[Sulan's Laboratory]
SULAN: Regeneration phase completed. Deactivate the genitron. Shut down the
bio-matrix. B’Elanna? B’Elanna Torres! Wake up!
Captain’s log, Stardate 48784.2. We have completed our survey of
the Avery system and are returning to retrieve Lieutenants Paris, Torres
and Durst. By now, they should have concluded their inspection of the
magnesite formations on the third planet.
[Mess hall]
NEELIX: Here we are Mister Tuvok, one bowl of authentic Vulcan plomeek
soup.
TUVOK: As I have told you, Mister Neelix, this is an unnecessary
indulgence. I am quite content to eat whatever the rest of the crew is
eating.
NEELIX: Nonsense. Everyone aboard this ship deserves a little taste
of home every now and then.
TUVOK: Very well then, thank you.
NEELIX: Don’t thank me, I’m having a marvellous time
experimenting with the native dishes of the entire crew. So far I’ve
learned to make corn salad for Mister Chakotay, and peanut butter and jelly
sandwiches for Mister Paris. He calls it comfort food. Isn’t that
charming? What are you waiting for, it’s no good cold. Well?
TUVOK: It is rather…piquant.
NEELIX: It is zesty, isn’t it. I tried following the recipe in the
computer’s databank but it seemed so bland so I took the liberty of
spicing it up a bit. Call it plomeek soup a la Neelix.
TUVOK: I must point out that if you take the liberty of changing a
time honoured recipe you are hardly presenting a taste of home.
CHAKOTAY [OC]: Senior officers please report to the bridge.
NEELIX: But your soup.
TUVOK: Please, enjoy it.
NEELIX: There’s no place like home.
[Bridge]
CHAKOTAY: The away team has failed to arrive at the pre-arranged
co-ordinates, Captain, and they’ve failed to respond to our hails.
JANEWAY: Have you tried locking on to their comm. signals?
KIM: We’ve scanned the entire surface. No sign of them. They must
still be underground, but I can’t locate them there either.
TUVOK: Then as we suspected, the dense magnesite formations in the
planet’s crust are blocking our sensors.
KIM: Take a look at this. This is the cave system nearest the beam-in
co-ordinates as it appeared in our initial geological scan. And this is
the same system now. This tunnel here has shifted to the west by almost
seventy five degrees.
JANEWAY: Are you saying walls of solid rock have changed shape in the
two days since the away team was deployed?
KIM: Apparently so, Captain, but our initial scans didn’t indicate
tectonic activity of anywhere near that magnitude.
CHAKOTAY: In any case, it’s possible that Torres and the others
haven’t returned to the beam-out site because they were trapped by
these geological shifts. I’d like to lead a team down to investigate,
Captain.
TUVOK: And what is to prevent us from losing you as well, Commander?
KIM: Breadcrumbs.
JANEWAY: Ensign?
KIM: I’m sorry, Captain, what I mean to say is I think I can modify
some subspace transponders which could be deployed along the Commander’s
path, kind of like
JANEWAY: Breadcrumbs. Got it.
KIM: If they’re placed at regular intervals I believe they’ll
maintain a signal link with the ship and they could serve as a
transporter relay in case we need to stage an emergency beam-out.
JANEWAY: Very well, Commander, take a team with you, but I want a
transporter lock on you at all times.
CHAKOTAY: Aye Captain. Tuvok, Kim, you’re with me.
[Planet]
SULAN: I apologise for the restraints, but your presence here is very
important to us. Do you understand?
TORRES: Who are you?
SULAN: I am Sulan, chief surgeon of the Vidiian Sodality.
TORRES: I demand to know what is happening here. You’ve surgically
altered my face. I look like a Klingon.
SULAN: I’ve performed no surgery as you understand the term. There
are several questions I need to ask you before we proceed.
TORRES: You can’t possibly believe I’m going to cooperate with
you.
SULAN: Perhaps I was in error to leave your consciousness and memory
intact.
TORRES: Durst. Paris. What have you done with them?
SULAN: What is your exact age, Klingon.
TORRES: If you want me to answer your question, you will have to
answer one of mine first.
SULAN: Very well.
TORRES: What exactly have you done to me.
SULAN: I have reconstituted your genome. You are now purely Klingon.
TORRES: That’s not possible.
SULAN: I assure you it is. I have developed a procedure to stimulate
cell division. A kind of enhanced mitosis. Your Klingon genetic material
was extracted. It was then converted from matter to energy by our
genetron. Finally you were rematerialised as the purified Klingon
specimen that you are now.
TORRES: Why! Why have you done this!
SULAN: For generations my people have been searching the quadrant for
a species immune to our disease in the hope that it would lead us to a
cure.
TORRES: And you think Klingons are immune to this phage.
SULAN: I believe your genetic structure has phage-resistant
nucleotide sequences, yes. But I needed a pure specimen to be certain.
My people do not know it yet, but you are their greatest hope.
TORRES: I will never help you.
SULAN: You are very strong. I can only hope that you will be truly
resistant to the phage.
TORRES: And how will you know that?
SULAN: I have infected you.
[Dormitory]
PARIS: They’re the ones with the guns, remember.
DURST: We’ve got to find a way out of this place.
PARIS: Agreed. But I don’t want to do anything until we find out
what they’ve done with B’Elanna. In the meantime, we have to keep
track of the guards movements – how long are their shifts, when do
they eat, when do they sleep.
DURST: There don’t seem to be many of them. I guess they figure we’re
all so exhausted we don’t have any fight left.
PARIS: We’ll find an opening, Pete, and when the time is right we’ll
make our move. Something funny, friend?
TALAXIAN: You.
PARIS: Really. How’s that?
TALAXIAN: Nobody ever escapes from this place. Those Vidiian leeches
can yank the beating heart out of you in a heartbeat. Heart out of you
in a heartbeat. Now that’s funny.
DURST: Hilarious.
PARIS: Seems like you know this place pretty well.
TALAXIAN: I should, I’ve been here six years.
PARIS: Then tell me something. I thought those Vidiians were in the
business of harvesting organs. How come we’re all still in one piece?
TALAXIAN: The disease makes them weak, they need somebody to dig
their tunnels. That’s us. Best way to keep alive around here is to
stay strong.
PARIS: Thanks for the advice.
TALAXIAN: Don’t worry, they’re always in need of replacement body
parts. They’ll get around to gutting you eventually. There were 23 of
us from my ship. I’m the only one left.
PARIS: Listen. When they grabbed us there was a woman with us. B’Elanna
Torres. Any idea what might have happened to her?
TALAXIAN: If she’s not here, she’s been taken to organ
processing.
[Tunnels]
KIM: I’ve deployed the transponders Commander. The relay signal is
coming through clearly.
CHAKOTAY: Good work.
KIM: Any sign of them?
CHAKOTAY: According to my tricorder readings they definitely came
this way. The question is, where did they go from here?
KIM: Delightful spot to get lost.
TUVOK: Commander, Ensign. Over here.
CHAKOTAY: What is it.
TUVOK: I detect traces of at least five humanoid lifeforms.
KIM: Five? There were only three in the away team.
TUVOK: Evidently they did not enter this cavern alone.
[Sulan's Laboratory]
SULAN: Are you in pain?
TORRES: It’s nothing.
SULAN: Remarkable. One of the symptoms of the early stages of the
phage is excruciating joint pain. I find it extraordinary that you can
endure it. Some who have been infected have been known to die from the
agony itself.
TORRES: It’s going to take more than an infection to kill me.
SULAN: It appears you are correct. Your body’s successfully
fighting off the phage. I am overjoyed.
TORRES: How delightful for you.
SULAN: Soon we will begin a series of procedures replicating your
genetic code and attempting various methods of integrating your DNA with
our own. In time we’ll be successful and eliminate the phage forever.
When that time comes you will be honoured as a hero by my people.
TORRES: I know I’m the first Klingon you’ve ever seen so I’ll
tell you that Klingons find honour as warriors on the battlefield not as
guinea pigs in a laboratory.
SULAN: Earlier you accused me of mutilating you. Now you sound
positively proud to be Klingon. You have me to thank for that, B’Elanna.
TORRES: You’ll get no gratitude from me.
SULAN: Perhaps you’ll feel different in time, but I don’t blame
you for your obstinacy. I would be proud too, with a form as handsome as
yours . I believe Klingons are the most impressive species I have ever
seen.
[Dormitory]
TORRES: Tom. Tom, wake up.
PARIS: B’Elanna?
TORRES: Yeah, it’s me.
PARIS: B’Elanna, what have they done to you?
TORRES: I remember them grabbing us outside the caves and then I …
I guess I just blacked out.
PARIS: Yes, they stunned all of us.
TORRES: The next thing I knew, they were waking me up in some kind of
laboratory. I was so groggy I couldn’t see. I asked them what they had
done to me and then one of them said that they had completely extracted
my Klingon DNA.
PARIS: It doesn’t seem possible. You look human.
TORRES: I feel so weak, sick to my stomach.
PARIS: Considering what they’ve done to you, I’m not surprised.
TORRES: So strange.
PARIS: What?
TORRES: When I was a child, I did everything I could to hide my
forehead. Hats, scarves, you name it.
PARIS: When I was a kid, I wore a cap to cover the haircuts my father
used to make me get first day of every summer.
TORRES: I grew up on a colony on Kessick 4. My mother and I were the
only Klingons there and that was a time when relations between the
homeworld and the federation weren’t too cordial. Nobody ever said
anything, but we were different and I didn’t like that feeling. Then
my father left when I was five years old. One day he was there and the next
he wasn’t. I cried myself to sleep every night for months. Of course I
never told anybody, and then I finally decided that he’d left because
I look like a Klingon. And so I tried to look human.
PARIS: Looks like you finally got what you wanted.
[Tunnels]
TUVOK: Strange.
CHAKOTAY: What is?
TUVOK: According to our last geological scan this cave should
continue straight ahead for another eight kilometres.
KIM: This is solid granite, more than fifty metres.
CHAKOTAY: If these caves were changing configuration while we were
here, we certainly would have felt it.
TUVOK: True, Commander, but I do not believe there has been any
tectonic activity. I believe this wall is merely an illusion, a
disguised force field.
CHAKOTAY: Away team to Voyager.
JANEWAY [OC]: Go ahead Commander.
CHAKOTAY: We’ve run into some type of force field, Captain. One
minute we were reading an empty tunnel, and the next we walked right
into a solid wall of rock.
TUVOK: Captain, the energy configuration of the force field matrix is
virtually identical to those used by the Vidiians.
[Bridge]
JANEWAY: Mister Ayala, scan for any alien vessels in the sector.
Commander, we know from past experience that our phasers can disrupt
that forcefield. I want to find out what’s in there.
[Tunnels]
CHAKOTAY: Aye Captain
JANEWAY [OC]: But I don’t want you taking any unnecessary risks. We’ll
be standing by to implement an emergency beam out.
CHAKOTAY: Acknowledged. It’s not working, Captain.
JANEWAY [OC]: Try reconfiguring your phaser to match the band width
modulation.
KIM: Commander!
CHAKOTAY: Three to beam up!
[Sulan's Laboratory]
SULAN: B’Elanna? How are you feeling today?
TORRES: I feel strong. It’s very frustrating to be restrained like
this.
SULAN: I sympathise.
TORRES: I don’t like being chained up like an animal.
SULAN: I’m sorry, I wish there was some
TORRES: I’ve been thinking about what you said. It’s because of
you that I am Klingon and I do like this feeling. In a strange way I
suppose I am grateful. Did you know that Klingon females are renowned in
the Alpha Quadrant not only for their physical prowess but for their
voracious sexual appetites as well. Why not let your creation out of her
harness. Study her in action.
SULAN: I wish it were possible, B’Elanna, but I’m afraid I can’t
risk releasing you just yet. Forgive me.
TORRES: For what?
SULAN: Please, don’t condescend. I may have a grotesque appearance
but I assure you my instincts are finely honed, and I do have feelings.
Hard as it may be for you to imagine, B’Elanna, my people were once
handsome and vigorous like yours, and with your help we will be again.
Perhaps when that time comes I will not disgust you quite so much as I
do now.
[Dormitory]
PARIS: They’re coming to take us to the work details. You can’t
let them see how sick you are.
TORRES: Maybe if they think I’m too weak they’ll leave me behind.
I could try to get my hands on that console over there.
PARIS: Maybe they’ll skip the preliminaries and take you straight
to organ processing.
VIDIIAN GUARD: You. Come with me.
DURST: What for.
VIDIIAN GUARD: You asked to contact your ship. The Prefect wishes to
discuss your request.
PARIS: I’m the senior officer here. If your superiors want to talk
with one of us, it should be me. He’s not going anywhere without me.
TORRES: Tom, don’t. They’ll kill you.
VIDIIAN GUARD: Stop!
DURST: It’s okay Tom. They’re the ones with the guns, remember?
PARIS: What is it?
[Bridge]
JANEWAY: Now that the Vidiians know we’re here, we have to be
prepared for the possibility they’ll call in reinforcements.
KIM: So far long range sensors haven’t located any alien vessels
near here.
TUVOK: However, it is possible that the same technology that
disguises their forcefields, cloaks their ships.
CHAKOTAY: The other thing we have to consider is that the prisoners
may be at greater risk now.
KIM: Captain, take a look at this. Using our tricorder data I’ve
been able to scan the entire planet for the forcefield signature. It
looks like the field surrounds an area more than six hundred Kilometres in
circumference.
JANEWAY: Is there any way to scan inside it?
KIM: Every reconfiguration I’ve tried has failed.
JANEWAY: If it’s the same kind of forcefield that the Vidiians used
the last time we ran into them, why didn’t our phasers breach it?
TUVOK: Apparently it has been adapted to repulse phaser fire.
JANEWAY: If the Vidiians can move in and out of there, so can we.
Start setting up simulations. Find a way to get through that forcefield.
[Sulann's Laboratory]
SULAN: B’Elanna? I have something I want to show you.
TORRES: Durst.
SULAN: I thought perhaps this new face would make you more
comfortable with me.
TORRES: You’ve killed him.
SULAN: Yes, B’Elanna, but his organs will save more than a dozen
lives.
[Briefing room]
KIM: Deep level scans have revealed a network of microfissures,
miniscule openings that develop each time the field matrix remodulates.
JANEWAY: Just how small are these microfissures?
KIM: Less than one micron. And they close up within a few seconds.
JANEWAY: Would it be possible to use our phasers to expand one of
these openings as it’s forming?
TUVOK: That was our first thought. But we realised such an attempt
would have to be at close range and would carry the risk of alerting the
Vidiians to our presence.
KIM: So then it occurred to us. If we could narrow the transporters
energy beam tightly enough, it might be possible to transport one of us
through the microfissures.
TUVOK: Of course, timing the transport to the precise moment of an
opening would be critical.
CHAKOTAY: But if we could get someone inside, we might be able to
find our people, and also deactivate the forcefield.
JANEWAY: And then, presumably, we could beam everyone back to the
ship.
TUVOK: Precisely. But you should be aware that because we are
incapable of scanning beyond the forcefield we will have no way of
communicating with whoever transports inside it. Nor will we be able to
verify that the transport has been successfully completed.
JANEWAY: Moreover, what’s to prevent whoever goes in from being
captured by the Vidiians.
CHAKOTAY: I have an idea about that, Captain.
[Sickbay]
EMH: Dermal stimulator, please.
KES: Remarkable work, Doctor.
EMH: If you think this is remarkable, you should see me remove a
bunion.
TUVOK: I have done my best to replicate Vidiian attire. I trust it
will prove sufficiently convincing.
CHAKOTAY: It’s a fine piece of work, Mister Tuvok. Next time I need a
tailor, I’ll know just where to look.
[Tunnels]
VIDIIAN GUARD: Quickly now. In there!
PARIS: Here, B’Elanna, sit down.
TALAXIAN: Here. It’s water.
PARIS: Thanks.
TALAXIAN: Rest while you can. The guard won’t be back right away.
Keep it.
TORRES: Tom, I’ve been thinking. When they did this thing to me, I
think it changed more than just the way I look.
PARIS: What do you mean?
TORRES: Back there, when they took Durst away, I was terrified.
PARIS: No one could blame you for that.
TORRES: You don’t understand. I’ve been in worse situations but I’ve
never felt like that before. Never. I mean, my heart was pounding and my
hands were shaking. I didn’t even try to help you.
PARIS: B’Elanna, I’m no doctor, but I have to believe that what
ever they did to you has seriously depleted your strength. There’s
nothing you could have done.
TORRES: No, that’s not it. I think that when they extracted my
Klingon DNA, they turned me into some kind of a coward.
PARIS: Sometimes fear can be a good thing. Keeps you from taking
unnecessary chances. Courage doesn’t mean that you don’t have fear.
It means that you’ve learnt to overcome it. And I know that you can
find the courage to hold on until we can find a way out of this place.
VIDIIAN GUARD: What’s going on here.
PARIS: She’s ill, she needed a rest.
VIDIIAN GUARD: If she’s too weak I’ll take her back to the
barracks.
TORRES: That’s okay, Tom. Maybe if I’m there I can try to make
contact with the ship.
[Transporter Room]
KIM: The emitter array has been initialised, Captain.
JANEWAY: Good. Are you ready, Mister Chakotay?
TUVOK: Captain. There’s an opening forming in the forcefield.
KIM: Initiating auto sequence.
TUVOK: Targeting scanners to match co-ordinates. Scanners locked.
JANEWAY: On my mark, Mister Kim. Energise. Well. Now we wait.
[Tunnels]
TORRES: Make a sound and I’ll break your neck, understand? I’m
looking for my friend, Tom Paris, a human male. Have you seen him?
Talaxian: He was here, but they sent him to another tunnel.
TORRES: Which one.
Talaxian: Back that way. There was another human with him but they
took her back to the barracks.
TORRES: A human female?
[Dormitory]
VIDIIAN GUARD: I need your help here. What are you doing. Come with
us.
TORRES: Where are you taking me?
VIDIIAN GUARD: A shower and a hot meal.
TORRES: No, please.
[Tunnels]
KLINGON TORRES: Wake up, petaQ! Eat!
HUMAN TORRES: What is it?
KLINGON TORRES: Some rodent I killed.
HUMAN TORRES: No thanks.
KLINGON TORRES: I’m sorry I can’t replicate you a soufflé but
you need nourishment. I can’t carry you all the way out of here.
HUMAN TORRES: How are we supposed to escape this place? There are
guards everywhere.
KLINGON TORRES: We fight our way out.
HUMAN TORRES: Maybe you haven’t noticed, but I’m not exactly in
fighting form.
KLINGON TORRES: That’s why you need food. Eat. So, you’re what’s
left over when all the Klingon DNA is taken out.
HUMAN TORRES: Apparently.
KLINGON TORRES: If I hadn’t come along, were you just going to
waste away in that prison camp until they killed you for your body
parts? Were you too frightened to act?
HUMAN TORRES: I was looking for a way to escape.
KLINGON TORRES: Looking! I’ll show you the way to escape! This and
this.
HUMAN TORRES: That’s the way you respond every situation, isn’t
it? If it doesn’t work, hit it. If it’s in your way, knock it down.
No wonder I got kicked out of the academy .
KLINGON TORRES: For which you should be eternally grateful.
HUMAN TORRES: Well, I’m not! Your temper has gotten me into trouble
more times that I … listen to me. Listen to us. This is ridiculous. Do
you realise we’re each fighting with our self.
KLINGON TORRES: I’m not the one who’s fighting, petaQ. If I
remember correctly, I’m the one who rescued you from that prison and
carried you here. Don’t you think you could at least acknowledge that?
Can’t you even admit that you won’t be able to get out of here
without me?
HUMAN TORRES: I don’t know that I can get out of here with you.
Brute force isn’t going to do it.
KLINGON TORRES: Maybe not. Maybe we’ll die in the attempt. But that’s
better than sitting here like frightened tik’kah cats doing nothing.
HUMAN TORRES: There you go again. Out of control. Just leaping into
action before you think things through.
KLINGON TORRES: Fine. You stay here. I’m getting out.
HUMAN TORRES: No, wait a minute, that’s not what I meant. I’m
sorry. Please, just before you rescued me, I logged onto the Vidiian’s
computer system. I only had a few seconds, but I think I found a way to
access the force field that’s cloaking this place. With a few minutes
more I could have deactivated it.
KLINGON TORRES: Then Voyager could get a lock on us, beam us back.
Paris too.
HUMAN TORRES: It may not be as exciting as fighting our way out, but
it stands a much better chance of working. If I have your help.
KLINGON TORRES: So. You need me.
HUMAN TORRES: I can’t get back to that computer without you. And
you’ll have to cover for me while I work.
KLINGON TORRES: We can’t go to the prison barracks. There are too
many guards there. In the lab where they were holding me, there was a
security console. That’s the last place they would expect us to be.
[Dormitory]
TALAXIAN: They must have taken her to organ processing.
PARIS: Tell me how to get there. Keep your hands off me.
CHAKOTAY: Whatever you say, Paris, but I thought you might like to
get out of this place.
PARIS: Chakotay?
CHAKOTAY: Where are Torres and Durst?
PARIS: I think they’ve been taken to what the Vidiians call organ
processing.
VIDIIAN GUARD: You! Why are you talking to that prisoner.
CHAKOTAY: I was ordered to take him to organ processing.
VIDIIAN GUARD: Why wasn’t I notified?
CHAKOTAY: I was told you had been.
VIDIIAN GUARD: I’ve never seen you before.
CHAKOTAY: My face was just grafted.
VIDIIAN GUARD: Very well. Take him. But from now on I expect to be
notified in advance of all transfers.
CHAKOTAY: Yes, sir.
[Sulan's Laboratory]
KLINGON TORRES: There.
HUMAN TORRES: I have to bypass the security code so I can access the
force field grid. Then I’ll have a better idea of what we’re dealing
with. That should do it. There! That’s what we’re up against, and I
think we’re here.
KLINGON TORRES: Can you shut it down?
HUMAN TORRES: I’m working on it.
KLINGON TORRES: What now.
HUMAN TORRES: If they didn’t know we were here before, they do now.
Take it easy, I’ll be done in a minute.
KLINGON TORRES: You’re not frightened any more, are you.
HUMAN TORRES: Maybe I just don’t have time to think about it. Are
you hurt?
KLINGON TORRES: Keep working.
SULAN: B’Elanna, stop!
KLINGON TORRES: You’re not going to hurt me. You need me.
SULAN: You’re right. But if you do not surrender I will kill her.
CHAKOTAY: Drop it!
SULAN: Who are you?
KLINGON TORRES: That’s what I want to know.
CHAKOTAY: It’s Chakotay!
HUMAN TORRES: I think I’ve just about accessed the forcefield.
KLINGON TORRES: Hurry!
HUMAN TORRES: Got it! There!
[Bridge]
TUVOK: Captain, the forcefield has been disrupted.
JANEWAY: Mister Kim, can you get a lock on Commander Chakotay?
CHAKOTAY: {OC} Chakotay to Voyager, do you read?
JANEWAY: Loud and clear, Commander.
[Sulan's Laboratory]
CHAKOTAY: I’ve found them, Captain
KLINGON TORRES: No!
SULAN: No!
CHAKOTAY: Three humans and one Klingon to beam up.
[Transporter room]
PARIS: She’s badly wounded, Captain.
HUMAN TORRES: Beam her to sickbay.
KLINGON TORRES: Don’t. No time. You showed true courage. It makes
my death an honourable one.
[Sickbay]
EMH: Using tissue from your counterpart, I can replicate the Klingon
DNA, then over the course of several days, I’ll reintegrate that
genetic material into your cellular structure.
TORRES: Wait a minute. You’re not saying that you’re going to
change me back?
EMH: That’s precisely what I’m saying. Your cell's ability to
synthesis proteins has been severely compromised. You need the Klingon
genes to survive.
TORRES: So. She’s saving my life again.
EMH: I’ll get started on the DNA.
CHAKOTAY: How are you doing?
TORRES: I’m not sure. It’s been a pretty strange experience. I do
know that right now, the way I am, I’m more at peace with myself than
I’ve ever been before. And that’s a good feeling.
CHAKOTAY: But.
TORRES: I’m incomplete. It doesn’t feel like me. I guess I’ve
had someone else living inside of me for too long to feel right without
her.
CHAKOTAY: I’d have to say that you two made quite a team down
there.
TORRES: I know. I came to admire a lot of things about her. Her
strength, her bravery. I guess I just have to accept the fact that I’ll
spend the rest of my life fighting with her.