731 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
731 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
From: cynth@netcom.com (Cynthia Bell)
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This is a repost of something I wrote about a year ago:
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The Worst of Both Worlds
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by Cindy Bell
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As Captain Picard and Counselor Troi stood in Transporter Room 3 that
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day, neither was in a very good mood, and the sight of Riker's amused smile
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and Data's puzzled expression only made things worse. "Could you please
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explain to me, Number One, why Starfleet has once again ordered us to
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provide shuttle service for Ambassador Troi?," asked Picard, wearily
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tugging at the collar of his dress uniform.
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"Yes, Will," agreed Deanna, "In Mother's last subspace transmission
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she told me that she had finally acquired her own ship and that Mr. Homn
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was flying it for her. I was hoping that her visits would become a little
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less ... spontaneous."
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"I am curious as well, Commander," added Data.
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"Her spaceship was stolen while she was vacationing on Risa, and she
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needs us to get her to a conference on Turabian V. Besides, sir," Riker
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couldn't resist adding, "you look so dashing in your dress uniform. I'm
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sure Mrs. Troi will appreciate it."
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"Oh, shut up, Number One!," snapped Picard irritably, and, continuing
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his outburst, added, "and Mr. Data, there's cat fur all over your uniform!"
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"I apologize, sir, but Spot appeared to need a hug."
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The captain glared at him for a moment, but suddenly found himself
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unable to keep shouting at his second officer. Damn him, thought Picard.
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He's giving me that look again. If I didn't know better, I'd say he was
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hurt. "Mr. Data," he finally said, more calmly, "your concern for your pet
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is very admirable and very human, but I would appreciate it if you didn't
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appear before Federation diplomats looking like a walking gold rug."
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"Yes sir, and thank you. I believe having a cat has taught me more
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about what it is to be human."
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He's doing it again. The moment I said "very human," his face seemed
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to brighten up.
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At this moment, the ensign at the transporter controls said "Signals
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locked onto, Captain."
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"Energize, Ensign."
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As Mrs. Troi, her infamous luggage, and Mr. Homn, her very tall, very
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silent servant materialized, the ambassador greeted them in her usual
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manner. "Jean-Luc!," she exclaimed, "I've barely arrived here and already
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the naughty thoughts begin! It's a wonder you can concentrate on running
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your starship! And Little One," she said, embracing Deanna, "I'm so glad
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to see you brought that nice Commander Riker with you. Are you two ever
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going to give me some grandchildren?"
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As Riker smiled graciously and Troi and Picard turned several shades
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of scarlet, Mrs. Troi then did something no one expected of her. She
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walked up to Data, and, without a word, slapped him very soundly across the
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face. Data felt no pain, of course, but was clearly in some kind of
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android shock. He stood open-mouthed for several seconds, rapidly
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accessing his files on Betazoid greeting rituals for some explanation for
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her behavior. Finding none, he finally said, "Inquiry? Why did you just
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strike my face with such force?"
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"Yes Ambassador," demanded Picard, "why did you slap my second
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officer?"
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"What the hell?!," exclaimed Riker.
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"MOTHER!," added a mortified Deanna, wishing she could just beam of
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out there.
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"Because he's so incredibly rude and obnoxious," said Mrs. Troi, as if
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this should be obvious to all.
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"I know you find his after-dinner anecdotes less than fascinating,"
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protested Picard, "but I simply can't imagine Mr. Data being intentionally
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rude or obnoxious to anyone." Not even you.
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"He was," countered Mrs. Troi. "He took forever to take our orders,
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wouldn't bring our food for ages, and then when it finally came he served
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it with the most appalling manners! He's the most insolent waiter I've
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ever dealt with."
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"Waiter?," asked Troi, Riker, and Picard in unison, while the ensign
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at the transporter controls tried not to laugh.
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"Correction, Ambassador," said Data. "I have prepared beverages in
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Ten-Forward on several occasions when Guinan was busy, and once I
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temporarily lost my memory and thought I was the permanent bartender, but I
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have never served anyone a meal there."
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"Don't play dumb with me, you rude robot. It was on Risa, three Earth
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weeks ago. Some friends and I were dining at the Wormhole Cafe. You were
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obviously moonlighting as a waiter, and you were too busy picking up some
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blonde at the bar to serve us properly. Doesn't Starfleet pay you enough?"
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It was all too funny for Riker. "Data, you old devil!" he said,
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clapping his friend on the back, "The things we don't know about you! I'm
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impressed. And all this time we thought you spent your spare time
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painting, acting, and trying to figure out which foods Spot would like."
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"But it is not possible that I was your waiter, Ambassador," said
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Data. "I have not left the Enterprise for forty-three days, two hours,
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eighteen minutes, and twelve seconds."
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"All right, then who was it?," demanded Mrs. Troi, "and don't try to
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tell me it was your evil twin or something."
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"Correction, Ambassador. 'Evil identical older brother' would be the
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more accurate term, but he is the most probable explanation for your dining
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experience."
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Suddenly the whole scene became markedly less humorous. Picard,
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Riker, and Troi looked at each other in horror and simultaneously
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exclaimed, "Lore!"
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"Who?," inquired Mrs. Troi.
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"Lore is the first android build by my creator, Dr. Noonian Soong,"
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explained Data. "He and I are identical in appearance, but we do not have
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similar personalities. His presence on Risa would make the most sense in
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the context of your accusations."
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"Mr. Data has a gift for understatement," said Picard grimly. "Lore
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is unstable, violent, highly emotional, and completely deranged. He is
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capable of much more than mere rudeness in restaurants. We have to find
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him, and find him quickly. Now, is he still on Risa, Ambassador?"
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"I don't know. He left with that blonde he'd been talking to. They
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said something about 'leaving this miserable dump of a resort planet.'"
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"Then he could be anywhere," sighed Picard. "What do you remember
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about his girlfriend? She might be the key to tracking him down. What
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race was she? What was she thinking?"
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"I don't remember, and I certainly don't eavesdrop on
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everyone's<>thoughts. She was just some blonde woman."
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"There are approximately three million, five thousand, seven-hundred
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and thirty-eight blonde humanoid females in that sector of the galaxy.
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Shall I attempt to find out if any of them have met Lore, sir?," asked
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Data.
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"That would take too much time, Mr. Data." said Picard. "Ambassador,
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don't you remember anything about her?"
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"Oh yes, one minor detail. I do remember reading her thoughts as they
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were leaving ... something about disliking the Enterprise."
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"Well, thank you very much for remembering that 'minor detail,'
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Lwaxana," retorted Picard. "Now we have it narrowed down to just blondes
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who don't like the Enterprise and consequently might even be as dangerous
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as Lore. Where do you suggest we start looking?"
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"There are approximately two-hundred fifty-six blonde females on Risa
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with a grievance against Commander Riker, sir," volunteered Data,
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"including twelve paternity suits, and ..."
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"Thank you, Data!" interrupted Riker.
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At that moment, Picard's combadge beeped. "Emergency on the Bridge,
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Captain," said Worf's unmistakably deep voice, "unknown ship decloaking
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directly in front of us."
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"Red alert. On our way, Lieutenant," said the captain. Then he
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addressed the group: "It looks as if Lore might already have found us."
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"Wait!," shouted Mrs. Troi as everyone rushed toward the turbolift.
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"What about my luggage?" Picard had to bite his lip to avoid telling her
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exactly what she could do with her luggage.
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They all got in the turbolift and sped to the Bridge, where Worf
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provided more details. "Sir, the uncloaking ship appears to be a Romulan
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war bird, but it is ... pink."
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"That's my ship! He stole it!," exclaimed Mrs. Troi.
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"Mother!," said Deanna, "you bought a Romulan<61>warship?!"
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"Oh calm down, Little One, it's an ex-Romulan warship that the Ferengi
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sold me when I threatened to sue them for kidnapping us a few years back.
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Most of the weapons are disabled now. It was a lot faster than we needed
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and rather difficult for Mr. Homn to fly with no crew, but we got a
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terrific deal on it. Also, green seemed like such a dreary color and I
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didn't want anyone shooting at us, so I had it painted pink. Don't you
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think it looks nice now?"
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"I can't believe this," sighed Deanna.<2E>
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"Shields up," said Picard.
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"Shields inoperable," growled Worf. "They are hailing us, sir,"
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"On screen."
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"Hello, Little Brother, so we meet again," smirked the image on the
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viewscreen. It was Lore all right. He was wearing black trousers, a
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white, twentieth-century style button-down shirt, and a black bow tie, as
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he lounged indolently in the ship's captain's chair. Several Pakleds were
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milling about in the background.
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"So, it's you again, Lore," said Mrs. Troi, "or should I say
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'Alphonso?'" The others once again glanced at each other in disbelief, but
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sure enough, the name tag on Lore's shirt pocket clearly read "Wormhole
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Cafe, Alphonso - May I help you?"
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"'Alphonso,' Lore?," asked Riker.
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"Have you<6F>ever met a waiter named Lore, stupid?"
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"Well, no, but ..."
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"'Alphonso' is the more rational choice of name for a waiter,
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Commander," observed Data, who had taken his place at ops.
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"Little Brother is right, for once. And by the way, Riker, you
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wouldn't look so smug if you knew some of the stories I've heard about you
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on Risa."
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"You shouldn't have stolen my starship, you insolent bucket of bolts,"
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scolded Mrs. Troi.
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"Then you shouldn't have left the keys in it, you silly old bat. And
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where's my tip, anyway?"
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"If you think I was going to leave you a tip after you repeatedly
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ignored us and then spent the evening saying the most lecherous things to
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that blonde while you were supposed to be getting our food ..."
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"Hey, I brought your food ..."
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"You dumped it in our laps! And what's more, I did not<6F>order Klingon
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gagh!"
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"Picky, picky, lady! Now, where was I? Oh yes, we meet again, Little
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Brother, and this time I'm finally going to put an end to your getting all
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the attention while I get dismantled or beamed into space. As you've no
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doubt already observed, Lore the Brilliant has figured out a way to send a
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disrupter beam that completely disables your shields, and I wouldn't try
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warping out of here, either, because this baby is every bit as fast as your
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precious Enterprise."
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"And sensors indicate they are well-armed," muttered Worf grumpily.
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Picard signaled Worf to cut the transmission and tapped his combadge.
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"Bridge to Engineering, are you following all this?"
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"Yes, Captain," said Geordi "I wouldn't miss a word of it."
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"Can you stop his disrupter beam?"
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"Well sir, to do that I'd have to realign the proton thrusters to the
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cuisinart beam and bevel the tachion particles in the subspace coaxial
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toaster to the torque truncheons in the RAM cache, and then I'd have to
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subvert the subspace woofers into the macro scanner ..."
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"Yes, yes. But can you do it, Mr. La Forge?"
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"I can do it, Captain, but it will take a few hours."
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"You have twenty minutes. Make it so. And Mr. La Forge, would you
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come work up on the bridge? We might need your presence here."
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"On my way, sir. Transferring engineering to bridge."
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"Analysis, Counselor, Ambassador?"
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"Well, I can't read the rude robot at all," said Mrs. Troi, "and those
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Pakled people are just thinking about things that make them go, but there's
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another presence on the ship who's thinking about blasting you and the
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Enterprise to kingdom come, Jean-Luc."
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"Correction, Ambassador," said Data. "Lore is not a robot. He is a
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sentient android like myself."
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"Robot, schmobot, who cares? He took my ship."
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"I agree with Mother," said Deanna. "There's definitely a hostile
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presence other than Lore on the ship, and it's very intense."
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"That must be his girlfriend. I can't wait to meet her," said Riker
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sarcastically.
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The resolute way Picard then straightened his uniform top indicated
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that he had decided on a course of action. "We need time if Mr. La Forge
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is going to get our shields back before we're attacked, and the way to buy
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that time is to keep Lore talking. Let's all try to engage his attention
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for as long as possible. It shouldn't be too difficult - I have a feeling
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he enjoys having an audience."
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Geordi and an assistant then emerged from the turbolift and began
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trying to get the shields back. "Shall I assist Commander La Forge and
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Ensign Gomez, Captain?," asked Data.
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"No, Mr. Data, you stay at ops. I want Lore to have the best possible
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view of you for this.
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"Do we have to listen to all his inane insults, sir?, asked Riker, who
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already felt like slugging Lore.
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"We do, Number One, but feel free to insult him back."
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"Shall I devise a special program of insults, sir?," asked Data. "I
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am programmed in the innuendoes, indignities, slights, slurs, snubs,
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affronts, and general impertinence of approximately one-thousand, seven
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hundred and fifty-four alien cultures."
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"No, Mr. Data," replied Picard, wondering, not for the first time,
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just what had been going on in the late Dr. Soong's mind when he was
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designing his androids. "Just be yourself. On screen, Mr. Worf."
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"So, you're back at last," said Lore, who appeared impatient.
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"Stop pacing, Lore," said Riker. "You're making everyone dizzy."
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Lore ignored him and continued. "No doubt you've been having one of
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your interminable conferences about what to do with me. It doesn't matter
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what you try - we're going to destroy you. Actually, we may not destroy
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you if we don't feel like it. I've been in a great mood lately, and do you
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know why?"
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"It is not possible for us to know that, Lore," reasoned Data, "as you
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have not told us yet."
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Lore shot Data an exasperated glare. "Then I'll tell you why. I'm in
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love, Little Brother. I've found the greatest girl in the whole universe.
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The birds are singing. The stars shine more brightly." Lore's face
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assumed a dreamy, far-off expression which could only be described as
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lovesick.
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"Hmph. How could your mood influence astronomic conditions and the
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behavior of wildlife, Lore?," wondered Data.
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Lore ignored the question and continued. "You'll meet her soon. In
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fact, you've met her already, and she's looking forward to seeing you all
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again ... one last time! She's in our quarters right now fixing her hair
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and hatching evil plots. She likes to do that for about an hour every day
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- she says it helps her to get more in touch with her anger."
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"She sounds just charming, Lore," smiled Riker. "We're so happy for
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you. We're all curious, though - how did you meet, and what were you doing
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waiting tables on Risa?"
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Lore seemed more than eager to tell his story. "After I had claimed
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Little Brother's chip as rightfully mine I used this handy thumb
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transporter to beam back to the Pakled ship. You really should get one
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installed, Little Brother, they're very useful. Anyway, the Pakleds
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recognized me as their natural leader. With my brains, and our mutual lack
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of ethics, we 'found' a lot of interesting stuff out there, but they drove
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me bananas. Do you people have any idea what it's like to work with
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Pakleds?"
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"Yes," said Geordi ruefully.
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At this, the Pakleds finally began to notice what was happening on
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their own viewscreen. "It is our friend Geordi," they said happily. "He
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is smart. He could help us go."
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"Yeah, right into a supernova," muttered Geordi.
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"Awww," said Lore. "Isn't that sweet? The Pakleds miss you,
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Bananahead."
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"Terrific," said Geordi. "Tell them I already have a job."
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"But Lore," said Riker, "when our sensors detected a ship heading for
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Soong's planet, we didn't detect any life forms aboard your craft."
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"That's because I was in a shuttlecraft when his stupid homing device
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went off. I took it for a few hours so I could have a break from these
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morons."
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"We were looking for things," said the Pakleds. "We were far from
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home. We found Lore. He is smart too. Lore found a new ship. It is
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fast. But we are bored here. We want to go look for more things."
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"We look for things, we look for things," mimicked Lore in that high,
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whiny voice he liked to use when imitating people. "Don't you fools realize
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I'm busy here? We can go look for things after we destroy the Enterprise,
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and if you're good you can even have some of the scraps as souvenirs." He
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then turned his attention back to the viewscreen. "Then, after about a
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year of our 'creative salvage' operations we crash-landed on Risa - it
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seems that these idiots weren't keeping an eye on the engine room, and we
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somehow managed to run out of dilithium."
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"A good captain should be more aware of what is happening on his ship,
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Lore," said Data.
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"Thanks, Little Brother, but the last thing I want right now is a
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personnel management lesson from the Intergalactic Boy Scout. Anyway, we
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were stuck on Risa, so we went our separate ways. The Pakleds became
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postal workers, and I got that job waiting tables at the Wormhole Cafe and
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doing the early lounge act in the Black Hole bar.
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"Lounge act, Lore?," asked Deanna. "I never knew you were musical."
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"Sure, Counselor Chest. I play kazoo, bagpipes, and the accordion,
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among other things."
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"Those are all instruments which humans can sometimes find somewhat
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irritating," observed Data, remembering his own rather brief stint as
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accordionist in Ten-Forward.
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"You got it, Little Brother," grinned Lore.
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"He was just awful, too," said Mrs. Troi. "You have a nice voice,
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'Alphonso,' but your choice of material was dreadful, and as for your banjo
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playing ..."
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"Listen, Mrs. Music Critic, just because you don't have the good taste
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to appreciate hearing 'Abdul, the Bulbul Ameer,' a selection of the
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galaxy's great polkas, and the complete works of my favorite country
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artist, L.Q. Sonny Clemonds ..."
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"I have met Mr. Clemonds," said Data. "I found him difficult to
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understand, even for a human."
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"You have!? Could you get me his autograph?," gushed a starstruck
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Lore. He looked somewhat embarrassed for a moment and then quickly
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regained his composure. "To get back to my story, the lounge act was fun,
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but being a waiter was hell. Do you know what I suffered, Little Brother,
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scrounging for tips while you were third in command of the Federation
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flagship? Do you know what it's like to have to fetch baby seats, reel off
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the specials, and repeatedly ask 'Is everything all right here?' The only
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fun part was waiting until everyone's mouth was full to say it.
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"And then she stormed into my life. When I first saw her sitting at
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the bar, cursing the Federation and tossing drinks in the bartender's face,
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I knew that at last I had found the girl for me. The next day we went to
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the post office to fetch the Pakleds, made off with the Betazoid Broad's
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ship, and then set out to find the Enterprise. We 'found' a lot of useful
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things along the way, and, as Lt. Barf there has observed, we're now armed
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to the teeth and ready to blast you to bits."
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"Don't bet on it," growled Worf.
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"Hey Klingon," taunted Lore cheerfully, "How've you been? Wanna go
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for another turbolift ride? I'd be only too happy to beat the stuffing out
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of you again."
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"Grrrrrrrrr."
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"And who's the charming Bajoran? I don't remember seeing you before,"
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said Lore noticing Ensign Ro, who was sitting next to Data at the con.
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"This is Ensign Ro Laren, Lore," said Data. "She was not stationed on
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the Enterprise the last time we met."
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"So, my little brother gets to sit next you all day. No doubt the
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experience is completely wasted on him."
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"Who is<69>this jerk, Data?," asked Ro.
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"That is my brother Lore, Ensign."
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"You have a weird family, Data."
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"You should have met my father and grandfather."
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"I'm so sorry that you're stuck listening to his off-key whistling,
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bad jokes, and interminable observations, Ro," continued Lore. "If I
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wasn't already taken, I'd invite you to leave that garbage scow and come
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join me."
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"And what makes you think I'd say 'yes,' Cardassian Breath?"
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"You have worded your invitation to Ensign Ro incorrectly, Lore," said
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Data. "Since you were speaking hypothetically, it would have been more
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proper to say 'if I were<72>not already taken.'"
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"Oh great, a grammar lesson from someone who can't say 'can't.'"
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"It is not grammatically incorrect to be unable to use contractions,
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Lore."
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"Listen, I've had just about enough of your endless nit-picking. As
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soon as my girlfriend gets here, and ... where is she, anyway?" Lore
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tapped the combadge near his name tag. "Dear! Aren't you ready yet?
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Would you please get out here?"
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"I'll be right there, sweetheart," said an offscreen voice. "My hair
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doesn't look right yet."
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"Never mind that. I'm sure you look lovely. Just get out here, okay?
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I want everyone to see you."
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"All right, all right. I'm here my darling," said the voice, as a
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blonde woman with pointed ears walked into viewscreen range, sat down next
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to Lore, and put her arms around him.
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"Sela!," exclaimed the entire bridge, except for Data and Ro.
|
||
"Swell." said Riker. "Now we're dealing with both the Bad Seeds."
|
||
"Who's the blonde Romulan, Data?," asked Ro, who hadn't thought there
|
||
were any.
|
||
"She is ... Before Lt. Worf became security chief ..." Data
|
||
hesitated again, unsure of where to start. Finally he said, "It is what
|
||
humans call a 'long story,' Ensign. I will attempt to explain it to you
|
||
later."
|
||
Sela was her usual charming self. "So, once again I confront my arch
|
||
enemies on the Enterprise. I will get my revenge on you yet, Picard."
|
||
"It's always a pleasure to see you again too, Sela," said the captain.
|
||
"This time I'm especially angry with you, Jean-Luc," she continued,
|
||
"because after my brilliant plots to brainwash La Forge, ruin the Klingon-
|
||
UFP alliance, and take over Vulcan failed, I lost my rank as a commander in
|
||
the Romulan fleet."
|
||
"And how you ever got to be a commander at age 23 I'll never
|
||
understand," said Riker.
|
||
"Now you can find a job which requires more writing," observed Data.
|
||
"Excuse me?"
|
||
"During our last meeting, when you unsuccessfully attempted to force
|
||
Ambassador Spock to give a speech you had written, you expressed regret
|
||
that your own job did not give you a chance to do much writing. I
|
||
suggested that perhaps you could get another job, and now that career
|
||
option is open to you."
|
||
Everyone could almost see the steam coming out of Sela's ears. As
|
||
always, Data spoke without a trace of irony or sarcasm, which seemed to
|
||
infuriate her all the more. "Never mind my career plans," she retorted.
|
||
"You ruined me, Picard, and now you're going to pay."
|
||
"Sela," asked Riker, "has it ever dawned on you that maybe your plots
|
||
don't work because, with the possible exception of the Ferengi and the
|
||
Pakleds, you are easily the most inept opponent we've ever faced?"
|
||
"Shut up! If not for the Enterprise I'd be the supreme dictator of
|
||
Vulcan by now. Everything is your fault, Picard. You sent my mother back
|
||
in time to an almost certain death, and now you've wrecked my career."
|
||
The turbolift doors opened, and a woman in civilian clothes and an
|
||
interesting hat emerged. "Sela," she said in a calm, wise, voice, "don't
|
||
you realize that you wouldn't have been born at all if your mother hadn't
|
||
gone back in time?"
|
||
"Guinan!," said Picard, "what a surprise to see you on the bridge."
|
||
"When I heard Sela had turned up I thought I'd better get here as soon
|
||
as I could."
|
||
"And you still think I should believe her story about her background?"
|
||
"I know it sounds bizarre, but you'll just have to take my word for
|
||
it, Jean Luc."
|
||
Picard then addressed Sela. "I'm still not sure if I believe you, but
|
||
from what I understand your mother wanted to go back. Indeed, she had to
|
||
go back in order to correct the whole course of time."
|
||
"You still killed her, Picard."
|
||
"No, Sela," said Guinan, "you<6F>killed her when you turned her in for
|
||
trying to escape from Romulus with you."
|
||
"My mother was a traitor to the Romulan cause. My father gave her a
|
||
home and family, and she thanked him by trying to leave."
|
||
"Your mother was held prisoner and forced to be his mistress!," said
|
||
Guinan. How can you blame her for wanting to escape?"
|
||
"I still hold her and Picard responsible for everything! After he got
|
||
me fired, I decided to take a vacation on Risa, where I could relax and
|
||
think of some more things to blame him for. I was drowning my sorrows at
|
||
the Wormhole Cafe bar when Lore walked up and said, 'Hey baby, I'm fully
|
||
functional.' At first I thought he was Data."
|
||
"Which explains why she broke that beer bottle over my head," said
|
||
Lore. "Actually, I thought she looked familiar too, sort of like your old
|
||
security chief, only more ... Romulan. When I'd finally convinced her that
|
||
I wasn't Data she told me about her mother, and we discovered that we have
|
||
so much in common - we both have, or in Sela's case had, relatives on the
|
||
Enterprise who really get on our nerves.
|
||
"We talked for hours while that annoying Betazoid lady kept yelling
|
||
for Lore to bring her party their meals," continued Sela. "Then we went
|
||
back to my hotel room, and ... well, let's just say I finally understand
|
||
what my mother saw in Data."
|
||
"Spare us the sordid details, Sela," said Riker. "Everyone just had
|
||
lunch."
|
||
"Isn't she wonderful?," sighed Lore. "Petty, mean, spiteful, ill-
|
||
tempered, vindictive - the perfect girl for me."
|
||
"You said it," quipped Geordi.
|
||
"I want you all to be the first to know that Sela has agreed to marry
|
||
me. I'd invite you to the wedding, but you probably won't be alive for it.
|
||
We'll just have to have the Pakleds as guests then, won't we, sweetie?"
|
||
"That's fine with me, snuggle-bunny," said Sela, as they gazed
|
||
adoringly into each other's eyes.
|
||
"I think I'm going to be sick," announced Riker.
|
||
"Do you need to be escorted to sick bay, Commander?," asked Data.
|
||
"It's just an expression, Data," explained Geordi.
|
||
Lore and Sela gazed at each other some more and then kissed. "Now I
|
||
know I'm going to be sick," said Riker.
|
||
"Thank goodness they can't reproduce," said Dr. Crusher, who was once
|
||
again hanging around on the bridge for no apparent reason.
|
||
"That's where you're wrong, Doc. Sela and I are going to build some
|
||
kids - not boring, nice kids either, but awful, sneaky, rotten kids who
|
||
will make us proud. Speaking of sickeningly good kids, Doc, where's that
|
||
manchild of yours? I was especially looking forward to blowing him up."
|
||
"If you mean Wesley, he's far away from you and your disrupter beam."
|
||
"He finally got into Starfleet Academy, huh? That's convenient,
|
||
because Sela and I are headed in that direction anyway. First we're going
|
||
to be married by an Elvis impersonator in Las Vegas, and then we're going
|
||
to San Francisco to blow Starfleet Academy off the map."
|
||
"Listen, mister, if you harm my son ..."
|
||
"You look beautiful when you're angry, Doc, though you looked even
|
||
more beautiful when your manchild discovered I'd switched places with the
|
||
Twinkie and I had to phaser your arm - the fire matched your lovely red
|
||
hair."
|
||
"Why are you referring to me as a twentieth century snack food,
|
||
Lore?," asked Data. "Although I am a similar shade of gold, I have neither
|
||
a baked foam exterior nor a synthetic filling designed to mimic Earth dairy
|
||
products. Therefore, I must deduce that you have selected a consumer
|
||
product known for its light weight and lack of nutritional value in order
|
||
to imply that I am somehow personally lacking in substance. Interesting."
|
||
"Interesting," sneered Lore. "You see why I can't stand him? He even
|
||
takes all the fun out of calling him names."
|
||
"Attaboy, Data," said Riker quietly, patting him on the shoulder.
|
||
"We've got them right where we want them."
|
||
"'Attaboy,' sir?," asked Data, with one of his trademark puzzled
|
||
frowns.
|
||
"It's an expression of encouragement, from all of us," explained
|
||
Geordi.
|
||
"Now, don't you worry about Data any more, my love," said Sela. "Soon
|
||
the entire Enterprise will be on fire. How I have longed for this day of
|
||
revenge!"
|
||
"You two make a perfect couple," said Guinan, "because you both
|
||
completely refuse to take any responsibility for your actions."
|
||
"Hey, I didn't ask<73>to be built, lady," said Lore. "And I didn't ask
|
||
to be ...
|
||
"Such an obnoxious jerk?," suggested Dr. Crusher helpfully.
|
||
"What do any of you know? You expect me to be like your beloved Data,
|
||
yet you have no idea what I've been through. It's always been easy for
|
||
Data. He gets rescued by Starfleet, I get switched off. He gets the
|
||
interesting job, I get dismantled. He gets the friends and attention, I
|
||
get shoved in storage. He gets the bridge during night watch, I get beamed
|
||
into space for two long years. He gets summoned back for repairs, I show
|
||
up and get stared at like something the cat dragged in."
|
||
"I do not believe any domestic feline would be capable of dragging an
|
||
object of your weight, Lore," observed Data. "My own cat Spot, for
|
||
example, ..."
|
||
"Oh great, more of Little Brother's relentless literal-mindedness.
|
||
Why do you people like him so much, anyway? Is it the violin playing, the
|
||
bad jokes, that perpetually perplexed expression, the selflessness, the
|
||
naivet<EFBFBD>, that irritating little 'hmph' sound he makes, or because he's so
|
||
damn nice?"
|
||
"I think you just answered your own question, Lore," said Picard.
|
||
Lore glared at the captain and went on. "Who's ever cared about me?
|
||
Who's ever given me a chance? Not all of you, not Soong, and certainly not
|
||
those stupid colonists. They all hated me. My only real friend was Steve,
|
||
until you destroyed him."
|
||
"Who the hell is Steve?," asked Riker.
|
||
"The Crystalline Entity, of course. It had a name, you know."
|
||
"How touching," said Riker.
|
||
"There is a possibility that you might acquire more friends if you
|
||
modified your behavior, Lore," suggested Data.
|
||
Lore's tone became even more sarcastic. "And how do you folks suggest
|
||
I do that?"
|
||
"Well," said Dr. Crusher, "for a start you could stop frightening
|
||
colonists, summoning entities, knocking out Data, threatening my son,
|
||
igniting my arm, stealing chips, and flinging old men across science labs."
|
||
"Enough of this chatter," said Sela, who was growing increasingly
|
||
impatient. "Let's destroy them now and get out of here, Lore. I want to
|
||
do some shopping on Sarona VII."
|
||
"I'm sensing a lot of hostility here, Sela " said Counselor Troi, "and
|
||
I think that you and Lore both need to get in touch with your feelings
|
||
about why you want to destroy us. You both have a lot of unresolved issues
|
||
to work out, and ...."
|
||
"Gee, thank you for sharing that with us, Counselor Chest," said Lore.
|
||
"How much does Starfleet pay for your insights, anyway?"
|
||
"I think our photon torpedoes need to get in touch with your main
|
||
hull," added Sela. She then turned to the Pakled at tactical. "Prepare to
|
||
fire."
|
||
"Shall I launch all weapons at them, sir?," growled Worf.
|
||
"Not yet, Mr. Worf," said Picard. "Mister La Forge, where are those
|
||
shields?"
|
||
"I'm workin' on it, Captain! If I could just have a few more minutes
|
||
..."
|
||
"You don't have a few more minutes, La Forge," said Sela menacingly.
|
||
"Your mother wouldn't have approved, Sela," chided Riker. "Hell, even
|
||
your aunt wouldn't approve, and she's certainly no paragon of ethics."
|
||
"I have an aunt?"
|
||
"Yes, on Turkana IV. Why don't you go visit her right now?"
|
||
"I don't think so Riker. Lore darling, let's put a final end to the
|
||
Enterprise and fire all weapons now."
|
||
"No," said Lore softly.
|
||
There were audible gasps on both ships, and even Data's jaw dropped in
|
||
surprise.
|
||
"What?," said Sela.
|
||
"I don't feel like it."
|
||
"You don't feel like it?"
|
||
"No. Can't we just insult them a little more and then go get
|
||
married?"
|
||
"Are you malfunctioning, Lore? What happened to the angry android I
|
||
met on Risa? What happened to the guy who helped turn over four hundred
|
||
colonists into Entity Chow?"
|
||
"You're a Romulan, Sela, you hate half the galaxy. But if we destroy
|
||
the Enterprise now, I won't have anyone left to pick on."
|
||
"But when we first met all you could talk about was finally getting
|
||
rid of Data."
|
||
"I know. He is an annoying little nerd, but he's still ..." Lore
|
||
paused, obviously finding the next words difficult. "He's still the only
|
||
family I have left."
|
||
"Fire now!," said Sela to the Pakled at tactical.
|
||
The Pakled did nothing. "Lore says 'no.' He is smart. We obey
|
||
Lore."
|
||
"Then I'll just have to fire them myself," said Sela, heading for
|
||
tactical, but Lore was too fast for her and blocked the way. "Get out of
|
||
my way, Lore!," she said urgently. "We don't have much time before they
|
||
get their shields back." Lore didn't budge.
|
||
"Shields up, sir!," announced Geordi triumphantly.
|
||
"Damn!," said Sela. She turned to Lore in a fury. "Nice going, you
|
||
idiot! There's no way we can attack them now without risking our own
|
||
destruction! I thought you were as evil and vengeful as they come, but now
|
||
I see that you're just a wimp. I should have realized it when you were
|
||
telling me about yourself on Risa. You've had all those opportunities to
|
||
finally dispose of Data, but all you've ever done is knock him out, switch
|
||
him off, or steal his chip. You're pathetic, Lore, and I never want to see
|
||
you again."
|
||
"Sela wait," pleaded Lore in increasingly whiny tones. "I can be
|
||
mean. I can be rotten. What about my summoning the Entity? What about my
|
||
beating up Soong? What about my dumping Klingon gagh in everyone's laps?
|
||
Think of what we've meant to each other. I love you, Sela. Don't go."
|
||
"Lore, you fool. Do you honestly think I would have agreed to marry
|
||
you if you hadn't been able to help me hunt down the Enterprise? Don't you
|
||
realize that I was using you?"
|
||
"Using me?" Lore's bewildered expression was worthy of Data.
|
||
"Don't get me wrong, though. I wasn't always lying. It's been fun."
|
||
She grinned. "Lots of fun sometimes, and I was somewhat fond of you."
|
||
"Gee thanks, that makes me feel so much better," said Lore.
|
||
"I'll just take one of the shuttlecrafts and go back to Romulus now.
|
||
Oh, and Lore, I'm kind of embarrassed to have dated a wimp like you, so
|
||
forget we ever knew each other, okay?" And with that, she was off to the
|
||
shuttle bay.
|
||
Lore sat quietly for a few moments, utterly stunned by what had just
|
||
happened. "Sela!," he shouted, as he watched her shuttle clear the pink
|
||
starship, "Wait! Come back here! You can forget that stuff about my
|
||
forgetting you, you know! I'm not Data - you can't just order me to forget
|
||
something! Hey, I'm talking to you!"
|
||
"It is highly unlikely that Sela has a channel open to hear you,
|
||
Lore," observed Data.
|
||
It suddenly dawned on Lore that he still had a channel open to the
|
||
Enterprise and had been broadcasting everything. "I don't know what's
|
||
worse," he said miserably, as he switched his own viewscreen back to the
|
||
Enterprise bridge, "getting dumped by Sela, or having it happen in full
|
||
view of all of you morons."
|
||
"I think someone needs a hug," said Counselor Troi.
|
||
"And I think someone needs to stop being so barfy," said Lore. "Hell,
|
||
I never liked that stupid Romulan hairstyle of hers anyway," he declared,
|
||
without much conviction. He then addressed Data. "Now you can see what
|
||
it's like to have both a perfect memory and full human emotions, Little
|
||
Brother. I'm going to remember every moment of this whole rotten scene
|
||
vividly for as long as I exist. I just can't believe she'd betray me like
|
||
that..."
|
||
"I cannot truly empathize, Lore," said Data, "but your current
|
||
circumstances are not entirely unfamiliar to me."
|
||
"What's he talking about now?," asked Lore.
|
||
"I think what Data's trying to tell you," said Riker, "is that you're
|
||
not the first Soong to be betrayed by a Yar."
|
||
For once Lore had no snappy comeback. "Oh. I'm, er, sorry to hear
|
||
that, Data."
|
||
"There is no need to offer sympathy, but I appreciate the thought,
|
||
Lore."
|
||
Worf, meanwhile, was growing impatient. "Can we fire on him now,
|
||
sir?"
|
||
"No, Mr. Worf," said Picard, ignoring the Klingon's growled mutterings
|
||
and turning his attention back to the viewscreen. "You know, you probably
|
||
saved all our lives just now, Lore."
|
||
"Don't remind me."
|
||
"This goes against all of my better judgment," continued the captain,
|
||
as Worf and Riker looked increasingly alarmed, "but I am prepared to invite
|
||
you aboard the Enterprise, provided you agree to return Data's emotions
|
||
chip and to undergo psychiatric treatment to help you deal with some of
|
||
your more, er, antisocial personality traits." Now it was Deanna's turn to
|
||
look alarmed, as she considered the prospect of having Lore for a patient.
|
||
"You can return my ship, too!" shouted Mrs. Troi.
|
||
"No thanks," said Lore. "I might be deranged, but I'm not stupid. If
|
||
you think I'm going to beam aboard and let Engineer Bananahead and
|
||
Counselor Chest mess around with my head, you're even crazier than I am.
|
||
Besides, the chip is like Worf's brain - it doesn't work. I might as well
|
||
have swallowed a cufflink for all the difference it's made. Oh, I thought
|
||
it was doing something at first, but that turned out to be just one of the
|
||
usual twinges I get because I'm crammed full of Soong's junkyard parts.
|
||
Anyway, someone has to keep the Pakleds in line."
|
||
"So, where will you go now Lore?," asked Dr. Crusher.
|
||
"Actually, someone made me a job offer just before I met Sela. It's
|
||
in a bar in some godforsaken place on the edge of nowhere, but I'd get to
|
||
do my lounge act there and I wouldn't have to wait any tables. I think I
|
||
just might accept that job - there's even a post office for the Pakleds to
|
||
work at."
|
||
"Good luck, Lore," said Data.
|
||
"Good-bye, Little Brother." Lore suddenly realized how he was
|
||
sounding. "Hey, I don't want you all to think I actually like you or
|
||
anything. You and the Pakleds might be the closest things I have to
|
||
friends now," he admitted, "but I still think you're all a bunch of morons
|
||
and that Data is the biggest nerd in the galaxy."
|
||
"We think you're just swell, too, Lore," said Riker.
|
||
Lore smiled at Ensign Ro. "My offer still stands."
|
||
"Maybe some other time," she smiled back, and with that Lore closed
|
||
the channel and warped out of sight.
|
||
Ro suddenly realized that Riker and Picard were glaring at her. "I
|
||
was just being polite," she explained, somewhat feebly.
|
||
"What about my ship?," demanded Mrs. Troi. "You let that rude robot
|
||
run off with my ship!"
|
||
"Lwaxana," explained Picard patiently, "we probably couldn't have
|
||
gotten that ship back from Lore without destroying it." Suddenly he had an
|
||
idea. "I'll tell you what, though. You can have one of our shuttles.
|
||
It's a much more manageable size for you and Mr. Homn anyway."
|
||
"Sir," whispered Riker urgently, "we've already lost all those
|
||
shuttles in explosions this year, not to mention the one we gave to Scotty.
|
||
What will Starfleet command say?" Picard gave Riker a look that indicated
|
||
he would have given away his captain's yacht if it meant getting rid of
|
||
Mrs. Troi sooner.
|
||
"Thank you for such a generous gift, Jean Luc," said Mrs. Troi
|
||
graciously. "You're a true gentleman, though you must learn to control
|
||
those naughty thoughts." Deanna signed and stared at the ceiling.
|
||
"And Mr. Data," said Picard, "well done. My own older brother isn't
|
||
easy to get along with either."
|
||
Later that day, Geordi went to see Data in his quarters. "Come in,"
|
||
said Data, who was looking at a computer screen while Spot sat on his lap
|
||
purring.
|
||
"Hi Data, hi Spot. Listen, if you're busy I can come back later."
|
||
"No, Geordi. I am just analyzing the molecular structure of various
|
||
feline supplements."
|
||
"I wanted to check to see how you were doing."
|
||
"Why?"
|
||
"Well, it's not every day that we run into your deranged older brother
|
||
and the revenge-crazed Romulan daughter of a late friend. Are you all
|
||
right?"
|
||
"Lore's disrupter beam had no effect on me, Geordi. Self-diagnostics
|
||
reveal that I am functioning within normal parameters."
|
||
"That's not what I meant, Data. How do you feel?"
|
||
"I have no feelings. None. Zero. Zip. Nada. Zilch. None
|
||
whatsoever of any kind. No feelings, no way, no how. Absolutely none ...
|
||
|
||
Geordi, why are you pretending to repeatedly bash your head against the
|
||
wall?"
|
||
Geordi took a deep breath. In some ways this was a conversation he
|
||
had been dreading for years. "Data, I think we need to talk."
|
||
"Is Counselor Troi going to have me watch The Wizard of Oz<4F>again?"
|
||
Geordi remembered how certain Troi had been that Data would gain self-
|
||
insight from the film. He seemed to find it intriguing, but, when asked at
|
||
the end whether he had seen any resemblance between himself and the Tin
|
||
Man, he observed only that they were both artificial life forms with
|
||
metallic exteriors.
|
||
"No, Data, but think about that emotions chip Lore stole from you. He
|
||
said that it's useless, that it doesn't do anything."
|
||
"That chip was designed to work in me, not Lore."
|
||
"Maybe it's not supposed to work in anyone. Maybe Soong just told you
|
||
the chip contained emotions so it would have the placebo effect of
|
||
enhancing the emotions which you might already have. Data, you've grown
|
||
and changed a lot since I've met you, and none of us find you completely
|
||
emotionless. Maybe there's more going on inside you than you think."
|
||
"I might underestimate myself, but you might also be
|
||
anthropomorphizing me. We will never know the chip's real purpose unless
|
||
it is installed in my head. Until then, all is mere speculation."
|
||
"I guess so," agreed Geordi reluctantly.
|
||
Data saw that his friend seemed disheartened. "The chip does not
|
||
matter, Geordi. What is important is that I continue to seek my own
|
||
humanity and that I have friends like you."
|
||
"Wanna go to the holodeck and play Holmes and Watson, then?"
|
||
Data gave one of his near-nonexistent smiles. "Of course. You are
|
||
not just another biological organism to me."
|
||
"Data, you old sentimentalist," laughed Geordi.
|
||
Meanwhile, in another part of space, Lore finally stopped staring
|
||
despondently through the viewscreen and decided to try to forget Sela as
|
||
best he could. "Set a course for the Bajoran border," he said to the
|
||
Pakled at the con., "and send out a subspace transmission telling Quark
|
||
that I accept his job offer ..."
|
||
|
||
THE END?
|
||
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
Cindy Bell "No one will be seated during famous Fish Argument."
|
||
cynth@netcom.com - Tom Servo, _Gamera vs. Zigra_
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