- For other uses, see Beneath the Skin.
"Blood Will Tell, Issue 2", scripted under the title "Beneath the Skin", was the second comic issued in the Klingons: Blood Will Tell miniseries.
Description[]
- It's time for another glimpse at Star Trek history from the Klingon perspective, and this month we look at the origins of one of the USS Enterprise's most famous missions! Rocked by the events of the previous issue, the Klingon High Council turns to a new tactic in their struggle against the Federation: espionage! What will one Klingon do to prove his worth to the Empire? And what most improbable creature will stand in his way?
Summary[]
The day after discussing the incident at Organia, Kahnrah and K'ahlynn spend an evening outside bat'leth dueling. While battling, Kahnrah discusses understanding one's enemy with his granddaughter, warning that one should be wary of both under-and-over-estimating one's enemy, and continues his lesson in Klingon history in the telling of the story of Gralmek, an experiment in Klingon espionage.
Gralmek was a cousin of the House of Kahnrah, and a Mach ghotI', a Klingon of diminutive stature. Gralmek tried hard to train as a warrior, but despite his determination his body could not support his ambitions. Then, an opportunity arose; Gralmek and several others were selected to be offered an opportunity to serve the Empire. They were warned that the mission would be dangerous, painful, and could rob them of their identity, and Gralmek immediately volunteered.
- From the mission log of Gralmek: Finally, a chance to prove myself in the eyes of my family and the Empire. I was quickly escorted off to a series of briefings about my new mission: Working for Klingon Intelligence.
- The agents of Klingon Intelligence briefed me on the details of the aborted war between the Empire and the Federation. The Organians had interfered, halting the conflict, and preventing the Empire from crushing the Federation. The Klingon Empire would not be allowed to engage its Federation Enemies in natural warlike confrontation
Constricted by the terms of the Organian Peace Treaty the High Council had resulted to new tactics to further the expansion of the Empire, which the treaty had dictated had to be achieved by competing to best develop new worlds for their agricultural and economic potential. To achieve this the High Council had decreed a program of espionage, and Gralmek was to be the first test, which if successful would expand to an army of undercover agents. Gralmek's mission was to infiltrate Starfleet's Planetary Development Corps, and sabotage Federation colonization efforts. But first Gralmek had to be prepared...
Gralmek underwent drastic cosmetic surgery to give him the appearance of a Human; his cranial and spinal ridges were sanded and shaved down to give him smooth Human like features; thousands of forehead drillings were implanted to give him a Human hairline; and his skin was burned with acid to him a paler Human Caucasian-like pigmentation.
Eight weeks later Gralmek had recovered from the surgery, but already feeling less of a Klingon was appalled to learn from his doctor that, thanks to the limits of Klingon medicine, the procedure was non-reversible; he would have the appearance of a Human for the rest of his life. He would not however, as his doctor warned him, have the internal anatomy of a Human, and while on his mission would have to be careful to avoid being subjected to any deep medical scans.
While his scars healed Gralmek underwent training to learn to act like a Human: To eat Human food, and mask his distaste at the sweet flavors and mushy textures, and to use more delicate Human actions and ways of presenting one's self. Then Gralmek was ready.
Gralmek's mission was to take on the identity of Arne Darvin and sabotage the Federation's efforts to colonize Sherman's Planet by poisoning a shipment of quadrotriticale with a viral agent, which would result in the harvest not sustaining the colony and leading to fatalities - leaving the door open for the Empire to take over development of the planet.
- From the mission log of Gralmek: The High Council had secured me a Starfleet uniform and forged credentials to get me on board the Lexington, which was ferrying my target to Deep Space Station K-7. Once on board, it was merely a matter of finding him and choosing the opportune moment to introduce myself.
- Enemy or no, I refused to stab the Human in the back, despite my orders for absolute secrecy. One has a right to look his killer in the eyes.
- After disposing of the body aboard the Lexington, I replaced Darvin and continued on schedule to Deep Space Station K-7, where I was to meet Darvin's new commander, a Human named Nilz Baris.
After weeks on the station awaiting the grain shipment Gralmek-as-Darvin had begun to develop a degree of loyalty to Baris. So when Baris had one of his "stupider notions" Gralmek argued against him not to go ahead with his paranoid plan – of issuing a priority one alert, fearing the Klingons could spring on the station at any moment. Which as Gralmek warned would call in any ship in the quadrant, and could land Baris in some trouble. Despite Gralmek's objections Baris issued the alert, and almost immediately the USS Enterprise arrived.
Darvin was not impressed by the pompousness, recklessness and overconfidence of Captain Kirk, but did enjoy his utter lack of respect for Baris, for whom he agreed to a post a mere two guards on the grain. Wary that Barris might be able to encourage Kirk to post more security Gralmek decided to accelerate his plans and infect the grain sooner.
Gralmek made his way through the stations repair ducts to get past the posted guards, and made use of his posting to bypass any security alarms. As he traveled through the bowls of the station he idly pondered whether his mission might be commemorated with a statue.
After three days Gralmek felt secure in the success of his mission, but was then summoned to the station commander's office by an irate Baris, who was exasperated at Kirk.
At this point Gralmek’s own logs ceased, and the rest of the tale was recorded by Captain Koloth, who had, by pure chance, been visiting the station at the same time for shore leave. Gralmek arrived at the office to be greeted by the angry screams of tribbles, the verminous balls of fluff which had recently infested the station. From their reaction Kirk was able to deduce Darvin was a Klingon, which his doctor, McCoy, confirmed with a tricorder scan. Still, Gralmek's plan had not been undone, but under the threat of a screaming tribble he crumbled and revealed he had poisoned the grain.
Koloth was forced to leave the station humiliated, and contacted his superiors to voice his frustration at the situation – complaining that if he had been informed of the espionage mission he would have not even visited the station. His conversation was interrupted by one of his crew, informing him of a tribble infestation in the engine room.
Meanwhile, Gralmek spent several months in Federation custody. The High council made it a priority to retrieve him, fearing he would give away more of the Empire's secrets, and organized a prisoner exchange to get him back.
After a debriefing Gralmek was escorted to the Great Hall and dressed down by the Chancellor. The Chancellor acknowledged the inherent riskiness of the mission, and Gralmek’s willingness to serve the Empire, but was appalled at Gralmek’s fear which had led him to rush his plans and reveal himself as a Klingon agent. As punishment for his failure Gralmek was discommended, and warned never to be found in Klingon space.
And so ended the age of Klingon espionage, and as far as Kahnrah knew, the story of Gralmek. K'ahlynn asks her grandfather if he has yet reached a decision on how he will vote on Gorkon's proposal, and what he could have learnt from this tale of cowardice. Kahnrah is still unsure about how he will vote, but the lesson he finds in Gralmek's story is that a Klingon can develop loyalty and admiration for Human adversaries, and so, perhaps Humans and Klingons aren't so different.
References[]
Characters[]
- Nilz Baris • Arne Darvin • Gralmek • Cyrano Jones • K'ahlynn • Kahnrah • James T. Kirk • Koloth • Lurry • Leonard McCoy • Benjamin Sisko • Spock
- Referenced only
- Gorkon • Kahless the Unforgettable
Starships and vehicles[]
- USS Enterprise (Constitution-class) • IKS Gr'oth (D7-class) • USS Lexington (Constitution-class) • prison barge
Locations[]
- Deep Space Station K-7 • Great Hall • Qo'noS
- Referenced only
- Rura Penthe • Sherman's Planet
Races and cultures[]
States and organizations[]
- Federation Starfleet • Klingon Empire • Klingon High Council • Klingon Intelligence • Planetary Development Corps • Starfleet Command • United Federation of Planets
Other references[]
- agriculture • bat'leth • discommendation • d'k tahg • Earther • engine room • espionage • forehead ridges • gelatin • ha'dibah • hair drilling • heart • log • lung • mach ghotI' • milk • Organian Peace Treaty • poison • priority one alert • prisoner exchange • quadrant • quadrotriticale • rib cage • shore leave • skin • spine • Starfleet uniform • starship • statue • sugar • tribble • vegetable • viral agent
Appendices[]
Related media[]
- The Trouble with Tribbles (TOS episode) - This issue tells the episode from the Klingon's point of view, greatly expanding on the back-story of Arne Darvin.
- The Undiscovered Country (TOS movie) - The framing story for this issue is set around the time of this movie, considering the fall out of the Praxis disaster.
- Against Their Nature (TOS comic) - This issue continues the framing story a day on from "Against Their Nature" and TOS TV era story connecting the dots between the TOS episodes "Errand of Mercy" and "The Trouble with Tribbles".
- Errand of Mercy (TOS episode) - Reference is made to the Organians from this episode.
- Trials and Tribble-ations (DS9 episode) - Benjamin Sisko makes a cameo appearance, having traveled back in time to this period in the DS9 episode.
- Sins of the Father (TNG episode) - This comic features a Klingon discommendation, as established in this episode.
Background[]
- Like the previous issue no title is published in the comic, the title was however established on an advert for this issue at the end of the previous issue.
- Of the ten pages of adverts in this issue one is used to advertise Star Trek products, promoting IDW's other miniseries running along side Blood Will Tell, the TNG anniversary miniseries The Space Between, featuring Dennis Calero's cover art for the first issue of that series.
Covers[]
- This issue was available in four different covers. David Messina and Joe Corroney each provided a cover. And variants of Joe Corroney's cover were be available as retailer incentives, either a sketch version or a version without cover titles.
Images[]
Connections[]
Star Trek - Klingons: Blood Will Tell | |
---|---|
Issues | Against Their Nature • Beneath the Skin • The Order of Things • Blood Reign O'er Me • Losses |
Episodes | Errand of Mercy • The Trouble with Tribbles • A Private Little War • Day of the Dove • The Undiscovered Country |
Creators | Elena Casagrande • Joe Corroney • David Messina • Robbie Robbins • Chris Ryall • Dan Taylor • Scott & David Tipton • Ilaria Traversi • Neil Uyetake |
Timeline[]
- This issue takes place around the events of the episode "The Trouble with Tribbles", extending some months before and after the episode. The framing story is set shortly after the opening scenes of Star Trek VI: The Undiscovered Country.
published order | ||
---|---|---|
Previous comic: Against Their Nature |
TOS comics Klingons: Blood Will Tell |
Next comic: The Order of Things |
Previous story: Against Their Nature |
Stories by: Scott & David Tipton |
Next story: The Order of Things |
chronological order | ||
Previous adventure: Against Their Nature Framing story |
Memory Beta Chronology | Next adventure: The Order of Things Framing story |
The above chronology placements are based on the primary placement in 2293. The Memory Beta Chronology places events from this story in 4 other timeframe(s): | ||
Previous adventure: Gemini |
2267 Pages 3-7; months before "The Trouble With Tribbles" |
Next adventure: To Reign in Hell: The Exile of Khan Noonien Singh Chapters 7-11 |
Previous adventure: The First Peer |
2267 Pages 8-11; weeks before "The Trouble With Tribbles" |
Next adventure: I, Mudd |
Previous adventure: The Galactic Whirlpool |
2267 Pages 12-19 Concurrently with "The Trouble With Tribbles" |
Next adventure: The Trouble with Tribbles |
Previous adventure: The Gamesters of Triskelion |
2268 Pages 20-21 Months after "The Trouble With Tribbles" |
Next adventure: Obsession |
Images[]
External link[]
- Blood Will Tell, Issue 2 article at Memory Alpha, the wiki for canon Star Trek.