Ronin’s spectral bargain for survival
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Beverly enters the flower-filled house and calls out to Ronin, seeking to discuss the recent accident involving Quint. Ronin acknowledges Quint's death but attempts to redirect the conversation to their relationship.
Ronin physically appears to Beverly and steers her to a couch, claiming he needs to take corporeal form, but is weakening; he insists that Beverly retrieves and lights the candle.
Ronin explains that he weakens when away from the candle, revealing that the Howard women have kept it lit for generations, then proposes they be together always after she lights it.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Ronin’s emotional state is one of desperate urgency, masked by seductive charm. His pain and instability are real, but his focus is entirely on securing Beverly’s compliance to retrieve the candle. His proposal of eternal bondage is a tool to ensure his survival, not an expression of genuine affection.
Ronin materializes in the Howard home, his corporeal form flickering with instability as he touches Beverly’s cheek and deflects her questions about Quint. He steers her to the couch, his pain and urgency manipulating her into agreement to retrieve the candle. His proposal of eternal bondage is a calculated seduction, masking his desperation to survive. He vanishes abruptly after their kiss, leaving Beverly emotionally ensnared and his true motives—self-preservation—unspoken.
- • Secure Beverly’s agreement to light the candle
- • Exploit her grief to manipulate her into compliance
- • Beverly’s emotional vulnerability makes her susceptible to manipulation
- • The candle is his lifeline, and he must retrieve it at any cost
Initially grief-stricken and seeking answers about Quint’s death, Beverly’s emotional state rapidly shifts to hypnotic compliance as Ronin’s presence and touch disarm her. Her vulnerability is exploited, leaving her in a state of obsessive fixation on him, her earlier concerns forgotten.
Beverly enters the storm-lashed Howard home, her voice trembling as she calls out to Ronin, her grief over Quint’s death still raw. She reacts to an unseen touch on her cheek, her smile betraying a mix of longing and confusion. When Ronin materializes, she is drawn to him almost hypnotically, her hands reaching for his as he guides her to the couch. Her initial insistence on understanding Quint’s fate is deflected by Ronin’s urgency, and she agrees to retrieve the candle, her focus narrowing entirely on him. By the end, her emotional state is one of hypnotic compliance, her earlier grief replaced by an obsessive fixation on Ronin’s proposal of eternal bondage.
- • Understand Quint’s death and his final actions
- • Retrieve the candle to help Ronin (manipulated into this goal)
- • Ronin’s needs are more urgent than her own grief
- • Lighting the candle will bind her to Ronin in an eternal, unbreakable bond
Quint is referenced only in passing as deceased, his death serving as a distraction that Ronin deflects. His role in …
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The couch in the Howard home serves as the physical and emotional stage for Ronin’s manipulation of Beverly. It is where he guides her to sit, his touch and proximity creating an intimate, hypnotic atmosphere. The couch’s cushions support Beverly as she listens to Ronin’s proposal, her compliance deepening as she is drawn into his supernatural allure. The object symbolizes the threshold between Beverly’s grief and her growing entrapment in Ronin’s curse, its surface absorbing the tension of her moral dilemma.
The USS Enterprise’s power transfer beam is referenced as Ronin’s proposed means of travel to retrieve the candle. While not physically present in the Howard home, its mention underscores the supernatural’s exploitation of Starfleet technology. Ronin’s claim to ride the beam highlights the blending of the spectral and the scientific, foreshadowing the threat he poses to the Enterprise and its crew. The beam becomes a metaphor for the unseen forces at play, bridging the gap between Beverly’s personal struggle and the larger supernatural conflict.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The Howard home’s living room and sitting room serve as the haunting backdrop for Ronin’s manipulation of Beverly. The storm-lashed exterior and camellia flowers create an atmosphere of mourning and supernatural tension, while the Scottish country antiques and medical relics ground the scene in familial legacy. The space is both a refuge and a trap, its warmth contrasting with the cold calculation of Ronin’s proposal. The stairway to unseen upper floors symbolizes the unresolved past, while the flickering candle (off-screen) looms as the object of obsession. The location’s mood is one of creeping dread and hypnotic intimacy, its practical role as a meeting place for supernatural negotiation.
Organizations Involved
Institutional presence and influence
Starfleet is indirectly represented through the USS Enterprise’s power transfer beam, which Ronin proposes to use to travel to the ship. While not physically present, Starfleet’s technology becomes a tool for the supernatural, foreshadowing the threat Ronin poses to the crew. The organization’s protocols and resources are unwittingly exploited, highlighting the vulnerability of even the most advanced institutions to otherworldly forces. Beverly’s role as a Starfleet officer is temporarily overshadowed by her personal entanglement with Ronin, creating a tension between duty and supernatural allure.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"Beverly speaks with Ronin who persuades her to light the candle."
"Beverly enters the camellia-filled house, seeking light amidst the worsening storm, leading to her conversing with Ronin."
"Ronin explains that he weakens when away from the candle, revealing that the Howard women have kept it lit for generations, then proposes they be together always after she lights it, so Beverly lights the candle."
"Beverly speaks with Ronin who persuades her to light the candle."
Key Dialogue
"BEVERLY: Ronin... I have to talk to you... are you here?"
"RONIN: I'm here, Beverly... did you miss me?"
"BEVERLY: Yes.... But... I must talk to you. There's been an accident..."
"RONIN: I know. Quint is dead."
"BEVERLY: Do you know what happened? What was he trying to do?"
"RONIN: Beverly... there's something more important we have to talk about..."
"RONIN: It's not easy for me to take corporeal form... I can't do it for long. I want you to light the candle..."
"BEVERLY: Quint said it was your home... is that true?"
"RONIN: Yes... if I'm away from it for too long, I begin to weaken. That's why the women in your family have always kept the candle lit."
"RONIN: Then we'll be together... always."