Beverly confirms the 24-hour blackout
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Beverly explains to Picard that she can measure the crew's daily cycles at a molecular level, revealing that if they were unconscious for only thirty seconds, their cellular functions would be nearly synchronous.
Beverly confirms that the crew was unconscious for significantly longer than thirty seconds, based on the molecular level measurements of their cellular functions, solidifying the mystery of the missing time.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
Tense and calculating; his surface composure masks a growing unease about the crew’s safety and Data’s potential involvement in the anomaly.
Picard walks briskly alongside Beverly, his posture rigid with command authority, when she interrupts with her findings. He listens intently, his expression tightening as the implications of her data sink in. His brief dialogue—'Our internal clocks' and 'And were they?'—reveals his sharp, analytical mind at work, probing for clarity amid the escalating mystery. His off-screen reaction (implied by the camera's focus on his face) suggests a mix of concern and strategic recalibration, as Data’s earlier explanation now faces direct contradiction.
- • Verify the accuracy of Beverly’s findings to assess the crew’s true exposure to the blackout.
- • Reevaluate Data’s earlier explanation in light of this new evidence, preparing to take corrective action if necessary.
- • The crew’s safety and the ship’s security are his primary responsibilities, and any discrepancy in the timeline is a direct threat to both.
- • Data, as a senior officer, should be held to the same standards of transparency and accountability as any other crew member—especially when his actions or explanations raise questions.
Focused and resolute; her clinical detachment is a tool to convey the gravity of her discovery without panic, but there’s an undercurrent of concern for the crew’s well-being.
Beverly strides purposefully beside Picard, her medical tricorder active and her demeanor focused. She delivers her findings with the precision of a scientist and the urgency of a physician, her dialogue methodical yet laced with implication: 'A lot longer' than thirty seconds. Her body language—direct eye contact, measured gestures—underscores her confidence in the data, while her clinical tone contrasts with the growing tension of the revelation. She is the voice of empirical truth in a moment where assumptions are crumbling.
- • Ensure Picard understands the full implications of the cellular disruption, so he can take appropriate action to protect the crew.
- • Establish the transporter trace data as irrefutable evidence, countering any potential skepticism about the 24-hour blackout.
- • Medical science provides objective truth, and her data is a reliable indicator of what transpired during the blackout.
- • The crew’s collective memory of the event is unreliable, and her findings must take precedence in any investigation.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The transporter cellular sample—a trace extracted from the last user of the transporter—serves as the critical piece of evidence in this exchange. Beverly wields it like a scalpel, dissecting the crew’s false memory of the blackout. The sample’s molecular data, when compared to current cellular cycles, exposes the 24-hour discrepancy, acting as an objective counterpoint to Data’s earlier explanation. Its role is purely functional: to reveal the truth through empirical measurement, grounding the supernatural implications of the mystery in hard science. The sample’s existence implies that the transporter was the last point of contact before the blackout, tying the anomaly to a specific event or entity.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
The corridor of the Enterprise-D is more than a backdrop in this moment—it becomes a pressure cooker for revelation. Its sterile, institutional design (smooth bulkheads, steady lighting, the hum of the ship’s systems) contrasts sharply with the escalating tension of the exchange. The neutral ground forces Picard and Beverly into close proximity, their rapid pace mirroring the urgency of the discovery. The corridor’s lack of distractions ensures their focus remains on the data, while its public nature (though empty in this scene) implies the stakes are high enough to warrant immediate action, regardless of audience.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
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Key Dialogue
"BEVERLY: Physiologically, each of us is on a daily cycle. Our cells have developed rhythms based on a twenty-four hour period."
"PICARD: Our internal clocks."
"BEVERLY: Exactly, and I can measure that effect at the molecular level. I took a trace from the last person to use the transporter, and compared her cell function levels to what they are right now. If we were unconscious for only thirty seconds, those cycles would be nearly synchronous."
"PICARD: And were they?"
"BEVERLY: No. We were out for longer than thirty seconds, Captain. A lot longer."