Treachery, Faith, and the Great River

"Treachery, Faith and the Great River" is the 156th episode of the television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the sixth episode of the seventh season. It was first aired on November 4, 1998. The teleplay was written by David Weddle and Bradley Thompson, based on a story by Philip Kim, and directed by Steve Posey. Guest stars include Jeffrey Combs as Weyoun, Casey Biggs as Damar, and J. G. Hertzler as Klingon General Martok as well as the female changeling played by Salome Jens

"Treachery, Faith and the Great River"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode
Episode no.Season 7
Episode 6
Directed bySteve Posey
Story byPhilip Kim
Teleplay byDavid Weddle
Bradley Thompson
Featured musicDavid Bell
Production code556
Original air dateNovember 4, 1998 (1998-11-04)
Guest appearance(s)

When it was aired on television in November of 1998, the show received Nielsen ratings of 4.8 points corresponding to over 4.7 million viewers.[1]

Plot

Odo gets a coded message from Gul Russol and takes off to meet him, even though he considers the possibility that it could be a trap. In fact it is a ploy for Weyoun to meet with Odo. Odo distrusts Weyoun, not believing that he would turn his back on the Founders, and the situation takes a turn for the strange when another Weyoun hails their runabout. It transpires that the Weyoun they had come to know for the past few years was recently disintegrated in a transporter accident, and the version currently with Odo (Weyoun VI) is a "defective" clone that does not believe the Founders to be infallible and questions the necessity of the Dominion's war with the Alpha Quadrant powers. His replacement (Weyoun VII) tells Odo that he would be happy to have their runabout destroyed in order to prevent Weyoun VI's secrets from reaching the Federation, even if it means killing Odo. In fact, the female changeling appears, demanding an update. Weyoun VII is subservient but vague in his answers, not revealing Odo as their target. Damar is suspicious of the Founder's appearance.

As they try to escape the pursuing Jem'Hadar, Weyoun VI reveals to Odo that an illness is spreading in the Great Link and all the Founders except Odo are dying. It turns out their meeting was a ploy to urge Odo to rebuild the Dominion according to his ideal. Under attack from dominion ships, Weyoun VI tells Odo he lives to serve him, hails the other dominion ships, and triggers his voluntary destruct mechanism. Seeing this, Weyoun VII stops his attack and offers assistance to Odo. Before dying, Weyoun VI asks Odo for a blessing.

At about the same time Odo departed, Benjamin Sisko goes to a conference on Bajor, and orders Miles O'Brien to have the gravity fixed on the USS Defiant before his return. Sisko is unconcerned that O'Brien lacks the one crucial piece of equipment required to make the repair. Nog offers to help O'Brien by navigating "the Great Material Continuum", a Ferengi concept of economics and trade - described as "millions of worlds, all with too much of one and not enough of the other." O'Brien reluctantly gives Nog his authorization code, which Nog uses to make a long series of trades based on rumors, including loaning out Sisko's desk and selling General Martok's prized bloodwine. An increasingly alarmed O'Brien watches with dismay as the young Ferengi works deal after deal; meanwhile, the part he requires appears no closer to arriving.

In the end, Sisko's desk is returned to its proper place; Martok's bloodwine is replaced with an even better vintage, a 2309, procured from Nog's cousin Gant; the Defiant is finally repaired; and Sisko himself returns to the station with no idea that it's been anything other than 'business as usual' on DS9. In his quarters, Odo ponders the blessing he gave Weyoun VI.

Postscript

Weyoun VI’s prediction that Odo will both cure the dying Founders and be their leader on a different path than that of the Female Changeling and the Dominion-Federation War does come true in the last episode of the series "What You Leave Behind".

Reception

In 2015, Geek.com recommended this episode as "essential watching" for their abbreviated Star Trek: Deep Space Nine binge-watching guide.[2]

In 2019, ScreenRant ranked this one of the top ten episodes for the character Nog, noting how he had to make multiple trading deals.[3]

References

  1. "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine condensed: How to watch the most story-driven Trek". Geek.com. 2015-01-19. Retrieved 2019-07-13.
  2. "Star Trek: 10 Best Nog Episodes, Ranked". ScreenRant. 2019-09-29. Retrieved 2019-10-28.
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