Star Trek: Discovery (2017) s05e02 Episode Script

Under the Twin Moons

1

Previously on Star Trek: Discovery
RAYNER: They're smart, slippery as hell,
don't give a damn about
anyone but themselves.
Meet Moll and L'ak.
- BOOK: What did they steal?
- KOVICH: Something vital to the security
of the Federation.
BURNHAM: You're Moll and
L'ak, what's your next move?
BOOK: Q'mau. Dealer
there loves the old stuff.
Captain Burnham, Captain
Rayner, set a course
- for Q'mau.
- My mission or hers?
Why don't you try working together?
BURNHAM: An explosion up there
will cause an avalanche
and we can't risk killing
all those people down there!
An avalanche is not gonna happen.
Discovery, we have to
stop that avalanche.
We did it! Great work, everyone.
I do believe it would be only logical
to codify our commitment
in a more official capacity.
Are you asking me to marry you?
Some things are hard
to move past. For both of us.
And maybe we haven't
wanted to say that out loud.
Are we saying it now?
I think we are.
We've been calling them the Progenitors.
They created life as we know it.
Somehow, Dr. Vellek
found their technology.
Whatever it was they used
to design life itself.
Now Moll and L'ak know where it is.
Or the diary
is the first piece of the puzzle.
There is a system in the outer sector
of the Beta Quadrant Vileen.
One of its worlds Lyrek
has three moons, two of which
move in perfect sync.
It's on Lyrek.

BURNHAM: Captain's personal log,
stardate 866274.3.
For millenia,
philosophers and scientists
have wrestled with
the same big questions.
What is our purpose?
Why are we here?
What does it all mean?
I always thought I knew.
The mission. That's my purpose.
That's why I'm here.
That was always enough.
But, lately, it's not,
and I don't know why.
We're on a search for one of
the greatest powers ever known.
The very thing that created us.
I can't help but wonder
once we find it, once I understand it,
is that where I'll find the answers?
Is that how things make sense again?
(DOOR CHIMES)
Come.
Ah.
I have found myself reviewing
that same hologram
in my quarters as well.
Not much else to do while we
wait to get out of dry dock.
(ELECTRONIC HUMMING)
That avalanche really
did a number on us.
SARU: Ah, yes, the sands
of Q'mau continue to reveal
many heretofore unknown
radiative properties.
Meanwhile, Moll and L'ak
have one hell of a head start.
Only for the time being.
Uh, diligence of our new
friend notwithstanding,
I am happy to report that
repairs are nearly finished.
We should be ready to jump
within the hour.
Good.
Any more delays and I would
have started to wonder
if someone was stalling
his final day on board.
(CHUCKLES)
Just as well. I haven't found
anyone to replace you yet.
I am pleased that
the schedule has afforded me
one last mission to say goodbye.
Let's get ready for Lyrek.
Uh, there is another matter first.
Uh, an official matter
from the president's office.
RILLAK: Did you agree with
Captain Rayner's decision to fire
knowing, as he did, that
the consequences could be catastrophic?
I'm sorry, Madam President,
but I'm not sure I see
how the testimony of a matter
of opinion is relevant.
The Starfleet Corp of Engineers
is presently mired
in a very messy cleanup that has caused
no end of political complications,
which is precisely what
we do not need right now.
You were there. Your
testimony is relevant.
I would like to respectfully
remind the board
that Captain Rayner's actions
did not cause the avalanche.
No, but he seems to have
inspired Moll and L'ak,
who did.
My mission was to stop them, ma'am.
That's what I was doing.
Did you agree?
VANCE: Captain Burnham,
no one appreciates the, uh
unwritten Starfleet code
of conduct more than I do.
But you're being asked a direct
question by the president
to which we would all
appreciate a direct answer.
You had no problem voicing your
opinion in the field, Captain.
All right. The answer is no.
I did not agree. I thought it posed
- an unjustifiable risk.
- And as I told her then,
we had a Red Directive.
Our priority was a stolen item
that could compromise the safety
of the entire Federation.
Your mission is not
in question here, Captain.
Your actions are.
My strategy worked.
I blocked their escape. And, yes,
sometimes enemies
do inspire one another,
but what I did on Q'mau
was no different than
what I've been doing
for the last 30 years.
We are in a different time now, Captain.
Things have changed.
We're not at war.
The Breen are in-fighting
over a new leader.
The Orions are regrouping.
War is always a possibility,
and you're living in
a candy-colored holo-fantasy
if you're thinking otherwise.
(WHISPERS): You are
not helping yourself.
Oh, come on.
This is politics,
pure and simple. I already
know what she thinks.
I've leveled undue criticism
against the Federation
during a delicate time
of diplomacy and rebuilding.
I could be out there right now,
finishing this mission,
instead of sitting on our asses
That's enough, Rayner.
wasting precious time
while a technology
of unbelievable power is being
- VANCE: Captain Rayner.
- found, used
or sold to the highest bidder.
I said that's enough.
I think now would be
a good time for a break.

You disagree with me about this, too
that we're wasting time?
I think the world is bigger
than our own corner of it.
Captain Burnham. A word?
Shit.
Thank you for your candor in there.
It's true that it wasn't fair
for me to judge him.
Well, he's never quite been able
to get out of his own way.
Loves Starfleet, loves the Federation,
we've been together in more
firefights than I can count,
- but
- He has things to learn.
Don't we all.
But he's a gifted officer.
Thank you. Thank you for seeing that.
SARU (ON COMMS): Pardon
the interruption, Captain.
All ship repairs are nearly complete.
Discovery will be ready
to leave shortly.
I'll be right there.
Dr. Kovich will monitor
your progress from here.
I do have to ask
the addition to your crew manifest
He'll be fully briefed and
squared away before departure.
Good. It's an extra set of eyes
someone who's focused on Moll and L'ak,
knows their tactics from
his own time as a courier
could be helpful for the mission.
I couldn't agree more.
So, this isn't gonna be an issue.
No, sir.
Not at all.
Good.
'Cause he's already
proven himself valuable.
And I believe he'll continue to be.
Just see this as the start
of any other mission, my queen.
(MEOWS)
(SQUEAKING)
Who are you?
(PURRS)
BURNHAM: Lights.
I see Grudge is just as playful as ever.
It's the constant change.
- Hard for her to settle, you know?
- Mm.
So, you've made a fan
out of Admiral Vance.
Won't be sharing a drink
with him anytime soon.
But at least he hasn't
thrown me back in the clink.
No, he's impressed with
your work with the refugees.
And with your help on the Q'mau mission.
If you can help us get
the Progenitors' tech,
I'm sure the higher-ups
would be grateful.
I just go where they tell me.
So,
now I'm here.
What do you need?
All right. Well, according to the diary,
Dr. Vellek hid the Progenitors' power
or a clue as to where it's hidden
on Lyrek, and that's
where we're headed now.
Paul is also analyzing
something else that he found.
A schematic on this page
may be significant.
So, while he's working on
that, I will have you
review Moll and L'ak's interactions
with the dealer, Fred.
See if they said anything or
did anything that can help us.
Shouldn't take long. Then what?
Hugh's working up a psych profile.
We may run into our courier
friends down on the planet,
if they haven't already gotten there.
Either way, we need to get
that clue before they do.
And it's Saru's last mission,
by the way.
For a while, that is.
I know. I heard. (CHUCKLES)
Action Saru, chained to a desk.
Never thought I'd see it.
Action Saru?
Yeah. Come on, you know.
Action Saru.
(HISSES)
(IMITATES QUILLS LANDING)
(LAUGHS)
Yeah. Sorry she doesn't like it.
- Cats.
- I already knew she wouldn't.
Got it for you.
Mr. Saru. Black Alert.
(DOOR WHOOSHES SHUT)



(ORIGINAL STAR TREK THEME PLAYS)
TILLY: The clue from the diary,
"under the shadow of twin moons",
points us here. Double solar eclipse
casts a shadow over this area
once every seven years,
and scans show a large
structure at its center.
So, what else do we know
about the planet?
Uh, it's M-class. Uninhabited.
At least by anyone alive.
The place is kind of like
a burial ground.
Uh, the Promellians used it.
Before they went extinct
themselves, of course.
Why would a Romulan scientist choose
an ancient Promellian necropolis
as a hiding place?
No idea, sir. The last
recorded exploration
was over a century before
Dr. Vellek was even born.
Any sign of L'ak and Moll?
No, none. But we don't
know the full extent
of their cloaking capabilities yet.
- Mm, so they could be down there.
- TILLY: Down there,
up here, either way,
we will keep our eyes peeled.
Which is actually kind of disgusting
if you think about it.
- (CHUCKLES)
- But I-I'm here as your science specialist,
so they're peeled.
I'm so glad that you are
back with us for this.
Please thank the cadets
for letting us borrow you.
- (CHUCKLES)
- Uh, Lieutenant, I noticed
that our transport coordinates
have us landing quite a distance
from our target location.
Yeah, so, unfortunately,
the entire center area
seems to be surrounded
by a weirdly strong
electromagnetic field. See?
Something you might see from
a great technological power?
We will find out soon enough.
The field won't allow us
to transport you in,
but we'll get you as close as we can.
And you'll have to walk from there.
Have security on standby.
No one goes down unless
they need to be there.
Remind them that this is a sacred space
and we should tread lightly.
And keep those eyes peeled.
- Aye, Captain.
- Aye, Captain.
Last dance.
I shall follow your lead.
(CHUCKLES SOFTLY)
(GASPS SOFTLY)
It's oddly serene
for a species that
was constantly at war.
Indeed.
I don't believe I've ever heard such
quiet.
Wow.
Okay. Still no life signs?
I have compensated
for the cloaking system
Moll and L'ak had used
against us previously, and
- Mm.
- registering none in the vicinity.
Here. This large pyramid
that's where the shadow would fall.
Power of creation, here we come.
Hey.
Book.
I heard you were on board.
Welcome back.
How are you doing?
Yeah. Um, I've been helping
resettle DMA refugees
That is what you were doing.
I want to know how are you doing?
Just trying to make sense of it all.
Figure out what's next,
- you know?
- Mm-hmm.
So, what have we got
on Moll and L'ak so far?
Well, let's just say I know
more about the spirits
my abuela used to pray to
than I do about these two.
Hmm.
They use hybridized tech from
a variety of different species,
they don't shy away from
physical confrontation,
though they're not violent
just for the sake of it.
Moll is human, L'ak is a mystery.
That's about it.
We don't even know where they're from
or if those are even their real names.
ZORA: Dr. Culber, I have the footage
of Moll and L'ak you asked for.
BOOK: Oh, from when they got away.
What is it?
They've got two starships
on their tail
one has them on a leash
and they pull this stunt
like they're going for style points.
Okay. Why?
'Cause they're free.
Having fun together.
In love.
Means a lot to be together,
I would imagine.
We're here for them, Doc, not me.
And, you see, that's not just fun.
That's cliff's-edge kind of stuff.
Okay, so they're thrill-seekers.
- That's helpful.
- Yeah.
What say we give them a cliff?
See if they're willing to jump.
Did you know you have
a nickname? Action Saru.
Ah, yes.
Huh. You've heard it before?
Yeah, I find it quite humorous.
He didn't tell me he came up with that.
I mean, it's-it's not that
he needed to, it's just that
we were together for a long time.
I mean, not long by, uh,
by some standards but
- long for me.
- Are you speaking of Mr. Booker?
Uh, yeah, didn't he give
you that nickname?
Uh, no, it was Commander Reno,
shortly after we arrived in this future.
She heard about my encounter
with Zareh and, apparently,
my ferocity the use of my quills
well, struck a rather
strong chord with her.
Right. Right.
I'm really happy for you, Saru.
You know, I-I remember the day
you came aboard Discovery.
A mutineer, a prisoner.
You seemed exactly the wrong choice.
And yet you made the most
of the opportunity.
I-I remain deeply impressed
and inspired by all that
you have accomplished.
Oh, Saru, you have always
seen something in me.
Even when others didn't.
Even when I didn't.
And I look at you now,
who you've become.
Probably the bravest soul
I've ever known.
Thank you, Michael.
How the hell am I gonna
find another you?
You do not need another me.
You need a new Number One.
Right. Well, Tilly wants to go
back to the academy after this.
I've got candidates on Discovery
and across Starfleet.
- I
- If I may offer a piece of advice.
Sure.
You are a force, Michael.
I believe you would be aided
by one who is as well.
Someone like Mr. Booker,
now that I think of it.
- You're not suggesting I make Book my Number
- I simply mean to say
that he stands his ground,
even in difficult moments.
- If you were to
- Saru.
Bodies wouldn't be unburied here.
What do you think grave robbers?
SARU: I would venture to say
they have been here
for quite some time.
But not courtesy of Moll and L'ak.
Which begs the question:
what killed them?
If only the stones could speak.
BURNHAM: Let's keep our eyes open.
Hate to miss your wedding
because I'm dead.
That would be a grave disappointment.
Did you just make a pun?
Oh, unintentional.
Unless, of course, you found it amusing.
What?
Nothing. I'm
very happy that you're back.
Mm.
Even if it is just temporary.
Thanks. Mm, um, me, too.
Although I-I do really feel
like I found my place there.
Like, I love teaching.
Yeah, you're really good at it.
Well
my cadets haven't really been
rising to the challenge in the field.
They can task,
but then they never seem to fully grasp
the meaning of the mission itself.
Tasks are concrete.
And meaning is
Hmm.
Well, hopefully some
time away will give me time
and space to clear my head
and offer a fresh perspective
to help them.
Fresh perspectives are good.
Hmm?
Uh, Gray.
I love him a lot.
And this is the first time
that it's just been me.
And I
I don't know, I kind of like it.
And you don't know
how to feel about that?
(ALERT BEEPING)
Huh, that's odd.
Uh, that's, uh
there's a spike
in the electromagnetic field.
Getting close.
500 meters from the target.
Still no sign of Moll and L'ak.
TILLY (ON COMMS): Captain,
we've been looking at the spikes
in the electromagnetic field.
Are you seeing anything
weird down there?
No.
Nothing weird.
(RUMBLING)
Changed my mind.
(GASPS)
(GRUNTING)
Looks like we know what
killed the grave robbers.
Incredible that, although fallen
and shattered centuries ago,
the technology of this
security system has endured.
I'm sure I'll appreciate
that at some point.
Discovery, with transporters
out, if we run,
these drones'll cut us to pieces.
We're recalibrating
the transporter system
to get around the electromagnetic field.
I-I can't I can't get it.
TILLY: Captain, can you
make it back to the drop zone
- where we beamed you in?
- Not a chance.
Can you take them out from orbit?
ADIRA: No, Captain, you're too close.
Uh, what if we send
in the security team?
I do not believe we will
survive that long, Ensign.
(BEEPING, WHIRRING)
BURNHAM: That drone just detonated.
- (DRONE FIRES)
- (GRUNTS)
Great. Lose one drone, another comes.
Tilly, we're losing our foot.
What Oh, my God, who lost a foot?
No, not our actual feet.
The foot we're hiding under.
But we'll lose our actual
heads if we can't find
- the power source and shut this thing down.
- TILLY: On it.
We remain in your capable
hands, Lieutenant.
- Capable and speedy.
- TILLY: Okay.
Power sources let's run through them.
- Ion reactor?
- Not that I can see. Uh, uh, deuterium?
No, no spectral traces. What
Uh, it's got to be run
on some sort of battery
of some kind, right?
Well, what about cloaked antimatter?
COMMS OFFICER: Excuse me,
Lieutenant, you're receiving
an urgent transmission
from Federation headquarters.
I'm sorry, that's gonna have to wait.
I hate waiting, and sounds
like you could use my help.
Captain Rayner?
I've been monitoring secure comms.
But how ?
30 years at Starfleet, that's how.
This is your first Red Directive?
I've been on seven,
served point on four.
- Now, about that help
- Okay, this is a science problem, Captain.
No, this is a people problem,
as you might say. It always is.
Do you really think the
Promellians were using
cloaked antimatter batteries
2,000 years ago?
To beat the system they built,
you've got to think like them,
not 32nd century scientists.
Okay, Zora, using
Federation databases, uh,
what energy source did the
Promellians use on their ships?
ZORA: Lang-cycle fusion was most common.
Okay, any evidence of that
on the surface when we arrived?
Um
- Hmm, none.
- BURNHAM: Tilly, do we have a solve yet?
Uh, working on it.
Don't look at me. Keep going.
Who were they? How did they think?
They built a graveyard,
they wanted to protect it for centuries,
so they needed power.
What technology did they
have available to them?
What could they bring there? Better yet,
what was already there?
Zora or whoever you are
how'd they power their cities?
What else did they use for their ships?
ZORA: Data shows they
harnessed gravity waves,
gamma-ray bursts,
electromagnetic waves
Electromagnetic waves.
TILLY AND ADIRA:
The electromagnetic field!
- You're welcome.
- BURNHAM: Hurry, Tilly.
(PHASERS FIRING)
(RAPID BEEPING)
All the drones are gonna detonate!
Go, go, go!
Tilly, we're running out
of body parts down here.
TILLY: Good news: we figured out
whats powering the security system.
Okay. Sounds like bad news is coming,
but we'll take the good news.
What do we got?
The electromagnetic field
it spiked before
the security system kicked in.
That's what's powering it.
Well, I fail to see
how that is good news.
We cannot shut down a planet.
No, but if you can locate
the statue's internal control mechanism,
you could shut that down
and stop the drones.
The head. When the drones
came out of the eyes.
That's where this all started.
We can demolish that.
Whoa. That could cause a chain
reaction throughout the system,
destroying what we came here to find
and killing us in the process.
Well, it's a risk, but it's
our only option. Discovery
can't get a lock. If we do
nothing, we're dead for sure.
What if we disconnect the system
from its power source first?
We'll have to scan the
internal mechanism and then
have Tilly analyze how
it connects to the E.M. field.
But the drones are back.
And right now we don't
have that kind of time.
Um, or
we could use an electromagnetic pulse.
It disrupts present-day technology,
it should do the same with
a thousand-year-old system.
Well, Captain
Tilly, what do you think?
TILLY: Yeah, well, it is
the safer option, Captain.
If you can use the power packs
from your phasers
and set them to emergency
discharge and then get that
as close as you can to the
internal control mechanism,
that that could work.
All right.
- I'll go draw their fire.
- Captain.
My reflexes and speed are
superior to any human's.
I will draw fire while
you place our weapons.
- No, let me do it. Okay?
- No, no,
- Captain, no.
- No, this is your last mission.
We are running out of time.
- T'Rina would be heartbroken.
- She would want me to
perform my duties as I always have.
Michael, please.
On your mark.
(DRONES WHIRRING)
(GRUNTS)
(GRUNTS)
(GRUNTS)
(PHASER WHIRRING)
(FIRES RAPIDLY)
(PHASER BEEPING)
(WHIRRING)

(GRUNTING)
(RAPID BEEPING)
We did it! Captain Rayner
BURNHAM: Saru?!
Saru, where are you?!
- Here, Captain! Here.
- (GASPS)
Here. I I'm all right. I'm all right.
(PANTING HEAVILY)
Ooh.
- (LAUGHS)
- (GROANS)
Oh. Oh, you're hit?
It's I'm fine. It's nothing serious.
Action Saru. Damn!
(LAUGHING)
Your idea worked. Thank you.
I believe it is now clear why Dr. Vellek
would choose a Promellian necropolis
- as a hiding place.
- Yes.
It is exceedingly (GRUNTS)
well-defended.
(BOTH LAUGH, EXHALE)
Let's just hope what we're
looking for is still here
and that Moll and L'ak
haven't beaten us to it.
You ready?
Yes.
(BOTH GRUNT)
Okay.
Let's go.
ZORA: Commander, I've completed
my search on the symbol
found in the Romulan scientist's diary.
There are 2,453,972
possible pattern matches
in Federation databases.
Great, so we're narrowing it down.
Let me try you this way.
I'm not sure about this, Book.
Maybe if we knew
- more about Moll and L'ak
- I know all I need for this.
- What's going on?
- He wants to access
a special subspace comms channel.
I had to get this piece of equipment
from my pack. Which station can I use?
- Um
- Thank you.
STAMETS: What's that for?
- Dark comms.
- Dark comms?
Yeah, to reach L'ak and Moll.
From the way they fly,
my guess is they're Sui
couriers that take the most
dangerous jobs
because they love the action.
And the latinum.
Sui are the ones you call
when you have a really dangerous score.
They're running from Starfleet.
Why would they talk to you?
Because they need to unload
that diary while they can.
Something that hot, bound
to be offers once word gets out.
So I'm gonna send them a message.
He thinks he can talk them down
before they reach the planet,
- assuming they're not here yet.
- And if you can't?
At the very least, we'll
know more about them.
Listen, wherever they are right now,
the last thing we need's
another dance with them.
We have to try this.
Okay.
I need all nonessential personnel
to clear Engineering.
Everybody out! Come on, go, go!
Thank you.
All right, uh,
you're all set. Discovery's hidden.
They won't know where
you're calling from.
They'll do the same on their ship.
See if you can trace them anyway.
Strivers, this is code for them
that's out-fleeting Starfleet.
If you're itching to sell
I got a boon for you.
Hit back.
- Did it go through?
- BOOK: Mm-hmm.
Doesn't appear to be working.
BOOK: It will.
Here we go.
You wanted our attention, you got it.
You have two minutes.
BURNHAM: This is it.
We're dead center of our target area.
SARU: There are no life signs
or energy signatures,
- which is fortunate.
- BURNHAM: Okay, what are we looking for?
SARU: Perhaps we are meant
to enter the structure itself.
BURNHAM: No. Wait a minute. Over there.
Damn it. Phaser burns.
They beat us.
But why would Moll and L'ak do this
if the Progenitors' tech was here?
I do not see readings that
would indicate there was once
anything of great power here at all.
- Never?
- Never.
So, maybe the inscription
on the stone is a clue.
It's the next step
to the Progenitors' tech,
so that's why Moll and L'ak
destroyed it.
We've got to figure out what it said.
TILLY (ON COMMS): Uh,
Captain, less-than-great news:
the-the field is powering up again.
How much time do we have, Lieutenant?
Three, four minutes maybe.
We'll take it. There's
got to be something here.
SARU: Oh.
If you lower your tricorder.
What is it?
There are hints of iridescent bacteria
within the scorched areas of stone.
The bacteria would have
settled into the grooves
where the words were inscribed.
- Hmm.
- Their iridescence must be
a reaction to the radiation
from the phaser blast.
I'll recalibrate for the UV spectrum.
Yes, you're right.
Okay.
"Jolan tru, zarbalgon".
That's "Hello, wanderer.
Many worlds have you traveled".
- This is a Romulan revlav.
- Yes, uh, yes.
"Opaline waters call to you".
"Thoughts are shared".
Which seems to point to Betazed.
- Mm.
- But there are only four verses.
- TILLY: Uh, Captain?
- Yes, yes,
we, uh, we know. Uh, right.
A revlav has five verses.
So, where's the missing verse?
- No, we have to get you out.
- We need a few minutes.
No, you have, at most, two minutes.
- The field is coming up fast.
- Okay, well, the fifth verse
has to be here somewhere,
and we can't leave without it.
I won't ask again.
Who are you?
A former courier, like yourselves.
Well, former courier,
I'm sorry to disappoint.
Diary's not for sale.
Now that we know what it leads to.
You were curious enough
to answer my message.
Yeah, well,
as she said, we're
after bigger shine now.
But I'm guessing that he knows that.
Don't you?
You make a mess and
get Starfleet on your ass,
folks start talking.
(SCOFFS) Try again. What is your angle?
I got things that I want, too.
And if I stop you,
I might just get them.
Now, I don't know if you're
running from something
or to something, but you're running.
All you've got is each
other, and you're in
way over your head.
You need to walk away
before it's too late.
You can't win in a race with Starfleet.
Wrong. We're already ahead.
MOLL: And it's them
who should walk away.
Diary's Romulan.
Federation's got no claim to it.
We saw it first, finders
keepers and all that.
That diary leads to something
more dangerous than you know.
The Federation can handle it,
keep it safe. You can't.
Keep going like this, you'll
end up dead or in the brig.
Or is that the kind of shine
you're looking for?
MOLL: You know, with
all the Federation kav'kar
coming out of your mouth,
I'm having a hard time
believing you were ever a courier.
Who are you, really?
No lies here.
I worked in the Beta Quadrant,
mostly sector six.
Name's Cleveland Booker.
You heard of me.
You're right about one thing.
All we have is each other.
And that's more than enough.
CULBER: Did we get the trace?
STAMETS: No, they routed
their comms signal through
an unstable wormhole. Smart
but completely untraceable.
Book? You all right?
BOOK: Yeah.
BURNHAM: So, Dr. Vellek left this clue.
Let's put ourselves in his shoes.
What do we know about
24th century Romulans?
They were obsessed with secrecy.
Yes, and so the diary, this place,
uh, the message in a poem
Maybe it's not just secrecy.
It's security.
Both of which went hand in hand
during the time of the empire.
Uh, eminent Romulan thinkers,
including scientists,
often traveled with
armed guards.
- TILLY: 60 seconds.
- BURNHAM: Huh.
Their homes also
frequently had a shaiqouin,
a false front door designed
to mislead enemies.
Right, and the entrance
for family and friends
and trusted allies was in the back.
So, behind the stone.
Or, uh, beneath it?
40 seconds.
Can you muster up that
famous Kelpien strength?
Well we shall see.
Okay.
- (SARU GRUNTING)
- I see something!
Keep going.
BURNHAM: Keep going. Keep going!
Got it. Moll and L'ak don't have
this part of the clue, so they're
on their way to Betazed.
Well, they will realize
their error soon enough
and return here.
BURNHAM: What is this?
(GRUNTS)
Huh.
SARU: Oh
Now, we can't let them find this.
I do not wish to destroy
the stone, but
- Ten seconds!
- Okay, well, let's just cover it up and then leave it be.
This is a sacred space and
we've disturbed it enough.
We'll find another way to
get ahead of Moll and L'ak.
Hurry, hurry.
Five, four
Captain!
Hurry, hurry, hurry, Saru.
Tilly, now!
(PANTING)
TILLY: Exciting last day.
- (CHUCKLES)
- Yeah, indeed.
Yeah, thank you both
very much for your help.
Oh, you should really be
thanking Captain Rayner.
I mean, we-we we would
never have figured out
- how that security system worked without him.
- BURNHAM: Rayner?
(EXHALES)
Commander Stamets, can you
join us in the science lab?
STAMETS: On my way.
Any sign of Moll and L'ak's ship?
None.
Tilly, have Linus prep a team of DOTs.
There's a stone monument down
there desecrated by phaser fire.
Let's have them repair it
as best as they can.
And let's get sensors into orbit.
When Moll and L'ak come back,
- I want to know about it.
- (DOOR WHOOSHES OPEN)
- Aye, Cap.
- Aye, Captain.
- (DOOR WHOOSHES SHUT)
- STAMETS: Oh.
Mr. Saru, I happen to know a doctor.
Yes, I will see him shortly, thank you.
Uh, but first Captain?
BURNHAM: Okay, check this out.
Looks similar to the diary symbol
you've been working on,
no?
Yeah, it h it has the same
style and visual language.
Zora, can you bring up the diary symbol?
ZORA: Yes, Commander.
Zora, can you create
a programmable-matter
version of that?
ZORA: Of course, Captain.
(GASPS)
Yes, Stamets. Yes.
(STAMETS GASPS SOFTLY)
STAMETS: No wonder we
couldn't find a pattern match.
It was incomplete.
But what is it?
I think this is a map of some kind,
broken into five pieces.
And the poem tells us where to go next.
So we just need to find four more pieces
to complete the map.
TILLY: So, on-once we have
all five pieces, then we find
what created us?
The Progenitors' actual technology?
Seems so.
No biggie, then.
Uh, where are we going next?
Uh, the first set of verses
seem to suggest Betazed,
which is where Moll and L'ak
must be heading.
But this final verse reads,
"A world like no other,
where two souls entwine,
joined as one".
Well, when considered
with the other details
uh, opaline waters, shared thoughts
- uh, I suppose
- ADIRA: Trill.
We're going to Trill.
(CHUCKLES)
MOLL: All we have is each other.
And that's more than enough.
Freeze.
Zora, can you zoom in on Moll?
ZORA: Certainly, Mr. Booker.
Can you take this image
and age Moll down to
seven years, three months?
(DOOR CHIMES)
Come in.
- Hey.
- Hey.
You okay?
The way you left, it looked
like you saw a ghost.
(SOFT CHUCKLE)
Do you believe in fate?
Depends, I suppose. Why?
Turns out I know her.
Who?
Moll.
Moll?
Her birthmark. I've only
ever seen it on one person.
Here.
A child.
I'd never actually met her before.
Until today.
I've only ever seen a holo image.
Her name is
Malinne.
She's the daughter of my mentor
Cleveland Booker IV.
Which, I suppose
makes her the closest thing
to family I've got left.
I believe I may be ready.
You can still change your mind. Okay?
I told Detmer to pull in real slow.
(SOFT CHUCKLE)
I passed through
Vahar'ai,
from a life of fear
to a life of hope,
right here in this room.
What I remember most about that day
is that you were here with me.
You held my hand.
And I was not afraid.
Thank you, Michael.
It was an honor, Saru.
Everything with you has been.
But it's not forever, right?
A few months, hopefully.
Well, while I'm gone, I do hope that
my replacement will serve you well.
(CHUCKLES) There's
no replacing you, but
whoever comes, I'm
sure they'll be great.
Any last words of advice?
Well, I must say, I
I feel a great deal of power
in this moment.
(BOTH CHUCKLE)
I will simply encourage you
to continue forward as you have.
One cannot predict what is to come.
But I find that when I give myself over
to the journey
trust in the process,
one might say
there is always
great meaning in that.
Wherever I may eventually arrive.
I will also advise you
to not touch the swamp kelp
while it is in bloom.
Yes, Tilly warned me.
- (CHUCKLES)
- We'll take good care of them.
And this will always be here for you.
I know it will.
Thank you, Saru.
For what?
For giving me a second chance.
Brushing up on your geometry?
(CHUCKLES): Well
I actually am.
I I can't help Charlie
if I don't know what she's doing.
(CHUCKLES) Right.
So, I, uh, I read your report.
Good work today.
Thank you, sir.
If I may,
I've been wondering about the inquiry.
I asked Rayner
to take an early retirement,
effective immediately.
Can't have been easy.
We've been friends for 30 years.
Hopefully still will be
once the dust settles.
I will say
on Q'mau
he did what he thought was
right for the Federation.
He always has.
But the shame is, he's
a damn good captain.
But the world has changed.
I tried to talk to him and
help him see it, but
he won't hear me.
You mind?
Free galaxy. Most of it, anyway.
I got to say
she's a beautiful ship.
They don't make 'em like that anymore.
(SOFT CHUCKLE)
You find the Progenitors' tech?
No, but we found a clue
to where it's hidden.
Next stop: somewhere on Trill.
The quest continues.
Ah.
Thank you for your help today.
Well, I was on break
from getting grilled.
It gave me something to do.
Well, you've done a lot over the years.
Citations for distinguished service,
the Grankite Order of Tactics,
- awards of valor.
- Trinkets.
It's what you do in the chair
every day, every mission
that's what matters.
You could have told the board
what they wanted to hear.
I know what I stand for,
I know what I believe in.
I'm not gonna apologize for that.
Anything else, Captain, or can I go back
to enjoying the view in peace?
So you think you deserved it?
(SIGHS)
The retirement?
I always tell my crew:
get out of your head,
think like your enemies.
I should have seen it coming.
What Moll and L'ak did on Q'mau.
We've tangled enough.
I should have known. I
I should have known.
If that town had been hit.
All those lives lost.
Why didn't you say any of that
during the inquiry?
I already dug my own grave in there.
It wouldn't have mattered.
Doesn't mean you have to get in it.
(SHORT CHUCKLE)
I want you to be my Number One.
You get knocked in the head
with one of those statues?
(CHUCKLES)
You didn't have to help us
today, but you did
because the mission matters to you.
Starfleet and the Federation
matter to you.
And I see how you're looking
out at the stars
we both know you're
not ready to hang it up.
It's an interesting offer.
But Vance wouldn't let me back on a ship
unless it was a garbage scow.
I already spoke to Vance.
He backs my choice.
I got a second chance once.
This is yours.
We leave for Trill at 0800.
The offer stands till then.
Burnham.
I'm not a yes man.
I'm counting on that.
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