[This is all very novel for Chekov, who has not given a great deal of thought to the motivations of the Bad Guys. Nero was destroying planets, he was bad, end of story. The Khan incident was not so black and white when Khan assisted them and Admiral Marcus attempted to destroy the Enterprise, but, ultimately, good and evil were relatively well-defined. That decent people choose to live unsavory lives because that is the best choice for them... what kind of sense does that make?]
The reward was enough to encourage you to kill?
[Chekov maintains eye contact, laser-focused, until Isaak mentions comfortable lives. He has never felt guilty for having the life he has; it wasn't full of wealth or free of sorrow and difficulty, but it was never necessary for him to do anything he found morally questionable.
action; backdated to 1/18
The reward was enough to encourage you to kill?
[Chekov maintains eye contact, laser-focused, until Isaak mentions comfortable lives. He has never felt guilty for having the life he has; it wasn't full of wealth or free of sorrow and difficulty, but it was never necessary for him to do anything he found morally questionable.
He doesn't have a response for that.]