
Jake Sisko has a surprisingly healthy mental
outlook considering the traumatic childhood of losing his mother at age
11
during the infamous Borg massacre at the
Battle of Wolf 359; he was unconscious when his father barely saved him
from
their wrecked cabin on the U.S.S. Saratoga
and fled to escape pods. The memory is ever-present but only occasionally
haunts him, as on the fourth anniversary
of her death, whenever the Captain leaves for a risky mission that might
leave him
orphaned again, and when the chance to
meet the mirror-universe Jennifer Sisko lured him into a trap in that dimension
in
2372.
Jake shares a deep love and familial friendship
with his father that has greatly buttressed the normal strains of his teenage
years; the love is echoed with the bond
he has with his grandfather Joseph, although visits spent helping out in
the kitchen
and garden are not seen as fun. At times
the young man has shown more openness and concern for his dad's romantic
life
than his own, having been uncomfortable
initially discussing dating and his career goals but able to introduce
his father to
freighter captain Kasidy Yates in late
2371. He knew Captain Sisko had finally accepted DS9 as "home" when he
took his
ancient African art collection out of storage
on Earth earlier that year and brought it to the station.
As a young boy Jake loved his nursery's
ceiling starfield as a child and wondered why it couldn't go along when
the Siskos
moved - a tale his father loves to tell.
Before Wolf 359, the family had enjoyed their most memorable vacation ever
on a
camping trip to Itamish III, where his
mom had taught Jake to water-ski.
Having settled into life after his mother's
death at the Utopia Planetia yards on Mars, just next door to Earth, Jake
was not
happy with the move to the dilapidated
DS9 in 2369. Out of mutual loneliness there he soon met and befriended
Nog, a
Ferengi boy often in trouble; the two were
among only 14 children aged 8 to 16 on the station at the time, mostly
Bajoran.
Among their interests the two boys enjoyed
girl-watching, but the elder Sisko had worried about Nog's too-great influence
in
everything from staying up too late to
girls to a lack of ethics. He need not: Jake had already learned his dad's
values of
tolerance, kindness and honesty and is
responsible with his own priorities between work and play. Jake was bothered
when
Nog once wanted him to lie for him about
stolen homework and then pulled out of school on Rom's order, but the boys
decided to ignore their fathers' demands
and Jake tutored him to read. If not for Jake's patience, Nog would never
have made
their Noh-Jay Consortium pay off or perhaps
have the confidence, maturity and broader outlook to apply for Starfleet
Academy years later. He and Nog were Keiko's
last two pupils when she closed the school in 2371, and she tutored them
privately after that until she left. They
were on the verge of splitting forever, but when Sisko admitted he had
been wrong
about their friendship the two made amends
as Nog left for the Academy - even though he too had thought Nog was joking
about his academy application.
Jake recalls his first date was to be in
early 2370 with a Bajoran girl, Laira, but it was called off when her father
forbid it amid
the growing xenophobia fanned by The Circle
faction at the time. His next known "date" a few months later was with
Mardah,
a Dabo girl, then 19; supposedly just tutoring
her in entomology, he soon decided she was the love of his life and wanted
his
dad to have her for dinner. A year later
it finally happened; Captain Sisko shocked him by inviting her, but though
nervous
they hit it off. Mardah's sudden departure
weeks later for schooling on Regulus III left him glum, but he was soon
caught up
by Lwaxana Troi's Zanthi fever - which
only acts in case of latent pre-existing emotions - and fell hard for Kira
during the
Gratitude Festival. A relationship with
the human girl Leanne was nearly sabotaged by Nog's Ferengi attitude on
a double
date; he was still seeing her weeks later
at the time he joined his dad in the Bajoran solar sailer.
The depths of his bond with Captain Sisko
were borne out again when the young man decided that a Starfleet life was
not for
him, and was relieved when his surprised
father supported his ambitions to be a writer. His interest in poetry had
been
exposed only months before at the infamous
dinner with Sisko and Mardah, and still later he'd been embarrassed about
his
writing and an early story about the Maquis.
Keiko, who had encouraged Jake with his blossoming interest, helped him
secure a scholarship to the Pennington
School in New Zealand in 2371, though he deferred it a year - again out
of concern
about leaving before his dad had begun
dating. He visited the school again a year later during the Dominion invasion
scare
and has since not spoken of any plans there.
Jake's actions have also been heroic, helping
to save himself, his dad and O'Brien when the station's old counter-insurgency
program kicked into gear. Later, while
in a reality eventually to be known only to his father, he sacrificed his
life as a writer in
a discarded timeline to give Sisko a second
chance to avoid a fatal accident on the U.S.S. Defiant.
Before Keiko O'Brien's school opened in
2369 he'd learned by home study on computer, but quickly came to like her.
Like
any teen, Jake didn't see the need in studying
esoteric subjects like Klingon opera. Algebra was not a simple school subject
for him, but only weeks later he was studying
calculus. Although his grades are "great" as of SD 47552, he placed in
the
lower third on mechanical science and led
his dad to ask O'Brien about a tutoring mentorship; he calls himself a
"low-tech
kind of guy." The training came in handy
when he and Nog were trapped in the Gamma Quadrant on a Runabout with the
Jem'Hadar in pursuit, having asked for
a flying lesson only days before.
Playing with model starships was a boyhood
pastime, and he's also inherited some of the Sisko men's cooking flair;
A
favorite drink is lemonade; he also enjoys
I'danian spice pudding, and orange juice and oatmeal for breakfast. Though
he still
has the instrument, he took keyboard lessons
for a while but it never caught on. Within a few months after arriving
at DS9
his other hobbies, often shared with Nog,
included school projects, playing cards, dom-jot, and even baseball, with
Jake
inheriting the passion from his dad and
playing on his program in the holosuites. By early 2370 he was batting
against Bob
Gibson's curve ball in the holo-program;
by midyear he could strike out his dad with a curve ball, and a year later
when he
had grown as tall as Sisko he could pitch
inside to back off even his dad from the plate.
CONFIDENTIAL: Selected Access Only
UPDATE SD 50500: Dr. J. Bashir, M.D.
Jake Sisko has continued to find a life
for himself on the station as he develops his writing aptitude amid the
latest news
from the Dominion, Borg, Bajorans, Cardassians
and Klingons. His artistic muse almost killed him when an alien female,
still unidentified as to species, literally
drew sustenance form his own speeded-up creativity; the near-fatal incident
did yield
the first chapter of a book named "."
This doctor was witness to a personal landmark
in his life when Jake faced both fear and courage during my side trip to
Ajilon Prime to aid their overrun field
hospital amid the height of fighting there during the UFP-Klingon Archanis
sector border
wars. The trip started out as a chance
for young Sisko to pen an article over the outcry one of this doctor's
articles caused
at a medical conference, but to his credit
he wrote a much more exciting and personal expose of his own personal highs
and
lows at Ajilon and then shared them.
An unexpected twist came when his old buddy
Nog returned to do sophomore-year field study at DS9. Their euphoria at
moving out and in together turned sour
quickly when Nog's neatness streak collided with Jake's less than strict
housecleaning. After a spat and a talk
by their fathers the boys patched things up. At the time, he was working
on a story
entitled "Past Prologue."
Almost as emotionally draining was the weight
that rested solely on his shoulders when Jake made the decision to save
his
father, rather than allow his continued
"visions" to fatally degrade his neural system. While all of us knew that
the captain's
life had to come before the promise of
any elusive messages from the Prophet aliens, it was still hard for Jake
to run counter
to his father's heartfelt wishes.
On a side note, I continue to hear of young
Sisko's casual ease in gourmet cooking with such dishes as chicken a la
Sisko
and lingta roast -- an almost genetic trait
shared by the men of his family. With Nog gone, he had also taken to playing
computer dom-jot as a break in writing.

