For the Cause

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Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode
"For the Cause"

Eddington gives orders
Episode no. 93
Prod. code 494
Airdate May 6, 1996
Writer(s) Ronald D. Moore
Director James L. Conway
Guest star(s) Kenneth Marshall as Michael Eddington
Penny Johnson as Kasidy Yates
Tracy Middendorf as Ziyal
John Prosky as Brathaw
Steven Vincent Leigh as Reese
Year 2372
Stardate 49729.8
Episode chronology
Previous "The Muse"
Next "To the Death"

"For the Cause" is an episode of the science fiction television series Star Trek: Deep Space Nine, the 21st episode of the fourth season.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

Spoiler warning: Plot and/or ending details follow.

During a security briefing, Lieutenant Commander Michael Eddington informs the senior staff that twelve industrial replicators will be delivered to the station in three days before being delivered to Cardassia, as per the request of the beleagured empire, whose industrial base has been destroyed by Klingon attacks. Eddington also states with Cardassia's preoccupation with the Klingons, the Maquis have been emboldened and their activity in the demilitarized zone between Cardassia and the Federation increased. Starfleet Intelligence believes the Maquis will try to stop the delivery and possibly steal the replicators. After the briefing, Eddington and Odo also inform Captain Sisko that there may be a Maquis smuggler on the station, and that preliminary circumstantial evidence may point to Sisko's girlfriend, freighter captain Kasidy Yates.

Meanwhile, Garak begins to take a closer notice of Gul Dukat's daughter, Tora Ziyal, who is now living on the station under the supervision of Major Kira. He mulls over an invitation by her to a Cardassian sauna in one of Quark's holosuites, wondering if she intends to kill him in order to please her father, since it was Garak who had Dukat’s father tortured and killed years ago, when he was a member of the Obsidian Order, Cardassia’s internal security police.

Sisko sends Worf in the Defiant to confirm Eddington and Odo's suspicions about Kasidy Yates, and indeed, Worf witnesses Kasidy's ship, the Xhosa, transferring cargo to a Maquis raider in the Badlands.

Kira comes to Garak's tailor shop and threatens to kill him if he harms Ziyal. From this Garak actually deduces that it would be safe to meet with Ziyal, reasoning that Kira would not have threatened him if Ziyal had ill in mind for him. Quark points out to him, however, that Kira's threats may have been designed to lull into a state of complacency to facilitate any ulterior plans on Ziyal's part.

Sisko intends to stop Kasidy’s next delivery himself and capture her Maquis contact. When Kasidy's contact fails to appear, Odo becomes suspicious, wondering if Sisko was merely lured away from the station, which may be the Maquis’ target. When Sisko boards the Xhosa and confronts Kasidy, she insists that she was merely delivering medical supplies, and that she did not knowingly lure Sisko from the station, as it seems that she was duped by the Maquis just as Sisko was.

Back at the station, Eddington orders his security team to place the replicators aboard a Vulcan transport that is due to arrive at the station at any moment. After the security officers leave the wardroom, Kira arrives in the room. Eddington stuns her unconscious with a phaser, and steals the replicators, revealing himself to be a member of the Maquis.

Sisko returns to the station, but without arresting Kasidy or her crew, much to Odo's objections. Eddington later contacts Sisko, proclaiming his allegiance to the Maquis, excoriating the Federation for their politics in general and their treatment of the colonists that formed the Maquis in particular. He asks Sisko to leave the Maquis alone, telling him that they only consider Cardassia their enemy, and not the Federation. He also warns Sisko that there will be further conflicts if the Federation attempts to send more replicators or similar aid to Cardassia. Sisko vows to hunt Eddington down and arrest him, no matter what it takes.

Garak ultimately meets Ziyal in the holosuite, but although he is armed with a phaser to protect himself, Ziyal tells him that she has no illicit intentions toward him, explaining that as the half Bajoran, half Cardassian daugther of the former prefect of Bajor during the Occupation, she is an outcast on Bajor. She says she needs no companionship, since she spent five years in a prison camp all alone, but would like to learn more about "home" (Cardassia), from the only person on the station that can tell her anything about it. Thus their relationship begins.

Kasidy returns to Deep Space Nine, having let her crew off at at Maquis colony. She says she sensed that Sisko left her in the Badlands to see if she would willingly turn herself in. She says that she wil not apologize for what she did, but felt she had a duty to aid the Maquis, just as Sisko has his duty, which he fulfills by ordering security to arrest her, after they share an emotional embrace.

[edit] Plot and production problems

  • In the teaser, from the time Kasidy gets out of bed wearing a negligee to the point at which she appears full dressed in her uniform is only sixteen seconds.
  • Author Phil Farrand, in The Nitpicker’s Guide for Deep Space Nine Trekkers, pointed out that during the springball match between Kira and an opponent in Act 1, the scoring indicators on the left and right hand of the court show scores that are inconsistent with the scoring seen during the match, and even change inexplicably. In the first full shot of the entire court, the indicator that the score is 2-1 in Kira's favor. Kira scores a point, but instead of going from 2 to 3, her indicator goes from 3 to 4. In the next shot of it, it has reverted to 3. Then, after her opponent trips her, his indicator shows a score of 2 instead of 1. He then scores a point, but instead of his score going from 2 to 3, it is again at 1, and now goes to 2.[1]
  • Farrand also wondered where Dax was in the episode, pointing out that she is seen neither on the Defiant, nor in Ops at the end of the episode after Eddington has absconded with the replicators.
  • After Eddington stuns Kira unconscious at the end of Act 4, and prepares to leave on the Vulcan transport with the stolen replicators in the beginning of Act 5, he tells Lieutenant Reese that he is in command until Sisko returns to the station. This should have raised suspicion in Reese, since Kira is supposed to be the second-in-command of the station, and alerted him to the fact that something had happened to her.
  • Phil Farrand also pointed out that at the end of the episode, Sisko, in the cargo bay with Kasidy, summons Lieutenant Reese to arrest her by tapping his combadge and saying, “Lieutenant Reese”. The cargo bay doors slide open, revealing Reese and two other security officers standing right behind it. None of them had an arm extended, as if having pressed the button on the other side of the door to open it, making it seem as if the door opened automatically upon Sisko’s page.[1]

[edit] Continuity inconsistencies

  • In the episode “Little Green Men”, Kira found her springball racquet among the items Nog was selling at his coming of age flea market. But in this episode, the two participants in the springball match, of which Kira is one, use gloves with fortified palms as striking surfaces, rather than racquets.
  • Ziyal was a 13-year-old in the episodes "Indiscretion" and "Return to Grace", but she is now referred to as a "woman", presumably to facilitate the relationship written for her character and Garak in the eyes of American viewers who would find a relationship between an adult male and 13-year-old female inappropriate.

[edit] Trivia

  • Writer Mark Gehred-O'Connell was inspired by the Oklahoma City bombing to write this episode. Specifically, he recalled how in the days following the bombing, suspicion fell upon people of Middle Eastern descent as the culprits, when in fact, the true culprit was Timothy McVeigh, a white American. Gehred-O'Connell decided to write a story in which Deep Space Nine was the target of a terrorist attack, after which suspicion fell upon the least likely person, Kasidy Yates, as the prime suspect. As the story evolved, the attack upon the station was dispensed with, and the trust between Kasidy and Sisko became the thematic focus of the episode.[2]
  • After being played by Cyia Batten in "Indiscretion" and "Return to Grace", Ziyal is played in this episode by Tracy Middendorf. This is Middendorf's only appearance in the role, as Melanie Smith later acquires the role permanently in "In Purgatory's Shadow", playing her until the character's final appearance in "Sacrifice of Angels". Batten would go on to appar as Irina in "Drive", an episode of Star Trek: Voyager, and as Navaar in "Bound", an episode of Star Trek: Enterprise.
  • Although springball had been mentioned before, this episode marked the first time the game was actually seen.
  • The mention of Tholian punctuality by Kasidy in the second scene of Act 2 was writer Ron Moore's tribute to the original series episode, "The Tholian Web", in which those aliens first appeared.[2]
  • The reference by Jake Sisko in Act 3 to the 1961 Yankees and the 1978 Red Sox was a tribute by producer Ira Steven Behr to his two favorite baseball teams.[2]
  • The set of the Xhosa bridge was created from pieces previously used as the interior of the Saratoga, on which Sisko had served as First Officer, as seen in the pilot episode, "Emissary".[2]
  • The story in this episode would be followed up later in a sequel episode, "For the Uniform".

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Farrand, Phil; The Nitpicker’s Guide for Deep Space Nine Trekkers; Pages 372 & 373.
  2. ^ a b c d Erdman, Terry J. & Block, Paula M.; the Star Trek:Deep Space Nine Companion; Pages 338-341

[edit] External links