Riker Bonds with Ethan in Captivity
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Tomalak enters with guards and mockingly presents Riker with a ragged boy, falsely identified as his son, Jean-Luc, which Riker questions, realizing the Romulans are manipulating him.
After Tomalak exits, Riker gently tries to get the boy to trust him and reveal his identity, promising to help him escape, learning that his name is Ethan.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Terified and hesitant at first, gradually opening up to Riker due to his gentle persistence, but remaining deeply fearful of the Romulans and the possibility of recapture.
Ethan is initially huddled in fear in the corner of the holding cell, flinching away from Riker’s attempts to approach him. After Riker kneels beside him and gently questions him, Ethan slowly reveals fragments of his past—his capture at Miridian Six, the disappearance of his parents, and his failed escape attempt. He expresses resignation and fear of recapture, particularly when he hears guards approaching outside the cell.
- • Avoid further harm from the Romulans.
- • Find someone to trust who can help him escape.
- • The Romulans will always find him, no matter where he hides.
- • Riker might be his only chance at escape, despite his initial distrust.
Ironically amused by Riker’s confusion and dismissive of his concerns, masking his strategic goals behind a facade of charm.
Tomalak enters the holding cell with Riker and the Romulan guards, cruelly introducing the boy as Riker’s fabricated son before revealing it as an illusion. He ignores Riker’s questions about the boy’s condition and exits with the guards, leaving Riker alone with Ethan. His actions underscore the Romulans’ psychological manipulation of Riker, exploiting his memory loss and vulnerability.
- • Psychologically torment Riker by exploiting his memory loss and vulnerability.
- • Use Ethan as a tool to deepen Riker’s disorientation and dependence on the Romulans.
- • Riker’s fractured state makes him susceptible to manipulation.
- • The illusion of fatherhood will further destabilize Riker’s grip on reality.
Initially confused and disoriented, shifting to deep concern and protective determination as he connects with Ethan, masking his own vulnerability with a focus on the boy’s safety.
Riker enters the holding cell with Tomalak and the Romulan guards, initially reacting with shock and confusion upon seeing the boy, whom Tomalak cruelly introduces as his fabricated son. After Tomalak exits, Riker attempts to connect with the boy, kneeling beside him and gently questioning him about his identity and past. He reacts with concern and determination as Ethan reveals fragments of his trauma, ultimately promising to help the boy escape, despite the boy’s resignation and fear of recapture.
- • Establish trust with Ethan to uncover the truth about his captivity.
- • Protect Ethan from further harm and help him escape the Romulans.
- • Ethan’s story may hold clues to the Romulans’ deception and his own situation.
- • Even in his fractured state, he can provide safety and hope to someone in need.
Neutral and detached, fulfilling their roles as enforcers without emotional investment in the situation.
The Romulan guards accompany Tomalak into the holding cell, then exit with him after the force field is reactivated. Later, two guards are heard striding past the holding cell, reinforcing Ethan’s fear of recapture. Their silent, disciplined presence underscores the oppressive atmosphere of the Romulan facility and the boy’s helplessness.
- • Maintain security and control over the holding cell.
- • Enforce Tomalak’s orders without question.
- • Their duty is to uphold Romulan authority, regardless of the circumstances.
- • Prisoners like Ethan and Riker are threats to be contained.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Romulan holding cell force field serves as a shimmering energy barrier that seals the entrance to the cell, deactivated by a Romulan guard to admit Tomalak, Riker, and Ethan before reactivating to lock them inside. It hums steadily, blocking escape and amplifying the sense of confinement. The force field’s glow underscores Riker’s isolation and the psychological manipulation orchestrated by Tomalak, as it traps him in a space where his reality is deliberately fractured.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The holding cell, carved into living rock, functions as a confined and oppressive space where Riker and Ethan are trapped. The rough walls and shimmering force field create an atmosphere of isolation and dread, reinforcing Ethan’s fear and Riker’s sense of vulnerability. The cell’s design—narrow, unyielding, and patrolled—symbolizes the Romulans’ control and the psychological torment they inflict on their prisoners. The sound of guards striding past outside the cell heightens the tension, reminding Ethan of his failed escape and the inevitability of recapture.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The United Federation of Planets is indirectly represented through Riker’s role as a Starfleet officer and his instinctive protective response to Ethan’s plight. Riker’s disbelief at Ethan’s claim about Miridian Six—‘I thought it was uninhabited’—highlights a contradiction between Ethan’s story and official Federation records, suggesting a potential intelligence failure or cover-up. Riker’s promise to help Ethan escape reflects his commitment to Federation values, even in his fractured state, while Ethan’s trauma underscores the Federation’s inability to protect civilians in the Neutral Zone.
The Romulan Star Empire is represented through Tomalak’s psychological manipulation of Riker and the oppressive environment of the holding cell. The Romulans use Ethan as a tool to exploit Riker’s memory loss, creating an illusion of fatherhood that deepens his disorientation. The holding cell’s design, the guards’ disciplined presence, and the force field all reflect the Empire’s strategic use of fear and control to achieve its goals. Ethan’s story—his capture at Miridian Six and the disappearance of his parents—hints at the Romulans’ broader operations near the Neutral Zone, undermining Federation records and exposing vulnerabilities in Starfleet’s intelligence.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Tomalak identifies Ethan/Jean-Luc as his son prompting Riker to try to get the boy to trust him, promising to help him escape."
"Riker is imprisoned in a holding cell then Tomalak arrives with a boy, falsely saying that the boy is Jean-Luc, Riker's son."
"Tomalak identifies Ethan/Jean-Luc as his son prompting Riker to try to get the boy to trust him, promising to help him escape."
"Riker pressing Ethan about the circumstances of his capture results in Tomalak approach Riker's holding cell."
Key Dialogue
"TOMALAK: Please say hello to your son. RIKER: Jean-Luc? TOMALAK: That is not his name, of course. Nor have you ever really met him. We merely... used his image to augment your program."
"RIKER: What have you done to him? ETHAN: They brought me here... with my parents. We were at a research station on Miridian Six. RIKER: Miridian Six... near the Neutral Zone? I thought it was uninhabited... ETHAN: The station was set up last year. Then the Romulans came..."
"RIKER: Ethan... I'll get us out of here. ETHAN: How? Even if we do get away, they'll find us. They found me when I escaped before."