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In the Pale Moonlight

6x19 Inquisition His Way Star Trek: Deep Space NineSeason 6
In the Pale Moonlight

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 AIRED ON

April 15, 1998

 RUNTIME

45 minutes

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151

 LAST UPDATE

2024-09-13 19:24:21

 PAGE VERSION

Version 2

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 SUMMARY

Stardate: 51721.3. To save the Federation in a critical scheme, Sisko comes to realize that he must violate its fundamental principles to do so.

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 TRANSCRIPT


[Sisko's quarters]
(Sisko is sitting on his couch, looking straight at us.)
SISKO: Captain's personal log, stardate five one seven, er, five one seven four? Computer, what day is it?
COMPUTER: Stardate 51721.3.
SISKO: It's only been two weeks. I need to talk about this. I have to justify what's happened, what I've done, at least to myself. I can't talk to anyone else. Not even to Dax. Maybe if I just lay it all out in my log, it'll finally make sense. I can see where it all went wrong. Where I went wrong. I suppose it started two weeks ago,

[Wardroom]

SISKO [OC]: While I was posting the weekly casualty list in the wardroom. Every Friday morning for the past three months, I've posted the official list of Starfleet personnel killed, wounded or missing in the war.
(Everyone looks for names they know. Don't look too closely, names are repeated. Captain Margaret Clark is there six times.)
SISKO [OC]: It's become something of a grim ritual around here. Not a week goes by that someone doesn't find the name of a loved one, a friend or an acquaintance on that damned list.
(Dax finds a name.)
SISKO [OC]: I've grown to hate Fridays.
SISKO: Who is it, Dax?
DAX: Leslie Wong.
SISKO: The skipper of the Cairo?
DAX: She was an instructor at the Academy when I was a sophomore.
BASHIR: Do you know what happened to the Cairo?
SISKO: Just that she disappeared on patrol in the Romulan neutral zone. I'll look into it.
DAX: Don't bother. I'm sure it's the same old story. The Jem'Hadar crossed the Romulan border and caught them by surprise. It's only about the hundredth time it's happened.
BASHIR: I can't believe the Romulans allow them to violate their territory so brazenly. Why do they get away with it?
SISKO: The Romulans have a treaty of non-aggression and friendship with the Dominion, so they're willing to turn a blind eye to almost anything in the name of friendship.
BASHIR: What we need is to bring the Romulans into the war on our side. With the combined forces of the Federation, the Klingons and the Romulans we could finally go on the offensive.
DAX: That's the last thing the Romulans want. Think about it. They're in the perfect position. They get to sit back and watch as their biggest rivals slug it out in a long, bloody war. No one's threatening their interests. Why should they risk their necks? There's simply no reason for them to get involved in our war. No reason at all.
SISKO [OC]: That was the moment I made the decision. It was like I had stepped through a door and locked it behind me. I was going to bring the Romulans into the war.

[Captain's office]

SISKO: It's in their own best interest to join the war, that's the key. That's the reason the Romulans will finally take action. Not to do us any favours, but to protect themselves from the Dominion.
DAX: Okay. Let's say I'm the Romulan Proconsul. From where I'm sitting, the Dominion isn't a threat to me. I have a non-aggression pact with them. They're my allies.
SISKO: You're not going to put your faith in some piece of paper, are you?
DAX: Not at all. I've been watching them very closely since the beginning of the war, and so far, they've kept their part of the bargain.
SISKO: They're violating your territory almost every day. What kind of an ally is that?
DAX: So they're crossing my backyard to give the Federation a bloody nose. I can't say that makes me very sad.
SISKO: You can't be naive enough to think that the Dominion is going to stop with the Federation. When they're finished with us, they're be coming after you.
DAX: That's speculation.
SISKO: The Founders see it as their sacred duty to bring order to the galaxy. Their order. Do you think they'll sit idly by while you keep your chaotic empire right next to their perfect order? No. If you watch us go under, then what you're really doing is signing your own death warrant.
DAX: But before I plunge my people into a conflict that will kill millions of loyal Romulan citizens, I need something more concrete than the self-serving argument of a Starfleet officer. I need proof of Dominion duplicity. Not more words, proof.
SISKO: Very good, old man. You would have made a decent Romulan.
DAX: I prefer the spots to the pointed ears.
SISKO: Okay, you've convinced me. They're going to need evidence. But if there is evidence of a Dominion plan to attack Romulus, it's probably buried deep in the bowels of their headquarters on Cardassia Prime.
DAX: Not exactly the most accessible place in the galaxy.
SISKO: Not for us, maybe. But there is someone on this station who specialises in gaining access to places where he is not welcome.

[Wardroom]

GARAK: I must say I'm flattered, Captain. I had no idea you held such a lofty opinion of me. Your faith in my ability to retrieve classified information from my former homeland is most gratifying.
SISKO: Mister Garak, let's dispense with the usual repartee and concentrate on the issue at hand. Can you do it or not?
GARAK: No one wants to see the Dominion destroyed more than I do, but to go to Cardassia Prime, penetrate one of the most heavily guarded facilities in the quadrant, steal top secret war plans and then return them safely to you is not just another job. It's more like a suicide mission. And that is well outside my field of expertise.
SISKO: I didn't say you had to go there yourself. I have to believe that a man like you still has a few contacts at home. A colleague from the Obsidian Order, an old friend, a reliable informant. Someone who might owe you a favour.
GARAK: Perhaps.
SISKO: Then I'd say it's time to call in a favour.
GARAK: It would mean calling in all my favours, Captain. To do what you're asking would use up every resource I have left on Cardassia. And it may be a very messy, very bloody business. Are you prepared for that?
SISKO: I posted my fourteenth casualty list this morning. I'm already involved in a very messy, very bloody business. And the only way I can see to end it is to bring the Romulans into the war. I am prepared to do whatever it takes to accomplish that goal, but I can't do it alone. I need help. Now, are you in or out?
GARAK: I'm in.
SISKO [OC]: My father used to say that the road to hell is paved with good intentions.

[Sisko's quarters]

SISKO: I laid the first stone right there. I'd committed myself. I'd pay any price, go to any lengths, because my cause was righteous. My intentions were good. In the beginning, that seemed like enough.

[Sisko's bedroom]

SISKO [OC]: If there's one thing I've learned over the years, it's that bad news invariably comes in the middle of the night.
KIRA [OC]: Kira to Captain Sisko.
SISKO: Go ahead, Major.
KIRA [OC]: We just received a priority one communication from Starfleet Command. The Dominion has invaded Betazed.

[Ops]

SISKO: According to initial reports, the invasion force must have come from somewhere in the Calandra Sector.
DAX: Did Starfleet Intelligence know anything about the buildup?
WORF: No. They believed Calandra was too far from the Dominion supply lines to be a threat.
SISKO: There's plenty of blame to go around. The Tenth Fleet was supposed to be protecting Betazed and its outlying colonies, but it was caught out of position on a training exercise. What's worse, Betazed's own defence systems are obsolete and undermanned. The planet was theirs in less than ten hours.
KIRA: With Betazed in the hands of the Jem'Hadar, the Dominion is in a position to threaten Vulcan, Andor, Tellar, Alpha Centauri.
DAX: If we ever needed a new ally, it's right now.

[Garak's shop]

(Garak is working on a dress when Sisko enters.)
SISKO: Mister Garak, it's been three days. Have you made any progress?
GARAK: Well I suppose that depends on how you look at it.
SISKO: This is how I look at it is. Betazed has just fallen to the Dominion and we need to get this operation underway.
GARAK: I share your desire for swift action, Captain. In fact, after our last conversation, I made a few discreet inquiries among my former associates still living on Cardassia. As I anticipated, they shared my loathing for the current government and were willing to take on an assignment aimed at its destruction.
SISKO: That sounds like progress to me.
GARAK: Doesn't it? Unfortunately, they're all dead now.
SISKO: What?
GARAK: Yes. All killed within one day of speaking with me. I suppose that's a testament to the effectiveness of Dominion security. One should admire such efficiency.
SISKO: I'm sorry.
GARAK: I hope you're not giving up that easily. After all, the stakes are much higher than a few dead operatives. The fate of the entire quadrant hangs in the balance. Or at least that's the case you made to me.
SISKO: Do you have another plan?
GARAK: As a matter of fact, I do. But I suspect you won't like it.
SISKO: Try me.
GARAK: If you want to guarantee that we obtain evidence of a Dominion plan to attack the Romulans, I suggest that we manufacture that evidence ourselves.

[Sisko's quarters]

SISKO: Maybe I should have put a stop to it right there. Maybe I should have said, thank you very much for your input, Mister Garak. I will take your suggestion under advisement, and gone back to my office and forgotten about the whole thing. But I didn't. Because in my heart, I knew what he was saying made sense.

[Garak's shop]

GARAK: His name is Vreenak. He's been a key member of the Romulan Senate for the past fourteen years. He's Secretary of the War Plans Council, Vice Chairman of the Tal Shiar, and one of the most trusted advisors to Proconsul Neral.
SISKO: He's also the man that negotiated the non-aggression pact with the Dominion.
GARAK: Since you're familiar with him, I'll skip the rest of his biography. What's important is that he continues to be one of the most ardently pro-Dominion voices in the Senate. If we can convince him that the Dominion is a threat, the rest of the Senate will follow.
SISKO: All right, how?
GARAK: Ten days from now, Senator Vreenak will be making a trip to Soukara for a diplomatic meeting with Weyoun. I am certain that he can be persuaded to make a secret detour to DS Nine if he were invited by one Captain Benjamin Sisko.
SISKO: How do you know he'll be visiting Soukara?
GARAK: There are some things I'd rather not discuss. May I continue?
SISKO: Please.
GARAK: When Senator Vreenak arrives, you will show him a holographic recording of a secret meeting held at the highest level of the Dominion in which the planned invasion of Romulus is being discussed. You will tell the Senator that this information was obtained through various covert means at great cost to the Federation. At least ten good men lost their lives bringing it across the line, that sort of thing. He will immediately suspect it's a forgery, but you will assure him that such a thing would be impossible. You see, Senator, this is an official Cardassian transcript. It was recorded on a one time optolythic data rod used for official record keeping. These rods are manufactured only as needed on Cardassia Prime. Information can only be transcribed on them once, and then cannot be altered.
SISKO: He'll want to examine it.
GARAK: Of course. And he will discover to his amazement that it's completely genuine. At least, so it will appear.
SISKO: But in reality?
GARAK: You will have handed him a genuine optolythic data rod, but it will contain one of the most perfect forgeries ever fashioned. I'm still working on obtaining the data rod, but I have located the man who will create the holorecording.
SISKO: You realise I can't authorise a thing like this on my own. I'll have to clear it with Starfleet Command.
GARAK: Of course. But I suspect that with the fall of Betazed, they'll be ready to do whatever it takes to bring the Romulans into the war.
SISKO: I'll let you know.
GARAK: One last thing, Captain. The man we need to forge this holoprogramme is currently sitting in a Klingon prison awaiting execution. To save time and incidentally his life, I thought that perhaps you could contact Chancellor Gowron today and arrange a pardon.
SISKO: What's his name?
GARAK: Grathon Tolar.

[Wardroom]

(Tolar is a pale blue reptilian with a head crest. Rather pretty colour, actually.)
TOLAR: I cannot tell you how grateful I am, Captain. The Klingons were going to execute me tomorrow. Of course, they say that every day. It's one of the little games they like to play.
SISKO: You do understand the terms of your parole?
TOLAR: Oh, yes. I have to promise to stay away from the Klingon Empire. That'll be tough. And I have to create some kind of a special holoprogramme for you. I can hardy wait. I've never worked for Starfleet before.
SISKO: Let's be very clear about this. You're not working for Starfleet. This entire matter is off the record. As far as you're concerned, you're working for me.
TOLAR: Oh. A personal matter. Something special for your eyes only. Something with, perhaps, five or six Orion slave girls and
SISKO: Mister Tolar, I suggest you go wait in your quarters. Mister Garak will provide you with all the information you need.
TOLAR: Garak is here?
SISKO: That's right.
TOLAR: Oh. Oh. Well, that's different. I'll wait in my quarters.
SISKO [OC]: Why I didn't listen to the voice in the back of my mind telling me not to believe a word he said, I'll never know.

[Captain's office]

SISKO [OC]: But it didn't take long for me to come face to face with the fact that I'd made a mistake.
ODO [OC]: Odo to the Captain.
SISKO: Go ahead, Constable.
ODO [OC]: I'm sorry to disturb you, but do you know a man named Grathon Tolar?
SISKO: Yes. Why do you ask?
ODO {OC]: Because he just tried to kill Quark.

[Quark's]

(Quark is shaking.)
BASHIR: Sit still, Quark. You'll be fine.
ODO: (to security) All right, keep an eye on him.
SISKO: What happened?
ODO: As I understand it, Mister Tolar over there came in about two hours ago and ordered a bottle of Whelan Bitters. Fifteen minutes later, he ordered a second bottle, then a third. Halfway through his fourth bottle he decided to dance with M'Pella. She was otherwise engaged running the dabo wheel and declined his invitation. He decided to force the issue. A brief struggle ensued and Quark, in an uncharacteristic display of chivalry, attempted to intervene, so Tolar stabbed him. Normally, he'd be sitting in a holding cell, but he claims he's a friend of yours.
SISKO: He's no friend of mine, but he is working for me. It's an extremely sensitive matter concerning Federation security. I can't have any record of him being on the station.
ODO: I see. I am certainly aware of the need for special security measures during wartime, but as a matter of law, if Quark chooses to press charges against Tolar, I have no choice but to make an arrest.
SISKO: May I speak to Quark.
(Odo nods, Sisko goes over to Bashir and Quark.)
SISKO: How is he?
QUARK: How do I look? I'm a man who just had a brush with death.
BASHIR: He'll be fine. His ribs deflected the knife from his major organs. The bleeding was superficial.
QUARK: Superficial? Do you know how much this shirt cost?
SISKO: Will you excuse us for a moment, Doctor?
BASHIR: I'll check on you tomorrow.
(Bashir leaves.)
SISKO: Do you intend to press charges?
QUARK: You bet I do.
SISKO: What will it take, er, to, er, convince you otherwise?
QUARK: Are you offering me a bribe? I knew it. Captain, I've always liked you. I suspected that somewhere deep down in your heart of hearts there was a tiny bit of Ferengi just waiting to get out.
SISKO: What's your price?
QUARK: Well, let's start with replacing my clothes and M'Pella's clothes.
SISKO: All right.
QUARK: I'm not finished. I think I should be compensated for the loss of business I suffered today, which I calculate as no less than five bars of gold pressed latinum.
SISKO: Done.
QUARK: I'm also having a problem with station security. They're holding some cargo containers which I've been waiting for because of some missing import licence or something.
SISKO: I'll handle it. Anything else?
QUARK: No. I think we can call it a bribe. And thank you, Captain. Thank you for restoring my faith in the ninety eighth Rule of Acquisition. Every man has his price.

[Sisko's quarters]

SISKO: That was my first moment of real doubt, when I started to wonder if this whole thing was a mistake. So then I went back to my office and there was a new casualty list waiting for me. People are dying out there every day. Entire worlds are struggling for their freedom and here I am still worrying about the finer points of morality. No, I had to keep my eye on the ball. Win the war, stop the bloodshed. Those were the priorities!

[Promenade]

SISKO [OC]: So I pushed on. And every time another doubt appeared before me, I just found another way to shove it aside.
GARAK: Mind if I join you?
SISKO: Be my guest.

[Turbolift]

SISKO: Ops.
GARAK: Hold. The less I'm seen parading through Ops, the better.
SISKO: I couldn't agree more.
GARAK: You seem angry.
SISKO: Who's watching Tolar?
GARAK: I've locked him in his quarters. I've also left him with the distinct impression that if he attempts to force the door open, it may explode.
SISKO: I hope that's just an impression.
GARAK: It's best not to dwell on such minutiae. In any case, we have far more important matters to discuss. I've located a gentleman willing to sell us a genuine optolythic data rod.
SISKO: How do you know it's genuine?
GARAK: I trust the source, but rest assured I will confirm the rod's authenticity before I make payment. Which brings me to you.
SISKO: How much does he want?
GARAK: I'm afraid he's not interested in latinum. The gentleman in question has requested to be compensated with two hundred litres of biomimetic gel.
SISKO: What?
GARAK: I don't know why, exactly. One would assume it has something to do with genetic experimentation.
SISKO: Offer him something else.
GARAK: Believe me, I wouldn't be relaying this request if I thought he'd take anything else.
SISKO: Biomimetic gel is strictly controlled by the Federation and not for sale at any price. Find someone else who's willing sell us a rod.
GARAK: I wasn't exaggerating when I told you about the near impossibility of obtaining a genuine Cardassian data rod. It's something of a minor miracle that I was able to locate this one source, I'm virtually certain I won't find another. I'm afraid we either give him what he wants or forget the whole enterprise.
SISKO: Then let's forget about it. Ops. Hold. Two hundred litres is out of the question. There's not that much gel in the entire sector.
GARAK: I believe the quantity is open to negotiation.
SISKO: Ops.

[Captain's office]

BASHIR: Captain, biomimetic gel is an extremely dangerous compound, as you know. I can't release it without at least some idea of where it's going. In the wrong hands, it could be used to make biogenic weapons, or for illegal replication experiments, or to develop organic explosives
SISKO: Perhaps I didn't make myself clear, Doctor. This is not a request, it's an order. You will package eighty five litres of biomimetic gel for interstellar transport and deliver them to cargo bay three. Is that understood?
BASHIR: Yes. I'd like this order in writing, please, sir.
SISKO: I thought you might.
BASHIR: You should know that I shall note this in my log and file an official protest with Starfleet Medical.
SISKO: That is your right. But I want the gel by the end of the day. Dismissed.

[Holosuite]

(Set up as a Cardassian conference room. Garak and Sisko watch the play as Tolar works controls.)
WEYOUN: The Founders have decided to implement stage two ahead of schedule.
DAMAR: The invasion of Romulus? It's too soon. We're engaged in heavy fighting all along the border with the Federation. The Klingons are preparing to go on the offensive and
WEYOUN: Fortunately, the Founders have better vision than you do. They can see the opportunities before us even when you cannot. Consider. The Romulans don't expect an attack from Cardassia. The bulk of the Romulan fleet is still deployed along the Neutral Zone with the Federation. The Founders estimate that we could be on Romulus itself in less than three weeks.
DAMAR: Three weeks? I heard the same kind of estimates before we attacked the Federation.
WEYOUN: Those plans were ruined by the incompetency of your predecessor.
DAMAR: Gul Dukat is a great man.
WEYOUN: Gul Dukat is a preening egotist and a fool. We offered him unchallenged control of the Alpha Quadrant and all he could think about was his daughter. Now, shall we get back to the business at hand?
GARAK: That's it. Freeze programme. That's all the new material. The rest of the programme plays exactly as you saw it before. What do you think?
SISKO: It's better. They seem more real.
GARAK: Yes, and all I had to do was add a little petty bickering and mutual loathing.
TOLAR: So, you are happy?
SISKO: It's satisfactory.
GARAK: You may record the programme onto the data rod now.
(The scenario vanishes.)
SISKO: I've received a message. Senator Vreenak is on the way.
GARAK: Excellent.
TOLAR: Done. Who gets it?
GARAK: Just put it in the case.
(The wooden case has a Cardassian emblem on it.)
TOLAR: Well. It has been a pleasure doing business with you, gentlemen. Call me again if you ever need
SISKO: You're not going anywhere.
TOLAR: What? What do you mean?
SISKO: I mean you're not leaving until your work is accepted by our client.
TOLAR: That isn't fair. You can't keep me here against my will! I haven't done anything wrong. We had an agreement.
(Sisko pushes Tolar up against the bulkhead.)
SISKO: I'm making a new agreement. If that programme passes inspection, you walk free, but if there's even the slightest flaw, the I will send you back to that Klingon prison and tell Gowron to take his time while he executes you.
TOLAR: All right. It will pass. You'll see. It will pass.
GARAK: I sincerely hope so. Now why don't you go back to your quarters. I'll be along shortly to say hello.

[Sisko's quarters]

SISKO: Maybe I was under more pressure than I realised. Maybe it really was starting to get to me. But I was off the hook. Starfleet Command had given the plan their blessing and I thought that would make things easier. But I was the one who had to make it happen. I was the one who had to look Senator Vreenak in his eye and convince him that a lie was the truth.

[Corridor]

GARAK: So while you're entertaining the Senator in the wardroom, I'll take the opportunity to make a quick search of his ship's database.
SISKO: For what?
GARAK: For any intelligence information he may have picked up on the Dominion in Soukara.
SISKO: What if you get caught?
GARAK: Oh, I think that's highly unlikely. I doubt the senator will be travelling with more than four bodyguards at the most. Two will stand watch outside the wardroom and two will stay in the landing bay. I assure you, they'll never know I was even near their ship.
SISKO: Just make sure you don't get caught.
(Round a corner.)
SISKO: Report.
WORF: Sections fifty two Baker through sixty two Baker have been secured. I have posted armed guards at every entry points and I have personally scanned all compartments for signs of surveillance equipment.
SISKO: Very good, Commander. Maintain current security measures until further notice. No one is to enter this area except for Mister Garak and myself.
WORF: Aye, sir.
GARAK: Always a pleasure to see you, Mister Worf.

[Airlock]

KIRA [OC]: Ops to Captain Sisko.
SISKO: Go ahead, Major.
KIRA [OC]: We've just received the coded subspace signal you were waiting for. Should I reply?
SISKO: No reply, Major. Sisko out.
(Sisko taps commands onto a wall panel. We watch as the landing pad doors open, the pad itself goes up. More commands and the pad comes down with nothing on it. Then a Romulan shuttle decloaks and the embarkation tube extends to it.)
GARAK: I'll take my leave of you now, Captain. Oh, and one last thing. Vreenak believes he's on the winning side, so until you can prove otherwise, you may have to put up with a certain acerbic attitude.
SISKO: Mister Garak, after having spent a week with you, I have developed a very, very thick skin.
GARAK: Good luck.
(Garak leaves. The airlock opens and two Romulan guards come out, followed by the Senator.)
SISKO: Welcome aboard, Senator. I'm Captain Benjamin Sisko.
VREENAK: So, you're the Commander of Deep Space Nine, and the Emissary to the Prophets, decorated combat officer, widower, father, mentor, and oh yes, the man who started the war with the Dominion. Somehow I thought you'd be taller.
SISKO: Sorry to disappoint you.
VREENAK: To be honest, my opinion of Starfleet officers is so low that you'd have to work very hard indeed to disappoint me.
SISKO: If you'll come with me, I'll show you to your quarters.
VREENAK: I look forward to seeing your station, while it's still here, that is. The way the war's going with the Federation, it may not be around much longer.

[Wardroom]

(Romulan ale is being imbibed.)
VREENAK: A fair approximation. Somewhat lacking in aroma. Real kali-fal should forcibly open one's sinuses well before the first sip.
SISKO: We don't have much experience in replicating Romulan beverages. Of course, all of that would change if we became allies instead of cold warriors.
VREENAK: You are persistent, Captain, I'll grant you that, but dogged determination isn't enough to change the reality of your situation. Time is definitely not on your side. The Dominion shipyards are working at one hundred percent capacity. Yours are still being rebuilt. The Dominion is breeding legions of Jem'Hadar soldiers every day. You're experiencing a manpower shortage. But most important, the Dominion is resolved to win the war at any cost. You and I both know the Federation has already put out peace feelers. Now, in all candor, if you were in my position, which side would you choose?
SISKO: I'd pick the side most likely to leave us in peace when the dust settles. Maybe you're right. Maybe the Dominion will win in the end. Then the Founders will control what we now call Cardassia, the Klingon Empire and the Federation. So, instead of facing three separate opponents with three separate agendas, you'll find yourselves facing the same opponent on every side. There's a word for that. Surrounded.
VREENAK: It really is a good replica. The aroma's starting to grow on me. For a moment there I almost forgot that it wasn't the real thing, but only for a moment. You make some very good points, Captain, but it's still all speculation and theory. Nothing that would warrant abrogating our treaty and plunging the Empire into war.
SISKO: What if I told you that the Dominion is planning a sneak attack on the Romulan Empire at this very moment?
VREENAK: I'd want proof.

[Holosuite]

(Another part of the recording is running.)
WEYOUN: And with the Cardassian Fourth Order protecting their flank, the Twenty third Jem'Hadar division will begin its thrust across the Glintara Sector. They should begin the invasion of Romulus itself on the following day. Once we've taken the homeworld, organised resistance will crumble when outlying systems and colonies begin looking out for themselves. Consolidation of the entire Empire will take three months at most.
DAMAR: What if the Romulan fleet reacts faster than you're anticipating? What if they pull all of their forces away from the Federation border at the first sign of our attack?
WEYOUN: I place my faith in the Founders. They say that the Romulans are not ready for war and will not react fast enough once it begins. Now, do you wish to dispute their judgment?
DAMAR: No, of course not. I serve the Founders.
WEYOUN: As do we all. Meeting adjourned.
(Up comes a Cardassian logo, then the room is empty except for the two spectators.)
VREENAK: I'd like to examine that data rod.

[Sisko's quarters]

SISKO: So all I could do was wait and see how masterful Tolar's forgery really was. So I waited. Tried to catch up on my paperwork. But I found it very difficult to focus on criminal activity reports, or cargo manifests, do I went back to pacing and staring out of the window. I'm not an impatient man. I'm not one to agonise over decisions once they're made. I got that from my father. He always says worry and doubt are the greatest enemies of a great chef. The soufflé will either rise or it won't. There's not a damn thing you can do about it, so you might as well just sit back and wait and see what happens. But this time the cost of failure was so high I found it difficult to follow his advice.

[Corridor]

SISKO [OC]: If Vreenak discovered that the data rod was a forgery, if he realised that we were trying to trick them into war, it could push the Romulans even farther into the enemy camp. They could start to openly help the Dominion. If worse came to worst, they could actually join the war against us. I had the distinct feeling that victory or defeat would be decided in the next few minutes.

[Wardroom]

(Sisko enters, Vreenak dismisses his guards.)
VREENAK: It's a fake!

[Sisko's quarters]

SISKO: So it blew up in my face. And all the lies and the compromises, the inner doubts and rationalisations, all for nothing. Vreenak was furious. I can't say I blamed him. I'd have reacted the same way. After telling me in no uncertain terms that he would expose this vile deception to the entire Alpha Quadrant, he got back in his shuttle and headed home. There didn't seem to be anything more to do.

[Wardroom]

SISKO [OC]: So I went back to work. Two days later, I got the news.
(It must be Friday.)
BASHIR: No one for me today.
DAX: I had one. Maria Tatalia, wounded in action.
BASHIR: Friend?
DAX: Friend of a friend. I actually only met her once. I don't think she'd remember me.
BASHIR: A friend of a friend between the two of us. Well, I know it sounds a bit strange, but I'd say we're off to a pretty good start today.
WORF: Captain, we just received word from Starfleet Intelligence that a Romulan shuttlecraft carrying a high ranking senator has just been destroyed.
SISKO: Which Senator?
WORF: Senator Vreenak. He was returning to Romulus from a diplomatic mission to Soukara when his shuttle exploded. The Tal Shiar are investigating, but preliminary report points to sabotage. They believe that the Dominion is responsible.
DAX: The Dominion assassinated a Romulan Senator.
BASHIR: On a diplomatic mission.
WORF: That changes everything. It could even bring the Romulans into the war.
SISKO: Excuse me.

[Garak's shop]

(Sisko the Thunder God storms in and hits Garak, sending him flying.)
SISKO: Get up. You killed him.
GARAK: That's right.
SISKO: That's what you planned to do all along, isn't it. You knew the data rod wouldn't hold up to scrutiny. You just wanted to get him on the station so you could plant a bomb on his shuttle.
GARAK: It wasn't quite that simple. I did have hopes that the rod would somehow pass inspection, but I suspected that Tolar may not have been up to the task.
SISKO: And what about Tolar? Did you kill him too?
GARAK: Think of them both as tragic victims of war.
(Sisko punches Garak again.)
GARAK: If you can allow your anger to subside for a moment, you'll see that they did not die in vain. The Romulans will enter the war.
SISKO: There's no guarantee of that.
GARAK: Oh, but I think that there is. You see, when the Tal Shiar finishes examining the wreckage of Vreenak's shuttle, they'll find the burnt remnants of a Cardassian optolythic data rod which somehow miraculously survived the explosion. After painstaking forensic examination, they'll discover that the rod contains a recording of a high level Dominion meeting at which the invasion of Romulus was being planned.
SISKO: And then they'll discover that it is a fraud!
GARAK: No, I don't think they will, because any imperfections in the forgery will appear to be a result of the explosion. So, with a seemingly legitimate rod in one hand and a dead senator in the other, I ask you, Captain, what conclusion would you draw?
SISKO: That Vreenak obtained the rod on Soukara and that the Dominion killed him to prevent him from returning to Romulus with it.
GARAK: Precisely. And the more the Dominion protests their innocence, the more the Romulans will believe they're guilty because it's exactly what the Romulans would have done in their place. That's why you came to me, isn't it, Captain? Because you knew I could do those things that you weren't capable of doing. Well, it worked. And you'll get what you want, a war between the Romulans and the Dominion. And if your conscience is bothering you, you should soothe it with the knowledge that you may have just saved the entire Alpha Quadrant and all it cost was the life of one Romulan senator, one criminal, and the self-respect of one Starfleet officer. I don't know about you, but I'd call that a bargain.

[Sisko's quarters]

SISKO: At oh eight hundred hours, station time, the Romulan Empire formally declared war against the Dominion. They have already struck fifteen bases along the Cardassian border. So, this is a huge victory for the good guys. This may even be the turning point of the entire war. There's even a 'Welcome to the Fight' party tonight in the wardroom. So I lied, I cheated, I bribed men to cover the crimes of other men. I am an accessory to murder. But most damning thing of all, I think I can live with it. And if I had to do it all over again, I would. Garak was right about one thing. A guilty conscience is a small price to pay for the safety of the Alpha Quadrant, so I will learn to live with it. Because I can live with it. I can live with it. Computer, erase that entire personal log.

 HISTORY

2024-09-13 19:24:21 - Pike: Added the transcript.


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