Beverly admits REM sleep failure
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Beverly informs Troi that none of the crew, except Troi, can reach REM sleep, and that Beverly is running out of options. Beverly mentions that she has tried multiple medical strategies like somatic drugs and inducing theta waves in the entorhinal cortex, but found no success.
Troi expresses her despair, revealing that her dreams are nightmares and that she fears she will end up like Hagan, a despairing prediction of her future.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Discouraged and frustrated, but channeling her emotions into a clinical demeanor. There’s a quiet rage beneath her exhaustion—anger at her inability to save her crew, and perhaps at the universe for this cruel twist.
Beverly stands beside a patient’s bio-bed, her hands steady but her posture betraying exhaustion. She delivers her medical failure with a quiet, defeated tone, her pale complexion and shaky demeanor reflecting the toll of the crisis. When she notes that Troi is the only one still capable of dreaming, her voice carries a mix of clinical observation and personal frustration. She does not offer false hope, instead acknowledging the grim reality with professionalism tinged with despair.
- • To inform Troi of the medical reality (no REM sleep restoration possible) so she can prepare for what comes next.
- • To subtly convey her own helplessness, hoping Troi might find another way where medicine cannot.
- • That science and medicine have failed the crew, and the solution must lie elsewhere (e.g., Troi’s empathic abilities).
- • That the Tyken’s Rift is not just a physical anomaly but a psychological one, requiring a non-medical response.
A fragile facade of composure masking deep despair, fear of losing herself, and a creeping sense of inevitability about her descent into madness.
Troi is physically and emotionally drained, her body slumped against the wall as she drifts in and out of a nightmare induced by the Sighing Voice. She wakes disoriented, her voice trembling as she questions Hagan, then turns to Beverly for answers. Her gaze lingers on Hagan’s catatonic form, a premonition of her own fate, as she absorbs Beverly’s devastating news with a mix of resignation and dread. Her final line—'I'll be like him. Just like him.'—is delivered with a hollow, defeated tone, her hands clenched in quiet despair.
- • To understand Hagan’s fragmented memories and the meaning of 'double... double...'—hoping for a clue to escape the Rift’s psychological trap.
- • To delay her own psychological collapse by seeking medical reassurance from Beverly, only to have her last hope shattered.
- • That her empathic abilities might still offer a way to communicate with the trapped crew or the Sighing Voice, despite her nightmares.
- • That she is uniquely cursed (or blessed) by her ability to dream in a crew that cannot, making her both a potential savior and a future victim.
None (catatonic, unresponsive). Their state is a void, a blank slate onto which the crew projects their fear of what’s to come.
The unnamed patient lies motionless on the bio-bed, their condition reflecting the crew’s REM sleep deprivation crisis. Neurotransmitter monitors attached to them display flat readings, symbolizing Beverly’s failure to restore normal brain function. The patient’s presence underscores the scope of the problem—Troi and Hagan are not isolated cases but part of a ship-wide unraveling. Their stillness is a silent accusation: This could be anyone.
- • None (conscious). Their condition serves as a warning to the rest of the crew.
- • To reinforce the stakes: without a solution, this will be Troi’s fate—and the crew’s.
- • That the Rift’s effects are irreversible without external intervention.
- • That their suffering is a shared burden, not an individual failure.
A mix of raw survival instinct and psychological torment. The Voice is not malevolent but driven by the crew’s collective madness, its words a distorted reflection of their trapped state.
The Sighing Voice manifests only in Troi’s nightmare, its raspy, throaty whispers ('Eyes... in the dark... one moon circles...') serving as a telepathic distress call from the trapped Brattain crew. It is not physically present in Sickbay but lingers in Troi’s mind, a haunting echo of the psychological torment she and the crew face. Its words are cryptic, luring her deeper into the mystery of the Rift while amplifying her fear. The Voice is both a victim and a tormentor, its desperation masked by foreboding menace.
- • To communicate the *Brattain* crew’s distress, even if incoherently.
- • To draw Troi (and by extension, the *Enterprise* crew) into the Rift’s psychological trap, whether intentionally or not.
- • That Troi is their only hope for rescue, given her empathic abilities.
- • That the Rift’s effects are inescapable without understanding its 'double' nature (hinted at by Hagan’s repetition).
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Hagan’s bio-bed is the physical manifestation of his psychological imprisonment, its sterile surface and humming diagnostics a stark contrast to the horror unfolding in his mind. Troi sits beside it, her presence a mix of empathy and dread as she watches for any sign of response. The bed’s monitors remain silent, reinforcing Hagan’s catatonic state and the futility of medical intervention. Symbolically, it represents the crew’s shared vulnerability—their bodies may be intact, but their minds are under siege. When Troi turns away in despair, the bed becomes a silent witness to her own impending fate.
The neurotransmitter monitors attached to the patient’s bio-bed are the tangible evidence of Beverly’s medical failure. Their flat readings—confirming the absence of REM sleep—are a silent rebuke to her expertise and a harbinger of doom for the crew. When Beverly admits that 'no one can dream... except you,' the monitors become a cruel irony: they measure the very thing the crew has lost, and the one thing Troi cannot escape. Their beeping is a metronome of despair, counting down the crew’s sanity.
The unnamed patient’s bio-bed is a mirror to Hagan’s, its glowing panels and diagnostic lights casting a cold glow over the scene. While Hagan is the focus of Troi’s attention, this bed symbolizes the scale of the crisis—every crew member is a potential Hagan, their minds unraveling in silence. Beverly’s hands move over its controls with practiced precision, but the bed offers no solutions, only confirmation of failure. Its presence is a reminder that Troi’s nightmare is not personal but collective, and her fate is intertwined with the crew’s.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Sickbay is the heart of the crew’s psychological unraveling, its sterile white walls and humming diagnostics a false promise of control. The space is divided between Troi’s vigil by Hagan’s bed and Beverly’s futile efforts at the patient’s bio-bed, creating a visual and emotional chasm. The air is thick with tension, the beeping of monitors a constant reminder of the crew’s deteriorating state. Troi’s nightmare—induced by the Sighing Voice—bleeds into the physical space, blurring the line between her personal torment and the shared crisis. Sickbay, meant to be a sanctuary, has become a pressure cooker of despair.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Troi is in Nightmare with clue, then visits Hagan."
"Scene ends on Picard being told the dire consequences. Focus now shifts to Troi."
"Troi is in Nightmare with clue, then visits Hagan."
Key Dialogue
"BEVERLY: Deanna... Nothing's working... I've tried somatic drugs, I've tried inducing theta waves in the entorhinal cortex... no matter what I do, no one can reach REM sleep. No one can dream... except you..."
"TROI: ((ironic)) Except me... And all I have is nightmares... I can barely sleep at all anymore."
"TROI: In the end... I'll be like him. Just like him."