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Captain's log, star date 44429.
6.
We're on a mapping survey
near the Cardassian Sector.
It is nearly a year since a treaty
ended the long conflict
between the Federation
and Cardassia.
Captain, we are nearing
the periphery of Sector 21503.
Look out for a Cardassian ship,
Mr.
Worf.
They should hail us soon.
They're still skittish
about protecting their border.
Last time I was here,
I was on the Stargazer, running ahead
of a Cardassian warship.
Running, Captain?
- You? That's hard to believe.
- Believe it.
I'd been sent to broker a truce.
I'd lowered my shields
as a gesture of goodwill.
The Cardassians were not impressed.
They had taken out most of my weapons
before I could regroup and run.
The Cardassians have no honour.
I do not trust them.
They're our allies now.
We have to trust them.
Trust is earned, not given away.
I hope they make contact soon.
It's not good to stay too long
on a Cardassian border
without making
your intentions known.
What is it?
Kelp buds,
plankton loaf and sea berries.
Sweetheart, I'm not a fish.
It's very healthy.
I had this when I was growing up.
What? No muffins or oatmeal
or corned beef and eggs?
For breakfast?
Keiko, I've been thinking.
You've introduced me to this
wonderful food that you're used to,
I'd like to do the same.
Isn't that what marriage is about,
sharing?
What kind of foods?
Scalloped potatoes,
mutton shanks, oxtails and cabbage.
- Kind of heavy.
- You'll love it, I promise.
I remember the aromas
when my mother was cooking.
She cooked?
She didn't believe in a replicator.
She thought real food was better.
She handled real meat?
She touched it and cut it?
Yeah, like a master chef.
She was fantastic.
Of course,
I'll have to use the replicator.
I'll make something special tonight.
You'll love it, I promise.
OK.
Maybe I'll have something
special for you tonight, too.
Something's wrong.
Red alert.
Take emergency stations.
Cardassian ship
preparing to fire again.
Increase power
to the forward shields.
- Hail them again.
- What is he doing? Damage report.
Minor damage to secondary hull
before we put up our shields.
No casualties.
Structural integrity intact.
Engineering to bridge.
Starboard power coupling is down.
Evasive action, delta sequence.
Ready phasers.
- Delta evasion plan initiated.
- Target engines and shields.
Aye, sir.
Ready.
Fire.
Direct hit, sir.
Damage to aft shield generators.
Continue phaser fire.
Multiple hits, sir.
Power failure
in their forward shields.
The Cardassian ship is standing down.
Let's see
if they'll answer our hail now.
Frequency open.
This is Capt Picard
of the Federation ship Enterprise.
I am Gul Macet
of the Cardassian ship Trager.
- Why have you fired on us?
- Curious question, Captain.
In war, one attacks one's enemies.
There is a treaty
between our peoples.
Perhaps that fact was unknown
to the Federation starship
which destroyed our space station
in the Cuellar system two days ago.
Federation starship?
Attacked an unarmed
science station.
They had barely enough time
to send an emergency signal
before they were incinerated.
Gul Macet,
the Federation and the Cardassians
have struggled too hard for peace
to abandon it so easily.
We are not the ones
who have abandoned it, Captain.
Let me talk to my superiors,
find out what is behind this.
Give me one hour.
The alternative is for us
to continue firing at one another.
And in such a contest,
you would be at a disadvantage.
Very well.
One hour.
Space, the final frontier.
These are the voyages
of the Starship Enterprise.
Its continuing mission
to explore strange new worlds,
.
.
to seek out new life
and new civilizations,
.
.
to boldly go
where no one has gone before.
Captain,
we've confirmed your report.
It was the Starship Phoenix, under
the command of Benjamin Maxwell.
Ben Maxwell?
But he's one of Starfleet's
finest captains.
He must have had provocation.
I wish we knew.
He's gone on silent running.
Won't answer our communiqu�s.
He's still in Cardassian space?
The station he destroyed
was in Sector 21505.
You're the nearest starship.
We want you to go in and find him.
Will the Cardassians cooperate?
They've granted you safe passage.
You'll take along a delegation
of observers to show good faith.
Jean-Luc, I don't have to tell you,
the Federation is not prepared
for a new sustained conflict.
You must preserve the peace.
No matter what the cost.
Haden out.
There will be three Cardassians
transporting aboard.
Capt Gul Macet and two aides.
My intention is to be open with them,
allow them to share
in our search for the Phoenix.
It is necessary
to assign them a security detail.
They're guests.
I don't want them
to feel like prisoners.
I agree with Mr.
Worf.
They don't need
to have the run of the ship.
Allow me to post guards in some
of the sensitive areas of the ship.
Very well.
Let's limit their access.
But you instruct your people
they are our guests.
- Aye, sir.
- Counsellor, stay close to the crew.
Some may feel uncomfortable
with Cardassians on board.
- I don't want any incidents.
- Yes, Captain.
Mr.
Data, has anyone else on board
served with Capt Benjamin Maxwell?
Accessing.
Chief O'Brien served under him
aboard the Rutledge, sir.
Indeed.
Number One, will you
and the Counsellor meet our guests?
Inform Chief O'Brien
I will be calling on him.
Yes, sir.
Welcome to the Enterprise.
I'm First Officer William Riker.
Counsellor Deanna Troi.
I am Gul Macet.
My aides, Glinn Daro, Glinn Telle.
This is our transporter chief,
Mr.
O'Brien.
Shall we?
Captain's log, supplemental.
We have entered Cardassian territory
on our quest to locate the Phoenix.
With our sensors we've been scanning
a radius of ten light years.
We can effectively scan
one sector a day.
We're scanning 21505 now.
There's no sign of the Phoenix.
In fact, you have no assurance
the ship is still in Sector 21505.
In fact,
we have no idea where it is.
We thought the last known coordinates
were a good place to start.
Capt Picard, you can understand
that we are skeptical.
Do you expect us to believe
that you are using
every means at your disposal
to track down one of your own?
Of course you are concerned,
Gul Macet.
That is precisely why I have included
you in every aspect of our effort.
You're present with my staff.
You're hearing reports as I hear
them, nothing edited or withheld.
Very well.
Transporter Chief O'Brien
served with Benjamin Maxwell.
I thought he might be able
to provide some insights.
Mr.
O'Brien, I understand
that Capt Maxwell lost his family
during a raid on an outpost.
More like sabotage, sir.
It was on Setlik III.
Cardassian militia
made a sneak raid on an outpost,
wiped out close to 100 civilians.
Then it's revenge he's after.
- That's not what I meant.
- It's retribution for his own loss.
- Capt Maxwell
- Gentlemen.
Let's not indulge in speculation.
Can we confine our discussion
to the facts?
- Mr.
O'Brien
- Worf to Capt Picard.
- Go ahead.
- Sensors have located the Phoenix.
Gul Macet,
will you join me on the bridge?
Deck six.
Deck ten.
Your captain is most impressive.
Yes, he is.
Chief O'Brien, our transporting
system is still operating
with active feed-pattern buffers.
I would like to talk with you
about your technology.
I'll have to get
Cmdr La Forge's approval.
I understand.
In the meantime,
we are going to your ten-forward.
Will you join us?
If my Commander tells me to discuss
the transporter with you, I will.
If Capt Picard orders me to tell you
about Ben Maxwell, I will.
But who I choose
to spend my free time with,
that's my business.
Captain,
the Phoenix is in Sector 21505.
Ensign, set a course, warp six.
Mr.
Worf, send a message.
Tell them
to prepare for a rendezvous.
Yes, Captain.
- Captain, a suggestion.
- Yes?
We have a number of ships
in Sector 21505.
If you will give us
more precise coordinates
and the ship's
coded transponder frequency,
we could intercept Maxwell
far more quickly than you.
I'm sure that's true.
However, given the circumstances,
I would prefer to make
the initial contact myself.
You would,
if the situation were reversed.
Captain, time is crucial.
You have a dangerous man
with a huge arsenal at his command.
If he is intent
on revenge against my people,
he must be stopped
before he can do more damage.
So far, we have an isolated incident.
If I reach him first,
then perhaps diplomacy can prevail.
But if one of your ships
should decide to retaliate,
we could lose control
of the situation.
You will not give us the means
to find his precise location?
No, I won't.
There you are.
Potato casserole.
A dish fit for kings.
The minstrel boy to the war has gone
- What's that you're singing?
- What? It's just an old song.
A bunch of us
used to sing it on the Rutledge.
- I hadn't thought about it in years.
- What's it about?
It's about war and glory.
The minstrel boy to the war has gone
In the ranks of death
you will find him
His father's sword he hath girded on
And his wild harp slung behind him
Capt Maxwell
always liked that song.
All this business about him
and the Cardassians brought it back.
You know,
sitting with the staff this morning,
I could tell there were people
who still don't like the Cardassians.
- I imagine that's to be expected.
- You do?
Sure.
It was a long war.
That takes
its toll.
What are these dark things?
Capers.
But the fighting's over now.
Why should anyone still feel
however they feel?
You fought the Cardassians?
There were some skirmishes,
when I was with Capt Maxwell.
Well, how do you feel about them?
Me? I feel fine.
I mean, the war's over now.
- The pursuing ship is the Phoenix.
- And the other?
- A Cardassian supply ship.
- How would you know that?
We are able
to make that determination.
You can read our transponder codes.
The important thing now
is your ship may be in jeopardy.
- Mr.
Worf, any answer to our message?
- No, Captain.
Put out a repeating message,
priority-one communiqu�.
- Break off your pursuit now.
- Aye, sir.
We are doing everything we can
to reach them.
Yes, and accomplishing nothing,
I'm sorry to say.
Can you show me the location
of our other ships?
Mr.
Data.
There, you see? We have a warship
which could intercept the Phoenix,
if you will give us
the transponder frequency.
Or are you going to stand there
while our ship is destroyed, Captain?
Mr.
Worf, has there been
any response to our hails?
No, Captain.
Very well.
Mr.
Worf,
.
.
relay the prefix codes of the
Phoenix to the Cardassian warship.
Sir, they will be able
to dismantle its shields!
The Phoenix won't have a chance!
I cannot allow Maxwell
to ambush that supply ship.
Mr.
Worf, now.
Yes, Captain.
The Cardassian warship
is moving on the Phoenix.
Mr.
Data, overlay weapon ranges
of the two ships.
The warship is 300,000 kilometres
from the Phoenix.
It is opening fire.
The Phoenix has taken a direct hit.
The Phoenix
has begun evasive manoeuvres.
It has positioned itself outside
the range of the opposing ship.
The Phoenix has powered up
both phasers and photon torpedoes.
The Phoenix
is firing photon torpedoes.
He has destroyed our warship.
Does the supply ship
have any weapons?
Very limited.
Not enough to defeat
a Nebula-class starship.
Sir, the Phoenix is firing on the
The warship carried a crew of 600,
the supply ship, 50.
Estimate the time
to intercept with the Phoenix.
At our present speed of warp four,
Ensign, increase to warp nine.
- Captain.
- Chief.
I wanted to talk to you.
Anything I can do, sir.
Ben Maxwell, he must be quite a man.
He's a rare one, alright.
I count myself lucky, sir.
I've served with
the two finest captains in Starfleet.
From your knowledge of the man,
what has gone wrong?
There's a reason for what he's doing.
The Cardassians were up to something,
I'm sure.
When his family was killed,
how did he take it?
I'd say he took it well.
I know he was broken up inside.
Who wouldn't be?
But you'd never know it to see him.
He never missed a minute's duty.
Always had a smile, a joke.
I see.
He would never retaliate,
no matter what that Cardassian says.
They're up to something, sir.
They're the ones you should
investigate, not Maxwell.
- You don't care for the Cardassians?
- I like them fine.
It's just, well, I know them.
You learn to watch your back
when you're around those people.
Ben Maxwell has just sent more
than 600 of them to their deaths.
I don't know what to say, sir.
But he must have had his reasons.
I think when one has been angry
for a long time, one gets used to it.
And it becomes comfortable,
like old leather.
And, finally,
.
.
it becomes so familiar one can't
ever remember feeling any other way.
Thank you, Chief.
Kanar.
Mind if I join you?
Do you want another?
And an ale.
Kanar.
I never could develop a taste for it.
It takes a bit of getting used to.
I wanted to say,
I owe you an apology.
I shouldn't have popped off
like that in the turbolift.
- I think
- Here's your ale, Mr.
O'Brien.
This has been *** all of us.
I know I'll be happy
when I'm back on my own ship.
I guess that's true.
I hadn't thought about that.
I was on Setlik III
with Capt Maxwell
the morning after the massacre.
We were too late, of course.
Almost everyone was dead.
That was a terrible mistake.
We were told the outpost
was a launching place
for a massive attack against us.
The only people left alive
were in an outlying district
of the settlement.
I was sent there with a squad
to reinforce them.
Cardassians were advancing on us,
moving through the streets,
destroying, killing.
I was with a group
of women and children,
when two Cardassian soldiers
burst in.
I stunned one of them.
The other one jumped me.
We struggled.
One of the women threw me a phaser,
and I fired.
The phaser was set at maximum.
The man just,
just incinerated,
there before my eyes.
I'd never killed anything before.
When I was a kid,
I'd worry about swatting a mosquito.
It's not you I hate, Cardassian.
I hate what I became because of you.
I will protest this, Klingon!
- Lieutenant?
- He was found at a computer station,
attempting to access information
on our weapon systems.
A lie, Gul Macet.
I was studying
the terminal interface systems.
They're more efficient than ours.
I didn't know what was in the files.
What business did you have
going near one of their computers?
But, Gul Macet, I meant nothing.
There was no harm done.
Go to your quarters.
You're confined there
for the duration of this expedition.
As you wish, sir.
- Mr.
Worf, please accompany him.
- Gladly, Captain.
Captain, may we speak in private?
You have the bridge, Number One.
I deeply regret
what my aide has done, Captain.
You have my word, he will
be disciplined upon my return.
You may take what action you wish.
I consider the matter closed.
I'm not sure I would be
so generous in your place, Captain.
- Thank you.
- If there is to be a lasting peace,
neither you nor I must allow
any one man to undermine our efforts.
There are those who crave war,
who need it.
I am not one of them, Captain.
And I'm beginning to see
that neither are you.
We have had our full measure.
The lasting peace begins here,
with the two of us.
- Bridge to Captain.
- Picard here.
We have located the Phoenix.
We will intercept it in 22 minutes.
Captain's log, star date 44431.
7.
We have contacted Capt Maxwell
and he has agreed to come on board.
Welcome aboard, sir.
I'm Cmdr Riker, First Officer.
I know all about you, Commander.
Fine work you did with the Borg.
- We all owe you on that one.
- Thank you.
O'Brien? Miles O'Brien?
- Hello, Captain.
Good to see you.
- How are ya?
I had no idea
you were on the Enterprise.
This was my tactical officer
on the Rutledge.
Best I ever had.
Thank you.
O'Brien has the ability to size up
a situation instantly,
then come up with options
to fit all contingencies.
- Remarkable.
- I learned that from you.
But you got that silver tongue
by kissing the Stone.
Commander, best I see
your captain straightaway.
- We've got a lot to talk about.
- Yes, sir.
Capt Jean-Luc Picard.
Capt Benjamin Maxwell.
That'll be all, Commander.
- Captain.
- A pleasure, Captain.
Please, sit down.
You must think I've gone mad.
The thought had occurred.
Picard, I have to tell you,
I was grateful when I realised
it was you Starfleet
had sent after me.
Someone who knows
what it's like out here.
I know of nothing out here that could
justify what you have done.
Then listen to this.
The Cardassians are arming again.
That so-called science station?
Military supply port.
- How do you know this?
- Information comes my way.
From whom?
Where is your documentation?
I know what they're doing!
I can smell it.
There's no reason for a science
station in the Cuellar system,
but it's a hell of a strategic site
for a military transport station,
a jumping-off point
into three Federation sectors.
They're running supply ships,
and nobody can tell me
it's for scientific research.
Whatever the circumstances,
why didn't you notify Starfleet?
And wait six months
while the bureaucrats read reports,
trying to figure out what to do?
They don't know
what's going on out here.
But you should, Picard.
You know
what it's like to be under fire.
- You weren't under fire.
- Lives were at stake.
- Whose lives?
- We had to act now!
Why?
It smells musty in here.
Like a bureaucrat's office.
You have killed nearly 700 people
and taken us to the brink of war.
I have prevented war.
Or at the very least
delayed it a good long time.
The peace treaty was a ruse
to give them time to regroup.
Alone, you decided
to dispose of the treaty.
I took the initiative.
I did what had to be done.
What had to be done? For whom?
Why would a man,
with a long and brilliant service,
abandon the principles
that he has believed in,
even fought for, all of his life?
I believe it is because of what they
did to your wife and your children.
- Not true.
- To avenge their deaths.
You're a fool, Picard.
History will look at you and say,
"This man was a fool.
"
I'll accept the judgement of history.
When it becomes clear
what the Cardassians have done,
I will be vindicated.
What they have or have not done
is irrelevant.
Irrelevant?
Come with me.
Find one of their supply ships,
and we'll see how irrelevant it is.
We're not going after
any more Cardassian ships.
You're going to return
to your bridge
.
.
and set a course for Star base 211.
The Phoenix and the Enterprise
will return to Federation space.
Those are Starfleet's orders.
I will permit you the dignity
of retaining your command
during the voyage.
The alternative
is to put you in the brig
and to tow your ship
back to the star base in disgrace.
- I will return to my ship.
- You understand your orders?
Yes, Captain.
Mr.
Worf, report to my ready room.
My guest is departing.
Aye, sir.
Captain's log, supplemental.
With the Phoenix in close formation,
we are proceeding to Star base 211.
Mr.
Data, how long
until we clear Cardassian space?
At this speed,
three hours, 20 minutes.
Mr.
Worf, send a message
to Admiral Haden.
- Inform him of our time of arrival.
- Aye, sir.
Captain,
the Phoenix has changed course.
What is he doing?
Ensign, change course to pursue.
Mr.
Worf, will you hail Capt Maxwell?
- No response, Captain.
- Data, project his new course.
He is headed for a Cardassian
vessel, 0.
12 light years from here.
He'll attack that ship
just as he did the others.
Continue the hail, Mr.
Worf.
Priority-one message.
- Do you know what that ship is?
- I imagine it's a supply ship,
headed for the research station
in the Kelrabi system.
- The Phoenix still does not respond.
- Ensign, warp eight.
Overtake.
The Phoenix
has accelerated to warp nine.
We will not be able to reach him
before he gets to the vessel.
- Ensign, warp nine.
- Aye, sir.
Arm phasers.
Continue the hail.
Aye, sir.
Chief O'Brien
was Maxwell's tactical officer.
Get him up here.
The Phoenix is out of warp.
- They have reached the vessel.
- Slow to impulse.
- Vessels are within visual range.
- On screen.
Has the Phoenix
activated its weapons?
Negative.
Phaser banks are not armed.
The Cardassians?
Sensors are unable to determine
the status of their defences.
Their ship is running
with a high-powered subspace field.
Mr.
O'Brien,
your former commander is placing me
in the position of firing on him.
I need your knowledge of the man,
how he thinks,
what he's capable of doing.
- Aye, sir.
- Sir, Capt Maxwell is hailing us.
On screen.
Alright, Picard.
You need proof? You've got it now.
Capt Maxwell,
you have disobeyed a direct order.
Board the ship.
You'll see that
everything I've said is true.
The Cardassian vessel
will not be boarded.
You will transport
aboard the Enterprise.
Picard, if you don't board
that ship, I'll destroy it.
And I will use
whatever force is necessary
to prevent you
from taking that action, Captain.
Sir, Capt Maxwell,
if he feels his back
is against the wall, he'll strike.
The Phoenix is transferring power
to its shields.
They're arming phasers
and loading torpedo bays.
Red alert.
It seems you were right, Mr.
O'Brien.
- Ready phasers, load torpedoes.
- Phasers armed.
Loading torpedo bays.
Sir, let me beam over.
Try to talk to him.
We served together a long time.
When you've been through
what we have, you get inside someone.
He might listen.
He'd never allow you
to transport on board.
The Phoenix is using
a high-energy sensor system.
It cycles every 5.
5 minutes.
Between, there's a window
of a 50th of a second.
- Trust me, I can get through.
- Make it so.
Not now!
- I'm not armed.
- How the devil did you get here?
I thought that if we could talk,
we could figure a way out
of this mess.
The way out of this is clear.
Talk to Picard.
Get him to board the damn ship!
He won't do that, sir.
But he'd turn his weapons
on this ship to protect the enemy?
- I don't believe it.
- He will!
Count on it.
What the hell
has happened to this war?
Sir, there is no war.
The war is over.
You're wrong.
The Cardassians live to make war.
That's what everybody thinks
about the enemy.
- That's what they think about us.
- We're not the same at all.
We do not start wars!
We do not make surprise attacks
on manned outposts!
We do not butcher women and children
in their homes!
Children
.
.
who never had the chance
to grow up!
You were with me on Setlik.
- You saw what they did.
- Yes, sir.
What was the name of that fella
who hung around you like a puppy?
Will Kayden.
- Stompie.
- Stompie!
As cool under fire
as a mountain lake.
Yes, sir.
He died at Setlik, didn't he?
Yes, sir.
What was that song of his?
The one he always sang,
the one I liked?
The minstrel boy to the war has gone
In the ranks of death
you will find him
His father's sword he hath girded on
And his wild harp slung behind him
"Land of song!" said the warrior bard
Though all the world betrays thee
One sword at least
thy rights shall guard
One faithful harp shall praise thee
I'm not gonna win this one,
am l, Chief?
No, sir.
Captain's log, supplemental.
Capt Maxwell
has turned his ship over
and transported to the Enterprise.
I have confined him to quarters
for the return voyage.
Thank you, Chief.
I'd just like to say, sir,
he was a good man.
What he did was terribly wrong,
I know that now,
but I'm still proud
to have served with him.
Thank you, Chief.
And well done.
That'll be all.
His loyalty is admirable,
even if it is misplaced.
The loyalty you would quickly dismiss
does not come easily to my people.
You have much to learn about us.
Benjamin Maxwell earned the loyalty
of those who served with him.
You know, in war,
he was twice honoured with
the Federation's highest citation
for courage and valour.
And if he could not find
a role for himself in peace,
we can pity him,
but we shall not dismiss him.
You are welcome to your opinion.
I, for one, am grateful
he is under lock and key.
One more thing, Gul Macet.
Maxwell was right.
Those ships were not carrying
scientific equipment, were they?
A research station within arm's reach
of three Federation sectors?
Cargo ships running
with high-energy subspace fields
that jam sensors?
If you believe the transport ship
was carrying weapons, Captain,
why didn't you board it
as Maxwell requested?
I was here to protect the peace.
A peace I firmly believe is in
the interest of both our peoples.
If I had attempted
to board that ship,
I'm certain you and I would not be
having this pleasant conversation,
and that ships on both sides
would now be arming for war.
Captain, I assure you
Take this message to your leaders,
Gul Macet.
We'll be watching.