Star Trek: Strange New Worlds (2022) s02e01 Episode Script
The Broken Circle
1
♪
Last season on
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
PIKE: The Klingon War is over.
The Enterprise was on
its five-year mission.
Missing the war
took a toll on my crew.
I've let something out.
[ROARS] My emotions.
Rage. Pain.
I can't control it.
CHAPEL: It doesn't make you weak.
It makes you human.
LA'AN: I'd like to request
a formal leave of absence.
I found a lead on Oriana,
the girl we rescued from the Gorn.
If I said no, would it
make a difference?
I am resigning my commission.
- I'm an Illyrian.
- Rejected.
What do we do when Starfleet finds out?
You let me worry about Starfleet.
The hell is going on?
BATEL: I'm arresting
Commander Una Chin-Riley
for violations of our anti-genetic
modification directive.
I really am sorry.
So am I.
This isn't over.
♪
PIKE: Captain's log, stardate 2369.2.
Enterprise is in spacedock
at Starbase One.
The crew is taking
some well-deserved leave
while Chief Fleet Inspector
Commander Pelia
and her team from
Operational Support Services
are running comprehensive inspections,
systems checks and upgrades.
I've had my hands full on Enterprise
getting everything ready.
But even from afar,
I sense a tension here among
the brass that I can't pin down.
The feeling that
something is in the air.
But right now I have a crisis
closer to home to deal with.
- You're not giving up.
- UNA: Chris.
Did you manage to even talk to her?
She won't respond.
She won't take my calls either.
There must be other lawyers
who can handle this.
I lied about my species
on an application to Starfleet.
Let's just say this is not a plum case.
She's the only one
who might even try to fight it.
So we go public.
- They can't ignore your record.
- No.
This is my life. I'm not
letting my mistakes ruin yours.
- Una.
- [SIGHS] Anyway
I hear they're going
to offer me a plea deal.
You cannot resign.
The loss to Enterprise
would be unimaginable.
To me.
Don't start a fight you can't win.
You taught me that.
You didn't start this. They did.
And we're going to find a way to
win because it's what's right.
There's the Boy Scout in you again.
- I'm gonna talk to her myself, face-to-face.
- Oh, sure,
just take three days off from
being captain of the Enterprise
to go to the other side of the quadrant
and get a door slammed in your face.
Two and a half
in one of the newer shuttles.
I'll be back before Enterprise's
inspections are complete.
Chris, you're being ridiculous.
If she's your only shot
at fighting this,
I have to try.
Just hang in there, Number One.
That's an order. Pike out.
SPOCK: And while you
take this short leave
for personal reasons,
I will be acting captain
of the Enterprise?
PIKE: You don't sound excited, Spock.
I will remind you half our crew
is on shore leave.
And we still lack
a chief engineer
as well as a head of security.
Additionally,
Commander Chin-Riley's loss
- is acutely felt.
- Helping Una
is exactly why I have to go.
Take it easy, Mr. Spock.
You won't ever even
have to leave spacedock.
What is the human expression?
Famous last words.
Hey, I have faith in you.
See you in three days.
[DOOR WHOOSHES OPEN]
M'BENGA: Increased heart rate.
Heightened pain in the neck,
jaw and lower back.
If I didn't know better,
I'd say you were experiencing
what we humans call stress.
[SIGHS] That is atypical.
As you know, Vulcan emotions
are stronger than human ones.
But your people control them
through suppressive cognitive blocks.
Indeed.
When you unleashed your anger
to combat the Gorn,
you removed those blocks.
Now all your emotions
are flowing more freely.
Doctor, the captain has put me
in command of the Enterprise
for the next three days.
I am concerned my emotions
may impact my judgement.
You'll just have to learn
to live with them.
Like we all do.
- I would prefer not to.
- Mr. Spock,
may I offer a more human therapy?
All Vulcans study music, yes?
For its mathematical properties.
Humans use it as a way
of channeling emotion into expression.
[PLAYING A GRACEFUL TUNE]
Lovely.
[PLAYING CONTINUES]
And your heart rate is going down.
- [DOOR WHOOSHES OPEN]
- [OUT-OF-TUNE CHORD]
[PLAYING STOPS]
CHAPEL: Doctor.
Lieutenant.
Just letting you know
I'm coming on duty.
Of course. Thank you, nurse.
If you'll excuse me.
Fascinating.
Isn't that typically his line?
It's just that when he saw you, I
Don't even.
No, no. I wouldn't.
Was there something else?
It's about that fellowship
the archeological medicine.
I'm thinking about applying.
I'm going to have to
replace you, aren't I?
It's two months on Vulcan.
You're not getting rid of me that easy.
[MITCHELL SIGHS]
More inspectors than crew on this ship.
The pitch and yaw controls
are reversed from standard.
Standard positions aren't quick enough.
And I don't like getting shot,
so I adjusted them.
Highly irregular.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
Excuse me.
Oh, no, you don't.
Uh, I need to install
a secure comms patch.
- That'll reboot the system.
- And?
And we'll be off-line.
Even the emergency bands.
Figure a few hours of radio silence
would be welcome at communications.
Let me get a secondary comms on line.
No offense, but we're in spacedock.
How many hails are you getting?
[BOARD STARTS TRILLING, BEEPING]
I just need a second.
- It'll only be a few minutes.
- UHURA: And I have a job to do.
This is my station.
So if you don't mind?
Thank you.
[SIGHS]
[PLAYING A GRACEFUL TUNE]
[OUT-OF-TUNE CHORDS]
[DOOR CHIMES]
Come in.
Lieutenant. Sorry for the interruption.
Did I hear music?
What can I do for you, Ensign?
I wanted to talk to you about
an odd signal variance I picked up.
Could you not simply have called?
Internal comms are being rebooted.
It originated in the Cajitar system.
Cajitar is on the edge of Klingon space.
Yes, sir. At first,
I thought it was random signal shifting.
But I ran it through
meta-pattern analysis,
and it's a distress signal.
Who is it from?
La'An, sir.
Permission denied, Lieutenant.
But sir, if it is from
Lieutenant Noonien-Singh,
she has indicated she is
in dire need of our aid.
Well, if it is from Lieutenant
Noonien-Singh, then I remind you
that she's been on voluntary
leave from Starfleet for months.
Nevertheless, the message is dire.
It states: "Dangerous situation
on Cajitar 4.
Resources of Enterprise critical.
Anti-Federation threat".
How much do you know about Cajitar 4?
It is a dilithium mining planet
on the edge of Klingon space.
A prodigious dilithium mining planet.
Since the war,
the colony's been governed
by a painstakingly-negotiated treaty.
We alternate our access
with the Klingons.
For the next 30 days,
it's the Klingons' show.
We turn up during their shift,
they'll consider it an act of war.
There's no way we risk
a resumption of hostilities
with the Klingons over a vague message
which may or may not be from
a former member of Starfleet.
We'll check it out when we
get access to the planet back
next month. And even
if it really is your friend,
she's gonna have to
fend for herself until then.
April out.
UHURA: He's wrong. That message
has to be from La'An. She knows
our maintenance schedule.
It-it was beamed right at us.
Still, it could be a deception.
Even a trap.
The admiral was pretty definitive.
Yeah.
Our former comrade is in trouble.
She has indicated
aid to her is essential
for the safety of the Federation.
I will need your help to get
the inspectors off the ship
and achieve our objective. But
I will not ask you to do
something you believe is wrong.
If you wish to leave
or report this plan,
I will not stand in your way.
What plan?
I would have thought it obvious.
We must steal the Enterprise.
PIKE: Space.
The final frontier.
These are the voyages
of the starship Enterprise.
Its five-year mission:
to explore strange new worlds,
to seek out new life
and new civilizations,
to boldly go where no one
has gone before.
♪
♪
♪
♪
[ALARM BLARING]
UHURA [ON P.A.]:
Attention all personnel.
We have detected a cooling leak
in the intermix chamber.
All non-essential crew members
are ordered to evacuate
the ship immediately.
[ALARM CONTINUES BLARING]
Commander Pelia. We are at red alert.
- Perhaps you did not hear the evacuation order?
- PELIA: Yes.
Never mind me. I'm just
finishing up my inspection.
SPOCK: But readings indicate a loss
of antimatter containment.
Hmm. In the same intermix
chamber that my team spent
three days evaluating, and
found nothing wrong with.
- Huh!
- SPOCK: Commander, I am alarmed at your lack of concern.
At what?
At the textbook signs
of a warp core breach?
You do know that I teach a course
in warp core breaches
at the Academy, yes?
I didn't realize that.
Yes, well, if you had taken it,
you would know that
heightened temperatures
around the intermix chamber
is the single factor
most commonly mistaken
for an imminent breach.
Ooh, would you look at that.
Someone accidentally
simulated a coolant leak on the sensors.
If I didn't know any better, I'd say
- it was on purpose.
- SPOCK: Commander Pelia,
I am not sure what you are implying.
I'm not implying anything.
I'm flat-out saying
someone violated about
17 Starfleet regulations.
Well, perhaps while you're theorizing,
you might explain why
anyone would engage in such subterfuge.
Mm.
I can think of one reason.
To steal the Enterprise.
Or do you want to tell me that's
not what's happening here?
Yes, you can always count on a Vulcan's
inability to lie.
Another thing I know about Vulcans.
They don't do things
without a good reason.
Do you have a good reason
to steal the ship?
I am having what
you humans call a hunch.
A Vulcan with a hunch. That's a new one.
And not just any Vulcan.
Amanda Grayson's son.
- How do you know my
- Well, if you're going to
steal a starship, do it correctly.
Helm, can you vent
ionized plasma from the warp nacelles?
I could, but
should I?
- Why are you helping us?
- Oh, please.
We can spend a lot of time
talking about this or we can go.
You decide.
Vent the nacelles on my mark.
PELIA: Ha!
[LOUD BOOM]
[ALARM BLARING]
Emergency transmission from
Starbase One Docking Control.
They are blowing the docking clamps
and ordering us to make space
between the ship and the station.
I notice you're short a chief
engineer on this mission.
Indeed.
Be happy to sub in.
Been a hundred years
since I've gone out
with engines of my own.
A hundred years? Really?
It's a long story.
A really long story.
[LAUGHS]
That's the accent. You're Lanthanite.
Guilty as charged.
[BOARD BEEPS]
Starbase One is hailing us, sir.
Ms. Ortegas.
Nacelles recharged and ready.
SPOCK: Starbase One will have to wait.
The Cajitar system.
Warp factor five.
You gonna say it?
Your thing?
My what?
Your thing. You know.
Everyone in the chair has their thing.
Captain Pike always says "hit it".
My last captain liked to say "zoom".
Must I have a thing?
Do you have a thing?
Well, I've been workshopping
"vamanos".
But it's supposed to be about you.
What kind of commander
are you? All that.
So, no presh.
I would like the ship to go.
Now.
ORTEGAS: Aye aye, Captain.
♪
[WHOOPING, CHANTING, INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[KLINGONS CHEERING]
[CHUCKLES]
Beat that, human.
Drink.
Drink! Drink!
[CROWD WHOOPING RHYTHMICALLY]
[CROWD EXCLAIMS]
[BURPS]
[EXCLAIMS]
Was that watered-down?
[GROWLS]
[EXCLAIMS]
[GRUNTS]
MALE: Hey, he's got it!
Oh, oh
Oh! [LAUGHS]
Don't try to hide half the wine
in your beard again, Kr'Dogh.
[SHOUTS]
[CROWD ROARS]
[BURPS]
[COUGHS]
MALE: Oh, oh! Oh!
- [KR'DOGH GAGS]
- Oh!
[CROWD CHEERS]
You know what I really want.
I can set the meeting, but I am not sure
Greynax will meet with you, human.
Well, it's sweet that
you worry about my problems.
Set it for tonight.
You better find Kr'Dogh before he
throws up on the wrong person.
Stole the Enterprise?
SPOCK: Yes. You said it was urgent.
Wow. I would have lost so many bets.
Yeah, Vulcans can surprise you.
Thank you for coming. All of you.
What's going on?
The little girl who
survived the Gorn Oriana.
I was trying to find her parents.
Uh, we tracked them here.
And they'd thought she was dead.
Sounds like a happy ending.
Well, up until the war, this planet
had provided, uh,
a steady flow of dilithium
to both sides, like it does now.
But after the war started,
so many ships being destroyed,
dilithium constantly
needing to be replenished,
this place became a promised land.
Ore was dug up and auctioned off
to the highest bidder
at astronomical prices.
Fortunes were minted daily
and the mining syndicate
got a piece of every single one.
Then, suddenly, peace.
A new syndicate made up of
ex-Klingon and Federation soldiers
has decided that
peace isn't good for business.
And they have one ideology:
profit.
They want to re-start the war.
- Restart the war how?
- LA'AN: All I know is
they've been looking
to get their hands on as much
Federation tech as possible.
Then, a few days ago,
there was an explosion at the mine.
Half the town got sick
from ion exposure.
Including Oriana's parents.
Ion radiation is not naturally
occurring from dilithium.
But it can be created
by photon torpedoes.
That is correct.
We both served in
the Klingon War. Doc here just
likes to read up
on weapons systems is all.
Yes. A hundred million
Federation bodies, slaughtered.
And for what a parsec
of space or two?
And now some want to resume that
theater of horror for profit?
Where are, um, Oriana
and her parents now?
Med tent. They're short on
everything doctors, supplies.
We have med kits with us.
SPOCK: See what aid you can provide.
But keep a low profile.
Ensign Uhura and I will stay to assist
- in your investigation.
- I have a rendezvous with
three potential buyers
tonight as well, so
Wait. Ensign?
You go away, you miss things.
Seems I do.
CHAPEL: This is not good.
It is not.
Dr. M'Benga! Nurse Chapel!
Well, looks like our cover's blown.
I'm so glad to see you guys.
My parents
Try an inducing recombination
to repair genetic damage.
Hey.
This should have you feeling better
in about a day.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
Nice tech.
You medical?
Just in from off-world.
Looking to trade at market.
I hate to bust up your plans,
but we could use your services.
Who's we?
Follow me.
[FEMALE SPEAKING KLINGON]
UHURA: I think your prom dates
just arrived.
Three Klingons approaching.
Copy.
[FEMALE CONTINUES SPEAKING KLINGON]
SPOCK: Is that Klingon
they are speaking?
I do not recognize it.
Kach-Ugh, I think.
It's a pretty obscure dialect,
but I can make out the syntax.
Were you followed?
Yes. But then I cut their throats
and they stopped following me.
Leaving bodies to find when
we don't want anyone looking.
This is the Klingon shift
on this miserable world.
Bodies pile up. Did you
bring what you promised?
I thought Klingons hated
Federation weapons.
Why buy them?
That is not your concern.
You promised two dozen.
This is barely half that.
Well, it's what I have to sell.
I'll pay a third.
- I'm charging double.
- Double?
For half the weapons you promised?
You don't like the questions,
you don't like the price.
And what would stop me
from just taking them
from a tiny woman like you?
[DEVICE WHIRRS]
This is an anti-matter
detonation switch.
You better hope I don't let go.
Unless you're keen on losing
the bottom half of your body?
Are you sure
you have no Klingon blood in you?
Double for this lot.
But I need more.
I'll see what I can do.
Well done, Lieutenant.
What's an anti-matter detonation switch?
It's not a thing, is it?
Yeah, no, definitely not a thing.
I was able to parse out some
of what they were saying,
and whatever they're planning,
it's happening tomorrow.
Should we call Starfleet?
Not until we have solid proof.
I do not relish another call
with the admiral without it.
Now let's get back
to the Enterprise and see what
Nurse Chapel and Dr. M'Benga have found.
Chief Jay.
Ready when you are.
Roger that, Mr. Spock. Small problem:
I've been tracking
the doctor and Nurse Chapel,
and we lost their signal
about an hour ago.
I'm not a cave person,
but this is for sure
the biggest I've ever seen.
Decades of dilithium mining.
How do you think they got that in here?
I think they built it.
Move. Now!
[PATIENT MOANING]
M'BENGA: Ion burns everywhere.
This level of scarring
is normally too deep to treat.
But, fortunately, your
dermal system is redundant.
You've treated Klingons before.
- Where?
- It doesn't matter.
Tell me, or I'll cut out your tongue
so you spread no more lies.
Years ago I was stationed
on the moon of J'gal.
Now I know you are lying.
If you had served
on J'gal, you'd be dead.
[DEVICE STOPS]
Do you know that after
the battle of ChaKana,
there was so much blood in the air
the rain turned red?
Ror'Queg. Are you fit for duty now?
M'BENGA: I'm done with him.
Hey. You good?
I'm fine.
You sure?
You want me to tell you this
is not bringing everything back.
I can't.
But I can tell you I'm in control.
The war's over, Joseph.
Yes, but how can it ever be?
I'm fine.
Have you learned anything useful?
Um, yeah. The
severity of the burns suggest
the photon torpedoes are on this ship.
Maybe with all the other Federation tech
they've managed to acquire.
Why?
If you have a Federation ship
in the middle
of a territorial dispute
You could use it to attack the Klingons.
Start the war all over again.
We have to warn Enterprise.
There must be comms
somewhere here on the bridge.
So, we just waltz up there,
say, "Mind if we make a call?"
M'BENGA: You know this
can help us get there.
If it's important enough.
Do you ever not carry it?
No.
Hey.
Sure you want to do this again?
Again, no.
But I'm not seeing a better choice.
♪
[ALL GRUNTING]
♪
Oh! Oh
Tell me about this plan.
- And how to stop it.
- Or what?
[GRUNTS]
I know about your Federation
rules against torture.
[GRUNTING]
What defenses does your group have?
How many in your number?! What weapons?!
[GRUNTING]
[GAGGING]
He can't answer you if he's dead.
Joseph. Joseph!
30 soldiers.
On the bridge. Engineering.
Armed with phasers, phase-rifles,
Klingon disruptors.
Is there a transponder on the ship?
I will never.
Deck 13.
M'BENGA: The engines are warming up.
CHAPEL: I thought transponders
could only broadcast
a ship's name and class
to other Federation vessels.
I can reprogram it
to send a simple message.
[KLINGONS SHOUTING IN DISTANCE]
We need to move. Now.
I need a minute.
I'll buy you a minute.
[GRUNTING]
[KLINGON SHOUTS]
Got it.
Better find a way off this ship.
[GRUNTS] Airlock.
Unless you've got enough juice
for another dance.
I think it's running out.
Better hurry.
[KLINGON SHOUTS]
[GRUNTING]
Aah!
♪
♪
♪
♪
♪
ORTEGAS: Klingon battle
cruiser just warped in.
SPOCK: Red alert, Ms. Uhura.
Any indication they have seen us?
I'm reading internal comms only.
All coded,
but the activity is pretty
standard for arrival in orbit.
We haven't tripped any alarms yet, sir.
ORTEGAS: We're in low-power mode,
surrounded by interstellar ice
and rock with
a high internal iron content.
From their POV, we look like space junk.
You sound confident, Lt. Ortegas.
I've hidden from enough Klingons
to know when to take a breather.
MITCHELL: Battle cruiser moving away.
UHURA: Sir.
We're being hailed. On a secure channel.
By whom?
No luck locating M'Benga or Chapel.
- Anything your end?
- SPOCK: Negative.
Wherever they are must be shielded.
And a Klingon cruiser has arrived.
All my contacts in the
Broken Circle have vanished,
so whatever they're gonna do,
it must be something that's
Holy
MITCHELL: Sir,
I'm reading a launch from the surface.
It's a ship.
On screen.
That's one of ours.
Crossfield class, I think.
And it's headed right toward
that battle cruiser.
A Crossfield's no match
for a heavy cruiser.
- Well, we can't just let them get shot.
- UHURA: Uh, Lt. Spock?
That ship's transponder ping is off.
- Off?
- It's sending standard ident codes,
but the signal keeps flickering.
- Faulty?
- UHURA: No.
It's a pattern. A code.
Uh, Morse 2, I think.
- What is it saying?
- It's spelling
"Enterprise
destroy this ship".
Do you think they're reading
the transponder signal?
[POUNDING]
How long until they get in?
Five minutes,
if they have a laser torch.
Less, if they have a grenade.
We're in space.
They can't be that stupid.
Or maybe they can.
What do we do?
Let's get those lockers open.
See if they have any EV suits.
If the Klingons see that ship,
it will start a war.
Indeed.
In fact, Ms. Ortegas,
I surmise that is likely
its precise intention.
I believe the Federation ship is part of
a false flag operation.
I think the extremists
intend to use the ship
to attack the Klingons as a way
of reigniting hostilities
with the Federation. I theorize
that Dr. M'Benga and
Nurse Chapel were indeed
taken by the extremists and were able
to reconfigure the transponder
to give us a warning.
Sir, what if Nurse Chapel
and Dr. M'Benga
are still on that ship?
They thought it worth their lives
to prevent another war.
Logical.
Federation ship in firing range.
MITCHELL: Mr. Spock,
what are your orders?
Follow the false Federation ship.
Stay in weapons range,
but hold your fire.
And do not let the Klingons
know that we are here.
Got it.
If we don't destroy it before
we get out of the rings,
the Klingons are going
to see both of us.
That's definitely gonna start a war.
- Shields at 80%.
- Mr. Spock,
- should I return fire?
- Not yet.
- 70%.
- Copy. That is the last time
they dent our paint job.
MITCHELL: They fired an array
of torpedoes.
I think they're cutting through.
There's a beacon in the helmet.
And an attitude jet in the pack.
So, we just jump into space
without an EV suit?
The beacon will activate
once we're in space.
I can use the attitude jet
to guide us away from the ship.
Only we'll be dead.
Not necessarily.
It'll take almost a minute
for us to freeze to death.
Don't worry.
We'll pass out after 15 seconds.
I know it's a terrible idea.
Yeah, it's terrible.
Let's get to it, then.
MITCHELL: They're heading
straight for the Klingons.
Stay on that ship, Ms. Ortegas.
- Pedal to the metal, sir.
- Sir, they're in
sensor range
of the Klingon battle cruiser.
- There's only time for one shot.
- ORTEGAS: Photon torpedoes
locked on the Federation ship.
Full spread.
Mr. Spock?
SPOCK: Not yet. Any signal
from Nurse Chapel or Dr. M'Benga?
UHURA: Nothing, sir.
I can't believe this is how
we're gonna die.
We've gotten out of worse.
No, not really.
I suppose not.
ORTEGAS: Mr. Spock, it's now or never.
Fire photon torpedoes!
♪
Sir, I'm detecting a
Federation EV suit transponder.
Bridge to transport.
Lock on to that signal
and beam them aboard now.
♪
I waited.
I waited.
I waited for you.
You don't die. You don't die.
You do not die!
[GASPS, WHEEZES]
Why you got to be so rough?
UHURA: Lt. Spock, we're being hailed
by the Klingon captain.
CAPTAIN D'CHOK: What
is the meaning of this?
Hiding?
Trespassing?
Destroying your own ship
in order to cover your tracks?
We were in fact pursuing a rogue vessel
- which intended to do you harm.
- Absurd.
Why else would I tell you
the ship was not ours
if it was indeed ours?
To cover your own failure
in the face of our superior might.
But we destroyed the ship.
You anticipated defeat.
And now you're stalling for another day.
Captain, your sensors did not detect us
until we fired on
the false Federation vessel.
Could we not have as easily
fired on yours?
But why should I trust you?
SPOCK: I am Vulcan.
And as I believe your people know,
Vulcans cannot lie.
I care little for what legends say.
I know a man's truth
only when I look into his eyes,
face-to-face.
So be it.
Perhaps we can conclude this discussion
over a barrel of bloodwine?
You drink bloodwine?
I have been known to.
This is something I must see.
You're no typical Vulcan.
No.
It would seem I am not.
- D'CHOK: Yah!
- [INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[SPEAKS KLINGON]
Indeed.
[CROWD EXCLAIMING]
- Ah.
- Ah.
[MUG CLANGS]
[D'CHOK CHUCKLES]
[CLEARS THROAT, COUGHS]
Well, uh, listen, I think my Klingon
might be a little rusty,
but did he just say
"may your blood scream?"
A Klingon toast,
the true meaning of which
is becoming clear to me.
Right. [CLEARS THROAT]
Well, thank you
for getting me out of the Academy.
Are you actually Lanthanite?
Oh, a couple of drinks
and you get personal
that it, flyboy?
I am.
I have always been
fascinated by your people.
That you managed to live
on Earth among other humans
undetected until
the 22nd century is remarkable.
You know your mother was one of
the first people I came out to.
I did not.
But that's a tale for another time.
And now you teach engineering
at Starfleet Academy?
Taught.
You asked me why I helped you.
You want to know the worst thing
about living almost forever?
The loss of those you love.
Oh, you sweet
un-Vulcan Vulcan.
No.
That's a pain shared
by all those who live
with even a half-open heart.
No.
It's boredom.
And on that ship of yours,
there seems to be a shortage of that.
I like it.
- Hm.
- I might even try and stick around.
Huh?
Huh?
[LAUGHS]
Another?
Please.
To the Vulcan
who acts nothing like a Vulcan.
- [LAUGHS]
- [CHEERING]
ORIANA: La'An!
Just promise you'll
stay out of trouble, okay?
I will if you will.
[BOTH CHUCKLE]
Where are you gonna go now?
Um
[ALL SHOUTING, EXCLAIMING]
After explicitly ordering you not to go,
you risked hundreds of lives,
and you risked peace in the quadrant.
If you could lower the volume
of your voice, Admiral.
Oh, my God.
Are you hungover, Spock?
The result of a peace treaty
with the Klingon captain.
- After a successful mission.
- You got lucky,
and that could have just
as easily gone the other way,
with the Federation thrown into
a brutal war with the Klingons.
I did what I believed was right,
followed my gut, as you humans
are so fond of saying,
and I will accept
whatever punishment
Starfleet feels is just.
Consider that Klingon hangover
your punishment.
But next time
and there better not be a next time
it'll be your commission.
Now, get Enterprise home.
Mr. Spock.
I didn't hear you come in.
Are you all right?
Yes.
I just
She'll be fine.
I'm not
I
I have no words for what I feel.
Yes.
[DOOR WHOOSHES OPEN]
♪
You let Spock off easy.
APRIL: He just kept us from potentially
having to defend two fronts
at the same time.
Even if he doesn't know it.
In any case, he's one of our best.
And if this war happens
we're gonna need
every good officer we've got.
♪
Last season on
Star Trek: Strange New Worlds
PIKE: The Klingon War is over.
The Enterprise was on
its five-year mission.
Missing the war
took a toll on my crew.
I've let something out.
[ROARS] My emotions.
Rage. Pain.
I can't control it.
CHAPEL: It doesn't make you weak.
It makes you human.
LA'AN: I'd like to request
a formal leave of absence.
I found a lead on Oriana,
the girl we rescued from the Gorn.
If I said no, would it
make a difference?
I am resigning my commission.
- I'm an Illyrian.
- Rejected.
What do we do when Starfleet finds out?
You let me worry about Starfleet.
The hell is going on?
BATEL: I'm arresting
Commander Una Chin-Riley
for violations of our anti-genetic
modification directive.
I really am sorry.
So am I.
This isn't over.
♪
PIKE: Captain's log, stardate 2369.2.
Enterprise is in spacedock
at Starbase One.
The crew is taking
some well-deserved leave
while Chief Fleet Inspector
Commander Pelia
and her team from
Operational Support Services
are running comprehensive inspections,
systems checks and upgrades.
I've had my hands full on Enterprise
getting everything ready.
But even from afar,
I sense a tension here among
the brass that I can't pin down.
The feeling that
something is in the air.
But right now I have a crisis
closer to home to deal with.
- You're not giving up.
- UNA: Chris.
Did you manage to even talk to her?
She won't respond.
She won't take my calls either.
There must be other lawyers
who can handle this.
I lied about my species
on an application to Starfleet.
Let's just say this is not a plum case.
She's the only one
who might even try to fight it.
So we go public.
- They can't ignore your record.
- No.
This is my life. I'm not
letting my mistakes ruin yours.
- Una.
- [SIGHS] Anyway
I hear they're going
to offer me a plea deal.
You cannot resign.
The loss to Enterprise
would be unimaginable.
To me.
Don't start a fight you can't win.
You taught me that.
You didn't start this. They did.
And we're going to find a way to
win because it's what's right.
There's the Boy Scout in you again.
- I'm gonna talk to her myself, face-to-face.
- Oh, sure,
just take three days off from
being captain of the Enterprise
to go to the other side of the quadrant
and get a door slammed in your face.
Two and a half
in one of the newer shuttles.
I'll be back before Enterprise's
inspections are complete.
Chris, you're being ridiculous.
If she's your only shot
at fighting this,
I have to try.
Just hang in there, Number One.
That's an order. Pike out.
SPOCK: And while you
take this short leave
for personal reasons,
I will be acting captain
of the Enterprise?
PIKE: You don't sound excited, Spock.
I will remind you half our crew
is on shore leave.
And we still lack
a chief engineer
as well as a head of security.
Additionally,
Commander Chin-Riley's loss
- is acutely felt.
- Helping Una
is exactly why I have to go.
Take it easy, Mr. Spock.
You won't ever even
have to leave spacedock.
What is the human expression?
Famous last words.
Hey, I have faith in you.
See you in three days.
[DOOR WHOOSHES OPEN]
M'BENGA: Increased heart rate.
Heightened pain in the neck,
jaw and lower back.
If I didn't know better,
I'd say you were experiencing
what we humans call stress.
[SIGHS] That is atypical.
As you know, Vulcan emotions
are stronger than human ones.
But your people control them
through suppressive cognitive blocks.
Indeed.
When you unleashed your anger
to combat the Gorn,
you removed those blocks.
Now all your emotions
are flowing more freely.
Doctor, the captain has put me
in command of the Enterprise
for the next three days.
I am concerned my emotions
may impact my judgement.
You'll just have to learn
to live with them.
Like we all do.
- I would prefer not to.
- Mr. Spock,
may I offer a more human therapy?
All Vulcans study music, yes?
For its mathematical properties.
Humans use it as a way
of channeling emotion into expression.
[PLAYING A GRACEFUL TUNE]
Lovely.
[PLAYING CONTINUES]
And your heart rate is going down.
- [DOOR WHOOSHES OPEN]
- [OUT-OF-TUNE CHORD]
[PLAYING STOPS]
CHAPEL: Doctor.
Lieutenant.
Just letting you know
I'm coming on duty.
Of course. Thank you, nurse.
If you'll excuse me.
Fascinating.
Isn't that typically his line?
It's just that when he saw you, I
Don't even.
No, no. I wouldn't.
Was there something else?
It's about that fellowship
the archeological medicine.
I'm thinking about applying.
I'm going to have to
replace you, aren't I?
It's two months on Vulcan.
You're not getting rid of me that easy.
[MITCHELL SIGHS]
More inspectors than crew on this ship.
The pitch and yaw controls
are reversed from standard.
Standard positions aren't quick enough.
And I don't like getting shot,
so I adjusted them.
Highly irregular.
[INDISTINCT CHATTER]
Excuse me.
Oh, no, you don't.
Uh, I need to install
a secure comms patch.
- That'll reboot the system.
- And?
And we'll be off-line.
Even the emergency bands.
Figure a few hours of radio silence
would be welcome at communications.
Let me get a secondary comms on line.
No offense, but we're in spacedock.
How many hails are you getting?
[BOARD STARTS TRILLING, BEEPING]
I just need a second.
- It'll only be a few minutes.
- UHURA: And I have a job to do.
This is my station.
So if you don't mind?
Thank you.
[SIGHS]
[PLAYING A GRACEFUL TUNE]
[OUT-OF-TUNE CHORDS]
[DOOR CHIMES]
Come in.
Lieutenant. Sorry for the interruption.
Did I hear music?
What can I do for you, Ensign?
I wanted to talk to you about
an odd signal variance I picked up.
Could you not simply have called?
Internal comms are being rebooted.
It originated in the Cajitar system.
Cajitar is on the edge of Klingon space.
Yes, sir. At first,
I thought it was random signal shifting.
But I ran it through
meta-pattern analysis,
and it's a distress signal.
Who is it from?
La'An, sir.
Permission denied, Lieutenant.
But sir, if it is from
Lieutenant Noonien-Singh,
she has indicated she is
in dire need of our aid.
Well, if it is from Lieutenant
Noonien-Singh, then I remind you
that she's been on voluntary
leave from Starfleet for months.
Nevertheless, the message is dire.
It states: "Dangerous situation
on Cajitar 4.
Resources of Enterprise critical.
Anti-Federation threat".
How much do you know about Cajitar 4?
It is a dilithium mining planet
on the edge of Klingon space.
A prodigious dilithium mining planet.
Since the war,
the colony's been governed
by a painstakingly-negotiated treaty.
We alternate our access
with the Klingons.
For the next 30 days,
it's the Klingons' show.
We turn up during their shift,
they'll consider it an act of war.
There's no way we risk
a resumption of hostilities
with the Klingons over a vague message
which may or may not be from
a former member of Starfleet.
We'll check it out when we
get access to the planet back
next month. And even
if it really is your friend,
she's gonna have to
fend for herself until then.
April out.
UHURA: He's wrong. That message
has to be from La'An. She knows
our maintenance schedule.
It-it was beamed right at us.
Still, it could be a deception.
Even a trap.
The admiral was pretty definitive.
Yeah.
Our former comrade is in trouble.
She has indicated
aid to her is essential
for the safety of the Federation.
I will need your help to get
the inspectors off the ship
and achieve our objective. But
I will not ask you to do
something you believe is wrong.
If you wish to leave
or report this plan,
I will not stand in your way.
What plan?
I would have thought it obvious.
We must steal the Enterprise.
PIKE: Space.
The final frontier.
These are the voyages
of the starship Enterprise.
Its five-year mission:
to explore strange new worlds,
to seek out new life
and new civilizations,
to boldly go where no one
has gone before.
♪
♪
♪
♪
[ALARM BLARING]
UHURA [ON P.A.]:
Attention all personnel.
We have detected a cooling leak
in the intermix chamber.
All non-essential crew members
are ordered to evacuate
the ship immediately.
[ALARM CONTINUES BLARING]
Commander Pelia. We are at red alert.
- Perhaps you did not hear the evacuation order?
- PELIA: Yes.
Never mind me. I'm just
finishing up my inspection.
SPOCK: But readings indicate a loss
of antimatter containment.
Hmm. In the same intermix
chamber that my team spent
three days evaluating, and
found nothing wrong with.
- Huh!
- SPOCK: Commander, I am alarmed at your lack of concern.
At what?
At the textbook signs
of a warp core breach?
You do know that I teach a course
in warp core breaches
at the Academy, yes?
I didn't realize that.
Yes, well, if you had taken it,
you would know that
heightened temperatures
around the intermix chamber
is the single factor
most commonly mistaken
for an imminent breach.
Ooh, would you look at that.
Someone accidentally
simulated a coolant leak on the sensors.
If I didn't know any better, I'd say
- it was on purpose.
- SPOCK: Commander Pelia,
I am not sure what you are implying.
I'm not implying anything.
I'm flat-out saying
someone violated about
17 Starfleet regulations.
Well, perhaps while you're theorizing,
you might explain why
anyone would engage in such subterfuge.
Mm.
I can think of one reason.
To steal the Enterprise.
Or do you want to tell me that's
not what's happening here?
Yes, you can always count on a Vulcan's
inability to lie.
Another thing I know about Vulcans.
They don't do things
without a good reason.
Do you have a good reason
to steal the ship?
I am having what
you humans call a hunch.
A Vulcan with a hunch. That's a new one.
And not just any Vulcan.
Amanda Grayson's son.
- How do you know my
- Well, if you're going to
steal a starship, do it correctly.
Helm, can you vent
ionized plasma from the warp nacelles?
I could, but
should I?
- Why are you helping us?
- Oh, please.
We can spend a lot of time
talking about this or we can go.
You decide.
Vent the nacelles on my mark.
PELIA: Ha!
[LOUD BOOM]
[ALARM BLARING]
Emergency transmission from
Starbase One Docking Control.
They are blowing the docking clamps
and ordering us to make space
between the ship and the station.
I notice you're short a chief
engineer on this mission.
Indeed.
Be happy to sub in.
Been a hundred years
since I've gone out
with engines of my own.
A hundred years? Really?
It's a long story.
A really long story.
[LAUGHS]
That's the accent. You're Lanthanite.
Guilty as charged.
[BOARD BEEPS]
Starbase One is hailing us, sir.
Ms. Ortegas.
Nacelles recharged and ready.
SPOCK: Starbase One will have to wait.
The Cajitar system.
Warp factor five.
You gonna say it?
Your thing?
My what?
Your thing. You know.
Everyone in the chair has their thing.
Captain Pike always says "hit it".
My last captain liked to say "zoom".
Must I have a thing?
Do you have a thing?
Well, I've been workshopping
"vamanos".
But it's supposed to be about you.
What kind of commander
are you? All that.
So, no presh.
I would like the ship to go.
Now.
ORTEGAS: Aye aye, Captain.
♪
[WHOOPING, CHANTING, INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[KLINGONS CHEERING]
[CHUCKLES]
Beat that, human.
Drink.
Drink! Drink!
[CROWD WHOOPING RHYTHMICALLY]
[CROWD EXCLAIMS]
[BURPS]
[EXCLAIMS]
Was that watered-down?
[GROWLS]
[EXCLAIMS]
[GRUNTS]
MALE: Hey, he's got it!
Oh, oh
Oh! [LAUGHS]
Don't try to hide half the wine
in your beard again, Kr'Dogh.
[SHOUTS]
[CROWD ROARS]
[BURPS]
[COUGHS]
MALE: Oh, oh! Oh!
- [KR'DOGH GAGS]
- Oh!
[CROWD CHEERS]
You know what I really want.
I can set the meeting, but I am not sure
Greynax will meet with you, human.
Well, it's sweet that
you worry about my problems.
Set it for tonight.
You better find Kr'Dogh before he
throws up on the wrong person.
Stole the Enterprise?
SPOCK: Yes. You said it was urgent.
Wow. I would have lost so many bets.
Yeah, Vulcans can surprise you.
Thank you for coming. All of you.
What's going on?
The little girl who
survived the Gorn Oriana.
I was trying to find her parents.
Uh, we tracked them here.
And they'd thought she was dead.
Sounds like a happy ending.
Well, up until the war, this planet
had provided, uh,
a steady flow of dilithium
to both sides, like it does now.
But after the war started,
so many ships being destroyed,
dilithium constantly
needing to be replenished,
this place became a promised land.
Ore was dug up and auctioned off
to the highest bidder
at astronomical prices.
Fortunes were minted daily
and the mining syndicate
got a piece of every single one.
Then, suddenly, peace.
A new syndicate made up of
ex-Klingon and Federation soldiers
has decided that
peace isn't good for business.
And they have one ideology:
profit.
They want to re-start the war.
- Restart the war how?
- LA'AN: All I know is
they've been looking
to get their hands on as much
Federation tech as possible.
Then, a few days ago,
there was an explosion at the mine.
Half the town got sick
from ion exposure.
Including Oriana's parents.
Ion radiation is not naturally
occurring from dilithium.
But it can be created
by photon torpedoes.
That is correct.
We both served in
the Klingon War. Doc here just
likes to read up
on weapons systems is all.
Yes. A hundred million
Federation bodies, slaughtered.
And for what a parsec
of space or two?
And now some want to resume that
theater of horror for profit?
Where are, um, Oriana
and her parents now?
Med tent. They're short on
everything doctors, supplies.
We have med kits with us.
SPOCK: See what aid you can provide.
But keep a low profile.
Ensign Uhura and I will stay to assist
- in your investigation.
- I have a rendezvous with
three potential buyers
tonight as well, so
Wait. Ensign?
You go away, you miss things.
Seems I do.
CHAPEL: This is not good.
It is not.
Dr. M'Benga! Nurse Chapel!
Well, looks like our cover's blown.
I'm so glad to see you guys.
My parents
Try an inducing recombination
to repair genetic damage.
Hey.
This should have you feeling better
in about a day.
- Thank you.
- Yeah.
Nice tech.
You medical?
Just in from off-world.
Looking to trade at market.
I hate to bust up your plans,
but we could use your services.
Who's we?
Follow me.
[FEMALE SPEAKING KLINGON]
UHURA: I think your prom dates
just arrived.
Three Klingons approaching.
Copy.
[FEMALE CONTINUES SPEAKING KLINGON]
SPOCK: Is that Klingon
they are speaking?
I do not recognize it.
Kach-Ugh, I think.
It's a pretty obscure dialect,
but I can make out the syntax.
Were you followed?
Yes. But then I cut their throats
and they stopped following me.
Leaving bodies to find when
we don't want anyone looking.
This is the Klingon shift
on this miserable world.
Bodies pile up. Did you
bring what you promised?
I thought Klingons hated
Federation weapons.
Why buy them?
That is not your concern.
You promised two dozen.
This is barely half that.
Well, it's what I have to sell.
I'll pay a third.
- I'm charging double.
- Double?
For half the weapons you promised?
You don't like the questions,
you don't like the price.
And what would stop me
from just taking them
from a tiny woman like you?
[DEVICE WHIRRS]
This is an anti-matter
detonation switch.
You better hope I don't let go.
Unless you're keen on losing
the bottom half of your body?
Are you sure
you have no Klingon blood in you?
Double for this lot.
But I need more.
I'll see what I can do.
Well done, Lieutenant.
What's an anti-matter detonation switch?
It's not a thing, is it?
Yeah, no, definitely not a thing.
I was able to parse out some
of what they were saying,
and whatever they're planning,
it's happening tomorrow.
Should we call Starfleet?
Not until we have solid proof.
I do not relish another call
with the admiral without it.
Now let's get back
to the Enterprise and see what
Nurse Chapel and Dr. M'Benga have found.
Chief Jay.
Ready when you are.
Roger that, Mr. Spock. Small problem:
I've been tracking
the doctor and Nurse Chapel,
and we lost their signal
about an hour ago.
I'm not a cave person,
but this is for sure
the biggest I've ever seen.
Decades of dilithium mining.
How do you think they got that in here?
I think they built it.
Move. Now!
[PATIENT MOANING]
M'BENGA: Ion burns everywhere.
This level of scarring
is normally too deep to treat.
But, fortunately, your
dermal system is redundant.
You've treated Klingons before.
- Where?
- It doesn't matter.
Tell me, or I'll cut out your tongue
so you spread no more lies.
Years ago I was stationed
on the moon of J'gal.
Now I know you are lying.
If you had served
on J'gal, you'd be dead.
[DEVICE STOPS]
Do you know that after
the battle of ChaKana,
there was so much blood in the air
the rain turned red?
Ror'Queg. Are you fit for duty now?
M'BENGA: I'm done with him.
Hey. You good?
I'm fine.
You sure?
You want me to tell you this
is not bringing everything back.
I can't.
But I can tell you I'm in control.
The war's over, Joseph.
Yes, but how can it ever be?
I'm fine.
Have you learned anything useful?
Um, yeah. The
severity of the burns suggest
the photon torpedoes are on this ship.
Maybe with all the other Federation tech
they've managed to acquire.
Why?
If you have a Federation ship
in the middle
of a territorial dispute
You could use it to attack the Klingons.
Start the war all over again.
We have to warn Enterprise.
There must be comms
somewhere here on the bridge.
So, we just waltz up there,
say, "Mind if we make a call?"
M'BENGA: You know this
can help us get there.
If it's important enough.
Do you ever not carry it?
No.
Hey.
Sure you want to do this again?
Again, no.
But I'm not seeing a better choice.
♪
[ALL GRUNTING]
♪
Oh! Oh
Tell me about this plan.
- And how to stop it.
- Or what?
[GRUNTS]
I know about your Federation
rules against torture.
[GRUNTING]
What defenses does your group have?
How many in your number?! What weapons?!
[GRUNTING]
[GAGGING]
He can't answer you if he's dead.
Joseph. Joseph!
30 soldiers.
On the bridge. Engineering.
Armed with phasers, phase-rifles,
Klingon disruptors.
Is there a transponder on the ship?
I will never.
Deck 13.
M'BENGA: The engines are warming up.
CHAPEL: I thought transponders
could only broadcast
a ship's name and class
to other Federation vessels.
I can reprogram it
to send a simple message.
[KLINGONS SHOUTING IN DISTANCE]
We need to move. Now.
I need a minute.
I'll buy you a minute.
[GRUNTING]
[KLINGON SHOUTS]
Got it.
Better find a way off this ship.
[GRUNTS] Airlock.
Unless you've got enough juice
for another dance.
I think it's running out.
Better hurry.
[KLINGON SHOUTS]
[GRUNTING]
Aah!
♪
♪
♪
♪
♪
ORTEGAS: Klingon battle
cruiser just warped in.
SPOCK: Red alert, Ms. Uhura.
Any indication they have seen us?
I'm reading internal comms only.
All coded,
but the activity is pretty
standard for arrival in orbit.
We haven't tripped any alarms yet, sir.
ORTEGAS: We're in low-power mode,
surrounded by interstellar ice
and rock with
a high internal iron content.
From their POV, we look like space junk.
You sound confident, Lt. Ortegas.
I've hidden from enough Klingons
to know when to take a breather.
MITCHELL: Battle cruiser moving away.
UHURA: Sir.
We're being hailed. On a secure channel.
By whom?
No luck locating M'Benga or Chapel.
- Anything your end?
- SPOCK: Negative.
Wherever they are must be shielded.
And a Klingon cruiser has arrived.
All my contacts in the
Broken Circle have vanished,
so whatever they're gonna do,
it must be something that's
Holy
MITCHELL: Sir,
I'm reading a launch from the surface.
It's a ship.
On screen.
That's one of ours.
Crossfield class, I think.
And it's headed right toward
that battle cruiser.
A Crossfield's no match
for a heavy cruiser.
- Well, we can't just let them get shot.
- UHURA: Uh, Lt. Spock?
That ship's transponder ping is off.
- Off?
- It's sending standard ident codes,
but the signal keeps flickering.
- Faulty?
- UHURA: No.
It's a pattern. A code.
Uh, Morse 2, I think.
- What is it saying?
- It's spelling
"Enterprise
destroy this ship".
Do you think they're reading
the transponder signal?
[POUNDING]
How long until they get in?
Five minutes,
if they have a laser torch.
Less, if they have a grenade.
We're in space.
They can't be that stupid.
Or maybe they can.
What do we do?
Let's get those lockers open.
See if they have any EV suits.
If the Klingons see that ship,
it will start a war.
Indeed.
In fact, Ms. Ortegas,
I surmise that is likely
its precise intention.
I believe the Federation ship is part of
a false flag operation.
I think the extremists
intend to use the ship
to attack the Klingons as a way
of reigniting hostilities
with the Federation. I theorize
that Dr. M'Benga and
Nurse Chapel were indeed
taken by the extremists and were able
to reconfigure the transponder
to give us a warning.
Sir, what if Nurse Chapel
and Dr. M'Benga
are still on that ship?
They thought it worth their lives
to prevent another war.
Logical.
Federation ship in firing range.
MITCHELL: Mr. Spock,
what are your orders?
Follow the false Federation ship.
Stay in weapons range,
but hold your fire.
And do not let the Klingons
know that we are here.
Got it.
If we don't destroy it before
we get out of the rings,
the Klingons are going
to see both of us.
That's definitely gonna start a war.
- Shields at 80%.
- Mr. Spock,
- should I return fire?
- Not yet.
- 70%.
- Copy. That is the last time
they dent our paint job.
MITCHELL: They fired an array
of torpedoes.
I think they're cutting through.
There's a beacon in the helmet.
And an attitude jet in the pack.
So, we just jump into space
without an EV suit?
The beacon will activate
once we're in space.
I can use the attitude jet
to guide us away from the ship.
Only we'll be dead.
Not necessarily.
It'll take almost a minute
for us to freeze to death.
Don't worry.
We'll pass out after 15 seconds.
I know it's a terrible idea.
Yeah, it's terrible.
Let's get to it, then.
MITCHELL: They're heading
straight for the Klingons.
Stay on that ship, Ms. Ortegas.
- Pedal to the metal, sir.
- Sir, they're in
sensor range
of the Klingon battle cruiser.
- There's only time for one shot.
- ORTEGAS: Photon torpedoes
locked on the Federation ship.
Full spread.
Mr. Spock?
SPOCK: Not yet. Any signal
from Nurse Chapel or Dr. M'Benga?
UHURA: Nothing, sir.
I can't believe this is how
we're gonna die.
We've gotten out of worse.
No, not really.
I suppose not.
ORTEGAS: Mr. Spock, it's now or never.
Fire photon torpedoes!
♪
Sir, I'm detecting a
Federation EV suit transponder.
Bridge to transport.
Lock on to that signal
and beam them aboard now.
♪
I waited.
I waited.
I waited for you.
You don't die. You don't die.
You do not die!
[GASPS, WHEEZES]
Why you got to be so rough?
UHURA: Lt. Spock, we're being hailed
by the Klingon captain.
CAPTAIN D'CHOK: What
is the meaning of this?
Hiding?
Trespassing?
Destroying your own ship
in order to cover your tracks?
We were in fact pursuing a rogue vessel
- which intended to do you harm.
- Absurd.
Why else would I tell you
the ship was not ours
if it was indeed ours?
To cover your own failure
in the face of our superior might.
But we destroyed the ship.
You anticipated defeat.
And now you're stalling for another day.
Captain, your sensors did not detect us
until we fired on
the false Federation vessel.
Could we not have as easily
fired on yours?
But why should I trust you?
SPOCK: I am Vulcan.
And as I believe your people know,
Vulcans cannot lie.
I care little for what legends say.
I know a man's truth
only when I look into his eyes,
face-to-face.
So be it.
Perhaps we can conclude this discussion
over a barrel of bloodwine?
You drink bloodwine?
I have been known to.
This is something I must see.
You're no typical Vulcan.
No.
It would seem I am not.
- D'CHOK: Yah!
- [INDISTINCT CHATTER]
[SPEAKS KLINGON]
Indeed.
[CROWD EXCLAIMING]
- Ah.
- Ah.
[MUG CLANGS]
[D'CHOK CHUCKLES]
[CLEARS THROAT, COUGHS]
Well, uh, listen, I think my Klingon
might be a little rusty,
but did he just say
"may your blood scream?"
A Klingon toast,
the true meaning of which
is becoming clear to me.
Right. [CLEARS THROAT]
Well, thank you
for getting me out of the Academy.
Are you actually Lanthanite?
Oh, a couple of drinks
and you get personal
that it, flyboy?
I am.
I have always been
fascinated by your people.
That you managed to live
on Earth among other humans
undetected until
the 22nd century is remarkable.
You know your mother was one of
the first people I came out to.
I did not.
But that's a tale for another time.
And now you teach engineering
at Starfleet Academy?
Taught.
You asked me why I helped you.
You want to know the worst thing
about living almost forever?
The loss of those you love.
Oh, you sweet
un-Vulcan Vulcan.
No.
That's a pain shared
by all those who live
with even a half-open heart.
No.
It's boredom.
And on that ship of yours,
there seems to be a shortage of that.
I like it.
- Hm.
- I might even try and stick around.
Huh?
Huh?
[LAUGHS]
Another?
Please.
To the Vulcan
who acts nothing like a Vulcan.
- [LAUGHS]
- [CHEERING]
ORIANA: La'An!
Just promise you'll
stay out of trouble, okay?
I will if you will.
[BOTH CHUCKLE]
Where are you gonna go now?
Um
[ALL SHOUTING, EXCLAIMING]
After explicitly ordering you not to go,
you risked hundreds of lives,
and you risked peace in the quadrant.
If you could lower the volume
of your voice, Admiral.
Oh, my God.
Are you hungover, Spock?
The result of a peace treaty
with the Klingon captain.
- After a successful mission.
- You got lucky,
and that could have just
as easily gone the other way,
with the Federation thrown into
a brutal war with the Klingons.
I did what I believed was right,
followed my gut, as you humans
are so fond of saying,
and I will accept
whatever punishment
Starfleet feels is just.
Consider that Klingon hangover
your punishment.
But next time
and there better not be a next time
it'll be your commission.
Now, get Enterprise home.
Mr. Spock.
I didn't hear you come in.
Are you all right?
Yes.
I just
She'll be fine.
I'm not
I
I have no words for what I feel.
Yes.
[DOOR WHOOSHES OPEN]
♪
You let Spock off easy.
APRIL: He just kept us from potentially
having to defend two fronts
at the same time.
Even if he doesn't know it.
In any case, he's one of our best.
And if this war happens
we're gonna need
every good officer we've got.