Fabula
S4E17 · Night Terrors

Troi probes Hagan’s fractured mind

In Sickbay, Counselor Troi attempts a telepathic link with the catatonic Betazoid survivor Hagan, the sole witness to the USS Brattain’s crew’s violent self-destruction. Hagan’s fragmented, cryptic responses—‘Bright... one pole... two poles...’—hint at a deeper, possibly telepathic or spatial anomaly tied to the Tyken’s Rift. His inability to articulate further underscores the psychological toll of the Rift, leaving Troi with only a tantalizing but incomprehensible clue. The exchange deepens the mystery of the Brattain’s fate while reinforcing the Rift’s capacity to unravel minds, foreshadowing the Enterprise crew’s own impending collapse. Troi’s persistence here mirrors her earlier directed dreaming, suggesting this is another desperate attempt to extract meaning from madness before the Rift claims them all.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

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Troi attempts to telepathically connect with the catatonic Hagan to understand the voices and circumstances of the Brattain's demise. Hagan offers cryptic clues regarding 'poles' before lapsing back into his unresponsive state.

hope to frustration

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

2

A hollow, echoing terror—his mind is a battleground of half-remembered horrors, and Troi’s presence, though gentle, feels like an intrusion. He is not so much resisting as he is lost, adrift in a sea of his own fractured perceptions.

Andrus Hagan lies motionless on the biobed, his Betazoid features gaunt and hollow, his skin sallow under the sickbay lights. His breathing is shallow, his fingers twitching sporadically as Troi’s telepathic probe brushes against his mind. When he speaks, his voice is a rasping whisper, the words ‘Bright... one pole... two poles...’ escaping like fragments of a dream. His eyes, wide and unblinking, stare into the void, as if seeing something far beyond the sterile walls of Sickbay. The moment Troi presses for clarity, he retreats into silence, his body going limp once more, a puppet with cut strings.

Goals in this moment
  • None (conscious). His subconscious may be attempting to communicate, but his higher functions are too damaged to articulate intentionally.
  • Survival (unconscious). His body clings to life, even as his mind recoils from the memories of the *Brattain*’s destruction.
Active beliefs
  • The voices he hears are real, and they are a threat—though he cannot articulate why.
  • The ‘poles’ he mentions are tied to the Tyken’s Rift, but the connection is buried beneath layers of trauma.
Character traits
Psychologically shattered Traumatized and detached Involuntarily responsive to telepathic stimuli Unconsciously communicative
Follow Hagan's journey

A fragile balance of professional resolve and personal dread—her empathy for Hagan’s suffering wars with her fear that his fractured mind holds the key to the Enterprise’s survival, and she may never unlock it.

Deanna Troi sits rigidly beside Hagan’s biobed, her fingers lightly resting on the edge as she focuses her empathic energy inward. Her voice, though calm, carries an undercurrent of urgency, her Betazoid heritage allowing her to bridge the gap between their minds. She leans in slightly as Hagan stirs, her dark eyes narrowing in concentration, but her expression tightens with frustration when his responses dissolve into incoherence. Physically, she remains composed, but the tension in her shoulders betrays her growing desperation to extract meaning from the madness.

Goals in this moment
  • Extract coherent information from Hagan’s traumatized psyche to understand the *Brattain*’s fate and the Tyken’s Rift’s nature.
  • Provide Hagan a sense of safety and connection, even if only telepathically, to coax him toward lucidity.
Active beliefs
  • Hagan’s fragmented utterances contain vital clues, even if they are currently incomprehensible.
  • Her empathic abilities are the crew’s best chance at unraveling the mystery before the Rift claims them, too.
Character traits
Empathetic persistence Intellectually frustrated Emotionally invested Professionally determined
Follow Deanna Troi's journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

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Andrus Hagan's Biobed (Enterprise Sickbay)

The biobed serves as both a medical cradle and a psychic battleground in this moment. Its humming monitors cast a clinical glow over Hagan’s prone form, their steady beeps a stark contrast to the erratic, fragmented nature of his responses. The bed’s design—intended for healing—becomes a symbol of the crew’s desperation, as Troi uses it not just as a medical tool but as a conduit for her telepathic probe. The electrodes and sensors attached to Hagan’s temples are silent witnesses to the struggle unfolding, their readings likely spiking as his mind flickers between coherence and collapse. The biobed’s sterile functionality underscores the irony: here, in a place meant to restore life, Troi is forced to delve into the wreckage of a mind to save the Enterprise from a threat that defies logic.

Before: Operational and stable, with Hagan lying catatonic upon …
After: Unchanged in function, but now carrying the weight …
Before: Operational and stable, with Hagan lying catatonic upon it, his vital signs monitored but erratic.
After: Unchanged in function, but now carrying the weight of Troi’s failed attempt to extract clarity from Hagan’s psyche. The monitors may show elevated stress indicators for both Troi and Hagan post-probe.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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Enterprise Sickbay

Sickbay, usually a haven of order and healing, takes on a claustrophobic, almost funereal atmosphere in this scene. The hum of medical equipment and the sterile white lighting create a stark contrast to the psychological horror unfolding. The space, typically bustling with activity, feels eerily quiet, as if the crew’s absence is a silent acknowledgment of the creeping dread seeping into the Enterprise. Troi and Hagan are isolated in this moment, the biobeds around them empty, their solitude amplifying the tension. The location’s usual role as a place of recovery is subverted—here, it becomes a liminal space where the boundaries between sanity and madness blur, and where the crew’s unraveling is given physical form.

Atmosphere A suffocating blend of clinical detachment and creeping dread—the sterile environment feels like a thin …
Function A desperate last resort for Troi to probe Hagan’s mind, and a physical manifestation of …
Symbolism Represents the fragility of the human (and Betazoid) mind when confronted with forces beyond comprehension, …
Access Restricted to medical personnel and key crew members (e.g., Troi, Picard, Crusher) due to the …
The sterile, white lighting casting long shadows across the biobeds, emphasizing the isolation of Troi and Hagan. The low, persistent hum of medical monitors, a mechanical counterpoint to the silence of the room. The empty biobeds surrounding them, a visual reminder of the crew’s absence and the growing threat to their sanity.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

What led here 1
Temporal

"Transitioning between scenes and plot points, Peeples incident ends and switches to Enterprise. Troi attempts to Telepathically connect with Hagan."

Peeples hears phantom sounds on Brattain
S4E17 · Night Terrors
What this causes 1
Temporal

"Ending on Hagan clues, the scene switches to O'Brien returning home to Keiko and showing signs of mental decline."

O'Brien Accuses Keiko of Infidelity
S4E17 · Night Terrors

Part of Larger Arcs

Key Dialogue

"TROI: I'm here... can you hear me?"
"HAGAN: Bright... one pole... two poles..."
"TROI: I don't understand... tell me more about the poles..."