Crusher traces anomaly to Locklin
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Beverly arrives at the transporter room and inquires about the last person to use the transporter before the wormhole incident, setting up a potential medical angle to the unfolding mystery.
O'Brien identifies Ensign Locklin as the last person to use the transporter, leading Beverly to order Locklin to report to Sickbay, suggesting she suspects a connection between the transporter usage and the earlier blackout.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Cautious and slightly defensive—O’Brien is focused on his duties but picks up on Beverly’s underlying tension. His minor injury makes him physically uncomfortable, but his professionalism keeps him engaged. He’s not yet alarmed, but her line of questioning plants a seed of unease about the wormhole’s true nature.
Miles O’Brien sits at the transporter controls, his fingers moving deftly over the console as he enters a report into a small peripheral computer. His bandaged elbow rests awkwardly on the panel, a reminder of his earlier domestic mishap with Keiko. When Beverly enters, he glances up, his expression shifting from mild irritation at the interruption to cautious cooperation as she pivots from small talk about his injury to a pointed question about the last transporter usage. He touches the control board to retrieve the data, his voice steady but his posture betraying a hint of discomfort—whether from his injury or the weight of Beverly’s unspoken suspicions.
- • Provide accurate and efficient access to transporter logs to satisfy Beverly’s request.
- • Avoid drawing unnecessary attention to his own distractions (e.g., his injury or domestic life) while fulfilling his duty.
- • Beverly’s questions are part of a routine post-incident investigation, though her tone suggests something more serious.
- • The transporter logs are a reliable source of data, and his technical expertise ensures their accuracy.
Controlled urgency—surface-level calm masking a growing suspicion that the wormhole incident is tied to something unnatural, possibly alien. Her medical training sharpens her focus on physiological anomalies, but her instincts suggest a deeper, more sinister explanation.
Beverly Crusher enters the transporter room with purposeful strides, her medical insignia gleaming under the room’s harsh lighting. She approaches O’Brien at the transporter controls, her gaze flickering to his bandaged elbow before locking onto the console. Her tone is measured but probing as she shifts from casual inquiry about his injury to a direct interrogation about the last transporter usage before the wormhole. She stands with arms slightly crossed, her posture exuding authority, and delivers her final order—Locklin’s summons to Sickbay—with clinical precision, her eyes narrowing almost imperceptibly as O’Brien confirms Locklin’s name.
- • Uncover the cause of the ship’s missing 24 hours by tracing the last transporter usage.
- • Identify any physiological or psychological anomalies in crew members who may have been exposed to the wormhole’s effects.
- • The wormhole incident is not a natural phenomenon but may involve external interference (e.g., alien technology or entities).
- • Medical evaluations can reveal hidden clues about the incident, even if the crew is unaware of their exposure.
Not applicable (off-screen, but inferred to be lighthearted or apologetic given the context of the injury).
Keiko O’Brien is mentioned only in passing as the cause of Miles’ bandaged elbow, a domestic mishap that briefly surfaces in the dialogue. She is not physically present in the transporter room but serves as a subtle reminder of O’Brien’s dual life—his professional duties aboard the Enterprise and his personal responsibilities as a husband. Her indirect presence adds a layer of realism to O’Brien’s character, grounding his otherwise high-stakes role in the mundane.
- • None within this event (her role is purely contextual).
- • None within this event (her presence is implied but not active).
Not applicable (off-screen, but inferred to be unaware of the scrutiny or possibly anxious if exposed to the wormhole’s effects).
Ensign Locklin is referenced only by name as the last user of the transporter before the wormhole incident. Her absence from the scene is deliberate, heightening the mystery around her role in the anomaly. Beverly’s order for Locklin to report to Sickbay frames her as a potential key to unraveling the incident, her transporter activity now a focal point of suspicion. Locklin’s unseen presence looms over the exchange, her future medical evaluation a critical next step in the investigation.
- • None within this event (her role is purely as a subject of investigation).
- • None within this event (her beliefs are speculative and tied to future developments).
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
While not explicitly detailed in the canonical entities, the 'small computer peripheral' O’Brien uses to enter his report is implied to be an auxiliary device integrated with the transporter system. It serves as a secondary data-recording tool, reinforcing the scene’s theme of institutional record-keeping and technical precision. Though its specific function is ambiguous, its presence underscores the Enterprise’s reliance on layered systems for operations and investigations. Beverly’s interruption halts O’Brien’s report entry, momentarily pausing the ship’s bureaucratic machinery in favor of her medical probe.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The transporter room functions as a claustrophobic yet high-tech hub of operational activity, its compact design amplifying the tension between Beverly’s probing questions and O’Brien’s cautious responses. The humming machinery and glowing transporter pads create an atmosphere of controlled urgency, while the sharp shadows cast by the room’s lighting accentuate the stakes of the investigation. This space, typically a site of routine beaming operations, becomes a microcosm of the Enterprise’s broader mystery—its sterile efficiency now tinged with suspicion. The room’s functional role as a transportation node is subverted here, repurposed as a site for uncovering clues about the wormhole’s unnatural effects.
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
"BEVERLY: Hello, Chief. How's the elbow?"
"O'BRIEN: Much better. This isn't a house call, is it?"
"BEVERLY: No, it's not. Tell me, who was the last one to use the transporter before we went through the wormhole?"
"O'BRIEN: Ensign Locklin. She's one of my technicians."
"BEVERLY: Have her report immediately to Sickbay."