Data requests memorial permission
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Data asks Picard for permission to plan and conduct a memorial service for Geordi and Ro, expressing his sense of responsibility as Geordi's friend. Picard grants Data permission, moved by his request and Data moves to the turbolift, leaving Picard somber.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Somber and reflective, moved by Data’s emotional vulnerability and the reminder of the crew’s losses, yet maintaining composure as captain.
Picard stands at the aft science station on the Enterprise bridge, engaged in a comms check with Riker about the Romulan power transfer. When Data interrupts to request permission for a memorial service, Picard turns fully toward him, his posture softening as he listens. His expression shifts from focused command to somber reflection, acknowledging the weight of Data’s request. He grants permission with a measured nod, his voice carrying both authority and compassion, before Data departs toward the turbolift, leaving Picard momentarily still in contemplation.
- • Uphold the chain of command while honoring personal bonds and emotional needs of the crew.
- • Ensure operational priorities do not overshadow the human cost of the mission, even briefly.
- • Memorializing the lost is a moral duty that strengthens the crew’s resilience.
- • Leadership requires balancing pragmatism with empathy, especially in crises.
Determined yet somber, processing grief through ritual and responsibility, with a quiet urgency to honor his friend.
Data approaches Picard at the aft science station, his usual precise demeanor momentarily disrupted by a hint of solemnity. He first reports an anomalous energy fluctuation in the transporter system, then pauses to frame his request for a memorial service as a 'personal responsibility.' His posture is upright but his voice carries an uncommon weight, betraying his emotional processing of Geordi’s loss. After receiving Picard’s permission, he moves toward the turbolift with deliberate steps, his exit leaving Picard in a rare moment of quiet introspection.
- • Secure permission to conduct a memorial service as a personal and professional obligation to Geordi.
- • Reaffirm his emotional connection to humanity through the act of mourning, despite his android nature.
- • Honoring the dead is a human custom that holds meaning even for an android seeking to understand emotions.
- • His friendship with Geordi warrants this act of remembrance, regardless of operational priorities.
Mirok is not physically present during this event, but his earlier cooperation with Riker on the Romulan ship sets the …
Riker is not physically present during this event, but his earlier report to Picard about the Romulan power transfer and …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
Picard’s comlink facilitates the operational update from Riker, creating the backdrop for Data’s emotional request. The device serves as a functional tool (enabling communication) and a narrative device (highlighting the crew’s divided attention between mission and mourning). Its brief activation—Picard’s voice cutting through the bridge’s hum—frames the contrast between Riker’s optimism on the Romulan ship and Data’s grief on the Enterprise, reinforcing the story’s themes of cooperation and loss.
The transporter imaging scanners in Transporter Room Three are mentioned as Data’s next destination after securing Picard’s permission. While not physically present in this event, their reference functions as a narrative transition: Data’s investigation of the scanners will later reveal Geordi and Ro’s phased state, making this object a catalyst for the story’s twist. The scanners symbolize the tension between technical solutions (sabotage detection) and emotional resolutions (memorializing the lost), as Data moves from one to the other.
The Enterprise’s transporter diagnostics are briefly referenced as Data reports an 'anomalous energy fluctuation' to Picard, tying the object to the Romulan sabotage plot. While not the central focus of this event, the diagnostics serve as a narrative bridge: they remind the audience of the ongoing investigation into Geordi and Ro’s disappearance and foreshadow Data’s later deduction of their true condition. The object’s mention underscores the duality of the scene—operational urgency (transporter anomalies) intersecting with personal grief (the memorial request).
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The transporter room three is mentioned as Data’s next destination after securing Picard’s permission. While not the physical setting of this event, its reference functions as a narrative transition, linking Data’s emotional request to his later technical investigation. The room’s cramped, high-stakes environment—glowing pads, humming systems, and the occasional beep of diagnostics—serves as a metaphor for the duality of Data’s role: both a mourner and a problem-solver. The location’s off-screen presence underscores the story’s themes of hidden truths (Geordi and Ro’s phased state) and the crew’s resilience in the face of loss.
The aft science station on the Enterprise bridge is the precise location where Data interrupts Picard to make his memorial request. This semi-enclosed space—adjoining the main bridge but slightly separated—creates an intimate pocket for their exchange, away from the viewscreen’s glare and the crew’s immediate attention. The station’s consoles, displaying transporter diagnostics, serve as a visual metaphor for the blend of technical and emotional concerns: Data’s report of the anomalous energy fluctuation segues into his personal plea, linking logic and loss. The location’s mood is one of quiet urgency, with the hum of the ship and the occasional beep of diagnostics underscoring the weight of the moment.
The main bridge of the Enterprise serves as the primary setting for this event, its familiar layout—aft science stations, viewscreens, and humming consoles—grounding the emotional exchange between Picard and Data. The bridge’s atmosphere, typically one of controlled urgency, shifts momentarily to somber reflection as Data makes his request. The location’s institutional authority (symbolized by Picard’s chair and the viewscreen’s starfield) contrasts with the personal nature of Data’s plea, creating a tension between duty and grief. The bridge’s yellow alert lights cast a stark glow, reinforcing the duality of the scene: a ship in crisis, yet a crew that must also mourn.
The Romulan engine room is referenced indirectly through Riker’s earlier report to Picard about the power transfer and engine replacement. While not the physical setting of this event, its chaotic and smoke-filled conditions (from earlier in the scene) create a subtextual contrast to the Enterprise bridge’s relative order. The Romulan ship’s fragility—its damaged cloaking device and garbled distress calls—serves as a narrative foil to Data’s request, highlighting the crew’s divided focus: stabilizing an ally’s ship while grappling with their own losses. The location’s off-screen presence underscores the story’s themes of fragile alliances and the human cost of sabotage.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet is represented through Picard’s authority as captain and the Enterprise’s operational protocols, which frame Data’s memorial request as a personal favor rather than an official duty. The organization’s influence is subtly felt in the balance Picard strikes: granting Data’s request while ensuring mission priorities (the Romulan power transfer) are not compromised. Starfleet’s values—honoring the lost, upholding duty, and fostering crew cohesion—are embodied in Picard’s measured response, which validates Data’s emotional needs without disrupting the chain of command. The organization’s presence is also implied in the technical context (transporter diagnostics, subspace resonators), where Starfleet’s resources are deployed to address both the sabotage and the crew’s grief.
The Romulan Star Empire is indirectly represented through the ongoing power transfer crisis and the earlier sabotage that led to Geordi and Ro’s disappearance. While not physically present in this event, the organization’s influence looms as a subtextual threat: the Romulans’ deception (cloaking device, graviton generators) has disrupted the Enterprise’s mission and personal lives. The organization’s power dynamics are reflected in the fragile alliance between Riker and Mirok (off-screen) and the crew’s divided attention—balancing cooperation with the Romulans while grappling with their own losses. The Romulans’ actions serve as a catalyst for Data’s emotional request, as the sabotage has made the memorial feel both urgent and bittersweet.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
No narrative connections mapped yet
This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph
Key Dialogue
"DATA: Captain... I have a personal favor to ask. I considered Commander La Forge to be my best friend. I feel it is my responsibility to plan and conduct the memorial service. May I have your permission to do so?"
"PICARD: Permission granted. Make whatever arrangements you find appropriate."