Narrative Web

Ro discovers her invisibility and intangibility

Ro Laren awakens in a disoriented state in the Enterprise’s corridor, her confusion deepening as passing crew members walk through her without acknowledgment. She attempts to hail the bridge via her communicator, but her calls go unanswered, reinforcing her growing isolation. When she reaches sickbay, the door fails to respond to her presence—until a crew member exits, allowing her to pass through the still-open door. This moment confirms her intangibility, marking a critical turning point: her altered state is no longer a fleeting malfunction but a persistent, destabilizing condition. The discovery forces her to confront the reality of her invisibility, which becomes both a liability (she cannot communicate the Romulan sabotage) and a potential advantage (she can move undetected through the ship). The scene underscores the escalating stakes of the Enterprise’s crisis, as Ro’s helplessness mirrors the crew’s broader vulnerability to the Romulan plot. Her Bajoran beliefs about death and the afterlife further complicate her reaction, as she grapples with whether this is a spiritual reckoning or a scientific anomaly. The moment also sets up her eventual collaboration with Geordi, as both must leverage their intangibility to navigate the ship’s impending doom.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

3

Ro awakens in a corridor, disoriented and unseen by passing crew members, realizing something has gone wrong.

confusion to realization ['corridor intersection']

Ro attempts to contact the bridge using her communicator, but receives no response, heightening her concern.

concern to frustration

Ro heads to sickbay, only to find she can pass through closed doors and is completely ignored by a crew member, confirming her invisibility.

puzzlement to frustrated acceptance ['sickbay']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

4

A volatile mix of frustration, existential dread, and desperate determination. Her scientific training clashes with Bajoran cultural beliefs about the afterlife, leaving her emotionally unmoored as she grapples with her invisibility.

Ro Laren awakens groggy and disoriented in the corridor, her confusion mounting as crew members pass through her without acknowledgment. She attempts to hail the bridge via communicator, but the silence that follows deepens her isolation. When she reaches sickbay, the door’s refusal to respond—followed by a crewperson’s unintentional assistance—confirms her intangibility. Her physical state deteriorates briefly with a wave of dizziness, but she presses forward, her frustration and desperation palpable as she navigates a ship that no longer perceives her.

Goals in this moment
  • To communicate her predicament to the bridge and secure help
  • To reach sickbay and find medical or technical assistance
Active beliefs
  • Her condition is a malfunction that can be fixed through Starfleet protocols
  • Her Bajoran faith suggests this might be a spiritual reckoning or punishment
Character traits
Resourceful under pressure Frustrated by helplessness Spiritually conflicted (Bajoran beliefs vs. scientific anomaly) Determined despite disorientation
Follow Ro Laren's journey
Supporting 3

Indifferent and task-focused; his actions are mechanically efficient but emotionally detached, reinforcing Ro’s sense of abandonment.

An unnamed crewperson exits sickbay, walking past Ro without seeing her. His abrupt movement and lack of acknowledgment further emphasize Ro’s invisibility, while his unintentional act of holding the door open becomes a critical moment of serendipity in her struggle. His presence is fleeting but pivotal, illustrating how the crew’s mundane actions inadvertently shape Ro’s ghostly journey through the ship.

Goals in this moment
  • To exit sickbay and resume duties
  • To move efficiently through the corridor
Active beliefs
  • The ship’s operations are proceeding as normal
  • His individual actions contribute to the greater mission
Character traits
Routine-driven and unobservant Unwittingly helpful in Ro’s crisis Symbolic of the crew’s collective obliviousness
Follow Unnamed Corridors …'s journey

Neutral and operational; their lack of awareness creates an eerie contrast to Ro’s panic, emphasizing her alienation from the ship’s functioning reality.

N.D. Crewmen pass Ro in the corridor without seeing or acknowledging her, their obliviousness reinforcing her intangibility. Their brisk, purposeful movements contrast sharply with Ro’s disorientation, highlighting the stark divide between her invisible struggle and the crew’s unaware routine. One crewperson exits sickbay, unwittingly holding the door open long enough for Ro to slip through, a moment of unintentional assistance that underscores her ghostly existence aboard the ship.

Goals in this moment
  • To perform routine duties efficiently
  • To maintain shipboard operations without disruption
Active beliefs
  • The ship’s systems are functioning normally (unaware of the transporter malfunction)
  • Their roles are critical to the *Enterprise*’s mission
Character traits
Disciplined and focused on duties Unaware of Ro’s predicament (reinforcing her isolation) Inadvertently facilitative (holding the door open)
Follow N.D. Shuttlebay …'s journey

Grim and introspective, carrying the weight of leadership. His disturbed expression reflects his awareness of the Enterprise’s vulnerability, though his focus remains on strategic solutions rather than personal distress.

Captain Picard enters the corridor from a turbolift, his expression grim and deeply disturbed as he walks lost in thought. The camera lingers on him briefly before shifting focus to Ro, but his presence in the corridor—though peripheral to Ro’s immediate crisis—hints at the broader weight of the Enterprise’s predicament. His preoccupation suggests he is already grappling with the Romulan sabotage, though he remains unaware of Ro’s invisible plight.

Goals in this moment
  • To assess and mitigate the Romulan threat to the *Enterprise*
  • To maintain crew morale and operational efficiency amid the crisis
Active beliefs
  • The Romulan sabotage is a calculable threat that can be neutralized through logic and preparation
  • His crew’s safety is paramount, even if it requires difficult decisions
Character traits
Burdened by command responsibility Intellectually engaged in solving the ship’s crisis Emotionally detached in public (masking inner turmoil)
Follow Jean-Luc Picard's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

2
Ensign Ro's Communicator

Ro’s communicator becomes a symbol of her isolation as she attempts to hail the bridge, only to be met with silence. The device’s failure to transmit her distress call underscores the severity of her intangibility, transforming a standard Starfleet tool into a cruel reminder of her helplessness. Its recalcitrance forces her to confront the reality that she is cut off from the crew and the ship’s systems, heightening the tension of her predicament.

Before: Functional and attached to Ro’s uniform, ready for …
After: Silent and ineffective, unable to transmit or receive …
Before: Functional and attached to Ro’s uniform, ready for use.
After: Silent and ineffective, unable to transmit or receive signals due to Ro’s intangible state.
Enterprise Sickbay Door

The sickbay door initially refuses to respond to Ro’s presence, its sensors unable to register her intangible form. This moment of resistance becomes a visceral confirmation of her altered state, forcing her to grapple with the reality of her invisibility. When a crewperson exits, the door remains open just long enough for Ro to slip through—a fleeting opportunity that underscores both her desperation and the ship’s unintentional complicity in her crisis.

Before: Functional and responsive to authorized crew members, sealed …
After: Briefly open due to the crewperson’s exit, allowing …
Before: Functional and responsive to authorized crew members, sealed shut by default.
After: Briefly open due to the crewperson’s exit, allowing Ro to pass through before closing again.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

2
Corridor (Section Twenty-Three Baker, USS Enterprise-D)

The corridor in Section Twenty-Three Baker serves as the liminal space where Ro’s intangibility is first revealed. Its narrow confines and humming bulkheads amplify her disorientation, while the passing crew members—who walk through her without pause—create an eerie, ghostly atmosphere. The corridor becomes a metaphor for her isolation, a place where she is physically present but entirely unseen, trapped between the ship’s operational reality and her own invisible crisis.

Atmosphere Claustrophobic and surreal, with the hum of ship systems contrasting sharply with Ro’s growing panic. …
Function A transitional space where Ro’s intangibility is first tested and confirmed, forcing her to navigate …
Symbolism Represents the threshold between Ro’s known reality and her new, invisible existence. The corridor’s indifference …
Access Open to all crew members, but Ro’s intangibility renders her unable to interact with doors …
The hum of the ship’s systems, a constant reminder of the Enterprise’s operational life The sterile, metallic bulkheads reflecting the cold efficiency of Starfleet The passing crew members, their solid forms clipping through Ro without acknowledgment
Sickbay (USS Enterprise-D)

Sickbay looms as Ro’s destination, a place of healing and answers that remains just out of reach. The door’s refusal to open for her is a cruel irony, as the very place designed to help the crew cannot perceive her existence. When she finally slips through the open door, the sterile environment of biobeds and monitor beeps contrasts with her invisible struggle, reinforcing the disconnect between her crisis and the ship’s unaware routine. The location becomes a symbol of her desperation and the Enterprise’s broader vulnerability.

Atmosphere Sterile and efficient, with the steady beep of monitors and the brisk movements of medical …
Function A sanctuary that Ro cannot access, highlighting her intangibility and the ship’s inability to recognize …
Symbolism Represents the Enterprise’s institutional inability to acknowledge Ro’s crisis, mirroring the ship’s broader blindness to …
Access Restricted to authorized personnel, but Ro’s intangibility makes her unable to trigger the door’s sensors.
The hum of medical scanners and the steady beep of monitors, creating a clinical backdrop Nurses moving briskly between patients, their focus on trauma cases from the recent crises The automatic sliding door, which refuses to respond to Ro’s presence

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Causal

"Riker's report of Geordi and Ro being lost directly leads to Ro awakening in a phased state, initiating her experience of being unseen and unheard."

Riker confirms Geordi and Ro are lost
S5E24 · The Next Phase

Key Dialogue

"RO: Ensign Ro to bridge. This is Ensign Ro, reporting in... I'm in section twenty-three baker, near sickbay."
"RO: ((to herself)) Sickbay..."