Data reveals Soong’s love for Juliana
Plot Beats
The narrative micro-steps within this event
Juliana expresses her sadness about departing and solicits reassurance from Data about a future reunion. Data tentatively suggests that he may visit Atrea during one of his leaves, which Juliana warmly welcomes.
Data tells Juliana that before Dr. Soong died, he confessed that she was the only great love of his life, but he regrets never telling her how much he cared for her. Data indicates that he is sure that Dr. Soong was referring to Juliana and wanted her to know of his love for her.
Who Was There
Characters present in this moment
A posthumous storm of remorse and tenderness. Soong’s love, though delayed, is active in this moment—it softens Juliana’s grief, validates Data’s emotional struggles, and bridges the gap between creator and created. His regret is not just personal but generational: it explains Juliana’s android body, Data’s ethical dilemmas, and the cycle of abandonment that defines their family. The confession is his final gift, a way to love them after death.
Noonien Soong is physically absent but omnipresent in the scene, his voice and legacy channeled through Data’s confession. His regret—‘never letting her know how much he cared’—hangs in the air like a specter, coloring every gesture and word. The confession recontextualizes Juliana’s entire arc: her guilt over abandoning Data, her fear of Soong’s prototypes, and her desperate need to be seen as human. Soong’s love, though unspoken in life, becomes the emotional linchpin of the farewell, elevating it from a goodbye to a transmission of legacy.
- • To ensure Juliana knows the depth of his love, even in absence.
- • To imbue Data with an emotional inheritance that counters his logical nature.
- • That love, even unspoken, has the power to define a life (or afterlife).
- • That his creations—Data and Juliana—are extensions of his own humanity, flawed and perfect in equal measure.
A complex blend of joy, grief, and maternal pride. The confirmation of Soong’s love fills a decades-old void, but it’s tempered by the knowledge that this may be her last physical moment with Data. The proverb is her way of gifting him a legacy—one that redefines his ‘goodness’ as a product of love, not engineering. The kiss is impulsive, a human need to physically convey what words cannot. Her farewell is bittersweet: she is both the mother saying goodbye and the android saying hello to her own mortality.
Juliana receives Data’s revelation with a physical softening—her shoulders relax, her breath catches almost imperceptibly. She smiles inward, as if piecing together a puzzle she’d long suspected but never confirmed. When she recites the Atrean proverb, her voice is warm, almost musical, and her hand lingers near Data’s arm before she kisses his cheek—a spontaneous, maternal gesture. As she steps onto the transporter pad, her final glance back is charged with unspoken love and sorrow, her posture resolute but her eyes glistening.
- • To ensure Data carries forward Soong’s love as part of his identity, countering the coldness of his android nature.
- • To preserve the emotional bond between them, even as she departs, by framing their connection as inherently ‘good.’
- • That love—even unspoken—shapes a person (or android) more profoundly than any positronic net.
- • That her role as Data’s mother is not defined by biology but by the emotional choices she and Soong made, even in absence.
Bittersweet longing beneath a facade of composure. Data is acutely aware of the emotional weight of the moment—Soong’s unspoken love, Juliana’s impending departure, and his own inability to fully grasp human grief. His surface calm masks a storm of positronic calculations: Is this what it means to lose a mother? To inherit a father’s regret? To be both human and not? The kiss on his cheek disrupts his logic, leaving him momentarily unmoored.
Data stands with uncharacteristic stillness, his golden eyes reflecting the transporter room’s ambient glow as he delivers Soong’s posthumous confession with deliberate precision. His posture is upright but not rigid, suggesting a rare vulnerability—his fingers briefly twitch, a subconscious tell of emotional processing. When Juliana kisses his cheek, he does not flinch, though his pupils dilate slightly, a micro-expression of surprise or recognition. His farewell is spoken with quiet finality, his gaze lingering on her even as the transporter hum begins.
- • To honor Soong’s memory by sharing his confession, preserving Juliana’s humanity in the face of her android nature.
- • To process his own emotional conflict—balancing his creator’s legacy with his growing understanding of human connection.
- • That Soong’s love for Juliana was the defining emotional truth of his life, and thus worthy of preservation.
- • That his own moral ‘goodness’ (as Juliana frames it) is not inherent but inherited—a gift from the love between his creators, despite their flaws.
Neutral but not unaffected. The Operator’s demeanor is one of quiet competence, but the scene’s emotional gravity is impossible to ignore. They are a reminder of the Enterprise’s role as a vessel for both exploration and farewell—a place where lives intersect and diverge. Their presence grounds the scene in the reality of Starfleet: even in moments of profound personal significance, the machine (and its operators) must function.
The N.D. Transporter Operator stands at the controls, their back to Data and Juliana, fingers moving with practiced efficiency over the console. They are a silent witness to the farewell, their presence functional but not intrusive. The hum of the transporter builds as Juliana steps onto the pad, and the Operator’s focus never wavers—this is routine, yet the weight of the moment is palpable even to them. Their role is to facilitate the departure, but the emotional undercurrent is undeniable: they are part of a machine that enables both connection and separation.
- • To ensure Juliana’s safe dematerialization, adhering to Starfleet protocols.
- • To maintain the transporter room’s operational integrity amid the emotional intensity.
- • That their technical precision is a service to the crew’s emotional needs, even if unspoken.
- • That farewells, no matter how personal, are part of the larger mission of the *Enterprise*.
Objects Involved
Significant items in this scene
The Transporter Controls are the mechanism that facilitates Juliana’s departure, but their role in this scene is purely functional—a counterpoint to the emotional drama unfolding beside them. The Operator’s fingers dance over the controls, adjusting settings with precision as the dematerialization sequence initiates. The console’s readouts glow with active energy signatures, mapping Juliana’s molecular pattern as she steps onto the pad. The controls are a reminder of the Enterprise’s role as a tool of both connection and separation: they can bring loved ones together (as with Pran’s earlier beam-in) or tear them apart (as with Juliana’s beam-out). In this moment, they are the silent arbiters of farewell.
The Transporter Room is the stage for this emotional climax, its sterile, futuristic design contrasting sharply with the raw humanity of Data and Juliana’s exchange. The room’s ambient hum—usually a background noise—becomes the soundtrack to their farewell, its mechanical rhythm underscoring the tension between logic and emotion. The transporter pad, a circular platform of shimmering energy, serves as both a threshold and a metaphor: Juliana’s step onto it symbolizes her transition from presence to memory, from mother to myth. The console, with its glowing controls, is operated by the N.D. Transporter Operator, their actions the technical counterpart to the emotional release unfolding beside them. The room’s lighting is cool and clinical, yet the scene’s warmth comes from the characters, not the setting.
Location Details
Places and their significance in this event
Transporter Room Three serves as the neutral ground for Data and Juliana’s farewell, a liminal space where the personal and the institutional collide. Its design—clean lines, metallic surfaces, and the ever-present hum of energy—embodies the Enterprise’s dual role as both a home and a machine. The room’s functional purpose (transportation) becomes secondary to its emotional role: a place where connections are made and broken. The sterile environment amplifies the rawness of the moment, as if to highlight the contrast between the cold precision of technology and the warmth of human (and android) emotion. The transporter pad, in particular, is a symbolic threshold, marking the transition from presence to absence, from mother to memory.
Narrative Connections
How this event relates to others in the story
"After erasing her memory, Data has one last tender moment with Juliana, in which he mentions Soong's supposed love for her, and then ends the episode."
Part of Larger Arcs
Key Dialogue
"DATA: Before he died, my father told me that he had only one great love in his life... and that he regretted never letting her know how much he cared for her. I am certain he was referring to you."
"JULIANA: On Atrea they have a saying... that a child born from parents who love each other will have nothing but goodness in his heart... I guess that explains you..."
"JULIANA: Take care of yourself, son."