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|aPrevInUniverseTimeline = Genesis (episode)
 
|aPrevInUniverseTimeline = Genesis (episode)
 
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{{disambiguate|the Klingon custom|blood oath}}
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{{disambiguation|the Klingon custom|blood oath}}
   
 
Three old Klingon warriors reunite on Deep Space 9, seeking Curzon Dax, with whom they entered into a blood oath to one day exact revenge on an enemy for killing the warriors' firstborn sons. Finding Jadzia as worthy a warrior as they felt Curzon to be, she joins the Klingons in completing their vendetta.
 
Three old Klingon warriors reunite on Deep Space 9, seeking Curzon Dax, with whom they entered into a blood oath to one day exact revenge on an enemy for killing the warriors' firstborn sons. Finding Jadzia as worthy a warrior as they felt Curzon to be, she joins the Klingons in completing their vendetta.
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===Teaser===
 
===Teaser===
 
[[File:Koloth2370.jpg|thumb|Koloth]]
 
[[File:Koloth2370.jpg|thumb|Koloth]]
[[Quark]] complains to [[Odo]] that an elderly, drunken [[Klingon]] is monopolizing one of the [[holosuite]]s, endlessly re-fighting the [[Battle of Klach D'Kel Brakt]]. With Odo standing by, Quark shuts off the power, and the Klingon, [[Kor]], storms out with a bottle in his hand. He lunges drunkenly at Quark, but Odo pacifies him by telling him a "victory celebration" is awaiting him, and leads him to a holding cell to sleep it off.
+
[[Quark]] complains to [[Odo]] that an elderly, drunken [[Klingon]] is monopolizing one of the [[holosuite]]s, endlessly re-fighting the [[Battle of Klach D'Kel Brakt]]. With Odo standing by, Quark shuts off the power, and the Klingon, [[Kor]], storms out with a bottle of [[Breshtanti ale]] in his hand. He lunges drunkenly at Quark, but Odo pacifies him by telling him a "victory celebration" is awaiting him, and leads him to a holding cell to sleep it off.
   
 
[[Koloth]], Kor's friend, comes to bail him out; however, when he sees Kor is still quite drunk, he furiously tells Odo to keep him. Shrugging, Kor passes out again, while Odo rolls his eyes.
 
[[Koloth]], Kor's friend, comes to bail him out; however, when he sees Kor is still quite drunk, he furiously tells Odo to keep him. Shrugging, Kor passes out again, while Odo rolls his eyes.
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Walking alone with Dax on the [[Promenade]], Kang muses that times have changed, and nothing is quite the same as it was in the [[Klingon Empire]], not even a blood oath. With that in mind, he tells Jadzia that she has no obligation to honor her past [[Trill|host]]'s commitments, and formally releases her from Curzon's oath.
 
Walking alone with Dax on the [[Promenade]], Kang muses that times have changed, and nothing is quite the same as it was in the [[Klingon Empire]], not even a blood oath. With that in mind, he tells Jadzia that she has no obligation to honor her past [[Trill|host]]'s commitments, and formally releases her from Curzon's oath.
   
But Dax confides in Kira that she nonetheless feels obligated to fulfill it. The Albino is a heinous criminal who led [[pirate]] raids on several Klingon and [[Federation]] colonies, until a task force commanded by Kang, Kor, and Koloth destroyed his power base. The Albino retaliated by infecting each of the three Klingons' firstborn sons with a deadly virus; Curzon was godfather to Kang's son, and swore the oath along with the other three. Remembering Kira about her years with the [[Bajoran Resistance]], Jadzia asks what it is like to have to kill someone. Kira responds, "''when you take someone's life, you lose a part of your own as well.''"
+
But Dax confides in Kira that she nonetheless feels obligated to fulfill it. The Albino is a heinous criminal who led [[pirate]] raids on several Klingon and [[Federation]] colonies, until a task force commanded by Kang, Kor, and Koloth destroyed his power base. The Albino retaliated by infecting each of the three Klingons' firstborn sons with a deadly genetic virus; Curzon was godfather to [[Dax, son of Kang|Kang's son]], and swore the oath along with the other three. Remembering Kira about her years with the [[Bajoran Resistance]], Jadzia asks what it is like to have to kill someone. Kira responds, "''when you take someone's life, you lose a part of your own as well.''"
   
 
Dax talks to Kor, who is as joyful as ever: "''Oh, of course you should come! The splendor of fighting and killing, a bloodbath in the cause of vengeance; who wouldn't want to come!''" But when she asks him to speak with Koloth and Kang on her behalf, he hesitates, calling himself an old man whose influence and power are long past.
 
Dax talks to Kor, who is as joyful as ever: "''Oh, of course you should come! The splendor of fighting and killing, a bloodbath in the cause of vengeance; who wouldn't want to come!''" But when she asks him to speak with Koloth and Kang on her behalf, he hesitates, calling himself an old man whose influence and power are long past.
   
Dax confronts Koloth in a holosuite while he is practicing his ''[[bat'leth]]'' techniques. He believes she is too young and fragile to accompany them, so she challenges him to a duel to show him that she still retains Curzon's skill with the weapon. After a few rounds, Koloth concedes that her presence will do [[honor]] to their cause, but Kang remains adamant.
+
Dax confronts Koloth in a holosuite while he is practicing his ''[[bat'leth]]'' techniques. He believes she is too young and fragile to accompany them, so she challenges him to a duel to show him that she still retains Curzon's skill with the weapon. After a few rounds, Koloth concedes that her presence will do [[honor]] to their cause, but Kang remains adamant in his refusal.
   
 
===Act Three===
 
===Act Three===
 
Dax presses the matter: ultimately, Kang does not have the right to deny her vengeance against the Albino, who killed Dax's godson. Angrily, Kang agrees to allow her along, storming, "''come and be damned!''"
 
Dax presses the matter: ultimately, Kang does not have the right to deny her vengeance against the Albino, who killed Dax's godson. Angrily, Kang agrees to allow her along, storming, "''come and be damned!''"
   
Before Dax can request a leave of absence, [[Benjamin Sisko]] beats her to the punch and confronts her in her [[quarters]]. He cannot condone [[murder]] in the name of vengeance, nor can he understand why Jadzia feels the need to do so to honor a commitment Curzon made. Dax tells him that Curzon is a part of her, and Curzon understood and embraced Klingon concepts of honor and vengeance. When Dax begs him not to make her disobey a direct order, he does not directly give her permission to go but does not stop her either.
+
Before Dax can request a leave of absence, [[Benjamin Sisko]] beats her to the punch and confronts her in her [[quarters]]. He cannot condone [[murder]] in the name of vengeance, nor can he understand why Jadzia feels the need to do so to honor a commitment Curzon made. Dax tells him that Curzon is a part of her, and Curzon understood and embraced the Klingon concepts of honor and vengeance. When Dax begs him not to make her disobey a direct order, he does not directly give her permission to go but does not try to stop her either.
   
 
Aboard Kang's ship, on the way to the Albino's hideaway, the Klingons and Jadzia discuss their strategy. Kang advocates a surprise frontal assault on the compound's main gate. His intelligence indicates that the Albino only has forty guards, and the shock and awe of their appearance will give them a decisive advantage. Koloth and Kor endorse the plan and march out of the room triumphantly, but Dax stays to confront Kang. Unlike them, she can see that the plan is suicide, and demands to know what Kang is really up to. In fact, she says, if she didn't know better, she'd think Kang had been paid to lure them into a trap.
 
Aboard Kang's ship, on the way to the Albino's hideaway, the Klingons and Jadzia discuss their strategy. Kang advocates a surprise frontal assault on the compound's main gate. His intelligence indicates that the Albino only has forty guards, and the shock and awe of their appearance will give them a decisive advantage. Koloth and Kor endorse the plan and march out of the room triumphantly, but Dax stays to confront Kang. Unlike them, she can see that the plan is suicide, and demands to know what Kang is really up to. In fact, she says, if she didn't know better, she'd think Kang had been paid to lure them into a trap.
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After beaming down to [[Secarus IV]], Dax scans the area with her [[tricorder]] and detects a [[gravitic mine]] buried inside the main entrance: the Albino obviously never intended to keep his bargain with Kang. On the other hand, the booby-trap gives them the advantage, since the Albino will be focusing his defenses on the main gate. The four of them quickly work out an alternate plan of attack: Dax will create a diversion by sabotaging the compound's armory, drawing a fair amount of the guards away from the main house, while the Klingons disable the power station, knocking out the Albino's communications and scanners.
 
After beaming down to [[Secarus IV]], Dax scans the area with her [[tricorder]] and detects a [[gravitic mine]] buried inside the main entrance: the Albino obviously never intended to keep his bargain with Kang. On the other hand, the booby-trap gives them the advantage, since the Albino will be focusing his defenses on the main gate. The four of them quickly work out an alternate plan of attack: Dax will create a diversion by sabotaging the compound's armory, drawing a fair amount of the guards away from the main house, while the Klingons disable the power station, knocking out the Albino's communications and scanners.
   
When the armory explodes, the Albino realizes that his trap has been outmaneuvered. Before he can order his guards to draw back into the house, the power station is sabotaged, leaving him trapped inside his main hall with only a few guards. The Klingons and Dax storm into the hall and fight his guards hand-to-hand. Koloth is mortally wounded when a guard stabs him in the back, while Kang fights his way through to the Albino.
+
When the armory explodes, the Albino realizes that his trap has been outmaneuvered. Before he can order his guards to draw back into the house, the power station is sabotaged, leaving him trapped inside his main hall with a [[Markalian]] and only a few guards. The Klingons and Dax storm into the hall and fight his guards hand-to-hand. Koloth is mortally wounded when a guard stabs him in the back, while Kang fights his way through to the Albino.
   
 
The Albino manages to mortally wound Kang, but turns to find Dax's ''bat'leth'' at his throat. She introduces herself as the former Curzon Dax, and he smirks that she doesn't have it in her to murder him, alluding to the traditional consuming of the enemy's heart once they have been slain. She hesitates, and meanwhile Kang stabs his knife into the Albino's back. On the surface, he thanks Dax for the act of friendship in "letting" him have the death blow, but the knowing eyes between long friends hints at the deeper reality: that Kang has saved Jadzia from being forced to make the decision to kill the Albino. Kang utters, "''It is a good day to die,''" before dying. Dax murmurs sadly, "''It's never a good day to lose a friend.''" The only Klingon left standing, Kor, sings in honor of his fallen comrades, as he stands over the body of the dead Albino.
 
The Albino manages to mortally wound Kang, but turns to find Dax's ''bat'leth'' at his throat. She introduces herself as the former Curzon Dax, and he smirks that she doesn't have it in her to murder him, alluding to the traditional consuming of the enemy's heart once they have been slain. She hesitates, and meanwhile Kang stabs his knife into the Albino's back. On the surface, he thanks Dax for the act of friendship in "letting" him have the death blow, but the knowing eyes between long friends hints at the deeper reality: that Kang has saved Jadzia from being forced to make the decision to kill the Albino. Kang utters, "''It is a good day to die,''" before dying. Dax murmurs sadly, "''It's never a good day to lose a friend.''" The only Klingon left standing, Kor, sings in honor of his fallen comrades, as he stands over the body of the dead Albino.
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"''No, they don't... That's just it! They say I have no obligation to them... but I ''do''! I know it - I ''feel'' it!... If not to them, then to Curzon.''"
 
"''No, they don't... That's just it! They say I have no obligation to them... but I ''do''! I know it - I ''feel'' it!... If not to them, then to Curzon.''"
 
: - '''Kira''' and '''Dax''', regarding the blood oath
 
: - '''Kira''' and '''Dax''', regarding the blood oath
  +
  +
  +
"''Quark, you devious little Ha'DIbaH! Bring wine.''"
  +
: - '''Kor'''
   
   
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== Background ==
 
== Background ==
 
=== Story and script ===
 
=== Story and script ===
* [[Peter Allan Fields]]' original story, entitled "The Beast", did not feature Kang, Kor, and Koloth. They were to be new characters, but [[Robert Hewitt Wolfe]], a big fan of ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|The Original Series]]'', suggested using the three most popular [[Klingon]]s from that series. Fields based "The Beast" on {{w|Akira Kurosawa}}'s 1954 film ''{{w|Seven Samurai}}'' and {{w|John Sturges}}' 1960 remake of that film, ''{{w|The Magnificent Seven}}''. He modeled Koloth after {{w|James Coburn}}'s character of Britt and Kang after {{w|Yul Brynner}}. Kor was based on {{w|William Shakespeare}}'s character of {{w|Falstaff}}, who appeared in ''[[Henry IV, Part II]]''. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
+
* [[Peter Allan Fields]]' original story, entitled "The Beast", did not feature Kang, Kor, and Koloth. They were to be new characters, but [[Robert Hewitt Wolfe]], a big fan of ''[[Star Trek: The Original Series|The Original Series]]'', suggested using the three most popular [[Klingon]]s from that series. Fields based "The Beast" on {{w|Akira Kurosawa}}'s 1954 film ''{{w|Seven Samurai}}'' and {{w|John Sturges}}' 1960 remake of that film, ''{{w|The Magnificent Seven}}''. He modeled Koloth after {{w|James Coburn}}'s character of Britt and Kang after {{w|Yul Brynner}}. Kor was based on [[William Shakespeare]]'s character of {{w|Falstaff}}, who appeared in ''[[Henry IV, Part II]]''. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
* The writers staff toyed with the idea of having the three Klingons appear as they did in the original ''Star Trek'', but decided against it. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
* The writers staff toyed with the idea of having the three Klingons appear as they did in the original ''Star Trek'', but decided against it. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
* When [[Michael Ansara]] asked why the Klingons now looked different, he was told "''Klingons live to be very, very old and that's a natural physical metamorphosis''". (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') The ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise]]'' episodes {{e|Affliction}} and {{e|Divergence}} ultimately explained why Kang, Koloth, and Kor have ridges here.
 
* When [[Michael Ansara]] asked why the Klingons now looked different, he was told "''Klingons live to be very, very old and that's a natural physical metamorphosis''". (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') The ''[[Star Trek: Enterprise]]'' episodes {{e|Affliction}} and {{e|Divergence}} ultimately explained why Kang, Koloth, and Kor have ridges here.
  +
 
=== Production ===
 
=== Production ===
 
[[File:Albino's courtyard.jpg|thumb|[[Jim Martin]] sketch of Albino's courtyard]]
 
[[File:Albino's courtyard.jpg|thumb|[[Jim Martin]] sketch of Albino's courtyard]]
 
* Before the episode entered production, [[Junie Lowry-Johnson]] and [[Ron Surma]] checked to see if [[Michael Ansara]], [[John Colicos]], and [[William Campbell]] were still acting. They found the first two easily, but had difficulty finding Campbell. He was actually doing ''[[Star Trek]]'' cruise conventions at the time. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
* Before the episode entered production, [[Junie Lowry-Johnson]] and [[Ron Surma]] checked to see if [[Michael Ansara]], [[John Colicos]], and [[William Campbell]] were still acting. They found the first two easily, but had difficulty finding Campbell. He was actually doing ''[[Star Trek]]'' cruise conventions at the time. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
  +
*William Campbell commented on the start of filming that "''I went down there not realizing that they had this age thing of 85 or 100 years later, I thought we would just be older, that we didn't evolve with the carbuncle on the head, and the other changes they've done. However, when I walked in there said to [[Rick Berman]], 'Somebody out there we were going to have to put this make-up on, á la [[Michael Dorn]]'. And he said, 'Well, yeah. It's 100 years later, and don't ask me why they do it. This is the way Klingons look now, and you've evolved into this'. I said fine, but I had just thought we were going to to come back as the Over the Hill Gang-type thing. Of course it had a lot more significance than that. We were all senior officers, we were part of of this special quest. I thought they did a phenomenal job the the make-up, although Michael Ansara said to me, 'Bill, I haven't worked in six years, this is going to kill me!''" ("The Honorable William Campbell", ''[[TV Zone]]'' magazine, issue 60)
 
* The interior of [[the Albino]]'s fortress was built on [[Paramount Stage 18]]. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') The fortress set was actually built on Stage 18 for the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode {{e|Masks}} as [[Masaka]]'s [[temple]]. TNG's [[Paramount Stage 16|Stage 16]] was taken up by the [[Barkonian]] village set constructed for {{e|Thine Own Self}}. (''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion]]'')
 
* The interior of [[the Albino]]'s fortress was built on [[Paramount Stage 18]]. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'') The fortress set was actually built on Stage 18 for the ''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation]]'' episode {{e|Masks}} as [[Masaka]]'s [[temple]]. TNG's [[Paramount Stage 16|Stage 16]] was taken up by the [[Barkonian]] village set constructed for {{e|Thine Own Self}}. (''[[Star Trek: The Next Generation Companion]]'')
 
* The Albino's fortress was a house in Pasadena designed by {{w|Frank Lloyd Wright}} for Mr. and Mrs. George M. Millard. A model of it, which was blown up to show the destruction of the Compound, was built on Paramount's Van Ness parking lot. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
* The Albino's fortress was a house in Pasadena designed by {{w|Frank Lloyd Wright}} for Mr. and Mrs. George M. Millard. A model of it, which was blown up to show the destruction of the Compound, was built on Paramount's Van Ness parking lot. (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
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=== Reception ===
 
=== Reception ===
 
* [[Terry Farrell]] is a big fan of this episode because she feels that it reveals a great deal of depth to Dax. Farrell feels that each of the three Klingons require a different approach from her, and that the character is capable of switching gears like that is something she is quite proud of; "''With Kor, I had to convince him that he was a hero, and that in my eyes he would always be a hero, so that was philosophical. With Koloth, I had to prove that I was strong enough to go to battle with him, so that was physical. And with Kang, I had to prove to him that my desire and need to be a part of this blood oath was strong enough that I could not imagine staying behind, that I was mentally strong and capable enough. So I had to exhibit the honor, the physical strength, and the mental perseverance to go with them''." (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
 
* [[Terry Farrell]] is a big fan of this episode because she feels that it reveals a great deal of depth to Dax. Farrell feels that each of the three Klingons require a different approach from her, and that the character is capable of switching gears like that is something she is quite proud of; "''With Kor, I had to convince him that he was a hero, and that in my eyes he would always be a hero, so that was philosophical. With Koloth, I had to prove that I was strong enough to go to battle with him, so that was physical. And with Kang, I had to prove to him that my desire and need to be a part of this blood oath was strong enough that I could not imagine staying behind, that I was mentally strong and capable enough. So I had to exhibit the honor, the physical strength, and the mental perseverance to go with them''." (''[[Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion]]'')
*[[Winrich Kolbe]] commented "''It was the closest thing to ''[[Beowulf]]'' that I ever saw. There was a mythological quality to it and these guys were real heroes. I played Wagner in my mind the whole day and it had a feel that was beyond episodic television. It was really ''[[The Three Musketeers]]'' on a smaller scale and I loved it''". (''[[The Deep Space Log Book: A Second Season Companion]]'')
+
*[[Winrich Kolbe]] commented "''It was the closest thing to ''[[Beowulf (poem)|Beowulf]]'' that I ever saw. There was a mythological quality to it and these guys were real heroes. I played Wagner in my mind the whole day and it had a feel that was beyond episodic television. It was really ''[[The Three Musketeers]]'' on a smaller scale and I loved it''". (''[[The Deep Space Log Book: A Second Season Companion]]'')
 
* On the return of the TOS actors, [[Michael Okuda]] commented "''At first, you almost didn't recognize them because they were in heavy Klingon makeup. But as soon as Michael Ansara opened his mouth, there was a powerful sense of ''déjà vu''. Having the three original Klingons on the show was magical for everyone''". (''[[Star Trek - Where No One Has Gone Before]]'')
 
* On the return of the TOS actors, [[Michael Okuda]] commented "''At first, you almost didn't recognize them because they were in heavy Klingon makeup. But as soon as Michael Ansara opened his mouth, there was a powerful sense of ''déjà vu''. Having the three original Klingons on the show was magical for everyone''". (''[[Star Trek - Where No One Has Gone Before]]'')
  +
*William Campbell commented that he, Michael Ansara and John Colicos all greatly enjoyed the episode, commenting "''When it was all over and we finally saw the finished show, we really loved it''". One particular scene Campbell enjoyed was the brief scene with [[Rene Auberjonois]]. "''That was the scene when I walk in to get Colicos out of the drunk tank, and Odo turns around and says, 'How did you get in here?' I say him, 'I am Koloth!' and he says 'You're not answering my question', and my reply is, 'Yes I did'. In other words, Koloth can do anything. An actor can't have a better intro than that, and all the fans who had seen the old show identified him immediately''". ("The Honorable William Campbell", ''[[TV Zone]]'' magazine, issue 60)
* William Campbell said this episode was his most difficult acting job, and one he would have liked to do again. (''[[Deep Space Nine Chronicles]]'')
+
* William Campbell also said this episode was his most difficult acting job, and one he would have liked to do again. (''[[Deep Space Nine Chronicles]]'')
 
 
=== Trivia ===
 
=== Trivia ===
 
* This episode "reunites" three Klingons from ''The Original Series'': [[Kor]] ({{TOS|Errand of Mercy}}), [[Koloth]] ({{TOS|The Trouble with Tribbles}}), and [[Kang]] ({{TOS|Day of the Dove}}).
 
* This episode "reunites" three Klingons from ''The Original Series'': [[Kor]] ({{TOS|Errand of Mercy}}), [[Koloth]] ({{TOS|The Trouble with Tribbles}}), and [[Kang]] ({{TOS|Day of the Dove}}).
* This episode marks the deaths of Koloth ([[William Campbell]]) and Kang ([[Michael Ansara]]), although, Kang later appeared in {{VOY|Flashback}}. Incidentally, Kor ([[John Colicos]]) is the only one of the three Klingons to survive the events of this episode. However, Colicos was the first of the three actors to pass away, on March 6, 2000. Campbell died on April 28, 2011.
+
* This episode marks the deaths of Koloth ([[William Campbell]]) and Kang ([[Michael Ansara]]), although, Kang later appeared in {{VOY|Flashback}}. Incidentally, Kor ([[John Colicos]]) is the only one of the three Klingons to survive the events of this episode. However, Colicos was the first of the three actors to pass away, on March 6, 2000. Campbell died on April 28, 2011 and Ansara on July 31, 2013.
 
* John Colicos reprises his role as Kor in [[DS9 Season 4|season four]]'s {{e|The Sword of Kahless}} and [[DS9 Season 7|season seven]]'s {{e|Once More Unto the Breach}}.
 
* John Colicos reprises his role as Kor in [[DS9 Season 4|season four]]'s {{e|The Sword of Kahless}} and [[DS9 Season 7|season seven]]'s {{e|Once More Unto the Breach}}.
 
* [[Colm Meaney]] ([[Miles O'Brien]]), [[Siddig El Fadil]] ([[Julian Bashir]]), and [[Cirroc Lofton]] ([[Jake Sisko]]) do not appear in this episode.
 
* [[Colm Meaney]] ([[Miles O'Brien]]), [[Siddig El Fadil]] ([[Julian Bashir]]), and [[Cirroc Lofton]] ([[Jake Sisko]]) do not appear in this episode.
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=== Also starring ===
 
=== Also starring ===
 
*[[Rene Auberjonois]] as [[Constable]] [[Odo]]
 
*[[Rene Auberjonois]] as [[Constable]] [[Odo]]
*[[Siddig El Fadil]] as [[Doctor]] [[Julian Bashir]]
+
*[[Siddig El Fadil]] as [[Doctor]] [[Julian Bashir]] (credit only)
 
*[[Terry Farrell]] as [[Lieutenant]] [[Jadzia Dax]]
 
*[[Terry Farrell]] as [[Lieutenant]] [[Jadzia Dax]]
*[[Cirroc Lofton]] as [[Jake Sisko]]
+
*[[Cirroc Lofton]] as [[Jake Sisko]] (credit only)
*[[Colm Meaney]] as [[Chief]] [[Miles O'Brien]]
+
*[[Colm Meaney]] as [[Chief]] [[Miles O'Brien]] (credit only)
 
*[[Armin Shimerman]] as [[Quark]]
 
*[[Armin Shimerman]] as [[Quark]]
 
*[[Nana Visitor]] as [[Major]] [[Kira Nerys]]
 
*[[Nana Visitor]] as [[Major]] [[Kira Nerys]]
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*[[Joe Murphy]] as [[Secarus IV inhabitants#Albino guards|Albino guard #2]]
 
*[[Joe Murphy]] as [[Secarus IV inhabitants#Albino guards|Albino guard #2]]
 
*[[Denney Pierce]] as an [[Secarus IV inhabitants#Albino guards|Albino guard]]
 
*[[Denney Pierce]] as an [[Secarus IV inhabitants#Albino guards|Albino guard]]
  +
*[[Sandra Wild]] as [[Kor|Kor's]] [[Dabo girls#Club Martus dabo girl|Dabo girl #1]]
  +
*[[Unknown performer]] as [[Kor|Kor's]] [[Dabo girls#Dabo Girl 5|Dabo girl #2]]
   
 
===Stunt doubles===
 
===Stunt doubles===

Revision as of 02:06, 30 March 2014

Template:Realworld

For the Klingon custom, please see blood oath.

Three old Klingon warriors reunite on Deep Space 9, seeking Curzon Dax, with whom they entered into a blood oath to one day exact revenge on an enemy for killing the warriors' firstborn sons. Finding Jadzia as worthy a warrior as they felt Curzon to be, she joins the Klingons in completing their vendetta.

Summary

Teaser

File:Koloth2370.jpg

Koloth

Quark complains to Odo that an elderly, drunken Klingon is monopolizing one of the holosuites, endlessly re-fighting the Battle of Klach D'Kel Brakt. With Odo standing by, Quark shuts off the power, and the Klingon, Kor, storms out with a bottle of Breshtanti ale in his hand. He lunges drunkenly at Quark, but Odo pacifies him by telling him a "victory celebration" is awaiting him, and leads him to a holding cell to sleep it off.

Koloth, Kor's friend, comes to bail him out; however, when he sees Kor is still quite drunk, he furiously tells Odo to keep him. Shrugging, Kor passes out again, while Odo rolls his eyes.

Act One

In Ops, Odo brings a report to Major Kira and apologizes for being late, as it's been a "Klingon afternoon." Dax overhears the name and has Kor released. She reveals to him and to Koloth that she is their old friend and comrade, "Dax" - Curzon Dax having been the last host of the symbiont now inside her. Kor is delighted that their old friend now inhabits a beautiful woman's body, but Koloth protests that some mistake has been made. Dax realizes that their meeting has been arranged by another old friend, Kang, who arrives and tells them that he has finally found "the Albino."

Eighty-one years ago, the three Klingons and Curzon swore a blood oath to hunt down and kill the Albino, no matter what. Kang has finally tracked him down to a hideout in the Secarus system - and, to ensure that no warning causes the Albino to flee before they can reach him, Kang killed the traders who disclosed the location to him.

Act Two

Walking alone with Dax on the Promenade, Kang muses that times have changed, and nothing is quite the same as it was in the Klingon Empire, not even a blood oath. With that in mind, he tells Jadzia that she has no obligation to honor her past host's commitments, and formally releases her from Curzon's oath.

But Dax confides in Kira that she nonetheless feels obligated to fulfill it. The Albino is a heinous criminal who led pirate raids on several Klingon and Federation colonies, until a task force commanded by Kang, Kor, and Koloth destroyed his power base. The Albino retaliated by infecting each of the three Klingons' firstborn sons with a deadly genetic virus; Curzon was godfather to Kang's son, and swore the oath along with the other three. Remembering Kira about her years with the Bajoran Resistance, Jadzia asks what it is like to have to kill someone. Kira responds, "when you take someone's life, you lose a part of your own as well."

Dax talks to Kor, who is as joyful as ever: "Oh, of course you should come! The splendor of fighting and killing, a bloodbath in the cause of vengeance; who wouldn't want to come!" But when she asks him to speak with Koloth and Kang on her behalf, he hesitates, calling himself an old man whose influence and power are long past.

Dax confronts Koloth in a holosuite while he is practicing his bat'leth techniques. He believes she is too young and fragile to accompany them, so she challenges him to a duel to show him that she still retains Curzon's skill with the weapon. After a few rounds, Koloth concedes that her presence will do honor to their cause, but Kang remains adamant in his refusal.

Act Three

Dax presses the matter: ultimately, Kang does not have the right to deny her vengeance against the Albino, who killed Dax's godson. Angrily, Kang agrees to allow her along, storming, "come and be damned!"

Before Dax can request a leave of absence, Benjamin Sisko beats her to the punch and confronts her in her quarters. He cannot condone murder in the name of vengeance, nor can he understand why Jadzia feels the need to do so to honor a commitment Curzon made. Dax tells him that Curzon is a part of her, and Curzon understood and embraced the Klingon concepts of honor and vengeance. When Dax begs him not to make her disobey a direct order, he does not directly give her permission to go but does not try to stop her either.

Aboard Kang's ship, on the way to the Albino's hideaway, the Klingons and Jadzia discuss their strategy. Kang advocates a surprise frontal assault on the compound's main gate. His intelligence indicates that the Albino only has forty guards, and the shock and awe of their appearance will give them a decisive advantage. Koloth and Kor endorse the plan and march out of the room triumphantly, but Dax stays to confront Kang. Unlike them, she can see that the plan is suicide, and demands to know what Kang is really up to. In fact, she says, if she didn't know better, she'd think Kang had been paid to lure them into a trap.

Kang admits that when he first learned the Albino's location, he visited the system to see if it was true, and was contacted by the Albino. The Albino offered Kang a "glorious" battle against forty of the Albino's best warriors and Kang accepted, believing that if he could not kill the Albino, he could die trying.

Believing that Klingons embrace death too easily, Dax urges him to consider an alternative strategy. Kang insists that the Albino's defenses cannot be penetrated by the four of them, and victory is impossible. But Dax has the idea of disabling the guards' phasers, by reconfiguring the ship's disruptors to bombard the compound from orbit with tetryon particles. The resulting dampening field will disable any energy weapons inside, giving the Klingons a significant advantage over the guards in hand-to-hand combat. Kang agrees, saying, "perhaps it is a good day to live."

Act Four

Kor, 2370

Kor

After beaming down to Secarus IV, Dax scans the area with her tricorder and detects a gravitic mine buried inside the main entrance: the Albino obviously never intended to keep his bargain with Kang. On the other hand, the booby-trap gives them the advantage, since the Albino will be focusing his defenses on the main gate. The four of them quickly work out an alternate plan of attack: Dax will create a diversion by sabotaging the compound's armory, drawing a fair amount of the guards away from the main house, while the Klingons disable the power station, knocking out the Albino's communications and scanners.

When the armory explodes, the Albino realizes that his trap has been outmaneuvered. Before he can order his guards to draw back into the house, the power station is sabotaged, leaving him trapped inside his main hall with a Markalian and only a few guards. The Klingons and Dax storm into the hall and fight his guards hand-to-hand. Koloth is mortally wounded when a guard stabs him in the back, while Kang fights his way through to the Albino.

The Albino manages to mortally wound Kang, but turns to find Dax's bat'leth at his throat. She introduces herself as the former Curzon Dax, and he smirks that she doesn't have it in her to murder him, alluding to the traditional consuming of the enemy's heart once they have been slain. She hesitates, and meanwhile Kang stabs his knife into the Albino's back. On the surface, he thanks Dax for the act of friendship in "letting" him have the death blow, but the knowing eyes between long friends hints at the deeper reality: that Kang has saved Jadzia from being forced to make the decision to kill the Albino. Kang utters, "It is a good day to die," before dying. Dax murmurs sadly, "It's never a good day to lose a friend." The only Klingon left standing, Kor, sings in honor of his fallen comrades, as he stands over the body of the dead Albino.

Dax returns to the station and resumes her post while casting a nervous glance at both Kira and Sisko, who return it pensively.

Memorable Quotes

"Shut off the power."
"He'll kill you!"
"No, he said he'll kill you - shut it off."

- Odo and Quark, evicting a drunken Kor from the holosuite


"How did you get in here?"
"I am Koloth."
"That doesn't answer my question."
"Yes, it does."

- Odo and Koloth, in Odo's office


"I do not go into battle with one whose honor is washed away in Breshtanti ale... Keep him!"

- Koloth, seeing the drunken Kor


"Security reassignments, major. Sorry it took so long; it's been a Klingon afternoon... Every time Klingons visit the station I wind up with a Klingon afternoon - but this is definitely one I'll cherish forever."

- Odo


"Kiss me!"
"How about just a great big hug?"

- A still drunk Kor, realizing that the beautiful woman who bailed him out truly is Dax


"This is a mistake! Kang must not have known..."
"Ah, but what a beautiful mistake!"

- Koloth and Kor, referring to Dax's new identity as Jadzia


"Is Kang coming?"
"Of course he's coming; he's brought the four of us together after 81 years!"
"Could it possibly mean that he's..."
"Yes...that is exactly what it means: I have found The Albino."

- Dax, Kor, and Kang


"This time, we will reach the Albino! And when we do, I will cut his heart out and eat it, while he watches me with his dying breath!"

- Kang


"The Korvat colony. First day of negotiations, I walked out on you, right in the middle of that long-winded speech of yours. You should have seen the look on your face. Nobody had ever had the kajunpak't to show their back to the great Kang before Curzon did."
"I almost killed Curzon that day."

- Dax and Kang


"You've said to yourself, 'Every new life for a Trill has to be a new life'! If not, you'd wind up paying off old debts forever. These Klingons can't possibly expect you to keep this oath!"
"No, they don't... That's just it! They say I have no obligation to them... but I do! I know it - I feel it!... If not to them, then to Curzon."

- Kira and Dax, regarding the blood oath


"Quark, you devious little Ha'DIbaH! Bring wine."

- Kor


"There is tension on your face, Koloth! You ought to drink more."

- Kor


"Of course you should come! The splendor of fighting and killing; a bloodbath in the cause of vengeance; who wouldn't want to come!"

- Kor to Dax


"Wait here."
"Where are you going?"
"I'm going to find out if he's inside."
"And how do you intend to do that?"
"I'll ask somebody!"

- Koloth offering a simple solution, and Kor wondering if he's gone mad


"May Kahless guide us on this day of vengeance!"

- Kang, before the Klingons storm the Albino's compound


"Look upon your executioners, killer of children!"

- Kang

Background

Story and script

Production

Albino's courtyard

Jim Martin sketch of Albino's courtyard

Reception

  • Terry Farrell is a big fan of this episode because she feels that it reveals a great deal of depth to Dax. Farrell feels that each of the three Klingons require a different approach from her, and that the character is capable of switching gears like that is something she is quite proud of; "With Kor, I had to convince him that he was a hero, and that in my eyes he would always be a hero, so that was philosophical. With Koloth, I had to prove that I was strong enough to go to battle with him, so that was physical. And with Kang, I had to prove to him that my desire and need to be a part of this blood oath was strong enough that I could not imagine staying behind, that I was mentally strong and capable enough. So I had to exhibit the honor, the physical strength, and the mental perseverance to go with them." (Star Trek: Deep Space Nine Companion)
  • Winrich Kolbe commented "It was the closest thing to Beowulf that I ever saw. There was a mythological quality to it and these guys were real heroes. I played Wagner in my mind the whole day and it had a feel that was beyond episodic television. It was really The Three Musketeers on a smaller scale and I loved it". (The Deep Space Log Book: A Second Season Companion)
  • On the return of the TOS actors, Michael Okuda commented "At first, you almost didn't recognize them because they were in heavy Klingon makeup. But as soon as Michael Ansara opened his mouth, there was a powerful sense of déjà vu. Having the three original Klingons on the show was magical for everyone". (Star Trek - Where No One Has Gone Before)
  • William Campbell commented that he, Michael Ansara and John Colicos all greatly enjoyed the episode, commenting "When it was all over and we finally saw the finished show, we really loved it". One particular scene Campbell enjoyed was the brief scene with Rene Auberjonois. "That was the scene when I walk in to get Colicos out of the drunk tank, and Odo turns around and says, 'How did you get in here?' I say him, 'I am Koloth!' and he says 'You're not answering my question', and my reply is, 'Yes I did'. In other words, Koloth can do anything. An actor can't have a better intro than that, and all the fans who had seen the old show identified him immediately". ("The Honorable William Campbell", TV Zone magazine, issue 60)
  • William Campbell also said this episode was his most difficult acting job, and one he would have liked to do again. (Deep Space Nine Chronicles)

Trivia

Apocrypha

  • Andy Mangels and Michael A. Martin's novel Forged in Fire is a prequel of sorts to this episode, giving more insight as to the background of the Albino (whose name, we learn, is Qagh) and Curzon's relationship with the Klingons.

Video and DVD releases

Links and references

Starring

Also starring

Guest stars

Uncredited co-stars

Stunt doubles

References

baakonite; Bahgol; Bajoran Resistance; Bajoran wormhole; bat'leth; blood oath; Breshtanti ale; Cardassians; d'k tahg; d'akturak; Dahar master; Dax, son of Kang; Dax, Curzon; dabo girl; Dayos IV; Federation;Ferengi; Galdonterre; genetic virus; gravitic mine; holosuite; Klach D'Kel Brakt; Klach D'Kel Brakt, Battle of; Klingon Empire; Korvat colony; kuttar; Markalian; meter; Milky Way Galaxy; N'yengoren strategy; orrery; plasma leak; Promenade; Quark's; QiVon; racht; Replimat; rib; riddinite; Romulans; Secarus IV; Secarus system; Starfleet oath; tetryon; tetryon radiation; tricorder

External links

Previous episode:
"Profit and Loss"
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
Season 2
Next episode:
"The Maquis, Part I"