The Leg Goes Dead — Neurological Spread Revealed

Riker insists on walking to the biobed—an almost ritual demand rooted in pride and fear of losing agency—despite Pulaski's objections. He takes a step and his leg suddenly ‘goes dead,’ collapsing him onto the table. The abrupt loss of motor function shifts the situation from puzzling contamination to an urgent neurological emergency: the microbe is integrated with his nervous tissue and already disabling nerve signals. The fall crystallizes stakes, forces immediate medical control, and ratchets Pulaski’s alarm and the crew’s desperation to find a radical cure.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

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Riker materializes in Sickbay, waves off the waiting orderlies, and insists on walking; Pulaski pushes back until he admits a private creed that not making it on his own feet would mean the end for him.

defiance to vulnerability

Riker steps toward the bed and his leg collapses; the medical crewmen haul him onto the table as he registers his leg has gone dead and Pulaski’s concern spikes.

confidence to alarm

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

3

Professional control overlaying real concern; irritation at Riker's theatricality morphs into focused alarm when the fall proves a neurological event.

Challenges Riker's decision medically and authoritatively, questions his motives, reacts with immediate concern when he collapses, and shifts from conversational rebuke to clinical alarm and containment posture.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent unnecessary risk to the patient by discouraging unassisted movement.
  • Quickly assess severity and institute containment and diagnostic procedure.
  • Maintain medical authority and ensure the safety of the sickbay environment.
Active beliefs
  • Unnecessary movement is hazardous for an unstable patient.
  • Medical protocol must override personal theatrics.
  • Early clinical control improves chances of accurate diagnosis and treatment.
Character traits
authoritative pragmatic concerned unsentimental
Follow Katherine Pulaski's journey

Determined and guarded pride giving way to startled alarm and sudden vulnerability when his leg 'goes dead'.

Assertively refuses help and attempts to walk to the medical table as a deliberate assertion of agency; takes a step, experiences abrupt loss of motor function, utters surprise, and is then lifted onto the biobed by medics.

Goals in this moment
  • Preserve personal agency and dignity by walking to the table unaided.
  • Avoid being treated as incapacitated; prove he is still in control.
  • Minimize perceived dependence on the crew and delay full medical intervention.
Active beliefs
  • Physical independence equals survival and dignity ('if I can't make it on my own two feet... it would be over').
  • Accepting help signals loss of command of his own fate.
  • He can downplay or manage his symptoms without immediate surrender to medical protocols.
Character traits
prideful stoic vulnerable when threshold crossed self-reliant
Follow William Riker's journey

Alert and ready; quietly concerned but defers to medical authority as the emergency unfolds.

Present and attentive in sickbay, materializes with the party, stands by ready to assist, translates field findings into support if needed while allowing medical crew to execute immediate physical aid.

Goals in this moment
  • Be available to provide technical or logistical assistance if Pulaski requests it.
  • Ensure patient is stabilized and that diagnostic samples or equipment are secured quickly.
  • Protect Riker by following established safety and containment protocols.
Active beliefs
  • Medical personnel should lead clinical intervention.
  • Rapid, cooperative action increases survivability.
  • The ship's protocols exist to prevent contamination and harm.
Character traits
loyal procedural cautious supportive
Follow Geordi La …'s journey

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

1
Enterprise Sickbay Medical Table

The medical treatment table functions as the intended destination and instrument of triage: Riker insists on walking to it, the medics use it as the place to catch and receive him, and it becomes the platform for immediate assessment and monitoring of his sudden neurological collapse.

Before: Unoccupied, properly set in Sickbay and ready for …
After: Occupied by Riker; in active use as medics …
Before: Unoccupied, properly set in Sickbay and ready for patient use; positioned as the focal point for clinical assistance.
After: Occupied by Riker; in active use as medics secure him, monitor his vitals, and begin diagnostic procedures.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

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Enterprise Sickbay

Enterprise Sickbay is the functional and symbolic arena for the event: a clinical stage where authority, pride, and medical urgency collide. It contains staff, ready equipment, and an environment that permits a rapid transition from polite ritual to forceful medical intervention.

Atmosphere Clinical and tense — initially controlled but quickly turning urgent and intimate as Riker collapses …
Function Sanctuary and treatment arena; the immediate site for diagnosis, stabilization, and enforcement of medical protocols.
Symbolism Represents institutional authority and the boundary between autonomous command identity and enforced medical dependency.
Access Restricted area in practice to medical personnel and essential senior officers; access implicitly limited by …
Cool, antiseptic lighting and a low mechanical hum. Presence of stainless biobeds, diagnostic consoles, and monitoring equipment. Two medical crewmembers standing by and ready to act. Tight physical space increasing intimacy and immediacy of action.

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

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Key Dialogue

"RIKER: "I can walk to the table, thank you.""
"RIKER: "I've always had the notion that if I was ever so injured that I couldn't make it on my own two feet... it would be over.""
"RIKER: "This is the strangest feeling. My whole leg just went -- dead.""