intelligent
slaves. Now turning to the world of sports and bringing you the taped
results of the arena games last night. (a sword fight) The first heat
involved amateurs. They're petty thieves from City Prison.
Conducted, however, with traditional weapons, it provided some
amusement for a few moments. In the second heat, a slightly more
professional display in the spirit of our splendid past, when gladiator
Claudius Marcus killed the last of the barbarians, William B. Harrison,
in an excellent example of
(The picture of an old Roman fight with net and short sword is lost.)
UHURA: Transmission lost, sir. Shall I try to get it back?
KIRK: Slaves and gladiators. What are we seeing, a twentieth-century
Rome?
SPOCK: Captain, the one described as the barbarian is also listed here.
Flight officer William B. Harrison of the SS Beagle. At least there
were some survivors down there.
KIRK: Ready the transporter room, Mister Spock. We're beaming down.
[Hillside]
(The landing party of three is beamed onto a ridge,
nicely silhouetted against the clear blue sky.)
KIRK: You could have selected a more convenient place, Mister Spock.
SPOCK: But hardly more practical, captain. Close to the city we
located, but not populated. We should not be observed.
(They head down the steep slope. Spock takes some tricorder scans.)
SPOCK: Fascinating. This atmosphere is remarkably similar to your
twentieth century. Moderately industrialised pollution containing
substantial amounts of carbon monoxide and partially consumed
hydrocarbons.
MCCOY: The word was smog.
SPOCK: Yes, I believe that was the term. I had no idea you were that
much of a historian, Doctor.
MCCOY: I am not, Mister Spock. I was simply trying to stop you from
giving us a whole lecture on the subject. Jim, is there anything at all
we know about this planet?
KIRK: The SS Beagle was the first ship to make a survey of this star
sector when it disappeared.
SPOCK: Then the Prime Directive is in full force, Captain?
KIRK: No identification of self or mission. No interference with the
social development of said planet.
MCCOY: No references to space, or the fact that there are other worlds,
or more advanced civilisations.
KIRK: Let's go.
MCCOY: One, just once, I'd like to be able to land someplace and say,
Behold, I am the Archangel Gabriel.
SPOCK: I fail to see the humour in that situation, Doctor.
MCCOY: Naturally. You could hardly claim to be an angel with those
pointed ears, Mister Spock. But say you landed someplace with a
pitchfork.
(A gunshot rings out.)
FLAVIUS [OC]: Don't move! Hands in the air!
SPOCK: Complete Earth parallel. The language here is English.
(Kirk tries to go for his phaser, and another shot hits the ground near
his feet.)
FLAVIUS [OC]: I said, don't move!
KIRK: I think he means it, Spock.
SPOCK: There would seem to be evidence to that effect.
(Four men appear from behind rocks. They are wearing t-shirts with a
short chain motif at the neck. The leader is barefoot and wearing
shorts.)
FLAVIUS: Who are you?
KIRK: We come from another province.
FLAVIUS: (to Spock) Where are you from? What do you call those?
SPOCK: I call them ears.
FLAVIUS: Are you trying to be funny?
SPOCK: Never. Colloquial twentieth-century English. An amazing
parallel.
KIRK: We come from a place that's quite some journey from here. I doubt
if you've heard
FLAVIUS: Uniforms. Probably some new Praetorian guard unit. I should
kill you here, but Septimus would probably be displeased. Move. Move!
(As they are lead along, a guard whistles the signal that they are
approaching, and two men come out of a hidden cave.
[Cave entrance]
FLAVIUS: I didn't harm them, Septimus, as much as I
wanted to.
SEPTIMUS: (a very old man with a gentle way of speaking) Keep always in
your mind, Flavius, that our way is peace.
MCCOY: For which we are grateful, for we are men of peace ourselves.
SEPTIMUS: Oh? Are you Children of the Sun?
MCCOY: Well, if you're speaking of worships of sorts, we represent many
beliefs.
FLAVIUS: There is only one true belief! Roman butchers, sent here by
the first citizen.
KIRK: Do we look like any Romans you ever saw ?
SEPTIMUS: Then are you slaves like ourselves?
KIRK: Our people don't believe in slavery.
FLAVIUS: A Roman lie. We must kill them.
SPOCK: Sir, we came here looking for some friends, forty seven of them
who were stranded here some six years ago. They wore clothing similar
to ours. Have you heard of such men?
FLAVIUS: Septimus, I know killing is evil, but sometimes it's
necessary.
SEPTIMUS: No.
FLAVIUS: But they've located us, our hiding place. It's better to kill
a few of them than all of us.
KIRK: Wait. I can prove we're telling the truth. A small device. I'll
take it out slowly. (his communicator) Kirk to Enterprise. Come in.
SCOTT [OC]: Scott here, Captain.
KIRK: Scotty, lock in on my transmission beam. Scan us.
SCOTT [OC]: Scanning, sir.
KIRK: Including ourselves, how many of us are there?
SCOTT [OC]: Twelve, Captain.
KIRK: Good, Scotty. Continue scanning. We'll maintain transmission.
Kirk out. The Enterprise is our ship, somewhere at sea. That's all I
can tell you. If it isn't sufficient, you will have to kill us.
SEPTIMUS: Tell me the empire has a device like that, Flavius, and you
may kill them. Otherwise, accept them as friends.
(Septimus leads the way into the caves.)
Captain's log, stardate 4040.7. On the surface of
planet four, system eight nine two, the landing party has won the
confidence of what obviously is a group of runaway slaves. They dwell
in caves not far from a large city, wear rags, live under primitive
conditions. But they are creatures of a heavily industrialised
twentieth-century type planet very much like Earth. An amazing example
of Hodgkins's law of Parallel Planet Development. But on this Earth,
Rome never fell. A world ruled by emperors who can trace their line
back two thousand years to their own Julius and Augustus Caesars.
[Cave]
(The landing party are given water, and Spock leafs
through some magazines.)
SEPTIMUS: No, Captain. I'm sure I would have heard of the arrival of
other men like you.
KIRK: Perhaps you've heard, let's say, an impossible story or a rumour
of men who came from the sky or from other worlds.
SEPTIMUS: There are no other worlds.
KIRK: The stars.
SEPTIMUS: Lights shining through from heaven. It is where the sun is.
Blessed be the sun.
KIRK: Yes, of course.
SPOCK: (brings over a magazine) Captain, I thought you might find this
interesting.
KIRK: Spock?
SPOCK: Fascinating.
KIRK: (looking at a car advert) The Jupiter Eight. Conventional
internal combustion engine. You were right about the smog. But the
Jupiter Eight?
Mars toothpaste. Neptune bath salts.
SEPTIMUS: Taken from the names of false gods. When I was a senator, I
worshiped them too, but I heard the words of the sun. I became a
Brother. For that, they made me a slave.
KIRK: Septimus, we need your help. We must go into the city. We know
that one of our missing friends was seen there recently.
SEPTIMUS: My advice to you is to leave. Go back where you came from.
KIRK: We can't do that. Perhaps you know his name. Merik. Captain
Merik.
(General consternation and animosity from the other slaves)
SEPTIMUS: Merikus?
KIRK: Yes. He's the leader of our friends.
SEPTIMUS: Merikus is first citizen. Butcher.
KIRK: That doesn't sound like the same man.
SPOCK: Captain, a logical question, if I may. Septimus, how many years
ago did Merikus become your first citizen?
SEPTIMUS: Perhaps five years.
FLAVIUS: Almost six. I was there when he became lord of the games. If
he is your friend, you are no friends of ours.
KIRK: Septimus, wherever we may be from, you must believe that it is
one of our most important laws that none of us interfere with the
affairs of others. If Captain Merik is Merikus, then he has violated
that law, and he must be taken away and punished. Will you help us get
to the truth of all this?
SEPTIMUS: First I must discuss it with the others.
(The men leave.)
SPOCK: Curious, Captain, the similarity in names. Were you told why
Merik was dropped from the Space Academy?
KIRK: He failed a psycho-simulator test. All it takes is a split second
of indecision. Hardly the type to become a political strongman.
MCCOY: Odd that these people should worship the sun.
SPOCK: Why, Doctor?
MCCOY: Because, my dear Mister Spock, it is illogical. Rome had no sun
worshipers. Why should they parallel Rome in every way except one?
(The men return.)
SEPTIMUS: We have decided. Flavius will guide you. We will provide you
with suitable clothing. I caution you, take great care. The police are
everywhere. May the blessings of the sun be upon you.
[Countryside]
(Dressed as slaves in jeans and t-shirts, the
landing party are lead towards the city. Spock wears his obligatory
woollen hat. They stop by a small thicket of trees.)
FLAVIUS: We'll wait here until dark.
KIRK: Are you a slave, Flavius?
FLAVIUS: You are barbarians indeed not to know of Flavius Maximus. For
seven years, I was the most successful gladiator in this province.
KIRK: Then you heard the word of the sun?
FLAVIUS: Yes. The words of peace and freedom. It wasn't easy for me to
believe. I was trained to fight. But the words, the words are true.
KIRK: There are many things I'd like to know
(he's interrupted by rapid gunfire.)
MAXIMUS: Hold! Don't move! Hands in the air!
(Armed police round them up.)
Four fleeing fish. A fine haul. Flavius Maximus.
(Flavius attacks him and gets knocked down.)
MAXIMUS: You have been too long absent from the games, Flavius. The
first citizen will be pleased. Runaway slaves are always welcome.
(removes Spock's hat) No, not slaves. Barbarians. It's been a long time
since I've watched barbarians die in the arena.
Captain's log, stardate 4040.9. Uniformed police
like those of Earth, a great city like Rome with automobiles.
Astonishing similarities to twentieth-century Earth, down to the fine
carbon steel in the bars.
[Prison]
(Spock and McCoy carry Flavius into a cell.)
KIRK: Tell Merikus I'd like to see him.
MAXIMUS: The first citizen? Why would he bother with arena bait like
you?
KIRK: Tell him it's Jim Kirk. Perhaps a friend.
MAXIMUS: Perhaps?
KIRK: Well, if I am a friend and you don't tell him, do you really want
to risk that?
(They are locked in and left alone. McCoy tends to Flavius's head
wound.)
KIRK: But if there have been slaves for over 2,000 years, hasn't there
always been discontent, runaways?
FLAVIUS: Long ago there were rebellions, but they were suppressed. And
with each century, the slaves acquired more rights under the law. They
received rights to medicine, the right to government payments in their
old age, and they slowly learned to be content.
SPOCK: Even more fascinating. Slavery evolving into an institution with
guaranteed medical payments, old-age pensions.
MCCOY: Quite logical, I'd say, Mister Spock. Just as it's logical that
twentieth-century Rome would use television to show its gladiator
contests or name a new car the Jupiter Eight.
SPOCK: Doctor, if I were able to show emotion, your new infatuation
with that term would begin to annoy me.
MCCOY: What term? Logic? Medical men are trained in logic, Mister
Spock.
SPOCK: Really, Doctor, I had no idea they were trained. Watching you, I
assumed it was trial and error.
FLAVIUS: Are they enemies, Captain?
KIRK: I'm not sure they're sure. When the slaves began to worship the
sun, they became discontent again. When did all this happen?
FLAVIUS: Long ago. Perhaps as long ago as the beginning of the empire.
The message of the sun, that all men are brothers, was kept from us.
Perhaps I'm a fool to believe it. It does often seem that man must
fight to live.
KIRK: You go on believing it, Flavius. All men are brothers.
(The guards return.)
MAXIMUS: Flavius. Your friends are waiting for you. You've already been
matched for the morning games. Come.
FLAVIUS: I will not fight. I'm a Brother of the Sun.
MAXIMUS: Put a sword in your hand, and you'll fight. I know you,
Flavius, you're as peaceful as a bull.
(Two guards take Flavius away.)
MAXIMUS: You three come with us.
KIRK: Three against three. We may never get a better chance.
MAXIMUS: No talking. Outside.
KIRK: (looking at McCoy) I doubt if he'll get very far. He feels ill.
MCCOY: I do?
MAXIMUS: Outside!
KIRK: All right, but he'll double over before we get very far. (Spock
and Kirk take McCoy's arms.)
MCCOY: No, I think I can walk. I'll try.
(McCoy suddenly doubles over in pain and two guards are sent in to
help. One gets neck-pinched, the Roman is karate-chopped and the last
guard is punched by the invalid.)
KIRK: Let's go.
MERIK: (blue eyed, red haired) Well done, Jim. (Armed guards appear.)
I'm afraid it isn't that easy. They've been handling slaves here for
two thousand years.
CLAUDIUS: But it was exciting. They'd do well in the arena.
KIRK: Captain Merik, isn't it ?
MERIK: Yes, it's me. This is our Proconsul, Claudius Marcus.
CLAUDIUS: But this is no place for a reunion.
MERIK: This way. Your friends, too. There's lots to talk about, lots to
explain.
KIRK: I agree.
MERIK: Don't judge me before you know the facts. Come on, we can talk
freely here. The Proconsul knows who and what we are.
[Chamber]
(Some small animal skins on the floor, a brass
brazier, an urn and busts on plinths, and a girl preparing drinks.)
MERIK: You can leave us.
(The guards leave.)
MERIK: Well, a celebration. A meeting of old friends.
CLAUDIUS: Prepare food for our friends. They've come from a great
distance. A great distance indeed. So, this is a Vulcan. Interesting.
From what I've heard, I wish I had fifty of you for the arena.
MERIK: This other is your ship's surgeon?
KIRK: McCoy.
MERIK: It's a pity we can't let him loose in our hospitals. Our level
of medicine would improve immeasurably, I'm sure.
CLAUDIUS: Come. You must be hungry. Gentlemen?
(They sit at a table, and the girl brings over a plate.)
CLAUDIUS: Oh, try the sparrow broiled in garum. Delicious. Or perhaps
some of this roast kid. Lovely thing, isn't she?
KIRK: All right, what happened?
MERIK: We had meteor damage, Jim. I went ashore with a landing party to
look for iridium ore for repairs, and I met this gentleman.
KIRK: Go on.
MERIK: He convinced me it would be unfair to this world to carry word
of their existence elsewhere.
CLAUDIUS: Contamination. Can't risk that. Oh, you'll understand as you
learn more about us.
MERIK: So I made the decision to stay.
KIRK: What happened to your crew? Did they voluntarily beam, come
ashore?
MERIK: This is an ordered world, Jim, a conservative world based on
time-honoured Roman strengths and virtues.
KIRK: What happened to your crew?
MERIK: There's been no war here for over four hundred years, Jim.
Could, let's say, your land of that same era make that same boast? I
think you can see
why they don't want to have their stability contaminated by dangerous
ideas of other ways and other places.
SPOCK: Interesting, and given a conservative empire, quite
understandable.
MCCOY: Are you out of your head?
SPOCK: I said I understood it, Doctor. I find the checks and balances
of this civilisation quite illuminating.
MCCOY: Next he'll be telling us he prefers it over Earth history.
SPOCK: They do seem to have escaped the carnage of your first three
world wars, Doctor.
MCCOY: They have slavery, gladiatorial games, despotism.
SPOCK: Situations quite familiar to the six million who died in your
first world war, the eleven million who died in your second, the thirty
seven million who died in your third. Shall I go on?
CLAUDIUS: Interesting. And you, Captain, which world do you prefer?
KIRK: My world, proconsul, is my vessel, my oath, my crew. What
happened to your vessel you've explained. What happened to your oath is
obvious.
MERIK: And as for my men, those that were able to adapt to this world
are still alive. Those who couldn't adapt are dead. That's the way it
is with life everywhere, isn't it?
KIRK: You sent your own men into the arena?
MERIK: Just as I did, Jim, you're going to order your own people
ashore.
MCCOY: You must know that's impossible. Starfleet regulations
CLAUDIUS: Are designed to circumvent any such order. There may be over
four hundred men on your ship, Captain, but they can be brought down if
it's handled properly. Say, a few at a time. You see, I have the
advantage of a trained ship captain to tell me what is and what is not
possible. Your communicator, Captain Kirk. Now do save us all a lot of
unnecessary trouble and issue the appropriate orders.
MERIK: They're going to be arriving soon, anyway, Jim. A recon party,
then a rescue party, then another rescue party. I had less men. It
added up the same.
KIRK: Do you really believe I could be made to order my own people
down?
CLAUDIUS: I believe this, Captain. That you would do almost anything
rather than see these two dear friends put slowly to death.
(Kirk takes the communicator.)
MCCOY: Jim.
KIRK: Kirk to Enterprise.
SCOTT [OC]: Bridge. Scott here.
(Armed guards enter.)
KIRK: Scotty, if you have a fix. (guns are pointed at his head) Stand
by, Scotty.
CLAUDIUS: Very wise of you, Captain. No point in sending up
bullet-ridden corpses.
KIRK: Yet on the other hand, my chief engineer's standing by for a
message.
CLAUDIUS: I do hope so, for your sake. Now, Captain, what are you going
to order your men to do?
KIRK: If I brought down a hundred of them armed with phasers
CLAUDIUS: you could probably defeat the combined armies of our entire
empire, and violate your oath regarding noninterference with other
societies. I believe you all swear you'll die before you'd violate that
directive. Am I right?
SPOCK: Quite correct.
MCCOY: Must you always be so blasted honest?
CLAUDIUS: But on the other hand, why even bother to send your men down?
From what I understand, your vessel could lay waste to the entire
surface of the world. Oh, but there's that Prime Directive in the way
again. Can't interfere.
MERIK: Jim, you've already started a message. Your engineer's waiting.
What are you going to do?
KIRK: Scotty. Sorry to keep you waiting.
SCOTT [OC]: We were becoming concerned, Captain. You were a bit
overdue.
CLAUDIUS: Order your officers to come down.
KIRK: Condition Green, all's well. Kirk out.
CLAUDIUS: Guards, take them. Prepare them for the games.
MERIK: Ah, that was stupid, Jim. This is not an Academy training test.
This is for real. They're taking you to die.
Ship's log, stardate 4041.2. Chief Engineer Scott
recording. Captain Kirk and his landing party have checked in
[Bridge]
SCOTT: But they have used the code term Condition
Green, which means they're in trouble. But it also prohibits my taking
any action. (ends log entry) Mister Chekov, pinpoint power source
locations. Type, power, load factors, and how much our beams will have
to pull to overload them.
CHEKOV: That may take some time.
SCOTT: Let it take time, lad. They're in trouble, and I'm under orders
not to interfere. However, no order can stop me from frightening them.
It may do no good, but it may suggest to someone just what a starship
can really do. Aye.
[Arena]
(Actually, a painted backdrop in the Empire TV
television studio. The commentator sits on scaffolding next to a camera
operator.)
ANNOUNCER: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen. Live and direct from
City Arena, and in colour, we bring you Name the Winner, brought to you
tonight by your Jupiter Eight dealers from coast to coast. In just a
moment, tonight's first heat. We're in a taped commercial, Proconsul.
Forty seconds, then we'll be back live.
(Claudius, Merik and Kirk take seats on a raised platform. Kirk is
manacled, and there are two armed guards behind him. Spock and McCoy
are brought out by two guards in full traditional dress.)
ANNOUNCER: Stand by. Ten seconds. And first tonight, ladies and
gentlemen, a surprise extra. In the far corner, a pair of highly
aggressive barbarians. Strong, intelligent, with strange ways, and I'm
sure full of a lot of surprises. And facing them, two favorites here
from previous encounters, Achilles and Flavius. (The canned applause is
turned up by a bored sound effects man) Victory or death? And for which
of them? Well, ladies and gentlemen, you know as much about that at
this moment as I do because this is your programme. You name the
winner.
FLAVIUS: I don't mind fighting, but why you?
VOICE [OC]: Begin!
(Achilles takes on Spock. They are well matched. McCoy is against
Flavius, and doesn't know what to do with a short sword.)
ANNOUNCER: Flavius may be getting off to a slow start, but he's never
disappointed this crowd. A close one. The barbarian with the pointed
ears seems to be in trouble.
SPOCK: I tell you I'm well able to defeat you.
ACHILLES: Fight, barbarian!
MERIK: Most of my men went the same way. I hoped I would feel it less
with yours.
SPOCK: I do not want to injure you.
(The cat-calls and hisses are amplified. Flavius gets a taste of the
whip.)
MASTER: Fight, you two. You bring this network's ratings down, Flavius,
and we'll do a special on you.
(McCoy puts more effort into it.)
CLAUDIUS: Question, Captain?
KIRK: The rules. If Spock should finish his man off first, would he be
able to help
CLAUDIUS: We believe men should fight their own battles. Only the weak
will die. My word as a Roman. Ready to order your men down, Captain?
MERIK: Maybe now you understand why I gave in. The Romans have always
been the strongest, and they've had practice for over two thousand
years in enslaving men, using them, killing them.
CLAUDIUS: Quite true, Captain Kirk. The games have always strengthened
us. Death becomes a familiar pattern. We don't fear it as you do.
(Flavius gets whipped again)
FLAVIUS: At least defend yourself.
MCCOY: I am defending myself!
FLAVIUS: Not like that, you fool. Hold your weapon higher.
(The cat-calls are replaced by cheers)
CLAUDIUS: Admit it. You find these games frightening, revolting.
KIRK: Proconsul, in some parts of the galaxy I have seen forms of
entertainment that makes this look like a folk dance.
CLAUDIUS: Certain this isn't different, Captain? Those are your men
dying, not strangers.
KIRK: I've had to select men to die before so that others could be
saved.
CLAUDIUS: You're a clever liar, Captain Kirk. Merikus was a spaceship
captain. I've observed him thoroughly. Your species has no such
strength.
MERIK: He commands not just a spaceship, Proconsul, but a starship. A
very special vessel and crew. I tried for such a command.
CLAUDIUS: I see no evidence of superiority. They fight no better than
your men did, Merikus. Perhaps not as well.
ACHILLES: Stop running. Fight.
SPOCK: Need any help, Doctor?
MCCOY: Whatever gave you that idea?
ACHILLES: Fight, you pointed-ear freak!
MCCOY: You tell him, buster. Of all the completely ridiculous,
illogical questions I ever heard in my life!
(McCoy falls, and is vulnerable. Achilles is distracted so Spock
punches him out then goes and neck-pinches Flavius.)
MASTER: A clear foul, Proconsul. Your decision?
CLAUDIUS: Your opinion, Merikus? After all, they're like yourself.
MERIK: It's your decision, Proconsul.
CLAUDIUS: Your opinion, Captain Kirk? Would you like me to kill them
now? An easy death? Then you'd gladly accept whatever happens to you.
Take them back to their cage. Well, it won't go that easily for them,
Captain, nor for you. Take him to my quarters.
[Chamber]
(Kirk is alone in the room, and is startled when a
curtain is pulled back and the blonde girl appears, wearing very
little.)
DRUSILLA: I was told to wait for you and provide wine, food, whatever
you wish. I am Proconsul's slave Drusilla. Although for this evening.
(pause) For this evening I was told I am your slave. Command me.
KIRK: It won't work.
DRUSILLA: What will not work?
KIRK: Whatever he has in mind, whatever tricks. You hear that,
Proconsul? It won't work. I'm not co-operating. I may die, but you
won't get any entertainment out of it.
DRUSILLA: We're alone. Please believe me. I've never lied to one who
owns me.
[Jail]
(Spock is checking the iron bars of their prison.)
MCCOY: Angry, Mister Spock, or frustrated, perhaps?
SPOCK: Such emotions are foreign to me, Doctor. I'm merely testing the
strength of the door.
MCCOY: For the fifteenth time. Spock. Spock, I know we've had our
disagreements. Maybe they're jokes. I don't know. As Jim says, we're
not often sure ourselves sometimes, but what I'm trying to say is
SPOCK: Doctor, I am seeking a means of escape. Will you please be
brief?
MCCOY: Well, what I'm trying to say is you saved my life in the arena.
SPOCK: Yes, that's quite true.
MCCOY: I'm trying to thank you, you pointed-eared hobgoblin!
SPOCK: Oh, yes. You humans have that emotional need to express
gratitude. You're welcome, I believe, is the correct response. However,
Doctor, you must remember I am entirely motivated by logic. The loss of
our ship's surgeon, whatever I think of his skill, would mean a
reduction in the efficiency of the Enterprise and therefore
MCCOY: Do you know why you're not afraid to die, Spock? You're more
afraid of living. Each day you stay alive is just one more day you
might slip and let your human half peek out. That's it, isn't it?
Insecurity. Why, you wouldn't know what to do with a genuine, warm,
decent feeling.
SPOCK: Really, Doctor?
MCCOY: I know. I'm worried about Jim, too.
[Chamber]
(The wine is being poured.)
KIRK: Very good. (he tries a grape) Excellent.
DRUSILLA: I was concerned. I am ordered to please you.
KIRK: I've been in some strange worlds with strange customs. Perhaps
this is considered torture here.
DRUSILLA: Torture? I do not understand. I do not wish to see you
tortured in any way. (she kisses him) At the first sign of pain, you
will tell me?
KIRK: You'll be the first to know.
(Later, when the oil lamp has burnt out, and Kirk is asleep)
CLAUDIUS: Captain. (Kirk wakes with a start) I'm sorry I was detained.
Should we have our little talk now? So far on this planet we've kept
you rather busy. I don't wonder you slept through the afternoon. By the
way, one of the communicators we took from you is missing. Was it my
pretty Drusilla by any chance?
(Merik enters. There are guards in the room now too.)
CLAUDIUS: See if he has it. Not that I would have punished her. I would
have blamed you. You're a Roman, Kirk, or you should have been. It's
not on his person?
MERIK: No, Proconsul.
CLAUDIUS: I am sorry I was detained. I trust there was nothing further
you required?
KIRK: Nothing except perhaps an explanation.
CLAUDIUS: Because you're a man, I owe you that. You must die shortly,
and because you are a man (pauses) Would you leave us, Merik? The
thoughts of one man to another cannot possibly interest you.
(Merik leaves.)
CLAUDIUS: Because you are a man, I gave you some last hours as a man.
KIRK: I appreciate that.
CLAUDIUS: Unfortunately, we must demonstrate that defiance is
intolerable.
KIRK: Of course.
CLAUDIUS: But I've learned to respect you. I promise you, you will die
easily, quickly.
KIRK: I thank you. And my friends?
CLAUDIUS: When their time comes, the same of course. Guards. Take him
to the arena. Oh, we've pre-empted fifteen minutes on the early show
for you. In full colour. We guarantee you a splendid audience. You may
not understand because you're centuries beyond anything as crude as
television.
KIRK: I've heard it was similar.
Enterprise log, Engineer Scott reporting. All banks
in readiness for disruption of power sources on the planet's surface.
[Arena]
ANNOUNCER: Good evening, ladies and gentlemen.
Before tonight's first heat, a simple execution. Stay tuned to this
channel. There's a lot of excitement coming your way.
CLAUDIUS: Make it a quick, single thrust.
MASTER: Don't move. You'll only die harder.
FLAVIUS: (rushing into the arena) Murderers! If you want death, fight
me!
(Claudius signals a guard, who fires his machine gun. The Roman is
killed along with Flavius. Kirk grabs the sword and deals with another
Roman.)
[Bridge]
SCOTT: Now, Mister Chekov. Activate.
[Arena]
(As the lights go out, Kirk gets himself a gun and
runs.)
CLAUDIUS: Guards, don't let him escape! Guards!
[Jail]
( When the lights come on again, he's by McCoy and
Spock's cell.)
MCCOY: Jim!
KIRK: Stand back.
(He shoots the lock out.)
KIRK: Obsolete, but effective.
MCCOY: What happened, Jim?
SPOCK: What did they do to you?
KIRK: They threw me a few curves. No time to explain.
(Claudius and guards come in from two different entrances.)
CLAUDIUS: Hold! We're in each other's line of fire. I pity you, Captain
Merik, but at least watch and see how men die. Swords only!
(So the fight starts, and Spock acquires a sword very quickly. The cell
door is a defensible position.)
MERIK: (into communicator) Starship, lock in on this. Three to beam
(Claudius stabs him, but Merik manages to throw the communicator into
the cell with the landing party.)
SCOTT [OC]: Enterprise to Captain Kirk. Ready to beam up three.
(They disappear in a hail of bullets.)
Captain's log, stardate 4041.7. Note commendation,
Engineering Officer Scott. Despite enormous temptation
>
[Bridge]
KIRK: And strong personal feelings, he obeyed the
Prime Directive. His temporary blackout of the city below resulted in
no interference with the society
and yet saved the lives of myself and the landing party.
SCOTT: Thank you, Captain.
(Scott leaves as McCoy and Spock enter the Bridge.)
KIRK: Gentlemen.
MCCOY: Captain, I see on your report Flavius was killed. I am sorry. I
liked that huge sun worshiper.
SPOCK: I wish we could have examined that belief of his more closely.
It seems illogical for a sun worshiper to develop a philosophy of total
brotherhood. Sun worship is usually a primitive superstition religion.
UHURA: I'm afraid you have it all wrong, Mister Spock, all of you. I've
been monitoring some of their old-style radio waves, the empire
spokesman trying to ridicule their religion. But he couldn't. Don't you
understand? It's not the sun up in the sky. It's the Son of God.
KIRK: Caesar and Christ. They had them both. And the word is spreading
only now.
MCCOY: A philosophy of total love and total brotherhood.
SPOCK: It will replace their imperial Rome, but it will happen in their
twentieth century.
KIRK: Wouldn't it be something to watch, to be a part of? To see it
happen all over again? Mister Chekov, take us out of orbit. Ahead warp
factor one.
CHEKOV: Aye, sir.
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