Narrative Web

Beverly confronts REM-deprivation hallucinations

In the Enterprise’s morgue, Beverly Crusher orders autopsies on the Brattain crew’s brain tissue, searching for scientific answers to their mass murder-suicide. As she examines the corpses, REM sleep deprivation triggers a hallucination: the bodies’ eyes snap open, and their torsos sit upright, fixating on her. Beverly, recognizing the psychological unraveling, forces herself to regain control by dismissing the vision as a delusion. The moment underscores the Tyken’s Rift’s insidious effect on the crew’s sanity, mirroring the Brattain’s fate and foreshadowing Beverly’s own vulnerability to the anomaly’s influence. Her struggle to reclaim control highlights the crew’s collective descent into madness, reinforcing the urgency of escaping the Rift before their faculties collapse entirely.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

4

Beverly instructs an assistant to set up positron emission sensors in Sickbay for further brain tissue cross-sections from the Brattain crew, indicating a deeper dive into the cause of death.

professional to investigative ['hold', 'Morgue']

After the assistant exits, Beverly experiences unsettling sounds and a disorienting hallucination of the Brattain crew's corpses sitting upright and staring at her, a manifestation of the growing fear and psychological distress caused by REM sleep deprivation.

investigative to terror ['Morgue']

Realizing it's a hallucination, Beverly attempts to regain control by firmly telling the vision to go away, demonstrating her will to combat the psychological effects of sleep deprivation.

terror to denial ['Morgue']

When she opens her eyes, Beverly finds the room returned to normal, though she fights to compose herself and maintain control, highlighting the internal struggle against the encroaching madness.

denial to strained calm ['Morgue']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

None (as corpses). As hallucinations: A projection of Beverly’s terror—less about the Brattain crew’s actual state and more about her dread of becoming like them: a victim of the Rift’s madness, her mind unraveling in solitude.

The Brattain crew corpses lie motionless in their translucent stasis bags, their faces obscured by the force fields’ glow—until Beverly’s REM-deprived mind twists reality. One by one, their eyes snap open, their torsos lurching upright as if pulled by unseen strings. They don’t speak, don’t move further; they simply stare, their hollow gazes locking onto Beverly with accusatory intensity. The effect is a grotesque tableau, a silent chorus of the dead judging the living. When Beverly shuts her eyes, the vision dissolves, leaving only the hum of the stasis fields and the cold, unblinking truth: these bodies did sit up once, in the final moments before they turned on each other.

Goals in this moment
  • To serve as a manifestation of Beverly’s deepest fear: that she is already losing her grip on reality.
  • To mirror the Brattain crew’s fate as a warning (or a prophecy).
Active beliefs
  • That the dead *do* have something to say—if only to those teetering on the edge of the same abyss.
  • That Beverly’s scientific rationalism is a flimsy defense against the Rift’s true nature: a force that preys on the mind’s fragility.
Character traits
Symbolic embodiments of guilt and paranoia Silent but overwhelmingly present (their stillness is as unnerving as their ‘movement’) Reflections of Beverly’s subconscious fears (are they judging her? Warning her?)
Follow USS Brattain …'s journey

A fragile facade of control masking escalating panic—her clinical detachment is a shield, but the cracks are showing. The hallucination doesn’t just frighten her; it validates her worst fear: that she’s losing her mind, just like the Brattain crew.

Beverly Crusher stands in the morgue, her posture rigid with forced professionalism as she directs the assistant to set up positron emission sensors for further brain tissue analysis. Her fingers tighten around an autopsy report as she reads, her brow furrowing—not just at the data, but at the creeping dread of the Rift’s psychological toll. When the hallucination strikes, her body jerks back, her breath hitching as the corpses ‘awaken.’ She spins in a slow circle, eyes wide, before squeezing them shut and snapping a command to banish the vision. Her hands tremble slightly as she reopens her eyes, scanning the room for lingering threats.

Goals in this moment
  • To find a *scientific* explanation for the Brattain crew’s deaths before the Rift claims her too.
  • To prove to herself (and by extension, the crew) that she can resist the Rift’s psychological assaults.
Active beliefs
  • That logic and medicine can shield her from the Rift’s effects, if she just holds on a little longer.
  • That acknowledging the hallucination—even to herself—would be the first step toward irreversible madness.
Character traits
Scientifically meticulous (even under duress) Prone to dissociation when overwhelmed Defiant in the face of psychological erosion Physically reactive to stress (tremors, sharp movements)
Follow Beverly Crusher's journey
Supporting 1

Quietly unsettled but professionally detached—he’s seen death before, but the Rift’s presence makes even the mundane feel sinister. His exit is a retreat, not a choice.

The Supernumerary Assistant nods silently at Beverly’s orders, his expression neutral but his posture betraying a hint of unease in the morgue’s oppressive atmosphere. He exits swiftly, likely relieved to leave the room of the dead—though his departure is so unobtrusive it’s almost as if he were never there. His role is purely functional: a pair of hands to execute Beverly’s directives, but his absence during the hallucination underscores the isolation of her ordeal.

Goals in this moment
  • To complete Beverly’s task efficiently and without drawing attention to himself.
  • To avoid becoming entangled in whatever is unraveling in that room.
Active beliefs
  • That his job is to follow orders, not to question or intervene in the doctor’s work.
  • That the less he engages with the Brattain crew’s fate, the safer he’ll be from the Rift’s effects.
Character traits
Dutiful and unquestioning Discreet to the point of invisibility Subtly affected by the morgue’s tension (though he hides it well)
Follow Supernumerary Assistant's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

4
Brattain Crew Autopsy Reports

The autopsy reports clutched in Beverly’s hands are more than data—they’re a challenge. Their contents (implied to be inconclusive or disturbing) force her to confront the limits of her expertise. When the hallucination strikes, she drops the report, her focus shattered. The reports’ failure to provide answers mirrors her own unraveling: the Brattain crew’s deaths defy explanation, just as her mind now defies her control. Their presence in the scene is a cruel joke: the more she reads, the less she understands—and the more the Rift wins.

Before: Clipped to the stasis bags or held in …
After: Discarded or forgotten on the floor, their utility …
Before: Clipped to the stasis bags or held in Beverly’s hand, their pages filled with clinical jargon and unanswered questions.
After: Discarded or forgotten on the floor, their utility overshadowed by the hallucination. Their abandonment symbolizes Beverly’s shift from investigator to victim.
Invisible Stasis Force Fields

The invisible stasis force fields are the morgue’s silent guardians, their presence felt only in the way they distort the light and cast eerie shadows. During the hallucination, they become a cruel irony: the fields should be containing the dead, yet Beverly’s mind makes it seem as though the corpses are breaking free. The fields’ failure to prevent the psychological breach underscores the Rift’s true nature—it doesn’t just attack the body, it infiltrates the mind, rendering even Starfleet’s technology obsolete. Their invisibility mirrors the Rift itself: an unseen force with devastating, visible effects.

Before: Active and stable, humming softly as they maintain …
After: Still functional, but their reliability is called into …
Before: Active and stable, humming softly as they maintain the corpses in stasis.
After: Still functional, but their reliability is called into question. Beverly can no longer trust what she sees—or what the fields are really holding back.
Positron Emission Sensors

The positron emission sensors, though only mentioned in Beverly’s orders to the assistant, serve as a critical narrative device here. They represent her last tether to rationality—a tool to measure the unmeasurable, to quantify the madness creeping into her mind. Their absence during the hallucination is telling: even science cannot penetrate the Rift’s psychological warfare. The sensors’ role is dual: a symbol of Beverly’s fading hope in logic, and a foreshadowing of her eventual reliance on something beyond science to survive.

Before: Stowed in Sickbay, awaiting Beverly’s selection of which …
After: Unchanged physically, but their symbolic weight shifts—from potential …
Before: Stowed in Sickbay, awaiting Beverly’s selection of which Brattain crew brains to scan. Their presence is implied but not yet active in the morgue.
After: Unchanged physically, but their symbolic weight shifts—from potential solution to bitter irony. Beverly’s order to set them up now feels like a desperate grasp at straws.
Translucent Body Bags

The translucent body bags are more than containers—they’re portals into Beverly’s fracturing psyche. Their material (thin, almost ghostly) and the way they cast long shadows on the walls create an atmosphere of unease, as if the dead are already half-present in the world of the living. When the hallucination occurs, the bags don’t move—it’s the corpses inside that seem to animate, their forms pressing against the material like prisoners testing their cells. The bags’ stasis fields, though invisible, are the only thing keeping the horror at bay… and even they feel fragile in this moment.

Before: Sealed and suspended in the morgue, their contents …
After: Physically unchanged, but their perceived role shifts. No …
Before: Sealed and suspended in the morgue, their contents motionless, their surfaces catching the dim light.
After: Physically unchanged, but their perceived role shifts. No longer just holding the dead, they now feel like barriers between Beverly and the Rift’s influence—a barrier she’s not sure will hold.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Cargo Bay (USS Enterprise)

The cargo area/morgue is a masterclass in atmospheric dread, its design amplifying Beverly’s psychological unraveling. The dim lighting casts long, shifting shadows from the stasis fields, turning the room into a labyrinth of half-seen threats. The translucent body bags, suspended like specters, create the illusion of movement even when still. The sound of the scene—Beverly’s sharp inhale, the rustle of the autopsy report, the thunk of an unseen noise—heightens the tension, making the space feel alive, almost breathing. This isn’t just a morgue; it’s a liminal space where the boundary between life and death, sanity and madness, blurs. The Rift’s influence seeps into the very walls, turning a place of scientific detachment into a chamber of horrors.

Atmosphere Claustrophobic and oppressive, with a creeping sense of being watched. The air feels thick, charged …
Function A pressure cooker for Beverly’s psychological breakdown, where the isolation of the morgue mirrors the …
Symbolism Represents the fragility of human control in the face of the unknown. The morgue is …
Access Restricted to medical personnel and authorized crew, but the Rift’s influence makes it feel like …
The eerie, shifting shadows cast by the stasis fields, which seem to pulse when Beverly isn’t looking. The unnatural stillness of the air, broken only by the occasional thunk or rustle—sounds with no clear source. The translucent body bags, their surfaces catching the light like ice over a frozen lake, hinting at the forms beneath. The hum of the stasis fields, a low, constant drone that grates on Beverly’s nerves like nails on glass.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Temporal

"Shift between story beats, Now moving to Beverly."

Picard surrenders command to Data
S4E17 · Night Terrors
What this causes 1
Temporal

"Focus returns to Beverly after staving off the effects of deterioration."

Crusher reveals REM sleep crisis
S4E17 · Night Terrors

Key Dialogue

"BEVERLY: I want to do more cross-sections on the brain tissue of some of these bodies. Set up the positron emission sensors in Sickbay... I'll decide which ones I want to study."
"BEVERLY: Go away."