Home > Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Statistical Probabilities
00:00:05No, no, it is not fair!
00:00:06Am I the only one here?
00:00:08Is that it? Hm-hm-hm? Is that it?
00:00:10Am I the only one who sees? Hm, hm, hm, hm?
00:00:13And what is that incessant noise?!
00:00:15Calm down.
00:00:17Am I talking too fast, Doctor? Having trouble keeping up, hm, hm, hm?
00:00:19I don't want to see you get upset, Jack.
00:00:21Please don't leave us here, Karen, please!
00:00:23It's only for a few weeks, Patrick.
00:00:25You know why they brought us here, don't you?
00:00:27Why they carted us halfway across the quadrant?
00:00:30They're going to experiment on us.
00:00:32Stop it, Jack. ( whimpers )
00:00:34They want to find out what makes our genetically engineered brains tick.
00:00:36They're going to cut our heads open and see what comes out!
00:00:39( sobbing ) ( laughing )
00:00:41He's just trying to scare you.
00:00:42KAREN: Don't listen to him.
00:00:44Now, I told you why I brought you here, remember?
00:00:46Mm-hmm.
00:00:47To meet that doctor, Dr. Bashir?
00:00:49You know.
00:00:50The handsome one.
00:00:52KAREN: He was genetically enhanced when he was a boy, just like all of you.
00:00:56No, no! He's not like us.
00:00:58I never saw him at the Institute.
00:01:00He wasn't locked away, hm-hm, for being too smart, hm-hm?
00:01:02He's passed himself off as normal.
00:01:04He's Mr. Normal Starfleet Man, mm-hmm.
00:01:06Mr. Productive Member of Society.
00:01:09Well, maybe we can learn to be just like him.
00:01:13Wear little uniforms, hm? Yes, sir!
00:01:15No, sir!
00:01:16Thank you, sir!
00:01:17I don't like it here.
00:01:18It's going to be all right.
00:01:21Dr. Bashir is going to work with you for a while, that's all.
00:01:24Just think of it as a little vacation from the Institute.
00:01:27No, no, this is not happening, no.
00:01:28It is happening, Jack, and you're going to have to try to make the best of it.
00:01:32I'm going to make the best of it.
00:01:35See the way he's looking at me?
00:01:37He's in love with me already.
00:01:39Give me that!
00:01:40I want to go home. ( door chimes )
00:01:42It's him.
00:01:47See that?
00:01:49That's what I'm going to do to your boyfriend.
00:01:51( chuckles )
00:01:52Give me the padd.
00:01:59Sorry.
00:02:01You're not sorry.
00:02:02We both know that.
00:02:04You did it on purpose because you're upset but there are better ways of dealing with being upset.
00:02:11I'll work on it.
00:02:15All right, well...
00:02:18I'll see you all in a few weeks.
00:02:20( whimpering ) Patrick, it's fine. It's fine.
00:02:23Go on.
00:02:28Bye, Sarina.
00:02:36You all right?
00:02:37Oh, it's nothing.
00:02:38Just another run-in with Jack.
00:02:39Like I said in my report, don't turn your back on him.
00:02:43Well, we better get you down to the Infirmary.
00:02:44I'm fine. You go on in.
00:02:46They're about as ready to meet you as they'll ever be.
00:02:50I just hope you have better luck getting through to them than I've had.
00:04:57Hello?
00:04:58( maniacal chuckling )
00:05:01Funny. He doesn't look like a mutant.
00:05:04Is that you, Jack?
00:05:05He knows me. He knows my name.
00:05:07I didn't tell him my name.
00:05:08It's all right.
00:05:09I just read Dr. Loews' report, that's all.
00:05:11I knew that.
00:05:14Hello, Sarina.
00:05:16JACK: What is he talking to her for?
00:05:17He read the reports.
00:05:18She won't answer you.
00:05:19Didn't you read the reports? Hm-hm-hm?
00:05:23Would anyone mind if I turned on the lights?
00:05:25Would anyone mind if he turns on some lights?
00:05:27Go ahead, we're not mole people, you know.
00:05:29Computer, lights.
00:05:30Hello. Lauren.
00:05:33I know what you're thinking, Julian, but I'm not that kind of girl.
00:05:37JACK: Bashir, was it? Hm.
00:05:38Rings a bell, rings a bell.
00:05:39Bashir, Bashir, Bashir, Bashir, Bashir...
00:05:41Ah, got it, got it!
00:05:4215th-century poet-- Singh el Bashir.
00:05:44Any relation?
00:05:45Yes, actually.
00:05:46His work was totally derivative.
00:05:47He was a plagiarist.
00:05:48You knew that. You had to know that.
00:05:49Yet you come in here bragging about it anyway, hm, hm.
00:05:52Why? Hm? Hm?
00:05:53( chuckling )
00:05:54You're the one who brought it up.
00:05:55Well, what was I supposed to do-- just let you get away with it?! Hm-hm-hm?
00:05:58That noise!
00:06:00Tell me, Doctor, what kind of enhancements did your parents have done to you?
00:06:04Mental abilities, mostly but they had my hand/eye coordination reflexes and vision improved as well.
00:06:14Can you do that? Hm-hm-hm?
00:06:15I doubt it.
00:06:16Yeah, what happened?
00:06:18Uh, your parents couldn't afford the full overhaul, hm-hm?
00:06:21He turned out all right.
00:06:22You're not exactly known for being very discriminating, hm?
00:06:25I turned you down, didn't I?
00:06:27And you're still regretting it!
00:06:28The cube root of 329-- what is it?
00:06:316.903.
00:06:34LAUREN: Very good!
00:06:35And you didn't even use your fingers.
00:06:38He's a mutant, just like the rest of us.
00:06:41No, no, no, he is not like us.
00:06:42He passed as normal.
00:06:44Is that true?
00:06:45Did you pass as normal? Is that true?
00:06:46My genetic status was discovered a year ago.
00:06:48LAUREN: How'd you manage to hide it for so long?
00:06:51I did my best not to exploit my abilities.
00:06:55Mm-mmm, so no one would suspect.
00:06:57Very clever. I'm impressed. ( chuckles )
00:06:59Now, that's not right!
00:07:00There are reasons why DNA resequencing is illegal.
00:07:03There are reasons why people like us are barred from serving in Starfleet.
00:07:07We have an advantage.
00:07:08Normal people can't compete. It's not fair.
00:07:09Maybe you're right.
00:07:11Maybe I should have said something sooner.
00:07:12There are rules-- uh, uh, don't talk with your mouth full, don't open an airlock when somebody's inside it, and don't lie about your genetic status.
00:07:19No, no, no, you did. You lied.
00:07:21You'd lied, and-and then when you got caught you cut a deal with Starfleet, hm, hm, hm, hm?
00:07:25You-you got yourself off the hook.
00:07:27If you'd told the truth you could have lived with us at the Institute.
00:07:30Hm, he's right, you know.
00:07:31Then they would have put you away.
00:07:33They don't put people away for being genetically engineered.
00:07:35No, no, no, no, they just won't let you do anything that's worth doing!
00:07:39No, no, they are afraid that people like us are going to take over!
00:07:41Well, it happened before.
00:07:43People like us did try and take over.
00:07:44Oh, no, no, I knew you were going to do that.
00:07:46I knew that you were going to trot out the Eugenics War.
00:07:48I'm not trotting out anything.
00:07:49All I'm saying is there's a good reason why we've been barred from certain professions but that doesn't mean we can't be productive members of society.
00:07:55Yeah, here it comes-- the "We Can Still Contribute" speech.
00:07:58No, no, no, no.
00:08:00I will not forget what was done to me.
00:08:02I will not be a part of a society that put me away for being too smart! No, no!
00:08:05All right, then.
00:08:07Seeing as though you have all the answers already,
00:08:10I'll spare you the speech.
00:08:16I'm having dinner with some friends.
00:08:18What? You think we don't eat? We eat.
00:08:20We're going to eat right now.
00:08:22Hm? Y-Yum-yum.
00:08:23I'll go set the table.
00:08:29Don't worry about us.
00:08:30We'll be fine. Hm.
00:08:32Thanks for scaring him off.
00:08:40BASHIR: All I kept thinking was
00:08:42"There, but for the grace of God, go I."
00:08:44DAX: How do you mean?
00:08:46My parents managed to find a decent doctor to perform the DNA resequencing on me.
00:08:51These four weren't so lucky.
00:08:52They all suffered unintended side effects, and by the time they were five or six, their parents were forced to come forward and admit they'd broken the law so that their children could get treatment.
00:09:03Hm. Perhaps they waited too long.
00:09:06Yeah. There was nothing the doctors at the Institute could do for them.
00:09:10These cases are so rare. There's no standard treatment.
00:09:13I can't imagine it was a very stimulating environment for them.
00:09:17That's what Dr. Loews thought when she first came to the Institute.
00:09:20She got permission to separate them from the other residents so that she could work with them.
00:09:24Why did she bring them here?
00:09:26She thought they might respond to meeting someone like them who was leading a normal life.
00:09:33She was also hoping that one day they might be able to live on their own and be productive.
00:09:39Well, let's hope they don't become too productive.
00:09:41Might make the rest of us look bad.
00:09:44It is not a laughing matter.
00:09:46If people like them are allowed to compete freely, then parents would feel pressured to have their children enhanced so they could keep up.
00:09:53That's precisely what prompted the ban on DNA resequencing in the first place.
00:10:00Giving them a chance to contribute doesn't necessarily mean sanctioning what was done to them.
00:10:06They didn't ask to have their DNA tampered with.
00:10:09They were only children.
00:10:11And why should they be excluded just because their parents broke the law?
00:10:14You're right.
00:10:16It's not quite fair... but even so, it seemed like a good way to discourage genetic tampering.
00:10:23O'BRIEN: Besides, it's not as if we're trying to exclude them from anything.
00:10:27We're just... talking about... you know, limiting what they're allowed to do.
00:10:31Like joining Starfleet.
00:10:33Exactly.
00:10:34BASHIR: Are you saying that I shouldn't be allowed to wear this uniform?
00:10:38Well, you are an exception.
00:10:40Ah, an exception.
00:10:42I should be used to that.
00:10:43I've been one all my life-- first, because of the DNA resequencing, and now, because I've been allowed to join Starfleet.
00:10:52Perhaps I should not have said anything.
00:10:55No. No, it's all right.
00:11:00SISKO: Well does anyone care to speculate about what Gul Damar is going to say in his speech?
00:11:07Nothing we're going to like, I'll bet.
00:11:09It should be starting any minute.
00:11:11If he's going to announce another new battle offensive it's going to spoil dessert.
00:11:17JACK: Can you hear me?
00:11:18H-Hello, calling Dr. Bashir.
00:11:20( sighing ): Jack...
00:11:21Hello. Anybody there? Hm-hm?
00:11:22Did you give them access to the com system?
00:11:25Hello? Hello? Dr. Bashir? Hm? No, they must have broken in somehow. Oh!
00:11:30I'd love to stay and chat about our impending doom, but...
00:11:41JACK: I can't take it!
00:11:43Would you do something about that noise!
00:11:45What noise?
00:11:46What kind of sick game are you people playing, hm?!
00:11:49What are you talking about?
00:11:50Can't you hear it?!
00:11:52We complained, and two very cute engineers came by and said there was nothing wrong.
00:11:56Wait a minute.
00:11:57Is it a kind of high-pitched whine?
00:11:58Yes! Thank God!
00:12:00See? I told you we weren't crazy.
00:12:02Hm-hm-hm?
00:12:05You are a mutant.
00:12:07You are.
00:12:08Now, do something about that noise or I will snap her neck.
00:12:20I called Chief O'Brien. Now, let her go.
00:12:22Maybe I'll wait until he gets here.
00:12:24If you don't let her go
00:12:26I'll tell the Chief the noise went away by itself.
00:12:29You think I want to be doing this?
00:12:31I'm just making sure things get done.
00:12:39Unbelievable.
00:12:40This is the thanks I get.
00:12:42Are you all right?
00:12:45( door chimes )
00:12:46( sighs heavily )
00:12:47Come in.
00:12:49Miles...
00:12:51I wonder if you could find out what's making that noise.
00:12:54I know you can't hear it, but it's there-- probably a sympathetic vibration in the power coupling or something.
00:13:00What do you know? You're right.
00:13:02JACK: Well, why don't you fix it dear fellow, dear fellow?
00:13:04Well, why don't you fix it before I go mad?!
00:13:17( quietly ): He's married.
00:13:18Too bad.
00:13:22Sounds like the plasma flow's out of sync.
00:13:27You're right.
00:13:28Better realign it.
00:13:30I was just thinking that.
00:13:31Yeah. Ooh!
00:13:34It's about to start.
00:13:36Almost finished.
00:13:40There.
00:13:41JACK: Finally.
00:13:42LAUREN/PATRICK: Ah!
00:13:43Much better. Thank you, Chief.
00:13:46DAMAR: Fellow citizens
00:13:47these are great days for Cardassia.
00:13:50Together, with our Dominion allies,
00:13:52we have given our enemies cause to fear us once more.
00:13:57Can't argue with that.
00:13:58Who's he?
00:13:59It's Damar, the new head of the Cardassian government.
00:14:02"Uneasy lies the head that wears the crown."
00:14:05He's sad.
00:14:06Ashamed is more like it.
00:14:07Why do you say that?
00:14:08Shh!
00:14:09...we are poised to make
00:14:10another bold step to ensure our future.
00:14:13Peace!
00:14:15Looks like a man who doesn't sleep.
00:14:16"Methought I heard a voice cry, 'sleep no more!
00:14:19'Damar does murder sleep.'"
00:14:21He's killed someone!
00:14:22Someone close to him.
00:14:24How could they know that?
00:14:26...shed their blood to defend their home.
00:14:27Their sacrifice must not be in vain.
00:14:31The peace we seek
00:14:32will honor their memory and preserve the gains
00:14:35for which they gave their lives.
00:14:37I challenge the Federation to answer my call for peace.
00:14:42I am ready at any time to meet with its representatives
00:14:46to discuss how we can put an end to hostilities.
00:14:49As your leader...
00:14:51Pretender! You don't belong on that throne, and you know it.
00:14:53...everything in my power to protect Cardassia.
00:14:55Someone's making him say all this. He doesn't want to.
00:14:57...forward into a new era.
00:14:59This I vow with my life's blood...
00:15:03for my sons...
00:15:05for all our sons.
00:15:10Did any of you know who Damar was before today?
00:15:13JACK: No, no, no, but it's obvious who he is.
00:15:15The pretender... ( chuckles )
00:15:16...who-who killed the king and seized the throne.
00:15:18Not the king. He's still alive.
00:15:20Oh, the queen, maybe... ( gasps )
00:15:22Or a princess. Mmm.
00:15:23Yes. Ziyal.
00:15:24That's Gul Dukat's daughter.
00:15:26JACK: And now, the pretender finds himself in league with a-a-a dark knight that he can't control. Hm, hm?
00:15:32Weyoun?
00:15:33JACK: It's not a bad story.
00:15:34Epic, really.
00:15:37What else can you tell us? Hm, hm?
00:15:41It was amazing.
00:15:42They pieced together the entire story of how Damar came to power.
00:15:46Weyoun is the dark prince,
00:15:47Gul Dukat is the deposed king,
00:15:49Damar is the pretender to the throne, and Ziyal is the innocent princess he murdered.
00:15:53And now the pretender is wracked with guilt over what he's done.
00:15:56And they got all this just from watching Damar's speech?
00:15:59Oh, they were fascinated by the whole thing.
00:16:00They kept bombarding me with questions about Cardassia and the war.
00:16:03I've never seen them so engaged.
00:16:05And you want to keep them engaged.
00:16:06I'd like to try.
00:16:08I'm just running out of material.
00:16:09What do you mean?
00:16:10Well, they've already gone through everything the computer has on Cardassia and the Dominion.
00:16:16Roll out the red carpet.
00:16:18Visitors?
00:16:19Starfleet has decided to listen to what Damar has to say.
00:16:23He and Weyoun will be arriving in the morning and I am the lucky one who gets the chance to sit across the table from them.
00:16:30That's great!
00:16:31KIRA: It's hard to believe that the Dominion really wants peace.
00:16:34I wouldn't be surprised if they were just stalling for time in order to regroup.
00:16:38Sir, is there any chance I can get a transcript of the negotiations?
00:16:41You can do better than that.
00:16:44The Dominion has insisted on recording the proceedings so that everyone can see that their desire for peace is sincere.
00:16:50Perfect.
00:16:52You shouldn't have agreed to that, Benjamin.
00:16:54Now you have to be on your best behavior.
00:16:56Hm.
00:16:59So, the pretender and his dark knight are coming to the station, hm, hm?
00:17:02And the story's not over, eh?
00:17:03Peace talks could be interesting.
00:17:05I'd say so and the best part is we're going to have ringside seats.
00:17:10( whining )
00:17:12( Patrick laughing )
00:17:13Mmm-mmm!
00:17:24Ah, Major!
00:17:27Welcome to Deep Space 9.
00:17:28How nice to see you again.
00:17:30Can I give you a word of advice, Weyoun?
00:17:33By all means.
00:17:34You're welcome to play your little
00:17:36"we're all friends here" game with me, but I wouldn't try it with Captain Sisko.
00:17:40He's not in the mood.
00:17:41DAMAR: We're on a mission of peace, Major.
00:17:43Maybe he should get in the mood.
00:17:53This is the border as it existed before hostilities broke out.
00:17:56This is the border we are now proposing.
00:17:59This arrangement would award disputed star systems to the side that already has effective control over them.
00:18:06On the balance, we are giving up more than you.
00:18:08JACK: Computer, freeze program.
00:18:11Computer...
00:18:12Hi. Uh, listen.
00:18:13Go to native language mode and replay time code 7-6-1 through, uh, uh...
00:18:177-6-9, hm, hm.
00:18:19Eee-ja maa'na hoo'va-baa'li jen'ku'rada sen'to.
00:18:23JACK: Got you!
00:18:24Did you hear that, hm, hm, hm?
00:18:26He used the passive voice transitive, hm, hm.
00:18:29Since when could you speak Dominionese?
00:18:30Hm, since this morning.
00:18:32That phrasing is only used to make a request, not a statement.
00:18:36They are up to something, hm, hm, hm.
00:18:37( Patrick laughing )
00:18:39What is it, Patrick?
00:18:41Did you see something?
00:18:42( dismissive grunt )
00:18:44You can tell us.
00:18:46They want the Kabrel system.
00:18:48How do you know?
00:18:49They kept avoiding it with their eyes.
00:18:53Are you sure?
00:18:54They kept avoiding it.
00:18:56Told you they were up to something, hm, hm?
00:18:58End program.
00:19:01BASHIR: All right, they want the Kabrel system, but why?
00:19:04LAUREN: I don't know, but they're willing to give up a lot to get it.
00:19:07The mizainite deposits on Holna IV alone are enough to keep their shipyards running for years.
00:19:13Yes, yes, yes, that's typical Dominion strategy.
00:19:15They offer to give up something valuable in order to hide the fact that they want something even more valuable in the long term, hm, hm, hm.
00:19:20See, that's how they think. Big picture.
00:19:22They don't worry about what's going to happen tomorrow.
00:19:23No, no, no. They're thinking long term.
00:19:25They're thinking what's going to happen a year from now, a-a-a decade, a century, hm, hm, hm, hm, yes, yes.
00:19:30There must be something special about the Kabrel system.
00:19:32LAUREN: Nothing on the first planet but some simple protozoids and tri-nucleic fungi.
00:19:36The second planet has some cormaline deposits but they're common enough.
00:19:41Okay, okay, okay, maybe there's another reason, hm.
00:19:43Does it have any strategic value, hm, hm?
00:19:45( padd beeping )
00:19:46LAUREN: Not that I can see.
00:19:47They wouldn't want to build a base there.
00:19:48JACK: Why not, why not? Hm, hm?
00:19:50Seems perfectly suitable. Hm, hm?
00:19:51LAUREN: It's not an optimum situation.
00:19:53It's a binary system.
00:19:54There's a lot of ionic interference there.
00:19:57JACK: All right, all right, forget it.
00:19:59Does this have anything to do with what we're talking about, Sarina?
00:20:07Can we take it?
00:20:11JACK: ...like an ancient technology, hm, hm, hm?
00:20:14There's no evidence of anything like that.
00:20:16Any idea what this might mean?
00:20:20SISKO: Chemistry was never my strong suit.
00:20:23What is it?
00:20:24BASHIR: It shows how you can break down tri-nucleic fungus to make yridium bicantizine, one of the active ingredients in ketracel-white.
00:20:30That's why the Dominion wants the Kabrel system so that they can manufacture the drug right here in the Alpha Quadrant.
00:20:35According to our calculations, they'll be able to manufacture enough to supply the Jem'Hadar indefinitely.
00:20:41I was going to recommend that the Federation accept the proposed border.
00:20:46It could've cost us the Alpha Quadrant.
00:20:48Actually, sir, we should give them Kabrel.
00:20:51Why is that?
00:20:52If we don't, the Dominion will be forced to attack before their stockpile of white runs out.
00:20:56Here are the casualty projections.
00:20:58As you can see, an attack would result in devastating casualties for both sides.
00:21:03Y-You're suggesting we stall?
00:21:06It will buy us time to rebuild our defenses and bring the Romulans into the alliance.
00:21:11The Romulans.
00:21:13According to our analyses-- there it is-- they'll vote to abandon their nonaggression pact with the Dominion at next year's plenary session.
00:21:22By which time, internal pressures between the Cardassians and the Dominion will have erupted and after three years six months and 27 days, we predict that, uh--
00:21:31Hang on a minute, Doctor.
00:21:32How'd you come up with all this?
00:21:33Two days ago, you said these people were impossible to deal with.
00:21:36Now they're turning out projections that it would take Starfleet Intelligence months to come up with.
00:21:41We're mutants.
00:21:42I know.
00:21:44We're not exactly qualified for this kind of work and it could be said that, uh... it is beyond the limits of what people like us should be allowed to do.
00:21:53But I think if you allow me to walk you through our analyses, you'll be impressed.
00:22:03All right, Doctor, go ahead.
00:22:05Thank you, sir.
00:22:07The way our statistical analysis works, the further into the future you go, the more accurate the projection.
00:22:14It's based on a kind of nonlinear dynamics whereby small fluctuations tend to factor out over time.
00:22:19The net result is-- Just a minute, Doctor.
00:22:22Why don't we go back to the beginning and take me through this step-by-step... nice and easy.
00:22:30Gladly, sir.
00:22:34Captain Sisko said he would take our analyses to Starfleet Command right away.
00:22:39Imagine that-- Starfleet Command. Hm.
00:22:42All those admirals.
00:22:43It's a party!
00:22:45BASHIR: It is now.
00:22:46We need music.
00:22:48Computer, music.
00:22:49Make it grand.
00:22:50A waltz.
00:22:51( "Blue Danube" plays )
00:22:56Ah!
00:22:59Care to dance?
00:23:35LAUREN: Coward.
00:23:36He tried.
00:23:37I meant her.
00:23:49( door chimes )
00:23:50Come in.
00:23:52Chief.
00:23:53What a pleasant surprise.
00:23:57I, uh...
00:24:00I need to replace that power coupling.
00:24:02Don't mind us.
00:24:11Hi.
00:24:12No, thanks.
00:24:14It's a party. No, I need to get to work.
00:24:24( sobbing )
00:24:26I didn't mean to...
00:24:28It's just that I-I need to get this coupling replaced.
00:24:32( music ends )
00:24:33What did you do, Chief?
00:24:35Nothing!
00:24:37What's the matter, Patrick?
00:24:39He doesn't like me.
00:24:41Well, sure, I do.
00:24:43( crying continues )
00:24:45See?
00:24:49LAUREN: The Chief doesn't like any of us.
00:24:52Do you, Chief? Julian...
00:24:54JACK: He's just jealous you're spending so much time with us.
00:24:57His wife's away. He misses his friend.
00:24:59I do not.
00:25:01It's all right, Julian.
00:25:02Go play with your friend.
00:25:03We'll be fine.
00:25:05You want me to play with you, do you, Chief?
00:25:09No!
00:25:10( snickers )
00:25:11Yes, you do.
00:25:12( chuckles )
00:25:13Come on, let's go to Quark's.
00:25:15I-I'm going to need those.
00:25:16No, you don't.
00:25:17There's nothing wrong with that power coupling.
00:25:22Well... it's... going to have to be replaced sometime.
00:25:28( chuckling )
00:25:30Ready?
00:25:31( laughter continues )
00:25:33Ready. Yeah.
00:25:37I'm sorry.
00:25:38The last thing in the world
00:25:39I wanted to do was upset them.
00:25:41Oh, it's all right.
00:25:43The only reason Patrick gets so emotional... is because he likes you.
00:25:48He does?
00:25:49Oh, yeah, they all do.
00:25:50What? Because I got rid of that noise?
00:25:52Oh, no, it's not just that.
00:25:53They feel comfortable being around you.
00:25:55What was the word Jack used?
00:25:56"Uncomplicated."
00:25:59Uncomplicated.
00:26:01Oh, yes, they're amazingly insightful.
00:26:03They have ways of seeing things other people don't.
00:26:06And saying things other people don't.
00:26:08Yeah. They are pretty candid, aren't they?
00:26:10( chuckles ): They sure are.
00:26:11Funny thing is
00:26:13I'm actually beginning to enjoy their company.
00:26:16Hey! What are you doing?
00:26:18Get back!
00:26:20You know, I was thinking.
00:26:22Starfleet Command might do all right to take them on as a team of advisers.
00:26:26Oh, I don't know.
00:26:27Oh, I can't imagine them in a room with a bunch of admirals unless they're going to teach them how to dance.
00:26:33( chuckling ): We were celebrating.
00:26:35Yeah, whatever.
00:26:38Ah, they really are quite brilliant, though.
00:26:41I mean, once we actually started working, it was incredible.
00:26:44We were all on the same wavelength-- talking in shorthand, finishing each other's sentences.
00:26:48I've never had that with anyone else.
00:26:50Well, after being with them, I can understand how the rest of us must seem a little uncomplicated.
00:26:55Well, I wouldn't say that exactly.
00:26:58More like... slow.
00:27:00Ha-ha. Must be very frustrating for you.
00:27:02( chuckles )
00:27:03I don't mind.
00:27:04Makes me feel superior.
00:27:05Oh, glad to be of service.
00:27:07Ah, I appreciate it.
00:27:08It's not always easy walking amongst the common people.
00:27:11Ah, it's probably best to keep your expectations low, huh?
00:27:15Ha! That way we can surprise you every now and then.
00:27:19( sighs )
00:27:23Another game?
00:27:25Sure. But do I have to stand so far back?
00:27:27Oh, I-I-I make one lucky shot and you're ready to come down to my level.
00:27:31I like to win, just like the next man.
00:27:33Get back there. Come on.
00:27:37( sighs )
00:27:38I've got good news.
00:27:39Starfleet Command was so impressed with our analysis they've agreed to let us have access to classified information regarding Starfleet's battle readiness.
00:27:47Is something wrong?
00:27:49We have new long-term projections.
00:27:51You-you better take a look.
00:27:53You're not going to like it.
00:28:04Well? Hm, hm?
00:28:06( sighs ): Everything checks out.
00:28:07I was hoping you were going to find a flaw.
00:28:10Nope.
00:28:11So then you agree with our conclusion, hm, hm?
00:28:13It's inescapable.
00:28:14There's no way the Federation is going to be able to beat the Dominion.
00:28:17We have no choice.
00:28:19We're going to have to surrender.
00:28:27Surrender to the Dominion-- not on my watch.
00:28:31Sir, I understand how you feel.
00:28:32I don't like it any more than you do but it's the best option.
00:28:37We've run dozens of different scenarios.
00:28:40Even if something unlikely were to happen tilting the scales in our favor-- such as an anti-Dominion coup on Cardassia-- we'll still lose this war.
00:28:47But that doesn't mean we just give up and roll over.
00:28:51But if we fight there will be over 900 billion casualties.
00:28:56If we surrender, no one dies.
00:28:59Either way, we're in for five generations of Dominion rule.
00:29:02Eventually a rebellion will form centering on Earth.
00:29:06It'll spread... and within another generation, they'll succeed in conquering the Dominion.
00:29:11The Alpha Quadrant will unite and a new, stronger Federation will rule for thousands of years.
00:29:17But since we can't win this war, why don't we save as many lives as we can?
00:29:25I know it's difficult to accept.
00:29:30I don't accept it.
00:29:32Your entire argument is based on a series of statistical probabilities and assumptions.
00:29:37They're not just assumptions.
00:29:38If you want me to take you through the equations,
00:29:40I will.
00:29:42Even if I knew with a hundred percent certainty what was going to happen,
00:29:45I wouldn't ask an entire generation of people to voluntarily give up their freedom.
00:29:50Not even to save over 900 billion lives?
00:29:52Surrender is not an option!
00:29:55Now I'm happy to hear your group's advice on how to win this war, but I don't need your advice on how to lose it.
00:30:00We can't win this war.
00:30:02I don't care if the odds are against us.
00:30:04If we're going to lose, then we're going to go down fighting so that when our descendants someday rise up against the Dominion, they'll know what they're made of.
00:30:13With all due respect, sir, aren't you letting your pride get in your way?
00:30:16All right, Doctor... you've made your recommendation.
00:30:19I'll pass it on to Starfleet Command.
00:30:21Without adding your voice to it, they'll dismiss it out of hand.
00:30:24I'm counting on it.
00:30:28So we go down fighting.
00:30:30How terribly courageous of us.
00:30:33( door opens, closes )
00:30:56What do you think?
00:30:59It's pretty grim.
00:31:01It's not just grim... it's hopeless.
00:31:04We can't beat them, Miles.
00:31:06Well, it doesn't look like it, does it?
00:31:10We have to avoid a long, drawn-out war.
00:31:13You mean surrender?
00:31:15I know... it's an ugly word but the facts are facts.
00:31:21I don't know, Julian.
00:31:23Don't tell me you agree with the Captain.
00:31:26I suppose I do.
00:31:28Well... is there some part of the analysis y-you didn't understand?
00:31:31Because if there is, I-I-I'd be happy to explain.
00:31:34I understood it perfectly.
00:31:37Believe it or not.
00:31:38That's not what I meant.
00:31:40All I'm saying is that you have to look at the bigger picture.
00:31:44Well, I'm trying, but maybe I'm too uncomplicated to see it properly.
00:31:49I didn't say that.
00:31:50You don't have to.
00:31:52The way you're acting... you think nobody with half a brain could possibly disagree with you.
00:31:58Frankly, I don't see how they can.
00:32:00Well, I can see two possible explanations for it.
00:32:03Either I'm even more feebleminded than you ever realized, or you're not as smart as you think you are.
00:32:17( sighs )
00:32:23FEMALE: Good, good, stop.
00:32:25MALE: One more!
00:32:26ALL: Dabo!
00:32:29Looks like your lucky day.
00:32:31Please.
00:32:32You and I both know these games of chance are no such thing-- the odds are in the house's favor.
00:32:37Shh. Don't say that.
00:32:38People are trying to have fun.
00:32:40Sooner or later, no matter how perfectly I play, no matter how well I hedge my bets,
00:32:45I'm going to lose.
00:32:46Why are you trying to spoil everyone's good time?
00:32:50Look around.
00:32:51These people are enjoying themselves.
00:32:53Half of them know the odds are against them but they don't care.
00:32:56They're here because they want to believe they can win.
00:32:58Is that so bad?
00:32:59They're fools.
00:33:01Why don't you just take your winnings and call it a day?
00:33:04Because I'm trying to prove a point.
00:33:07There is no way to win.
00:33:09Stop saying that.
00:33:11There! You see?
00:33:14We're all as good as dead.
00:33:17Doctor... take it easy.
00:33:19It's just a game. You're right.
00:33:21It's not as if 900 billion lives were at stake.
00:33:32I just got word.
00:33:33Starfleet rejected our recommendations.
00:33:35JACK: I knew it!
00:33:36LAUREN: It's kind of a relief in a way.
00:33:38I mean, who wants to wave a white flag?
00:33:40They're the cowards.
00:33:41They don't have the courage to see the truth.
00:33:43You may be right but there's nothing we can do.
00:33:45No, no, no, we can't just take this lying down.
00:33:46The stakes are too high.
00:33:48We've got to take matters into our own hands.
00:33:50How, Jack? What can we do?
00:33:52BASHIR: We can't force Starfleet to surrender.
00:33:55If we can't head off the war, then there might be a way to make it a lot less bloody.
00:33:58How?
00:33:59Look at this--
00:34:01Starfleet battle plans, uh, fleet deployments.
00:34:03Do you know what the Dominion could do with this information?
00:34:06They could take the Alpha Quadrant in a matter of weeks.
00:34:09With a lot fewer Federation casualties than in a drawn-out war.
00:34:11There wouldn't be more than two billion casualties.
00:34:14That's a lot better than 900 billion.
00:34:17Wait a minute!
00:34:20It's one thing for us to try and avert a war, but it's quite another for us to take it on ourselves to trigger an invasion that's going to get a lot of people killed.
00:34:27It's not our place to decide who lives and who dies.
00:34:29We're not gods.
00:34:30Maybe not, but we're the next best thing.
00:34:33Can you hear yourself?
00:34:35That's precisely the kind of thinking that makes people afraid of us.
00:34:38I don't care.
00:34:39I'm willing to make this decision.
00:34:41It's not our decision to make.
00:34:42We presented our case to Starfleet.
00:34:45They rejected it. Case closed.
00:34:47Not closed! We're going through with this.
00:34:49Well, I'm not going to be a party to treason.
00:34:51Call it what you want, but I am willing to do it if it means saving billions of lives, hm, hm.
00:34:58So are you with us? Hm, hm?
00:34:59No! Haven't you been listening?
00:35:02Fine!
00:35:09Mmm...
00:35:12So how do we contact the Dominion?
00:35:24( sighs )
00:35:26( door opening )
00:35:29WEYOUN: Still at it, I see.
00:35:31I've been looking over
00:35:32Sisko's latest counterproposal.
00:35:34We don't seem to be getting anywhere with him.
00:35:37Not very encouraging, is it?
00:35:39I don't know why you had me call for peace talks in the first place.
00:35:44My, my. How quickly you've taken to your new role.
00:35:49And to think, only a short time ago you were nothing more than Gul Dukat's Adjutant.
00:35:54I appreciate the faith you've shown in me.
00:35:57Then show some faith in me.
00:35:59Don't be like your predecessor, second-guessing my every move.
00:36:03It should be clear to you by now that no one is irreplaceable.
00:36:08Now...
00:36:10I just received a very interesting message from an unidentified party claiming to have some information that could be very beneficial to us.
00:36:21What sort of information?
00:36:22I don't know, but we're going to find out.
00:36:35Computer...
00:36:39Computer, respond.
00:36:46Sarina, where is everyone?
00:36:50Did they arrange a meeting with the Dominion?
00:36:56Listen, we have to stop them before it's too late.
00:37:01Untie me.
00:37:04Please, Sarina.
00:37:08You don't want the deaths of so many people on your hands.
00:37:11It's Jack, isn't it?
00:37:14Are you worried what he'll think?
00:37:16I've seen the way you look at him when you think no one's watching.
00:37:20I know how much you care, but if you don't help me stop them, you know what's going to happen?
00:37:28They're going to be arrested and charged with treason and you're never going to see any of them again.
00:37:35You're never going to see Jack again.
00:37:44I'm Patrick.
00:37:45Patrick!
00:37:47Come on.
00:37:58Hello, everyone.
00:38:00He's not supposed to be here.
00:38:01No, no, no, he's not.
00:38:03I-I don't understand.
00:38:05Well, why don't we all go back to your quarters and I will explain it to you.
00:38:09No. We've got to do this.
00:38:11Lives are at stake.
00:38:12Don't interfere, Julian.
00:38:14You have no right.
00:38:15You're in enough trouble already, Jack.
00:38:17Don't make it any worse.
00:38:19Now, we can do this the easy way... or the hard way.
00:38:25It's up to you.
00:38:29Where are they?
00:38:31They'll be here.
00:38:32This is ridiculous.
00:38:33Sneaking into a storage bay for a secret meeting.
00:38:36I'm not some agent of the Obsidian Order.
00:38:39I'm the leader of the Cardassian Empire.
00:38:40Don't let it go to your head.
00:38:41You serve only at the Dominion's pleasure.
00:38:44Besides, I think it's exciting.
00:38:46( door opens )
00:38:47They're here.
00:38:53Odo?
00:38:54Yes, I know.
00:38:56I honor you with my presence.
00:38:59We... seem to have gotten ourselves lost.
00:39:02Mm-hmm.
00:39:03They're not coming.
00:39:06Who's not coming?
00:39:07( chuckles )
00:39:09I had a feeling you were going to say that.
00:39:12Shall I escort you to your quarters?
00:39:21BASHIR: Captain Sisko has decided not to press charges.
00:39:23You won't be going to prison.
00:39:25What are they going to do to us?
00:39:26Nothing bad.
00:39:27You'll be going back to the Institute together.
00:39:29It doesn't matter what happens to us.
00:39:31Don't you realize what you've done, hm?
00:39:33I've kept you from committing treason.
00:39:35Are we supposed to thank you?
00:39:37900 billion people are going to die.
00:39:39You don't know that.
00:39:40Didn't you sit here and go through the projections with us?
00:39:43Hm, hm, hm? Didn't you?
00:39:44He was here, Jack.
00:39:45I remember.
00:39:46Maybe our projections were wrong.
00:39:48How can you say that?
00:39:49We factored in every contingency, hm.
00:39:51Every variable.
00:39:52The equations don't lie.
00:39:54You! You.
00:39:55You ruined everything.
00:39:56What do you make of that, Jack?
00:39:58Why didn't you anticipate that?
00:40:00Why didn't you factor her into your equation?
00:40:02Because you thought you knew everything but you didn't even know what was going to happen in this room.
00:40:10One person derailed your plans.
00:40:16One person changed the course of history.
00:40:20Now, I don't know about you, but that makes me think that maybe, just maybe, things may not turn out the way we thought.
00:40:52I heard what happened.
00:40:53It was a pretty close call.
00:40:55Yeah. Luckily, I managed to intercept them in time.
00:40:58No, that's not what I meant.
00:40:59I was talking about when you had to decide whether or not to meet with the Dominion.
00:41:05It can't have been easy for you.
00:41:07I know how you wanted to try to save as many lives as possible.
00:41:10That's probably what makes you such a good doctor.
00:41:13Fortunately, this doctor is also a Starfleet Officer.
00:41:18We thought we were so smart.
00:41:21We thought we could predict the future.
00:41:24It was my fault, not theirs.
00:41:28I should never have let things go so far.
00:41:32If I hadn't been so bent on trying to prove to the world that they had something to contribute...
00:41:37They did contribute.
00:41:39It seems to me we've become far too complacent about the Dominion.
00:41:43We may have driven them back into Cardassian space, but we haven't beaten them yet.
00:41:49I can only hope.
00:41:52Well, the odds are stacked against us.
00:41:54All we can do is give it our best shot.
00:42:11You're not going to cause any more trouble, are you?
00:42:14Not this time.
00:42:16I'll double-down.
00:42:17Risky.
00:42:19Maybe there's a better bet but sometimes when the odds are so stacked against you, you've just got to take a chance.
00:42:25I admire your courage.
00:42:27ALL: Dabo!
00:42:30Well, what do you know?
00:42:32We have a winner.
00:42:33O'Brien to Bashir.
00:42:35Go ahead.
00:42:37You wanted to know when a certain transport was leaving.
00:42:40Oh, thanks.
00:42:41There is one problem, though.
00:42:44We've got some passengers that are refusing to board
00:42:46unless you come see them.
00:42:52I didn't think you'd want to see me again.
00:42:53LAUREN: Believe me
00:42:55I wouldn't mind if our predictions turned out to be wrong.
00:42:58Jack's still furious, but...
00:43:01I didn't want to leave without saying good-bye.
00:43:05Will you come visit us?
00:43:07What?
00:43:09Oh, uh, yeah, I'd like that.
00:43:15You did the right thing, you know.
00:43:19One of these days, he'll understand that.
00:43:26So... you ready to go?
00:43:29Not so fast.
00:43:30There's one thing I need to know, Doctor.
00:43:34If-If we can come up with a way to beat the Dominion, will you listen?
00:43:39I can't think of anything I'd like better.
00:43:42Good.
00:43:43Good, good, all right, let's go then.
00:43:45Let's go.
00:43:46Bashir to O'Brien.
00:43:48Four to beam out.