home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!usc!elroy.jpl.nasa.gov!nntp-server.caltech.edu!tlynch
- From: tlynch@cco.caltech.edu (Timothy W. Lynch)
- Newsgroups: rec.arts.startrek.info
- Subject: Synopsis, "Chain of Command, Part II"
- Followup-To: rec.arts.startrek.current
- Date: 23 Dec 1992 01:28:56 GMT
- Organization: California Institute of Technology, Pasadena
- Lines: 236
- Approved: griffith@dweeb.fx.com
- Message-ID: <1h8fcoINNolh@gap.caltech.edu>
- Reply-To: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
- NNTP-Posting-Host: sandman.caltech.edu
- Summary: == synopsis
- Keywords: TNG, Cardassians, Picard, torture
-
- WARNING: The following post contains intense spoilers for "Chain of Command,
- Part II" that the faint of heart may find disturbing. Proceed with caution.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Picard, now heavily drugged, is being interrogated. He answers all questions
- put to him as best he can, including giving the names of the rest of his
- team; but when Gul Madred asks about the defense plans for Minos Korva, Picard
- has no answer. Madred orders the dosage increased and begins again...
-
- Meanwhile, the negotiations are stalling back aboard the Enterprise, and are
- only made worse when Gul Lemec raises the issue of Celtris Three. When he is
- asked what evidence he has for Picard's team's "attack", he responds that
- they have Picard himself, and assures them that, although exactly how is not
- known, "we *will* respond." After he leaves, Jellico confirms to Riker and
- Troi that Picard and company were sent to Celtris, and that he may well be
- captured. He sends Riker in a shuttle to the planned rendezvous point to
- pick up whichever team members do return.
-
- Picard is now brought back to Gul Madred, blindfolded. He asks to see a
- neutral representative, and is assured that one is en route. Madred plays
- the gracious host, removing Picard's blindfold and shackles, and the two then
- talk of Cardassian archaeology. When Picard eventually asks to be returned
- to his ship, however, Madred chuckles. "My dear captain, you are a
- *criminal*. You have been apprehended invading one of our secret facilities.
- The least that will happen is for you to stand trial, and be punished. But I
- am offering you the opportunity for that experience to be ... _civilized_."
- The price, of course, is cooperation with Madred's questioning, particularly
- as regards the defense plans for Minos Korva. When Picard assures Madred
- that he does not *know* those plans, Madred is skeptical; the Enterprise,
- after all, would be the command ship for that planet's sector in the event of
- an attack.
-
- Picard is manhandled by the arriving guards and resists. "Wasted energy,
- Captain..." says Madred, now approaching Picard with a very sharp knife.
- "Are you in good health?" Picard protests that torture is forbidden by the
- code regarding prisoners of war, but Madred relentlessly carves off Picard's
- clothing. "From this point on, you will enjoy no privilege of rank, no
- privileges of person. From now on, I will refer to you only as ... *human*.
- You have no other identity." Picard, stripped naked, is shackled at both
- hands and feet and left to sleep while stretched vertically like a side of
- beef.
-
- When Riker returns with Beverly and Worf (both bruised and scratched, but
- intact), Jellico puts Geordi to work analyzing Bev's tricorder readings.
- Riker asks permission to prepare a rescue operation for Picard, but Jellico
- refuses, saying that under the current circumstances, it would be foolhardy.
- "He's _gone_. I'm sorry, Will, but you're going to have to accept that."
-
- Morning arrives for Picard, and with it Gul Madred. "Good morning; I trust
- you slept well." Picard is unshackled, but then subjected to watching Madred
- cheerfully drink his morning beverage while Picard suffers from thirst.
- "Thirsty?" Picard nods. "I would imagine so."
-
- The interrogation begins again, with Madred professing to believe that Picard
- knows nothing of Minos Korva. Instead, Madred turns on four very bright
- lights behind him and asks Picard how many lights he sees. When Picard,
- not surprisingly, sees four, Madred rejects his answer. He calls Picard's
- attention to a small device that has been implanted in his chest, which
- Madred can use to produce pain in any part of Picard's body at will. When
- Picard continues to insist that there are four lights, Madred begins to use
- this device...
-
- Picard's initial interrogation is shown to Jellico, Riker and Troi. Picard,
- it so happens, is not protected by the Seldonis Four Convention unless he is
- officially a prisoner of war; and the only way to establish that is to admit
- that he was acting under Federation orders, an admission Jellico is by no
- means prepared to make. Gul Lemec, of course, offers an alternate option:
- if the Federation withdraws completely from the sector, they will release
- Picard and forget the whole thing. Jellico requests a recess to consult his
- superiors, and ultimately ends up involved in a shouting match with Riker,
- who demands that Picard's life is worth the admission that he *was* acting on
- behalf of the Federation. Despite Troi's attempts to mediate, the argument
- escalates: "Are you questioning my judgement, Commander?" "As first
- officer, it is my responsibility to point out any actions that may be
- *mistakes* by a commanding officer, _sir_," snarls Riker. "Then maybe,"
- responds Jellico in kind, "it's time you found other responsibilities.
- You're relieved; don't make me confine you to quarters as well." Riker
- stalks off.
-
- Some time later, Jellico confers with Geordi and Data, who is now acting
- first officer. They reason that the Cardassians may have deliberately set a
- trap for Picard, and further suggest that it may be to get defense plans for
- this sector. They become convinced that the Cardassians are planning an
- imminent attack somewhere in the sector, and Jellico orders Geordi to scan
- Lemec's ship in an attempt to find out where it might be.
-
- Gul Madred, meanwhile, has a brief meeting with his daughter in Picard's
- presence. After she leaves, Picard (now robed) expresses his surprise at
- Madred allowing her to see him. He further suggests, upon hearing statements
- from Madred that she knows "enemies deserve their fate," that she will soon
- learn to devalue those other than the "enemies," perhaps even including her
- own parents. This quickly evolves into a discussion of Cardassian history
- and what the ruling military junta has done for (and to) the Cardassians.
- Madred brags that since the military takeover, feeding the population is no
- longer a problem, and that "my daughter will never have to worry about going
- hungry." "Her belly may be full, but her spirit will be empty," retorts
- Picard. Madred, furious, slugs Picard and begins again. "How many lights do
- you see?"
-
- Geordi's scans suggest that Lemec's ship may have recently been in the
- McAllister Nebula, a nebula very near the Cardassian/Federation border.
- Jellico quickly believes that a Cardassian fleet is hiding in that nebula
- until they can attack, and a check of the area suggests that Minos Korva (a
- prior Cardassian target) would be a prime location to attack from that site.
- Jellico orders the Enterprise to Minos Korva on the double.
-
- Madred, at this point, tries another tactic. He commends Picard as being
- remarkably strong-willed: "I see no point in keeping you here any further;
- you may go." Picard slowly pulls himself up off the floor of the chamber and
- begins to lurch towards the open doors, only to hear "We will get what we
- need from the human female." Madred tells him that both Beverly and Worf
- have been captured (Worf killed), and that since he proved so unhelpful, they
- will have to get their information from her. Picard protests that Bev knows
- nothing of defenses; she's a medical officer. "You might be right; I'll have
- to determine that for myself." Picard drags himself back to Madred's desk
- and sits, offering to stay.
-
- With the Enterprise en route to Minos Korva, Jellico outlines his plans to
- hit the Cardassian fleet in the nebula before it leaves it. Despite
- objections from crewmembers that his theory is by no means certain, he holds
- firm, ordering Worf to prep 500 antimatter mines and Geordi to prepare a
- shuttle for the journey. Beverly goes to prepare sickbay for the inevitable
- casualties, very bitter at Jellico's attitude.
-
- As morning comes again, Gul Madred shares a breakfast of taspa eggs with
- Picard. Picard, finding his egg contains a still-living taspa, eats it
- greedily anyway. Madred, amused, talks of eating his first live taspa when
- he was six years old, and of having other eggs from the same nest taken
- from him forcibly by an older boy. Rather than accepting this, however,
- Picard pursues it. "It must be rewarding you to repay others for all those
- years of misery."
-
- "What do you mean?"
- "Torture has never been a reliable means of extracting information. It is
- ultimately self-defeating as a means of control. One wonders why it is still
- practiced."
- "I fail to see where this analysis is leading," says Madred dully.
- Picard pounces, despite his tired voice. "Whenever I look at you now, I
- won't see a powerful Cardassian warrior. I will see a six-year old boy who
- is powerless to protect himself."
- Madred erupts into a rage, turning the lights on Picard full blast. "Be
- quiet!"
- "In spite of all you have done to me, I find you a pitiable man."
- "Picard, stop it -- " Madred raises the pain inducer. "-- or I will turn
- this on and leave you in agony all night."
- Picard laughs. "Ha! You called me Picard."
- "What are the Federation's defense plans for Minos Korva?"
- "There are four lights!"
- Madred, enraged, begins tormenting Picard anew. "There are _five_ lights!
- How many do you see now?"
- Picard, despite his agony and growing incoherence, manages one final barb
- before lapsing into screams. "You are six years old! Weak and helpless!
- You cannot hurt me!"
-
- Jellico and Geordi, meanwhile, talk in the newly prepared shuttle of old
- piloting runs. When it turns out that Jellico needs the best pilot around to
- conduct this strafing run, Geordi tells him that Riker is the best they've
- got.
-
- Jellico eventually goes to Riker and asks him to pilot the shuttle, but not
- until the two drop ranks and trade barbs. But eventually, Jellico asks Riker
- for help. "Will you pilot the shuttle, Commander?" "Yes." Jellico turns to
- leave. "You're welcome."
-
- Riker and Geordi swoop into the nebula in their shuttle and plant the mines
- on the Cardassian ships. Once they have returned, Jellico signals a very
- angry Gul Madred on the Reklar. "I'm not going to argue with you, Gul
- Madred. Every one of your ships has a mine on its belly, my finger's on the
- button, and you're in a _very_ bad position." After the weakness of the
- situation becomes apparent, Madred agrees to all of Jellico's terms,
- including the immediate release of Picard.
-
- This news, however, has yet to reach Picard, who finds himself alone and
- takes the opportunity to smash the pain inducer, despite the knowledge that
- Madred has duplicates. Madred, arriving, tries to break Picard one last time
- by telling him that the battle has been won by the Cardassians, that the
- Enterprise is burning, and that Picard is theirs forever.
-
- He offers Picard a choice: academic pursuits and comfort, or a continuation
- of the days of torture. "It's up to you. A life of ease and reflection and
- intellectual challenge ... or this."
-
- "What must I do?"
-
- "Nothing, really. Tell me ... how many lights you see. How many?"
-
- Picard stares at the lights abjectly for a long time. As the guards come in,
- Madred urges Picard to tell him before it's too late. "Don't be a stubborn
- fool! How many?"
-
- One of the arriving Cardassians, however, is Gul Lemec, who demands to know
- why Picard isn't ready for his journey back to the Enterprise. He tells
- Picard to go with the guards to get cleaned up and ready for his return.
- Picard stands up and screams defiantly at Madred, "There are FOUR LIGHTS!",
- then stalks off with the guards, refusing any help with the walk.
-
- Some time later, Picard returns to the Enterprise intact and obtains his
- command back from Jellico. His first action as captain, however, is to give
- Will the bridge and talk to Troi in the ready room.
-
- "What I didn't put in the report was that, at the end, he gave me a choice
- between a life of comfort, or more torture. All I had to do was say that I
- could see five lights when in fact there were only four."
-
- "You didn't say it."
-
- Picard tries to reassure her. "No. No." He becomes pensive again, however:
- "But I was going to. I would have said anything. But more than that, I
- believed that I _could see_ five lights..."
-
- And the Enterprise sails out among the stars.
-
- NEXT: Four more weeks of reruns to let DS9 get going, and I go back to
- maintaining net.silence. S'long for now...
-
- Tim Lynch (Harvard-Westlake School, Science Dept.)
- BITNET: tlynch@citjulie
- INTERNET: tlynch@juliet.caltech.edu
- UUCP: ...!ucbvax!tlynch%juliet.caltech.edu@hamlet.caltech.edu
- "Do you know that in this century you can go into a shop and purchase a
- revolver or any firearm, it's perfectly legal, these people encourage--"
- "STOP IT!" [slap]
- "It's catching, isn't it? Violence."
- --David Warner and Malcolm McDowell, "Time After Time"
- --
- Copyright 1992, Timothy W. Lynch. All rights reserved, but feel free to ask...
-