Locarno manipulates Wesley with fabricated evidence
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Locarno presents a damaged flight recorder report to Wesley, suggesting it supports their false narrative, and highlights the severe consequences of revealing the truth, leaving Wesley conflicted and struggling with his conscience.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Guilt-ridden and morally conflicted, oscillating between righteous indignation and paralyzing fear of abandonment. His internal struggle is visible in his physical tension and reluctant compliance, masking a deep sense of betrayal—both of Joshua’s memory and his own principles.
Wesley stands physically apart from the group, his body language tense and defensive as he grapples with the moral weight of the cover-up. He initially resists Locarno’s narrative, challenging the blame placed on Joshua, but his resolve wavers as Hajar and Sito nod in reluctant agreement. When Locarno presents the doctored flight recorder, Wesley’s hands tremble slightly as he holds the PADD, his conflicted gaze shifting between the fabricated evidence and his squadron mates. His emotional breakdown is palpable—guilt over Joshua’s death, fear of expulsion, and the crushing pressure to maintain team unity—culminating in his silent, resigned nod of acceptance.
- • To uphold the truth about Joshua’s death and the squadron’s responsibility
- • To resist Locarno’s manipulation without alienating his friends or risking expulsion
- • Loyalty to the team should not require moral compromise or deceit
- • Starfleet’s values of truth and accountability must be prioritized over personal or group survival
Calculating and determined, masking his own guilt behind a facade of earnest leadership. His emotional appeals are performative, designed to exploit Wesley’s desire for belonging and fear of isolation. Beneath the surface, there’s a flicker of desperation—he knows this is a make-or-break moment for the squadron’s survival.
Locarno dominates the scene as the charismatic orchestrator of the cover-up, blending earnest appeals to team loyalty with calculated psychological pressure. He begins by softening his tone to rally the group, framing Joshua’s death as an unfortunate accident caused by panic. When Wesley resists, Locarno deploys the doctored flight recorder as ‘evidence,’ then shifts to emotional leverage—invoking shared futures and the unbreakable bond of Nova Squadron. His body language is controlled yet intense, his voice shifting between gentle persuasion and sarcastic challenge, ultimately breaking Wesley’s resistance with a rhetorical question about their readiness to sacrifice their futures.
- • To secure Wesley’s compliance in the cover-up to protect the squadron’s future
- • To reinforce the group’s unity and loyalty under his leadership
- • The ends justify the means when it comes to protecting the team’s legacy
- • Starfleet’s rules are secondary to the squadron’s survival and post-graduation success
N/A (posthumous presence, but his absence is felt as a haunting moral weight)
Joshua Albert is absent from the scene but looms large as the posthumous focal point of the moral dilemma. His death is invoked by Locarno to manipulate Wesley’s guilt, with Hajar and Sito reluctantly nodding in agreement when Joshua is blamed for ‘panicking.’ The group’s collective guilt over his death is palpable, and his memory serves as both a catalyst for the cover-up and a silent witness to Wesley’s moral crisis.
Reluctantly compliant, torn between her loyalty to the team and her internal moral compass. Her emotional state is one of resigned guilt, as she sacrifices her principles to avoid confrontation or expulsion. There’s a sense of self-reproach in her avoidance of Wesley’s gaze.
Hajar initially resists Locarno’s narrative, her body language tense and her voice hesitant as she defends Joshua’s memory. However, under Locarno’s persistent gaze and the weight of group pressure, she relents, nodding in agreement when he suggests Joshua ‘panicked.’ Her compliance is reluctant but firm, serving as a turning point that isolates Wesley. She avoids direct eye contact with Wesley during the climax, her guilt manifesting in physical withdrawal—crossing her arms, shifting her weight—as she aligns with Locarno’s version of events.
- • To avoid conflict within the squadron
- • To protect her own future at the Academy
- • The group’s survival is more important than individual truth-telling
- • Resisting Locarno would lead to isolation or expulsion
Resigned and conflicted, her emotional state is one of quiet complicity. She’s visibly uncomfortable with the deception but lacks the courage to challenge Locarno directly. Her tension is palpable, as she oscillates between guilt over betraying Joshua and fear of losing her place in the squadron.
Sito begins the scene by challenging Locarno’s initial lie about Joshua’s responsibility, but her resistance crumbles under the weight of group pressure. She reluctantly nods when Locarno blames Joshua, then actively pressures Wesley with the phrase, ‘You don’t have to lie... just don’t volunteer any new information.’ Her role is pivotal in isolating Wesley, as she reinforces the group’s narrative while avoiding direct confrontation. Physically, she stands close to Locarno, her posture rigid, her hands clenched—betraying her internal conflict.
- • To maintain her position in Nova Squadron
- • To avoid direct conflict with Locarno or Wesley
- • Silence is a form of self-preservation
- • The squadron’s unity is worth the moral compromise
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The doctored flight recorder PADD is the linchpin of Locarno’s manipulation, serving as fabricated ‘evidence’ to exonerate the squadron and blame Joshua Albert. Locarno presents it with calculated nonchalance, claiming the crash damaged the recorder beyond recovery—limiting the data to pre-collision telemetry that ‘proves’ the squadron’s innocence. Wesley’s hands tremble as he holds the PADD, his conflicted gaze shifting between the screen and his squadron mates. The object symbolizes the moral corruption at the heart of the cover-up, its glowing screen casting an eerie light on the faces of the cadets as they collectively betray Joshua’s memory.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Wesley’s dormitory room becomes a claustrophobic pressure cooker, its confined space amplifying the tension between moral integrity and institutional survival. The older, lived-in furnishings—a desk, chairs, and a bed—create an intimate yet oppressive atmosphere, where every shift in body language is visible. The dim lighting casts long shadows, mirroring the moral ambiguity of the cadets’ choices. The room’s isolation reinforces the group’s sense of being cut off from Starfleet’s oversight, making their complicity feel both secretive and inescapable. It is here that Wesley’s moral crisis reaches its breaking point, as the weight of Locarno’s manipulation collapses his resistance.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet Academy looms as the unseen antagonist in this scene, its institutional policies and values serving as the moral backdrop against which the cadets’ complicity unfolds. The Academy’s ban on dangerous maneuvers and its demand for truth create the very conflict that Locarno exploits—pitting the cadets’ fear of expulsion against their loyalty to the squadron. The organization’s presence is felt in the cadets’ whispered conversations about ‘walking in and telling them everything,’ as well as in Wesley’s internal struggle between Starfleet’s ideals and the pressure to protect his friends. The Academy’s rules are both the reason for the cover-up and the source of the cadets’ guilt.
Nova Squadron functions as a tight-knit but morally fractured unit in this scene, with Locarno acting as its charismatic leader and the other cadets as reluctant participants in his cover-up. The squadron’s bond is both its strength and its weakness—Locarno leverages their shared history and future ambitions to pressure Wesley into compliance, while Hajar and Sito’s reluctance underscores the moral cost of their loyalty. The group’s unity is performative, masking the guilt and conflict beneath the surface. Their collective decision to cover up Joshua’s death symbolizes the corruption of their shared ideals, as ambition and fear override truth.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Locarno assuring Wesley that everything is fine despite the mounting suspicion directly leads to Sito and Wesley confronting Locarno about his false testimony, violating their agreement."
"Locarno assuring Wesley that everything is fine despite the mounting suspicion directly leads to Sito and Wesley confronting Locarno about his false testimony, violating their agreement."
"Locarno assuring Wesley that everything is fine despite the mounting suspicion directly leads to Sito and Wesley confronting Locarno about his false testimony, violating their agreement."
"Locarno assuring Wesley that everything is fine despite the mounting suspicion directly leads to Sito and Wesley confronting Locarno about his false testimony, violating their agreement."
"Locarno assuring Wesley that everything is fine despite the mounting suspicion directly leads to Sito and Wesley confronting Locarno about his false testimony, violating their agreement."
"Nova Squadron confronts Locarno about false testimony which mirrors the earlier unease and is sustained throughout the plot as the guilt grows."
"Nova Squadron confronts Locarno about false testimony which mirrors the earlier unease and is sustained throughout the plot as the guilt grows."
"Nova Squadron confronts Locarno about false testimony which mirrors the earlier unease and is sustained throughout the plot as the guilt grows."
"Nova Squadron confronts Locarno about false testimony which mirrors the earlier unease and is sustained throughout the plot as the guilt grows."
"Locarno leveraging Josh's memory to manipulate Wesley into maintaining the cover-up creates an emotional impact which mirrors Albert's emotional exchange in the hearing room, contributing to his escalating moral dilemma."
"Locarno leveraging Josh's memory to manipulate Wesley into maintaining the cover-up creates an emotional impact which mirrors Albert's emotional exchange in the hearing room, contributing to his escalating moral dilemma."
Key Dialogue
"LOCARNO: ((gentle)) Look... he was my friend, too. I worked to get him on this team. But the truth is... he panicked."
"LOCARNO: ((hands PADD to Wes)) This is the preliminary report on your flight recorder. It was so badly damaged in the crash, the lab was only able to retrieve a third of the total telemetry on the recorder... and all of it is from before the collision. There is no problem here."
"LOCARNO: We made a promise, right in the beginning, that we'd stick together. We were Nova Squadron—nobody else could say that. And even after we graduated we'd try to get posted to the same duty... we were going to be a team—for a long time."