| "Treachery, Faith, and the Great River" | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Star Trek: Deep Space Nine episode | |||
| Episodeno. | Season 7 Episode 6 | ||
| Directed by | Steve Posey | ||
| Story by | Philip Kim | ||
| Teleplay by | |||
| Featured music | David Bell | ||
| Production code | 556 | ||
| Original air date | November 2, 1998 (1998-11-02) | ||
| Guest appearances | |||
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| Episode chronology | |||
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| Star Trek: Deep Space Nineseason 7 | |||
| List of episodes | |||
"Treachery, Faith, and the Great River" (originally without aserial comma) is the 156th episode of the television seriesStar Trek: Deep Space Nine, the sixth episode of theseventh season. It was first aired the week of November 2, 1998.[1] The teleplay was written by David Weddle and Bradley Thompson, based on a story by Philip Kim, and directed by Steve Posey. When it was aired on television in November 1998, the episode received Nielsen ratings of 4.8 points corresponding to over 4.7 million viewers.[2]
Set in the 24th century, the series follows the adventures of the crew of theStarfleet-managedBajoranspace stationDeep Space Nine. The later seasons of the series follow a war between theUnited Federation of Planets and an expansionist empire known as theDominion, ruled by the shape-shifting Changelings, which has already absorbed the nearby planet ofCardassia. In this episode, aclone ofWeyoun, one of the Dominion's genetically engineered Vorta administrators, attempts to defect to the Federation; since the Vorta see the Changelings as gods, Weyoun delivers himself into the custody of DS9's security chiefOdo, a renegade Changeling who has rejected the Dominion.
Guest stars include many ofDeep Space Nine's recurring cast, includingJeffrey Combs as two clones of Weyoun,Casey Biggs asCardassian leaderDamar,J. G. Hertzler asKlingon GeneralMartok,Aron Eisenberg andMax Grodénchik asFerengi engineersNog andRom, andSalome Jens as a Changeling.[3]
Odo is summoned to a secret rendezvous by Weyoun, who says that he has decided that the Dominion's war against the Federation is misguided, and offers to defect. Odo distrusts Weyoun, and is irritated that Weyoun considers him a god, but takes him into custody. Soon theirrunabout is hailed byanother Weyoun, who explains that the Weyoun clone with Odo (Weyoun VI) was activated after the "accidental" death of the previous Weyoun (which both Weyouns suspect was arranged by Damar); his successor, Weyoun VII, was activated when Weyoun VI abandoned his post and was deemed "defective". Weyoun VII orders Weyoun VI to activate hisself-termination implant, but he refuses.
Damar persuades Weyoun VII to order the runabout destroyed to prevent Weyoun VI from reaching the Federation; Weyoun VII is reluctant to risk the death of Odo, a Changeling, but eventually consents. When the Changeling supervising him demands an update, Weyoun VII is subservient but vague in his answers, not revealing Odo as their target. Damar notices that the Changeling looks unwell.
As they try to escape the pursuing Dominion ships, Weyoun VI reveals to Odo that an unknown and fatal illness is spreading among the Changelings, with Odo possibly the only one uninfected. He urges Odo to be prepared to take command of the Dominion himself and turn it away from its imperialistic ways. Realizing they will be unable to escape, Weyoun VI tells Odo he lives to serve him, hails Weyoun VII, and triggers his termination implant. Weyoun VII immediately calls off the attack and allows Odo to escape. Before dying, Weyoun VI asks Odo for a blessing, and Odo complies. Back on DS9, Kira and Odo discuss their concern the Dominion may become more aggressive if its dying leaders decide they have nothing left to lose.
In a side plot on Deep Space Nine, ChiefMiles O'Brien is missing a crucial piece of equipment needed to repair the starshipDefiant.Nog offers to help O'Brien by navigating "the Great Material Continuum"—aFerengi metaphor for the economics ofsupply and demand as a great river on which a skilled navigator can always find what he needs. O'Brien reluctantly authorizes Nog to make a long series of trades, including loaning outCaptain Sisko's desk and selling a shipment of wine sent by General Martok's wife. An increasingly alarmed O'Brien watches with dismay as Nog works deal after deal while the required part appears no closer to arriving. In the end, theDefiant is finally repaired, Martok's wine is replaced with a better vintage, and Sisko's desk is returned before he even discovers it was gone.
In his 2014 review of this episode forThe A.V. Club, Zack Handlen felt the episode was "a pleasure to watch" and praised its presentation of both sides of a conflict.[1]
Reviewing the episode in 2014 forTor.com,Keith R.A. DeCandido gave it a rating of 7 out of 10; he called the plots "superb" and a "delight", though he thought Nog's storyline makes little sense in a science-fiction setting in which items can easily bereplicated.[3]
In 2015,Geek.com recommended this episode as "essential watching" for their abbreviatedStar Trek: Deep Space Ninebinge-watching guide.[4]
In 2019,Screen Rant ranked this one of the top ten episodes for the character Nog.[5]
Media scholar Ina Rae Hark described the episode as "a sort of comparative religion seminar" examining the beliefs of the Dominion and the Ferengi. The episode therefore illustrates howDeep Space Nine explores alien cultures in detail, taking religious belief seriously, and thus departs from the work ofGene Roddenberry, creator of theStar Trek franchise, who tended to portray religion as an exploitative "con game".[6]