Somehow, Dukat caught word of the outrageous, endlessly ironic fact that his long-time temptation Kira and his old nemesis Garak had gone to help his dear friend Damar in his resistance movement against the Dominion. This news was so bizarre that he just had to go see for himself.
He beamed into their "underground" headquarters just in time to hear a shouting match between Kira and Rusot: Damar's right-hand man.
"Ah, Nerys!" Dukat greeted her jovially. "It would appear that in my absence, you've found a new Cardassian with whom to fight! You must've missed me!"
She spun. "Dukat?! How did you get here?! And believe it or not, everything isn't always about you!"
Dukat always so enjoyed their banter that he didn't even bother to take offense; his amused smile remained. "Curious that you should find it unusual to see me here; we are deep in Cardassian territory, after all. I find it fascinating to find you here; you get bolder with every passing year. I'm impressed. First time within our empire, I presume?"
Kira refused to let his teasing, veiled scare tactics rattle her. "Actually, no. And I'm here to help clean up the mess you made of your empire, by allying it with the Dominion, of all things!"
But not everyone reacted the same as Dukat.
Rusot took a menacing step from behind her. "You will show proper respect to your Cardassian masters!"
Kira fired over her shoulder, "Shut up, Rusot! And no one is my master!"
Damar was hesitant. "Kira, a bit more civility and diplomacy might be prudent." He was trying not to take offense, and to only caution her, but he hadn't appreciated her flippant, challenging tone, either.
Kira's gaze briefly touched on Damar, and then slid to his right to Garak.
Wordlessly, his eyes spoke volumes: BE...VERY...CAREFUL.
She closed her eyes, sighed, and tried for a more reasonable tone. "All I was saying, Rusot, before Dukat got here, was that you need to go for the target that will do the most damage to their supply lines, not the one that'll make the biggest 'boom!'"
If anything, his rage increased. "You talk to me as if you think that I'm a child, not an officer! And I still say that we should not let our strategy be planned by a Bajoran, let alone a Bajoran woman, who probably hates us, and would love to see us fail!"
Kira stared. "You think that I came all the way here...." She glanced at Dukat. "Took the great risk of coming here, merely to help you fail???"
Rusot shot back, "Of course a Bajoran would like to see us fail, so that the Dominion can do to us what we did to you, isn't that right? Isn't that your idea of poetic justice??"
She lost her temper. "All right, fine! If that's what you want to believe, I'll just go right back to DS9, and you can fail by yourselves; you don't need me for that!"
Stung by her implication that they couldn't succeed without her, Rusot sneered nastily, "Don't you mean Terok Nor?"
Dukat grinned broadly at the cheap shot, and Damar couldn't help but do the same; he and Dukat had used the exact same psychological warfare on her when they and the Dominion had retaken the station. Garak tried not to smile at the effective verbal blow, but he was clearly struggling. They all saw the hurt look in her eyes at the cruel reminder of her people's former enslavement by them.
Obviously deciding that if they could dredge up old wounds, she would take a potshot of her own, and venomously, she declared to Rusot, "If Shakaar had been as stupid a tactician as you, Rusot, we wouldn't have driven you off Bajor, even by now!!"
Unfortunately, her stab at Rusot had struck everyone else in the room as well. When she glanced all around, and saw a flash of anger even in Garak's eyes, she knew that she was in trouble. Her own rage fled in her resulting uncertainty. Bad move, Nerys, she thought nervously, you're the lone Bajoran woman in a room full of Cardassian men, and that wasn't very smart.
Dukat said coldly, "I remind you, Nerys, that your pitiful resistance did not drive us off Bajor; we left of our own accord, because we had acquired all that we'd wanted from you."
Damar nodded solemnly. "If the wormhole had been discovered during the Occupation, we would still be on Bajor now." The heartless tone of voice that he'd exhibited throughout the brief Dominion Occupation of DS9 was back full force.
Even Garak spoke out against her. "The many agents of the Obsidian Order had already efficiently dispatched many of the most influential leaders of your various resistance cells. I, personally, was in the process of setting up your precious Shakaar, even as our recall came in from Central Command. If not for that, he would have had, at most, a day or two left to live, quite probably along with the rest of his little band, including, most likely, you."
Kira swallowed hard, thoroughly unnerved by their words, their tone, and their stern, dangerous expressions. "I think maybe I misspoke."
Facing those three, she was caught off guard by Rusot, behind her. He had evidently decided that this was the best support from these highest-ranking three Cardassians that he was ever likely to get. Her legs were kicked viciously out from under her, she was on the floor, and he was on top of her, even before she could react. Her arms were quickly pinned above her head. Rusot's anger was hot, in direct contrast to the cold fury of the other three.
"You need discipline, just like a lot of Bajoran women did, during the Occupation!" Rusot hissed.
It wasn't hard to guess what he meant, just from his position on top of her. Kira released a piercing shriek.
Rusot fumed, "And judging from you insolent behavior, it was a lesson that you didn't receive often enough, back then!"
Something in Kira's eyes, just for the briefest moment, told Rusot what she didn't want him to know, and suddenly he was observing her piercingly. She whimpered when she saw him recognize it, and turned away quickly, but it was too late; he knew.
"You never suffered that particular punishment back then, did you?"
Her wild eyes fled from Garak to Damar to Dukat: imploring, embarrassed, mortified, horrified, humiliated, beseeching, awkward, even something nearing sheepish. But all three were immediately so fascinated by the revolutionary concept that Rusot had suggested, that they approached wide-eyed, as if magnetically drawn to her.
"No!!!" Kira whispered fervently, and all of them instinctively understood that that single word was less an answer to Rusot's question – although it was clearly the correct answer in any case – and more a plea to them not to let this happen to her.
"Why, Nerys!" Dukat grinned in delight. "Never?!! Really??!!" A new realization burst into his expression. "That's why you looked so panicked, as well as angry, every time that I came on to you!!" He was utterly fascinated, staring at her as if he'd just discovered a completely new, wonderful species.
In evidently the same frame of mind, Damar commented, intrigued, "I suppose that we might have somehow missed one. Although my impression was that each of us got to hundreds, maybe thousands of their women."
Kira looked almost sickened by revulsion. But somehow, she could not turn her face away, pull her eyes away, from the mesmerizing and mesmerized looks of the three towering over her.
Unfortunately, Garak, ever the brilliant, clever, insightful, analytical one, the keen expert at divining just what torture would work best on each victim, studied her eyes penetratingly, and revealed, "And it's your deepest fear! It was during the Occupation, and it still is now!" He began to look more and more thrilled by the enormity and truth of his discovery, smiling more broadly at each astonishing announcement. "Let me guess: during the Occupation, you were shot, beaten, stabbed, and none of it mattered, did it? None of it left any lasting effects. But you lived every day in terror, didn't you? Terror that one day, one of us would...!"