Clemens spots Data and pursues
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Samuel Clemens, in a street interview, reveals his suspicions about time travelers in San Francisco and his intention to expose them, drawing a comparison to his book, "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court.
Clemens abruptly ends the interview with the reporter, spotting Data across the street and deciding to follow him in pursuit of evidence to support his theory of time travel.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Coldly indifferent—their emotions, if they have any, are subsumed by their mission. They are neither threatened nor intrigued by Data; he is simply not part of their current hunt.
The Devidian Couple—an aristocratic man and woman—glide through the crowd in the opposite direction of Data, their movements eerily smooth and detached. The woman carries a satchel, and the man wields a serpent-headed cane, both objects marking their otherworldly nature. They take no notice of Data, their focus seemingly elsewhere, though their presence on the street is ominous, hinting at their predatory intent. Their indifference to Data suggests either a lack of immediate interest in him or an awareness that he poses no threat to their harvesting of neural energy.
- • To locate and harvest neural energy from vulnerable humans (e.g., cholera victims) without drawing attention.
- • To avoid detection by temporal anomalies (like Data or the Enterprise crew) that could disrupt their operations.
- • Their actions are justified by their survival needs, and human lives are expendable.
- • The timeline is malleable, and their presence will not be detected unless they make a mistake.
Righteously indignant with an undercurrent of triumphant certainty—his theories about time travelers feel vindicated, fueling a sense of mission to expose 'the truth.'
Samuel Clemens, mid-interview with a young reporter, pivots from theoretical ranting about time travelers to abrupt action when he spots Data across the street. His cigar smolders as he cuts off the reporter mid-sentence, his glare sharpening with suspicion. He excuses himself with a gruff 'Scuse me' and immediately begins tailing Data, his posture tense and purposeful, driven by a mix of paranoia and determination to uncover 'evidence.' His abrupt departure leaves the reporter bewildered, notepad still in hand, as Clemens weaves through the crowd, his focus unwavering.
- • To gather concrete evidence of time travelers (specifically Data) to validate his theories and 'expose' them publicly.
- • To disrupt or confront the perceived threat to the timeline, driven by a moral obligation to protect history from 'fouling.'
- • Time travelers are actively corrupting the 19th century, just as his *Connecticut Yankee* character corrupted the past.
- • He is the only one who can recognize and stop this threat, making his pursuit a moral duty.
Neutral and analytical—Data is processing his surroundings logically, unaware of the human drama unfolding around him or the Devidians’ silent threat.
Data, unaware of Clemens’s pursuit or the Devidians’ presence, moves down the street with his characteristic poise, blending into the 19th-century crowd despite his anachronistic appearance. His attention is focused elsewhere—likely on his mission or observations of the era—making him an unwitting target for Clemens’s suspicion. The Devidian couple, moving in the opposite direction, takes no notice of him, their indifference suggesting either a calculated disregard or an awareness of his irrelevance to their immediate predatory goals.
- • To gather data on 19th-century San Francisco for the crew’s temporal mission.
- • To avoid drawing attention to himself or the Enterprise’s presence in the past.
- • His primary objective is to support the crew’s mission without altering the timeline.
- • Human reactions (like Clemens’s paranoia) are irrational but must be navigated carefully to avoid exposure.
Mildly bemused but professionally curious—his initial amusement at Clemens’s rants gives way to a journalist’s instinct to pursue a lead, though his deferential nature holds him back.
The Young Reporter, caught off-guard by Clemens’s abrupt departure, remains standing on the street corner, notepad in hand and pencil paused mid-scribble. His polite smile fades into mild confusion as he watches Clemens hurry away, his earlier amusement at the eccentric interview now tinged with curiosity. He makes no move to follow, instead glancing down at his notes—fragmented theories about time travelers—and then back toward the direction Clemens vanished, as if debating whether to chase after a story or let it go.
- • To capture Clemens’s theories for his article, even if they seem far-fetched.
- • To decide whether to follow Clemens’s sudden pursuit of Data, weighing journalistic curiosity against professional decorum.
- • Clemens’s theories about time travelers are entertaining but likely baseless—though his intensity suggests there may be more to the story.
- • His role as a reporter is to document, not intervene, so he should not chase after Clemens unless the story demands it.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Female Devidian’s satchel is a subtle but critical prop, marking her as part of the predatory Devidian couple. Carried with eerie nonchalance as she moves through the crowd, the satchel hints at its sinister purpose: harvesting neural energy from human victims. Its presence on the street, paired with the serpent-headed cane, signals the Devidians’ otherworldly nature and their indifference to the human drama unfolding around them. The satchel is both a tool of their trade and a symbol of their detachment from the timeline they exploit.
Samuel Clemens’s cigar serves as a visual and symbolic anchor to his 19th-century persona, its smoke curling around his face as he delivers his combative theories about time travelers. The cigar amplifies his agitated demeanor, its embers glowing as he cuts off the reporter mid-sentence and excuses himself to pursue Data. It is both a prop of his era and a metaphor for his smoldering paranoia—something he clings to as he abandons the interview, leaving the reporter and his notepad behind in favor of his self-appointed mission.
The Young Reporter’s notepad becomes a silent witness to Clemens’s abrupt shift from theorizing to action. As Clemens rants about time travelers, the reporter jots down notes with a pencil, his polite smile never wavering—even as Clemens corrects him on the name 'Twain.' When Clemens suddenly excuses himself and dashes after Data, the notepad is left with only fragments of the interview: ink marks capturing Clemens’s suspicions but not his abrupt departure. The pad symbolizes the unfinished nature of the story, as the reporter is left holding clues to a tale he doesn’t yet understand.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The bustling 19th-century San Francisco street serves as a neutral yet charged backdrop for the collision of Clemens’s paranoia, Data’s oblivious mission, and the Devidians’ predatory presence. Horse-drawn carriages rumble over cobblestones, gas lamps flicker, and pedestrians hurry past, creating a cacophony of activity that masks the deeper tensions at play. The street is a microcosm of the era—progress and superstition intertwined—where Clemens’s theories about time travelers feel both anachronistic and eerily prescient. It is a stage for confrontation, pursuit, and unspoken threats, with the Devidians’ silent passage through the crowd adding an layer of unease.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
The USS Enterprise (NCC-1701-D) crew’s presence in 1893 San Francisco is implied through Data’s unwitting role in this event. Though the crew itself is not physically present on the street, their mission—to stop the Devidians and preserve the timeline—hangs in the balance as Clemens’s pursuit of Data risks exposing their temporal incursion. Data’s obliviousness to Clemens’s suspicion highlights the crew’s vulnerability: one misstep could unravel their covert operation and alter history irreparably. The organization’s stakes are raised by Clemens’s crusade and the Devidians’ predatory actions, both of which threaten the timeline’s integrity.
The Devidians’ organization is represented through the eerie, aristocratic couple moving silently through the crowd, their serpent-headed cane and satchel marking their predatory intent. Their presence on the street is a direct threat to the timeline, as they phase through time to drain neural energy from human victims. The couple’s indifference to Data suggests either a lack of immediate interest in him or an awareness that he poses no threat to their harvesting operations. Their silent, ominous patrol underscores the organization’s broader goal: to exploit temporal anomalies for survival, regardless of the consequences to history.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"CLEMENS: I have long been interested in the notion of time travel. In fact, I wrote a book about it... It chronicled the tale of a man from our era who fouled the sixth century by introducing newfangled gadgets and weapons... all in the name of Progress. The idea of time travelers isn't so far fetched as it seems... in fact, I have learned that, even now, people from the future are right here in San Francisco... and I have no doubt that they are intent on fouling our world... just like my Yankee did in King Arthur's time. Well. Let me serve notice: as soon as I get the necessary evidence, I intend to expose them... and make it absolutely clear that they are not welcome here."
"YOUNG REPORTER: Yes, sir. And will this be a sequel to 'Connecticut Yankee,' Mister Twain?"
"CLEMENS: The name's Clemens, son. Sam Clemens, with an 'e."