[Sisko's
quarters]
(The aftermath of a sombre dinner party. Most
people are hitting the scotch (or equivalent) bottle as Jake and Nog
clear the table.)
O'BRIEN: Did you hear about the Tian An Men? She was reported missing
last night bear the Cardassian border.
KIRA: That's three in the last three weeks.
BASHIR: At this rate we're going to run out of ships.
KIRA: Well that's not funny.
BASHIR: It wasn't meant to be. Unless Starfleet Command actually starts
doing something about the Dominion threat, the situation's only going
to get worse.
KIRA: What do you want, Julian, a war?
SISKO: What I want is to talk about something else. Chief, what about
Kirayoshi? Is he walking yet?
O'BRIEN: No, not yet. No.
SISKO: Odo, I understand you're going to Bajor next week. Do you plan
to see Doctor Mora?
ODO: Actually, I've cancelled my trip. There's been a seventy five
percent jump in the theft of medical supplies and food rations on DS
Nine. I haven't seen such an increase since
O'BRIEN: Since?
ODO: Since just before the Cardassians were forced to abandon the
station.
BASHIR: On that note, I think I'll turn in.
O'BRIEN: Me, too. Thank you for dinner, Captain. It was wonderful.
SISKO: It was my pleasure.
ODO: Sir.
SISKO: Goodnight, everyone.
(They leave, except a large figure closely examining an African
artefact.)
SISKO: Mister Worf? You've been paroled. The party's over.
WORF: Thank you, sir. Goodnight.
(Now it's just Jake and Nog.)
SISKO: Don't bother. I'll clean up the rest up later. I want to be
alone for a while. Go on.
JAKE: Okay
NOG: Goodnight, sir.
CREWWOMAN [OC]: Ops to Captain Sisko.
SISKO: Go ahead.
CREWWOMAN [OC]: We just received a message from Bajor, Sir. Kai Winn
will be coming to the station tomorrow morning and she'd like to meet
with you.
SISKO: Acknowledged.
[Quark's]
NOG: Thanks for the invitation, Jake. That was a
lot of fun.
JAKE: Did you see how down my dad was? He tried to hide it, but I could
tell he was depressed.
NOG: He's not the only one. Look around. There's something in the air.
People are scared.
JAKE: Yeah, but he's usually the one who tries to lift everyone's
spirits. I mean, people go to him for encouragement. Where does he go
when he needs it?
QUARK: I hope I'll be seeing the two of you tomorrow at twelve hundred
hours.
NOG: Why?
QUARK: Why? Haven't you heard? There's going to be an auction of some
of the galaxy's rarest and most valuable antiquities. Here. Find
something you like and make a bid with all that latinum you've got
stashed under your bed.
NOG: Shh!
QUARK: Oh, Nog. You don't really keep it under your bed?
NOG: No, of course not.
JAKE: Where'd you get all this stuff, Quark?
QUARK: I'm just conducting the auction, for a modest commission. The
items up for sale were all aboard an old derelict freighter that the
Bajorans found adrift about a light year from here. The cargo hold was
crammed with valuable items of every description. Antiques, paintings,
vehicles.
NOG: It's all a bunch of junk. Listen to some of this stuff. A mid
twenty fourth century ceramic Romulan water basin, slightly cracked. A
pair of Tellarite shoes, date unknown. A mid-twentieth century human
baseball card. A Tholian pedestal of
JAKE: A baseball card? A mint condition nineteen fifty one Willie Mays rookie card! Nog,
this is it!
NOG: What do you mean?
JAKE: It's perfect. This is how I can cheer up my Dad. You know how
much he loves baseball. He'll go nuts when he sees this.
QUARK: Tell him to be here at twelve hundred hours and he can bid along
with everyone else.
JAKE: No. I'm going to bid on this. He's always doing things for me, I
want to do something for him for a change. And this is it. All I have
to do is get him this card. How hard can that be?
[Jake + Nog's quarters]
JAKE: Come on, Nog.
NOG: No.
JAKE: Why not?
NOG: It's my money, Jake. If you want to bid at the auction, use your
own money.
JAKE: I'm human, I don't have any money.
NOG: It's not my fault that your species decided to abandon
currency-based economics in favour of some philosophy of
self-enhancement.
JAKE: Hey, watch it. There's nothing wrong with our philosophy. We work
to better ourselves and the rest of humanity.
NOG: What does that mean exactly?
JAKE: It means. It means we don't need money.
NOG: Well if you don't need money, then you certainly don't need mine.
JAKE: How much latinum do you have? How much?
NOG: Five bars.
JAKE: Five bars!
NOG: Look, it's taken me a lifetime to save up that much money, and I'm
not going to just throw it away for some baseball card.
JAKE: Not even for my father, the man who made it possible for you to
enter Starfleet Academy.
NOG: Oh no, that's not fair.
JAKE: The man who believed in you when no one else would.
NOG: Oh, this is so low.
JAKE: I can't believe you would rather keep your filthy money locked
away in a box under a bed than use it to give him endless moments of
happiness.
NOG: Argh! All right, all right. I'll do it.
JAKE: That's very generous, Nog. I'm proud of you. Now let's get that
money.
NOG: Humans.
[Captain's office]
SISKO: Come in.
(Kira escorts Winn in while her two aides wait outside, on guard.)
SISKO: Welcome back to Deep Space Nine, your Eminence.
WINN: Thank you, Emissary. You may go now, child.
KIRA: Thank you.
(Kira leaves)
WINN: Why don't we take a walk?
SISKO: A walk?
WINN: Yes. Would you mind?
[Promenade - upper level]
(The guards trail along discreetly.)
SISKO: Something wrong, Eminence?
WINN: No, nothing wrong, but there was a shop down there as I recall. A
woman who sold Bajoran tapestries and antiques.
SISKO: Ah. Kandra Vilk.
WINN: Yes.
SISKO: I believe she moved to a neutral world near the Coridan system
about two months ago.
WINN: So many people have left Deep Space Nine in the last few months.
I'm sure there are times when you must feel as if you're being
abandoned here.
SISKO: Forgive me Eminence, but I have a very busy day ahead of me.
WINN: I'm here to meet with a representative of the Dominion.
SISKO: To what end?
WINN: I don't know. This meeting is being held at their request. You
disapprove?
SISKO: I'm concerned. The Dominion is notorious for its political
intrigue.
WINN: I have some experience in that area as well. This is a delicate
moment for Bajor. This conflict between the Federation and the Dominion
could escalate into open warfare at any moment. A misstep now could
result in the destruction of our world.
SISKO: For once I am in complete agreement with you. You have my word I
will do whatever it takes to safeguard Bajor.
WINN: Walk with the Prophets.
[Quark's]
(It's the auction, and an abstract sculpture is
being bid on.)
QUARK: the bid is to you, sir one bar, three strips. Don't let the lady
steal this fine example of post-eventualistic, pre-Matoian, bronze and
triptin sculpture for such a pittance.
(A Bolian bids.)
QUARK: One bar, three strips. One bar four strips, and it's all yours.
An honourable addition to any Klingon household. Remember, all the
proceeds from this auction go to the Bajoran War Orphans' Fund, minus a
modest commission. Think of those poor, lonely children and how much
your latinum will mean to them. Looks like the kids'll have to make do
with one bar, three strips Sold to the blue man in the good shoes.
(Desultory applause as a lidded box is brought out.)
QUARK: Lot forty-eight. An Andorian chest containing a pre-Surak Vulcan
bracelet, a sixth century Bajoran mandala, a twenty-third century ion
transtator, a Willie Mays baseball card from Earth dated nineteen fifty
one. Who'll start the bidding with one bar of gold-pressed latinum?
JAKE: One bar.
QUARK: One bar. Do I hear one bar, five strips?
(A vedek bids.)
QUARK: One bar, five strips. Do I hear one bar, ten?
NOG: Don't worry. He'll drop out at two bars.
JAKE: How do you know that?
NOG: I'm still a Ferengi. One bar, ten.
QUARK: One bar, ten. One, fifteen? (yes) One, fifteen. One, twenty?
(yes) One, twenty. One, twenty-five?
GIGER: Two bars.
QUARK: The bid is two bars. Do I hear two bars five? Vedek, are you in?
(no)
NOG: I told you.
QUARK: Two bars, five.
GIGER: Three bars.
JAKE: Four bars!
NOG: Jake!
GIGER: Ten bars.
QUARK: The bid is ten bars of gold-pressed latinum. Is there another
bid?
JAKE: What do we do now?
NOG: Nothing. We're out of money.
QUARK: Jake? Do you want to make another bid? Sold to the gentleman
sitting in the aisle.
QUARK: Lot forty nine. A rare example of a twentieth century human art
form, acrylic on black velvet. This image was the inspiration for the
flag of the Martian colonies in the twenty second
[Jake + Nog's quarters]
NOG: I know you wanted that card, but we lost it,
okay? So let's come up with something else to cheer up your dad. Like a
new pair of shoes.
JAKE: Shoes?
NOG: What's wrong with shoes?
JAKE: Nothing, except it's stupid. I want to give my dad something
that'll bring a little joy into his life. Something special. I'm
telling you, that baseball card is the answer. It's kismet.
NOG: Kiss you?
JAKE: Kismet. Fate, destiny. I was meant to give that card to my
father.
NOG: Jake, I think you're taking this whole baseball card thing way too
seriously.
JAKE: It's not the card, it's my dad. This is very important to me. My
father has never let me down. He's always been there for me when I
needed him. And right now he needs me. I don't want to let him down.
Nog, please, let's get that card.
NOG: All right. What do you want to do?
[Promenade]
(The boys wait for the auction winners to come out
of Quarks. Morn got the bullfighter on black velvet picture.)
NOG: Sir.
JAKE: Excuse me, sir. Could we talk to you for a minute?
GIGER: Who sent you?
JAKE: No one.
NOG: We wish to discuss a business transaction.
GIGER: Not interested.
JAKE: You don't even know what it is yet.
NOG: We just want to buy the baseball card.
GIGER: Listen to me. I haven't done anything wrong and I won't be
hounded by you and your soulless minions of orthodoxy. I haven't broken
any laws, except perhaps the laws of nature. So stay away from me. (to
turbolift) Habitat ring.
[Airlock]
WEYOUN: Captain Sisko, I can't tell you how happy I
am to see you again.
SISKO: I wish I could say the same.
WEYOUN: How delightful. You feel comfortable enough around me to make
jokes. I'm so pleased to see our relationship evolving beyond the stale
adversarial stage.
SISKO: No it's not. But before you twist that into a compliment, let me
be blunt. I don't like the Dominion, I don't like what it stands for,
and I don't like you. So let's dispense with the hollow pleasantries
and stick to business.
WEYOUN: I can't tell you how it pains me to hear you say that, Captain.
You see, I really like Deep Space Nine and I like you. And after this
meeting with Kai Winn, I think you and I will be seeing a lot more of
each other.
[Replimat]
NOG: Jake! Jake! He wants to see us!
JAKE: Who?
NOG: Doctor Giger, the man who bought the baseball card. He wants us to
come to his quarters, He says he's willing to make a deal.
JAKE: You're kidding.
NOG: No. He left a message for us about an hour ago. It said to meet
him at eighteen hundred hours.
JAKE: That's in ten minutes. Let's go!
[Corridor]
NOG: Remember let me do the talking.
JAKE: You?
NOG: You had your chance on the Promenade. Now stand aside and let a
professional handle this.
[Giger's quarters]
(It is full of bizarre bleeping machinery, and a
strange pod by the window.)
GIGER: Step out of the doorway, please. And don't touch anything. This
is very sensitive equipment. I did some checking on you two. It turns
out that you are the station commander's son and you are the nephew of
the man who owns the bar.
NOG: That's right.
GIGER: Since you are not, in fact, working for the soulless minions of
orthodoxy that have hounded my work and plagued my existence, I have
decided to open negotiations regarding the sale of a mint condition
nineteen fifty one Willie Mays rookie card, without the original
packaging or chewing gum.
NOG: Excellent. We would like to open the negotiations with a bid of
GIGER: The card is not for sale.
JAKE: What?
NOG: But you just said that
GIGER: I am willing to trade the card in exchange for the following
items.
(Nog takes the PADD.)
JAKE: Two litres of anaerobic metabolites suspended in a hydrosaline
solution? A neodymium power cell? Where are we supposed to get all this
stuff?
GIGER: Surely the station commander's son and a promising young cadet
have access to a wide variety of equipment and supplies that would not
be available to someone like myself.
JAKE: It's a very long list. It'll take some doing.
NOG: Wait a minute. What are you planning to do with these things?
JAKE: Nog?
NOG: Look, we can't start delivering equipment and medical supplies to
you without knowing what you're going to do with them.
GIGER: Very well, young man. Let me ask you both a simple question. Do
you want to die?
NOG: No.
JAKE: Not really.
GIGER: Of course you don't, so why should you? Why should any of us end
up as putrefying corpses in wooden boxes stuck in the ground, or
vaporised into subatomic particles and vented into the cosmos like a
bad case of gas? No reason that I can think of. I have devoted my life
to the study of death, and do you know what I found? Death is nothing
more than the result of cellular boredom.
JAKE: Boredom?
GIGER: Think about it. The cells in your body have been doing the same
job, the same dull monotonous routine, every day since you were
conceived. Metabolise, divide, metabolise, divide. Wouldn't you get
bored? Of course you would. So at some point, the cells just say,
'that's it', and you, the unwary victim of cellular ennui, are quite
literally bored to death.
NOG: I never thought about it that way.
GIGER: Doctor Bathkin of Andros Three was the first to come up with the
answer to solving the puzzle of death. Keep the cells energised. Keep
them in the game by teaching them new mitochondrial tricks.
Unfortunately, before he could finish his work, Doctor Bathkin died in
a shuttle accident. Or so they say. And while the soulless minions of
orthodoxy refuse to follow up on his important research, I could hear
the clarion call of destiny ringing in my ears. And now, after fifteen
years of tireless effort, after being laughed at and hounded out of the
halls of the scientific establishment, after begging and scrounging for
materials across half the galaxy, I have nearly completed work on this.
The Cellular Regeneration and Entertainment Chamber.
JAKE: What does it do?
GIGER: I'm glad you asked. It is specially designed to transmit
biogenic energy on a chromoelectric wavelength and send uplifting and
entertaining messages to the nuclei of every cell in your body. Spend
eight hours a day in this machine and your cells will never get bored.
You will never grow old, and most important, you will never die. That
is the goal of my work, nothing less than immortality itself.
JAKE: Excuse us for a moment.
GIGER: Of course.
JAKE: (sotto) What do you think?
NOG: (sotto) I don't know. I'm no expert in cellular chemistry but his
theory sounds a little odd to me.
JAKE: (sotto) He had me going there for a minute, but a Cellular
Entertainment Machine?
NOG: (sotto) He's crazy, isn't he?
JAKE: (sotto) Completely. But he does have the baseball card.
NOG: (sotto) So?
JAKE: (sotto) So that means we've got to help him.
NOG: (sotto) I'm not so sure this is such a good idea.
JAKE: (sotto) Nog, I can't let my father down.
NOG: (sotto) Let him down? Your father doesn't even know this card
exists. I don't know which of you is crazier.
JAKE: (sotto) I'm not crazy. I'm just a little obsessed.
NOG: (sotto) A little?
JAKE: Okay, Doctor. We're in.
(Jake holds out his hand.)
GIGER: Do you know how many germs are transmitted by a handshake? You
want to kill me? Just nod if we have a deal. Him too.
[Cargo bay]
JAKE: Hey, Chief, we need a neodynium power cell
from a Cardassian phase coil inverter. You think you could help us out?
O'BRIEN: That's an unusual piece of equipment. What do you need that
for?
NOG: We have to trade it for a
JAKE: It's kind of a secret.
O'BRIEN: I'm sure there's an old cell lying around here somewhere, but
I don't have time to scrounge around for it at the moment.
NOG: What's the matter with you? Just tell him you're trying to give
your father a gift.
JAKE: No. I want it to be a surprise. You know you can't keep a secret
on this station. If I tell the Chief, he tells Keiko, Keiko tells Dax
NOG: But you're not giving him any reason to help us. Okay. Let me show
you a little something about incentive-based economics. Chief, may I
ask you a question? Wouldn't you rather be doing something else right
now?
O'BRIEN: Almost anything.
NOG: But isn't there something specific you'd rather be doing? Like
going to the holosuites, maybe?
O'BRIEN: Sure.
NOG: I bet you'd rather be kayaking right now, wouldn't you? You
probably haven't shot those rapids in weeks. No interruptions, no
maintenance schedules. Just you and the river.
O'BRIEN: That's what I'd be doing right now if Decker hadn't gotten
sick. But I have to recalibrate all these EPS regulators so they don't
interfere with the station's artificial gravity grid.
NOG: What if someone else recalibrated the regulators for you? Someone
like us?
O'BRIEN: You'd do that for me?
JAKE: Absolutely.
NOG: Don't give it a second thought. Just go shoot those rapids.
O'BRIEN: Thanks. Thanks a lot. I owe you one.
NOG: Our pleasure. And Chief? About that power cell?
O'BRIEN: Oh, yeah. I think I know where there's one. I'll have it sent
up to your quarters.
JAKE: Thanks, Chief.
NOG: Come on. You calibrate, I'll scan.
[Infirmary]
BASHIR: Five litres of anaerobic metabolites
suspended in hydrosaline solution? What could you possibly want with
that?
NOG: We can't tell you. It's a surprise for someone.
BASHIR: They're not going to drink it, are they?
JAKE: Oh, no. At least, I don't know. Is he?
BASHIR: I don't have time for this.
JAKE: Can I ask you one question? Wouldn't you rather be doing
something else right now?
BASHIR: No.
JAKE: No?
BASHIR: No. This is the first chance I've had to get any research done
on my prion project in five months. You couldn't drag me away from
here.
JAKE: Oh.
NOG: What Jake is trying to say is that you seem unhappy.
BASHIR: I suppose I have been feeling a little down, now that you come
to mention it.
NOG: Just out of curiosity. If you had to name one thing that would
make you happy right now, what would it be?
BASHIR: I don't know.
NOG: Humour me. One thing. Anything at all.
BASHIR: Kukalaka.
JAKE: Excuse me?
BASHIR: That's what I want. Leeta borrowed him, said he was cute, but
she never brought him back.
NOG: Kuka-what?
BASHIR: Kukalaka. You bring him to me and you'll have earned yourselves
five litres of anaerobic metabolites suspended in hydrosaline solution.
JAKE: Done. Just one thing, Doctor. What's a Kukalaka?
[Leeta's bedroom]
(Leeta is sleeping with Bashir's teddy bear in her
arms. Nog reaches in and she takes hold of his arm. he blows gently in
her ear, she whimpers and he manages to swap the bear for a pillow
without being trapped again. Nog leaves through an access panel.)
[Captain's office]
WINN: Weyoun has made a startling proposal. The
Dominion wishes to sign a non-aggression treaty with Bajor.
SISKO: They're trying to split Bajor from the Federation.
WINN: Forgive me, Emissary, but you've already done that. It was your
advice six months ago that kept Bajor out of the Federation. How did
you put it? Bajor must stand alone. Well, we are very much alone now.
SISKO: Even though you're not a member of the Federation, Starfleet is
committed to the protection of your world. We're not going to stand
idly by and watch the Dominion conquer Bajor.
WINN: Can you promise me that you will not let one Jem'Hadar soldier
set foot on Bajor? Can you promise me that you will use your entire
fleet to protect our planet, even if it means sacrificing other worlds
like Vulcan or Andor or Berengaria, or perhaps Earth itself?
SISKO: I can't make that kind of promise.
WINN: I wouldn't believe you if you did. So you see my predicament. If
we ally ourselves with the Federation against the Dominion, we risk
becoming the first casualty of the next war.
SISKO: And if you ally yourselves with the Dominion, you risk becoming
the next conquered world.
WINN: A most unhappy choice. I have asked the Prophets to guide me, but
they have not answered my prayers. I even consulted the Orb of Wisdom
before coming here and it has told me nothing. So I come to you,
Emissary. You have heard the voice of the Prophets. You were sent here
to guide us through troubled times. Tell me what to do and I will do
it. How can I save Bajor?
SISKO: You want my advice? Then this is it. Stall. Tell Weyoun you have
to consult with the Council of Ministers, or that you have to meditate
on your response. Anything you want, but you have to stall for time.
WINN: Time for what?
SISKO: I don't know. But I do know the moment of crisis isn't here yet,
and until that moment arrives we have to keep Bajor's options open. I'm
aware that this is difficult for you, given our past, but this time you
have to trust me.
(Winn holds Sisko's left ear.)
WINN: Very well, Emissary. We put ourselves in your hands. May we all
walk with the Prophets.
[Giger's quarters]
(Jake enters with a cart of stuff as Giger climbs
out of the Chamber.)
GIGER: Refreshed, regenerated, mildly entertained. I still get a little
bored after the first five hours.
JAKE: I've got half the things you wanted.
GIGER: Good. Good. Where's the hydrosaline solution?
JAKE: We should have it soon. Nog just got the bear. Don't ask.
(Giger puts a rod into another machine and green and blue lights come
on along with a thrumming noise.)
GIGER: You know what that is? It's the sound of immortality.
[Weyoun's quarters]
(Weyoun is listening to the noise from room below
as the Jem'Hadar scan it.)
WEYOUN: What's going on down there?
[Jake + Nog's quarters]
(Nog is playing Klingon music as Jake works on a
PADD. Sorry, my resolution isn't good enough to read it. The soprano's
top note goes through his skull.)
JAKE: Nog! Turn that down! Nog! I'm working out here!
NOG: So am I! I have to listen to all of Worf's opera recordings and
filter out the sub-harmonic distortions!
JAKE: Can you turn that down? I'm trying to add a little humour to
Kira's speech to the Agricultural Delegation.
NOG: No! I have to listen at precisely eighty two decibels because
that's the volume Worf listens at! Of course, if I could've simply told
him why I needed two metres of electro-plasma conduit from the Defiant,
he probably would've just given it to me and things would be a lot
quieter around here!
JAKE: We can't tell anybody, Nog! (mutes the sound) Now, listen to this
for a second. (reads) Thank you for that kind introduction, and thank
you for inviting me to address you here today. I've always thought it
odd that the topic of water reclamation was usually treated as such a
dry subject. Is that funny?
NOG: No.
(Music back on.)
JAKE: I didn't think so either.
[Corridor]
(Another delivery is being made)
JAKE: Would you watch it with that thing.
NOG: Try staying out of the way.
(No reply at Giger's door.)
NOG: He's probably sleeping inside his Cellular Entertainment thing
again. It's not locked.
(They open the door to a completely empty room.)
[Security office]
ODO: No, there is no record of a Doctor Giger being
assigned to those quarters.
JAKE: He was there, Odo.
NOG: Maybe the soulless minions of orthodoxy finally caught up with
him.
ODO: The who?
JAKE: We don't know who they are, but they were after Doctor Giger's
Cellular Regeneration and Entertainment Chamber.
ODO: His what?
JAKE: It's a device used to keep the cells in your body from getting
bored. You see, he was going to transmit messages to people's cells to
keep them entertained so they wouldn't die off and as a result these
people would live forever.
[Promenade]
NOG: Do you think he's really going to charge us
with filing false reports, obstructing justice and being public
nuisances? I can't have that on my Academy record.
JAKE: I think he was just trying to scare us. Nog, look.
NOG: It's Kai Winn.
JAKE: Do you see who she's talking to? That's the Vedek who was bidding
against us at the auction.
NOG: Jake, I don't know what you're thinking, but I'm sure I'm not
going to like it.
JAKE: Don't you see? The Vedek was bidding on that lot because there
was an old Bajoran mandala in it. He must have been working for the
Kai. When they lost, the Kai must have gotten angry. And we all know
how dangerous she is when she's angry.
NOG: What are you saying? That in order to get the mandala she
kidnapped Giger?
JAKE: It all makes sense now.
NOG: Jake, I'm really starting to worry about you.
JAKE: Come on.
NOG: Where're we going?
JAKE: Let me introduce you to a new human expression. We're going to
beard the lion in its den.
NOG: Lions, Gigers, bears.
JAKE: Oh my.
[Corridor]
WEYOUN: I hope you've found our talks as rewarding
as I have, your Eminence. May I enquire if you plan on giving the First
Minister a positive recommendation regarding the non-aggression pact?
WINN: I'm afraid I cannot reveal my recommendations to the First
Minister. You understand.
WEYOUN: Of course, of course. Forgive me for even asking. It is enough
to know that you and I have found so many common interests. I feel that
we are very much alike.
(Winn holds his ear.)
WINN: No. We are nothing alike. Nothing at all.
(Winn goes around the corner and meets Jake and Nog.)
WINN: What is it, my children?
JAKE: We need to talk.
[Captain's office]
SISKO: You accused the Kai of burglary and
kidnapping?
JAKE: We didn't really accuse her of anything.
SISKO: Oh, I see. You just implied it.
NOG: Exactly.
SISKO: Are you trying to be funny, Cadet? Because I'm not laughing.
NOG: No, sir.
SISKO: I want an explanation and I want it now.
NOG: Well, sir, it all began in my uncle Quark's bar when we saw this
list of various
JAKE: We were in the bar and I guess we got a little drunk.
NOG: Jake!
JAKE: It won't do any good to lie about it, Nog.
NOG: What? Captain, I would like to separate myself from
SISKO: As you were, Cadet! Drunk. I see that my faith in the two of you
has sadly been misplaced. You both are confined to quarters until
further notice. Dismissed!
[Ops]
NOG: What did you say that for?
JAKE: I didn't want him to know about the baseball card.
NOG: Of course not. If you tell him about the card, he might forgive
us. He might even be grateful for all the effort we've gone through
just to make him happy. And we certainly wouldn't want that. Habitat
ring.
[Turbolift]
JAKE: Once we get the card, everything'll be fine.
NOG: Jake, as your friend, I think I should tell you that you're
starting to go over the edge. You need some perspective on all this.
You need to get away, clear your head.
(They are suddenly beamed away)
[Jem'Hadar interrogation room]
NOG: This isn't what I had in mind.
(Two Jem'Hadar appear, then Weyoun enters. They are on the ship, not
the station.)
WEYOUN: Do you think I'm a fool? Let's start at the beginning. What is
the nature of your relationship with Doctor Elias Giger?
JAKE: We barely know him. He had a baseball card that I wanted to give
to my father to cheer him up. My father's the Station Commander, by the
way.
WEYOUN: I know who your father is. Go on.
JAKE: That's it. We wanted the card, and so we agreed to help him get a
few things for his research. We got all the equipment, but he
disappeared about three hours ago and we haven't seen him since.
(Weyoun looks at a Jem'Hadar, who leaves.)
WEYOUN: Do you really expect me to believe that everything you've been
doing for the last twenty two hours has been perfectly innocent? That
it was merely a coincidence that Doctor Giger has been running
experiments with highly charged polaric particles directly below my
quarters? I suppose there's also an innocent explanation to the secret
meetings you've been having with virtually the entire senior staff of
Deep Space Nine, or that Kai Winn met with you immediately after
leaving me? I suggest that you stop playing games with me and tell me
the truth. Quickly.
JAKE: This is all just a misunderstanding. Nothing's going on, and
we're certainly not involved in some secret plot against
(A Jem'Hadar enters with Giger and the Andorian chest.)
GIGER: You betrayed me. You turned me over to these soulless minions of
orthodoxy. Well, they won't discover the secret of my work without a
(Another Jem'Hadar takes the chest.)
GIGER: Fight.
WEYOUN: So, there are secrets after all. There shouldn't be any secrets
between friends, Jake. I do want to be your friend.
(Weyoun opens the chest and takes out the baseball card in it's
holder.)
NOG: Do something.
JAKE: All right. We'll tell you the truth.
WEYOUN: I'm listening.
JAKE: We weren't supposed to divulge this, but since you left us no
choice. We're working for Starfleet Intelligence.
NOG: Oh, no.
JAKE: Forget about it, Nog. We have to tell him. We've been
investigating the man whose picture is in your hand right now. Until
yesterday, that man, one Willie Mays, did not exist in any historical
documents. Then, in the blink of an eye, that card appeared on the
station, and at that same moment a bust of Willie Mays appeared at the
Hall of Fame in Cooperstown, New York. There's only one explanation. We
suspect that this man is from the future.
WEYOUN: A time traveller?
JAKE: That's right. And so far that card is the only link we have to
him. We must to find out what he's planning to do in the past, or what
he may have done already. We need that card. The entire future of the
galaxy may depend on us tracking down Willie Mays and stopping him.
WEYOUN: I believe you.
NOG: You do?
WEYOUN: Yes. That is, I believe your first story. That you're two
innocent boys trying to give a gift to Captain Sisko.
JAKE: You are very wise.
WEYOUN: Which still leaves the question of what you were doing beneath
my quarters.
NOG: He's harmless. He's just working on a way to become immortal.
WEYOUN: Really? I have a background in, shall we say, creative
genetics. I'd be most interested in hearing your theories.
GIGER: Well, it may take some time to explain. Let me ask you a simple
question. Do you want to die?
NOG: Excuse me? Can we go?
WEYOUN: Of course.
NOG: Thank you.
WEYOUN: Aren't you forgetting something?
Captain's log, stardate 50929.4. Two days ago, this
station felt like a tomb. I'd never seen so many of my crew depressed
at the same time. But for some reason, it now seems as though a new
spirit has swept through the station, as if someone had opened a door
and let a gust of fresh air blow through a musty old house. Why this is
happening, frankly, is a mystery to me. After all, nothing has really
changed. The Dominion is still a threat, the Cardassians are still
threatening to take the station, and I can still see the clouds of war
gathering on the horizon. So why do I sense a new-found optimism in the
air? But maybe I'm over-thinking this. Maybe the real explanation is as
simple as something my father taught me a long time ago. Even in the
darkest moments, you can always find something that'll make you smile.
(O'Brien has been kayaking.)
(Bashir is placing Kukalaka on a shelf.)
(Leeta is puzzled by the missing bear.)
(Kira gets a great round of applause for her speech.)
(Worf is listening to his opera with a look of bliss on his face.)
(Weyoun is trying out Giger's chamber.)
(Sisko has his baseball card. Nog gets a handshake and Jake a big hug.)
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