Narrative Web
S2E19
· Manhunt

Noir Respite — Pay the Tailor, Stall the Landlord

Picard slips fully into the Dixon Hill holonovel, trading barbed banter with the program's sardonic secretary as a deliberate, tactile escape from his diplomatic strain. The secretary's jokey report—"the tailor" and "the landlord"—prompts Picard's small ritual: pay the tailor and stall the landlord, a comic decision that both acknowledges the fantasy's low stakes and lets him savor control. The moment is interrupted by Deanna and Lwaxana's arrival, signaling the scene's shift: this respite sets tone and character, then hands the energy back to the episode's interpersonal pressure.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

Picard strides into Dixon Hill’s reception, greets his secretary like an old accomplice, and sheds his hat and coat as the noir world wraps around him. He savors the familiar rhythm.

formality to comfortable nostalgia ['reception desk in Dixon Hill’s office']

Fishing for a real case, Picard asks about calls; the secretary deadpans that only a tailor and a landlord want him. He orders her to pay one and stall the other as she laughs at their nonexistent funds.

anticipation to wry resignation ['reception desk in Dixon Hill’s office', …

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

6

Pragmatic and expectant — portrayed only through the expectation of payment conveyed by the secretary.

Referenced off-stage via the secretary's notepad as the tailor who has called to request payment for cleaning Picard's other suit; does not appear but catalyzes Picard's comic ritual.

Goals in this moment
  • To collect outstanding payment for services rendered.
  • To secure timely settlement of a business obligation.
Active beliefs
  • Debts should be paid promptly.
  • Normal commercial concerns persist despite Picard's fantastical escape.
Character traits
transactional practical insistent
Follow Tailor's journey

Impatient and businesslike, existing only as an implied pressure on Picard's civilian life.

Referenced as an off-stage caller (landlord) whose purpose is implied—requesting rent or raising a mundane demand—used by the secretary to puncture the fantasy and prompt Picard's 'stall the landlord' response.

Goals in this moment
  • To collect rent or otherwise press for payment.
  • To assert landlord obligations despite Picard's holodeck retreat.
Active beliefs
  • Financial obligations are immediate and non-negotiable.
  • The tenant is responsible regardless of personal or professional distractions.
Character traits
demanding mundane impatient
Follow Unidentified Landlord's journey

Pleasured and temporarily content on the surface — using ritualized control to mask underlying weariness and diplomatic strain.

Enters the reception, greets the secretary with a pleased smile, removes his hat and trench coat, accepts the secretary's rundown of mundane calls, pronounces the ritualistic decision to 'pay the tailor and stall the landlord,' and moves into his office to savor the holodeck refuge.

Goals in this moment
  • To regain a sense of agency through a private ritual and persona.
  • To temporarily escape the pressures of command and diplomacy.
  • To preserve the illusion of normalcy through small, performative routines.
Active beliefs
  • Small, repeatable rituals restore psychological equilibrium.
  • The holodeck persona (Dixon Hill) is a safe space where he can exercise control.
  • Duty will inevitably reassert itself but a short respite is necessary.
Character traits
measured ritualistic wry controlled seeking sanctuary
Follow Jean-Luc Picard's journey

Apologetic and resigned outwardly, balancing familial politeness with professional obligation; privately mortified by her mother's intrusion but firm in priorities.

Stands across the room and provides a quiet, professional containment: when Mrs. Troi questions her about ship business, Deanna calmly states that ship's business takes precedence, embodying duty over domesticity.

Goals in this moment
  • To prioritize the Enterprise's needs over personal/familial demands.
  • To defuse potential interpersonal escalation with her mother.
  • To protect ship operations and Picard's privacy.
Active beliefs
  • Professional duty must supersede personal or familial demands while on active assignment.
  • Polite refusal is the best way to manage her mother's strong personality aboard a starship.
  • Maintaining chain-of-command clarity prevents diplomatic complications.
Character traits
dutiful measured protective embarrassed (implicitly)
Follow Deanna Troi's journey

Quietly obliging and neutral; his gestures communicate agreement and support without commentary.

Silently samples several tall glasses of multi-colored liquids, then bows deeply in response to Mrs. Troi's suggestion — performing the role of the attentive, ceremonial valet who punctuates Lwaxana's moves without speaking.

Goals in this moment
  • To support Mrs. Troi's intentions and follow her directions.
  • To maintain decorum and ritualized presence within the reception area.
Active beliefs
  • Service requires silent, exact execution of social cues.
  • Physical gestures (bowing) suffice to indicate assent in public contexts.
Character traits
taciturn obedient ceremonial attentive
Follow Mr. Homn's journey

Amused and conspiratorial; she plays accomplice to Picard's ritual and lightly undermines the fantasy with comic realism.

Perched behind the reception desk, she produces a small notepad, reports two incoming calls with sardonic asides, chuckles, picks up and then hangs up the telephone while repeating Picard's ritual cue aloud, both prompting and punctuating his escape.

Goals in this moment
  • To keep Chandlerland's tonal rhythm by delivering wry cues and timing.
  • To gently puncture Picard's fantasy with practical reminders while preserving the joke.
  • To maintain control of the reception space and its small power plays.
Active beliefs
  • Picard values these small rituals and will play along.
  • Humor and mundane annoyance (tailor/landlord) are useful anchors in the fantasy.
  • A receptionist's role includes both service and the maintenance of tone.
Character traits
sardonic teasing efficient performative
Follow Dixon Hill …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

5
1940s Detective Trench Coat

Picard removes his period-styled trench coat as a tactile shedding of Starfleet formality and physical adoption of the Dixon Hill persona; the coat functions as a costume mantle that signals his entry into the holonovel and his temporary authority within that micro-world.

Before: Worn by Picard at the reception threshold, serving …
After: Removed and likely set aside in Picard's office …
Before: Worn by Picard at the reception threshold, serving as part of his Dixon Hill costume.
After: Removed and likely set aside in Picard's office inside the holodeck; no damage, simply stored.
Dixon Hill Reception Desk

The reception desk anchors the beat-to-beat interaction: the secretary's theatrical swivel, the notepad and telephone, Picard's approach and exchange; it frames the small power plays and the rhythm of the comic ritual.

Before: In place as the central set piece of …
After: Remains in position, having facilitated the exchange and …
Before: In place as the central set piece of the reception room, holding clerical props.
After: Remains in position, having facilitated the exchange and hosted the props used during the event.
Dixon Hill Secretary's Small Notepad

The secretary pulls out and consults her small notepad to cue lines and report incoming calls; it structures the comic timing, lists the tailor and landlord, and acts as a prop that both anchors the scene's mundanity and triggers Picard's ritual response.

Before: On the secretary's desk, closed or ready; easily …
After: Consulted and replaced on the desk after the …
Before: On the secretary's desk, closed or ready; easily accessible.
After: Consulted and replaced on the desk after the secretary's chuckle and the phone action.
Dixon Hill Secretary's Telephone

The period-styled desk telephone is lifted by the secretary to accept and then dismiss/offhand the calls; it conveys off-stage pressures (tailor/landlord) into the holodeck world and is used to comic effect when she hangs up after mocking the idea of payment.

Before: Resting on the reception desk, ready to be …
After: Placed back on the desk after the secretary …
Before: Resting on the reception desk, ready to be answered.
After: Placed back on the desk after the secretary finishes the brief, performative phone exchange.
Tall Glasses of Multi-Colored Liquids

A cluster of tall, multi-colored cocktail glasses functions as set dressing and a tactile focus for Homn; he samples several, providing a silent, comic counterpoint and underscoring the reception's performative hospitality while Lwaxana shifts plans.

Before: Arranged on a serving surface near Homn, full …
After: Some glasses have been sampled by Homn and …
Before: Arranged on a serving surface near Homn, full and beaded with condensation.
After: Some glasses have been sampled by Homn and remain on the table; they continue to signal leisure and ceremony.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

1
Dixon Hill's Reception Room

Dixon Hill's reception room operates as a holodeck sanctuary where Picard slips into a noir persona; its period detail, desk, notepad, and drinks provide the tactile environment for ritualized escape, while its intimacy makes the eventual intrusion by Deanna and Mrs. Troi more jarring.

Atmosphere Warmly noir, lightly comic, intimate — a deliberate contrast to the ship's formality; cozy refuge …
Function Sanctuary and stage for Picard's private ritual; also the set-piece that allows immediate dramatic interruption.
Symbolism Represents psychological refuge and the fragile boundary between duty and personal coping mechanisms.
Access Holodeck program intended for Picard but physically accessible to visitors on the holodeck (no heavy …
Reception desk with a swivel chair and notepad Muted, period-evocative lighting and noir atmosphere Telephone on the desk producing clipped, performative calls A small tableau of tall, colorful drinks being sampled

Narrative Connections

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Themes This Exemplifies

Thematic resonance and meaning

Key Dialogue

"PICARD: "New cases?""
"SECRETARY: "Are you kiddin'? The last time we got a new case, Hitler wasn't running Germany. Your tailor called -- he wants his dough for cleaning your other suit -- and your landlord called -- you can guess what he wants.""
"PICARD: "I see... Well, pay the tailor and stall the landlord.""