Counterpoint (Star Trek: Voyager)

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Star Trek: VOY episode
"Counterpoint"
Image:ST-VOY Counterpoint.jpg
Kashyk takes over Janeway's ready room
Episode no. 104
Prod. code 204
Airdate December 16, 1998
Writer(s) Michael Taylor
Director Les Landau
Guest star(s) Mark Harelik as Kashyk
Randy Oglesby as Kir
J. Patrick McCormack as Prax
Alexander Enberg as Vorik
Year 2375
Stardate  ?
Episode chronology
Previous "Thirty Days"
Next "Latent Image"

"Counterpoint" is an episode of Star Trek: Voyager, the tenth episode of the fifth season. The episode has an average rating of 4.4/5 on the official Star Trek website (as of August 6th, 2007).[1]

[edit] Plot

The USS Voyager is passing through Devore space, where telepathy is illegal and telepaths are sent to relocation centers. Devore warships are far larger and more powerful than Voyager, so the ship is subject to frequent inspections to check for telepaths. As the episode opens, one of these inspections, complete with rough treatment of the crew and their equipment, is underway.

The lead Devore inspector, Kashyk, takes up residence in Janeway's ready room. He plays Mahler's first symphony throughout the ship to "relax" the crew. However, Kashyk expresses an interest in human culture, allows Voyager to get away with a course deviation that his assistant, Prax, says would normally result in it being impounded, and suggests that Janeway could use a friend like him.

The Devore ships then leave Voyager, after which Captain Janeway orders that twelve Brenari refugees, along with Tuvok and Vorik, all of whom are telepathic, be brought out of transporter suspension in cargo bay one, which contains contaminated antimatter to block Devore sensors.

Soon after, Kashyk returns to the ship, this time alone. He tells Janeway that he knows all about the telepathic refugees and that the nebula containing a wormhole that she plans to transport them to for their escape is a Devore trap. He says that he is defecting and requests asylum on the ship in return for his assistance in avoiding Devore ships. She agrees to grant him safe passage out of Devore space if the Brenari are amenable.

The Brenari leader, Kir, agrees to cooperate. Kir points Janeway to a scientist, Torat, who can help them predict the next appearance of the wormhole. At this point, Janeway begins to cooperate with Kashyk. Torat is reluctant to help Voyager, so she introduces Kashyk as a fellow professor who doubts his work. To prove himself, and in exchange for mercurium isochromate, Torat provides the two with some data on the wormhole. Later, the two work to pinpoint the next appearance of the wormhole. After standard algorithms fail, Janeway, considering the music that is playing in the background, suggests that the pattern may be found in a subspace counterpoint. This time, the computer analysis works, allowing the next occurrence of the wormhole to be predicted.

Unfortunately, Voyager is soon detected by a Devore scanning array. Janeway plans to fight the ships with the new information about them she has obtained from Kashyk. But he tells her she will never survive against two of them and offers to take command of the impending inspection to ensure the refugees escape. She agrees, and the two kiss before Kashyk leaves in his ship.

The Devore inspectors soon board the ship. Janeway meets Kashyk in her ready room, who plays Tchaikovsky's fourth symphony, second movement and demands that she cease altering her course and leave Devore space. After sending Prax away, he asks about the wormhole. She tells him it is off the port bow and a photon torpedo will open it. He then congratulates her, ordering Prax to Cargo Bay one to capture the refugees and ordering two photon torpedoes to be fired to destroy the wormhole.

However, he soon realizes that it is he who has been double crossed. The neutrino emissions indicating a wormhole off the port bow are actually antimatter residue signatures, and it is not refugees, but cargo containers filled with vegetables, that are suspended in the transporters in Cargo Bay one. Janeway changes the music to Mahler's first symphony, while the refugees escape through the wormhole via shuttlecraft. Prax suggests that Voyager be impounded and the crew sent to relocation centers, but Kashyk, noting the effect the loss of the telepaths would have on both of their careers, leaves the ship and allows Janeway on her way.

[edit] Miscellaneous

  • The Devore are mentioned in several future episodes of Voyager, including "Think Tank" and "Dragon's Teeth".
  • The precise notable musical piece by Mahler is the Symphony No. 1 in D Major: II. Kräftig bewegt, doch nicht zu Schnell.
  • Once, when asked by a fan at a convention what her favorite episode of the show was, Kate Mulgrew answered "Counterpoint". She liked the play within a play within a play aspect of the show.

[edit] External links

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Star Trek: Balance of Terror | Amok Time | Journey to Babel | The Immunity Syndrome | The Enterprise Incident | Star Trek: The Motion Picture | Star Trek II: The Wrath of Khan | Star Trek III: The Search for Spock | Star Trek IV: The Voyage Home | Star Trek V: The Final Frontier | Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country
Star Trek: The Next Generation: Sarek | Data's Day | Unification | Gambit | Star Trek: First Contact
Star Trek: Deep Space Nine: Take Me Out to the Holosuite | Field of Fire
Star Trek: Voyager: Learning Curve | Meld | Innocence | Tuvix | Flashback | Alter Ego | Blood Fever | Random Thoughts | Infinite Regress | Counterpoint | Gravity | Juggernaut | Riddles | Unimatrix Zero | Repression
Star Trek: Enterprise: Broken Bow | The Andorian Incident | Breaking the Ice | Shadows of P'Jem | Fusion | Fallen Hero | Carbon Creek | The Seventh | Stigma | Cease Fire | Bounty | The Expanse | Impulse | Harbinger | Damage | | Home | The Forge | Awakening | Kir'Shara | Babel One | Affliction | Demons | Terra Prime | These Are the Voyages...
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